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Friday, June 29, 2012

Soccer and Americans a Bad Match

Posted on 1:00 AM by Unknown
Moments like these are the only ones we Americans really connect to when it comes to soccer.

  We’re the weird ones, you know. And as much as we like to think that, as Americans, we have crafted the coolest sports and play the most popular ones, the truth is we haven’t and the truth is we don’t. Football is vigorous and baseball is timeless, basketball is rousing and hockey is bracing, but soccer is the Beautiful Game. It is the World’s Game. In our sports culture though, it falls underneath just about everything besides croquet and badminton, begging the question, “Are we that different from the rest of the world?”

Yes, and no. Soccer gives us what we crave as a sports audience, we just don’t see it. It also gives us what we loathe, and our eyes are much more discerning in this vain. The result is a game that we condemn as repetitive, uneventful, and painfully theatrical. This of course, clashes with what the rest of world (minus Canada) sees as fast-paced, imaginative and wonderfully dramatic.

This difference in opinion, which really is a difference in perception, is a function of our country’s thirst for furious action. We have been trained by mass media to want fast, aggressive, unrelenting activity that presents itself in a forceful manner. We want to be spoon-fed in this regard, often unwilling to delve deeper into something to appreciate its complexity and beauty. In the realm of entertainment – and sports fall here for most of our country – our jejune appetites are intensified, leading to premature judgments and sweeping generalities. “Soccer is boring,” is one such favorite.

Of course, that’s like a German calling baseball tedious. Or an Italian calling football predictable. They are dismissive, narrow-minded claims that come with very little latitude. I suppose it stems from our own vain self-importance, that we can watch 45 minutes of a sport (or less) and make a decisive pronouncement about it. We act like a 5 year old in the library, who restlessly scours the shelves for a book that catches his eye, tossing the rejects on the floor behind him until he finds a bright, unusual cover. He doesn’t care what’s inside.

But most sports fans are older than 5, and have long understood the “don’t judge a book by its cover” lesson, even if their actions might say otherwise. We’d be wise to apply it to soccer, for there’s a lot about the game that suits our spectator desires. What’s more, there’s a lot about the game that doesn't suit these desires, which presents an opportunity for us, as sports fans, to diversify and refine our palette. Like caviar or coffee, soccer is an acquired taste.

Chances are, it won’t grip you right away. There is no potential for a kickoff-return, when a soccer game begins. In all likelihood, the possessing team will bring the ball backward first, working it through the midfielders and backs before initiating any kind of attack or buildup. But continue to watch, and the game will begin to reveal itself to you. You will see the crispness in the passes, the deftness in the touches, and the cheekiness in the footwork. Keep watching and you will see the way players masterfully manipulate the ball, harnessing spin and pressure points and velocity the way a pitching ace commands the baseball. You will see the way they dupe defenders, faking one way and then suddenly cutting back another, artistically eluding their opponents the way a running back scampers around the linebackers. You will see how they powerfully elevate to win a 50/50 ball, soaring fiercely into the air, eyes wide and the mind possessed, the way a forward skies for a rebound off the backboard. You will see the geometric wizardry in their passing, intuitively opening holes and filling space, and working give-and-go’s the way a pair of wingers operate off their center, moving fluidly as one unit toward the goal. To see all this requires a keen eye, otherwise you might mistake the game’s swift, jaunty tune for a sputtering cacophony of tone-deaf fullbacks and out-of-tune strikers. The Beautiful Game wants your affection, but she wont throw herself at you. 

Unfortunately – and this requires far less patience and perceptiveness – you will also see a terrible amount of embellishment. Diving and acting and lobbying the referee for favorable calls is as much a part of the game as decorative celebrations. It is even encouraged by many managers, not excluding U.S. coach Jurgen Klinsmann who said recently that his players need to “get an edge” the way star players on high-profile teams do, by exaggerating fouls and “making their case with referees” in swarming droves. Not surprisingly, these comments did not rest well with fans of the national team, who are quick to point out that the Americans’ toughness and resiliency is one of the team’s strengths. Moreover, there is a level of dignity and self-respect ingrained in their aversion to diving that the players are unwilling to sacrifice for a few extra calls per game. As Landon Donovan said, “That’s not really in our character as Americans. … We try to play the game fair. We don’t really dive. We don’t do those kind of things.”

In fairness, Klinsmann comes from a soccer culture where embellishment is seen as tactful strategy, not cheap duplicity. So his urging the U.S. to adopt these age-old methods was in the name of gamesmanship, rather than cheating. But the issue remains the same: In a domain whose defining, most persuasive aspect is its unpredictability – its realness – soccer rewards players for staged behavior. And in a sphere where teeth-gritting toughness is the norm, if not the expectation, soccer is littered with episodes of dramatic pretense. Such fraud not only cheapens the game, but renders it soft. And Americans, who deem themselves a hardy lot, have no time for prima donna-like conduct. We’ve seen Muhammad Ali box with a broken jaw, we’ve seen Jack Youngblood play with a broken leg. We’ve seen Tiger Woods win with a torn ACL and two stress fractures. So when we see a diva on the pitch crumble to the ground like he has been shot, clutching an ankle or a leg as though it has been sawed in two, only to dust himself off and resume play thirty seconds later, it makes us sick.   

Soccer: The World’s Version is not meant for us. The skill is mesmerizing and the flair is alluring, but the embellishment and the whining is petty and shameful and more of a turnoff than an extra extremity. Soccer: The American’s Version isn’t quite meant for us either. The speed is impressive and the tenacity is rousing, but the want for technique is frustrating and the absence of artistry is uninspiring. To watch American soccer is to eat a BLT, sans bacon.

Perhaps one day we will form a hybrid, combining the refined style of the World with the hearty grit of the Americans. But until that day comes, soccer will continue to be slated on the reserve team of spectator sports in the United States.  


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Posted in Soccer, U.S. Soccer, USA Soccer | No comments

Thursday, June 28, 2012

Throwback Thursday: Ronaldinho

Posted on 3:57 PM by Unknown
It feels like a while ago now, but there were two or three years (2004ish-2007ish) when Ronaldinho was the best player in the world. Unanimously. He had no equals, no foils the way Messi has Ronaldo. He was so good he basically trademarked his own moves, and created the whole "elastico" rage. He was the quintessential Brazilian superstar, with his bouncing head of hair, his swanky boots, and his ultra-exuberant, uber-expressive personality. To watch Ronaldinho was to watch youthfulness personified, ever joyful, ever mischievous, and always eager to flash that broad-faced smile that alone was responsible for the death of 26 Brazilian dentists.

In the 2002 World Cup, while still playing under the shadow of Ronaldo and Rivaldo, Ronaldinho asserted himself on the international stage. He was to Ronaldo and Rivaldo what Iniesta is to Messi, although he displayed a scoring touch of his own as well. Against England, in the quarterfinals, he did this to David Seaman. Brazil won the match 1-0 en route to claiming their 5th World Cup title.

  
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Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Typifying NBA Draft Picks

Posted on 3:27 PM by Unknown
Amar'e 9th overall pick in 2002 was a high value pick.

 The NBA Draft is, of all the professional drafts, the most important one. It's the most easy transition from amateur to pro, and it has by far the most potential to change a franchise almost immediately. But much like other drafts, there are busts, steals, great picks, unimportant picks and the like. Here we give you a little breakdown of what types of draft picks one team may get. (Only going to use players from the last 15 years as examples for contextual purposes).

The Franchise-Altering 1st Overall Pick
Examples: Tim Duncan ('97), Lebron James ('03),  Dwight Howard ('04), Derrick Rose ('08)
2012 potential: Yes, Anthony Davis
This player usually seems obvious, but the 4-for-15 stats indicates otherwise. A 1st overall pick always has some intangible that absolutely, positively cannot be taught. In the case of Duncan it was basketball IQ, in LeBron and Dwight it was size/athleticism, and with Derrick Rose it was pure relentlessness. Usually this one guy can provide enough talent to take a NBA team from doormat to championship contender within three years. Here's just one of those situations where you won the lottery, and then won the lottery, pretty simple here.

Franchise-Altering Lottery Picks(2-15)
Examples: Dirk Nowitzki-9th ('98), Amar'e Stoudemire-9th ('02), Carmelo Anthony-3rd & Dwyane Wade-5th ('03), Deron Williams-3rd & Chris Paul-4th ('05), Kevin Durant-2nd ('07), Kevin Love-5th ('08)
2012 potential: Harrison Barnes, Perry Jones III
A value pick indeed. Anytime you can get a guy that can change your franchise, it's absolutely amazing. Anytime you don't win the lottery, but still essentially win the lottery, that's phenomenal. Again these guys are much like the previous category, except for some reason they got passed over, probably because of the imperfect science of scouting. There is always something a tad bit "questionable" for these guys, but they eventually for some reason prove that flaw to be false.

Late Bloomer 1st Round Picks
Examples: Tracy McGrady-9th ('97), Richard Hamilton-7th ('99), Joe Johnson-10th ('01), Al Jefferson-15th ('04), Danny Granger-17th ('05)
2012 potential: Damian Lillard, John Henson, Moe Harkless
This guy is still a lottery pick and eventually fills out his worth, but it may not intially be recognized. They are drafted pretty much accurately, but sometimes are seen as almost bust for how high they were selected. For some(Hamilton, Jefferson) a simple change of scenery puts their career in motion, but sometimes its a longer maturation process. NBA coaching usually has something to do with their career progressions.  


The Absolute, Positive Steal
Examples: Manu Ginobili-57th ('99), Michael Redd-43rd ('00), Monta Ellis-40th ('05), Rajon Rondo-21st ('06), Marc Gasol-48th ('07)
2012 potential: Kendall Marshall, Jae Crowder, Hollis Thompson
These guys can only really be had with the 20th pick or later. Most of the time a guy of this caliber and underrated-nature falls into a team's lap, but sometime there is advanced scouting. Usually you see this pick in the second round, and you are going ballistic because you robbed the draft blind(but you didn't actually know you did). Or in the case people passed on a guy like Rajon Rondo because he couldn't score to save his life, but he was the ultimate floor general. Out of all five of these guys it's a toss-up between Manu and Rondo to who was a bigger steal, picking arguably the best PG in the game at 20 or picking one of the best bench players to ever play at 57? I'm leaning Manu, but something says that Rondo pick will bring another banner to Boston sometime soon.


You Got Exactly What You Were Looking For Pick
Examples: Al Harrington-25th ('98), Andrei Kirilenko-24th ('99), Jason Kapono-31st ('03), Wilson Chandler-23rd ('07), Mario Chalmers-34th ('08), 
2012 potential: Marquis Teague, Miles Plumlee
They're drafted exactly where they're supposed, late first round pick/early second round pick. They pan out to be solid NBA players, and they usually give what you what you want out of them. There low-risk/low-reward players and they pan out that way. However, they can serve as vital role players to some great teams(cough...cough...Mario Chalmers). With all things considered they're about as boring as an NBA player could be.


Well It Could Have Been Worse Pick
Examples: Jason Williams-7th ('98), Drew Gooden-4th ('02), Kirk Hinrich-7th ('03), Raymond Felton-5th ('05), O.J. Mayo-3rd ('08)
2012 potential: Fab Melo, Austin Rivers, Michael Kidd-Gilchrist
Almost, just almost a group of busts here, but since they had decent NBA careers their top-10 selection isn't completely invalidated. It's not like any of these guys forgot how to be good players, their transitions from the NBA just weren't as smooth as originally thought. Either they were overrated by the league scouts or they simply enjoyed their NBA stardom a bit much. Maybe they were slow to pick up on the more advanced NBA sets, or maybe they just didn't give a crap. Either way these guys are just a step below the "name shall remain nameless" category.

The Bust To End All Busts
Examples: Jonathan Bender-5th ('96), KWAME BROWN-1st ('01), Darko Milicic-2nd ('03), Tyrus Thomas-4th ('06), Michael Beasley-2nd ('08)
2012 potential: Andre Drummond, Bradley Beal
The names on this list probably blow your mind and it'll blow your mind over and over again. Something went absolutely, terribly wrong when the team scouted and picked this guy. Either they were relying too heavily on unique size as a selling point, or they just ignored or missed a serious character flaw. A bust seriously this bad could set a franchise back for years, especially if a pick behind the bust pick becomes a superstar. Talk about rubbing salt in the wounds...for hours.

"What If" Major Injury Pick
Examples: Jay Williams-2nd ('02), Shaun Livingston-4th ('04), Greg Oden-1st ('07),
When this happens it's really just sad, and unfortunate. No one wants to see a great college prospect flame-out in the NBA because of a freak knee injury or a proneness to injury in general. There is always a major "what if" question here to how good the player would have been and it can also set a franchise back several years, when it wasn't even their fault. This is probably the best macrocosm of injuries in sports.
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Posted in NBA, NBA Draft | No comments

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Drugs Don't Make All Stars

Posted on 6:08 PM by Unknown

They are called PED’s: performance-enhancing drugs. This title is self-explanatory. A player takes them to enhance his performance. It’s cheap, it’s dishonest, and it’s shameful. But most of all – and here’s the rub – it’s effective. Ergo, for anyone not named Derek Jeter (who carries a set of morals built for a family of 5), it’s extremely tempting. The success and the celebrity that baseball’s forbidden fruit promises is alluring, almost seductive, and players take them for the same reasons that Adam ate from the Tree of Knowledge. (Luckily for us, sin and death are not spread throughout the world when a baseball player succumbs to the temptation of PHD’s, or our world would probably be ruled by guys like Bernie Madoff and Jerry Sandusky.)

But sometimes PHD’s lie. They promise something they cannot deliver, and players become nothing more than their former drug-free self. In fairness, this is often a result of the player using, not the drug itself. (I doubt that the steroids Alex Rodriguez used were any “better” than the ones Matt Lawton used, but the effects were drastically different.) It’s also a result of big egos and starry eyes, the likes of which run rampant in the MLB, as players freely associate pills and syringes with majestic homeruns and lavish heaps of cash. After witnessing the gaudy success enjoyed by Barry Bonds, Mark McGwire, Sammy Sosa, etc, etc, it’s hard to blame them for this.

But Bonds, McGwire and Sosa share something in common. They were each prolific players without performance-enhancers. They didn’t need to supplement themselves with steroids to reach stardom (whether it’s saddening or maddening that they caved is for you to decide.) Thus when they did use, the results were magnified because they already possessed this foundation of talent. The drugs they allegedly took did not teach them how to hit – there is no steroid that helps you hit the ball the other way or discern balls and strikes. These are natural abilities. (If I took steroids tomorrow, I might pop a few more homers in wiffleball this summer, but I’m not taking over for Mark Teixeira.) I don’t have that in me. 

The same goes for middling Major Leaguers. Enter Marlon Byrd.

A former outfielder for the Phillies, Nationals, Rangers, Cubs and Red Sox (and here already is an intimation of his capability) Byrd was suspended 50 games by the MLB yesterday for testing positive for Tamoxifen, a performance-enhancing drug. In an official statement, he claimed that, “Although that medication is on the banned list, I absolutely did not use it for performance-enhancement reasons.’’ He cited a surgery, “private and unrelated to baseball,” as cause for taking the drug. But every accused player comes armed with an explanation. Almost all of them find an escape route leading to their vindication.

Thing is, Byrd probably didn’t even need an out card because I don’t think anyone even read his statement. No one really cared. He’s not a name you see on the leaderboards, he’s not a name you expect to see on the leaderboards, and he’s not a name you know because of loud self-promotion or obnoxious publicity stunts (Nyger Morgan). He’s an average hitter and an average fielder whose name is peripheral to the ones we care about.

And he used PHD’s. He’s like the kid who sneaks a cheat sheet into the test and still gets a C minus. With the aid of Tamofixen, Byrd hit .210 this season in 47 games with the Cubs and Red Sox. He hit 1 home run, collected 9 RBI’s, and amassed more strikeouts than hits. Arizona recently had temperatures higher than his OBP. And thus Byrd not only becomes a villain, but a villain who sucks. Whereas Bonds and Co. played the role of baseball’s Joker, Byrd gets to be that red-headed kid from The Inredibles. No one’s even afraid of that guy.  

So to the rest of the Average Joe’s out there, don’t do it. Don’t pop a pill or take a shot or drink some mysterious, bubbling green liquid and wait for yourself to become the Incredible Hulk. It won’t happen. You have to first be good in order to be great.  
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Posted in Marlon Byrd, MLB, Steroids | No comments

OK Ronaldo, The Stage Is Yours

Posted on 10:44 AM by Unknown
The Time is now for Christiano Ronaldo

 Cristiano Ronaldo has sat patiently, and maybe angrily, in the shadows of his natural La Liga rival, Lionel Messi for three straight years now. The Fifa Player of the Year Award, now the Ballon d'Or and an award of Ronaldo's in '08, has gone to Messi again and again and again. He's watched Messi amass 72 goals this year, clean out the record books and wow even the not-so-fond-of-soccer United States. Ronaldo has pretty much watched the Argentinian steal away all the spotlight and praise that should be directed his way. But there is one way the Portuguese superstar can rediscover his limelight and that starts on Wednesday vs. Spain.

It may just be that perfect time for Ronaldo and his Portugal side to sneak up on the likes of Germany, Spain and Italy, win the Euro and put an official "champion stamp" in his soccer passport. Ronaldo is at the point in his career where he is finding a perfect mix between youthful ingenuity and veteran craftiness, or as some people like to call it, he's entering his prime. We all know that the 27-year-old can shred the twine with blistering free kicks, that has been his M.O. since day one, but there has always been something missing with Ronaldo. Some believe that he lacks a certain mental toughness that denies him the competency to push the giants of international soccer. It also may be true that Christiano has felt a bit slighted by his inferior Portuguese teammates who don't surround him like the Germans surround Schweinsteiger or the Spanish surround Iniesta and Xavi. But as we've seen so far in this tournament, Ronaldo has stopped feeling sorry for himself and has instead been the player Portugal has asked him to be for nine years now.

Portugal wasn't even supposed to pass through the Group of Death. Germany and Netherlands were far superior squads containing the firepower and experience that would oust both Denmark and Portugal with relative ease. The Portuguese attacking midfielder may have been the best player in the group, yet there was no way one single player was going to power anyone through to the next round, certainly not in this group. But Ronaldo was poised to sour that notion.

With Portugal somehow in the driver's seat to place second in the group after defeating Denmark(but losing to Germany like everyone else) they still needed to beat the Netherlands, who were surprisingly fighting desperately to pass through. Early in that game, 11 minutes in to be exact, Van Der Vaart tattooed a swirling shot into the bottom corner, almost certainly ending Portugal's dreams of pushing through to the knockout stages. The game wasn't officially over, but no one in their right mind believed that Portugal was going to stage any type of comeback, well no one named Christiano Ronaldo.

In the 28th minute Ronaldo changed the whole atmosphere of the group, and possibly even the tournament. He took a disgustingly perfect ball from Joao Pereira, applied a harmonious touch on the ball and buried it in the back of the net. As he slowly made his jaunt toward the sideline, he simply raised a finger in the air emotionless. There was this sort of "It's my time," look on his face and you could just sense the confidence oozing out of him. He summoned his teammates over for a group hug, told them to get him the ball and let him work his magic. After trying time and time again to get his teammates to score by feeding them perfect balls, Ronaldo realized that it was his time to score. As the clock ticked on toward the 75th minute, Christiano went on a furious run down the left flank as Nani bolted down the right side with the ball, then right before the two reached the box, Nani fed Ronaldo with the through ball of his lifetime. As Ronaldo met the ball, he made the sort of stop-and-turn that makes defenders wilt and that's just what Dutch back Gregory van der Wiel did. This was the kind of moment that would make the average player melt with excitement, the pressure of scoring one of the biggest goals in a country's history would have them force a shot right into the goalie's mitts. But not Christiano Ronaldo. The superstar left both van der Wiel and goalie Maarten Stekelenburg in the seats with the rest of the fans watching a master manufacture his craft. The finish was an afterthought, Portugal was moving on.

Ronaldo went on to score on a deft header in the 79th minute of the quarterfinal matchup against the Czech Republic to push Portugal onto a much anticipated semi-final matchup with Spain. Answering the challenge against the Netherlands was part one of what could be a career-defining tournament for the superstar. Beating Spain would almost feel like the precipice for Ronaldo, despite it not being the Euro 2012 Final. It's sort of ironic that for Christiano to put his first major stamp on the international stage, he must beat five of his Real Madrid teammates, and seven of his most bitter rivals. I think Ronaldo's up to the challenge. He has carried his home country this far, why can't he bring them back to the spot where he got his first taste of international disappointment? It's been eight years since Greece shockingly left him in tears on his home pitch in the Euro 2004 final, and in those eight years we've seen Ronaldo grow up from a highly talented teenager into a full-blown leader. He's no longer the pretty boy obsessed with women or engrossed in hype. Real Madrid was a winner in La Liga for the first time since 2008 thanks to him, I don't see why he can't do the same for Portugal.

It's now time for Ronaldo to make the transformation from leader into legend and it starts on Wednesday.
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Posted in Christiano Ronaldo, Euro 2012, Portugal, Soccer | No comments

Monday, June 25, 2012

Youk's Run - and an Era - Over in Boston

Posted on 4:14 PM by Unknown
Kevin Youkilis bids Red Sox nation farewell.

Kevin Youkilis walked to the top step of the dugout, turned to the sellout crowd at Fenway Park, and raised both his arms above his head. 37,565 cheered one last time for their beloved third baseman, their applause caught somewhere between reverence and heartbreak, and taking the kind of regretful cry that at once adores and resists the moment. Youk held up the number one on each hand – one for 2004, another for 2007 – and then, like a runner crossing the finish line, descended back into the dugout and down the hollow, muffled locker room hallway.

The crowd then quieted down and retook their seats, reverting their gaze to the battle between pitcher and hitter. But the mood had changed inside Fenway Park; their minds and their hearts were elsewhere. They watched the final two innings of a 9-4 Red Sox win, but it all felt stale and obligatory, and bereft of that blissful oblivion that so often pervades the ballpark in Boston. There was a lingering cognizance in the air, a painful realization. The Fenway fans, ever the most entrenched, enraptured ones of their kind, could not give themselves fully to the game. They could not drift off in its sights and sounds and depart from their everyday lives, the way baseball invites them to. Something was tugging at them, holding them back. There was a second consciousness in a ballpark that almost always has but one.

Baseball had betrayed them. It had become real. The cold, rigid actuality of the outside world had seeped into their realm of romance, it had poisoned it, stolen its innocence. The Green Monster, and the rest of the walls to their sanctuary, may well have toppled to the turf. They weren’t invulnerable anymore. Their perfect game had reared its ugly business-driven head, and their perfect team had been made to look like puppets, each one of them attached to a string dangling from the luxury box of the unfamiliar owner. And for the fans, many of them clad in the hometown team’s jerseys, the feeling was unnerving, to say the least. They felt played, as if someone had invited them to a costume party that no one else dressed up for. And now, the jerseys they wore felt a little less comfortable, a little less their own. Those donning the lovable number 20 on their backs started looking over their shoulder, wondering with unease when they might be disposed of as well.

It was not a good day to be a Red Sox fan (and this comes from a Yankees devotee), even if they had beaten the Braves and taken the three game series, 2-1. The heart and soul of their team, and its de facto captain, had been shipped out of town. It’s what fans hate about sports, the frosty reality of it all, the dreary truth that they are ultimately inconsequential. No matter how feverishly they root for an outcome – whether in a game or an administrative decision – the ending rarely takes them into account. They can only hope.
       
 But the woe for Sox fans goes deeper than that. When Youkilis sauntered down the locker room hallway Sunday afternoon, before being swallowed up in its unknown darkness, the craned necks and squinting eyes caught the last glimpse of Boston’s most recent folk-hero. The Fenway faithful will never see him in a Red Sox uniform again. Their sonorous chants of “Youuuuuuuuk” will go unsung, their cherished number 20 jerseys will go unworn, and their well-groomed, bushy fake beards will be returned to the squirrel’s nest from where they were taken. Hopefully they were fed with something other than stray hotdog mustard in the interim. When Red Sox fans look to third base from now on, they’ll no longer see their burly, heavy-footed, mechanically-flawed 8th round draft pick who fails every eye-test by baseball standards and who “would have played for a six-pack of beer,” as his father once said. Instead, they’ll see an athletic, springy five-tooled 23 year old who makes scouts drool and who will be the cornerstone of this team for years to come. And somehow, it still feels like a downgrade.

See, Youkilis and Red Sox nation have an uncommon bond. They are united by faith in one another, and by a deep-rooted, inveterate love for the game of baseball. Coming up, Youkilis was always told he wouldn’t make it. They said his stance was too anomalous, his fielding too raw, and his temper too turbulent. No one was willing to take a chance on the unorthodox kid out of Cincinnati. Except, of course, the Red Sox. At the urging of scout Matt Haas, Boston selected Youkilis in the 2001 draft, and their marriage was happy and complementary and successful. Youkilis spread his infectious ardor for the game throughout the clubhouse, and showed his teammates how to compete. He dirtied the Red Sox jersey every time he played – a mark of distinction among an increasingly urbane and purified cast of ballplayers these days – and probably rubbed dirt on it even when he didn’t. He wasn’t a shiny, polished player, and he didn’t want to be. The Blue-collar, fiery fans of Fenway could relate to this. In 2006, the Red Sox gave him the chance to be an everyday player, and he embraced the task with aplomb, a year later leading Boston to its second world championship of the decade. Boston made Youkilis a star, and Youkilis made Boston a winner. The two parties brought out the best in one another.

But in the years since 2007 – and one could even argue 2004 – the Red Sox have lost some of their magic, some of their flair for the dramatic. They play with less gusto now, less stubbornness. They aren’t as tortured by defeat it seems, and thus not as covetous of victory. The self-proclaimed Cowboys that toppled The Curse of the Great Bambino in 2004 have left and gone away, their replacements more gentlemanly in nature. (It’s hard to imagine Adrian Gonzalez telling the Yankees to go f*** themselves, even if he’s a great player.) Even many of the diehard heroes from the 2007 team have departed Boston, either by choice or by compulsion, and what remains of them is a disjointed, aging bunch.

This process of attrition started with the departure of Pedro Martinez in December of 2004. His departure alone took much of the vehemence out of the Red Sox spirit, wiped much of the foam from the team’s mouth, as Pedro was the master of incitement and ever the foil to the high-minded, law-abiding Yankees. He delighted in this role. He thrived in it. With him removed from the rivalry, its incendiary flavor was cooled, its combustibility quelled. But his truculence lived on in the form of the feisty Kevin Millar and the game – if quirky – Johnny Damon. Until 2005, that is, when these two ringleaders were abandoned as well. Red Sox-lifer Trot Nixon received the same fate a year later, and slowly but surely, Boston’s spunky, plucky “do anything to win” identity was fading from their fabric, like smeared, spotty eye-black that drips from a player’s cheeks in the game’s late innings.

This fierce vitality was revived in 2007, due in large part to the contributions of the defiant Curt Schilling, the eccentric Manny Ramirez, the fearless Mike Lowell, and the flippant Jonathan Pabelbon. But Schilling retired in the ensuing offseason, and Ramirez was traded the next year in a move with drastic identity implications. The Red Sox were tired of his carelessness, and his spotlight-craving, me-first attitude so they shipped him out for Jason Bay, a far more reserved, far more introverted personality. Bay was a strong hitter, a solid leftfielder, and a good teammate. He stayed out of controversy, was in the headlines for the right reasons, and competed hard. But there was a level of detachment in Bay’s disposition, a distance in his eyes that spoke to a man overwhelmed. When he succeeded in Boston, he wore a wild look of relief; when he failed, a defeated look of “what the hell am I doing here?” It happens a lot to understated stars in big cities and divorce is often the only remedy. (Why Jason Bay next tried out the high-profile New York Mets beyond me; his best years came as a member of the invisible Pittsburgh Pirates where he was Rookie of the Year in 2004 and a two-time All Star.) Regardless, Manny’s transcendent value quickly became clear to the Red Sox, when they went down in flames in the ALCS to the Tampa Bay Rays, not so much because of a lack of execution but a lack of fortitude. (Youkilis did his best to will the Sox to the World Series in 2008, hitting .333 in the ALCS, but he was let down by two floundering Old Reliables in David Ortiz and Jason Varitek.)

They have not been that close to a title since. They just don’t seem to own that charisma anymore that every championship team must have. There were times, during the Ortiz-to-Schilling era when it seemed the Red Sox, once destiny’s punching bag, were actually on fate’s good side. In all honesty, there was no scarier scenario as a Yankees fan during this span than taking a one run lead into the bottom of the 9th inning at Fenway, even with the best closer in the world. You just felt like you were going to lose. It was a premonition that stemmed partly from the ever-faithful home crowd (and 86 years of futility will do this to you), but mostly from the guys in red socks. They never looked intimidated against Mariano Rivera, the way so many hitters do. They never appeared desperate, even if they were. And they never looked afraid of losing, because they firmly believed they were going to win.

But they have lost this aura. It’s a difficult thing to maintain. It takes the right players and the right personalities, the combination of which is hard to come by. Lowell retired in 2010, Papelbon was not resigned this past offseason, and just like that, two more pivotal pieces to the Red Sox revival were gone. Entering this season, a 36 year old Big Papi and an injury-plagued Youkilis were the only two carry-overs from the 2004 team. Now it’s down to one.

The Red Sox turn now to a new core to take them back to the promise-land. Led by Dustin Pedroia, who was a key contributor on the 2007 championship team, this team has a lot to figure out. They’re in 4thplace in a wickedly tough A.L. East, their starting rotation has been inconsistent, and their bullpen is less of a sure thing than a New England winter. But their holes are bigger than all that. The Red Sox suffer most from a lack of fire, an absence of desire. Their biggest flaws are character ones.

When Kevin Youkilis disappeared down the tunnel yesterday, the Fenway fans bidding him a forlorn farewell, he took an era – and an aura – with him. Red Sox nation might not admit this fact, but they can sense it. You could hear it in the way they cheered for Youk for the last time yesterday, taking one big gulp and trying to thank him, and his fallen comrades, for eight amazing years. 
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Posted in Boston Red Sox, Kevin Youkilis, MLB | No comments

Islanders Keep Outdoing Themselves

Posted on 2:45 PM by Unknown
This is a normal scene in Nassau Coliseum, and shouldn't change in the near future.

  Bluejacketsxtra.com- How highly did the Blue Jackets value defenseman Ryan Murray before taking him with the No. 2 overall pick in Friday's first round of the NHL Draft? Enough to turn down an eye-opening offer from the New York Islanders, who, according to numerous NHL sources, offered all of their picks -- one in each round -- for the right to move up from No. 4 to No. 2 for Murray.

That's right, for the Jackets' No. 2 pick, the Islanders offered pick Nos. 4, 34, 65, 103, 125, 155 and 185. The bounty would have given the Jackets the following picks: 4, 31, 34, 62, 65, 95, 103, 125, 152, 155, 182 and 185. And if that weren't enough, the Jackets could have had the Kings' No. 30 if they wanted it.

Next week's development camp would have required two sheets of ice.

Blue Jackets GM Scott Howson offered a "no comment" when reached by The Dispatch late Sunday. After Friday's first round, he did mention a "very attractive" trade offer the Blue Jackets declined before selection Murray, a precocious prospect whom many think could play in the NHL this season.
-Aaron Portzline

The Islanders and their GM Garth Snow should write a book called, "Rolling Around in the Ridiculous." This is just beyond absurd. Six picks for a defenseman who has never touched the ice in the NHL? I wouldn't give six picks up for most defensemen actually in the NHL. Yes, the WHL might be one of the elite junior leagues, but it's still a junior league and the kid is still a kid. Honestly, first of all, is this guy really going to be the next Nick Lidstrom(I'd say he's worth six picks)? Even if he was, the risk is far greater than the reward. Second of all, I won't trust a single individual that the Islanders "highly tout." And third of all, the NHL draft is just a notch below the MLB draft on the total-crapshoot-scale so who the hell knows if this guy will be good.

But hey, are we surprised about this? No, absolutely not. The Islanders are the kings of stupid deals, head scratching trades, and putrid teams. DiPietro's 15-year deal is obviously the most notable of the Islanders hideous moves, but they also doled out a 10-year contract to Alexi Yashin. Other than his decent 75-point first season, Yashin was injured, underperformed and was honestly far more interested in playing at home in the KHL. The only thing the Islanders are good at is finding one or two good players and then letting them walk or trading them, because they always have to "blow up the team." Well the New York Islanders are forever "blown up."

It's so bad for the Islanders that people don't even have to wonder why no one attends games anymore. The Coliseum is a joke, the team hasn't made it out of the first round of the playoffs since '93 and their front office is more dysfunctional than an anarchist convention. They went from the biggest clown in the history of hockey, Mike Milbury, to an equally bad general manager in Garth Snow who, aside from drafting John Tavares, hasn't done a thing. There's a reason why "The Lighthouse" never even broke ground.

I'll give the Blue Jackets credit though for not folding under the laughable stupidity of the Islanders. Columbus wanted Ryan Murray and they stayed strong despite being offered the entire Islanders organization, Hofstra's lacrosse team and this sweet Zigmund Palffy action figure. Or maybe they were just being good guys, not blaming their questionable colleagues for their absolute stupidity. The Islanders take the "laughing stock" moniker and they turn it into a two-hour Dane Cook stand-up routine.
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Posted in Columbus Blue Jackets, Garth Snow, New York Islanders, NHL, NHL Draft | No comments

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Who's Next to Fill LeBron's Pressure-Filled Shoes?

Posted on 3:22 PM by Unknown
Now that LeBron has gotten the monkey off his back, who will be next?

 I'm sure you, like me, and most of America have been letting it all settle in. You know what I'm talking about, the sad realization that LeBron James is no longer the butt of all of our jokes involving 3/4ths, receding hairlines and whatever anyone can think of to poke fun at the league's most polarizing star. Well it's over. No more pressure for him. No more disdain, well except from the bitter contingent out in Cleveland who still can't get over being spurned for nicer shores. No more, "Did he make the wrong decision?" questions. Two years or so of anti-LeBron rhetoric is out the window. So now what? Now who do we peg the onus on to get the monkey off their back. Well here's our top-5 list of guys that have the pressure on them now that LeBron has broken through.

5. Deron Williams
He may be the forgotten man over the past two years, playing in irrelevant city of Newark, but he can still ball. This off season is solely his, now that Dwight Howard decided to undecide that he had decided to stay with the Magic or whatever. Will he remain with the Nets while they make there much anticipated, but highly overrated, move to Brooklyn? That is still in question, but I think if he wants to break through he'll want to move down to Dallas and team up with Dirk and the passionate organization led by nutjob Mark Cuban. Staying in Brooklyn and hoping that Dwight Howard comes is an interesting, but risky choice; we all know Howard is as indecisive as Peter Griffin. Either way Williams sort of downgraded his status when he went from the contending Jazz to the doormat Nets, we'll have a more accurate read on D-Will's status once we know where(and with whom) he's playing.

4. Chris Paul
CP3 is one of those guys that is often falsely pegged as a "winner." What has he won? A gold medal with the Redeem Team? Exactly, really nothing. Maybe it falls back on his lack of great teammates, but Chris Paul hasn't really deserved the title he's been given by some. CP3 is probably the second-best floor general in the game, behind Rondo, but he tops my list of point guards with killer instincts. He can go Kobe on you at times which is a good, and bad thing. When he decides to take over, late in games usually, nobody else touches the rock. The shots will fall most of the time, but for some reason Paul abandons his high-IQ point guard game for this wannabe-Jordan type of play that is really only meant for a select few players. His Clipper squad, at this very moment, is not built for a championship. Blake Griffin is too fragile late in games and lacks all-around skill and awareness. Youtube highlights are nice for Lob City, but if CP3 wants to win in L.A. he'll probably have to reach unimaginable heights(like 30 and 15 a night). The competitive drive is there, that's for sure, but his decision to stick with a dysfunctional Clippers organization may come back to haunt him. Or maybe, just maybe, he can be a true savior for the league's biggest joke.

3. Carmelo Anthony
The man forced himself into the most pressured packed situation in the history of sports. Playing for the Knicks is like being the President, nobody wants to do it, you've got unheralded expectations if you do it, and if you win just once, then you're immortalized. It isn't clear if he and Amar'e can coexist, since they are both premier scorers who don't move well without the ball and aren't defensive stalwarts(more out of effort), but there's truly one more year for them to answer that question. 'Melo has only escaped the first round of the playoffs once in his career and has proclaimed himself as one of the elite players in the league, but he's somehow also escaped the same expectations LeBron "unwillingly" took on. They're best buds, were drafted in the same draft(2 spots separating them) and have been compared since they started gaining national attention in high school. There really is no more time for Anthony to be called out for not playing defense or not trying hard enough, he has to step up and be a leader. And lose some weight too.

2. Kevin Durant
Some people might be surprised to see Durant here at the two spot but you'll find out why in a second. There really is two ways KD's career could go. One, he could use the motivation from losing to LeBron and go on a vicious tear along the line of winning five titles and raining daggers in LeBron's mug. Or two, he could simply be the next Patrick Ewing. A guy, who had a great career, should have had multiple rings, but was confronted with the task of beating a super human. LeBron just may be the career-long roadblock to Durant's time in the NBA. That would be a seriously unfortunate situation because KD has both the better team, and is seen in the better light by the public. Ewing is a controversial "great" player because he never won a title, hopefully circumstances won't be as bleak for Durant.

1. Dwight Howard
Oh Mr. Superman, how badly you have villainized yourself. D12's opt-out fiasco last trading deadline has increased the pressure on him to win ten fold. No longer is he the league "nice guy," flying through the air and throwing balls through hoops from 5 feet away or flashing that charming smile that everybody thought was genuine. Or maybe it was genuine and the guy got some bad advice, when he decided to take the Magic the gut-wrenching superstar ride for one more season. I'm not sure we've seen Howard reach his ceiling which could be either frightening or downright wrong(How could a guy with that freakish build disappoint us?) Maybe he just needs a teammate and a point guard with an win-first attitude and not a buddy-buddy guy like Jameer Nelson. You know, someone to get up in his grill and tell him, "this isn't a f**king joke anymore". We'll see if Howard pushes his way out of Orlando this off season to the possible destination of Brooklyn. If he does that, and it's after D-Will leaves, then we'll realize that Howard isn't playing basketball to win, he's playing it because he's 6-foot-11, 265 lbs and can jump as high as LeBron. Basketball may just be his money maker and if that's the case then shame on him.
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Posted in Carmelo Anthony, Chris Paul, Deron Williams, Dwight Howard, Kevin Durant, NBA | No comments

Sunday Night Showdown

Posted on 2:20 PM by Unknown


In a series that has been marked by contrasts in style, juxtaposition is thrown into the spotlight tonight at Citi Field. On one side loom the sluggers from the Bronx, who belt, bash and batter the ball to a pulp, and whose 110 homeruns lead the major leagues. On the other side wag the kids from the Queens, who score runs through guile and clutch hitting, and whose 30 sacrifice plays rank 5th in the majors. And on the mound tonight, C.C. Sabathia opposes R.A. Dickey in a matchup that serves as a microcosm of Yankees versus Mets. It’s a fitting ending to this year’s version of the Subway Series.

Entering tonight’s game, the Yankees sit atop the A.L East with a 42-28 record. They are fueled by high-powered hitting and – despite injuries to David Robertson and Mariano Rivera – a stingy bullpen. They are where we thought they would be 70 games into the season, and brassily proud of the still-smoking trail behind them.

The Mets are 39-33, ahead of the Braves, Phillies and Marlins in the N.L. East, and just 3.5 games out of first place. They are spurred by timely hitting, crafty play, and talent maximization. And David Wright. They are nowhere near where we thought they would be 72 games into the season, exceeding expectations and reveling in the silence of the cynics.

Sabathia is 9-3 on the season, averaging over 7 innings per start, and ranks 5th in the majors with his 102 strikeouts. Just like his team, CC is doing exactly what we thought he would do in just the manner he is doing it, suppressing hitters with stifling fastballs and baffling sliders. His craft is consummate.

Dickey is 11-1, surrendering just 6 hits per 9 innings, and leads the majors with an ERA of 2.00. His 103 strikeouts are one the better than Sabathia’s total. He is doing unimaginably more than what we thought he would in a way as bewildering to us as the opposition, flummoxing hitters with dipping and darting and diving knuckleballs. His style is understated.

Sabathia is 6 foot 7, 290 pounds, and hurls the ball from his massive left arm. He wears his cap slightly to the side, lets his voluminous pants drape around his ankles, and has a teddy-bear personality almost as big as himself. He is fiery and imposing on the mound, and celebrates big outs with the kind of vigorous fist pumps that could knock out a small minor-leaguer. The Yankees, themselves a brawny and brash bunch, endorse everything about their ace.

Dickey is a slender 6 foot 2, 222 pounds, and sails the ball from his rubbery right arm. He wears his socks high, his hair long, and pulls his brim low over his pensive eyes. He is quiet on the hill, but deeply driven, and his simple windup and subdued character seem to be reflective of his honest humility. He has visions of grandeur and glory in his mind, but he’s careful to anchor himself in the moment. The Mets, themselves a confident but conservative club, see themselves in their savior.

Tonight, it’s power versus ploy, flair versus fortitude. It’s the Kings Court versus the commoners, pedigree versus peasantry.

It’s the Yankees versus the Mets and its C.C. Sabathia versus R.A. Dickey.     
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Posted in CC Sabathia, MLB, New York Mets, New York Yankees, R.A. Dickey | No comments

Friday, June 22, 2012

The King Finally Gets his Crown

Posted on 11:37 PM by Unknown

No, no, not LeBron James. I’m talking about the real King, the Swedish King, the King of New York City and Madison Square Garden, and ironically, the King that LeBron could have been. This King is the monarch of Manhattan, the Crown of the crease, and he’s more loyal, more grounded, and more authentic than that king down in Miami. He’s the King that everyone likes, (save those from LI/NJ/Philly/Pittsburgh, and even they respect him) the George Washington, the John Kennedy. “When New York needed a leader, they said ‘Henrik Lundqvist can.’” Something like that. The other is the king that no one likes and everyone ridicules, (save those from Miami) the George Bush, but I won’t let anymore talk of him spoil this celebration.

King Henrik has been crouched in his throne for a while now, a throne that has come to signify his standing as the most valuable player in New York, the most adored player in Sweden, and the finest goalie in all the land. Between these distinctions and his sleek hair, chic suits, and debonair makeup, “Hank”, as he is lovingly called in The Garden, truly is fit for the throne. So it was appropriate that the NHL finally crowned the King on Wednesday, awarding him the Vezina Trophy for this year’s version of the league’s best goalie.

It seems this is a title that Lundqvist has unofficially held since Martin Brodeur’s last sparkling season in 2007-08. Wednesday night in Las Vegas, it was made official, but this was all akin to handing Coach K an award for The Best College Basketball Coach. We already knew it. In the interim, there have been other stars that have shone more brightly, namely Ryan Miller in 2009, but none have shone more consistently, more faithfully, more valiantly than Lundqvist. Since his rookie season in 2005-06, Hank has been the North Star for the Rangers, the guy that they could look up to every night - knowing he would be there - and follow to glory. When he grew out his beard for the playoffs this spring, standing courageously tall for the Blueshirts in net, the expression “Jesus Saves” was never more apt, never so manifest.

Though greeted with awe and wonder, Lundqvist’s performance this postseason was something Rangers fans have grown proudly accustomed to. At the risk of sounding spoiled, it is something we have come to expect, not least because Hank expects it of himself. This impossibly high standard that he holds himself to, this pristine impeccability that he fully believes he is capable of, drives him to be better every time he plays. It is most evident after the rare puck slips by him. He’ll briefly hold his position, then slouch his shoulders and jerk his head forward in an expression of frustration that says “I should have had that,” even if the shot couldn’t have been stopped by SEAL Team 6. The King doesn’t accept impossible as an excuse.

Hockey folk often say this is his best trait as a goalie, this warrior-like way, and Lundqvist isn’t one to disagree. He’ll be the first to tell you that despite all the plaudits for his padwork and all the glamour about his glove, it is actually his iron-willed compete-level that serves him best. “I really battled tonight” is the way he describes it, and about the closest he comes to boastfulness. He is one of those special athletes who wants the challenge, who relishes it, who craves it. He’d rather see 45 basement hockey-like shots than 17 low percentage ones. He delights in such a deluge.

The Rangers oblige Hank in this wish far too often though for their own good, partly for the same reason that 18,000 in MSG pinch themselves and rub their eyes when he is proved human. They expect him to make the saves. He’s the best insurance policy money can buy (6 years, $41.25 million).

But the team’s heavy reliance on him has left something to be desired in the stat columns. In his first five full seasons in the NHL, Lundqvist played less than 70 games just once, when he played in 68 in the 2010-11 campaign, while his celebrated counterparts were averaging something closer to 60. He saw 1,800+ shots each year, twice weathering over 2,000, the most rubber faced by any netminder in this span. This all translated into numbers (GAA, Save %) that were staggering in the context of his season, but less impressive relative to the rest of the league. There was no doubt Hank was the most valuable goaltender at this time, but the Vezina is awarded to the best goaltender. And best, which is itself a qualitative, subjective measurement, is substantiated by statistics, which left Lundqvist out.

This year though, Rangers coach John Tortorella vowed to play his goalie less, so as to keep him fresher over the course of the grueling NHL season. True to his word, Tortorella called upon Lundqvist just 62 times this year and The King responded with his most royal season yet. He compiled a record of 39-18-5, amassed eight shutouts, and won spectacular game after spectacular game. Excluding the peewee-like seasons of Cory Schneider and Brian Elliot, his .930 save percentage ranked first in the league and his 1.97 goals against average ranked second. He starred in the Winter Classic, in front of the NHL’s largest viewing audience, styling the grace, the panache, and the athleticism that his position demands. He scripted a 14-5 record against division opponents, suffering consecutive losses just three times all year.  It was the kind of season we all knew was coming from the Swedish netminder, even if it wasn’t so different from one’s past.         

But awards are about numbers. They rely on the quantitative, for better or worse, placing higher stock in hard statistics than seasoned judgment. This year, the former was finally congruous with the ladder, and the pick for the Vezina Trophy was never easier. 

It would be The King. The real one.





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Posted in Henrik Lundqvist, New York Rangers, NHL, Vezina Trophy | No comments

Fallback Friday Classic Pic Of The Week

Posted on 9:00 AM by Unknown


There was a ton of talk on Wednesday morning about Lebron and the "cramp game" as they called it. People were calling it heroic, courageous and amazing. It also got everyone reminiscing on the most infamous injury/sickness/health issue game in the history of sports, Michael Jordan's "Flu game."

With the series tied at two in the 1997 NBA Finals and the Utah Jazz coming off back-to-back victories, the Bulls entered Game 5 in "must win" mode. While they did have two games up coming back in Chicago, they felt as though this was going to be the swing game that decided the series. Jordan hadn't played that well in the previous two games only going for 26 and 22 in Games 3 & 4. With Jordan having "flu-like" symptoms it looked like the world was really crashing down for this Chicago Bulls dynasty in its quest for title no. 5. MJ, on the other hand, thought differently.



Jordan looks like absolute death throughout the entire game and yet he's still there making shots, still has the active hands to pick off passes and the killer instinct to hit a three pointer with the game basically hanging in the balance. This performance is probably one of the greatest performances we've ever seen in the history of sports, not because he scored 38 points, had a few assists and steals, but he played exactly like the best basketball player of all-time even with the flu. There was no drop off in his game. If you didn't know the context of the situation you would just have looked at MJ's stat line and said "Classic Mike."

The picture above is so stunning. Never in your life you would ever think you would have seen Jordan leaning on anyone else. MJ never leaned on anyone. He was the Mariano Rivera and he was the C.C. Sabathia. It always started and ended with him. But he was so drained that he needed to be carried off of the court, saddled with towels and soothed with ice bags. Yet even in Jordan's darkest hour, he still rose above the rest and finished what he started.

It's moments like this that should keep us from ever comparing anyone to him. No one, I repeat, no one would able to pull this off, not Magic, not Bird, not Lebron. Jordan never played in Game 7 in the Finals, but that's because he already beat all his opponents in Game 6. He's also the only player ever to have a 6-to-6 NBA Championships-to-NBA Finals MVP ratio, absolutely astonishing. There will never be another Micheal Jordan, and there will never be another "Flu Game."

So while we are about to exonerate Lebron for finally winning his first title let's never compare him to Jordan. He's already lost two titles, Jordan lost none.
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Posted in Chicago Bulls, Fallback Friday, Michael Jordan, NBA, NBA Finals | No comments

Thursday, June 21, 2012

The Camera Scheming of Lebron James

Posted on 1:23 PM by Unknown

It’s amazing really, the way LeBron James does it. The way he unfailingly lures cameras in his direction, as though they are magnetically drawn to his orbit. The way he latches onto them and keeps them there, the way he needs them (and they need him) like some rare from of mutualistic symbiosis.

Tuesday night, in the dying minutes of Game 5, he put forth his finest performance yet. The game was tied, he was sidelined with leg cramps (no, seriously), and at risk of forfeiting the foremost face-time of The Finals. The Heat were also at risk of forfeiting a potential 3-1 series lead, though that is neither here nor there. But fear not, LeBron is an innovator when it comes to camera attraction. First, he limped to the middle of the court, after heroically converting a lay-up, his face contorted and twisted and oozing pain, and then stopped right in the middle of the Heat logo. This will be a fantastic shot of my gallant self-sacrifice. The extra 10 feet to the huddle (which, for LeBron, is about 2 steps) were simply too daunting, too painful for him to consider. Then, he hunched over, gave the cameras a freebie, and waited for teammates to help him the rest of the way. (Correct me if I’m wrong, but I believe the first to his rescue was Juwan Howard, who has become such a self-appointed puppet for King James I’m starting to think he’s on hands and knees tying the Chosen One’s shoes before tipoff.)

Then, with LeBron safely on the sideline, play resumed. Of course, you wouldn’t have known this because James was still in your TV screen, now trying on his “I just got shot in the kneecap” look, which was honestly equally impressive as anything happening on the court. Eventually, the cameras flitted back to the game action because of some insular contractual obligation, but LeBron wasn’t finished.

We next saw him being carried off the court, assisted mainly by Old Yeller Juwan Howard, who instantly leapt into action (his first of the series) when he saw his companion in trouble. The mask James wore now looked like one I might have flaunted a few Halloweens back. After this charade, LeBron began to incur some mockery and legitimate head-turning from a few NHL-ers on Twitter.

From Blake Wheeler of the Jets: ““I wonder what kind of face LeBron would make if he took a slapper off the laces?”

From Alex Golikoski of the Stars: “What a gutsy performance by lebron #not”

And my personal favorite, from Nick Bonino of the Ducks: “We get it Lebron, it doesn’t hurt when you’re running around but it looks unbearable when the cameras are close up during the timeouts.”

That’s an apt observation from the Boston University grad, and an important one in this whole face-time discussion. It confirms LeBron's level of savvy, of shrewdness, of seasoned “schemery” that he has developed since cameramen first flocked his way. He knows what they want, and he knows how to give it to them. And hockey players, ever the stoic, unyielding ones in sport, have the right to question his toughness. Spear a guy in the balls, and he might only blink. Bump 6’8, 250-pound Lebron James, and he’ll flail his arms, throw back his head, and scream murder.

Then he’ll pull himself together, wait for the cameras, and step up to the free-throw line.

Maybe this relationship isn’t mutualistic. Maybe its commensal. For there’s no doubt that Lebron needs the cameras, but do the cameras really need him? Do we really need him?

Let’s take it one step further on the biology chain. Maybe it’s parasitic, like the way fleas feed off human blood, leaving little red bite marks as their mark of gratitude. In the same manner, LeBron feeds off our attention, he craves it, thrives on it, and will go to extreme lengths to secure it. But what do we get out of it?

We get a game that has been cheapened by his embellishment, by his insatiable desire for attention. And he gets to look like a great American hero. He wins.

But by god I hope he loses tonight. 
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All Quiet On The MVP Front

Posted on 1:14 PM by Unknown
Evgeni Malkin cleaned up at this season's NHL Awards, but his memorable season will be all but forgotten in due time.

 Sidney Crosby played 28 games this season, 22 in the regular season, 6 in the postseason. He tallied 37 points in those 22 games, a stat quite impressive considering the fact he started his season twice and was suffering from all types of mental blockades. But you wouldn't have known that if you didn't pay attention. Glancing at Sportscenter for their minute segment on Crosby would have you thinking he was tearing it up, but his career was possibly spiraling out of control.

Yes, Crosby was suffering from the most frightening and mysterious injury in all of sports. An injury many thought would derail his career. All the NHL coverage was asking whether or not he'd ever play again or if he'd ever return to his MVP form in 2007 when he tallied 120 points. While Crosby soaked up the small amount of national attention hockey gets, his much criticized teammate Evgeni Malkin, was putting together one of the most impressive, but underappreciated seasons we'll ever see.

Malkin unfairly was pushed into a nightmarish situation. Not only did he have to led a Stanley Cup-favorite squad, but he had to replace Sidney Crosby. Replacing Crosby was like Pippen replacing Jordan, Ryan Mallett replacing Brady, or Robin replacing Batman. It was a task of unimaginable pressure and expectation, a task only meant for a true superstar. The 6-foot-3 center took on these expectations head on, amassing an absurd 50-goal, 59-assist campaign in only 75 games. He did this with swirling rumors about his teammate Crosby's future dominating the media and overshadowing his own scintillating run. Malkin silenced all his doubters with a campaign that would make any bloodthirsty competitor grin from ear-to-ear. He was so good that he turned James Neal, a decent 20+ goal scorer, into an absolute machine with 40 goals. Pittsburgh's second star answered the biggest question of them all, when someone asks you to step up, you do so. Malkin did just that.

There is no doubt that Malkin is a supreme, top-10 maybe even top-5 talent in the league. The Russian had broken the 100-point barrier twice in his career, but never like this. He always did it with Crosby leading the way, keeping the pressure off, allowing him to do his thing pressure-free. Anytime Evgeni made a big play it somehow came back to Crosby. But a dip in performance in '09-'10 and an injury plagued '10-'11 brought back doubts about what kind of player Malkin was. Even with Sidney Crosby sidelined with injuries, people still passed on the thought of the Penguins second star ever breaking through again. No one even remembered that Malkin had more points than Crosby in their '09 Stanley Cup run. No one even remembered he had a ring. Yes, this season may have erased that sentiment, but it didn't properly shine the light on what is one of the more clutch seasons we've ever seen.

Let's be honest, the NHL is a league begging, searching, clawing at a superstar that can improve ratings, boost interest. That's why Gary Bettman probably prays every night that Sidney Crosby wakes up tomorrow with a clear head and a clean bill of health. That's why the league has swallowed up the other superstar who is too busy driving 100 MPH and fraternizing with women(ugly and smoking hot) to win anything. The league saw it's first 60 goal scorer since Ovechkin's '07-'08 campaign in Steven Stamkos and that stole some headlines. Unfortunate to know that this league runs on the fumes of its superstars and on the hopes of it's biggest markets. As expected the most impressive regular season in years went relatively unnoticed, until last night.

Malkin absolutely cleaned up at the annual NHL awards in Vegas. He won the Hart as the league's MVP. He obviously won the Art Ross for leading the league in points and he won probably the most underrated award of them all, the Ted Lindsay Award for league's best player which is voted on by the players. But even after last night, Malkin still won't be remembered for this season and that's the unfortunate side of the NHL. There is no national credit given to superstars who don't act like per-Madonna's(Ovie) or transcend Gretzky(Sid).  There won't be much for Malkin especially not in this struggling NHL, an NHL some say will enter another, potentially league crushing lockout. Believe it or not, Malkin didn't even steal the show last night despite winning three major awards. Lundy stole all his credit with this F-bomb, and suave apology only Henrik himself could pull off. Malkin simply accepted his awards, dropped a few quick speeches chalk full of poor English and faded back into the shadows.

In a league so starved for attention, sometimes even the greatest seasons can disappear in an instant. That's what will happen here with Evgeni Malkin.
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Posted in Alex Ovechkin, Evgeni Malkin, NHL, Sidney Crosby | No comments

Throwback Thursday: Cup Winners

Posted on 9:39 AM by Unknown
Yeah, that's right. Fallback Friday just got some competition. But thursdays deal with the film industry, and this video here is enough to give you goosebumps even in this sweltering summer heat.
Gary Thorne & Co, take it away:

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Posted in NHL, Stanley Cup, Throwback Thursday | No comments

The Last Stand In Oklahoma City

Posted on 9:00 AM by Unknown
It's time for Kevin Durant to give us a performance to remember.

 It was a cold, cold atmosphere within the Thunder locker room on Tuesday night. How could it not be? They wasted away an impressive 17-point lead in the first quarter in a matter of seconds. Russell Westbrook carried the entire population of Oklahoma City on his back, putting forth an electrifying, "How is he doing that?" performance. But it too was wasted. They watched Mario Chalmers score nine clutch points in the fourth quarter, Mario Chalmers. That has to be more demoralizing than watching an 90-year-old back right into to your car; you want to go Bobby Knight on them, but you can't, so you sit and watch and probably vomit. Simply put, Tuesday night was gut-wrenching for the Thunder and it puts them into a back-to-the-wall situation that no NBA team has ever come back from, not even in 30 tries.

The one shining light for Oklahoma City is the Western Conference Finals. Their 2-0 deficit to the Spurs was thought to be insurmountable, and rightfully so, the Spurs had yet to lose so far in the playoffs. But the Thunder shed the weight of that "insurmountable" deficit as fast as Westbrook attacks the basket. This Oklahoma City team is so young and so talented that I don't believe they even think about the odds or the pressure or anything of that mental stuff. What is different from the Spurs and the Heat? Absolutely nothing. The Heat haven't slaughtered OKC in any facet of the game. Each game has finished close, except for OKC's Game 1 victory, and each game could have gone either way. So with one Durant three going in instead of rimming out or one Lebron James turnover, we could be talking about a 2-2 or a 3-1 series in favor of the Thunder. That bodes well for Oklahoma City who all of the sudden has gone from clear-cut favorite to clear-cut underdog, but I'll put that sentiment on the dramatic game-to-game swings that America undergoes with every result.

A big question for Game 5 is who is the pressure on? The obvious pick is Oklahoma City, they're down 3-1 on the road with a three game losing streak. They've got to have a big performance, right? Well you could also make the case that the pressure is on Lebron James, who we all can finally agree on is the main cog in the Miami engine. Lebron has never been on the right side of a close-out game in the Finals. The pressure will obviously be immense for him to win, but how will he handle it? Will he just eat it up like he has in a majority of this year's playoff games? Or will he force it, with the thought that he himself has to win this game. Actually, he doesn't have to win this game. Wade could go out there and score 45 and put his stamp on the series and Lebron would STILL win Finals MVP. It just a matter of Lebron exercising his demons, and that is far easier said than done. That's especially true in Lebron's case, since we all know how hard this guy makes it on himself.

Hopefully for the Thunder, and everyone who wants this series to go seven, Kevin Durant, Russell Westbrook and James Harden can come together and put forth an effort we'll all remember. More specifically I think it's time for Durant to put together that 40+ point efficient performance we've all be clamoring for. I was the first person to say we were seeing Durant mature before our eyes, yet he has taken a step in the wrong direction in this series, looking overwhelmed and over matched at times. If OKC wants to pull off this miracle it starts and ends with Kevin Durant, not Russell Westbrook's electrifying play or Harden's energy off the bench.

I have my doubts about the Heat actually "going for the jugular," but I think this team, and most notably Lebron, are ready to take the next step. But Don't count the Thunder out completely just yet.
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Posted in Kevin Durant, Lebron James, Miami, NBA Finals, Oklahoma City Thunder, Russell Westbrook | No comments

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Ruminating About R.A. Dickey

Posted on 10:22 AM by Unknown

This is what we love about sports. In one word: unpredictability. In four more words, with some baseball flavor: out of left field. And when a 37 year old withering journeyman, who nearly gave up his sputtering career in baseball to become an English teacher, turns his knuckleball into the most dominant pitch in baseball, and then tosses consecutive one-hitters to inflate his record to a major league best 11-1, its fair to call it unpredictable. Or maybe you don’t call it anything at all. Maybe you just marvel at what he’s done, celebrate its serendipity, indulge in its insanity, and hope it continues, for there really are no words for such a thing after all.

In a way, we have seen this before. It’s “The guy who nobody wanted comes back to dominate those who rejected him” storyline, and its as fascinating, and beguiling, and perplexing as always. If you’re not immediately familiar with this narrative, think Jeremy Lin, and if you’re not familiar with Jeremy Lin, come out from under your rock for a while.

But just like every day is a new one, even if its basic elements remain the same, so too is this R.A. revolution/revelation.

First of all, Dickey completely reinvented himself as a major league pitcher. So there was no Victor Cruz factor at play here, where one team finally sees the guy’s intrinsic talent and unleashes it on the rest of the league. Rather, after five futile years with the Texas Rangers, in which he limped along with a 16-19 record and earned run averages more bloated than John Kruk post-Thanksgiving, Dickey decided to make a change. Not a Jose Bautista adding a leg lift to his swing type change, but a complete rebranding of his style. Bautista was always a power hitter; a quick leg lift and a subtle top hand adjustment didn’t transform a slap-hitting pest into a homerun vending machine. But R.A. Dickey was never before a knuckleballer. He was your average fastball-slider-curve pitcher, and to be straight, he was barely average. So heeding the advice of his manager Buck Showalter, Dickey abandoned conventionality – abandoned straightness – and found dizzying success.

Not at first, of course. And here’s another differentiating point between Dickey and his seeming storyline. Even after he made the change in his approach, even after the desperation move, the last gasp effort, the “well, shit, why not?” turn toward baseball bamboozlement, he still struggled. So no, this isn’t exactly your “Dominik Hasek metamorphosing from human to octopus, refashioning the position, and earning the name ‘Dominator’” story either. Dickey’s transmutation from middling, mainstream pitcher to knuckleball virtuoso took a lot more time. After being released by the Rangers in 2006, he spent a year out of the majors, before signing with the Seattle Mariners in 08, who saw little return in their investment and quickly let him go after 14 underwhelming starts. Then the Minnesota Twins gave him a whirl, but soon dumped him back on the scrapheap after 35 ineffective outings. At this point in his career, the 34 year old Dickey had a record of 22-29 and an ERA north of 5. He was a model of mediocrity.

Then, at the urging of owner Omar Minaya, the Mets picked him up. Call Minaya a prophet. A seer. An incredibly sagacious baseball mind. Call him flat out lucky. (And that’s the one I’m going with.) Because in 2010, something within R.A. Dickey simply clicked. A light bulb flashed on – you know, one of those 500 watt, industrial sized, construction site light bulbs – and Dickey’s career took a complete 180. He started 26 games for the lowly Mets, pitched to the euphonic tune of a 2.84 ERA (good for 10th in the Majors), and had it not been for said lowly Mets, surely would have won more than 11 games. But no one was convinced, the way we are now, of his superhuman greatness. And last year, despite his earning a team-leading 3.28 ERA, did little more to promulgate his otherworldly aura. It was only a matter of time before he lost the feel for his mercurial pitch, or hitters started to see it better, or some rabid Phillies fan snuck into his house late at night and cracked each of his fingernails, one by one, in his sleep.

Turns out, it was only a matter of time before he gained a profound feel for the pitch, and hitters started to go blind at the sight of it, and that Phillies fan decided to cut him a break because he was so purely impressed with Dickey’s talents and so enamored by his story. It’s hard not to be. He’s 11-1, sporting an ERA of 2.00, leading the National League in strikeouts, and hasn’t allowed an earned run since Ralph Ellison wrote Invisible Man. But moreover, he’s a genuinely likeable guy, and how often do we get to say that about All Stars these days? He’s unassuming, he’s agreeable with the media, he’s an intellectual and an athlete, and he looks like the rest of us. Not that we hold it against Albert Pujols for looking more like a tan Hulk than a normal human, but there is something reassuring, something enabling about watching a relatively skinny, relatively old, relatively average guy do totally above-average things. But most of all, we like him because he his humble.

And that’s what the knuckleball will do to you. Every time he throws it, he is reminded of how close he came to failure. Of how he was cast aside, drowning in the vast ocean that is the minor leagues, before he latched onto the rescue line that Buck Showalter had tossed his way years ago. The knuckleball reminds him, somewhat bluntly, that nothing else worked.

So maybe this sense of humility was forced upon him. But Dickey doesn’t seem like a guy who was ever given to arrogance. His weathered face, sad twinkling eyes, and working-man’s moustache speak to someone who had to work hard to get to where is today. He was never blessed with an electric arm or divine athleticism – his path to greatness wasn’t paved with gold. But he’s got a Rare Acuity, and a Rubber Arm, and a Relentless Attitude.

And a Really Amazing knuckleball.   
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Posted in MLB, New York Mets, R.A. Dickey | No comments

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

We May Have Seen This Before: The Fledgling Rise of A Superstar

Posted on 11:22 AM by Unknown
We've seen this Lebron James saga before, it happened to a guy name Alex Rodriguez.

I've been sitting here over the past week pondering a different sentiment towards Lebron James then I ever have. There's something about this Lebron, the second time around, that is different from the ones we've seen before. Yes, there are times when you just wanna strangle him, most notably when he gives up an opportunity to drive to the bucket in favor of a fade away 25-footer he's obviously going to miss. Or when he's struts around after an and-1 with his chin up and no emotion on his face; you want to slap that look right off him, I know. Don't let this talk fool you, I'm not falling in love with the most infamous villain in the history of sports. I simply have found a connection to an old feeling I had for another superstar who had as pressurized and highly-criticized rise to true greatness as well. Ladies and gentlemen, I'm talking about Alex Rodriguez.

A-Rod and Lebron had almost the exact upbringings in the world of fame and fortune. Lebron most notably appeared on a Sports Illustrated cover when he was a junior in high school. A junior in high school. I was so awestruck by the fact a high school junior was on the cover of the world's most famous sports magazine that I could have sworn he played ball for Notre Dame. I mean the "Irish" on the jersey was enough to think that he was playing college basketball, right? Rodriguez on the other hand didn't get flushed on the front pages(age 21) as quickly as Lebron, but then again baseball players need a quicker time to adjust to the pro-game than basketball players do. A-Rod was called up to the show in 1994 as an 18-year-old making him only the third shortstop of that age since 1900 to don a major league uniform. Both players played like phenoms the minute they stepped onto the field and because of that they took on expectations never labeled on a player in the history of their respective sports.

Statistically and physically both A-Rod and Lebron were in another stratosphere. Lebron was the most athletic player to ever step onto an NBA hardwood and his high-flying, dominating play was so absolutely mesmerizing it was like watching Picasso paint a picture at about a 1,000 times the speed. Rodriguez was a five-tool player with one of the most picture-perfect swings baseball had ever seen. A-Rod was on pace to smash all types of home run records and it was looking as if Lebron James was going to erase Oscar Robertson from the record books altogether. But while both players were running a muck on stat sheets everywhere, there was something missing from their games and their vocabularies: the word clutch.

In 2000, A-Rod received a 10-year, $252 million contract from the Texas Rangers that shook the sports world. Was anyone really worth that type of money? It didn't matter, A-Rod was widely considered to be the best player in baseball and that was how baseball and a booming economy was going to handle it. If the NBA didn't have a salary cap you could imagine Lebron being paid a contract even the gods would be happy with. But people still questioned these high priced players, claiming that they weren't worth it when it mattered. They said "A-Rod only hit homers up 10 or down 10" or that Lebron wasn't much more than a Youtube dunking sensation. Rodriguez didn't make it to the World Series until he was 34, throwing up laughable .071 and .133 batting averages in back-to-back postseasons in '05 and '06. In Lebron's first NBA Finals he was run out of the building by a far superior San Antonio squad, and honestly had no business being there. So the pressure on them was building to epic proportions, so bad that A-Rod was constantly booed in Yankee Stadium(especially after restructuring his contract from 25.2 mil a year to 27.5 mil a year, a deal that made baseball purists sick to their stomachs) and Lebron was absolutely chastised by Celtics fans after he gave up on his Cavaliers team in the 2010 playoffs, right before the earth-shattering 2010 free agency period.

Things finally came together for A-Rod in 2009 when he not only won his first World Series, but he put the Yankees on his back during the title run hitting .365, smashing six home runs and driving in 18 runs. Rodriguez had not only thrown the World Series monkey miles off of his back he also had completely validated his career with a postseason MVP award, an award ironically named after Babe Ruth, arguably the Yankee's greatest hitter. Carrying a team to a title can instantaneously erase 13 years of pitiful clutch performances. People came around on Rodriguez once he started to swing a hot stick when his team needed him most. They finally stopped looking at A-Rod as an overly talented pre-Madonna who just didn't have the guts to win when it mattered. Better yet, he now assumed the title of Yankee Legend, a title that is synonymous with the greatest players to ever play the game of baseball.

10 years may separate these two individuals, but their careers are so eerily similar. Lebron may only be in his ninth season, but basketball players primes don't work the same way as baseball players primes do. If we want to even out the two sports for the sake historical significance, Lebron is at the same point in his career as A-Rod was in his when he first won a championship. With the way Lebron is playing right now don't be surprised if he wins a title and is crowned Finals MVP. It would only be fitting.

I came around on A-Rod during that 2009 run. I began to respect his masterful swing and I tipped my cap to him when he won. I wasn't a Yankees fan, I will never be a Yankee fan, and actually I still hate the Yankees with a burning passion. I hate the Heat, can't stand their joker fans or their scummy team President, but if Lebron carries Miami to a title and earns Finals MVP I'll throw him a head nod in respect and then go back to hating his f**king guts.
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Posted in Alex Rodriguez, Lebron James, MLB, NBA | No comments
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