Thursday, February 23rd, 2012

What does the return of D-Rose mean for the Bulls? Less than you think

All-Star point guard and reigning MVP Derrick Rose finally returned to the Bulls starting roster after missing five straight games with lingering back spasms. In his return, he scored 23 points as well as six assists and five rebounds in 35 minutes. He looked good running the floor with his elite speed, and his jumper looked good, adding two 3-pointers.

Now, what does that mean for the Bulls, who have the second best record in the east after the heat? Not as much as you may think. Yes, the Bulls need a healthy Rose to make a run for their first title since the Jordan era. However, they are 6-3 without Rose this year, and Carlos Boozer, Joakim Noah and especially Luol Deng, who will join Rose in the All-Star game this year, have been fantastic in his absence. Backup point guard CJ Watson is a premier three-point shooter, and though he lacks the athleticism of Rose, he is a starting-caliber guard that many teams (Lakers!) would love to have as a starter.
The three losses without Rose have a lot to do with other injuries, specifically to Watson, Deng, and the starting two-guard Richard Hamilton, who, when he straps on the mask, can flat out score. When your scoring options at guard are 36-year-old Mike James ad 5’11” John Lucas III, you can foresee some problems. Those three losses have less to do with Rose’s absence and more to do with the fact that the Bulls’ first THREE options at guard were injured. Still, they went 6-3 without the reigning MVP, which by the definition of that award is impressive. It’s also impressive that most of those games were on the road. Deng also became the first Bulls forward to have 20 points and 10 assists in two consecutive games since Scottie Pippen.
Now, I want to reiterate this is not at all a dis on Rose’s importance to this team. It is paramount that he is healthy come playoff time. Just look at the rest of this team, though. Deng, Noah, and guard Ronnie Brewer are some of the best defensive players in the league. So is Taj Gibson off the bench. The Bulls may not have the Big Three, but they have eight players that are starting caliber players in the NBA. This team is incredibly different from the Jordan-led Bulls of the 90s, but it gives Chicagoans a feeling of déjà vu.

This team is built to win it all. They have the best on-ball defenders of any team in the NBA (Brewer, Deng and Noah), a star player (D-Rose), multiple scoring options (Rose, Deng, Boozer and Watson off the bench), tough post play and rebounding (Noah and Taj Gibson) and the veteran experienced in the finals (Rip Hamilton). Plus, they didn’t destroy the city of Cleveland to get this team, so what’s not to love?
The Chicago Bulls are among the favorites to win the title, and they should be America’s favorite. The 2011-2012 Chicago Bulls play the game the way it’s meant to be played, hard and as a team. That’s why the loss of D-Rose isn’t crippling to this team. They’ll use depth, sweat and motivation to win, even if their MVP isn’t able to showcase his talents on the court.

By Adam Pope

Wednesday, February 22nd, 2012

New Lakers in Town ???

There is no arguing that the Los Angeles Lakers are one of the most successful and respected franchises in the history of Sports. This storied franchise might be adding some new faces to an already dangerous squad. Listed below are some possible players that might end up in a Lakers jersey.

-Michael Beasley, SF (Minnesota Timberwolves)
-Gilbert Arenas, PG (Free Agent)
-Jose Calderon, PG (Toronto Raptors)
– Kirk Hinrich, PG (Atlanta Hawks)
– Steve Nash, PG (Phoenix Suns)
-Ramon Sessions, PG (Cleveland Cavs)
-Derron Williams, PG (New Jersey Nets)
-Rajon Rondo, PG (Boston Celtics)

Now any of these additions would provide the Lakers with an extra boost and maybe place them back into talks as NBA Championship contenders. I’ll make sure to keep you updated if any new players get added to the mix.

Tuesday, February 21st, 2012

Lamont “MoMo” Jones: A Name You Will Know Come March

Top recruits usually don’t play basketball at Iona. Lamont “MoMo” Jones is an exception. A former top recruit from Oak Hill Academy, MoMo committed to Arizona. Jones played two seasons in Tucson and averaged 9.6 points per game his sophomore year. Instead of returning to Arizona for a junior year, Jones transferred. He wanted to be closer to his family. Jones ended up choosing Iona, and boy are the Gales happy he did. Jones has the Gaels thinking NCCA Tourney this year as he is averaging 16.2 points per game this season. The Gaels are 22-6 and are a team to watch come tournament time. The scary thing is that Jones is not even the leading scorer on his team. Senior Michael Glover is averaging 18.5 points and 9.3 rebounds per game.. March Madness is closing coming upon us and we all know anything can happen. With senior leadership like Glover and NBA type talent in junior Lamont Jones, Iona is a team that could not only just pull an upset or two, but have a legitiment chance to make a deep run that could land them a VCU or Mason type run.

Tuesday, February 21st, 2012

Faith in Haith by Matt Fehr

One of the most overwhelming things to cope with in the overall scheme of life is being told you are not capable of accomplishing something. Even the strongest of minds can wither at the expectation of failure from a vast majority. A person’s reaction to these criticisms will determine how the rest of their life will play out. One can conform to their detractors each time, accept failure and ultimately live a lifetime as an underachiever. The alternative, however, is considerably more rewarding. One can also make the decision to persevere. For when somebody succeeds despite low expectations and extreme doubt, they are labeled as “great.” Their triumphs are glorified and the work that was sacrificed to be successful is given significance. These are the overachievers of the world.

Missouri’s head basketball coach, Frank Haith, is such an overachiever.

When Haith accepted the position at Mizzou last year, following the departure of Mike Anderson (who returned to Arkansas where he had been an assistant early in his career), it was under more scrutiny than any coach in recent memory. During his seven years at the University of Miami he sported a 43-69 conference record with one NCAA tournament appearance and was one of the last candidates that Missouri had even considered for the vacancy. In August, a mere three months before his first season at Mizzou began, he was linked to the Nevin Shapiro “pay for play” scandal in which one of Haith’s assistants at Miami accepted money to heavily pursue several big name high school recruits.

Not only was he under investigation by the NCAA, he inherited a team that had 12 upperclassmen that were all recruited by Anderson and were accustomed to his “40 Minutes of Hell” style of play in which players play an extremely up-tempo fast break offense combined with aggravating defensive pressure. While Haith vowed to keep some of these aspects in tact, it is difficult to obtain a team that had spent so many years under one style of play and make them your own. Rarely do coaches succeed under these circumstances and it usually takes a year or so for a staff to make headway with their players.

The amount of backlash that took place at the university after Haith’s hiring was considerable. Tiger alumni, students, faculty all bashed athletic director Mike Alden for failing to land Purdue head coach Matt Painter who many deemed as the successor to Anderson. The widespread belief was that the players would resist Haith’s staff and try to play basketball the way they had in previous years, which would have greatly depleted team chemistry. It didn’t help that the team’s chief defensive threat in the paint, Laurence Bowers, was lost for the season with a torn ACL a month before the season began. There was no optimism and little if any support for how the team would perform this year.

Haith decided to persevere.

Through 27 games, he has the Tigers off to a 25-2 record, the best the school has seen in almost two decades and are 3-0 against teams ranked in the top 10. They are shooting 50.3% from the field, the second best in the nation, and average 79.9 points a game, the seventh best in the nation.

In a game against the California Golden Bears, ranked 18th at the time, the Tigers won by a convincing 39 points, scoring 92 points in the process. In an interview with ESPN’s Jason King, Missouri senior guard/forward Kim English described the change in team chemistry.

“This is the best I’ve felt in my four years, because it’s the most selfless team I’ve played on,” English said. “We’re all 10 guys, plus three transfers — we’re buying into the process every day.”

Mizzou is undefeated at home and is poised to make a run in not only the Big 12 tournament but, the big dance at the end of March.

Could it be that Mizzou’s senior leadership wanted to make a statement to the coach who left them in their last years at the university? It’s a possibility.

Could it be that Anderson recruited a team that was most dangerous when it added a half court offense to its repertoire? Perhaps.

But this team’s success ultimately has to do with Haith’s ability to handle adversity.

Haith’s ability to handle all the pessimists and criticisms of the team he was taking on has him as a contender for coach of the year in the NCAA. He holds the players’ pulse and has them playing with more teamwork than before. He preaches a message of accountability and never doubting yourself. The players show love for the game and respect his values. Suddenly, Mizzou Arena is rocking as loud as Cameron Indoor with students camping out days before big games just to assure a seat in the student section.

“Success is not owned. It’s rented, and you have to pay rent every day.’ I live my life like that. I work every day like I’m going to be fired tomorrow”, Haith said in an interview with ESPN columnist Dana O’Neil.

Anderson, ironically, took over a team that only has four upperclassmen and is currently unranked with 17-10 record. Although he gets the opportunity to grow with another set of players, he has to deal with the growing pains of having a young roster and also must wonder what could have been. He has to think about how this season would have played out if he had stayed with his players at Missouri and how it would have felt to have success with the six seniors he recruited. However, he still expresses love for the team he left.

“Those kids are part of my family. They will be for the rest of my life,” said Anderson in an interview with SB Nation. “Obviously they were hurt and even when you talk about some of the fans. Why? When I got there, there was not a lot of empathy about the program. Now there are feelings about it and I understand that. But I’m so excited for those guys. They’re going to do great things.”

Jim Larranaga, who led the George Mason Patriots to a Final Four appearance in 2006, replaced Haith at Miami, is doing similarly well despite being in the basketball super-conference ACC. The Hurricanes are off to a 16-9 record and defeated Duke at home in overtime earlier in the year.

Frank Haith’s first season at Missouri is a prime example of the rewarding feelings that are associated with succeeding under doubt. He was given virtually no shot to succeed before he even set foot on campus. And the negativity that came with his history has been completely erased because he took on the challenge. He looked his critics in the face and proved them wrong. His tenure at Mizzou is, for the time being at least, labeled as “great,” and he is doing so with extreme class.

The future for the currently ranked no. 3 Tigers is to be determined but, the sky is the limit. They take on Kansas State at home Tuesday night (Feb. 21) before heading across the border Saturday night (Feb. 25) to play what could be their last conference game against archrival Kansas (Mizzou is heading to the Southeast Conference next season). There was little confidence in the months leading up to the season but now it seems as though Missouri fans have faith in Haith.

Monday, February 20th, 2012

Manic Monday

Happy first day of week First Pick Blog fans! Bringing you some wonderful new content this week, for now check out some pieces from the weekend!

Jimmy Luehrs with the latest Nascar news

 

Ben Simpson on why he hates sports sometimes

and some MLB news from all of us!

Check out the new content today and this entire week!

 

Sunday, February 19th, 2012

Wanna Hear a Secret…?

Wanna hear a secret? Sometimes…I hate sports.

For all the success stories, the underdogs, and the unsung heroes finally getting their due there are millions of others with failed dreams, false realities. Kids, myself included, grow up worshipping a man or woman because they can throw a ball 50 yards with pinpoint accuracy or shoot one through a nylon net from 15 feet away with a hand in their face. Sports can ruin lives. A missed shot, a bobbled grounder, can cast you into the shadows of infamy for eternity. A simple mistake and one can go from hometown hero to outcast. How did we get here? How did we reach this point?

The nation just recently witnessed what can happen when coaches, a position of authority can fall very far off the path of righteousness. A coach is supposed to help, to nurture, to protect. But they are humans, and no human is perfect. We build up coaches to the point where they are no longer people, but gods. They can control the children they teach, and teach them evil. They can teach them that their opponent is not just another kid like them, but an enemy, who needs to be beaten. They can teach them that “Winning is not everything, but the only thing.” They can teach them whatever they want, for they are coaches, and whatever coach says goes.

This is the last I will ever speak of the terrible events at Penn State, but no matter your feelings on the matter know this: Joe Paterno was more than just a coach in Happy Valley, he WAS Penn State. When in reality, he was a man who won football games, and was damn good at it too. The spotlight turned from the children and the monster who destroyed their lives, to the aging coach who didn’t do enough. But if there was more to be done, information to follow up on, there is only one man who could have found the answers. One man whose opinion mattered the most. Joe needed to do m0re, had to do m ore. But sadly it seems the program was put above the welfare of children…

But it is more than just the coaches but the athletes themselves who sometimes forget what they stand for. For it is the athletes, not the coaches, who we pay 80 dollars to see. It is the athletes for whom we sacrifice sleep for, relationships for. It is their names who we don on our backs and wake up wishing we could be. We long for the ability to stand up on top of a podium, in front of the world, and call ourselves champions. We invest our hearts, our souls into people and teams. I’ll be the first to admit that the fans share much of the blame. I base my life on how the teams I like are doing, a simple loss can ruin my day, or week. I have to step back sometimes and remind myself that there is so much more out there, so much more matters, than whether or not the Tigers lost the pennant. But it’s so hard to separate, and sometimes we choose not to.

Sports can kill. It can kill dreams, the kids who were told they weren’t tall enough, fast enough, strong enough. The kids who had empty promises whispered into their ear by recruiters, who all along were waiting for someone better to appear. The kids who said all the right things, did all the right things, worked as hard as their body could, and were not even close to being drafted, to make the next level. Meanwhile there are athletes who are blessed with the height, with the body, who barely has to work or do anything for themselves their entire lives and make it by a long-shot. They are lazy, but it doesn’t matter. They are rude, but it doesn’t matter. Sports, like life, are not fair.

Sports can kill people too. Through concussions, through the tireless bone-crushing of body into body. Through that one line drive, that one right hook. The retired athlete who is too proud to admit something is wrong, that his mind is turning into mush. The coach who continues his stressful lifestyle, despite the anxiety and the cold sweats that keep him up late at night wondering if he’ll have a job in the morning. The gambler who uses sports to make his living, despite his family’s pleas to stop, who finds himself in a ditch off the highway for failure to pay his bookie in time. It sounds silly, sounds like television, but it happens. Sports can kill.

This is an entire website based around sports and entertainment. We write about sports because we want to, because we feel we have to. But even we need to stop ourselves every now and then and remember that this is for fun, that sports are played to entertain. But sometimes even we forget…

99.99% of the time I love sports. I feel they inspire hope, bring people together, and help us escape from our problems. But after the final buzzer, after the last inning, we need to remember that our problems are still there. It’s only a game, and yet, its so much more…

By Ben Simpson

Sunday, February 19th, 2012

‘Rowdy’ Busch wins thriller down in Daytona

The first unofficial race of the season proved to be one to watch. As Kyle Busch edged Tony Stewart by less than .1 seconds (.013 seconds) because of the classic ‘slingshot’ pass on the last stretch of the last lap. This photo-finish was one that people will be expecting for the Daytona 500 next Sunday as Speed week definitely started in the most exciting way.
Kyle Busch edges Stewart for Bud Shootout victory
Some highlights of the race included a lot of pack racing because the two-car tandems that were so popular last year could not be as affective as teams could not pick up on each other’s radio signals and communicate with each other. This resulted in a lot more close racing and therefore a lot more action for the fans. There were some major wrecks caused inadvertently because of this and NASCAR is reassessing if they did make the right decision. Some notable drivers were taken out early in the race from a large wreck that involved over half of the field of 25 drivers and spoke about how the new style of racing has caused these kinds of wrecks. Other drivers thought that pack racing is the way to go and is how races should be raced on the super-speedway tracks like Daytona and Talledega.
Sparks fly high in Daytona

By Jimmy Luehrs

Saturday, February 18th, 2012

Some MLB News…

In case you haven’t heard, ESPN reports:

“The Pirates and New York Yankees have agreed to a trade that would send right-hander A.J. Burnett to Pittsburgh, sources said.

The Pirates will send right-handed reliever Diego Moreno and outfielder Exicardo Cayones to New York in return, sources said. Moreno, a 25-year-old from Venezuela, has split the past two seasons between the Class A and Double-A minor league teams. Cayones, who is 20, spent 2011 in Class A.”

Saturday, February 18th, 2012

On this day…February 18th

A daily look on any special events that happened on this date in history!

1983 – The Indiana Pacers began a 28 game road losing streak.

The 2010-2011 Washington Wizards came dangerously close to that number, losing 25 straight games on the road

1998 – Rob Smith (Cure) did battle with the forces of musical evil (Barbara Streisand) on the TV show South Park.

One of the SP classics

 

2001 – NASCAR driver Dale Earnhardt, Sr., was killed in a crash during the Daytona 500 race.

RIP Dale Earnhardt Sr., clearly your legacy will continue to shine not only in the racing world, but in the entire sports world as well.

Saturday, February 18th, 2012

OMG

Here’s a little Treat to start of your Saturday right, straight RIDONCULOUS

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