Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Son of a Sailor

by Slate Quicksilver

Current events in Quicksilver-land caused a complete lack of time to post anything of merit. I could be compelled to shell out some garbage that is completely devoid of any thought, intelligence, merit or regard for history or the present.

But instead of touching off a potential war in the sports "journalism" field, I'd rather just give you a song that will bring up the fact that will get you pumped that winter is over.

That's right people, winter's cold dead touch is has retreated back to the frozen expanse of wasteland and taiga completely empty of warmth of any kind; physical or human: Canada. Gardens will start blooming. Summer ales are brewing. Golf bags are being taken out of moth ball storage. Sandals are being removed from closets. Oh, what's that? You live in the "South"? Oh, I'm sorry that you don't understand that "seasons" "happen" "on a yearly basis." This song, this author's personal favorite of Mr. Buffett, has always been equated to warmth in my head.

We'll be back tomorrow with an actual sports related thing. But in the mean time, enjoy.

Monday, March 8, 2010

Reflections of NOLA

Posted by Iroquois Plisken

As it is SPRING BREAK (insert glass shattering / someone socking a random in the jaw) time at my revered trade school, the crew and I ventured to New Orleans for the first time (my first time, anyhow). Recollections and pictures to be posted upon my return to the Internet (I'm sending this from my mobile device).

But, during the stupor of a recovery meal, I found myself with a nearly overwhelming sense of what the Super Bowl has meant to the city of New Orleans. You see all of these little mom-and-pop establishments who have their Katrina story posted right on their menu. Every single one of them mentions the Saints.

The city has been consumed by the team winning. Everywhere, you get "Who dat?" (or its relaive "We dat!"). I saw Ba Lee Dat and other variations on the Dat slogan. I saw a deity Brees branding Manning the centaur. The street artists had pictures commemorating the event. In short, you can't swing a dead cat in NOLA and not hit something with a fleur-de-lis.

I myself previoudly thought that the Saints winning wasn't any different than the Bucs winning. Tampa had a long history of futility also. Their draft picks were notoriously bad. They had a nickname signifying their awfulness. They won a Super Bowl after a major acquisition.

But the one thing Tampa really lacks in this comparison is a profound sense of importance to the city. If (heaven forbid) the Bucs were to leave or move, the city would probably take a hit to its pride and they'd be over it in a couple years. If the Saints were to disappear, I don't know if New Orleans would be the same. One of the first things you see coming in on 10 West is the Superdome and I guarantee the first billboard you see has to do with football.

Just like Katrina, everyone has their own Saints story. Even the homeless folks. I chatted with a homeless guy outside of a bar that didn't allow outside drinks (more on those in Part II) and he was telling me about an experience he had with a past player (don't know who) serving him soup at a refugee camp after Katrina. The city needs its Saints like Bourbon Street needs its drunk assholes craving Hurricanes and Hand Grenades.

They aren't the New Orleans Saints because they are a football team that plays there. They are the city in a je ne sais quoi way that is unique even among the best of college towns. And there's really no better way to describe it other than to take in the atmosphere holding a drink in hand watching dumb tourists yell "Who dat?" and having an entire area, from big shots to bum raps, respond "We dat!"

Because it is that guy wearing the Drew Brees jersey while cooking a fresh batch of jambalaya that may as well be Drew Brees himself. I know that I couldn't tell after a little while.

Friday, March 5, 2010

Offseason Chatter: NFL Free Agency Starts Today

Posted by Iroquois Plisken

No doubt adding to Slate's documented ire of overanalyzing the NFL during the offseason, here I am with some more tinder for the fire. I would posit, though, that talking about free agency on the day it opens up isn't really just ESPN filling up airspace. This is a potentially historic offseason for the NFL. It is the first year in quite some time that there is no salary cap. Naturally, this leads to people freaking out. A sample conversation with that dimwit that everyone knows who is prone to overreaction:

You: Hey friend, did you see free agency opened up today? It's an uncapped year.

Your Stupid and Smelly Friend: OH MY GOD UNCAPPED YEAR FOOTBALL WILL BE RUINED THAT SAME WAY BASEBALL IS RUINED TOO MANY SUPERPOWERHOUSE TEAMS LIKE TEH YANKEES AND THE RED SOCKS AND THE YANKESE WILL MAKE THE NFL BORING.

You: Mmm hmm. Well, that's...very good...for a first try. You know what? I have a ball. Perhaps you'd like to bounce it?

First things first, your friend talks loudly and in run-on sentences. Second, he's prone to repeating things. Third, baseball is not ruined for having an uncapped salary system (although there are deficiencies in the system; I'd start with not being allowed to pocket shared revenue).

But you, the suave and debonair reader of PLS, know that there are other factors in play here. First (and this can and will be overstated by ESPN) is obviously the economy. If this morning's trends are any indication of what to come, you'll have the same mix of things that happens in baseball: a few teams, once constrained by terrible franchise crippling decisions or inability or willingness to spend top dollar, will go for the gusto. A few will look to shed dead weight. Others still will sit on the sidelines (like my team). Nothing to see here.

Second, nothing really stands to change in terms of actual players being signed, in terms of salaries. I may be alone in this belief, but I believe the salary cap causes teams to act in irrational ways. To analogize, think of it as driving your car on a highway with a hard speed limit, viz. any attempt to exceed the limit is impossible. You're stuck in traffic behind some cars that are going about 8-10 MPH under the limit, but you, the normally smarter and more composed driver, know that you could be doing things better. It inevitably become frustrating following these drivers because you know there is room to work but there's just no opportunity to break free. Finally, you have room to your left to pass and, lo and behold, the hard speed limit disappears. What's your first reaction? I would guess that you're going to floor it to pass these slow assholes that have been holding up your inevitable Manifest Destiny to wherever it is you're going.

To borrow a non-NFL example, we can look to the NBA (which lacks a hard cap, but the idea's the same). After years of being crippled (no pun intended) by the Grant Hill contract and burdened by other various failures (Steve Francis), at the end of the 2006-07 season, the Magic finally shed constraints that didn't allow them to spend any money on improving the team except for essentially lateral moves. What was the first thing Orlando did? Ridiculously overpaid Rashard Lewis in a sign-and-trade. Seriously, they paid a max contract (6 yr/$120M) to a non max player, bidding against no one but themselves.

Tying it all back together, just because all of a sudden the NFL teams have a ton of freedom and can ostensibly spend as much as they want may result in a temporary increase in irrational spending, but it likely won't produce any more than your standard stupid contracts. Just for funsies, here's some ridiculously good links to some ridiculously bad contracts, first for baseball and second for basketball @ http://www.scoresreport.com/2009/03/05/the-nbas-68-worst-contracts/ (For some reason, I can't hotlink it from this page). As those links should demonstrate, stupidity in player valuation runs rampant in both capped and uncapped leagues. As noted before, the economy should keep most of the really bad decisions in check.

A couple miscellany heading into your weekend:

- Team Jolly Drank is now 2-0 with a 21-4 demolishing of the previous squad. One guy was so hammered he could barely stand up and was definitely an all-star. In the last inning, when it was apparent the other side was going to lose, Drunky McSwingerson hits a frozen rope to center, which was bobbled. D McS jogs to second and his buddy is pissed and starts yelling. D McS calmly replies, "Bro, we're down 21-4. What I do isn't going to make a difference." I love freshmen.

- I see that Slate introduced the fantasy baseball league. I am offended he calls it an "annoying habit of winning" though. It's not annoying at all (for me, anyway). I can see where it would piss people off that I called my shot by naming my team "3 Year Winner" and won both regular season and playoff crown, even in spite of the legendary A-Rod for Bill Hall/Ryan Zimmerman trade (you can assume that neither Slate nor I were in that deal), which is Slate's favorite argument in favor of democratic vetoes of trades, which might make an interesting point/counterpoint later on.

- In the future, also look for a primer on our baseball terminology as we have quite a few nicknames that will casually tossed around. We'll start with Doug Davis, for example. Doug Davis' name is Doug the Dino.

- Finally, just in case there was ever any doubt in your mind about whether or not what you see is a movie, this car (courtesy of my neighbor) removes any and all doubt.





Enjoy your weekend, everyone.

Thursday, March 4, 2010

GALACTOHOCKEYBEAR RETURNS

by Slate Quicksilver

He's back and more destructive than ever. GALACTOHOCKEYBEAR returned in full carnage and this time, it gets a touch personal.

For those of you keeping score at home, GALACTOHOCKEYBEAR was first seen on this site back in October creating a supernova, going back in time and destroying the Galileo spacecraft and annihilating the moon. Now, it looks as though he is back... this time with far deadlier consequences.

But let's look at it from GALACTOHOCKEYBEAR's position. He was sleeping in a massive glacier, minding his own business, and then an ice breaker ship, who is there specifically to break up ice floes in the arctic winter, cracks the ice and wakes him up. I doubt you could say that GALACTOHOCKEYBEAR was overreacting when he summoned his Thundaga-class ELECTROHOCKEYSTICK from thin air and then slashed the ship into two pieces (73 good sailors went down with the ship) because they woke him up. You'd be pissed too!

Then the next logical thing, if you are GALACTOHOCKEYBEAR, is to jump into a fighter jet and slip on a badass pair of aviator sunglasses. What is most troubling to all living things in the universe is that clearly there is more than 1 GALACTOHOCKEYBEARs. In fact, there is a whole squadron of them. Although GALACTOHOCKEYBEAR does like to do the damage with his own paws, sometimes its more fun to let missiles do the trick. That's why Miami (OH) University gets destroyed. And Ohio State... well we can take a good guess why a few AGM-84 Maverick missiles landed there. Michigan State, specifically Spartan Stadium, got strafed as well proving that GALACTOHOCKEYBEAR was playing for keeps.

But then, a more logical thought process emerged. Why waste our time destroying solely the campuses of the CCHA conference schools, and just destroy the entire planet? Thus GALACTOHOCKEYBEAR 1 drops a nuke into a volcano creating a chain of events that would make Ernst Stavro Blofeld need to change his pants that culminated in the complete destruction of Earth.

The explosion, one of cataclysmic proportions, goes on to fling GALACTOHOCKEYBEAR's jet at nearly the speed of the light and into a wormhole. The jet, unable to go as fast as it going, breaks up and GALACTOHOCKEYBEAR punches the eject and begins his final entry vector with his ELECTROHOCKEYSTICK blazing.

It finally all becomes clear. To get to the Carlson Center, in Fairbanks, Alaska, where GALACTOHOCKEYBEAR's team plays, he needed to destroy the Earth to get to the terminal velocity to get him up to speed to activate the wormhole just to arrive at the Carlson Center just on time so he can bust through the roof (killing 18 people who were sucked out in the vacuum of space), take the puck at center ice, deke a few times and fire a shot at the net causing yet another explosion.

So to summarize: GALACTOHOCKEYBEAR kills about 6.5 billion people, but scored a goal.

With the college hockey regular season ending just recently, one can only imagine what GALACTOHOCKEYBEAR's encore will be.

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Potluck Sports Bloodletting

by Slate Quicksilver

There are times when human nature creates a storm of blood lust within the dimensions of our skulls from which the only way to cure yourself is to go to the field of battle and have it out with your opponents. Boxing, MMA, chess boxing, rollerderby and the round after the final spin of Wheel of Fortune are all perfect examples of the human condition getting to its boiling point and exploding in a fit of rage. For centuries, men have fought men for no particular reason. Countries have gone to war for far less reasons than, say, an aunt of one side being insulted.

As you have seen in the incubation period of our fine site, we have had a few point-counterpoint exchanges and general disagreements. We have all had reason to kill each other in a fit of anger, but we are civil people (although Red needs to see Sunshine on my Shoulder by John Denver no less than 4 times consecutively after seeing the Yankees lose). So we will take our feuds to the field of battle.

To which field do I refer to? A field that our ancestors longed to shed the blood and tears of their opponents so that they could build what we know as culture and civilization could exist as it does now. A field which is so expansive and unforgiving that neither Hitler, Napoleon, Cortes, Sun Tzu, Xerxes, Ramses II nor Ugg the Neanderthal ever dared to expose their vast war machines to it.

We're talking: Fantasy baseball.

Slate, Iroquois, Annie and Red all have teams in the same 12 team league. The league? A recreation of a league used long ago (re: as far back as 2 years ago). Iroquois has an annoying habit of winning, but this is year that things will be different.

The categories:
Hitting: Runs, singles, doubles, triples, home runs, RBIs, stolen bases, walks, errors, batting average and slugging %.
Pitching: Innings pitched, wins, complete games, shutouts, saves, earned runs (total), strikeouts, ERA, WHIP, strikeouts per 9 innings.

21 categories. 10 hitting. 10 pitching. 1 defensive.

12 teams. 6 to the playoffs. 1 winner.

We will keep you posted here as the season goes on as blood is spilled, friendships are put on hold and plots are schemed, hatched and exposed. In doing so we hope to bring baseball knowledge (we all have some) but also to expose the to the world how brutal this sport is.

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Sketches on Collective Stupidity

by Slate Quicksilver

(Ed note: Make Yourself a sandwich before this post... it's a long one)
(Ed note^2: Long but awesome)

In case you either don't like sports or haven't been awake since Sunday evening, I think you should know that Canada won the gold medal game in hockey at the Olympics against the US. It was one of the best games of hockey in the last decade or so and not just in context or timing, but in terms of actual hockey. It was amazing that there were no commercials during the intermission, the game was up and down with great plays on defense and amazing saves by the goalies. When Zach Parise (someone I personally I do not like) tied the game up with half a minute left in the third period, cheering was audibly heard in the streets of the hockey wasteland known as Kansas City. The game winning goal was a great two man play, equivalent to a give and go from the top of the key in basketball. If it wasn't a pre-planned play, it certainly looked like one. Goalie Ryan Miller never stood a chance with a good player freely bearing down on the net (being an indoor soccer goalie, this one sympathizes).

The NHL went back to work last night. The Red Wings, who sent no less 35% of their roster to the Winter Games, played their old rivals the Avalanche (who sent 20% of their roster), in a close game which the Red Wings won with a late goal 3-2. The players, to a casual observer, looked normal. The trained eye saw certain players not working as hard cycling the puck in the corners, forwards playing international style of the game (more individual effort than team effort) and the game slowing down at the ends of periods. Basically, it was noticeable that certain players were drained while others had 2 weeks to go fishing.

This brings us to the crux of the situation. USA goalie Ryan Miller, who is also inconveniently the goalie for the Buffalo Sabres, has a game tonight. And not just against anyone. The Sabres play in Pittsburgh tonight against the Penguins, whose captain is none other than the golden goal man himself, Sidney Crosby.

"AN OLYMPIC REMATCH!!!!!1!!!" is basically what any communications network, whether TV, radio, interwebz, telegraph, long wave maritime facsimile or smoke signal that has a tilt towards the sporting world is claiming about this game. Sportscenter is creaming its pants over this matchup. So much so that all day on Sportscenter, which they show for 14 hours (not a joke) on an average weekday, they have been asking their "experts" from all sports their opinion. Opinion on what, you may ask? They want their opinion on the audacity and nerve of Ryan Miller and the Buffalo Sabres organization and their decision sit Ryan Miller tonight for the aforementioned "rematch." Yes, Ryan Miller will be dressed, but will not start in Pittsburgh tonight.

This has caused ESPN to collapse into a singularity. Some, namely the hockey people like Barry Melrose and John Buccigross (who anchors in the afternoon and a regular... and very good... writer for their hockey section on espn.com) favor sitting Miller in a relatively meaningless game in the face of the NHL season and the playoffs; both are easily upper playoff seeds with just over a month to go and they don't need him to get hurt. But it is the "experts" who are just hopelessly clueless about the game and show that although hockey was done a favor by the Olympics and the results, the sport is still climbing uphill to restore its place in the American sports-industrial complex. The "experts" try to bring their sport's culture into it or just show how little they care/know(/both).

Using the 2 P.M. Sportscenter hosted by John Buccigross and Chris McKendry (two of the upper echilon anchors on the network in my opinion), I went through each "expert" opinion. The more I watched, the dumber I felt and the worse I felt for the game of hockey.

Bruce Bowen (Credentials: NBA player for 13 seasons/NBA defensive player of the year '03/'05/'07)

"I think he should play." He took the "the Olympics were great and the NHL needs the publicity" and the "you need to help your teammates." The clincher of stupidity was Bowen saying that Miller needs to realize that athletes sometimes play "back to back"s. Clearly Bowen never played anything other than basketball. The back to back he was referring to was that the Sabres play tomorrow. But a hockey back to back is one thousand fold tougher on the body than a basketball back to back game situation. Also, Bruce Bowen never came off the Olympics after losing the biggest game in more than decade. In fact, Bruce Bowen's international career is highlighted by a 3rd place finish at the 2006 FIBA World Championships where he didn't even play in the game where we got eliminated.

Doug Gottlieb (Credentials: College Basketball player for Oklahoma State/ESPN Radio/White Guy)

"I'm guessing that he is completely exhausted from (his schedule) and his extra effort that he gave even though he wasn't on the ice when they scored the game tying goal," and "everyone makes the playoffs... hahaha." Although he believes he should be sitting, his opinion shows he knows absolutely nothing about hockey. The everyone makes the playoffs shtick is old. We hear that, but never hear that the same number of teams make the playoffs in theNBA. And the "not on the ice" thing shows how little he knows about the sport. He wasn't on the ice so that we could get an extra attacker and more than that even if he were on the ice, he wouldn't be up in offensive zone because he is the goalie! Yet again, this shows how bad it is for hockey in the mainstream. Hosts on flagship networks don't even understand the simple mechanics of a major sport.

Todd McShay (Credentials: Somehow gets paid to predict NFL players draft chances because he is only slightly better than flipping a coin/hates Tim Tebow/White Guy)

"He probably should play (in terms of PR) but let's give him the night off (after what he did for us)." A very legitimate opinion from a guy who makes his money in an illegitimate business ruining college kids careers because their agility cone time is only 94% the average of their position's average.

Herm Edwards (Credentials: Former NFL player, Former Head Coach of the Jets and Chiefs) and Barry Melrose (Credentials: Only person this mix who ever played hockey in the NHL/Coached LA Kings to Stanley Cup Finals... and lost... in 1993/has a mullet)

Herm and Barry "squared off" with both anchor kind of moderating. Here is a brief breakdown. Barry said he should not play. No way. He is spent physically and mentally... especially mentally. And that's when stupid injuries happen. Herm retorted with (for some reason) dropping a puck he had in his suit pocket and saying that if he were the player he "would tell the coach 'I'm Playing.' Unless he takes my shoes and stick, I'm playing." Barry countered with "this is not a big game and Miller needs rest". Herm, who clearly knows little about the game much less the current NHL season, said "YES IT IS A BIG GAME!" Barry tried to interject but Herm, talking a mile a minute, wouldn't budge even going as far to saying that Barry was once a player. This got Barry off his block, because Barry was terrible at hockey and he is very defensive about that, and basically Herm won the argument because Melrose was basically done talking about Miller and was ready to talk about something else.

You (Credentials: You are the country and you are voting. You =people at work but not working, college kids, people with nothing better to do, the unemployed)

Sportscenter does these polls to get your opinion. "Your" being those who vote on these polls. 63% of "You" said he should play, 37% of "You" said he shouldn't.

By the way, the game is not on national TV. If you have FoxSports Pittsburgh of MSG-B, you can watch the game at 7:30. Anyone else, you can go to bar and ask your soon to be puzzled bartender or waitress if they have the hockey package on DirecTV. Don't be surprised if you get laughed at.

Monday, March 1, 2010

Shaq Goes Down For A Bit

Posted by Iroquois Plisken

Perhaps Stan was a shade hasty in proclaiming the Cavs the team to beat. At least for a couple of months, Shaquille O'Neal will be sidelined with a bent up thumb. If you weren't watching the Cavs/Celts tilt last week, Glen Davis (whom I refuse to address by nickname; it is just as irritating now as it was when he was at LSU) fouled Shaq kinda hard on the way up and came down on his shooting hand. A Celtics player playing rough and having the foul downplayed? Why, this has never happened! Surely, just an oversight by the ref; he must have been new. To be fair to Davis, it wasn't deliberate or anything, just some good old fashioned hard contact that should have drawn a foul. It wasn't like he threw someone into the scorer's table.

Nevertheless, this is rough for the Cavaliers. Antawn Jamison has not shown a lot of expediency getting acquainted with his new team, and the Cavalier's favorite lineup (as opposed to best?) is now missing its enforcer. The awkward chemistry issues will be present yet again when (if?) Shaq returns to the Cavs. You would think it wouldn't take long to adjust into the lineup for Cleveland because Jamison played with a C who was a steady defensive presence and had cranked up the offense for the season (Brendan Haywood), which sounds like the renewed Shaquille O'Neal this season, but it's not like LeBron James was Caron Butler or anything. Tawn could always do what the rest of the team does and just watch James play.

Cleveland doesn't appear to be in any danger of losing the top spot in the East either. As of now, they are 6 games ahead of Orlando for the top spot, and nearly 10 ahead of both Atlanta and Boston. Where this could get interesting is the overall playoff seeding, which determines HCA in the Finals. As of now, Cleveland only holds a 1 game lead over the Lake Show for the top seed in the playoffs, which seems especially vulnerable right now. However, the LAL have a fairly tough schedule until March 22nd (the first day that Cleveland can resign Zydrunas Ilgauskas), with 6 road games, the only tough one being @ Orlando this upcoming Sunday. Nevertheless, road games are always kind of a crapshoot and you never know.

Fortunately, Cleveland's schedule up until the 22nd features only two Cs they should really have trouble with: Tim Duncan (on the 8th) and Kendrick Perkins (on the 14th). They also might have trouble with Brook Lopez (NJN) later this week, but it's the Nets. Because they possess such considerable depth at PF , they should be able to withstand any challenge at PF (notably, Chicago with the resurgent Taj Gibson and Indiana, with Troy Murphy). Cleveland will also have Shaq ready for the Lakers and Orlando, as they only face Orlando once before the playoffs. If everything stays as it is, Orlando (as the 2 seed) would not see Cleveland again until the East Finals and the Lakers the NBA Finals. That's the good news.

The Ilgauskas buyout was (in hindsight) timed perfectly, not that there is any implication of collusion. The Shaq surgery has the potential to be a boon for the Cavs because of the rest his knees will get. Those Clevelanders who want LBJ to stay at home should be counting their lucky stars (for now) because this could be a blessing in disguise in King James' quest for coronation.