How many of you miss college football yet? Spring practices helped give me that fix that I needed in the last month or so. But now it's back to nothing until fall camps start up. Here's an interesting story published in the LA Times byChris Dufresne this week.
We all know Pete Carroll's got something good going on in Heritage Hall. For USC fans, it doesn't matter how many All-Americans are lost to the NFL each year. As long as Pete is running things, it'll be okay. As the rest of the Pac-10 and most of the country is loathe to accept, the Trojans have top recruiting classes every year lately. This year was no different. According to the worldwide leader's rankings, USC signed the top class (I know it's Insider, but you get the idea) in the country this year.
Joe McKnight, of New Orleans, headlined the recruiting class. According to the story his popularity back home took a major hit when he punched his ticket for the land of surf, celebrities, and Heismans (possibly with the help of a shady phone conversation with Reggie Bush). Joe was one of the bright spots of the post-Katrina sports scene in New Orleans. The locals expected him to stay true to his roots and and play for Les Miles in Baton Rouge.
I guess he won't be going back for Mardi Gras and Po' Boys without a good disguise.
Welcome to Troy, Joe.
Source
Wednesday, May 23, 2007
Tuesday, May 22, 2007
Sunday, May 20, 2007
Me and the NBA
I have very little to say about the NBA at this point. I was already slightly turned off by the season when my Sacramento Kings went 5-10 in the month of December. I was still holding out hope then that perhaps it was just going to take some time to adjust to Mussleman's leadership. If I still had the DIRECTV league pass, maybe I would have seen his inability to connect with his team, his team's lack of energy, the poor communication on defense, and the inefficiency on offense. It's a rare occasion when a King's game is televised in Los Angeles. The box scores really don't tell you the plot behind the story.
Anyway, I'm rambling. The playoffs were mildly intriguing to me for a few reasons:
1) My girlfriend's favorite team is the Rockets, so I had some rooting interest.
2) I'm from northern California, so I felt some hometown pride for the Warriors finally making it back to the playoffs.
3) Chris Webber may have a chance to win a ring.
4) The Phoenix Suns play exciting basketball.
Well, here's what happened so far...
- The Rockets were bounced by the Jazz, whom I begrudgingly respect. The series was defined by it's defense and plodding offense. Not exactly thrilling.
- As everyone has written, the Bruins North were exciting to watch and a great story to follow. Nellie capitalized on his knowledge of the Mavs weaknesses and the team's lack of a pure scorer. I was pulling for the boys from Oakland in every game. But the achille's heel of Nellie-ball, rebounds, was their undoing in the second round.
- Chris Webber...what should I say? He made Sacramento basketball fun again. He wasn't the only one, he had help from Vlade and White Chocolate. But it all centered around his ability to score and his ability to create for his teammates. Kings basketball was some of the most exciting stuff you were going to see on the court at the time. He was the heart and soul of our team. Maybe he didn't hit the big shots, but Kings fans loved him anyway.
When he got traded, I knew Geoff Petrie was doing the right thing...he always does. His knees would never again let him be the explosive yet smooth post player he'd been known for. It was still hard to let him go. Anyway, I hope he wins a championship ring this year. It just eluded him in college and so far in the pros. He deserves it.
- After the Kings decided to go fishing early this year I latched onto the Suns for the playoff run (the Warriors never had a strong chance to get to the conference championship). Steve Nash is a helluva competitor and his team makes watching basketball fun. It's also no secret that I have loathed the Spurs for some time. The way things turned out isn't really their fault though.
The NBA has let San Antonio get away with a lot of questionable play for the last few years. For some reason, the league degenerates into a grabbing/shoving/bumping mess every year in the playoffs. Why does the league let the refs call the games differently in the postseason? Inconsistent enforcement makes no sense. I'm not saying that the suspensions were wrong. But the way the league and the officials handled the events in the games prior to the game 4 where Horry shoved Nash into the scorer's table WAS wrong.
To use the cliché of this postseason, the play got too "chippy" and no one tried to stop it. The boiling point was the end of game 4. If San Antonio goes on to win the title again, like I expect them to do, it's only fair that Peter Holt (owner of the Spurs) buys Stu Jackson some championship bling too.
I could go on for quite a while, but I already said I didn't have much to say about the NBA. I guess that was a lie. Even though it's a slow time of year for sports aside from the NBA playoffs (I don't acknowledge hockey), I will only be paying cursory attention to how the remaining basketball games unfold.
...but the NBA lotto is tomorrow, and the Kings have a 1.8% chance of getting the number 1 pick. There is still hope!
Anyway, I'm rambling. The playoffs were mildly intriguing to me for a few reasons:
1) My girlfriend's favorite team is the Rockets, so I had some rooting interest.
2) I'm from northern California, so I felt some hometown pride for the Warriors finally making it back to the playoffs.
3) Chris Webber may have a chance to win a ring.
4) The Phoenix Suns play exciting basketball.
Well, here's what happened so far...
- The Rockets were bounced by the Jazz, whom I begrudgingly respect. The series was defined by it's defense and plodding offense. Not exactly thrilling.
- As everyone has written, the Bruins North were exciting to watch and a great story to follow. Nellie capitalized on his knowledge of the Mavs weaknesses and the team's lack of a pure scorer. I was pulling for the boys from Oakland in every game. But the achille's heel of Nellie-ball, rebounds, was their undoing in the second round.
- Chris Webber...what should I say? He made Sacramento basketball fun again. He wasn't the only one, he had help from Vlade and White Chocolate. But it all centered around his ability to score and his ability to create for his teammates. Kings basketball was some of the most exciting stuff you were going to see on the court at the time. He was the heart and soul of our team. Maybe he didn't hit the big shots, but Kings fans loved him anyway.
When he got traded, I knew Geoff Petrie was doing the right thing...he always does. His knees would never again let him be the explosive yet smooth post player he'd been known for. It was still hard to let him go. Anyway, I hope he wins a championship ring this year. It just eluded him in college and so far in the pros. He deserves it.
- After the Kings decided to go fishing early this year I latched onto the Suns for the playoff run (the Warriors never had a strong chance to get to the conference championship). Steve Nash is a helluva competitor and his team makes watching basketball fun. It's also no secret that I have loathed the Spurs for some time. The way things turned out isn't really their fault though.
The NBA has let San Antonio get away with a lot of questionable play for the last few years. For some reason, the league degenerates into a grabbing/shoving/bumping mess every year in the playoffs. Why does the league let the refs call the games differently in the postseason? Inconsistent enforcement makes no sense. I'm not saying that the suspensions were wrong. But the way the league and the officials handled the events in the games prior to the game 4 where Horry shoved Nash into the scorer's table WAS wrong.
To use the cliché of this postseason, the play got too "chippy" and no one tried to stop it. The boiling point was the end of game 4. If San Antonio goes on to win the title again, like I expect them to do, it's only fair that Peter Holt (owner of the Spurs) buys Stu Jackson some championship bling too.
I could go on for quite a while, but I already said I didn't have much to say about the NBA. I guess that was a lie. Even though it's a slow time of year for sports aside from the NBA playoffs (I don't acknowledge hockey), I will only be paying cursory attention to how the remaining basketball games unfold.
...but the NBA lotto is tomorrow, and the Kings have a 1.8% chance of getting the number 1 pick. There is still hope!
Thursday, February 22, 2007
FUCK YOU YOU FUCKING LAZY ASS PUNKS. Why do you destroy other people's belongings? Why do you steal and cheat your way through life? Do you ever think about the other people? Get a fucking job. Go to school. Respect yourself. You've got a choice. This city makes me angry.
Note: I wrote this post the night after my car stereo was stolen. Emotions got the best of me. Prior to this most recent transgression, my car had also been stolen. Hopefully you'll forgive the outburst.
Note: I wrote this post the night after my car stereo was stolen. Emotions got the best of me. Prior to this most recent transgression, my car had also been stolen. Hopefully you'll forgive the outburst.
Wednesday, January 03, 2007
Man, it's been a long time hasn't it? I'm going to try blogging again so that my typing/writing skills don't become too emaciated.
Today's topic: College Football Playoffs
After the majority of this season's bowl games have passed, I no longer feel like a playoff for D-I football teams is a good idea. I was never really sold on the idea before, but I went along with the idea that it would be a good thing because that's what the media outlets told me.
Despite what some columnists may write about the relevency, or lack thereof, of the bowl games, the players and the coaches prepare and play the games as if they are a championship. Every team leaves everything on the field. There's arguably much more emotion spent in each bowl game than there would be in a semi-final round playoff game.
If there is a playoff, we likely would not get the instant classic Boise State victory over Oklahoma in the Fiesta bowl Monday night. The game had a finality and excitment of victory you wouldn't see if the Broncos were scheduled for another game in a week.
I'll admit that 32 bowl games is a lot. But I'd rather have 32 games with the excitement that the bowl games provide than a playoff format where teams go about the games in a workman-like manner, culminating in a single championship game. Every bowl game has the feel of a championship game.
These guys are in college, they are not yet pros. Bowl games are a reward for a good season both for the players and the fans.
Today's topic: College Football Playoffs
After the majority of this season's bowl games have passed, I no longer feel like a playoff for D-I football teams is a good idea. I was never really sold on the idea before, but I went along with the idea that it would be a good thing because that's what the media outlets told me.
Despite what some columnists may write about the relevency, or lack thereof, of the bowl games, the players and the coaches prepare and play the games as if they are a championship. Every team leaves everything on the field. There's arguably much more emotion spent in each bowl game than there would be in a semi-final round playoff game.
If there is a playoff, we likely would not get the instant classic Boise State victory over Oklahoma in the Fiesta bowl Monday night. The game had a finality and excitment of victory you wouldn't see if the Broncos were scheduled for another game in a week.
I'll admit that 32 bowl games is a lot. But I'd rather have 32 games with the excitement that the bowl games provide than a playoff format where teams go about the games in a workman-like manner, culminating in a single championship game. Every bowl game has the feel of a championship game.
These guys are in college, they are not yet pros. Bowl games are a reward for a good season both for the players and the fans.
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