Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Drafting Jimmer

Much speculation has been surrounding the draft status of College Basketball folk legend Jimmer Fredette, and in anticipation of Thursday Night's Radio City Music Hall event I will offer my opinion on the matter. Regardless of my undeniable, and unconditional allegiance to the former BYU point guard, the answer to the Fredette draft puzzle is very simple. The closest form of basketball to the National Basketball Association is the NCAA. Jimmer Fredette, in all his glory, did nothing short of dominate College Basketball for two full years. He sliced up defenses nightly, posted astounding numbers, and rightfully coined a shooting range that was unimaginable prior to his appearance on the Mormon hardwood. Am I guaranteeing that Fredette will dominate the NBA, or even check out as half of what he was in college? Absolutely not. I am simply saying that NBA GM's have no reason not to take a shot with Fredette. His game may resemble that of those who have proven busts in the past, but his pure dominance in the NBA's tune up league is means for taking a draft day risk.

JD

Saturday, June 11, 2011

Smirk Nowitzki

When mauled by Miami defenders in this year's NBA Finals, Dirk Nowitzki has graciously accepted the routine whistle and proceeded to the charity stripe with a goofy grin across his face. The Smirk. The hardwoods of L.A., Portland, Oklahoma City, Dallas, and most recently South Beach have all collaborated to create Nowitzki's nation wide playground this post season, where he has dropped jaws on the monkey bars, and thrown opponents off the swings. In 2006, Dwayne Wade's Heat shocked Nowitzki and crew, when they erased a 2-0 series deficit to earn the Naismith Trophy with four straight stunning wins. Five years later, Dirk has Dallas a game away from capturing the Title that Wade single handedly stole from them; memories that Nowitzki revisits in the worst of late night dreams.

A Championship for Dallas would be the first for the franchise which debuted in the 1980-81 season. If the Mavs can achieve this elusive greatness Sunday Night, many critics will credit the victory to Lebron James' lack of late game luster. While James' on court woes and media antics have frequently made headlines this series, Nowitzki's lights out shooting and acrobatic heroics will in the end conquer all. If the Mavericks win, Dirk Nowitzki will hoist the trophy on basketball's biggest stage, and you better bet that he will be smirking; a nuance he continues to coin with every defender whom he makes silly.

JD

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Must Have Monta

Rumors have been circulating that a straight-up trade will send Andre Iguodala to the Golden State Warriors and bring Monta Ellis to Philadelphia. Since Allen Iverson left the South Philly hardwood some years ago now, the struggling Sixers have lacked the major component that every successful NBA team holds; a pure scorer. If the team can land Monta Ellis (who has averaged 20 points throughout his young career and around 25 in the past two seasons) they will insert a piece to a puzzle that has seen all too many "rebuilding" seasons. I have been a faithful Sixers fan ever since Allen Iverson lifted the team to a Finals birth in my first season as a fan, the pinnacle of my fan hood in 2001. I have no intentions of breaking the allegiance to my favorite basketball team in the near future, but if I have to watch Andre Iguodala heave up last second prayers with a defender who he is incapable of shaking off breathing down his neck, for a whole another season, I may take my love for the game somewhere else. Give me Monta Ellis; please give the faithful a scorer.

JD

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Playing The Game

Baseball's ultimate "gamer" Chase Utley is back in the Phillies' lineup, and seems to be the current cure for what was looking like a long term slump for the club. Last night, the Phils won in fashion, with a 5-4 walk-off victory in the bottom of the 19th down in South Philadelphia. Highlights of the game included a game tying home run by Ryan Howard in the bottom of the 10th, five scoreless relief innings from Danys Baez (who usually is ousted before he records three outs), and most notably a scoreless top of the 19th from utility infielder Wilson Valdez; who joined the likes of George Herman Ruth as the only player to start in the infield and eventually tab the win on the mound. When Jimmy Rollins crossed home plate the clock above Ashbourne Alley was resting its hands right around 1:30 AM. With a day game later "that day," Manuel inserted Michael Martinez, Dane Sardinha, and Wilson Valdez into the starting lineup. The offense posted 10 runs, behind two hits and three RBI's from one Cliff Lee, and a three-run homer from the surging Raul Ibanez. When Cliff's line was closed in the 8th, the Phils held a 10-4 lead thanks to Chase Utley's first home run of the season; didn't keep the fans waiting too long. Jose Contreras made his first appearance off the DL and set the Reds down 1-2-3 in the ninth and the Fightin Phils pranced away with another series win in their back pocket. It seems to all be clicking right about now, and all the men in red are doing, is simply playing the game.

JD

Monday, May 16, 2011

Chasing Answers

Even though our hometown Phils are head and shoulders above the whole National League entering play Monday night, the night to night favorites haven't been exactly cruising. I have been on the success train with the Phils since play began on April 1st, and am wondering if I am the only fan who finds it painful to watch our lineup hit? Just a month and a half into the season the absence of Chase Utley has been magnified with every blank frame that the club posts in the box score each night. As the Phillies continue to lean on their stellar starting staff for consistent production, the team, front office, and fan base yearns for their prized second basemen more than ever. Surprisingly enough, the answers to the Phillies offensive woes don't only rest on the DL, but in their slumping corner outfield positions, who should be replaced even before we get "The Man" back.

As of Sunday May 15th, Wilson Valdez's .239 average has made him a virtual hole amidst the Phils linep, while his unofficial platoon partner Pete Orr's posting of .259 in limited at-bats hardly helps the cause. It is easy to say that the return of Chase Utley, in what will hopefully be in the near future, will quickly cure the offensive problems that have presented themselves so far this season. Aside from the Utley injury-saga, I will openly say that I am losing faith in "doing the right thing," playing a guy because he "deserves" the spot, or because he has "earned it" with some set of statistics that we just don't see. Charlie Manuel will ramble on about the lineup spot that he owes to 57 year-old vet Raul Ibanez, or career bench player Ben Francisco who hits with a cheese grater stick. The more John Mayberry Jr. and Ross Gload produce when called upon, the more I lose faith in Charlie's philosophy; which may have won us games in the past, but is losing us games now.

JD

Sunday, May 15, 2011

The Best Friends: The Public Enemies

Is the constant ESPN coverage on the long lasting Lebron-D-Wade friendship supposed to make us feel better about the events that ensued last summer? Frankly, Lebron's announcement show, the arrival party for the big three in Miami, and the talk of "6 championships" still all makes me want to puke. The Miami Heat have hit their stride, and steamrolled both the 76er's and Boston Celtics to prove so. There are two hopes left to stop the the Miami Thrice from winning their first championship in their first year together, and that is the Chicago Bulls and a Western Conference representative in June. I would want to see nothing more than a Miami fall this post-season, which would trigger a drama-filled off-season for Lebron, Wade, Bosh, and most importantly baby coach Eric Spoelstra. There are talks of Dwight Howard moving to LA, or even Chris Paul finding a home in The Big Apple. If the Bulls or a Western Conference opponent can hold off the Heat, the inspired players around the league can form their own power houses this coming summer, and make sure Lebron will forever remain "ring-less."

JD