According to the brillant minds at ESPN.
Continue reading ‘Did You Know UNC Was Running Up The Score on Arkansas?’
According to the brillant minds at ESPN.
Continue reading ‘Did You Know UNC Was Running Up The Score on Arkansas?’
Well, maybe it should not be as much a laugh line as merely a double take. ACC Now quotes former Maryland star John Lucas, who has been helping troubled former BC center Sean Williams with his little drug problem:
Sean doesn’t have any real-life issues,” Lucas says. “There are other guys I’ve had here who have had real-life issues. He doesn’t. His issue is, he just wants to smoke some weed sometime — and you can’t. We’re learning how to handle life issues without smoking weed to medicate. I would venture to say, he hasn’t smoked any more weed than a lot of the other guys who are going to get drafted. The difference is, he got caught. Now, the question is, do you have an addiction? That’s another issue. If it’s worth it to you, if you have to have it, then you have an addiction, because look at what you’ve lost. If it’s not worth it to you, then we’re on our way. And I think he’s more than on his way.
I really liked Giglio’s response:
Not sure where to start here, how about with: “He just wants to smoke weed sometime.
Nice. I actually would go from there to: “I would venture to say, he hasn’t smoked any more weed than a lot of the other guys who are going to get drafted. The difference is, he got caught.”
How do you know that considering Williams was a repeat offender? There are two sides to that statement. You are either implying on one hand that Williams smoke very little weed and there is a rampant low level use of weed among the first round draft picks or the Williams smokes a lot of weed and so does everyone else. At any rate Lucas is playing games with moral equivalence and declaring that Williams pot smoking was not bad in and of itself because everyone is doing it. The implication is that Williams pot smoking is bad only because he was caught and ultimately kicked off the team at BC. I think the statement is grossly irresponsible on so many levels from accusing most of the draft picks to smoking weed to establishing that it is not really wrong if everyone is doing it to forwarding the idea that is only actually wrong if you get caught.
Nice example you are setting for the more impressionable eyes that read that statement, John.
ESPN.com delved into the rather interesting world of message boards highlighting the thoughts of fans following games in the Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight. Among the more interesting nuggets is this quote apparently gleaned from a UNC message board.
…but how does Greg Oden get named to the first team AP All-American team and not Tyler Hansbrough?
Has anyone enjoyed the kind of media hype to the point people abandon all common sense when it comes to voting for postseason awards? Never mind, I know the answer to that, I watched J.J. Redick and Shelden Williams play for Duke.
If you thought three weeks was enough time to put “The Foul” to rest, you were wrong. [UNNAMED ANALYST] continues his idiotic assertion that the referees got the call wrong when they went to the went to the replay to ascertain whether Gerald Henderson’s foul on Tyler Hansbrough was worthy of ejection.
Bill Simmons basically says what we are all feeling about [UNNAMED ANALYST] in pointing out that aside from the a bit of a rabble rouser, he also has been doing the championship of college basketball for three freaking decades. Unfortunately he is not getting any better and as Simmons points out there is not a darn thing we can do about.
Packer’s case is different, though. Many people (including me) believe he’s a humorless know-it-all and a curmudgeon, and we’re exhausted by his schtick. But because he announces the most important college games every spring, he can’t be avoided. Hell, these days, thanks to Janet Jackson and the seven-second delay for “live” events, we can’t even mute games and listen to radio simulcasts anymore — the audio never matches up. It’s Packer and Nantz or nothing.
So we’re left with two choices: mute our TV or grit our teeth. I’ve tried it both ways and found it’s more enjoyable to mute and listen to my iPod. That’s my plan through the title game. I’m doing it for my own sanity. No offense, Billy, but 32 years is more than enough.
The radio being out of sync is probably my biggest peeve. I would gladly put on Woody Durham as my father did during the 1993 title game because we were sick of hearing [UNNAMED ANALYST'S] anti-UNC opinions. Of course we turned the sound on the TV up after Chris Webber called the ill-fated timeout because Woody was speaking in unknown tongues at that point and we wanted to confirm what was actually happening. This of course led to one of the more memorable exchanges between [UNNAMED ANALYST] and Jim Nantz.
Jim Nantz: So, what do you think is going through Chris Webber’s head right now.
[UNNAMED ANALYST]: Well, Jim, he is such a cerebral young man…
That’s right. Chris Webber is cerebral.
Of course I also heard at one point this week that [UNNAMED ANALYST] would be at the East Regional. Please, CBS, I am begging you, send him to St. Louis.
Let me introduce you to Joe Rexrode. Mr. Rexrode is a beat writer in East Lansing, MI who had someone at Yahoo Sports afford him the gift of writing a special article about Saturday night’s 2nd Round East Regional game between UNC and Michigan State. What an absolute shame he wasted it with such an asinine article. Here are some of the “highlights”
According to WRAL.com, a handful of NC State fans were so incensed over the Ty Lawson dunk at the end of the ACC Championship that they took to spewing some racial slurs at the freshman’s general direction on the fan site “The Wolf Web.”
The Wolf Web, which isn’t affiliated with the university, contained numerous posts that contained epithets and threatened to lynch University of North Carolina player Ty Lawson, who scored a breakaway slam dunk with 1 second left in UNC’s 89-80 victory over N.C. State in the championship game.
Let me first point out the incredible irony of NC State fans using racially charged language and threats when the head coach of the Wolfpack is an African-American. Honestly, how stupid can you be to engage in a kind of vitrol that would be offensive to your own coach and players? Calling Lawson classless for the dunk or complaining that it was showboating is one thing. Granted I find that assessment to be flat wrong but if that is your opinion so be it. However, calling out a player using racially insensitive language is borderline psychotic.
And I know there are NC State fans out there who have common sense and like me are capable of putting aside the rivalry in order to see the opposing coaches and players in a positive light. That is the high road and while NC State may be a rival, I also happen to like Sidney Lowe as a coach and think he has done an excellent job. Even where Duke is concerned, as much as I dislike Mike Krzyzewski for in number of issues, I do acknowledge what the facts confirm and that is he is one of the best basketball coaches in the history of the game.
The point is there is a fine line between the passions of the heart and intellectual honesty. Anyone incapable of walking that line really should relax a little bit.
Hat tip to reader C.Michael for this one.
I had a commenter register his opinion on one of my posts concerning the all time wins record which Bob Knight passed earlier this month. Usually I respond with the comments section, if at all, unless they offer up something exceptionally insightful or relatively asinine. Unfortunately for this guy, his was the latter and I felt it neccesitated a public response. Here is the comment:
I understand you like Dean better than Bobby, but as for pure coaching, Dean under-achieved as a coach in comparison. Dean had far better talent than Bobby. Bobby won championships with only one true star (Thomas in 81). Dean’s 2 championships were both won on flukes. G’town with freddy brown throwing the ball to wrong player and Webb calling timeout with none left. two of the biggest blunders in NCAA history. Dean was GIVEN 2 championships, he could have none with all those HOF players. Give Dean Bobby’s talent and he has 0 championships. Give Bobby Dean’s talent and he may have 10 championships. There is no comparison in who is the better coach. Bobby over Dean all day.
Now, I think the talent argument is debatable. To say Knight only had one true star is selling the talent at IU short during the Knight years when you consider he also had guys like Quinn Buckner and Scott May who played on the undefeated 1976 team plus others who were considered great college basketball players. According to the IU media guide, there were 16 different players named All American during the 27 years Knight was the head coach there. During the 36 years of Dean Smith he had 24 All Americans who were named on any AP All American team. So, while Dean Smith did have more talent in house, it was not by much and certainly not enough to give Smith a discernible advanatage of Knight. I think stating that Knight would have won 10 titles with Smith’s teams and Smith would have zero with Knight’s is quite frankly overly simplistic. And the reason I now that is that Coach K is perhaps an example of Knight’s coaching with Smith’s talent and his titles record is only one better than Smith with one less Final Four on his resume.
However, the part of the argument which really raised my ire was the assertion that Dean Smith’s national titles were both flukes and therefore not actually earned on the court. Obviously the commenter does not know that UNC fans have been hearing this stuff for years and it usually comes from Wolfpack fans. And since he is operating on such a level of ignorance let’s review what transpired in those two games.
1982 NCAA Champioship
UNC trailed by one at halftime but shot 11 for 18 from the floor in the second stanza and after Michael Jordan hit the go ahead jumper with 17 seconds left it was 63-62. Georgetown’s Freddy Brown brought the ball frontcourt with John Thompson opting not to call a timeout with the clock waning. Brown picks up his dribble above the key and it is obvious he is panicked as to what he should do next. Jordan actually steps up in the lane and cuts off an passing lane to the paint at which point James Worthy reacts to a fake pass from Brown and flashes out running almost to midcourt. Brown sees this out of the corner of his eye and then passes the ball right to Worthy who attempts run the clock out but is fouled with two seconds left.
It is important to remember one thing: UNC was leading when all of this transpired. Jordan hit the clutch shot and all UNC had to do was play about 10 more seconds of lockdown defense and they walk out of there national champions. I would argue that they did exactly that which is what caused Brown to make such an egregious mistake. Aside from all of that what difference does it make how Brown screwed up there? Whether he throws the ball to Worthy, out of bounds, or someone misses a shot, by no means does that lead to the conclusion that UNC somehow had the game “given” to them. The pressure and obligation was still on the Hoyas to actually make a shot and win the game. They failed to do that just as Syracuse failed to come back and win the game after the Keith Smart shot in 1987.
1993 NCAA Championship
This is actually much simpler. UNC is leading 73-71 when UNC forward Pat Sullivan misses the back end of a one and one with 19 seconds left. Michigan’s Chris Webber rebounds the ball and then in a confused moment drag his pivot foot before starting to dribble which is not called by the referee. He the dribbles himself down into the right corner where he is immediately trapped by the two best defenders UNC has in the persons of George Lynch and Derrick Phelps. Since Webber realized there was no way he would be able to get the ball out of the corner he called a timeout Michigan did not have which resulted in a technical foul. Donald Williams sinks four straight free throws to bring his point total to 25 for the second straight game(which was probably also a fluke in the mind of the commenter.) It also should be noted that UNC had three fouls to give there and could have easily burned most of the remaining 11 seconds by playing aggressive defense or just fouling three times. So, just like 1982, UNC was ahead in the game needing only to play good defense to walk out of the Superdome the national champion. They did just that by forcing Webber down in the corner where he could not get a pass out. Webber actually traveled before we even reached that point but the ref missed the call so what ended up happening actually bailed the refs out for botching that call.
The point is in both situations UNC earned the win in every way that counted. They had the lead late in the game with only a good defensive stand between them and the national championship. If anything I think it is more of a case of the two respective players choking the game away or botching their team’s chance to attempt to tie or win the game rather than it being “given” to UNC/Dean Smith.
So I have no problem with someone arguing Knight over Smith on various levels. That is the great thing about sports is that there are such debates. However, I would think if Knight is truly better than Smith then you should be able to argue the point without resorting to arguments as ignorant and devoid of common sense as those labeling the titles under Smith as flukes.
As most of the freedom loving world probably knows by now, Texas Tech coach Bob Knight made physical contact with a player on Monday night by tapping him on his chin to force him to look Knight in the face while he was “instructing” him on the finer points of college basketball. Naturally, ESPN took the incident and went into full on coverage mode giving us multiple angles, replays, analysis and five minutes leading off SportsCenter last night which included highlights of Texas Tech vs Gardner Webb(nevermind that #1 Florida and #2 North Carolina were also in action). Now, I found the act itself to be a non-issue despite Knight’s reputation and aside from the fact I have vehemently disliked him as long as I can remember. In fact this is de facto opinion of about 80% of the nation on this issue despite the fact Pat Forde was on ESPN last night advocating a 1 game suspension. Now, I was not planning on blogging this because as you may have noticed there is actual basketball being played, so I will defer to the always excellent Dan Wetzel who takes the opportunity to rap ESPN upside it’s bloated head. He points out the wild hypocrisy in ESPN ignoring Michigan’s Lloyd Carr who earlier this week stormed out of an ESPN on ABC interview for the upcoming game this week letting F-bombs fly. Nor would they show other coaches, and there will be other coaches, do it. Wetzel nails it on the head and closes it with this:
Yes, Knight should know better and should know the world has changed. But this act is hardly worth this kind of over-the-top coverage. Not when college athletics has serious problems – academic fraud, rampant cheating, widespread profiteering.
For a while “SportsCenter” – the overwhelmingly most powerful force in sports media – lost its way with a silly parade of sorry would-be standup comics as anchors. Now it has backed off that slightly and gone straight tabloid.
Daily coverage of Barry Bonds. Daily coverage of Terrell Owens. Daily coverage of whatever outrageous character it can drum up. “Up next on Cold Pizza, a clinical psychologist gives a diagnosis of Bob Knight.” (No joke).
One standard here, one there. Some get exposed, some get protected. No consistent news judgment. No sense of perspective. Just a toe-the-company-line ombudsman on its website.
Yeah, Bob Knight is in the media grinder now, the full force of the World Wide Leader flipping out over a flipped chin.
It’s fine if ESPN thinks he deserves it. But if so, he sure isn’t the only one. And that’s what the network isn’t telling you.
Well said. ESPN has become an entertainment outlet pure and simple. As an extension of that the news must fit the criteria of being entertaining and having Bob Knight make contact with a player fits that description. As for Knight, ESPN has a very odd relationship with the contrversial coach. On one hand they hold him up as an example of a coach “out of control” and blow up incidents like this to reinforce that idea thus creating news. On the other hand they had a show run on their networks about Knight holding open tryouts for a spot on the Texas Tech team. Obviously they had high hopes an incident like this would occur on the series, I guess since it didn’t they are trying to make up for it now.
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