Thursday, February 24, 2011

Spring Fever


Have no fear,this seemingly incessant and endless winter will come to an end...how do I know? The spring fever that manifests itself in the brains of NBA and NHL General Managers...you know that incredible urge to blow up the roster and make that big deal that comes from being cooped up with the same old dreary group of players for too long? This year, suits in both leagues have been busy long in advance of deadline day with the promise of more to come. The largest of the NBA trades came earlier this week when Carmelo Anthony finally arrived in New York. Not to be outdone, the Knicks country cousins in New Jersey pulled off an inspired piece of casting by prying Deron Williams from Utah, stealing the thunder from the big team in Manhattan and grabbing some headlines of their own. But the biggest surprise of the day could be Boston/Okc City, swapping Kendrick Perkins for Jeff Green. Obviously both teams think they are close and are trading for skill sets they perceive to be missing from their current collection of talent. A flurry of deals involving big names and conjecture about the possible imbalance of talent league wide providing fodder for analysis done to death. To the frozen pond and the wheelin' and dealin' looks to reach a fever pitch by Monday's deadline. The most interesting of the deals so far are the Tomas Kaberle move from Toronto to Boston and the Blues deal with Colorado. The swapping of young assets like Erik Johnson and Chris Stewart in the Blues/Avs deal inspires more questions than it answers- specifically from the St Louis point of view, as number 1 picks rarely get traded. Toss in the always frustrating and floating Alexei Kovalev returning to Pittsburgh and its game on, tweaking and tuning up rosters for the stretch drive. All this is a boon for the sports media types as cogent analysis and discussion about the games themselves seem ancillary to the endless prattle about personnel moves. Hours upon hours have been and will be devoted to filling programming based on the player deals done to this point and those speculated to happen in the hours and days ahead. For the sports networks, radio, blogs and websites, its Christmas morning as the trade ticker rolls. So crawl from your igloos and take heart... the flowers will bloom, the trees will blossom, the birds will sing and the winter sports will tune-up their rosters giving us all the water cooler and coffee klatch topics to get us through this longest of winters to the spring ahead.

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

The Deal is Done..........Finally

compliments of ESPN.com


Eatin Lunch with the Cool Kids


Pop quiz- how many teams were represented in this past weekend's NBA All Star game? Hint-30 franchises in the league so......30...20....how about 14? More than half the teams in the league did not send a player to the game. Of the 12 Eastern Conference all stars, Boston and Miami accounted for 7 players on the roster.Today, the long awaited trade of Carmelo Anthony from Denver to the Knicks adds even more star power to Gotham's roster and pairs him with the Knicks big off season signing in Amar'e Stoudemire. Parity? We don't need no stinking parity.... What the NFL spent years working for the NBA is undoing in a matter of 2 or 3 seasons. Why go to Golden State or Toronto when you can eat lunch with the cool kids and play in Miami, Boston, LA or NYC? The sports media blogosphere is ginned up and giddy with speculation that Melo is just the first of a few puzzle pieces in New York that potentially could add Chris Paul or Dwight Howard to the Knickerbockers bench. The NCAA has its power conferences and now the NBA has its power teams, franchises that are uber charged by the massive star power of its jersey wearing goliaths. If ever a league needed a San Francisco Giants or Green Bay Packers its the NBA, where a red headed stepchild of a franchise can exceed the glitter of the big city boys and go on a magical run to a championship, capturing our imagination along the way. You cannot blame the players for wanting to surround themselves with like minded talents and build teams for the ages, but in the overall consolidation of talent on team rosters like consolidation of money, power and influence in business, government or society leads to a disparity that robs the sport of its competitiveness, innovation and appeal. For the long term, let's hope this convergence of superstars on a select few teams is a fad and not a new NBA reality. Makes one pine for a Wizards-Kings final just to prove its possible.

Monday, February 21, 2011

Bracketology- compliments of ESPN.com

Table Scraps


Monday Morning Table Scraps-

Tip of the frozen cap to the folks of Calgary and the NHL for a fine Heritage Classic, 41,000 plus brave souls took in the game in -20 Celsius with the wind as the hometown Flames knocked off the Canadiens 4-0. These games really are the leagues most novel and exciting concept and the real possibility that 4-5 of these outdoor classics could take place every season is a real possibility.

Here's to LeBron James who seemingly took it upon himself to get his fellow Eastern Conference All-Stars worked up into a competitive lather in the second half of last nights' NBA All Star game and at least made the second half and final few minutes somewhat competitive.

Still in LA with the All-Star weekend, despite Kobe's masterful performance and MVP highlight reel game last night, it appears the weekend belonged to the Clippers Blake Griffin. This year's event will forever be remembered for Griffin's Saturday night dunk over a KIA. The torch is quickly being passed to Mr Griffin. In a league deep with individual personalities and brands , the Clippers Griffin is quickly surging to the front of the line.

The worst NHL game ever played could have likely been Saturday night with the Leafs/Senators putting us all through a snore fest for what seemed like forever. Yep, both teams are retooling and players need name tags with all the new faces in the room, but if the on ice product of all these personnel moves is hockey this bad- God help those in Leaf Nation and Senator Land.


So, who's the best team in NCAA hoops??? Not so easy is it. Another weekend of upsets and the parity of this year's offering becomes more obvious as we close in on Selection Sunday 3 weeks from now. Ohio State, Pitt, Kansas and Texas seem like Number 1's but who knows....since mid January it seems it has become anyone's field to be the class of and tournament fave.


Big Full Gorilla props to:


Trevor Bayne

Kobe Bryant

Milos Raonic

Miikka Kiprusoff