Obsessedsportsnut's Blog

March 30, 2010

What’s Happening to the Steelers?

Filed under: football — Tags: , — Jonathan Lee @ 12:09 pm

When I think about model franchises in all of sports over 3+ decades, only a couple teams come to mind. Los Angeles Lakers, Boston Celtics, New York Yankees, San Francisco 49ers, Dallas Cowboys. Boston Red Soxs. Detroit Red Wings. There are some other great franchises currently, like the New England Patriots, that have been great this past decade, but dont have the history that spans 30 years. Other teams, like the Montreal Canadian and Toronto Maple Leafs, have done well in the past, but currently have not been competitive as of late.

One can make the case that the Pittsburgh Steelers is the model franchise in all the NFL, if not all of sports.

They have played in 7 Superbowls, one behind Dallas, and won a record 6 of them. The team has been owned by Rooney family since 1933, and has stayed within the family for over 70 years. The current owner, Dan Rooney, is one of the most respected owners in the entire league. He is credited with implementing the “Rooney Rule”, which requires NFL teams with coaching and GM openings to interview at least one minority candidate. On top of that, Barack Obama just recently made him the ambassador to Ireland.

As a result of the constant stability of ownership and the owner’s loyalty and trust, there has only been 3 coaches since 1969: Chuck Knoll from 1969-1991, Bill Cower from 1992-2006, and Mike Tomlin from 2007-present. In an era where coaches constantly leave for a better job and better opportunities, this is absolutely unheard of. This is also a reflection of the amazing ownership of the team. Even in down years in the 1990s when the Steelers werent playing well, the Rooney family instilled enough confidence in Bill Cower and remained loyal to him and didnt fire him. They stuck by his side, and allowed him to finally win his first Super Bowl in 2006.

Steelers players have also been a model of class throughout NFL history. Players like Mel Blount, Terry Bradshaw, Joe Greene, Franco Harris, Jack Lambert, John Stallworth, Lynn Swann, Jerome Bettis, and Hines Ward have been great ambassadors for the team and for the league as a whole.

Having lived in Pittsburgh for 5 years, I have witnessed how much Steeler fans love their team and their players. No other fans are as passionate about their team as Steeler fans.

That’s why its troubling to see the two of the Steeler’s best (and maybe most important) players in so much trouble recently. Ben Roethlisberger has been the subject of two sexual assault charges in the past year. Santonio Holmes has been the subject of multiple drug possession charges over the past couple years, and is also accused of recently assaulting a woman in an Orlando nightclub.

Why is all of this happening? Have Roethlisberger and Holmes found success too soon? Roethlisberger has already won 2 Superbowl titles in his first 6 seasons in the league, and Holmes was the Superbowl MVP in 2009. Do they think they’re on top of the world now and feel that they’re invisible and can do anything they want?

Is this a reflection on coaching and ownership? Mike Tomlin is only 38, and is the third youngest head coach in any of the 4 professional sports league. He’s only 10 years older than Roethislerger (12 for Holmes). Is he not feared and respected by Roethlisberger and Holmes because of his age? Do they take not take him seriously? Are they not worried about punishment and discipline because they know they are the two most important players on offense for the team? Is Dan Rooney becoming older and more out of sync with the team, being the ambassador to Ireland and such? Is he not fostering a sense of family and responsibility to the team and community in Roethlisberger and Holmes?

It’ll be very interesting to see what happens in the next coming weeks with regards to disciplining these two players. In the past, the Rooney’s have had a policy that players are never bigger then the team. Both Plaxico Burress and Antwaan Randle-El were let go after both these WR asked for gigantic contracts.

However when players have been the subject of legal problems, the Rooney family has been the center of controversy. In the past couple years, three players have been the subject of domestic abuse cases: Najeh Davenport, James Harrison, and Cedrick Wilson. Davenport and Wilson were let go from the team, while Harrison, the NFL Defensive player of the year, was not punished. Rooney got a lot of criticism and was accused of a double standard: Wilson and Harrison were accused of both domestic violence, yet Harrison wasn’t punished. As great as the Rooney family is, did they show favoritism in trying to “justify” the actions of one of their best players?

This past month, Oregon Ducks coach, Chip Kelly, suspended his star QB, Jeremiah Masoli for the entire season after Masoli pleaded guilty for a burglary charge. Masoli was a potential Heisman trophy candidate for next season, but Kelly made the difficult decision to suspend him, despite knowing that his changes of playing in the national title game next year took a big hit.

What will the coaching and ownership do with regards to Roethlisberger and Holmes? Will Dan Rooney claim that Roethlisberger was never convicted or charged and let him off free? Will they do the same for Holmes? Or will they make the difficult decision and punish both these players, even if it may cost them a couple games next season?

March 28, 2010

Final Four is set!

Filed under: basketball — Tags: , — Jonathan Lee @ 9:14 pm

The Final Four is set! West Virginia, Duke, Michigan State, and Butler. Finally in the last two games of the Elite 8, normalcy has finally returned with Duke and Michigan State winning today’s games.

Everyone is going to remember this tournament as the year parity returned and the year of the upsets, most notably the losses of Kansas, Syracuse, and Kentucky. People will remember Georgetown losing in the 1st round and Villanova playing horribly and losing in the 2nd. People will look at the Final Four and scratch their head to see how teams like West Virginia (1st Final Four since 1959) and Butler (1st ever appearance in the Final Four) lasted so long.

However, while it is surprising to see Michigan State, West Virginia and Butler here instead of Kansas, Kentucky and Syracuse/Kansas State respectively, it should not be a shock to see these four teams here.

While Kansas and Kentucky got all the preseason hype, these 4 teams all were well regarded before the season started and all were ranked in the top 15. Michigan State was ranked #2, West Virginia #8, Duke #9, and Butler #11. Michigan State even received 5 1st place votes to start the season. Throughout the season, West Virginia, Duke and Michigan State were always ranked in the top 15. Butler fell out of the rankings for only 5 weeks, but ended the year on a 20 game win streak and the #11 team.

So yes, while there were many upsets, these 4 teams have been deserving the entire season to be in the Final Four.

*******************

I think the most fascinating story line during this Final Four is the match ups between some great coaches.

In Michigan State, you have Tom Izzo, who might be the best coach in college basketball right now. Ever since taking over as head coach in 1995, he has coached MSU to two national title games, winning one in 2000, while also leading MSU to 6 Final Fours, the most of any team. For a team that’s been struggling with injuries, he’s been the steady hand to lead this team to the Final Four.

At Duke, you obviously have Coach Mike Krzyzewski, who was also the coach of Team USA at the 2008 Beijing Olympics. Coach K has led Duke to 7 NCAA Championship Games, winning 3 of them, while also leading Duke to 11 Final Fours, 2nd only to John Wooden’s 12 with UCLA.

At West Virginia, you have Bob Huggins, who originally found great success at Cincinnati, leading the Bearcats to 14 straight tournament appearances, including one Final Four and 2 Elite 8 berths.

And finally at Bulter, you have Brad Stevens, by far the youngest and most experienced coach out of the 4. However, he just set the record for the coaching the most wins in the first 3 seasons of a coach’s career (88).

It’ll be interesting to see how Huggins coaches vs Coach K and how Stevens will match up his Butler squad against Izzo’s Michigan State squad. It’ll be fascinating to see what game plans are drawn up.

*******************

Prediction time. I’ve been so off this year, it’s not even funny. In my full tournament bracket, I had Kansas beating Baylor in the tournament game, and I had only 1 correct Final Four prediction (West Virginia).

In my “2nd chance bracket”, I DID EVEN WORSE! I had only 4 out of 12 picks correct. In the West and Midwest region, I picked EVERY SINGLE ELITE 8 game incorrectly. In the South and East regions, I picked all 4 Sweet 16 games correctly, but I was dead wrong on both my Elite 8 games, since I had Kentucky and Baylor winning. So pathetic.

So…my last chance at redemption…my last picks

WEST VIRGINIA over MICHIGAN STATE in the national title game.

I would absolutely LOVE to see Morgantown in flames 🙂

March 27, 2010

Halfway to the final four

Filed under: basketball — Jonathan Lee @ 6:34 pm

Once again, I cant stress enough how amazing and wide open this tourney has been.

In the first Elite 8 game, #5 Butler upset #2 Kansas State.

In the 2nd Elite 8 game, #2 West Virginia upset #1 Kentucky – kind of disappointed in Kentucky. How can a team expect to win when they shoot 4/31 from the 3 and 16/29 from FTs.

Anyways, my “2nd chance bracket” has been officially busted. demolished. killed. I had Ohio State, Syracuse, Kentucky, and Baylor going to the final four. So far, I’m 0/3. My only chance for a dignity is if Baylor beats Duke tomorrow.

This is pathetic.

March 26, 2010

Gretzky Interview

Filed under: hockey — Jonathan Lee @ 10:41 am

An interview of Wayne Gretzky when he was only 13 years old.

Gretzky Interview

By the age of 10, he had scored 378 goals and 120 assists in just 85 games. By the time he was 13 years old, he had scored 1000 goals. He was already a national icon in Canada.

Exchange 1

interviewer: “you going to be a pro?”

gretzky: “all that i can say is that i hope”

interviewer: “you would like to be a hockey player?”

gretzky: “yes or a baseball…it doesnt really matter”

Exchange 2

interviewer: “when  you’re 18, how much do you think you’ll be worth? would you believe it if I say $1 million?”

gretzky: “i dont really know. probably not.”

When he was 17, he was offered a 7 year contract for $1.75 million US.

Man…what did I accomplish when I was 13?!

March 25, 2010

NBC explains Canadian teams to America

Filed under: hockey — Jonathan Lee @ 9:42 am

one of the funniest hockey videos I’ve seen in a while. hockey fans will truly appreciate it.

2010 NCAA Tournament – 2nd Chance Pickem

Filed under: basketball — Tags: , — Jonathan Lee @ 12:14 am

soo…let’s forget that I even tried to correctly pick the tourney winner this year. My bracket after the first two rounds was absolutely atrocious…maybe the worst ive ever done in my life.

With the Sweet 16 starting today, here are my predictions for the next 4 rounds…

Sweet 16

Midwest

#9 Northern Iowa over #5 Michigan State

#2 Ohio State over #6 Tennessee

West

#1 Syracuse over #5 Butler

#6 Xavier over #2 Kansas State

East

#1 Kentucky over #12 Cornell

#2 West Virginia over #11 Washington

South

#1 Duke over #4 Purdue

#3 Baylor over #10 Saint Mary’s

Elite 8

West: #2 Ohio State over #9 Northern Iowa

Midwest: #1 Syracuse over #6 Xavier

East: #1 Kentucky over #2 West Virginia

South: #3 Baylor over #1 Duke

Final Four

#2 Ohio State over #1 Syracuse

#1 Kentucky over #3 Baylor

National Championship

#2 Ohio State over #1 Kentucky

March 22, 2010

2010 NCAA Tournament – The Sweet 16

Filed under: basketball — Tags: — Jonathan Lee @ 6:01 am

It’s been a long weekend, so I haven’t had the opportunity to blog about all the days as much as I’d like. Thoughts in a future post.

But the first two rounds has been so interesting and wide opened that I wanted to compare this year’s tournament to tournaments in the past.

1. The average seed of remaining Sweet 16 teams

If all top 4 seeds in all 4 regions make it to the Sweet 16, the average remaining seed would be 2.5 (1+2+3+4) x 4 / 16.

This year’s average seed of the Sweet 16 is 5.0, the highest its been this decade! The lowest average seed was last year’s tournament (3.0625) , when all 1, 2, and 3 seeds made the Sweet 16. The previous high was back in 2002, when the average seed was 4.6875.

2. The upset of the #1 seed

In the past 5 years, every single #1 seed has made at least the Sweet 16. After Kansas was upset last night, this is the first time since 2004, that not all 4 #1 seeds will make it.

This has been one of the most wide-open tournaments in recent memory, and I believe any of the 16 teams remaining has the ability to winning it all. If the first two rounds was any indicator, the next 3 rounds before the national title game will be extremely entertaining.

March 19, 2010

Champions League Quarterfinals Draw

Filed under: soccer — Jonathan Lee @ 6:03 am

The Champions League Quarterfinals draw was released today, with the draw all the way to the Finals. (My predictions in bold)

Q1: Lyon vs Bordeaux
Q2: Bayern Munich vs Manchester United
Q3: Arsenal vs Barcelona
Q4: Internazionale vs CSKA Moscow

Semifinals
S1: Winner of Q1 (Bordeaux) vs Winner of Q2 (Manchester United)
S2: Winner of Q3 (Barcelona) vs Winner of Q4 (Internazionale)

Finals
Winner of S1 (Manchester United) vs Winner of S2 (Barcelona).

2010 Champions League Winner: Barcelona.

Thoughts…

1. Manchester United vs Bayern Munich!!! The first (?) time they’ve played since the 1999 Champions League Finals!

There have been very few instances in sports that give me chills when I watch replays of the game. My favorite clip to watch is Al Michael’s “Do you believe in miracles” call at the 1980 Olympics.

The 1999 Champions League Finals is another game that I love watching over and over again. That year, Manchester United had won the FA Cup and the English Premier League already, and they needed to win the Champions League to win the “treble”. The “treble” consists of winning your country’s top league title and major domestic cup competition as well as the continental championship. It’s very rare in Europe…only 5 times in history.

In the Champions League Finals, Manchester was down 1-0 to Bayern Munich at the end of the game. 3 minutes were added in stoppage time. Manchester United miraculously scores 2 goals in the final 3 minutes to win the title and win the treble. LOVE IT.

2. Manchester United got the easiest draw imaginable. There are three teams I dread playing: Barcelona, Arsenal, and Internazionale. The way the draw the set is up, we wouldn’t have to play any of these teams until the final. Such good “luck” for the Red Devils!

3. Every team, with the exception of CSKA Moscow, is also in their respective league’s title race as well.

French Ligue 1: #1 Bordeaux (53), #2 Montpellier (53), #3 AJ Auxerre (52), #4 Lyon (51)
Spain La Liga: #1 Real Madrid (65), #1 Barcelona (65)
Italy Series A: #1 Internazionale (59), #2 AC Milan (58)
Germany Bundesliga: #1 Bayern Munich (56), #2 Schalke 04 (54), #3 Bayern Leverkusen (53)
England Premier League: #1 Manchester United (66), #2 Chelsea (64), #3 Arsenal (64)

It’ll be very interesting to see how the club managers balance both the European campaign and their domestic campaign. Manchester United and Barcelona have a great starting 11 team, but they also have the benefit of having a very deep roster. Ive always said that a lot of the bench players on Manchester United probably could get first team playing time on a majority of other teams.

I think Manchester United is in great position to make a run for both the Champions League title, as well as the Premier League title. Our defense is starting to stabilize with Vidic and Ferdinand starting to get back to fitness, and all a lot of our players are starting to get back to playing levels. Soon, Sir Alex Ferguson will have Ryan Giggs and Michael Owen available, and reports say that Owen Hargreaves is almost back to full fitness!

March 18, 2010

Thoughts after day 1: Why Parity is good.

Filed under: basketball — Tags: , — Jonathan Lee @ 6:13 am

This has been one of the craziest 1st days of the college basketball tournament in recent memory. Here’s a recap of these day’s events.

Shocking Upsets of the 1st day
– #14 Ohio manhandles #3 Georgetown, 97-83.
– #13 Murray State shocks #4 Vanderbilt at the buzzer, 66-65.
– #11 Old Dominion beats #6 Notre Dame, 51-50.
– #11 Washington beats #6 Marquette, 80-78.
– #10 Saint Mary’s beats #7 Richmond, 80-71.

Interesting story lines/stats
– #2 Villanova narrowly beating #15 Robert Morris in OT, even after RM had a 9 point lead at one point.
– 7 out of 16 games were decided by 3 points or less.
– In 3 games, the contest was won on a shot taken taken with less than 2 seconds left in the game.
– Only 5 games were won by more than 10 points (#1 Kentucky by 29, #2 Kansas State by 20, #1 Kansas by 16, #14 Ohio by 14, #5 Butler by 18).
– There were 3 games (out of 16) that went to Overtime. In the past 9 years, there have never been more than 2 OT games in the 1st round (out of 32 games).

Last week, my friend, Howard Lio, posted a comment on my Pac-10 post regarding my idea of parity.

“And Jon, equality is a terrible idea-for a NCAA Season. Where are your upsets now? Where are the cinderella stories? Who is the Goliath in the David story?

A season without a dominant force, just does not generate buzz. This season has only been driven by individual players like John wall, Evan Turner, or Demarcus Cousins.

All i can say is that when i watch the March madness tourney, I can’t say i will be passionately watching, because i cant expect a UNC to be in the Final Four; or cheer for a cinderella story since everyone is on an equal level.

This March madness, the brackets will be very boring to me”

The first day of the 2010 NCAA Tournament just proved that you don’t need a Cinderella story or a dominant team to create an exciting tournament. It also proved that parity across all conferences is very good for the game.

Personally, I would rather see competitive games across the board any day over dominant teams and a handful of Cinderella teams. I had a friend who didn’t follow college basketball at all follow the games intently to see who would etch out the win. Following all these close games down to the wire proved to be extremely exciting for myself and scores of fans across the country.

In a system with parity, every single game will be a good game. Today, 7 out of the 16 games were decided by 3 points or less, and11/16 were decided by 10 points or less. Almost every single game was a competitive game, and caught the attention of fans across the country.

Up until recently, the top 4 seeds would normally always roll over the #13-#16 seeds, winning by double digit margins. Now, even the #13-#16 seeds will fight hard against the top seeds and keep games close. This year we saw a #3 seed and a #4 seed get taken down and saw a #2 seed almost upset. In a couple years, I predict that even #1-#16 match-ups wont be gimme games anymore. I would predict the first #16 upset for a #1 team within the next decade.

Parity is good for the game. We see lower ranked teams play the games of their life, which forces higher ranked teams to answer the challenge. We see closer games won in the last seconds, as opposed to uncompetitive blowouts.

My Official Bracket after Day 1

Round 1: 9/16 Correct

One way to see how you’re doing is to see the maximum possible teams left you have making future rounds. For example, if for some reason you had, Georgetown, Texas, Vanderbilt and Notre Dame all make the Final Four, your max possible score for that round would now by 0/4, since all teams lost today.

Final 4: 4/4
Elite 8: 8/8
Sweet 16: 14/16

I had Georgetown and Vanderbilt making the Sweet 16.

March 16, 2010

Tiger’s return to golf

Filed under: Uncategorized — Jonathan Lee @ 6:18 am

So today, Tiger Woods announced that his return to golf will be at the Masters, the site of his first Majors win and where he’s won 4 times. It will probably shape up to be the most covered golf tournament of all time. The media presence will be unprecedented and will probably be one of the biggest circuses of all time.

Ever since Tiger Wood’s took an indefinite leave from golf, the sports world debated how Tiger would perform when he returned to play. Would he still be able to break Jack Nicklaus’s record of 18 Major Wins.

In terms of his playing abilities, I dont foresee winning 5 more Majors to be that difficult for Tiger. Last year, Tiger had an 8 month break while he rehabilitated his knee. While he didnt win a major upon his return, the 8 month break didn’t affect his playing abilities, and he was always in contention in tournaments.

The biggest unknown is his mental and emotional capacity and strength. The media has always respected his privacy, and he’s never before had to answer to the public and address the public at lengths. He’s always been able to just concentrate on golf. He won’t be able to hide from the public scrutiny anymore. The press and paparazzi will now continue to follow his every move. Who knows how Tiger will handle the invasion of his personal life.

Tiger has in the past shown flashes of annoyance as well. He’s been known to lash out at fans who flash cameras when he’s about to hit the ball. What happens now if fans start heckling him about his personal life on the golf course? Will he be able to deal with this?

Tiger is one of the greatest competitors of our lifetime. How he responds and handles the increased public pressure and scrutiny will go a long way into determining if he’ll pass Jack Nicklaus’s record.

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