- The Celtics must be out to prove how little value Kevin Garnett actually has to the team's success. Boston is now 4-2 without "The Big Ticket" in the lineup, and put forth an outstanding effort at home Friday night against the Cavs. A game back in the race for the top seed in the Eastern Conference heading into the game, Boston came out on a mission and out-willed Cleveland 105-94. The Celts made it their mission not to let LeBron James beat them, and they succeeded. LBJ had just 21 points, six rebounds and five assists, but shot a miserable 33-percent from the field. Mo Williams was great, scoring 26 points on 8-15 shooting, but if he's the only guy doing well for Cleveland you know they're in trouble. Granted, the game was in Boston which no doubt was an advantage for the Celtics. But the fact that Cleveland played as poorly as it did last night at TD Bank North Garden sends the message that if they don't nail down that top seed before the regular season ends, they're going to have to figure out a way to win in Beantown if they hope to reach the NBA Finals. The Celtics are now 49-14 and while KG may be out another week or so, Boston is showing it doesn't need him for now. A big statement was made between the top two teams in the East, and right now it appears Boston has the upper hand.
- Speaking of the Association, while the top teams in the East are the cream of the crop in the NBA, the opposite could be said about the teams holding the bottom seeds in the conference. With their 15-point victory over Milwaukee Friday night, the lowly Chicago Bulls have now taken sole possession of the 8th seed in the East. Let me be the first to tell you this Bulls team is not good. The fact that they would make the playoffs if the season ended today is merely a product of the fact that there are just too many teams that qualify for the post season in the NBA. I know, I know. It would theoretically be good for the league if the Bulls made the playoffs because of Chicago's market size and the fact that Derrick Rose is one of the league's bright young stars. But if the NBA were smart, they'd allow just 6 teams from each conference to make the post season and have the top two seeds earn a bye like the NFL. Is it perfect solution? Well, no, frankly. But it's better than having teams like Chicago or Milwaukee who are five and six games below .500 respectively earning a spot in the playoffs. That's really a joke, isn't it?
- Thankfully I didn't go to Florida State, nor am I a fan of their athletics. It's not that I don't like them, but man are their fans bumming tonight. The NCAA slapped the Seminoles with four years of probation and may force the football program to forfeit some of their wins in the record books as punishment for their academic cheating scandal. Bobby Bowden's 382 wins ranks 2nd all time to Joe Paterno, who has just one more career win. But if he has to give back some wins JoePa really distances himself in that book, doesn't he? The 'Noles football program will have to forfeit two scholarships in recruiting this year and one next season, and that's just part of the problem. Other sports are going to lose a bunch of scholarships and victories too. Apparently the track and field program will have to give up three NCAA championship crowns. That's what happens when a reported sixty-one FSU athletes cheated on an online test in 2006 and 2007, and also were provided the answers to tests and had papers written for them by university staff. A couple of things I thought when I saw this: 1) While this is pretty significant corruption, athletes at every school in America cheat. If they were going to cheat, they should have been better cheaters. 2) What does it say about the pressure to win at FSU when university staffers are cheating for these athletes? Apparently Myron Rolle didn't need the help. Maybe they should be recruiting smarter athletes so they can handle the academics so FSU doesn't have to spoon feed them to keep them on their respective teams. Or here's a thought, mandate some study time in their practice schedule! Florida State basketball is actually good this year, but forget about that for a while. Now that recruiting takes a hit the upstart team will decline, and so will seemingly every other sports team in Tallahassee. Yikes.
- Is there a bigger joke than agent Drew Rosenhaus's claim that there are "several teams" interesting in signing Terrell Owens? I guess the thought would be plausible if he hadn't thrown in the thought that he won't identify the teams that are in fact interested. If you can't identify teams, then how can we believe there are several teams interested? Conventional wisdom would suggest Oakland is interested, because they'll take anything they can get. But beyond that, who? San Francisco? Maybe Washington? That's three teams, which wouldn't suffice for my definition of several. This could end up going a lot like the Manny Ramirez situation went. No, T.O. won't end up signing back with the Cowboys, but Rosenhaus will try to create a market that doesn't exist for a player with significant character flaws. Like Ramirez, there's no question that you'd want T.O. for the talent he possesses. But how many teams want a guy who seemingly obliterates every locker room he enters? Rosenhaus is doing his job as an agent, trying to create some leverage to find Owens a contract. But please, enough with this garbage about how there are several teams interested. I cannot believe that's true. Can you?
Showing posts with label Drew Rosenhaus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Drew Rosenhaus. Show all posts
Saturday, March 7, 2009
Weekend Headlines
A few musings from Friday night in the world of sports...
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