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January 2008 Archives
New years is a time for reflection. A time to take stock of the things done in the past year with hopes that we will learn from our mistakes and become better for them. Yesterday, GM Isiah Thomas gave Head Coach Isiah Thomas a vote of confidence that his job is safe. Yes you read that correctly, couldn't make that up. So much for the 2 week deadline for criticism Isiah placed on himself. By the way, the team went 1-5 during that stretch...
Judging by the last 4 years under the leadership of Isiah Thomas and James Dolan, there is about as much reflection on past failures at MSG as there is accountability. Rather, Knicks management likes to look ahead, focusing on how best to save face and deflect blame while not caring in the slightest about winning or the fans.
With the holiday season coming to a close, now is as good a time as any to look back on the wonderful things Zeke and Jazzy Jim have given Knicks fans over the last four years.
1. Stephon Marbury - If you like losing basketball, then Marbury is your man at the point. Before coming to NY, Steph had built an extensive losing resume, from alienating Kevin Garnett and breaking up a young, talented T'Wolves squad to winning a paltry 0 playoff series. Isiah recognized this and brought his preternatural ability to fail to the Knicks. Over the past four years Starbury has registered 0 wins in playoff games and 1 remarkable scene of infidelity in a truck while killing any team chemistry that has sprouted up from time to time. Luckily, we still have 2 more seasons of him at about 21 million per year...
2. Steve Francis - Because having Stephon Marbury on the roster wasn't enough the Zeke pulled a savvy trade to create the losingest backcourt possible at the highest cap number imaginable. Trevor Ariza and Jalen Rose's expiring contract were traded away to acquire "The Franchise." Like they say at MSG "you've got to give something, to get nothing."
3. Eddy Curry - For the bargain basement price of two first round picks, two second round picks and enough bad contracts to ensure zero cap flexibility for the forseeable future, the Knicks received a "franchise center" with a history of weight and heart problems. To his credit, Curry did begin to come into his own a bit last year averaging 19 points and 7 rebounds a game. Fortunately, Isiah refused to trade him at the peak of his value this summer, instead opting to pair him with Zach Randolph to form an interior defensive presence almost as intimidating as
Steve Nash sans the shot blocking ability.
4. Jerome James - According to Isiah, Big Snacks was acquired for his "girth" not his ability to consistently fill a DNP spot. According to NYC buffets, business has never been better.
5. Jared Jeffries - Using the familiar negotiating strategy of outbidding himself, Isiah was able to sign bonafide offensive blackhole Jared Jeffries to an untradeable five year contract in 2006. Two years and roughly 10,000 unnecessary pump fakes later, Knicks fans are glad to have a guy who brings such "intangibles" as missing layups and being an overrated defender to their roster.
6. No All Stars - The natural progression from Isiah's free agent signings and trades bring us to the fact that the Knicks haven't had a player appear in the All Star Game since 2001. Conversely, several Knick players and personnel have appeared in court during that time...
7. Anucha Browne Sanders - Winner of the largest payout ever for a game of HORSE at MSG, 11.6 million dollars.
8. Head Coach Isiah Thomas - From the makers of General Manager Isiah Thomas, comes an inept head coach with no control of his players and a 41-70 record over the last two seasons. Puzzle piece pins sold separately.
9. Double Digit Losses - One of the key accessories included with Head Coach Isiah are blowouts as the Knicks lead the league with 14 double digit losses this season. I was going to research the number of double digit defeats over the course of Thomas' tenure but decided it was best if the loaded gun on the table remains next to the half-empty bottle of Jameson rather than my temple.
10. Isiah's Contract Extension - This post has focused primarily on Isiah; however, it wouldn't be fair to James Dolan if we didn't mention his contributions to Knicks fans. Not only can the fat man play some serious jazz music and grow a goatee but he also appears to have an uncanny sense for detecting "evident progress" where there is none. Since signing Isiah to a 3 year extension worth 24 million dollars late last season, the Knicks are 12-36. Thus, everytime you look to the Knicks sidelines and see Isiah with his head in his hands or staring blankly from the bench you know who to thank.
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Taking a break from his busy schedule of judging fashion shows on Project Runway, exploting/berating ex-teammates for personal gain and being generally effeminate, Tiki Barber will attend the New York Giants-Tampa Bay Bucaneers playoff game on Sunday. In an article for his excellent Giants blog at the Star-Ledger, Mike Garafolo reports that Tiki announced his intentions to attend the game last night on his Sirius Radio Show - "The Barber Shop" - which he co-hosts with his brother, Bucs cornerback Ronde.
The article states that Tiki found himself in a "quandary" this week in regards to his rooting interest and has settled on a compromise. He will stand on the Tampa sidelines BUT also wear a Giants hat explaining to Ronde on the broadcast: "Dude, I'm rooting for you but I am a Giant. Sorry, brother..."
Well Tiki, I think I speak for most Giants fans when I say don't bother wearing our team's colors come Sunday. You showed your true colors earlier in the year when you tossed Eli under the bus to further your announcing career, tarnishing the sanctity of the locker room in the process. So while I thank you for firing up the Gmen this season and helping to improve team chemistry by retiring, you need to remember that you are no longer a Giant. Now, you are merely another talking head... a rather large one at that.
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Having dedicated myself to getting back down to playing weight recently, I had to accept the fact that visits to the gym may interfere with Nets-basketball-watching capabilities. Because sometimes games tip off at 7, which always feels a little early. And as a Nets fan, I had to accept that this could mean missing the best basketball the Nets play; this team is not exactly known for its strong play to close out games, to say the least. Often, this team plays its best basketball in the first half (and it can be magnificent on many nights), only to go completely cold after the half and end up losing by double digits. Such is life. But as long as I can still watch my team, and then flip around the League Pass for the rest of the night, I'm (relatively) content. Of course I'd rather watch my team dominate. But not every season can be one for the ages. I know this, accept this, and go on with my life.
So last night, when I got home during halftime, flipped on the game versus Orlando to see the Nets down 8, and then watched them quickly fall further behind (by as many as 15 at one point), I figured it was the same old story- keep things close for a half and then sputter out down the stretch. But it didn't happen. The second half, most notably the fourth quarter, was a bright spot for the current Nets season as a whole. So what happened?
Lightning in a bottle.
Let me digress for a moment. (Don't act like you're not pleased I finally broke the "anecdote comes first" formula...we all like change from time to time.)
Morning radio shows are terrible, but sometimes they play music, so that's what my alarm clock is set to. Mostly because that buzzer sound is what I imagine to be the sound you hear as you descend into hell. So yeah, some mornings I get music, some mornings I get inane conversational drivel. Either/or will wake me up (eventually...I'm a huge proponent of the snooze button). If it's a decent song I might let it play for a few seconds, but most songs and all forms of morning dj conversation usually propel me with a quickness toward the snooze and/or off button. Not today, my friends. The conversation topic I awoke to on this morning was so intriguing, so compelling, so...profound...that I had no choice but to continue to lie in my bed and listen for several moments.
Now, apparently...and I missed the beginning, so my facts could be off...apparently, some woman, somewhere, possibly locally...weighed in recently at around 950 lbs. And apparently she had only weighed around 500 lbs. But then she got hit by a car, or truck. One of the show's hosts asked, "Did the truck make it?" Laughs all around. And then since the 500 lb. woman was ah..."incapacitated," she put on the other 400 lbs. More laughs all around. Then the real point of discussion- this woman was married, with two children. Questions asked and unfortunately not answered before I had to get out of bed, content that for at least one day, someone else was going to hell before me: Who would marry her? Who would not only marry her but have sex with her, at least twice? Do you need to have a fetish? Do you need to be skinny? Do you need to be incredibly...ehhhm, well-endowed? And seriously, how does one get that monstrously obese?
The answer occurred to me as I begain to write about last night's Nets game- lightning in a bottle.
Think about it. How lucky do you have to be as a 500 lb. woman, let alone a 900 lb. woman, to find somebody to, as the morning show hosts put it (and I approve!) "bang you out" even once? Not to mention stay with you, procreate with you, procreate with you again, all while watching you put on 400+ more lbs.? You need an incredibly fortuitous combination of circumstances. You need a guy who really likes fat chicks, and a guy who is physically capable of exercising his penchant for fat chicks, and a personality not altogether too awful for someone to spend the rest of their life with you regardless of your weight, and decent weather (because I don't care how strong your obesity fetish is, fat people must smell terrible in extreme heat).... Only if all these things come together do you have a shot at reaching the type of situation ripe for morning show fodder. But the odds are decidedly not in your favor. Probably 49 times out of 50, the chick who fondly recalls her 500 lb. days as "The Skinny Years" dies alone. Possibly with a house full of cats. If she hasn't eaten them.
And my point is this: 49 times out of 50, when you have a bad shooting night from Vince (a.k.a. "Errant Jump Shot Theater"), RJ (a.k.a. "3 Point Shots Are Not For You!!!") and JKidd (a.k.a. "The Best Point Guard In The League But Not Even Close To One Of Its Better Shooters By Far") coupled with foul trouble on your promising young big men, you are not going to win.
I'm not sure last night's win over the Magic was the turning point of the season. And if it was, I'm not sure that's a good thing. As mentioned earlier, I am completely enamored with Boone and the Freak Elastique. But, as young players are prone to do, they will get in foul trouble against the elite big men in the league, and probably won't be ready to drive the momentum of an entire game just yet.
So let's look at this objectively here. You won by 1 point. You had a huge game from Darrell Armstrong, who clearly intended to make a triumphant return to his former basketball home. You had a big game from Malik Allen, who may continue to play at a higher level, thus causing me to take back any negative things I had to say about his basketball-playing abilities. You got 10 points from JASON COLLINS! He went 5 for 5! With no turnovers! AND had the NBA Steal of the Night! That's never going to happen again! Not to mention the intense Dwight Howard elbow that Boki took square to the face. (Bok, if you need someone to hold some ice on there for you, I'm your girl...really, I'm very doting...call me!) And for some reason, the Orlando tv crew was under the impression the Nets used the thunderous DH 'bow as a rallying point, despite the fact it was quite obviously unintentional. But rallying point or not, after my poor Boki picked himself up off the floor, the Nets all of a sudden woke up. The game got more physical and the refs let them play. And what did the Nets get as a result of this series of improbable performances and hard fouls? A win. An exciting, down-to-the-wire, scream-at-the-television-with-glee, maybe-this-season's-not-over win.
But what are the odds the Nets can win games like this, with their "Big Three" (I hate that term) cold and their big men saddled with fouls early, often? They say you can only catch lightning in a bottle once, if ever. The Nets starters need to play solidly, in the same games, and with more consistency, so that the rest of the team doesn't have to try to string together a list of improbables. I love seeing guys like Malik and Armstrong, and yes, Twin have good games. I just don't love having to rely on it.
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In the first three years of Tom Coughlin's head coaching tenure in New York, the Giants were a mess. They were an egotistical team, laden with immature stars (Shockey), talking heads (Tiki) and as a whole rebelled against Coughlin's domineering coaching style. In addition, there were constant media outburtsts with guys throwing coaches and teammates under the bus. Compounding the problem, was the fact that the team had a young quarterback in Eli Manning who, being even-keeled by nature, was overwhelmed by the big veteran egos in the locker room. Despite all this, the team made the playoffs twice, being bounced in the first round both times.
Coming into the 2007-2008 season, expectations were low following the retirement of leading rusher Tiki Barber. Tom Coughlin was seemingly a lame duck coach, almost certain to be fired at season's end and most experts predicted a 6-10 campaign that would place the Gmen in the NFC East cellar. Who would have known that the adversity facing Coughlin and departure of the outspoken Barber, the two things that were to doom this team, would serve as the catalysts for positive change and a successful season.
It all started with Coughlin. After assessing the team's negative response to his overbearing coaching the past three seasons, he very admirably swallowed his pride and contstructed a veteran players committee. This consisted of the team's most respected veteran players such as Shaun O'Hara and Michael Strahan (a staunch early critic of Coughlin) who would help lead in the locker room/practice field and most importantly present the players concerns/thoughts to the coaching staff. This open dialogue fostered not only a better understanding and respect between the veteran players and coaches, it helped create a harmonious locker room where guys were held more accountable by one another for their actions.
This behind the scenes transformation would not have been possible without Tiki Barber's departure. Tiki's criticisms were a trigger for many of the issues in the locker room and had an overall negative effect on the team's attitude. His departure gave everyone else a bigger voice, especially Eli Manning who has earned the respect of his teammates after publicly replying to Tiki's criticisms and playing through a shoulder injury the entire season.
While the offseason brought a lot of positive change off the field, ultimately a team's success is decided in the win column and following two straight losses out of the gates things weren't looking good. In my view, the Giants success this season can be defined by two comeback wins, both on the road:
- Week 3 in Washington: The Giants avoided a 0-3 start that would have buried there season, overcoming a 17-3 halftime deficit to win 24-17.
- Week 16 in Buffalo: Coming off an ugly home loss, the Giants saw their playoff lead disappearing with the Pats looming on the horizon. Down 14-0 early, the Giants rallied in terribly wintry conditions to win 38-21, clinching a playoff berth.
The Giants determined and fearless road play was on display again this weekend in the Florida sunshine as they overcame an early deficit to dominate the final three quarters of their playoff game with Tampa winning 24-14. The win in Tampa was their 8th straight and feeds into the team's self-imposed identity as "Road Warriors."
The Giants now head to Dallas for their third meeting with the Cowboys this season and suprisingly the first ever in postseason play. With Washington eliminated, the Giants will not see another home game this season and something tells me they wouldn't have it any other way.
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 Recently, I began writing for a new fantasy sports blog appropriately named the Fantasy Sports Experience. While Giggin On Ya is still my first love, FSE allows me to feed my fantasy sports fix and that my friends is a good thing.
Anyway, from time to time I will link to some of the fun articles we do over there; sparing you from the detailed analysis that is not so much fun unless you are really into fantasy sports. This week, we decided to live blog the awesomely bizarre Roger Clemens press conference. Follow the link below and enjoy.
Link
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The news that the Atlanta Falcons have requested to speak to Steve Spagnuolo in regards to their open head coaching vacancy has made more tan a few Giants fans nervous and downright uncomfortable. Spags has done a tremendous job in his first year in New York, implementing a fast, aggressive defensive scheme that has been exciting to watch and very effective at shutting down opposing offenses. The Giants rank 7th in the NFL in overall defense and lead the league in sacks with 53.
The Giants haven't exactly had great luck with their offensive and defensive coordinators in recent years. John Hufnagel's offenses stalled more often then my old 1988 Nissan (which set a single season record for AAA service calls in 2003) while Tim Lewis' defenses looked like they were made of paper mache' and were very accommodating to the run.
Spags is the most talented coordinator we have had since John Fox left in 2002 to become the head coach of the Carolina Panthers, leading them to a Super Bowl a year later. Thus, please don't blame Giants fans if they are a bit overprotective of our young defensive coordinator as other teams come calling for his services. We knew this day would come eventually, but not this soon.
The chances of Spags leaving are compounded by the Falcons search for a new GM. Chris Mara, the Giants current VP of player evaluation, and Eagles GM Tom Heckert are the top candidates for the open GM spot in Atlanta and are both familiar with Spags. Heckert has known him since his days with the Eagles dating back to 1999 while Mara has worked with him this season. It is thought that both would make a big push to bring him on board as head coach if they are named GM.
While the interest in Spags is a bit disconcerting, have no fear faithful Giant backers, I don't think the boy wonder is going anywhere. According to most accounts, he is quite happy in New York and with only one year of experience under his belt as defensive coordinator, he does not quite feel ready to make the leap to head coach just yet.
We will know more after the playoffs as the Giants have temporarily denied the Falcons request to speak with Spagnuolo. The two sides will meet once the Giants are eliminated from contention to discuss the position. Until then, Spags should have only one thing on his mind: figuring out how to stop the potent Cowboys offense on Sunday.
UPDATE: Pete Carroll is now being considered the front-runner for the position after reportedly speaking with Falcons' owner Arthur Blank. This is some good news...
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The Minnesota Twins are Major League Baseball's biggest tease. For the past few months, they have been flaunting their Venezuelan golden boy to anyone who would listen (or afford to listen) inundating sports websites and television programs with a myriad of rumors, most completely worthless. Johan Santana is the prize here friends, and he has been linked to about half the teams in baseball at some point. But for fiscal, need-based and/or cosmetic reasons there have always been only three possible teams that make sense: the Boston Red Sox, New York Yankees and New York Mets.
Back when the madness that is the "Santana Sweepstakes" began, a buddy of mine Phil, a Yankee fan and a co-contributor over at the Fantasy Sports Experience, told me flatly that the Mets would land Santana. He reasoned that the offers made by the Yankees and Red Sox were merely done for posturing. Essentially, the two teams were (to borrow a great line from season 2 of The Wire) "pissing on each other's leg" as they engaged in a high stakes game of keep-away.
Looking back objectively we all should have seen this coming. Baseball has clearly entered a new age where the prospect has more value than ever and the behaviors of the Yanks and Sox over the past 2 years exemplify this fact. Both teams are actively funneling more money than ever into buidling dominant farm systems rather than blowing money on the free agent market and it is working. Yankee and Red Sox pitching prospects have enjoyed a lot of success at the minor and more importantly major league level. Thus, it would stand to reason that there would be no need for either team to meet the hefty price tag it would take to land Santana from both a prospect or fiscal standpoint.
Naturally, the Twins have waited it out because let's be honest the Yanks and Sox can definately offer the best package of prospects if they wanted to. But amidst all of the smoke screens that were thrown up by the AL East rivals - offers that were nearly completed/reported to be complete, half-hearted deadlines, withdrawals from talks, re-entering talks, lowered interest, raised interest, etc. - the Mets and Omar Minaya always sat with a quiet confidence on the sidelines. They looked on as the media and experts poked holes in all of their prospects and made cases against potential offers knowing their day at the forefront of the sweepstakes lay ahead when the posturing was done.
Following the controversal Ryan Church trade, I wrote that although I liked what the trade did for our current roster, it's overall effect would be marginal unless we landed a frontline starter. As time wore on after that trade with the Nats and no Santana deal had been made, I slowly became a believer that the Mets would bring him to New York.
Overall, the Mets have been the best fit for Santana all along:
- Have the money to sign him long-term for big money (he wants 6 years-150 Million).
- Biggest need coming into the offseason was for an inning-eating front-line stater to slot in front of Pedro, Maine and Perez.
- This need is exasperated by the fact that the Mets have a deceptively old roster. While they have great young players like Reyes and Wright, this team also has many vets and aging stars at several key positions including Delgado (1B), Castillo (2B), Alou (LF) and of course the ever-important Pedro Martinez who is in the last year of his deal. Their best chance to contend for a World Series is this year.
- The Mets play in the National League, which means the Twins don't have to worry about Santana coming back to haunt them a few times a year.
- Santana wants to play in New York.
- Most importantly, despite all of the reports about the Mets not having the prospects of the Yankees or Red Sox, they have what the Twins need: Top-tier corner outfield & center field prospects (Fernando Martinez & Carlos Gomez) with power and speed as well a selection of young pitcher with relief and starting pitching upside (Kevin Mulvey, Deolis Guerra, Phil Humber, Mike Pelfrey)
All of this aside, I did not want to write about Santana until we saw what the Mets would be willing to offer, as I was still concerned about two things. The Mets weren't willing to give Santana the long extension or big money deal and/or although our prospects are good, we were overvaluing them and wouldn't make a legit offer.
After news broke mid-week that Fred Wilpon had publically given Omar Minaya the financial green light to bring Santana on board, my cautious optimism and lingering traces of skepticism melted away and now I firmly believe the Mets will complete a trade for Santana by month's end. The current package reportedly being offered include Deolis Guerra, Carlos Gomez, Kevin Mulvey and Phil Humber. While this is a decent haul for the Twins, I don't think this deal happens unless the mets include their top prospect Fernando Martinez who some claim is the heir apparent at the plate to Juan Gonzalez and could be up by the age of 20.
I am pretty sure the Mets will give in eventually and include Fernando Martinez in order to get Santana and personally I am all for it. While the farm system would be depleted, the Mets would retain Arron Heilman in the bullpen (for better or worse) and keep their top pitching prospect, Mike Pelfrey, who could slot in as a 5th starter or a power bullpen arm depending on how we use El Duque. This provides Willy with added options and some good flexibility throughout the pitching staff. Also, keep in mind we have 3 first round picks this season, so the opportunity is there to begin restocking the farm system.
Most importantly we will be filling our biggest need, getting a pitcher who has dominated the American League for the last 4 seasons, posting a win-loss record of 70-32 with an ERA well under 3.00 during that time. Not to mention he has picked up two Cy Young's in that span. Coming to the lighter-hitting National League, to a great pitcher's park, backed up by a solid defense and good offense, Santana would immediately be the front-runner for the Cy Young award and the Mets instantly become the NL favorite to reach the World Series.
Remember Mets fans, for every Jose Reyes there is a "5-tool prospect" like Alex Escobar and for every Josh Becket, AJ Burnett and Dontrelle Willis a Generation K. Given the makeup of this roster, it is time to surrender to our inhibitions and live in the now. With Johan aboard, the pieces are in place for 2008 to be the year we bring a World Series championship back to Queens.
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At this point, it was starting to appear as if the Giants offense may be done scoring for the day. As it turned out the offense wouldn't so much as get another first down following the go ahead score. Thus, the collective hopes of the Giants and their faithful fans laid with the defense - a tired and injury-depleted defense at that.
To say the Cowboys dominated the time of possession on Sunday would be an understatement. The Dallas offense had the ball for nearly 37 minutes, running 69 plays; 28 more than the Giants. Adding to the tall task that lay ahead in the final 7 minutes was a shoulder injury sustained by Aaron Ross before the start of the fourth quarter which reunited him with fellow CBs Sam Madison and Kevin Dockery on the sidelines. If I told you before the game that to win, the Gmen would have to fend off two late go-ahead drives starting around mid-field with RW McQuarters and Geoffery Pope playing prominent roles in the pass defense would you have still tuned in?
Well that is exactly what the Giants did in nerve-racking fashion with one of the most inspired displays of team defense I have witnessed in all my years as a fan of the Big Blue. The first Dallas drive inside the 7 minute mark would get as far as the NYG 41 yard line before falling apart, thanks in large part to a Kawika Mitchell sack as well as a costly intentional grounding call on Tony Romo. The Giants defense started getting to and hitting Romo late in the game forcing him to rush throws with pressure ultimately resulting in two sacks.
Following another Giants 3 and out, the stage was set for Tony Romo to earn his first playoff win in dramatic fashion and for me to go on suicide watch. Being a Giant fan I have been on the receiving end of some terrible playoff losses which featured similar scripts. Sucking down beer like it was the anecdote for my nerve-induced nausea I paced in my living room, hands in pocket. Panicked text messages poured in and while I checked them during the commercial breaks I was too nervous to reply. I found myself living each passing moment by the code of my strange superstitions, developed entirely during the 4th quarter - stand in the same spot, keep hands in pocket, put beer bottle down while play is in progress, rinse and repeat...
Amidst the late game madness, was a sequence of events which was so surreal I pinched myself to make sure I wasn't stuck in a bizarre lucid dream. It began with Tony Romo completing an improbable shovel pass on the run to Jason Witten for a gain of 18 yards to the Giants 22. Immediately after the play, Fox cut to a clip of Brett Favre completing a similar type of circus pass on Saturday versus the Seahawks as Joe Buck gushed about Romo's virtues.
With my guests and I already visibly rattled, we are then taken to a close up of a fiery Jerry Jones clapping with great intensity on the Dallas sidelines, Superbowl rings blinging in the setting Texas sun. Finally, with the room now comatose, the Fox cameras head back to the field capturing Justin Tuck writhing in pain on the Texas Stadium carpet.
As demoralizing as that sequence was, it served to make the game-ending interception by RW McQuarters that much sweeter. The Giants had overcome great odds in avenging their lone road loss of the season, raising their record away from East Rutherford to an incredible 9-1. And, as always, to the victor goes the spoils. A bumbling, disheveled Wade Phillips looking like he just got bounced from a dive bar at 3am. A frowning Tony Romo left searching for answers and the icing on the cake, a sobbing TO feebly defending his QB.
With two ghosts of playoff past - Jeff Garcia and Terrell Owens - sent packing, the Giants now head on to Green Bay for what promises to be their toughest test of the season: Brett Favre in Arctic Lambeau.
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This post is being brought to you by the oily pecs of Reggie Theus.
I wrote a blog post the other day and right around when I was finishing it up, Internet Explorer crashed and I lost the whole thing. This has happened to me a bunch of times and for awhile there it was really frustrating and upsetting and one time I even almost cried.
This time though, I kinda just shrugged it off. Mutter the obligatory, "Are you fucking kidding me?!?" and then switched right over to do something else, possibly even work.
Because really, I should know better by now. I should know to hit the "Save" button every few minutes, and know not let the thing sit unfinished while I dick around on other sites, and know that the Internet Gods hate me. And, you know, I do know these things. But somewhere in the execution, they get ignored, or forgotten, and then I lose entire posts. Then I get angry. Then I realize I'd just written another stupid rant about fat people that wasn't particularly funny, just really angry, at fat people, and at the Nets, and at Mike Bibby too for some reason. Sooooo yeah. Despondency won the day, and I abandoned all hope of getting any posts up anytime soon. Because my feelings toward the Nets, and I'd imagine the Nets' feelings toward themselves likely parallel this lost-post feeling. They're losing games by making the same mistakes as always. And they're not caring/trying enough for whole games, but also not caring/trying enough to put forth the effort to remedy the situation before it's too late. They've just been really frustrating to watch. They consistently toe the line of mediocrity, occasionally playing like champs, occasionally playing like scrubs, but mostly just playing like....meh. There's not a lot to write about a team like that without rehashing over and over the same complaints about what's being done wrong, and what needs improvement, particularly when the same issues continue to plague the below-par play on the court. I say this knowing full well the Nets can turn it around and rip off one of those mid-season 10 game win streaks next week if something clicks. So, hopefully my saving of this post after every sentence or so is paralleled by some continuous positive trends on the court from my boys. Despondency has no place in the NBA.
As always, the root of the problem is our self-assured baller, who now keeps the dubious company of Tim Thomas, Kwame Brown and Eddy Curry in terms of effort and drive, at least according to other players. Nice to know they agree with me. Would be nicer if he just played a little harder and the team won more games. Ah well.
Been keeping busy watching other basketball. Hopped onto the Blazers bandwagon about a month ago. Enjoyed the Kings very much, right up until Bibby's return. Hoping Reggie sees the light and sits his ass down, or the Maloofs trade his not-in-a-gang ass. I do heart me some Francisco Garcia, really REALLY heart me some Brad Miller, Kevin Martin is just freaking fabulous, and I will never ever tire of Mikki Moore's facial expressions or his reactions to good things happening on the court. So the Blazers and the Kings- they've been supplying me w/ the means to yell at the television in delight while my own allegiance has left me a bit deprived.
Anyway, here is some deliciously down-home Brad Miller. Just because, that's why.
I also checked out the Dakota Wizards during the D-League showcase the other night so I could get an extended look at the Boom Tho Movement. I would seriously marry Rod Benson tomorrow, given the opportunity. Twice. He's like a less deranged version of Gilbert, with twice the intelligence. And I love Gilbert!
So yeah. Hopefully some more Nets content eventually, once there's actually something interesting to write about. If not, I may subject you all to some things that are on the newer side to me- college basketball? Hockey? Bikini rodeo pie-fighting? Stay tuned!
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This post brought to you by Boki's Slovenian hotness.
Is this the problem, right here?
"We've played with this before. We were out looking in and ended up in the sixth spot and got to the second round. We just got to keep fighting. Hopefully we can put a nice win streak together or go 15 out of 18. That would definitely help."
So like...that's the plan? A page out of the old Lakers handbook? JKidd going the way of Shaq, or even LeBron? A little of the old "Take it easy and we can turn it on when we have to" strategy? Because last I checked, that didn't work out all that well.
Kidd is better than that. Here's hoping he's just trying to maintain a positive attitude, and it just came out wrong.
We also feel the need to address the unsubstantiated and most likely bogus VC engagement rumors. Because what else does one do on a blog other than fan the flames of blatently false accusations of fidelity?
Having no connect inside the organization whatsoever, I have consulted the most reliable source for information of this nature- the NBA Girlfriend Forum. Of course!
Vince and I went to Tenjune in NYC this weekend after he and his team stunk up the joint in Jersey and lost to the Celtics. Nets Dancer? yeah right. Vince is not serious with anyone right now, and I know that for a fact. Though he may be fucking her, any thing more serious than that is a lie. Im fucking him right now, and I know he's fucking another model chick ( who I can't stand) right now as well. Her name is Alisha Conty, anyone who is close to Vince knows who she is, and anyone who is close to him would know who I am as well. |
Then there are some allegations of Vince spreading around the Herp.
So we here at The GOY have come to the conclusion that...NBA groupies are classy individuals.
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The post in which I throw up a bunch of links and random-ass thoughts because it's not freaking 5:00 yet...
And uh...some Randy Orton slash fiction apparently?
Every time I think I'm going to write a blog post, and promise to do so, I end up not doing it. And every time I swear I won't be posting, so as to finish things or study for things, I overly do it. My blogging is the equivalent of being the "Every guy I really want is not interested in me and every guy that really wants me I'm not interested in" girl. And that sucks, cuz that bitch is whiny.
First, this classic SNL piece, which I thought was pretty closely mirrored by all the Heath Ledger coverage on Tuesday. The "Saturday Night Live: Best of Eddie Murphy" is a VHS that still gets some play in my house...yes, even though it is a VHS. So that should tell you something.
Then, there was an ESNEWS video w/ my current favorite Net, Sean Williams, as pointed out by MCB and Nets Daily. Only now it's gone. Which sucks. Because it was freaking fantastic. I'll keep an eye out for its return. Because in Nets land, the entertainment is not present on the court these days. Believe that.
For real, I was all excited to watch Nets vs. Kings and then not only did my boys let the Kings put up 5 3's in the 1st quarter, they basically decided not to try for the rest of the game. Then I go to watch the Kings last night and root for them against the Clippers (since I clearly couldn't root for them against the Nets, because like...it's the Nets) and of course they get blown the fuck out by the Clippers. It's ridiculous. I can't win. Now not only is my life the anti-serendipity, so is my NBA fandom.
Speaking of the Kings though, it's nice to see Ron-Ron back in action. (And like booooooo Villa. Unless they were just trying to provoke him into being CRAZY, in which case...hee.) I do like though that every time he gets knocked down, instead of giving him the helping hand up, other players (opponents and teammates alike) kind of just pat him on the head or shoulder but make sure to keep their distance, cuz that motherfucker's crazy.
Annnd speaking of crazy...
Being a Mets and Giants fan, I don't concern myself with the New England sports scene. I was too young to remember Mookie Wilson's grounder roll through Bill Buckner's legs, effectively ripping the hearts out of Red Sox nation and placing a dark cloud of despair over an area stretching from Rhode Island to Maine. Living in New York and being friends with numerous avid Yankee fans I've been an outside observer to the ferocious New York-Boston rivalry, but have never had the opportunity to participate first hand.
Fast forward to last Sunday as the Giants lead by a cast of improbable heroes including a QB who was a draft bust as recently as week 15, a cornerback left for dead on the bench mid-season and a WR braving the -4 degree temps with a busted ankle, knee and pinky took down mighty Brett Favre in Lambeau in an overtime thriller for the ages. As journeyman Lawrence Tynes joined the history books becoming the first kicker to successfully make a 40+ yard field goal at Lambeau in the postseason, (it was a 47 yard FG to be exact) I lay on my living room floor hands raised to the heavens when it dawned on me: very fittingly, it was up to New York to derail the perfect season once again.
We have been there before. It was week 17 and the Giants had been given the thankless task of stopping New England's quest for the first ever 16-0 season. All week the questions loomed: Would the Giants play their starters in what was a meaningless game a week before the wild card round of the playoffs? If the starters began the game how long would they play? Would head coach Tom Coughlin be willing to risk injury to deny Tom Brady and Bill Belichick the NFL's first look at true 16 game regular season perfection?
Three road playoff wins and a Superbowl berth later and the Giants' on-field performance speaks louder than words. Tom Coughlin did in fact play his starters for the entire game and while New England achieved perfection that fateful night in East Rutherford, NJ, the Giants valiant effort and spirited play gave them the added confidence needed to get by the best the NFC has to offer and move onward to Arizona.
On February 3rd, the Giants and Patriots meet one more time in Superbowl XLII and I am prepared to say that a New York win on Sunday would dwarf any of the sports-related heartbreak the Empire State has ever inflicted on the greater New England area in the past. Forget Bucky Dent, Bill Buckner and Aaron Boone, no sports team has ever had more to lose in one game then the 2007-08 New England Patriots.
The Giants enter the Superbowl as 14 point underdogs, picked to lose by everyone expect their fans and hopefully family members. The Patriots on the other hand arrive in Arizona 18-0, one win away from attaining absolute perfection and establishing themselves as the single best sports team of all-time. A Patriots loss in a game that has been all but handed to them by every "expert," talking head and fan in the football community would go down as perhaps the greatest upset in the Superbowl era.
Although the Patriots stands at destiny's door, on hallowed ground never before touched by any NFL team, they also remain one loss away from going down in infamy and becoming a punchline for all eternity. In the end, New England's season will not be judged by 18-0, but rather by either 19-0 or 18-1. If the New York Giants are the ones handing them that 1 in the loss column, the ghost of Babe Ruth can finally take a breather.
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So it's like officially official that trade demands have been made.
Some reporters are taking an "I told you so" approach. Which is fair. What with all that silly migraine business and stuff.
But guess what? Everything out there today mentions the fact that Kidd is displeased with Carter and how crappy and unmotivated Carter is. And to that I say: No fucking duh.
Vince's contract fucks the Nets over. We knew it then. We just did not know how MUCH it would fuck them over. Plunging the team to lottery levels and alienating the captain and best point guard in the league- that I did not see coming, at least not this quickly. So yes, Kidd is being a bratty dipshit, but if the Nets had just worked a sign & trade for VC or even let him fucking walk, we would not be having this discussion because I surmise they would be playing much better without his gimpy knees and pouty face and piss poor attitude, and JKidd would be happy and they would be winning and yayyyyyy........
Anyway. A few weeks still until the trade deadline. And a pleasant distraction in the Giants Super Bowl at least for the next few days.
As always, In Rod We Trust. No fire sales, please.
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