MLB Postseason Expansion

With the expansion of the postseason comes change in the regular season.  Baseball has a notoriously methodical schedule.  There’s elegance and rhythm to 162 games.  The bitterness of bad losses exits quickly and the glee of triumphant wins nearly immediately fleets.  Only eight teams make the playoffs, which makes patience an invaluable quality in any competitive team.

The Red Sox lost their mental edge last year, and after more than 120 games of dominance, couldn’t endure the end of a grueling run.  They never had the chance to be dangerous in the playoffs.  If the MLB expands the amount of playoff teams to ten, baseball will lose the most valuable asset the sport has: its pennant race.  It takes a true fan to grind out 140 games, and we’re rewarded with the most exciting end to any regular season in sports.

In football, if you make the playoffs, anything can happen, just ask the Giants.  Basketball’s enormous playoff landscape trivializes its regular season.  Baseball and baseball alone eliminates teams from contention that can’t win their division., but if two more wild card teams are added, it gives mediocre teams a cop-out.

However, there are benefits.  It gives teams in tough divisions like the AL East a way to enter the postseason without spending triple their normal amount.  The titans of baseball are perennially strong, and a change in the postseason will certainly shake up the caste system.  The thing is baseball is a “good old boy” network, where fans enjoy watching the same thing season after season, and change is often scoffed at.  If baseball can change, any American staple can.  It’s like serving low-fat apple pie, or putting fruit juice in a Rolling Rock.  Sometimes, things are OK the way they are.

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Sloppy Sports Relationships

Sports relationships sometimes end poorly.  It’s a major industry, so it’s inevitable that feelings will be hurt.  The plight of the modern athlete isn’t easy.  Only the elite have the luxury of truly being wanted.  Teams trade and cut players like we change clothes.  Some athletes never find a permanent home, but when it’s a superstar player the stakes are high.

Rick Nash will never be embraced in Columbus like he was before.  He was another athlete that fell victim to the NBA syndrome of desiring a winning team to accompany his magnificent talent.  Nobody can really blame a person for wanting to win when they have a job that requires competitiveness.  The trade rumors with the Rangers took flight this weekend, and it was revealed Nash asked for a trade.  If Nash were a Ranger today, things would be different.  Sure, he’d still be hated, but not by the fans he’ll play in front of every night.  Now, he’s condemned to a season of awkwardness.  He isn’t the first athlete to encounter this burned-bridge sensation that tenses relationships between fans, players and management.

Pau Gasol plays nearly every night with the knowledge that his team wanted to trade him.  So does Rajon Rondo.  Gasol was as good as gone when the trade that would send him to the basketball purgatory that is Houston got vetoed.  Then, during the season, after nearly enough time to shove that proposed trade in the back of his mind, Mitch Kupchak and the Lakers management once again made it known that Gasol was on the trading block.  Danny Ainge tried to trade Rondo for Chris Paul and a garbage can to be named later if it was under the age of 25.  Ainge also gave a half-assed effort to move some of the big three. Perhaps the greatest example of awkward exits is Peyton Manning, whose story of potentially leaving Indianapolis has polarized the sports world.

Athletes are regular, simple people who can feel the scorn of rejection as any of us can. It’s never easy to leave a team, or to tell a player they have to leave, but it’s part of the world these athletes and execs signed up for.  There’s an underlying lesson from all of these stories.  Athletes can’t avoid these situations from occurring, but damage control in sports means playing the game as hard as they ever did, and if they do that, our memories are shorter than we think.  Fight on Rick Nash, and one day your legacy will be as grand as you imagined it would be two months ago.

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15 Years of Doc And Chico: An Ode To Mike Emrick

This past Friday was a special day for New Jersey Devils’ fans of this generation as we paid tribute to the great voice of the Devils’, Mike “Doc” Emrick (earning the nickname for his PhD in Communications). Joining the Devils 21 seasons ago Emrick stormed onto the scene with his unique style of calling a game as well as his childlike enthusiasm that he displayed so routinely. What made Doc special was his unique insight on the game and his ability to explain a story with extraordinary detail. His knack for telling a quirky story such as the one about a young player shooting rocks at a tree to improve accuracy because it was too warm for ice to form (true story, I kid you not). Doc had a special way of bonding with the audience, captivating us with his limitless knowledge of statistics and history of the game, all in addition to being a fun “on-air” personality.

As a lifetime New Jersey fan I’ve known the voice of the team to be Doc & Chico (Glenn “Chico” Resch), one of the best announcing pairs I’ve seen across any sport. As a team these guys complemented each other perfectly, each having their individual strengths that the other lacked. Doc was always the lead guy, but with Chico being an Ex-Goalie for both the Islanders and Devils, he offered (and still offers) a different view of the game that Doc as a non-player could never emulate (not that he needed to). The tandem worked together for all three of the Stanley Cups the Devils have won in their history (95’,00’ and 03’), and they made each victory feel real & special because of how much they made their jobs part of their lives.

Today half the tandem still works for the Devils, that being Glenn “Chico” Rescch. Doc was chosen to be a lead announcer on all of the NHL’s biggest games working for NBC Sports.  Emrick had been doing this for years already but on July 21, 2011 it became official as “The Dean of American Hockey” would sadly be moving on. This to all fans meant the insertion of Steve Cangialosi, the long time stat man of the team who earns his nickname, Mr. Know It All. Cangialosi is an intelligent announcer, but the void Doc left is still felt, and rightfully so.

On Friday, February 24th The Voice of the Devils was given his day, “Doc Night”, and despite the team falling to the league leading Vancouver Canucks (2-1), all those who attended or watched from home got to hear Emrick give an inspired speech that touched on many key moments in the team’s history, coming from the man who called it all; it was very touching have seen the majority of the games he referenced. Great announcers only come around once in a while…..Docs’ only come around once ever. Thank You Mike “Doc” Emrick for the passion you displayed in your job, you made watching the New Jersey Devils the past 21 seasons a sports fan’s dream.

Comments? Who’s your favorite announcer?

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Midseason NBA MVP

After a mind-numbingly boring All-Star Game, bloggers and columnists around the country are left with the inevitable first half of the season/predictions for second half column.  There have been several performers that have stood out, but at this point there’s only one true choice for MVP.  I hate to say it as much as anybody, but LeBron James is unquestionably the MVP.  James is averaging 27.4 points, 8.1 rebounds, and 6.8 assists.

Sure, there are other players with inflated stats.  Kevin Durant is making an awfully convincing case that he’s the best scorer in the league, but until he becomes a defensive powerhouse like LeBron, or develops James’ intimidating vision, he’ll always be a slight step behind.

Kevin Love has emerged as the best power forward in the game, and if you don’t believe me, Charles Barkley will tell you twenty times that he is.  Love’s efforts are being recognized more, and he’ll get an MVP trophy soon enough, but this isn’t the year for him.  His shaky defense and Minnesota’s lack of relevance will make it a nearly impossible task to beat out LeBron.

How is anybody supposed to beat LBJ?  He plays almost every position on the floor.  His transition game is the best in the NBA.  His defense is as good as any superstar’s in the league.  In the end, we’re all just nitpicking, criticizing LeBron for late game jitters.  It makes us feel better to remind ourselves that he’s human.  Sure, he isn’t clutch, and he’s as hate-able as any athlete around, but for now, in this regular season, nobody means as much to their team as LeBron does, and this is a team determined to shake the reputation that they can’t win the big one.

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2012 NBA All-Star Roster: The Usual, The Old & The New

Lets disregard my awful pun of a title and talk about the All-Star game. The case can be made every year that certain players were snubbed in the All-Star selection process, and this pertains to every sport that allows the fans to dictate who is chosen. The voting process is one of the most exciting things a fan gets to do during the season and because the event is nothing more than a spectacle it’s hard to get upset over who is chosen. However, that doesn’t mean that the selection process is fair, because it is anything but. Seemingly every season the same core of players participate in these games and often times it’s because of the name recognition fans have as opposed to rewarding the players having the best statistical seasons. This year will be no exception, so I’ve broken up the selections into groups as such; we have a group I like to call “The Perma All Stars”, we have the group I’ll call “The Classy Vets,” and we have our sample group of young talent I’ll call “The First-Timers”.

The “Perma All Stars” include players like Kobe Bryant, Dwyane Wade, LeBron James and such who no matter what happens during the course of the season will receive votes because of their large fan base. These players also benefit enormously from the votes of casual fans that only know household names and fail to put value on how the player has done this season, seemingly turning an All-Star nod into a lifetime achievement award. The issue I encounter with this (despite this being solely for the fans after all, with there being little to no pressure on the outcome) is the bad taste in my mouth each and every year I see the selections. It really becomes an issue when these types of guys aren’t having All-Star seasons, yet there place is already reserved. For instance, Carmelo Anthony has been named an All-Star Starter this season while playing in just 24 games…is that fair to other guys who have played a full 30-40 games already? I really like Melo, but he is not an All-Star Starter this year. He is however a deserving backup, but because he’s Melo’ you better be sure he’s starting. It just goes to show how flawed the system can be.

The second group is our “Classy Vets,” guys who also seem to have a non expiring invite to the All-Star game.  Although this season we saw Kevin Garnett and Tim Duncan both get denied entrance, the voters still saved seats for Paul Pierce and Dirk Nowitzki. Now Dirk is my hands down favorite player of all-time, and a surefire Hall of Famer, but when he was selected to be on the roster this season (something he himself said was undeserved) he was averaging around just 17 points a game (he’s got that up to 19.6 PPG with some solid play lately). Not only is this an off year for him, but he should of been left off the All-Star squad. Since Dirk became such an icon in last year’s playoffs, fans rewarded him with another appearance, yet If you look at his stats they are actually worse than those of David Lee and arguably Rudy Gay, both players who did not get voted in but could have taken Dirk’s spot deservingly.

The last group we have is the group that makes the game fun, “The First-Timers.” This group is composed this year of guys like LaMarcus Aldridge (who’s been a physical beast this season), Marc Gasol (that’s right we still have a Gasol in the All-Star game this year….sorry Pau), and Roy Hibbert (the giant shot blocker from Indiana). Players like this seem to truly value being selected to play and keep the game fresh. Don’t get me wrong, seeing LeBron throw down vicious dunks is fun, but I’d much rather see a guy like Aldridge come out and have an amazing game to surprise us. Surprises are what make sports fun and I believe that the All-Star game would be more fun if players felt they had to earn the spots rather than mostly receive handouts based on their pedigree. Having more “First-Timers” in the All-Star game would improve the quality of the event and would challenge complacent veterans to fight for their spot on these rosters, truly a win-win for everyone involved including the fans.

My favorite example of poor fan-based selection (one that completely ruins the legitimacy of the fan voting process) is that of Yao Ming. I remember when Yao came into the league and he was unstoppable. We’d simply never seen a huge man shoot and move with the type of ease that he demonstrated, and it was truly beautiful to watch as a fan of the game. However, as Yao continued to deteriorate year after year, his All-Star selections did not. Since China has fallen in love with the NBA (Jeremy Lin should already get his 2013 All-Star Jersey ready) over the past decade, Yao became the league’s top vote getter year after year, even when he was injured for most of the season. This angered me because I imagined myself in the shoes of a Center in the NBA who fought really hard all year to get into that game. Statistically I deserved to get in, but my name was not as known as that of Yao’s and so I was snubbed a selection. Had this happened to me I would be furious and my lust to play in an All-Star game would be completely lost due to my anger with this injustice.

The only way to restore some order to the system is to have one in which fans can vote from a list of players that the coaches and owners have approved first, or something along these lines. Simply letting Fans vote results in a game that seems to be the same year in and year out and does not showcase the league’s best talent, but rather the league’s top financial assets and figureheads (it’s not the Lakers, it’s Kobe & his Lakers). Although this is good for the league it is not fair to players who work hard to earn this honor (guys like David Lee & Monta Ellis come to mind) and should be adapted in the coming years. Maybe the league likes to replay the same event year after year, because then they should just let fans vote for the All-Star team right before the first game of the season tips off….it sounds funny but if you think about it the rosters wouldn’t change much now would they?

Agree? Who got snubbed this year? Who shouldn’t be on the all star team? Let Me Hear About It!

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