Thursday, August 30, 2007

Football is here.

America's real past-time is here. I didn't mean football, I meant fantasy football! I can't wait for my drafts. I play in two leagues and both drafts are coming up soon. I have done very little research and I hope to get in some serious work before the drafts. I got the first pick in one of the leagues. LT time! Who knows what happens this season, but has there ever been a more obvious first pick than LT is this year? I mean the closest might have been LT in 2006. This guy is awesome. I love him as a player and a person and I am looking forward to having him on my fantasy roster.

It's good to see football again. The College season kicked off today with LSU mauling MSU 45-0. Tennessee is at Berkeley this weekend for a big week-1 showdown. I hope Cal upholds Pac-10's honor by taking care of the Vols and Ainge. The start of the college football season will be a bigger deal if there are any worthwhile match-ups early. In fact there are a few good ones this season with a rare early season Pac-10 showdown between UCLA and Jim Harbaugh's Stanford. But usually it's just cup-cake after cup-cake for the big programs the first 2 or 3 weeks and the college season ramps up much slower than the NFL. In any case, aren't we all glad football is here.

Sunday, August 26, 2007

Trade Value

One of the interesting conversations in sports is analysis of trades and potential trades. It's always fun to sit in a bar and analyze how good or horrible a given trade is. But it's also one of the most difficult judgement to make. For example, there's a lot of talk about the KG trade or about the J-Rich trade for Brandan Wright in the Golden State land. But who really knows what happens in the future given that Brandan Wright is a rookie who has not played a single possession in the NBA or even with Al Jefferson who went to Minny in the KG trade who is so young. 5 years from now when KG is old and over-paid, Jefferson could potentially be dominating the league. Similarly, Brandan Wright could retire as the best-ever power forward or he could just flame out of the league in 2 years. At least with established veterans like J-Rich, KG and Ray Allen, you know what you are getting. But things get a lot more unpredictable when these trades involve rookies and draft picks.

Now, I am not saying we all shut up and stop evaluating trades. Fans and media definitely have to evaluate every move of the GM and the management and make them accountable. No point giving them a free reign. Plus, if we don't talk in hypotheticals and about the future, what else do we as sports fans get to talk about to show our knowledge and expertise? So thats not what I am saying. But I want fans and media to understand that evaluation of these trades can change wildly with time. Sometimes these trades go one way for 3 years and goes the other way for the next 10 especially if it involves young players. I started thinking about all this with this whole Michael Vick saga. A lot of fans and experts conveniently forget that Michael Vick was traded for Ladainian Tomlinson.

The Chargers in 2001 had recently drafted a QB very high in the draft, a QB named Ryan Leaf. That move had set the franchise back by about 5 years and made them the laughing stock of the league. So they were literally scared to touch another QB when they earned the first pick in 2001 and a QB named Michael Vick was the prize of the draft. As good as Michael Vick looked, the Chargers reluctantly traded that pick away to avoid another QB disaster. Boy, aren't they glad today they did that with this whole dog fighting deal today? But forget the whole dog fighting deal. With that in the picture, no team would even trade a cheer leader's outfit for Vick. So thats not the point here. Atlanta jumped on that deal in 2001 and sent San Diego the fifth overall pick in the first round, their third-round pick, their second-round pick in 2002 and wide receiver Tim Dwight. Never mind that even Tim Dwight for Michael Vick would look lop-sided for San Diego ended up drafting a RB called Ladainian Tomlinson with that 5-Th pick. The rest of the picks in that trade have not yielded anything spectacular for the Chargers to date.

A lot of experts were all over San Diego for passing up on an incredible athlete, a transcendent, once-in-a-lifetime, position changing player. That was the take even 2 or 3 years in to the trade when it became obvious that LT was going to be good and he had already erased most of his draft-day doubts. Some people still said that as good as LT is, he is no Vick. Vick is such a high impact player who was hyped to be even bigger than the NFL. He was a big business windfall for the league as well because of the hype, his street-cred and the fact that he is a QB. But fast-forward 2 or 3 more years and it's clear that trade did involve an incredible athlete, a transcendent, once-in-a-lifetime, position changing player. But thats LT. I am talking even pre-dog days of this summer. Even without his current set of problems, Vick for LT is lop-sided in favor of the Chargers. In fact, the Chargers ended up picking Drew Brees in the second round of that 2001 draft to play QB for them instead of Vick and I wouldn't even trade Brees for Vick, dogs or no dogs. Vick never really reached his full-potential. It looked like we were never going to get the QB of the new millennium, Dan Marino of this generation. LT is all of that and more at the RB position. Thats the reality.

The morale of the story, don't be quick to judge trades.

Saturday, August 25, 2007

Steve Kerr with Bill Simmons

Bill Simmons is quickly becoming one of my favorite sportswriter. Dude is funny, very committed to the NBA and well-informed about league matters and it's 80's and 90's history. He almost convinced me with his article a few months back that KG for Amare is a good deal for the Suns before other Suns fans back knocked some sense back into me. But in-spite of that questionable call, I like Bill Simmons. He might be my second best sports media guy after Jim Rome, who I probably like more for his non-sports takes than his sports-takes. Sometimes I feel like actual sports-talk slows down Jim's show.

In any case, Bill Simmons had Steve Kerr on his show and I loved the conversation. Of course I wanted to listen to My Suns GM in the off-season, but it was also a great basketball conversation in general. It had a lot of useful tid-bits. First, the Suns conversation. Bill thinks the Suns are the favorite to reach the finals against his beloved Celtics of course. Even as a Suns fan, I don't know why we are the favorites and how we are going to beat the Champions Spurs. That too since we got smaller with the Kurt Thomas trade. Bill quizzed Kerr on this trade calling it one of the most lop-sided trades ever. Sometimes we don't talk enough about such low-profile trades, but Suns lost a lot in that deal. They gave up Thomas and 2 future first round picks for a conditional second round pick. Think about that. What kind of trade is that where you give a decent player plus 2 first round picks for a second round pick? Makes no sense from a basketball standpoint.

Of course we all understand that it's a salary dump and Kerr also noted how the Suns saved 16 mill counting the luxury tax. But one of the reasons the Suns have problem getting better and they have gotten older lately because they have traded away a tonne of picks the last few years and each time it was to save money. They traded away the picks that could have netted Luol Deng, Rajon Rondo and Sergio Rodriguez. Now two more first rounders are gone. Thats not good in the long-term. Kerr din't get too much in to the Suns and just said Grant Hill's addition would be great. He also noted how Steve Nash was playing pick-up soccer and he said soccer helps Nash's passing and how some of his passing angles are just awesome. Thats an interesting point. Kerr also noted how soccer players tend to take a lot of risks with their passes because the downside is low. Turnovers in soccer don't turn to points at the other end like it does in basketball. So players like Nash and Giniobli take lot more chances and that explains their high turnover numbers sometimes.

Kerr also was talking about his days with Cleveland and Bill said Mark Price was probably one of the most underrated players in the history of the NBA. Kerr noted that he was probably the first guy to split the double-team like Wade and a lot of others do these days. Price figured that if he dribbled low and went hard between the two guys, they had to either let him go or foul him. They also spoke about MJ and if 92 MJ was playing in 2007 NBA with the current hand-checking rules, both of them agreed MJ would be unstoppable. May be he'll score 100 in a couple of games. Kerr also noted how MJ and Tim Duncan were both champions and cared only about winning, but had 2 different approaches. He said MJ was real hard on teammates, while Tim always blamed himself for all losses even if he had 30-20. Both works in it's own ways. I guess teammates step-up for both guys because they love one guy and they fear the other!

The other thing that was interesting was how high Kerr was on Pippen. He says he was the ultimate team player and both Bill and Steve were sad that his refusal to go into the game in that playoff game kind of spoiled his reputation forever. I have always thought the 17 point choke job the Blazers pulled against the Lakers in game 7 of the 2000 playoffs has had a profound impact on NBA history. If they had won, they probably would have won the championship and would have prevented the Lakers three-peat. Given that Kobe and Shaq never got along, they might have even broken off early and who knows what happens then. But Bill brought in a new angle to that series. He says it altered how history perceives Pippen. If the Blazers had gotten to the finals, Pipp being their best player and leader would have gotten a lot of credit. Plus he would have done something without MJ and that would have cemented Pippen's Hall-of-Fame career. Now most people just think of him as MJ's side-kick. He was that but he was much, much more.

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Streak over for Webb

Brandon Webb won his 14-Th game today (3-2 against the Brewers) but his scoreless innings streak ended at 42. It was recently voted on the Arizona Republic website as the most impressive streak ever in the history of AZ sports ahead of other streaks like the Suns winning 17 straight and 15 straight in the same season and Lute Olson taking his Arizona wildcats to 8 million straight NCAA tournaments or something. I guess the Republic jinxed it because the streak ended today, but I am thinking Webb is on track to win back to back Cy Young anyways. Peavy's 14-5 with a 2.21 ERA is still better than Webb's 14-8 and 2.63, but not by much. If the DBacks win the division crown and Webb continues his strong second half, he should have a good shot at the Cy. Damn Prince Fielder for driving in that run in the first.

The game of the day was in Baltimore as Texas beat Baltimore 30-3. Yes, you read that right. A Big league team allowed 30 runs to another. I bet the Baltimore Ravens will play many games this NFL season where they don't allow anywhere close to 30 points and thats in football. The Orioles have embarrassed themselves like no other team in 110 years of modern Baseball. They gave up 5 runs in the 4-Th, 9 in the 6-Th, 10 in the 8-Th and 6 in the 9-Th. Thats more runs in each of those innings than a big league team should be giving up in entire games. If you look at the 4 pitchers they sent to the mound, they gave up 6, 8, 7 and 9 runs respectively. Again, more runs than what these scrubs should be giving up in entire games. Where was the mercy rule when you needed it? I am amazed Texas managed to score all these runs. After a while, aren't you supposed to just swing wildly and try to hit just home runs every pitch? Hit out or get out. I guess not. I am glad they didn't bunt and move runners over in the ninth with the score at 28-3! Paul Shuey gave up 9 runs in the 2 innings he pitched at the end. This is not what he was hoping in his ripe old age! MLB's best name, Jarrod Saltalamacchia, hit 2 homers and had 7 RBIs. I guess he almost equalled all the good work Mark Teixeira has done for Atlanta since the trade in just one game!

Speaking of Mark Teixeira, he has been a great pickup for the ATL. Dude has 9 homers and 26 RBIs in 19 games for the Braves. This guy might single-handedly get the Braves to the playoffs. Of course Atlanta is still reeling from the Michael Vick story. Vick plead guilty and now will definitely go to the hole. The only questions is, for how long and when? Experts say the deal might put him in jail for 12 to 22 months. Rough stuff. He will probably be suspended from the game and that needs to be served when he gets out. So he'll most definitely be out for 2 or 3 years and will be 30 years old by the time he is back in the reckoning. Sad, sad story. Sick story too as more and more details of this dog fighting deal comes out. Bryan Gumbel and Real Sports on HBO had a shocking piece on dog fighting and you just wonder who the hell these people are and how did they ever get this sick? Really scary, screwed up humans doing stupid and disgusting things to train these dogs. I am shocked and upset and I don't even like dogs. I am scared to run into some of these dumb, disgusting people.

NFL is king in our country right now, but with all these problems, NFL better be careful. I am sure Roger Goodell understands this and thats why he is really tough with his personal conduct policy, but he has no other choice. Fair or not, White America views NBA as being too black, too ghetto, too hip-hop and too thuggish and thats why they stay away from it. I feel NFL is on the same track with Vick, Pacman, the Bengals, etc. etc. etc. They have had one problem after the other the last year or 2 and this might catchup even to the mighty NFL. These things don't happen overnight and NFL better be careful with it's image. The Vick deal is a big one because America loves dogs more than they love their family.

Monday, August 20, 2007

Santastic!

Johan Santana was amazing today. He struck out 17 guys in 8 innings as he totally dominated the Texas Rangers. The Twins won a 1-0 gem of a game. Santana's pitch count was high and he didn't go out in the 9-Th. Joe Nathan closed the deal as he added 2 more strikeouts. Millwood was not too bad for the Rangers either as he gave up just a run in 7 strong innings. But Santana was the story. He was in total command and all his pitches were working. He apparently didn't shake off catcher Mike Redmond even once in this game and why would he if everything is working to perfection? You could tell how fooled the hitters were as they started flailing at everything in the late innings. They felt like they had no other choice. Johan Santana may be the best pitcher in the game right now.

Speaking of the Twins, they got their closer a couple of years back from the Giants when Brian Sabean traded away Joe Nathan. That dude is now one of the best closers in the game. It's almost like Toronto looked at this and said, "OK, lets turn this other pitcher we got from the Giants and see if he can close too. May be Sabean and the Giants can't spot closer talent and they give them away". So Toronto turns Jeremy Accardo into a closer after B.J.Ryan gets injured and he has now got 24 saves with a 2.28 ERA. Brian Sabean should be pissed. It's not like the Giants could have used a good closer the last few years :-)

Carlos Zambrano signed a 5 year 91.5 million contract to upstage Zito's 18 mill by 0.3 mill a year though Zito's contract is for 7 years. I guess thats the going market for good pitchers, especially if someone pays 18 a year for Zito! There's no way true aces are now going to take less than 18! It's amazing how things work out. With all the hype for Kerry Wood and Mark Prior, nobody even looked at Zambrano few years back. But with those 2 occasionally getting out of the DL to play once in a while, Zambrano has become the ace and the face of that Cubs rotation. Today he pitched 3 scoreless before rain wiped out their Sunday nighter against the Cards.

Great excitement in Yankee-land as 2 kids came off the bullpen to help them finish a game. This dude Joba Chamberlain can hit 100 on the gun and he pitched the 8-Th. Edwar Ramirez pitched the 9-Th and Yankee-fan finally saw some young blood on the mound. They have been missing that for a while. But San Diego was happy with it's golden oldie as Maddux won his 342-Nd with a strong, one-run outing. His ERA is now down to 3.90 and has been pitching well lately. Unfortunately, the Padres bats have been silent and he has had 2 losses and 3 NDs in the 5 starts before this one despite giving up 3 runs or less in all of them. I love watching this guy win. The only thing better might be watching my DBacks ace Brandon Webb continue his shutout streak. It now stands at 42 innings and thats just awesome. His latest outing was a 4-0 shutout of the Braves on Friday as Webb pitched his 3-Rd straight complete game. That's unheard off in this day and age.

Sunday, August 19, 2007

Bambino in da house!

Micah Owings is one of those home-grown talent contributing to the DBacks this year. Today, at Atlanta, he had a 4/5 stint at the plate with 2 long home runs. He drove in 6 and scored 4 times himself. This was in front of a friendly crowd for Micah as he grew up in Georgia and had a whole bunch of his peeps at the yard. But here's the story. He is a starting pitcher who also won the game giving up just 3 runs in 7 strong innings. Thats Ruthian stuff and he said it was his greatest game ever. That could be the under-statement of the year. Dude already had hit a homer this season and now has 3. Not bad at all. He is not having a great year pitching with an ERA around 4.70 and a 6-6 record, but you know what? If you can drive in 6 runs, you have every right to give up 4 or 5. I can't complain. Micah helped extend the DBacks lead in the NL west to 5 games.

Yanks are 5 behind the Sox as they have beat the Tigers to lead the series 2-1 with a game to go tomorrow. Today, Clemens lucked his way to a win and showed once again why he is a punk. 20 year old rookie Cameron Maybin hit his first career home run off Clemens and Clemens couldn't let the kid go. He came inside and hit him later in the game. Real tough guy! The Yankees are good though. They are just half a game behind the Mariners. Thank god the Sox had a strong first half of the season. If not, the Yanks will be running away with that division. Looks like the Yanks are going to make the post-season after-all. I want to enjoy a couple of years when both the Sox and the Yanks don't make it to the playoffs. ESPN and some other outlets might stop covering baseball if that ever happens!

NFL is still dealing with Michael Vick. He is supposedly going to take a plea deal on Monday. All his co-defendants have struck a deal and Vick is in a real bad spot. The feds now have 4 solid witnesses and all 3 of his co-defendants have plead guilty. So it's Vick -V- 7 plus the Feds! Reminds me of that great "walk-off" run and TD he had against the Vikings in OT. If he goes to trial and gets convicted, he could be in jail for 5 years and come out after doing maybe 85% of that time. Thats long. If he takes the deal, he is potentially looking at 12-18 months and might get out in 9-12 months. I wouldn't be surprised if he takes the deal even with his millions and access to top lawyers. Thats how bad a soup he is in.

One question thats hard to answer is, how is dog-fighting so bad, but hunting is so normal? Everybody from the vice-president on down goes hunting in this country and kill deers and other sweet animals, but you can't kill a dog without being treated like the second-coming of the devil. I am not condoning what Vick did and he is a sick dude, but it's amazing how hypocritical our culture is. We shoot a deer dead and jail Vick for fighting dogs.

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

Plea time

It's plea time as the difficult summer in Sports is winding down. Tim Donaghy is expected to plead guilty tomorrow and this means we will get to know exactly what the charges are and what he is accepting. In Michael Vick's case, he is rumored to be negotiating a plea agreement with federal prosecutors. This means he is really in trouble. If his high-profile lawyers don't think they can fight it, the feds should have quite the dirt on Vick. They are supposedly negotiating jail-time under a year. Experts think he will be in jail for multiple years if Vick goes to trial. It'll be interesting to see what happens. I never thought I would see a millionaire celebrity like this spend any kind of serious time in the hole - Robert Blake being the only exception.

The NBA apparently is happy with Donaghy's guilty plea. They want closure on the matter and they will move closer to it with this development. The NBA off-season is kind of slowing down now with the KG trade done. There is a lot of stupid noise about washed up oldies trying to come back. Apparently the Celtics want Reggie Miller back and I don't know why. Alan Houston is saying he wants to come back and I hope somebody asks him "what for?". There is even talk about Charles Oakley coming back. That might be worth it because Oaks will start a few fights and spice things up. Plus, he is the black Yogi Berra with quotes like "If it ain't broke, don't break it." and "posses are like contracts. Everybody's got one. Some are just bigger than others."

Interestingly, the media always asking the Suns if they are interested in all these guys. I guess thats their way of saying the Suns are a contender, they are close and they can use a little veteran help. But I am glad the Suns are really not chasing these guys. They just need a big guy, period. Unfortunately P.J.Brown seems to be the only viable option right now and even he is chased by multiple teams, including the Mavs who apparently want him just to screw the Suns. In other news, the Clips got a huge blow when Elton Brand ruptured his left Achilles' tendon. Thats bad for the Clips and the NBA, but good for the other Pacific division teams I guess. The Lakers may still not be the best team in LA as Kobe still has no help. Not sure what the Laker management is doing. They can't get anybody.

Good day in MLB as the Yanks lost 12-0 to the Orioles. I can live with that score everyday. A great game in bean-town as the Sox won 2-1 over the Devil Rays scoring both their runs in the 9-Th for a walk-off win. Fantastic duel between 23 year old lefties Scott Kazmir and cancer survivor John Lester. Unfortunately, the DRays bullpen blew the lead for Kazmir. Eric Gagne heard some boos in this game, but was solid today after a few bad outings. DBacks had a tough day as B.K.Kim lasted just 17 pitches. This is not the home-coming we were all expecting. The Bonderman-Sabathia duel went to the 10-Th innings as Detroit won at Cleveland 6-2. Bobby Cox got kicked out of the game for a record 132-Nd time against the Giants. No homer for Barry Bonds today, or for that matter Rick Ankiel!

Saturday, August 11, 2007

Ankiel is back with a bang

Rick Ankiel hit 2 homers today and he now has 3 in 3 games. He was recently called up to the majors as an outfielder after doing really well in the minors as a hitter. We often hype up a lot of stories on sports for it's emotional and feel-good values, but this is a truly heart-warming story. If you don't remember, Rick Ankiel came into the bigs as a can't miss, flame throwing starting pitcher at the age on 20 in 1999. The guy had a heavy sinker and a devastating curve-ball to go with his 97 MPH fast ball. He was left-handed too. He even started game 1 of the playoffs in 2000 against the Braves and my man Greg Maddux, but mysteriously started throwing wild pitch after wild pitch. It was painful to see a kid with so much potential just lose it mentally and disintegrate on the mound. The Cards had to pull him out of that game and he couldn't regain his control the rest of that playoffs as he was tried a couple more games against the Braves and later the Mets.

More of the same next year as Ankiel's problems only got worse during the regular season. He was sent down to the minors and he never could regain his control at any level. He was sent all the way down to the rookie league where he regained some semblance of normalcy with his pitching. He was given opportunities couple more times by the Cards, but the ugliness never went away. The guy has had a tough life growing up. He had a screwed up dad who pushed him real hard to do well in baseball. The dad was also a criminal who had been arrested 14 times and convicted 6 times. When Ankiel came up to the majors, his dad was in the federal prison doing 6 years for drug crimes. Still the kid grew up to be a nice dude and may be was rushed to the majors too soon by the Cards given his unusual background. So everybody inside and outside the Cards wanted him to succeed, but he just could not get his control back except for a brief stretch in the minors couple of years back.

After several years of trying and failing, Ankiel decided he was going to quit pitching and become an outfielder. Ankiel was a decent hitter and a good athlete growing up. Even in the majors, he was one of the better hitting pitchers. He already had 2 home-runs in the bigs as a pitcher. So he decided to become a hitter full-time and sure enough, he did very well. So well that the Cards decided to call him up this week. He hit a home run his very first at-bat and Tony LaRussa had tears in his eyes. He said it was as exciting as winning the World Series last year. It felt almost scripted that he hit a home-run in his first game back. It's been curtain call time for Ankiel ever since. Today, he hit two more dingers and made a fantastic catch in the outfield. Great story so far. I have a feeling the pitchers will eventually figure this guy out given that he has been hitting seriously for just 2 years. But I sure hope this feel-good tale continues forever. I would love for Ankiel to retire an outfielder after having a solid 10 year big league career with 200+ home runs!

In other regular baseball news, my Arizona DBacks are on fire. They have won 17 of 20 as they have opened a 4 game lead in the NL West. Brandon Webb is a stud. He is riding a continuos, scoreless 33-inning innings streak. The reigning Cy Young winner might win one more this year. This guy came up in 2003 and has been the main-man for the DBacks ever since. The DBacks are looking awesome right now. They are young, exciting and more importantly, completely home-grown. Webb was a DBacks draft pick and so are 5 of 8 position players and the 6-th, Chris Young, has not played for any other team but the DBacks though was drafted by the WhiteSox. They also locked up Eric Byrnes long term for 30 mill over 3 years. Great signing. I have always liked Byrnes ever since his days with my other favorite AL team, the A's. The DBacks also got Byung-Hyun Kim back for old time sake! I have a felling the rest of the season will be good for the snakes. The home-grown hitters are not setting the park on fire, but they do enough to win and they'll improve. In contrast, the Brewers are still winning on the strength of their young hitting. They can also get to the playoffs if their pitching holds up.

Wednesday, August 08, 2007

Bonds and KG aftermath

It's been a day since Bonds hit his 756-Th and he has hit 757 already. This was his usual water shot, his 35 -Th in to the McCovey cove out of the 45 total that has reached the water out there. That brings up something I want to mention about Bonds. I have beat him up pretty bad over the steroids issue and everybody thinks the record is tainted. But I thought I need to mention 2 things that makes Bonds' achievements relatively impressive. First, his home ball park is brutal to hitters. Petco in San Diego is probably the only new park thats worse for the hitters than AT&T. When they were building this bad boy, people looked at the short porch on the right and said it's tailor made for Bonds to hit home-runs all day. But the park ended up playing much truer than expected. In fact, without that short distance to the right, this might be a graveyard for the hitters. Even with that, Bonds has hit 35 out of the 45 balls that have reached the waters. Visiting left-handers rarely reach the water because it's just too hard.

Not only has the Giants ended up with a beautiful ball-park which might end up as the Wrigley or Fenway of the next generation, they have also ended up with a very fair baseball park. But if Bonds was playing at any other park, you are probably looking at 5 home runs more each of the last 6 or 7 years. Secondly, the walks. Bonds is famous for his walks and one of the reasons for it is, how bad his supporting cast has been throughout the years. The Giants have done a horrible job of surrounding him with big bats. Jeff Kent was the closest thing to a super-star they have had batting around Bonds and nobody appreciated that guy anyways and he left town pretty much unwanted. If only Bonds had any kind of help, he would have walked far less and have seen a lot more good pitches. You can add another 5 HRs a year if the Giants had helped him out. Neither of these factors remove the taint on Bonds, but what I am saying is, he could easily be staring at a tainted 800 home-runs today if the park and the Giants had done him any favors.

The other guy who is getting a lot of flak lately is Kevin McHale of the T-Wolves. He is accused of striking deals with his friend Danny Ainge and transforming his bad T-Wolves team into the horrible Celtics team that Ainge dumped on him. He has definitely proven to be a bad GM lately. He is also an Ex-Celtic great and has about 7 guys on his rosters who have played for the Celtics the last few years. It looks and sounds like an inside job, but really it's not that bad. I agree the previous trade where he gave up Wally Szczerbiak, Michael Olowokandi and the first pick for Ricky Davis and Mark Blount was just stupid. The stupid part was really the first pick he threw in. He had no business doing that knowing fully well that his team sucks and that pick will probably be worth something. I guess he got carried away by the opportunity to give the Kandi-man away!

But I don't see what the problem is with the KG trade. First off, McHale got back the first pick that he should have never given up in the first place. Secondly, he got Theo Ratliff's expiring contract. On top of this, he got Sebastian Telfair, Ryan Gomes, Gerald Green and Al Jefferson. What else did McHale have on the table that was better? You can't evaluate the trade in a vacuum. You got to look at his other options. He didn't have any. I am a Suns fan and would have loved for the Suns to get KG, but the Suns made it clear they are not giving Amare and as much as I love the Matrix, Marion and a bunch of scrubs is not better than what the Celts gave them. McHale could have gotten Lamar Odom and LA's scrubs and thats even worse! Except Kobe, there's nothing on that roster that I would even touch with a 10 foot barge pole. The Warriors probably had the best young talent to offer, but they didn't have the right mix of salaries to match up. McHale essentially had nothing else.

When you gut a franchise and give up a mega-star like KG, I always think a total re-build is a better way to go than trying to re-load. You are not going to replace KG with an Odom or Marion. You are better off going young and building from the ground floor again. Thats exactly what McHale is doing right now. It'll take them 3 years to get above water and may be McHale will be and probably should be fired by then, but he finally has a number of ways to rebuild his team. Young talent, good future picks and cap space. Even McHale probably can't screw this up. Or may be he will. In life who you know is more important than what you know. Danny Ainge is the best proof for that. He didn't do too well as a GM himself, but he knew Kevin McHale and looks like that saved his job. I understand that friendships always help in clinching such deals in terms of comfort level, but my point is, McHale didn't have too many options for KG.

Tuesday, August 07, 2007

Bonds 756!

Finally Bonds did what he was supposed to this year - surpass the home run mark. As expected, it happened at home. The Giants and the home fans put on a show. Ironically the ball ended up in the hands of a Mets fan who was in the crowd wearing a Mets jersey. Apparently he was on his way to Australia. Go figure. The game stopped for a long time for the ceremony. His entire family and Willie Mays were there as usual. The big surprise was a message from Hank Aaron on the jumbo-tron. There was a lot of talk about Hank not being there. But the classy Aaron sent the message and enhanced his image more than anything. Bud Selig also called Barry after the game and congratulated him. He was not at the game for some reason. Should have been busy working on the all-important Devil Rays-Pirates inter-league schedule for next year.

The guy who gave up the home run, Mike Bacsik, gave a real cute interview after the game. He seems like a genuine kid who had no problems giving up the record breaker. He tipped his cap towards Bonds during the game. He later said he wanted to challenge him and he also met him afterwards to congratulate him and got an autographed bat from Bonds. Apparently this guy's dad has pitched to Bond's dad and also pitched to Aaron when he was at 755. Barry wished this kid well in his presser. Bonds was also all praise for John Lannon, yesterday's starting pitcher, who not only challenged Bonds, but actually overpowered him. All in all, a great day for Bonds. There were a couple of questions about the "taint" and the controversy which Bonds summarily dismissed. He was clearly irritated by those questions and he said "this record is not tainted, period".

Bonds had a great story for the local TV audience in the Bay Area in one of their shows. There was a very memorable at-bat he had against Eric Gagne in 2004. Bottom of the ninth, Barry comes to the plate trailing 3-0 with Gagne trying to close the game for the Dodgers. They went one-on-one, pure gas versus bat-speed. He got one pretty good which just hooked foul. That was a 98 MPH fast ball. Then Bonds planted a 100 MPH pitch in about the same spot where he hit 756 today. Bonds told the story today that he and Eric had met in the past and they had this deal where Eric agreed to challenge Bonds if he faced him with a lead of 3 runs or more. Thats exactly what happened on that day in 2004 and everybody got to witness it.

With all this said, one cannot but smell the "asterix" in the air. Ironically, I was kind of OK with Bonds chasing the record and was not too bothered by him even surpassing the great Hank Aaron. But the "taint" hit me today when the Giants did sort of a tribute to the top 10 home run leaders - Barry Bonds, Hank Aaron, Babe Ruth, Willie Mays, Sammy Sosa, Frank Robinson, Mark McGwire, Harmon Killebrew, Rafael Palmeiro and Ken Griffey, Jr. There are 5 guys from the current "era" and thats just way too many from one era. 3 of them are clearly tainted - McGwire, Palmeiro and Sosa. One possibly clean guy - Griffey and the other - Bonds, definitely tainted, but might be in the top 10 anyways. This is when it hit me that Mays and Aaron and Robinson and those guys should be really pissed. A lifetime of hard-work on their part is being erased left and right by a bunch of roid-heads from our era and nobody did anything until recently. Baseball collectively failed it's heroes and it's a crying shame. The real victims are the fans and the true legends of the game who are all being replaced by fake superstars.

Like I said, Bonds probably belongs in the top 10 list anyways, but he definitely doesn't break Aaron's record without the juice. He probably doesn't even get to Willie's 660 without Greg Anderson. Only thing we could say for sure about Bonds is, he was a first-ballot hall-of-famer with or without Balco, but all his home-run marks are definitely question marks. Bob Costas made this point that people are just wrong when they say that Bonds was the best player alive even in 1998 and so the steroids don't matter. Bonds was a first-ballot hall-of-famer even in 1998, but Costas says nobody was even talking about him in terms of all-time great players. In fact, he was not even in the all-century team and was not even in the top 2 or 3 notable misses in that team. So his home run numbers since 2000 definitely took him from "phenomenal" to the "super-human". Bonds hit more home runs after he turned 35 than Roger Marris hit his entire career. Enough said!

The post-steroids Bonds became one of the greatest hitters of all time and the jump he recorded in almost every offensive category after he turned 35 is other-worldly. A player who was already playing at a hall-of-fame level, got much better - almost 40% to 50% better, after he turned 35 years old. It's just unheard of. How do you explain that without some cream and the clear?

Sunday, August 05, 2007

Milestone Weekend

The NFL hall of fame weekend and an emotional speech by Michael Irvin signaled the start of the NFL pre-season. So this might very well be the last weekend of undivided attention for MLB this year. MLB did have something good to offer this weekend. All the milestones we have been waiting for a while happened this weekend. A-Rod hit 500, Bonds tied the record with 755 on Saturday. Then on Sunday, Tom Glavine got his 300-Th win. The only thing remaining now is 756 for Barry. He is back home for 4 against the Nationals and as expected sat out the game at San Diego on Sunday. He had a long press conference yesterday after the game and the reason he gave for not playing on Sun I thought was weird. He said "I'll not be in the lineup tomorrow. I am going to celebrate with my family". What? Just say you have a sore thumb or whatever or just leave it to the usual "Bonds will not play day games after night games". I thought his answer was strange to say the least.

The San Diego crowd cheered the Bonds home run more than they booed. That was not really a surprise to me. Some experts made a big deal out of it saying it'll be ugly and nasty and all that. I thought American people are too nice for that. Eventually, I knew they'll just get caught in the excitement and respect the moment and let Bonds off easy. Thats exactly what happened. There were enough boos and "asterix" signs in the crowd, but most people cheered the feat and even gave him a standing ovation. May be it would have been a little worse at LA because of the rivalry, but the reception would have been pretty much the same in any other town. Bud Selig seemed to have more problems with it than the Sand Diego fans. He kind of just stood up and was completely stoic. He didn't even clap his hands.

Bud is really pushing it. He seems to have some real issues with Barry Bonds as if it's all Bonds fault and is talking like he is making a major sacrifice by even being there. I thought his statement after the game was not gracious at all. He seemed to point to all the scandals and kind of gave Bonds a back-handed compliment. "No matter what anybody thinks of the controversy surrounding this event, Mr. Bonds' achievement is noteworthy and remarkable," Selig said, adding that "all citizens in this country are innocent until proven guilty." There's no need for this on this day. The only thing more ridiculous was when he said last week that he is making a herculean effort to attend these games. “This has been a tough experience, I don’t mind telling you,” Selig said. “I don’t think anybody can say I haven’t made a Herculean effort,” he said. “In fact, I have a lot of people who are stunned I’m still at it.” What?? I think he is growing senile. He needs to understand he is part of the problem and is fooling nobody with his "holier than thou" attitude. Did he forget that he is the commissioner of the game and the steroid dealers were running around his clubhouses right underneath his nose?

Bud didn't congratulate Bonds except for that stupid statement. Also, he apparently called to congratulate A-Rod for his 500 and openly said he would love to attend Glavine's 300-Th win. Bud just hates Bonds and I don't know why. Speaking of A-Rod, he finally got his 500-Th home run as a prolonged slump was getting a little ugly for him. The Yankees offense has been feasting on some bad teams the last couple of weeks. There have been games where they have scored 21 runs and 16 runs and another with 8 home runs. But A-Rod got to 499 and was kind of stuck there for a while. He went hitless in 21 at-bats after hitting the 499-Th home run on July 25-Th. There was some talk again about how this guy can't come through under pressure. Tabloids were on him again for not being able to perform when it matters the most. Poor guy, can't win even when he hits his 500-Th home run. I am sure he is glad the thing is over now.

Tom Glavine also got his 300-Th win and might very well be the last one to do it for a while. I know everybody said the same thing when Maddux got there a couple of years back, but we did know than that Glavine had a real shot at it. Now, I don't see anybody with a realistic chance except may be an outside shot for Mike Mussina who has 245 wins and is 38 years old. Randy Johnson is pretty close to 300, but is also pretty old and pretty injured. He may not even pitch again. So Glavine might truly be the last one. The Cubs fans were all love for Glavine. A classy superstar with a lot of talent, breaking great records will get mad love even on the road. Thats why I guess the whole Bonds deal looks so bad because that kind of hatred and booing is unusual when you are a superstar at that level chasing that kind of a record. You couldn't help but notice the contrast between the two scenarios, thanks to the classy Cubs fans. 300 is done now for Glavine and the biggest loser is ESPN! They can't show his beautiful wife Christine Glavine every 8 seconds anymore. She was a real cutie with genuine concern on her face whenever the Cubs scored runs and heart-felt tears in her eyes at the end. Baseball never looked this beautiful :-)