Wednesday, January 07, 2009

Before Brett Hull goofed, there was another GM with a tie to Belleville

Michael Farber's Sports Illustrated suplex of Sean Avery is being passed around today. One couldn't help but notice the burn on a certain GM-for-life of the Kingston Frontenacs, who traded for the young Avery once upon a time.
"Owen Sound G.M. Ray McKelvie recalls, " 'A lot of people had already gotten the idea that he wasn't a team player. It was hard to make a deal that made sense for us, until one night in Kingston he had three (goals) and three (assists). A couple of days later (Kingston G.M. Larry Mavety) and I had a deal. Sean could get people riled up, but he was an excellent player." (emphasis mine.)
One of Mavety's trademarks is trading for players based on what they have done vs. the Frontenacs. It is not far off from, "Hey, he scored two goals against us that one time, let's get him." They can't argue with the results -- namely, the fact the team has won less than 40% of its games since Mavety and owner Doug Springer's unholy alliance began a decade ago.

It has even made it as far, however indirectly, as the bible of sports journalism. Seriously, read that Farber piece, it's a beauty.

Meantime, there might be a happy ending for a player whom Mavety did poorly by, former Frontenacs first-rounder Luke Pither. He has been traded to the Belleville Bulls.

(Update: In his first game for Belleville, Pither, the former Frontenacs first-rounder, had five points vs. Oshawa. Meantime, Anthony Peters, who didn't win a game in Kingston this season, ended up getting a shutout out for Saginaw, with fan favourite Kyle Bochek scoring a goal. In the words of Dr. Christopher Turk, "Welcome!")

Related:
The Trouble With Sean Avery (Michael Farber, Sports Illustrated; via Torontosportsmedia's Weblog)

Snark break ... that was quite Ruud of him ...



No word of a lie. For years, the Ottawa 67's had the slogan "Hockey With Bite." Their NHL counterparts have co-opted it; that it also Jarkko Ruutu was doing, plus a Finn would never miss a chance to parody something a Swedish player was accused of doing.

The Senators players are beyond mocking, although did you see Eugene Melnyk out on the ice celebrating with the world junior team after it won the gold medal on Monday? Granted, it was a proud moment for Canadians from Barbados to Vancouver Island.

The topic to turn your nose up at today: Tonya Harding is scheduled for a mixed martial arts fight in Detroit. Spare the wisecracks. It was 15 years ago and God forbid there ever would be a woman in figure skating who didn't conform to the stereotypes. She should be thanked for actually making Nancy Kerrigan relevant for three months back in 1994.

Julián de Guzmán has never been shy about criticizing the Canadian Soccer Assocation. Calling it "a cancer" in an interview with The Canadian Stretford End has some serious damn factor, though. (Our senior men's national team should have a score like the one Sam had with that inteview.)

The Globe & Mail has its sweeping take on hockey violence.

As Jason Giambi returns to Oakland, six words that make neck hairs stand on end: "Jack Cust as an everyday outfielder."

Today is the 15th anniversary of the release of Cabin Boy. Count yourself lucky that is not being broken out for a full post, although the day is young.

This post is worth nothing, but this is worth noting:


Cooperstown: More support for the Rock

"No player in major league history has a better stolen base percentage than Raines’ 84.7. He stole 70 or more for six straight seasons. His career on-base percentage of .385 is so bar beyond his peers it’s ridiculous.

How did 75 percent of the voters ignore Raines a year ago? It makes no sense. Hopefully, the big jump in votes he receives this year puts him in position to make the trip to Cooperstown he so obviously deserves in 2010." -- Tim Cowlishaw, Dallas Morning News
Forty-two per cent or bust, people. It would be a big step.

Tuesday, January 06, 2009

To an athlete dying young; 16 reasons to smile

You almost don't want to say anything cheap or dumb about this kind of story.

David Gough, a reporter at the Wallaceburg (Ont.) Courier-Press, is owed big time for sharing this story. The local Junior C hockey club, the Lakers, lost a teammate, Tristan Carswell, who died in his sleep Dec. 28, three days after Christmas. He was just 19 years old.
"The Lakers first game was something a Hollywood scriptwriter couldn’t have written better. The Lakers opened the scoring 16 seconds into the game with a goal by Nash Lozon. They scored their final goal of the game (a 3-0 win on Jan. 3) with an empty-net goal by Chris Lalonde with 16 seconds remaining in the game.

"Carswell’s jersey number? Sixteen.

"Additionally there was a stoppage in play in the first period with the clock showing 16:16. "
One does not presume to be any kind of a theologian or even know for sure that God exists. Is an all-time crazy coincidence, at the very least.

One should not infer too much from a story about a junior hockey team. No doubt, though, if you're a hockey fan living in Ontario, you could use a little pick-me-up. The January blahs have set in; the glow of the world juniors is fading fast. The Leafs and Senators are offering precious little solace (and it's all the fault of Jason Spezza, just to capture the spirit of the thing).

Regardless, reading of a group of athletes, who at the roughest of times, came together "to overcome pain and wrong and death," in Freddie Shero's immortal phrase, is heartwarming. No one can explain why it was Carswell who was taken from his family and friends too soon, but a story like this makes one appreciate having people who are there for the rough times.

(Thanks, David.)

Related:
Number 16 always with the Lakers (David Gough, Wallaceburg Courier-Press)

Opening Day a mere 19 weeks away for Rapids

The Unofficial Ottawa Rapids Blog will soon be a hive of activity.

For now, Carl Kiiffner has a poll up about ticketing at Ottawa Stadium. This is important.

The gut feeling? It's going to work out. The difference between last season and this summer will be night and day. The former owners had cash but lacked common sense. It ought to be a complete 180 under new GM Barry Robinson, who having worked in politics for thirty years, knows about the art of the possible.

'Laugh and wince' -- sounds perfect

The film geek sites have mentioned this already, but it's new to us: The film Big Fan premieres at Sundance. It might not be a sports movie per se, but it's directed by Robert Siegel, who wrote The Wrestler, and it stars Patton Oswalt of Lewis Black's The Root Of All Evil fame.
"Oswalt, one of our favorite comedians, stars as a hardcore New York Giants fan who runs into the team's star quarterback at a strip club, whereupon misunderstandings and violence ensue. The film was written and directed by Robert Siegel, a former Onion writer who also penned one of 2008's best films, The Wrestler. The Sundance blurb says the film 'will make you laugh and wince at the same time,' which is one of our favorite things to do." -- Film.com
A sports movie doesn't have to be about athletes. Game 6, which came out about three years ago, was a perfect example. Please say this will be coming to the Toronto International Film Festival.

Related:
Sundance 2009 - Six Movies to Look For;
A Patton Oswalt vehicle, a David Foster Wallace adaptation and a new teen sex romp from the director of Superbad
(Film.com)

Snark break ... new meaning to 'football mum'

As you readied for Trafficageddon, Day 2 ... and Bryan McCabe's much-anticipated return to the Air Canada Centre.

A good friend became a parent the other day (congratulations!), but suffice to say it probably wasn't like this:
"A football-mad mother stunned hospital midwives by demanding to give birth wearing the strip of her favourite team. Jennifer Peaty astounded staff at Falkirk Royal Infirmary with her unusual request to get changed shortly after going into labour. Husband Kevan was on hand to help his wife into his favourite Falkirk Football Club shirt shortly before the birth of the couple's first son."
Country star Carrie Underwood and the Senators' Mike Fisher are an item. She already recorded a fight song for Ottawa's playoff run. It's called Just A Dream.

(Yes, linking to the song to explain the joke is hacky, but someone'e ego could not handle having a overlap with Carrie Underwood's fanbase. Like Hank III said, the Grand Ole Opry ain't so grand any more.

The World Juniors finally ended. Those of us who like focusing on the 5% that's wrong with it instead of the 95% that's right feel strangely bereft. Talk about a Canadian conundrum. The International Ice Hockey Federation wants the tournament here every year and Canada doesn't.
This post is worth nothing, but this is worth noting
  • One is more inclined to hope Dan Boyle, the San Jose Sharks d-man, can get another a Stanley Cup ring after hearing him talk about what he left behind in Tampa Bay:
    "I remember back to 2004, to our championship run. An amazing time for all of us. People were excited in Tampa. Hockey mattered. That building really rocked. Now most nights it's half full. We were just a couple years removed from a Stanley Cup, and they blew it up. It's turned into a revolving door there.

    "I guess it's only human nature to watch what's going on there, but it's not anything to gloat about. Nothing to take pleasure in.

    "It's sad."
    Tampa Bay Lightning owners Oren Koules and Len Barrie: Two more people Gary Bettman would rather deal with than Jim Balsillie.
  • As you know, I do support Syracuse in college basketball, and Hoops Addict has them ranked No. 6 in the NCAA. Andy Rautins (Leo's son) is blossoming into a big-time scorer.
  • Rod Marinelli, the same guy who presided over the Detroit Lions' 0-16 season, might end up becoming the defensive line coach with the Chicago Bears.
  • TSN pretty much kicked CBC Sports around the block in the hockey ratings wars.
  • Ottawa's Tyler Holmes starts for Tulsa vs. Ball State in tonight's GMAC Bowl (8 p.m. Eastern, The Score).

Zen Dayley: Beleaguered big-leaguer; jungle of jaggled little pills

Baseball is so embarrassed over Mark McGwire that it is taking out on J.C. Romero.

MLB can point to Romero's 50-game suspension as evidence of the success of its crackdown on performance-enhancing drugs -- as much as one hates to dignify talk-radio shorthand. They got a solid middle reliever -- an established player, but not one whose absence would be noticed the same way it would with Ryan Howard or Chase Utley (oops, bad example). The kicker is that Romero is being punished for his "negligence" for using a supplement that, coincidentally, was "created and marketed" by the same guy who was the first in the U.S. to sell androstenedione, which was what Big Mac took. That is irony writ large.

Two big takeaways are that (a) at least the media, notably Peter Gammons at ESPN.com, are saying this is bogus; and (b) at least people are understanding that what Romero took is part and parcel of what it takes to get through the Long Season. It is kind of like MLB is still stuck in Dick Cheney's America and believes people will swallow whatever is handed down, no equivocating, no ifs, ands or buts, while most everyone else is over here in 2009.

It is all pretty greasy. Romero and other ballplayers are in the same Minnesota Vikings' Kevin and Pat Williams, in the StarCaps case. Big Pharma in the North America is such a multi-headed beast that the ball-and-stick leagues are really powerless themselves to do anything. It's like a jungle of a jagged little pills.

Ultimately, this does come back to the spectre of McGwire and Barry Bonds (and if you haven't read it already, go to the Hardball Times, where John Brattain has written a pretty impassioned defence of Bonds.)

Like the Philadelphia Inquirer story put it, "Baseball, because of its embarrassing mishandling of the steroid issue in the 1990s, is under pressure to catch cheaters and create the impression it has improved its policing techniques. At the same time, the FDA has had enormous enforcement issues with federal laws regarding the ingredients in over-the-counter supplements."

It is stranger still that Romero has been "ruled guilty of 'negligence' " (Cherry Hill Courier-Post), but there's no punishment for people in the Phillies organization who were advising him. There are so many gray areas, and if you read through the stories, there's conflicting stories about the labeling on the package, the involvement of the players' association, the advice from the Phillies's strength coach, and so on.

Gammons, God love him, also points out the biggest part of why the guy would use a quote, unquote PED.
"The season is a grind," Romero said. "When you're a middle reliever, you have to be ready to get up and down and pitch every day. Everyone takes something. Some guys drink coffee, others supplements. We try to make sure they're all legal. I certainly did."
It is brutal. Please try to have some consideration when a ballplayer gets caught. Calling someone a cheater is just too easy.

Bad news for nocturnal rounders fans

Hearing of earlier starts for baseball playoff games would not mark the first time someone though, "Hey, one positive sports development to come out of the recession." Hey, at least one bloke believes it could be be great for the English Premier League, which is capitalistic excess straight out of Hank and Hal Steinbrenner's most fevered dreams.

Monday's Sports Business Journal predicted that it's likely that baseball will not be so much of the national past bed time this October.
First Fox announced that it is canceling its pregame show during baseball’s regular season. Now look for the broadcaster to start World Series games a half-hour earlier, closer to 8 p.m. ET. Fox has always maintained that later starting times helped ratings, which meant more people were watching. But this year, the World Series games went so much longer (average length for the three non-rain-delayed games was 3 hours, 15 minutes) and ended so late (average ending time was 11:43 p.m. ET) that ratings couldn’t keep up.
It is a small win for fans in the Eastern Time Zone. Too many baseball nuts, on the morning after a heart-pounding extra-inning post-season game, have been confronted with that empty feeling. It comes with realizing that you were the one twitburger in the entire company who stayed up until 1:15 to see who won and have no one to talk about with, let alone someone of the desired gender. C'est la vie.

There are some other intiguing predictions in that article, such as the NCAA basketball tournament being expanded to 96 teams. That one is for another time.

Related:
The year ahead in sports media, through a digital crystal ball (John Ourand, Sports Business Journal)

Monday, January 05, 2009

LIVE! blog - Canada v Sweden - the battle for gold in Ottawa

Below the jump

7:08 - The hype machine is cranked up to 11 on TSN 20-ish minutes out from puck drop. Who needs TSN when you've got LIVE! blogging on OOLF?

7:30 - The Prime Minister thinks Canada will win and that we always show more heart than our opposition.

7:35 - I'm not 100 per cent sure, but it seemed like the Ottawa fans just loudly booed Sweden. Us Canucks...we're always nice. Except when we're not.

7:40 - Canada playing a bit of "rugby hockey." The Swedes take a penalty. P.K. Subban "bulls" it in for a 1-0 lead very early.

7:45 - The old cliche is that the road team needs to survive the first 5min. It's not clear Sweden did (although 1-0 isn't out of reach, obviously). So farm however, the Canadians have been equal from a skill stand point and far superior physically. Hammering the opposition is still very much the Canadian way.


7:49 -
Swedish goaltender Jacob Markstrom seems to want to prove his manhood (while diving. He is European). I'm not sure that's what the Swedes want to see in a goalie tonight.

7:57 - Canada. Canada. Canada. It's all Canada as they are completely controlling the neutral zone and putting all sorts of pressure on the Swedes first outlet pass. Canucks to the PP 9 min left 1st.

8:00 - Swedes kill the PP.

8:01 - Sweden catches a break with a high sticking penalty against Canada. And, before anyone starts to complain about the refs...they're fine. They are letting Canada play the body and if the Canucks lose this one it will have nothing to do with the men in black and white.

8:04 - Canada kills the PP, but Sweden does enough to make Canuck fans hope Canada doesn't end up in the box too much tonight. Shots 14-9 Canada, by the way.

8:08 - Big push by Canada gets as close as the post but no further. With 20 seconds left in the first Sweden has to feel fortunate to only be down 1-0. It was a dominating period by the home team.

8:10 - First over. 1-0 Canada. Trivia question (mostly directed to our Eastern Ontario readers) ...if Subban's goal holds up as the winner it will mark the second time that a Belleville Bull scored the winner for Canada. Name the other. The winner gets free access to Out of Left Field for a year!

8:22 - It will be interesting to see if Canada can keep the emotion up as high as it was throughout the first period. Although I'm sure the Swedes "want it" just as much, Canada seems a little more willing to fling their body around with reckless abandon. It's almost like they've dreamed of this night for years while drinking hot chocolate around a Christmas tree. Oh, God, please stop me. I'm becoming Pierre McGuire...next update at start of second.

8:27 - Second period is underway...Canadian coaches worried about pinching Swedish defencemen evidently.

8:30 -
Swedes get their best chance of game off a counter, but Canada up to it. Then Subban goes all Bobby Orr again. Doesn't score. He's probably going to get caught doing that some time.

8:33 - Jacob Markstrom just commits the worst dive in the history of sport. He didn't draw a penalty.

8:35 - And it's 2-0. Esposito. That's a Tim Hortons commercial waiting o happen.

8:40 - Another good chance off a 2-on-1 is stopped by Sweden, but the Swedes are going to need to do something soon if they are to have a chance in this.

8:45 - Just to be clear, TSN reminds us, this is a rebuilding year for Canada...(how just took a penalty).

8:49 -
Canada kills the PP. Then spends a good 90 seconds swarming around the Swedish goal. About the only thing I have to say about this is...remember the last time Canada lost the gold. They were all over the Americans who came back out of no where in the third.

8:54 -
I'm not really a violent man. But, the Swedish goaltender makes me want to hit something. He's a real piece of work, truly. Sweden going on a 5-on-4 PP.
8:59 - This might be Sweden's best stretch, as it draws another penalty
9:02 - Sweden to a two-man advantage.
9:06 - Canadian GK Dustin Tokarski earns his keep has Canada kills three straight to maintain 2-0 lead. Crazy pressure by Swedes, but nothing...less than a minute left in the period.
9:08 - And the second ends with a Swedish penalty. From about the 10 minute mark on, this period was far more even than the first, but overall Canada is full value for the lead. Just 20 minutes to go...
9:25 - GOAL Canada almost as soon as it starts up -- Cody Hodgson
9:29 - Subban draws a penalty. He's got to be a first-team all-star for this tournament. Habs fans have to be happy with what they are seeing anyway...
9:32 - Victor Hedman is dead. Or something like that anyway. Not that I'm suggesting that the Swedes are diving around like Brazilian soccer players (I'm allowed to say that. I'm the soccer guy). Sweden to a PP on a goaltender interference call
9:38 - Sweden out shooting Canada (who just killed its sixth penalty 38-28...Oh, and they score. It's 3-1. 11:30 left. Joakim Andersson the goal.
9:44 - Fans pissed in that the ref apparently missed a too many men penalty then got Canada for a hook. Swedes go on seventh PP. 8:15 left.
9:47 - Typo above has been fixed..about seven minutes left. Sweden playing desperate now and badly out shooting Canada (although this is the first time when it's noticeable). But, Canada to the PP...
9:50 - Canada holding the puck well on PP, but not getting much real chances. As an aside...I'm always a little embarrassed when a Canadian hockey crowd screams SHOOOOOT on the PP. Blasting it from the point is not always the best choice, you know...4:09 left
9:53 - McGuire talking about superior Canadian grit. 2:30 left. Open net.
9:57 - Jordan Eberle scores on the open net. Call it five in a row. 1:40 left.
9:49 - In the last minute. The Swedes, every the optimists, still have the goalie pulled...and Canada scores the fifth...Cody Hodgson
10:01 - It's over. To confused Sens fans: What's happening on the ice now is a championship celebration by the home team. Enjoy it because you're not likely to see another soon.
10:03 - The only thing less enlightening than listening to pro athletes interviewed on the ice following a championship is listening to teenage athletes interviewed on the ice following a championship.
10:07 - uninspired goaltender pick as Canada's player of the game. Seriously, he made a lot of saves, but how many were really tough. The defense's ability to clear the net and the PK was the "MVP" today.
10:09 - Hey Ottawa fans...don't boo teenage hockey players that just lost the biggest game of their short career.
10:11- - They sure do like PK Subban in Ottawa. I wonder if they will in the first round of the OHL playoffs.
10:13 - John Tavares is named top forward in the tourney. I still think he's going to be Brian Propp (which isn't awful, but...)
10:21 - I'M TRYING TO LISTEN TO THE SONG....thanks for reading. I'm out of here.

(semi) LIVE! blog - Russia v Slovakia

Below the jump

3:48 - We'll be back in this spot tonight for the gold medal game, but for now some updates throughout the bronze medal game - let's say every 10 minutes or so...

3:45 - Pavel Chernov gives Russia a 1-0 lead on a nice little play during a delayed penalty. He showed poise to wait to Superkeeper! Jaroslav Janus to commit. It looks like a nice crowd in Ottawa. Of course, they are all dead (or so it would seem)

3:50 - Russia likely carrying the play a bit, but it has the feel of a shiny game. The Motherland is going on the PP. With 10 players in the KHL, you have to like this Russian team. Canada was probably more than a little lucky to advance to tonight's game with Sweden.

3:56 - All and all it's not a bad game. Watching Russia is always worthwhile. My dirty little secret? After Canada I've always sort of cheered for the Russians. I think it's kind of like how fighters can have a beer with someone that they tried to kill for 12-rounds -- there is a certain respect there. I've always thought that Russia made Canada better (by forcing a little more flair and skill into the Canadian game) and Canada made Russia better (by making them learn how to play the physical game). International hockey was missing something the last few years when Russia took a step back. Forget USA v Canada for gold in 2010. Give me a back to the future game against our old foes...Still 1-0 Russia.

4:05 - Slovakia manages to kill a two man disadvantage and are holding tough...Pierre McGuire doesn't like international officiating, did you know that?

4:09 - And the first period is over - 1-0 Russia. Not a bad period of hockey, pretty free flowing, if a little lacking in passion (to be expected. Two days ago, Russia was six seconds from playing for gold and midnight came for Slovakia). There are worse ways to spend a Monday afternoon, however.

4:15 - Bob McKenzie now pushing for a tournament format change that looks a whole lot like the one I proposed last week...

4:27 - And we're back...the longer Slovakia hangs around...

4:29 - A nice stretch for Slovakia ends with a PP chance.

4:34 - Oh man, bad luck. Maxim Goncharov scores coming out of the penalty box after Slovakia has several great scoring opportunities. Sport is cruel sometimes. 2-0 Russia.

4:41 - Superkeeper! Jaroslav Janus!! He can play the game AND SLOVAKIA SCORES! Martin Stanjnoch on a blast from the side boards.

4:46 - The game has really picked up since the Slovakia goal. The underdogs seem to smell the possibility of an upset. (cliche alert) The next goal is huge! Actually, it says here next goal wins. Just 6 min left 2nd.

4:53 -
Another couple saves from Superkeeper! Jaroslav Janus as Russia starts to reestablish itself. Meanwhile, TSN game crew barely hides desire to see Slovakia win game. 1:08 left in 2nd.

4:56 - Poof! And the bubble bursts when Nikita Filatov blasts one through Superkeeper! Jaroslav Janus to give Russia the 3-1 lead heading into the third...we'll be back for that third in 15 min or so...

5:13 - The third is underway. Slovakia likely needs to score soon to have a chance. Pretty much all the energy was sucked out of the rink with Russia's last goal.

5:22 - Russia in control mode now. Slovakia will need to open it up and hope that Superkeeper! Jaroslav Janus can be, well, Super.


5:28 -
Less than 10 minutes left. TSN already talking more about Canada v Sweden than the game currently being played.

5:29 - Nikita Filatov decides that he's had enough of this nonsense and makes it 4-1 by picking the top corner above...wait for it...Superkeeper! Jaroslav Janus!!

5:39 - Well isn't that interesting. Slovakia scores on the PP with the goalie pulled to make it 3-2. Game on, surprisingly.

5:43 - But not for long. Dmitri Kugryshev puts it away with the empty net. 4-2 will probably be the final. Unless there is anymore action, we'll shut it down here. But, we will be back for another LIVE! blog tonight. A golden LIVE! blog that is.

Zen Dayley: Pat the Bat by the Bay

Pat Burrell, if he's left to be a designated hitter, is a decent pickup for the Tampa Bay Rays.

He is 32 years old and the classic player who might have a short shelf life, which is why two years, $16 million US is not a bad deal -- he won't be there long enough for him to block anyone in Tampa Bay's organization. Some of his biggest comparables saw their careers slide off a cliff when they reached that age. Regardless, the Rays got him primarily for those .279/.406/.545 slash stats vs. left-handed pitching. Left-handers proved their undoing in the World Series when they have to face the Cy Young and Cy Old, the Phillies' Cole Hamels and Jamie Moyer.

There is a whiff of a team overreacting to what happened to it in the post-season Tampa struggled to hit left-handers all season. This upgrades the DH spot for the Rays significantly.

MLB Network: Are we missing much?

In all honesty, at this point in the calendar you're grateful for any baseball chatter in Canada. Even the callers to MLB Home Plate on XM Radio who ask why Steve Garvey isn't in the Hall of Fame are tolerable.

ShysterBall has been on top of the MLB Network's debut. They have Hazel Mae, but their early offerings have veered have been heavy on the syrupy and the faux-intellectual dilettante nuisances -- yes, they employ Bob Costas. Slate had an awesome article in October that held out hope someone would at least try to bring informed baseball commentary to TV:
"... my show would take a cue from sites like Baseball Prospectus and Hardball Times and put crucial decisions in context. Consider BP's observation that the Angels-Red Sox series turned on three characteristically bold base-running decisions by the Angels that all turned out badly, which they used to illustrate the point that Mike Scioscia's managerial style has not kept up with the particular skills of his roster. Or their breakdown of the Phillies-Dodgers NLCS, which observed that the Phils' decision to bat Chase Utley and Ryan Howard in succession will allow Joe Torre to use his left-handed specialist, Joe Beimel, against both of them in key spots. It isn't as if this kind of analysis can't be put together on short notice — you just need analysts who aren't John Kruk."
It is doable. It is hard to believe that there aren't younger journalists who can both be telegenic and offer analysis -- they're used to being on camera and they know their way around Baseball-Reference.com. Sticking people with more of the jockocracy is repeating the NFL Network's folly.

This, that and the other
  • Not to encourage a culture of attack, but please read The Tao's takedown of regular Prime Time Sports panelist James Deacon. No disrespect, but a man who is regularly on a nationally syndicated sports-talk radio program should know that major-league teams never trade a top-end starting pitcher, not to mention that you can't trade a draft choice in baseball.
  • Bill James projecting Toronto native Joey Votto to have a 30-homer, 102-RBI season for the Cincinnati Reds.
  • The Blue Jays' Travis Snider is pegged to put up 19 homers, 83 RBI with an .804 OPS this season. Those are serious numbers for a 21-year-old player.
  • This is just idle speculation, but if the San Diego Padres are sold for $400 million US, does it give Rogers Communications a ballpark figure for what it might get for the Blue Jays?

Trade Spezza?

Hockey blogger nonpareil James Mirtle's assessment of the NHL's playoff push: "You can stick a fork in the bottom four teams in the Eastern Conference, with Toronto likely not far behind."

The Senators would need 58 points in their final 45 games to get into the playoffs. Don't worry, it's going to be OK.

Snark break ...

(Honestly, the Snark Break bit might have to die ... on Mondays, it should be, in honour of favourite funny bastard Bill Murray's first big role, the Trippers, as in, "It just doesn't matter! It just doesn't matter!" Anyway, it just doesn't matter ...

... that four Montreal Canadiens were elected to start for the Eastern Conference in the NHL all-star game and Alex Ovechkin, the best player in the sport, will only go as a reserve. It's an exhibition game in a sport where players only stay in the ice for 40-50 seconds at a clip, does it matter who starts? The NHL All-Star Game is as pertinent to hockey as Ben Lyons is to film criticism. Let it go.

... that there are still two games left in the Bowl Clusterphooey Series. The blogetariat is convinced the national championship should be handed to the unbeaten Utah Utes.

... that each team is not guaranteed a possession in NFL overtime, when it's Peyton Manning's team that ends up never seeing the ball. (Seriously, it's stupid.)

... who gets centrefielder Andruw Jones and his restructured contract, although it would be nice if he went back to the Atlanta Braves. Then they would have Chipper Jones and Cheaper Jones.

(One columnist has convinced himself Jones' career is done. Well, why didn't you say that his career is over? Start in with the J.P. Ricciardi jokes in 3-2-1 ...)

... that you never bother to read anything at AOL Fanhouse, because it's dead on arrival now that it has signed up Jay Mariotti. (Thank you, Sports On My Mind.)

... that the Minnesota Vikings, my Minnesota Vikings, lost out in the NFL playoffs. It puts Brad Childress on a short leash in 2009, one would hope. The game was there for the taking even though they didn't play very well or all that aggressively. It's kind of a microcosm of how it's gone under Childress. Anyone think that Bill Cowher would call for a run up the middle or a, groan, safe pass, right after the defence forces a turnover at midfield? No, he'd force the issue. The mind reels.

... that Kinger is the only one who gets why Big Wheel At The Cracker Factory would be a great title for a book if some guy wasn't already using it.

... that someone is another a year older. Thanks again to the readers and friends, and all of you are in the latter category, who sent Facebook messages to the newly minted 30-something-year-old. I debuted the same year as two franchises who have underperformed lately -- Star Wars and the Blue Jays.

This post is worth nothing, but this is worth noting
  • Bob Elliott of Sun Media published a list of the 100 most influential Canadians in baseball over the weekend. Jonah Keri of ESPN.com, Gatineau native Phillippe Aumont and Baseball Canada's Jim Baba (who had a little something to do with the Ottawa Rapids' existence) each made the list (and ahead of jamiecampbell, too).

    The Ottawa Citizen sportswriter Don Campbell, who's an accomplished youth baseball coach, received a honourable mention.
  • Vancouver Canucks GM Mike Gillis, a Kingston guy, got a right good Kurtenblogging. Please don't shoot the messenger.

The dude doesn't abide. He might be pulling on a Sweden sweater

The jury has always been split on Jack Todd at the Montreal Gazette.

People don't go so much any more for that columnist-you-love-to-hate shtick. Eventually, don't they hit just a point when the emotion is all gone, like in that episode of Cheers when Norm is hired as the corporate killer? However, there are times when, right or wrong, he really gets into one.

Todd did not pull a Claude Lemieux (I'll explain later), but he did refer to the world junior hockey championship as "the time when our TV networks bring us coverage that is so sycophantic, chauvinistic, shrill, strident and one-sided that it almost makes you embarrassed to cheer for Team Canada. Almost." And it just goes on from there.
"... the coverage this year (with TSN leading the way) reminds me of the way the United States welcomed the world to the Atlanta Olympics in 1996. The low point of that fiasco was when USA Today ran a list of the 100 greatest Olympic athletes of all time: 99 Americans and Nadia Comaneci, who was married to an American.

"The U.S. media treated the rest of the world like an opponent, which is exactly how TSN is treating the visitors to this tournament.

"Such treatment is both ungracious and un-Canadian. We are better than that. (TSN commentators Gord) Miller and (Pierre) McGuire are better than that."
Some would say, "Took him long enough."

This site's Trevor Stewart disclosed there was cheering in the press box on Saturday (personal opinion: As well there should have been!) when Canada tied the game with five seconds left vs. Russia on Saturday. Duane Rollins had at it about 10 days before the tournament started. Our resident liberal sissy snarked off that, "It would be ironic if Canada lost the World Junior hockey gold medal to Sweden. In Sweden, there's a chance a promising hockey player might actually serve his country. In Canada, we just have them do a photo op at a military base."

Todd hit that, referring to, "Pat Quinn squeezing his corpulent form into a paratrooper uniform for an embarrassing military photo op." Senators owner Eugene Melnyk in Canadian Forces garb has a much higher wince factor.

Really, Todd is echoing what a lot of us have been saying. The rest of us just abide by it, since no one wants to be like Lemieux, after he was cut from Team Canada many years ago, bitterly chanting, "USA! USA!" Love seeing Canada win, love the media coverage.

That said, it is good writin', Dickie (so is Todd's memoir, The Taste of Metal: A Deserter's Story).

(P.S. Incidentally, a broadcaster friend says four OHL teams have a shot at getting John Tavares., including one in the OHL's Eastern Conference, but not the Belleville Bulls. Would Melnyk get him for his Mississauga St. Michael's Majors, in hope he might get him again in the NHL draft?)

Related:
Canada goes ga-ga over baby faces (Jack Todd, Montreal Gazette)

Seven days till Cooperstown...

All of the baseball posts you're going to see in the next seven days are enveloped in an air of apology.

The Baseball Hall of Fame vote is in seven days. For some of you, it's about as pertinent to your day-to-day life as Yosemite Sam mudflaps on a Learjet. Sorry, but for some of us, it's like a U.S. presidential election which happens every year -- like a Canadian election.

Joe Posnanski appeared on Mount Olympus late last night holding a couple stone tablets bearing the names of the players he voted for, in no particular order. Mike Lynch at Seamheads has been taking mock ballots from the hardest of the hardcore baseball geeks, who suffice to say, are proving to be a tougher crowd than the Baseball Writers' Association of America. That site also ranks this year's candidates by Win Shares, which might be eye-opening for anyone who is on the fence about a certain former Montreal Expos leadoff hitter.

Poz says he will vote for Bert Blyleven, Rickey Henderson, Tommy John (who's on the ballot for the final time), Mark McGwire, Dale Murphy, Alan Trammell, and of course, Tim Raines. He voted for Raines last time.Andre Dawson not on that list:
"I have the utmost respect for the guy, but I just can’t do it. That .323 on-base percentage … it would be lower than all but five Hall of Famers — Bill Mazeroski, Joe Tinker, Luis Aparicio, Rabbit Maranville and Brooks Robinson. And none of them went in for their bats. I guess the way I look at it, this is a bit like voting in a .255 hitter. I will say I wish I could get past it."
Anyway, the Seamheads polling has been a minor revelation. Out of almost 150 respondents so far -- and we're talking hardcore baseball geeks, completely unredeemable people -- Rickey Henderson was the only who got the magic 75% support. Henderson drew 99.3% -- yeah, one person had to be the one who didn't vote for him.

Blyleven, the best pitcher not in Cooperstown, was polling around 70% and Raines was around 65%. As for Jim Rice, don't ask.

Elsewhere around the web, Chicago sportswriter Rick Telander said he voted for Dawson but not for Raines. Paul Sullivan at the Chicago Tribune voted for both former Expos, without mentioning that they played for the Expos, but a win's a win. The Tribune had all of its writers who votes talk about their ballots, but alas, Sullivan seems to be the only one who voted for Raines.

Sean McAdam at the Boston Herald has the ballot that might exactly reflect the BBWAA vote -- Henderson, Dawson and Jim Rice.

Seriously, what else is there to get excited about in the first full of January

Sunday, January 04, 2009

Fronts: Call it the Daniel derby , damn it

Young Daniel Catenacci might be seeing a portent of his hockey future this Saturday.

Catenacci, as those of you who get the Sunday Star know, is the class of the "93s," in hockey argot. He is pegged to be the No. 1 pick in the OHL draft, which is the Kingston Frontenacs already have a death grip on. The smooth-skating centre's minor midget team, as it happens, has a game next weekend vs. Greater Kingston, which sports the same name, colours and crest as the city's de facto OHL team.

No doubt the Catenacci camp will do their homework about what awaits them in Kingston. It's even come to the point where this site's commenters are saying the local conspiracy theory is that the Frontenacs, under owner Doug Springer, are tanking so the municipality can't afford to keep paying for the K-Rock Centre and ends up having to sell it, likely for pennies on the dollar. (If that perception is out there, no wonder the actual turnout for Frontenacs games is so low.)

No doubt the Catenacci camp are great people, who will try not to tip their hand about their son's plans at any point before the draft. It's his future. They they have the right of first refusal when it comes to where Daniel will play hockey. The Hockey News reported several weeks ago -- when the Frontenacs finishing dead last did not seem like an inevitability -- that Catenacci was hoping to go the OHL route instead of the NCAA (one of his linemates with his midget team is already committed to play at the University of Maine).

It wasn't tied to Kingston story then, since there was still hope they would not be the worst team in the league. After all, Springer said the Frontenacs' goal was to finish in the top four of the OHL's Eastern Conference. There was, and is, no reason to doubt him -- after all, he didn't say which year -- outside of the fact the Frontenacs, with tonight's 5-2 loss in Oshawa, have won only 39% of their games since he and GM-for-life Larry Mavety came together to form the franchise's share-a-brain trust in a decade ago.

(The Frontenacs since Springer became owner, are 296-374-82 counting playoffs. That works out to a .448 winning percentage, yet there's never been, far as anyone can tell, any urgency to make any changes in the organization's hierarchy, namely the general mangler.)

There is a chance to have some fun with this, because in the words of David Letterman, "I just like causin' trouble." The cynics might already be scoffing that it will be a frosty Friday in July when a player who's supposed to be this good reports to such a ramshackle franchise, but the Frontenacs' saving grace is players such as Ethan Werek and Ottawa's own Erik Gudbranson (who earned a gold medal at the World Under-17s tonight, well done) who just need to be in the OHL to help their draft status and improve their bargaining power when they sign their first pro contract. Those kinds of players are too few and far between for one team to have 10 or 12 of them, even if they are the London Knights.

Anyway, the choice here is to call it the Daniel derby, although some rabblerousers were suggesting Crap for Catenacci, which is a bit rude to good boy from a good family. There will be plenty of time to talk about this, since the Frontenacs are 11 points clear of the next-worst team in the OHL. The marketing practically writes itself --he was born in '93! Give him Dougie Gilmour's old number!

Related:
Catenacci a powerhouse in 'sixth gear' (Lois Kalchman, Toronto Star)

Canada and Cooperstown: It's all about 2010

Roberto Alomar and Andre Dawson, a Blue Jay and an Expo, forming the Baseball Hall of Fame's 2010 induction class — it could happen.

One is hopeful for Dawson that his wait ends a week from tomorrow when the Baseball Writers Association of America vote is announced. The former Expos slugger told MLB Home Plate recently that the Hall of Fame has "lost its luster. I feel it (induction) is inevitable ... how I will react to it, I just don't know." Jeez, does that sound like the way someone should look at his sport's highest individual honour? Meantime, looking ahead, Alomar is the best of the lot among the first-timers for the 2010 ballot. He would be the first player from a Canadian-based team to go into Cooperstown on the first ballot (OK, so it's not as exciting as the Jays winning the AL East, whatever).

Dawson should make it this season or next, although Jim Rice got 64% in 2006 and is still waiting, three years later. Alomar, meantime, is probably the lone first-ballot Hall of Famer who comes up in 2010. Among the others, Barry Larkin seems doomed to the same area of purgatory as Alan Trammell, another shortstop who did almost everything well, but didn't have one or two areas where he stood out. The ballplayers got Larkin; statheads got him; the media might not.

Fred McGriff, who of course the Jays traded for Alomar on Dec. 6, 1990, is probably better than some of the first baseman/corner outfielder types enshrined in Cooperstown. His career numbers in the traditional categories probably aren't what voters would like to see from someone who played through the heavy-hitting '90s (although McGriff's total of 491 homers jumps to 511 when put in a stat-neutral context). The long-time Seattle Mariners designated hitter Edgar Martinez is also going to provide a good test case for whether someone who was a full-time DH can be elected.

It could happen. Alomar's credentials are beyond reproach. Only five players accumulated more Win Shares between 1984 and 2003. He

As for Tim Raines, it comes down to setting a target. It would be satisfactory if he can get into the 40-45% range this. It is absurd that players get more worthy in sportswriters' eyes even though they have not swung a bat or thrown a ball for years, but the media tends to be lemming-like with their thought process. Jim Rice hovered around 50% support for several years, before the New England hype machine went to work.

So it goes. Nevertheless, Alomar and Dawson in 2010. It could happen.

(It's acknowledged that I spend way too much time obsessing over the Baseball Hall of Fame.)

Related:
Raines hoping for big jump in HOF vote; Game-changing leadoff man believes he earned enshrinement (Bill Ladson, MLB.com)

Saturday, January 03, 2009

What a bunch of homers

There's no cheering in the pressbox - usually. A quick scan of pressrow at Scotiabank Place last night pulled the curtain back on that ideological illusion when Team Canada forward Jordan Eberle scored with 5.4 seconds remaining against the Russians to send their game to extra time, and eventually a shootout, in which Canada won 6-5 to advance to the WJC final here in the national capital.
Eberle not only allowed dozens of scribes to press and hold delete on their under-construction ledes, he and John Tavares - the player whose perfectly plucky pass set up the tying goal - also buried in the shootout to allow the writers to poke out punchy prose full of upbeat quotations from beaming Canadian kids.


The Russians took a 5-4 lead with two minutes left, silencing a Scotiabank crowd as loud as, if not louder than (according to one arena staffer I talked to) anything the Senators provoked during their Stanley Cup Final run. And it's not like the Canadians stormed back. It didn't really look like the tying goal was coming. So the press box was quieted, too, except for the tip-tapping keyboards registering keystrokes reporters and columnists really didn't want to put together.

The game seemed over until the moment Tavares willed a magical pass toward the front of the Russian crease, where Eberle took it away from a defenceman and made a super-quick-yet-graceful backhand deke to put the puck in as a knee touched the ice.

I asked the Regina Pats star about the feeling on the bench when Russia scored their go-ahead goal, a bad-luck scramble that hardly seemed dangerous but somehow saw the puck inexplicably kick up and roll over goalie Dustin Tokarski's right skate and trickle in.

"We knew what we had to do," Eberle said.

"Where there any thoughts like 'our tournament can't end on a goal like that?" I pressed.

"We just knew we had two minutes to score a goal," he followed. "Maybe that's just the Canadian way of thinking."

Adda boy. Now tell me that's not more fun to write than whatever twist each reporter was reaching for after Dmitri Klopov gave Russia a 5-4 lead.

Sure, maybe it's only the worst-of-the-worst who stroll into a pressbox wearing their favourite team's baseball cap and the good ones are able to ply their pens with some sort of objectivity that readers respect. But WJC semifinal Saturday was a lesson in situated perspective by quote-unquote objective observers. Some things are more pleasant to observe than others.

With time ticking away on Russia's 5-4 lead, I'm sure those waiting to chronicle history in the press box were looking for context where they could - maybe a painful third period in Halifax in 2003 when Russia scored two unanswered third-period goals to steal gold away from Canada, the last time Russia defeated Canada in a WJC; perhaps they'd say Klopov's ugly third-period potential game-winner held shades of Marc-Andre Fleury's game-deciding gaffe in 2004 when the Americans downed Canada in that gold-medal game; or possibly they'd settle on the fact that Canada was never the favourite for this year's tourney anyhow.

Then, pressrow was ignited by the game tying goal. Impartial writers in black blazers jumped to their feet and grinned, albeit with a lot less noise than the 20,000-plus red-and-white sweater wearing fans below their feet. Today some report is undoubtedly pointing to significance of 6-5 in the Canada-Russia rivalry (see: game-winners by Henderson, Paul or Lemieux, Mario vs. the Soviets). Some will point to Canada's edge in "heart" and others may say that this time Team Canada actually held an edge in "skill" over the Russians.

Whoever they are, they're splitting hairs. Either team could have won in brilliantly even game.
Last night was positively the most entertaining, hard-fought hockey game I've see live. And maybe today someone, somewhere is using the words "instant classic." Both things are probably only true because Canada won. In reality, this tournament produces instant classics year after year. All the blowouts the prelim produced are forgotten as the final four days produce drama.

Team Canada needed a "classic" overtime goal from Matt Halischuk in the gold-medal game a year ago. The previous tournament, a semi-final shootout over the U.S. turned that game into a classic.

You could make a case that Russia's 3-2 victory in 2003, after entering the third down 2-1 to Canada, and the Americans' 4-3 victory in 2004, could have classic status, depending on who's doing the figuring.

Let's face it, beauty is in the eye of the beholder. And all of those reports you're reading and seeing today, those beholders desperately want Canada to win. If only because if makes their jobs more fun.

I'm sure you can't blame 'em.

Fronts: The Winter of 43 for those double-dipping Dougies

Fair is fair, so let the record show the Kingston Frontenacs are undefeated in 2009 AD (anno domini, not "after Doug Springer," but dare to dream).

The Fronts whupped the Oshawa Generals 5-0 for just their second win at Kingston Ratepayer Centre since Doug Gilmour became coach. Most kidding aside, it's always great to see that team on the right side of the scoreboard. Attention should be paid, especially when someone, or someones (Kinger and myself) spent 15 minutes on CFRC yesterday where the hope was expressed that Springer might have an epiphany, "or what alcoholics call a moment of clarity, to quote Pulp Fiction."

Speaking of double-digits ... what no one has written is that the Frontenacs, now on pace for 38 points after seasons of, in reverse order, 52, 69 and 81 points (that was under Jim Hulton in 2005-06, those were the days), are in danger of setting a precedent for decline.

It has never happened in the OHL's modern history. A friend last night said, "Cornwall must have done it," referring to the late and lamented Royals, but even they avoided that distinction.

This might be a good rebuttal to the argument that the Frontenacs are genuinely rebuilding under owner Springer and The Royal Mavesty, AKA general manager Larry Mavety. You can basically use the last good year as a baseline -- Year 1.

Eighteen teams have experienced a double-digit dip in points two seasons in a row since 1974-75. Fifteen of them improved in Year 4, two had the exact same total and only one -- the now-defunct Cornwall Royals -- declined. Many of the franchises in this sample later ended up being sold or relocated.
  • Sudbury Wolves, '75-76 to '78-79: 102, 80, 42, 81
    Year 4: +39

  • Ottawa 67's, 1990-91 to '93-94: 80, 68, 40, 77
    Year 4: +37
    (The 67's still changed ownership a few seasons later).

  • Cornwall/Newmarket Royals-Sarnia Sting, '91-92 to '94-95: 82, 67, 28, 53
    Year 4: +25
    (When you're in a comparison with a team which moved twice in three years, it's time to take a good hard look at your operation.)

  • Sudbury ( '01-02 to '04-05): 81, 60, 38, 61
    Year 4: +23
    (The Wolves went to the OHL championship series two seasons later, 2006-07.)

  • Barrie Colts (1998-99 to '01-02): 104, 93, 69, 87
    Year 4 : +18
    (Barrie won the OHL championship in 2000.)

  • Belleville Bulls ('90-91 to '93-94): 83, 53, 66, 70
    Year 4: +17
    (Larry Mavety, give the man credit, coached those teams.)

  • Brantford Alexanders ('76-77 to '79-80): 105, 76, 49, 64
    Year 4: +15
    (Franchise played in St. Catharines and Hamilton during the first two seasons; it moved back to Hamilton in 1984.)

  • Kitchener Rangers ('96-97 to '99-00): 78, 64, 52, 66
    Year 4: +14
    (Peter DeBoer, now coach of the NHL's Florida Panthers, arrived two seasons later, 2001-02, and Kitchener won the league title in his second season.)

  • Guelph Platers ('85-86 to '88-89): 84, 60, 47, 60
    Year 4: +13
    (Guess what? The Guelph team ended up moving to Owen Sound a couple years later.)

  • Windsor Spitfires ('90-91 to '93-94): 70, 58, 43, 55
    Year 4: +12
    (Some will tell you that the Spitfires had the worst ownership in the OHL before Springer came along.)

  • Oshawa Generals, '82-83 to '85-86: 93, 75, 66, 76
    Year 4: +10
    (It was only a nine-point drop that one season, but it's worth fudging a little since the Generals won the OHL championship in 1987.)

  • Kingston Frontenacs, '99-00 to '02-03: 84, 68, 49, 56
    Year 4: +7
    (Ahem.)

  • London Knights, '97-98 through '00-01: 85, 72, 54, 60
    Year 4: +6
    (The Knights won an OHL record-low three games and won a league-record 59, within the span of a decade. They did not have the same general manager all that time.)

  • North Bay Centennials/Saginaw Spirit, '00-01 to '03-04: 72, 49, 34, 39
    Year 4: +5
    (The team moved!)

  • Ottawa 67's, '99-00 to '02-03: 103, 91, 80, 84
    Year 4: +4
    (Ottawa won the OHL championship in 2001 and reached the final in 2005 -- and they never declined that much.)

  • North Bay Centennials, '93-94 to '96-97: 97, 74, 35, 36
    Year 4: +1
    (And where are they now? Saginaw.)

  • Toronto Marlboros ('83-84 to '86-87): 91, 73, 47, 47
    Year 4: Zero
    (The Marlboros moved within a couple seasons.)

  • North Bay Centennials ('86-87 to '89-90): 94, 67, 54, 54
    Year 4: Zero

  • Cornwall Royals ('87-88 to '90-91): 77, 67, 52, 47
    Year 4: Minus-5

  • Kingston Frontenacs ('05-06 to '08-09): 81, 69, 52, ??
    Year 4: ??
The average improvement for these 18 double dippers was 12.8 points. The Frontenacs have already been on the low end of the curve once under Springer, who marked his 750th game as owner Friday.

At this rate, they will be the low end of the curve, barring a minor miracle over the final 29 games of this season that gets them up to 43 points and avoids a permanent place in stathead infamy.

Springer and his hockey people have their apologists, despite the fact the Frontenacs have won less than 40% of their games (296 of 750, counting playoffs) since he bought into the team in 1998. If the Frontenacs are rebuilding, a dubious proposition, then they're not doing so with the speed of other franchises who hit rock bottom and built themselves back up. All of them made a structural change -- new owner, new city, new front office. None of them tried to get a different result doing it the same way, which is a definition of insanity.

It's time for Springer to have his moment of clarity, in the small hope it might give the ol' hometown the hockey team it deserves. To the Kingston players, good job last night and good luck tonight in Belleville.

Don Sanderson's death: A swirl of thoughts

Far be it to expect people to stay from the fighting-in-hockey rubric on the day Don Sanderson died.

That is how the media works, for good or ill. No doubt you have your thoughts, so if you are so inclined, read the symposium and leave a comment.

Michael Den Tandt, Sun Media, "Hockey fights have to stop": "Proponents of fighting in hockey will argue that such accidents are exceedingly rare. They'll say that most hockey fights end with nary a bloody nose on either side. They'll repeat, as they always do, that fighting is an integral part of the game, without which it would be somehow less Canadian.

"Bollocks.

"Can anyone who has gotten a taste of World Juniors action in Ottawa in recent days doubt that hockey is better off without the incessant scuffles and mock battles that now impede the Canadian game, at virtually every level?

"Elite hockey players are just that. They're not trained fighters. Most have no idea how to throw a punch."

Ryan Hollweg, Toronto Maple Leafs forward, via citynews.ca: "It's part of the game and things like that happen sometimes. You gotta try not to think about it and go about your business."

Ken Campbell, The Hockey News, "Sanderson's death must re-open fight debate": "... if the people who run this game are unwilling or feel they are unable to do something about this blight on a great game, then perhaps it might be time for those who make the laws to do it for them."

Jamal Mayers, Leafs forward, via citynews.ca: "... it's a terrible story. It should never come to that. To think that it happened in somewhat of a recreational game makes it even tougher on the families and my heart goes out to everyone involved."

Roy MacGregor, The Globe & Mail: "Hockey discipline needs a fighting chance": "Accident or non-accident is not the debate here, but what can, and must, be done to remove as much violence from the game as would still allow hockey to be a collision sport requiring tenacity from its players.

"It seems simply obvious that heads require as much protection as possible in the game. This would include simply doing up the chin straps supplied with each helmet. (Though how not doing it up became a hockey "fashion" is as unfathomable, as is how doffing one's helmet before fighting became part of hockey chivalry.)"

Patrick, commenter at the Toronto Star: "Fighting is in NHL hockey because THE PLAYERS want it in. Until the 700 or so players in the nhlpa put up a protest fighting will never leave the NHL game.

Last, but not least, here's a take from someone who knew the young man.

International Bowl mania grips Big Smoke

Or something like that anyway.

Putting aside my bitterness that this money grab bowl game gets 10 times the attention in the Toronto media as does this country's actual college football title game, I give you a little preview of tomorrow's vitally important International Bowl.

The majority of the New York Times bloggers tip their hat to UConn, suggesting that MAC Cinderellas aren't a good bet when playing teams from actual conferences. Even if they were fourth.

Canada's best sportswriter even weighs in (when was the last time Brunt covered the Vanier? Sorry, I said I'd drop that. Carry on) with the worthwhile story of how Buffalo forfeited its only other bowl game in solidarity with two African-American teammates who would have been denied the opportunity to play in the racist south.

The Buffalo News focuses on the Canadian connections in the game. Surprisingly they don't offer up the paranoid opinion that U of T is planning to steal the Bulls (although now that I think about it...).

And the Hartford Courant says it's all about Turner Gill and his tricky, tricky offense. Speaking of, there's a Buffalo football personality Toronto may want to steal...

Enjoy the game and remember. They don't punt on third down.

CIS Corner: McCleery helps Ravens avenge Acadia

Notes on our athletes/teams of interest from The 613 ...

HOOPS
  • Ravens: It probably should be treated lightly since his team has its eyes on a bigger prize, but senior forward Kevin McCleery scoring 34 points on 16-of-19 shooting in the Carleton Ravens' win over Acadia last night at a tournament in Halifax has something of a "wow" factor.

    McCleery is such a good glue guy for Carleton that it's nice to see him command the spotlight for once and become a go-to scoring option (of course, in the Dave Smart system, anyone can be the go-to at a given moment).

    Acadia's not what it was last year, of course. Carleton hit half-a-hundred in the first half and won by 27. They play No. 9 Dalhousie in the semi-final tonight and if they win, play the Saint Mary's-St. Francis Xavier winner in Sunday's final.
  • Ottawa native Dwayne Johnson, by the way, had 17 points and nine rebounds to help No. 3 St. FX beat Lakehead 71-60. Lakehead's power forward, Yoosrie Salhia, had a big night, which raises the question how they would handle the low-post tandem of Aaron Doornekamp and McCleery.
  • Another Ottawan, Anneka Bakker, who's playing for the Alberta women's team, might get some consideration for a feature in next week's Sun Schools sports page. She had 16 points, six rebounds to help the Pandas beat Calgary last night in a matchup of Top 10 teams. In case you're wondering, yes, she is the daughter of Queen's Football Hall of Fame member Dick Bakker, who was part of the famed Gold Rush defensive line in the 1970s.
HOCKEY

The "baseball standings" for the eastern half of the OUA, with games remaining, probably should be repeated. Carleton lost 6-4 to York Friday and is at Ontario Tech Saturday (there's a webcast). The loss basically left them even with the Gee-Gees, who have those four games in hand.

Ottawa is at Toronto and Ryerson this weekend. Beating the Varsity Blues on the road would be such a bonus for them.
  1. Trois-Rivieres -- (11)
  2. Toronto 6.0 (13)
  3. Concordia 5.5 (13)
  4. Ottawa 6.0 (15)
  5. Carleton 6.0 (11)
  6. McGill 6.5 (14)

  7. Queen's 8.5 (11)

Friday, January 02, 2009

Running at 2/3's steam: In-game Injury Report not looking good for Calderon...

Recovering from a very bad case of bronchitis I developed right around Christmas (yeah happy holidays seriously, how I do return this one?), I don't take these latest moves by the Toronto Raptors as flattery but rather something to help re induce those pesky headaches...

With Jermaine O'Neal already out due to a bruised knee the Toronto Raptors have apparently suffered another big blow as Jose Calderon left the game with a strained hamstring with 8:07 left in the second quarter. I'd give you more of a recap but you know I live in Toronto, and therefore don't have TSN2...

But anyways The Canadian Press, among many other sources as well, has already reported this so I take it as quite concerning - generally a player walking off the court doesn't get mentioned until post-game, not IN game unless something is seriously going down! The Raptors have not been having the best of seasons but the talk has always been about what if and when the big three tandem Toronto touts does turn things around this team can still be scary good! But while O'Neal has held his own so far considering the injuries and long breaks he endured before landing in Toronto, Calderon's injury problems were not foreseen and are far more troubling for the team as well considering their lack of depth at the point.

Well anyways, to all interested Jose is hurt - yet I'm feeling better? One of these days we'll get it right, stay tuned for more about the impact that Calderon's absence leaves should he be missing from some time, and just a recap of this unfortunate news...

Raptors' guard Jose Calderon leaves game with hamstring strain (Toronto Star)

Update: Calderon has been listed as day-to-day, and from all reports he may only miss a game or two. However the nagging hamstring injury that has been an issue for Jose pretty much all season thus far has further spurred along that trade talk to bring in a more experienced back-up point guard to Toronto...

Top 5: Other Miracles on Ice

The Slovak junior hockey team had its "Lake Placid moment," quoth TSN's Pierre McGuire, whose take on hockey must always be taken as ex cathedra, upsetting Team USA in the quarter-finals of the World Junior Hockey Championship. The Slovaks were lucky and good, although this was just as much about Team USA living up to its rep as the leading linen-soilers at the tournament — complete with some appallingly poor sportsmanship by Team USA defenceman James Shattenkirk, who reached out from the bench to hit a Slovak player with his stick. In Slovakia's honour, here is a Top 5 of international hockey upsets — and as penance for Team USA, whose get-up-and-go got up and went after their loss to Canada, it will be Miracle on Ice-free.

A key condition for this list is that it has to have the quality of being out of nowhere, where years later, you could look back and say, "Kazakhstan actually beat Canada in hockey?" or "Canada once beat the U.S. in basketball?" (They did, way back when.) Even Switzerland beating Canada at the 2006 Olympics can be ruled out. The Swiss had a handful of pros and Martin Gerber as its goaltender, before he became Public Enemy No. 29 in Ottawa.

Belarus' quarter-final upset of Sweden at the 2002 Olympic semi-final should not even count. Belarus had beaten Russia at the world two years earlier.

Here's a list, by no means definitive.


1995 World Juniors: Ukraine 3, USA 2
1996 World Juniors: Ukraine 4, USA 3


Don't call today a miracle — the U.S. has been doing this for years. Ukraine played in the main world juniors only twice and hasn't been heard from again, but it beat the United States in back-to-back years. The second time, it was even in America at the 1996 tournament in Boston, which remain infamous for sparse attendance.

The win in '95 ranks first. It should have been a 2-2 tie, but Oleksa Lazarenko stole the puck inside his own blueline in the final seconds and went in to beat U.S. goalie John Grahame on a breakaway. Losses like that were probably what caused USA Hockey to take the event a little more seriously.

2006 Olympic women's semi-final: Sweden 3, USA 2

All the chattering class talk during the Turin Olympics was about how women's hockey didn't belong in the Olympics (and one game might not have changed too many minds). The Americans were 102-0-2 against countries other than its northern neighbour, but the Swedes turned to a time-honoured upset formula — ride a hot goalie (Kim Martin, whom CBC.ca called "the Miracle Worker") bury the chances you go get, and get into a shootout. It worked and 16-year-old Pernilla Winberg got the winner in the shootout.

1998 World Juniors: Kazakhstan 6, Canada 3

As Greatest Hockey Legends related, the Kazakhstani team was rag-tag as all get out — outdated equipment, only seven spare sticks, and their best player on their maiden voyage into the World Juniors was Nik Antropov.

It was the seventh-place game and Canada was disillusioned and disspirited after being bounced from contention for a sixth straight gold medal. It still happened. Kazakhstan ruled throughout, and it was actually a 6-2 game since Canada scored a window-dressing goal with two seconds left.

1947 Worlds: Austria 2, Sweden 1

For decades, the world championship was a true round-robin. There were no playoffs, no single-elimination games. Whoever finished first got the gold. The Swedes appeared to have it locked up — they only had to beat Austria in their final game. King Gustav had already sent a telegram of congratulations. Somehow, Austria rose up and knocked off the Swedes, and the Czechs fell heir to the gold medal as Sweden slipped to the silver.

1976 Worlds: Poland 6, USSR 4

Since whoever has the TV footage writes the history, this one will never get mentioned. The Big Red Machine was at the peak of its powers. Poland — which these days is nowhere near a playing in a top-shelf hockey tournament — was living under the Soviet boot, but they had home ice for an opening game against the best team outside North America, which had beat it 20-0, 13-2, 15-2 and, at the Olympics where the Russians won won their fourth consecutive Olympic gold medal, 16-1. Already in 1975-76, the nucleus of the Soviet Big Red Machine had tied the Montréal Canadiens on New Year's Eve before going on to Olympic gold. However, the Poles had a hometown crowd in Katowice behind them, and the Russians took them lightly.

Vladislav Tretiak, in his memoir, figured that the puck was in the Soviets' zone for no more than eight minutes that night. Somehow, Poland cashed in whenever it got the chance, and considering the political history between the countries, it deserves to be No. 1.

A Clockwork Purple... Skol Vikings!



The upshot of the Minnesota Vikings not being able to sell out a home playoff game? Their defensive star, Jared Allen, used the word cashish during a video pitch to fans to sell out the stadium for Sunday's wild-card game vs. the Philadelphia Eagles. What kind of talk is that from a player on a team in mid-sized Midwestern city? You'd expect to hear the Dallas Cowboys borrow a word from the drug culture, but that would require them making the playoffs, apparently.

It is a little ironic to hear that from a player once suspended for a substance abuse by the NFL, which once cast out Ricky Williams for a year for smoking marijuana. This gets to the heart of a new self-imposed rule: No more ironic postings on the Vikes, although that will require the team to hold up its end of the bargain, if not Sunday, then next season, or the one after that, or the one after that ...

Not to get all metabloggy, but it's become a personal rule not to write too much about the Vikings as this site has evolved, lo, there past 2 1/2 years. The Vikes are where I draw the line at being an open book.

Cheering for them has involved too much screaming at the television, plus there is the inanimate-object kicking. Picture the contents of a nearly-full box of Triscuits flying into space after being drop-kicked, and that was during the 2006 season opener, which the Vikings actually won in typical teeth-gnashing fashion (it came down to field goal, as so often happens when Brad Childress is the coach).

A sports blog has to do more than say, "Here's what happening in sports and here's what I think about it," so it did not seem like there was much to add with regard to the Beloved Purple (acknowledging nod: Daily Norseman). There are any number of great Vikings blogs out there. Grant's Tomb has already socked away the distinction of being the best one originating out of Canada. Drew Magary of Deadspin and Kissing Suzy Kolber fame is a Vikings fan. The territory is well-marked.

That's being said, it's impossible to bottle it up when it's your team, and they're in the playoffs. This is no doubt a sign of mild obsessive-compulsive disorder, but during the lead-up to Sunday's big game at the Metrodome, attention has not been focused on the breakdown between the two teams. How Childress' history with Eagles passer Donovan McNabb might bear on the proceedings, owner Zygi Wilf's push for a nearly $1-billion new stadium, Adrian Peterson's fumble problems, whether both parts of the Williams Wall will play, Tarvaris Jackson's readiness for the post-season and the concern that Childress, on game day is the worst manager this side of Michael Scott on The Office, have all been pushed out to the perimeter. Greater minds can chin-wag over those side issues.

This week has been all about plunking down in front of the computer, Clockwork Orange-style, and scouring YouTube for all the low points in Vikings history, as if that might cause the great spirit in the heavens to reach down and help influence the outcome.

You know the whole litany: Gary Anderson missing the field goal in 1999 that would have secured a Super Bowl trip. The 41-0 loss to the New York Giants in the NFC title game in early 2001, although if Football Outsiders had been more prominent back then, one would have seen that coming from 500 miles away. Being knocked out of the playoffs on the final play of the 2003 season, on a sideline catch that would not have counted under today's NFL rules.

It even includes the ones the predate yours truly cheering for the team, or even being born. Darrin Nelson dropping the pass on the goal line against Washington in 1988. Damned Drew Pearson getting away with a push-off to catch the Hail Mary in 1975.

Who knows what forces led yours truly to accept the Purple as a football saviour on NFL Sundays. To be totally fatalistic about it, it was probably an inevitability, going all the way back to the early days of nineteen seventy-seven, when I came into the world a mere five days before the Vikings to become the first team to lose four Super Bowls. For all I know, since I was so young at the time, it might have happened the day my parents brought their first-born son home from the hospital.

(Twenty-some years later, this would all be brought home, thanks to a Winnipeg TV station rerunning a 1977 Saturday Night Live hosted by the Hall of Fame quarterback, Fran Tarkenton, who once said: "I've won two hundred games, all little ones.")

It was fate. I initially supported the Philadelphia Eagles. They had Randall Cunningham. They had the same name and team colours as the high school I later attended. Their offensive line in that era included Mike Schad, who had gone to Queen's and was even from Belleville, a half-hour drive from the Sager homestead.

The early '90s Eagles were a gateway team before turning to harder drugs -- cheering for the Vikings. It probably was a contrarian move. Their archrivals have a lot to offer. The Chicago Bears won a Super Bowl in 1986, when a lot of sports fans my age were very impressionable. They boast the greatest player in NFL history, Walter Payton.

The Green Bay Packers have always been a great team to get behind -- a team owned by its community, plus there's the frozen tundra, the Lombardi legend and Brett Favre just having fun out there.

The Vikings, though, present more of intellectual challenge. They've also made the playoffs more often than either of other two team since the AFL-NFL merger in 1970 (you could look it up). They will win the Super Bowl one of these seasons -- law of averages -- and the Vikings' fanbase, in the midwestern United States, on the Canadian Prairies and all points across the known world will have a blessedly Bill Simmons-free now-I-can-die-in-peace moment.

Who knows if the dream will come any closer to reality this Sunday. That's not for me to say. The belief
is if that you make yourself bulletproof as a fan, wear that tortured history like a team jersey, Fate will smile upon us for a change, maybe.