Anyone stopping by my site, please head over Jon Pessah at True/Slant , my new home for blogging. Thanks.
While you’re there, take a look around. Plenty of interesting people on site.
Jon
Anyone stopping by my site, please head over Jon Pessah at True/Slant , my new home for blogging. Thanks.
While you’re there, take a look around. Plenty of interesting people on site.
Jon
Should Michael Vick get another chance? Yes.
Should Pete Rose? No.
The New York Daily News says Commissioner Bud Selig is considering Pete Rose’s possible reinstatement for Hall of Fame eligibility. Buster Olney, the voice of baseball for ESPN, says he’ll vote for Rose if he’s reinstated. I wouldn’t. Rose undermined the credibility of his sport, lied about it, lied about it again—for years— and still shows little to no remorse.
And forget the steroid comparison. At this point it is pretty obvious that steroid use was widespread and condoned from on high. (Willful ignorance is not a defense.) Rose was betting illegally, on his own sport, and his own team. And he’s barely said he’s sorry, much less made any kind of amends.
NFL commissioner Roger Goodell reinstated Vick today, ruling that the former Atlanta quarterback could play in regular-season games as early as October. What Vick did — bankrolling a dogfighting ring — was despicable. But he admitted his crime and did his time — 23 months in a federal prison. In the American legal system, that qualifies him for a second chance.
Will an NFL team hire him? In time, I’m saying yes, but this promises to be one long morality play. Will a baseball team hire Rose if Selig lifts his lifetime ban? Count on it.
But that’s another story entirely.
also posted at http://trueslant.com/jonpessah/
News reports this week have Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski signing up for a second tour with the Olympic team.
Prediction: K will be out of Duke before the opening tap of the next Olympic basketball tournament.
Simply, there is no where to go but down for him at Duke, where he has not been able to attract top talent since Roy Williams took up shop eight miles down the road. Look, there are just so many sons of NBA basketball players and coaches to go around. K has not landed a big man prospect since Elton Brand, who left early, and Carlos Boozer, whose draft value was destroyed in K’s guard-oriented system. He was not able to hold on to Eliot Williams this offseason and his interest in all-but-certain one-and-done John Wall tells you a lot about how his recruiting is going.
The top players no longer have to buy into the team-comes-first concept that K peddles ( a concept that took a big hit when he turned his back on the university during the lacrosse scandal). They realize it’s a business, the same way K does, and it has changed the playing field. The question is at age 62, can K adjust? Does he still even want to?
I wrote about this two years ago in ESPN Magazine as K headed into his first Olympics.http://sports.espn.go.com/espnmag/story?id=3373328. Not much has changed.
K’s recent failures at recruiting and the resultant early exits in the NCAA tournament are hurting his “brand,” something he has worked tirelessly to polish and promote. Losing in the first weekend of the NCAAs can only tarnish the image. Winning gold medals gets you endorsements.
You figure it out.
Baseball writers across the country are wringing their hands over the welcome Manny is getting now that he finished his 50-game suspension. The truth: fans cared only when they thought a handful of top players were doing steroids. It messed with the record book. Now that it is pretty obvious that the use of PEDs were wide spread, fans see this as the steroid era, akin to the deadball era, the spitball era, the all-the-players-are-white era. It all makes sense. Baseball writers, on the other hand, were humiliated by the story the missed — or decided not to report — and continue to take it out on the players. They need to get over it, too.
So, once again “lawyers with knowledge of the drug-testing results” from the 2003 baseball season broke the law and leaked information about the confidential tests, this time fingering Sammy Sosa as one of the 104 players who tested positive to the New York Times. These tests are under seal as the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in California decides if the government can keep the results they took from the lab under questionable circumstances in April of 2004. There was no investigation when the “laywers” famously leaked the first of those positives — Alex Rodriguez — to SI, so guessing there will be no investigation this time, either. Odd, when you consider how aggressive the investigators were on leaks that hurt their case. Or how they squeezed Greg Anderson’s wife and mother-in-law to get him to talk. And how they recently decided to drive the woefully bankrupt state of California even deeper into debt by appealing the Balco judge’s ruling on evidence, once again prolonging the case against Barry Bonds.
Makes you wonder just who is doing the leaking?
We all know the Yankees’ run of four World Series titles was built on pitching. And we all knew that, despite the success of the staff, many of those pitchers grumbled about Jorge Posada. Not when he was belting doubles and home runs at the plate. But more than a few were less than thrilled with the way Posada caught and called the game.
Now comes the stats in today’s New York Times that are nothing short of chilling for a team whose pitching staff, expected to be a major strength this season, has struggled. When Posada is behind the plate, the Yankees ERA is 6.31. It’s almost three runs less — 3.81 — when either Francisco Cervelli, Jose Molina, or Kevin Cash is calling the pitches. To be fair, Posada has caught four starts by Chein-Ming Wang, who has yet to recover from the torn tendon he suffered running the bases last May in Houston (I love interleague play, but hate that pitchers have to bat in NL parks). But even subtracting those games, Posada’s ERA is 5.47.
Newcomer AJ Burnett, who has fared far better when Posada is not behind the plate (batters have hit .330 in four games pitching to Posada, .223 in nine games pitching to the other three), had this to say after his shutout performance pitching to Cervelli against the Mets on Sunday: “I think it’s just a matter of — I don’t know if it’s the catcher — but we threw curveballs in fastball counts, we had them looking for something and they had no idea what was coming, I don’t think,” Burnett said. “That’s huge.”
The Yankees want — and need — Jorge’s bat in the lineup, and the DH slot is already occupied by aging Hideki Matsui. So he will play the bulk of the games behind the plate. But it’s pitching that wins, and if the Yankee pitchers continue to struggle pitching to Posada, New York will have a touch decision to make.
Is it just me, or does Derek Jeter look perpetually unhappy?
Granted, there hasn’t been much joy around the Yankees this spring. Injuries continue to plague an aging team, the three free agents are tense and tight—CC’s gem last night notwithstanding—and the new Yankee Stadium is an embarrassment, a monument to the greed and excess of an era that ended when the economy melted last October.
All of this, and more, seems to etched on Derek’s no longer boyish face. Never engaging with the media and always cautious, Derek nonetheless made us feel good because it was so clear that he loved what he was doing. Now it feels like he’d rather be somewhere else, maybe with Joe Torre in Los Angeles.
Watching him in the field is getting painful. Not quite Willie Mays in the Mets outfield painful, but even ardent defenders — and count me in that group — have to admit that too many balls are going through the left side of the infield. He’s even having some trouble with his trademark, back-to-the-the infield catches of pop fly balls.
Watching him in an interview is worse. Yes, he always answered in monotone cliches. But there was still an excitement in his voice and a joy in his eyes that jumped through the screen and made you feel good to be a Yankees fan. That is gone now, replaced by a vacant gaze away from the camera.
Will this change if/when the Yankees begin to win again? I’m hoping so. But I’m not counting on it.
That didn’t take long. So, Alex Rodriguez split the difference and decided to have arthroscopic surgery that will keep him hidden for six to nine weeks. (http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=3961898)
Expect the rest of the prediction — the next A-Rod scandal — to come true sometime in mid-April. Looks like Will Leitch of New York Magazine also has his suspicions about Rodriguez’s latest cover story, http://nymag.com/daily/intel/2009/03/a-rods_all-too_convenient_surg.html.