Sunday, February 24, 2019

Late February

So I am not yet over the incredible heave by Iowa from the corner after going off of four sets of hands which cost RU a game they had won. I was angry that RU players could not bat the ball down like defenders are trained to do on a football “Hail Mary” throw to try to tie or win a game. It was a lucky set of circumstances with an unbelievable shot from an impossible angle. 

RU Head Coach Steve Pikell wasn’t too upset afterwards. His rationale was that if all of this happened and the Iowa player scored, more power to them and let’s move on. Such logic carried them into the second half of Wednesday night’s game at Michigan State, where the #6 Spartans trailed 40-33 before they had a 23-4 run to reverse the game in their favor. The 61-50 final score shows that, at least against a highly-ranked MSU on the road, RU didn’t get blown out.

RU has 4 games remaining in this order: home again Minnesota; at Iowa; Penn State; at Indiana. Presently RU is 12-14. If they went 3-1 in these final contests, they would be a .500 team entering the Big Ten Tournament. A victory and a loss in Chicago would leave RU at .500 and have a shot at the NIT. Not probable but possible. Who would have thought this could happen to the Scarlet Knights given their earlier struggles. I like this team even if they are short  on skill because they are deep in determination and character.

F&M ended its season in Chestertown, Maryland with a loss at Washington College. F&M played gallantly but key misses from the Diplomats combined with timely free throw shooting and some nifty buckets by the Shoremen put Washington into the next round of the Centennial Conference playoffs. The last second three point attempt from the corner fell short and F&M had a long and unhappy bus ride home after falling 63-60. For the curious, D III #6 Swarthmore won the CC automatic bid with wins over Washington and Johns Hopkins.

Duke was blown out of the gym after a sneaker blowout. Zion Williamson, Duke’s all-everything big man and projected #1 pick in the NBA Draft, had his shoe fail in the first minute of the game, derailing the big man with a mild knee strain. North Carolina took full advantage of the loss of Williamson and dominated in the paint. 

Now three teams sit tied atop the ACC standings—Duke, UVA and UNC. Any of the three can win the league championship in the regular season or in the ACC Tournament. Any of the three can also win the NCA Tournament. Duke’s chances in the ACC and and the NCAA’s hinges upon Williamson’s recovery. They did fine with a road win at Syracuse before the largest crowd in Carrier Dome history. 

While Carolina can crow about the win; let’s see how they fare in a couple of games when the two teams meet in Chapel Hill, if Williamson is healthy. It was nice to see President Obama seated court side in Durham. Retirement suits him well.

A must read is the piece by Sally Jenkins, formerly of Sports Illustrated and now with the Washington Post. She wrote a provocative column on the plight of Zion Williamson and the others who are restricted by the NBA to have to reach age 19 before they can play professionally in the U.S., unless they go to Europe for a year, while the schools and shoe companies profit. See www.washingtonpost.com/people/sally-jenkins/ and you will be directed to her February 21st article. 

Villanova has lost three games in a row for the first time in ages. This should be expected after the seasons Head Coach Jay Wright has had with the great talent he assembled and now are playing in the NBA. 

Georgia had a game taken away from them in the last seconds by something untoward. A fan heaved a stuffed toy Bulldog onto the court as a Mississippi State player was shooting a free throw. The MSU coached yelled and carried on, demanding that a technical foul be called against the Georgia bench for unsportsmanlike conduct. With the score tied, Mississippi State had more chances to untie the game, which they did. After missing the second free throw on purpose, Georgia had no chance to fling a desperation shot. 

My only question is this—what if the offender was a child under the age of 5 who just acted on impulse and threw the toy onto the floor? Should Georgia still penalized like that? If it was an adult, I hope they identified the person and the idiot is penalized for incredibly poor judgement. 

Nevada lost to San Diego State on the road, scoring only 56 points. This loss should move them out of the Top 10 and may hurt their chances at a #2 seed. The Wolf Pack has more to lose considering it is harder to gain ground in the polls and with the Selection Committee and their proprietary bias for the Power 5 conferences. The Big Ten is projected to have as many as 9 NCAA tournament teams. Yet the likelihood of those Big Ten teams being seeded too high and losing is greater than if a deserving Nevada team is sold short for its few losses. Which is why America loves the underdog in the David versus Goliath epic confrontation that is the NCAA Tournament.

Syracuse Head Coach Jim Boeheim was involved in an unfortunate car accident when he struck and killed a man whose car had been disabled on an upstate New York Interstate. Boeheim was trying to avoid the vehicle when the decedent entered the lane in which Boeheim’s car was traveling. For Boeheim, this came after a big Syracuse win over a ranked Louisville squad at the Carrier Dome on Wednesday night and with Duke coming in. I know that Boeheim is still shaken and upset from this tragic occurrence. I imagine this will impact his team as well. My condolences, like Boeheim, who said he will carry that night with him forever, and countless others, are with the family of the man who tragically lost his life in this horrible accident. It was an appropriate measure to have a moment of silence for the victim before the Duke game.

Controversy enveloped the Georgia-Mississippi men’s basketball game on Saturday. During the week, the campus and Oxford had been awash with protests regarding the Saturday march from one Confederate statue in town to one on campus by two purported Confederate sympathizer groups. To put an exclamation point on the fact that the march was in progress when the game began, 6 Ole Miss players took a knee at the start of the National Anthem and two more joined in as the song progressed. This was not anti-veteran or against the views of law enforcement and the military—the players who participated made that clear. It was a protest against what the purposes and goals of the two groups—who were not local—stood for. The entire campus and administration should be supportive of this counter protest by its students—especially by the players.

On Sunday Rutgers announced that C. Vivian Stringer, the 70 year old Hall of Fame women’s basketball coach, would be missing the final three regular season games due to exhaustion. This is sad news. She is doing the correct thing in listening to her doctors. I hope that she is physically able to return to the sidelines for the post-season as planned. The question remains: is this the end of a magnificent career for a trailblazer in women’s basketball?

I watched the Boston Celtics and the Bucks in Milwaukee on Thursday night. The game went down to the end with Boston’s star and major irritant, Kyrie Irving, missing the final shot to allow the Bucks to prevail by a point. Although Toronto, Philadelphia and Indiana have better records than Boston, a Milwaukee-Boston playoff series is like an Eastern Conference finals. Watching Giannis Antetokounmpo play reminds me of  Doctor J—Julius Erving. Giannis is the M.V.P. in my mind, not James Harden or Russell Westbrook.

Golden State won its first game after the All-Star break over Sacramento by 2 points. It took heroics by Steph Curry, who had 36 points which included an NBA record setting 10 three point buckets for the 5th time this season. Kevin Durant, as the free agency rumors swirl and have him landing in New York where he has relocated his business interests, added 28. No less an authority than Draymond Green said that the Kings, despite losing all four games this season to the Warriors, are a legitimately good basketball team with Buddy Hield and Marvin Bagley III, and they will be contending for the playoffs and improving yearly.

Golden State was riddled by the James Harden-less Houston Rockets at home on Saturday night before a national TV audience. Chris Paul absolutely shredded the Warriors, tallying 23 points with some deadly three pointers and dishing out 17 assists. To make up for the loss of Harden, who has a cervical sprain and flu-like symptoms, Kennth Faried and P.J. Tucker put up double-doubles and Eric Gordon hit for 25 points as Houston climbed to 3-0 against Golden State this season.

Houston had leads in double digits much of the game and led by 20 points at one time. They played a stifling, smothering defense, stealing the ball, making the Warriors work harder for their shots and blocking shots more than Golden State is used to. While the Warriors actually led by 4 in the third quarter, that advantage was short-lived. Kevin Durant, Steph Curry and Klay Thompson all had 20 or more points. DeMarcus Cousins looked rusty, Draymond Green was ineffective and the Warriors’ bench had no answers for the Rockets. Golden State should hope that they do not have to play Houston in the playoffs.

LeBron James said he had to get his playoff push going earlier than usual the season, with the Lakers looking in form the outside of the current playoff picture. With the Houston Rockets ahead by 19 points in the third quarter,, he led the charge to overcome James Harden and his crew for a Los Angeles win. However, on Saturday night, the team was blown out by the New Orleans Pelicans without Anthony Davis. This led LeBron to question his teammates desire to win.

Can LeBron carry the team and will them to victory? He is 34 now and the years of playing for championships plus his significant groin injury may hinder this. LeBron lives to win on the basketball court and he does not want his legacy tarnished. So it would not surprise me if the Lakers go on a significant winning streak these last 20+ games led by King James.

Speaking of tarnished, the embarrassing revelation that New England Patriots’ owner Robert Kraft got caught up in a sting operation by frequenting a massage parlor in Jupiter, Florida which is suspected of engaging in human trafficking is so unfortunate. Here is a man worth billions and is very philanthropic, yet he is reduced to going to such a place for sexual activity, which was verified by local authorities. 

We can speculate on the reasons which placed this wealthy 77 old male in the midst of a sting operation. Whatever the reason, it is not good. I don’t care for him very much because he is arrogant. Still, I have a pang of sadness that he needed to stoop to this level for sex. He probably could have borrowed Stormy from his buddy, President Trump. She accepts cash, of which he has plenty.

Manny Machado is a Padre. Who really saw this coming? Ten years and $300 million later, San Diego, the team with a great farm system, will now become a power with Machado and the #2 prospect in all of baseball, Fernando Tatis, Jr. patrolling the left side of the infield. 

Where does this event leave Bryce Harper? Harper’s agent, Scott Boras, evidently wants 10 years and at least $326 million for his client. That represent a million dollars more than Giancarlo Stanton’s 10 year, $325 million deal. Such is the simplicity of his negotiations, which makes it so difficult now that Machado has gone below the Stanton figure. Harper has previously rejected $300 million offers, including one from the Washington Nationals, the team has played with thus far. Unless the Padres go all out in a spending frenzy or the Phillies or Giants are willing to make a big splash, I think it will be harder for Harper to attain grander fiscal happiness than Machado has.

Clayton Kershaw has been shut down with “arm trouble” after his first bullpen session went 10 minutes before stopping. Dodgers’ manager Dave Roberts does not believe this is serious. I am dubious about his feelings. This shutdown may portend the even greater decline of one of the premier pitchers of our time. He has lost some speed on his fastball and makes up for that loss with guile. Kershaw started 26 times last season, but had a third bout with back problems and suffered some biceps tendinitis. 

To me, this sends up a red flag—his injuries are starting way too early, or, he never healed from last season. Kershaw, who will turn 31 in March, is in the beginning year of a three year, $93 million extension. I have doubts that Kershaw will make it through to the third year without a string of injuries plaguing him and removing him from the elite status he posted even last season with his 2.73 E.R.A. and a great strikeout to walk ratio. No matter what happens,  his path to Cooperstown remains safe.

Are you as excited as I am about the NHL trade deadline on February 25? Thought so. 
Like their brethren in in MLB, NFL and the NBA, these moves are designed to plug holes. Only from a team not going anywhere will a major impact player be sent packing. With that in mind, will the Rangers and Devils, mired in the bottom of their division, be sellers? With the Devils, is this a one year aberration fueled by the extended absence due to injury of Taylor Hall, last season’s Hart Trophy winner as the NHL’s M.V.P.? Or will the Islanders, among the leaders in the Eastern Conference, be buyers? I feel sadness for New York Rangers fans, as crowd favorite Mats Zuccarello was shipped to Dallas.

I watched the NHL Stadium Series from Lincoln Financial Field, where the Philadelphia Flyers traveled down the street to host the Pittsburgh Penguins in the rain. It had elements of sloppiness on the ice coupled with physicality, but in the end the Philadelphia boo birds saw their Flyers rally to win over Pittsburgh with two goals late in regulation and the game winner 1:59 into OT by Claude Giroux. The Penguins folded despite surging to a 3-1 lead on goals by Sidney Crosby and Evegni Malkin. Pittsburgh’s chances went the way of the weather—when it began to pour, the Flyers suddenly played better. It was a festive scene and I love the outdoor games. Even if the rain made playing conditions difficult.

The Jets have told me that they were only going to accept tickets for games on my phone’s NYJ mobile app. No more fob’s. No more Internet printing of tickets. No more hard copy tickets with stubs. I recognize modernization. There still are some Electronic Age dinosaurs who have flip phones and do not get the Internet on their cell phones. I pity them.

What this really means is that the Jets are trying to control the resale market. How many people are willing to give up their account number and password for friends or others to enter the stadium on their tickets? The answer is very few. Which forces the season ticket holder to send the tickets back to the Jets, who will control the resale by selling the ticket and providing an account number and password for the particular game to a non-season ticket holder. 

I am dealing with what has been tentatively been diagnosed as soleus tendonitis. Every step I take, my R leg near the fibula hurts. I need to rest the leg, elevate and ice it while not exercising through walking or biking, let alone running. I believe it has become chronic and I think that it is somewhat footwear derived. If I haven’t reduced the pain by this method (anti-inflammatory medications are out because I had a reaction to them) after my upcoming Canadian trip, then an injection is likely. What a bummer. Especially when I am trying to lose 10 pounds.

Spring training is a time of eternal optimism. All the players start fresh and every team begins the season at 0-0. Managers and club executives heap praise on their teams, gushing with excitement. The warmth of the Florida or Arizona sun augers a new sense of being, a time of joy not yet tempered by reality. Players can get their work done in the morning and if not playing in an exhibition game, play a round of golf or go swimming. It may not be
Spring on the calendar until the later part of Spring Training, but in the team camps it is the start of a new adventure, a voyage which, for two teams, will culminate in the chill of early November.

Having said that, I have never been to a Spring Training game. I doubt that I will, for the games are meaningless and the prices are still relatively high. I have been on the site of the Miami Marlins’ camp in Jupiter, which allowed some player closeness and interaction with the fans. I have seen Detroit’s complex in Lakeland; the Red Sox in both Winter Haven and Fort Myers; Philadelphia in Clearwater; the Yankees in Fort Lauderdale and Tampa; the Cardinals, who share the other side of the Jupiter grounds with the Marlins; the Pirates in Bradenton; and the Brewers while they played at Sun City in Arizona. That is the extent of my Spring Training interest and I am happy with it. It takes enough to go to big league games these days. TV has become the great equalizer. 

Then again, this is an unusual weather year, with two Polar Vortex, and now snow in Pasadena and Malibu, where in the latter, they suffered enough devastation with the fires later last year. Clark County. Nevada, I.e., Las Vegas, had to cancel school. So, just like the weather, who knows if this baseball season will revert to form with the big money clubs leading the way. Change is in the air, and now on the ground.


Thus, I hope to be ready to exercise with a more svelte body come Opening Day. Just as I hope the Yankees will be ready out of the gate when the bell rings on the 2019 season. We both anticipate having great seasons. If not, I might feel like a perpetually unhappy Mets fan.

Sunday, February 17, 2019

A Simple Week Of Sports In My World

This week has been chock full of sports news and accomplishments. I will briefly try to digest what has happened. 

Let’s start with golf. Phil Mickelson won a rain-delayed Pebble Beach Pro-Am on Monday. It was his record-tying 5th victory in the event. 

Then there was the saga of Matt Kuchar. On a whim, Kuchar played and won the Mayakoba Classic, receiving a check for over $1.2 million. He used a substitute caddie, made an agreement with him for payment of no more than $4,000 and paid him an extra $1,000 after the win. The following outcry led Kuchar to reconsider his dumb and cheap mistake, so he remunerated the man $50,000 with an apology.

The tennis news is this: Naomi Osaka, winner of the U.S Open and the Australian Open, summarily fired her coach, Sascha Bajin. No reason was provided, and it is curious since Osaka has literally come from obscurity to becoming the top player in women’s tennis.
In hockey news, the St. Louis Blues are red hot, having won 9 in a row to project them back into the Western Conference playoff picture. The Blues ended San Jose’s 6 game winning streak. The Boston Bruins have won 5 on a row and are 7-0-3 in their last 10 contests.

When Carolina beat the New York Rangers, it was the first time since 2010 that the Hurricanes had won on the ice at Madison Square Garden. Matt Murray’s 50 saves in a Pittsburgh win at Philadelphia was a career high. Detroit’s win at Nashville was the Red Wings 9th in 10 games against the Predators.

Auston Matthews, the young and exceptionally talented Toronto star scored his 100th goal against Marc-Andre Fleury in a Maple Leafs victory at Vegas. His teammate, Mitch Marner, thrilled a young Toronto fan in the same game after he scored a goal by tossing the puck to her and then posing for an in-game Valentine’s Day selfie.

Meanwhile, Tampa Bay is running away from the pack and look to be the clear favorites to make the Stanley Cup Finals, barring injury. Last year’s finalists, Vegas and Washington are poised to make the playoffs but face tough roads ahead to repeat last season.

From football, we have learned that disgruntled Pittsburgh WR Andre Brown said goodbye to Steeler Nation, noting that it was time to move on. On the heels of that, Pittsburgh’s management requested a meeting with Brown which will occur next week. Stay tuned for further developments.

Super Bowl XLVII M.V.P. Joe Flacco has been traded by the Baltimore Ravens to quarterback-starved John Elway and his Denver Broncos. The emergence of Lamar Jackson in Baltimore made this move necessary.

As a result of Flacco heading to Denver, Eagles’ extraordinary backup QB Nick Foles delivered a $2 million cashier’s check to management to buy out a $20 million option, as a prelude to a potential franchise tag and subsequent trade. Philadelphia has made it clear that they are still favoring Carson Wentz as their QB.

Former Jets C Spencer Long, who had so much difficulty in New York and was released, only to resign with division rival Buffalo on a three year deal.

Friday’s big news was that Colin Kaepernick and Eric Reid settled their collusion lawsuit against the NFL. There is a non-disclosure agreement in place, so terms have not been released. For Reid, this comes after he inked a three year deal with Carolina.
Kaepernick turned down an inquiry from the Alliance of American Football, counter offering $20 million to play in that league. Tim Tebow, former University of Florida and NFL QB, and Mets hopeful, spurned the AAF’s repeated inquiries, preferring to try to make the big club after he starts the season in Triple A.

Looking at college basketball, #1 Tennessee, was one of four teams starting Saturday with an unbeaten conference records (Gonzaga, Sam Houston State and Wofford were the others), traveled to Lexington, Kentucky to take on the the #5 Wildcats at Rupp Arena in a critical SEC matchup. Kentucky took care of Tennessee’s unbeaten SEC record by thrashing the Volunteers. Sam Houston dropped to 12-1 in the Southland Conference with its loss.
Conversely, California, Chicago State, Portland, San Jose State, Tulane and Vanderbilt  have yet to obtain their first conference victory. Plus there are a number of teams with only 1 conference victory.

Heading into a Saturday evening matchup with #21 Iowa at a sold out RAC which included my wife and me, Rutgers has won 2 road games and recorded 5 Big Ten wins in a season for the first time. They lost a heartbreaker on a wild, prayer shot banked in from the corner with .2 left on the clock. Questionable officiating may have benefitted Iowa, but RU played tremendously and deserved to win when guard Geo Baker sank a three pointer with 3.3 seconds left to give the Scarlet Knight the lead by 1.

Duke is the most formidable team in Division I. They won convincingly at #3 Virginia, then roared back from a 23 point deficit to defeat home standing #16 Louisville and overpower N.C. State. 

Teams to watch out from the non-Power 5 conferences for in the NCAA Tournament, if they reach it, are: 24-1 Houston: 21-5 Vermont; VCU and Davidson, both at 19-6; Liberty and Lipscomb from the Atlantic Sun; UC Irvine and Hofstra are tough at 22-5; ODU with a 21-6 record; Northern Kentucky out of the Horizon; Yale is sporting a 17-4 mark, Buffalo, the Mid Americian leader has a 22-3 record; Loyola of Chicago, last year’s Cinderella team, is in front in the MVC; 23-1 Nevada is a Top Ten squad and conference runner-up Utah State is 20-6; Wofford with its 23-4 record; Sam Houston State has recently been a thorn to the top tier schools; Texas State from the Sun Belt is 21-5; and New Mexico State is at 22-4 coming from the WAC.

I purposely omitted two teams. First, there is Murray State, tied for first with Belmont, a potential tournament team in the very tough Ohio Valley Conference. Murray State has Temetrious “Ja” Murray, who is averaging nearly 25 points per game and over 10 assists per contest. He is projected to be a top lottery pick when he declares for the NBA Draft.

Secondly, I did not talk about the South Dakota State Jackrabbits of the Summit League. Led by 6’9” school scoring record holder Mike Daum, SDState suffered its second loss in conference to Nebraska-Omaha on Thursday via a buzzer beater. They are a legitimately good team. Like Iowa, they survived Saturday on a buzzer beater by their own wonderfully talented guard, David Jenkins, Jr. Jenkins hit for 24 points today to help overcome a 17 point lead by North Dakota State in Fargo. Jenkins had 34 in the loss on Thursday. Daum contributed 31 points and snared 12 rebounds for his 50th double double. SDState sort of reminds me of Indiana State in 1979, two outstanding players leading the way. Except that Daum is not Larry Bird. 

I have one more college game left on my schedule. #10 Marquette will come to the Prudential Center for a Big East battle with NCAA hopeful Seton Hall. Seton Hall will have to play exceptionally well to overcome the number two team in the conference.

Honorable mention goes to the former leader of the MAAC. That’s Monmouth, who began the campaign at 0-11 and is now 9-5 in conference, with a 10-17 overall record. Head Coach King Rice, a former North Carolina star, knows how to coach and has kept his team focused and ready despite the horrible opening to the year.

In viewing the list of games on TV Saturday, I counted 37 college contests. That is amazing and is over saturation at its finest or at its worst.
One more college basketball report. As Centennial Conference play started on Saturday, Muhlenberg, Franklin and Marshall, Dickinson and Gettysburg were all playing for the right to be in the 4-5 playoff game on Tuesday. The results are in—F&M and Washington College will meet in Chestertown for the right to play number 1 seed Swarthmore by virtue of F&M’s road win over third place Ursinus, Muhlenberg’s home loss to Gettysburg and Washington routing Dickinson. The Shoremen have beaten F&M twice in a season for the first time in 13 years. Winning three times is very difficult, even if the game is at home.

Pro basketball takes center stage in its All-Star Game in Charlotte. Local heroes, the Curry Brothers, met in the 3 point shooting contest; sentimentally, Dirk Novitzki is participated, and Devon Booker was there to defend his crown.  Joe Harris of Brooklyn won the shootout by 2 points over Steph Curry. I don’t care much for the Skills Competition or the Slam Dunk Contest, nor do I care for the supposed All-Star Game between Team LeBron and Team Giannis. Check out the video of Sonya Curry, herself an athlete at Virginia Tech, swishing a half court shot underhanded.

LeBron has been in the news for the All Star team he selected. Many of his squad are free agents and LeBron and his agent Rich Paul have been accused of recruiting. That also happened when the duo appeared at the Duke-UVA game, as LeBron has a relationship with some of the Duke players and he loved the way Duke big man Zion Williamson played.

Golden State, everyone’s favorite to repeat as champs, is now 9-0 and when Curry, Kevin Durant. Klay Thompson, Draymond Green and DeMarcus Cousins are together in the starting lineup.

James Harden now has 31 games in a row scoring over 30 points a game. Kevin Durant has 52 consecutive games scoring 20 or more in a game. LeBron James has 912 consecutive games where he has scored at least 10 points, which is the NBA record.

New addition Marc Gasol went 5-5 in the fourth quarter to propel Toronto to a win over Brooklyn. The Raptors are an even better team with his addition. 

Scottie Pippen started a controversy when he opined that James was not a clutch player in the fourth quarter when having chances to win the game on his shot, unlike his teammate, Michael Jordan or the Lakers’ Koby Bryant. Pippen was partially correct—Jordan hit on 50% of those attempts, James on 37% of his attempts and Kobe hit only 25%.

New York ended its club record consecutive game losing streak at 18, with a road win at Atlanta. Charlotte lost to Orlando for the first time in the last 14 meetings. And the Magic had 2 consecutive 30+ point wins for the first time in franchise history.

Embattled New Orleans GM Darrell Demps was fired in the wake of the Anthony Davis trade fiasco. The owner of the Pelicans and the Saints is Gayle Benson. She has had a rough start to 2019 with the terrible officiating costing the Saints a spot in Super Bowl LVIII and now with the Davis debacle. 

The Lakers didn’t look much better in their overt pursuit of Davis, which has clearly rattled the team and placed their chances to make the playoffs in jeopardy. 

This is where the NBA sits at its All Star break. At least the league didn’t lose Adam Silver to the NFL, as several owners checked on his willingness to be their leader. Silver is basketball geek and loves where he is, in a league that is very profitable globally. This makes me feel that current NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell might not be in good standing among 
ownership.

College baseball season is upon us. Rutgers went on its annual trip to Miami to face the Hurricanes. The trip has not been kind the Scarlet Knights, with the Hurricanes punishing RU in all three games. F&M opens its 2019 campaign with two Saturday games in North Carolina versus Greensboro and Guiford, then a Sunday test at #3 Randolph-Macon.

Justin Verlander, the Astros’ ace pitcher, feels he can pitch until age 45, like Tom Brady believes he can be an effective QB with New England. This kind of thought must come from the fact that they are both married to hot, celebrity/model wives.

As pitchers and catchers have reported to Spring Training, the Phillies signed young ace Aaron Nola to a 4 year, $45 minion extension and the Yankees gave their young ace Luis Severino a 4 year, $40 million pact with a club option 5th year which would raise the total package to $52.5 million, most of it front-loaded. 

Reigning NL Cy Young Award winner, Jacob deGrom, has told the Mets he will not negotiate an extension beyond opening day and if nothing happens, he might put himself on a self-imposed pitch count. Memo to Mets management—get moving!

Didi Gregorius is throwing as he rehabs from Tommy John surgery. Former Met Matt Harvey, now with the Angels, is on the Injury List, the successor to the Disabled List. Gary Sanchez says he is close to 100% from off season surgery. Injury-plagued Yankees’ OF Jacoby Ellsbury now has to contend with plantar fasciitis while he continues to mend from hip surgery. Jordan Montgomery remains confident he will be back to the Yankees the season. Clint Frazier is ready to play again, as he is not being plagued by the concussion he suffered last spring.

Corey Seager of the Dodgers indicated he is ready to resume his spot at shortstop after injury sidelined him in 2018. Roberto Osuna has been named the closer for the Astros; Osuna had previously been suspended 75 games for domestic abuse. The Rays have indicated that starter by committee will again be in vogue in 2019. Jameson Tailon has been named by Pirates’ manner Clint Hurdle as the opening day starter.

C.C. Sabathia announced that 2019 is his last season in baseball as a player. He is on the precipice of reaching 3,000 strikeouts and 250 wins in his illustrious 18 year career. C.C. has started 538 of 539 games he has pitched in. He is a 6 time All-Star and won the 2007 A.L. Cy Young Award while with Cleveland. Sabathia is not a first ballot Hall of Fame inductee, but he should merit a great amount of consideration once his name is up for consideration.
Lastly, there are a slew of name free agents like Adam Jones, Dallas Keuchel, Craig Kimbrel, Jose Iglesias, Mike Moustakis, Marwin Gonzalez who have not been signed. The players feel that the owners are trying to drive salaries down in the free agent market while signing younger players to team friendly deals. There is rising tension between the owners and the MLBPA which will probably get uglier as the CBA ends after the 20121 season. 

This is a contributing factor as to why prime free agents Manny Machado and Bryce Harper remain unsigned. Their agents, Dan Lozano for Machado and Scott Boras for Harper,  have told their clients to steadfastly remain true to their goals of mega contracts for over $300 million a year. In a climate like this, while teams interview each player, it doesn’t mean they will ultimately open up their coffers and pay (or maybe overpay) for these stars. 

When this will end is like guessing when Robert Mueller will complete his report. Machado, Harper and the rest of the free agents seemingly have a deadline—the start of the season is in late March and they will need time to get ready. Unless the owners dig in and play hardball.


If I were in Atlantic City or Las Vegas, I would think that the odds for signing both free agents would be about even with when the Mueller Report will be completed. That pales in guessing who will have the better outcome—Mueller or Machado/Harper/MLB.

Sunday, February 10, 2019

No More Football?


     I am not going to be too harsh about Super Bowl LIII. Sure, there wasn't a lot of scoring--it was the lowest scoring Super Bowl ever and this was the first Super Bowl where no touchdowns were scored in the first three quarters. New England tied the New York Jets' 50 year old record, with only one TD scored during an entire game. The Los Angeles Rams dubiously tied the Miami Dolphins Super Bowl VI record as the second team not to score a TD in a losing effort.

     Maybe it was the Rams' inexperience which hurt them greatly. That includes Sean McVay, who admittedly was outreached by Patriots sure-fire Hall of Fame coach Bill Belichick and his stellar staff. Rams' QB Jared Goff was repeatedly frustrated by the different looks the New England defense presented. Superior defensive lineman Aaron Donald was repeatedly rebuffed by the Patriots' offensive line, giving enough time for QB Tom Brady to make 10 throws for 141 yards to Julian Edelman, who was named the games M.V.P., or to open holes in the Rams defense for RB Sony Michel to penetrate deep into the their  defense.

     Even the kicking game was off, as New England's Steven Gotskowski uncharacteristically missed an early field goal attempt, and the Rams' Greg Zerulein was wide from 48 yards in the las minute of play, when LA got the ball back after Gotskowski booted a 41 field goal to give New England the final 10 point margin of victory. 

     Rams’ punter Johnny Hekker hit a 65 yard punt in the second half, a Super Bowl record, eliciting mock excitement from the CBS broadcast duo of Jim Nantz and Tony Romo. Hekker punted nine times in the game, an average of 46.5 yards per punt, landing five inside the  New England 20 yard line. By far, Hekker was the Rams’ star.

     Brady completed 21 of 35 passes for 262 yards, after opening the game with his only interception. Goff’s totals were hardly spectacular, as he compiled 229 yards on 19 for 38 passing with one interception. A key defensive play by Jason Mc Courty robbed Goff and wide receiver Brandin Cooks on what looked like it would be a certain TD. 

     I must give credit to Tom Brady and Bill Belichick—6 Super Bowl wins together. Belichick, a spry 66 year old, is the oldest coach to win a Super Bowl. Brady now holds the mark for most Super Bowl wins by a player and at age 41, he is the oldest QB to capture the Super Bowl. Two legends who are first ballot inductees in Canton.

     Even when he did not have a stellar game, Brady once again showed why he is the G.O.A.T. in NFL QB annals. The man is now 6-3 in the Super Bowl. That’s 9 trips to the big game. Amazing. He willed the Patriots to win. And he may not be done yet. 

     I saw a graphic the Monday after the game. It showed the all-time leaders in championships in their respective professional sport. Bill Russell of the Boston Celtics had 11 along with Henri Richard of the Montreal Canadiens. Yogi Berra posted 8 championships with the New York Yankees. Then there was Tom Brady with his Super Bowl wins. That is special and remarkable. Somebody mentioned to Brady that he tied Michael Jordan’s 6 rings with the Chicago Bulls—the more modern comparison—a fact by which Brady was awed. Another commentator put that into perspective—it is harder to do this with a football team given the nature of the game, and that is why this feat may never be duplicated.

     There is a segment of the population that was not among the 98 million viewers of the game. The fans who live in New Orleans. Rightfully so, I accept their anger and unwillingness to watch a game in which they felt their team should have played. However, from what I saw that night, I don’t believe that the Saints would have fared much better than the Rams. This was the night for the New England Patriots to re-establish their greatness after last year’s loss to the Philadelphia Eagles. 

     For all those who yearn for the high scoring shootouts that Goff and young guns like Patrick Mahomes, the league’s M.V.P. regularly fashioned, the time-honored cliche that defense wins championships was appropriate this year. Maybe next year and for years thereafter we may see plenty of points put on the scoreboard, but this year was throwback to another era. And who would be most likely to be in the center of this? Brady and Belichick, of course.

     A few more Super Bowl side notes. The halftime program was a bust. Gladys Knight singing the National Anthem was much better, as would be expected. All of the pricey commercials for the Super Bowl were not really memorable. My favorite, which I could see repeatedly, was the one the NFL offered for its 100th anniversary.  A must see.

     Before you know it will be time for football. Wait—there are games this weekend? A new league called the AAF or the Alliance of American Football? Not watching it—I wan’t a fan of the World Football League or Arena Football. This a time for other sports—like basketball and hockey.

     I made it to my first Division III basketball game for 2018-19. The top team in the Landmark League, the Drew University Rangers, hosted the Elizabethtown Blue Jays. It was fun. No pep band, no cheerleaders, a halftime number by the Drew Rangerettes dance team and a couple of students in an impromptu one on one game.

     My wife and I sat close to the action, three rows from the floor, directly across from the Drew bench. We were among the E-town women’s team, victors over Drew in the first game, as they chowed down on delicious looking doughnuts from Berwyn, PA, pizza and hot chicken parmigiana sandwiches. We had a couple of peanuts to eat in comparison. I wondered if E-town had a nutritionist advising these girls, and when was the last time they ate—when they left Lancaster County before 9:00 am for the nearly three hour trek to Madison, New Jersey?

     Drew outplayed the Blue Jays behind junior guard Riley Collins, who surpassed his seasonal average of 16.3 ppg with 18 today. The contest was played in spurts, with Drew leading, then E-town coming close to catching up. The superior play from the Rangers’ guards and the tough rebounding, led by 6’6” senior Nate Aldrich who hauled in 20 boards, plus ever-changing defenses made it tough for the Blue Jays to stay with Drew. Two E-town players fouled out of the game. Connor Moffatt led E-town with a game-high 19 points and junior guard Ethan DuBois garnered 12 rebounds and dished out 5 assists, before a noisy crowd of 518 who witnessed Drew win its 18th game against 5 losses as they stayed one game in front of Moravian College for the top spot in the Landmark League.

     Today I visited the Allan P. Kirby Center on the campus of Lafayette College, where the home team entertained the Holy Cross Crusaders in a battle of two of the lower ranked Patriot League teams. In a nail biter, the Leopards prevailed, 69-67, after blowing a 47-35 advantage and trailing by 2 late in the second half. Five Leopards, all underclassmen,  scored in double figures, and the team shot 48.3% from behind the three-point arc. Still it took two free throws by his scorer Justin Jaworski (18 points) to seal the victory with 5 ticks remaining. Holy Cross now 13-12 on the year, employed an aggressive zone defense in the second half to wipe out the halftime deficit, forcing the young Leopards into numerous bad passes or bad choices. Lafayette now has won two game in a row for the first time this season. Their overall record stands at 6-16, and they are tied with Holy Cross, as both teams have 4-8 conference records.

     A couple of take aways from this trip. First, the players at this level are bigger, stronger and faster than in D-III based on what I have seen the last two days. They also shoot a little bit better from outside the three point stripe. 

     As to more interesting tidbits, Lafayette has a pep band; Drew does not. Drew has white folding chairs on three sides of the court; Lafayette has all fold out chair seating. The scoreboard in the Kirby Sports Center showed something that I have never seen before—the team that was ahead in green numbers, while the losing team score was in red; if tied, the scores were in yellow. The Drew dance team was much better than the Lafayette dance team. And the crowd made more noise at Drew, because there were far more students in the gym than at Lafayette. Lafayette did have cheerleaders present, but I hardly noticed them.

     Two games in 22 hours. See my Facebook page for some pictures. Sunday’s game was broadcast on CBS Sports Network; it was over in 1:53. The D-III contest was over in 1:33, as there were no mandatory TV timeouts. Tonight I will watch most of the Miami-Golden State game, as the contest starts at a reasonable 8:30 p.m. as opposed to the normal 10:30 start from Oakland. All totaled, I will have watched on TV the exciting end of the Lakers-Celtics game on Friday night from Boston, where Rashon Rondo, a former Celtics’ star returned home to act as a spoiler by hitting the game-winning shot; the final minutes of the Rutgers-Illinois affair which the Illini won in OT; UConn at Memphis, because my wife’s second cousin’s son, Darren Goldwater, handled the play-by-play; and the Heat and the Warriors. Plus I will have attended two more games in that span. If there had been a Jonathan Dayton High School home game to go to, I might have made that, too. The best I could do was see the uniformed Dayton girls’ team running around The Mall at Short Hills on Friday night. I could have seen more, including #2 Duke taking on #3 Virginia, but I opted for an informative HBO premiere of a documentary on Mr. Rogers. 

     Any more games would have seemed to be a bit childish. Besides, I managed to see some of the ceremonies honoring the 1993-94 Stanley Cup Champion New York Rangers on the ice at Madison Square Garden.

     You get my drift. Why would I need to watch more football or care too much about the moves the Jets and other teams might make in the coming weeks leading to the NFL Combine and then the draft? 

     I have basketball, some hockey (how about the turnaround of the New York Islanders under Head Coach Barry Trotz, who led the Washington Capitals to the Stanley Cup last season?) to keep my mind occupied. I have a trip to Edmonton and Vancouver with my son to see the Devils in action. Conference tournaments and March Madness are almost upon us.


     Dare I say that pitcher and catchers report to MLB camps this week and Manny Machado and Bryce Harper remained unsigned?