July 13, 2010
NL reclaims "Senior Circuit" title
Well how about that! The National League has won an All-Star Game! It hadn't happened since 1996 but it happened tonight, with the Nationals finally pulling one out, 3-1.
As such, with the ridiculous concept of the the All-Star Game league winning having home-field advantage in the World Series still in place, Games 1, 2, 6 and 7 (the final two if necessary) of the Fall Classic will be held at one of Citizens Bank Park, Petco Park, Dodger Stadium, Coors Field, Turner Field, Busch Stadium, Great American Ballpark or Citi Field (failing some other NL team making a miraculous run). No NL team has had home-field advantage in the World Series since 2001, when the Diamondbacks used it to win all four home games in beating the Yankees and ending the Paul O'Neill-Tino Martinez-Scott Brosius dynasty.
The game was poorly managed by both sides with neither side really managing to win so much as to try and get everyone in. Both Charlie Manuel and Joe Girardi seemed unsure as to what the real priority should have been. That being said, there were three heroes for the NL, two of which may even get to benefit in October from the home-field advantage:
1. Brian McCann. The game's MVP, Atlanta's catcher delivered a three-run double off Matt Thornton in the top of the seventh inning. It was the only run-scoring play of the game for the NL as the pitching-dominated theme of the first half of the season continued on in the mid-summer classic.
2. Adam Wainwright. The best pitcher in the NL since the start of last season, the Cardinals righthander was called upon to take over after his team took the lead in the last of the seventh. With one out in the inning, John Buck was credited with a double on what should have been a two-base error on Matt Holliday, who dropped the fly into left. Wainwright then walked Ian Kinsler, setting up a double play situation which is something Cardinals pitchers excel at inducing. As seems to be the case so often, Wainwright succeeded in getting the ground ball from Vernon Wells but shortstop Rafael Furcal and second baseman Brandon Phillips failed to turn it, recording only the out at second. There were runners on the corners with Torii Hunter, the hometown hero, at the plate and ready to create a legendary All-Star moment with his Angels fans going crazy. Instead, Wainwright baffled him with an array of breaking balls to record the strikeout and get out of the inning. The NL gave the AL two extra outs to work with in the frame but Wainwright didn't surrender.
3. Marlon Byrd. The Cubs had to have a representative and Byrd represented them well. He had arguably the best at-bat of the night, battling his way to a walk from Thornton to load the bases in the seventh in front of McCann, who delivered the three-run double. And in the last of the ninth, after Jonathan Broxton allowed a leadoff single to David Ortiz and struckout Adrian Beltre, Byrd threw out Ortiz at second base from right field on a would-be Buck single. Ortiz couldn't commit to running hard because he wasn't sure if Byrd would be able to catch the ball off Buck's bat or not and when it fell, Byrd easily threw out the slow-footed Ortiz.
It should be noted that the incessant need to get every player into the game prevented Girardi from pinch running for Ortiz. The only player he had left on his bench was Alex Rodriguez and Girardi didn't want to use him because of an injured thumb (and why on earth would Girardi want to use his own player if he has some sort of injury). Plus, given his recent history of hip injuries, there is no way A-Rod was going to be used as a pinch runner for Ortiz. Girardi's best play would have been to use an extra pitcher to run for Ortiz (Fausto Carmona?) and then using A-Rod if he had no other choice. Of course, he didn't do it.
The Boss dies after heart attack
George M. Steinbrenner III, one of the most important owners in sports history, has died after suffering a massive heart attack. He had just turned 80 on July 4.
Steinbrenner's 1973 purchase of the Yankees from CBS for $10 million is perhaps the greatest investment in sports history. The Yankees won World Series in 1977, 1978, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2000 and 2009 under his ownership, and additional American League pennants in 1976, 1981, 2001 and 2003. Known for his candor and willingness to hire and fire managers on a whim, "The Boss" had been rather quiet in recent seasons as his health started to catch up with him. His last public appearance was on Sept. 27, 2008 at the final game at old Yankee Stadium; he was not on hand for the Yankees 2009 World Series celebration.
July 12, 2010
Lots of roster moves around the NBA
With the dust settled on the big names in free agency, teams are now making smaller moves to fill out their teams and things are really getting interesting in seeing how teams are going to shape up. Today was a big day of moves and here's a recap, starting with the most amazing move of the day so far: the Spurs finally bringing over Tiago Splitter.
The 6'11" Splitter was selected in the first round of the 2007 draft by the Spurs after being led to believe he would be a top 10 pick. Instead, San Antonio wisely drafted him as he fell to 28th overall. Playing in Spain, he has been considered the best big man in Europe and--Spurs fans will love this--he idolized Tim Duncan growing up, so much so that he modeled his game around him. It had been speculated that the Spurs would have to use their entire mid-level exception to entice the 25-year-old to leave behind his Spanish team but instead San Antonio got him to come over for $10 million over three years, with a first year salary of about $3.4 million. That means San Antonio still has about $2.4 million to use to sign another piece, probably a veteran player late in his career. One option that makes sense: Raja Bell, a tough perimeter defender, something the Spurs didn't really have last season after Bruce Bowen retired. And if Splitter can come in and make a big difference quickly, maybe the Spurs do have one more run in them, especially since he will be counted on to ease Duncan's workload.
Elsewhere, to the surprise of absolutely no one, Derek Fisher rejected overtures from the Heat and stayed with the Lakers. But Miami was busy anyway and so much for LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh eating up all of their cap space. Somehow, Miami convinced Udonis Haslem to re-sign for less than both Denver and Dallas offerend him and also officially added Mike Miller. Seems LeBron is heavily recruiting players to join Miami and the great Brian Windhorst of the Cleveland Plain Dealer quotes a league executive as saying "LeBron has done more recruiting in the last five days than he did in the last three years." I'm sure that's music to Dan Gilbert's ears. Ira Winderman, who covers the Heat for the Sun-Sentinel, breaks down the team's roster and shows just where the team is headed in terms of its full roster. We'll see if all of these guys will take peanuts to sign on but it seems likely that Zydrunas Ilgauskas and Juwan Howard would. Of course, both of those players are pretty much terrible at this point.
Moving on, Orlando is about to sign Quentin Richardson, a three-point specialist who could be just the sort of spot-up shooter needed for those Dwight Howard double-teams. Does that mean the Magic, despite initial claims to the contrary, won't match the offer sheet J.J. Redick signed with Chicago?
The Jazz, meanwhile, appear on the verge of acquiring Al Jefferson from Minnesota for draft picks, absorbing Jefferson's salary into the trade exception they received when Carlos Boozer left for Chicago. Jefferson hasn't been a difference-maker yet in his career but has put up points with bad teams in Boston (leading him to be the central figure in the Kevin Garnett trade) and Minnesota. He's younger and cheaper than Boozer. I like this pickup for Utah, should it go down, and it's good for Jefferson because it's stupid for a team to have both he and Kevin Love.
So plenty's happening in the most interesting offseason in NBA history.
The 6'11" Splitter was selected in the first round of the 2007 draft by the Spurs after being led to believe he would be a top 10 pick. Instead, San Antonio wisely drafted him as he fell to 28th overall. Playing in Spain, he has been considered the best big man in Europe and--Spurs fans will love this--he idolized Tim Duncan growing up, so much so that he modeled his game around him. It had been speculated that the Spurs would have to use their entire mid-level exception to entice the 25-year-old to leave behind his Spanish team but instead San Antonio got him to come over for $10 million over three years, with a first year salary of about $3.4 million. That means San Antonio still has about $2.4 million to use to sign another piece, probably a veteran player late in his career. One option that makes sense: Raja Bell, a tough perimeter defender, something the Spurs didn't really have last season after Bruce Bowen retired. And if Splitter can come in and make a big difference quickly, maybe the Spurs do have one more run in them, especially since he will be counted on to ease Duncan's workload.
Elsewhere, to the surprise of absolutely no one, Derek Fisher rejected overtures from the Heat and stayed with the Lakers. But Miami was busy anyway and so much for LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh eating up all of their cap space. Somehow, Miami convinced Udonis Haslem to re-sign for less than both Denver and Dallas offerend him and also officially added Mike Miller. Seems LeBron is heavily recruiting players to join Miami and the great Brian Windhorst of the Cleveland Plain Dealer quotes a league executive as saying "LeBron has done more recruiting in the last five days than he did in the last three years." I'm sure that's music to Dan Gilbert's ears. Ira Winderman, who covers the Heat for the Sun-Sentinel, breaks down the team's roster and shows just where the team is headed in terms of its full roster. We'll see if all of these guys will take peanuts to sign on but it seems likely that Zydrunas Ilgauskas and Juwan Howard would. Of course, both of those players are pretty much terrible at this point.
Moving on, Orlando is about to sign Quentin Richardson, a three-point specialist who could be just the sort of spot-up shooter needed for those Dwight Howard double-teams. Does that mean the Magic, despite initial claims to the contrary, won't match the offer sheet J.J. Redick signed with Chicago?
The Jazz, meanwhile, appear on the verge of acquiring Al Jefferson from Minnesota for draft picks, absorbing Jefferson's salary into the trade exception they received when Carlos Boozer left for Chicago. Jefferson hasn't been a difference-maker yet in his career but has put up points with bad teams in Boston (leading him to be the central figure in the Kevin Garnett trade) and Minnesota. He's younger and cheaper than Boozer. I like this pickup for Utah, should it go down, and it's good for Jefferson because it's stupid for a team to have both he and Kevin Love.
So plenty's happening in the most interesting offseason in NBA history.
A new Big Three in New York?
Spike Lee nearly passed out at the suggestion (and probably wet himself too).
Toasting newlyweds Carmelo Anthony and LaLa Vazquez at their wedding over the weekend in New York, Chris Paul reportedly said during his speech that "We'll form our own Big Three."
Paul, Carmelo and Amar'e Stoudemire. Knicks fans would have their most relevant team since 1999. This group would probably do just as good a job of losing in the conference finals as did the Patrick Ewing era teams (because we know they won't be beating the Heat and that they won't play a lick of defense if Mike D'Antoni is still the coach).
Of course, what remains to be seen is how this could come together because of the impending labor war after the coming season. It's fun to dream about for Knicks fans but they may want to be careful in getting their hopes up too high; after all, they spent the last two years dreaming of the summer of 2010 which ended up landing them just Amar'e, Raymond Felton, Kelenna Azubuike, Anthony Randolph and Ronny Turiaf while losing David Lee. Not exactly the LeBron bill of goods they were sold.
Toasting newlyweds Carmelo Anthony and LaLa Vazquez at their wedding over the weekend in New York, Chris Paul reportedly said during his speech that "We'll form our own Big Three."
Paul, Carmelo and Amar'e Stoudemire. Knicks fans would have their most relevant team since 1999. This group would probably do just as good a job of losing in the conference finals as did the Patrick Ewing era teams (because we know they won't be beating the Heat and that they won't play a lick of defense if Mike D'Antoni is still the coach).
Of course, what remains to be seen is how this could come together because of the impending labor war after the coming season. It's fun to dream about for Knicks fans but they may want to be careful in getting their hopes up too high; after all, they spent the last two years dreaming of the summer of 2010 which ended up landing them just Amar'e, Raymond Felton, Kelenna Azubuike, Anthony Randolph and Ronny Turiaf while losing David Lee. Not exactly the LeBron bill of goods they were sold.
Could the Suns actually be trying to win?
I've been pretty critical of Suns owner Robert Sarver's attempts to destroy their franchise through penny-pinching decisions over the years but maybe I was too quick to assume he was going to throw in the towel on a competitive 2010-2011 towel too soon.
Having lost Amar'e Stoudemire as a free agent to the Knicks, the Arizona Republic reports the Suns are closing in on two separate deals that would land them Hedo Turkoglu from Toronto and Josh Childress from Greece via Atlanta.
For Turkoglu, the Raptors would receive Leandro Barbosa and Dwayne Jones (who would then be flipped to Charlotte for Boris Diaw). For Childress, a restricted free agent who played the last two seasons with Olympiakos in Greece, the Hawks would receive a 2012 second-round pick in a sign-and-trade deal with the Suns. The acquisition of Childress would come via a portion of the trade exception the Suns received in their sign-and-trade with the Knicks for Amar'e and he will receive a five-year, $33 million contract.
The 31-year-old Turkoglu was outstanding for the Magic in 2008 and 2009, as they rose to elite status in the East. He signed with Toronto last offseason and was horrible and asked for a trade. Now he'll go to Phoenix where he'll be able to bury wide open threes off Steve Nash penetration plays and be a huge mismatch as, at 6'10", the Suns could use him as a power forward. Childress played really for the Hawks three seasons ago as a swingman and defender before opting to sign a three-year deal in Greece. However, he was allowed out of his contract after two seasons and most figured the Hawks would let him go after insanely giving Joe Johnson a max contract.
So here's the Suns team right now: Nash, Grant Hill, Turkoglu, Childress, Robin Lopez, the re-signed Channing Frye, the newly signed Hakim Warrick, Jared Dudley and Goran Dragic, possibly Louis Amundson (currently a free agent) and draft picks Gani Lawal and Dwayne Collins. I have to say, that's a darn good team that has me re-thinking my prediction that Nash would ask out by February and could absolutely challenge for a repeat trip to the conference finals.
Having lost Amar'e Stoudemire as a free agent to the Knicks, the Arizona Republic reports the Suns are closing in on two separate deals that would land them Hedo Turkoglu from Toronto and Josh Childress from Greece via Atlanta.
For Turkoglu, the Raptors would receive Leandro Barbosa and Dwayne Jones (who would then be flipped to Charlotte for Boris Diaw). For Childress, a restricted free agent who played the last two seasons with Olympiakos in Greece, the Hawks would receive a 2012 second-round pick in a sign-and-trade deal with the Suns. The acquisition of Childress would come via a portion of the trade exception the Suns received in their sign-and-trade with the Knicks for Amar'e and he will receive a five-year, $33 million contract.
The 31-year-old Turkoglu was outstanding for the Magic in 2008 and 2009, as they rose to elite status in the East. He signed with Toronto last offseason and was horrible and asked for a trade. Now he'll go to Phoenix where he'll be able to bury wide open threes off Steve Nash penetration plays and be a huge mismatch as, at 6'10", the Suns could use him as a power forward. Childress played really for the Hawks three seasons ago as a swingman and defender before opting to sign a three-year deal in Greece. However, he was allowed out of his contract after two seasons and most figured the Hawks would let him go after insanely giving Joe Johnson a max contract.
So here's the Suns team right now: Nash, Grant Hill, Turkoglu, Childress, Robin Lopez, the re-signed Channing Frye, the newly signed Hakim Warrick, Jared Dudley and Goran Dragic, possibly Louis Amundson (currently a free agent) and draft picks Gani Lawal and Dwayne Collins. I have to say, that's a darn good team that has me re-thinking my prediction that Nash would ask out by February and could absolutely challenge for a repeat trip to the conference finals.
July 11, 2010
Rev. Jesse Jackson: Please, stop being an idiot
Responding to Dan Gilbert's hilarious, over-the-top diatribe in a letter to fans after LeBron James left the Cavaliers for the Heat, the Rev. Jesse Jackson had this to say in a statement released by his Rainbow PUSH Coalition:
"He speaks as an owner of LeBron and not the owner of the Cleveland Cavaliers. His feelings of betrayal personify a slave master mentality. He sees LeBron as a runaway slave. This is an owner employee relationship--between business partners--and LeBron honored his contract."
And he adds later:
"LeBron is not a child, nor is he bound to play on Gilbert’s plantation and be demeaned. He has been a model citizen and has inspired the children of Akron, Cleveland, the State of Ohio and the United States."
I mean, seriously. Or maybe Gilbert just reacted the way a scorned lover would. Nonsense like this is exactly why Jesse Jackson's message on real issues gets lost so often. Making such over-the-top statements on meaningless situations like this only serves to demean the work the Rainbow PUSH Coalition does on meaningful issues. It is a shame that Jackson finds the need to interject on situations like this so often, generally to the detriment of the real causes he should be supporting.
"He speaks as an owner of LeBron and not the owner of the Cleveland Cavaliers. His feelings of betrayal personify a slave master mentality. He sees LeBron as a runaway slave. This is an owner employee relationship--between business partners--and LeBron honored his contract."
And he adds later:
"LeBron is not a child, nor is he bound to play on Gilbert’s plantation and be demeaned. He has been a model citizen and has inspired the children of Akron, Cleveland, the State of Ohio and the United States."
I mean, seriously. Or maybe Gilbert just reacted the way a scorned lover would. Nonsense like this is exactly why Jesse Jackson's message on real issues gets lost so often. Making such over-the-top statements on meaningless situations like this only serves to demean the work the Rainbow PUSH Coalition does on meaningful issues. It is a shame that Jackson finds the need to interject on situations like this so often, generally to the detriment of the real causes he should be supporting.
The Reign in Spain!
It's over! Spain has won the World Cup! Andres Iniesta's goal in the 116th minute (well into extra time) was the only marker of the match.
The poor fans the Netherlands would have celebrated in Amsterdam with a complete orgy of marijuana and sex shops. Instead, they will have to get over the loss with a complete orgy of marijuana and sex shops. I really need to go to Amsterdam.
By the way, it's been a good summer to be fan of Spain sports (and I know, that list of people is limited to Spaniards). Their best basketball player, Pau Gasol, won his second consecutive NBA title (and should have been the Finals MVP). Rafael Nadal won both the French Open and Wimbledon, earned the No. 1 ranking in the world and became universally accepted, for the first time, as the world's best player. And now Spain has won the World Cup. Good year for the nation's sports.
I'm excited for World Cup 2014.
The poor fans the Netherlands would have celebrated in Amsterdam with a complete orgy of marijuana and sex shops. Instead, they will have to get over the loss with a complete orgy of marijuana and sex shops. I really need to go to Amsterdam.
By the way, it's been a good summer to be fan of Spain sports (and I know, that list of people is limited to Spaniards). Their best basketball player, Pau Gasol, won his second consecutive NBA title (and should have been the Finals MVP). Rafael Nadal won both the French Open and Wimbledon, earned the No. 1 ranking in the world and became universally accepted, for the first time, as the world's best player. And now Spain has won the World Cup. Good year for the nation's sports.
I'm excited for World Cup 2014.
NBA Free Agency 2010: The Media Winners
The LeBron James circus is finally over. Weeks of rumors, innuendo and theatrics have finally ended with James following Dwyane Wade to Miami, where they will team with Chris Bosh.
There were four media winners in this story:
1. Stephen A. Smith. You have to hand it to Stephen A. He reported on his Twitter page and on his radio show on June 28 that the three were going to Miami. And while many, myself included, seriously doubted Stephen A., it seems now that the three agreed to join forces long ago and certainly before the free agency period started. No one seriously believes that the three decided a day before. No one seriously believes LeBron decided the morning of his embarrassing television special. So it seems that Stephen A. had it first and I'll give him props for it, even if he did backtrack on July 2 when Wade was reportedly about to "commit" to Chicago (which now seems like it was a staged stunt for the documentary these guys are putting together on the process). Stephen A. knew it first.
2. Alan Hahn. The Newsday reporter was the first to report after the announcement of the asinine television show to announce the decision that LeBron was going to Miami. While everyone kept refreshing ESPN.com, NBA.com or even the Cleveland Plain-Dealer's website, the place to get the news was actually Newsday (and they're behind a pay wall!). Hahn broke the news on Twitter the night before the show.
3. Skip Bayless. The ESPN gasbag has been saying for years on his unwatchable show that LeBron was more Scottie Pippen than Michael Jordan, that he was a follower and not a leader. I didn't believe it, or maybe didn't want to believe it, but I think this decision pretty much proved him right.
There is no way the competitor in Jordan would have followed any of his contemporaries on to their teams. There is no way Jordan would have joined Isiah Thomas' team or Charles Barkley's team or Patrick Ewing's team or even Hakeem Olajuwon's team (the only other alpha dog superstar to win a title during the Bulls run, and even that was because Jordan essentially sat out two years). Kobe Bryant wanted Shaquille O'Neal traded away because he wanted to lead his own team to a championship and while Bryant was criticized by many (myself included) for being selfish and for breaking up a dynasty and for being over-the-top in his demands (he not only wanted Shaq traded but also wanted a new coach instead of Phil Jackson), it does have to be said that it was fueled by his competitive drive (okay, and also his personal disdain for Shaq). Kobe had already won three titles as a second banana to Young Shaq and wanted to prove he could do it as an alpha dog.
LeBron? Well, he's essentially saying that he can't do it as an alpha dog. He's giving that up at the age of 25 (the same age Kobe decided he simply had to have his own team), with probably 8-10 great years left in his career. Jordan didn't win his first title until he was 28 and Kobe didn't win his first as an alpha dog until he was 30 but LeBron gave that up at 25 to join Wade's team, a guy who already won a title as the alpha dog with Old Shaq playing the role of second banana.
On his television show, LeBron openly talked about being happy to not have the pressure of having to dominate every night. Wanting that pressure and tackling it head on is what makes the very greatest the very greatest. LeBron said he didn't want it and in the process eliminated himself from the Jordan/Kobe/Russell/Magic/Bird/Duncan/Olajuwon/Isiah/Kareem level of all-time greats. He eliminated himself from the Shaq/Moses level of all-time greats. He eliminated himself from the Dwyane Wade level of all-time greats. And he did it at the age of 25. And while LeBron admitted it on national television on Thursday night, Bayless has been saying it for at least a couple of years. So well done, Skip. You have no idea how much it pains me to admit Stephen A. and Skip were so right in this story; they may be my two most disliked television personalities.
4. Brian Windhorst. In a story that had reporters passing along rumors as news, Windhorst, the Cleveland Plain-Dealer Cavaliers correspondent who has been covering LeBron since he was at St. Mary's-St. Vincent High School in Akron, stayed above the fray and reported nothing but news. His report in today's Plain-Dealer on the backstory of these three joining forces is easily the best-reported story I have read about this whole saga. I strongly encourage everyone to read it. Over the last few years, Windhorst became the No. 1 local media reporter in America due to his relationship with LeBron. No one's reputation has grown more than his.
Unfortunately for Windhorst, no one is going to care about his anymore. With LeBron no longer a member of the Cavaliers, he's not going to have ESPN constantly wanting him to guest write on their website or to provide updates on the team for SportsCenter or on ESPN Radio. The only time we'll hear from Windhorst on national programming or national websites will be when the Heat make their first visit to Cleveland next season. On the bright side for Windhorst, it's probably only a matter of time before one of the Miami papers makes him a huge offer to cover the Heat.
There were four media winners in this story:
1. Stephen A. Smith. You have to hand it to Stephen A. He reported on his Twitter page and on his radio show on June 28 that the three were going to Miami. And while many, myself included, seriously doubted Stephen A., it seems now that the three agreed to join forces long ago and certainly before the free agency period started. No one seriously believes that the three decided a day before. No one seriously believes LeBron decided the morning of his embarrassing television special. So it seems that Stephen A. had it first and I'll give him props for it, even if he did backtrack on July 2 when Wade was reportedly about to "commit" to Chicago (which now seems like it was a staged stunt for the documentary these guys are putting together on the process). Stephen A. knew it first.
2. Alan Hahn. The Newsday reporter was the first to report after the announcement of the asinine television show to announce the decision that LeBron was going to Miami. While everyone kept refreshing ESPN.com, NBA.com or even the Cleveland Plain-Dealer's website, the place to get the news was actually Newsday (and they're behind a pay wall!). Hahn broke the news on Twitter the night before the show.
3. Skip Bayless. The ESPN gasbag has been saying for years on his unwatchable show that LeBron was more Scottie Pippen than Michael Jordan, that he was a follower and not a leader. I didn't believe it, or maybe didn't want to believe it, but I think this decision pretty much proved him right.
There is no way the competitor in Jordan would have followed any of his contemporaries on to their teams. There is no way Jordan would have joined Isiah Thomas' team or Charles Barkley's team or Patrick Ewing's team or even Hakeem Olajuwon's team (the only other alpha dog superstar to win a title during the Bulls run, and even that was because Jordan essentially sat out two years). Kobe Bryant wanted Shaquille O'Neal traded away because he wanted to lead his own team to a championship and while Bryant was criticized by many (myself included) for being selfish and for breaking up a dynasty and for being over-the-top in his demands (he not only wanted Shaq traded but also wanted a new coach instead of Phil Jackson), it does have to be said that it was fueled by his competitive drive (okay, and also his personal disdain for Shaq). Kobe had already won three titles as a second banana to Young Shaq and wanted to prove he could do it as an alpha dog.
LeBron? Well, he's essentially saying that he can't do it as an alpha dog. He's giving that up at the age of 25 (the same age Kobe decided he simply had to have his own team), with probably 8-10 great years left in his career. Jordan didn't win his first title until he was 28 and Kobe didn't win his first as an alpha dog until he was 30 but LeBron gave that up at 25 to join Wade's team, a guy who already won a title as the alpha dog with Old Shaq playing the role of second banana.
On his television show, LeBron openly talked about being happy to not have the pressure of having to dominate every night. Wanting that pressure and tackling it head on is what makes the very greatest the very greatest. LeBron said he didn't want it and in the process eliminated himself from the Jordan/Kobe/Russell/Magic/Bird/Duncan/Olajuwon/Isiah/Kareem level of all-time greats. He eliminated himself from the Shaq/Moses level of all-time greats. He eliminated himself from the Dwyane Wade level of all-time greats. And he did it at the age of 25. And while LeBron admitted it on national television on Thursday night, Bayless has been saying it for at least a couple of years. So well done, Skip. You have no idea how much it pains me to admit Stephen A. and Skip were so right in this story; they may be my two most disliked television personalities.
4. Brian Windhorst. In a story that had reporters passing along rumors as news, Windhorst, the Cleveland Plain-Dealer Cavaliers correspondent who has been covering LeBron since he was at St. Mary's-St. Vincent High School in Akron, stayed above the fray and reported nothing but news. His report in today's Plain-Dealer on the backstory of these three joining forces is easily the best-reported story I have read about this whole saga. I strongly encourage everyone to read it. Over the last few years, Windhorst became the No. 1 local media reporter in America due to his relationship with LeBron. No one's reputation has grown more than his.
Unfortunately for Windhorst, no one is going to care about his anymore. With LeBron no longer a member of the Cavaliers, he's not going to have ESPN constantly wanting him to guest write on their website or to provide updates on the team for SportsCenter or on ESPN Radio. The only time we'll hear from Windhorst on national programming or national websites will be when the Heat make their first visit to Cleveland next season. On the bright side for Windhorst, it's probably only a matter of time before one of the Miami papers makes him a huge offer to cover the Heat.
The Voice of God has died
RIP, Bob Sheppard.
In 2000, the Yankees held a "Bob Sheppard Day" at the previous Yankee Stadium. This is the tribute that played in the ballpark:
July 10, 2010
Someone different wins a NASCAR race
The same handful of drivers seems to win pretty much every NASCAR race. Jimmie Johnson. Denny Hamlin. Kyle Busch. Kurt Busch. Kevin Harvick.
Then there are the handful of drivers who haven't won in a while but you figure will soon. Jeff Gordon. Tony Stewart. Carl Edwards. Mark Martin. Jeff Burton.
And then there are the former stars who still occassionally win, or who at the very least draw attention to themselves or the sport. Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Ryan Newman are two such examples.
So it's good to see when someone that gets no attention from both the casual sports media and the hardcore NASCAR media win a race and that's exactly what happened yesterday, when David Reutimann took the checkered flag in the Sprint Cup race at Chicago. It was just the second win of Reutimann's career and the first time he actually drove to victory lane. His first win, last year's Coca-Cola 600, was won when he opted to stay out during a caution right as the rain began to come. During the caution, the race was halted and never started up again, giving him a rain-shortened win in a race that took two days to complete 227 of the 400 laps.
So this was the first time Reutimann got to win in a spontaneous way, in a real way. He didn't get lucky because of rain. He outraced everyone else for the first time in his career and it was really cool to see the emotion he had in doing so. Sure, he was happy to win at Charlotte last year but you could tell this one meant more to him because it was a full race.
With seven races left until the Chase, Reutimann is now in position to leap into the top 12 to qualify. The win moved him up to 15th in the standings, 96 points behind 12th place Clint Bowyer. The current top 12, in order, are Harvick, Gordon, Johnson, Hamlin, Kurt Busch, Kyle Busch, Burton, Matt Kenseth, Stewart, Edwards, Greg Biffle and Bowyer, with Junior in 13th and Martin 14th.
I maintain that wins are undervalued in the Chase format. Gordon is second without a win this season, ahead of Johnson and Hamlin who each have won five times this season. Gordon, Burton, Kenseth, Stewart, Edwards, Biffle and Bowyer each are in the top 12 without a win this season while Reutimann, Newman and McMurray aren't despite winning a race. It's idiotic.
Then there are the handful of drivers who haven't won in a while but you figure will soon. Jeff Gordon. Tony Stewart. Carl Edwards. Mark Martin. Jeff Burton.
And then there are the former stars who still occassionally win, or who at the very least draw attention to themselves or the sport. Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Ryan Newman are two such examples.
So it's good to see when someone that gets no attention from both the casual sports media and the hardcore NASCAR media win a race and that's exactly what happened yesterday, when David Reutimann took the checkered flag in the Sprint Cup race at Chicago. It was just the second win of Reutimann's career and the first time he actually drove to victory lane. His first win, last year's Coca-Cola 600, was won when he opted to stay out during a caution right as the rain began to come. During the caution, the race was halted and never started up again, giving him a rain-shortened win in a race that took two days to complete 227 of the 400 laps.
So this was the first time Reutimann got to win in a spontaneous way, in a real way. He didn't get lucky because of rain. He outraced everyone else for the first time in his career and it was really cool to see the emotion he had in doing so. Sure, he was happy to win at Charlotte last year but you could tell this one meant more to him because it was a full race.
With seven races left until the Chase, Reutimann is now in position to leap into the top 12 to qualify. The win moved him up to 15th in the standings, 96 points behind 12th place Clint Bowyer. The current top 12, in order, are Harvick, Gordon, Johnson, Hamlin, Kurt Busch, Kyle Busch, Burton, Matt Kenseth, Stewart, Edwards, Greg Biffle and Bowyer, with Junior in 13th and Martin 14th.
I maintain that wins are undervalued in the Chase format. Gordon is second without a win this season, ahead of Johnson and Hamlin who each have won five times this season. Gordon, Burton, Kenseth, Stewart, Edwards, Biffle and Bowyer each are in the top 12 without a win this season while Reutimann, Newman and McMurray aren't despite winning a race. It's idiotic.
Reds-Phillies: the best game of 2010 so far?
I hope you were lucky enough to watch the Reds-Phillies game tonight. It may have been the best one of the season.
Reds starter Travis Wood, making just his third career start, carried a perfect game through eight innings. Unfortunately for him, his teammates never got him a run as Roy Halladay matched his zeroes, if not his perfection, going nine shutout innings of his own and striking out nine while allowing one walk and scattering five hits. Carlos Ruiz broke up the perfect game with a leadoff double in the ninth and I fully expected Dusty Baker to pull the plug on Wood but Wood pitched around it, retiring the next three hitters in succession thanks it part to Joey Votto reaching over the dugout railing to catch a Jimmy Rollins pop out with Ruiz on third and two out.
There was a critical moment in the game in the top of the eighth. The Reds got Miguel Cairo to third base with one out and had Ryan Hanigan and Wood due up. Hanigan is having a strong season with the bat but Halladay struck him out. Then came Wood, with the go-ahead run on third and two outs. The situation presented Dusty an interesting decision: pinch hit for Wood to try and get that run home in a tie game or let Wood hit for himself to preserve his chance at a perfect game. Remember, the Reds are in a pennant race, entering play two games up on the Cardinals in the NL Central. That run was vitally important. I don't think any manager would have pinch hit for Wood in that spot so I'm not faulting Dusty for letting Wood hit for himself but it is an interesting dilemma to have given the circumstances. Alas, Halladay struck him out as well.
The Reds loaded the bases in the 10th off enigmatic Phillies closer Brad Lidge but Lidge got out of it.
After failing to drive in Ruiz in the last of the ninth, Rollins got another chance to do the same in the last of the 11th, again with two outs. This time, facing Logan Ondrusek, Rollins delivered to give the Phillies a 1-0 win.
In this Year of the Pitcher, this was the best pitched game yet.
Reds starter Travis Wood, making just his third career start, carried a perfect game through eight innings. Unfortunately for him, his teammates never got him a run as Roy Halladay matched his zeroes, if not his perfection, going nine shutout innings of his own and striking out nine while allowing one walk and scattering five hits. Carlos Ruiz broke up the perfect game with a leadoff double in the ninth and I fully expected Dusty Baker to pull the plug on Wood but Wood pitched around it, retiring the next three hitters in succession thanks it part to Joey Votto reaching over the dugout railing to catch a Jimmy Rollins pop out with Ruiz on third and two out.
There was a critical moment in the game in the top of the eighth. The Reds got Miguel Cairo to third base with one out and had Ryan Hanigan and Wood due up. Hanigan is having a strong season with the bat but Halladay struck him out. Then came Wood, with the go-ahead run on third and two outs. The situation presented Dusty an interesting decision: pinch hit for Wood to try and get that run home in a tie game or let Wood hit for himself to preserve his chance at a perfect game. Remember, the Reds are in a pennant race, entering play two games up on the Cardinals in the NL Central. That run was vitally important. I don't think any manager would have pinch hit for Wood in that spot so I'm not faulting Dusty for letting Wood hit for himself but it is an interesting dilemma to have given the circumstances. Alas, Halladay struck him out as well.
The Reds loaded the bases in the 10th off enigmatic Phillies closer Brad Lidge but Lidge got out of it.
After failing to drive in Ruiz in the last of the ninth, Rollins got another chance to do the same in the last of the 11th, again with two outs. This time, facing Logan Ondrusek, Rollins delivered to give the Phillies a 1-0 win.
In this Year of the Pitcher, this was the best pitched game yet.
Bad news for Knicks fans
Today, the New York Daily News reported that should Donnie Walsh, now 70 years old and with some health issues, opt to retire, Isiah Thomas would be a candidate to replace him as Knicks president.
ESPN's Chris Broussard reports on Twitter that Walsh told him Isiah would be a candidate to be the Knicks general manager, should they opt to hire one.
I, of course, hope this happens for comedy's sake but every Knicks fan will get in line to jump off the Empire State Building should this happen.
And should it happen: Gilbert Arenas, come on down! The Knicks would like to present you with a new jersey! Allen Iverson, come on down! The Knicks would like to offer you a $40 million contract! Tracy McGrady, come on down! The Knicks would like to offer you a $50 million contract!
Honestly, this would be like Barack Obama resigning as President and George W. Bush replacing him.
ESPN's Chris Broussard reports on Twitter that Walsh told him Isiah would be a candidate to be the Knicks general manager, should they opt to hire one.
I, of course, hope this happens for comedy's sake but every Knicks fan will get in line to jump off the Empire State Building should this happen.
And should it happen: Gilbert Arenas, come on down! The Knicks would like to present you with a new jersey! Allen Iverson, come on down! The Knicks would like to offer you a $40 million contract! Tracy McGrady, come on down! The Knicks would like to offer you a $50 million contract!
Honestly, this would be like Barack Obama resigning as President and George W. Bush replacing him.
Miami's welcome party for Wade-LeBron-Bosh
Somehow, I don't think Russell, Magic, Larry, Michael or Kobe ever would have done something like this. Honestly, I'm surprised Dwyane Wade would participate in something like this but after the last few years, I suppose he was willing to do it in order to bring LeBron in as the Pippen to his Jordan.
By the way, Chris Bosh has really hit the lottery. The guy has missed the playoffs five times in seven years, yet is somehow being considered a superstar here. Think about this:
Wade: NBA champion
LeBron: 2-time MVP
Bosh: Missed the playoffs five out of seven years
What am I missing here about Bosh? Has any fan ever said to themselves, "You know, the Raptors are in town, we have to go because I really want to see Chris Bosh!"
By the way, Chris Bosh has really hit the lottery. The guy has missed the playoffs five times in seven years, yet is somehow being considered a superstar here. Think about this:
Wade: NBA champion
LeBron: 2-time MVP
Bosh: Missed the playoffs five out of seven years
What am I missing here about Bosh? Has any fan ever said to themselves, "You know, the Raptors are in town, we have to go because I really want to see Chris Bosh!"
"The Decision" NHL style?
NHL free agency opened on July 1 and virtually everyone signed on with a team that day, except for the biggest fish in the pond, 27-year-old sniper Ilya Kovalchuk. Reportedly seeking a 10-year, $100 million contract, Kovalchuk has found no one willing to meet his price even as rumors of talks with the Kings, Islanders, Rangers, re-signing with the Devils and the Russian KHL have come up.
In the wake of LeBron James' trainwreck television special to announce his free agent destination, the New York Post is reporting that one of the Canadian networks is suggesting the same idea to Kovalchuk.
Seriously.
The good news is that Kovalchuk announcing on national Canadian television that he's leaving the Devils probably won't be a stake through the heart of New Jersey since he's Russian and since he isn't exactly Sidney Crosby (Kovalchuk has a 1-8 career record in playoff games, losing both his career series). The bad news is that sports are becoming more and more less fun to follow if reality television is becoming this big a component. I really hope LeBron's show doesn't set a precedent like this but it seems like we're already headed that way.
July 9, 2010
Lee to Yankees falls apart, headed to Texas instead
This morning, Joel Sherman of the New York Post reported that Cliff Lee was close to being traded from Seattle to the Yankees. Well, that didn't happen. The deal fell apart and now the Mariners are shipping Lee to Texas instead. Lee can wear his Rangers cap in the All-Star Game on Tuesday, then sign with the Yankees in the winter since everyone knows Scott Boras will take him to the market and the Yankees will offer him far more than the bankrupt Rangers or anyone else can.
The Mariners are kicking in money in this deal to secure better prospects. They also are receiving Texas first baseman Justin Smoak, a highly touted young hitter who came up earlier this season to play first base everyday for the Rangers. He's shown signs of promise but has struggled for most of his time in the majors.
The Mariners are kicking in money in this deal to secure better prospects. They also are receiving Texas first baseman Justin Smoak, a highly touted young hitter who came up earlier this season to play first base everyday for the Rangers. He's shown signs of promise but has struggled for most of his time in the majors.
How many more years of mediocrity for Knicks?
Other than the Cavaliers, the biggest loser in the free agent derby was clearly the New York Knicks. No one expected the Clippers to get anyone. The Bulls got Carlos Boozer and already had a solid core in place. The Heat scored incredibly. The Hawks held on to Joe Johnson (though overpaid incredibly). The Suns happily saved money. The Mavericks re-signed Dirk Nowitzki. The Celtics kept Paul Pierce and Ray Allen while adding Jermaine O'Neal. The Rockets held on to their various assets, keeping them in position to make a strike if a top-level player were to become available during the season (Carmelo Anthony? Chris Paul?). Even the Nets can say they're headed upwards, striking out on the big guns but still adding Martell Webster and rookie Derrick Favors to a decent Devin Harris-Brook Lopez combo while adding a gazillionaire owner who is eager to spend.
The Knicks? Well, it was a complete failure, unless you consider replacing David Lee with Amar'e Stoudemire, Kelenna Azuibuike, Anthony Randolph and Ronny Turiaf a success.
When Donnie Walsh took over the Knicks basketball operations from Isiah Thomas a couple of years ago, he had one mandate: clear bad contracts and create cap space for the summer of 2010. LeBron James was the target but, failing that, they would get Dwyane Wade. Surely they wouldn't miss out on both, right?
When Mike D'Antoni left Phoenix two years ago, he agreed to spend two seasons coaching horrific rosters in New York because come the summer of 2010, they would become title contenders. With D'Antoni's relationship with LeBron and Wade from USA Basketball, clearly the Knicks wouldn't miss out on both, right?
Well, they missed out on both. In fact, here is how the free agency scorecard played out:
LeBron James: Miami
Dwyane Wade: Miami
Chris Bosh: Miami
Carlos Boozer: Chicago
Dirk Nowitzki: Dallas
Paul Pierce: Boston
Ray Allen: Boston
David Lee: Golden State (from New York)
Amar'e Stoudemire: New York
All the Knicks got was Amar'e, a player who needs an elite point guard or ball-distributor to succeed (he now has neither), has health issues because of past knee and eye injuries, plays no defense whatsoever, has previously clashed with D'Antoni when both were with the Suns (although they are said to have ironed out their differences), and is signed for an uninsured $100 million over five seasons.
Ever since Isiah left, Walsh and D'Antoni have told them to be patient, told them that come summer of 2010, it would all be worth it. Everything was geared toward this summer. And they, essentially, struck out. Is Amar'e really going to better the production Lee gave them? Doubtful, especially with Lee being a far better rebounder. Randolph's entire reputation is based on doing well in the summer league. Azubuike has no reputation and Turiaf is just a warm body.
The fans have every right to be angry. The Knicks, even without having any sure-fire proof that they could succeed in the summer of 2010, sold their fans on that false hope. When Walsh and D'Antoni came in, they did nothing to try and win for two seasons. Everything was geared toward this season, right down to giving up 2009 lottery pick Jordan Hill, their first-round pick next year and a swap of first-rounders in 2012 to Houston in order to get rid of Jared Jeffries contract to free up cap space. All for this summer. And they failed. Miserably.
Walsh and D'Antoni and hapless owner James Dolan can now try and sell the fans on the promises of next summer, when Carmelo Anthony is a free agent, but why should any Knicks fan trust them? Isiah Thomas failed miserably but one thing you can't fault him for was trying to put together a winning team. Walsh and D'Antoni gutted the team for 2010 and whiffed.
So Knicks fans can get ready for a season of Toney Douglas playing a mediocre point guard, Danilo Ganillari not having space to bury jumpers, Amar'e and Randolph playing the same position, Wilson Chandler being a so-so role player, Eddy Curry being fat and lazy (although it is a contract year!) and Turiaf doing nothing.
Oh, and if I'm D'Antoni? I resign immediately. Because he too was sold a false bill of goods. He was sold on coming to the Knicks because they would be remade in 2010. Or does Walsh have some crazy trick up his sleeve? Can he parlay Curry's expiring contract into the hideous contract of Gilbert Arenas? That won't add many wins but it will add some buzz. Right now, that's all the Knicks can offer--buzz.
The NBA's greatest stage has been irrelevant for a decade and if it remains irrelevant much longer, it no longer will be the NBA's greatest stage, just as how Notre Dame is no longer college football's greatest stage. Sadly, that's what seems to be becoming of the Knicks.
The Knicks? Well, it was a complete failure, unless you consider replacing David Lee with Amar'e Stoudemire, Kelenna Azuibuike, Anthony Randolph and Ronny Turiaf a success.
When Donnie Walsh took over the Knicks basketball operations from Isiah Thomas a couple of years ago, he had one mandate: clear bad contracts and create cap space for the summer of 2010. LeBron James was the target but, failing that, they would get Dwyane Wade. Surely they wouldn't miss out on both, right?
When Mike D'Antoni left Phoenix two years ago, he agreed to spend two seasons coaching horrific rosters in New York because come the summer of 2010, they would become title contenders. With D'Antoni's relationship with LeBron and Wade from USA Basketball, clearly the Knicks wouldn't miss out on both, right?
Well, they missed out on both. In fact, here is how the free agency scorecard played out:
LeBron James: Miami
Dwyane Wade: Miami
Chris Bosh: Miami
Carlos Boozer: Chicago
Dirk Nowitzki: Dallas
Paul Pierce: Boston
Ray Allen: Boston
David Lee: Golden State (from New York)
Amar'e Stoudemire: New York
All the Knicks got was Amar'e, a player who needs an elite point guard or ball-distributor to succeed (he now has neither), has health issues because of past knee and eye injuries, plays no defense whatsoever, has previously clashed with D'Antoni when both were with the Suns (although they are said to have ironed out their differences), and is signed for an uninsured $100 million over five seasons.
Ever since Isiah left, Walsh and D'Antoni have told them to be patient, told them that come summer of 2010, it would all be worth it. Everything was geared toward this summer. And they, essentially, struck out. Is Amar'e really going to better the production Lee gave them? Doubtful, especially with Lee being a far better rebounder. Randolph's entire reputation is based on doing well in the summer league. Azubuike has no reputation and Turiaf is just a warm body.
The fans have every right to be angry. The Knicks, even without having any sure-fire proof that they could succeed in the summer of 2010, sold their fans on that false hope. When Walsh and D'Antoni came in, they did nothing to try and win for two seasons. Everything was geared toward this season, right down to giving up 2009 lottery pick Jordan Hill, their first-round pick next year and a swap of first-rounders in 2012 to Houston in order to get rid of Jared Jeffries contract to free up cap space. All for this summer. And they failed. Miserably.
Walsh and D'Antoni and hapless owner James Dolan can now try and sell the fans on the promises of next summer, when Carmelo Anthony is a free agent, but why should any Knicks fan trust them? Isiah Thomas failed miserably but one thing you can't fault him for was trying to put together a winning team. Walsh and D'Antoni gutted the team for 2010 and whiffed.
So Knicks fans can get ready for a season of Toney Douglas playing a mediocre point guard, Danilo Ganillari not having space to bury jumpers, Amar'e and Randolph playing the same position, Wilson Chandler being a so-so role player, Eddy Curry being fat and lazy (although it is a contract year!) and Turiaf doing nothing.
Oh, and if I'm D'Antoni? I resign immediately. Because he too was sold a false bill of goods. He was sold on coming to the Knicks because they would be remade in 2010. Or does Walsh have some crazy trick up his sleeve? Can he parlay Curry's expiring contract into the hideous contract of Gilbert Arenas? That won't add many wins but it will add some buzz. Right now, that's all the Knicks can offer--buzz.
The NBA's greatest stage has been irrelevant for a decade and if it remains irrelevant much longer, it no longer will be the NBA's greatest stage, just as how Notre Dame is no longer college football's greatest stage. Sadly, that's what seems to be becoming of the Knicks.
Yankees closing in on Cliff Lee
Last year, the Yankees lost two games in the World Series and both of those were started for the Phillies by Cliff Lee. Now, the Yankees are reportedly on the verge of acquiring Lee.
Lee is 8-3 with a 2.34 ERA this season, having a preposterous 89-to-6 strikeout-to-walk ratio for the woeful Mariners, who acquired Lee from the Phillies this past offseason. With his contract up after the season, Seattle is eager to move him for young players and ESPN's Buster Olney is reporting that while the Yankees are close to making this deal happen, other teams are still in the running.
No matter, it's a certainty that Lee will be traded by the July 31 deadline. And when he is, it will be the third time in a year Lee has moved, going from Cleveland to Philadelphia, Philadelphia to Seattle, and Seattle to New York or somewhere else in that span. Lee is represented by Scott Boras and will seek top dollar in the offseason so even if the Yankees fail to acquire him now, it seems pretty certain they will land him as a free agent and that he will be a part of their 2011 rotation.
Lee is 8-3 with a 2.34 ERA this season, having a preposterous 89-to-6 strikeout-to-walk ratio for the woeful Mariners, who acquired Lee from the Phillies this past offseason. With his contract up after the season, Seattle is eager to move him for young players and ESPN's Buster Olney is reporting that while the Yankees are close to making this deal happen, other teams are still in the running.
No matter, it's a certainty that Lee will be traded by the July 31 deadline. And when he is, it will be the third time in a year Lee has moved, going from Cleveland to Philadelphia, Philadelphia to Seattle, and Seattle to New York or somewhere else in that span. Lee is represented by Scott Boras and will seek top dollar in the offseason so even if the Yankees fail to acquire him now, it seems pretty certain they will land him as a free agent and that he will be a part of their 2011 rotation.
July 8, 2010
Seven thoughts on LeBron going to Miami
1. I really wanted Jim Gray, Michael Wilbon or anyone else on the ESPN dog-and-pony show to ask this question of LeBron:
"You know that you can never go back to Cleveland, right?"
LeBron said all the right things about loving Cleveland and loving Ohio, missing the most important point: he is a complete pariah in that region now. He can never go back. When the Heat go to Cleveland next season, he has to take a private plane to Cleveland that arrives 90 minutes before tip, go straight to the arena and take that same private plane out of town 90 minutes later. He can't do anything more than that.
I think Cavaliers fans were prepared for LeBron leaving. I remember speculating about his departure with buddies over beers and wings on draft night 2003 (and I, even back then, thought the Bulls and Knicks would be coming after him). But to do it in this fashion? By staging a one-hour television event thanks to the persuading of Gray, whose television career has so bottomed out that he's relegated to spending the 2010-2011 season doing sideline for the Sacramento Kings, LeBron became a villain, not just in Cleveland but throughout America. He ripped the hearts out of a fanbase that did everything they could to defend him, to support him, to love him.
The fans of northeast Ohio have had their hearts ripped out more than any fanbase in sports deserves. They haven't won any kind of professional championship since the Cleveland Browns won the 1964 NFL Championship. They endured Michael Jordan crushing them for years and specifically in 1989 and 1992. They endured The Drive and The Fumble and the Mistake By The Lake. They endured blowing a 3-1 series lead in the 2007 ALCS and the Tony Fernandez error that led to them blowing Game 7 of the 1997 World Series. They endured superstars like Albert Belle, Manny Ramirez, Jim Thome, CC Sabathia and Cliff Lee leaving. And most famously and importantly, they endured Art Modell taking their beloved Browns to Baltimore.
But none of that pain was inflicted by a native of the region. This time, their hearts have been ripped out by one of their own, one who understood the pain of Clevelanders, one of who was supposed to have felt that same pain. LeBron spoke of wanting to continue living in Akron. Good luck.
2. LeBron's legacy is secure. Forget being one of the all-time greats. When his epitaph is written, LeBron will be remembered as the guy who had to go join another superstar who already had a ring in order to win his own.
While I'm omitting many on this chain, it has to be said that if Michael Jordan and Bill Russell are at the very top of the chain, and the next tier includes Magic Johnson, Larry Bird, Kobe Bryant and Tim Duncan, and then a few chains below is Dwyane Wade, even further below that is LeBron.
Let's say LeBron wins five straight titles with the Heat. You know what that would mean? It would mean he will have one fewer than Wade. LeBron joining Wade's team is like Jordan joining Magic in 1988 because he couldn't win a title in Chicago.
The thing I hate about LeBron breaking the hearts of Cleveland most isn't that he's leaving. It's that he's essentially saying "I can't win the championship as the star player." Jordan, Russell, Magic, Bird and Duncan all proved they could. So did Kobe these last two years. Isiah Thomas proved he could do it. So did Bill Walton. And Moses Malone. And Hakeem Olajuwon. Shaquille O'Neal proved he could do it with Young Kobe. D-Wade proved he could do it with Old Shaq. LeBron? He can't prove it. Because from this point forward, LeBron will be known as the guy who decided he couldn't win the title as the undisputed alpha dog and thus joined forces with Wade, another alpha dog (who already has a ring). Jordan, Bird, Magic and Duncan never joined forces with another alpha dog. Neither did Isiah. Or Hakeem. They said "I'm the best and I'm going to prove it by beating all of the other great players in this league." (Or, in the case of Jordan, eviscerating them.)
The only way LeBron can prove that he's capable of that would be if Wade suffered a season-ending injury, missed the playoffs, and LeBron led the Heat to the title. Anything short of that and LeBron has succeeded in maintaining a legacy below that of Jordan, Magic, Russell, Duncan, Bird and Kobe.
From this day forward, LeBron goes down as another Julius Erving, someone who needed another superduperstar to team up with him in order to win a title (and I'm assuming LeBron and Wade will win a title or two or five together). As a result, their legacies aren't what they could have been.
Sorry, but it's true.
3. Why I'm upset that LeBron is with Miami: the absence of really good basketball. As bad as I feel for Cleveland, especially with the ridiculous one-hour special to announce his decision, I don't fault LeBron for leaving them. We all know the hideous roster the Cavaliers have, even with LeBron. It's why they were embarrassed by the Celtics in the playoffs.
But I'm a fan of basketball and as a fan, I have two wishes: to see who the best of the best are (and sadly, LeBron eliminated himself from that upper tier by joining Wade's team) and to see great games and especially great playoff series. Sports are nothing without competition. Let's say LeBron had signed with the Bulls. How exciting would the Eastern Conference playoffs have been with the Bulls (LeBron, Derrick Rose, Carlos Boozer and Joakim Noah) and Heat (Wade and Chris Bosh) joining the Magic and Celtics (if they have another run in them) as a power packed quartet in the East? Plus, the bottom four playoff teams could have offered a push with Milwaukee and Atlanta being strong.
Now? Even though Miami has only three players of quality on the team (high quality, admittedly), they are the favorites if they can land anyone of substance. And, honestly, they should win the East. Having a team being far and above everyone else isn't nearly as entertaining as having three or four teams battling it out for the crown. Right now, the Lakers and Heat should be in the 2011 Finals (so long as the Heat can somehow find a supporting cast). And anything else would be an upset. It's unfortunate that the Finals seem so set 11 months before they occur.
4. Don't even try to compare this new "Big Three" to any other "Big Three" as a means of justification. When Magic, Kareem and James Worthy were together, Magic and Kareem were at different stages (except for maybe 1985, when Kareem had a revival in the Finals) and Worthy was never on their level. Plus, Magic and Worthy were drafted into Kareem's team; neither simply signed up for it. When Larry Bird, Robert Parish and Kevin McHale were together, Bird was always the No. 1 guy. The Celtics trio of Paul Pierce, Kevin Garnett and Ray Allen isn't made up any player who anyone has ever considered one of the all-time elite guys. And while LeBron and Wade are very accomplished, let's not try and pretend that Chris Bosh has done anything to put his name among the other Hall of Famers mentioned; in seven seasons, he's never won a playoff series, never been a 1st Team All-NBA and only once been a 2nd Team All-NBA selection.
However, LeBron (and Wade, to a lesser extent) are held to higher standards than the current Boston guys. LeBron has been considered a potential all-time, top tier guy since he was 15 years old. He's won the last two league MVP awards and singlehandedly taken an otherwise decrepit team to the Finals. This is the only "Big Three" with two guys who want to be alpha dogs. Those others didn't have a second alpha dog. The only time the double alpha dog has ever worked is when it's an inside-outside pairing (Kobe-Shaq, Doc-Moses). It's never worked with two perimeter guys who need to dominate the ball.
5. ESPN killed their journalist credibility with this debacle. Honestly, no one hurt their brand more than ESPN other than LeBron. I feel really bad for the likes of Ric Bucher, Marc Stein and Chad Ford, three guys who worked their tails off on this whole free agency story. In the end, they were trumped by an hour-long special hosted by Jim Gray, who hasn't been able to land a consistent gig with a major network since 2007. Remember the famous Happy Day "Jump The Shark" episode? I sort of feel like this is the moment where ESPN jumped the shark. This is the moment where they went from being the Worldwide Leader in Sports (at least, according to them) to being a national punchline. They've already been hammered by the New York Times.
Gray, who has no credibility left anymore (amazing, given that I once really respected him for asking tough questions, even if I didn't always agree with him for doing so--like the Pete Rose interview at the 1999 World Series), asked 16 different inane questions before asking the only question anyone watching cared about. Michael Wilbon fared much better in his line of questioning but failed to ask LeBron two key questions: 1) Are you aware that you are now a pariah in your home town, another Art Modell to Northeast Ohioans? 2) Given all the backlash you have received for coming up with this show and breaking Cleveland's hearts on national television in the process, do you still think this show was the right way to deliver your message?
Also, did anyone else notice that Chris Broussard was conspicuously absent from their set after LeBron announced he was joining the Heat? Broussard was on ESPN all day, then left once the decision was announced. Broussard is from Cleveland. Was he off crying somewhere after the announcement was officially made? Or off crying somewhere that he was a part of such a ridiculous production? Either way, I wouldn't blame him.
6. No one's legacy takes a bigger hit here than LeBron's (if the Heat win the next five titles, Wade can always say he won one without LeBron) but no one's increased more than Pat Riley's. He coached the Showtime Lakers to four titles, ending a Lakers curse against the Celtics, becoming the first team to win a deciding game in Boston and successfully shifting the Lakers from Kareem's team to Magic's team without having to get rid of Kareem or bruising his ego (even Phil Jackson failed at this with Shaq and Kobe, having to sit out a year and see Shaq be traded for the shift to successfully happen). He then turned an under-talented Knicks team into a championship contender by preaching defense and rough play (which ruined the NBA, because David Stern overreacted and now every bit of semi-physical play results in technical fouls). Then he built and coached a championship contender in Miami around Alonzo Mourning and Tim Hardaway, then did the same with Wade and Shaq, and now has brought in Bosh and LeBron while keeping Wade.
The only thing left for Riley to do is prove he can win a championship against one of Phil Jackson's championship contenders, because he has never done that (the '94 Knicks beat the Bulls but Jordan was off playing baseball and the '06 Heat won the title while the Lakers were in rebuild mode). Riley has proven himself as great an executive as he was a coach. And I think he'll be coaching the Heat by New Year's.
7. Cleveland? They may as well fold the franchise. I enjoyed Dan Gilbert's demolition of LeBron in his statement to the Cavs fans (even if he was completely wrong for putting it out there and comes across worse than LeBron does in writing it) but, sadly, it doesn't mean much. There was all sorts of speculation out there that Bosh wanted to join forces with LeBron in Chicago, New York or Miami, but not in Cleveland, which says all you need to know about the way players view playing in that city.
It's unfortunate but the Cavs are likely to never have an era like they just did. They went to the Finals in 2007 and were a legitimate contender for three years after. They had arguably the best player in the league for the last five years, a two-time NBA. They had the 48 Special in 2007. Now? They have nothing. Their franchise just depreciated by hundreds of millions of dollars. Gilbert's best bet is to try and get rid of the likes of Mo Williams and Antawn Jamison, hoping they can find someone to take them for expiring contracts.
Cleveland is never going to hit the lottery like they did with LeBron in 2003 and they're never going to strike gold in free agency because even LeBron left them despite being a hometown boy who could get more money with the Cavaliers. The team will be fortunate to win 25 games next season.
Byron Scott is probably wishing he had an opt-out clause in his deal, one that allowed him to opt-out if LeBron left.
"You know that you can never go back to Cleveland, right?"
LeBron said all the right things about loving Cleveland and loving Ohio, missing the most important point: he is a complete pariah in that region now. He can never go back. When the Heat go to Cleveland next season, he has to take a private plane to Cleveland that arrives 90 minutes before tip, go straight to the arena and take that same private plane out of town 90 minutes later. He can't do anything more than that.
I think Cavaliers fans were prepared for LeBron leaving. I remember speculating about his departure with buddies over beers and wings on draft night 2003 (and I, even back then, thought the Bulls and Knicks would be coming after him). But to do it in this fashion? By staging a one-hour television event thanks to the persuading of Gray, whose television career has so bottomed out that he's relegated to spending the 2010-2011 season doing sideline for the Sacramento Kings, LeBron became a villain, not just in Cleveland but throughout America. He ripped the hearts out of a fanbase that did everything they could to defend him, to support him, to love him.
The fans of northeast Ohio have had their hearts ripped out more than any fanbase in sports deserves. They haven't won any kind of professional championship since the Cleveland Browns won the 1964 NFL Championship. They endured Michael Jordan crushing them for years and specifically in 1989 and 1992. They endured The Drive and The Fumble and the Mistake By The Lake. They endured blowing a 3-1 series lead in the 2007 ALCS and the Tony Fernandez error that led to them blowing Game 7 of the 1997 World Series. They endured superstars like Albert Belle, Manny Ramirez, Jim Thome, CC Sabathia and Cliff Lee leaving. And most famously and importantly, they endured Art Modell taking their beloved Browns to Baltimore.
But none of that pain was inflicted by a native of the region. This time, their hearts have been ripped out by one of their own, one who understood the pain of Clevelanders, one of who was supposed to have felt that same pain. LeBron spoke of wanting to continue living in Akron. Good luck.
2. LeBron's legacy is secure. Forget being one of the all-time greats. When his epitaph is written, LeBron will be remembered as the guy who had to go join another superstar who already had a ring in order to win his own.
While I'm omitting many on this chain, it has to be said that if Michael Jordan and Bill Russell are at the very top of the chain, and the next tier includes Magic Johnson, Larry Bird, Kobe Bryant and Tim Duncan, and then a few chains below is Dwyane Wade, even further below that is LeBron.
Let's say LeBron wins five straight titles with the Heat. You know what that would mean? It would mean he will have one fewer than Wade. LeBron joining Wade's team is like Jordan joining Magic in 1988 because he couldn't win a title in Chicago.
The thing I hate about LeBron breaking the hearts of Cleveland most isn't that he's leaving. It's that he's essentially saying "I can't win the championship as the star player." Jordan, Russell, Magic, Bird and Duncan all proved they could. So did Kobe these last two years. Isiah Thomas proved he could do it. So did Bill Walton. And Moses Malone. And Hakeem Olajuwon. Shaquille O'Neal proved he could do it with Young Kobe. D-Wade proved he could do it with Old Shaq. LeBron? He can't prove it. Because from this point forward, LeBron will be known as the guy who decided he couldn't win the title as the undisputed alpha dog and thus joined forces with Wade, another alpha dog (who already has a ring). Jordan, Bird, Magic and Duncan never joined forces with another alpha dog. Neither did Isiah. Or Hakeem. They said "I'm the best and I'm going to prove it by beating all of the other great players in this league." (Or, in the case of Jordan, eviscerating them.)
The only way LeBron can prove that he's capable of that would be if Wade suffered a season-ending injury, missed the playoffs, and LeBron led the Heat to the title. Anything short of that and LeBron has succeeded in maintaining a legacy below that of Jordan, Magic, Russell, Duncan, Bird and Kobe.
From this day forward, LeBron goes down as another Julius Erving, someone who needed another superduperstar to team up with him in order to win a title (and I'm assuming LeBron and Wade will win a title or two or five together). As a result, their legacies aren't what they could have been.
Sorry, but it's true.
3. Why I'm upset that LeBron is with Miami: the absence of really good basketball. As bad as I feel for Cleveland, especially with the ridiculous one-hour special to announce his decision, I don't fault LeBron for leaving them. We all know the hideous roster the Cavaliers have, even with LeBron. It's why they were embarrassed by the Celtics in the playoffs.
But I'm a fan of basketball and as a fan, I have two wishes: to see who the best of the best are (and sadly, LeBron eliminated himself from that upper tier by joining Wade's team) and to see great games and especially great playoff series. Sports are nothing without competition. Let's say LeBron had signed with the Bulls. How exciting would the Eastern Conference playoffs have been with the Bulls (LeBron, Derrick Rose, Carlos Boozer and Joakim Noah) and Heat (Wade and Chris Bosh) joining the Magic and Celtics (if they have another run in them) as a power packed quartet in the East? Plus, the bottom four playoff teams could have offered a push with Milwaukee and Atlanta being strong.
Now? Even though Miami has only three players of quality on the team (high quality, admittedly), they are the favorites if they can land anyone of substance. And, honestly, they should win the East. Having a team being far and above everyone else isn't nearly as entertaining as having three or four teams battling it out for the crown. Right now, the Lakers and Heat should be in the 2011 Finals (so long as the Heat can somehow find a supporting cast). And anything else would be an upset. It's unfortunate that the Finals seem so set 11 months before they occur.
4. Don't even try to compare this new "Big Three" to any other "Big Three" as a means of justification. When Magic, Kareem and James Worthy were together, Magic and Kareem were at different stages (except for maybe 1985, when Kareem had a revival in the Finals) and Worthy was never on their level. Plus, Magic and Worthy were drafted into Kareem's team; neither simply signed up for it. When Larry Bird, Robert Parish and Kevin McHale were together, Bird was always the No. 1 guy. The Celtics trio of Paul Pierce, Kevin Garnett and Ray Allen isn't made up any player who anyone has ever considered one of the all-time elite guys. And while LeBron and Wade are very accomplished, let's not try and pretend that Chris Bosh has done anything to put his name among the other Hall of Famers mentioned; in seven seasons, he's never won a playoff series, never been a 1st Team All-NBA and only once been a 2nd Team All-NBA selection.
However, LeBron (and Wade, to a lesser extent) are held to higher standards than the current Boston guys. LeBron has been considered a potential all-time, top tier guy since he was 15 years old. He's won the last two league MVP awards and singlehandedly taken an otherwise decrepit team to the Finals. This is the only "Big Three" with two guys who want to be alpha dogs. Those others didn't have a second alpha dog. The only time the double alpha dog has ever worked is when it's an inside-outside pairing (Kobe-Shaq, Doc-Moses). It's never worked with two perimeter guys who need to dominate the ball.
5. ESPN killed their journalist credibility with this debacle. Honestly, no one hurt their brand more than ESPN other than LeBron. I feel really bad for the likes of Ric Bucher, Marc Stein and Chad Ford, three guys who worked their tails off on this whole free agency story. In the end, they were trumped by an hour-long special hosted by Jim Gray, who hasn't been able to land a consistent gig with a major network since 2007. Remember the famous Happy Day "Jump The Shark" episode? I sort of feel like this is the moment where ESPN jumped the shark. This is the moment where they went from being the Worldwide Leader in Sports (at least, according to them) to being a national punchline. They've already been hammered by the New York Times.
Gray, who has no credibility left anymore (amazing, given that I once really respected him for asking tough questions, even if I didn't always agree with him for doing so--like the Pete Rose interview at the 1999 World Series), asked 16 different inane questions before asking the only question anyone watching cared about. Michael Wilbon fared much better in his line of questioning but failed to ask LeBron two key questions: 1) Are you aware that you are now a pariah in your home town, another Art Modell to Northeast Ohioans? 2) Given all the backlash you have received for coming up with this show and breaking Cleveland's hearts on national television in the process, do you still think this show was the right way to deliver your message?
Also, did anyone else notice that Chris Broussard was conspicuously absent from their set after LeBron announced he was joining the Heat? Broussard was on ESPN all day, then left once the decision was announced. Broussard is from Cleveland. Was he off crying somewhere after the announcement was officially made? Or off crying somewhere that he was a part of such a ridiculous production? Either way, I wouldn't blame him.
6. No one's legacy takes a bigger hit here than LeBron's (if the Heat win the next five titles, Wade can always say he won one without LeBron) but no one's increased more than Pat Riley's. He coached the Showtime Lakers to four titles, ending a Lakers curse against the Celtics, becoming the first team to win a deciding game in Boston and successfully shifting the Lakers from Kareem's team to Magic's team without having to get rid of Kareem or bruising his ego (even Phil Jackson failed at this with Shaq and Kobe, having to sit out a year and see Shaq be traded for the shift to successfully happen). He then turned an under-talented Knicks team into a championship contender by preaching defense and rough play (which ruined the NBA, because David Stern overreacted and now every bit of semi-physical play results in technical fouls). Then he built and coached a championship contender in Miami around Alonzo Mourning and Tim Hardaway, then did the same with Wade and Shaq, and now has brought in Bosh and LeBron while keeping Wade.
The only thing left for Riley to do is prove he can win a championship against one of Phil Jackson's championship contenders, because he has never done that (the '94 Knicks beat the Bulls but Jordan was off playing baseball and the '06 Heat won the title while the Lakers were in rebuild mode). Riley has proven himself as great an executive as he was a coach. And I think he'll be coaching the Heat by New Year's.
7. Cleveland? They may as well fold the franchise. I enjoyed Dan Gilbert's demolition of LeBron in his statement to the Cavs fans (even if he was completely wrong for putting it out there and comes across worse than LeBron does in writing it) but, sadly, it doesn't mean much. There was all sorts of speculation out there that Bosh wanted to join forces with LeBron in Chicago, New York or Miami, but not in Cleveland, which says all you need to know about the way players view playing in that city.
It's unfortunate but the Cavs are likely to never have an era like they just did. They went to the Finals in 2007 and were a legitimate contender for three years after. They had arguably the best player in the league for the last five years, a two-time NBA. They had the 48 Special in 2007. Now? They have nothing. Their franchise just depreciated by hundreds of millions of dollars. Gilbert's best bet is to try and get rid of the likes of Mo Williams and Antawn Jamison, hoping they can find someone to take them for expiring contracts.
Cleveland is never going to hit the lottery like they did with LeBron in 2003 and they're never going to strike gold in free agency because even LeBron left them despite being a hometown boy who could get more money with the Cavaliers. The team will be fortunate to win 25 games next season.
Byron Scott is probably wishing he had an opt-out clause in his deal, one that allowed him to opt-out if LeBron left.
Dan Gilbert's message to Cavaliers fans
The letter:
Dear Cleveland, All Of Northeast Ohio and Cleveland Cavaliers Supporters Wherever You May Be Tonight;
As you now know, our former hero, who grew up in the very region that he deserted this evening, is no longer a Cleveland Cavalier.
This was announced with a several day, narcissistic, self-promotional build-up culminating with a national TV special of his "decision" unlike anything ever "witnessed" in the history of sports and probably the history of entertainment.
Clearly, this is bitterly disappointing to all of us.
The good news is that the ownership team and the rest of the hard-working, loyal, and driven staff over here at your hometown Cavaliers have not betrayed you nor NEVER will betray you.
There is so much more to tell you about the events of the recent past and our more than exciting future. Over the next several days and weeks, we will be communicating much of that to you.
You simply don't deserve this kind of cowardly betrayal.
You have given so much and deserve so much more.
In the meantime, I want to make one statement to you tonight:
"I PERSONALLY GUARANTEE THAT THE CLEVELAND CAVALIERS WILL WIN AN NBA CHAMPIONSHIP BEFORE THE SELF-TITLED FORMER ‘KING’ WINS ONE"
You can take it to the bank.
If you thought we were motivated before tonight to bring the hardware to Cleveland, I can tell you that this shameful display of selfishness and betrayal by one of our very own has shifted our "motivation" to previously unknown and previously never experienced levels.
Some people think they should go to heaven but NOT have to die to get there.
Sorry, but that's simply not how it works.
This shocking act of disloyalty from our home grown "chosen one" sends the exact opposite lesson of what we would want our children to learn. And "who" we would want them to grow-up to become.
But the good news is that this heartless and callous action can only serve as the antidote to the so-called "curse" on Cleveland, Ohio.
The self-declared former "King" will be taking the "curse" with him down south. And until he does "right" by Cleveland and Ohio, James (and the town where he plays) will unfortunately own this dreaded spell and bad karma.
Just watch.
Sleep well, Cleveland.
Tomorrow is a new and much brighter day....
I PROMISE you that our energy, focus, capital, knowledge and experience will be directed at one thing and one thing only:
DELIVERING YOU the championship you have long deserved and is long overdue....
Dan Gilbert
Majority Owner
Cleveland Cavaliers
Dear Cleveland, All Of Northeast Ohio and Cleveland Cavaliers Supporters Wherever You May Be Tonight;
As you now know, our former hero, who grew up in the very region that he deserted this evening, is no longer a Cleveland Cavalier.
This was announced with a several day, narcissistic, self-promotional build-up culminating with a national TV special of his "decision" unlike anything ever "witnessed" in the history of sports and probably the history of entertainment.
Clearly, this is bitterly disappointing to all of us.
The good news is that the ownership team and the rest of the hard-working, loyal, and driven staff over here at your hometown Cavaliers have not betrayed you nor NEVER will betray you.
There is so much more to tell you about the events of the recent past and our more than exciting future. Over the next several days and weeks, we will be communicating much of that to you.
You simply don't deserve this kind of cowardly betrayal.
You have given so much and deserve so much more.
In the meantime, I want to make one statement to you tonight:
"I PERSONALLY GUARANTEE THAT THE CLEVELAND CAVALIERS WILL WIN AN NBA CHAMPIONSHIP BEFORE THE SELF-TITLED FORMER ‘KING’ WINS ONE"
You can take it to the bank.
If you thought we were motivated before tonight to bring the hardware to Cleveland, I can tell you that this shameful display of selfishness and betrayal by one of our very own has shifted our "motivation" to previously unknown and previously never experienced levels.
Some people think they should go to heaven but NOT have to die to get there.
Sorry, but that's simply not how it works.
This shocking act of disloyalty from our home grown "chosen one" sends the exact opposite lesson of what we would want our children to learn. And "who" we would want them to grow-up to become.
But the good news is that this heartless and callous action can only serve as the antidote to the so-called "curse" on Cleveland, Ohio.
The self-declared former "King" will be taking the "curse" with him down south. And until he does "right" by Cleveland and Ohio, James (and the town where he plays) will unfortunately own this dreaded spell and bad karma.
Just watch.
Sleep well, Cleveland.
Tomorrow is a new and much brighter day....
I PROMISE you that our energy, focus, capital, knowledge and experience will be directed at one thing and one thing only:
DELIVERING YOU the championship you have long deserved and is long overdue....
Dan Gilbert
Majority Owner
Cleveland Cavaliers
Dean Smith is starting to slip
In my lifetime, there have been three active college basketball coaches that transcended all others: Mike Krzyzweski, Bob Knight and Dean Smith (with Tom Izzo threatening to join the club). It's with that in mind that I pass along the sad news that it appears Dean Smith is starting to slip.
The man who retired as the winningest coach of all-time, with two national championships and names like Michael Jordan, James Worthy, Brad Daugherty, Sam Perkins, Rasheed Wallace, Jerry Stackhouse, Vince Carter and Antawn Jamison among those he coached (and don't forget some of my personal favorites like Ed Cota and Donald Williams) is starting to lose his memory according to the Fayetteville Observer. It reports that "people close to the coach say his famous memory is slipping. On some days he doesn't recognize people he has known for years."
The North Carolina basketball family is as tight as any college basketball family in the nation, especially among those who played or worked under Smith. Jordan still famously reveres Smith, even after he became the single biggest sports superstar in the world (and sorry, LeBron, but you're never reaching the MJ plateau of "global icon"). Says the article: "And more significantly, at least to those who are closest to him, his health issues have weakened his connections with so many former players. That has left the Carolina family shaken, with former Tar Heels missing the friendship and mentoring Smith delivered for years after their basketball careers were done."
Best wishes to the great Dean Smith, his immediate family and the Tar Heel basketball family.
The man who retired as the winningest coach of all-time, with two national championships and names like Michael Jordan, James Worthy, Brad Daugherty, Sam Perkins, Rasheed Wallace, Jerry Stackhouse, Vince Carter and Antawn Jamison among those he coached (and don't forget some of my personal favorites like Ed Cota and Donald Williams) is starting to lose his memory according to the Fayetteville Observer. It reports that "people close to the coach say his famous memory is slipping. On some days he doesn't recognize people he has known for years."
The North Carolina basketball family is as tight as any college basketball family in the nation, especially among those who played or worked under Smith. Jordan still famously reveres Smith, even after he became the single biggest sports superstar in the world (and sorry, LeBron, but you're never reaching the MJ plateau of "global icon"). Says the article: "And more significantly, at least to those who are closest to him, his health issues have weakened his connections with so many former players. That has left the Carolina family shaken, with former Tar Heels missing the friendship and mentoring Smith delivered for years after their basketball careers were done."
Best wishes to the great Dean Smith, his immediate family and the Tar Heel basketball family.
July 7, 2010
Will Newsday be right?
With LeBron TV tomorrow night, the question many have wondered is if someone will scoop LeBron's show. The first attempt at it comes from Alan Hahn of Newsday who Tweets:
"Multiple sources are telling Newsday that LeBron James has decided to join Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh in Miami. The new Big Three is here."
Alright then. So far, no one else has gone with this and given the way this story has played out, it's hard to believe anything until the final announcement is made. I fully expect a report from Ric Bucher or Adrian Wojnarowski tomorrow saying that LeBron is seriously considering the Clippers, just to create even more buzz for the show. But we'll see. Speaking of Bucher, shortly after Hahn's Tweet he Tweeted this (over two Tweets):
"Never tweeted LeBron was in Mia. A source said he was. Passed it on to the mothership. Made a 2nd call, told he was in Akron. Killed report...But the insanity is rising: the 1 source came at me hard that LBJ to Mia is done. Only way I go w/one source on that is if it's LBJ/Mav."
"Mav," being Maverick Carter. Anyway, Brian Windhorst of the Cleveland Plain-Dealer, who has been the ultimate LeBron authority since James was in high school, Tweeted this a little after the Bucher Tweets:
"Newsday has reported LeBron has decided on Heat. Only a couple of people can truly confirm this. None have to me at this point."
So that's where we are. Sounds like the east coast media is going to have to forego sleep tonight in order to chase down this LeBron-to-Miami report and LeBron wouldn't want it any other way.
UPDATE (10:41 pm): Chris Broussard of ESPN chimes in: "Sources with knowledge of the situation indeed saying LeBron will join Wade and Bosh in Miami, barring a late change of heart"
The only thing I will caution is that the dreaded "sources with knowledge of the situation" also said a LeBron/Bosh partnership in Chicago was a "done deal." Plus, LeBron has his show to promote. This could all be a smokescreen for the truth. Or it could be the truth. It's LeBron. Anything is in play at this point. What's fact is fiction and what's fiction is fact until he makes his official announcement.
"Multiple sources are telling Newsday that LeBron James has decided to join Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh in Miami. The new Big Three is here."
Alright then. So far, no one else has gone with this and given the way this story has played out, it's hard to believe anything until the final announcement is made. I fully expect a report from Ric Bucher or Adrian Wojnarowski tomorrow saying that LeBron is seriously considering the Clippers, just to create even more buzz for the show. But we'll see. Speaking of Bucher, shortly after Hahn's Tweet he Tweeted this (over two Tweets):
"Never tweeted LeBron was in Mia. A source said he was. Passed it on to the mothership. Made a 2nd call, told he was in Akron. Killed report...But the insanity is rising: the 1 source came at me hard that LBJ to Mia is done. Only way I go w/one source on that is if it's LBJ/Mav."
"Mav," being Maverick Carter. Anyway, Brian Windhorst of the Cleveland Plain-Dealer, who has been the ultimate LeBron authority since James was in high school, Tweeted this a little after the Bucher Tweets:
"Newsday has reported LeBron has decided on Heat. Only a couple of people can truly confirm this. None have to me at this point."
So that's where we are. Sounds like the east coast media is going to have to forego sleep tonight in order to chase down this LeBron-to-Miami report and LeBron wouldn't want it any other way.
UPDATE (10:41 pm): Chris Broussard of ESPN chimes in: "Sources with knowledge of the situation indeed saying LeBron will join Wade and Bosh in Miami, barring a late change of heart"
The only thing I will caution is that the dreaded "sources with knowledge of the situation" also said a LeBron/Bosh partnership in Chicago was a "done deal." Plus, LeBron has his show to promote. This could all be a smokescreen for the truth. Or it could be the truth. It's LeBron. Anything is in play at this point. What's fact is fiction and what's fiction is fact until he makes his official announcement.
The Big Three stays intact
The Celtics are giving it another run at an NBA championship with their veteran cast. First Doc Rivers announced he would return as head coach for the final season of his contract. Then Paul Pierce re-signed with the team for four years.
And now, Ray Allen has agreed to a two-year, $20 million deal according to ESPN's Marc Stein. Allen will have the ability to opt out again next summer should he so choose.
The offseason couldn't have worked out any better for Kevin Garnett, who had to have been wondering, at least a little, if Rivers, Pierce and Allen would all leave and he'd be left all alone. Now they're all back and we'll have to see what they have left.
Boston was 52-30 during the regular season, masked by an incredible run to Game 7 of the NBA Finals. Everyone figured that this playoff run was their last chance but apparently the Celtics are going to try and squeeze another title out of this group. Allen had one of the great shooting games of all-time in Game 2 of the Finals, then couldn't hit anything the rest of the way, in part because of a thigh injury suffered early in Game 3. But Allen was definitely the most consistent of these three players this past season, with Pierce and especially Garnett battling injuries that slowed down their game. Fortunately for all of them, Rajon Rondo emerged as the new superstar of the team this season, though he has obvious flaws (like horrific free throw shooting).
The Celtics now must fill out the rest of the team, beginning with someone to fill in while Kendrick Perkins recovers from ACL surgery. They're said to be looking at both Jermaine and Shaquille O'Neal as possible options. Rasheed Wallace's contract is a chip they have to play in the trade market and Tony Allen remains a free agent. But the core is back for what the Celtics hope is one more run at an 18th title for the franchise.
And now, Ray Allen has agreed to a two-year, $20 million deal according to ESPN's Marc Stein. Allen will have the ability to opt out again next summer should he so choose.
The offseason couldn't have worked out any better for Kevin Garnett, who had to have been wondering, at least a little, if Rivers, Pierce and Allen would all leave and he'd be left all alone. Now they're all back and we'll have to see what they have left.
Boston was 52-30 during the regular season, masked by an incredible run to Game 7 of the NBA Finals. Everyone figured that this playoff run was their last chance but apparently the Celtics are going to try and squeeze another title out of this group. Allen had one of the great shooting games of all-time in Game 2 of the Finals, then couldn't hit anything the rest of the way, in part because of a thigh injury suffered early in Game 3. But Allen was definitely the most consistent of these three players this past season, with Pierce and especially Garnett battling injuries that slowed down their game. Fortunately for all of them, Rajon Rondo emerged as the new superstar of the team this season, though he has obvious flaws (like horrific free throw shooting).
The Celtics now must fill out the rest of the team, beginning with someone to fill in while Kendrick Perkins recovers from ACL surgery. They're said to be looking at both Jermaine and Shaquille O'Neal as possible options. Rasheed Wallace's contract is a chip they have to play in the trade market and Tony Allen remains a free agent. But the core is back for what the Celtics hope is one more run at an 18th title for the franchise.
Boozin' it up in Chicago
The Bulls don't have to worry about striking out in free agency. With Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh off to Miami and LeBron James still up for grabs, Chicago has struck by signing Carlos Boozer to a five-year, $80 million deal according to ESPN's Ric Bucher.
The Bulls can still afford a maximum contract under the salary cap and now have a little bit of added ammunition in their hopes of landing LeBron (or do they?). By adding Boozer, Chicago can have a team of him, Derrick Rose, Joakim Noah, Taj Gibson and Luol Deng before adding anything else. They can adde LeBron without getting rid of Deng now and if you ask me, adding LeBron makes them the best team (on paper) in the East.
But I wonder if LeBron (ironically enough) would have any ill-will toward Boozer for bolting from the Cavaliers when the two were teammates during James' rookie year. Boozer promised the Cavs he would re-sign with the team if they granted him unrestricted free agency so that he could get more money from the team, then promptly signed with Utah. One cannot help but wonder if LeBron thinks he already would have a championship or two if Boozer hadn't left him in 2004.
For what it's worth, Boozer apparently is going to reach out to LeBron and try to persuade him to come to Chicago. I think it's worth noting that while Boozer has had some injury issues, there's no denying that he has achieved far more team success than Bosh ever has. I have more confidence in Boozer to deliver in a pressure-packed situation than I do in Bosh at this point.
The Bulls can still afford a maximum contract under the salary cap and now have a little bit of added ammunition in their hopes of landing LeBron (or do they?). By adding Boozer, Chicago can have a team of him, Derrick Rose, Joakim Noah, Taj Gibson and Luol Deng before adding anything else. They can adde LeBron without getting rid of Deng now and if you ask me, adding LeBron makes them the best team (on paper) in the East.
But I wonder if LeBron (ironically enough) would have any ill-will toward Boozer for bolting from the Cavaliers when the two were teammates during James' rookie year. Boozer promised the Cavs he would re-sign with the team if they granted him unrestricted free agency so that he could get more money from the team, then promptly signed with Utah. One cannot help but wonder if LeBron thinks he already would have a championship or two if Boozer hadn't left him in 2004.
For what it's worth, Boozer apparently is going to reach out to LeBron and try to persuade him to come to Chicago. I think it's worth noting that while Boozer has had some injury issues, there's no denying that he has achieved far more team success than Bosh ever has. I have more confidence in Boozer to deliver in a pressure-packed situation than I do in Bosh at this point.
Feelin' the Heat
Two of the big three have fallen. Dwyane Wade is staying in Miami and Chris Bosh is joining him there. Financial details are yet to be revealed as it's still unknown if Bosh will be coming in a sign-and-trade with Toronto.
Speaking on ESPN, both said they would be willing to take less than the max for the good of the team and be able to give the team flexibility to fill out the team.
How good will the Heat be? Who knows? They're still in the running for LeBron James, although Wade and Bosh join a team that only has Mario Chalmers and Michael Beasley under contract. That being said, I think a Wade-Bosh combo makes Miami a contender in the East but they have to greatly improve their supporting cast to be a championship-caliber team. No team is winning a title without good role players off the bench and we'll have to see if Miami can get them. Maybe they can get several good role players with the money earmarked for LeBron.
Speaking on ESPN, both said they would be willing to take less than the max for the good of the team and be able to give the team flexibility to fill out the team.
How good will the Heat be? Who knows? They're still in the running for LeBron James, although Wade and Bosh join a team that only has Mario Chalmers and Michael Beasley under contract. That being said, I think a Wade-Bosh combo makes Miami a contender in the East but they have to greatly improve their supporting cast to be a championship-caliber team. No team is winning a title without good role players off the bench and we'll have to see if Miami can get them. Maybe they can get several good role players with the money earmarked for LeBron.
Wade and Bosh reportedly signing with Miami
Not that this is much of a surprise at this point but ESPN's Chris Broussard is reporting that Dwyane Wade will re-sign with the Heat and Chris Bosh will join him.
Given all of the reporting over the last two weeks, I'm not sure I'll believe this until it becomes official and Broussard says the two will announce it today. We'll see.
Given all of the reporting over the last two weeks, I'm not sure I'll believe this until it becomes official and Broussard says the two will announce it today. We'll see.
LeBron TV: Free agency 2010 officially reaches the ridiculous (if it hadn't already)
In the last week, every bit of non-news has turned into news, every bit of non-news contradicting the previous bit of non-news. If anything has spoken more to the ridiculous nature of media in 2010, it's been NBA free agency and, I must say, I'm just as guilty of it as anyone.
Fans of Cleveland gave up three days of their lives last week to line the streets and show their support for LeBron James and their disdain for the Knicks, Bulls, Heat, Nets and Clippers as they attempted to woo him away from the Cavaliers. Stories such as LeBron showing up for the meetings wearing shorts, or him showing up at his basketball camp wearing a Yankees hat, became national news. On July 28, it was reported that James and Chris Bosh signing with the Bulls was a "done deal" and just one day later, Stephen A. Smith reported that James, Bosh and Dwyane Wade had held a summit and joined forces, deciding that they were going to join forces in Miami. This preceded Stephen A. retracting the report about a week later, essentially reporting that his report was incorrect.
Reports of how the teams made their pitch became major headlines, ranging from the Cavaliers showing him Family Guy-style cartoons to the Bulls brass walking across the street like they were the Beatles on the Abbey Road album to the Knicks telling LeBron how they could make him a billionaire. That the Heat met with him for nearly three hours and the Clippers for less than one was national news.
Yesterday, all of the sports websites had some variation of this headline among its top stories: "LeBron joins Twitter." No, seriously. This was considered a national sports story of importance, James joining a social media site.
But it hasn't been all about LeBron. Last Friday, ESPN's Chad Ford reported that Dwyane Wade was leaning toward committing to joining the Bulls, then it became even bigger news that Wade and Bosh were meeting the Bulls simultaneously, causing massive pain in Miami and jubilation in Chicago. And at the same time, ESPN's Chris Sheridan reported that the so-called done deal of Joe Johnson re-signing with the Hawks wasn't such a done deal because he was still considering the Knicks and Bulls too (as if anyone really cares about Joe Johnson). Bosh, meanwhile, was chronicling his free agency tour on Twitter (even posting a photo of himself having dinner with Wade while cryptically saying that "someone" was missing) while both he and Wade were making a documentary of their free agency whirlwind. Then Amar'e Stoudemire joined the Knicks (at least this was actual news) and started angling for Carmelo Anthony and Tony Parker to join him, even though neither is a free agent for another year, making New Yorkers delirious ("We're gonna get LeBron, Melo, Parker, Evan Longoria and Amar'e!").
Nothing has demonstrated non-news turning into major news more than NBA free agency 2010 and there's no doubt that LeBron, Wade and Bosh are eating it up. If anything, LeBron probably now wishes he hadn't rejected the notion of a whirlwind free agency tour where he threw out the first pitch at Wrigley, partied in Manhattan with Jay-Z and Mikhail Prokhorov, attended a Yankees game with Mike D'Antoni and had drinks poured down his and Pat Riley's throats on South Beach. It's all reaching a culmination on Thursday, with ESPN and LeBron joining forces on a one-hour television special to announce where he's going, a show that feels rather anticlimactic because everyone except Chris Sheridan (the only reporter left that feels LeBron is going to the Knicks) seems to believe his return to Cleveland is pretty much a formality at this point. It's somewhat reminiscent of Kobe Bryant's 2004 television announcement that he would stay with the Lakers, something also seen as a given at the time, especially since the Lakers had traded away nemesis Shaquille O'Neal a couple days prior.
Everyone is going to pile on to LeBron for doing this television thing (if Bob Ryan is on PTI tonight, you can pretty much guarantee that he's going to scream about it) but the reality of the situation is that the media that complains about this is the same media that created all of this, created the monster that is King James and that is this free agency tour. If you ask me, this is a smart move by LeBron, whose free agency has been more important to American sports fans than the NBA Finals or any game LeBron has actually played.
All I know is that this show culminates a really sad couple of weeks in the history of sports journalism and makes me happy that I chose blogging instead of news reporting as a line of work (can blogging be a profession?). I'd be embarrassed if I were a member of the news media right about now.
At this point, I believe LeBron is going to re-sign with the Cavaliers (even though even without Bosh or Wade, Chicago is the best fit for his long-term interests of winning). I believe he's going to have an opt-out in three years so he can do all of this again, only next time he'll probably decide it isn't worth such media attention (whether the media agrees or not is another story entirely). And I'll be tuned in on Thursday to watch.
Fans of Cleveland gave up three days of their lives last week to line the streets and show their support for LeBron James and their disdain for the Knicks, Bulls, Heat, Nets and Clippers as they attempted to woo him away from the Cavaliers. Stories such as LeBron showing up for the meetings wearing shorts, or him showing up at his basketball camp wearing a Yankees hat, became national news. On July 28, it was reported that James and Chris Bosh signing with the Bulls was a "done deal" and just one day later, Stephen A. Smith reported that James, Bosh and Dwyane Wade had held a summit and joined forces, deciding that they were going to join forces in Miami. This preceded Stephen A. retracting the report about a week later, essentially reporting that his report was incorrect.
Reports of how the teams made their pitch became major headlines, ranging from the Cavaliers showing him Family Guy-style cartoons to the Bulls brass walking across the street like they were the Beatles on the Abbey Road album to the Knicks telling LeBron how they could make him a billionaire. That the Heat met with him for nearly three hours and the Clippers for less than one was national news.
Yesterday, all of the sports websites had some variation of this headline among its top stories: "LeBron joins Twitter." No, seriously. This was considered a national sports story of importance, James joining a social media site.
But it hasn't been all about LeBron. Last Friday, ESPN's Chad Ford reported that Dwyane Wade was leaning toward committing to joining the Bulls, then it became even bigger news that Wade and Bosh were meeting the Bulls simultaneously, causing massive pain in Miami and jubilation in Chicago. And at the same time, ESPN's Chris Sheridan reported that the so-called done deal of Joe Johnson re-signing with the Hawks wasn't such a done deal because he was still considering the Knicks and Bulls too (as if anyone really cares about Joe Johnson). Bosh, meanwhile, was chronicling his free agency tour on Twitter (even posting a photo of himself having dinner with Wade while cryptically saying that "someone" was missing) while both he and Wade were making a documentary of their free agency whirlwind. Then Amar'e Stoudemire joined the Knicks (at least this was actual news) and started angling for Carmelo Anthony and Tony Parker to join him, even though neither is a free agent for another year, making New Yorkers delirious ("We're gonna get LeBron, Melo, Parker, Evan Longoria and Amar'e!").
Nothing has demonstrated non-news turning into major news more than NBA free agency 2010 and there's no doubt that LeBron, Wade and Bosh are eating it up. If anything, LeBron probably now wishes he hadn't rejected the notion of a whirlwind free agency tour where he threw out the first pitch at Wrigley, partied in Manhattan with Jay-Z and Mikhail Prokhorov, attended a Yankees game with Mike D'Antoni and had drinks poured down his and Pat Riley's throats on South Beach. It's all reaching a culmination on Thursday, with ESPN and LeBron joining forces on a one-hour television special to announce where he's going, a show that feels rather anticlimactic because everyone except Chris Sheridan (the only reporter left that feels LeBron is going to the Knicks) seems to believe his return to Cleveland is pretty much a formality at this point. It's somewhat reminiscent of Kobe Bryant's 2004 television announcement that he would stay with the Lakers, something also seen as a given at the time, especially since the Lakers had traded away nemesis Shaquille O'Neal a couple days prior.
Everyone is going to pile on to LeBron for doing this television thing (if Bob Ryan is on PTI tonight, you can pretty much guarantee that he's going to scream about it) but the reality of the situation is that the media that complains about this is the same media that created all of this, created the monster that is King James and that is this free agency tour. If you ask me, this is a smart move by LeBron, whose free agency has been more important to American sports fans than the NBA Finals or any game LeBron has actually played.
All I know is that this show culminates a really sad couple of weeks in the history of sports journalism and makes me happy that I chose blogging instead of news reporting as a line of work (can blogging be a profession?). I'd be embarrassed if I were a member of the news media right about now.
At this point, I believe LeBron is going to re-sign with the Cavaliers (even though even without Bosh or Wade, Chicago is the best fit for his long-term interests of winning). I believe he's going to have an opt-out in three years so he can do all of this again, only next time he'll probably decide it isn't worth such media attention (whether the media agrees or not is another story entirely). And I'll be tuned in on Thursday to watch.
July 5, 2010
The first major NBA free agent domino has fallen
Amar'e Stoudemire is signing with the New York Knicks. His agent has confirmed it, Amar'e has confirmed it by talking to the media and even the Knicks have confirmed it, putting a picture of Amar'e in a Knicks jersey on the Madison Square Garden marquee.
Of course, it isn't yet on MSG's website or on the Knicks' website because free agents aren't technically allowed to sign until Thursday.
Anyway, this is a good signing for the Knicks so long as they can find a point guard who can push the ball. And the best one out there is, um, well, Luke Ridnour. They better hope LeBron comes or Amar'e's promises of Tony Parker come to fruition or this has disaster written all over it.
(And, no, I don't consider Joe Johnson staying in Atlanta to be "major.")
Of course, it isn't yet on MSG's website or on the Knicks' website because free agents aren't technically allowed to sign until Thursday.
Anyway, this is a good signing for the Knicks so long as they can find a point guard who can push the ball. And the best one out there is, um, well, Luke Ridnour. They better hope LeBron comes or Amar'e's promises of Tony Parker come to fruition or this has disaster written all over it.
(And, no, I don't consider Joe Johnson staying in Atlanta to be "major.")
Bob Probert passes away
During his career, there were few players like Bob Probert. He had the hands to once score 29 goals in a season and the fists to once rack up 398 penalty minutes in a season (and to go over 300 penalty minutes in two other seasons as well).
In an era of the NHL where there were numerous players in the league whose sole purpose was to drop the gloves, Probert was the best fighter of all of them yet also served a real hockey purpose as a player who could put the puck in the net.
Probert died today at the age of 45 after collapsing while on a boat in Lake St. Clair, near Windsor. He was 45 years old.
The cause of the death has not yet been released but one can only hope it wasn't related to the substance abuse issues he faced during his life. He was once suspended by the NHL for attempting to smuggle cocaine into the U.S. from Canada and once had a motorcycle accident while having traces of cocaine and three times the legal limit of alcohol in his system.
In tribute to perhaps the greatest enforcer in NHL history, here are a sampling of some of his fights. RIP.
In an era of the NHL where there were numerous players in the league whose sole purpose was to drop the gloves, Probert was the best fighter of all of them yet also served a real hockey purpose as a player who could put the puck in the net.
Probert died today at the age of 45 after collapsing while on a boat in Lake St. Clair, near Windsor. He was 45 years old.
The cause of the death has not yet been released but one can only hope it wasn't related to the substance abuse issues he faced during his life. He was once suspended by the NHL for attempting to smuggle cocaine into the U.S. from Canada and once had a motorcycle accident while having traces of cocaine and three times the legal limit of alcohol in his system.
In tribute to perhaps the greatest enforcer in NHL history, here are a sampling of some of his fights. RIP.
Maradona says he's done
It is with great sadness that I report that Cronica newspaper in Argentina is reporting that Diego Maradona is done as the coach of Argentina's national soccer team. While nothing has officially been announced, the paper quotes Maradona as saying, "It's done, my chapter has ended."
This isn't official and a close friend of his is quoted as saying that he's still thinking about it. And let me say this: I hope he changes his mind. The World Cup has been fun but Diego Maradona made it more fun than the vuvuzelas, the horrific announcing, the U.S. miracle and Charissa Thompson's ridiculous reports on Yahoo! combined. Maradona made this event much more interesting and much more fun for a person like me that follows soccer on the periphery before really throwing myself into it once every four years.
So, Diego, I'm begging you: please come back for 2014.
This isn't official and a close friend of his is quoted as saying that he's still thinking about it. And let me say this: I hope he changes his mind. The World Cup has been fun but Diego Maradona made it more fun than the vuvuzelas, the horrific announcing, the U.S. miracle and Charissa Thompson's ridiculous reports on Yahoo! combined. Maradona made this event much more interesting and much more fun for a person like me that follows soccer on the periphery before really throwing myself into it once every four years.
So, Diego, I'm begging you: please come back for 2014.
July 4, 2010
MLB All-Star teams unveiled
The rosters for the All-Star Game (this time it counts!) have been unveiled and I have only two comments:
1. It's time to rethink things when Evan Meek is an All-Star (quick, what team does he play for?). And Arthur Rhodes? Really? It's not like the Reds didn't have anyone else to choose from (unlike the Pirates, the team for whom Meek pitches and, to be fair, he is having a great season as an eighth inning guy). Do we really need LOOGYs on the All-Star team? Who is his one out going to be? Early prediction: David Ortiz.
2. How on earth is Omar Infante an All-Star but Joey Votto (arguably the NL MVP to this point) not?
RAFA!
I think it's safe to say we have entered the era of Rafa. Rafael Nadal just won his second Wimbledon title, easily putting away Tomas Berdych in straight sets. It is Nadal's eighth major championship, putting him halfway to Roger Federer's record of 16.
With Federer pretty clearly in his age of decline, the next few years figure to be dominated by Nadal. I mean, who is going to beat him? Over the last six years, he has destroyed the competition on clay so it's a fair bet he's not going to lose much at Roland Garros. He now has won 14 straight matches at Wimbledon, winning in in 2008 and this year (he missed it last year because of a knee injury). He's captured the Aussie, beating Federer there in a five-set final last year. All that's left to secure the career grand slam is the U.S. Open.
Of course, Nadal has had virtually no success at Flushing Meadow, which maybe opens the door for the rest of the field. Will defending champ Juan Martin del Potro repeat (or even enter, after missing the French and Wimbledon with a wrist injury)? Andy Murray has done well there so maybe he can finally break through and win a major. Or how about perpetual underachiever Novak Djokovic, who has made a career of talking a big game but not backing it up? He won the 2008 Aussie Open and is now the No. 2 player in the world (with Federer falling to No. 3) so maybe he can take it. Perhaps Robin Soderling, who has played Nadal better than anyone the last couple of years, can finally break through. Or maybe Federer has one more run in him.
Whatever the case, it seems like the only thing that can derail the Nadal train now are injuries (and don't discount them--given his frantic style, recurring leg injuries could occur). He should dominate Roland Garros and Wimbledon for the next few years and he has already proven his ability to win the Aussie. The U.S. Open may be the field's only hope and Nadal could end that in a couple months too.
July 3, 2010
Well, we know the power forwards are on the move
Dirk Nowitzki has reportedly re-signed with Dallas (as expected). Paul Pierce's new deal with Boston is reportedly done (as expected). Joe Johnson is reportedly about to sign a max deal to stay with Atlanta (as previously believed).
So far, the only real free agent move has been Amar'e Stoudemire departing Phoenix (unless you count Steve Blake going to the Lakers or Hakim Warrick signing with the Suns).
Chris Bosh is going to leave Toronto, Amar'e is done in Phoenix and no one thinks Carlos Boozer will stay in Utah so three teams are going to be landing good power forwards to upgrade their low-post game (especially offensively; Amar'e is an embarrassment defensively and Boozer is so-so at best). At this point, it's anyone's guess regarding LeBron James and Dwyane Wade. Most probably believe they will stay in Cleveland and Miami but what if they don't?
So far, the only real free agent move has been Amar'e Stoudemire departing Phoenix (unless you count Steve Blake going to the Lakers or Hakim Warrick signing with the Suns).
Chris Bosh is going to leave Toronto, Amar'e is done in Phoenix and no one thinks Carlos Boozer will stay in Utah so three teams are going to be landing good power forwards to upgrade their low-post game (especially offensively; Amar'e is an embarrassment defensively and Boozer is so-so at best). At this point, it's anyone's guess regarding LeBron James and Dwyane Wade. Most probably believe they will stay in Cleveland and Miami but what if they don't?
Stephen A. starts backtracking
On Monday, Stephen A. Smith of...not really sure what he's of these days...reported on his radio show and Twitter page that LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh had decided to join forces in Miami.
Now that all indications are that he was wrong, Stephen A. has started backtracking, using the "they changed their minds!" defense for his incorrect scoop. He's spent most of the morning posting this same drivel on his Twitter page, explaining how his scoop was right but things change, get in the way, blah blah blah. Which, of course is true, but is also why it was idiotic of him to report such a thing four days before the free agency period began.
Sure, they may have been interested in joining forces but to report it so matter-of-factly as Stephen A. did (and always does) so far in advance essentially set him up to fail. Of course things could get in the way. Of course there was a good chance there would be a "monkey wrench" thrown into things, as Stephen A. currently is saying. By attempting to be the first one to break the news as opposed to waiting it out to get it right, or even tempering his words a little bit ("the big three met last night and are definitely on board to try and join forces in Miami, it may not happen but they're interested in it"), Stephen A. is in the process of making himself look even more foolish than he always does and making ESPN look even better for getting rid of him and instead relying on the likes of Marc Stein, Chad Ford, Ric Bucher, Chris Broussard, Chris Sheridan and J.A. Adande, all of whom have proven themselves as more reliable sources of information than Stephen A.
Plus, he's opened himself up to ridicule from all, such as this Tweet from Bill Simmons: "Stephen A. Smith is reporting that Stephen A. Smith's report was incorrect."
The funniest outcome, of course, would be if LeBron, Wade and Bosh do join forces in Miami so that Stephen A. can report that his report of his report being incorrect is incorrect.
Now that all indications are that he was wrong, Stephen A. has started backtracking, using the "they changed their minds!" defense for his incorrect scoop. He's spent most of the morning posting this same drivel on his Twitter page, explaining how his scoop was right but things change, get in the way, blah blah blah. Which, of course is true, but is also why it was idiotic of him to report such a thing four days before the free agency period began.
Sure, they may have been interested in joining forces but to report it so matter-of-factly as Stephen A. did (and always does) so far in advance essentially set him up to fail. Of course things could get in the way. Of course there was a good chance there would be a "monkey wrench" thrown into things, as Stephen A. currently is saying. By attempting to be the first one to break the news as opposed to waiting it out to get it right, or even tempering his words a little bit ("the big three met last night and are definitely on board to try and join forces in Miami, it may not happen but they're interested in it"), Stephen A. is in the process of making himself look even more foolish than he always does and making ESPN look even better for getting rid of him and instead relying on the likes of Marc Stein, Chad Ford, Ric Bucher, Chris Broussard, Chris Sheridan and J.A. Adande, all of whom have proven themselves as more reliable sources of information than Stephen A.
Plus, he's opened himself up to ridicule from all, such as this Tweet from Bill Simmons: "Stephen A. Smith is reporting that Stephen A. Smith's report was incorrect."
The funniest outcome, of course, would be if LeBron, Wade and Bosh do join forces in Miami so that Stephen A. can report that his report of his report being incorrect is incorrect.
July 2, 2010
Honor thy Father
It doesn't happen often so it's important to make note of Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s Daytona victory in the Nationwide Series tonight. More noteworthy is that he did it driving a replica of his father's Wrangler Cup series car that he drove for most of the 1980s, right down to the No. 3 on the side. Junior has said this will be the last time he ever drive his father's number (although I still believe Richard Childress will eventually offer it up to him in the future in the Cup series).
Junior only runs a couple of Nationwide Series races a year and this is first win in that series since 2006. It is the first time he has been in any victory lane since winning at Michigan in June 2008 in the Cup series. It would be great for him and for the sport if he can pull off the double and win the Cup race tomorrow. Currently one spot out of the Chase, Junior has just one win since his May 2006 Richmond victory. He is at his best in restrictor plate races and put on a late charge to finish second in the Daytona 500 so perhaps he has a win in him tomorrow.
Chicago bound?
You always have to take what ESPN.com's Chad Ford says with a grain of salt because he once wrote "Darko is Europe's version of LeBron James" (and I guess Milicic does have more rings than LeBron does) but his report today is a shocker: according to a source (which could just be some cab driver on Michigan Ave.), Dwyane Wade is leaning toward signing with the Bulls.
Everyone has assumed all along that D-Wade would re-sign with Miami but he met with the Bulls yesterday and is now going to visit them again tonight. If this happens, it would be quite a 180--not long ago, Wade was critical of Bulls management, wondering why Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen are no longer a part of the organization. Apparently, something eased his mind on that when he visited the team yesterday in Chicago (and while Jordan clearly wouldn't be a part of a recruitment effort to Chicago since he now owns the Charlotte Bobcats, there have been rumors that Pippen is involved in the Bulls recruitment pitch).
While we may all be shocked that Wade would leave the Heat, it shouldn't be surprising that he is strongly considering the Bulls. He is from the south side of Chicago and grew up idolizing and cheering for the Jordan-Pippen-Phil Jackson dynasty. His mother still lives there, as does his child from his just-ended marriage.
The Bulls are meeting with LeBron tomorrow and met with Chris Bosh today (and Carlos Boozer too!). Things really are becoming now. Would Wade be able to partner up with either LeBron or Bosh in Chicago?
While no one will be more devastated by Wade going to Chicago than Miami (which probably would get no one of consequence if Wade leaves, causing Pat Riley to submit his resignation), no one would be more happy than Cleveland owner Dan Gilbert, especially if Bosh goes with him. If the Wade-Bosh combo commits to the Bulls, then LeBron would lose a suitor and most have felt all along that LeBron was most likely to sign with Chicago or stay in Cleveland.
UPDATE (5:17 pm): Comcast Sportsnet Chicago has confirmed that Wade and Bosh, who are both represented by agent Henry Thomas, are currently meeting with the Bulls (with Thomas present as well). Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo! reports that the Bulls are hoping to have a committment from Wade lined up to take with them to their meeting with LeBron tomorrow, although Wade would be fine with partnering up with Bosh in Chicago as well. Wojnarowski also details that LeBron and Wade would like to play together but LeBron is dubious about doing it in Miami, probably because the Heat only have Michael Beasley and Mario Chalmers currently under contract.
And Knicks fans: Wojnarowksi reports that the Knicks are pretty much out of the LeBron derby after an unimpressive presentation that lacked organization. Which pretty much sums up the entire last decade for the Knicks.
UPDATE (7:54 pm): Chad Ford updates his initial report and Tweets that after his meeting with the Bulls, Wade is on the fence about whether to go to Chicago or stay in Miami. No committment was made, however. Wojnarowksi reports that the Bulls tried to push for a committment but were unsuccessful. However, they remain committed to trying to get two of the LeBron-Wade-Bosh triumvirate to come to Chicago, if not all three.
And not sure how this would necessarily affect this whole Chicago-Miami tug-of-war but ESPN's Chris Sheridan reports to hold those horses on the Joe Johnson max deal to re-sign in Atlanta. Sheridan reports Johnson hasn't committed to the Hawks and won't until he sees what the other max-level guys do (it's amazing that Johnson is considered a max-level guy). Apparently the Bulls and Knicks are still very much in play.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)