Saturday, March 28, 2009

GIVE ME ANOTHER CHANCE...

(Aahhh a sigh and grunt of disgust)

Dear Sports Blahg Readers,

I come to as not just your voice of reason, or your chance to escape into glorious, remarkable, sophisticated voice of sports literature, but a man who’s been beaten. Beaten from what you ask? Myself. This has to be the worst bracket I have filled out in years. Seriously, I am almost a shamed of myself as someone you turn to for “expert” opinions on the various sports you watch. I was 11 for 16 on the sweet 16 teams. I was 5 for 8 on the elite 8 teams, and might be 3 out of 4 for the final 4 teams. I lost my championship loser in Memphis, and at this point have said, screw the bracket, as long as UNC wins the whole thing, then that’s all that matters.

Please don’t let my 3 day binge of research to fill out my bracket change your opinion of me, as I failed miserably. WAIT, don’t stop reading. What are you doing? Don’t X me out! Just give me another chance. I promise I will do better. Just relax; we’ll get through this together. We still have my baseball predictions to make…I will make it up to you later on this week with my baseball forecast.

I hope everyone has had a chance to watch these first two weekends of the NCAA tournament. It certainly is something else. There hasn’t been many upset this year, but like I stated in my last post, if you ever get the chance to attend of these opening weekend games in a city near you, it’s well worth it. I hope you watched any of the games Gus Johnson announced, as its unparalleled the level of elegance he possess with each game he calls. I hope at some point you went a bar to watch the games, and felt the intensity and excitement as each fan was fixated into each TV (as the Bulls game played in the corner, and nobody seemed to care). I hope you had a chance to watch Blake Griffin and Tyler Hansbrough as they reveal what’s great about college basketball. As one possesses skill and athleticism, and the other is pure heart and hustle. If you haven’t had a chance to see them play, they face off tomorrow at 3:30 central time, as it should be a game to remember.

I will keep this post short and sweet as we prepare for the final 4 to be set by 6pm tomorrow evening. Please do not judge me on this performance alone as I am just a man, and we all make mistakes. Enjoy the rest of your weekends, and we’ll see you soon.

With love,

Your Bri-Guy Sports Blahgger

Coming real soon:
Final 4 set – Who’s cutting down the nets?
MLB Predictions
Around the Horn = plain awful

Thursday, March 19, 2009

LET THE MADNESS BEGIN!

Its Sunday night, I’m kicking back with the roommates watching the selection show for the NCAA tournament and the roommates and I start adding our own criticism, comments, questioning, "expert opinions," and just any reason too take a shot at one another. After the two hour special, some friendly banter, and Dave (my roommate) talk about his alma mater Purdue for the last 5 hours, it was time to open up my laptop and take a closer look at the bracket for myself.

Anyone who watches college basketball and more specifically March Madness appreciates the excitement this tournament brings. Its young men busting their asses all year for the chance to play in March and for most of them it’s the "biggest" game they will ever play in. Not sure if most agree, but watching a college game brings a level of intensity a NBA game just doesn’t have, or at least until the 4th quarter. I am sure we could debate back and forth about college and the NBA, but as Dickey V would say… "It’s March Baby!" Which means, bracket time! I could break down each region, with the best teams, the best players, who’s hot, who’s not, who’s primed for a big upset, which team has the best coach, etc… But let’s face it, there is no right or wrong way to fill this damn bracket out, but everyone does! Everyone enters a work pool, a family/friends pool, a fantasy draft of players, or even a league of 8 participants who draft for all 64 teams in 8 rounds.
Since you don’t have all day to read a break down of each game, nor do I have the time, here are some things that will for sure happen over the next few weekends...

  • Someone will fill out a bracket within 5 minutes

  • Someone will fill out the bracket starting with their NCAA Championship first, and work backwards

  • Someone will take 3 friggin days to fill it out the bracket, because they are busy breaking down teams, conferences, injuries, seeding, who they play, where they play, how many seniors they have, how many offensive rebounds they grab a game (come on people, second chance points), and every stat imaginable, all because they have nothing better to do. (I know, seriously those guys are losers)

  • You’ll enter at least 1 pool

  • Some chick, whether she’s a friend, or co-worker will fill out a bracket in the same pool as you and do better than you because she likes the colors of their uniforms or because one of the guys on the team is "Hot!"

  • You’ll get pissed at this chick, because she doesn’t know anything about sports as you spent 3 days breaking down the bracket

  • Someone will throw their bracket away after the first day, because quite frankly, they had no idea what they were doing

  • Someone will miss work Thursday and/or Friday to stay home and watch the games (these people are awesome)

  • Someone will take a half day to go home and watch the games (these people are not as awesome,… but still awesome)

  • Someone will find time during the day to watch games, either a TV in the office, or logging onto CBS Sportsline to watch the games online

  • You’ll fill out a bracket against a loved one, thinking you’ll win because you follow college basketball and will lose…. again…. for the 5th year in a row

  • You’ll witness a an upset that you never saw coming

  • You’ll witness an upset you predicted on your bracket

  • You’ll witness a last second shot, which will excite you, or piss you off! Not because you love the school, or have any affiliation with them, but it will either make or break your bracket

  • Someone will pick all 4, final four teams but will pick the wrong championship game

  • Someone will pick all 4, final four teams, and will pick the championship game, and the winner

  • You’ll find the game(s) Gus Johnson is announcing and you will listening intently, because is by far is the best announcer in town (and by town, I mean in the country)

  • You should watch Oklahoma because Blake Griffin is absolutely amazing and is by far the best player in college

  • You should watch and/or respect Tyler Hansbrough of the Tar Heels (perhaps being biased as I am a Carolina fan) no one works harder than he does; as he is what’s great about college basketball. He returned for his senior season, as he hopes to lead the Heels to a National title

  • You should at some point in your life, attend the opening round games in the city closest to you… The Atmosphere is like nothing else

  • Do not forget about Baseball. I know spring training is still going on, but April 6, Championship Night, is still opening day for a lot of MLB teams.

  • Picking the winner – Avg. Margin of victory 10 + points; 10 game winning streak during the regular season; 20 out of the last 21 Title winners have had 2 players play in the NBA (that eliminates a lot of teams)

Sit back, relax, and enjoy some of the most exciting basketball games you’ll witness all year! There will be cursing at your TV, cursing at your bracket, cursing yourself for crossing out Utah St, as they go on to beat Marquette.

Championship Game - Memphis v UNC
Winner - UNC

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Unfortunately... Money Talks

Sports are supposed to be about the thrill of the moment… Being the guy standing at the plate in the bottom of the 9th with two outs, a 2 and 2 count with the game winning run standing on second. Or… 5.8 seconds left in the game, you’re trailing by 1, and you have to take the ball the whole length of the court for a game winner. How about…the wind is blowing in your face, the game is tied and you’re about to attempt the longest field goal of your career. These are the moments, the reasons we attend sporting events. We go for the thrill, the excitement; to watch our favorite team(s) bring home the W! Then to come home, walk through the door and look your family and friends in the eye and say…“I was there!” To say “I was there,” is not just a saying, but a state of a euphoria! The feeling that not only you and whoever else was in the stadium mattered that day/night, but ever lasting memories that you will share for years to come.

I read a Buster Olney article a few weeks back, maybe even a month ago, of how in these economic times players need to connect to the fan more than ever. As a fan and a season ticket holder, it’s absolutely ridiculous the amount of money these athletes are making. On my way to work this morning, listening to Mike and Mike in the morning, they were talking about a study/poll that was conducted about fans take on sports and specifically baseball… Those results showed that 40% of fans feel the biggest problem in baseball is the player’s salaries with steroids coming in second at 22%. Which brings me to my question…? Who’s to blame for this problem? The players? The Agents? The Owners? Us… the fans?

I am sure everyone has an opinion on who’s to blame for the outrageous salaries in today’s game, but I will try to offer an expert opinion. (And by expert, I mean someone who just watches a lot of sports) One thing I recall from watching countless hours of ESPN was something the former GM of the Mets Steve Phillips stated on the show months ago was… “The Agent is an extension of the player…” This is was something I always agreed with. The words that come out of the agent’s mouth are some; if not all the words the player is speaking. Some of you may disagree but, remember the player PAYS the agent. He is the boss; he is the one than has the power to fire his agent, therefore in my mind controls the relationship.

Now with that being said, the agent has the opportunity to come back and inform the player… “Hey, the market is set, you are this caliber of player, as a result we can ask for X amount.” So what is the player suppose to do? “No, that’s right. That’s too much money. I can’t accept that” player says with soft sensitive voice. WRONG… The same thing anyone would do… Turn to his agent and say, “I am just as good if not better than player X; go get me a similar contract…” player says in thuggish tough guy voice. With the money teams are offering up these days, a player would be a damn fool not to ask for the same kind of deal. Part of the problem, the player… What happened to just playing baseball/football/basketball? We want to believe the player cares of the team he plays for and the fans that cheer him on. It seems as though they don't realize how good they have it, and how much it time and effort it cost us to go see them play a kids game. If these guys truly love this game, respect this game; the game they have been playing since they were 5, then the money shouldn’t be the deciding factor on where they play or in some cases, (Manny) how hard they play. If they played the game, the same way when they were young…playing hard, playing smart, playing right, and trying to be the greatest there is, then they’ll earn the Quan!

The other answer (the real answer)… The owners! Not sure who started it, who offered the first big contract, but all it took was for one owner to set the market and now guys like AROD, Manny, CC, Johan, Zito, and Zambrano can ask for what the market value is at their position. If the damn market wasn’t set so damn high for guys who throw, catch and hit a ball for a living (not to mention earn hundreds of millions of dollars and can retire from the working world by age 35, while the rest of us work till we are 65) then the rest of America wouldn’t resent these players that we have grown to idolize. The owners have given into the agent/player demands because they didn’t want to miss out on the next big thing. Well teams like the Marlins and Rays of recent years have shown you can win without spending the big bucks on the players listed above. The owners gave it up quicker than a hooker on a Friday night (sorry, that was a bad joke). But nonetheless it’s true. They all gave in, they all want the big star that will drive ticket sales, and merchandise. The "star" will pay for itself. Which is why you can’t blame the fans... can you?

I, the fan, (I voice my opinion and speak for no one else) should not be blamed. I attend games because I am a fan. I have been a fan my whole life and will continue to be one until I no longer walk this earth. I go to sporting events, to cheer my teams, as I have become an extension of them. And when I refer to them, I say we. I have invested time, money, sweat and tears into each team, and therefore have earned the right to say “we” when talking about them. I go to see great players, achieve great things. (And If I had the money would go see a lot more) Just like my Dad went and saw Mickey Mantle and still speaks his graces till this day, I will continue to attend baseball games, and sporting events to witness moments of great magnitude. To hopefully see something I have never seen before. To escape from reality and get caught up in the diving catch, the play at the plate, the game winning shot, and to share high fives with a family member, friend, or even a complete stranger. I go to say… I was there!