Friday, October 31, 2008

Time For Browns To Show Consistency

by Greg Kozarik

As Clevelanders, we expect the worse to go along with a long with a lot of highs and lows and the way this year’s Browns team has played, it just fits right into the mold of Cleveland. Inconsistency has been the team’s best feature, but maybe at home against the Ratbirds, err Ravens, they could show that this is a good team.
The Browns will need to change a few things this time around. Despite losing to Baltimore the first time around, the Browns controlled the momentum throughout the first half and part of the third quarter. Derek Anderson threw two really bad passes that ended up in picks, one for a touchdown and the other ended deep in Browns’ territory.
This time, the Browns need to run, run and run more. In the first meeting, Jamal Lewis was really beating down the defense, then the picks happened and the team went away from the run. Baltimore statistically might be at the top of the league in run defense but they you can run on them. Baltimore does not stuff the run like Pittsburgh or Tennessee.
Second, the offensive line needs to do a better job this time around. The Browns must avoid third and longs since this is what the Ravens defense thrives on. Do not give them a chance to pin their ears back and come with an all-out blitz. DA has to realize when to check out of a play and Braylon Edwards has to know when he becomes the hot receiver.
The Browns defense has to step up and put pressure on rookie Joe Flacco. Make him uncomfortable in the pocket and make him try to beat the defense with his arm. The defense must contain the Ravens’ running game and not let them dictate the pace of the game. The defense has steadily improved each game and that must continue. Flacco will have a hard enough time with the raucous crowd that should help the defense.
Finally, the special teams needs to show up in a big way. The Ravens have had mental lapses in the past two games with their special teams. Josh Cribbs must make some big runs and take advantage against an average coverage team.
The Browns need to shed the tag of an inconsistent team and start to make their push towards the playoffs. This team has two must win games at home but they cannot look past Baltimore. With two wins at home, this team will be poised to make their move and possible give this city a playoff team.

Thursday, October 30, 2008

Gibson, Cavs cruise past Charlotte

By Johnny Russo

The Cavs looked much sharper tonight than they did in their opening night loss in Boston on Tuesday. They hosted the Charlotte Bobcats in Charlotte's first game of the season and their first game under new head coach Larry Brown. 

The Cavs started the game off well and controlled a solid lead throughout most of the game. They led by as many as 23-points and finished with a 96-79 victory. Mike Brown again went with a 10 man rotation and he was also able to limit everybody's minutes. He has said that he would like to keep Lebron's minutes under 40 a game this year and so far he has done that in the first two games. Lebron played 36 minutes against Boston and 30 tonight. Delonte and Z also played 30 minutes each tonight and Mo Williams led the team with 32 minutes.

"Im probably gonna play 10 guys going into our next game", said Mike Brown.

"I understand that playing 10 guys you can't do that, but as long as we can win with it, it's gonna buy me some time to look at guys and some different combinations because who knows who I am going to start at the two guard next game."
"But eventually it's gonna come down to 9 and come playoff time it will probably be at 8," he added.

Daniel Gibson had a huge night in 31 minutes off the bench. He erupted for 20-points in the first half and he finished with 25-points and 4 three's on 10-of-14 shooting. Due to the multiple players that are able to penetrate, Gibson was able to get many wide-open looks that he was able to knock down. 

"That's the thing about this team", said Gibson.

"We have so many weapons that it's hard for a team to lock in on me because we have so many guys on the floor that can make plays. Tonight I was the guy that found the open spots and I got a couple to go."

The tough defensive play and the inside presence that Ben Wallace brought tonight is something that Cavs fans would like to see more often. In 24-minutes, Big Ben pulled down 10 rebounds and blocked 5 shots. He showed no signs of his back bothering him and he looked like the Ben Wallace we know from Detroit.

"I just wanted to be active", said Ben.

"I've been able to do what I need to do to keep my back feeling good. The trainers and everybody have been working hard to try and keep my health right. I have to continue to do what we have been doing these last couple weeks and try and have a healthy season."

Cleveland's only let up tonight once again came in the third quarter. I don't know what goes on in the locker room at half, but we don't come out with the same firepower or sense of urgency in the third. This was the only quarter that the Bobcats outscored us in, 26-18. At one point our 19-point lead turned in to just a 5-point lead with four minutes left in the third. Mo Williams did a great job turning the game back in our favor by encouraging the team to step it up on defense. He also came up with some key buckets late in the third and early in the fourth to get our momentum back.

Mo finished the game with 17-points and 7-assists on 7-of-14 shooting. Lebron James bounced back from Tuesday's loss to finish with 22-points, 9-rebounds and 9-assists on 7-of-15 shooting and 8-of-12 from the line. Zydrunas chipped in with 11-points and Delonte West added 9.

The Cavs will travel to play a very tough New Orleans team on Saturday night.

How Does That Taste Mark Shapiro?

by Greg Kozarik

As Progressive Field sits quiet and we wait to see what great moves Indians GM Mark Shapiro will make over the winter, the Philadelphia Phillies celebrate their first world series crown since 1980. Did anyone notice that they were led by manager Charlie Manuel?
Yes that is the same manager that won 90 games in his first two years as manager of the Indians and then was fired in July of 2002. This was former GM John Hart’s pick and when Shapiro took over it was clear that Manuel would not have his contract renewed after the 2002 season was over. Shapiro wanted his own guy and went after Eric Wedge, who must be the second coming of Casey Stengel and after six years this revelation has not come true.
Since Manuel became manager of the Phillies in 2005, they haven’t finished below second place and have won two division titles and now a World Series title. Wedge has finished third twice and fourth twice to go with his one division title. Shapiro claimed the move to hire Wedge was the way he with the younger guys.
Well, Manuel was great with the younger guys; just ask Jim Thome what he meant to his career. Manuel was the same guy who fought to have C.C. Sabathia on the roster in 2000 claiming he was ready for the big leagues. Just ask the stars on the Phillies like Chase Utley, Ryan Howard, Cole Hamels, Jimmy Rollins and Carlos Ruiz, how good Manuel is. By the way, these are all homegrown guys for the Phillies.
Shapiro must really know what he is doing since we haven’t won anything of any significance since Mike Hargrove left. Matter of fact, 1997 was the last time the team won the American League pennant. Shapiro should be disgusted that he fired this manager and I hope he sees the joy that comes from winning the World Series.
Manuel is a baseball guy through and through and would have been perfect to develop a young Indians team. This isn’t coming from someone who is jumping on the bandwagon, but back in 2002, I wrote on how bad of a move it was to fire Manuel. He is in the same mold of Twins manager Ron Gardenhire.
We are stuck with Wedge and he is not the worst manager but he has issues with too many players, just ask Brandon Phillips. He doesn’t handle the pressure well and it shows in his team. But next year, when Tribe fans are just waiting for Browns training camp to start and Progressive Field sits half empty in July, maybe people will start wishing Manuel was back here.
Also, maybe this win for Manuel will shut up Hargrove for good now. Grover complained that Manuel backstabbed him and that he helped with Hart’s decision fire him after the 1999 season. Well, I hope Hargrove sees this is how you win the World Series.
The firing of Manuel six years ago was one of the first in a long line of bad moves made by boy genius Shapiro. The celebration was awesome to see for a guy who resembles a true old school baseball guy. Hats off to you Charlie Manuel, nobody deserves this more than you!!

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

New Season, Same Bad Habits For Cavs


by Greg Kozarik

It is only one game into this 2008-09 season, but Tuesday night’s loss to the Boston Celtics showed the Cavaliers have to overcome some bad habits that we have seen in the last three years.
This is just an observation and does not mean the Cavaliers are not an elite team, but some of the disturbing play we seen last night must stop. A lot of this falls directly on head coach Mike Brown. Brown is a good coach, but he has some deficiencies and must stop some of his bad habits.
First off, the idea of a starting backcourt of Mo Williams and Delonte West is a major problem. West should be coming off the bench and he needs to be the leader when the second unit comes in, not Daniel Gibson. Gibson played awful last night and needs to realize that he is not LeBron James. He cannot hold the ball the entire shot clock and take a wild jumper at the end.
Starting either Wally Szczerbiak or Sasha Pavlovic should start at the two-guard because a pure shooter is what would fit perfect in that spot. Plus, Brown does not have to play either of these guys more than 15 minutes a game. Just because they start does not mean they have earned the right to play big minutes.
If Brown could ever control Anderson Varejao and get him to play within the scheme, then he could be a viable back up. Varejao gives you flashes of brilliance and then commits silly fouls and often finds himself out of position.
My biggest problem I saw is the lack of energy and execution coming out of halftime. This has been a major issue since Brown has been head coach. What is said at halftime? Why do the Cavs have these third quarter meltdowns every game? This has to be solved immediately.
When a lead slips away and the opposing team goes on a run, Brown takes way to long to stop the run and call timeout. Lakers head coach Phil Jackson is a master of knowing when to call timeouts to stop or prevent runs by the other team. Brown needs to learn when to take timeouts.
Also, as the Celtics started to pull away early in the fourth quarter, Brown refused to put James and Williams in till the eight-minute mark, why? It is about winning the game and not waiting till it says a certain time to put players back in.
The Cavaliers also need to better understand game management down the stretch and quit settling for jump shots. Drive to the hoop and make something happen.
Lastly, this falls on the superstar. To become one of the very best, James needs to MAKE your free throws down the stretch. Why has this become a lost art in the NBA? James clanked three-of-four from the charity stripe thus giving the Cavaliers no shot at winning the game.
The Cavaliers just played one game, but the mistakes that are made are things we have seen from this team over the past three seasons. These are all correctable but they need to be pointed out and fixed now and not in April when it is too late.

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Cavs start strong, but can't hold off Boston in opener

By Johnny Russo

No more training camp, no more preseason games, no more roster cuts, the season is finally here!

 The Cavs drew a very tough task in playing the champion Boston Celtics the first game of the season. Prior to the tip-off, the Celtics gained a little extra motivation after receiving their championship rings and raising their 17th championship banner.  

After an emotional ceremony, the Celtics came out a little shaky and we were able to go on a 10-0 run to gain an early lead. Big Z went 4-of-4 from the line and scored 7-points in the first quarter. Everybody was contributing and we held a 28-22 lead at the end of the first.

We started the second quarter with our full second unit in the game. We played well defensively and Boston was really struggling from the floor. With two minutes left in the half, Delonte West threw Lebron James a monster alley-oop and we closed out the half with a 50-43 lead.

The Cavs' third quarter struggles in the past continued to haunt them tonight. We were outscored 24-13 and we allowed Paul Pierce to go off for 11-points. Once we started to lose momentum, we fell in love with jump shots that just weren't falling (just like last year). This is where it really hurts not having a reliable low-post scorer. Our offense yet again relied on the high-pick n' roll that Boston defends very well. At the end of the third our deficit was only four, 67-63.

The combination of the Celtics' Leon Powe and Tony Allen off the bench really gave Boston a spark in the fourth quarter. Allen scored 7-points in the fourth and Powe had two huge dunks that put the momentum in favor of Boston. One was off of a Lebron missed free throw where he dunked it and was fouled by Varejao. This gave Boston an 88-84 lead with 5 seconds left. Lebron missed two clutch free throws down the stretch that would have led to a one possession game and the Celtics barely held on to a 90-85 victory. Finals MVP Paul Pierce continued playing well against us and finished with a game-high 27-points.

Mo Williams made his Cavaliers debut by going 4-of-10 shooting with 12-points and three 3's. He had some errors on defense and a few costly turnovers, but he showed signs of his speed and how he would like to push the ball. We weren't able to get in the open court and run the break as much as we would have liked to. Most of that reason being that we were playing against an excellent half court team. I see us looking to really push the ball more as the season goes on. 

As for the crowded backcourt, Mike Brown started Delonte and gave him and Mo the majority of the minutes. On several occasions we seen a three guard rotation with Lebron at the 4-spot. This was a rotation that Mike Brown had mentioned during training camp and it should work to our advantage once it develops. Gibson came off of the bench and played 22-minutes while Wally played 15 and Sasha was held to only 12. 

Lebron finished the game with 22-points, 7-rebounds and 6-assists, but he struggled from the free throw line going 4-of-8. Ilguaskas had a strong opening night and he finished with 15-points and 8-rebounds while going 9-of-10 from the line. 

The Cavs' next game will be the home opener against the Charlotte Bobcats on Thursday.

Someone Wake Up Rip Van Tressel!


by Greg Kozarik

As Buckeye nation will become furious with this blog, it is time to face the truth about Ohio State head coach Jim Tressel especially now that we have had a few days to let that awful loss to Penn State sink in.
Tressel has consistently been his own worst enemy this season, one in which a team full of returning starters from last year's squad that went to the national championship game. The Penn State game was like watching the Woody Hayes offense but a lot less creative.
Offensive Coordinator Jim Bollman is part of the problem as his play-calling is predictable and unimaginative as it has been evident all season. Tressel has not adjusted this problem and doesn't see it as an issue. Watching grass grow is more enjoyable than watching the Ohio State offense.
Tressel is a good coach but from elite as most Buckeye fans like to think. His in-game adjustments are worse than Romeo Crennel and games at the Division I level are not won on just talent alone when facing someone other than Troy or Indiana.
Just look at the two national championship games where the adjustments were not made and then look at the USC game or Penn State game from this year. Make an adjustment once in a while, you are allowed to do that during a game.
Yes, Tressel won a national championship in 2002 but let us not forget that the majority of that team were John Cooper recruits. Do these names ring a bell: Craig Krenzel, Michael Jenkins, Will Smith, Kenny Peterson, Matt Wilhelm, Cie Grant, Mike Doss and Donnie Nickey? They were all major contributors on the championship team and all Cooper recruits.
If Tressel was such a great coach and as good as guys like Les Miles and Urban Meyer, why did it take so long for him to get a big time Division I job? Tressel is a good recruiter but does not have the moxie at recruiting that Cooper had. He may get more Ohio kids than Cooper, but where has that gotten the Buckeyes?
The time has come to quit talking about Tressel as one of the greatest coaches in the country. There are about 20 coaches that come to mind that would do a better job at coaching football than Tressel. He is lucky to be in the little 10 because his game-day coaching would be exposed more if OSU were in a conference that doesn't play football like it is 1962.
The Buckeyes need to fire Bollman and bring in someone that understands what an offense should look like or else Terrelle Pryor will be crying on why he chose OSU. If the old man Joe Paterno can run a wide-open offense than why can't Tressel?
The time has come for Tressel to start taking the heat that he deserves. Wake up Buckeye fan and realize what is going on and take off those scarlet and gray-colored glasses. It is 2008, not 1968 and the Buckeyes are taking a step back with each game with Bollman as the offensive coordinator. Tressel needs to take control and put this team into the present and not the past.
If this stubbornness by Tressel continues, watch out when Rich Rodriguez gets the players he wants in the system at Michigan. Buckeye fan, the only way to prepare for that is to keep playing the 2007 Illinois-OSU tape and you can expect more games like that. Tressel must change with the times and do it sooner than now because 2002 was a long time ago.

Monday, October 27, 2008

Wait, The World Series is on?

By Ben Chew

Well most of you were probably as confused as I was that playoff baseball is still currently being played with game five tonight (as of this blog post) How many of you can guess who is leading the series or even better who was the winning pitcher in game four? (If you said, Joe Blanton. Give yourself a cookie)

It’s not that I am not a fan of baseball, that is not a true statement. However, the popularity of baseball has gone by the wayside which is sad if you consider that it is allegedly the “American Pastime.” However the MLB reached its day of reckoning when the Tampa Bay Rays upset the Boston Red Sox to have the matchup of the Philadelphia Phillies-Tampa Bay Rays in the World Series which will live in infamy due to the ratings.

Specifically the day of World Series game three which started at 10 pm est due to a rain delay, yeah that is correct on the eastern time-zone it started at 10pm. Most of you were probably out partying or doing something more proficient with your time. I watched the entire game and honestly I cannot recall anything specific related to the game. (I do remember that Taylor Swift did sing the National Anthem and the umpteenth Til Death episode in place of World Series baseball)

How in the hell did baseball fall this far? I know a lot of you out there are probably going to say that the 1994 strike is at fault. This does seem to be a factor but that was 14 years ago. The NBA was locked out in 1999 and it has steadily gotten back into the public mind.

Maybe the voice of Fox baseball Joe Buck is partly right that we as Americans have so many options in our lives that sitting down to watch a three hour baseball game is too much. Think about when you were a kid, without the internet/DVD’s/etc. it would be assumed that you were limited in your options and your only option was to watch the game. Now you can catch your favorite episode of your favorite sitcom on the Internet and watch that hot Britney Spears video on youtube. You can do both of that while keeping up-to-date on the game on your favorite sports site gamecast.

It really is sad at some points to see MLB fall this far where episodes of Heroes, CSI, How I Met your Mother, The Office, Prison Break, House, and even Chuck all top the ratings for game three and game four. In the end, maybe baseball in the words of Taylor Swift has “Teardrops on their metaphorical guitar” but in the end it isn’t self-inflected but a sign of the times and the change that we have undergone in the year 2000's.

Tucker Has The ‘Bend Don’t Break’ Defense Working

by Greg Kozarik

Once again the Browns have proven that they are consistently inconsistently as they shocked the Jacksonville Jaguars 23-17 in Jacksonville. Major kudos has to go to defensive coordinator Mel Tucker, who has this defense playing extremely well with some major holes on that side of the ball.
Tucker is in his first year as the team’s defensive coordinator after serving three years as the secondary coach. The Cleveland native took over after the firing of Todd Grantham. Tucker has taken a defense that lacks the right players and has them playing above and beyond their abilities.
The Browns do not have the right linebackers to play the 3-4 but what Tucker has them doing is just amazing. The linebacking core of Andra Davis, D’Qwell Jackson, Kamerion Wimbley and rookie Alex Hall with an aging Willie McGinest in the mix is hardly a dynamic group. Davis and McGinest are too slow, Jackson always trails the play and ‘Mr. Invisible’ Kamerion Wimbley hasn’t shown up to play since his rookie year in 2006, but they are stopping teams when they have to.
The heart of a 3-4 is the linebackers, just look at Baltimore and Pittsburgh and compare the players they have at the same positions. Also, let us not forget that major injuries to LB Antwan Peek and DE Robaire Smith have hampered the defense as well and Tucker has held them all together.
Sunday’s win just proved that the ‘bend don’t break’ style of defense is working. The Jaguars quarterback David Garrard threw for 283 yards and they held the edge in time of possession by a 35:05 to 24:55 advantage. The defense stepped up and made plays when they had to.
With just under two minutes left, Jacksonville moved the ball deep into Cleveland territory and the defense came up with two huge plays. First, it started with a sack by Brodney Pool and then Nick Sorenson knocked a ball away from Jags’ receiver Matt Jones, who appeared to have the ball in his hands. The credit has to go to Mel Tucker for what he has done with this group of players.
Tucker’s defensive is averaging just 12.5 points allowed over the last six games and this includes the Baltimore game in which two touchdowns were scored by the Ravens defense. This defense has kept the Browns in every game despite the erratic play of Derek Anderson and the rest of the offense.
Also, one other major move has contributed to the defense and that was the trade that brought Shaun Rogers to the Browns. Rogers has been nothing but superb this season and had a great game Sunday which included a blocked field goal.
Tucker has this defense playing with confidence and that will only grow as this team wins. He has these guys playing above and beyond what was expected from them. The teams’ strength was supposed to be on offense but the tide is quickly changing as Tucker’s defense is becoming the face of the 2008 Cleveland Browns.

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Kellen Who?

By Tony Mazur

The past week has not been one to remember for the Cleveland Browns. The Kellen Winslow, Jr., debacle was filled with backstabbing and deceit. There are so many questions that have yet to be answered. On top of all of that, the Browns had just come off a disappointing loss to the Washington Redskins. This week in Jacksonville was critical.

With Winslow on the inactive list, tight ends Steve Heiden and Darnell Dinkins had to step up big. Heiden did in a big way with a 51-yard reception to the goal line on fourth down, resulting in a Donte' Stallworth 3-yard touchdown. Both Heiden and Dinkins stepped up with big blocks, a part of the game that is foreign to Kellen Winslow. Also, Steve Heiden has sure hands, if Derek Anderson can get the ball to him. Last week, Heiden was a non-factor in the offense, thus resulting in a loss.

The question begs to be asked, is Kellen Winslow, Jr.'s, tenure in Cleveland running out?

Winslow is one of the best tight ends in the NFL, and I'm sure general managers around the league would jump at the chance of signing him for 2009. But has he burnt all of his bridges with the Browns' organization, or vice versa? Or is this all water under that said bridge? Kellen wants a big-time deal, but are the Browns willing to reward him?

No matter where Winslow ends up, he certainly will be the X-factor for an offense.

Has Randy Lerner Cut The Legs Out From Under Phil Savage?

So now it is being reported that Browns owner Randy Lerner has called Kellen Winslow, personally apologized, and rescinded the suspension. Winslow gets his $235K pay check back, he doesn't play against Jacksonville because of logisitical reasons and he pays a $25K fine.

So it appears that everything is resolved and things can move forward.

Don't count on it... here's why.

The fact Lerner stepped in to fix this - to me - is a clear indication that not only was Winslow unjustly punished for telling the truth, Lerner obviously doesn't think Browns GM Phil Savage has the ability (or tact) to handle this matter professionally and personally. That's a problem.

If anyone reading this thinks that Phil Savage has NOT suffered major damage to his position and power in the organization then you clearly are not paying attention.

Adding to this public relations/player personnel nightmare is the fact that the team Savage built is inadequate on the field and nowhere close to being a playoff caliber team yet alone a Super Bowl contender.

Prior to arriving in Cleveland, Savage built a reputation of having a keen eye for talent and evaluating that talent. Now it's apparent that's about all he has going for him (and even that may be a stretch).

If anyone can provide a list of Savage's draft picks and how they are doing I'd love to see it.

The only person in the organization right now who clearly has been vindicated in all of this is Kellen Winslow, Jr. and I applaud him for speaking the truth. And if the reports are accurate that he basically put a certain 'Browns employee' in her place all the better - most of the media won't admit it, but I will - dealing with many of Browns front office people or some their underlings is as pleasant as getting a root canal - and that is a shame.

Sometimes I wonder if the Browns are more focused on who keeps their power/jobs/reputation vs. putting a winning team on the field.

I know that after seeing the 'Winslow/Savage Show' unfold this week who's stock has risen and who's stock has plummeted.

Just ask Randy Lerner...

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Saturday, October 25, 2008

Williams Finding His Groove

by Greg Kozarik

The biggest off season move the Cavaliers made was the trade that brought point guard Mo Williams here. GM Danny Ferry recognized the need for a true point that can break down defenses and hit open shots.
Williams has a lot to offer the Cavs that they have not had here since the LeBron James era started. The closest the Cavs came to that type of point guard was the 31 games in 2003-04 when they acquired Jeff McInnis. We all remember how that ended.
Friday night, the Cavaliers finished the preseason with 107-80 victory over the Washington Wizards and in the game Williams finished with 15 points and was a perfect 4-for-4 from the free throw line. His career free throw percentage is 85% and this is an area that has haunted the Cavaliers for a long time.
Williams also is deadly from three-point range as he is a career 36% shooter from long range. Friday night he showed fans in Columbus just what they can expect. He hit his only three-point attempt and consistently broke down the Wizards’ defense and found the open man.
Williams looked like a bigger version of what the Cavs saw last year in the playoffs against Boston as Rajon Rondo consistently kept the defense on their heels. Williams now gives the Cavs someone that can do that for them rather than against them.
The flow of the game is much faster with Williams whether it is off a made basket or a miss. He seems to be in a perfect rhythm with James already, even with a patent handshake between the two. He is also starting to gel with his other teammates as well.
With the addition of Williams, Delonte West has looked better at the two-guard, though ideally being the first one off the bench would be the best spot for him. Daniel Gibson has looked better and even added a teardrop jumper to his game. Pavlovic and Szczerbiak have had wide open shots as well as Ilguaskas.
Williams is the type of player the Cavaliers have longed for and his energy should help propel this team deep into the playoffs. The Cavaliers seem to be hitting their stride as the season is set to begin next Tuesday in Boston. As for Williams, Cavaliers fans will definitely love his style of play.

Friday, October 24, 2008

Holy Crap, Someone has got to call Horatio

By Ben Chew

Obviously most of you know that some of us at AM Mayhem like the brilliance of CSI Miami where the lead character is played by David Caruso who is mostly known for his one-liners on the show. Well this story that I've come across might be described by Horatio as a "The information super highway might have taken another victim" (Cue the CSI Miami Music)

In Tokyo, recently a 43-year old women is being charged with killing her virtual husband (not the actual guy) in the virtual world. Yes, you read what I just typed. They were part of an MMORPG called Maple Story (which is much like World of Warcraft) and through this became online husband and wife. She then hacked into his account to plan the murder of his character when they broke up.

It is quoted in this article, "The woman, who is jailed on suspicion of illegally accessing a computer and manipulating electronic data, used his identification and password to log onto popular interactive game "Maple Story" to carry out the virtual murder in mid-May." The article continues to talk about she plans no retribution in real life.

Just when you thought that you heard it all, this story comes up.

Cavaliers Set For Championship Run

by Greg Kozarik

The Cavaliers will play their final preseason game Friday night in Columbus against their playoff rival Washington Wizards. The Cavs finalized their roster on Thursday in a training camp that had little excitement since there were no injuries or holdouts to be concerned with.
One year ago, the Cavs were dealing with holdouts from Anderson Varejao and Sasha Pavlovic along with the injury factors that plagued Larry Hughes his whole career. Just a side note here, Hughes will miss six to eight weeks for the Bulls with a shoulder injury. Now you should be glad he is no longer a Cavalier.
A year ago, the Cavs big off-season move was the signing of Devin Brown. This year the team added dynamic point guard Mo Williams. Also, the Cavs had a first round draft pick which they used on J.J. Hickson. Hickson has had a typical rookie training camp with the usual ups and downs.
The Cavs also added some youth in guards Tarence Kinsey and St. Edward/North Carolina grad Jawad Williams along with some veteran help inside in center Lorenzen Wright. Don’t forget about rookie forward Darnell Jackson who is currently out with a wrist injury.
This year’s squad will be more exciting and possibly more up tempo since the team finally has a point guard in Williams. Plus, this gives the Cavs more depth with Delonte West coming off the bench. West really fit in with LeBron James and company last year after coming over at the trade deadline. He also had a great series in the loss to the Celtics in the second round of the playoffs.
The only undecided spot in the starting lineup is at the two-guard. Wally Szczerbiak and Pavlovic are battling for the spot along with Daniel Gibson. Whoever wins the spot just must play defense for head coach Mike Brown.
The biggest concern for the Cavaliers is the front court. Aging center Zydrunas Ilguaskas is strictly an offensive force and forward Ben Wallace is the opposite as he is in there for his defensive abilities. Varejao and Wright must give productive minutes off the bench and do not be surprised to see James play some at the power forward spot just like the Lakers did last year with Lamar Odom.
This will not be the roster that heads to the playoffs next April as GM Danny Ferry will most likely pull the trigger on a deal before February’s trading deadline. One thing that is certain is that this year’s ride should be a great one. Hopefully, this year’s ride ends on a warm June day with a parade down Euclid Avenue. Anything is possible as long as number 23 is here.

Thursday, October 23, 2008

I got your Diatribe swinging, pal

By Rick Morris

Cleveland's Scene Magazine approached its "Best of Cleveland: Indians Writer" designation of Paul Cousineau with every bit as much credibility as anything else in that over-the-hill rag.

The Diatribe guy? Really?

Although I think that the Tribe beat writers do a very nice job for the most part, I'm enough of a new media guy (look at where this is appearing, in a freaking blog!) to have an open mind about giving the award to a blogger. But this one?

Inasmuch as the honor was not called "Most Shameless Mark Shapiro Ass-Kisser Who Lies About Larry Dolan Not Being Cheap And Who Talks Down To Fans Who See Through The Front Office Ga-Ga And Who Reprints Their Propaganda Shamelessly" Award, I'd say the stoners at Scene need to put down the bong in the shape of Obama's head long enough to realize the backwardness and stupidity of their move.

When you figure that the enablers in the media buy the Dolans enough breathing room with gullible fans to never actually move into the fat part of the bell curve of MLB salaries, it's no exaggeration to say that "Cult of Shapiro" Kool-Aid drinkers like Cousineau are part of the reason this team got away with willfully accepting regression from the '07 ALCS rather than actually part with some caysh to improve. So to Paul Cousineau, I have only this to say: Thanks for helping to make more of my lifelong pain as an Indians fan possible by not speaking truth to power, you jerkoff! Enjoy your shiny award!

Who Would Buy This Book?

By Tony Mazur

(This is more of a social commentary than a sports-related piece, but it does have to do with an athletic team. Please forgive me.)

We are finished as Americans.

Two years have passed since the initial "crime", and a year and a half after the case was closed, Crystal Mangum is back in the spotlight, proclaiming her innocence once more.

Mangum has penned a memoir, called The Last Dance for Grace: The Crystal Mangum Story, about her "attack" by three Duke lacrosse players back in March 2006. Not only were Reade Seligmann, Collin Finnerty, and David Evans all proven not guilty, they were found innocent on all counts due to the constant inaccuracies in Mangum's account. She feels that she needs to defend herself and to tell her side of the story.

I want to know who is actually going to purchase this book. The book is filled with lies and inconsistencies. The fact that she hasn't been arrested and locked up for a long time for leading on not only the judge, the jury, and the prosecutors, but all of America. She was not raped. She was not beaten. The only thing she was was high on Ambien, methadone, Paxil and amitriptyline.

The problem with America is that people will go out a buy this fictional book. Whether they agree with Mangum's side of the story or not, you are filling her wallet with undeserved cash. The same people who will buy this are the ones who pre-ordered O.J. Simpson's If I Did It.

Do me a favor. Scratch that. Do the former Duke lacrosse players and their families a favor and DO NOT BUY THIS BOOK. If you want to read a book filled with incoherent ramblings and inaccuracies, then pick up The Audacity of Hope.

Speaking of the Duke lacrosse case, I still haven't heard an apology from Al Sharpton. Not only did he accuse the players before reading the facts, Sharpton also turned it into a racial case, since the "attackers" were white and the "victim" was a poor black girl. But when white police officers in Philadelphia were shot and killed by black criminals based on the color of their skin, Sharpton is more concerned about taking down Don Imus. Al, just go away.

Instant Replay Expands

By Tony Mazur

In 1999, the NFL unveiled a brilliant idea: instant replay. For years, calls on the field have been disputed over and over again. The outcomes of many games could have been much different if instant replay were in effect. Coach's Challenges have changed the game, and for the better.

It wasn't until 2008 that Major League Baseball instilled instant replay. The umpires were criticized all season for their poor judgment on home run calls, so Major League Baseball implemented instant replay for home run calls only, much to the chagrin of baseball purists such as Commissioner Bud Selig.

A few years ago, the NBA utilized instant replay to tell whether a shot went in before or after the buzzer. Now, as of October 23rd, the NBA's Board of Governors approved of expanded instant replay. It will be used to determine 2- and 3-point shots, fouls outside or within the 3-point arc, and if there is a clock malfunction.

I would like your feedback. Do you think instant replay is good for the respective game, or does it take away from the fact that we, including the umpires/referees, are all human?

Buckeyes Eyeing To Get Back In The Title Race


by Greg Kozarik

As the 10th-ranked Buckeyes prepare for their Saturday night showdown versus the third-ranked Penn State Nittany Lions, the national media fears the worst—a Buckeyes win. A win would put Ohio State in the thick of the national championship race.
The Buckeyes currently sit ninth in the latest BCS poll while Penn State sits third. A win will certainly jump the Buckeyes up in the polls and the BCS, but the teams battling in front of Ohio State have a much tougher road the rest of the season.
If the Buckeyes win, the road is tough be much more manageable than most teams. They will travel to 22nd-ranked Northwestern and then travel to Illinois before finishing at home with a terrible Michigan team.
As for the teams ahead of them, top-ranked Texas still has this Saturday’s game against sixth-ranked Oklahoma State, then at eighth-ranked Texas Tech and they still have to travel to 23rd-ranked Kansas. Second-ranked Alabama still has a big game against 13th-ranked LSU in Baton Rouge.
Fourth-ranked Oklahoma still has to battle with Texas Tech and Oklahoma State. Georgia, who is seventh in the BCS, still has to play this week at LSU, at home versus 10th-ranked Florida and at home against 18th-ranked Georgia Tech.
The one team that seems to have a smooth path to get themselves right back in the national championship is USC. The Trojans could be headed for a rematch against the Buckeyes, something that does not scare the Trojans. For the Buckeyes, a trip to the Orange Bowl might be a long shot now, but they should have been in the picture the whole time.
With a veteran team returning, Ohio State struggled early on and eventually needed a freshman quarterback, Terrelle Pryor, to bring the offense out of the doldrums. The defense just underachieved early on but now seems to be hitting its groove.
This is a trend that is new under head coach Jim Tressel. In the past, the Buckeyes have seemed to hit their peak to soon and would struggle down the stretch to win games. This year the struggles were early, one that included a shellacking at USC 35-3, but they might have turned the corner with their 45-7 beat down at Michigan State.
Seniors Malcolm Jenkins and James Laurinaitis are setting the tone on defense. As each game is played, Pryor seems to improve and the sky is the limited for someone with his talent. Don’t forget about running back Chris ‘Beanie’ Wells, who is just getting better and better as he is getting closer to 100 percent. He is getting his explosiveness back as his foot gets better.
The Buckeyes would love the chance to get revenge on the Trojans, but that is a bit down the road. Most national media pundits outside of ESPN’s Lou Holtz, do not want to see Ohio State in the title game again as well as fans outside of Buckeye nation. First things first, Ohio State must beat the Penn State Nittany Lions this Saturday in Columbus.

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Cavs Fall To Detroit, 97-79


By Johnny Russo

Another preseason game is in the books and that leaves only one game left before the season opener on Tuesday. Lebron James sat out tonight's game against Detroit as a precaution. Mike Brown slid Sasha down to small forward and started Delonte West at the two.

Mo Williams came out shooting the ball very well tonight. He connected on his first 3 shots and two of those were three's. His solid play continued throughout the game and he finished with 14-points and 4-assists on 4-of-9 shooting. 

Sasha Pavlovic looked much better attacking the basket tonight, but he is still struggling with his jump shot. He has been bothered with an ankle injury most of the preseason and you have to wonder if that is killing his confidence. He hasn't found any rhythm in his jumper and prior tonight he hadn't attacked the basket much. Late in the fourth quarter he had a powerful two-handed dunk in the lane, but he came down grimacing on that right ankle. Coach Mike Brown and his teammates appear to have a lot of confidence in him and hopefully he can return to full strength by the start of the season.

Rookie J.J Hickson hasn't impressed me too much over the preseason. We all know that he definitely has the size and athletic ability to become a good player, but he has been making too many "rookie" mistakes. Tonight he got his first two shots swatted and his third shot was some garbage off the glass that looked like he just threw up there. The two shots that he had blocked came after he gave his defender several pump-fakes. Sorry J.J, but those pump-fakes won't work in the NBA as they did in college. He was also called for setting an illegal pick and for shuffling his feet under the basket. He had a monster put-back dunk late in the third over Antonio McDyess that was really impressive, but he gave up a wide open dunk in the fourth for not rotating on defense. I don't mean to bash him too much because he is only a 20 year old rookie, but i just hope our big men stay healthy because he doesn't appear ready to take on big minutes just yet.


K2 The Beginning Of The End???????

By Don P

Kellen Winslow Jr's career as a Cleveland Brown can be summed up in one word, Drama. Since he was drafted and declared himself as the best Tight End in the NFL before taking a snap it's been a soap opera. From blowing his knee covering an onside kick to his current situation K2 has gone from hated to loved 2 or 3 times. Some fans even hate him now. Why? Some people have never forgiven him for his soldier comment as a college kid or his hold out in his rookie year. He's not at fault for neither situation. The soldier comment he was coming off of a tough loss and the opposing team was purposely trying to hurt him. the hold out it's on the agent. Once drafted the negotiation fall to the greedy agent.

On the current situation I blame the big heads in the front office. Why you ask? Because if the would've come out and said staph in the beginning I wouldn't be writing this. That "mysterious illness" rift raff didn't help anything. All it did was fuel rumors. The Cleveland Browns organization has turned into the FBI, Secret Service, and the D.A. (not Derek Anderson) combined. Their secrecy caused fans to speculate that Kellen had the clap. They covered up the staph thing because they got scared. All they did was make a bigger mess and it looks like K2 was suspended for clearing his name and the air. His name was getting dragged into the mud. He has a wife who probably does her own shopping. Imagine your wife at Wal Mart and she hears someone saying she heard you have the clap. Step in those shoes.

We all know how emotional Kellen is. Especially after a tough loss and although I don't agree with everything he did I feel him. His Feelings were hurt that the big heads didn't come see him. No call, no visit not even a fruit basket. His life and career was in the balance and he felt like he got no love from anybody. RAC man (Romeo) called but not Phil.

Maybe the best situation for Winslow and the Browns is to part ways. As much as I don't want it to happen it might be the best thing. Despite his foul ups Kellen has done nothing but produce on the field. Playing hurt getting beat up week in and week out and he can't get a phone call? This situation is only going to get worse. So what they should do is do what Tampa Bay did with Keyshawn Johnson and what Philly did with T.O. Pay him to stay home and move him in the off season. It's the only way this mess is going to get cleaned up.

Cleveland Sports Fan Get With The Program!!!!!!!

By Don P

Disclaimer: Anyone who is sensitive should stop reading right now. Because you are not going to lie what i have to say.


At 25 years old I'm old enough to know better but I'm young enough not to care. Being a Cleveland sports fan has been quite an experience for me. Drives and fumbles and shots. (oh my!!!!). I remember crying as a kid when Byner fumbled at the 1. I recall watching M.J. (Jordan) hang in the air as Craig Ehlo fall hopelessly to the ground. I also recall Edgar Renteria's little flubber in the 97 World Series. But you know what Cleveland sports fan? IT HAPPENED NOW GET OVER IT!!!!

For far too long you have been living in the past and are always looking for the worst to happen. Thus developing a losers mentality. Pessimism is the worse kind of attitude to have. As grown ups if you have that attitude you know what? You have loser kids who have loser kids that have pessimistic attitudes and loser mentalities. Pretty soon we have a city full of losers. TRICKLE DOWN EFFECT!!!!!!!!! This city used to be proud, what happened? We are lucky to have pro sports teams. Ok so they may lose, but like Manny Ramirez said "its not the end of the world". If your life depends on whether the Browns, Cavs and Indians win or lose, YOU MY FRIEND ARE PATHETIC.

Back to my point of living in the past. Its been that way forever. Browns fans are expecting to see Paul Brown on the sidelines, HE'S NOT HERE!!! He hasn't coached this team in 45 years. Jim Brown hasn't run the ball since 65, The Kardiac Kids have grown up, and Kosar and company have moved on, SO SHOULD YOU ALL. Why can't the new Browns get this kind of love? They went 10 and 6 last season so why are they getting penalized by fans saying the schedule was easy. They played who was in front of them it's not their fault. 10 wins is 10 wins! PESSIMISM. If this was the Browns of the 80's you would be dancing in the streets. Why isn't there a Derek Derek song? I bet a Brady Brady song will be out whenever he takes over the starting spot.

In closing I just want to say get behind the teams and stay behind them. Stop complaining and going back the next week. Browns fans stop making dry threats about not going to the games and on Sunday's you in the muny lot grilling brats. Don't like what they are doing fine stay home. Matter of fact give away your ticket and don't ever go back. There are plenty of people (including me) that would love to go. I am sick of hearing the whining then seeing 78,000 butts in the seats. GET WITH THE PROGRAM!!!! and remember IT'S JUST A GAME!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Time Is Coming To Cut Bait With Winslow

by Greg Kozarik

Teams always have to deal with injuries and the Browns are not the first team to have these issues. Grant it, the Browns have had a large amount of staph infections and Kellen Winslow is not the first or last athlete to get it.
Winslow is just a long list of crybaby athletes who are more concerned about being the center of attention rather than trying to be part of a winning team. He is crying because his general manager didn’t call or come see him while he was in the hospital. Gimmie a break!!
K2 decided after a tough loss to come clean and tell the media what happened with his illness. He did this right after the game while still in full pads. I wonder if he knew whether the team won or loss at FedEx Field. This shows the selfishness of this player. Romeo Crennel didn’t even come to support Winslow and his complaints, instead chastised him for the way he handled it.
By the way, did anyone notice that future Hall-of-Fame player Tom Brady has contracted a staph infection after his knee surgery? Brady is the ultimate team player and I would much rather have him on my team than Winslow. Did GM Scott Pioli go visit him or even Bill Belichick, doubt it if you know either of these two guys.
Winslow is a great talent and deserved to be in the Pro Bowl last season, but he started at the Super Bowl when overtures from himself and his self-indulged super agent, Drew Rosenhaus, started talking about wanting a new deal despite being signed through 2010.
Timing is everything in the NFL when there are no guaranteed contracts. Winslow knows that after his fourth knee surgery, he has one more big payday before his body can no longer take the rigors of the NFL grind. But this shows how quickly Winslow has forgotten the past.
This is the same person that missed a full season because he was doing motorcycle tricks in a parking lot, a violation of his contract that stated motorcycles were not allowed while he was under contract. K2 originally tried to hide from the Browns what really happened. Thank goodness for the cameras around Cuyahoga Community College.
Instead of taking his 4.4 million-dollar bonus away in which the Browns were legally allowed to do, they gave it to him. In fact, Phil Savage reworked his contract and extended him. I guess he wasn’t so much, as Winslow says, “a piece of meat.”
Winslow is lucky that Savage runs the front office and not former Tribe GM John Hart. Back in the mid 90’s when Omar Vizquel wanted a new deal, Hart asked him to dinner as the story goes. When they sat down, Hart pulled out Vizquel’s current contract and asked if that was his signature on it. When Vizquel responded that it was, Hart stood up and left. Vizquel never got that new deal.
First of all, a piece of meat is not a millionaire athlete. Ask soldiers fighting for our country and what they make. Ask people like that and I don’t want to hear it from a pampered athlete. Winslow’s contract demands are completely uncalled for.
Winslow has clearly been a player that is concerned with himself and not the team at times. Remember when former Steeler Joey Porter called him out and then delivered a message to him in that game. Against the Browns biggest rival, Winslow is usually a no-show. In five games against Pittsburgh, all losses, Winslow has just one touchdown on 24 catches for 239 yards, hardly hall-of-fame numbers.
The NFL Network reported that the Browns were actively trying to trade him before the deadline but the offers were few. Savage has set up life without Winslow when he drafted tight end Martin Rucker. This is the same team that has four tight ends on the roster, knowing that Winslow might break down at some point.
In a city where we have seen one of the greatest tight ends play in Ozzie Newsome, Winslow has a long way to catch up to ‘The Wizard of Oz’. This malcontent behavior is leading to his departure from the Browns. At this point, Winslow is farther from the ‘warrior’ he declared himself and more closer to the selfish player that today’s world has become so accustomed to.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Browns really like Brady Quinn...really like

By Ben Chew

Well fans of the STC blog, I'm back and better than ever. The issue is that the better part isn't really true since I have been absent from AM Mayhem for the past couple days due to an undisclosed injury like Kellen Winslow. (Hint: It may be a staph infection)

I was mulling over on my days off the Cleveland Browns news to keep up to date and came across this little nugget of information that the Minnesota Vikings had offered the Cleveland Browns a king's ransom for the back-up quarterback.

The Pioneer Press reported that the Vikings reportedly offered the Browns their 2009 and 2010 first-round picks for quarterback Brady Quinn prior to last Tuesday's deadline. It was interesting that the team has put Quinn that he is equal to two first-round draft picks.

Honestly, anytime that a team is given two first round picks for a single player it is almost crazy not to take that deal. However with the issue at quarterback between Derek Anderson and Brady Quinn, the Browns had to almost keep Brady Quinn.

I hope for the sake of the Cleveland fan that Quinn pans out but from what I've seen in the pre-season, he is less than average quarterback. Assuming the Browns goes about 5-11, they would have had two first round picks in 2009 and two first round picks in 2010. The first two picks in 09 would at least be in the top 15 of the NFL draft which can help change the fortunes of any NFL team.

Maybe this might all be passe and in the end maybe Brady Quinn leads the Browns to a Super Bowl in the near future or maybe he'll be the reverse Herschel Walker and fans might be rueing what they could have gotten for Quinn.

Time To Salvage Season With Quinn


by Greg Kozarik

Most teams will make a change early to try and save their season but for some reason the Browns always wait till the season is a wash. Time to do the opposite and try to save the season as this week's Jacksonville game becomes a must win. The only way to do that at this point is to change the quarterback and see what Brady Quinn can bring to the team.
The Derek Anderson experiment is over as the league has quickly caught up to him and that started in the second half of last season. Anderson has very little confidence right now if he has any at all.
His arm strength is what GM Phil Savage and head coach Romeo Crennel love, but the dying quails that DA threw against Washington are not the norm for him, thus proving he has no confidence in his ability. The tight spirals that we have seen over the past season have disappeared and he has no touch for the short and intermediate passes.
Crennel will stick with Anderson and for some reason thinks that once he goes to Quinn, he then cannot go back to Anderson. If Quinn is just as bad then why not and if that is the case then at least you know that Savage will already be out scouting Colt McCoy, Matt Stafford, Sam Bradford, Graham Harrell or Tim Tebow.
Crennel will play Anderson for the fact that he thinks this is the only way his job is safe. If he inserts the former first-rounder and he blows up and leads the Browns into the playoff hunt, then that is what will save his job. Also, Quinn might be able to save a locker room that is quickly becoming divided, just ask Kellen Winslow or is this a secret too just like his motorcycle accident at first. Sorry, I digress.
Anderson has lost the respect of his teammates as was evident in his exchange with Lawrence Vickers on Sunday. This is not the first time this season that he has been arguing with his teammates. Plus, without the threat of the deep ball then Anderson brings absolutely nothing to the Browns.
Anderson may have been a Pro-Bowler last season (thanks to the other quarterbacks deciding not to play in that game) but last year is long gone and this is a league of what have you done for me lately. There is a reason that Anderson was a sixth-round pick and it is rare to find that late-round gem like Tom Brady.
This is the same Derek Anderson we see now that we saw last preseason. The same guy who couldn't beat out Charlie Frye and now he has not adjusted his game as opposing defenses have to his game.
Let's get the Brady Quinn era started because if anything the Browns will need to know if this is the quarterback of the future or just another of a long line of first-round quarterback flops in the NFL. We have seen some nice things and some bad things from Quinn in the preseason, but now it is time for the Browns' golden boy to play.
We all know that Crennel will stick with DA and he will seal his fate for next season. The only way to shake up a team at this point in the season is to change the quarterback just ask the Titans. But this is Cleveland and this kind of forward thinking does not happen here.

Monday, October 20, 2008

2008 World Series preview

By Rick Morris


I said that it was highly improbable. As a fan, not an analyst, I have never been so happy to be wrong. The Rays have eliminated the Red Sox and are going to the World Series!


Rarely if ever in recent history has a team averted a historic “choke” in Game 7, but Tampa managed to do so, and if you think about it, it’s kind of fitting that a young, come-from-nowhere (not in terms of talent, but in terms of shockingly sudden collective maturation of young talent) team that has been compared to the ’69 Mets would be the team to get it done. In other words, the accomplishments of this team are already historic, so why not this Tampa Bay squad when it comes to having to climb out of a steep psychological hole caused by kicking away a World Series near-miss in Game 5?


Until the Rays’ stunning collapse at Fenway, I was already contemplating an upcoming Tampa Bay-Philaldelphia World Series (show me anybody who had THAT daily double on their futures bets at the start of the season!). I’m always interested in the storylines for a big series. Certainly, at first blush, the clash of these cities’ franchises in the NFC Playoffs and NHL Eastern Conference Finals this decade establishes some small competitive connection. A World Series would give Tampa its third world championship this decade to go along with the Bucs and Lightning, while Philly is still searching for its first world title since the ’83 Sixers (as a Clevelander, my heart bleeds for them!). But on a deeper level, this fresh matchup is most interesting because you really have to scratch well beneath the surface just to see how fresh it really is.


I started digging through recent World Series battles to see if I could find a precedent for two teams dominated by a core of young talent making it to the end without having made any deep runs previously (Philly was in the NLDS last year for their first postseason appearance since ’93, but they were swept quickly by Colorado, so this is the first time these players have been in for longer than the proverbial cup of coffee). The few times that teams deemed relative fresh faces had been around for the final round in recent years, they had been knocking around the playoff picture for a few years (i.e. White Sox-Astros in ’05). Angels-Giants in ’02 probably comes the closest in recent years, although San Fran had been in the playoffs a few times with that core; otherwise, you almost have to go back to 1986, with the Mets’ vast young talent on one side and the Clemens/Boggs/Hurst troika on the other side. Boston had a veteran core, though, even if they hadn’t made it to the postseason since 1975, so even that analogy falls apart somewhat. In other words, we haven’t really seen anything like this at all in recent decades, a celebration of the game’s future becoming the present before our very eyes on this stage, so it is something to celebrate.


[Some other World Series matchups would have been very interesting as well. We already had the media beat us over the head with the whole Manny/Torre/Nomahhh vs. Boston angle – as well as Boston vs. LA for a title in a sport other than hoops – but there were some other good possibilities as well. Boston and Philly could have reprised the spirit of the Braves-As World Series tilt of 1914, as well as Sox-Phils the next year. We all know the antagonism between these cities with football and hockey rivalries, as well as the fairly recent Pats-Eagles Super Bowl. And a Tampa-LA World Series would have been chock full of the promise of rematches to come, given that they are both among the top five teams in baseball in terms of their blend of young major league and minor league talent.]


With the American League’s decided superiority in recent years and the fact that Tampa just knocked off the world champions, an extremely resilient club to say the least, the Rays must be considered the favorites right off the bat before any further analysis. And that is to say nothing of the rust that the Phillies may well be collecting right now. Ask the ’06 Tigers what it’s like to sit on your recliners for a week waiting for the other league to sort out its business – or see how the Rockies enjoyed their wait last year. Additionally, Tampa has the home field advantage and that madhouse should be rollicking for all of their home games – and Philly, typical of most NL teams, comes out on the short end of the stick as far as whether the DH is used or not because they don’t have one more big booming consistent bat on their bench while the Rays lose little without their DH (sorry, Cliff Floyd!).


The starting pitching is a double-edged sword. Surely Cole Hamels is the best of the bunch on either side, based both on his abilities and the extent to which he has advanced in his career. With the Phils’ long rest, he could pitch three times in this series and probably not lose much effectiveness. But Tampa’s Scott Kazmir and Matt Garza show signs of moving up to that level at some point through greater consistency and both have shown flashes this postseason of being able to go toe-to-toe with a Hamels. With Jamie Shields and Andy Sonnanstine, the Rays have the definitive edge over a Philly rotation that is like Forest Gump’s box of chocolates with Brett Myers, Jamie Moyer and Joe Blanton. Charlie Manuel would do well to park Moyer in long relief and use a three-man rotation, but Tampa still rates the edge here.


In the bullpen, with Brad Lidge back as a full-blown killer, the Phillies have it better, particularly as troubled as the Rays’ ‘pen looked in recent games. David Price is the “X factor,” though, as he could well perform the role of K-Rod circa ’02: the young flamethrower coming in for late-inning shutdown work. Will he be trusted to close as he was in Game 7 of the ALCS? I doubt it initially, but it’ll be necessary if those in front of him can’t get it going.


Each team has a bit of a funny note to the lineup, although both are strong. For Philly, they’ve got one of the best 1-2-3 punches in the infield in the recent history of the game with former MVPs Ryan Howard and Jimmy Rollins, along with the individual who may be the best talent on the team in Chase Utley. But for whatever reason, the Phils seem to think that because of these young megastars that they can coast with somebody of the ability of, uh, me at third base! Seriously, though, Pedro Feliz and Greg Dobbs are decent as far as platoons go and the rest of the lineup is serviceable to above-average collectively, with streaky power hitter Pat Burrell in the outfield to go along with two blue-collar heroes who have found a home in Shane Victorino and Jayson Werth. Carlos Ruiz and Chris Coste are nothing special behind the plate.


Tampa’s weird aspect to the lineup is the fact that they have defied a notion of what they would resemble if indeed they ever made it to this point. Back in 2005-06, I was touting Tampa Bay as very possibly “the next ’95 Indians” in looking at that lineup – which is completely different right now. Subtract Aubrey Huff and Delmon Young (who was still on his way up then, but projected to be an anchor of this lineup when it reached maturity), Jonny Gomes (still with the team, but somebody who peaked and then regressed) and Rocco Baldelli (still a great player when 100% healthy, but somebody who has struggled with injury and illness issues). At that time, BJ Upton was projecting to show much greater power than he did this year, although he lived up to the billing in 2007 and has again very recently. So that part of the core didn’t materialize in the way I thought they would if the team made it this far. On the other hand, add in Evan Longoria (fated to probably become the best hitter of the bunch) and Carlos Pena (who has worked to minimize the hole in his swing and become a dangerous power hitter). Carl Crawford has been a constant all throughout this time.


All in all, under manager Joe Maddon, this team shed its aspirations to imitate the Tribe of the mid-‘90s in favor of a more balanced approach. This team runs quite effectively and can scratch and manufacture much like a National League team – or the Angels, the organization from which Maddon was plucked. Ironically, many see the Phillies as more of a prototypical American League team with an offense that occasionally veers towards all-or-nothing power. This style is, of course, less effective in October.


The one part of my analysis of the Rays from 2-3 years ago that has held up was the prediction that this team would take great strides forward if they could manage to deal part of their hitting surplus for some strong arms – because outside of Scott Kazmir, and more recently, Shields, this team has historically been really lacking in that area. The Garza-for-Young deal in the offseason was the epitome of such a trade, a rare transaction involving very young players in which one projected as a potential five-tool All-Star and the other projected as a potential ace at some point.


Certainly, I thought that if Tampa Bay made the World Series that they would score really high in my “superstar analysis.” Last year, I broke down all of the Octobers since the first one with the Division Series in 1995 to examine how many players who could rightly be deemed superstars at the present time were playing for each team. It’s very strange to consider that, for as star-studded as I consider this particular matchup to be, that it comes in slightly below the average in terms of number of present superstars in this era. Philly has five players who I would slot as stars at the present time: the three big-time infielders, Hamels and Lidge. For Tampa Bay, I would only designate Crawford and Longoria (who, notwithstanding only being a rookie, may well be the team’s best hitter already – and he has a superlative minor-league and collegiate pedigree). But therein lies the rub: while there is a fairly strong break between the Phillies’ “Big 5” and the rest of the roster, the Rays are crawling with players who could very well be slotted as superstars at this time next year: Upton (who is regaining the power stroke and respect that he lost during a fallback ’08 year), Baldelli (if he can stay healthy), Pena (if he can find a way at this stage of his career to make better contact), Kazmir/Shields/Garza (with more consistency) and even David Price (one of the most dominant young arms in the game). For that matter, Tampa’s farm system, loaded with more potential superstars-in-waiting, could yield even more names to this list very quickly. So Philadelphia’s 5-2 edge in this area is very misleading, because they only have a handful of players you could even make a case for being on that next level: probably up-and-down slugger Burrell and setup ace Ryan Madson. Myers and Blanton are great when on, but are extraordinarily spotty to say the least.


I was also wrong in believing that Tampa’s road to the World Series might come to an end because the team did not acquire one more power bat to play right field at the trading deadline. Baldelli’s resurgence, which the team surely could not have counted on at the time, has helped greatly. Suffice to say that they got lucky.


While we’re tallying up where I have been wrong, I am only 2-4 in my series predictions this postseason; ironically, my two correct picks were Tampa Bay and Philadelphia in the first round, but I had them both losing in the LCS because of matchups I thought were unfavorable. I am very impressed at the manner in which both teams proved me wrong, Tampa by overcoming the almost insurmountable Boston postseason aura and Philly by getting past what seemed to be a “team of destiny” in the red-hot Dodgers.


And should I be proven wrong again on another claim, I am prepared to pay the price. I stated both right here in The Lounge and also on SportsTalkNetwork.com that, as a longtime Charlie Manuel skeptic, I am prepared to eat dog food on the air if he leads a team to a world championship. Let me note that I am very fond of Charlie on a personal level, as he seems to be one of the nicest guys in baseball and I would be very happy for him personally if he were to win and prove me wrong. I just think he’s going to get his lunch eaten by a shark like Joe Maddon. Nothing personal.


Ultimately, in the end, I give the edge to the Rays in terms of ability to manufacture runs, depth of starting pitching and managing. I give the edge to the Phillies in late-inning pitching. As such, the wunderkinds who just knocked off the defending world champions should be hoisting their own trophy by the end of the month. Rays in 6.

Time For Crennel To Pack His Bags

by Greg Kozarik

People always talk about consistency and that changing coaches is a bad thing, but the time has come for Romeo Crennel. His presence continues to hurt this team rather than help.