Sunday, August 12, 2007

Because I need something else bad in my sports fandom ...

After the Cavs sweep ...

In the midst of another Indians Summer Slump (patent pending, I do believe) ...



Steely McBeam

I'm debating not even acknowledging his existence.

I Hate the ****ing Yankees

I Hate the Yankees.

And, yes, I grew up being told to not use the word "hate" unless I really meant it.

And, yes, I still say I hate the Yankees.

I went to my first baseball game of the season on Friday night (been to at least one game every season since I was born). Got the "pleasure" of sitting in a section with a bunch of Yankees fans. And ... I say this as someone who grew up in Cleveland as a Stillers fan ... Yankees fans really need to learn etiquette for being in a visiting ballpark.

It's OK to have fun little chants. It's great to have playful banter with the other fans around you. It's fantastic to talk smak.

It's stupid to act like the home team. It's bad to stand and cheer for the closer when the final batter comes up, and act like you're the home team. And it's pathetic to start and/or crush "The Wave".

One more thought: my team may have gotten swept, but at lest my name isn't Melky.

I hate the ****ing Yankees.

Thursday, June 28, 2007

ugh

1.0 IP 7 hits 8 runs 8 earned runs 2 BB 1 K 2 HR

And this is why you almost never want to have players from your favorite team also on your fantasy team.

ugh, indeed

Monday, June 25, 2007

The NHL

So, I really didn't understand the clamor in the media back in 1995. After the baseball strike and the canceled World Series. Perhaps it was my youth, or perhaps it was my living in a city going through a baseball craze. But I didn't get how one nasty experience, even as nasty as a canceled World Series, could drive you away from watching a sport.

Until it happened again. No, not in baseball. But in hockey. An entire season canceled. No Stanley Cup awarded. And now, here we are, two years later, and I still don't give a crap about the NHL. I watched exactly one game this year: when the Cup was in the building. I watched because I wanted to see the Cup awarded, not because I wanted to watch hockey.

However ... if Bill Simmons covered the NHL season like he did the NHL Draft, I'd be much more likely to watch. Classic Simmons humor. Awesome.

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

NBA Draft

So, the NBA draft is coming up. There's a ton of buzz surrounding it. Durant, Oden ... two possible cornerstone players.

I just can't get excited. My team doesn't have a single pick in this draft. Not a single pick. In what's being touted as one of the deepest drafts ever.

I want to get excited for it, but it seems like I'm just waiting for every team but my own to get better.

*sigh*

At least I can go enjoy Jiri Welsch, since he's really our first round pick this year.



Crap.


Thanks a lot, Jim Paxson

Sunday, June 17, 2007

hmmm ...



Does this mean I need to start following NASCAR a little closer?

Thursday, June 14, 2007

Questions I Can't Answer

Let me start his off by saying that this year of sports will only be complete when the Indians get swept in the World Series, and the Steelers lose by 4 touchdowns in the Super Bowl.

Seriously, look at the year my teams have had:

Ohio State football: rolls through the regular season, gets whomped (completely and totally, the actual whomping may have been illegal in a few states) by Florida in the National Title Game.

Ohio State basketball: have a good-if-not-great season, have thrilling tournament victories, and then can't hit a shot to save their life in the championship game against Florida.

Cleveland Cavaliers: have a good-if-sleepwalked-through regular season, sleepwalk through two playoff rounds, dominate Detroit, and then never get a complete game together in a sweet at the hands of the Spurs.

At this point in time, I'm checking to make sure the Avs didn't get swept in the Stanley Cup Playoffs (after I check to make sure the NHL still exists)

So, this begs a few questions:

  1. Is it better to make the championship game/series and get blown out, or to not make it at all?


  2. My inclination here is to say it's better to make the championship game/series. If you can't be #1, #2 isn't a bad place to be. But it hurts more this way.

    It hurts more this year to get swept by the Spurs than it hurt last year to squander away victory in the second round against Detroit. It hurt more to lose to Florida in 1997 than it did to lose to Seattle in the first round the year they won 100 million regular season games. No loss in the Wild Card or Division Round has felt as bad as the losses for the Steelers in the AFC Title games, or in Super Bowl XXX.

    At the same time, it hurt a lot less to get whomped by Florida this year than it hurt all those years the Cooper-lead Buckeyes choked away a shot at a National Title by losing to Michigan or Michigan State.

    So, I guess this question is up for debate, but totally leaning towards better to get there. At least you can talk some smak to 28 other teams (or whatever)


  3. Is it better to get whomped in a championship series/game or lose a nailbiter?


  4. I can directly compare two things here: The 2007 NBA Finals (Cavs swept handily by Spurs) against the 1997 World Series (Indians lose a heartbreaking game seven to the Marlins).

    And I can say without a doubt that the 1997 World Series hurt more, was more devastating, and just without a doubt sucked more. But, I think there are some other factors to consider that keep this question from being answered:
    • This Cavs team is young, ahead of schedule, has a bright future, and should be back. That Indians team was nearing the end of their window of opportunity, never got back, and had the "veteran " experience edge over Florida.

    • The Spurs are a team built the right way, and have been there before, and handle business properly (for the most part, cheap shots by Bowen and Horry not withstanding). The Marlins bought that championship, then fire sold it away, and for the most part felt like a completely undeserving franchise and fanbase.

    • Baseball has always been my first love. Basketball has always been at best third, though I'm not sure if the Cavs rank higher than the Steelers, for reasons of my hometown being attached to one and not the other


    So, I'm leaning towards saying it's better to get whomped, but I'm not able to say for sure.


So, two questions, no real answers. Anybody got any thoughts?

One Win

... at a time.

What we always say, right?

Helps us keep the faith, keep perspective on the long seasons.

When the tip comes tonight, the Cavs and their fans have to leave the mindset of "we're down 3-0" behind, and have the mindset "this game is 0-0". Right?

And we can get this win, right?

I'm certain we can.

I'm hoping we see a lineup something like: Snow, Sasha, LeBron, Gooden, Z to start the game, with Boobie first off the bench (spelling either Sasha or Snow, depending on if we need more offense or just a fresh look), followed by Marshall (much higher basketball IQ than Gooden) and AV (much more energy than Z).

One win ... one game at a time ... it's not 3-0 Spurs, it's 0-0 in Game 4.

Hope ... springs ... eternal?

Monday, June 11, 2007

Mama said they're be days like this

1-0.

12 innings.

ugh.

When you're starting pitcher throws nine innings of shut-out ball, you need to win that game. Period.

+16 in the 4th quarter

-11 for the game

ugh.

When you play like crap for three quarters, you can't win a game.

Any truth to the rumor the starting line-up for game 3 is: Boobie, Jones, James, Marshall, and Andy?

if that's the case, I'll stop calling (in Charles Barkley-like nicknames) Marshall the Large Splot of Missed Shot and Jones the Tall Stiff whose shots just whiff.

Thursday, June 07, 2007

More Boobie, Please

So ... that's what it feels like to watch a NBA game with your team involved?

I'm not sure I like it.

Ugly, ugly game for the Cavaliers for 7/8ths of the game. The offense never looked in rhythm, the defense seemed unprepared, and the team never got an advantage on the boards, which has been their coup de grace all season.

And yet, despite that, they had a chance to make a game of it. A better shot, and it's a five point game with 90 seconds left. And then who knows.

At least the solution seems simple:

More Boobie. More minutes. More touches. More shots.

Less Hughes. Yes, it's a gutty performance to play through the injury, but he's not in a flow of the game at all on offense. And if you just want his defense, play Eric Snow, who has much better defense.

I actually wouldn't mind seeing a rotation of Snow, Gibson, James, Gooden, and Illgauskas. Snow can play the point and distribute to four guys who can hit shots.

The analyst in me wants to say that this game proves the Spurs are the better team, with better experience and better coaching, which trumps the best individual player on the court. The fan in me still believes though.

Game two will really tell the story ... if the Cavs can respond and win or make it a last possession game, they've got a real chance to win when they go home and win the series. If they come out flat and get beaten down again ... the series might be over.

One last thought to hang my hat (and hopes) on: The Cavs have never lost consecutive games in the NBA Finals.

The Day has finally come

The NBA Finals start tonight. After a long layoff. Seems like it's been forever since the Cavs played. I'm just eating up the experience right now. Taking in everything I can get.

Here's what everyone's saying today:

Gov. Strickland making sure the "witness" sign remains in place

Scouts Inc. has Spurs in six ESPN.com Insider required

$15K for a ticket?

True Hoop gives the Cavs some chance, but still won't pick them

Stat Geek Smackdown also has little love for the Cavs

Even Brian Windhorst is picking the Spurs

And, words from the expert:

"I think [the Cavaliers] might only be the fourth-best team San Antonio has faced in the postseason" -- ESPN.com's John Hollinger

Nice John ... I think ESPN has replaced usual East Coast bias with Western Conference bias when it comes to the NBA. I guess I was imagining that two of the last three NBA champions came from the East? I get you slotting the Suns above the Cavs, but the Nuggets and the Jazz, too? Come on, John.

Still looking for a member of the media not based in Cleveland to pick the Cavs to win ... still looking ... still looking ...

Wednesday, June 06, 2007

Happy to be There?

In a word: Yes.

In a sentence: Yes, but I'd like to win four more games.

In a longer explanation:

I'm thrilled to have dispatched the Detroit Pistons in six games. I'm thrilled that the Cavaliers are in their first ever NBA Finals. I was very close to cloud nine as I watched the final seconds tick off the clock and the trophy presentation. It felt as good ... maybe even better ... than 1997 when the wheel play worked to perfection, and the Indians defeated Baltimore and headed to the World Series.

At the start of the season, I predicted the Cavs (along with Bill Simmons, BTW) to win the east, and then lose in the NBA Finals. Sports Guy, if I remember correctly, predicted Suns over Cavs, I predicted Mavs over Cavs. My honest expectation was for the Cavs to reach the Eastern Conference Finals and take it to 6-7 games. Hence, the Cavs have reached both my expectations and my predictions for them.

So, will I be sad if they lose the Finals to the Spurs? Yes. I want them to win. I want them to win (believe it of not) more than I wanted the Steelers to beat Seattle (or maybe that's just the present in me talking ... we'll see how I really feel in 2 months or so). But, at the same time, I won't be crushed if they lose, the way I was crushed after game seven of the 1997 World Series (and I still haven't forgiven you, Jose Mesa).

Cheering on a team that exceeded expectations, and has a chance to win the title is a great place to be. I want to enjoy it.

Because win or lose this year, the expectation is that the Cavaliers win the 2008 NBA Finals. And that will put me in a totally different mindset.

Saturday, June 02, 2007

pwnage?

I'm used to the idea of seeing a team/city dominate another team/city thoroughly.

I'm not used to my team/city being on the giving end of the whooping.

And yet, it seems that I'm staring that down.

The Cavs are up 3-2 on the Detroit Pistons with game six tonight in Cleveland with a chance to move to the NBA Finals for the first time in history.

The Tribe has won five in a row against the Detroit Tigers to open up a 4.5 game lead in the AL Central.

And the most recent wins for both teams seemed to rip the heart out of their Detroit counterpart. The Pistons held all but one player scoreless for the last 12+ minutes of the game, including both overtimes, and lost. The Tigers pounded out 11 runs and have a four-run lead in the ninth inning, and lost. Cleveland didn't just win those two games. They took shot after shot on the mouth, and then demoralized Detroit and won anyways. They left Detroit shaking their heads, wondering if they could do anything. Believe me, I know. I've seen my teams on the wrong end of those types of games all too often.

It seems like pwnage is happening. By the Indians. By the Cavs. By the city of Cleveland.

And yet ... the Clevelander in me is still waiting for the other shoe to drop. For something like "the Shot" or "The Mesa" or "The Drive" or "The Fumble" ... but I feel like it's not gonna happen this time. This isn't like last year against Detroit, where I was amazed the Cavs won three games and had a chance. This isn't like 1997 where we had a lead in a back-and-forth World Series. This is a basketball series we've been dominating, and losing by not making a clutch shot, not getting dominated and winning a game or two with luck. This is the type of run the White Sox had against the Indians two years ago.

It really feels different.

God, I hope it is.

Friday, June 01, 2007

Hatred

One of the best things about being a sports fan, is you get an outlet for anger and hatred. These are natural, human emotions that shouldn't be placed onto singular humans in a "real" context. But, in the world of sports, during a heated contest, the outlet is there. And as long as you can separate the worlds, it's very healthy.

And, so, I've come to the conclusion that you really need someone, something, somewhere to hate in the world of sports.

And I've always been a little torn on finding something/one/place that I can really hate the whole year round.

I grew up in Cleveland, and most folks there hate Pittsburgh. It's a great rivalry that stems from football, the Browns and the Steelers. The problem though, is that while I'm a Cleveland fan almost all the time, my one exception is football. I'm a Steelers fan to the core. It's how my dad (Youngstown native) raised me. I can't change it, even if I want to. So, while I grew up hating the Browns, I can't hate Cleveland all year 'round, because of my love for the rest of the city.

So, I've been honestly searching. Until this past weekend. When it finally hit me.

I hate Detroit.

Hate them with a passion.

This past weekend, I was simultaneously watching Cavs-Pistons on TV while gamecasting Indians-Tigers online. And every ounce of my sports being was venomously rooting against Detroit. I found myself hating them, the way I hated Ric Flair as a young NWA/WCW/Sting fan. There was nothing more satisfying than seeing them lose, except seeing them lose to my team.

And it fits the criteria. I can hate them the entire year. As an Indians fan, I've been without a real rival ... well, my entire life. As a Cavaliers fan, the only team I could possibly ever hate as much as Detroit is Chicago, and the sting of "The Shot" isn't quite as potent when compared to the magic of MJ. He did it to everyone, we were just one victim. As an Avalanche fan, I already hate the Red Wings. And, who knows, maybe my renewed hatred of Detroit will give me a renewed interest in the NHL?

That only leaves football. And, I'll admit, it's hard to hate Detroit when they're so pathetic, such a non-threat, and not even in the same conference as my favorite team. But, I found a loophole. Detroit is close enough to Ann Arbor. So football season is covered, too.

At long last, I have my year-round place to hate. And I love it. I feel my sports fandom is finally becoming complete.

I'm No Analyst

And that's why I'm changing up this blog.

It's fun to pretend that I'm an analyst. Fun to pretend I really know what I'm talking about. But, really, I have too much bias, and I'd rather just talk about what i like and what I hate, and what it means to be a fan and the joys and frustrations of fandom, then to try to break down match-ups and make prognostications.

So, I'm refocusing my efforts to emphasize the fan side more than the analyst side.

Thursday, May 24, 2007

Changes

Going to be changing the format of how I do this blog here in the near future.

Keep your eyes peeled and don't go too far.

Saturday, April 28, 2007

NFL Mock Draft -- Final

Well, it's draft day. The only day I eat unhealthier than I do on Super Bowl Sunday. So, I thought I'd get my final round 1 mock up.

1. Oakland: JaMarcus Russell, QB LSU

Pretty much a guarantee at this point in time

2. Detroit: Calvin Johnson, WR GT

Although I expect him (or the pick) to be traded to Tampa Bay, Atlanta, or Denver

3. Cleveland: Joe Thomas, OT Wisconsin

The smart pick. So, that means Cleveland will probably go with Brady Quinn

4. Tampa Bay: Gaines Adams, DE Clemson

Either in Tampa or Detroit, Gaines is the pick here.

5. Arizona: Adrian Peterson, RB Oklahoma

Could be Levi Brown, but I think AD is just a better value

6. Washington: Brady Quinn, QB Notre Dame

I expect Quinn to be the pick, but Washington won't be the team. I see Miami or Chicago trading up to this spot to get Quinn.

7. Minnesota: Amobi Okoye, DT Louisville

Too much potential to pass up

8. Atlanta: LaRon Landry, S LSU

Possibly the best defensive player in the draft, even though they probably want Okoye

9. Miami: Levi Brown, OT PSU

If this is Miami's pick, it's easily Brown. If it's Washington, it might be Leon Hall

10. Houston: Leon Hall, CB Michigan

11. San Fransisco: Teddy Ginn Jr, WR OSU

His speed is too salivating, and his potential to be a game changing on offense and special teams too tempting. They still need to get another weapon for Alex Smith and he fits the bill

12. Buffalo: Marshawn Lynch, RB Cal

Need to replace McGahee, and the drop off after Lynch is astounding.

13. St. Louis: Jamaal Anderson, DE Arkansas

14. Carolina Panthers: Grego Olsen, TE Miami

Great Value, great talent, fills a need.

15. Pittsburgh: Patrick Willis, LB Ole Miss

Best LB in the draft to a team that really needs a playmaking LB. This would be a Steeler's fan dream come true (him or Levi Brown ... and no, it't not a coincindence that in my two mocks those are the two players they got). If he's gone, I imagine Darrelle Revis is the pick

16. Green Bay: Dwayne Bowe, WR LSU

They want Lynch or Ginn, probably in that order, but really need a playmaker on offense. Bowe is the next best one. Might try to trade down in this scenario, and will have to hope to find value in the 2nd or 3rd round for a RB.

17. Jacksonville: Reggie Nelson, S Florida

Too much value to pass this guy up at this point. Not the greatest need, but too much talent

18. Cincinnati: David Harris, LB, Michigan

19. Tennessee Titans: Dwayne Jarrett, WR USC

They hope Ginn falls to them, but Jarrett (and his size) isn't a bad consolation prize, especially with the connection to Chow

20. New York Giants: Lawrence Timmons, LB FSU

21. Denver: Adam Carriker, DE Nebraska

Great value, and it fills a need. What a coup for Denver

22. Dallas: Darrelle Revis, CB Pitt

Great steal. Revis could go top 15

23. Kansas City: Robert Meachem, WR Tennessee

Another team hoping Ginn or another top WR fall to them. Meachem isn't a bad catch, though, and fills a great need

24. New England: Paul Posluszny, LB PSU

Good value, good fit, fills a need.

25. New York Jets: Alan Branch, DT Michigan

Nothing but BPA here

26. Philadelphia: Joe Staley, OT Central Michigan

The Eagles are in a position to go for good value and depth, and Staley is an excellent choice

27. New Orleans: Aaron Ross, CB Texas

Good value pick, and helps the NO Secondary which looked suspect at times

28. New England: Jarvis Moss, DE Florida

A tweaner that could go top-15, and now gets to be used in both his positions by the Patriots. This is scary.

29. Baltimore: Trent Edwards, QB Stanford

Boller never panned out, and McNair is old. They make a minor reach to grab Edwards, but only because Staley is gone

30. San Diego: Chris Houston, CB Arkansas

Another step to improve the defense

31. Chicago: Ben Grubbs, OG Auburn

I'm half expecting the Bears to trade up for Quinn, but if they don't Grubbs is an amazing talent and an amazing value. They could also go WR (Sidney Rice), but there is better value in the 2nd-3rd rounds for WR.

32. Indianapolis: Brandon Meriweather, S Florida

Good value pick, and while the Colts don't have many needs, a good, versatile safety can only help.

And that's that ... we'll see if I get more than 10 right.

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Random Thoughts

I know it's not just me, but I still have to make this statement:

The NBA Playoffs have way too many off-nights. The Cavaliers should be playing, at the minimum, game three tonight, not game two. Their series, if it ends in four, should be wrapping up Saturday or Sunday, not starting up in a new city for the first time. I sometimes wonder why more sports fans don't follow the NBA as closely as I do, and then something like this comes along to remind me why. Hope the large checks from TNT make it worthwhile to alienate some fan bases, David.

The Mavs and Spurs get a shot to even their series at home tonight. I won't be shocked to see San Antonio go down 2-0, but I'll be 100% shocked if it happens to Dallas. In fact, I think it's more likely that Dallas goes on a run and wins the next four against Golden State, then it is that Golden State wins even one more game. Avery will get his boys prepared, come in with a decent game plan, stick to it, and once they get the monkey off their backs and beat Don Nelson and the Warriors, they'll keep doing it.

I've come to the conclusion that Joe Thomas is simply the best available player in the NFL Draft. ESPN just posted a "risk study" on the "bust potential" for each position in the first round. Offensive Line ranked pretty safe. So, when you combine that with his skill and size, I just don't see how you would want a Calvin Johnson, Adrian Peterson, Brady Quinn, Gaines Adams, JaMarcuss Russell, or anyone else ahead of this guy. I'm a big fan of hanging on to your draft picks, but I'd give up quite a few to move up for a shot at taking this guy.

I'm wondering how to treat A-Rod's April. On one hand, he's on a record setting pace like nobody has any business being on. On the other hand, I hate to follow just about any story involving the Yankees or the Red Sox. And, on my mythological third hand, I'm comparing A-Rod's April this year to Chris Shelton's April last year. Just saying.

NFL Draft is this weekend. Party at my house Saturday if you can make it. Homemade, hand-battered beer batter onion rings! I'll try to get up a final first round mock before then, but no promises.

Friday, April 20, 2007

NBA Playoff Preview

Been a while. Oh well. Sue me. Missed the boat on an MLB preview, but I'm here now for an NBA Playoff Preview.

We'll Start with the first round series.

Eastern Conference



(1) Pistons vs. (8) Magic

I'm just waiting for the media to start playing up Darko's return to Detroit. Wouldn't it be great if he hit a game winning shot or two?

The Big Question: Will the Pistons sleepwalk through a few games and give them away?

The Pick Pistons in 6. (So, yes, they will sleepwalk and give away two games)

(2) Cavs vs. (7) Wizards

A rematch from last years first-round, only

a) LeBron is no longer a playoff rookie
b) Some key members of the Cavs have developed nicely (Gibson, Andy, Sasha)
c) The Wiz are without some key players

The Big Question: How will Mike Brown handle his bench in the playoffs?

The Pick: Cavs in Five (Mike Brown uses Eric Snow too much in one game, and the Cavs lose ... probably game 3)

(3) Raptors vs. (6) Nets

Did you know that Vince Carter used to play for the Raptors, and then tanked his way out of town? Or that the Raptors have vaulted from #1 draft pick status to division champion status in one year? If you didn't, you'll know it soon after the media hypes it for a week.

The Big Question: How did a team as talented as the Nets only get the #6 seed in the Eastern Conference?

The Pick: Nets in seven (and Vince Carter hits the game winning shot in Toronto)

(4) Heat vs. (5) Bulls
(Bulls have home-court advantage)

Another rematch from last years playoffs. This one just as interesting as it was last year.

The Big Question: Will the hot/cold shooting of the Bulls and their lack of interior scoring kill them in this series, or in another series?

The Other Big Question: How's the shoulder, Flash?

The Pick: Bulls in 7 (after Big Ben hurts Flash' shoulder in game six)

Western Conference



(1) Mavs vs. (8) Warriors

Did you know that the Warriors are the only team the Mavs didn't beat this regular season? You will, by the time you watch five minutes of any coverage of the Mavs this week.

The Big Question: Will the Warriors, after more than a decade out of the playoffs, simply be happy to be there?

The Pick: Mavs in four (that happiness won't last long)

(2) Suns vs. (7) Lakers

Yet another rematch from last year. If the Lakers were fully healthy and fully gelled, this would be a good series. That's not the case.

The Big Question: How many games can Kobe win by himself?

The Pick: Suns in 5 (Kobe goes for fiddy in game three, and the Lakers win)

(3) Spurs vs. (6) Nuggets

This is the second-most intriguing match-up of the first round for me. The Spurs are a veteran team, with championship experience, and are built to succeed in the playoffs. The Nuggets are up-and-coming, and their terrific two-headed monster is finally starting to gel.

The Big Question: Can Marcus Camby be effective on Tim Duncan?

The Pick: Nuggets in six (I'm not betting against AI in the first round)

(4) Jazz vs. (5) Rockets
(Rockets have home-court advantage)

I hate Carlos Boozer.

The Big Question: Can T-Mac get out of the first round?

The Other Question: How long until we're sick of that question?

The Pick: Rockets in 5 (T-Mac will leave no doubt, and I really hope Yao neuters Boozer)

Sunday, March 25, 2007

Misconseptions in Sports

I doubt it's a secret that one of my peeves in life is uninformed statements from announcers and other "experts" in sports. So, I thought I'd address a few of these today. Cuz I can.

Overtime against Xavier proved that Ohio State is better without Greg Oden

This is one I've heard so many times in the last week that it drives me crazy. There is a big, telling, obvious reason why Xavier was outperformed considerably in overtime by Ohio State. And it has little to do with Greg Oden.

The real reason is that Xavier was trying to recover from a stomach punch. They had the game won, and then it was snatched away from them by a desperation three-point shot. They gained a large lead, fought off a comeback attempt, and had a win in their grasps, and then watched it slip away on a one-in-a-hundred shot. That demoralizes a team, plain and simple. And when that happens, it really effects your play on the court.

Of course, the other reason would happen to be the talent level between the two teams. The longer two teams play, the more likely it is that the more talented team wins. It's why we see more upsets in single-elimination tournaments, than in best-of-seven series. Simple and plain.

Of course, Ohio State's play with Oden on the bench against Tennessee does little to help my argument, but his play against Memphis sure helps me.

The Cleveland Cavaliers cannot win an NBA title without a good "second banana" to LeBron James

There is a popular notion that a superstar needs a second superstar to win a title. Jordan had Scottie. Shaq had Kobe. D-Wade had Shaq. Duncan had Robinson and/or Parker.

Blah. Blah. Blah.

I call a foul.

I say with enough "third bananas" and a good second string line-up, a dominant superstar can win a ring. And I think the current Cavs are situated nicely in such a role.

Larry Hughes and Drew Gooden make pretty good "third bananas". Hughes might not have the dominant jump shot you want out of a #2 option, but he's got enough defense to give him minutes, and his court vision is pretty good, too. Gooden might not be consistent, but a guy that can honestly go on the floor on any given night and give you a 20-10 game is a good enough option. Add in other lesser players like Anderson Varajeo, Sasha Pavlovic, Daniel Gibson, and Zydrunas Ilgauskus, and you've got enough support around you to outrank a second banana.

And, besides that ... Scottie Pippen wasn't the real key to helping Jordan to his titles. It was Dennis Rodman, Horace Grant, Steve Kerr, and Luc Longley.

Four #1 seed in the Final Four would be bad for the NCAA Tournament

The crutch everyone leans on to support this: the NCAA Tournament is unpredictable, and that's what gives it such great appeal.

Great. I agree.

But you know what? As of now, everyone "knows" that all four top seeds will not make it to the Final Four. That's ... *gasp* ... something predictable. If it happened once ... just once ... it'd be enough to create doubt in your mind and remove the last ounce of predictability from the tournament.

The NBA MVP will be either Dirk or Nash

I honestly think this was true at the All-Star game, but is no longer true, no matter how many ESPN and TNT pundits tell me it still is. It's become a four-man race. And currently, my top four ballot looks like this:

1. Dirk
2. Kobe
3. LeBron
4. Nash




That's enough for now ... I'm gonna try to put together a full MLB preview later this week.

Sunday, February 11, 2007

More NBA Thoughts

So, in the past three days, I've finally gotten to catch a couple of NBA games.

Ok, actually, I've caught the last two Cavs games, against the Heat and the Lakers. And they've gotten me excited about the NBA again. Gotten me paying closer attention to NBA highlight reels on ESPN and following news stories and rumors and all that. And, I've got a couple of thoughts.

1) The Cavaliers are starting to look good. The move to go to Daniel Gibson as the starting point guard looks to have freed up the offense. Eric Snow is a phenominal defensive talent, but teams are no longer able to completely ignore one of the Cavs' starters when playing defense.

It's also energized the second team, to help the bench play. Eric Snow commands that unit a lot better, because they can run a slowed down offense through him, without everyone else standing around waiting for LeBron to get invovled. Sasha and AV are really producing on that unit right now, and if they keep it up, this could be a very dangerous team in the playoffs.

2) It's becoming obvious to me that the East playoffs are going to be dramatic than the West playoffs. The Mavs are the class of the West. There is no debate about it, at least not in my mind. They have the best player in the West (Dirk), are a deep team, and have tasted some success with the bitter taste left in their mouth in falling short. The other contenders in the West just seem too flawed.

In Phoenix, the lack of real depth is showing as injuries creep in. I wouldn't bet on them against a deep and rested and focused Mavs squad. They look like a team that is going to run out of gas in the second or third round of the playoffs.

In San Antonio, the team looks a little lost. Tim Duncan is still dominant as usual, but it doesn't look like anyone else is showing up consistently to help him. It could be just an off year, or it could be the end of an era. I'd probably bet on this being the end of their era. Lucky for them, Duncan has more than enough miles left for them to retool and make another run with him.

Both L.A. teams look too inconsistent to be real contenders. Utah doesn't do anything for me, especially if they lose seeding position with Boozer out.

The West just looks clear-cut as a slamdunk win for the Mavs.

In the East, however, there are a handful of teams I can see winning the conference.

The Cavaliers are starting to gel and come together. The Pistons, since the addition of Webber, have realy looked good. The Heat have to be a contender as long as they remain in position to make the playoffs. The Magic are someone who worry me, since they have Dwight Howard (more no him later), and there's no telling what a dominant center can do in the playoffs. And, there's Washington, lead by a man on a mission (Agent Zero), who can carry a team to an upset or two, which might be enough to win a few rounds and win the conference.

That said, I think the East drama is all for naught. None of those teams would I pick to defeat the Mavs for the NBA title, save the Cavs, but that would be a very biased pick.

3) I finally am starting to see what all the talk about Dwight Howard is all about. Wow, he's simply amazing, and he's getting better every game it seems. I'd put long-term stock in the Magic, if I could trust that organization to either build around a star, or at least keep a star. Still, he's entered into my top five NBA players I will stop and watch when they are on TV, just because you don't know what they might do next. That list:

1) LeBron
2) Kobe
3) Agent Zero
4) D-Wade
5) Dwight Howard

Tuesday, February 06, 2007

Mock Draft Version 1

Well, the NFL Season is over, and the Cavaliers are depressing me so that i can't focus on the NBA, it's not March yet, so I can't get excited about college basketball, I don't get obscure channels, so I can't follow the NHL, and pitchers and catchers haven't reported yet.

That leaves me to talk about the NFL a little more, and this time, I'll focus on the upcoming NFL Draft, one of my favorite spectacles in all of sport. Here's my first attempt at a 2007 NFL Mock Draft, first round only.

1. Oakland Raiders

This team needs just about everything on the offensive side of the ball. It would be tempting to take a playmaker like Calvin Johnson, and if I were running the team I would be tempted to take a rock for the O-Line, like Joe Thomas. However, the NFL is a quarterback's league, and if you want to win, you need a franchise quarterback. Oakland has a chance to land one here, and I don't see them passing on that chance.

The pick: JaMarcuss Russel, QB, LSU

2. Detroit Lions

This is a team with not as many holes as Oakland, but still missing a few key pieces. I can see them trying to grab a rock for their O-Line in Joe Thomas, as among the picks that can get you real #2 overall value here, he's about the only one that will make an immediate impact. Brady Quinn is an option here, if only because the Lions have no long term answer at quarterback, and Quinn has all the desired measureables. Still, I think the pick is to try to get an impact player on defense, and see if you can compete quickly in a weak NFC.

The pick: Alan Branch, DT, Michigan

3. Cleveland Browns

Another team with a lot of needs, mainly on the offensive side of the ball. Joe Thomas would go a long way towards helping a pitiful offensive line, but I don't see that as a good enough pick for a team that not only needs to turn it around on the field, but also needs to excite their fan base after a few dismal seasons. Calvin Johnson could be considered, but with Winslow and Edwards already on board, investing another high draft pick in a receiving threat seems ... odd, at best. I think the call here is for a franchise quarterback, something the team hasn't had since its return.

The pick: Brady Quinn, QB, Notre Dame

4. Tampa Bay Buccaneers

The once proud Bucs defense looked pitiful and pathetic at times this year. They got old quickly, and also suffered losses through defections. Jamaal Anderson could be looked at here to try to put some spice back in the defense, but I think the real answer is to get a scoring threat for the offense, take pressure off the defense, and see if they can perform better when they don't feel the need to play perfect.

The pick: Calvin Johnson, WR, Georgia Tech

5. Arizona Cardinals

This one seems too easy. The Cardinals need O-line help, and the best O-lineman is still on the board. If this situation unfolds, there is no need for the Cardinals to consider anyone else.

The pick: Joe Thomas, OT, Wisconsin

6. Washington Redskins

Washington has invested money into offensive playmakers the past few offseasons, and seem to have a possible quarterback to build with in Jason Campbell. That puts the eyes squarely on the offensive line, and a defensive playmaker. No real value exists on the O-Line at #6, and so that leaves them to look for a defensive playmaker. I wouldn't be surprised to see them trade down to try to grab an extra pick, though.

The pick: Jamaal Anderson, DE, Arkansas

7. Minnesota Vikings

Odd situation here. The best value on the board is a running back (Adrian Peterson), but the Vikings have no need there. They could reach for a wide receiver (either Ginn or Jarrett might make sense), but common sense says they'll either trade down with a team looking to move up for Peterson (like the Packers, Giants, or Jets), or take a good value pick on defense. Since I'm not allowing trades in this mock ...

The pick: Gaines Adams, DE, Clemson

8. Houston Texans

Barring someone moving up in a trade, this could be a slamdunk for the Texans, too. After passing on Reggie Bush last year, there is no way they let Adrian Peterson get away if he's sitting there.

The pick: Adrian Peterson, RB, Oklahoma

9. Miami Dolphins

The Dolphins could probably use a playmaker on the offensive side of the football, so a talent like Ted Ginn Jr. could be a temptation. At the same time, shoring up the fundamental areas of football, the O and D-lines, is essential, especially in a division featuring the Patriots, who exploit bad fundamentals so easily. That puts Levi Brown and Omobi Okoye on the radar screen. Still, I think the secondary is a big concern in Miami, and so they go there with the pick.

The pick: Leon Hall, DB, Michigan

10. Atlanta Falcons

Again, a guy with stretch-the-field speed like Ted Ginn is going to get a long, hard look here, especially with a guy like Michael Vick who we know can throw the deep ball and create time with his legs to get separation for his receivers. Still, I think the secondary remains a concern for Atlanta, especialy when they need to face the Panthers and Saints twice a year.

The pick: Reggie Nelson, S, Florida

11. San Fransisco 49ers

If this unfolds this way, I think the niners are jumping for joy. After seeing Alex Smith have a bit of a breakout, and getting great play out of Frank Gore, the niners have a great chance to add a playmaker to help Smith progress further.

The pick: Ted Ginn, WR, Ohio State

12. Buffalo Bills

The Bills have one of those impossible to predict front offices. That said, I think there's a value left on the board right now that Buffalo can't talk themselves out of, if they want to. And, I doubt they'd want to, since he has the look and ability to be a playmaker in the league for years to come.

The pick: Amobi Okoye, DE, Louisville

13. St. Louis Rams

The Rams were a very decent team last year, but their offense seemed to collapse when they had some O-line injuries, and their defense seemed to collapse a little too often. Hence, the obvious choices here seem to be O-Line or Defense. Levi Brown gets a bit of consideration, but that's not the best value here. This probably comes down to two linebackers.

The pick: Lawrence Timmons, OLB, Florida State

14. Carolina Panthers

Carolina is probably hoping against hope that one of the two big Quarterbacks falls to them, as Jake Delhomme has fallen off the map. That doesn't appear likely, so they need to look to other needs. Defense is always a strength, and so I don't know why the Panthers wouldn't try to make their strength stronger and see if they can't win that way.

The pick: Paul Posluszny, OLD, Penn State

15. Pittsburgh Steelers

Pittsburgh was a team plagued by injuries and turnovers last year, and you can't draft to get around that. So, they can take the best player available (Marshawn Lynch), or they can add depth to a position they are starting to age at (linebacker and o-line). With Posluszny and Timmons coming off the board, it makes the pick a little easier to figure out.

The pick: Levi Brown, OT, Penn State

16. Green Bay Packers

With Favre coming back for at least one more season, this team needs to find players that can impact right away to help Favre win for as long as they have him. To that end, they luck out in this scenario, as one of the top playmakers has fallen to them. If this unfolds, I don't see the Packers taking long to get their card in.

The pick: Marshawn Lynch, RB, California

17. Jacksonville Jaguars

There's a value pick on the board that really seems to fit the mold of what the Jaguars like to get on offense: a big, strong wide receiver with good hands. As they continue to try to find a franchise quarterback, and continue to try to develop the ones they have, I think getting as many targets to help as possible is key.

The pick: Dwayne Jarrett, WR, USC

18. Cincinnati Bengals

The need for the Bengals is good character guys that can also make an impact. That might rule out a guy like Jarvis Moss, who while a possible impact player, has had some character questions. The best value on the board right now, by far, is LaRon Landry, but he's not a need for the Bengals. I think they shore up their defense with a different value pick.

The pick: Adam Carriker, DE, Nebraska

19. Tennessee Titans

They would be very happy to see any of Ginn, Lynch, or Jarrett fall to them. Unfortunately, that didn't happen. So, I think they have to go with the best value on the board, and just try to get pieces to a puzzle that seems ready to come together. And, they get a real steal here.

The pick: LaRon Landry, S, LSU

20. New York Giants

Another team that really want, I believe, Marshawn Lynch, but barring a trade-up, there is no way he's available at this point in time. So, they need to look at other needs. Good value is available at linebacker, and a good fit is there at cornerback.

The pick: Darrelle Revis, CB, Pittsburgh

21. Denver Broncos

This is another team that simply ran into some bad luck to cause them to lose the playoffs. There in a great position to just go for the best player available, and find a place to plug him in. As such, they get great value here.

The pick: Patrick Willis, ILB, Ole Miss

22. Dallas Cowboys

The Cowboys have a large glaring need at Guard, and at Safety. They narrowly miss out on great value at safety, but the best guard prospect available is still on the board, and that should make this an easy pick.

The pick: Justin Blalock, OG, Texas

23. Kansas City Chiefs

They are probably hopeful that Levi Brown falls to them, but that didn't happen in this mock. Outside of that, they could use help at WR, but need to evaluate if they can get better value in rounds 2 and 3, than they can get here. I think they can, and so I think they keep trying to improve their defense, and get a nice hybrid-freak type player that's dropped a bit.

The pick: Jarvis Moss, DE, Florida

24. New England Patriots

The need here seems obvious, after the departures of Deion Branch and the other wideouts, and the disappointment in the AFC title game. The question becomes, do they take a WR here, or do they wait until their second first round selection. I think WR is the pick here, if only because now they get their pick of the remaining first round talent.

The pick: Dwayne Bowe, WR, LSU

25. New York Jets

New York's biggest need is a feature running back. I'd expect them to work the phones non-stop leading up to the draft to try to trade up to land Peterson or Lynch. If they're unable to do that (as this mock suggests), I'd expect them to wait until round two to grab a running back, and nab a Kenny Irons, Michael Bush, or a Brian Leonard. With that out of the way, the o-line solidified a bit last year, they can focus on defense and try to nab an impact lineman or an impact cornerback.

The pick: Marcus McCauley, CB, Fresno St.

26. Philadelphia Eagles

Outside linebacker and wide receiver look to be the biggest round-one needs for the Eagles, while other first day picks could be used to try to grab a quarterback to groom under McNabb. With linebacker depth starting to dry up, it makes the most sense to go with a first-round talented wide receiver here.

The pick: Sidney Rice, WR, South Carolina

27. New Orleans Saints

They could use some help stopping the run, so a run stopping linebacker or a penetrating defensive tackle might be the best bet here. Again, linebacker value is not high here, so a trade down could happen. If not, I see them grabbing an impact lineman.

The pick: Quinn Pitcock, DT, Ohio State

28. New England Patriots

The Patriots already addressed their biggest 1st round need earlier in this mock, so they are really in a position where they can simply go after the best play available and find a place to plug him in.

The Pick: Michael Griffin, S, Texas

29. Baltimore Ravens

Running back is probably a need for them, but without reaching for a second rounder, they shouldn't take one here. They can probably get the same type of back if they simply wait a round, and get better value for it. Linebacker could be an issue as well, but again, depth has dropped and so has value. Hence, the probable pick is offensive line.

The pick: Joe Staley, OT, Central Michigan

30. San Diego Chargers

Since you can't draft clutch, the Chargers are left to look a little deeper onto their depth chart to find needs to fill in the first round. A wide receiver and linebacker depth seem to be the biggest areas of concern. There's not really a WR left on the board with value here, so I think they go for a depth LB.

The pick: Jon Beason, OLB, Miami

31. Chicago Bears

Super Bowl teams rarely have big needs, and that's the case for the Bears. Some might argue that they need to look towards a franchise quarterback, but there's not one available at #31 this year. Depth on the Offensive Line might be the best move for the Bears, and that's the way we'll lean with this pick.

The pick: Arron Sears, OT, Tennessee

32. Indianapolis Colts

Super Bowl winners very rarely have big needs, and the Colts have the luxury of trying to just add depth. One area that looked good in the playoffs but poor elsewhere was run defense, and so grabbing a run stuffer might be the best idea. Either a linebacker or a d-lineman would do the trick, but one offers much better value at this pick.

The pick: DeMarcus Tyler, DT, North Carolina State.



And there you have it ... my first mock for the year. I'm sure things will change around Combine time, and I'll need to update.

Sunday, February 04, 2007

An Anti-Manning Conspiracy Theory

**warning**


This post is fueled by thoughts of a man who is very much anti-Manning Family and even moreso anti-Peyton Manning. Hence, the resulting blog entry is not fair nor balanced, and is in fact biased.

So ... Peyton Manning was just named MVP of Super Bowl XLI. And I'm not really sure why . The Colts defense and running game were much more responsible for winning that game than Manning. If the Bears had been able to capitalize on the early Manning mistake and take a 14 or 10 point lead early in the first, that game ends very differently. But they didn't, and Peyton was bailed out by a defense that took advantage of bad play calling and poor executiong by Rex Grossman, as well as two pretty good performances by his running backs.

And here is where my theory comes in.

Midway through the third quarter, the game is starting to look like it's almost certainly going to the Colts. At this point, Joseph Addai already has ten catches and is putting up an MVP-like performance.

And what do we get the rest of the game?

A large dose of Dominic Rhodes, not Joseph Addai.

No real explanation why. But I have a theory.

Peyton Manning asked for Rhodes to come in, and share the duties with Addai and put up similar stats. This would then (and I think did) cause MVP voters to say "hey, it didn't matter who was running the ball for the Colts, they were gonna run well, we can't name a Colts RB as Super Bowl MVP, let's just give it to Peyton Manning".

And it worked. Congrats on your Super Bowl Ring, Peyton, and may it be your only one.

And congrats on your MVP, as I'm certain you weaseled and politiced your way to it.

Or at least that's what I'm gonna tell myself, just so I can have something of a smile on my face when I think about the fact that you won a Super Bowl.

Monday, January 22, 2007

Is Tom Brady Overrated?

This is not a knee-jerk response to yesterday's results.

This is not a post made by a Steelers fan, bitter that his team got punked in two AFC Title Games by Brady's Patriots.

This is an honest question.

Every sports media outlet talks about how clutch Tom Brady is. He's farly clutch, and I'll never deny that. But, he's never performed when the game completely hinged on him.

And i can say that, because there is a huge difference in leading your team down the field for a game winning/game tying field goal attempt, where you just need to move the ball quickly. It's a completely different beast when you have to move the ball into the endzone for a game winning/game tying touchdown. And while Brady has been near flawless in driving his team to put them in position for that field goal, yesterday he failed in his first real post season challenge to lead his team to a game winning touchdown.

Not only did he fail, he didn't give his team a maximized chance, throwing an interception to end the game. He did't go down fighting to the last second, putting the ball where his teamates could make a play, making smart decisions to keep hope alive. He threw the ball into bad coverage, and handed the other team the game.

So, yeah ... I've bought into the Tom Brady hype. I've called him great and clutch. But I'm starting to have doubts.

And I think you should, too.