Wednesday, November 30, 2011

ACC Doldrums

What's more depressing: losing the ACC-Big 10 challenge for the third year in a row; or the realization that Leonard Hamilton is the third longest tenured coach in the conference?

The ACC became the best conference in the country thanks - in part - to coaching giants such as Dean Smith, Everett Case, Norm Sloan, Lefty Dreisell, Gary Williams, Terry Holland, Bobby Cremins, Jim Valvano, Vic Bubas, Frank Maguire, Bones McKinney, etc. etc.

Now we have ol' Roy and Mike Krzyzewski . . . and that's it.  Leonard Hamilton is not only the third longest tenured coach, but a guy who has no earthly idea how to coach offense is arguably the third best coach in the ACC by virtue of going to three straight NCAA tournaments. 

That's how far the ACC has fallen. 

And it's not only Hamilton.  I think Tony Bennett is the fourth longest tenured, and he hasn't been in Charlottesville long enough to have a Virginia drivers license yet.

Things may improve.  After all, Jamie Dixon and Jim Boeheim are coming, and only one of them had to fire an alleged child molester this season.  And Mark Turgeon at Maryland is a Roy Williams disciple, Mark Gottfried may be able to jump start things at NC State, and the new coaches at Clemson and Georgia Tech have won at lesser schools.  

The football-powered expansion is one reason ACC basketball has suffered. But the main culprit is a lackluster series of head coaches on the bench of storied programs in Raleigh and Atlanta.

Sunday, November 27, 2011

On second thought

I didn't get a chance to blog between Carolina's blow-out win over South Carolina and the disappointing loss to UNLV last night.

But upon further review, the blog topic would have been the same - Kendall Marshall.  He was once again unbelievable against Lesser Carolina.  He finished with 14 assists - many of which were spectacular - his third double figure total for this young season. 

John Henson may be our best player so far with Harrison Barnes poised to assert that title during the season, but Marshall is Carolina's most important player.  I agree with Jay Bilas' assessment that we may be seeing the second coming of Jason Kidd.

The loss to UNLV also highlighted how important Marshall is. As my brother pointed out during the game, Carolina counts on our point guard to disrupt the other team's offense via ball pressure. The Tar Heels' recent championship teams have featured point guards who could dominate a game defensively: Derrick Phelps in '93, Raymond Felton in '05 and Ty Lawson 3 years ago. 

Roy recognizes that Marshall might not be fleet enough to do that, at least not yet, so Dexter Strickland - who by the way was the only starter to play well for 40 minutes versus the Rebels - has been covering the other teams point guard.

Saturday night plenty of things went wrong for the Heels; Carolina could not rebound, guard or shoot.  Even good teams will struggle with one of those facets of basketball during a game, but rarely do good teams stink at all three at the same time. Saturday night, Carolina certainly did.  Zeller had a terrible game, both Z and Henson were pushed around on the boards where Carolina got killed, no one made free throws, and Barnes and the starters had a collectively terrible shooting night and settled for a shocking number of bad shots.  

And on both ends of the floor Marshall struggled; he didn't disrupt their defense or run North Carolina's offense as well as he has throughout his tenure as our starting one. When he struggles, this team will struggle. The good news is Marshall - and by definition the 2012 Tar Heels - is too good to have THAT happen again.  

This week will be a big one for the Heels as they welcome Wisconsin to Chapel Hill as part of the ACC-Big 10 challenge before heading to Lexington to face Kentucky in a match up of college basketball's two winningest programs.  This loss to UNLV will bring out a more focused, determined Marshall and Carolina squad (and ol' Roy, too).  In particular, look for huge games this week from Zeller, Barnes and of course our most important player, Kendall Marshall.

As few extra points:
  • James Michael McAdoo, though not as key as Marshall, will be a very important part of our season. The Heels will need him to produce off the bench in general, but in particular as our lone reliable big man off the bench he will be key in spelling both Zeller and Henson. He had some nice moments versus UNLV, especially running the floor, but he also missed some important free throws in the second half that could have impacted the final outcome.  
  • Besides Strickland two other Heels had nice games versus UNLV: Reggie Bullock and P.J. Hairston.  Both have put together back to back to back nice games.  McAdoo, Bullock and Hairston give Carolina a phenomenal bench. 
  • Great to see Carolina stick it to Duke for the 20th time in the last 21 games, including 8 straight wins.  At 7 and 5 Carolina is bowl eligible, no small feat considering the turmoil of the off season and the firing of Butch Davis.  Kudos to Everett Withers and seniors such as Dwight Jones for leading this year's squad.
  • Next year is already tantalizing, with Bryn Renner and Gio Bernard poised to lead the Heels to the promised land - 9 wins, including one over N.C. State!
  • Finally, while were talking leadership one of my favorites is T.J. Yates, who led Carolina to 8 wins last year despite numerous suspensions and disruptions.  Today, Yates played in his first NFL game and helped lead his Houston Texans to a 20-13 win. Yates took over for injured second-string quarterback Matt Leinert at the end of the first half, and completed 8 of 15 passes for 70 yards.  Leinert may be out for the season so Yates is likely the de facto starter for the AFC South leading Texans.
  • GO HEELS!

Friday, November 25, 2011

No one notices Greek good news?

I'm probably overstating things when I say 'good news' to describe the pairing of Zach Galifianakis and Olympia Dukakis on HBO's 'Bored to Death.'   That show is fun to watch on it's own, but the guest stars this year - John Hodgeman, Mary Steenbergen, Patton Oswald, etc. - have been excellent, especially Olympia Dukakis.   

On the show she and Galifianakis end up having an affair that lasts 2 or 3 episodes.  They were funny - and of course Greek - together.  It was some kind of Greek comedy super group that could only be topped if Tina Fey works with . . . Jennifer Aniston? Dimitri Martin? 

Those names are a reminder that this very well may be, to quote John Manuel, the 'golden age of Greek-American comedy.'  Tonight I googled both their names, and found many positive reviews and notes about their on-screen pairing. But despite this 'golden age' when I googled their Galifianakis, Dukakis and Greek I found nothing.  Tipota.

More proof that the crisis in the motherland has not only put a lid on any good news about Greece or Greeks now Greek-Americans are suffering, too!

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

News, actual NEWS, from Carolina's romp over Tennessee State

Though most of the story lines stayed the same - John Henson showing off his new and improved offensive arsenal, Harrison Barnes looking like Harrison Barnes with a couple of particularly sweet moves, Kendall Marshall dropping a record number of dimes - there was some actual new news from Carolina's latest romp over 'a team that will or has made the NCAA tournament in 2011 or 2012 but isn't nearly as good as Carolina."

The Heels were led by Reggie Bullock's 23 points on their way to a relatively easy 102-69 win.  Coming into the season the Heels only had one semi-legit concern, at least talent wise.  With Leslie McDonald, arguably the Heels' best outside shooter, out for the season there were - are? - concerns regarding whether Carolina has enough outside shooting.   

North Carolina's imposing front line of Tyler Zeller,  Henson and Barnes is practically unstoppable.  But the Heels will still need outside shooting to keep teams from playing a packed-in zone (a la Virginia) and daring Carolina to beat them from the outside.  Barnes is part of that solution; though he will likely take fewer threes he is also expected to make a higher percentage.  

But the other half of the answer to the McDonald question is Bullock.  He had his moments last year despite battling a balky knee that eventually ended his season early.  This year, a healthy Bullock needs to actually turn into the McDonald of last year, especially the version down the stretch in 2011.  McDonald eventually developed into a confident offensive player off the bench, one the Heels relied on.

[It could be a three-part answer if you factor in P.J. Hairston, but I don't want to make that kind of assumption for a freshman even though Hairston is very, very good].

Bullock had been a little underwhelming so far this season but against Tennessee State looked fantastic. He was confidently stepping into his shot and even drove a few times to the hole.  Shooting is as much mental as it is physical, so that kind of night could launch a great sophomore campaign for Bullock - and answer the one question that lingers with this year's Carolina team.

GO HEELS!

Extra points
  • How great was Bullock's night?  It rendered a 15-assist night for Marshall a mere footnote.  K-Mar now has 38 assists in his last 3 games, which I think is a Carolina record, including 2 fifteen assist efforts. The Heels shot 62 percent versus Tennessee State, and are shooting 53 percent for the season. The main reason for those gaudy stats is Marshall (and playing teams that were on the short side so we could easily feed the post).  Henson has gotten better, but so has Marshall. 
  • Tennessee State head coach John Cooper was once an assistant coach at Fayetteville State University, located in the city in which I am blogging from right now! 


Sunday, November 20, 2011

More evidence

You could easily call today's home-opener win over Mississippi Valley State University "UNC-A Part II."  The main story line from the 101-76 victory was the continued evolution of John Henson.

I liked Harrison Barnes' assertiveness on his way to 18 points, seeing Tyler Zeller grab oodles of rebounds and put backs and run the floor as he always does, and Kendall Marshall had a tidy game punctuated by at least 2 spectacular fast-break passes.  We even saw Dexter Strickland hit a few jumpers as part of overall great floor game (13 points, 6 boards, 6 assists, only 2 turnovers). 

One could quibble with the missed frees and threes, but that will come, especially the free throws.

However, THE story continues to be Henson.  Like Zeller running the floor, we expect Henson to blocks lots of shots and get his share of points in transition and down low.   But so far in three games Henson has shown an incredibly new set of skills.  As he did against Michigan State and UNC-A, Henson showed off a sick turnaround jumper, baseline moves and confidence in hitting shots from 15 to 17 feet versus Jerry Rice's alma mater.

Folks might remember that Henson was projected to be a three in the NBA, and came to Carolina in part to develop that skill set. As a freshman he suffered at the 3, and late in the season was moved down low and finished strong.

Last year, Henson was exclusively a 4 and had a terrific season.  This year it may be 'back to future' for Henson as he builds confidence in shooting and playing a bit on the wing.   

All Tar Heels fans were excited about the prospect of this season, having all five starters back with a great recruiting class (McAdoo was great today on his way to 10 points, and Hairston had 8).  

Perhaps even more exciting is watching Henson develop into a 75 (3/4, get it?) and into an even more elite player than we expected.  GO HEELS!

Extra Points

Like Henson's turnaround jumper, it seems clear that Carolina football is one year away.  Thursday's loss to Virginia Tech, in honestly a game Carolina should have won, was both tough to take and cause for optimism. 

Tough to take in that other than our inability to consistently stop Hokies quarterback Logan Thomas, Carolina outplayed Tech. If we had been able to suit up a Barth - any Barth - to kick field goals (or not fumble on our 5 yard line) we probably pull out an impressive road win.  

It was great to see Carolina fight back on the road against a top ten team.

But the significant optimism centers around our backs, quarter and half.  Bryn Renner is going to be a monster next year.  He's developing more and more poise each game to go along with an impressive arm and plus legs.   

And speaking of legs, though he only played a half Gio Bernard is as impressive as Renner.  Those two could lead us to the promised land: beating NC State and perhaps making it to the ACC championship game. Our offensive and defensive lines will need to be rebuilt - lots of seniors on both - but with Renner and Bernard (and a Barth?) the future looks bright for the football Heels.

Finally, speaking of the future I'd bring back Everett Withers as coach next season. The stability would be nice, but more importantly he's handled a very difficult situation with aplomb and the Heels are playing hard and smart.  New athletic director Bubba Cunningham will likely want to bring in his own guy as head coach, but I think Withers deserves to have 'interim' taken out of his title

Sunday, November 13, 2011

It's only been two games but . . .

Carolina ventured into Roy's hometown for a nice 91-75 win over a good UNC-Asheville team today, their second win in as many games versus a squad that made last year's NCAA tournament.  

UNC-A is a pretty small team, so Carolina excelled at what Carolina likes to do: feed the post as the first, second and third option. As a result the Heels were led by their front line; Tyler Zeller's 27 points, John Henson's double-double with 20 points and 12 boards, and Harrison Barnes' 17.

After flying from San Diego and the Carrier Classic the Heels looked a little sloppy at times, with 17 total turnovers (6 by Barnes).  But once their legs adjusted back to eastern time Carolina was rarely actually threatened by the Bulldogs.

I know it's only been two games, but the story for the Tar Heels so far has been Henson.  He had a great season last year, becoming a defensive force, playing the four with authority, and even making his free throws.

Dean used to always expect a great leap forward from a players' first to second year; Henson did that last year.
But so far this year he has displayed a similar leap in terms of offensive skill. Henson has displayed an improved mid-range jump shot, a sweet and sweeping hook shot and a potentially devastating and unstoppable turnaround jump shot from the baseline. When he makes that turnaround jumper he looks like a combination of Rasheed Wallace and Tyler Hansbrough - with a little Hakeem Olajuwon thrown in.

Yes, that shot of Henson's is potentionaly Psychosheed dreamtastic!

It's hard to keep from getting too excited about this Carolina team, certainly a 2009-worthy excitement.  GO HEELS!
A few more Carolina blue notes:
  • Safe to say no team has ever played on an aircraft carrier on one night, then two days later played a game 3 times zones away - in the mountains.  Sure, those were the Appalachians not the Rockies so it wasn't like going to free sea level to mile high elevation, but it's still an impressive back-to-back;
  • Dean never liked playing in-state opponents outside of the ACC, so you never saw Carolina play Appalachian State, ECU or UNC Charlotte. And he almost never played any of those teams at their place. Roy has changed that, and routinely schedules UNCA in particular.  
  • It was a nice gesture for the Heels to travel to UNC-Asheville to help them inaugurate their new Kimmel Arena.

Saturday, November 12, 2011

Heels are back

Outside of my family nothing makes me quite as happy - most of the time - as watching (and of course blogging about) the Tar Heels. They could have been playing inside a phone booth, let alone on the deck of an aircraft carrier, and I would have watched - and enjoyed watching.

To say today's game was different than most openers is an understatement.  The president sitting court side, the court being outside on an aircraft carrier, playing on a national holiday - a holiday we usually ignore as much as we currently ignore the wars being fought in Afghanistan and Iraq - were all unique experiences, even for a team as used to the spotlight and hype as Carolina.

Those factors, especially being outside with a weird backdrop, plus the first game of the season, make it hard to really evaluate how the Heels and the Spartans (putting the Hellenic in Carolina Hellenic Blue blog) played tonight.  It was a disjointed game, without much flow. 

The good news is the Heels played very well in the last 5 minutes of the first half both on offense and defense, and especially in the first 10 minutes of the second.  The Heels got and made easy baskets, some created by their work on the board but many from their defensive pressure, some because Michigan State was sloppy.  But the Heels looked like the Heels for those 15 minutes - running and scoring and forcing the action.

The other 25 weren't that bad. There was a 10-minute stretch in the first half where the Spartans killed us on the boards, and a 5-minute one where we lost focus and allowed Michigan State to cut our 20-point lead in half.  

But the main reason it was disjointed is the Heels missed many makeable shots, including free throws, early.  The silver lining to both is that one, Carolina was getting good shots, and two, the Heels were being aggressive on offense and getting fouled.

So we can quibble with the execution, execution that may have been impacted by the weather, an outdoor court, nerves, playing in front of the president AND on the deck of a massive war machine, etc.  But Carolina generally did what Carolina wanted to do, which bodes well for when the Heels move inside, you know into a building to play basketball.  

In terms of the players, John Henson was probably our player of the game.  He finished with a near triple double - 12 points, 9 blocks, and 7 boards.  The blocks are part, a HUGE part, of his game, but tonight Henson showed off a more polished offensive game.  He was impressive. Henson also had a great post-game quote: "It was fun. My excuse was sometimes I felt like the boat moved a little bit when I shot. That's why I missed."

Harrison Barnes lead the team with 17 points, and looked calm and confident for most of the night.  His 3 late, that ended a Spartans run that cut the lead to 10, effectively ended the game.  Barnes was also active defensively versus Michigan State.

Kendall Marshall and Dexter Strickland looked good in the back court, with Marshall looking in mid-season form on a number of impressive passes to start fast breaks.  Strickland benefited from 2 of those passes on his way to 10 points.  I was disappointed to see that Strickland still occasionally shoots fading away off his back foot, but he did hit his first 3-point attempt of the season.

Tyler Zeller's inability to hit shots or grab a board early lit up the twittersphere, but he had a nice second half and picked up 3 charging calls.

Carolina's bench looked solid with nice moments from Reggie Bullock and freshmen P.J. Hairston and a very active John Michael McAdoo, who finished with 4 points, 3 boards and 1 blocked shot in 17 minutes.

Not a perfect game from the Heels in terms of execution, at least when it came to shooting early, but defensively Carolina looked good, they did not turn it over much (14 for the game, 5 believe it or not from Marshall, a stat you assume will come down), they beat a good team while facing a once-in-a-lifetime scenario, but best of all did what Carolina wanted to do - at least for 25 of the 40 minutes.


Next up for the Heels is a visit to ol' Roy's hometown to inaugurate UNC Asheville's new gym.


GO HEELS!


A few more sports notes:
  • Great to hear that Wilson Ramos has been rescued.  The Venezuelan police report that an aerial raid freed Ramos.  Can't imagine what that is like, but I assume Ramos will report early, VERY early, to spring training this year.
  • Somehow, a halftime contest that featured Brooklyn Decker, James Worthy AND Tyler Hansbrough was incredibly lame.  How on earth could that happen?
  • I have nothing to add to the sad and disgusting Penn State situation. I initially thought it was harsh to not allow Joe Paterno to coach one final game in State College.  But the more you think about it, how could Paterno tell his higher ups what he heard about a child being raped in the shower, then drop it?  Never tell the police or worst of all, never confront Sandusky? How could anyone ignore those kinds of crimes against children?  Time to clean house completely in Happy Valley.

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Democracy should trump the market

Another great piece today in the Post by Harold Meyerson on how democracy should trump markets but hasn't in Greece - or in the U.S. for that matter.  Take the 2008 bank bailout.  If that had been truly little 'd' democratic - of course it was done by a big R Republican - Congress and the White House would have insisted that one condition for receiving massive amounts of taxpayer money was to write off 50 to 75 percent of the bad mortgages.  That way taxpayers would have tangibly benefited from helping the banks instead of simply being told these institutions were 'too big to fail.'

Robert Reich recently wrote a great column on democracy over capital, too.

In Greece, the issue is the actual euro and the euro zone.  Lost in the drama in Greece and the pending one in Italy (and Spain, and Portugal, and . . . ) is just how flawed the euro zone is, how badly that monetary 'union' has been put together.  Ironically, Greeks want to stay in the euro zone but also keep their economic sovereignty, which seem to be mutually exclusive.  

If the euro is to survive countries like Germany and Greece, France and Italy, need to integrate their economic and taxation policies - and in Greece's case, start collecting taxes - not just their currency.  

As Meyerson points out: "The euro created a house divided against itself. Monetarily, the continent was unified, but fiscally, politically, governmentally, economically and culturally, European nations remained separate and sovereign."  

I wonder if Greeks understand that in order to keep the euro they will have to give up their sovereignty.  Or maybe they do; Greeks have been so under served by their political class they may be willing to give Germany's or Brussels' bureaucrats a try.

Friday, November 4, 2011

Greek Tragedy (Cliche)

Where to begin when trying to assess the worst week in Greek history since when? The fall of Constantinople in 1453?  

Probably better to compare the week's chaos and tragedy - yes, two Greek words - to the junta that took over Greece in 1967 and ruled the birthplace of democracy as a dictatorship for seven years. 

The junta is an appropriate jumping off point since one can argue that those seven years were the last vestige of 'old' or more appropriately 'schizophrenic' Greece,  a nation and identify that vacillated between the middle east and Europe, between a western, classical identity and an eastern, byzantine/ottoman one, between the efficiency, transparency, accountability and meritocracy of the west and the nepotism, bribery,  irresponsibility and shaddy deals of the east.

But the junta and it's failed attempt to stamp out modernity and western culture - everything from the welfare state to the Beatles - convinced Greeks to finally join the west and cast their lot with Europe. A referendum outlawed the monarchy, divorce was legalized, Constantine Karamanlis was re-elected prime minister, and Greece re-applied to join the European Economic Community (as the European Union was called back then) soon after democracy was restored in 1974.  

It was a triumphant moment for Karamanlis, who was prime minister in the late 1950s when Greece originally applied for EEC membership.

Greece was accepted into the EEC, and the biggest event in modern Greek history occurred when Greece became a full member of the then 10-nation European union in 1981.  It may sound weird to think of Greece as anything but European since the motherland founded western civilization - and Greece was a founding member of NATO and was rebuilt by the Marshall Plan - but it wasn't until 31 years ago that that 'officially' happened. 

Of course, it took a while for that notion to take hold.  For instance, in 2005, as our cab driver drove us from the new Venizelos Athens airport to our hotel near the Acropolis he pointed out the 2004 Olympic Stadium, bragged about the airport and highways, and said to me "we are really European now."

And while parts of Greece became modern, parts of it stayed mired in the old, eastern ways, where bribes were necessary to get things done, and the political class rewarded their own and only Greeks with connections got the good jobs or got ahead. 

Ironically, that post-junta European identity is likely the only thing that will save Greece now.  Polls say that 60 percent of Greeks oppose the bailout, but 70 percent want to stay in the Euro zone.  Staying in the Euro zone means Greece will get their latest bailout.  So unlike during the other crises - in 1453, the Pope and the Christian west failed to save Constantinople and the Byzantine Empire from the Ottomans, and in 1967 and during the junta, the U.S. government put up with the dictatorship and did NOT press for a return to democracy - the west will probably save Greece.

But nothing in Greece ever seems to be easy - but it is interesting and full of flawed characters.  

Prime Minister George Papandreou (California born, Minnesota bred, FYI), whose father founded the socialist party he now heads, came into office in 2008, winning that election with an Obama-like margin and optimism.  
 
However, when George Papandreou took office, he discovered that the previous government, headed by the nephew of Constantine Karamanlis, had cooked the books, hidden massive amounts of debt, and basically lied to the European Union in order to join the Euro zone.  The Greek welfare state, which was dramatically expanded by George Papandreou's father Andreas when he was prime minister in the 1980s, had to be cut by his son.

George Papandreou had almost pulled it off, securing 8 billion Euros in the most recent bailout and an agreement to write off 50 percent of Greek debt.  But tragedy struck as it always seems to do in Greece, with Papadreou calling for a referendum, claiming that in a democracy the public should be allowed to vote on the bailout - and the cuts to the welfare state that go along with it.

As I wrap up this blog post I realize that we - Greeks and Greek-Americans - should have seen this coming.  This tragedy is so consistent with the rest of our 3,000 years of unmatched history (of course, if Greece takes down the Euro and the world economy, that historical legacy won't buy us the good favor it does now!).  Our history is our pride and our curse.

For instance: 
  • We invent democracy, but the prime minister's decision to have a vote on the bailout threatens to unravel the deal - and cost Greece 8 billion Euros.
  • We used to be torn between the east and the west, now the Greek public is split on Europe: pro-Euro zone, but anti-EU bailout and mandated cuts
  • The nephew of the prime minister who helped Greece join the European Union in 1981 lied to the European Union in order for Greece to join the Euro zone
  • The son of the socialist who expanded the welfare state has to dismantle it.
  • (and while we're at it, since the days of the Trojan War Greeks have always enjoyed tricking people; maybe that's one reason half of all Greeks don't pay their taxes)
Greece will survive, it always has against bigger problems. But hopefully, Greece's political class will not.  Greek society needs to finally break with the worst vestige of the east: the oligarchy, in Greece's case the oligarchy of Greek political families like the Karamanlis and Papandreou dynasties. 

Greeks need to believe in themselves, in real grassroots democracy and civil society, in the common good, in laws and not in political classes or families.   The rejection of the junta led to a great leap forward in Greece.  Let's hope this crisis will end the junta of the Greek political classes and families.

A Few More Hellenic Notes:

Of course, Greek political families are only part of the problem. And there is no guarantee that an 'outsider' prime minister would not have done the same thing in terms of expanding a bloated welfare state or cooking the books.   

Why? Because a massive Greek government and public sector has always been a key factor in cobbling together the modern Greek state over the last 180 years.  

Greece's current boundaries were only set in 1947.  From the birth of modern Greece in 1828, to 1947 and beyond, a strong and active central government was seen as essential in absorbing and assimilating ethnic Greeks - who used to live as subjects of the Ottoman Empire, or on islands that were part of the British Empire or belonged to Venice or Italy - into the new modern Greek state AND fostering a modern and independent Greek identity. 

Remember, up until 1828 there had never, ever been one, united Greek state or empire.  Alexander the Great kind of did that, but it didn't last.  Some argue that the Byzantine Empire between the 6th and 12th centuries was the first Greek state or Greek empire, but they didn't even call themselves 'Greeks.' Though they spoke Greek, since they inherited the Roman Empire they called themselves 'Romiosini' - Greek for 'of the Roman Empire.' 

Anyway, in order to build this modern Greek nation state it was felt that a strong and active central government - that would do everything from collecting taxes, to building an army to confront the Ottoman Empire and take back Constantinople, to resurrecting and stressing the link to classical Greece, to cleaning up and standardizing the modern Greek language - was needed.

That belief was shared by all Greeks, whether they were royalists or democrats.  That consensus never changed, and the government got even bigger once Greece joined the Euro zone and was able to borrow billions to maintain such a large government sector.  And borrowing money became easier than collecting taxes from wealthy Greeks, but that's for another blog.   

Finally, two last items.  One, good to see that a unity government will finally be formed between New Democracy and PASOK to show the markets and the EU that Greeks CAN work together.  That happens so rarely that most of those instances are national holidays like last week's OXI Day.

And two, in my opinion one thing that has always gnawed at the Greek psyche is our lack of stature in the modern world.  From 40o BC to 1453 we were the center of universe in many ways.   But since 1828 we've marginal at best.  

Greece has overshadowed the G-20, Herman Cain, you name it.  And today's confidence vote in parliament will be the lead item on newscasts across the globe.  So at least we're at the center of the world again!


Tuesday, November 1, 2011