Saturday, February 28, 2009

Tourny Time, March Madness, & The 3 Things For A Final Four Team


From "The Thought Spigot"

Conference and the NCAA Championship Tournaments are just around the corner. Teams like Duke, North Carolina, Kansas, and a handful of others are always guaranteed a spot at the table, usually in the final four. Few teams have the wear-with-all to constantly become players on the main stage (deep into the tourny, or the Final Four), but more and more there is a new breed of "Bubble Teams," in today's college basketball. The days of UCLA's dynasty of championships is over, in the era of "one and done" ball. Players are forced to go to school (unlike Lebron, Garnett, Kobe, etc..etc...), whether they like it, or not. This has caused a major change in the game, recruiting and definitely in the NCAA Tournament. Only six #1 ranked teams have ever won the "Big Dance," thru the rigors of "March Madness" and Senior laden teams (Pitt '07, George Mason '06, Illinois '05, St. Joe's '04) are going farther into the tourny every year. The once "underdogs" of the game, like Valparaiso, Gonzaga, Davidson, and Butler's, of the college basketball world, are no longer sneaking up on anyone and continue to look stronger, each year (Although, they are not stronger, it is just the talent pool is leaving colleges faster). However, the month of march is still filled with just as much madness, as ever. There are three things colleges need to make it to the tournament, advance deep, and possibly win the whole ball of wax.

The first thing is a brilliant coach (Coach K, Roy Williams, Bill Self, J. Boeheim, to name a few). A coach who is able to bring kids together who are seniors, freshmen, going to the NBA, and those who are not. Cohesion/"gelling" at the correct time is essential. A team not playing together, is not a team, at all. Great coaches take the concept to the next level, making a team playing like a team, play like one player (almost). Plays run effortlessly, defense is suffocating, and the players on the benches know their roles and embrace the bench, as if they were playing on the floor. Few coaches ever achieve this kind of team, much less, repeat the process year in and year out. They are priceless to the university, their players, to the game, and they usually head to the hall of fame.

Next, constant tournament teams and some of the greatest teams have a magnificent point guard/guard. Whether the teams are today, or are teams of the past, these floor generals score, pass, play huge amounts of minutes, and always play defense. They can take over a game, if need be, but they are the metronome of the whole game. In a five game tournament, they must keep the other players in line, calm, and expressly are an extension of the coach himself, but are on the floor. These great guards (Isaiah Thomas, David Rivers, Bobby Hurley, Ty Lawson, Sharon Collins, etc..etc..) had all of those/these qualities, making them unforgettable and indispensable, at the same time.

The last piece to the puzzle has to be one strong and dominate big man. His presence inside the paint, both offensively and defensively, are so imposing he owns both sections of paint. His footwork, on both ends, allows him to block/alter all shots around him, score anytime he has position (which is often) and is generally unstoppable in all fazes of the game. He is a leader and does not fluster, no matter how much pounding he takes. As with the guard, a tourny bound team/elite team must have, the centers/forwards from the past and future (Russell, Chamberlain, Walton, Manning, Duncan, Hansborough, Thabeet, etc...etc..), all had these features. They play, as if they are possessed, fearless, and/or have hammer their will on the opposition.

A coach, dominate big man, and a great floor general is the only way teams make it to the tournament. This year is a prime example, Notre Dame has a great team on paper (once ranked in the top 10), a "good coach," guard (McAlarney) and big man (Harringody), but they have not gelled, not playing as a team, and they are now faced with having to win the Big East Tournament, to have a chance to go the "Big Dance." However, other teams who are not/will not have any problems making the conference tourny, much less "The Big Dance," are pretty easy to see: Duke, Missouri, UCONN, Florida State, UNC, Kansas, Louisville, Gonzaga, even Butler already clinched a spot, as conference champs. However, look for these teams to be the ones to beat, come "March Madness Tourny" time and the two players (a big time guard and inside player): Oklahoma ((T. Griffin/Blake Griffin), UNC (Ty Lawson/Hansborough), UCONN (Miller/Thabeet), KU (Collins/Aldridge), Texas (Pittman/Abrams). This handful of teams has all three parts, and should be a dominate force, when everything counts and teams play in a one and done atmosphere. In a five game tournament, for the national title, several teams can enter and play, but very few can win consistently.

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Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Pittsburgh Steelers, James "Cheap Shot" Harrison, A Goon!


From The Thought Spigot


James Harrison was the NFL's Defensive Player of the Year, for the 2008-'09 season. However, after the Super Bowl, maybe he should be known as the biggest steroid, HGH, and just plain dirty player of the year. All of the interviews with Santanio Holmes and "Big Ben," after the Steelers win, days later few are talking about one of the most blatant disregards for NFL rules and the NFL game. In the fourth quarter, if you do not already know, Harrison was caught (in the middle of the field) beating the daylights out of Arizona Cardinals safety Aaron Francisco. The play was down field and Francisco was face down on the ground (due to a clean sweep from Harrison), thirty yards from the action, when the inexcusable happened. Harrison took multiple shots to his ribs and back, with clinched fists, then when the safety looked up/tried to get up, Harrison hit him full force, knocking him over backwards (for no reason at all, and looking like an obvious example of "roid rage").

Very few net articles, radio spots, and television channels have even touched on the incident, with the exception of John Madden (during the game) saying, "Harrison should be thrown out of the game for that, there is no excuse." The NFL and ESPN are not addressing the problem at all, but there is a bigger picture here. One billion people watched the Super Bowl this year, and countless numbers of those people were kids. If this was an isolated incident, maybe the Commissioner could have a talk with him and/or fine him. However, this is not the first problem and it does look like the player is a 'Roid Raging Idiot'. Earlier in 2008, law enforcement was called on Harrison, for a domestic dispute. Harrison was picked up later, after leaving the scene, for the following: "According to the criminal complaint filed in night court and obtained by KDKA, Harrison allegedly got into an argument with his girlfriend and she locked herself in her bedroom to call 911. Police say Harrison broke through the door, broke her cell phone in half and slapped her in the face."

The minimum for Harrison should be a $50-100,000 fine, a four game suspension, and he should be tested for Steroids, HGH, and other drugs, immediately! Regardless of what kind of man, player, and/or boyfriend Harrison is, he should pay a stiff penalty for his actions on Super Bowl Sunday. The Pittsburgh Steelers and the commissioner (Roger Goodell) should also be held to task for their lack of action, overall. Just a handful of days out, from the Super Bowl, there is still plenty of time for people to act. However, Roger Goodell can be the voice of reason and making things right. Although, the more days go by, the less and less the possibility of action against Harrison.

The bottom Line is the Pro Bowl is this weekend, which James Harrison is attending, and the "Almighty Dollar" will be the only thing NFL, Goodell, the Steelers, and Harrison will be concerned with, not the people and kids in America. The NFL will not risk any bad publicity. The media is gutless and will not be asking him questions before, during, or after the Pro Bowl. The Steelers hopes it all just goes away, and it is a shame. It would be a minor miracle if anyone takes action against "The Defensive Player of the Year," or should I say the "Defensive Steroiding Player of the Year" (another thing, the NFL won't touch with a stick). In a Super Bowl to remember, athletes with superior skill and amazing work ethic (like Hines Ward, Holmes, Big Ben, Warner, and Fitzgerald, to name a few), it is sad to see a brutish, hopped up man, make such a mockery of a great game. It is no wonder he was cut from three teams, before landing with the Steelers. It just looks like he didn't have the talent without the "helpers" and now that he has them, he is no role model for anyone. To bad, every time the game is shown, packaged for resell, or on ESPN Classic kids and others have to look at such a blatant set of cheap shots and how the media, Steelers, and the NFL handled the whole situation.

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Monday, February 2, 2009

Springsteen, "The Boss," Sinks At Super Bowl



From DMAN, At The Thought Spigot



Bruce Springsteen has never been silent on his views, politics, and mostly he has lived on the American's view of him, as a working man's friend and one of the "Blue Collar" guys. However, nothing was more important, to "The Boss," than the "Born In The U.S.A." album. It made him a pop culture icon, but more importantly, it showed a "blue collar icon," for Americans and America, as a whole.Of the album, Springsteen broke out, worldwide, with "Dancing in the Dark" (with a little help from a young Courtney Cox, in the video), which won him a Grammy and reached #2 on the Billboard Top 100. Yet, "Cover Me," "No Surrender," "My Hometown," and "I'm On Fire" were all released and on the charts, but "Born In The U. S. A." became a mantra for America.


Presidents, politicians (John Kerry in his campaign), sports teams, radio stations and countless other people use "Born in the U. S. A." for a variety of situations, still today. "The Boss" was made into a huge mainstream star, becoming the "working class singer" (a modern day Bob Dylan, if you will).Fast forward to Super Bowl Sunday, at halftime. An older Springsteen, with the whole E Street Band, was in front of millions. Opening with "Born to Run" (a 70's staple and one single putting him on the map), "Working on a Dream," and finishing with an extended of "Glory Days." No "Born In The U. S. A." on the agenda at all.


The "Blue Collar," for the people, and working class hero decided on a stage where millions and millions of people are watching (looking forward, and expecting with two wars going on in Iraq/Afghanistan, plus countless Americans abroad) not to play a song for all Americans (not to mention, his "signature song"). Maybe, Bruce decided, or the NFL decided, the American people's voice wasn't that important, or it would offend someone?ESPN had a game, where a certain amount of questions were asked (in a fantasy game format). Example, "Will there be a run for more than 40+ yards?" Another question was, "Will Bruce Springsteen open his set with "Born in the U. S. A.?"


I suppose people do not know about "The Boss'" far liberal stance and on American policies, in his older age? Either way, on a night as great as Super Bowl Sunday, to be asked to play the whole half time festivities, one would think Mr. Springsteen would take some responsibility, using his clout and platform for America. It is just a song, but America needs all the help it can get now. Obviously, "The Boss" is more interested in "The Wrestler" (the movie coming out this weekend) and his Golden Globe award, then the American people's overall views and emotions, or maybe he is not the "working class icon" people have given him credit for (and his politics now play top fiddle, in his life, over Americans).

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