Archive for March, 2010

Boston College athletic director Gene DeFilippo must be a big Dirty
Harry fan, because there's apparently nothing he loves more than blowing
his coaches' heads off with preposterously large guns after being given
little or no provocation. He terminated
football coach Jeff Jagondzinski
, then 20-8 in two seasons at BC,
for having the temerity to interview for an NFL job. And now he's offed
basketball coach Al Skinner
for missing the NCAA tournament for...
uh...
one consecutive year. Punks do not feel lucky on The Heights.

It would be one thing if either firing came paired with an obviously
attractive replacement candidate. Schools occasionally push fledgling
coaches out of the nest when Urban Meyer's hanging around in the
Mountain West or John Calipari's looking to blow town before the fuzz
catches up with him. BC had no such candidates. The football coach is
now an elderly guy with zero previous head coaching experience who will
probably retire in the next few years, occasioning another coaching
search that will either land on an old retread no one wants or a guy who
will have some success, sniff a higher-profile job, and get canned like
Jags.

Meanwhile, Tommy Amaker(!) is being mentioned as an attractive
candidate to replace Skinner. Amaker has made one tournament in thirteen
years as a head coach. Boston College blog Eagle in Atlanta dismisses that
possibility but the
rest of the list
consists of guys who came up under Skinner and
apparently won't be considered strongly, guys who aren't
coming
(BC alum Bruce Pearl most prominently) and the head coaches
at Cornell and Richmond.

Boston College fired a guy who made seven tourneys in ten years after
building BC up from a disaster zone for this? Neither Steve Donahue
(Cornell) or Chris Mooney (Richmond) has any experience at a major
conference level or operated at a relative deficit to his conference
peers, as they would certainly do at Boston College. They're complete
wildcards who would be extraordinarily lucky to have the same level of
success Skinner-BC's most accomplished coach in their history- had only a year ago.

While Skinner was aging and the program had started slipping, an
athletic department with a little patience or loyalty would have given
Skinner another year or two worth of rope. Tom O'Brien's
then-inexplicable decision to jump from a perpetually nine-win BC
program to a basketcase like NC State now looks like a guy who was
either pushed or saw DeFilippo polishing his gun daily and read the
writing on the wall. He's not exactly safe with the Wolfpack, but if he'd
gone 16-21 the last three years at Boston College, the press conference
announcing his firing would look like the final scene in
Scarface.

Word to wildly
successful
BC hockey coach Jerry York: wear a vest and try not to
lose to Miami in the Frozen Four.

View full post on The Sporting Blog

Boys soccer player of the year
Boys soccer player of the year

Read more on San Jose Mercury News

Premier League Says Soccer May Be Damaged by Ruling (Update1)
March 31 (Bloomberg) -- English soccer’s Premier League today protested against a ruling by U.K. regulator Ofcom that forces British Sky Broadcasting Group Plc to charge competitors as much as 23 percent less for its two main sports channels.

Read more on Bloomberg

Guard Fusion
Deputy Secretary Lute's Testimony on Nuclear Terrorism: Strengthening Our Domestic Defenses, Part II
The Honorable Jane Holl Lute, Deputy Secretary, United States Department of Homeland Security Testimony on "Nuclear Terrorism: Strengthening Our Domestic Defenses, Part II" before the United States Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs on September 15, 2010.


Fusion Smart Guard

Guard Fusion

You may have recently heard about an independent baseball team near where you live, or near where you were traveling.  If so, you may have wondered what makes a team "independent" and if it is worth your money to go watch that team.


An independent professional baseball team is a team which plays in a professional baseball league that is not affiliated with any Major League organization or the National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues, which is now named (officially) Minor League Baseball.  These teams have complete control over the players they sign, the personnel they hire, and their players can be signed by any "affiliated" team in Minor League Baseball.  


Occasionally, an independent baseball player may make it to a Major League Baseball roster after having started his career in the independent baseball leagues.  Many players who make it to a Major League roster after having spent time with an independent baseball team usually had previous Major League, or high-level Minor League experience prior to joining a Major League Baseball roster.  


For the 2009 season, nearly 60 independent teams fielded a team in 8 independent leagues.  The teams play in the U.S. and Canada.  There are independent baseball teams in the Northeast, Quebec, Calgary, California, the Mid-Atlantic, Texas, Arizona, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota and the Dakotas, just to name a few regions.  The players can range from just out of college, former "affiliated" minor league players who were released, players who could be in the minors but opted to play closer to home for family reasons, former Major League players, and occasionally international players.  Many teams have managers and coaches whom have previous Major League Baseball experience.


The question you may still have, however, is if an independent baseball team is worth your time and money.  In most markets this is a "yes."


Here are just some of the reasons why:


Prices are usually equal to or less than comparable entertainment, such as the movies
Concession prices are usually less than at higher-level professional sports
Kids and fans get participate in on-field and off-field promotions
Many teams offer incentives for you to bring groups
Many of the general managers and team executives have years of professional sports experience, so they understand what it takes to give you good entertainment for your money
Many of the players are accessible for autographs
The quality of play is considerably high, especially compared to other alternatives you may have in your area

Hopefully this article gives you a better understanding of independent baseball and helps you make a better decision for your entertainment dollar.

?

If you are interested in learning more about historical then click this link to join the free alumni membership list:

Hornets guard Chris Paul shoots against the Lakers. Paul had 15 points and 13 assists in Monday's win.Chris Paul had his first double-double since returning from injury with 15 points and 13 assists to help the New Orleans Hornets beat the Los Angeles Lakers 108-100 on Monday night.


View full post on NBCSports.com: Sports

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Today's Calls: Tom Izzo vs. History, Duke vs. (Recent) History, Butler vs. "Hoosiers", Kentucky vs. Chokery, Brackets vs. Busted, UConn women vs. Anyone, Sam Bradford vs. NFL D-linemen, Tim Tebow vs. Jim Kelly and More.

The Opening Pitch: It's official: We are living in the Izzo Dynasty.

When we look back at college hoops history 10, 20, 30 years from now, what will stand out most won't be Carmelo's one-and-done title or UNC's two titles with two totally different teams or even Florida's back-to-back champs.

In a sport defined by its championship tournament and whose currency is the Final Four, we will remember the coach who led his team to six Final Four appearances in 12 years between 1999 and 2010.

The Izzo Era. The Izzo Majority. The Izzo Dynasty.

Butler is a wonderful -- even cliched -- story. As is West Virginia, particularly in knocking off Kentucky. And even Duke (finally) getting back to the Final Four.

But entering the Final Four round of one of the most unpredictable tournaments in the history of the sport, the only thing anyone can say with certainty is that Tom Izzo is, right now, the best coach in college basketball.

If nothing else, yet another Final Four earns him that title.

DeCourcy picks Duke to win it all. That is all.

Butler Mania: I want to be able to buy a derivative that pays me every time "Butler" and "Hoosiers" show up together in a Google Alert this week. The story -- the small Indiana school heads home for the Final Four -- is among the great storybook moments in Tournament history. Why shouldn't this team be favored to win it all in Indy? (DeCourcy makes a terrific point: Because they haven't scored in the Tournament like the profile of a NCAA champ.)

West Virginia bounces Kentucky: As far as signature wins from this Tournament go, WVU's win over UK was a highlight -- hard fought and absurdly thrilling, particularly that "No-2's" 1st half by the 'Eers.

Let's focus on Kentucky: 4 NBA Lottery picks in the starting lineup -- including the best PG in a generation -- and Calipari & Co. couldn't get it done. Blame the poor 3-point shooting, but really, they freaked out from the pressure. And with good reason, because make no mistake: The season ends as a failure.

Duke rights the ship: You could argue their path was the least arduous of any 1-seed, but Baylor turned out to be as strong of a challenge as any 1-seed had to face. That was exactly the kind of team Duke has lost to during their recent Tourney slump, and for that win they get a hat-tip (even from a longtime Duke-hater) for the result.

(That said: I spent most of the final 5 minutes of that game shouting at the screen about the unfairness of it all: The lucky offensive rebounds, the foul calls in their favor. That T on Baylor. COME ON.)

Good Read: Fagan with a quick-hit profile of all four Final Four teams.

Bracket Update: 40th percentile nationally, after missing out on all four Final Four teams. (As bad as that seems, it's still twice as good as I did last year. Meanwhile, my wife is in the 97th percentile; I am so lucky.)

Obama Bracket: 56th percentile, after just missing on Kansas State and Kentucky -- and totally whiffing on Duke. Not much chance to do better, either. (If you did the National Bracket, you'd be in the 70th percentile.)

Women's Tournament: I tuned in for UConn's game against Iowa State yesterday. Good grief: It needed a Little League "slaughter rule." Is this UConn team the best basketball team in women's history -- or any basketball history?

NFL Draft: Sam Bradford has his Pro Day workout today, but watching him throw contrived passes can't possibly reveal what NFL execs really need to know: Can he take a pounding from NFL D-linemen?

Tebow Watch: Visiting the Bills in Buffalo today -- Bills on the short list of teams that seem to have a big interest in Tebow, plus enough need to want to draft him. (But would Buffalo really take him at No. 9?)

NFL Offseason Workouts: You would think that Big Ben would immerse himself in football, if only to change the subject from ... well, anything else. But he is skipping the Steelers' workouts this week.

CFB: Urban said he's sorry. Meyer is savvy enough to recognize that you don't pick a fight with the folks who stand in between you and the fans. (And, if you do pick that fight, you clean it up quickly.)

NBA Talking Points: In a league where the Lakers are the obvious pick to win the West in the upcoming playoffs, the only intrigue is figuring out which teams can avoid a matchup with the Lakers in the 1st round.

CBB Coaching Carousel: You have to wonder how "in shape" Steve Lavin is as a coach after his years as a TV analyst. But, on the flip side, he would bring TV cachet to the job in the country's biggest media market.

(Hires: Siena's Fran McCaffery to Iowa -- does the lifelong East Coaster have the regional connections? Iona's Kevin Willard to Seton Hall -- as long as he is a pleasant personality, he will be a welcome change of pace.)

MLB Spring Training: Is this the season that Clayton Kershaw finally fulfills his potential?

Economics: Did you really need a study to figure out that the Yankees have the highest average salary of any sports team in the world?

Media: For all the "Hoosiers" charm of Butler and national cachet of Duke, it will be interesting to see if fans tune in for the "small team vs. perennial Final Four power" or "hard-nosed afterthoughts vs. blue-bloods." The CBS dream scenario is Butler vs. Duke.

The Last Word: "That basically was the national championship game. We have a chance at this, we could win going away." -- West Virginia's Wellington Smith, on WVU's win over Kentucky.

Dan Shanoff writes The Wake-Up Call every weekday morning for SportingNews.com and blogs daily at DanShanoff.com. Got any comments, questions or feedback? Email Dan at shanofftsn-[at]-gmail-[dot]-com. Follow him on Twitter at twitter.com/danshanoff.

View full post on The Sporting Blog

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