Connected

Entries categorized as ‘sports’

Teaching the NCAA Sportsmanship

September 5, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Innocently enough, the NCAA agreed to partner with the American Football Coaches Association (AFCA) for a national sportsmanship initiative called “RESPECT Weekend” to kickoff the college football season. The premise for RESPECT Weekend is for all of the players on each team to meet prior to the game and shake hands to demonstrate sportsmanship. While it is a requirement that head coaches do this before each game, participation in Respect Weekend was strongly encouraged, but not mandatory.

Presumably, the NCAA and the AFCA felt this could help prevent players from fighting similar to the infamous South Carolina vs Clemson brawl in 2004

In some meeting during the summer, RESPECT Weekend probably seemed like an excellent idea. Who would be against promoting sportsmanship and is shaking hands not an great way to display this? Two problems however: What exactly is sportsmanship and how is it properly demonstrated?

Sportsmanship is the actions taken by coaches and athletes that are the unwritten rules behind the rules of a sport. Its not showing up your opponent, but allowing for a graceful defeat. Sportsmanship is choosing to not run up the score when the game has been won despite what the game clock says. Sportsmanship is not shooting a three point shot in basketball with less than 10 seconds left and up by double digits or only calling running plays in football once the game has become out of reach for the opponent. Sportsmanship is not shaking hands before a game.

Looking at this idea from a pure football perspective, it is doubtful RESPECT Weekend was conjured up by someone who once played the sport. Its acceptance by all parties is assuredly the result of no one finding a strong defensible reason not to do it. There is a mental preparation that nearly all athletes go through leading up the game or event. Unlike golf, baseball or even basketball to a degree, football players are preparing themselves to do battle. To physically outmatch their opponent, to knock them to the ground if possible every play. It is irresponsible to have more than 100 men in this mental state all meet at mid field and come eye to eye with their opponent. You cannot predict the mental strength of all involved and should not bet on the emotional control of these young men.

An obvious counter to this argument is the sport of boxing. While it is true boxers “touch gloves” before the beginning of each bout, like football coaches, it is purely ceremonial. Boxers are well past thinking about sportsmanship at this point. The boxer has already personally decided whether he will allow himself to commit the acts of a low blow or punching after the bell well before the touching of gloves and you will not know what their decision was until after the match is underway. On June 28, 1997, Mike Tyson touched gloves with Evander Holyfield to start the fight and in the third round Tyson bit a piece of Holyfield’s right ear off. This is all to prove sportsmanship is developed during an individuals lifetime and demonstrated by testing of their will through the fire of conflict and opportunity, not through a ceremony.

LeGarrette Blount was the University of Oregon 2009 starting tailback. The Senior’s stats for the year will remain eight carries for -5 yards. Frustration following defeat at the hand of Boise State and the vebal taunting by Byron Hout lead Blount to drop Hout with one swift punch to the chin. It was shocking, indefensible and the act that will be forever linked to the first day of RESPECT Weekend. Both players disgraced themselves and their teams, but for Blount, he will never play college football again. Sportsmanship matters. Oklahoma State’s coach Mike Gundy has already declared his team will not shake hands with Georgia today stating:

“Our first concern was [we'll] have 115 guys out there and they’ll have 70, it just takes one guy to pop off,” Gundy said Monday at his weekly media luncheon. “Then I don’t know how you’re going to break it up. How do you control something like that?”

There will always be a Tyson or a Blount that can send an event into disarray. The AFCA and the NCAA should focus on strongly encouraging its coaches to be the torchbearers of sportsmanship. Eliminate dirty play and penalize teams for running up scores. The latter though will always remain when a championship is decided through sportswriter and coach voting or the BCS system. If the NCAA really cared about sportsmanship in football it would create a playoff system to decide its champion. Otherwise you will always have coaches pushing the limits of acceptability like Oklahoma’s embarrassment of Texas A&M in 2003. That day the Sooners won 77-0 and all that was proved was that Bob Stoops will never have the discipline to be Joe Paterno. Paterno has twice had an undefeated team in a major conference that did not win the National Championship. Many argue it was due to the fact that Paterno refuses to run up a score when a game is officially out of reach. Paterno proves true sportsmanship and his legacy as a man trumps everything else. The NCAA does not need to invent acts of sportsmanship to improve the game. It merely needs to take a look at how the winningest coach in Division I football has defined his career. Winners do not happen by accident.

Categories: sports
Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

The 19th Hole – 8/29/09

August 29, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Vince Lombardi once said, “We would accomplish many more things if we did not think of them as impossible.” This begs the question, from a pure secular perspective, is there anything that is not possible? As Nike implies with the phrase, “Just do it.” It is not the question of whether it can be done, but instead whether you believe you can do it. As we labor through the last weekend of the year absent of football, I would like to examine some recent events in sports where the line of possible and impossible has blurred.

  • Brett Favre. Last year we had Favre Gate, this year the football world waited on baited breath for whether he would take the helm guiding the Vikings, conveniently one of the Packers most hated rivals. Finally, we were informed by the first ballot Hall of Famer, ”It was the hardest decision I’ve ever made. I didn’t feel like physically I could play at a level that was acceptable.” Favre would never play in the NFL again. It was impossible. But then August 18 happened. The impossible was again possible as Favre decided that he was not quite finished with his personal play box otherwise referred to as the NFL. I really like Favre or perhaps it is more accurate to say I really like watching him play the game of football. The Vikings had no shot of winning the Super Bowl this year. Now arguably the best defense and most fearsome running game now has an adequate passing game to complement them with Favre paired with the constant deep threat receivers of Bernard Berrian and Sidney Rice. The Super Bowl is now possible for Minnesota. Unfortunately, I think the incomparable Scoop Jackson identifies the mood of the football community with his article “What if Brett Favre were a woman?” I guess time will tell as to whether it worth dancing the dance with Mr. Favre.
  • Tiger Woods. He is an amazing athlete and in the discussion as perhaps the greatest golfer of all time. He has been named Associated Press Male Athlete of the Year a record-tying four times, and is the only person to be named Sports Illustrated’s Sportsman of the Year more than once. However, these facts have blinded the sports media during the past several years to pose the question at every PGA Major event: Tiger or the field. To be fair, his list of accomplishments at Majors are considerable. He is second all time in PGA Major victories, one of two players to win all four majors twice and the only player to have won multiple Majors in consecutive years. Starting from the first year Tiger won a Major in 1997, there have been 52 Majors. Tiger has won 14 or about 27 percent. This is a significant number, but during this time there were four entire years that he did not win a single Major: 1998, 2003, 2004 and 2009. The PGA Major tournaments consist of the top players in the world with varied and distinguished course terrains. It is irresponsible to suggest that one man should be considered the the front runner for every single tournament with no consideration to what players are playing the best golf at the time as well as those whose game is best suited for the current course in question. It is lazy journalism. Less than 30 percent odds is not something I wish to place my lot behind. Is it impossible that Woods could win every Major, no, but its highly improbable.
  • The Diva Receiver. To make a list of the those that have fit this profile since the 80’s would quickly begin to look like the Bible’s Book of Numbers. Long. Recent events suggest that there is strong reason to believe that the final curtain is falling for the diva receiver in the NFL, though we still have the entertaining examples of Ochocinco and that of the embarrassing from Brandon Marshall. I believe the era will be capped by the imprisonment of Plaxico Burress. A remarkable interview by Jeremy Schaap with Burress on E:60 highlights that his current circumstances may not be those resulting from that of a Diva mentality, but instead that of the targeted athlete that was so well documented in the article in ESPN The Magazine titled Living Scared following the tragic death of Sean Taylor. So is the Diva wide receiver in the NFL on its way out? I have hope that it is possible.
  • Eric Bruntlett. A post about the possible of impossible in sports would not be complete without paying tribute to Bruntlett’s unassisted triple play. It was only the second in major league history to end a game and the 15th overall. Sometimes overcoming the impossible involves just a bit of luck because as Lombardi once said, “Perfection is not attainable, but if we chase perfection we can catch excellence.”

Categories: sports
Tagged: , , , , , , , , , ,

Examining the Cultural Truth and Importance of Sports

August 8, 2009 · Leave a Comment

What truly is the definition of Sports? Late last night I was watching a HBO documentary on Joe Louis and began to ponder this seemingly rhetorical question. On the surface, the nature and understanding of sports is quite obvious. It is a competition that requires athleticism and skill where the goal is to master and outmatch the others participating. Dictionary.com defines sport as an athletic activity requiring skill or physical prowess and often of a competitive nature. I dispute this simple, yet completely logically premise.

Popular sports of the day include football, basketball, soccer, MMA, hockey, boxing and baseball. The list of all sports is perhaps limitless including non contact events such as golf, tennis, skating, swimming, bowling, billiards and even beer pong. Then there is the activities branded as sports entertainment as coined by the WWE. Surely true sports is entertaining, but can an activity be more entertainment than sport and still be classified as such?

Around the world, the athletes that compete at the highest level in their sport are revered and interestingly, their words and actions often carry more weight in public discourse than elected leaders, champions of business or athletes elite scholarly counterparts. These shining stars of sports often burn brightly for only a short period, normally lasting about a decade. How is it that they have captured the greatest spotlight with the ability to shape and redefine culture more so than any other profession?

I love boxing. It was of the elite global sports for nearly the entire twentieth century, only beginning to fall from popular interest twenty years ago in the early 90s. Boxing is among the oldest sports in the world with ties that go as far back to BC, winding its way through the Roman Empire, to prizefighting that eventually transformed into its present state with the release of the Marquess of Queensberry rules in 1867. Similar to MMA, it is viewed as a barbaric gladiatoresque spectacle. This misconception can arguably be linked to the clouded definition of Sports as true boxing includes unmatched skill, intelligence and discipline displayed through mental and physical combat with both the opponent and the individual.

My personal view of sports is the requirement of either a ball or physical contact. The best of sports including both and one of origins of the term Bam Sports. This is merely an opinion and not based in any decided evaluation of the true definition. In truth, sports is the nexus of an accepted, specialized skill that most do not possess that garners widespread interest, inspires passion and allegiance as well as social power. While often sports includes a team of athletes, the overall sport is directed by its current individual stars that demonstrate the highest of skill during their career. These stars are the chosen few to provide a voice to the current state of society, approving certain practices and condemning others, resulting in a societal tectonic shift. Sports is where society germinates its change agents.

Joe Louis exemplifies this premise with impact on cultural and social norms as well as political endorsement with the Schmeling fights and WW II enlistment. His example is perhaps the foundation for the recent critisim Tiger Woods has received for not utilizing the platform that he has been given as a global change agent, a globally, implicitly elected leader of the time to direct and guide social justice.

Perhaps the real question is what social injustice will Sports address next?

Categories: sports
Tagged: , ,

The 19th Hole – 7/19/09

July 19, 2009 · Leave a Comment

July has the unfortunate distinction of being the month right before football starts back up, but that does not mean we are without news for the U.S.’s top sport. America’s past time hits its midpoint of the season this week, but of course no one cares any more. Baseball could be on the verge of becoming America’s fourth sport. Sacrilegious you say – perhaps – but there is a rising tide that is undeniable.

A new champion in this rising sport helped provide more publicity in a week’s time than perhaps the last five years, again proving that all publicity is good, even if your champion is giving the bird directed straight at the fans that paid top dollar to see the sport’s Championship.

Not all is new. We nearly witnessed the crowning of the oldest Major champion in golf history. To bad 71 holes does not make for a tournament. Hole 72 is unforgivingly decisive. We also had incredible, albeit in a sport that will never take hold in America. For the staunch football fan, July continues to impress.

  • Michael Vick. His federal dogfighting sentence to end July 18, there is wide speculation regarding what team may pick him up, when or perhaps if the NFL commisioner will  allow him to play in the league again and thus if we will resort to playing in the fledgling UFL this upcoming season. The July 13 Sports Illustrated had an interesting piece title, “What’s Next For Michael Vick?” The article looks at past and current legal transgressions by other athletes and the punishment received, both through the courts and their respective leagues. What Vick did was wrong. He went to prison for 23 months. Should it not be obvious to all that he has served a very harsh concurrent punishment both legally and to his career. It is not any teams responsibility to sign him, but NFL would be in the wrong to extend his sentence. Perhaps the most interesting quote from the article came from esteemed writer Malcolm Gladwell: “Let’s see, Leonard Little got drunk and killed another human in a car accident. He served 90 days in jail and got suspended for eight games. Vick was cruel to some dogs. He went to jail for a year and a half. And we’re wondering if Vick can play in the NFL? Please.
  • MLB. This past week the league celebrated its All Star game and I do not know anyone who watched. Similar to the strike in 2004, the steroid inquisition via the George Mitchell report has destroyed fan interest. The past decade has completely altered the validity and accuracy of statistics. In a large sense, Manny Ramirez may have been the final straw, cleverly told in this fictional epic by Bill Simmons. Perhaps the greatest tragedy was uncovered in the July 13 Sports Illustrated-what can I say it was a good issue. The article looks at how Albert Pujols may be the most perfect player to ever play the game and this year has a chance to win the first batting triple crown since 1967. I fear it may fall on deaf ears, despite Pujols  strong, affirmative denial of ever taking performance enhancing drugs.
  • UFC 100. Brock Lesnar became the undisputed heavyweight champion and moments later attempted to restart a fight with the opponent he just pummeled, verbally assaulted his opponents wife, criticized the organizations biggest sponsor and flipped off the entire crowd. Sounds a little like a weekly WWE show at first glance, but MMA is now mainstream. This is not the Kimbo Slice circus from last October, instead this was the event and perhaps the champion that will push MMA to the third most popular sport in the U.S. Media attention was off the charts before and especially after the event and possibly more telling, UFC 100 had more than 1.3 million pay-per-view purchases. The most in its history.
  • The British Open(apparently now referred to as simply the Open Championship). Tom Watson at 59 was one shot away from becoming the oldest major champion in PGA history. It was not to be, mirroring the excitement and then honorable defeat by Greg Norman from the 2008 Open Championship. To bad. Maybe Jack still has one left in him. Wouldn’t that be a thrill. If the media comes away with one learning from this year’s Open Championship, please let it be that we no longer discuss taking Tiger or the field. This is just a plain dumb story angle and with Tiger missing the cut, perhaps it will never be brought up again. One could hope.
  • Indoor Brazilian soccer. Yep you read that correctly. This may not be the greatest soccer goal of all time, but it has to be the best of 2009:

Categories: sports
Tagged: , , , , , , ,

The 19th Hole – 7/3/09

July 3, 2009 · Leave a Comment

What a difference a year makes. The U.S. may now matter in two global sports that in years recent, we were an afterthought. Favre Gate of ‘08 is now mere nuisance and the NBA is filled with Conference altering changes. I also no longer loath the month of July as its significance in the sports landscape is quite plentiful.

I have been quiet on this site for exactly two months. This is to long for something meaningful not to result from my absence. Today is a very important date. It is the day I made steps to seriously pursue a passion, a direction. Today I began developing a site, and similar to GDGT it will be a least a few months before it is fully unveiled. July is an exciting month. Happy Birthday America.

  • GOOAAALLLL! That is right. Its summer so it is time to discuss elite soccer again. For 45 minutes, a full half, U.S. soccer was on top of the world. The Confederations Cup saw the U.S. leading Brazil 2-o, unfortunately the game ended 3-2 in favor of the South American power house. Brazil winning the Confederations Cup was not unexpected. The U.S. playing in the final and competing drew comparisons for many to the Miracle on Ice. While in no way does the Confederations Cup have similar importance to the Olympics, this would have been an unprecedented milestone in American soccer. Even with the loss, it represents the first time the U.S. competed in the final  for a significant global soccer championship. World Cup ‘10, yeah U.S. soccer, you have piqued my interest.
  • The NBA Draft. Where to begin. Blake Griffin was selected first in the Draft. The Timberwolves selected three point guards while still having Sebastian Telfair under contract. There is a reason some teams stay in the gutter. You heard it here- some where between first and last – Ricky Rubio will never play for Minnesota. Perhaps because some have suggested comparisons to Iverson, I am hoping for great things from Milwaukee’s Brandon Jennings. Here is a great counter criticism post regarding his recent trials. Oh yeah, inexplicably, the Spurs some how landed DeJuan Blair at pick 37. There is a reason some teams always compete for a Championship.
  • Wimbledon. In Ladies singles, as anticipated, the Williams sisters will compete head to head yet again for Grand Slam title. The title game is on the 4th of July no less. Its America’s little way of reminding the British about a document we like to call the Declaration of Independence. The Gentlemen’s Singles final is a bit of a different story. American born Andy Roddick will face off against Roger Federer, winner of 14 Grand Slam titles. This is not the match the tennis world was expecting or possibly hoping for. Today Roddick took down Britain’s Andy Murray. I will not lie – a piece of me was rooting for Murray after watching the Hope of Dunblane, but I have moved on. Hopefully Roddick can bring relevance again to U.S. Men’s tennis this weekend.

Categories: sports
Tagged: , , , , ,

The 19th Hole – 12/9/08

December 9, 2008 · 1 Comment

With each December arrives two very important yet diametrically opposed events in the sports fan’s life. The beloved college football bowl season is always coupled with strong opposition to the dastardly BCS system and intense discussion for some form of playoffs to determine the National Champion. 2008 is without a doubt the worst conclusion to the BCS since its inception. There are as many as nine teams that have a legitimate argument for playing in the title game: Texas, Florida, Oklahoma, Alabama, Penn State, USC, Utah, Texas Tech and Boise State. Assuming you can put aside the discussion for a playoff system, it is incomprehensible how Texas Tech and Boise State have been left out of BCS games, while Ohio State, Cincinnati and Virgina Tech get the big pay days. In the end it is all about money.

We do not have a playoff system because the NCAA cannot figure out how to make more money from it than the current system. Cincinnati and Virgina Tech play each other because they each won their respective BCS conference. Boise State does not have that luxury and is solely dependent on an at large bid, which was given to Ohio State because their fans “travel well” meaning greater ticket sales and higher revenue for the host city. Texas Tech lost out because two Big 12 schools (Texas and Oklahoma) were already selected for BCS games. To come off as fair and prevent any one conference from receiving to large a portion of the BCS bowl revenue, the NCAA made a rule that prevents three schools from the same conference to receive BCS invitations. Texas Tech could very well be the second or third best team in the nation, but they are locked out of the BCS. NCAA – it is not about the student athlete, sports or sportsmanship – it is all about money.

  • This week we all learned that head to head matchups are meaningless in college football. Texas beat OU in the Red River Shootout 45-35. It was decisive and on a neutral field. Texas’ only loss came on the road, after a miracle play with 1 second left. The BCS standings are a joke. Even more amusing is reviewing each Coach’s final votes in the USA Today poll. The media could have stepped up and voted Texas over OU to cancel out the computer rankings. Its a sad day for sports. Even the AP dropped the ball. UTs only hope is for a shared AP championship, though I would not hold your breath…
  • Donovan McNabb. Since I am an Eagles fan, I can tell you unequivocally that he is one of the worst QBs in the league. This is due to the fact that his accuracy(not Philly’s WR play) is embarrassing for a professional. A few weeks back the Eagles tied the Bungles(Bengals) 13-13. McNabb quickly became famous afterward for declaring he did not know a regular season game could end in a tie. In a recent article Rick Reilly decided to quiz other NFL players about rules of the game. In his normal witty style, he presents the argument that McNabb may be in good company. This still does not alleviate my displeasure with McNabb as my team’s starting QB.
  • Joey Porter. You have to respect players that can intelligently address a topic and not provide the pre approved statements given by their PR staff. Last week Plaxico Burress accidentally shot himself in a club with a unlicensed gun he was carrying for protection. Since then he has been attacked and labeled an example of what is wrong with today’s professional athlete. Today Porter spoke back, “Everybody has their mistakes, but that’s exactly what they are … Until you’ve been in that situation, when you’ve been robbed at gunpoint or you’ve had a gun waved in your face or had your house broken into before or been carjacked, you really don’t know what it’s like. For a person to carry a gun, I mean, you’re not carrying a gun to show that ‘I’m tough.’ It’s safety, it’s nothing but safety. They’re making [Burress] out to be such a bad guy but you look at all the guys that’s been robbed this year, all the home invasions, all the guys that’s been shot, like Collier, look how many times he got shot. I’ve had my house broken into before … I know Plax had been robbed before … But it’s tough for us to say we’re professional athletes so we’re not supposed to protect ourselves.” Here is a strong article on fear many athletes still have following the horrific death of Sean Taylor titled Living Scared.
  • Lastly, this week is the Jimmy V Classic. I wanted to honor that with his famous speech at the 1993 ESPY Awards. “Don’t give up, don’t ever give up.”

Categories: sports
Tagged: , ,

The 19th Hole – 8/13/08

August 13, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Can you smell it? Are the withdrawal symptoms that began in early February beginning to subside? Are you ready for some football? That is right – it is time. The NFL kicks off on September 4 with the Redskins taking on the New York football Giants. It is pleasing to the soul. Here are a few other highlights from the week:

  • Chad Pennington. Poor Chad. Everyone knows Brett Favre is a member of the Jets, but few people mentioned the unceremonious release of 2006 NFL Comeback Player of the Year. A great leader, fan favorite and statistically one of the franchise’s best quarterbacks of all time. His one great downfall being injuries, he deserved a little bit more. Excitement now builds for the Jets opener against the Dolphins, Pennington’s new team.
  • Padraig Harrington. Once can be viewed as luck. Twice and we are starting to see a trend, but three PGA major golf victories in 14 months and I think we may have a Tiger hunter. It is important to put into perspective the enormity of Harrington’s PGA Championship win. It has been 78 years since a European has won the tournament and he is the only European in history to win back to back PGA majors. All that and he has a cool name. Count me in on the bandwagon.
  • Redeem Team. I am not sure I can get on board here. I bought into the hype and decided to be one of the estimated billion plus people to watch the U.S.A versus China. It was a good first half, but a bad game. Moreover, I found myself rooting for China. Either I like underdogs, am disgusted with the NBA or am simply a pinko. Overall, I am just not into the Olympics this year, but did love watching the U.S.A. 400 freestyle relay team put France in their place.
  • Phelps

  • Caleb Campbell. The U.S. Army just shot itself in the foot. It stated it had a new policy that would allow cadets with exceptional skills to forgo their military commitment and serve through a recruitment capacity. After all the publicity and positive PR surrounding the first West Point cadet drafted in 11 years, the Army learned it did not have the authority to do this. The Lions lost a draft pick and time will tell if Campbell lost his opportunity to play in the NFL.

Categories: sports
Tagged: , , , , , ,

The 19th Hole – 7/27/08

July 27, 2008 · 4 Comments

I loath the month of July. Not necessarily because the furnace like weather in Texas is at its peak, but instead because it is a dead zone for sports. At least when concerning my interests, there is hardly anything going on. I can actually meet with friends on the weekend without a care of what game I am sacrificing. This can be highlighted through PTI taking the entire past week off. Its a difficult time, but I was able to roundup a few notable stories.

  • Are you ready for some football? I know its a bit mean to start that chant when we are still about a month away from regular season college or pro games, but yesterday the LA Times reported that NBC will live stream Sunday night NFL games. This is huge. Following ABCs live streaming experiment earlier this year with the NCAA Tournament and NBCs Olympic coverage (ablbeit delayed), I truly think the last significant online video gap is on the verge of being conquered. TiVo and Hulu adequately handle on demand TV show consumption, but sports generally requires live viewing and I am ecstatic networks are finally building out the infrastructure to allow high quality sports viewing for fans regardless of their location and access to a TV. Perhaps we may even break similar ground with Notre Dame this year too. One can only hope.
  • The Sports Guy. The intrigue of Bill Simmons is beginning to unravel. While I understand he is supposed to be the voice of the fan, I place strong importance in quality journalism. He has written some amazing articles including the article about Jamiel Andre Shaw Jr. earlier this year, but his recent blast on the sport of tennis was poorly researched and showed even less effort in word choice. A friend and I recently commented on his shortcomings, which are highlighted by the arrival of Rick Reilly to the ESPN family. To Simmons credit, he does discuss his tennis face-plant in this podcast, but I am hoping this may have been a wake up call and push him to raise his craft to a new level. His entertaining style is undoubtable, I am just hoping his credibility can match.
  • Favre Gate. Perhaps due to the lack of true sports news in July, this modest story has snowballed into the daily news lead for every sports show. This is an unusual stance for me, but I believe that Green Bay is more in the right than Favre. Regardless of whether he felt pressured into retiring, Favre did retire. It is not fair to the organization and his teammates to be held hostage by a single player. Aaron Rogers has displayed decent promise in limited action and it is fair to require a competition for starting QB if Favre comes back to Green Bay this year. Rogers is the future and has displayed unbelievable control throughout this ordeal, which cannot be said for Favre. Polls have shown that even the fans think Favre should remain retired. It is clear now that he will play this year, I hope he can without hurting his legacy. This is not the storybook ending we had in March.

Categories: digital media · sports
Tagged: , , , ,

The 19th Hole – 7/4/08

July 4, 2008 · Leave a Comment

squatchIndependance Day in the U.S. celebrates our declaration of freedom from the British Crown and their system of tyranny that viewed American colonialist as second rate citizens. Yesterday, the city of Seattle declared its independence from the NBA, albeit with a whimper. The Sonics were the oldest professional franchise in Seattle, iconic, beloved and had one of the loudest and imposing crowds in sports. There was even this famous and inspiring post made entirely of sports fans hoping to save the team. None of this matters though because apparently sports is about one thing…money.

I am disgusted and completely disillusioned by how this can happen. I understand sports leagues and teams are a business, but should they be able to abandon a community like any other company if they can get a better deal elsewhere? Their very success economically depends on the community embracing the team and taking a personal stake of implied ownership. Its “my team” and “we” won that game and I really like “our” chances next year. Part of fans love for sports is the unique culture of each team, such as the developed rivalries over time. Would the Red Sox/Yankees rivalry exist anymore if the Red Sox departed for South Carolina. I strongly doubt it. Sure the league would try to manufacture it, but it would be fake and would loose the meaning it previously possessed.

We are on a very slippery and dangerous slope with sports in America. Not to long ago a similarly beloved and important franchise in the NFL quit on its city. I speak of course about the Cleveland Browns. Sure Cleveland got its team back and retained its its name and logos, but the fans were betrayed and they also lost out on a Super Bowl winner when the Ravens (former Browns) won in the 2000 season.

Who is at fault. In my mind this is easy, a majority of the blame belongs exclusively to David Stern. His job is to ensure the growth and success of the NBA. First from a pure economic stance, how can switching from the 14th TV market to the 45th a positive? To push for this and suggest that Seattle may not deserve to have a franchise is dumbfounding. Additionally, a commissioner should fight to keep teams in their respective cities as justification for fans league wide that their support is appreciated as well as for the integrity of the league’s historical records and statistics, which has significant importance to the sports fan. Seattle may get another team within five years, but at what cost? It will not be an expansion team, meaning some other city will loose its team. Perhaps the Knicks should move…fan support has waned in the past few years and the last renovation to the Garden was in 1991 making Key Arena look practically brand new(assuming you did not already view it as such). Of course that will never happen (probably), but I hope the point is clear all the same. I need to go take a shower.

Categories: sports
Tagged: , ,

The 19th Hole – 6/12/08

June 12, 2008 · Leave a Comment

So how does sports fit into Connected? Beyond the internet and technology overall, I believe two other areas that connect people around the world are our sustainable future and sports. That and I am a huge sports enthusiast, so I have decided to include a new post series called the 19th Hole that will casually comment on sports topics and top links I come across. Here goes:

  • Perhaps the NBA should go back to the drawing board with its latest ref scandal. I am getting tired of explaining to my parents on the phone why something is a foul. Seems it always involves time of game and if the guy passed or shot vs actual contact. Lets face it…fouls in the NBA are completely arbitrary and there is a clear star system. That said…I do not believe the latest allegations by Donaghy. We have to hope it is not to that level.
  • Ah Kobe Bryant. I remember loving him when he first entered the league, but you are a team killer. It is ridiculous how he has been hyped to finally be a great teammate. Unfounded, just look at his demeanor during the finals. A team leader and worthy role model Kobe is not. See Curt Schilling’s first hand comments on the topic. This is not what a MVP is made of.
  • Manchester United players celebrateIt is slowly happening…I am becoming a soccer fan. Does not get more global than that. I was all over the Champions League final and now I find myself watching the Euro 2008. Turns out I just needed world class soccer to get into it. Yeah I just called you out MLS
  • Lastly, there is reason why Rick Reilly is the best. His most recent article discusses why we all need to cheer for Phil instead of Tiger at the US Open. And I quote…rooting for Tiger is like “rooting for erosion.”  Rooting for Phil “is like rooting for the salmon to eat the bear.” Enjoy.

Categories: sports
Tagged: , , ,