Search Keyword Within Blog

Showing posts with label Sports. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sports. Show all posts

Monday, February 8, 2016

Peyton Manning and the Laid Out Final Ride





Time to retire, Peyton Manning.



This will never happen again.



After the complete destruction that Denver faced in the hands of the Seahawks two years ago, I was convinced that the once-mighty Manning was no more. I thought he was too hurt, too washed up, and far too old to ever hold another championship trophy unless he was dishing high-fives from the bench all season. Instead John Elway and Friends had a new strategy: completely beef up the defense, ensure a great offensive line, and allow Peyton to ride out this wave and just keep the team in the matchup. The strategy would ensure a good regular season, but in the playoffs it would be a crapshoot.

After they got beat at home to the lowly Colts one year ago, my opinion on Manning remained true: excellent quarterback, Father Time has caught up, and it’s time to go before you embarrass yourself some more (Brett Favre anyone?).



Then the Broncos were handed a beautiful gift: the worst regular season in the history of the NFL.



I mean this from the bottom of my heart—after seeing all the ridiculous plays, cowardly moves, awful refereeing, questionable playcalling, mishandling of simple football fundamentals, and a total collective meltdown of defenses everywhere. We also saw tons of major injuries; ranging from the Patriots losing literally everybody, to the Cowboys losing an emerging Tony Romo, to the sneaky-good Bengals losing their quarterback at the very end of the season and forced to give up the top seed. Injuries, awful play (Thursday Night Football was abysmal to watch), and millions of wasted opportunities (as well as a dozen franchises at least making strange decisions) would open the door for the Denver Broncos to grab the top seed and have a direct path towards the championship.

Before any of you start screaming how I’m not giving any credit to the Denver defense, continue to hear me out. At no point did anyone feel like the Broncos were the best team in the NFL. The Steelers, Patriots, Bengals, Cardinals, Packers and (eventually) the Panthers throughout the season were considered superior teams before injuries crippled their quality. The Broncos peaked mainly in the playoffs when it most mattered, but a lot had to fall apart for them to pave the path to glory.

Even Manning himself got hurt and left for several weeks. This was far and beyond among his worst seasons (it might be the worst ever, truthfully), as his backup quarterback Brock Osweiler looked better in certain spurts. It feels so long ago that Manning had a near-negative quarterback rating as he even got pulled after throwing 4 ridiculous interceptions. Amazing how quickly people forget. If it wasn’t for Brock filling in during the injury/rest/mental recovery/relax until playoffs period, the Broncos would have been pushed out of the postseason entirely.

Injuries, terrible collapses, amazing Denver defense, and surprisingly competent backup quarterback was all the essential ingredients needed to give Manning this final chance at redemption and that long-eluded second Super Bowl ring. Too much had gone right for Denver to mess this up again, and I haven’t even mentioned how Oakland and San Diego within the same division weren’t even sure of their future during the season. And if you think that doesn't have much of an effect, look at the final seasons of any team that wound up relocating---including the St. Louis Rams.

Look, winning a Super Bowl does require much more skill and talent than luck, but can you honestly claim a team with less than 200 offense yards in its most important game deserves to be considered the best? What really happened is that underneath all the garbage that happened in 2015/2016, Denver rose up from the ashes emerging as the last team standing. The Steelers fell apart on a game they weren’t supposed to even be participating in (Bengals absolutely tanked the final two minutes of their Wild Card game), the Patriots’ offensive line was in shambles, and the Carolina Panthers got too cocky and may have underestimated the defense that was the main factor in Denver’s appearance in Santa Clara.

Peyton Manning, this is your peak, you will not be able to obtain this height again. You didn’t even play as a Top 10 quarterback in 2015. You are playing on house money and managed to win. But just like in Vegas, you can never push your luck in the NFL. The Broncos are a well-oiled machine on defense yet still looked shaky until it mattered the most. Retiring is the best option; for you, for your family, and for your legacy.





It has been a great ride. Don’t overdo it.

Thursday, January 28, 2016

The Appetizer Game: How the NBA Can Crash the Yearly Super Bowl Party




Yea, we know, we know. The Super Bowl is fast approaching. The 50th edition sees the Broncos taking on the Panthers. Past (Manning) versus the Future (Newton). Tennessee vs. Auburn. NFL’s Golden Boy vs. NFL’s Polarizing Boy. But this article is not about the Super Bowl---it’s about all the hoopla leading up to the Super Bowl.

Per tradition, there are two weeks between the championship games and the Super Bowl in order to build the hype, build the anticipation, and so that all the bets in Vegas are settled and ready to go. It is a lot of momentum that cumulates in a weekend purely and wholly dominated by football. The NFL reigns supreme not because of quality, but because of the ease of access and how easy it becomes to pick sides. But that’s for another article, we are discussing how as a competing league the NBA can hack into some of the Super Bowl glory.



I call it the Appetizer Game. Basically, The Big Game Before the Big Game.



See, because the NFL loves planning ahead we have the next couple Super Bowls figured out in terms of city and stadium. This year the Golden Game is in Santa Clara. 2017 belongs to Houston, and 2018 belongs to Minneapolis. Want to know what they all have in common? They all have basketball teams close by, which means basketball arenas within the vicinity of where the Super Bowl is being held. How ballsy would it be if the NBA every year would pit a huge basketball game at some point before the Super Bowl to nab some of the attention and some of the press already in town?

Now, what should the game be? Very easy: take the two teams that competed in the previous NBA Finals and have them play their first rematch. Take 2016 Super Bowl: the Appetizer Game would have been the Golden State Warriors and the Cleveland Cavaliers in whether the soccer-friendly Buck Shaw Stadium (is outdoor NBA game still out of the question?) or the much smaller Leavey Center. New location, new chance to draw fans in, and good way to enter the realm of Super Bowl territory while still promoting your league.

This is all manageable because the way the playoff format is, it’s guaranteed that the next season the two squads in the NBA Finals will play each other just twice. The winner gets the home game, as the other game will be held on wherever the Super Bowl is being held at (ONLY places where Super Bowl location doesn’t have basketball team: Tampa and San Diego). Ticket sales are easier, they don’t go on sale for the upcoming year until the day after it is determined which teams actually make the Finals. That way, we can cut down on people just buying the tickets to resell them to hungry fans. I will even take it a step further: on the first day they are only available to fans within the county of both participants. You’re welcome.

Let’s use the 2017 example. Houston Rockets’ Toyota Center will host the Appetizer Game on the Friday before the Super Bowl---with at least 7 months of hype since the Finals had finished far back in June and we purposely don’t schedule their rematch until this very day. The logo in the center of the court will be the logo of the NBA champion from the end of this season-----



(Let’s just assume right now it’s the Golden State Warriors, considering how amazing they are playing right now)


Of course it will be televised, and will get all the Disney/ABC/ESPN press since the House of Mouse is no longer interested in doing Super Bowl telecasts. So 6 months of hype, crashing the party of the superior sports league, two nearly guaranteed two big teams playing each other (16 of 30 NBA teams make playoffs, and very rarely does a NBA Finals Champ/Runner-Up fall off the very next year barring injury), and building a fanbase in another city or another region entirely. It may not be the most economically friendly plan, but it’s definitely one that will draw attention year in and year out.



I believe in the power and the potential insanity of the attention-grabbing Appetizer Game.

Friday, January 22, 2016

The (Quietly) Best News of the 2016 MLB Offseason



In the midst of the baseball offseason that has seen dozens of trades, questions answered, and signings (Cespedes not being one of them is quite bizarre), one of the better news in recent baseball memory has occurred under the noses of the mainstream media. The Tampa Bay Rays finally have permission to seek elsewhere for a new stadium, and may no longer be confined to the refrigerator known as Tropicana Field. This is fantastic news for Rays fans, for Tampa Bay, and for other cities in North America seeking their own baseball team.

We shall start with the Rays. They are no longer the Devil Rays of the past---this is a competitive team year in and year out with a flurry of front office people taking risks, making tons of trades, and sorting through the garbage big to pierce together a formidable squad. Even though the departure of Joe Maddon will eternally hurt the franchise (although some can argue that his departure led to increasing talks of a compromising to fix the Tropicana Field fiasco), there’s still enough good parts in the system to continue the fortune of good baseball. Most importantly, there is a certified culture, a distinctive and consistent personality.

The Tampa Bay Rays runs on old-school National League small ball, blended together with tight defense, unique decision-making, and ever-shifting strategies. Despite the management change, the attitude remains the same. The team revolves around Evan Longoria, who is signed with the team for the next several years (becoming the first and only major Rays player to stay in the organization for an extended period of time).

So what does this all mean? It’s not some hunky-dory awful franchise like the 76ers seeking a new stadium---this is a team with a personality, with a fanbase that is quietly growing (11th in television ratings), and with a future. The only issue within the past several season has been the stadium situation. It’s a domino effect: better attendance means better television numbers, which equates to more money to earn and spend on better players. And with the right location, we can see the average attendance of the team go up at least 10,000 per game. It won’t reach Fenway or AT&T Park numbers, but given the right destination the Rays can draw 25,000-30,000 fans per game easily. 50 million visit Orlando, over 4 million people live in Tampa Bay, and a total of 93 million visit Florida yearly---25,000 is a lofty and definitely reachable goal. It benefits Tampa, and benefits the opposing teams visiting the new ballpark.

Although the relocation idea might have been hampered because Tampa Bay now has permission to search within the borders of Tampa and Pinellas County, don’t get too upset Montreal, Portland, Mexico City, Charleston, Puerto Rico, Cuba, and maybe even Dominican Republic (Caribbean Nation would be perfect for an MLB team). With the Rays on the stadium upswing, it only leaves us with one remaining franchise in actual need of a new stadium: The Oakland Athletics. The argument can be made for the Atlanta Braves and the Chicago White Sox---but if Oakland can land a deal then the idea of expansion will hold much more weight.

32 teams is not a pipe dream, considering that Major League Baseball is the second most-successful league in the entire world, after the NFL of course. It is inches from the 10 billion mark, and that’s before the television contracts of multiple teams get refinanced and see drastic improvement. So why couldn’t the league expand its borders and reach out to Canada and Mexico? Montreal has become extremely hungry for some baseball, with this new generation pull for the Expos to make its return. Mexico is beautiful country full of passion and culture---and 125 million people. Mexico not having a franchise from any of the major North American leagues is nothing short of confusing (Major League Soccer, seriously?!!?!?!)

With the notorious stadium situation getting closer to a resolution in Tampa Bay, Major League Baseball can focus its efforts on Oakland, potentially working on the situation in Miami (beautiful stadium, weary fanbase), and ultimately giving more cities the opportunity to host a professional baseball team. The vote in St. Petersburg doesn’t just positively affect Florida and the Rays, it positively affects the league as a whole and the future.

Down the road in 2020, when we see the Montreal Expos, and the Mexico (*insert name here*) starting the season along with the other 30 teams, we can look at this day is one of the reasons why.

Sunday, January 17, 2016

Please (Don't) Go For It




2015 World Series. Game 5. Heck of a series (Game 1 was especially memorable), heck of a game. The Relentless Royals had pushed Matt Harvey to the absolute limit and now we have the already-broken Jeurys Familia trying to close out the game on the top of the 9th while leading by one run---with the tying run for the Royals on third base, just 90 feet away. With one out, there was a groundout to David Wright over at third. Wright looks over to the baserunner, and then throws to first base. Shocking the entire baseball world, that baserunner, Eric Hosmer, bolts for home even though the ball was still in the infield.



Lucas Duda, the Mets’ first baseman was so unprepared for the series of events he misplays the throw at home, therefore allowing the Royals to tie the game. Now, participating in the blame game is far too easy. You can blame Harvey for not allowing the Mets to save the game, you can blame the manager Collins for going with Familia and listening to Harvey, you can blame Duda for the terrible throw. The truth is, the Royals tied and ultimately won this game because they played the ballsier game, took the much bigger risks (They risked the entire game with the new-generation Slaughter’s Mad Dash), and shook the senses of the opponents. The Kansas City Royals excelled in making everyone else uncomfortable by always being on the attack.



Jesus, a reference to a play in the 1946 World Series. I have watched far too much baseball.



Fast forward to January 16, 2016. The Packers and the Cardinals. Aaron Rodgers had just sucked the life out of all of Arizona by successfully throwing a Hail Mary pass to tie the game. Yes, a Hail Mary with NO time left on the clock saved the Green Bay Packers’ season. All they needed was the extra point, tie it, send it to overtime. Of course the point was good. Arizona would win the game because Larry Fitzgerald responded to the comeback with the Hail Larry---a 70+ yard run that would trigger the game-winning touchdown for Carson Palmer and the Cardinals.


Now, I will not fault the Packers for tying the game. Not at all. They did the conservative thing and took their chances in overtime. That being said…



I would have gone for the kill in the fourth quarter. I would have gone for the two-pointer. Every single time.



The Arizona Cardinals literally watched their season go from NFL Title Game to Oh-God-We-Have-To-Still-Win-This. They are shaken. The fans are quiet. Everyone is stunned. The momentum is all Green Bay. So why not just go for the kill right then and there, and not depend on a coin flip five minutes later? Why not once again utilize the MVP of the game, Aaron Rodgers, and go a few more yards and finish the stunning?

Because the NFL in general is a very conservative, risk-less, gutless grouping of teams.

How many times do you see punts as opposed to going for it on fourth down? Even when down three touchdowns in the fourth quarter? How often do you see teams gunning for the tie as opposed to the lead? How often do you see teams playing it safe and just dragging an already-out-of-reach game? How many weaker teams do you see throwing in the towel in the second half? The NFL has a quality problem, and that is all these quarterbacks and coaches choosing to save face as opposed to taking necessary risks to even try to make a comeback.

Plays like the Mad Dash and the Hosmer Run do not occur in the NFL, they just don’t. Hail Mary plays do sometimes happen----but only in the final moments. You won’t see Hail Marys at any other point. You won’t see fake punts or field goals unless you are watching college football. You won’t see surprise onside kicks unless the score is within a touchdown and there isn’t much time left. I’m not saying teams have to fully renegade it up and go for it every single time, because football is about preserving the lead and also preserving territory to prevent the shrinkage of said lead.

The Royals did not have the deep talent of the Mets, yet managed to succeed and win the big prize because they played harder and took all the necessary gambles. In 12 of the last 13 Super Bowls (including this one), the Super Bowl featured whether Brady, (Peyton) Manning, or Roethlisberger. The AFC has been dominated by the same quarterbacks for nearly 1 ½ decades. The same teams win, regardless of how much hope you give your team. Compare that to the American League—which has seen 8 different teams enter the World Series---and they sometimes aren’t the best team in the batch either.

Yes, it is extremely silly to compare football and baseball. But I firmly believe that if these middle-of-the-hill football teams took more gambles we would see more surprises, and could see the boring conservative approach being replaced by a more entertaining, random, and relentless approach to scoring. This type of aggressiveness is what the Kansas City Chiefs (huddling while down by 14 and 3 minutes left?!!??) and the Green Bay Packers (Not going for it at the end?!?!!) needed to beat the obviously-superior opponents. In football, usually the best team wins, and although that guarantees quality football it leaves little room for surprise storylines. Perhaps shaking the entire foundation of the conservative style of play can alter this.



Until then, we still have baseball and its absolutely unpredictable upcoming season to look forward to.



P.S. Patriots over Cardinals in the Super Bowl---with Roger Goodell being “too sick” to attend.

Sunday, January 10, 2016

Don't Panic, Cincinnati




There are way too many factors to blame for the absolute disaster that was the Steelers/Bengals melee. The city Cincinnati woke up with severe depression after witnessing what should have been a sure-fire win evaporate in the span of two game minutes. Once again knocked out of the first round. Once again losing to the dreaded Pittsburgh Steelers. Once again got bit by the injury bug. And once again, blowing a lead in all the wrong times. It is unfathomable to find a worse way to lose the way the Bengals lost last night.

Might be karma, for the fans throwing crap on to the field when Big Ben got injured (although it might be retaliation for one of their players being knocked unconscious and the Steelers celebrating it). It might just be the inability to overcome the hurdle of bad history in the playoffs. But there is a person that should receive none of the blame. None of it.





Marvin Lewis.



Keep that man’s job. It is not his fault that he was dealt a bad hand. It is not his fault that the heart and soul of the organization got hurt on the final weeks of the season and was unavailable to help out. Up until the injury, Andy Dalton’s Bengals were one of the best threats in the entire league---even clinging to the #1 seed at one point. I had predicted that this was going to be Dalton's coming out party---similar to when Flacco finally took the next step with the Ravens back in 2013. It is not Lewis’ fault that the Bengals front office staff also rounded up a squad with toxic players prone to self-destructing.

Marvin Lewis kept the team intact, prevented them from panicking, and coached them to within two minutes of a victory. With a back-up quarterback that clearly wasn’t prepared going up against a Pittsburgh squad that has a Super Bowl-winning quarterback at the helm, this team was destined to lose in the first place. I had all my money on the Steelers. No Dalton, no victory. In the NFL, you cannot win without your leader at center—it has become impossible in this pass/offense-crazy league.

Excellent teachers can wind up with bad classes of students. Great poker players can be dealt bad hands. Marvin Lewis was dealt an ugly scenario with emotional players knowing they won’t go far without the entire team losing their cool because their victory disappeared after a series of terrible decisions that was the result of the melee that had transpired during the previous 58 minutes.

Once upon a time, the Cincinnati Bengals was the best team in the AFC. Lewis’ job was not in jeopardy then, and it shouldn’t be now. The game was disgusting, didn’t have to reach that point, and the sooner everyone forgets about it, the better.



The 2015-2016 Bengals minus Andy Dalton was not meant to win. Don’t throw Lewis under the bus because of this.

Saturday, December 5, 2015

The Muzzled Legacy of Kobe Bryant




There are a few awkward legacies that exist within sports, legacies that don’t quite get the full attention that it might deserve for a multitude of reasons. The New York Islanders winning four consecutive Stanley Cups is far less popular of a fact then the two consecutive decades of the Detroit Red Wings entering the playoffs. The 11 rings of Bill Russell and the 10 rings of Yogi Berra are far off the pop culture popularity of Jordan’s 6 rings or Mayweather’s so-called perfect record. The 85 Bears will forever be known for its defense and incredible playoff run---but the 2012 Tampa Bay Buccaneers were just as nasty, just as destructive. And now we have Kobe Bryant, probably the best player this millennium has to offer---buried underneath other players, other incidents, and other champions.

Kobe Bryant is definitely one of the 20 best players of all-time, but just doesn’t quite get that press. I mean, he does get press, but not really the press about his accomplishments and legacy. He never got the LeBron/Jordan press; heck even Shaq seemingly had more attention when the Big Aristotle was with the Lakers. Bryant couldn’t quite shake off the ballhog or teammate-killer status, even though in his later years he needed to be in full control in order for his Lakers to have a shot. And after Jordan finally stopped hogging the limelight, it wouldn’t be too long before we saw the likes of Wade, Carmelo, and LeBron step in (2003 NBA Draft, my goodness, it was that long ago?) and become the new faces of the NBA—with the Malice at the Palace and the Tim Donaghy scandal thrown in between. If Kobe had been a Jazz or a Hornets player, he would be at Tim Duncan level of attention..



And Kobe knows this.



This is why he pushed so hard, so damn long, for one last playoff run. He had 5 rings—right below Jordan. He was 3rd on scoring---below Kareem (another Laker great). Bryant was defiant and so badly wanted that sixth ring and scoring title he was willing to scorch the earth to achieve this. Bryant would destroy relationships with every teammate if he felt that they weren’t going to help him accomplish one last playoff run. Dwight Howard’s time in Los Angeles was a disaster because Bryant never accepted him. Steve Nash’s run in Los Angeles didn’t go well partially because Bryant didn’t like his end-of-career outlook. Kobe knows the only way to brush past the thick walls of the LeBron Era (which would compare James with the older NBA legend Jordan as opposed to Kobe) he needed to absorb that one final elusive ring and take in some records to finally stand out. Kobe threw 20 years of intense labor into the game he loved, and leaves behind a legacy that struggles because of its timing and circumstances.

Kobe Bryant started playing in the Michael Jordan Era, which ran from the late 80s to the early 2000s. Bryant played under Peak Shaq, who dominated the late 90s with his size, personality, and sheer strength. The early 2000s saw the Lakers dominating, but it also came with some boring uninspired NBA basketball (run by the Spurs) that would begin after the NBA on NBC ended. After NBA/NBC, Michael Jordan and the 90s stars started departing, as did the popularity of the league, and the best player at the time (there’s also that rape case that made Kobe look bad….) .

Then in 2003, the NBA changed forever because of the slew of hip, youthful, motivated new stars ranging from LeBron to Wade to Bosh to Carmelo to Dwight Howard (Dwightmare began in 2004). Even with back-to-back rings, Kobe couldn’t quite shake off the more popular stories of the Cavs, Heat, Thunder, and even the Big 3 Boston Celtics. And then came the referee that admitted to tainting games, including the greatest playoff series in the history of the NBA known as the Kings/Lakers Western Conference Finals—which should have ended with the Kings winning the Finals over the Lakers and eventual Nets and altering the entire NBA landscape.

Similar to the criminally underrated Tim Raines, the second-greatest leadoff hitter of all-time, being eternally in the shadows of Rickey Henderson (the greatest leadoff hitter of all-time), Kobe was always in the shadows of other people and other situations throughout his run. He knows that unless he could win 3 without Shaq, 1 without Phil Jackson and the infamous Triangle Offense, and 6 overall, it won’t be enough to certify him as the best of his generation, and among the best since the departure of Michael Jordan.

He needed one more run. One more push. Father Time did not allow this. The ruthless Western Conference wouldn’t allow this. And now we have a man breaking apart in front of us on his final season—a slow goodbye that is painful to watch because it won’t have the happy ending that he deserves after all his hard work and dedication. Perhaps down the road we will give Kobe his “era” much like how Jordan got his, the Bad Boys got theirs, the Celtics/Lakers got theirs, and LeBron would also have his. As of now, we are witnessing the last season of a great player that is one of the last links to the awesome 90s NBA period. Nothing more, nothing less.



Take care, Kobe.

Saturday, November 28, 2015

The Flukeless Relentless Run of the 2015 Warriors




Before you start reading, start playing the song “Seek and Destroy” by Metallica.



Now you are ready.





The Golden State Warriors of 2015-2016 just might ultimately become the greatest basketball team since the 95-96 Bulls---a team that notoriously bulldozed the nasty Eastern Conference on their way to an easy Finals win (along the way eliminating the greatest Magic and Sonics teams ever assembled) . Using a crazy concoction of ridiculous shooting, small size, jaded speed, annoying defense, and a relentless approach to shove down as many points down your throat as possible, the Warriors of today are playing lights-out basketball (winning by an AVERAGE of double-digits a game) and it has become a beauty to see. Also adding to the mix is the new-age NBA which allows for a team like the Warriors to actually survive.

Let’s start with what the Warriors are doing. Steph Curry took the words of “they got lucky” to the chest and has unleashed a start that easily makes him the best player in the NBA, running the best team in the planet. MVP numbers, MVP leadership (do remember that they don’t even have their coach yet), and dazzling plays have ignited the Bay Area and the rising bandwagon fanbase that enjoys watching this team play and run circles around everyone. Iguodala would be a starter on half the lineups in the NBA, yet plays off the bench—which shows the depth of their offense. Four players have a PER of at least 18—and Klay Thompson is just starting to get better. They are on top in every offensive category—and then achieve being in the top 10 in rebounds, steals, blocks, and forced turnovers. Even crazier is that the team is built to last, as their leads get so massive and there are so many players with the potential to take over, their best player can sit out the 4th quarter and not miss a single beat.

Their defense is their only slight flaw (is it even a flaw if they haven’t won?), as they are 11th in the league in points allowed. But scoring 115 points per game is ridiculous, and will cover any holes you might find in their lineup. Their formula has no weakness, even if they sacrifice defense. Playing a small lineup allows them to run the ball, and dictate the pace. Using big men lineups is the only way to even have a chance, but they better have some speed in their system otherwise the Warriors will just wear you out---which is how the Grizzlies and Cavaliers managed to lose so many in a row back in the 2015 Playoffs when it looked like they had control.

That being said, this new-age NBA allows for teams like this to explode out the game and thrive. Back in the 90s, if you didn’t have a successful and powerful big man you were in trouble—unless you had a Michael Jordan to cover for that loss. Back then, it was physical, tough, aggressive, nasty, and cutthroat from the first minute to the last. This type of rough basketball created the popular rivalries of peak-NBA: Knicks/Bulls, Knicks/Heat, Knicks/Pacers (notice a trend?), Celtics/Lakers, Pistons/Bulls, and the notable rivalry period would end with the Lakers/Kings and Pistons/Pacers.

Nowadays we pretend like there are rivalries, but the results are too one-sided to earn the word (LeBron/Bulls, Clippers/Warriors, Warriors/Grizzlies). The point is, the competition was fierce because the talent pool was deep and better distributed, and also because hand checks and hard fouls were allowed without an eyebrow being raised. 2014-2016 Warriors would die in the 90s; that is guaranteed. So they have a slight stroke of fortune there.

No more takeaways however, as this year currently belongs to the Warriors and this might carry on all the way through June unless other teams start stepping up. The Spurs will do their yearly coasting, without attempting to win every game. The Cavs will remain a threat, although LeBron James this season shocked me by benching himself in the middle of the game---which is inexcusable lack of leadership. The Cavaliers look like they are laboring through the season, while the Warriors just look like playground boys having tons of fun. Does anyone else in the NBA even look like they have a shot? The two major similarities between this Golden State squad and the eternal 96 Bulls is that each team had the best player in the world, and that they want to win every single game regardless of standings, importance of game, and who they are playing.

Golden State has the drive and talent to break the winning streak record, and potentially even the regular season wins record. Whether or not they plan on easing the pedals after the (expected) clinching of a playoff spot will be revealed with time, but for now I can only see the Spurs and maybe the Thunder (if they can get past the free agency drama among other things) standing in the way of their second straight title. This much is certain: the Warriors are mad, very mad; they have proven that they aren’t a fluke, and are edging closer towards a few records while solidifying itself as the team that is leagues ahead of everyone else.




No luck here. Beware the Warriors. Seriously.

Thursday, October 22, 2015

The Delayed Start of the 2015-2016 NFL Season





This NFL season has slightly dragged, hasn’t it?

Want to know why? Because it’s pointless. The season has not actually started. It does not matter what the record of your team is. It does not matter if your team is winning the division. Guess what, your season still has not started. Not for the Packers, which have compiled an impressive 6-0 record. Not for the Broncos, which have benefited from a mix of luck and being in a piss-poor division. Not for the Panthers, Jets, Steelers, or even the sneaky-good Bengals. And especially not for my Dolphins, who always finds a way to let me down.

Until the New England Patriots loses a game this season, it will not matter. The best team in the entire league can have an awful game and still manage to score 34 on the road. The best team in the entire league is second in yards per game and first in points per game. Brady is among the best in touchdowns, yards, and total rating. They have scored 104 points in their three road games. They can find multiple ways to beat you, sometimes destroy you (R.I.P. Jacksonville). Although they aren’t as offensively flashy as The Greatest Show on Turf, Peak Drew Brees Saints, or even the 2007 Patriots, nor are they as defensively destructive as Peak Gruden Bucs, 2000 Ravens, or 85 Bears, there’s a strong chance this team will walk away undefeated.

That’s right, the Patriots might win every game this season, and truly shove it to the faces of the NFL executives and Goodell. As a matter of fact I predict that the Patriots just might end 16-0 with just one or two true close scares.

There is only one truly tough game in their radar: going to New York to take on the darn Giants---the one thorn on their side. The New York Giants is the main reason why Brady isn’t wearing 6 rings. If they manage to shake off this demon and win on the road against a hostile and hopeful crowd (the fans know the Giants are a couple plays away from being a 5-1 team), then nothing will stop Brady and Friends.

The Jets? Please. The Dolphins? Nope. The Eagles? Only if Tebow was involved. The Old as Sin Denver Broncos? Not a chance. The Patriots’ biggest enemy is themselves, they can beat themselves in times when the opposing team can just tremble in fear. Did we see the awful attempt at a fake punt in the Patriots/Colts not-as-close-as-it-sounded game? That was a team throwing desperate shade to try to thwart what has become the scariest and edgiest team in the NFL. And it’s not only diluting the overall product of the NFL, but really has kept the league bottled up, waiting for them to mess up so the floodgates can open and other teams can throw their towel into the ring of Best Team.

Look at all the teams the Patriots beat last season en route to the Super Bowl. The Seahawks are shoddy and can’t protect the fourth quarter. The Colts lead their division-----with a 3-3 record and the Jaguars on their backs. And let’s not forget the Ravens, a team that dipped south so badly we forgot they were a trick play away from beating the Patriots. Baltimore is secretly immensely suffering, but since this season remains irrelevant nobody really cares. No team has improved themselves to a point in which fans, analysts, critics, and diehards truly feel like they are neck and neck against the champs.





The season begins, and there will actually be hope ONLY when the Patriots lose their first game. Until then, absolutely no point watching.

Monday, October 5, 2015

Predicting the 2015 MLB Playoffs (Trying To)





Predicting the baseball playoffs is absolutely next to impossible.



The talent pool is so deep, and to be honest every team in the postseason has a legitimate shot. In the American League, we can argue for the experience of the Yankees, the youthful energy of the Astros, the high energy of the Royals, the offensive juggernaut known as the Blue Jays, and the diet coke version of the Jays known as the Rangers. Each of them can make some serious noise.

Then there’s the even crazier National League. Do you pick the youthful and deep Mets? The German-like machine known as the Cardinals? The Dead Sea depth of the Pirates? The addicting youth of the Cubs? Or the microscopic ERA of the Dodgers? Unlike other leagues, every team that enters the postseason truly earns it, and 2015 is a majestic season so chock-full of awesome players it is hard to keep track of it all. For crying out loud, we had a pitcher throw two no-hitters yet not even wind up in Top 3 voting of the Cy Young in his own league. All I do know is expect long series, expect long games, and except a bunch of close games.

Even both Wild Card games might go the distance, even though I see both the Cubs and the Astros escaping by the skin of their teeth. What would I like to see in the World Series? Simple answer: the Blue Jays and the Cubs----give it a great America’s Team vs. Canada’s Team vibe. It would be brute offense against the cleverness of Cubs management. The ratings would be astronomical, even if most of it won’t be acknowledged (Nielsen Ratings don’t count Canadian viewership). But I don’t see either team truly going the distance, both winding up short in the championship series.



My prediction for the 2015 World Series is: The Kansas City Royals vs. The New York Mets.



Overall game is what will drive you in, having one overwhelming strength and trying to downplay the weaknesses will not help out this season. The Royals can pitch, they can steal, they can hit, and have a lights-out bullpen in the later innings when the going gets tough. Couple that with special home field advantage, a likable manager that seems to make all the right moves, and the momentum from the magical 2014 run should be enough to propel them to the Series yet again. They also carry the underdog edge that will be beneficial to the young squad that hasn’t really been respected---leading to some random conflicts early in the season.

The New York Mets have so much pitching they won’t know what to do with it---hell they hardly handled it well back in August when the innings were piling up. Imagine the concept of Matt Harvey being a bullpen pitcher to throw 2-3 innings of lights-out baseball. We also have Colon, Syndergaard, and DeGrom to choose from. Mix that in with a hot Flores, a red-hot Cespedes, sneaky-good Duda, great defense, and the incredible come-from-behind abilities and this makes the Mets arguably the toughest out in the National League---even if they aren’t as deep as the Cardinals and the Pirates.

If I’m wrong, it won’t really be a shock. The Blue Jays are more than capable of stopping the Royals, and the NL Central division alone has three squads with better teams and better records than the Mets. But the Mets got lucky because in the end of the opening round bloodbath, they would only have to deal with one NL Central team. Survive the Dodgers, and throw the kitchen sink against the NLCS opponent—because odds are they will be harder than anything that comes out of the American League. I still don’t really believe in the Cardinals, and I struggle to figure out why exactly. Maybe it’s the lack of star power, maybe it’s the influx of injuries. Every stat will tell you an NL Central team will walk into the World Series---I have a gut feeling that the Mets and their easier road will sneak in.

Back to the American League, the Yankees, Astros, and Rangers just don’t have the depth or the intimidation of the Royals and Blue Jays. The one guarantee I can give you is that the Royals and Blue Jays are going on a 7-game death battle in the ALCS, and it won’t be pretty because of their previous animosity towards each other. Home Field is important, which is why the Royals will triumph…



….and thanks to the All-Star Game (That issue will be discussed another day), this is why they will win the World Series in November. It will require lots of games, lots of innings, and lots of tension. It will be a great mix of fun, frustrating, and intense. At the end of the day, I can see the Royals surviving it all.



But its baseball. I’ll probably be wrong.

Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Don't Cry For Them Argenti--er, Pittsburgh




Sorry Pirates fans, back to the Wild Card Game your team goes.

And yes, they own the second best record in the National League. Yes they are probably a better team than the Los Angeles Dodgers right now----the Mets being the better squad thanks to free agency. Yes, they are 11-1 against the two teams entering the playoffs above them in seeding. It all seems unfair, no?

Guess what, its baseball, and it’s a sport that thrives on being cruel and unfair. No two strike zones are the same, the rules aren’t always enforced every game, sometimes the ball does absolutely evil things and destroys your game, sometimes you’ll be on an endless losing streak, sometimes an opposing player comes out of nowhere and hits the game-winner, sometimes you’ll do everything right and STILL lose, and sometimes you are in a nasty, nasty division with the most organized franchise in the entire league. The biggest appeal of baseball is that it resembles life: it’s crazy, unpredictable, and it’s not the strongest that survive, it’s the most tolerant and mentally strong that survive. The Pittsburgh Pirates must get over the Wild Card hump and become more tolerant. Especially when always looking up at the St. Louis Cardinals.

Baseball used to be even meaner. The Blue Jays are in the postseason for the first time since 1993. In 1993, the second-best team in ALL of baseball did not even make the playoffs for being underneath the powerful Atlanta Braves. The San Francisco Giants won 103 games, had a lineup that included peak Barry Bonds and Robby Thompson---yet because of the pennant chase rules they had no shot at the postseason because of the way the division was split.

The Pirates at least have an extra second to breathe under the Wild Card format that the Baseball Gods have blessed us. Should it be a best-of-three? That argument is for another day, as I’m sure the equally awesome Chicago Cubs also wouldn’t want their magical season to end on just one game. The point is: in order to reach the top, you have to defeat the king of the mountain. And sorry, but you need to win those division games. The Pirates had a three-game set against the Cardinals and could have been within a single game if they showed up and made some noise. And they were IN Pittsburgh. Losing two of three when the Division Title was on the line is unacceptable. The ball was in your court.

The most underrated aspect of this Wild Card format are those division games which don’t get enough weight in terms of importance. The Pirates are 8-9 against the Cardinals, and 8-11 against the Cubbies. If they had won 75% of those games, they would have been celebrating the division crown. Just winning 2/3rds of their games against the Chicago/St. Louis combo would have wielded them the division. You have tons of opportunities to bring down your rivals on our way to the top, and not just that but also knock them out from playoffs. The last thing you want in the crapshoot of a postseason is a team that recognizes you and has tons of experience against you.

The thing about baseball is that every team in the postseason earned their spot. 162 game season weeds out the lucky teams, and the fake-good teams. The truly best are the ones that always enters the promised land of the playoffs. We would be disrupting a great playoff system and an already-taxing regular season if we start seeding the playoff teams because one division wielded three excellent teams on one particular season. 2015 was an awkward season because one division produced three World Series-caliber teams.

That being said, the Mets are awesome, the Dodgers are great, the Cardinals are elite---and have all earned their crown and playoff berths---and considerable fanfare to potentially represent the National League come World Series time. If the Pirates want to earn the crown and join the elite, they need to beat the king of the NL Central Mountain, there is no other way.





Besides, one way or another, in the postseason you will encounter them….

Sunday, September 27, 2015

Back to Square One: The 2015 Tampa Bay Rays Recap




The 2015 Tampa Bay Rays can be summed up in a simple phrase: subtle recovery.



The Rays struggled to make much of an impact in the baseball season after enduring the most disastrous off-season the franchise has ever seen. They lost their gifted GM, and lost someone who can be simply called the best manager in baseball. Joe Maddon’s departure was such a darn shock that the Rays even went after the Cubs to try to coerce a tampering charge. It was a pointless action but was clearly spurned by a scorned and shattered heart. The soul of the Rays, which had become one of the 5 winningest franchises since the new colors, attitude, and name, was stripped away.

But the off-season didn’t end there. It became a fire sale as we moved several of the players that we had locked up for several years. The infield had been signed together for at least four years, only to see them go elsewhere. Longoria remains the last major player from the fateful 2008 season that saw Tampa Bay witness its first trip to the World Series. We lost Myers, who was our Diet Longoria. We lost Yunel Escobar, who was a darn good defensive player with slight batting issues (…who would then enter the Top 5 in batting average in the entire league...).



The fact is, I am sick of writing this year in and year out---totally sick of watching players slip through our fingers and become key players in other teams. I've complained about this for years upon years.



David Price became a bonafide star with the Tigers, and became an even bigger star in Toronto as they finally broke their playoff drought. James Shields may have screwed up by not taking less money and remaining with the Royals, but was a heck of a star in Kansas City during their improbable 2014 run. Scott Kazmir overcame the injuries and is now a reliable starting pitcher out in the American League. And honestly, I can see greatness in Wil Myers if he can squash the injury bug. Sam Fuld is a defensive powerhouse that really could have helped us in 2015. Then there’s Wade Davis, one of the best bullpen arms in the entire league. Similar to the Orlando Magic (another Florida franchise that receives and loses tons of underrated talent), the Tampa Bay Rays has become a revolving door of talent, as we never fight to keep any of these assets, resulting in a nucleus that can never be consistent. Joe Maddon was that consistency, and after he left, dark days became inevitable.

And if anyone questions the quality of Joe Maddon, look at what has happened to the Cubs. The Rays and the Cubs have strong similarities in terms of the average age and experience of their ballplayers in the lineup. Our disappointment isn’t strictly in our young lineup not managing to get past the more experienced squadrons, but instead in witnessing the incredible run of the Chicago Cubs under our ex-manager through very similar circumstances. The Cubs have no place denting the World Series chances of the rising power Pittsburgh Pirates and the powerhouse machine known at the St. Louis Cardinals—yet here they are in the postseason ready to make some noise. Most incredible fact: nearly half their lineup are rookies. 90 wins was not predicted by anybody, not even Maddon.

We lost the consistency, we lost fans, we lost our manager, we lost our general manager, and we lost most of our identity. What on earth is left? To make matters worse, the stadium situation had a lot to do with Maddon’s departure. He loved Tampa Bay, the people, the organization, and the community. There was absolutely no tension in the same-level vicinity. Go higher up the ladder though, and you’ll see a shrinking payroll (which is rather ridiculous considering the depth of talent and surge of money that baseball has happily been receiving), consistent cutting of corners (The David Price Trade comes to mind), and less and less chance of a true future that doesn’t involve the eyesore known as Tropicana Field. And this is a situation that will not be going away.

Across the way we see Montreal practically screaming for their team back. Montreal got baseball-hungry again, Canadians are enjoying baseball more, and the downtown market has become ripe for one. Both 2016 spring training games in Montreal are pretty much sold out already. In the meantime, Tampa Bay has split fandom between the Rays and the Yankees (throw in Phillies, Braves, and Red Sox for good measure), a local government that couldn’t give two craps about the awful stadium situation, and a fanbase growing sick and tired of trying to make the tough drive to the unattractive corner of St. Petersburg---knowing that we have tons of superior options to building a ballpark.

Yes, I have discussed this before as well. But now with the available options shrinking, Pinellas County actually being a target for a Braves Spring Training facility, and even the Commissioner of Major League Baseball quietly announcing his disappointment about the Tropicana Field ridiculousness, time is running out. It’s hard to support a team that changes its lineup every single year. It’s hard to support a team when the stadium is so shoddy and such a hassle to arrive to. It’s hard to support a team when the future remains in constant doubt. This is the ugly circle: few fans means less money which means less star players and less stability to keep a good team intact. But, no good stadium means fewer fans. Something in this vicious cycle has to change. Otherwise, no matter how deep the talent pool is, the Rays will remain one of the least popular teams in baseball (although some can argue that the television ratings say otherwise).

Despite all the grim news and grim outlook, the Rays looked decent and competitive most of the year. We had a strong starting lineup, superb defense, and remained close most of the time. Chris Archer and Matt Moore sometimes looked like the best pitcher in the league, with scattered dominating performances. Longoria is not his 2008-2010 form, but has improved numbers when compared to his disappointing 2014 season (Let’s not forget his consistent superb defense at third base). Kevin Kiermaier doesn’t have much of the offense, but has become arguably the best defensive outfielder in baseball. In July 1st the Rays were just a game back in the division. If the offense and pitching had clicked together as opposed to opposite times, then we’d be looking at a different 2015 season.

The true ugliness happens in the later innings: the Rays up to this point are 2-13 in extra innings, and 25-30 in one-run games. 27-43 in tight games. If the Rays had just won half of those close games then we would be looking at a fight for the Wild Card. If we had won 2/3rds of those games we would be next to the Blue Jays for the division. And the two biggest issues was the bullpen that imploded in the second half, and the lackluster offense. Kevin Cash had a bright idea of never allowing batters to see the starting pitcher a third time, which resulted in surprising success, but ultimately burning out the bullpen when the season went deeper. Boxburger blew several saves and lost 10 games for the Rays, and he personally blamed it on bullpen fatigue, quietly acknowledging and disagreeing with the Cash strategy. Cash also has awkward dependence on certain players; Jake McGee was never used in the 9th inning despite the struggles from the other bullpen players.



(Side Note: The best thing the Rays should do is a 7-starter lineup of pitchers: 6 of them in a rotation and a 7th one hanging out in the bullpen always prepared to go the distance in case the game goes out of control or there is a sudden injury. The Rays organization has a lot of good prospects, and the best way to maintain the young lineup and not overwhelm them is to give them less innings, more rest, and gradually increase the workload. I know, it won’t be easy to just successfully find seven starters, but the Rays have always been a pitch-heavy team, and I think the Mets’ 6-man rotation scheme should be something Tampa Bay should consider.)



Déjà vu: Rays’ offense has always been miserable. Chalk it up to Derek Shelton (every year), chalk it up to not spending on good offensive players, or just chalk it up on the focus being on pitching, the Rays offense has always been lackluster, and once again disappoints this season. With Longoria being the only true known threat, it was easy for AL and NL pitchers to pick apart the lineup with ease. The Cleveland Indians at one point came to Tampa and posted three straight perfect game threats. No MLB lineup should ever be this anemic. We’ve said this for years, it might be time for a new hitting coach.

Ultimately though, the Tampa Bay Rays are an organization with good players, good scouts, and good intentions. But, we can’t rebuild or have a good outlook towards the future until we can establish a firmer fanbase, open up the wallets a little more, actually keep our favorite players, and get that stadium we've been clamoring for since....forever.

We remodeled and retooled the Tampa Bay team back in 2008---it might be time to do it again. We don't have the Joe Maddon magic anymore, and we are still missing that identity that will shape the way the Rays do business, during baseball and outside of baseball. We need the fans to believe again. We need players to actually want to stick around, like Longoria did when he signed his ridiculously long contract extension. We just need a spark, something. 2015 was spent mostly picking up the pieces while simultaneously not simply throw away the pointless season.


Until then, we will be a franchise always barely remaining afloat, but never gunning for the Promised Land of success.



See you boys in 2016.

Friday, September 18, 2015

NBA Playoffs: Less is More



Adam Silver, I like you so far. But there’s still room for improvement of the league you are running.



The NBA has changed things in the playoff format, which is definitely an improvement. Now, even though you win the division it does not guarantee home field advantage. The breaking point may have been the recent Western Conference results, when the Clippers should have nabbed the #2 seed and the Spurs should not have had to drop all the way to #6 below the Blazers (ugh, the Eastern Conference needs to step its game up). The NBA can indeed do this division winner importance assassination without much protest because the scheduling in basketball is nearly identical across the board---resulting in fair play. The NFL could never really do this, because everyone’s schedules are very different, and depend more on the results of the season before.

But we really don’t care because it still doesn’t address the biggest issue: it’s far too long. The NBA Playoffs are far too lengthy. The sport and the league itself doesn’t have the unpredictability factor of the NHL and (especially) MLB, so most of these 7-game series we know who is going to win---and we hardly see upsets. The seeding part is an improvement, but more needs to be done. Even though the internet-popular Top 16 Teams Regardless of Conference idea will never take off (Too radical even in 21st century standards, even if it produces far better basketball), there are a variety of ways to improve the postseason of basketball and make it more bearable and less taxing to watch.

Best-of-5s needs to make a comeback, and in a big way. One of my most bitter NBA fan moments was when the first year that the playoff format expanded. My Orlando Magic was up three games to one against the Pistons----it should have been ours. But the greed of the NBA and the mouth of Tracy McGrady resulted in us losing three straight and not advancing. Not saying we would have won it all that season, but the darn Pistons have had our number for over a decade and this series was the catalyst (4-12 against the Pistons in the NBA Playoffs in the new millennium).

America loves underdog stories, and loves a good upset once in a while to shake up the foundation of the league. When the Nuggets upset the #1-seeded Sonics in 1994, it would trigger a shock that resulted in one of the better franchises of the 90s struggling to get out of the opening round (Nobody remembers they were upset by the Lakers the very next season). We don’t get many upsets anymore, with the Bulls dropping to the 76ers being the gargantuan upset back in 2012---and that only occurred because Chicago lost Derrick Rose in Game 1. A little insanity never, ever hurts, and dipping the first round to a best-of-5 would potentially produce some crazy. Oh dear God, that was three years ago. Dear goodness, the 76ers nearly made it to the Eastern Conference Finals just three years ago…

Hey, want to strum along and get to the good meat of the NBA playoffs quicker? Then Best-of-5 the conference semifinals as well. In here, you’ll have the best cluster of evenly-matched lineups. Usually the 3-6 seeds in both conferences are about even in quality—in this league you usually have 2-4 awesome championship-caliber teams, and then a slew of decent squads that are just a few pieces short from being a true threat. These second-tier teams should be eliminated as quickly as possible. Imagine being able to jam along two rounds of playoff basketball in a mere three weeks. Look at the Cavs’ run: they played their first game in April 19th and lost Game 6 in the Finals on June 16th. Way too much time.

Two rounds of Best-of-5 before hitting the Conference Finals would increase the pressure, would increase the panic, and would increase the stakes. It would give us more surprises, it would give us more insane storylines. The 2015 Brooklyn Nets needed a few surprise wins in order to get New York excited because of the extremely long road ahead and long odds. The NBA is a league far removed from the more competitive 90s, there are only a few franchises nowadays that we all truly know has a shot at the Finals. Even for the 2016 season, we can only really see the Cavs rise up from the Eastern Conference (and maybe, maybe the Atlanta Hawks). Requiring 6 wins instead of 8 wins would make a world of a difference, give more leeway for a shock or two.

The NBA would never drop the amount of games because of potential money lost, but it would increase the quality of the product. The 82-game season debate is for another day, today we should focus on cutting the first two rounds of the playoffs and arriving at the NBA Finals sooner. Three months of playoffs is ridiculous, no matter how much you might argue for its relevance. Chop off a few weeks, and allow for some insanity and panic. Reseeding helps, but more is needed. Reseeding makes the NBA playoffs fair, shortening it makes it crazy.

Thursday, September 3, 2015

The $150 Million Dollar Solution For Baseball




Let’s pretend for just a split second that Major League Baseball is sick of Tropicana Field and the crappy situation the Tampa Bay Rays find themselves in. Just for a second, let’s pretend. Now, we all know the story: lease is due in a million years, millions are owed to St. Petersburg for a property that all of Florida knows isn’t worth the price-----not even close.

What if MLB helps pick up the tab? What if each team (including the Rays) fork over 5 million? Just 5 million. I mean, it’s a lot in normal people terms, but in sports franchises terms that’s pocket change. Major League Baseball is worth 36 billion, with half of its franchises now worth over a billion remarkably. So much for “baseball is dead” eh? Even the Tampa Bay Rays, in the lower end of the spectrum is worth at least $500 million because of high television ratings and good merchandise sales. MLB can generate around $150 million in a span of a month and be able to immediately rid Tampa off of the Tropicana Field shackles.

Alright, I know there has to be more legal ramifications around the Tropicana Field deal. But money talks and $150 million to St. Petersburg would be a very loud “LET THEM FIND ANOTHER PLACE TO PLAY.” This money would more than cover the remaining costs of the giant refrigerator that has ranked last in MLB attendance in the past several years (even losing out to the Miami Marlins, which is located in a sexy city with tons of other options and with a terrible owner to boot). This is a way to see what the city politicians really feel about the team: do they really care about the team, or just care about getting covered for the building? Would they miss the Rays at all? Or is this just a city pulling money in an obviously-crappy situation?

Deal talks have died and stalled for years, with the city just flat-out refusing the Rays even a chance to look around. One of the bigger subtle stories is the meteoric rise of Montreal Baseball and how the Rays changing uniforms would be absolutely perfect for the league---even if expansion should be the true blue solution. The Montreal RayExpos would be lodged in the American League East with the Yankees, Red Sox, and Blue Jays. MLB is not stupid, they can see the oodles of money signs, even if it would mean breaking the hearts of people in Central Florida (which clearly have no indication of feeling a connection with the South Beach vibe and teams located within its confides). But this isn’t about Montreal, this is about how baseball can pick up the tab (excruciating left field idea, just letting you all know) to remove one of the few remaining scabs in an otherwise very successful league going through a subtle quality renaissance.

Of course, with all the money around, this is indeed very do-able. The issue is whether or not other teams are willing to participate in something that doesn’t affect them (that is, except for the few games they are stuck in Tampa Bay). You can waive the revenue sharing, but then the lower-tier teams would complain about not getting the extra dough. You can waive the luxury tax, but this would only affect the heavy spenders like the Dodgers, Red Sox, Angels, and Yankees. You can waive the International Player tax usually imposed on the teams, but that would also create an issue as teams like the ones I mentioned would benefit the most. They could be reimbursed in intervals for the next decade after the new stadium is found/built/celebrated, but I doubt the Rays would enjoy the concept of slowly paying back 29 teams for a generation.

The only way this would work is if all teams collectively agree that the $5 million spent on the Rays is justified and would improve the league overall. Unfortunately, I don’t see happening in a long shot, but the point of this article is to point out that it is mathematically viable to solve the awful issue that has been plaguing Florida baseball for the past decade. If pockets would open, then we would be one step closer to making the league an overall happier place.



Now, about that Athletics stadium issue…………………..

Friday, August 28, 2015

Offense and Revenge: The Two Main Storylines of the 2015 NFL Season





Back in 2014, I had said that the NFC winner would win the Super Bowl, most likely out of the NFC West. I was predicting a bloodbath between the Seahawks and the 49ers, the top rivalry that was brewing in the NFL. They dislike each other almost as badly as the Ravens/Patriots grudge match, and thought that whomever survived would win it all. The Seahawks were a bonehead decision away from becoming back-to-back champs. I am positive that they are just itching to return to finish the job, getting that second Super Bowl ring.



But this will not be their year. Not this time.



We have two major storylines developing this season that creates the two teams we will see in the 2016 Super Bowl. Both tales are boldly different, arguably opposite. On the NFC side, we will see the Seahawks handedly take over the NFC West as the Cardinals will struggle matching last season’s magic, the 49ers will fall in flames, and the Rams will…well, not really contribute. The Panthers will repeat as champs, continuing the momentum from last year’s surprisingly lengthy run. The Packers will also repeat, as a furious Aaron Rodgers (who should have been in the Super Bowl last season) shall be seen hurling bombs all year long to get back to the same spot.

In case you haven’t noticed, a lot of revenge storylines are developing in the NFC: the Cowboys, Lions, Packers, and especially the Seahawks all feel hosed and feel like they should have gone further. The SpyGate controversy engulfs the fact that the Lions got horrifically screwed in their playoff game, the Cowboys got wrecked because of a stupid rule (it WAS the right call, contrary to what you are led to believe), the Packers caused the biggest collapse in recent NFL history, and the Seahawks…we all know what occurred on that fateful night. P.S. It was a terrible call mixed with a ballsy move by Belichick for not calling the timeout we were all expecting. Back to topic. The NFC will not be won by any of these teams though.

The true revenge story belongs to Tom Brady and the New England Patriots in the AFC. They are pissed, even if they won it all. DeflateGate has ruined all happy feelings experienced in the Northeast as they watch their legendary quarterback have to go to court to defend his reputation and prevent a suspension. We are seeing a furious head coach, constantly accused of cheating, suddenly having his legacy questioned yet again by the NFL, by the fans, and of course by the rival teams. Ravens are still salty at that trick play…

Expect the Patriots to scream through the AFC, taking down everything in its path. The Colts (which will win their division), Ravens (winning in a tight division), Steelers, and Chargers (whom I predict will be neck-in-neck with the reeling Broncos) will fall very quickly and swiftly to the Belichick Machine. It won’t be pretty in the least bit. Reggie Wayne joining the Patriots alongside a mostly-intact staff and a bloodthirsty Brady? I am Dolphins nation all the way, and I think we might even hit 10 wins (despite the nasty scheduling ending of Chargers/Colts/Patriots). But the Patriots will win at LEAST 12 to stick it to Roger, stick it to the NFL, and stick it to the haters. The last thing you need is to give them motivation.



Patriots will march to the Bowl. Want to know who is joining them?






Philadelphia Eagles.





Yes, the Eagles. I am not kidding. Chip Kelly and its sneaky-deep lineup of offensive weapons is going to march in an inconsistent division. Bradford will be healthy, will be well-protected, and is going to run a devastating offense that is going to wear you out. And then there’s the sheer potential of tricks up their sleeve. And of course, we can’t forget the main factor in all this:






TEBOW!

The Eagles will run circles around everyone using the innovative and fast-paced Kelly offense, and Tebow has FINALLY found a team that will adjust well to his style of play. Even if Tebow won’t be front and center, he will remain a vital part with leadership, optimism, and a great aura that will resonate throughout the staff and the season. Similar to the Alex Smith/Colin Kaepernick situation, Sam Bradford is an improved version of Nick Foles and could propel them to go quite far.

Yes, the Eagles is most definitely not the popular choice. But their quarterback staff is actually quite deep, and add all the offensive options and Chip Kelly’s innovative style of play, and this could spell greatness for Philly, and bad news for everyone else. Kelly is 46-7 in college, 20-12 in his first two pro seasons with a lesser lineup in a tough division----without much of a defense too. He is due for a special NFL season, and I predict that this will be it. I am standing by my Eagles/Patriots Super Bowl matchup.

God is now an Eagles fan. Never bet against God.



But that is my pick, posted here for all to see and criticize, especially if I am way off.


Go Dolphins!!!

Monday, August 24, 2015

The 2015 Rays' Missing Keys to Enter the Door of the Postseason




Welcome to the homestrech Tampa Bay Rays.



After being a couple innings shy of being right on the upper edge of the Wild Card standings, the Rays find themselves once again somewhere in the underneath the surprise-surprise Twins, the jaded Los Angeles Angels, the emerging Texas Rangers, and the bipolar Baltimore Orioles. Even though its four ballclubs that are better-built (with the exception of the Twins), the Rays are only 2.5 games back and have comeback history in its blood (They’ve pulled off bigger September miracles before). They also have the Twins, Orioles, and Yankees within the scheduling crosshairs, so they can definitely cover plenty of ground if they can manage to band together and win some games.

Now, the Rays technically should not be in this current position right now. They lost their GM, they lost their awesome manager (Any Joe Maddon doubters must be quiet now after seeing the Cubs’ incredible turnaround on Year One), and did lose a few players along the way. The Rays rank in the upper half on injured players and lost time to injuries. They are in a division with the Blue Jays, Yankees, and Orioles, offensive powerhouses that feed off of inexperienced pitching. The top American League teams have one thing in common: they destroy baseballs. The Rays are running an NL offense with small ball paving the way to their cluster of wins. The fact that they are in this position should make Rays fans proud and satisfied.



However, the Rays could be doing even better.



The close calls we keep losing are what kills us inside. Boxberger alone has cost the Rays 9 wins, and has blown several other games as well. The man has not been the same since the double intentional walk incident in South Side Chicago. The Rays are 2-10 in extra innings, and 21-22 in one-run games. If they would have won just half of their extra innings games and a few of those close matches we would be looking at them battling the Yankees/Blue Jays (depending on the week) in the Wild Card game. If the bullpen would just cling on to the leads that our starters have usually been dishing out, then we would be looking at a far better position right now.

Kevin Cash’s decision early in the season to never allow the opposing team to see the Rays’ starter a third time around was slightly revolutionary, slightly clever, and did help propel Tampa’s good start. But the situation gets complicated when the bullpen gets taxed, and the technique continues far deep into the season. His premature yanking of starters has been my biggest gripe of Cash, he has a rotation more than willing to dig deep, at least 7 innings. Chris Archer is one of the better pitchers this season, yet has been allowed to complete a game just once.

We need more from the starters, we need our backup to rest more often, not be utilized so much. Maybe even play with the cards and throw some starters to the bullpen. Matt Moore is coming back, why not shelf him to provide 3-4 good innings once in a while to allow for Boxberger, Geltz, Gomes and company to relax? Alex Colome is another decent pitcher that can survive more than just an inning. Him and Moore could potentially be a deadly middle-reliever combination. The Rays are 28th in quality starts, which means the bullpen has been utilized far beyond the norm, and really need some breathing space.

The offense is where we need to really pick up. 43 one-run games, 12 extra-inning games means when we separate, it’s never by too much. 24th in total bases, 29th in runs scored, 24th in batting average. The Rays have only won once when trailing after 8. These numbers are not pretty, no World Series contending team hits numbers this low. Our pitching has definitely kept us in, but now it’s time for the offense to rev up the pressure. The Rays are among the top 10 team in stolen bases---maybe it’s time to aim even higher. What they need to do is draw more walks, run the bases more often, make more sacrifices (19th in sacrifice hits), and quietly and slowly tack on the runs.With more runs will allow a longer leash from our starters, and more space for mistakes when the fatigued bullpen has to get involved.

We also need individual players to step up. Evan Longoria, sorry but you are my target. Longoria’s power numbers has been severely down (Just 13 homers so far in an “injury-free” season is slightly scary), but it’s his batting average I would like to see pick up. 270 is nothing to laugh at (career .271 hitter, .833 OPS), but in order for the offense to step up the leader and team MVP needs to rack up the numbers and get the team going. His home run, OPS, and RBI totals are far down from his early years. Maybe we’ve seen peak Longoria and it won’t come back, but I assure you if he manages to even slightly return to 2009-2011 form we will see more wins.

The 2015 Tampa Bay Rays are much better than we expected, playing in a division that is collectively playing much better than anticipated. Although it is a long way out of the woods, especially consider all that has been lost in the past 9 months, but rest-assured this franchise doesn’t quit, and will still make a deadly push. Even though the lack of free agency movement remains disgusting (I still cry about it from time to time), the Rays are still built and run decent enough to at the very most nab a Wild Card slot.

This organization has charted through rough waters in the past, and this insane Wild Card chase is no different. If the pitching can stop being so bottom-heavy (bullpen is clearly dying) and the offense can pick up the pace a smidgen, then we can see Tampa in playoff contention at this point next month.


P.S. The Rays are the only team yet to draw a million fans--while 11 teams have already hit 2 million. Some support for this team would be nice Tampa Bay....

Friday, July 31, 2015

The Yearly Trade Deadline Folding of the Tampa Bay Rays




The Tampa Bay Rays management staff believes that they have a team competitive enough to make some noise for the remainder of the season.

That if half true. Yes, the Rays will remain competitive, and might even make the playoffs if some of the players can pick up the slack. At the very least, they will be in the hunt come September. However, competitive should not be what we are seeking: we should be gunning for a World Series berth, and potentially winning the entire thing. Of course this is all a long shot, winning a championship is always a longshot with this organization. However, what’s even the point if we aren’t trying? The Rays are like that poker player that never bluffs his hand, surely he won't lose big on any risks, but nobody has ever won a poker tournament without a few risky moves and a few tricky plays.

We are seeing squads that just a couple years ago were worthless, now making all the major moves. The Houston Astros lost 100 games a few years in a row, and now have suddenly picked up Carlos Gomez AND Scott Kazmir (of course, a former Ray) in a matter of days. The Kansas City Royals went from cellar-dwellers into AL favorites, and this is AFTER losing their main pitcher James Shields (former Ray) and their Opening Day Starter. The suddenly-awesome Royals picked up Johnny Cueto AND Ben Zobrist (Former Ray…again). The Astros’ payroll is just 6 million more than Tampa’s, yet have managed to bolster their staff to become among the best-looking teams in the American League.

As for the Rays? Well, fan favorite DeJesus is gone…and we got a minor league pitcher in exchange. And then the Rays did….nothing else. It is mind-numbingly frustrating to witness that year after year we do more subtracting than adding by the time the deadline rolls around. Last year we witnessed our season collapse as we traded David Price despite having a spectacular July and was still in the hunt. It is frustrating to know what the issues are, see potential affordable pieces get shuffled around, and yet not make a move to try to improve our chances. Offense and speed (and to a lesser extent fresher bullpen arms) is what the Rays truly need. We know this. They know this. Baseball knows this. So why isn’t more being done in Tampa?

Baseball is twice as competitive as it was in 2008 when the Rays turned the franchise around. At the beginning of the season there was no clear-cut favorite. To this day, upon the publishing of this article there still isn’t a team that is leaps and bounds above everyone else. 19 of the 30 teams right now are within playoff range. Even the Cubs, Mets, and Astros are pushing towards the playoffs---when they were expected to be in not-quite-complete mode in 2015. You can’t just sit around anymore, the competition is tighter than ever. From Los Angeles all the way up to Toronto, over a dozen teams are built well-enough to make a strong push.

But the Rays are a team in a devastating wheel of successful mediocrity. Although the fans aren’t showing up to the games and help with the revenue stream, why should they show up if we don’t really make major moves to keep our good players? The Rays have remained in the bottom-third in payroll several years in a row, even though baseball itself has reached $8 billion in revenue. Evan Longoria remains the only great player in the history of the Rays organization to stay aboard the ship and not jump off for richer waters. Every season we see good players, great players, and impressive potential move elsewhere or get traded elsewhere. So why go to the games? There’s just a great chance we won’t see half those guys shortly down the road. The Rays won’t spend the extra money (Not even asking for a Dodger-like increase, with just $15-$20 million more you can land good role players), leading to us not really spending the money to go to the games, leading to less revenue required to make the important deals to make the organization stronger. We are on our way to becoming the first team to average less than 15,000 since 2006. Embarrassing to say the least.

The attendance, appeal, popularity of the Royals skyrocketed after the magical 2014 playoff run. Instead of sitting around like what the Rays have done in recent seasons, they have gone all-in by being very aggressive in the free agency and the trade deadline, and filling Kansas City with this aura of hope that they will be back in the playoff spotlight once again. The Royals knew that teams like the Blue Jays and Angels would beef up their lineups whenever possible, and needed to be in the mix.

The Tampa Bay Rays will never win a championship under this current attitude of keeping all the prospects, never making a move (unless its for more prospects), and just assuming that keeping the same team will allow them to “remain competitive,” even though they are third in the division and several games back in the wild card. You don’t have the magical Joe Maddon as manager, you have yet to draw in experienced and valuable veterans, and you haven’t been appealing enough to draw the interest of good young players roaming the free agency. You need to make moves. Otherwise, you will continuously drain the spirits and momentum of your team, your fans, and the area that maintains them.





Chris Archer basically pleaded that the Rays make moves to keep up with the Blue Jays. Don’t hold your breath, Archer, we’d hate to see you go to the disabled list and limit our “competitive” team even more. I love my Rays, but we will never win the entire thing until there is more effort seen in the heart of the season.

Sunday, June 21, 2015

The Unexpected Fight of the 2015 Tampa Bay Rays




So it was the bottom of the ninth. The Indians had the bases loaded with two outs. The Rays were leading 4-1, and it had been the sixth inning the already-weary bullpen had pitched that evening. Boxberger was obviously tired, you could see it in his eyes. Urshela had fouled off a couple pitches with plenty of ferociousness. The Indians were smelling walk-off, were smelling at least a rally. Boxberger throws a shocking fastball right down the middle, inching just a bit to the left. Called strike, froze Urshela completely, effectively ending the game.


That is the 2015 Tampa Bay Rays in a nutshell.

It is nearly July, and the Maddon-less Rays are in first place, and not in a weak division either. With the Blue Jays scoring bundles of runs, and the Yankees and Orioles being tough draws, this is no division for a weak squad. Somehow however, in spite all the injuries and departures, the Rays are producing wins in various ways and have become quite the inspiring story. Skipping past its questionable future in Florida (Montreal is threatening more and more) and skipping past the ugly offseason which saw Friedman and Joe Maddon take off to the National League, we are seeing a spunky squad led by a chill manager that seems to be carrying the Maddon culture handedly.

The Rays are not outstanding in any category specifically, but have exceled collectively and produce in multiple ways. The Rays are among the leaders in ERA, Saves, opponents’ batting average, defensive efficiency rating, and stolen bases. Whatever offense the team lacks (Longoria doing more Jeter-like numbers with decent average, fewer home runs) is made up for with outstanding defense, risky play, and superb pitching from starters to the bullpen.

No one player has stepped up all season, they arrive in droves. Chris Archer had an insane streak recently in which he pitched 23 innings with no walks, 38 strikeouts, 14 hits, and a meager run. Sousa Jr. decided to look like a home run hitter by entering the Top 20 in home runs. Steve Geltz retired 25 straight batters, and most of them happened after a Paula Abdul kiss. The Rays are keeping it close always, with 22 one-run games, and have at least three pitchers capable of saving the game when necessary. They are on pace to nearly double their stolen base output from 2014.



And…..this isn’t even the complete team yet.



Smyly is coming back. Moore will be back. Loney will eventually be back. Odorizzi will soon be back. Jennings and Jaso will be back down the road. So if the Rays are playing good baseball and we still have important pieces arriving, what might be their ceiling? Kevin Cash and Jim Hickey have pulled out miracles with the limited rotation, so who knows what Cash can do when he actually has more options.

Overall, the culture in Tampa Bay has remained the same, which was the most important requirement heading into Opening Week 2015. The small ball style has not left Tropicana Field, and the friendly approach to playing the game has definitely influenced the worry-free image of the young team. There hasn’t been a player controversy, there is wonderful support being dished out left and right, and every player is given their chance to shine and make an impact. It’s a beautiful thing.

Of course, the biggest weakness of the Tampa Bay Rays is the utter lack of home-field advantage. Last in attendance continues to plague the franchise even after the miraculous turnaround back in 2008, averaging nearly 4,000 less a game. Lack of buzz surrounding a good season is a mentally and emotionally draining problem that affects the best of teams. Although one can only hope, it appears that once again for another season the fans simply won’t make an appearance at The Trop---and that’s a shame considering the 110% effort the players have been giving so far this season.

But this Rays squad has survived an improving division, hordes of injuries, the departures of the heart and soul of the Rays Way, and relying on tons of inexperience. Perhaps it can handle the lack of fans too. After all, with half a team the Rays are approaching July with not only playoff range, but possibly even leading the division. It has been an interesting ride, and an unexpected one.

As a fan, it baffles me how you can still find ways to surprise me. But this 40-31 Tampa Bay Rays is not only surprising me, but is surprising the entire world of baseball. Let’s just wait and see how long this can hold up.