Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Baseball's Back, Baby

Before I start my Opening Day post, let me preface this by saying that I would have like to have titled the blog with a different "B" word instead of baby, namely something referring to dogs of the fairer sex. I felt it would be inappropriate and am trying to distance myself from that sort of low brow humor for a few cheap laughs. *Farts*

Opening Day for everyone except the Orioles and the Rays is in the books. What did we learn? Who stood out? What can I reasonably expect from Jason Heyward moving forward (4 RBI a night is the answer)? These questions would best be asked in a series of bullet points because I am too lazy at 8:50 a.m. to come up with coherent transitions between paragraphs. And away we go:

  • Carlos Zambrano sucks. I picked him up in the bench draft in my first auction league, which I considered a steal. Then he goes and gives up eight runs in 1.1 innings, good for an ERA of 54.00 and a WHIP of 6.00. He's still never had an ERA over 4 in any season of his career, but he's not the same guy who struck out 200 batters two season in a row with sub-3.5 ERAs and sub-1.3 WHIPs. I miss that guy.
  • In the same game, the man to which I've devoted the past two months of my life, Jason Heyward, pretty much took everyone's unreasonably high expectations of him and kicked them up about a bazillion notches, using his first major league swing to take the afore-mentioned Zambrano deep. And it wasn't just kinda deep. The kid (he's only 50 days older than I, which means most of you are older than he) is a machine, built for baseball and for decimating my fantasy opponents.
  • BREAKING NEWS: Albert Pujols is still incredible. He hit two home runs yesterday, which isn't really news, since it's not even the first Opening Day he's hit multiple home runs. There's a reason I haven't really mentioned him much in these blogs. It's because he's the clear-cut best player in baseball, both real-life and fantasy, and there is no news to report other than how awesome he is (or if he's injured). This might be the last time you read his name in this space, in fact.
  • Tim Lincecum put a lot of rumors to bed in his start yesterday. 7 innings, 4 hits, no walks, 7 Ks, no runs, no doubts. He's the best pitcher in baseball until something else happens (an injury or ineffectiveness).
  • Shaun Marcum was probably the second-biggest story of Opening Day for fantasy purposes. After a promising 2008 campaign, his career appeared derailed after Tommy John surgery. Now, I'm aware that many people have come back and been wildly successful after the surgery, but it was difficult for me to see that happening with Marcum considering he hadn't even had a full season of effectiveness before his injury. He proved me wrong however, not allowing a baserunner for 19 outs, finishing 7 full innings, allowing three runs, two hits, a walk and six Ks. The end line wasn't as pretty as his performance, but anyway who paid a small amount of money on him, or used a very late pick in a draft, was ecstatic.
  • Some more quick notes: After what seemed like a fluky season last year (21 homers, 10 steals in only 82 games), Garrett Jones started his 2010 with two homers and three RBI...Scott Baker (on both of my teams) continued his trend of starting slowly, lasting only 4.2 innings, giving up 4 runs and looked really out-of-control, which is bad, considering his success is predicated entirely on pinpoint control...Ian Kinsler, Lance Berkman, Daisuke Matsuzaka, Ted Lilly, Huston Street, Carlos Beltran, Jose Reyes and Cliff Lee all started the season on the DL. Fun for guys who owns them, I don't have any of them.

Monday, April 5, 2010

Monitoring the Mid-Majors: Butler

Butler entered the 2009-2010 season with a No. 10 preseason ranking and loads of confidence to compete against the nation's finest. The Bulldogs returned important starters, including Gordon Hayward, who has NBA-potential. But in all reality, most, if not all, the nation didn't think Butler had a chance to get the Elite Eight or Final Four.

Tonight, the Bulldogs take on No. 1 seed Duke for the 2010 National Championship. All weekend, the media has funneled out information about the David vs. Goliath comparison. Despite that top-10 preseason ranking, Butler is relishing the underdog title. For the first time in modern NCAA history, a mid-major team can win the tournament.

According to CNBC sports business reporter Darren Rovell, Duke spent $394,068 per player in 2008-09. Butler spent $347,108 on player expenses for the entire team last season.

Duke's coach Mike Krzyzewski has won an Olympic Gold Medal and is gunning for his fourth National Championship. Butler's Brad Stevens could still be mistaken as a player.

But this is what the NCAA Tournament is about. This is why so many people across the nation fill out brackets and religiously watch the tournament games. This spectacle provides the opportunity for the small schools that are under appreciated, undervalued and poorly funded to take down program's making $4 million a year.

This tournament has been terrible for my bracket and even worse for the Terps (who would've had an "easy" route to the Final Four if it wasn't for Korrie Lucious). But in terms of mid-majors and upsets, the 2009-2010 tournament is an instant classic.

Butler (33-4) vs. Duke (33-5)
Points for per game: Butler (69.0), Duke (77.4)
Points against per game: Butler (59.4), Duke (16-0)

Last loss: Butler at UAB on December 22, 2009 (25 straight wins), Duke at Maryland on March 3, 2010 (9 straight wins)

Butler Head Coach: Brad Stevens
Key Players:
- Gordon Hayward (G-F) 15.6 ppg, 8.3 rpg
- Shelvin Mack (G) 14.2 ppg, 3.7 rpg , 3.1 apg
- Matt Howard (F) 11.6 ppg, 5.2 rpg

Tournament Resume:
First Round - No. 12 UTEP, 77-59
Second Round - No. 13 Murray State, 54-52
Sweet Sixteen - No. 1 Syracuse, 63-59
Elite Eight - No. 2 Kansas State, 63-56
Final Four - No. 5 Michigan State, 52-50.

The Bulldogs survived an upset to Murray State, but since then they have been on fire. They took down National Championship-contenders Syracuse and Kansas State. In the Final Four, Butler dodged a poor shooting performance and beat Michigan State by getting to the free throw line tonight.

It should be a great game to watch. For Duke, this is the time to get back on top in college basketball. But for Butler, it's for so much more - all the mid-majors watching and dreaming that maybe once day they too will play for the title.

McNabb to the Redskins: A Tortured Analysis

The Redskins trade for former Eagles QB Donovan McNabb on Easter Sunday has been arguably the main focus of sports talk today, even with Opening Day (save for last night) and Tiger making an appearance at the Masters.

Opinions on this trade vary pretty widely; some hate it, some love it.

Pencil this writer in as someone who doesn't like it. Notice I said pencil, not pen. You can change pencil.

Donovan McNabb took the Eagles to Super Bowl XXXIX and has proven over the years to be a thorn in the Redskins' side. He has been a consummate professional throughout his entire career and generally speaking, is one of the classiest star players the NFL has ever seen. His reputation precedes him more than any other player the Redskins could have acquired.

But it, as many other national commentators (Mike Wise of the Washington Post here) have pointed out, this move reeks of the Redskins usual offseason decision-making. Once again, the Skins made a huge offseason splash.

If you think the Redskins significantly upgraded at the quarterback position then the "splash" in this move is acceptable. But did they?

McNabb threw for 22 TDs, 10 INTs, and 3,553 yards in 14 games for the Eagles last year. By any measure, a good season. He ranked 12th in the NFL in passer rating at 92.9.

Jason Campbell threw for 20 TDs, 15 INTs, and 3,618 yards in 16 games in the burgundy and gold. He ranked 15th in the NFL in passer rating (86.4).

But comparing numbers between the two is sort of irrelevant (since they're within shouting distance of each other) without looking at those numbers in context.

Campbell was sacked the 3rd most among all quarterbacks in the league last year while playing behind a line that included such prestigious names as D'Anthony Batiste and Will Montgomery. He set career highs in yards, touchdowns, passer rating, and completion percentage (and INTs too). He maintained an air of professionalism in the midst of what was the most embarrassing season in Redskins history. He was no Pro Bowler, nowhere close. But he was a serviceable quarterback, who was clearly improving, and had provided the Redskins with an air of stability at the QB position that they have not had in nearly two decades.

An important feature of this trade is one out of the Redskins old bag of tricks: trading draft picks. The Skins gave up their 2nd round pick this year and either a 3rd or 4th rounder next year to get McNabb. They have traded for the following players using draft picks under owner Daniel Snyder: Mark Brunell, Jason Campbell (Remember, the Skins traded up to select him in 2005),

To replace him (and make no mistake, Campbell will be gone by the time the season starts because Rex Grossman already sits in the back-up QB spot) with McNabb is a "win-now" move. The Redskins were 4-12 last season. Bruce Allen and Mike Shanahan must believe the Redskins, recently gutted of ten players, some long-time vets, and with one pick in the first four rounds of the NFL Draft (No. 4 overall in the 1st Round), are able to win within the next 2-3 years.

McNabb is 33 years old and has 12 seasons of tough, NFC East football under his belt. He has taken a beating in his time in the NFL. McNabb reasonably has a maximum of 5 years left in his tank. Over Daniel Snyder's tenure as Redskins owner, the Redskins have perpetually been in win-now mode. This move is yet another move in that pattern.

The biggest difference between this move and recent ones is that the move comes at the most valuable and important position on the field. The Redskins have never made marquee moves at the quarterback position, only at every other one. McNabb brings a winning attitude, Pro-Bowl arm, and infectious leadership that some said Jason Campbell lacks.

The most disturbing facet of this trade comes from the Eagles side. The Eagles voluntarily traded their franchise leader in many passing categories to a division rival. They then immediately anointed Kevin Kolb, a 2007 2nd round pick who has played sparingly, as the starter. This means a combination of two things: they think McNabb is losing it AND that Kolb is ready to be the starter.

For Redskins' fans sanity, let's say the Eagles believe only in #2: Kolb is now the better option. That bodes well for the Skins; the Eagles made a relatively cut-and-dry decision to replace an aging, but still highly functioning, McNabb, with a younger, unproven player.

This option makes almost zero sense.

The Eagles can't possibly see enough in Kolb alone, with little regard for McNabb's performance, to have made this decision.

What is more likely is the Eagles evaluated McNabb like they have many of their other Pro Bowl players: Brian Dawkins, Jeremiah Trotter, Brian Westbrook, Troy Vincent, Bobby Taylor, to name a few. Of those players, Dawkins, Westbrook, Vincent and Taylor have gone on to careers with other teams (Westbrook was released this offseason and has not signed with another player). With those players, they made an evaluation that said the player was about to drop off in performance and was no longer worth the investment. What do the Eagles know about McNabb's future? Have they seen something on tape that the Redskins haven't?

Or on the flip side, have the Redskins seen something in McNabb's tape which, in their minds, made him too good of an asset to pass up? This fall will answer a lot of those questions for both organizations. And once again, the Redskins are Offseason Champs.

The Philly Minute: Adios, Amigo

















By Ben Present

At around 7:30 p.m. Sunday night, as the sun was just setting on our nation’s capital, as the Philadelphia Phillies were less than 24 hours away from beginning their NL title defense in the very same district, and as Philadelphia’s most influential blogger (me) was out for a stroll on an otherwise beautiful night outside of D.C., the news broke. Somebody from home would be joining us very soon.

The Eagles reached a deal with the Redskins to ship quarterback Donovan McNabb to their division rival, showing respect to their 11-year starter but, in the eyes of many, none to their fans.
My phone rang. It rang a lot. Some calls were happy, others sounded like misdials for a suicide hotline. Lifelong fans were ready to give up on a team I’ve watched them cry over. Those calls didn’t bother me quite as much as the one that came in to break the news. “Did you hear about McNabb?” “McNabb got traded to the Redskins!” Of course I knew! It’s my job to know! I thought everyone I knew read Wednesdays With Kevin. Perhaps we have some more branching out to do.

I’m going to abstain from publicizing how I feel about the move. We’re all going to hear enough of that over the next few days. Instead I’m going to take the Dr. Seuss approach. The world’s most famous doctor once said, “Don’t cry because it’s over. Smile because it happened.” Let’s take a look back at one of the most cherished careers in the history of Philadelphia sports.

As many things do in Philadelphia, McNabb’s career started with boo-ing. A lot of it. They Eagles fans present wanted their front office to take Ricky Williams with the second overall pick in the 1999. Instead, they took a risk on a 22-year-old quarterback out of Syracuse, and they were met with this. And while Ricky’s career was respectable, it was often clouded by issues off the field. McNabb, the city would learn, would bring no such haze to the city of brotherly love.

His rookie season showed promise. He started about a third of the team’s contests, displaying a powerful arm but also some real dynamic athleticism. He could throw it deep (sometimes even accurately); he could make guys miss; he could run the ball 30 yards down the field himself; he was about to turn around a franchise that had been won only 14 games in the past three seasons.

During his second season, he showed just how quickly he planned on turning that team around. And for the first few years of his career, many remember him as being as close to perfect as it gets. Back-to-back-to-back 300 yard games, perfect passer ratings, 100-yard rushing games. He also rarely turned the ball over. Throughout his career in Philadelphia, fans, coaches and teammates got accustomed to fewer interceptions than those vying for any other active starter.

McNabb quickly turned the Eagles into a playoff team and every season brought with it higher hopes than before. He looked more and more like a pocket passer every game. But quietly mounting behind what statistics suggested was straight-up dominance, were injury concerns and questions about whether McNabb had the poise to play on football’s biggest stage.

Helping Andy Reid achieve an impressive playoff record, McNabb lead the team to three consecutive NFC Championship games between 2001 and ’03. But the team fell in each contest. In 2003, during a late fourth quarter comeback, McNabb completed one of the most celebrated passes of his career, known exclusively as fourth and 26, to lead his team from behind and make their third straight conference championship game. Again, they fell. This time to the Carolina Panthers by a disquieting 14-3 score.

In 2004, everything seemed to be coming together for McNabb’s Eagles. With running back Brian Westbrook in his prime and key off-season acquirements of Jevon Kearse and Terrell Owens, the team seemed primed to make it’s run at the dynasty that lived 500 miles north, the New England Patriots. During the regular season, the Eagles breezed by opponents, winning their first seven on the way to posting a 13-3 record. McNabb and T.O. seemed to be the best of friends for the first part of the season. For the first time in his career, Number Five had a legitimate downfield weapon. But in classic T.O. form, the receiver got in McNabb’s face when he didn’t feel like he was getting the ball enough, and the two never really seemed friendly after that point. In fact their rivalry is viewed as one of the biggest intra-squad rivalries the NFL has ever seen. After Owens broke his ankle late in the season, McNabb made it clear that he thought his team could win with or without their star receiver. After all, the Eagles were a playoff presence for four years without him.

Making it to the Super Bowl for the first time since 1981, when they lost to the Raiders, the Eagles looked to dethrone Tom Brady and the Patriots, who were making their third Super Bowl appearance in four years. There were two big questions going into the game, and both of them were answered game’s end. The first was how big of a factor T.O. was going to be, and he proved to be more than a decoy returning from his ankle injury. Secondly, people wanted to know: Does McNabb have the leadership and poise to win a championship against such a dominant Patriots team? After the game, many argued the answer was no.

McNabb had success and struggles in his only Super Bowl experience. He threw three touchdowns, but also three interceptions. And even though he denied it, some of his teammates claimed McNabb was ill the whole time. Others came out saying the pressure was too much for McNabb. The rumors that he threw up on the sidelines or field have never been confirmed.

Thus, the McNabb legacy in Philadelphia, while he was undeniably successful, has one gaping hole: it is without any championship rings. The years ensuing his championship loss have been filled with up and downs and injuries but a few glimpses back to the old McNabb. He has been somewhat successful running the ball (when he tries), he has shown poise in the pocket (although he often puts on his patented “happy feet”), and he has meshed well with second-year wide-out DeSean Jackson. Things were looking up for Mcnabb heading into his 12th year as an Eagle. And he wanted to stay.

But when the front office made their decision to send of their pro-bowl QB elsewhere, he decided he was at least going to pick where. Through refusing to talk with teams he wasn’t interested in like Oakland and Buffalo, Yahoo! Sports reported, McNabb forced his front office to send him to Washington.

To see him go is sad. And there are definitely questions about Kevin Kolb’s readiness to come in and be a starter in a town that is used to winning in football. The Philadelphia Phillies’ heroics aren’t going to take any of the pressure off, either. Regardless, those in Philly, fans from elsewhere, and simply those who appreciate the game, should strive to look back on the McNabb era with gratitude. He is one of the all-time greats. And that first time he comes back to Lincoln Financial Field and walks through those gates, nobody in that arena will be sitting down to welcome him. The ensuing times, however, I make no such guarantees.

Sunday, April 4, 2010

The Redskins' Easter Basket

The Redskins' Easter Basket had an extra large surprise in it on Sunday: Eagles QB Donovan McNabb. The Skins traded this year's 2nd round pick (No. 37) and either a 3rd or 4th round pick in 2011's draft to the Eagles in exchange for McNabb. This left move left me literally speechless; I'll follow up with coverage tomorrow.

Sixteen Deep: End of the Road - One Butler Falls

While one Butler (the university) was reveling in its first Final Four appearance and huge win over Michigan State, another (Da'Sean) was writhing in pain on the floor of Lucas Oil Stadium while his coach tried to distract him from his agony, both physical and emotional.

The vaunted Big East conference's last team fell bowed out of the NCAA Tournament last night with a whimper as they lost in embarrassing fashion to Duke 78-57.

Though only down eight at halftime, the Mountaineers never seemed to get into a rhythm and, as is often the cause, it was a slippery slope towards destruction.

First bad shooting, then bad rebounding, then bad injuries.

The Mountaineers' leading scorer Da'Sean Butler left the game midway through the second half after colliding with Duke's Brian Zoubek and getting charged with an offensive foul. Obviously in a lot of pain, and probably knowing the injury had ended his college career, he banged the floor and held his knee with tears in his eyes as his coach came to console him. Bob Huggins is usually not that emotional and comes off gruff and kind of a jerk. But in that moment, millions of people saw what kind of guy Bob Huggins is: a smart coach who cares deeply for his players.

He forged a connection with Butler calling him the best player he ever coached, but to casual fans who don't interact with these guys, it was honestly pretty hard to believe he was so emotionally invested until last night. And it was refreshing to see a coach do that. All coaches claim to love their kids but to me, it seems forced so often. This was a case where it seemed completely genuine.

As for the game, once Butler went out, West Virginia seemed completely deflated. As great a moment as Huggins' tenderness towards his injured star was, I thought he should have immediately called time-out and rallied the troops.

Tell them "Let's win this for Da'Sean" or "You guys have to step up" or something! They seemed confused and hurt without him. At any rate, they weren't down by too much (around a dozen) and could have conceivably pulled it out.

But Duke was the real story. They out-rebounded West Virginia 27-24 despite center Brian Zoubek's foul trouble. They only had five turnovers to West Virginia's 10. And they shot a staggering 13-25 from three. Nolan Smith, Jon Scheyer, and Kyle Singler (who I will NOT refer to as "The Big Three". C'mon people it's just because Lance Thomas and Zoubek are liabilities on offense.) combined for 63 of the team's 78 points.

They did play well though. Their defense looked dominant and it's hard to pick against them. They made WVU look terrible. And that's hard to do because of the defensive job they usually pull off.

It's worth noting that as good as Duke played, the game would have been a lot closer if Joe Mazzulla or Devin Ebanks showed up big. They both shot alright but they needed to be way more aggressive. I blame Huggins a bit for that. They didn't seem that prepared and Coach K really out-coached him.

In the end, not a very interesting game in all honesty. WVU never made a run and Duke seemed consistent. The Big East had a good year though because it's not all about tournament performance. Even one Final Four team is a huge accomplishment.

Overall, an amazing tournament so far and the Big East surely entertained even if it was only in disappointment. At least that Syracuse loss isn't looking so bad now with Butler poised to win the title.

What I learned tonight: Bob Huggins - great person, not-so-great in-game strategist.

Saturday, April 3, 2010

Donte Stallworth Renewed

“You see the hunger out there,” Stallworth said. “Guys are hungry to make something happen soon, not only in future steps, but definitely this year as well.”

This is a quote from an interview with baltimoreravens.com blogger Ryan Mink. It shows just how much passion and excitement Stallworth has to play again and what he brings to the mindset of the whole team.

After his year long suspension from the NFL for violating the substance abuse policy (you know...that whole DUI manslaughter in Florida episode), he has a renewed hunger to be out on the field. Sitting back for a year and watching his friends and teammates play the game he was supposed to be playing really took a toll and it will show come game time. He has worked extra hard to stay in game shape and he has realized how much of a privilege it really is to play football in the NFL.

This learning process and new sense of passion and focus (and the fact that, well, he's pretty darn good) really left a mark on the Ravens and the team is excited to use him as depth to the receiving corps.

I believe in the ability for second chances, especially when it's evident that the person really has learned from his/her mistakes. Maybe it's just the love for my team that has made me excited to see Stallworth in action. But I know at least part of it is a desire to see how this new man and new player fits in with the makeup of the Ravens and what he does to strengthen the team, on and off the field.

Additional Note:

The Ravens released their Pre-season schedule a few days ago. Here it is.

August 12 - vs Carolina Panthers
August 20 - at Washington Redskins
August 27 - vs New York Giants
September 2 - at St. Louis Rams