Sunday, March 20, 2011

Why Did I Pick UCONN to win the Men's NCAA Tournament? One Word; Kemba

The University of Connecticut took care of business in the round of 32 to advance themselves to the NCAA basketball men's tournament Sweet 16 round.  They earned their second victory of the tournament 69-58 over a very good Cincinnati team who came into the game hot off a 15-point win over a very good Missouri team in the round of 64.  UCONN displayed the same dominance they showed late in the season when they marched through the Big East tournament all the way to a conference tournament championship, earning them the #3 seed in the West bracket for the "big dance".

It was not just that UCONN won the Big East tournament that gave me the idea to pick them as my 2011 NCAA Champion.  It was a combination of that, the fact they are playing their best basketball going into the tournament, but most importantly, they have the most outstanding all around guard in the NCAA.  Many would argue that BYU's Jimmer Fredette, who lead the country in scoring with 28.5 PPG.  There are also argument's for Duke's Nolan Smith who averaged 20 points and 5 assists per game or Ben Hansbrough who averaged 18.5 PPG and 49% shooting in the 2010-2011 season.  Even amongst these powerhouse guards, UCONN'S Kemba Walker sets himself apart.

The 6'1" Walker, who is the shortest player of the bunch, averaged 23.1 PPG, more than Smith and Hansbrough and only second to Fredette.  Though Fredette's scoring average is substantially higher than Walker's, you have to consider that Walker plays in arguably the best conference in the nation in the defensive minded Big East Conference, who sent the most teams to the tournament.  Fredette plays in the weak Mountain West Conference that, outside of a sensational San Diego State basketball team, ranks below average or poor in comparison to conferences around the country.

Combine Walker's scoring ability with the range of other statistical categories he excels at, he is the best guard in basketball.  He actually averaged more rebounds per game than assists; a rarity for a 6'1" guard. It wasn't because he was slacking in either category; Walker averaged 5.2 rebounds and 4.3 assists.  An absolute pest on defense, Walker also averaged 1.9 steals per game, marking his superior defense.  The nation's other best guards are more pure scorers and do not have the notable defense Walker possesses.

Kemba Walker(15) hits the game winning shot as time expires against #1 seeded Pitt that sent his team to the conference tournament championship.  The Huskies would go on to win the 2010-2011 Big East Tournament.


What can't be measured by statistics, is what Walker has the most of, though.  His skill stretches over to the stat-less intangibles that any winning player needs to succeed.  He is the most respected player by his teammates, more than any team in the country.  Because of this profound respect, Walker is able to get the best out of his teammates each game.  His tenacity creates an indescribable spark that drives his Huskies to victory each night.  With Kemba in the lineup, his teammates have the confidence that they can beat anyone.  And with Walker, they really can beat anyone.

Walker went for 33 points, 5 assists and 5 rebounds in UCONN's tournament game versus Cincinnati to advance his team to the Sweet 16.  A fitting performance for a player who shines his brightest as the stage get's bigger.  I picked Kemba and UCONN to win it all before the tournament started and my pick is looking great.  Their next challenge is the sensational San Diego State Aztecs, who are the #2 seed in the West bracket, one better than UCONN.  Nobody is hotter than UCONN and Kemba Walker though.  Expect a high scoring game from both sides, but UCONN should prevail to make the Elite 8 where they will face Duke or Arizona.

Duke has proven it can fold on any given night.  They lost to three teams outside of the top 25 during the regular season.  Arizona is no powerhouse themselves.  They came in to the tournament as the #5 seed and they only had to handle a Texas team that slumped late in the season.  The real challenge for Walker and UCONN will be beating SDSU in their next game.  From there they can take the West bracket all the way to the championship with a win over the Southeast bracket's representative  which will be between BYU, Florida, Wisconson or Butler; all of which UCONN has the capacity to dominate.

My prediction?  UCONN beats Kansas in the championship game, 64-61; Kemba Walker named Most Outstanding Player.

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Wednesday, March 16, 2011

NFLPA Encourages Top Draft Picks to No Show on Draft Day

Though the NFLPA wouldn't go as far as calling for a boycott of the NFL's draft this April, it did send a strong message to young draftees who will soon become members of the NFLPA when a new CBA is in place.  NFLPA executives publicly called for all top draft picks that would normally be invited to New York City to personally attend the NFL draft, to decline any invitation to the NFL's draft as a statement of unity amongst players.  Even those who are not yet part of the union but will be upon a new labor deal and a signed contract.

The NFLPA has their own draft day production they'd like to put on for the players when their names are called in live coverage of the NFL draft.  They want to host that separate production at what the NFLPA called "down the street" from the NFL's draft center at Radio City Music Hall in New York.  No word yet on whether the NFLPA's draft day version will be televised by a competing cable channel when it happens April 28th-30th.

On the possibility of hosting their own draft party for the expected top 17 picks of the NFL draft who would have otherwise been invited to the NFL's draft experience in Radio City Music Hall, NFLPA executive, George Atallah told the media, ""It would be the same but instead of walking across the stage and shaking hands or getting a man hug from a commissioner who of course has locked you out and is insisting on a wage scale, you'd be walking across the stage and maybe get a handshake from [NFLPA executive director] DeMaurice Smith, who of course is fighting for you not to have a wage scale and not to lock you out."

What Atallah is referring to is the notion that new college draftees should not be put on public display for the NFL and it's owners, in a horse and pony show hosted by a commissioner who has locked them out of their future place of work making them unable to even be negotiated with on their first contract after the draft.  In addition, the people hosting the party in their honor are the very same people who are trying to get them paid less so the owners can have more.

NFL commissioner, Roger Goodell, is not sure if any player draftees will attend the conventional NFL draft party at Radio City Music Hall in New York, hosted by the NFL


The NFLPA's idea to host the party is so these young men who have worked their whole pee-wee, junior, high school and college careers in football for the moment they can be selected as a top pick in the NFL draft, to be able to celebrate and embrace fellow members of the union they will be entering into once signing a contract.  The NFLPA assumes have the young draft picks embrace their union executive director, DeMaurice Smith, in their shining moment when they officially become a pro football player.  He is, after all, the man who is trying to keep their initial rookie contract wages high, retirement pension benefits acceptable, their safety a priority and make sure they have a fair share of the mega-dollar pie that is the NFL revenue stream for years to come.

It seems like an easy choice, to me, on what the draftees should do.  Do they want to go to Radio City Music Hall to hear their name called, come out and put their face and endorsement on an NFL who's commissioner is trying to take their money and locking them out to prevent them from making a living?  To meet the team executives who drafted them; the same executives who represent the owner of the team that drafted them who a part of the group that is pulling the strings on Goodell's lockout to lower their wages?

Or do they have their moment with their fellow union members who support their rights and benefits as a player in the NFL, the executive director of the NFLPA who is at legal war with the NFL and its owners to secure their future earnings as a paid athlete?

Roger Goodell has, of course, denounced the move by the players and says he's disappointed in their action for the sake of the draftees.  Goodell told the media in response to the news that the NFLPA would host their own draft party for the top picks and coerce them to attend it instead of the normally scheduled NFL draft, "I think it's a shame for young men that are starting their careers in the NFL, that are having that once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to come across the stage, become an NFL player for the first time," Goodell told ESPN's Adam Schefter. "It's a really special moment and I hope they get to experience it."

NFLPA executive, George Atallah, wants players to decline invitation to the NFL's draft in New York and attend a special draft party being held by the NFLPA


It was first reported Monday that the NFLPA was pronouncing a full boycott of the NFL's draft and in an early polling, it showed that fans agreed with Goodell and that the NFLPA's idea to circumvent the draft tradition with their own event was not favored by 72% who voted.  Atallah, hopped to his twitter account pretty quickly to put out the negative PR fire.  In a series of tweets Atallah told fans, "Lots of interesting commentary on the possible NFL Draft issue. Fans rightfully frustrated. We will set the record straight today."

"Let me also correct the record: the NFLPA is not asking anyone to 'boycott' anything. NFL Draft in particular."

"The NFL Draft is special. Players and their families will be in NYC. It just maybe different. We will provide details when we can."

"I have been careful about what I can say on the record given our post-lockout world. There is a lot of frustration out there from everyone."

"The anger is palatable, but stick with us, we will be return to our positive message. We will get back to focusing on the good."

Atallah expounded on his tweets later that day on ESPN's NFL Live, "Our players are locked out. Past players, present players and future players," Atallah said.  He discussed with the show how players who will be drafted are entering a league where they can't negotiate a contract, meet with their new team or coaching staffs.


"Most importantly, they can't play football," he said.

Atallah's further explanation of the report that the NFLPA was not boycotting the NFL draft, but was just exercising coercion of the draftees to make a statement to the NFL by not attending, brought many who criticized the idea over to their side.  Atallah's tweets and interview created the fan understanding that they are taking measures necessary to keep the negotiating table balanced between the NFLPA and NFL in the future.  The NFLPA has been a traditionally weak union and has allowed it's labor partner, the NFL, to make up many of the rules in their favor on the business end of football.  I personally applaud the players for standing together in the fight to retain the relatively small wages they earn versus the astronomical figures the owners bring in on the merits of the player's talents and the sacrifice of their bodies while owners eat popcorn in luxury boxes.

More will be known about what direction this will go after the preliminary injunction hearing that the players have filed in court against the NFL to ban them from locking the players out is heard on April 6th.  The winner of that judgment could be setup nicely at the negotiating table later.  But don't expect any of this to be resolved before the player class-action antitrust suit is heard and exhausted through the summer.

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Monday, March 14, 2011

NFL Owners Initiate Lockout; Players set to Sue the League

What was speculation by the NFL and NFLPA about each others positions and what would end up happening between the sides that would lead to a lockout of the players, both wound up fulfilling each others self-fulfilling prophecies.  The NFL claimed for weeks leading up to this lockout that the NFLPA would deny reasonable terms to a new deal and pursue action in federal court.  The NFLPA claimed for weeks that the NFL had no intention on bargaining in reasonable terms and were committed to locking the players out.

Each ended up being the exact position of both sides as the current CBA expired on March 11th, 11:59PM with both sides walking away from the negotiating table.

The NFL and the NFLPA broke off negotiations to work out a new deal between the two operating sides of the business that is the National Football League on Friday.  The original deadline date was set for March 4th by the original drafting of the CBA that was to expire.  Not even 17 days of negotiating with a special third party federal mediator could bring the two sides to an amicable resolution.

DeMaurice Smith(left) is the Executive Director of the NFL Player's Association and Roger Goodell is the NFL Commissioner that represents the National Football League and its owners


What prompted the last minute, intense negotiations in the final week before the CBA expired was when Minnesota judge David Doty, who has been presiding over NFL labor cases for over twenty years as the ultimate arbiter of grievances between the NFLPA and NFL Management Council and has often ruled in favor of the players, blocked the NFL from being able to use an estimated $4 Billion dollars in money it had acquired in current and future television contracts.  The ruling came just a couple weeks before the CBA deadline and lost the NFL a mountain of leverage it could have used with those TV dollars if it ends up going into a season with the lost revenue of no football being played in 2011.

With the loss of that leverage, the NFL came down to a more level playing field with the NFLPA.  Because talks got much closer with the help of an independent, third party federal mediator to help induce compromise between the two sides, the CBA that was set to end on March 4th was once extended 24 hours then twice extended to March 11th.  That date has now come and passed with no new deal in place and no extension of the current deal to continue talks.

Minnesota U.S. District Judge, David Doty, has presided over NFL labor issues as the arbiter of grievances between the NFLPA and NFL Management Council since the late 1980's


The most glaring of the issues remains to be the way that the NFLPA and the NFL owners split up an astronomical $9 Billion pie between them.

Owners have been getting the first billion off of the top of the revenue pile under current terms, but opted out of that most recent CBA in May of 2008 because they wanted to get a new deal in place to increase their personal revenues.  The league has stated that many teams are operating under their profit potentials or even at a loss because players are being overpaid.  This is the basis of their argument for wanting to increase the amount of money they earn  from $1 Billion to $2 Billion.

The players have conceded that there can be an argument made for teams that need revenue boosts to keep those teams running and not relocated to larger markets.  Teams like the Jacksonville Jaguars are at risk of being sold and relocated to Los Angeles.  But just because a few teams are not maximizing profitability, the players don't feel it should be them that has to sacrifice their wages to make up that difference.  All they have asked the NFL to do is to share each individual team's revenue reports for each year over the last ten years and allow them to see how teams that operate on hard budgets need the financial boost and a compromising number to split between the players and owners can be made based on that information.

This chart shows the discrepancy between the league's leading and lowest revenue generating teams.


The owners were even willing to back off of their billion dollar per year revenue sharing demand and come all the way down to $137.5 Million, but in the end, it was their unwillingness to provide any detailed evidence that the owners are in need of more revenues to operate that turned off the NFLPA.  Without it, the NFLPA wasn't willing to give up any amount of money to the owners on a new deal.

The NFL thinks it is intrusive to the owners to have their revenues put under a public microscope by the players.  They offered only an aggregate revenue report of the 32 teams combined to justify their need for an increase in revenue share.  When the players found the NFL's attempt to provide financial information less than adequate to make a decision on how they would move forward on a compromise to determine revenue sharing, they broke off talks and the league consequently released a statement on Saturday stating that they were enforcing a lockout of the players.

The players, exercising their best chance to get a favorable resolution to the CBA stand-off, decertified themselves as a union, making them, legally,  now only a trade association of individuals in a common industry.  This move enabled them to remove themselves from competing with the NFL under the rules of labor law and allowed them to take their chances in the antitrust law arena by individually collaborating on a class-action, antitrust law suit against the NFL.  The players also had already filed with the courts for an injunction to block the owners from enforcing their imposed lockout before the lockout was even announced.  That injunction hearing will be held on April 6th.

With this brought forth the next action for the players, which was to have ten players, including NFL superstars Tom Brady and Peyton Manning to file the class-action antitrust suit against the NFL in a Minnesota courtroom.

The NFL is dismissing this move by the players to decertify themselves as a "sham" and that the player's court action is "built on the indisputably false premise that the NFLPA has stopped being a union and will merely delay the process of reaching an agreement."  The NFLPA antitrust suit's declarations denunciate the league's policies on the salary cap, draft and free-agency restrictions like franchise-player tags that force a player to stay on a team for a guaranteed salary that is, many times, less than what they could earn if they were allowed to test the free agent market.

Indianapolis Colts quarterback, Peyton Manning, is one of several star players that will file class-action antitrust action against the NFL


In decertifying as a union, the NFLPA is running from it's playbook from 1989 when the union decertified and filed antitrust action against the NFL, just like they are presently.  The NFLPA learned this move when back in 1989 their favorable court judgment was overruled by the 8th Circut Court of Appeals citing that the players could not file antitrust action as a union which prompted the first decertification of the NFLPA.  Those lawsuits, led most notably by the class-action law suit brought on by Hall of Fame player and NFL legend, Reggie White in 1993, brought both sides back to the bargaining table and ushered in the era of the NFLPA gaining free agency, which was the huge point of contention in that era's CBA dealings.  The NFLPA then re-formed in 1993 and has been a union ever since, until Friday.  Once a deal is done, they can re-form once again.

What the lockout ultimately means to the business of the NFL during the time it is in place is there can be no communication between the teams and current NFL players. Even after players are selected in this year's NFL draft this April they will only be selected and not negotiated with until a new CBA deal is in place.  The NFL is a year round business and much of what teams do to make themselves better for the upcoming season is to sign free agent players that can fill pressing areas of need.  With no free agency happening until a new deal is done, look for teams to try and fill positions purely through the draft.  By the time the lockout comes to a close, which could go all the way into the season before business is resumed, it may be too late to go out and sign players at need positions for the 2011 NFL season.

This is also the time of year when many sponsors and advertisers start or renew contract deals with the NFL.  With the future of the 2011 season unknown, many sponsors and advertisers will hold out on contract renewals, costing the NFL millions in revenue.

According to the NFL, it had compromised it's position on many other key, core issues in the deal.  The NFL stated that it offered the NFLPA a resumption of the 16 game regular season for at least two years with an opportunity to revisit negotiations of an 18 game schedule in 2013, instituting a rookie wage scale and using the money saved to be paid to veterans and retired players, creating new guidelines to player health and safety rules, establishing a fund for retired players to which the owners would contribute $82 Million of their own money over the next two years and more financial transparency by providing information on audited profitability of the aggregate of the 32 NFL franchises.

With all of that on the table, many of those things being big wins in the core issues debate for the player's union, the NFLPA couldn't get past the fact that the NFL was asking them to sacrifice a large portion of their personal revenue to benefit already rich owners and were not willing to provide any real proof that they needed a penny more than the $1 Billion they already are taking from the NFL revenue sharing pie.  The NFLPA finds it frankly insulting that the NFL would demand hundreds of millions of their dollars and not give them a good, detailed reason why.  It is hard to understand the justification behind giving 32 individual and ownership groups any extra amount of money when the very small lot of them are already sharing a more than healthy 1/9th of a $9 Billion pot.

Looking forward, we won't know the status of anything until a judge hears and reviews the litigation from both sides and makes a ruling that will ultimately give one side or the other the upper-hand in coming to terms on a new CBA.  But first, the ruling on the union's injunction request that will be first heard on April 6th is expected to be made within a months time but expect that the antitrust trial and judgments may very well drag into the summer months.

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Article first published as NFL Owners Initiate Lockout; Players set to Sue the League on Technorati.

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Thursday, March 10, 2011

NBA Prodigy, Kevin Love Records 52nd Consecutive Double-Double to Set NBA Record

For Kevin Love Wednesday night against the Indiana Pacers, it was just another day at the office.  Never much for flash or flare, Love simply punched the clock and went to work.  It took him no longer than just under seven minutes left to go in the first half to reach one of the most epic milestones in the history of the league.  With a free-throw that gave him 10 points, in addition to his 10 rebounds he had by the end of the 1st quarter, Love's 27th recorded double-double in a game by halftime in the '10-'11 season secured his 52nd consecutive; the record for the most consecutive games with a game recorded double-double in the NBA's modern era*.

Kevin Love is averaging 21 PPG and 16 RPG for the '10-'11 season.  If he keeps up those averages for the remainder of the season, he will become the first player in NBA history to average 20.0/15.0 for a team that finishes with a win percentage below .500.  The Timberwolves win percentage is .242
 

Love supplanted legendary Hall of Fame player and NBA Champion Moses Malone, who set the record in the 1978-'79 season with the Houston Rockets.  That season would end up being Malone's best statistical season of his career and would earn him the league's distinguished and highly coveted Most Valuable Player award

Moses Malone, seen here in his post-game celebration for his NBA Championship with the Philadelphia 76ers was the '83 Finals MVP and earned three league MVP's including the '78-'79 season he set the modern era record for consecutive double-doubles recorded at 51 games


The Minnesota Timberwolves found a gem when they traded for 5th overall pick, Kevin Love on 2008 NBA draft night in a deal that swapped Love, picked by the Memphis Grizzlies with Minnesota's third overall pick, O.J. Mayo, in an eight-player deal.  He's made the Grizzlies regret they ever dealt him.  Love brings, night in and night out, the kind of consistency and hustle a franchise dreams of in a young, talented star player.  Whether it's the grind at practice or in the games, the 'Wolves can always expect Love to show up with voracious tenacity yet a controlled finesse that combines the mental and physical parts of the game, in sync with one another.  It's his team-first workman's mentality and playing for one of the NBA's worst franchises that has made Kevin Love the most under-appreciated superstar in the NBA today.

Love has averaged 21 points and 16 rebounds per game in 65 games played this season.  The combination of these averages have typically only been put up in full seasons by some of the NBA's greatest of all time.  In fact, none of the greatest combination rebounder/scorers in the NBA's modern era have recorded those combined averages in a single season in their illustrious careers, outside of Moses Malone's aforementioned '78-'79 MVP season when he set the original consecutive games double-double record at 51.

Above is a list of the modern era's most dominate rebounding/scoring combination players and their greatest statistical season of their careers in rebounds and scoring average combined.  Love ranks second only to Malone in RPG, ranks higher than Dwight Howard, Tim Duncan and Chris Webber and comparable to Shaquille O'neal and Charles Barkley for single season combined rebound and scoring averages


Aside from the individual statistical comparisons of Love's current season versus the best combination rebounder/scorers in the modern area(and of any era) is what glaringly stands out as a colossal difference between them that sets Love apart from them all.  Each of the players listed in the figure above had their best season for a team that finished with a winning record and made the NBA playoffs.

Not only is Love having an epically historic season in points and rebounds, he's doing it for a team that is void of any other talent and has close to a league worst 16 wins in 66 games for a .242 winning percentage.  Only Shaquille O'neal's rookie campaign with the Orlando Magic, in which he had his best statistical season in combined points and rebounds, had as little as 41 wins, the least of any team listed above in their superstar's greatest season.

Before Kevin Love's historic night, only eight other players, before and after the modern era, had ever eclipsed 50 consecutive games recording a double-double.  All eight of them --  Moses Malone, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Elgin Baylor, Walt Bellamy, Wilt Chamberlain, Elvin Hayes, Jerry Lucas and Bill Russell -- have been inducted into the basketball Hall of Fame.

Love has only the double-double streaks of the pre-modern era to pass.  At this point moving forward, he will have to record four more consecutive double-doubles to replace Elvin Hayes' 55 for the NBA's Capital Bullets in '73-'74, which is fourth all-time.  Beyond that, only the legendary folk-hero and basketball pioneer, Wilt Chamberlain's impossible streaks of 133, 220 and the all-time record of 227 consecutive recorded double-doubles will be in play for Love.  He isn't eagerly pursuing a record of such surreal proportions.

Wilt Chamberlain, seen here in an iconic photo celebrating his personal best and the NBA's lone individual triple-digit point effort in a single game was a monster of the pre-modern era averaging as many as 50.4 PPG and 25.7 RPG in the '61-'62 season.


When asked about his record breaking night and the potential to chase down Wilt's hopelessly insurmountable record for consecutive double-doubles, Love said, "If you are looking at the grand scheme of things, you have to look at the 227 by 'The Big Dipper,' Wilt the Stilt. He was something special. It's not like I have my eyes set on that. I am pretty happy in 2011 with where I am at with 52 (consecutive) double-doubles."

Love also added on Wilt's record, "There are unbreakable records in this league and that is one of them."

*The modern era of the NBA is the era that started in 1976 when America's two national leagues, the American Basketball Association and the National Basketball Association, merged to become what we now know as today's NBA.  The merger vastly changed the landscape of the NBA and had such an impact on statistics, NBA records are distinguished by whether or not they happened in the NBA's modern era or before(For example: the single game scoring record in NBA history is Wilt Chamberlin's 100 points in 1962 but the modern era record is Kobe Bryant's 81 in 2006).

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Article first published as Prodigy Kevin Love Records 52nd Consecutive Double-Double to Set NBA Record on Blogcritics

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Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Ohio State Football Head Coach, Jim Tressel Suspended/Fined $250,000 for NCAA Violations

In shocking news today, long reverred and tenured head football coach, Jim Tressel, was given a swift punishment today by The Ohio State University for action it ruled to be in violation NCAA rules.  It was ruled that Tressel failed to notify the university of information he received about two players on his team selling game-used memorabilia.

Tressel's punishment, a two game suspension to start the 2011 football season and a heavy $250,000 fine,  included a public reprimand and his issuance of a public apology.  The NCAA is further investigating the matter and if it finds more information that Tressel acted in violation, they may reject Ohio State University's punishment and enforce their own sanctions.

The university's athletic director, Gene Smith, told members of the media that he never had any intent on firing the former national champion head coach over the matter.  The action to suspend Tressel is based on language in his contract that states that he must report any information he acquires on any violation of school, conference or NCAA violations, to the university, immediately.  The word "immediately" is underlined in that clause of his contract.

"Wherever we end up, Jim Tressel is our football coach," Smith told reporters.  "He is our coach and we trust him implicitly."


Ohio State University athletic director, Gene Smith, stated that he never considered dismissing Tressel for the breach of his contract

Three months ago, the NCAA suspended Ohio State star quarterback, Tyrelle Pryor, and four teammates for the first five games of the upcoming 2011 season for selling jersey, championship rings and trophies to a local tattoo parlor owner.  The NCAA suspensions were handed down just a couple weeks after Ohio State was notified by a U.S attorney that there was an ongoing federal investigation that involved players on the football team.

Ohio State football quarterback and Heisman candidate Tyrelle Pryor will miss the first five games of the 2011 season


Tressel received an email back in April of 2010 that this federal investigation was forthcoming and explicit information about the details of what had occured between players and local tattoo parlor owner, Eddie Rife.  He knew that the players had sold Rife signed memorabilia in exchange for cash and free tattoo work.  He ignored the violations and carried on as if he had no knowledge if the information.

Ohio State Head Football Coach, Jim Tressel has an .828 winning percentage in his ten years with the Buckeyes


''Obviously I'm disappointed that this happened at all,'' Tressel said. ''I take my responsibility for what we do at Ohio State tremendously seriously and for the game of football. I plan to grow from this. I'm sincerely saddened by the fact that I let some people down and didn't do things as well as I possibly could have."

"I have had a player murdered. I've had a player incarcerated. I've had a player get taken into the drug culture and lose his opportunity for a productive life,'' an emotional Tressel said at a news conference on Tuesday night. ''It was obviously tremendously concerning. Quite honestly, I was scared.''

Despite the discovery of the memorabilia sales and subsequent suspensions handed down to Pryor and four others, Tressel allowed them all to participate in the Sugar Bowl, the only remaining game after the suspensions were enforced.  The Buckeyes won that game over Arkansas, 31-26.

Tressel is 106-22 in ten years with the Buckeyes with a national championship in 2002.  He's one of college football's most established and successful coaches.  The Buckeyes will certainly be without him and their Heisman caliber quarterback for the first two games of the season against Akron and Toledo and depending on the outcome of an NCAA investigation ongoing, could be longer.

As for Ohio State's 2011 Big Ten championship prospects, it will be interesting to see whether or not the NCAA will accept Ohio State's self imposed sanctions.  It's likely the Buckeyes can survive Akron and Toledo without their coach and quarterback, but if the suspension for Tressel is extended, games at Miami(FL) and taking on Colorado and Nebraska at home in games three, four and five could be impossible for the Buckeyes without both the coach and quarterback.  They already know they'll be down their quarterback for those games.  Being down a coach that has 106 wins in 128 career games with Ohio State for those games will prove devastating.

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Article first published as Ohio State University Football Head Coach Jim Tressel Suspended and Fined for NCAA Violations on Technorati.

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Charlie Sheen, Dallas Mavericks Owner Mark Cuban in Talks for Potential TV Show

Celebrity superstar and national pariah, Charlie Sheen, has been in talks with billionaire internet mogul and NBA franchise owner, Mark Cuban, on the possibility that Sheen and Cuban can work together to get Sheen to star as a talk show host or on a reality show on Cuban's cable television network, HDNet.  Cuban confirmed the talks were ongoing Sunday evening.

"You've got somebody that everybody has a whole lot of interest in who's doing some interesting things, to say the least, and we always look for interesting programming by featuring interesting people doing interesting things," Cuban told media members before watching his Mavericks fall to the Memphis Grizzlies in Dallas.  "I reached out and we've had some conversations, and we're going to work on doing some things."

Billionaire, Mark Cuban, is founder of broadcast.com and made his fortune in a buyout by Yahoo!  He owns the NBA franchise Dallas Mavericks and the cable network, HDNet


Sheen, who's been in the national limelight for two decades for starring in various hit movies like Platoon, Wall Street and the Major League movie series, is most recently known for his success that has come from a multi-year stint as TV's highest paid actor in the smash comedy hit sitcom, Two and a Half Men on CBS.  Sheen has been famously fired from the show for his questionable taste in lifestyle which has been reported to include drug binges and prostitutes.  Cuban has reached out to fill the Sheen craving that has swept the nation in recent months.


Charlie Sheen(right), seen here with his fellow cast stars in the sitcom, Two and  Half Men

Sheen starred in many major films, including one of his most memorable roles as Ricky Vaughn, the closer for Major League Baseball's Cleveland Indians in the movie franchise Major League

"We'll do something together," Cuban continued, "but it's not certain it will be a show. It'll come down to what he wants do and what his situation is. We'll just figure it out from there, but it's a unique opportunity, I'll say that."

Sheen hosted an internet show on UStream.tv on Saturday night that has gotten mixed reviews but Cuban thinks that could be a good start to developing a talk show career.

"Everybody wants to critique a web show that got put together in a few hours," Cuban said. "That's not the point. It gave him a chance to be himself and have some fun. The thing I like the most about Charlie is that he just loves to mess with the media. You guys fall hook, line and sinker."

Should Sheen and Cuban make television magic in the future, it won't be the first time Cuban will have featured Sheen for promotion publicly.  Cuban's promotions department for the Dallas Mavericks has already incorporated Sheen into parts of their game audio routines.  They've played parts of Sheen's infamous 20/20 hour interview special that aired within the last week, over their loudspeaker at the American Airlines Center.

The team's biggest star has also made a promotional video using a couple of trendy words that Sheen coined in his nationally televised interview this past week.  Dallas forward, Dirk Nowitzki, in an attempt to promote his bobblehead night, was seen in a video on the jumbotron at American Airlines Center where he looks into the mirror and flexes while saying the Sheen coined words "Boom. Winning."

You can also see this article and more articles by The Sports Savant at Technorati.com

Article first published as Charlie Sheen, Dallas Mavericks Owner Mark Cuban in Talks for Potential TV Show on Technorati. 

Saturday, March 5, 2011

LeBron and the Heat; More Questions than Answers

The Miami Heat suffered their worst thrashing of the season in a 125-95 romp by the Spurs at the AT&T Center in San Antonio, Texas Friday night.  The Spurs, who own the leagues best record at 51-11, were expecting a challenge from the Heat, coming off of a devastating home loss to the Orlando Magic.  What they got was a team in disarray.

The Spurs punished the Heat with 17 three-point field goals in a 125-95 blowout


The Spurs jumped out to an early, runaway 1st quarter outscoring the Heat 36-12 at the end of twelve minutes.  Miami came back strong with an overpowering 2nd quarter, but in the second half continued to lose ground until the lead was not only insurmountable, but laughable.  James' 26 and Wade's 19 were not nearly enough to cover the enormous, 30-point spread that ended up being the margin of victory.

The final score wouldn't suggest it, but Miami matched San Antonio in many key statistical categories.  They both had 40 rebounds, 23 to 29 assists and 16 to 22 fast break points in the Spurs favor.  The real tell-tale statistic that made the Spurs a runaway winner?  Miami played no defense at the three point line.  San Antonio made a whopping seventeen three-point shots in just 28 attempts.  Not only were they over 60% from three-point range, but the Spurs shot 56% from the floor in total.  Their were more questions than answers on their defensive schemes and execution.

The Heat squandered a 24 point second half lead to fall to the Magic at home, 99-96


The loss came just a day after Miami suffered a mind-numbing loss to the Orlando Magic at home.  The Heat were showing signs of their potential dominance, building a 24 point lead in the 3rd quarter.  Next thing you know, Orlando goes on a 40-9 tear and ends up winning the game by three points.  Again, the trend was poor defense.  The Magic roared behind the arc, shooting 16-29 from three-point range, most of them hit in the stunning second half comeback.  That, accompanied by an abysmal 18% in 17 attempts for the Heat from three-point range stirred the upset victory by Orlando.  The loss left Miami with more questions than answers on how they could have blown such a lead with three of the game's elite players on one team.

The last place Miami figured they would be on March 4th, is finding themselves with a discouraging feeling despite their 43-19 record.  They just don't feel like a team that is as good as their record indicates.  If that's your sense of them, there's a reason for it.  The Heat have just 12 wins in 28 games against teams that have winning records and their record is considerably worse against the elite teams like Boston, Orlando, L.A., Dallas and San Antonio.  They beat up on a lot of the league's bottom dwellers, but the difference in talent between the league's best and its worst is substantial.  In other words, many of their wins could have just as easily come with two of the big three taking the night off.

There is an argument that can be made for the relativity of the significance of a team's record versus elite competition in the regular season, especially in the NBA.  Many would make a case that it's really only a matter of who get's hot in the playoffs anyway and that no psychological edge is gained from winning regular season contests against likely playoff foes.  Others will tell you that regular season wins give a team the advantage mentally over an opponent when it comes to playoff time.  As of now, the Heat better hope that their future rests in the former.  Their play versus top talent would indicate they will have a first or second round exit, but we've seen what they can do when they get hot.  If they could catch it in a bottle, they could rip their way through the Eastern Conference to the NBA Finals.  I don't think we've ever seen a team in NBA history that has such real potential for both outcomes.

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Lockout Looming; NFL and NFLPA Agree to 24-Hour CBA Extension

SAVANT REPORT

In an attempt to come to a new agreement without the current collective bargaining agreement expiring, the NFL and NFLPA agreed to a last minute temporary extension on Thursday that will last an additional 24 hours.  The current CBA was set to expire at 11:59PM Thursday night, but will now expire at the same time on Friday, March 4th.

The league and player's association have been meeting daily before a federal mediator to help bring the two sides to an amicable compromise on the core issues that they have been so far apart on since the hard negotiations have begun.  Each side decided today that an extension should be set to allow one more day of negotiations between the parties.


SAVANT ANALYSIS

At face value, the news of a 24-hour extension between the NFL and NFLPA sounds promising for a new CBA to be agreed to by March 4th.  It is an indication that the sides are close enough to an agreement on all major issues to think that a new agreement can be salvaged before a lockout takes place at the expiration of the current deal's extension.  But don't let this news encourage you to start putting the celebratory champagne on ice.  Though it was a last ditch attempt to come up with an agreement before a lockout occurs, the sides are still too far apart to realistically come to an agreement in the next 24 hours.  Plan on a lockout happening after tomorrow night's deadline.  A deal in the next day would be nothing short of a miracle.

The sides likely would not have even gotten this close in the process if not for a striking blow to the NFL just a few days ago.  In a legal hearing between the two parties before the Honorable Judge David S. Doty in Minneapolis, MN, Doty ruled that the NFL was in breach of the current CBA when they accepted less money from television contracts a year ago to assure themselves accessibility to what the NFLPA has been calling a lockout "war chest" of money that the NFL could draw upon during a lockout to sustain expenses even if football was not being played in the fall.

The part fo the CBA that Judge Doty says was breached is a clause that claims that the NFL must seek television contracts that seek the "maximum" financial value.  The NFL's acceptance of less than the maximum value televsion contracts to ensure upfront money that would give them leverage during a lockout is a clear breach of the clause.  Doty had to overrule a previous ruling by a lower magisterate that stated the NFL had a right to accept those terms.

Doty's ruling undermined much of the NFL's leverage against the NFLPA because it is expected that not only will Doty rule that the NFL will not be allowed to access the $4 Billion they garnered from the television contracts, but that they may be subject to monetary damages owed to the NFLPA for breaching the contract in the process.  This helped move negotiations along because without it, the NFLPA would be at such a disadvantage, the NFL would have little reason to compromise on any of the issues.  Doty's ruling has made for a much more even playing field.  If games are missed, the NFL, just like the NFLPA won't have future contract money to lean on when revenue isn't being generated.

What to expect: Though it was a valiant effort upon the NFL and NFLPA to extend the negotiations another 24 hours, but it is too little-too late.  An agreement will not be in place by the expiration and we will officially have the first work stoppage in the NFL since 1987.  Another key move to watch for will be the NFLPA legally decertifying themselves as a union, withdrawing their right to collectively bargain with the NFL, but gives the 1,800 players of the NFL the individual right to file an suit against the NFL for anti-trust action.  NFL superstars, Peyton Manning, Drew Brees and Tom Brady have been confirmed named plaintiffs in a potential anti-trust suit against the NFL.  It was anti-trust action in 1993, most notably by the late and legendary Reggie White that ended labor disputes between the NFL and NFLPA in '93.

It's still looking like this dispute will last into and through the summer months.  If no agreement is met by midnight, the night of March 4th, negotiations will turn cold for a while and a lockout will ensue.  For how long?  We just don't know.

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Report: Jets to keep Tomlinson for 2011; Cut Taylor, Jenkins and Woody

SAVANT REPORT

The Jets came up one game short of a trip to the Super Bowl once again in 2010 and it appears that they'll be making a few key roster changes for 2011.  One familiar face will be returning in 2011.

According to league sources, future Hall of Fame running back LaDainian Tomlinson will be back to play out the final year of his two-year deal he inked with the Jets in 2009 after being cut from the San Diego Chargers. Tomlinson, who turns 32 in June of this year, will be reloaded in 2011 with last year's other committee running backs, Shonn Green and Joe McKnight.

LaDainian Tomlinson, at age 31, rushed for 914 yards and 6 TD's and added 52 receptions in his first year with the New York  Jets


Ending their tenure with the Jets organization are six-time pro-bowl player and former defensive MVP Jason Taylor,  long time veteran offensive tackle Damien Woody who has been a part of the Jets league leading rushing attack in recent seasons and defensive tackle Kris Jenkins, who was a dominating run stopper with the Carolina Panthers early in his career, but only started 7 games in the last two of his three seasons with the Jets due to injuries.


SAVANT ANALYSIS

LaDainian Tomlinson may have salvaged his future with the Jets in this past year's playoffs.  Some thought Tomlinson to be at risk of being cut by the team after a promising and productive start to the 2010 season ended with a gradual decline in production.  After rushing for 599 yards and five scores in his first eight games of the season, he rushed for only 287 and one score in his last seven games(did not play in week 17).  His numbers in the receiving game took a quick dive as well catching 43 passes in the first ten games but finishing with only 9 in his final five contests, two receptions or less in each.

It was thought that the 31 year old Tomlinson may have been showing his age in the second half of the season, but he revved it back up in the playoffs, rushing for 125 yards in two wins versus the Colts and Patriots before being stymied for just 16 yards and a 1.8 yards per carry average against the vaunted Steelers defense in the AFC Championship.

Though Tomlinson's big  mid-season dip in production had critics calling his days of being a productive back over, the Jets feel like there's enough miles left on his legs to help get them to the promise land in 2011.  The Jets should be, and will be wary of his high mileage odometer though.

The Jets cut of stars Jason Taylor, Damien Woody and Kris Jenkins were not much of a surprise.  In his first year with the Jets, Taylor played in a substitute package as a passing down specialist and recorded 5.0 sacks and 36 tackles in limited time.  His age continues to be the issue for him going forward and is a good reason why he's played for three teams in the last three years and will be on his fourth in four years if he signs with someone for 2011.

Jason Taylor had 5.0 sacks in a backup role with the 2010 New York Jets


Damien Woody's departure came from a lack of consistent play and an apparent achilles injury he suffered in last year's playoff game against the Patriots that landed him on Injured Reserve.  The gaps in the run-blocking game he used to create aren't opening up and developing the way they used to in years past and he seems to labor in pass-blocking much more so than he did when he had younger and fresher legs.  The Jets decided that coupled with the recent achilles injury that ended his 2010 season, made him expendable to 2011's roster.  The Jets will likely look for a replacement for him via the 2011 draft this April.

Damien Woody has been a solid force in the Jets league leading rushing attack of recent seasons.  An achilles injury ended his 2010 season in the playoffs


The release of Kris Jenkins was the least of surprising news as he played in only one game last season and six games the season before, recording not a single sack and only 14 tackles in those games.  Jenkins 2009 season ended due to a severe knee injury to his left leg and then six plays into the 2010 season, repeated the same injury to the same knee.  It looks unlikely that any team will take a chance on him considering his experience and recent injury history.  The Jets will likely also look to a defensive tackle in the 2011 draft to replace him as well.

Kris Jenkins was a force on the interior line when healthy.  Two major knee injuries in the last two seasons may have ended his career after being released by the Jets


Fantasy Football Impact: With Tomlinson coming back after a down season, look for his workload to be reduced even more than it was in 2010.  Tomlinson and Green split carries pretty evenly in 2010 with Green handling 185 carries to Tomlinson's 219, but with Tomlinson another year older and his ineffectiveness towards the end of the season last year, look for Green and even second year back, Joe McKnight, who had 39 carries and a solid 4.8 yards per carry average in his rookie year, to increase their workloads to help save Tomlinson's legs over the duration of the season.