Showing posts with label Phillies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Phillies. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

The Craziest Three Days in (Kevo) Sports History


Saturday-

I put on my Duke jersey, but not as confidently as usual. They were playing West Virginia in the Final Four tonight, the same West Virginia team that yours truly picked to beat Duke in the National Semi-Final before the tournament began. I just didn't like the match-up for the Blue Devils. The Mountaineers were more athletic, they were tough, they could hurt you in a lot of ways.

In the 15 or so years that I've been filling out a bracket, I've only picked Duke to lose twice: in 2007 when they were a 6 seed and ended up losing in the first round to VCU, and this year. It just didn't seem like their year. They were never ranked 1 all season, and they just weren't the dominant team like the Duke teams of the early 2000's, which won the national title in 2001.

So yes, hoping I was wrong, I picked against my team. How did they respond? They were dominant. I haven't seen a Duke team play that well since the early 2000's. Everything went right. West Virginia had no chance once the second half started. I was dead wrong, and I couldn't have been happier about it. Clearly, if they could steamroll West Virginia, they wouldn't have a problem Monday night with little Butler in the National Championship game.

Sunday-

I thought the sports highlight of my Easter Sunday would be watching the end of the Shell Houston Open golf tournament in which Anthony Kim beat Vaughn Taylor in a playoff. I was wrong, again. When my roommate Matt yelled to me that Donovan McNabb had been traded to the Redskins, I thought it was a joke. I dashed to espn.com, but didn't see the headline. So I guess it was just a rumor after all. I reloaded the page, just to make sure. There it was: Eagles trade McNabb to Redskins. Unbelievable.

It seemed inevitable that McNabb would be traded this offseason. I've always been a McNabb supporter. I know everyone is saying that now that he is gone, but I actually have stuck by #5 throughout his career, while a good 70% of Eagles fans wanted him gone. However, it just felt like it was time for him to move on. He had one year left on his contract, he's 34 years old whereas the rest of the team is getting younger, and it just seemed like the Eagles had been playing the same season over and over again for the last decade. Close, but nothing to show for it. So yes, I was fully expecting a trade this offseason.

But the Redskins? A team the Eagles will play twice a season? A team the Eagles will directly be competing against for a playoff spot? I just don't understand it. Yes, I know Donovan said he didn't want to be traded to the Raiders or Bills or whatever other bad teams he was rumored to go to. It's nice for the team to send Donovan to a team he wanted to go to. But guess what? The NFL is not a nice business. Teams don't win Super Bowls by being nice. They win Super Bowls by making smart football decisions. Trading your starting QB to a direct rival is not a smart football decision. Donovan, I truly appreciate everything you have done for this team. But players get traded all the time, and for the most part, they don't have any control over it. If you had to go to Buffalo or Oakland, I'm sorry, but that's just the way this business works.

Again, I'm sad to see Donovan go. He's the best QB this franchise has ever had, and he deserved to win a Super Bowl in Philadelphia. But it's time to move on and start the Kevin Kolb era.

Monday afternoon-

Opening Day. Two of the best words in sports. The Phillies opened up their season against the Nationals, sending their new ace, Roy Halladay, to the mound. This opening day felt a bit different than any other opening day, however. I can not remember a Philadelphia team with higher expectations going into the season. Yes, this includes the Eagles teams that went to several consecutive NFC title games. This includes the Phillies of last season. As far as I have seen, the Phillies have been the team predicted most to win the World Series this year. That never happened with the Eagles and the Super Bowl. Most people didn't predict the Phillies to repeat as Champions last year, much less make the World Series again. But expectations this year are sky high. The Phillies didn't win the World Series last year, but it still felt like a successful season. If the Phillies don't win the World Series this year, it will be a failure. One game down, and they look great. There are a few more games to go.

Monday night-

Everyone hates Duke, except me. Or at least it feels that way sometimes. It certainly felt that way as Duke was going up against Butler, the nation's new sweethearts. Butler, the aw-shucks team from Indiana with a cute little coach up against Duke, the giants with a coach who, let's face it, isn't exactly endearing.

As well as Butler had played in the tournament, I felt very confident that Duke would win their 4th national title. They played their best game of the year against West Virginia, and Butler's the kind of team that typically doesn't give Duke a lot of trouble. No problem.

The game started out 6-1 Duke. This was going to get ugly, and fast. Nolan Smith barely missed a 3 which would have made it 9-1. From there on, it was a slugfest. Duke would make a 3, go up by 4, looking to pull away a bit, but Butler just wouldn't let them. It went back and forth. Butler's defense was just suffocating. Duke could not get off any easy shots. The biggest lead for Duke in the game was 6, and that lasted about a minute. Even though the game was incredibly close throughout, the crowd made it seem that Butler was winning and had the momentum. I was just a little nervous.

Duke went up 5 with 3 minutes to go. I was staring to feel a little better at this point. But then Butler got a 2, and Duke missed. Butler got another 2, and it was a 1 point game with 50 seconds left. Duke calls a timeout and draws up a play. This had to work. They needed a bucket here, or they wouldn't get another shot. They end up running a great play, and Kyle Singler has an open shot. If falls way short, and Brian Zoubek ends up kicking it out of bounds. 20 seconds left, and Duke won't get the ball back. If Butler makes a shot, the game's over. I almost didn't want to watch.

Butler has trouble getting the ball in, but they finally get it in to Gordon Hayward, their best player. He drives right, but Singler is right in his face. He gets off a fade away from the baseline. It looks good. It looks really good. But it clangs off the iron, and Zoubek get the rebound. Two foul shots for Zoubek, not exactly the best of free throw shooters. No problem with the first though. He misses the second on purpose (still don't get this), and Butler gets the rebound. Still, they won't get a good shot, no chance right? Hayward throws up a prayer from half court. It looks good. It looks really good. It just clangs off the rim. Game over, but it took me a few seconds to realize that Duke had won and were the National Champions.

Most "great" tournament games are great because of what happens in the final minutes. This game certainly had great final minutes. But it was just a great game from start to finish. Always close, always played with 100% effort. It's the way every college game should be. It's easily the best Duke game I've ever seen, and up there with the best title game in any sport I've ever seen. It was the perfect ending to the craziest stretch of days I've personally ever experienced in sports.

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

2010 MLB Predictions



















To try something new and bold, I'm going to rate each team in three categories from 1-10: offense, pitching, and the "eye-test", basically just how the team looks overall on paper as well as other intangibles.

American League

East
1. Yankees
Offense- 9
Pitching- 8
Eye-Test- 9
Overall: 26
2. Red Sox (wild card)
Offense- 7
Pitching- 9
Eye-Test- 8
Overall: 24
3. Rays
Offense- 7
Pitching- 7
Eye-Test- 7
Overall: 21
4. Orioles
Offense- 7
Pitching- 4
Eye-Test- 5
Overall: 16
5. Blue Jays
Offense- 5
Pitching- 4
Eye-Test- 4
Overall: 13

Central
1. Twins
Offense- 7
Pitching- 7
Eye-Test-8
Overall: 22
2. White Sox
Offense- 7
Pitching- 8
Eye-test-7
Overall: 22
3. Tigers
Offense- 7
Pitching- 7
Eye-Test- 7
Overall: 21
4. Royals
Offense- 4
Pitching- 6
Eye-Test- 4
Overall- 14
5. Indians
Offense- 4
Pitching- 4
Eye-Test-4
Overall: 12

West
1. Angels
Offense- 7
Pitching- 8
Eye-Test-7
Overall: 22
2. Mariners
Offense- 6
Pitching- 7
Eye-Test- 8
Overall: 21
3. Rangers
Offense- 7
Pitching- 5
Eye-Test- 6
Overall: 18
4. Athletics
Offense- 5
Pitching- 5
Eye-Test- 5
Overall: 15

National League

East
1. Phillies
Offense- 9
Pitching- 8
Eye-Test- 9
Overall: 26
2. Braves (wild card)
Offense- 7
Pitching- 8
Eye-Test- 8
Overall: 23
3. Marlins
Offense- 7
Pitching- 7
Eye-Test- 6
Overall: 20
4. Mets
Offense- 7
Pitching- 5
Eye-Test- 5
Overall: 19
5. Nationals
Offense- 5
Pitching- 3
Eye-Test- 3
Overall: 11

Central
1. Cardinals
Offense- 7
Pitching- 8
Eye-Test- 8
Overall: 23
2. Cubs
Offense- 6
Pitching- 7
Eye-Test- 7
Overall: 20
3. Brewers
Offense- 7
Pitching- 5
Eye-Test- 7
Overall: 19
4. Reds
Offense- 6
Pitching- 7
Eye-Test- 6
Overall: 19
5. Astros
Offense- 7
Pitching- 6
Eye-Test- 6
Overall: 19
6. Pirates
Offense- 4
Pitching- 4
Eye-Test- 3
Overall: 11

West
1. Rockies
Offense- 8
Pitching- 7
Eye-Test-7
Overall: 22
2. Dodgers
Offense- 8
Pitching- 6
Eye-Test-7
Overall: 21
3. Giants
Offense- 5
Pitching- 8
Eye-Test-6
Overall: 19
4. Diamondbacks
Offense- 7
Pitching- 6
Eye-Test-6
Overall: 19
5. Padres
Offense- 5
Pitching- 4
Eye-Test- 5
Overall: 14

Playoffs

Twins over Red Sox Yankees over Angels Phillies over Cardinals Rockies over Braves

Twins over Yankees Phillies over Rockies

World Series: Phillies over Twins in 5 games

Friday, August 28, 2009

Part 2- National League w/ John Kruk


I'm sure the suspense has been killing everyone, so here's my run-down of the senior circuit going into the final month of the season. There are seven teams left in the NL with a realistic shot at making the playoffs, so here they are, from worst to first:

7- Florida Marlins
If you believe in trends, the Marlins should win the World Series this year. After all, they do it every six years since the 1997 season. However, I'm going to go against fate and say the Marlins don't go all the way in 2009. Much like the Twins in the AL, the Marlins always seem to find a way to get it done with no money and few superstars, and the fact that they're even over .500 is impressive. They have a legit ace in Josh Johnson and the rest of their staff is solid. They also score a ton of runs, even if their only really great every day player is Hanley Ramirez. So yeah, good job Marlins but no playoffs this year.

6- Atlanta Braves
The Braves probably have the best starting pitching staff from top to bottom in the majors. They don't have one surefire dominant pitcher (maybe Tommy Hanson soon), but there's no easy game against this staff. However, the score about zero runs a game. If they can keep their rotation intact over the next few seasons and add a bat or two, they will be dangerous. However, they just don't have the lineup to make enough noise down the stretch this year.

5- San Francisco Giants
The Giants are very similar to the Braves in that they have great pitching and no hitting. However, I would be very very scared of the Giants in the postseason because they have two dominant starers in Tim Lincecum and Matt Cain, and a guy that used to be dominant in Barry Zito. Oh by the way, they have another guy who threw a no-hitter this season in Jonathan Sanchez. So yeah, if these guy find their way into the playoffs, watch out. The problem is their lineup, or the fact that it's basically non-existant. When your best hitter is a guy whose nickname is Kung-Fu Panda, you have issues. Much like the Braves, if they add some bats, look out.

4- Colorado Rockies
Stop me if this seems familiar: The Rockies are absolutely terrible in the beginning of the season, then out of nowhere, make a turnaround, become the hottest team in the majors, and end up sweeping the Phillies in the playoffs and making the World Series. Yeah, that happened two years ago, and it looks like history may repeat itself. On paper, this team isn't as good as the NL champions of two years ago. No Matt Holliday, and although the pitching staff has been overachieving, you have to wonder how long they will last. However, there's no arguing how good they have been over the last few months, and you always go with the hot team in the baseball playoffs. They are scary, for sure.

3- Los Angeles Dodgers
They still have the best record in the NL, but this is not the same team that dominated in the first half of the season. I have two words for you: Vicente Padilla. Besides the fact that they had to sign Padilla, their bullpen isn't very good, with the exception of Jonathan Broxton, and they're just not hitting very well as a team right now. Yes, even everyone's favorite guy Manny isn't playing too well right now. The lineup is still potent, but they're going in the opposite direction of the Rockies right now, and I wouldn't be shocked if Colorado ended up catching them in the West.

2- St. Louis Cardinals
Their were two major acquistions at the trading deadline this season: Cliff Lee to the Phillies, and Matt Holliday to the Cardinals. Holliday has made the Cardinals incredibly better, and maybe even the team to beat in the NL. Chris Carpenter has quietly become the best pitcher in the NL this season, and Adam Wainwright ain't so shabby either. The Cardinals still have a few problems. Their starting rotation is very thin after Carpenter and Wainwright, and their bullpen isn't so special either. And besides Holliday and some guy named Pujols, the lineup isn't going to scare too many teams. However, Pujojs+Holliday+Carpenter+Wainwright could be enough to lead them to a World Series.

1- Philadelphia Phillies
Yes, I'm a homer, too bad. I really wish I had wrote this before the Phils lost 2 out of 3 to the Pirates, but oh well. We all know what's good about the Phils, so I'll focus on the negatives. The biggest problem right now is Brad Lidge, and if he's going to figure it out by playoff time. We keep waiting on him to run off 10 saves in a row to say he's back, but it just doesn't look like it's gonna happen. So what to do about Lidge? It's looking like a real possibility that he won't be the Phillies closer pretty soon. The other problimatic pitcher is Cole Hamels. Yes, he looked good in in last outing, but it would be great to see him put together 4 or 5 good starts to know he can be counted on in the postseason. He is the key to the team right now. If the Phils go into a series with Lee, Hamels back in form, Happ, and Blanton the way they are pitching right now, it's lights out. So yes, call me a homer, but the Phils are the favorite in the NL right now.

So, Rockies win the Wild Card, Phils beat them in the first round, Cardinals take out the Dodgers in the first round, Phils over the Cards to get back to the World Series.

That would set us up with a Phils/Yankees World Series, which I predicted at the beginning of the year. Needless to say, that series would be slightly more intriguing than Phils/Rays from last year. Here's hoping.