Sports, politics and culture blog focused on the Tar Heels and the Hellenes. Ta leme!
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
Some excitement in the sports world
WORLD SERIES
As a baseball fan, I'm very excited and intrigued by the Yankees-Phillies match up. Traditionally, I root for the National League in the Series, and even though that means supporting a team I genuinely dislike in the Phillies having the Yankees represent the AL makes it a no-brainer.
A quick analysis of the Series - and especially the pitching - reveals two juicy pieces of info.
One, the Phillies have better starting pitching; I like having Pedro Martinez pitch game two and having Cliff Lee and Pedro start 4 or 5 games in a seven-game series. I also have no faith in the Yankees' A.J. Burnett.
Two, that advantage is negated by left-hander CC Sabathia, who could start three times if the World Series goes seven games.
The Phils are very vulnerable to lefties, so starting pitching could be a wash when comparing the two teams.
The bullpen match up is interesting too, but with the quality of starting pitching one wonders if anyone other than Mariano Rivera will come in for New York. The middle relievers for the Yankees have looked unsteady in the post season while the Phillies' relievers - even Brad Lidge - have looked good.
Even though I want the Phillies to defeat the Yankees if CC Sabathia outpitches Cliff Lee - and controls Ryan Howard and company - in games 1 and 4 New York will likely win their 27th championship. But I expect Pedro and Cole Hamels to outpitch Burnett and Andy Petite - so if Sabathia faulters the Phillies could become the first repeat National Champion since the Big Red Machine in the middle-70s.
Wizards Start 1-0
I got really excited watching the Wizards defeat Dallas last night. Gilbert Arenas looked fantastic, with no-ill effects from his two knee surgeries. He drove and dished, drove and finished, hit long range and mid range jumpers, and looked once again like one of the NBA's elite level talents.
But this entire squad is talented. Randy Foye had a great game, hitting jump shots and taking it to the rack, and finished in double figures. He and Mike Miller, who had 8 rebounds, are a significant infusion of talent for the Wizards; hard to believe Washington gave up stiffs like Etan Thomas and Darius Songaila in exchange for those two. Third newcomer Fabricio Oberto had a great fourth quarter and helped the Wizards put the game away with two big offensive boards, a nice put-back, and some nifty give-and-goes with Arenas.
And I haven't even mentioned Andray Blatche, who hit a variety of shots - everything from dunks to 17-18 footers - and looked confident and focused on his way to 16 points off the bench.
Finally, my man Brendan Haywood finished with 7 (on only 3 of 10 shooting) and 10 boards. Offensively, he carried the Zards for a stretch in the first half when Arenas was primarily dishing. Defensively, he was key on rotations and on the boards. New coach Flip Sanders rewarded that effort by giving B-Hay 38 minutes.
It was only one game, but this team looks like it should be one of the elite teams, along with Boston, Cleveland and Orlando, in the Eastern Conference. Go Wizards!
Monday, October 26, 2009
We're all Phillies Fans Now
You have to admire athletes like Jeter and Rivera, classy players who perform and carry themselves well. But for every Jeter on the Yankees there's a A-Rod, for every Rivera there's a Steinbrenner, and the Yankees are still the swaggering corporation that you have to root against. Go Phils!
Hoops
In his column today, Michael Wilbon riffs on a topic I blogged about a few weeks ago - the hoops oligarchy known as the NBA.
Saturday, October 24, 2009
Bad News for Wizards
Friday, October 23, 2009
At least basketball season starts soon
Monday, October 19, 2009
Playoffs
Baseball Playoffs
Though long, as long as 5 hours in one case, the baseball playoffs have been pretty entertaining, full of clutch plays, miscues, good pitching and loads and loads of drama.
As much as I loathed the outcome, Saturday night’s Yankees win was a classic. And it was good to finally see the Angels break through tonight. I thought they were definitely toast this afternoon, especially after Bobby Abreu got thrown out by whom else – Derek Jeter – trying to stretch a leadoff double into a triple.
But Joe Girardi will be mercilessly second guessed for taking out Robertson and bringing in Aceves, with TWO outs and nobody on in the 11th. Aceves gave up back-to-back hits, a single and a long double, and gave the Angels life in the process.
One random note: I think Joe Buck and Tim McCarver are doing a great job announcing this series.
I know he can sound smug, but I think in general McCarver is a pretty fine analyst. He sure has some juju over Mariano Rivera. In 2001, he practically predicted that a blooper against Rivera could drop with the Yankees playing the infield in, and as folks know that is exactly what happened as the Diamondbacks defeated New York to win game 7. Today he mentioned that in that same 2001 World Series game Rivera made a throwing error on a bunt seconds before Rivera made ANOTHER error fielding a bunt.
Despite the pummeling the Dodgers received in game 3 I am still on the LA bandwagon. I thought the game was over tonight when Howard hit that 2-run blast in the first. But the Dodgers made a nice comeback to take the lead as I blog between innings, 4-3.
One other random note: Besides Carolina blue, of course, is there a finer, more beautiful color than Dodger Blue? That uni is a classic; ditto the LA hat.
Greece is in the playoffs, too
The Greek men’s football team will play Ukraine in a two-game playoff with the winner qualifying for the 2010 World Cup. Greece, Ukraine, and six other squads that came in the second in their groups are in the playoffs.
The first game, on November 14th, is in Athens, and the second game is in Ukraine on November 18th. Let me know if you want to cover over to watch that contest on Saturday the 14th.
Greece has some history with Ukraine. One, we civilized them and they use the Cyrillic alphabet. And two, in 2006 the two nations played in the same group, with Ukraine qualifying while Greece, the 2005 European champs, finished a disappointing third.
This year, Ukraine came in second in their group - won by England - and even defeated the English squad 1-0 in London (though in fairness to the Knights of St. George they had already qualified and fielded a B-team in that contest).
Ukraine has some good players who are regulars in the English Premier League, but from a cultural stand point join Moldova, Latvia, and Luxembourg in Greece’s recent run of games versus utterly inconsequential countries.
However, like Switzerland – who defeated Greece twice in the qualifying round - Ukraine also has a sordid history of Nazi collaboration. The Nazi occupiers found many willing collaborators in Ukraine, mainly nationalists who hated that Ukraine was part of the Soviet Union (those same folks really hated Jews, too).
All in all it’s a decent draw. Having the first game in Athens should help, and the Hellenic team should want to avenge having Ukraine keep them out of the previous World Cup.
A birth in the world’s most popular sporting event, revenge and pay back for being Nazi collaborators should make it an entertaining two-game playoff.
Saturday, October 17, 2009
Football season is over
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
World Cupdate
Tuesday, October 13, 2009
Nationalized Football League
Sunday, October 11, 2009
Cornucopia
Saturday, October 10, 2009
Happy Indigenous Peoples Day Weekend!
Tuesday, October 6, 2009
Great start to the postseason
- At that point the Nats were only 3 games back of the Royals and 5 of the Pirates, and for a while Evan and I hoped we would catch one of those teams and not finish with the worst record in the majors. That did hot happen;
- It didn't happen because the Nats finished the season by going 19-31;
- However, if you add the eight-game winning streak it's an almost respectable 27-31 record;
- The only teams to win fewer games than the Nats after August 11th were the Orioles with 17 and the PIrates with 17;
- Of the six teams in last place on August 11th, five finished in last place. The only team to move up in the standings were the Padres, who went 27-20 after August 2nd to pass the Diamondbacks (18-30 after the 2nd).