Tuesday, December 30, 2008

NFL Picks

Well in a way it's great to be here, and not so great. We are at one of the most exciting times of an NFL season, the playoffs. One game settles things, and one game can also make us wonder why so-and-so is even playing their position as a Pro (See Tony Romo in the Seattle and Giant's game). Okay so I mentioned two games, my point still stands. Our picks are below.


Wild Card Weekend

Saturday
:

Atlanta v. Arizona. ESPN Line: Atlanta by 1.5
Matt: Atlanta..I blame alcohol for writing the wrong team
Casey: Dirrrty Birds
Jay: The big A-T-L

Indianapolis v. San Diego. ESPN Line: Even
Matt: Bolts
Casey: Bolts if they play the same as Sunday night
Jay: Can I pass? No? ok, Bolts

Sunday

Baltimore v. Miami. ESPN Line: Bal by 3
Matt: Baltimore
Casey: Ravens...I thought I heard Ray Lewis tapping at my chamber door
Jay: Miami... I like the way Sporano has turned it around, and I think he's got one more win in him

Philadelphia v. Minnesota. ESPN Line: Philly by 1
Matt: Philadelphia
Casey: Philly
Jay: Philly


Let it be a very good playoff weekend, no blowouts or controversy, please.
And just because...

Thoughts of the Maniac for January 1st Bowls

So as we head into these last 8 days of the bowl season, I offer up my last thoughts for the year (2008 that is). You can find my picks (and those of the other writers) for the January bowls in a different article, but I'll explain some of mine here.



I'll start off by saying that this year (like those prior) has been another case for a College football playoff. Texas getting the shaft, Utah getting undue praise, and -tying in with the first reason- OU getting lucky. But I've gotten off-subject.



THURSDAY JANUARY 1:



No doubt in my mind that this is the best day of football of this bowl season. The Capital One bowl offers a great rushing matchup of Georgia and Michigan State. Knowshon Moreno (UGA) and Javon Ringer (MSU) both had over 1300 yards this year. Ringer carried more of a load for the Spartans than Moreno did for the Dawgs. Not because he wanted to (although I'm sure he wasn't arguing) but because he had to. Georgia's recievers are some of the best in the SEC, and QB Matthew Stafford has the arm to get it deep down the field to them. I picked Georgia because I think that will be the difference in the game.



The Rose Bowl. Enough said. I don't need to go into how it's the most hyped game of the year (outside of the title game of course), nor how much pageantry there is between the parades, parties and events associated with the game itself. This year's game offers a matchup of 2 great defenses in Penn State and USC. USC's defense is first in the country, allowing only 7.6 points per game. Yeah, that's per game, not half. Penn State isn't that far behind at 12.4 ppg allowed. Neither defense has seen an offense like their opponent posseses. I picked USC because Pete Carrol is Mr. Big Game Genius, and they're playing in their backyard. Oh yeah, and their defense is the best we've seen in years.



The Orange Bowl brings an interesting matchup to the table. Virginia Tech brings the heat on defense, thanks to Defensive Coordinator Bud Foster. Cincy brings the passing game, run by Junior QB Tony Pike. That's the matchup of the game, but the question of the game is how does Virginia Tech's offense play? Inconsistency killed Va. Tech's hopes of an 11 win season, and this is their last chance to put up a 10th W. I picked Va. Tech because I don't think Cincinnati's offensive line will be able to keep Tony Pike protected long enough for him to put up big numbers, and without a true rushing threat, the Bearcats rely too heavily on the aerial assault.

Picking the January bowls

So folks, here we go. It's the last 8 days of the 2008-2009 College Football season (Insert silent moment here) and the best games (hopefully) are still to come. These are the bowls that will take place from new Year's Day on up to the National title game, and the forecasts of our writers.

Thursday January 1

Outback Bowl: South Carolina vs. Iowa

Casey: South Carolina
Jay: Iowa
Matt: Iowa

Capital One Bowl: #15 Georgia vs. #18 Michigan State

Casey: Georgia
Jay: Georgia
Matt: Michigan State

Gator Bowl: Nebraska vs. Clemson

Casey: Clemson
Jay: Nebraska
Matt: Clemson

Rose Bowl Game: #8 Penn State vs. #5 Southern Cal

Casey: Southern Cal
Jay: Southern Cal
Matt: Penn State

FedEx Orange Bowl: #12 Cincinnati vs. #19 Virginia Tech

Casey: Virginia Tech...or I'll break something
Jay: Virginia Tech
Matt: Virginia Tech...or Stinespring will get run out of town.

Friday January 2

Cotton Bowl: #25 Mississippi vs. #7 Texas Tech

Casey: Texas Tech
Jay: Texas Tech
Matt: Texas Tech

Liberty Bowl: Kentucky vs East Carolina

Casey: Yo ho
Jay: East Carolina
Matt: East Carolina

Allstate Sugar Bowl: #6 Utah vs #4 Alabama

Casey: 'Bama
Jay: Alabama
Matt: Bama big time..even without Smith.

Saturday January 3

International Bowl: Buffalo vs. Connecticut

Casey: UConn
Jay: Buffalo
Matt: Buffalo

Monday January 5

Tostitos Fiesta Bowl: #10 Ohio State vs. #3 Texas

Casey: Texas-you better win. Ohio State can't win on my birthday
Jay: Texas
Matt: Texas

Tuesday January 6

GMAC Bowl: #22 Ball State vs. Tulsa

Casey: Ball State
Jay: Ball State
Matt: Ball State

Thursday January 8

FedEx National Championship Game: #2 Florida vs. #1 Oklahoma

Casey: Texas...I mean, Florida
Jay: Florida - Agreed Casey! Hook 'Em!
Matt: Florida.. Chokahoma is no match for Tebow's might


Have a happy and relatively safe New Year. By relatively safe, I mean being alive and semi-conscious in time to party New Years day. We hope to do a nice NFL playoff preview before next weekend too, so stay tuned.

-The Matchup Crew

Monday, December 29, 2008

Holiday Hangover

Pardon the brief Holiday hiatus folks but all three of us were too busy to keep up with it the past few days. However, a lot happened in the past few days. Here's some of what we saw:

1. The Lions are the worst team in NFL history after losing the season finale and capping off a perfect season, 0-16! There's hope maybe, considering the turn-around the Dolphins had this year following a 1 win season last year. Plus, they play in the consistently "meh" NFC North so there's always hope.

2. The Denver Broncos have Swiss cheese for defense. Wait, Swiss cheese might do better. They allowed 52 points by the Chargers in a virtual playoff game. To make things worse, Jay Cutler was mediocre at best. I kind of feel bad for the Broncos losing 7 running backs to injury. That's no misprint, 7 running backs injured this year. The good news for Chargers fans? LT seems to be closer to his skill level of last year and Phillip Rivers played well, despite having a children's haircut.

3. Apparently you can win 11 games this year and not get into the playoffs while another gets in with a 8-8 record. That's what happened this year to the Patriots. Say what you will about Belichick, but to take a team that lost arguably one of the best quarterbacks in the league, a top 10 running back, and countless defensive stars to a 11 win season when everyone wrote you for dead in week 1 is a damn good coaching job I think. That 3 point loss to the Colts looks pretty costly now. The Pats better have a contract ready for Cassell considering there's already speculation that Brady could be out for all of 2009 season as well.

4. The Cowboys are out of the playoffs. Ha.

5a. Maybe Boise State shouldn't have been in a BCS game. I've made the argument that Boise State should have been in a BCS game over the Buckeyes. Which I still agree with, but probably just not in the same game that the Buckeyes are playing in. Imagine how bad the game between the Longhorns and the Broncos would be given UT's season long high octane offense and Boise's poor bowl performance against TCU in the San Diego County Credit Union Poinsettia Bowl.
5b. They really need to get back to just Poinsettia Bowl or New Mexico Bowl instead of the New Mexico Department of Tourism New Mexico Bowl. Oh I thought it would be Oregon Department of Tourism sponsoring it, my bad.

6. The NFL playoffs will be good this year. That's all I'll say for now about that. We'll do game picks as the weekend approaches.

Monday, December 22, 2008

Over The Weekend...

We saw several things over the weekend in the NFL and in the first few bowl games.

The New York Giants clinched homefield advantage for the playoffs by beating the Panthers 34-28 in OT in one of the season's better games. From the beginning it looked like the Panthers were going to run away with it but the ground game of the Giants kept the score close and ultimately won it for them. Panther's back DeAngelo Williams had four rushing touchdowns and Giants' backup running back Derrick Ward had 215 yards on 15 carries, including a monster run in overtime.

The Giants clinched the 1 seed in the NFC but the Panthers still aren't assured of the NFC South division yet as the Falcons clinched a playoff spot with their win over the Vikings. Going into next weekends games, the Falcons own the tiebreaker over the Panthers and can take the NFC South and thus the #2 seed in the NFC. With the Falcons playing the pitiful Rams and the Panthers playing the always capable Saints, the Panthers could go from having a week off at the beginning of the playoffs to playing as the wild card in the divisional round.

The Tennessee Titans proved that they're one of the leagues elite teams by physically dominating the Steelers on both sides of the ball and securing the #1 seed and home field advantage. Neither team needed to win this game considering they both had a first round bye but homefield advantage would prove beneficial no doubt.

Are the Broncos ever going to win the one game they need? They need one more win to secure the title for the awful AFC West division title but can't seem to get it. By the Chargers winning 3 straight games they've pulled themselves back into contention for the AFC West and the winner of next week's showdown between the two teams will be into the playoffs--that's right, there could be an 8-8 team in the playoffs. Which could also be true if the Cardinals lose their final game of the year (which looks probable following a 47-7 dismantling by the Patriots in Foxboro) against the Seahawks.

Three out of the four AFC East teams can win the division but I wont go into the complications

Okay, I know the Lions are bad, but this is a low thing to do Mr. Parker. Hope you get what's coming to you. Marinelli already has a tough enough time dealing with the fact that his team is 0-15 and trying to coach young talent on a small budget, but to do this? Despicable!

To finish it off with College Football:
Wake Forest defeated the Naval Academy to start the bowl season and South Florida whipped Memphis 41-14 in a bowl that was practically in their back yard. Gartrelle Johnson of Colorado State is a monster. He rushed for 285 yards and 2 touchdowns, while adding 90 yards receiving in CSU's 40-35 win over Fresno State in the New Mexico Bowl. Arizona knocked off #16 BYU in the Las Vegas Bowl, and Southern Mississippi blocked a Troy field goal in overtime to take the New Orleans Bowl.

-CR

Saturday, December 20, 2008

And thus begins the bowl season...

Today kicks off the College Football bowl season. Wake Forest takes on Navy at 11AM to begin the best time of the year, in my opinion. All the way through the end of the bowl season we will try to make posts about games and which ones were incredible, blowouts, boring, etc. Not promising Grade A stuff but hopefully some good insight nonetheless. Enjoy the best part of college football for the next 3 weeks!

-The Matchup crew

Who are these Panthers?!?

The biggest surprise in my mind this year in the NFL is the Carolina Panthers. Lets face the facts about why it's a big surprise, and why they're going far in the playoffs.

1) Delhomme can be awful: Jake has an 82.0 passer rating this year so far. Granted, I've seen a few of his picks, not his fault, and others are so awful it makes me sick. He has 14 TD to his 12 INT, not a stunning ratio. The funnier thing is some of his awful games are against bad teams, or when on the road. He threw 1 TD and 4 INT in a WIN against Oakland (17-6). Then one against KC, Chicago, he's thrown a total of 5 against TB, and Denver. What's bad is the fact that he's awful on the road. The upside? If they win against the Giants, they've practically sealed home field advantage throughout the NFC playoffs, which to an NFC South team is practically the golden ticket to not losing. NO NFC South teams have lost at home to another NFC south team, and only two have lost at home to a team period. The Panthers are undefeated at home, and the only other team in the NFL to be that good at home is Tampa Bay.

2) Steve Smith is their biggest catcher: this is a good AND bad thing. I remember one year, I believe when the Bears went to the Super Bowl, the Panthers were in a bad rut. Smith was their ONLY go-to guy that was consistent and dangerous. The Bears double covered the guy, stuck over the top help, etc. What did Smith do? Just bust loose for 171 yards, that's all. If Smith can beat double coverage, which he very easily can ("how" is a question for the ages), then the Panthers need only one thing: One other receiver to step up and be available for the short range passes. That way you have 2 defensive backs running with Smith, and that middle lane open for nice 5/10 to 20 yard pick ups.

3) Their Running Game is just...wow: The dual attack of Williams and Stewart is just ridiculous if it gets rolling. The Giants, and any other team that doesn't a 300 yard bomb dropped on them by the running game, will be sure to step up the run defense. They have the second best in the NFC, but will that be enough? The dangerous duo got 108 yards on Chicago's defense early in the year, the closest comparison to the Giants. Yea, their 300 yard game against a good Tampa Defense is impressive, but even if you leave out that game from TB's record, they still have a rushing defense that's just a bit better than the 49ers. The key? The Carolina Offensive line did GREAT at getting those blocks in. They got about 130 or so against Denver, but I feel this team doesn't want to rush the tempo. They can run that clock out so quickly, and as a defense you still can't come up and stick more men in the box because you're one mistake away from Steve Smith (or even Muhammed) burning you down the fade route or a nice deep slant.

4) The Red Zone Offense: These guys are destructive once they get within 20 yards of the endzone. Lets talk about their 3rd best red zone offense; like how they score about 93% of the time, and put up 7 about 64% of the time. The only two better teams are Dallas and Indy, so despite Delhomme's problems they can punch it in.

5) Time management: Here's a double edge sword. By taking forever to score through running and short passes, with the occasional Steve Smith wonder catch, you get to control the tempo and momentum of the game. If Carolina scores in the first quarter, they may have eaten a good third to half of the quarter doing it. For the opposing team, that leaves them less time to score if the game turns into a shootout, but for Carolina it can hurt too: If their opponents score and are up by 4 with 2 minutes to play, that takes away their dynamic run game as a very viable option. Sure they could run a bit, but not likely at all. Do they have that passing game, the short west coast offense, to really get a 2-minute drill going? Carolina averages close to 6 plays per drive, and only one team averages more running plays (The Giants). This team does need to show it's ability to not just run down time with a lead, but to also score a field goal, and even a touchdown, with little time left and maybe only 1-2 time outs. This is their greatest weakness, especially with a Delhomme who makes plenty of mistakes, and a receiving core that isn't tested nearly as much as it should. If you look at the top passing teams in the NFC, the Saints and Cardinals, their receiving core has a good distribution of yards. Steven Smith alone has close to half the teams total receiving yards, with Muhammad a good 400 yards behind. Even Steve Breaston of the Cardinals is within 100 yards of Boldin and about 300 yards away from Fitzgerald. On the Panthers, after Muhammad, there's Donte Rosario with a mere 209 receiving yards to Smith's 1240.

While Smith can get open and make plays despite every team's defense preparing to stop him, that may not work well during playoffs. With their run game highlighted now in the Tampa Bay game, defenses will look to stop the run and exploit Delhommes bad decision making and faltering accuracy when under duress. Delhomme needs to get more receivers involved so the Defense is kept guessing and can't cheat on coverage of Smith and Muhammad. Tight ends need to be making catches, more screens and other plays to beat the rush. Diversity in play calling will help this team make the final push

Finally, I heard on ESPN today someone saying how the Panthers have hit their stride. I couldn't agree more, and I say this is why this team is going to go to the NFC championship and beyond . Yes, I said it. Think about it, teams who go all the way hit their stride now, when it really counts. The Giant's were a dark horse last year, and the Cowboys were all the talk. The Cowboys hit their rough spot during the playoffs, while the Giants seemed to finally have everything together just in time. This year, the Giant's are now deflating just before playoffs, after a terrific and powerful start. The Cowboys are starting to hit a stride, but I wonder if that's only because of the teams they're now playing. A win over the Giants was big, but at home and against a struggling team isn't impressive. The cowboys will not have homefield advantage in the playoffs, they will suffer from a team chemistry that rests on winning and is very vulnerable to any small bumps. They have a quarterback who has not performed well in playoffs, and a wideout who makes too much noise when in playoffs you need to focus (and who likes to drop passes too). The Panthers are a selfless team who do not make noise, who do not take their eyes off the prize. They were not given much attention at the start of the year compared to other NFC teams, and yet they seem the more consistently strong ones.

Lets not count them out, lets not count out that entire division. The NFC East is good, but I'm putting my money on the NFC South. Even the Falcons or Buc's could easily rain on the NFC East's parade given a shot in the playoffs.

_-Matt

Richmond Overpowers Montana for DI-AA Championship

The University of Richmond Spiders overpowered the Montana Grizzlies 24-7 on Friday night to take home the school’s first national championship—in any sport—in 178 years.

Richmond got it done on offense, special teams, but most importantly: defense. Montana did manage to rack up over 300 yards of total offense; the majority of it coming from their passing game. The Spiders had a suspect pass coverage coming into this game and it showed at times when Montana senior quarterback Cole Bergquist dropped back to pass. He had 4 completions over 20 yards, including a spectacular 47 yard catch by Marc Mariani. Unfortunately for the Grizzlies, the 69 yard drive would end in a missed field goal. Mariani showed his ability to get through the secondary with ease accumulating 172 yards on 7 catches in the Grizzlies loss. The Spiders held Montana to a negligible 39 yards rushing. Although, this stat is kind of skewed considering the Grizzlies were playing catch-up from the opening kickoff and running soon became out of the question.
On the offensive side of the ball, Richmond quarterback Eric Ward played lights out. He went 12/18 passing for 96 yards and a touchdown while rushing for 46 yards. He also added a receiving touchdown on a trick play pass from fullback John Crone to score Richmond’s opening touchdown. Josh Vaughan was also a critical part of the Spiders success on offense, rushing for 162 yards and a TD. Vaughan proved imperative to Richmond’s 2nd half clock management considering the Spiders were more or less on cruise control after going up 21-0 in the first half.

The most important factor to the Grizzlies loss? The Richmond defensive line. The Spiders sacked Bergquist seven times, four of those sacks came from senior defensive end Lawrence Sidbury. Remember that name. Sidbury can flat out play defense and any NFL team that passes him up would be missing out. At 6’4 265lbs, he’s got a similar build to a Julius Peppers or Daryll Tapp. He reminds me of Daryll Tapp (mainly because I’ve watched DT more than Julius Peppers) with his uncanny ability to get past a lineman and put pressure on the quarterback. One play in particular that reminded me of Tapp was one in which Bergquist completed a pass out in the flat, the cornerback missed the tackle springing the receiver for a first down. Guessed who caught him? Yep. Sidbury chased him down from the line of scrimmage and brought him down. That’s what makes a defensive player great in my mind. The “motor” that runs until the play is over, not until the play is on the other side of the field. Sidbury could be a great player at the next level with his speed, power, and focus. Going back to the rest of that defensive line, both Pierre Turner and Martin Parker added a sack to Sidbury’s 4. Parker also forced a fumble on 1st down after Montana got the ball back, down 21-0, before the end of the half.

Richmond simply overpowered Montana on both sides of the ball. Their offensive line provided good protection for Ward and opened big holes for Vaughan to run through. Their defensive line imposed their will on the Grizzlies linemen and could very easily have had more than 7 sacks. The defensive pressure the Spiders put on Bergquist and the rest of the Grizzlies made any type of offensive rhythm hard to come by and in turn, points.

Hats off to 1st year head coach (and UR alum) Mike London and the rest of his coaching staff for an incredible coaching job in this game, the come-from-behind win 21-20 win over Northern Iowa the week before, and the unseating of 3 time defending champion Appalachian State. Gotta beat the champs to be the champs right? That’s what they are now. Congrats to the Spiders for winning the National Championship and for winning the way it should be *cough* playoff *cough* .

-Casey

Friday, December 19, 2008

The Teixeria Situation Shows a Deeper Problem

So at 2am I see the news that the Sox are out of the running for Teixeria. That leaves the Angles, Nationals, O's, and possibly the Yankees as serious contenders for this guy, assuming the Sox are serious about being out of the race. Granted, this happened not to long ago with someone else: when the Yankees told A-rod essentially if he opts out, there will be no negotiations, the bridge will have been burned. Funny how baseball, hell sports negotiations work. It's rumored many of the offers on the table range fro 160 to close to 190 million over 8 or so years. This brings up something that has bugged me for far too long.

Assume he gets 185 million over 9 years. He is looking for a 9-10 year offer, or so I've heard, so we'll say 9. That's roughly 20.55 million dollars a year, for just under a decade. Now, anything longer than 6-7 years for someone like, oh say Manny, is a bit ridiculous. Aging in sports is like smoking; sure smoking doesn't automatically make you get cancer, but it jacks up the chances you will, pretty high for stuff like lung and heart cancer. As someone in the MLB, NFL, MLS, NHL, NBA, etc age, that risk of different forms of dead money start to rise. Injuries, career declines, etc. People will argue and say "Matt, c'mon, the dude's 29" True, which is why he's able to get away with asking for that kind of year quantity. But forget aging for now, lets think about it this way: 9 years of playing for the SAME organization. Jeter's done it, Smoltz and Chipper Jones have been at Atlanta for 20 and 15 years respectively, but in my mind I feel it's a rare occurrence to stay for that long if you're really good. After so long, teams will go through dry spells, years and years of just doing awful. Those good players they signed who are in the fifth or sixth year of their contract, may all of a sudden decide to take their amazing talent and go to a team just about on the brink of a World Series run. They create a mess in the clubhouse, whining and complaining until they get traded, or refuse to play until they get a trade. In the age of 'super' agents, they tend to get what they want, and in some way the club eats some money. Think about it, would you, right now, lock in what company you wish to work for for the next 10 years? You're not allowed out for 10 years or else you face serious consequences. I wouldn't, what if that company went through tough times and limited my career advancement? Or got a few bad apples that made working awful? That's how clubs feel, just instead they're locking in on an employee for almost a decade without much of a way out if things get sour (that doesn't lose them money). The clubs are in a catch 22: If the club doesn't offer 7-8+ years, the players walk, and if they do, many times trouble occurs after 5-6 years. Think of someone like T.O, who's only a good sport when the team is winning, or Marbury, who's just a pain in the ass all around. Now imagine you're lock in with them for 8+ years, and the only way out is to lose a lot of cash, and possibly a lot of clubhouse morale.

Now, I'm not saying Teixeria is like that, he seems like a stand up guy. Yet, I've said that about people before. Believe it or not, TO wasn't the way he was when he was young and playing for the 49ers. When did you start hearing about his antics? I remember them about 2 years, maybe, before his departure to the Eagles. I was still young then, and my memory isn't great, but this TO drama was a past few years thing, not a career occurrence. Look at Manny, the man went from humble and playful, to wanting a trade, then to "I don't care, I'm just trying to have fun" until he hit that 500th HR mark, at which point he was in "get me the hell out of here" mode. Even if you get the player to stay, the morale damage is huge and doesn't just last the season.

Finally, John Henry of the BoSox have reiterated what a lot of GMs have said all over sports: The economy is awful and it might get worse. I assure you, if the auto industry collapses, the markets will get worse. If more mortgage troubles get out, the market will get much worse. If the auto industries get bailed out, and the bailout doesn't work, the markets will get wrecked. The Maddoff Ponzi scheme hurt the Mets, who lost quite a bit of money because of this con artist. If you lock in now, when you think or even know you can afford it, in 2-3 years you could be singing QUITE a different tune. But Agents like Boras, and the players they either convince to care only about green, or the players who only love money and not the sport itself, don't realize that. Apparently, it stopped being about the game, stopped being about the fans who support them, and it started being about whether they can afford to host a crazy party every night of the week, drive a nice car for no reason other than bragging, or how awesome they can make their house(s). Many teams out there like the O's are struggling because, on top of the economy, their fan base has dwindled. They are stuck in a cycle of defeat: Losing seasons lead to lower fans support, which leads to lower revenue, keeping them from seeking these big named players to be a corner stone of their team. This can easily lead to more losing seasons, and you see how the rest turns out. I'll admit, the Sox pay a lot now, but I feel teams like them, the Mets, White Sox, etc feel like the only way to compete is spend over 100 million on a roster. If we want to see competitiveness, higher fan counts, and much more for baseball, we need to see either a mandatory spending cap, or GMs to get together and make a gentleman's agreement. Stop hijacking this game to make the most money, stop buying teams just to win. I've had a halo game where I get 63 kills and 15 deaths, and a halo game where I had 16 kills and 9 deaths. Yet I was more proud of the second game. Why? Because the first game was a social match, against terrible players who haven't played as much as I have. The second game was against very tough competition, and win or lose I feel good about not taking a cheap win.

I hope Boston isn't out of the running, but I also hope we don't get him because we throw 200 million at him. The Matsusaka signing was a bit weird to me, teams bidding up to 50 million just to talk, and in hindsight it was too much. I don't know why anyone had to bid just to get exclusive negotiating rights, it's just insane. This off-season has shown three things: Baseball GM's are starting to feel the pinch of the economy, there are plenty of players who don't quite realize the economy's impact (or don't care), and sports agents are just as shifty and sometimes just evil (see Furcal and the encyclopedia dedicated to the Scott Boras phenomenon). This is coming from someone who almost had his spirit killed by baseball strikes, and never got into Hockey because of their strike. And for far too long us fans haven't done enough to blame the right people. Us.

We demand our teams throw out cash to get a good team, instead of being true fans and wait patiently for sane trades and sigings, and the farm system to start kicking in. We demand immediate results, and hence clubs feel the pinch to dish out cash. Where is the next Teixeria coming from? Or the next Randy Johnson, or Mike Mussina? From the farm system, somewhere, and by ignoring that, baseball teams are hopelessly sabotaging themselves the chance at 1, 2 or even a decade of years where they are consistently a competitive team. We can and should blame the players and the player association for raising hell every time talk of a salary cap comes around, or the owners for not banding together and putting in an unofficial cap, but ultimately they make money and can throw 150+ million at players because we give them the funds, and many times the angry indirect support, to do so.

Just a rant, something to ponder when you get upset that your team didn't outbid someone for player X, and declare your team is screwed for a long time.

_-Matt

*Side note* ESPN's player search for MLB is awful. I tried teixeria, Teixeria, "Teixeria, Mark", and only "Mark Teixeria" worked, while the box clearly says "Last Name". Apparently you need more than the last name..

Thursday, December 18, 2008

...and I thought Orange Bowl ticket sales were bad

For the Humanitarian Bowl here are the staggering (and rumored) numbers of tickets sales so far:

Maryland-16
Nevada-8

Holy crap I hope thats not true.

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Bulls take attention from Bills. Surprised? Not me.

Well, after racing off the starting blocks to 5-1, the Bills have now lost their breath. Actually, they did about 4 weeks ago. With the Bills eliminated from playoff contention this past week, being 6-8 now, the football fans in Buffalo are turning to the college ranks. The University of Buffalo Bulls are currently 8-5, and have a date with UConn in the January 3rd International Bowl in Toronto, Ontario.

Who's to blame for the Bills demise? In my opinion, JP Losman. In the 4 games that he started this year, the Bills are 0-4, with Losman posting 2 TDs and 5 INTs. Granted 2 of those INTs weren't really his fault, but that's still a 2:3 ratio. In the final 2 minutes of this past weekend's game, Losman fumbled and threw a pick. The latter allowed the Jets to slither away from the Bills' grasp. The Bills should have won that game, and could have beat Miami the week before. 3 weeks ago, they lost to the 49ers, who have actually turned on jets of their own lately. But Buffalo still should have won, especially since that game ended at 10-3.

Dick Jauron and the Bills' staff have moved Losman to the 3rd QB spot, stating that Trent Edwards will likely start on Sunday at Denver. The backup? Gibran Hamdan, a 2nd year player out of Indiana. He spent 2004-2006 in Amsterdam (NFL Europa) where he won the MVP in 2006. He has NFL (the real one) experience: He threw 2 passes for Seattle in 2003 against Washington. He completed 1 for 7 yards and was sacked twice. He's also been on a number of practice squads. Diamond in the rough? We shall see.

The Bills have nothing but pride to play for these last 2 weeks. A game at Denver this weekend should be interesting. Denver is 8-6 and can clinch a playoff spot with a win. The season finale is a home game against the Patriots, who are tied for first in the AFC East with Miami and New York (Jets). As a Buffalo sports fan, thank God for the Sabres (and Bulls!).

So back to the Bulls: Who gets praise for that turnaround? Easy- Turner Gill. The man took the laughingstock of college football to the MAC title game, where they beat previously unbeaten Ball State. Laughingstock no more my friends. This is the school's first bowl game (that they accepted the invitation to). These guys are psyched. So psyched in fact that Turner Gill will be on their sidelines through 2013. That extension coming earlier this week.

Gill's name was thrown around at quite a few schools in the past weeks, Auburn being the biggest name (sorry Syracuse, not anymore). When Auburn hired Chizik- which is a decision that still confuses me- UB wasted no time in drawing up a contract extension for Mr. Gill.

Part of the reason Gill is so popular with his players is that they really grab hold onto his system and philosophies. The first day he was in the locker room, he told his team that they "would be successful at the U of Buffalo". If you were a player in that locker room, would you have laughed? I would have.

But none of his team did. 2006 (Gill's first season) wasn't as great a success as they had hoped, with the Bulls finishing 2-10. 2007 was better, but not by much, ending that season at 5-7. 2008 started out to be much of the same, starting 2-4. But when Army dropped a 14 point lead in the 4th quarter, UB started streaking-winning 6 of the last 7 (including the MAC title game). Now sitting one win away from a school-record 9 wins, the Bulls are totally focused on UConn- a team that has found itself in it's second consecutive bowl.

Turner Gill isn't Mr. Unknown in the world of college football. He's a former Heisman finalist (4th place finish) from the U of Nebraska. He led the Huskers to a 28-2 record in 3 years as a starter. In addition, he spent time in the CFL and was also Director of Player Development for the Green Bay Packers before signing a 5 year contract with the University of Buffalo in December 2005.

We'll see what becomes of january 3rd, 2009 for Coach Gill and UB. But whatever happens there, there is little doubt around the country that Turner Gill has done a fantastic job with that program. I look forward to seeing whether or not UB continues to improve as a football program.


The Maniac

Malcolm Jenkins 1st Team All-American...Really?

Look, I know Malcolm Jenkins is one of the top corners in College Football. But I think that in no way does he deserve to be 1st team All-American. The only All-American team I've seen so far that got it right is the Sporting News' list of top players.

Jenkins, a 6'1" senior at Ohio State, had 3 interceptions for 7 yards and no touchdowns, 54 tackles (32 solo),3 forced fumbles,9 passes defended/broken up, and two blocked kicks. That's a good season. But is it All-American worthy? I don't think so.

Like I said, 3 Interceptions...7 yards? Only one of those interceptions came against a team that made it to a bowl game, let alone was above .500 (Wisconsin). The Big Ten, like the ACC, didn't really have any outstanding quarterbacks this year so it's hard to argue that he didn't get the interceptions because he faced superior quarterbacks.

So who does deserve that spot instead of Jenkins? Alphonso Smith of Wake Forest already has the other CB spot--well deserving of it, too--but there are numerous other CBs that are more suitable for the spot than Jenkins. In fact, at least 10 CBs have more INTs than Jenkins. One example? Virginia Tech's Macho Harris. I know, I know. I go to VT, but from an unbiased standpoint, hear me out. Here's Macho's stats for the season: 6 INTs for 142 yards and 2 TDs, 44 tackles (31 solo), 2 forced fumbles, and 13 passes defended/broken up. 3 of his interceptions came against teams that are in bowls. I already stated that the ACC is not very pass heavy so maybe its more impressive that he has 6 INTs and so many passes defended.

Don't want the Macho Harris argument because it's biased? Alright. How about Vanderbilt's DJ Moore? 6 Interceptions, 54 tackles (28 solo), 12 passes defended/broken up, 1 sack, and a fumble forced. This too in a conference that is pass happy in comparison to the ACC and Big Ten. Still no? How about UAB's Kevin Sanders? Cincinnati's Mike Mickens (who missed the last three games of the season)?

I don't mean to pick on Jenkins necessarily but rather those who pick the teams. Sometimes it seems like the players are picked solely on their stats. Other times it seems like they are picked solely on popularity. Players that truly exemplify a great contribution to their team should be awarded the All-American honorary title, not those that have average stats and a big following.

Hello, I'm the new guy

Hey all,

My name is Matt, I grew up in Northern Virginia, but am going to VT with Casey. I'm majoring in Psychology and Computer Science, with a Math minor.. Why? Probably because deep down part of me is a masochist in some way. I am a master at making it look like I'm doing work, when really I'm screwing around reading sport news and regular news. I play Halo 3, poker, helping Casey with his kicking game, and whatever else I feel like doing. I'm a pretty spontaneous person.

I wasn't much of an 'organized' sports kid. From the time I was 6, I played games of tackle football with friends. I became good friends with Casey my freshman year, after a game of football. I think my football skills impressed him? Anyways, I enjoyed football more than just about any sport, the lax rules on contact just made it more appealing than basketball.

Top games I've been too? Not much unfortunately but I'm working on it. I went to the USC v VT game that was played at Fed Ex field, and lost my voice after that terrrible penalty that shall not be named. I was at the BC v VT game with Casey, and the Orange Bowl with Casey (two very sad games). Also was at the Red Sox/Baltimore game where Manny hit his 500th. When I was young, my grandfather in MD would take me to quite a few Orioles games, as he got nice tickets through work. Unfortunately for him, my Dad and his side of the family made sure I was raised a BoSox fan.

I follow a lot of MLB baseball, although I don't consider myself that knowledgeable. I like to talk about what I think, even if it's wrong, so someone can tell me why it's wrong. Trial by fire, sure, but it's more fun that way. I love college football and the NFL, just watching a good game is fun even if my team isn't playing. I'm, of course, a VT fan, a Red Sox fan, and a 49er's fan (get the laughs out now). Don't worry, I wont chat much, if at all, about the 49ers. I'll also keep the peace and stay away from Red Sox and VT talk, and promise not to go after any yankee fans.

Finally, in the spirit of what was said before me, if I offend you, sorry in advance. It's hard to gauge emotions on the internet, and I have a tendency to type someting in a way that may make one think I'm being a jerk. I enjoy constructive criticism of my ideas, because that's how I learn best. I also have terrible spelling and grammar checking skills, so bear with me =P

Hope to see you all around and commenting

_-Matt

Weekend Picks

Time for the weekend, so here are some picks:

NFL:


  • Titans vs. Steelers (Sunday 1PM, CBS)...hope you like defense, #1 and #2 scoring defenses

  • Casey's Pick: Steelers 24-Titans 13

  • The Maniac's Pick: Steelers 28- Titans 14
  • Matt's Pick: Steelers 21 - Titans 24
  • Panthers vs. Giants (Sunday 8:15PM, NBC)

  • Casey's Pick: Panthers 27-Giants 24

  • The Maniac's Pick: Giants over Panthers, reverse Casey's score
  • Matt's Pick: Panther's 30 - Giants 17
NCAA Basketball...holy crap what a weekend:
(All games played on Saturday)


  • #2 UConn vs. #7 Gonzaga (4PM, CBS)

  • Casey's Pick: Gonzaga

  • The Maniac's Pick: UConn
  • Matt's Pick: UConn

  • #22 Michigan State vs. #5 Texas (2PM, CBS)

  • Casey's Pick: Texas

  • The Maniac's Pick: Texas
  • Matt's Pick: Texas (Not going to be a rebel)

  • #7 Xavier vs. #6 Duke (2PM, CBS)

  • Casey's Pick: Xavier

  • The Maniac's Pick: Xavier
  • Matt's Pick: Duke (Although it hurts my soul)

  • #11 Syracuse vs. #21 Memphis (6PM, ESPN)

  • Casey's Pick: Syracuse

  • The Maniac's Pick: Syracuse
  • Matt's Pick: Syracuse

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Jim Boeheim Doesn't Like Microphones

Syracuse lost last night on 60 foot shot at the buzzer to Cleveland State. So, very understandably so, 'Cuse head coach Jim Boeheim was upset. I feel bad for the microphone at the end of this



Maybe I feel bad for him actually. That sound is awful

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Weekend Picks

Once again, not much to talk about so...more weekend game picks!
  • Heisman Trophy...Graham Harrell was left out of the finalists?
  • Casey's Pick: Sam Bradford
  • The Maniac's Pick: Harrel got the shaft! Sam Bradford
  • Steelers vs. Ravens...pretty much for the AFC North (Sunday 1 PM CBS)
  • Casey's Pick: Steelers 17- Ravens 9
  • The Maniac's Pick: Steelers 21- Ravens 14
  • Giants vs. Cowboys (Sunday 8:15 PM NBC)
  • Casey's Pick: Giants 34- Cowboys
  • The Maniac's Pick: Giants 38 Cowboys 21
  • Falcons vs. Bucs (Sunday 1 PM FOX)
  • Casey's Pick: Falcons 31- Bucs 27
  • The Maniac's Pick: Bucs 28 Falcons 21
  • # 15 Memphis vs #19 Georgetown (Saturday 2 PM)
  • Casey's Pick: Georgetown...I don't do basketball scores
  • The Maniac's Pick: Memphis, same as Casey with scores
  • Penguins at Flyers (Saturday 1 PM)
  • Casey's Pick: Penguins 4- Flyers 1
  • The Maniac's Pick: Penguins 5- Flyers 0

Monday, December 8, 2008

It's Okay To Be Blue...Titans Blue


So with 3 regular season games left, the Titans have clinched the AFC South with a 12-1 record. Yes, the Titans. Not the Colts, not the Jaguars...the Titans. But maybe this shouldn't be such a surprise really.

Many people thought the departure of Steve McNair and Eddie George meant the end of things in Tennessee for the next 15 years. Although Steve McNair and Eddie George left, Jeff Fisher stayed in Tennessee. I think he, along with upper management, are the reason that the Titans have returned as a big time contender for the AFC spot in the Super Bowl this year. Don't go ahead and write them in yet for a 15-1 record though. They've got 2 tough games left; a home game versus Pittsburgh and a road game to end the season against the Colts.

Jeff Fisher is in his 14th year as head coach of the Titans/Oilers organization and this might be his best on both sides of the ball. The defensive minded head coach has always emphasized defensive play but now he's actually getting what he's been asking for. Along with Jim Schwartz as the defensive coordinator, the Titans are one of the best defenses in the NFL this year. Fisher has kept the team focused this year and not let the pressure of the media get to them.

Speaking of that defense, stingy might be the best word to describe it. They've only allowed 14 points a game on average and have only allowed more than 20 points twice all year. The defense is not really one of the big name defenses like the Giants, Steelers, or Patriots but maybe that's the key. With the exception of Keith Bullock, Albert Haynesworth, and the resurgent Javon Kearse, not many people could name a starter for the Titans 2nd place defense. I think the real key to success for the Titans is the ability of the team to play well as a unit and play unselfishly. Cortland Finnegan and Michael Griffin have really emerged as leaders of the secondary and have both racked up 5 interceptions. Finnegan has become a solid corner and with Nick Harper on the other side of the field, the Titans are hard to pass on. Michael Griffin and Chris Hope provide good speed and ability to read a play to back up Finnegan or Harper if necessary. The front four for the Titans average about 290 lbs and are very physical off the ball and get in the backfield quickly to disrupt the passing game. The linebacker corps is strong with Thornton, Tulloch, and Bullock stopping the run and defending the pass very well. The D-line and linebackers are a big reason why only 1 team has rushed for over 100 yards on them this season. This a solid defense allowing under 300 yards a game, <200 through the air and <100 on the ground (except for Steve Slaton). The test against the Steelers and then Colts in consecutive weeks will indicate how good they truly are.

Just as good as the Titans defense is their offense...that's probably why their 12-1 after all huh? The success of this offense is based off of the offensive line. Kerry Collins has only been taken down for a sack 7 times this year and Vince Young was sacked one time to make it a total of 8 for the season. That's tied for first in the league in sacks allowed with Denver. The offensive line is a large group that averages 300 pounds and is lead by 15 year veteran Kevin Mawae. They open large holes for one of the NFL's best running back tandems to run through. Chris Johnson has clearly emerged as the AFC Rookie of the Year, rushing for over 1000 yards and 8 touchdowns and averages close to 5 yards a carry. While Johnson is the homerun hitter, LenDale White is the wrecking ball and short yardage back. White leads the league (with Michael Turner) in touchdowns scored at the running back position with 14, on a little more than half the carries that Turner has. The balance between Johnson's speed and White's power makes the Tennessee running game a serious threat. Because of the serious threat of a run, the Titans have been able to utilize play-action passes nearly at will. Kerry Collins has shown his experience and good decision making by throwing only 6 interceptions on the year compared to his 11 touchdowns. The Titans don't really possess a deep threat at receiver but they do have several competent receivers that are good at holding on to the ball and picking up first downs. Justin Gage presents a big target for Kerry Collins and Chris Johnson has caught 39 passes out of the backfield to add some diversity. With the addition of Alge Crumpler in the off-season and Bo Scaife catching 50 passes so far, the Titans can use two tightends for blocking and also as very effective receivers. All in all, this is a good offense and they put up the points necessary to win by air and ground.

I've listed a bunch of stats but perhaps the most impressive is that the Titans are +11 in the turnover category. That keeps their defense resting on the sideline and their offense grinding down the opponent. The Titans, despite what some still say about them, are a very good football team and could make a deep run in the playoffs this year.

-Casey

Saturday, December 6, 2008

What did I learn this weekend? -The Maniac

Well, following a weekend of championship games, I reflect on what I learned:


  • The Gators don't run up the score- they are just that good. The Gators put up 31 points on one of the toughest defenses in the nation Saturday afternoon. Emanuel Moody didn't replace Percy Harvin altogether, but he did look very strong. He and Jeffrey Demps added the extra threats that Florida needed to open things up very nicely for Tebow. Tebow threw for 216 yards and 3 TDs, and ran for another 56 yards. Alabama, going into Saturday, led the nation in 3rd down defense. The Gators were 8-13 on 3rd downs. The Tide's defense did a decent job. Florida averaged 450 yards of offense during the season, and Bama held them to 359. But Florida did have 5 plays of 20 or more yards. Bama made some mistakes (only 1 turnover, a late INT) that cost them a few drives. Overall, Bama payed a good game. Just not good enough.

  • Ball State was overrated, but not by too much- Buffalo just did a great job of forcing turnovers. Ball State funbled the ball 4 times and threw 1 interception. The Cardinals did manage to gain over 500 yards of total offense, and hold the ball for over 34 minutes. Turnovers will kill you, and Buffalo drove that into Ball State's heads. The Bulls turned all 4 fumbles into points. 2 of those they returned for TDs, something that hasn't been done by anyone since 2001 (Louisville).

  • Speaking of Louisville, they need recruits. Badly- Louisville fell behind 49-0 in the first half to Rutgers. Missing 5 defensive starters, their lack of depth showed. They will lose 4 defensive players, including their best corner. Time to get on that recruiting trail Mr. Kragthorpe

  • The BCS is still screwed up, and AP voters need to start compensating for it- When you look at the tie in the Big 12 South and how it played out, it doesn't make any sense at all. OU beat TTU in Norman, TTU beat Texas in Lubbock( at the last second, mind you), and Texas beat OU on a neutral field. I'm sure most of sports nation agrees that Texas got the shaft here. Home field advantage is HUGE in college football these days, especially when you play in the Big 12 South. Stadiums that hold 70,000 or more are loud, hostile, and just plain intimidating when they're 90% opposing fans. The OU-Texas game in Dallas was split straight down the middle, and if you watched the game you know what I mean. The stadium was almost exactly half red, half orange. If you want a true champion next year, play all 3 of those games on neutral sites. You'll find out who is truly the best in that division

  • Staying in the Big 12, the South divison is more dominant than ever in the conference as a whole- OU's romp of Missouri put the exclamation point on that statement. The Southern divison has now won 5 straight Big 12 titles, with the North's last title being the K-State upset of OU in 2003. The combined score of the last 5 games? 233-51. The South went 15-3 against it's Northern opponents this year. That's domination to the extreme.

  • Washington has hope- After this season, that's not hard to say. Sarkisian stated "I am committed to bringing them back to title contention". I sure hope there's not a time limit on that statement. 0-12 is obviously as bad as it gets. Recruit hard Coach, that's about the only hope you've got right now.

  • BC's Dominique Davis is slowly getting there- He's not ready yet, and proved it Saturday against Virginia Tech. Don't count him out though, he's only a Freshman and only started 2 games this year-1 at home and the ACC title game. At home against Maryland, the regular season finale, Davis was 12-24 for 134 yds and 2 TDs. Against Va. Tech, he was 17-43 for 263, with a TD and 2 INTs. that isn't bad for an inexperienced quarterback against a VERY good Bud Foster defense. BC couldn't win the ACC title with Matt Ryan, but Davis might be the answer. He could have a big year next year replacing Chris Crane, who graduates this year.

Thursday, December 4, 2008

Weekend Picks

Alright, since there's not much to write about until this weekend's games are over, how about some good 'ol fashioned picks!

  • SEC Title Game- #1 Alabama vs. #4 Florida
  • Casey's Pick: Florida 38-Alabama 21
  • The Maniac's Pick: Alabama 35- Florida 31
  • Big 12 Title Game- #2 Oklahoma vs. #20 Missouri
  • Casey's Pick: Oklahoma 55- Missouri 31
  • The Maniac's Pick: Oklahoma 62- Missuori 28
  • ACC Title Game- #17 Boston College vs. #25 Virginia Tech
  • Casey's Pick: Virginia Tech 24-Boston College 17
  • The Maniac's Pick: Virginia Tech 14- Boston College 10
  • MAC Title Game- #12 Ball State vs. Buffalo
  • Casey's Pick: Ball State 41- Buffalo 20
  • The Maniac's Pick: Ball State 34- Buffalo 21
  • Dallas Cowboys vs. Pittsburgh Steelers
  • Casey's Pick: Steelers 27- Cowboys 17
  • The Maniac's Pick: Steelers 34- Cowboys 27

Intro, part 2

Alright, so Jay already introduced himself. My name is Casey and I live in Blacksburg, VA and grew up 40 minutes away in Roanoke. I'm a student at Virginia Tech and I probably spend more time watching sports than studying...which is a bad thing, but also an exaggeration.

I played soccer for 7 years, basketball for 6, baseball for 4 and then other sports not on a team. Like Jay, I guess I'll list some of the games I've been to. I saw DC United win the second MLS Cup in 97, I saw Manny hit homerun #500 at Camden Yards, United States defeat Argentina in soccer, FedEx Orange Bowl in 2008 (unfortunately it was a loss), Virginia Tech upset #1 UNC and #5 Duke in the same week, and numerous VT football games.

Hockey is by far my favorite sport to watch and then it's gotta be college football. Like Jay, I maintain a separate blog too at http://brinkofelimination.blogspot.com

Jay and I have agreed that unless it's a just a score, we won't post about VT or WVU. Yes, believe it or not, a Mountaineer and Hokie are working together!

Like Jay said, leave any comments on the articles and what not. We'll try to update as often as we can, even if it's just a overnight scoreboard posting.

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Intro, part 1

Welcome to "The Matchup". I'm Jay, aka The Maniac. I live in SW Florida, where I work as a maintenance director during the week, and a couch potato on football weekends. I was born in Fl, pretty much raised in Virginia, and have been back here since 2005.

I got my love of sports pretty early on. I played baseball for 15 years, and played 3 sports in high school (football, wrestling and baseball). I've been to some pretty sweet games and places that only fueled my sports craze. Some of the big games I've been to: Game 6 of the '99 Stanley Cup Finals (It's still not a goal, Mr. Hull), Game 7 of the '97 World Series (Marlins' "11th Heaven"), and the first and second rounds of the men's NCAA tournament 3 times.

My favorite sport has to be college football, as you'll figure out quickly. I live and die by West Virginia athletics. I won't write about them much though. If you want to read anything I have about WVU, go to http://www.wvumaniac.blogspot.com Now, onto the important stuff:

This blog is a different style than most you'll see. Most blogs now are written by only 1 author. This, my friends, defies all norms. "The Matchup" is a cooperative blog wrriten by 2 people who go way back. The other author will write his intro soon.

Please do not be afraid to leave us feedback on any of the sections, articles, pages- whatever you'd like to call them. We're friendly. I apologize in advance to anyone I may offend (I definetly try not to, but these days, people get offended waaay too easily).

Enjoy.

The Maniac