Monday, August 15, 2011

Odd Men Out: The Yankee Surplus


Late August is the best time to analyze a team’s home stretch, just as things get exciting but still before the NFL’s regular season arrives and makes all else obsolete to most fans. As the pennant race continues to heat up in the late days of August, the American League East division finds itself in a familiar situation as the Yankees and Red Sox battle for first place in the season’s final months. Their play has been nearly dead even outside of the rivalry itself, which the Sox have dominated this season by a count of ten wins to only two for New York. This result would suggest that the Yankees have been better against the rest of the league, and that if they can even play average baseball against Boston for the remainder of the year they have a good chance to finish atop the league’s best division when October comes. With such a tight race, even the smallest decision or an individual game can determine the outcome of this year’s battle for baseball supremacy. As the season progresses, one major problem has been passed down to manager Joe Girardi, but it a good problem to deal with. How he handles this issue may severely help or hurt the Bombers’ chase for an unprecedented 28th championship.
In a league with a standard five man pitching rotation, the Yankees are fortunate enough to have six (or five and a half as I will go on to explain.) Surprising seasons from Bartolo Colon and Freddy Garcia have kept the Yankees afloat alongside a couple of young studs and an excellent bullpen. While the pitching has been good this year, the gap between ace CC Sabathia and the next five starters is immeasurable. There is complete uncertainty surrounding who is the number two starter for the upcoming playoff run. Most teams seek out a one-two punch at the front end of their rotation, but us Yankee fans are now accustomed to one haymaker followed by a series of surprisingly effective jabs. This immense grey area has revealed the biggest hidden blessing in baseball today. The pitching surplus has led the Yankees to unintentionally create something unheard of in modern sports and in many cases, the world: a performance-based profession. Because only one of the six was safe by the halfway point in the season, the other five have been pitching for their lives. These life or death situations have forced what is, in my opinion, the most overachieving pitching rotation in baseball. I mean that in the best way possible; this competition has been great for the Yankees and they wouldn’t be the same without it.
There is one exception that has been a flaw in this competitive system, and continues to plague a team that can’t afford any cheap losses while chasing such a formidable rival. AJ Burnett started the year as the presumed second starter in the rotation, but continued to work his way down through his many struggles and bad performances. In recent months, Ivan Nova escaped the hot seat by pitching brilliantly and while many have been awaiting the collapses of Garcia and Colon, they simply have not happened. This leaves two questionable pitchers, Burnett and long time prospect Phil Hughes. Hughes went from winning eighteen games as an all star to a terrible start to the 2011 campaign that sent him to the DL for much of the first few months. However, in his last two starts he has pitched twelve innings and given up three runs. One of those appearances was shortened due to rain interrupting a shutout against the White Sox. I view his response to landing on the hot seat as a performance worthy of the Yankees rotation. Burnett, on the other hand, has been a different story. He may not have immunity from Girardi, but he definitely has inconceivable leniency. If I got the opportunity to ask Girardi one question on the matter, it would be just how badly does this guy have to pitch to be the odd man out?
Over his last two starts, Burnett’s “hot seat performance” as we’ll call it for now, included ten and a third innings pitched and eleven runs given up. He was given thirteen runs of support in the first few innings against the same White Sox that Hughes embarrassed, but was unable to even finish the five innings required to secure a statistical win. If this is how he responds under pressure, I am dreading the day if and when he knows he is going to keep his job and grows complacent. To put it plainly, I just don’t like the guy. I don’t even like his attitude; die-hard fans will notice that he even gets worse when faced with any adversity, such as an error or bad call from an umpire. He even committed the cardinal sin of ripping off his jersey during a temper tantrum, an act reserved for the special kind of stupid found in any bad teammate. From 2009 until a few hours ago, I had as many wins in August as a starting pitcher as AJ Burnett. Being that terrible in August is the definition of how to screw up a run to the playoffs. He even did his best to foil tonight’s plans as he surrendered a lead in the 5th inning. Luckily for him, the offense that has spoiled him for years now regained control of the game. His questionable benefit of the doubt has come from two undeserving areas. For one thing, his “stuff” has been said to be among the league’s best. The term “stuff” may be the most overrated aspect of baseball. A 95mph fastball is great until it is sent to major league hitters flat, without any movement, and is then promptly sent over the outfield fence. A curveball with dramatic movement is nice when it does not end up in the dirt or somewhere around the backstop. The other reason he is still around is because of all the numbers I could use to break down AJ Burnett, the one Joe Girardi seems to be most concerned with is $16,500,000. That is the money the Yankees are giving Burnett this season. It is a shot to the egos of both manager and GM Brian Cashman to demote anyone making that many millions.
Now that we have established Burnett’s recent history, I believe Phil Hughes has much more to offer both the Yankee present and future. It is a disservice to the team if Girardi shuffles Hughes between the rotation and bullpen until he is eventually ineffective in both, all to defend what has often proven himself to be a bad investment. Phil Hughes was the most valuable Yankee prospect for years; we refused to trade him away for Johan Santana in his prime. Since when did that same guy get treated like an expendable player to help a much less worthy veteran than an ‘07 Johan? Hughes’ numbers are bloated in a season that he spent injured in the early months; I believe they are not indicative of his ability and what he can bring to the team from this point onward. This makes Burnett’s futility slightly more difficult to define by the numbers. If you are willing to grant me the Hughes exception, Burnett’s ERA is about a full run higher than the next highest on the starting staff. Hughes can still be developed into an elite pitcher, whereas Burnett is sadly at the stage that will likely linger for the remainder of his career.
There is a reason I can rant for days about my team’s fifth starter, a position that is typically insignificant. Many teams don’t even use a fifth starter come playoff time. The reason the Yankees are different is because as mentioned earlier, we do not have two elite guys that can carry us to a championship. Ideally, a second Sabathia would appear and then the rest of the pitchers could really be anybody. The Phillies steamrolled into last season’s NLCS and ran straight into a wall as Tim Lincecum and Matt Cain led the charge of an unlikely champion. In order to compete with those teams that have multiple aces and situational hitters, every pitcher in the rotation has to be at least good. If Girardi goes the way I fear he might and continues to place his stock in Burnett, I feel as if we have one guaranteed loss per week unless we constantly light up the scoreboard. Keeping him around is essentially blind faith in him becoming the pitcher we bought, as opposed to the pitcher we have. It isn’t the worst risk in the world, but it is not one that a championship contender can afford to take, especially when someone more capable is waiting in the wings. Believe it or not, my managerial standpoint doesn’t leave AJ Burnett out completely. He can be used for long relief out of the bullpen and, more importantly, somebody needs to pie the guys in the face that hit the walk-offs.

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

NFL Goes Green: 2011 Free Agent Frenzy


NFL free agency has definitely lived up to our expectations, revitalizing the league immediately after the end of the lockout. While some teams have stayed conservative, relatively content with their rosters, many dove into the wildfire that continues to expand as the pre-season approaches. There have been some surprises throughout the process that has separated front offices’ men from boys and, predictably, the free agent contest of 2011 has its winners and losers. Originally, I was looking to distinguish a top and bottom five from the rest of the league. What ended up happening after evaluating each and every team showed that the majority of teams who fell on either side leaned more towards losers than winners. In my opinion, the losing franchises from this offseason currently outnumber the winners, seven to four.
Losers:
7. Packers-Due to their age and the fact that their previously injured players are basically acquisitions within themselves, the Packers seem like a champion that is more likely to repeat than any team since the peak of the New England dynasty. Being such a complete and well rounded team gives you the ability to nitpick. Two areas of possible improvement were running back and middle linebacker, seeing as Nick Barnett was released and has since signed with Buffalo. The Packers missed out on Ronnie Brown, Reggie Bush, and any other available back that could have started for them this season. Lofa Tatupu is one of the few big free agents left at this stage, and I think he would be a great fit in Green Bay. Unless they address one of those areas, this off season will remain somewhat of a missed opportunity for a team that is somehow under the salary cap, but is failing to do much about it.
6. Dolphins-Between the Patriots and Jets, the AFC East is an uphill climb for a team in the bottom half. Miami had a small window a few years ago when Tom Brady was injured and the Jets were before their time. Going from 1-15 to 11-5 was a stunning turnaround, but the beating they received at the hands of the Baltimore Ravens in the Wildcard round may have marked the end of this current team’s playoff hopes. Despite a bleak situation, there was hope this month to make some sizeable improvements. There were quarterbacks left and right that could provide help, and picking up Reggie Bush seemed like a great move to compliment Ronnie Brown. However, two problems arose: Ronnie Brown is now gone, and the QB move never happened. They are now a power running team without a power runner; Reggie Bush wouldn’t last two weeks in their current system, and I don’t consider a meeting with Tiki Barber to be any form of redemption. Unless they pull the trigger on a deal for Kyle Orton from Denver, Miami is looking at a slightly worse roster, which could lead to a much worse season.
5. 49ers-I don’t even consider the loss of two defensive starters and failure to sufficiently replace them as the problem here. In a division that allows a 7-9 champion, anything is possible. Each team is one good move away from a playoff spot. In the case of San Francisco, Quarterback Alex Smith has died nine times already and is still in line for the starting spot. Their QB draft pick is from Nevada, an atypical college offense, and will need even more time to adjust to the NFL than the usual prospects. Trading for Donovan McNabb or signing Matt Hasselbeck would have likely made them favorites to win the NFC West. Instead, they stood idly and ended up without a chair when the music stopped. Making the move to pick up Braylon Edwards would be nice, especially with Michael Crabtree injured, but this division will be won with quarterback play. Kyle Orton, as mentioned before, is the last capable QB who is also available. There isn’t enough of him to go around to each team in need, and San Francisco has done nothing to lift their division from its atmosphere of mediocrity. I would say they are the last of the minor offenders; everyone from here on out can be labeled as some form of disgrace.
4. Giants-The Giants actually kicked off the free agent frenzy, signing undrafted free agent Mark Herzlich. As a cancer survivor with first round talent, the Giants made a great move and got an absolute steal. From that point on, everything went downhill. Instead of cutting one of their two running backs (most likely Brandon Jacobs), they chose to cut two of their starting offensive linemen and immediately began restructuring the deals of both backs. While they later signed one replacement lineman, more problems appeared. The receiving core is a big question mark between Steve Smith still unsigned and the failure to sign Plaxico Burress. As if this isn’t enough, Kevin Boss is crazy enough to think he is an elite tight end and should be paid like one. In addition to this dispute, Osi Umenyiora was seeking a trade after the Giants failed to renegotiate his contract. Eventually this died down, but there is still tension. But no worries everyone, they did have time to sign David Carr. The Giants started over the cap and had to cut players, but made questionable decisions and are currently too much of a mess to even focus on making any progressive moves.
3. Bengals-Already a shaky organization, the Bengals can ill afford some tough breaks. Volatile personalities have led to frequent arrests and overall instability for a team that has enough to deal with when competing alongside the Steelers and Ravens in the AFC North. Stealing the aforementioned starters from the 49ers defense and resigning running back Cedric Benson are positive elements. In addition to this, the Bengals have recently been a team that drafts very well. However, the organization was sent spiraling when every dynamic element of their passing game fell apart. Chad Ochocinco was traded away to the Patriots; Terrell Owens was lost to free agency and will not likely be signed until September. Carson Palmer is fed up with the entire franchise and has forced an ultimatum upon Coach Marvin Lewis: either to trade his disgruntled Quarterback, or watch him retire. Coach Lewis has chosen to take an integrity based stance, displaying the strong will of the team and inviting the retirement. I personally think this is a selfish injustice to the organization that is more about saving face than making his team better. There could be some serious value for Palmer on the trade market, at least a second round pick and possibly even a first.
2. Bears-Between what I believe was a massive overachievement last year and a rapidly improving NFC North, the Bears needed to make improvements this summer. Their biggest weakness was a receiving core that does little to help an already inconsistent Jay Cutler at QB. They get off to a sluggish start, signing no noteworthy players that would help their areas of need and losing two defensive starters. They then make arguably the worst move of this month of madness by trading away tight end Greg Olsen to the Panthers for a third round draft pick. Young quarterbacks and bad ones have a few things in common, one of which is frequent reliance on his tight end. Whether or not you believe in Jay Cutler, it is commonly known that he frequently resembles a bad QB; Olsen provided a security blanket. When in doubt, the biggest target that hovers around the middle of the field and has great hands and athleticism is a pretty safe bet. Losing this puts much more pressure on the weapons the Bears do have or acquire, and I do not have much faith in the decision to pick up Cowboy castaways Marion Barber and Roy Williams. They lack a number one receiver and primary target; this and Cutler’s shaky play may lead to the most stagnant offense ever led by Offensive Coordinator Mike Martz.
1. Buccaneers-As I said while writing about the upcoming free agent frenzy a few weeks ago, the Bucs were by far in the most advantageous position due to their massive total of over $50 million that they had to spend on both their own players and others to add to a young and promising roster. In arguably the best division in football, keeping up with a couple of superbowl contenders in New Orleans and Atlanta would be a challenge, but they were at the forefront of the Nnamdi Asomugha race and if he didn’t pan out well there were plenty of other moves to be made. The Bucs took the conservative route and showed everyone exactly why they will not continue to compete with the league’s best throughout the next few years. It is one thing to prioritize your own players and reserve money for renewing their contracts; my own Steelers have been doing just that. And for a team that started $10 million over the salary cap, that’s a fine idea. But Tampa Bay could start another franchise with their cap space; they could buy the LA Dodgers. There isn’t even a move to criticize here because that implies that they did anything of value, which was not the case. Wait wait…they did sign a punter. The Jets spend money they don’t even have, and this team can’t even make a move? I don’t know a Bucs fan but after seeing this attitude, I at least know why.
The NFL transaction market is not a system built for chaos, and that list of organizational futility has shown just that. Noticeably left off that list of losers were the Dallas Cowboys. Many analysts have grouped them amongst the league’s worst in this category, but I feel they cut the right players to get rid of a team salary that was well over the new cap. The team’s original position needs to be factored in when grading their results. Alongside the misguided activity and frustrating inactivity, however, were a few displays of inspiring and aggressive moves that will truly change the course of division races in favor of a few winners. These fortunate teams are few in number, but successfully navigated through the most hectic period in their managerial history.
4. Jets-As my only winner that does not involve the team in question getting any better, the Jets are in a unique position. Last year, due to the expiration of the last Collective Bargaining Agreement, there was actually an uncapped year in which any team could spend all the money they could gather. The Jets took full advantage and were the big winners of last year’s off season. While this was beneficial in many ways, it carried a long term burden. Their hands were essentially tied this summer, and their main focus had to be saving money instead of spending it. Despite this, they were frontrunners for much of the Asomugha race and were eventually able to resign players such as Santonio Holmes, Antonio Cromartie, and David Harris. This was made possible through both the unselfishness of Mark Sanchez and LaDainian Tomlinson, who were willing to take pay cuts to help out, and an overall front office mindset that fans of any other team should be envious of. Their only losses were Brad Smith, a decent player who was sufficiently replaced in the draft by receiver/returner Jeremy Kerley from TCU, and star receiver Braylon Edwards. They signed Plaxico Burress fresh out of prison who, at this stage of his career, will only be slightly worse than Edwards in his prime and will even be a better red zone target. The fact that the Jets were able to maintain the overall caliber of their team despite the previous summer’s splurge makes them an incredible accomplishment.
3. Patriots-I am not the biggest fan of assuming a risky move is a good one just because Coach Bill Belichick made it. It is the low degree of risk that makes their two big moves so efficient and effective. They traded for Chad Ochocinco from the Bengals and Albert Haynesworth from the Redskins. If I own another team and the Patriots call me, I immediately hang up, because I’m probably getting ripped off. They simply know how to get the better end of trades by underpaying for talented veterans. Randy Moss was the perfect example, a 4th round pick to the Raiders for a record setting season…I’d do that too. For whatever reason, the rest of the league lets them get away with these garbage deals. Haynesworth has the work ethic of a sloth and Chad has become a bigger gimmick than talent. But since they paid so little for these guys, they can just cut them if they don’t work out well. There is no risk and such a high reward because they both have pro bowl history and potential.
2. Panthers-For the eight or so years that I have been watching football, I have never seen a team so unhappy with finishing last in the league. The Panthers could have easily let their own free agents escape and accepted the harsh reality of simply being a bad team. Instead, they immediately worked towards resigning John Beason (the biggest beast in the league that no one knows enough about), Charles Johnson and Deangelo Williams. With the new CBA, rookie QB’s are no longer grossly overpaid, so Cam Newton doesn’t cost nearly as much as a Sam Bradford or he-who-shall-not-be-named (Jamarcus Russell). Using this extra money, the Panthers also made the move to trade for Bears tight end Greg Olsen. As I said earlier, rookie QB’s love a good tight end, and the Panthers also picked up Jeremy Shockey earlier this year. Due to the competitiveness of this division, these moves may not help their position among their rivals, but they will win them more games and make them a better team. Who knows, maybe one of this year’s surprises is the Panthers finishing third in the NFC South ahead of the stagnant Buccaneers. As a matter of fact, I’d like to crown that as my first prediction I may regret later, one of my favorite lists every year. I just feel that so much of a team’s potential can be seen through the attitude of the management, and the willingness as an organization to both improve and compete.
1. Eagles-I considered trying to find a way to put Philly anywhere other than number one on this list but that would just be contrary for the sake of being contrary. It may be obvious but it is also true: The Philadelphia Eagles cornered this year’s market. To put this in perspective, they added half a defensive line with a pro bowler and a super bowl champion (Jason Babin and Cullen Jenkins). They spent themselves into a secondary surplus with the best cornerback combination in the league. It started by ripping off the Cardinals and sending an overrated/perennial backup quarterback away for arguably a top ten cornerback and a 2nd round draft pick. Then, they shocked the sports world by also signing Nnamdi Asomugha for much less money than he was expected to go for (5 years/$60 million). By the way, they still have Asante Samuel. They signed Vince Young to back up Mike Vick; once he’s injured their system remains the same due to the similar skill sets. They signed Ronnie Brown, the most underrated player on the market, to solve the short yardage problem that they have had for about a decade. As a former franchise back, he agreed to a one year, one million dollar contract just because he sees a championship ring in their near future. They signed right tackle Ryan Harris in a quiet yet brilliant move that will protect Vick’s blind side and may save their season if he keeps him safe. The hype will be this team’s only downfall; once they were crowned a Dream Team by the media their chances took a bit of a shot. Despite the challenges provided by such moves that will test their chemistry and mental toughness, the Eagles have without a doubt won the free agent contest of the ages.
One of the many things that make the NFL great is the competitive balance that levels the playing field. Football is the only sport where there are no shortcuts and a championship cannot be bought. Unlike the Miami Heat, the Eagles haven’t essentially clinched a ring; they are still just chasing one. The free agent frenzy has been great fun, but in the grand scheme of things will not determine the superbowl champion. The Steelers and Packers were boring but will be just fine. The Patriots will be great with or without their poorly conditioned fat man and the Titan of Twitter. The real determinant of greatness will be as it always has been, the strength and execution of the 32 NFL systems. With that said, this unique few weeks has been a crazy second half of summer to remember.

Monday, July 25, 2011

The Dog Days Are Over


March 12th, 2011 marked the beginning of the NFL lockout that has drained most news in sports of interesting off-season storylines that do not involve litigation procedures and struggles for leverage. The 132 day journey has seen its shifts in the balance of power between the NFL ownership, led by commissioner Roger Goodell and the former NFLPA (Players Association), represented by executive director DeMaurice Smith. To briefly summarize the issue, NFL teams claim they are losing money and therefore need to increase the percent they take in of the overall yearly league revenue. Think of it as a pie chart in which the players’ piece is lessened to make room for the owners who are allegedly in need. The players, in response, demanded financial transparency and the proof that would lead us to believe the teams are actually in need of an increased percentage. Initially poor communication led to the standstill that fueled the lockout. All communication between players and teams has been forbidden, which prevents any development or progression within the 32 organizations. However, the circumstances that caused the lockout have been beaten to death seeing as there has been nothing else to talk about in the football world and the crisis of missing any regular season games has finally been averted. The effects of the lockout are now most relevant; the situation itself has thankfully been made an issue of the past now that the two sides have reached a long awaited agreement. Some aspects of the lockout were a bit overblown and, in hindsight, the whole thing wasn’t too disastrous. In other aspects, there is some long term damage taken from it all. The current state of the post-lockout NFL may be an extensive summary of an entire summer, but can easily be broken up into three basic categories to describe the labor dispute: the good, the bad, and the ugly.
The Good: Let’s take a good look at what was actually missed as a result of the lockout. OTAs (Organized Team Activities) and voluntary workouts/minicamps were lost; we are without the most insignificant part of the off-season that even most players would probably like to do away with. Brett Favre was most likely wishing the NFL was locked out every year until mid August or so. The veterans really benefit from this; they either have time to heal up for training camps or can be trusted with their own workout schedules. Despite the series of obstacles, the league is right on schedule. Only one or two training camps will be delayed a few days to finalize the new Collective Bargaining Agreement that takes us all the way to 2021 and they get to argue over it all again, this time with more experience on the matter. The only other part of the off-season is what I’ve missed most, but it is actually somewhat of a blessing in disguise. Due to the lack of transactions, free agency has been dead. While this has left NFL rosters stale and with gaping holes that need to be filled, it all set up what will be the most exciting and crazy free agent frenzy in the history of professional sports. Approximately 400 positions are empty on NFL rosters that need to be filled with enough time to assimilate all newly arriving players into their respective systems. ESPN’s Adam Schefter will get less sleep in the next two weeks reporting all the madness than I will tonight after writing this. The bottom line on ESPN will just leave the breaking news banner up, replacing each name with the next big story. Listed below are only some of the players that will either be unrestricted free agents or possibly traded/released by their current teams.
Players who might be on different teams next year: Nnamdi Asomugha, Antonio Cromartie, Ahmad Bradshaw, Osi Umenyiora, Deangelo Williams, Brandon Jacobs, Tiki Barber, Cedric Benson, Ronnie Brown, Kevin Kolb, Plaxico Burress, Terrell Owens, Randy Moss, Chad “Ochocinco”, Carson Palmer, Braylon Edwards, Matt Hasselbeck, Santonio Holmes, Steve Smith, Santana Moss, Steve Breaston, Brad Smith, Donovan McNabb, Vince Young, Reggie Bush…What’s even crazier is that teams will have to cut players to clear cap space now that the salary cap has been reinstated, which will create another wave of free agents.
The Bad: By now every undrafted free agent has most likely lost his chance to make a significant impact on a team this year. If there was a lockout during every year, the success of players such as Kurt Warner, Warren Moon, Tony Romo, James Harrison or Antonio Gates would have been either delayed or prevented. Rookies suffer a similar fate; having less time to learn playbooks or work with coaches will hurt even top pick Cam Newton’s chances of making an immediate contribution. Another problem provided by lockout aftermath is the adjusted salary cap, and how many teams are already over it. Despite the need to add free agents, teams like the Giants, Jets, Steelers and Raiders are an average of $10 million over the new cap. Some teams will benefit from the adjustment; for example, the Buccaneers are an alarming $59 million dollars under and can buy essentially anyone they need. The new restrictions provided by the league’s agreement will test the ability of General Managers and how they can choose from what will be a sea of available talent. The lack of preparation this season might hurt the overall level of competition. The stronger and more stable organizations will excel while the majority of the league struggles to pull itself together. The chances of seeing a surprising success story or a variety of championship contenders are unlikely. The NFL has more parody than any other sport because of how quickly a franchise can turn itself around. The source of such improvements is the building of team chemistry, which starts as early as April. The early practices themselves are not very important in the grand scheme of the off-season, but Drew Brees and the Saints would not have exploded onto the NFL scene so quickly a few years ago if they didn’t have the months needed to grow as a team.
The Ugly: Best personified by Roger Goodell. The relations between players and the governing body turned hostile through this lockout. Players left and right came forward expressing disrespect and even hate towards Goodell, who was already under fire for his harsh punishment against negative off the field behavior and “illegal” hits as the NFL inches closer and closer towards skirts and two hand touch. While an agreement has been reached, the tension will remain between the two sides that went so long without budging, until something had to be done to save the season. The other side of the ugly portion of the lockout is how poorly informed most of the players are on their own situation. As a fan, I and many in my position knew more about the CBA than the players who it directly affected. Twitter has revealed itself as the absolute devil when immaturity and knee-jerk reactions meet technology’s ability to speak to millions in an instant. Whenever players express frustration towards the league in all their free time, it would become news within minutes. In such comments many things were said, few of which were constructive criticisms. DeMaurice Smith may have been a good enough negotiator to protect his players, but he certainly did not keep them well educated. Outside of the ten plaintiffs in the litigation cases, I doubt many NFL players have even read the new deal. Hopefully, everything will settle down now that both sides and the fans can enjoy the collective relief and happiness that comes with the end of the 132 day lockout.
Luckily, the NFL lockout has left the actual league’s schedule unaffected. Pre-season games will begin in August after the free agent frenzy that will leave fans exhausted from trying to keep up after five months of emptiness. I may have to write up another NFL summary just to remind myself and anyone reading what exactly happened between the 32 front offices and the nearly 500 players who were either cut, signed, or traded. One loose end has yet to be tied here and can be done so quickly, seeing as the player in question has totaled more time than his off-season antics have deserved. Brett Favre’s 4-year special The Indecision has followed us for long enough. If there’s one worse way for Mike Vick to hurt society after his scandal, it would be to let the Eagles sign the soap star gunslinger. But I’ll cut my first rant of the season short, and I’m happy to have a season to talk about at all. Happy Football Day everyone.

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

If I Were a Mets Fan


Being a younger sibling comes with its difficulties. While I cannot speak from experience, the challenges that come with living in the shadow of another are self explanatory. Being a Mets fan is accompanied by the constant struggle of, understandably, being the “other team” in New York. However, the position the Mets find themselves in this year is much more intriguing than their Bronx counterpart. For today I will be a Mets fan to experience the promising signs and questionable directions taken by the team that is forced to live in the biggest shadow of all.
Not so long ago, the Mets were just as competitive as the Yankees. David Wright and Jose Reyes were the future, and in their first four complete seasons together (2005-08) the Mets enjoyed an average of 89 wins. It seems like just yesterday when Endy Chavez robbed Scott Rolen and the Mets were one swing away from a World Series appearance that Carlos Beltran failed to even attempt. I don’t mean to bring up any painful memories, but the point is that we are not so far removed from the idea of glory for the New York Mets. So what happened in a only a couple of years that led to their more recent loveable loser persona? To put it shortly, the Phillies happened. A number of aggressive transactions and consecutive monumental collapses in Septembers led to the Phillies hurdling both the Mets and Braves to the top of the National League East division. The Mets haven’t been able to fully recover from their late season struggles. While they were tough, it’s about time the Mets were back in the playoff discussion, and this season may be the one to move their organization back in that direction.
The Mets have quietly been very competitive this year, maintaining a .500 record at 48-48. Clearing the realm of pushovers is the first necessary step towards redemption. They remain 9 games out of the wild card race and the playoffs do seem like a long shot, but it is far from impossible and a closer look at some of their individual elements lead me to believe that collective success is on its way. Offensively, their only issue is durability. Despite practically routine injuries and trips to the DL for Wright and Reyes, the Mets are surprisingly 2nd in the National League in batting average and 5th in runs scored. If they are capable of such numbers now, there is no reason to believe they cannot be the highest scoring and most efficient offense in the National League if those guys can stay reasonably healthy, and if Jason Bay does anything but remain a corpse. In terms of their pitching, another pleasant surprise makes the Mets a formidable opponent. I watched R.A. Dickey shut down Yankee bats multiple times by throwing wiffle balls. His collective ERA when combined with Dillon Gee and Jonathan Niese is 3.70, which is serviceable if they could only find an anchor to complete the starting rotation. Ideally, that ace will make a return later this summer as Johan Santana returns from yet another shortened season. A few things would have to go their way on the health front, but all the pieces are in place to assemble a championship (yes, championship) season within the next couple of years.
The last obstacle standing is unfortunately a sizeable one. My lingering suspicion is that the entire front office is either completely incapable of winning or is just fundamentally against it. I wont even blame them entirely for investing in Bernie Madoff and being left essentially broke. I understand they are working with limited funds but in a season in which the Pirates are in first place, I have no pity. The Mets have gotten rid of the closing relief pitcher who holds the record for saves in a single season for the foreseeable future and has plenty left in the tank to remain one of the league’s best at finishing games. They are also most likely planning to get rid of their best power hitter who boasts a .293 average, Carlos Beltran. As a Yankee fan, I am now accustomed to my power hitters accumulating terrible batting averages and just swinging for a short right field fence over and over again. I would not let go of a guy who can do that and still play the field. The reason the Mets are clearing financial space like they’re the Knicks is all to keep a table-setter. While he is a great one, Jose Reyes simply isn’t worth getting rid of multiple great players just to maybe keep one. He may even decide after this year to leave because the Mets are a financial mess and they got rid of people just to keep him so the team is collectively less talented than it previously was. He has already refused to renew or even discuss his contract so far during the current season, and I’m sure the stability and promise provided by being Derek Jeter’s successor or a key piece on another contender is pretty tempting. The Mets might lose everyone if they maintain this desperate style of ownership and management. As a temporary Mets fan, I can’t even tell if we’re trying to be a seller that’s building for a distant future or a buyer that’s trying to win now. The mixed signals leave me confused and, most forebodingly, unsure as to whether or not Fred Wilpon and company even know what they’re doing.
When I look at the Mets I see potential that ends in a ring, but the smaller and less evil empire in New York is a fragile one. Too many wrong turns and tough breaks as an organization could leave fans devastated, from rentals like me to the absolute die hards. Potential has its way of never coming to fruition. If I hear the Houston Texans are the NFL’s team of tomorrow one more time, I’ll be forced to point out that they forgot to at some point make themselves the team of today, and I fear the same for the Detroit Lions. On the baseball note, the Mets have to avoid that tomorrow mindset and realize that they have the pieces to win right now. They just need the strong leadership, a consistent pitching ace, and their strength and conditioning guys in charge need to be either improved, fired, or shot.

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Born in the USA: 2011 World Cup


Just when you think you’ve seen the most incredible moment in American soccer one year ago, Megan Rapinoe and Abby Wambach make it look like child’s play in both magnitude and degree of difficulty. While Landon Donovan’s goal was great, it provided a 1-0 win over Algeria to survive the weakest group in the 2010 World Cup and gave us our only win in the tournament. It also never happens if the keeper holds on to Clint Dempsey’s initial attempt. The play made by the American women was a half hour later in its respective game against an international superpower that placed the United States in the semifinals.

Only the golden voice of Ian Darke could do the moment any justice. The USA was facing adversity from every angle; questionable officiating teamed up with one of the most talented teams in the world as Brazil held a 2-1 lead in the stoppage time of extra time. Between a mulligan on a penalty shot, playing man-down for about an hour, and a display of diving that left Italians with their pens and papers out, the world number one women’s soccer team was all but dead in the 122nd minute of the world cup quarterfinal…and then this happened.
 Abby Wambach’s clutch header leveled the match and erased any tough breaks we were given, setting up the best goalkeeper in the world to bring home the victory. While there is a lot left in our journey through the 2011 World Cup, there is already so much to reflect on.
Our first two games were more or less taking care of business, beating Korea 2-0 and Columbia 3-0. The deadly range displayed in the first couple of games turned out to be a double edged sword, as we became a bit too dependent on low percentage shots against Sweden, who eventually defeated the Americans 2-1. Our offense looked stale and our possessions lacked any rhythm. The defense also looked slow and made some uncharacteristic mistakes that cost us the group, which is what forced the Brazil match in the first place. In response to their issues, team USA made the proper adjustments and become more aggressive and physical, scoring both of their goals inside the box in this last game. We also used Brazil’s sweeper position against them, which makes it nearly impossible to be caught off sides on that final play in extra time. Ideally, both methods of play should come together against our final two opponents. Luckily enough, Germany was ousted early by Japan and, seeing as we took care of Brazil ourselves, we have now become an overwhelming favorite to win it all this year. However, as uncle Ben would say, with great power comes great responsibility, and the pressure to become champions for the first time since 1999 continues to accumulate. I acknowledge this challenge as a tough one, but it’s a problem I’d like to deal with.
In terms of our immediate future, the danger of an emotional hangover is a considerable one. That last game is nearly impossible to follow up well, so Wambach and company need to suppress their memories as strongly as possible and treat this game as an individual event that involves a worthy opponent. While France is not traditionally a superpower in women’s soccer, they did rattle one when they lost 4-2 against Germany in group play. The score was not a good summary of the game; France’s goalie was ejected and Germany was able to prevent what could have easily been a shocking upset. I believe that defeating France and the winner of the Sweden/Japan game will require tapping into the only resource that the Americans have not yet fully used in this tournament. Our superior athleticism needs to manifest itself in the form of Heather O’Reilly or Alex Morgan as a substitute. While good execution alone would be enough to win, keeping France’s defense on their heels and on the run would likely cement our place in the final game.
The shot of Mia Hamm after winning the 1999 World Cup is one of the most famous images in the history of patriotism in American sports. This group of women have the opportunity to become legends of a similar stature. Wednesday morning’s showdown against the French is the next step for team USA, and hopefully not the last.

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

The Price of Loyalty: Derek Jeter


Very few athletes reach the pinnacle of adoration from their fans and the sports nation as a whole. To do so typically requires at least a decade of personal excellence and collective glory, preferably with one team. No one man today more greatly personifies this than New York Yankees captain Derek Jeter. His career resume includes a 1996 Rookie of the Year award; Jeter wasted no time becoming the heart and soul of the Yankees. Since then, he has accumulated five Gold Gloves, four Silver Sluggers, twelve All-Star appearances and, most importantly, five World Series championships. What has impressed me the most is that among so many legends, he will become the first Yankee to record 3000 hits. Something tangible will then set him apart from even Ruth, Gehrig, Mantle, and countless others. With or without the career summary, it can be agreed that there isn’t much Derek Jeter hasn’t earned. In the past two seasons, however, his public perception has taken a negative turn. As we approach the All-Star break, one of the league’s most prestigious and now problematic players has become a story of his own. From his contract and position with the Yankees to his 2011 All-Star selection, what does Derek Jeter deserve right now?
While his reputation has exceeded his current production, many fans and analysts have gone overboard when critiquing Jeter’s situation. After a first half that rivals last year for the title of worst season ever in his career, Derek Jeter’s numbers are certainly unworthy of being selected for next week’s showcasing of the league’s best players. With that said, I have no problem with him receiving the most votes among shortstops for two simple reasons. First of all, as much as the league tries, this game does not matter. While it does determine home field advantage for the World Series, I cannot fully respect any game that benches all of the best players in the league and lets the reserve players determine the outcome of the game that alters the course of the championship series. If the game really mattered so much, Roy Halladay would end up pitching eight or nine innings, which I currently doubt. I see the All-Star game as a celebration of the players that have grown to or will soon represent this league. Because of the 3000 hit chase, this will most likely be the last time that Derek Jeter is at the forefront of baseball news for a personal accomplishment. What better direction to aim the spotlight? The second and more glaring reason is the overwhelming lack of competition among American League shortstops. In the National League, this would not have happened with Jose Reyes having an MVP season. However, telling me that Cleveland’s Asdrubal Cabrera is really being robbed would be an overstatement. He isn’t young enough to be the next rising star, and hasn’t been good enough in his career to be a well respected veteran. He is just a good player having a good year.
The Yankees issues with Jeter are much more complicated, but I will not tolerate anyone saying that this era’s pride of the Yankees is overpaid. This criticism plays into a natural trend that any athlete undergoes. The truth is that during his early years, Jeter was underpaid. He won two championships before ever making one million dollars in a season. He won five rings before making more than ten million in a season, which is still not in the conversation of league’s highest paid players. A-Rod was making about 25 million per year by the time he teamed up with Mr. November to win one. The key to breaking down athlete contracts is this: rookies make old-man veteran money, and the old guys make rookie money. This isn’t the NFL; rookie money isn’t the best thing in the world. Jeter earned his money, then he made it. Only problem is that his current production matches that of his first contract ($130,000 in 1996), so he is considered grossly overpaid. It is a system of paying one’s dues, and then the dues pay you. It will happen again once Robinson Cano finally makes the money he deserves, and by that time he will be past his prime and will likely be criticized in a similar manor.
I will stick up for Derek Jeter’s paychecks as long as I live, but his role on his team is a very different story, and needs to be seriously re-evaluated. During his time on the DL, Eduardo Nunez showed some promise as a hitter while making some shaky plays in the field. Overall, I believe that Jeter is still a marginally better player. However, we did not rely on Nunez to leadoff the game; Joe Girardi threw him into the seven spot and anything he did was considered a pleasant surprise. Jeter, on the other hand, is killing us as a leadoff man who simply does not get on base enough. In order to be used appropriately, Jeter has to be moved further down in the lineup after he reached 3000 career hits. Then one step further, after Jorge Posada presumably retires in the next year or so, make him the DH and start to groom the next shortstop. Pay the man the money he deserves, but winning is more important than any superstar’s ego.
The main aspect of this complicated situation is the intangible factor of loyalty. Derek Jeter never took fans for a ride by making every expiring contract into an auction; he never even entertained the idea of playing for another team. His leadership and clutch performances are unmatched, reviving a 22 time champion after the 1980s and making it 27. Jeter’s contract calls into question the price of such loyalty. Hank Steinbrenner determined that price to be about $56 million over four years as the captain’s last contract was finalized. I believe such a determination is more than worthy of the last we can squeeze out of the shortstop, numbuh two, Derek…Jeter.

Thursday, June 30, 2011

America's Pastime to Shine


Thursday night marked the end of the NBA as we know it. Being plagued by the NFL lockout for several months now has not been made any easier by the shutting down of a second major sport. Considering the underwhelming nature of the NHL off-season, essentially 75% of the world of major professional sports is out of commission. America’s “Big 4” sports have been reduced to one. With all that said, who could be better fit for handling the fate of the American sports fan this year than America’s pastime? Unless you’re like me and have also been following our women’s pursuit of the World Cup Championship in Germany, or can’t wait for the Nadal-Murray match at Wimbledon, Major League Baseball may be your only hope. Typically, the long summer season of the MLB is frowned upon as irrelevant; September marks the first “significant” baseball thrown in the eyes of many. Devout baseball fans may not have this issue, but I believe all eyes should be on the MLB this summer, especially after the series of blows dealt to other struggling leagues. Sporscenter’s extensive coverage of the two lockouts have made ESPN more depressing than late night Fox news (I know it’s 10:00 pm and yes, I know where my children are, now please tell me which household appliance can kill me) . Instead of the grief and waiting for sports that have recently disappointed us with their structural issues, here are my top five reasons why baseball should receive your attention for the foreseeable future.
5. The Philly Phatale-Some people think overwhelming favorites are boring, but I find them the most exciting teams in sports because so much can go so terribly wrong. The Phillies look like they will be able to maintain a lead in the less than spectacular NL East, but there are a few major issues that could affect their playoff push once they get to September. This is an unbelievable roster, but they have historically lacked durability in both the lineup and rotation. Utley, Rollins, and Victorino have all battled relatively recent injury problems, and Howard is a strikeout machine who needs those guys functioning around him. Oswalt recently began his stint on the Disabled List and Hamels left during his last start in the 5th inning against the Red Sox. Each injury puts more pressure on the remaining players, which may prove to be too much for even Philly to handle.
4. The Boys are Back in Town-Like any other season, key players have gone down with some unfortunate injuries. Despite a few tough breaks, baseball has recently welcomed back key players such as Ryan Zimmerman and former MVP Joe Mauer. I continue to keep an eye on the Minnesota Twins who are, in my eyes, in contention regardless of their record. I wouldn’t be surprised if they made a run to even pass the Detroit Tigers once someone breaks the news to Justin Verlander and tells him that he is in fact human. In addition to all this, Derek Jeter returns to the Yankee lineup Monday to resume his chase for his 3000th career hit, a milestone never reached by any legend of the world’s greatest franchise. The return of some bigtime names should help and bring more attention to baseball.
3. The Trade Deadline-The classic debate begins. Who are the buyers, and who are the sellers? As the halfway point and all star festivities approach, the MLB hot stove is on full blast. The biggest acquisition of all may belong to whoever ends up with the Los Angeles Dodgers. The most interesting team on this borderline is the New York Mets. They are on the outer-most ring of contention, showing some promise lately but still a long shot to compete with the Phillies in the long run. With big contracts such as Carlos Beltran and Jose Reyes, they could either trade them for the best available offer, or hang on to them and roll the dice. Through this option, they could either keep their talent or become the next Cleveland Cavaliers. New York is not a city accustomed to losing its stars, so I expect them to keep these two guys. With that said, they better be able to keep them in the future or an already shaky front office will have a lot of explaining to do.
2. The NL Central Race-Included in this dogfight is the all-important contract year for St Louis Cardinals superstar Albert Pujols, who is planning to become the league’s highest paid player but is now battling a severe arm injury that has shortened his season. The Cardinals have been alongside two worthy competitors, including the Cincinnati Reds, who have already proven that they are no one year wonder after bursting onto the scene in 2010. The last of this three headed monster is the current division leading Milwaukee Brewers, who have as good a one two punch as there is in the league with Prince Fielder and Ryan Braun who, by the way, is currently riding a twenty game hit streak. This division doesn’t usually have the national spotlight, but it is becoming possibly the most fierce playoff race in the league.
1. Classic Sox vs. Yanks-As per usual the New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox are atop the baseball world. For about fifteen years now, these two teams have continued to make each other better by pushing them both on and off the field. This second to none rivalry is what launched these two teams to dominate the sport in an almost unprecedented fashion. Financially, they are unbeatable, and their play isn’t far behind. The Bo-Sox beatdown of the Bronx Bombers has been almost embarrassing to New Yorkers, who still somehow find themselves with a 2.5 game lead in the AL East division, which is traditionally the best in baseball. These two teams will serve as the anchors to what will be a great collaborative effort to launch baseball from the depths of the hovering steroid scandal of years past.
During the aforementioned steroid scandal, from the hiding to the policing, Bud Selig and company managed to do nearly everything wrong. This created a cloud over the sport that has not fully cleared, even after the technical issues were made right through more strict testing. The scars haven’t gone away, and I don’t suspect they will. However, the MLB has been given an opening. A needy and desperate public has fallen into their lap, limping through the absence of both the NFL and NBA. Baseball should not only draw our attention; they should monopolize it. Granted, the NFL lockout could end any day now, so the window of opportunity could be any duration. For however long we are faced with this scenario, let’s give America’s past time its due credit for being our one giant in sports that actually has its act together. After all, for what’s listed here and much more, this summer in baseball will be a beautiful thing to watch.