Saturday, February 18th, 2012

Super Saturday

Hello and welcome to Day 5 of the incarnation of First Pick Blog! We hope you have been entertained and we will keep providing content for ya!

Zach Altschuler tells us how the NBA rebounded from the lockout so quickly

 

Mujtaba Elgoodah talks about the evolution of the New York Knicks with the addition of J.R. Smith

Ricky Bassett gives us a look at Tazer-Ball

 

A lot more coming at ya this Saturday and all weekend long. Enjoy and spread the word!

 

 

Friday, February 17th, 2012

Ultimate Tazer Ball

Whilst perusing through the internets on a lazy friday afternoon, I stumbled upon this here video of grown men tazing each other for sport.  Healthy exercise? No.  Entertaining?  Hell yes.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E38G31wo7qc&feature=youtu.be

What I can gather from the video is that there are two teams with four players each that line up on opposite sides of the playing field.  When signaled to start (presumably by cannon shot or something else that is equally as badass as the game) all 8 players charge to the center of the field where a giant soccer ball awaits them.  The player toughest enough to survive all the tazers grabs the ball and proceeds to carry it to the goal where it is either kicked, punched, or thrown in.

My only question about this is: how can it possibly be legal here in the US?

By Ricky Bassett

Friday, February 17th, 2012

The Evolution of the New York Knicks

Only 2 weeks ago the New York Knicks were the laughing stock of the NBA, now they’re the hottest team in the NBA. Their PG Jeremy Lin has turned into an overnight celebrity while blazing opponents on a nightly basis and now they have added another quality player by the name of , wait for it…..J.R SMITH !!!

Smith is an amazing Talent and can easily go for 25 at any given night with his amazing 3 point shooting and explosive dunks. Take the amazing play of Lin, add the return of Melo and Amare and the addition of Smith and you could make an argument that the New York Knicks are now a serious contender in the Eastern Conference. Lets not forget that the Miami Heat and Chicago Bulls are still the front-runners in the East but with this new lineup the New York Knicks are a team to consider.

By Mujtaba Elgoodah

Friday, February 17th, 2012

Check out 45 Bold(ish) MLB Predictions

Alex Millon brings you his thoughts on the upcoming season

 

Friday, February 17th, 2012

Hell I’d See It

Friday, February 17th, 2012

On this day…February 17th

1943 – Joe DiMaggio (New York Yankees) joined the U.S. Army as a voluntary inductee.

No jokes here, the man was a legend and served his country. Also lost a bunch of statistical years due to WWII. As Ted Williams said, “Joe DiMaggio was the greatest all-around player I ever saw.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1996 – World chess champion Garry Kasparov beat the IBM supercomputer “Deep Blue” in Philadelphia, PA.

Rumored that Kasparov upon winning stood up and screamed “Suck it computer!” and broke into a Prime Time dance.

 

 

 

 

 

 

1963-On this day the greatest basketball player to ever walk the earth was born in Brooklyn, New York, later moving to Wilmington, North Carolina. Michael Jordan finished with 6 rings, 5 MVPS, 24 All-Star appearances, 6 Finals MVPS, 10 Scoring Titles, and won Rookie of the year among many other accolades. Jordan is the standard for which every basketball player strives to be. Love him or hate him, but you gotta respect him.

 

 

 

Friday, February 17th, 2012

How the NBA Rebounded from the Lockout so Quickly

It’s funny how short our memories are. The NBA, on the verge of collapse just over three and a half months ago, has roared to the front of the sports spotlight, only the amazingly popular NFL ahead of it in sports news across the country. How has it rebounded so quickly?
Last Season
Last season the NBA rebounded from over a decade of declining interest in the league after the glory years of the early 80’s to the mid 90’s. Slumping TV ratings, the lack of the superstar power of the previous two decades, as well as the lack of big time teams in many of the big time markets, didn’t help the NBA in its post-Jordan hangover. Last season changed all that. With the greatest free agent class in recent memory before last season, as well as much of the great talent in the big markets, the hype before last season was absolutely incredible. The season (and postseason as well) were a classic that will go down as one the greatest seasons ever. TV ratings were through the roof the entire season, as anxious fans (new and old) watched the new look Heat, Bulls, Knicks, etc. almost every weekend to the some of the highest TV ratings ever. There was no way that even a lockout (short of a whole season gone) could have stopped that momentum.
CP3

 

 

 

 

Admit it. You were hooked onto the NBA season before it began all because of the Chris Paul saga. The best true (and oft-injured) point guard in the league became the subject of immense controversy when it looked like the NBA-owned and run Hornets had traded him to the Lakers in a blockbuster deal that got the Lakers the (young) point guard they needed to win ring #6 for Kobe. However, David Stern shot down the trade setting off a media firestorm. Paul would end up in LA though, albeit to the normally hapless Clippers. It is now “Hip to be Clip” unlike any time in their history. Paul is a top 5 MVP candidate and has transformed the Clippers into “Lob City” along with Blake Griffin and DeAndre Jordan.
Dwight Howard

 

 

 

 

 

As big as the Chris Paul trade, Dwight Howard’s potential trade may be even bigger. For the entire season, Dwight Howard rumors for potential landing spots have also helped the NBA out of its short slump. From talks of him joining the Nets, Lakers, Clippers, etc. fans of the league have been intrigued by all the possibilities that a Dwight Howard trade brings. For GMs and fans, bringing the best big man in the league to your city will almost certainly help the franchises prospects, adding the perennial defensive player of the year will never hurt. Orlando is in a tough situation though. They probably want to trade him after the All-Star game, considering they are hosting it this year. They wouldn’t want a man who would easily be an All-Star in either league coming back to Orlando as a member of another team. Talk about bad PR…
Superstars
Not too much to analyze here, as this year has seen amazing production out LeBron, Kobe, Durant, etc. With so many star players playing up to their potential, this year has been about as smooth transition form a lockout as any. But one special superstar has stolen our hearts this year and become the NBA’s version, of well… I don’t know if we have even seen anything like this in nearly any other sport…

Jeremy Lin
Seriously, look all over all forms of media. My analysis wouldn’t bring anything new to the table. Heck he even made the cover of Time.

Jeremy Lin

By Zach Altschuler

Friday, February 17th, 2012

Freakin’ Friday!

The Weekend is almost here and FPB has got you covered

 

Brian Skinnell holds a Linvesigation

 

 

Jimmy Luehrs gives you an inside look on the sport of running

 

 

Ben Simpson provides Shaq’s and Barkley’s teams for the Rising Stars Challenge

 

More content coming at ya, happy Friday everybody!

 

 

Thursday, February 16th, 2012

Running for the Records

So yes,

As some of you know I am a runner. Something that takes up hours of my day here at George Mason University on the team not only with the arduous amounts of practice where running in circles is just a pastime of ours, but also the amount of time put in just taking care of my mangled body as this sport takes a beating on all your muscles, bones, and even your brain. And honestly I am here to say that it is sad that running does not get a lot of coverage, but I get why that is.

It’s because running is more of a communal cult if you will, it’s not at all a commercial sport, I mean you have to be seriously sadistic to even think about doing half the stuff that runners do. Pound their knees, roll their ankles, and constantly challenge their tendon’s abilities just to hang on…just for that 2 minutes of glory. When you run that time, cross the line and hold your arms up and know that it was all worth it: the sweat, the tears, the pain. We as runners challenge our bodies abilities to its extremes, tight rope walking with its’ natural breaking point just so we can run 1, maybe 2 seconds faster. Running is lifestyle, a culture, an art form if you will. As the all famous ‘Pre’ once said “Some people create with words, or with music, or with a brush and paints. I like to make something beautiful when I run. I like to make people stop and say, “I’ve never seen anyone run like that before.” It’s more then just a race, it’s a style. It’s doing something better then anyone else. It’s being creative.”

See people who do not run do not get that, so they say, “‘Oh it’s not a sport,’ you’re just running”. And to that I say, “Okay, well go for an easy run with me and we’ll see how you keep up.” The constant “RUN FOREST RUN” and “Nice shorts!” are always nice too from time to time. I feel that running as a sport always gets the back-burner behind all the other sports for this reason. For example, my senior year of high school, my cross country had a season to remember, making the to the state championship and placing well, but was still over-shadowed by a football team that won only one game and averaged scores of 35-0 in their losses.

The point is, us runners are like the demoted C class celebs of the sports world. As a runner, the word Bernard Legat, Nick Symmonds, Robby Andrews, Andrew Wheating, Alan Webb, Galen Rupp, Chris Salinsky and Sam Chalenga, are guys that I see as pure gods of American running, both on the NCAA and professional levels. I’m guessing the person reading this knows about 2 of those people at the most.

It’s not that I’m attacking the other sports, or saying that running should be the top news in the sports world, cause I realize both of those things are equally as silly. What I do want to show, is how this past weekend was honestly one of the best weekends in the world of running in at least the past 2 years, and ESPN passed it by.

We first start off with the Milrose Games, a yearly event that is usually held at the magical Madison Square Garden in New York City; a grand venue for the true main yearly event for running. The Milrose games have been around since 1908 started by a man named John Wanamaker. His name is important as the highlight of the night is running the annual Wanamaker mile, which takes the best milers from around the world and put them on the track to see who is the fastest and can be crowned the unofficial champion of the Milrose games. This year it was different though, the event was shifted to another venue, the Armory in Washington Heights. The change of the venue actually means a lot because the Garden is a much smaller track with tighter turns. The 160 meter track created exciting racing as fast paced as the Big Apple itself and some very memorable moments. Being shifted to what many people say to be ‘The fastest indoor track in the world’ has some major implications both on racing style and times.

Some highlights from the Milrose games include:

Samantha Nadel of North Shore (HS) in New York running a HS girls record time of 4:46.19 for 1 mile

Ajee Wilson of Neptune (HS) running a blazing time of 2:04.13 for 800 meters, also a HS girls record

…And on the boys side Edward Chaserek of St. Benedict’s (NJ) who many say is the best high school runner of all-time ran 13:57.04, a national record at the same time Lawi Lalang (Arizona) and Bernard Lagat (Nike) teamed up to break the Collegiate and American record respectively in the 5000 meter run.

That’s 3 major records going down, in one race. Talk about excitement!

The true highlight of the night as I said before though, was the Wanamaker Mile, a spectacle that people runners from around the world come or tune in just to watch. This year had much to talk about as Oregon runner just turned professional Matthew Centrowitz, representing Nike was the dark horse in a field of proven champions. It was his first professional race, and what better way to come out than on the largest stage of them all! He had heavy competition though, Miles Batty, former NCAA champion from BYU, Liam Boylan-Pett, part of the elite NY-NJ Track Club and a 3:56 miler among many others. The race went out and no one seemed to have control as the main contenders stayed near the back and waited to pounce on the opportunity when the race opened up. With 300 meters to go, Centrowitz shot to the lead with a large kick, the crowd exploded with cheer, they were up on their feet as they saw Batty go with him! The last lap bell rung and the place was all up on their feet, Batty charge to the side of Centrowitz seeing if he could work the outside down the backstretch, and with that Centrowitz opened up the lead and seemed to be relaxed and calm while Batty was winded and tensed. Batty made a final charge and leaned…Centrowitz won though. The time was 3:53.92, Batty getting out-leaned but still getting the NCAA mile record of 3:54.25.

I promise to not go as in depth as I did with the last meet but I will highlight the rest of the news of what possibly was, the best weekend for running. In Fayetteville, Arkansas Galen Rupp tore down the 2 mile record of 8:10.07 with a new time of  8:09.72, Records were set in Mens and Women’s 60 meter dash, Men’s 400 meter dash, Silas Kiplagat sets the record in the Men’s Indoor Mile of 3:52. In Washington, Ryan Hill and Diego Estrada both break the collegiate record in the 3000 meter run with times of 7:43 and 7:44. In Boston, many NCAA national qualifying times were run on both the Men and Women side including Eric Van Ingen running 3:57  mile. In Ohio, George Mason runner David Verburg and George Empty ran NCAA qualifying races with a 46:39 for Verburg in the 400 M and 1:02.09 in the 500M for Empty and George Mason ran the NCAA leading time for the 4×400 M relay of 3:07.88.

So if you’ve made it this far, you can tell I love to follow running. My point of posting all of this, is to show you that running can be exciting. And that, ESPN should have at least mentioned this past weekend’s events in a blip on SportsCenter instead of talking about Tiger Woods withering play, Spring Training that hasn’t even started or offseason deals for the NFL that are just speculative.

I hope you enjoyed reading this, and maybe learned a few things about running in the process.

Thursday, February 16th, 2012

Rising Stars Challenge

Big ups to the NBA for making this year’s Rising Stars Challenge actually exciting. Two coaches: Charles Barkley and Shaq, each drafting their respective teams to face off in the game. The two chose from a pool of 20 Rookie and Sophomore candidates (thankfully the NBA added Jeremy Lin in there). Here are the two rosters:

 

Shaq’s Superstars                             Chuck’s Young Bucks

-Blake Griffin(Clippers)               -DeMarcus Cousins(Kings)

-Greg Monroe(Pistons)               -Derrick Williams(T-Wolves)

-Markieff Morris(Suns)               -Paul George(Pacers)

-Ricky Rubio(T-Wolves)               -Kyrie Irving(Cavs)

-Jeremy Lin(Knicks)                    -MarShon Brooks(Nets)

-Kemba Walker(Bobcats)             -John Wall(Wizards)

-Norris Cole(Heat)                             -Gordon Hayward(Jazz)

-Brandon Knight(Pistons0           -Tiago Splitter(Spurs)

-Landry Fields(Knicks)                   -Evan Turner(Sixers)

-Tristan Thompson(Cavs)            -Kawhi Leonard(Spurs)

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