Monday, January 25, 2010

Vikings Fumble Farve's Chances Away


Last night's National Football Conference Championship game was the most dazzling to the wire football game I’ve ever seen. As expected, both football offenses answered every expectation as the New Orleans Saints and the Minnesota Vikings gave us an overtime shootout at the Louisiana Dome in New Orleans, Louisiana. It came down to a field goal kick in overtime to swipe Brett Farves' chances for his spectacular comeback tour.
The Minnesota Vikings came out of the gates with seven passing plays out of ten plays all together and threw on the first five plays. It was unexpected that the first touchdown for the Vikings would be from a 19 yard Adrian Peterson touchdown run. New Orleans quickly answered back with a touchdown drive of their own and it was nothing but pure action after that.
The Vikings and Saints threw up another touchdown for each side, but before the second quarter ended the serious problem for Adrian Peterson and the Minnesota came up. Peterson fumbled the ball away and Scott Fujita from the Saints' defense pounced on the fumble. The fumble was charged to Brett Farve and it started the turnover trend for the Vikings the rest of the game.
Brett Farve threw two interceptions and one of them after he broke the most important rule for a quarterback to break. Brett Farve threw across the field and Saints corner back Tracy Porter intercepted the pass ending the Vikings game winning drive. Brett Farve wasn't only throwing interceptions, but he wasn't alone with Percy Harvin, Bernard Berrian, Darius Raynaud and Adrian Peterson all fumbled the ball. Darius and Adrian didn't lose any of their fumbles and that gave the Vikings a total of five turnovers.
As much as I was rooting for a Brett Farve greatest 40 year old Super Bowl glory story, I was a little bit happier that the "Who Dat" Saints pulled out a miraculous overtime win with a 40 yard field goal winning kick. It looked like if the Vikings could have held on to the ball the Vikings would have held on to the win, but like football experts always says, "turnovers kill you" and they killed Brett's greatest football season ever. For some reason I want Farve to comeback next year and make it again and maybe this time bring Vikings another Prince "fight song" and another Super Bowl ring.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

All Star Funk


Boston Celtics guard and 13 year veteran Ray Allen is a little flustered with this year's All Star team voting and with the NBA allowing fans to vote players on the team. Ray Allen’s argument is that players are getting snubbed for players he feel shouldn't even be close to being on the team. Ray wants players who actually play during the season be on the All Star team. Ray Allen says, "I like the fact the fans get the opportunity to vote and pick who they'd like to see in the All Star Game, but I don't think it should be 100 percent."
The first player he must have a problem with is Philadelphia 76ers guard Allen Iverson. Iverson has been in a slump over the past couple years and hasn't really posted All Star numbers. As a matter of fact Allen has just come out of retirement two months ago as he received a second chance with the team that drafted him. Iverson has also been hampered by minor injuries due to him getting back in shape. I don't think Allen Iverson has played more than twenty games this season, but it's still more than the Western Conference All Star voted to this year's game.
Tracy McGrady of the Houston Rockets will be making his eighth All Star appearance and has only played five regular season games. The funny thing is that Tracy McGrady was voted into the All Star Game before he even played one minute in the regular season and is not even really on the Houston Rockets team right now. Tracy has been suspended indefinitely from the Rockets' team and they are actively trying to trade him before the upcoming deadline. Tracy is a good player, but he can't be an All Star this year.
There are plenty of other much deserving players who won't make this year's All Star team due to these votes such as Portland Trailblazer's guard Brandon Roy and Utah Jazz guard Derron Williams. Brandon Roy has been the leader of his young and injury riddled Trailblazers team that is on its way to the playoffs. Also Derron Williams who is a premiere point guard for the Jazz or you can even make a case for Memphis Grizzlies forward Rudy Gay. On the Eastern Conference side you can choose Stephen Jackson or Gerald Wallace from the Charlotte Bobcats. Gerald Wallace is averaging a double double with 18.3 points and 11.5 rebounds a game as a small forward. Not to mention Atlanta Hawks guard Mike Bibby or even the guy who started this conversation in Boston's Ray Allen.
Whoever makes it to the All Star game will be well deserving of it even if it is Tracy McGrady or Allen Iverson. These two players are proven veterans and have been to the All Star game before and that might be the reason why they needed to be snubbed this year. The league has a thriving young core of players, but that's what they are young. These players have plenty of more years to make the All Star team. The All Star game is like any other sport's All Star game, it's for the fans and the fans know who they want to see. If players feel slighted by being kept out of the All Star game, there is only one thing to do and that’s do what you have to do to be a fan favorite. Stay after the game and take pictures with fans and give out autographs along with public appearances. If that doesn't work, play better.

Monday, January 18, 2010

Brooking Has No Respect for Himself


The Dallas Cowboys played the Minnesota Vikings on Sunday to advance to the NFC Championship game. The Cowboys has already won their first playoff game since 1996 against the Philadelphia Eagles the week before and beat them pretty good 34-14. The Vikings totally embarrassed the Cowboys 34-3 on Sunday and rubbed it in when Brett Farve threw his fourth touchdown of the game with less than five minutes left in the game.
Now it wasn't embarrassing that they allowed a forty year old Brett Farve to have the best statistical playoff game of his career, nor was it that they didn't even score a touchdown the whole game. It was embarrassing for the Dallas Cowboys because they allowed a fourth quarter touchdown when it was fourth and three at their own eleven yard line. It got even worse when Cowboys' middle linebacker Keith Brooking followed Brett Farve to the Vikings' sideline to yell at them how disrespectful it was.
Then Keith Brooking went even further saying, "I thought it was totally classless and disrespectful. This is the NFL, that's not what this is about. I don't think there's a place for that. I was looking for Childress. I didn't think it was right, but they've got to see us next year." Please Keith, so it's a place in the NFL for following a player to their sideline and cry about how you feel disrespected by them scoring another touchdown. There's no crying in baseball and definitely no crying in football.
It was still time left on the clock and you mean to tell me if the Cowboys got the ball back they would've just taken knees to run the clock out. Hell no! They would have tried feverishly like they did to score a touchdown or put more points on the board to make that score look more respectable. That's a double standard that should never be brought up by another football player as long as this game is played. Now people are questioning if the Vikings ran up the score on the Cowboys. Yes they did and did so with good reason.
There's only one reason why athletes play the game and Herm Edwards said it best, "You win to play the game." That's it and that's all. If you don't want a team to blow you out or embarrass you there's only one thing you can do and that's stop them from scoring. Don't let them near your end zone or get into field goal position to put more points up. It sickens me already to see football players celebrate excessively after every first down, catch, two yard run or tackle pass the line of scrimmage. I know it's an emotional game, but if you are just as hyped when you make a big play you will be just as deflated when you mess up and that's all it was for Keith Brooking. Last week against the Eagles, the Cowboys were show boating the whole game, but this week its uncalled for. Get out of here. Shut up, take your ball, leave the field and go home.

Friday, January 15, 2010

When Will We Get It!


With Athletes continuing to disappoint the average sports fan with all kinds of crazy antics and situations, this leads me to ask the question when will we get it. If you were to look back at your memories of sport athletes you will see a bunch of them famous or not have a pattern run in with authorities and actions that would make the average Joe cringe. Each situation that you can remember will make you as a person think less of that athlete.

Look at Tiger Woods, Tiger was put on the highest pedestal I've ever seen for an athlete since Mike Tyson and was thrown from it quicker that he could sink a three foot put. Media and some sports fans had Tiger as almost God like as if they really believed in him to be a savior. All because he was a phenomenal golfer and was thrown under the bus after making a mistake that any other human can make. They didn't stop endorsing Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson or any other athlete was caught cheating as well.

Then you have Gilbert Arenas who now faces gun charges for a practical joke gone badly. Arenas was considered to be a premiere point guard in the NBA, but was hampered by injury. With this gun charge getting out of hand due to the media spinning this story into the two players brandishing guns at each other. People are not only looking to keep him out of the league, take his money and are now confused on who Gilbert Arenas really is.

Finally you have Marvin Harrison. Marvin Harrison on the field was touted as the ultimate professional in the NFL. He played a position that has had plenty of troubled and problematic players. Marvin was quiet and seamed humble as he never over celebrated a reception for a first down or a touchdown, but now is being investigate for a shooting and a murder. Now we question who Marvin really is and how did this happen?

It happens like this, these people are human beings not Gods. Yes they are very athletic and do thing that the average human might not be able to do, but that does not make them perfect. The athlete has proven this to sports fans time after time. There are a number of athletes, too many to count that has made simple human mistakes. I'm not saying don't cheer or root for these athletes. I'm just saying even with all that money and television exposure they are no better than us and aren't excused from making mistakes. This makes me want the sports fans to open their eyes and get it that athletes are human too.

Thursday, January 14, 2010

The Rooney Rule Dilemma


There are a lot of things that comes to mind when I think of the "Rooney Rule", first I think of affirmative action and the problem it has caused America due to a certain quota that has to be met and the way it singles out the wrong people. Then I think of the people who are over looked or just brought in to comply with the law. The Rooney rule is a rule set by the NFL that organizations need to interview at least one minority candidate before making its hire of who they really want.
That's the reason why I'm set on both sides of the "Rooney Rule" fence. The rule has helped coaches like Pittsburgh's Head Coach Mike Tomlin and ex Cleveland Browns' coach Romeo Crennel receive a job they might not have even been offered. , especially with the rule being named after the Pittsburgh Steelers' former owner Dan Rooney. The rule opens the door for true diversity in the league, but at the same time throws a dark cloud on the rule.
The "Rooney Rule" showed its true colors when two coaches were hired basically without any real chance of hiring a minority head coach. The Seattle Seahawks went straight for Pete Carroll after they fired their head coach Jim Mora and the Washington Redskins quickly hired former Denver Broncos' coach Mike Shanahan after Jim Zorn was abruptly shown the door. Both teams barely gave a minority coach a shot.
That's the problem right there, the Seahawks and the Redskins had to follow a formality which was more disrespectful than to not even interview a minority coach. The Seahawks brought in Minnesota Vikings' defensive coordinator Leslie Frazier just to comply with the "Rooney Rule". There was no real chance of him getting the position, but the Seahawks made sure to tell him that he had a real chance at filling it and all along they wanted Pete Carroll.
If a team knows who they want to hire I feel they should be allowed to hire that coach as soon as possible. They shouldn't have to comply with some rule just to interview a minority they really don't even want for the job. If there's a head coach with three Super Bowl rings and a minority head coach with none, most likely the coach with the rings will get the job. The "Rooney Rule" should be changed in a way that won't seem like a spit in the face to minority coaches. If there is an open position that won't be filled for over a couple weeks then the rule should take affect, but if the job is almost filled before its even open then the rule should be ruled out.

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Carroll's Trail of Destruction


With Pete Carroll geared up to be the Seattle Seahawks new head coach he has started a trail of deceit and destruction. Pete Carroll has brought the University of Southern California Trojans' football program back to dominance and also brought forth a new tradition. Not to mention the respect he and his teams has earned from all over the world in this past decade.
As fast as Pete Carroll brought USC to prominence, the faster he left the Trojans pondering scrambling to find a new head coach. This leaving of Pete Carroll was due to cause a chain reaction of destruction. With USC being a great university to coach at you would have thought coaches would be knocking down the door to fill this vacancy, but that's not the point. It was said that Carroll's decision was going to destruct the Oregon State Beavers as Mike Riley’s' name came up, but he quickly shot that down and there was Jack Del Rio. Jack Del Rio played for USC, but is still under contract with the Jacksonville Jaguars and he said it ain't happening as well.
Nobody really wants this job because as you look further and further into USC and the parting ways of Pete Carroll you'll see the real reason why. USC is totally in disarray and on the cusp of falling apart. Pete Carroll has left the Trojans' football team facing major sanctions for two major violations that we know of right now concerning Reggie Bush and his family troubles with improper gifts and running back Joe McKnight allegedly driving his baby mother's SUV sold to her by her boss a business manager or something.
These violations are the main reason and the real reason Pete Carroll decided to jump ship at USC. Well maybe there's one more and it has to do with the Trojans' athletic director Mike Garrett. Of course Pete felt slighted due to Mike Garrett hang him out to dry because he couldn’t keep his house clean. Ever since then the two have been running 40 yard dashes at opposite ends of the field waiting for the other one to leave, so they can run hundred yard sprints.
Look, Pete Carroll knew what he was doing when he took the first train smoking out of sunny California. He led the Trojans to their worst season since he's been there and looked liked he checked out before the season ended. Pete preached loyalty to his players, but showed he was a hypocrite by showing no loyalty at all to the recruits he brought to Southern California. We should’ve known Pete was up to something when he pitched a fit about Mark Sanchez leaving and now we know why. Carroll may have given Los Angeles great memories, but he has left us with a sour taste in our mouth with destroying L.A.'s team.

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Tell Us Something We Don't Know Mark


Mark McGwire has finally come out and told the world what most of the world presumed or thought they already knew. That he used performance enhancing drugs or steroids for over ten years. He admitted to using steroids during the season where he hit 70 homeruns and set the single season homerun record.
Like every person that uses performance enhancing drugs they regret it and say that they wished they never did it, but lets be honest if he wasn't smacking homeruns out of the ball parks he would have stopped using them. Every athlete wants to be one thing and that's great at whatever they do. They will use whatever advantage they can to get there to make history whether it's putting up extra iron in the weight room or needles in their back side.
There's only one reason that Mark McGwire chose to come forth about his steroid use and it wasn't to get a few extra people to buy his tell all book. McGwire came out to get into the Hall of Fame and that's the only reason. Sure he wants to be able to come to the St. Louis Cardinals' training facilities and not get hounded by steroid questions, but the Hall comes first.
I'm not mad at Mark McGwire for coming out about using steroids and I'm certainly not mad at him for using them either. America loves sports and they idolize the superior athlete and it was in the form of Mark McGwire. Baseball fans love the long ball and couldn't care less if he used steroids to do it. Mark was knocking them all over the park and real McGwire fans still love him for the things he achieved and it won't change their respect for him as a player or a person.
Look, I don't think him saying that he used performing enhancing drugs will get him into the Hall of Fame next year, but if he does great as a hitting coach and has no more bad marks on his record since being a hitting coach he should make it. Mark McGwire was great for baseball and brought more fans to the game with his monstrous homerun hits. With today's "Steroid Era" being called out a player with the accolades of Mark McGwire, he should be in the Hall of Fame.