Thursday, November 29, 2012

Rajon Rondo, get a hold of yourself!


Late in the second quarter of the Nets-Celtics game, with the Nets up by 16, Kevin Garnett drove to the basket and Kris Humphries fouled him hard, sending him to the ground. Rajon Rondo took umbrage from the play, pushed Humphries hard, got in his face and threw some punches, starting a fracas that went into the stands.

(see the video here)

Rajon Rondo is a punk. What was he thinking? First off, going after another player will immediately get him ejected and he knows that. Doesn’t he know that he is the team’s most important player? Doesn’t he know that the Celtics can’t win without him? Doesn’t he know that this is a divisional rivalry game against a good team that has already beaten his team once? The game was still early enough for the Celtics to possibly come back. Isn’t he also aware that he has a personal streak, a historical 37-game streak of double-digit assists on the line?

The foul wasn’t even egregious. Garnett was driving down the baseline, Humphries was defending him, KG went up, Hump made a weak attempt at either blocking the ball or disrupting KG to make sure he missed it, knocked him hard as KG was already off balance, and Garnett helped the ref out by theatrically tumbling to the floor. Hump came down on his shoulder, not the face. It was a hard foul between two large men, one that happens in nearly every quarter of every NBA game. It was going to be a personal foul for two free throws. And Rondo decided to pick a fight over it.

Some will say, “Wow, what a great teammate, sticking up for his friends.” No sir, this is a bad teammate, one that stuck his nose into a play that didn’t even involve him, caused a huge fight that spilled into the stands, and the only question now is how many games will he miss because of it. Is KG so fragile that there is a need to start a fight because of a one-armed push during a defensive play? Does Rondo have that little control over his emotions that he must react to a hard foul by creating a brawl? Sadly, this isn't the first time RR has done something like this. Rondo is too important to his team to miss games because of immature, punk actions like this. This was an ugly mark for the NBA, and an incident that hurts Rajon Rondo’s teammates and team.

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

and these guys are professionals?


I know box scores don’t tell the whole story of a game but it can sure tell a lot. And there have been a couple crazy games already this week in the NBA that caught my eye.

On Monday night, the Oklahoma City Thunder defeated the Charlotte Bobcats 114-69. In the middle of the 3rd quarter the score was 79-25. And then the Thunder coach pulled the starters. If this was last year when they were the worst team in the history of the NBA it would be a little easier to understand the Bobcats’ struggles. But they have actually been competitive this season. In fact, coming into that game they had a record of 7-5 (as many wins as they had all last season).

On Tuesday night, Kobe Bryant was sick with the flu but played anyway. Meanwhile, his teammates didn’t. The Lakers lost 79-77 in Los Angeles to a 6-8 (now 7-8) Pacers team. Kobe Bryant committed 10 turnovers (understandable; he was sick) but scored 40 points. The rest of the team might as well have stayed home. Outside of Kobe’s and Dwight Howard’s shooting, the rest of the Lakers were 5 for 38 (13%). They turned the ball over (7) more times than they got it in the basket (5). Kobe scored 40, the rest of the Lakers scored 37.

And lest you think Dwight Howard also carried the team, his free throw numbers continue to leave even Shaq shaking his head in shame. Howard was 3-12 from the charity stripe. 25%. And he’s actually getting paid to play basketball. This was already the sixth time this year that he has missed at least 6 free throws, third time he’s missed at least 9. I don’t know what it is about playing center for the Lakers but the way things are going, three of the top five worst free throw shooters in history are Laker centers (Wilt Chamberlain, Shaq and Howard). Steve Nash or not, a team with Kobe Bryant, Pau Gasol and Dwight Howard should not be 7-8. But especially in the NBA where games are usually close, leaving free points on the floor will continue to pile up losses.

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

the blooming of a Big Apple rivalry has begun


Wow, do I wish I had gotten tickets to the Barclay Center on Monday. The game had a playoff atmosphere and also resembled a high school rivalry game as the crowd was buzzing for both teams. It is the beginning of a really exciting rivalry. The Nets have established their position and the Knicks have assembled a very strong and deep win-now team. And New York certainly is big enough for both.

This was a statement game for the Brooklyn Nets. In a game where Deron Williams didn't have his shot and Joe Johnson again struggled, the Nets did what they had to do to win. The main numbers:

- Reggie Evans 14 rebounds (in 17 and ½ minutes)
- Jerry Stackhouse 4 for 5 shooting three pointers
- Brook Lopez: 22 points, 11 rebounds, 5 blocks
- Deron Williams: 16 points, 14 assists, 3 steals
- J.R. Smith, Rasheed Wallace, Ronnie Brewer, Raymond Felton combined 8 for 43 (18%) shooting
- Carmelo Anthony 10 for 16 shooting free throws
- Steve Novak 2 points in 18 minutes

A big talking point before the game was who had the better bench. The Nets proved, like they have all year, that they have a group of role players off the bench that don’t have the star power other teams’ second units provide, but are better overall. Reggie Evans is clearly one of the elite rebounders in the NBA. In his last three games he has grabbed 40 boards in just 62 minutes. Stackhouse, Watson and Bogans can all hit a three pointer off the bench, MarShon Brooks is a future star and Andray Blatche provides big man offense. Every player on the team knows his role.

The Knicks have been the toast of New York basketball for a long time, even though it’s been 40 years since they won a championship. But the Brooklyn Nets didn’t just move across the river and join the party as an annoying little brother like the Mets, Islanders or Clippers. They marched in to stay, to make a statement, and to compete now. Not only did they move, but they moved to Brooklyn with authority, created an identity, built a beautiful arena, and assembled a contending team.

The Knicks have a great team. Even without Iman Shumpert and Amar’e Stoudemire, on paper they have everything you want in a team: two strong point guards, a lock down perimeter defender, a defensive anchor in the middle who also owns the paint on offense, a scoring machine, and a bench with a sharp shooter from deep, a big man who can score from deep, a couple other big men defensive anchors, and a guy who provides instant offense. On the PS3, especially with Amar’e and Shumpert, this is a dream team.

But as history shows as well as we’ve seen early in this season, the Knicks are combustible and at times have a real lack of composure. When things start to go wrong they get bad in a hurry. Carmelo, J.R. Smith, Rasheed and Chandler are easily emotionally charged. And the other problem is they have a tendency to put up brick after brick enough to build a small house, especially Rasheed and Smith. Somehow at the end of regulation and in overtime, Carmelo never got the ball as Raymond Felton decided to take all the shots; and when he did get the ball in crunch time, Carmelo missed a half dozen free throws. What happens when Stoudemire comes back and expects to play? That sure didn’t work last year.

The Nets are set up to contend in the Eastern Conference for the next several years. Yeah, that probably sounds like an overzealous fan 13 games into the season, and this will probably be another Heat year, but next year and after that? The Nets made some crazy moves, trading for Joe Johnson and his bloated contract, signing Lopez to a max deal, paying top dollar for Kris Humphries, re-signing Gerald Wallace after giving up big picks, but what the Nets have is a championship nucleus. Humphries is signed for two years, but the rest of the starters (Deron Williams, Brook Lopez, Gerald Wallace, and Joe Johnson) are all contracted to be together for the next four. This is how the Pistons made it to the Finals three years in a row including a championship, having the same group of players together for several years: Billups, Rasheed, Ben Wallace, Rip Hamilton, Tayshaun Prince. And this Nets group is better! Deron Williams is an elite point guard and Brook Lopez is quickly becoming an All-NBA center. Gerald Wallace does everything well, Joe Johnson has the potential to drop 40 on any given night (as spotty as he is from time to time there’s a reason he got a $119 million contract) and Humphries is a top level rebounder. They have size that can give the Heat trouble. I think they can develop the chemistry to be a championship team. And considering that I’m saying this two years removed from finishing 12-70, that is remarkable.

Sunday, November 25, 2012

Norwich scores three goals late to stun Middlebury


In some Division III college hockey action, host team Norwich University defeated rival Middlebury College 5-4 at the 15th Annual PrimeLink Great Northern Shootout Tournament Championship Saturday night in one of the wildest and most exciting hockey games you’ll ever see.

The teams met after each won their opening game of the weekend on Friday, Middlebury defeating Plattsburgh State 3-2 and Norwich edging the St. Thomas Tommies by the same score. The 144th all-time meeting between the two Vermont schools was an instant classic. Right from the opening drop of the puck, both teams were very aggressive and the scoring came early and often. Norwich got on the board first with a power play goal by junior Chris Duszynksi at 12:25. Middlebury responded with a goal of their own, as Matt Silcoff scored the first of his two goals on the night three minutes later to tie the score. Silcoff, The freshman from Ontario, picked up an assist in the tournament opener Friday night to tally 3 points on the weekend and earn the Top Rookie award.

Looking for their second PrimeLink Shootout trophy in a row, Norwich took the lead again early in the second period when Tory Allan scored (assisted by Colin Mulvey and Corey Hale), but Middlebury scored twice in a 42 second span to take a 3-2 lead into the second intermission.


Middlebury Panthers extended their lead to 4-2 with 7:38 remaining in the third period as freshman Brendan McGovern found the back of the goal unassisted. But Norwich took advantage of some opportunities to get right back into it a short time later. With a delayed penalty coming, Travis Janke from Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan, scored to cut the lead to one. 1:57 into the ensuing power play, Colin Mulvey took a nice pass from Janke in front of the goal and scored to tie the game 4-4 with 4:12 remaining in regulation.

It looked like we were headed to a shootout but Mulvey and Janke weren’t finished. With the final seconds winding down, the Panthers turned the puck over in their own end, Janke found Colin Mulvey who shot over Middlebury goalkeeper Nick BonDurant’s left shoulder and the Cadets took the 5-4 lead with 6.7 seconds remaining in the game as the home crowd went wild. Norwich (7-0-0) scored three goals in the final 7 minutes to come back from a two goal deficit to claim the victory and remain undefeated on the year.

It was a weekend to remember for Colin Mulvey. The senior forward from Worcester, Massachusetts scored the game tying and game winning goals for the #2 ranked Norwich Cadets. Mulvey assisted in his team’s second score and added another assist in Friday’s match against St. Thomas, earning him the Tournament Most Valuable Player, and a cream pie in the face during the postgame press conference from his teammates. The championship was the Cadets eighth title in the 15-year history of the Thanksgiving-weekend tournament.

The heartbreaking loss for #12 ranked Middlebury drops their record on the season to 2-1-1, but the weekend was a good sign that the Panthers, a traditional Div. III powerhouse that has been down for the past few years, is back on track and is once again a force to be reckoned with. “I am so happy with how my guys played; I thought the weekend couldn’t have gone any better,” said longtime Middlebury head coach Bill Beaney, “unless of course we had won it.”

Saturday, November 24, 2012

a fan perspective on the NBA's best rivalry



In the 2005 NBA draft, the Utah Jazz selected Deron Williams with the #3 pick and Chris Paul went #4 to the New Orleans Hornets. Since that day this has been quite a rivalry. And frankly, it’s been pretty lopsided.

Actually, the rivalry started seven months earlier, when on December 1, 2004, Paul and the #1 ranked Wake Forest Demon Deacons marched into Champaign and got buried by Williams and Illinois 91-73. The Fighting Illini promptly took over #1 and went on to play in the National Championship Finals. Friday night continued one of the biggest Player vs. Player rivalries in the NBA when the Nets faced and shut down the Clippers 86-76.

Everyone loves Chris Paul. In ESPN's silly poll he was the highest ranked point guard, #4 overall. I don’t know why. Because he’s small and fast. He had a quick start in the NBA winning the Rookie of the Year nearly unanimously and going runner up in the MVP a couple years later. He’s been selected to five straight All Star games. Okay, yeah, he’s really good.

But when push comes to shove, Deron Williams has dominated Paul. In fact, it seems that CP3 has never played well against D-Will. Heads up in the NBA, Deron Williams is now 14-4 against Chris Paul’s team after Friday’s win as Paul struggled again.

Deron Williams has played 20 more regular season games and has done better in the playoffs. Williams has led his team to win 4 playoff series compared to Paul’s 2. Williams led the Jazz all the way to the Western Conference Finals in just his second year, and then in 2010, D-Will became the only player to record at least 20 points and 10 assists in five consecutive playoff games.

If you think it is just a product of better teammates, I invite you to compare Carlos Boozer’s career before and after he had Deron Williams for a teammate. Deron makes everyone around him better.

I love watching D-Will play basketball. His expression never changes. He is always in control. He is the strongest point guard I think we’ve ever seen and he handles the ball with pure authority. He plays through pain. He is a masterful ball handler, great passer, and can score anywhere. (Not only that, I love playing with him on PS3, where on NBA 2K11 he earned MVP honors two seasons in a row for me. And he’s even better in 2K13.)

Deron Williams is finally getting recognition he deserves, making 3 straight All Star games. He joined one of the worst teams in NBA history and has helped them become a preferred destination in just a year and a half. Consider that Mikhail Prokhorov was willing to swallow Joe Johnson’s bloated contract just to pursuade D-Will to stay.

Whether it’s Wake Forest and Illinois, Hornets and Jazz, or Clippers and Nets, the result is usually the same. And while Chris Paul gets the attention, Derrick Rose gets an MVP trophy, and Russell Westbrook scores the other half of points leftover from Durant, I’ll take Williams who simply goes about his business quietly and doesn’t care who likes him or not. I look for him to win an NBA Championship before those other three guys.

But for my very biased opinion, Deron Williams is the best point guard in the NBA. And heads up, no one has proven otherwise.

Monday, November 19, 2012

rookies: the good and the bad


Everyone loves rookie quarterbacks. The only predictable thing about rookie quarterbacks is that they will be unpredictable. A year ago, Cam Newton was the most amazing thing the league has ever seen. In 2012 after seven weeks, Robert Griffin III was the greatest rookie quarterback we’ve ever seen. The next week it was Ryan Tannehill who would lead the Dolphins to the playoffs. A week later, Andrew Luck is the second coming of Peyton Manning. Next is Russell Wilson is unbeatable at home and Nick Foles is the answer in Philadelphia.

And now, Week 11, RG3 is once again the main story.

On Sunday, Robert Griffin III had one of the most impressive and efficient games any quarterback has ever had. Taking advantage of an Eagles team that has now lost 7 in a row and recently fired their defensive coordinator, RG3 had a near perfect day. He completed 14 of 15 passes for 200 yards (13.3 yards per pass attempt) and four touchdowns for a perfect quarterback rating of 158.3. Those 14 completions went to 9 different receivers, and the four touchdowns came in all four quarters. He also ran 12 times for 84 yards, a tidy 7 yards per carry. The Redskins whooped the Eagles 31-6.

On the flip side, Eagles fans finally got what they wished for as rookie Nick Foles started in place of an injured Michael Vick but the results were not different. Foles was sacked four times, fumbled three times, and threw two interceptions as the Eagles had their worst game of the season.

Meanwhile, we’ve been hearing a whole the last few years about how poor the Patriots’ defense is and everybody is in love with Andrew Luck. But the Pats D sure made Luck look bad this week. The rookie sensation had three interceptions, two returned for touchdowns, and got strip-sacked for a fumble. The Colts lost by 35 points.

Another rookie, Ryan Tannehill, is in a part of the schedule that looked like Christmas for anybody else in the league: a 3-game winning streak and consecutive games against the Colts, Titans and Bills, three of the worst defenses in the NFL. Unfortunately for him and the Dolphins, it has turned into the best week for each of those defenses. After getting shellacked by the Titans 37-3, the Dolphins lost in Buffalo 19-14. Tannehill completed just 50 percent of his passes, was intercepted twice and sacked 3 times. He has now had a quarterback rating under 51 in five games this season.

As for Russell Wilson, he had a bye week. He may have a 5-0 home record but his next two games are on the road, in Miami 3300 miles away from friendly Seattle followed by a trip to Chicago to face those bad news Bears. Check back in a couple weeks.

not much of a snoozer in Houston after all


In case you missed it (and unless you live in Houston you probably did), the most lopsided matchup of the week turned out to be very exciting as the 8-1 (now 9-1) Texans came back to defeat the 1-8 (now 1-9) Jacksonville Jaguars in one of the wackiest games of the season.

Coming into the game with the #2-ranked defense at home facing a 1-8 team missing injured Maurice Jones-Drew, and where the starting quarterback got knocked out of the game early in the first quarter, this game shouldn’t have been close, much less a shootout. The game provided a laundry list of highlight notes:

- Matt Schaub completed 43 passes for 527 yards, the second most ever, and five touchdowns.

- Chad Henne came off the bench to throw for 354 yards, 4 touchdowns and no turnovers against the aforementioned #2 NFL defense.

- Andre Johnson caught 14 passes for 273 yards.

- Rookie first-round pick Justin Blackmon caught 7 passes for 236 yards. In nine previous games he totaled 250 receiving yards.

- It was the first time in NFL history opposing receivers each received over 200 yards in the same game.

- With six minutes remaining, the 1-8 Jaguars actually had a 14 point lead over the 8-1 Texans.

- Matt Schaub mad more completions (43) than the Arizona Cardinals had passing yards (41).

- Texans became the first team in NFL history to score twice in overtime.

- The two teams combined for 1098 yards of offense.

The Texans have a short turnaround as they fly to Detroit for a Thanskgiving showdown against the Lions. By the way, I think it's safe to say that Calvin Johnson is a little scarier than Justin Blackmon.

Saturday, November 17, 2012

those wheelin' and dealin' Jays


Could we be looking at an Orioles-Jays race for the top of the AL East in September?

Okay, they don’t even have a coach yet. They finished in fourth place a year ago. The Yankees are still the Yankees. And as we can tell from the three teams in Los Angeles and Miami, baseball is won on the field and not on paper. But there is real excitement north of the border for the first time in 20 years and it is impossible to ignore what the Toronto Blue Jays are doing.

The Jays just signed Melky Cabrera, coming off a suspension-shortened season where he hit .350. It is a low-risk, high-reward move that fills a need in left field. They just traded away spare parts for a top-level shortstop, All Star catcher, a speed demon who plays anywhere, and two top of the rotation arms. Last week they also signed Maicer Itzuris, a utilityman who will compete with Bonafacio for second base but like Bonafacio can pretty much play anywhere. And they probably aren’t done yet.

So anyway, as their team presently stands:

SS Jose Reyes
3B Brett Lawrie
RF Jose Bautista
DH Edwin Encarnacion
LF Melky Cabrera
1B Adam Lind
CF Colby Rasmus
C John Buck
2B Emilio Bonafacio

SP: Josh Johnson, Ricky Romero, Mark Buehrle, Brandon Morrow, Drabek/Laffey/Villanueva
Bullpen: Sergio Santos, Casey Janssen, Jason Frasor, etc.

That is an exciting lineup! Better than what the Yankees will have. And they have flexibility. Bonafacio can play second base or center field. On the bench they have a backup catcher with 30+ homer upside (J.P. Arencibia), outfielder who’s averaged 42 stolen bases the last four years (Rajai Davis), and a utility veteran player they are paying $3 million to play somewhere (Maicer Itzuris). They can use Arencibia or Rasmus as trade bait.

As a Yankees fan I hope Toronto is as improved as they look to be. A strong division is good for the Yankees. Tampa Bay is always good and a stronger Baltimore and Toronto makes the season so much more interesting. Boston is down right now but there is never a dull rivalry game with them. The bullpen is a cause for concern, and moving to the AL East is usually death for pitchers so we’ll have to see how Josh Johnson and Mark Buehrle fare, but the Blue Jays are in position to really compete. And suddenly with a very strong lineup around him, Jose Bautista is poised to bounce back with an MVP season.

early season love in the NBA


I bought NBA 2K13 on presale this year. I love it. I’m also in a fantasy basketball league for the first time, pretty much winging it. I recently just moved from New Jersey, where along with hearing about the Knicks constantly I became a big Nets fan even before they upgraded their team. These three factors have made me more interested in the NBA now probably than ever before.

I think there is more talent in the league than ever before. And while there are still some superteams, many teams are really solid. And after watching a couple great games the last couple nights (Nets-Celtics and Knicks-Grizzlies), I’ve never been more excited about basketball in mid-November.

The season is really early I know, but the best team in the league could be the Memphis Grizzlies. Sheesh, that sounds weird to say. Who?? I’ve pored through tons of statistics and the Grizzlies don’t stand near the top of any other than wins and points differential (like those matter at all). But this team is as fundamentally solid as there is in the NBA. And they are constantly improving. And the other thing I love about Memphis is that nobody talks about them and they couldn't care less.

When you assemble a hypothetical great team what do you want: a smart and skilled, thick center with a strong post game and soft touch who can hit the mid-range shot, is an exceptional passer, and gets to the foul line at will; a big, strong power forward who gives you 20 points and 10 rebounds every game (more like 14 rebounds); a smart playmaker point guard; an elite lock-down defender; and an acrobatic small forward averaging 20 points a game who does everything well. Marc Gasol has become one of the best centers in the league, perhaps second only to a healthy Dwight Howard. Zach Randolph continues to be a magnet rebounder, and those two are just too much size for smaller, “finesse” teams.

The Grizzlies are 7-1. In the last week they beat the mighty Heat by 18 points, Thunder in OKC by 10 points, and then knocked off the 6-0 Knicks by 10 points. Tough to have a better week than that. They finish it off with a game tonight against the Bobcats that should bring them to 8-1.

Yes, they caught the Knicks at a bad time; second night in a row on the road against two great teams. But watching the game, it was such a bad matchup for the Knicks that it probably doesn’t matter. Gasol put Chandler, Carmelo, and Rasheed Wallace in foul trouble and went 12-13 from the line. Randolph had like 5 offensive rebounds in the first quarter. There were a lot of fouls and most went the Grizzlies’ way. But it wasn’t just the whistles; the Knicks completely unraveled. Most of the calls were legit but the Knicks are too emotionally volatile that it got out of hand in a hurry. And that’s what bothers me and has always bothered me about the New York Knicks. And Memphis sure took advantage of it Friday night.

With the Grizzlies, Knicks, Heat, Lakers, Nets, Thunder, Celtics, Spurs and Clippers locked and loaded, with the 76ers, Bulls, Pacers, Mavericks and Timberwolves hopefully getting healthy as the season goes along, this is a great year to be an NBA fan. Look out for those bears.

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Miguel Cabrera should edge out Mike Trout


This afternoon the AL MVP will be announced and it should be a close contest between Miguel Cabrera and Mike Trout. The stats are pretty astounding. I don’t know why anyone else is even on the ballot.

- Cabrera ranks first in batting average, OPS, home runs, RBI, and total bases; second in runs, hits, and runs created per 27 outs (RC27); third in wins over replacement (WAR).

- Trout ranks first in runs, stolen bases, RC27 and WAR; second in average, OPS; third in triples. And plays really good defense.

One of the biggest things going for Trout is his defense. He plays lights out center field, no doubt. He’s a human highlight reel. Cabrera is maligned for his defense. But he also did something special for his team, and that was moving from first base to third base so Prince Fielder could have a spot on the team. His defense was below average, but I cut him a little slack because of his flexibility. And speaking of Fielder, he didn’t exactly provide Gold Glove defense at first base to hide poor plays from his teammates.

Trout is a complete player. He’s like Jose Reyes plus 30-homer power. Defense, speed and baserunning, power, and hits for a high average. There are probably a whole bunch of sabermetric stats that he leads in that I’ve never even heard of. He is crazy-exciting.

Cabrera is a big-time slugger who won the Triple Crown, a landmark accomplishment that hasn’t been achieved in 45 years. He is the league’s best and most feared hitter.

It’s a cheap shot I know, but for being renowned for his defense, Trout wasn’t picked for the Gold Glove at his position.

Both players’ teams underperformed for much of the year. Trout definitely sparked a resurgence for the Angels but in the end they still couldn’t even stay with the Oakland A’s or Baltimore Orioles, despite having a roster full of stars. The Tigers got behind the White Sox but surged strong in the second half and won the division handily before advancing to the World Series.

It’s not a lifetime achievement award but hey, Cabrera deserves MVP. He has hit above .320 in 7 of the last 8 years, tallied 30+ homers in 8 of the last 9, and averaged 118 RBI in his 9 full seasons. He could have won MVP three other times. He's the most consistent slugger in my lifetime. He won the Triple Crown in a pitcher’s park. Mike Trout likely had the best rookie season ever but he missed the first month of the season. I can’t wait to see what he can do across 162 games. Trout will have plenty of opportunities to collect multiple MVP awards but for now, my unofficial vote goes to a very deserving Miguel Cabrera.

Monday, November 12, 2012

Rex Ryan is riding a sinking ship


I really don’t like the Jets, mostly because they are blinded by their own arrogance. Last year Rex Ryan continued to tout his team as a Super Bowl contender instead of paying attention in the clubhouse. They rewarded a mediocre quarterback coming off a disappointing season with a contract extension. They declare that they are a ground-and-pound team despite not having personnel to fit that profile. They trade for Tim Tebow, boast about their innovative and complex offensive schemes, and then never use him.

There are decisions that just make no sense. Mark Sanchez completes a 32-yard pass to Dustin Keller and then the coach pulls out Sanchez for Tebow, who hands off to Shon Greene the next two plays. Back in comes Sanchez, who gets sacked and fumbled. How does running on and off the field help a quarterback, or help an offense that has struggled to move the ball all season?

The Jets have scored 10 or fewer points in more than half their games and are holding onto a 3-6 record. In a report on ESPN New York, Rex Ryan was asked if he would bench Sanchez for Tebow, even to save his job. Rex responded, “I’m not going to make a decision one way or the other in order to save my job. I’m trying to win games.” “We’re going to get this done or die trying.”

That sounds very nice. But why the undying love and support for Mark Sanchez? The numbers are not impressive. We aren’t talking about Joe Montana here.

Sanchez’ rankings among NFL quarterbacks:
- #26 in passing yards per game
- #29 in yards per attempt
- #30 in quarterback rating
- #32 in total quarterback rating
- #33 (last) in completion percentage

Minnesota, San Francisco and Houston don’t have great passing numbers either but they don’t need it; they have big name running backs carrying their offense and a great defense. The Jets are a below-average ground team and a below-average defense.

With Tim Tebow and Greg McElroy waiting in the wings, why does Rex Ryan so defiantly put his job in the hands of Mark Sanchez? He is a struggling, below average quarterback directing a poor offense. The team is sputtering. Looking at what Tim Tebow did for a sputtering Broncos team last year, what do you have to lose? Give him a shot.

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

five teams moving up


As the election has finally concluded I can once again turn my attention to the other big season. Here at the midpoint the NFL landscape is taking shape. While things are tight, wins are incredibly valuable but also getting harder to come by. Here are five teams whose situations improved dramatically this week.

Colts. In a midseason playoff game, Andrew Luck led the Indianapolis Colts over the Dolphins for a huge win that really helps them in the hunt for January. After an early season surge by Robert Griffin III, Andrew Luck has tightened his own grip on the Rookie of the Year Award in record-setting fashion. Against a pretty good defense, Luck completed 30-48 passes for 433 yards and two touchdowns in the win that gives the Colts four wins in their last five games since the bye (strangely, the loss was a beat-down by the Jets) and a record of 5-3, tied with the Steelers for the two Wild Card spots, a full game ahead of the Chargers and Dolphins. And the head-to-head over the Dolphins practically counts as a 2-game lead. And up next is a game against the Jaguars, a road game the Colts should be able to win handily.

Seahawks. Nothing like home sweet home. Luck isn’t the only rookie with playoff aspirations. After a couple road losses, Russell Wilson moved to 4-0 in Seattle, including an impressive line of 9 touchdowns and 0 interceptions in those home games. More importantly, the Seahawks defeated the Vikings, and while both teams are tied at 5-4, the Seahawks are in control for the final Wild Card spot. Things should stay bright as the Jets come into town next before a bye week.

Steelers. Big Ben led Pittsburgh defense went into Metlife Stadium in New York and beat the Giants. And it wasn’t just that they won but how they won. Traveling the day of the game, napping in stadium hallways instead of hotel rooms, getting the raw end of every call during the game, missing several key players and losing more to injury; completely shutting down the league’s top passer, Isaac Redman running wild, and Roethlisberger completing 8 of 9 passes on third down. Even without Troy Polamalu, the Steelers have the best pass defense in the NFL (in a passing league) and even without a consistent face in the backfield, Pittsburgh has the best third down conversion rate in the NFL. The win not only puts them in good position to take a Wild Card but also gives them an opportunity to overtake a battered Ravens team for the division. The Steelers get a home game against the poor Chiefs before two matchups with the Ravens in a span of three weeks.

Broncos. The pressure was on when the Chargers easily handled the Chiefs on Thursday, and then the Broncos fell behind the Bengals in the fourth quarter Sunday after two Peyton Manning interceptions. But Denver turned things around with a Champ Bailey interception sandwiched between a pair of Peyton touchdown passes. That was Manning’s 48th game-winning drive, moving him ahead of Dan Marino for the most all-time. The Broncos have outscored their opponents by a league-best 103-23 in the fourth quarters of games and stay a full game ahead of the Chargers. The Broncos head to Carolina this week in a possible trap game, but one where they are clearly the better team.

Giants. Yes, Big Blue lost a tough game to the Steelers where they got completely outplayed in every phase of the game. But at this point in the season when they already have a big lead in the division, losses by the Cowboys, Eagles and Redskins essentially count as a victory. All three combustible teams are in a free fall and the Giants head to Cincinnati with a 3-win lead in the division standings.

Monday, November 5, 2012

Giants come up small after Sandy


Playing in New Jersey the week of the Superstorm Sandy that ravaged the area, this home game was supposed to be an emotional lift for the home crowd. Instead, the New York Football Giants laid an egg against the Pittsburgh Steelers.

There was no reason for the Giants to play so poorly this week. With some of the ceremony before the game, this should have been a motivating 9/11, Hurricane-Katrina-like return to the field. Not only was it a home game, and a travel game for the opponent, the Steelers traveled in the same day. Kind of last minute. And not just that, they were without their star brightest defensive star Troy Palomalu and their top two running backs. And not just that, their blazing kick returner got hurt during the game as well as one of their top wide receivers. All the advantage should have been with the Giants.

And in the first half, all the advantage was with the G-Men. Without a doubt, the home team got every call. In their only offensive touchdown drive of the game there was a very questionable pass interference call, an even-more-questionable personal foul called in the end zone on third down on a helmet-to-helmet hit that was more accurately a shoulder to the ribs, and a touchdown run that could have been spotted short of the goal line. Four plays later, the Giants knocked a ball loose from Roethlisberger that sure looked like a Tuck Rule contestant (an incompleted pass), and during the return there was an obvious block in the back hit that was not called. It was the weakest 14 points I’ve ever seen. I’m a Giants fan and I couldn’t even get excited about all the scoring.

There were times that the defense looked really good. They did a pretty good job containing Big Ben, especially in the first half. Jason Pierre-Paul had one of the best individual defensive plays you’ll never see a replay of when he busted through a double team and sacked Ben Roethlisberger on third down in the second quarter. Justin Tuck had two sacks and batted down a pass. Corey Webster picked off a pass. Osi Umenyiora knocked that ball out of Big Ben’s hand that Michael Boley returned for a touchdown. Towards the end they sniffed out a fake field goal attempt to preserve the lead. The defense did enough to put the Giants in a position to win.

But then again, they didn’t. The defense looked like Swiss cheese on every other play. Third stringer Isaac Redman had a field day carving up the Giants like a pumpkin for 147 yards, including rushes in the first half for 7, 11, 11, 12, and 17 yards. In the fourth quarter he busted through for an 8 yard gain on third down in the redzone followed closely with a touchdown run, and then when the Giants had one final opportunity to get the ball back, Redman ran off for 28 yards. Mike Wallace turned a short catch across the middle into a 51-yard touchdown sprint that would make Usain Bolt proud. The special teams coverage was dreadful too, allowing three long returns of over 50 yards.

On the flip side, the Giants did absolutely nothing on offense. Nothing. The only big plays the whole game were two pass interference calls. Eli finished a miserable 10-24 passing for 125 yards, no touchdowns and an interception. Those are Mark Sanchez numbers. The rushing game was also a complete non-factor. The Giants are taking all the opportunities provided by the defense and turning them into field goals. Justin Tynes leads the NFL in field goals, and by a significant margin. That is not a statistic I want my team to lead.

And all those certainly weren’t the only mistakes, as Coach Coughlin surely noticed.

“This is as disappointing loss as we’ve had in a long time. Two illegal procedures [penalties] take us out of field goal range, offsides on third down, covering kicks and punts was terrible, was awful. Offensively, for a couple games in a row we didn’t play well, we didn’t appear to be very aggressive, sure didn’t appear to get any first downs. We didn’t tackle well, we didn’t stop the run well… We wanted emotionally so badly to win the game for obvious reasons, for all of our neighbors who are struggling and need some type of inspiration and of course, we didn’t provide it for them. That was not the type of game we planned to play.”

(Other than that, it was a good game...)

Three weeks ago the Giants looked like the best offense in the NFL, a unit that could turn up a big play almost at will. Since then they have been shut down twice in a row. In the fourth quarters after that huge Eli-to-Cruz missle against the Redskins, the Giants got two field goals and four straight three-and-outs. I nearly proclaimed Eli Manning the best quarterback in the league but now he can’t even convert a single first down in crunch time.

For the last couple years the Giants have really struggled at home. Fortunately, next week is a road game against a Bengals team that is laboring mightily. But after a bye, Big Blue faces the Packers, Saints, Falcons, Ravens and Eagles, perhaps the toughest final stretch of any team. This was a game they needed to and should have won. The season is too short to give up games like this.

The good news is that the rest of the division is underachieving tremendously and after Monday Night the G-Men will still have a 1.5 or 2.5 game lead over the Eagles that should be safe. The Giants are still an elite offense coupled with a defense that makes big plays and has an elite pass rush. They can beat any team any given week. And in a game where they looked like a team whose mind was elsewhere, they had a fourth quarter lead and only lost by 4 points. Even the Patriots and Packers have 3 losses. But for the game as its own individual entity, as Tom Coughlin said, this was a very disappointing game for the New York Giants and their fans. Eli Manning needs to regain his mojo and the defense needs to find a way to stop the run.

Saturday, November 3, 2012

News Flash: the World Series actually happened!


I hate the National League and I hate the Giants. After following the headlines from Game 1 I didn’t pay any attention the rest of the way. And from what I can tell, I’m not alone. Now that the dust has settled on the World Series that no one outside of San Francisco even saw, I did a little reflecting on the team, the series, and the season, and it is quite amazing how it all worked out.

What you can’t miss is how this World Series foreshadowed the All Star Game, which I thought was no less annoying. There were so many issues leading up to the Game. San Fran fans crashed the vote the last week and Tony La Russa looked like he was winging it. Matt Cain was picked to start instead of a more deserving R.A. Dickey, MVP front-runner David Wright was snubbed in favor of Pablo Sandoval, Melky Cabrera started in place of the other MVP man Andrew McCutchen, and Buster Posey, probably the third-most deserving catcher was chosen to start. The American League looked like commanding favorites. Logically, the game should have been a blowout. And what happened: it WAS a blowout, but the other way around. All three SF sluggers got on base and scored in the first off Justin Verlander (including a bases-clearing triple for Sandoval), Matt Cain earned the win, and Melky Cabrera went away with the MVP. It seemed like a bad joke.

Three and a half months later, wuncha know it, the Giants found themselves in the World Series, taking advantage of that home field advantage that they actually earned. Really miraculously, considering they were down 2-0 to the Reds with three games left in Cincinnati, down 3-1 to the Cardinals, and then facing a rested Tigers team that destroyed the Yankees. Bruce Bochy elected not to invite Melky Cabrera, the Giants best hitter of the first half of the season, to join in the Series. From a fan’s viewpoint, Melky helped the Giants get there, did his time for the crime and deserved to play. The move seemed quite hypocritical since teammate Guillermo Mota who served his second PED suspension earlier this season was on the roster. Wouldn’t it appropriate to include your hitter that hit .350 for 100 games? To make matters worse, Game 1 looked like a huge mismatch; the virtually unhittable Justin Verlander facing the Giants marginalized #4 starter, Barry Zito.

But hey, these are the 2012 Giants. Who cares about odds and logic? Verlander got hammered around once again. Kung Fu Panda Sandoval knocked three out of the park in Game 1 and no one watched another game.

What the Giants were able to accomplish this year blows my mind. Their premier closer missed practically the whole season. Their best pitcher Tim Lincecum was one of the worst starting pitchers in the National League all season. Their top hitter was suspended the second half of the season. Their star catcher was coming off a significant injury. Their division rivals threw caution to the wind and beefed up their lineup. Then in the postseason the Giants fell into two monster series deficits. But all that didn’t really matter, did it? They whupped Justin Verlander twice. Buster Posey put up an MVP season, especially in the second half when they were down a man. Everybody else chipped in to keep the wins coming. The entire rotation (beside Timmy) was tough and consistent all year and the bullpen was steady, blowing the fewest leads in the NL. The new-look Dodgers could never keep up after the All Star break. And the Giants would not be defeated, going 5-0 in the playoffs when facing elimination, probably the most impressive number of all.

I hate it when things happen in sports that don’t make sense. The best team is supposed to win. Isn’t that the Yankees, or Tigers, or Rangers, or Nationals, or Reds? The 2012 San Francisco Giants were the most unlikely champs since, well, the 2011 Cardinals, who were the most unlikely champs since, well, the 2010 San Francisco Giants, who won it all with an improbable patchwork team of cast offs. Whatever they are doing in the Bay is working, defying all logic. If it happens again in 2013, maybe it will start making sense.

Thursday, November 1, 2012

five questions for the new NBA season


The NBA season is a couple days old and since the World Series quickly got out of the way, there is a lot of excitement about basketball. Here are 5 things to watch for this year.

1. Can anyone compete with the Heat in the East?

The Heat’s Big 3 have gone to the Finals in back-to-back years and look pretty unstoppable again this year. Injuries are certainly hampering everyone else. Derrick Rose’s entire season is in doubt, crippling the Bulls’ chances. The Pacers are starting the season shorthanded as their #1 guy Danny Grainger is dealing with a sore knee. The Knicks are down two starters as Amar’e Stoudemire is having surgery on his knee and will miss a couple months, and great lockdown defender Iman Shumpert could be out the whole year with a serious knee problem. Even the 76ers are dealing with a bad knee in their star Andrew Bynum. Playoff teams Orlando and Atlanta each traded away their best player. The Celtics are at full strength, but that looks significantly less than what the Heat have, as evident in the Opening Tipoff double-digit loss. Perhaps the new-look Nets can contend? Perhaps. Dewayne Wade looked great following his health issues from the summer, Ray Allen is a great addition to the bench and LeBron is as good as anyone ever. The Heat are a dead lock to run represent the conference in the Finals.

2. Who’s the king of New York?

Unfortunately, Hurricane Sandy may be queen and forced a postponement of the Opener, but there is a lot of excitement with a new rivalry between the Knicks and Nets in the Big Apple. The Knicks really had a dreadful season last year and this season starts with some missing pieces (see above) but they also have lots of new playmakers, as old as they may be. In video games this is the most fun team to be. Jason Kidd and Raymond Felton replace Jeremy Lin. Ronny Brewer fills in for Shumpert. Dinosaurs Rasheed Wallace and Marcus Camby provide some depth while Amar’e is out, as does potential ‘diamond-in-the-rough’ Chris Copeland. Carmelo is still here and one of the best best scorers in the game.

The Nets have made a lot of news with their moves to Brooklyn and in their roster. It was shocking that they were able to retain D-Will, Wallace, Lopez and Humphries and also add Joe Johnson and Andray Blatche. People will say that it will take time for the roster to get used to each other, but the Heat and Celtics both made the Finals the first year of their new looks, and as noted, the Nets are returning four starters from last season so the transition should not be too bumpy. They are also surprisingly healthy.

The Nets and Knicks may not have any recent history but especially in a weak conference, both the teams form an instant rivalry and should both rise to near the top. The Nets are my team and I’m sticking my flag with them.

3. Are the Lakers the Best of the West?

On paper, but the games are played on the court where L.A. is already 0-2. This is a Hall of Fame roster but it will take time to get all the pieces on the same page. Each superstar comes with his own system and Mike Brown’s job is to make those compatible and it isn’t easy. Fortunately, this is an 82-game schedule. Dwight Howard in gold will get old quick if he has too many of those 3-14 free throw games where he also fouls out. (He did play much better in the second game). Nash, Kobe, and Gasol are all great but old. The Lakers’ road was helped as their top competition Thunder surprisingly traded their Olympian James Harden, who looked like a superstar in his Rocket debut. Thunder will still be strong, and the Spurs and Clippers will continue to push the standings.

4. Who will step up around all the injuries?

Seems like a lockout-delayed beginning to the season would have been welcome news this year with all the injuries already plaguing teams. Aside from the people already mentioned (Rose, Amar’e, Grainger, and Bynum) there are plenty more stars and important players that are starting the season in street clothes. In fact, the Knicks are one of four teams with playoff aspirations that have multiple starters out. The Timberwolves will be without Kevin Love and Ricky Rubio for a while. The Mavs are missing their two big men Dirk Nowitzki and Chris Kaman. The Wizards are dealing with injuries to John Wall and Nene. A year ago Jeremy Lin took advantage of an opportunity created by several teammates getting injured to come from an unknown to banking on a new $25 million contract. Who will be this year’s Jeremy Lin?

5. Which team off the radar could surprise?

More than any other sport, the NBA has fewer surprises of teams busting out. The Pacers and Spurs did that last season, although who is surprised by anything involving Tim Duncan and Greg Popavich? The Knicks and Nets certainly haven’t been hiding this offseason and in a weaker Eastern Conference they should contend. But who are we not thinking of?

The recent trade of James Harden make the Rockets a candidate, especially if Jeremy Lin can continue what he began. This is a superstars league, and Harden has been hiding behind two of them in OKC. Perhaps he was a third, and this is his opportunity to prove it since there is no one to steal the attention. Harden and Lin should be great at first but on a team without much depth or experience, teams will game plan to take them out and Houston will have to find another playmaker. Who that is I’m not sure, as the Rockets are going with a completely revamped lineup missing their six highest scorers from 2011-12. But that void provides plenty of opportunity for the likes of Chandler Parsons, Patrick Patterson, Royce White and Carlos Delfino to step up and make a name for themselves.