Wednesday, December 30, 2009

2009 - A Year in Sports I'd like to Forget

As years go, 2009 may be one of the worst I can remember in terms of how the teams I root for fared in their respective sports. Maybe I have gotten a little spoiled in recent years with the success of USC Football (7 straight BCS bowl games), USC Basketball (3 straight NCAA tournament appearances), and the Red Sox (World Series champions in '04 and '07), but the beatings my teams took this year were cruel and unusual, and the year I went through is something I wish upon no other sports fan.

USC Football and Basketball
USC Football ended the 2009 season with a record of 9-4, including an emerald bowl victory over Boston College. While the season was disappointing in that USC didn't make it to a BCS bowl game for the first time in 7 years, a 9 win season really isn't all that bad. However, what made this year especially hard to cope with was the way USC lost its 4 games. The Trojans got blown out at home by Stanford and in Eugene against Oregon, as well as loosing close games at Washington and at home against Arizona. The loss at Washington I can live with because it was a game in which no one on the Trojans could hang on to the ball, and like it or not those types of games happen every once in  while. However, against Oregon and Stanford USC had no answer on defense, and when they realized they had no answer defensively everyone on the team just shut it down. Seeing a team completely give up is disheartening to say the least, and it is why this season was so tough on Trojan football fans.

USC Basketball, on the other hand, had most of its turmoil off the court. After winning the Pac-10 tournament title and making the NCAA tourney for the third consecutive year this past spring, all hell broke loose for the Trojans. Taj Gibson, DeMar DeRozan, and Daniel Hacket all decided to leave school early to turn pro, head coach Tim Floyd resigned amid allegations that he gave money to former trojan O.J. Mayo, and as a result the players making up one of the nation's best recruiting classes were released from their commitment to play for the school and fled elsewhere, and returning forward Leonard Washington was ruled academically ineligible to play for the fall 2009 semester. All this being said, things are actually starting to look up for the team as it heads in to the start of Pac-10 play in 2010. USC has started the season with an 8-4 record and is coming off a christmas tournament victory at the Diamond Head classic in Hawaii, so maybe I do have a little reason to believe that the new year may bring success for at least one of the teams I root for.

Nationals and Red Sox
The Nationals misfortune in 2009 was well documented as not only were they the butt of many jokes because of their play on the field, but also because they couldn't seem to get their name spelled correctly on the front of their jersey. There was also the embarrassing off-the-field scandal involving former GM Jim Bowden that eventually cost him his job. However, since Mike Rizzo has taken over as GM the team has started to slowly move in the right direction, signing first overall pick Stephen Strasburg to as $15 million deal and acquiring free-agent all-star pitcher Jason Marquis. Rizzo also raided the front offices of several other teams this off-season in order to have more qualified baseball minds around him, which is why I believe the Nationals, despite their 59-103 record in 2009, are the DC team showing the most promise in 2010 besides the Capitals.

Compared to all the other teams that let me down this year, the Red Sox really don't even deserve to be mentioned in the same breath. The only reason I feel the need to bring them up in this post is because the Yankees won the World Series, and having the Yankees win yet another World Series is about as bad as if the Red Sox did finish with an equal record to the Nationals.

Redskins
The team with likely the most disappointing season in 2009 of the teams I root for, at times I actually got physically ill when watching them play this season. Even with the benefit of an easy early-season schedule and the addition of high-priced free agent Albert Haynesworth, the Skins could only manage to win 4 games in 2009 and went 0-6 in the NFC East. As if their record itself isn't bad enough, the Cowboys finally decided to start winning some games in December and have already secured themselves a playoff birth. Indeed times are bleak now if you're a Redskins fan, but there is a glimmer of light at the end of the tunnel with the recent resignation of Vinny Cerrato and the hiring of new GM Bruce Allen. The skins will have a lot of work to do trying to right the ship in 2010, but at least they have a head start with the hiring of a proven football mind in Bruce Allen. That's more than can be said for the next team on this list...

Wizards
While the Redskins may have won the award for the most disappointing of the DC teams in 2009, the Wizards win the award for the team whose future looks the most bleak. After finishing the 08-09 season with a record of 19-63, there was actually a lot of optimism surrounding the team in the summer because Gilbert Arenas was finally healthy again, meaning the big 3 of Arenas, Caron Butler, and  Antawn Jamison would all be on the floor together again for an extended period of time for the first time since 2006. But, as the first 30 games of the 09-10 season has proven, having those three players healthy doesn't necessarily mean the team will start winning again. The Wizards currently sit at 10-20 and are last in the southeast division, 12 games back of Orlando. It appears as though they will eclipse their dismal win total of last season, but need to go 32-20 the rest of the way to have any sort of shot at the playoffs. One could argue that the team just needs more time to adjust to playing in new head coach Flip Saunders' system, but even he admitted that defensively this team can't stop anyone. With the defensively deficient Gilbert Arenas locked up for a lot more money for a lot more years, it seems the Wizards are stuck with the players currently on the court, and it could be a while until the Wizards again reach respectability.

Capitals
Finally I get to the lone bright spot of my sports fan experience in 2009. The Capitals advanced to the 2nd round of the NHL playoffs in the spring, and took Pittsburgh to a game 7 before finally succumbing to the eventual Stanley Cup Champions. Armed with arguably the best player in the NHL and some impressive young netminders, the Caps seem poised to be a force for years to come. But, seeing as their success has come at a time when all the other teams I root for are down in the dumps, I have found myself wondering whether it is better to root for one great team and a lot of sub-par teams or a bunch of mediocre squads. While I'm sure there is not one answer for all sports fans, I have concluded that prolonged greatness is a rarity in sports these days, so when one team you root for has the chance to be great you take that along with the bad. Would I prefer a Redskins Superbowl to a Capitals Stanley Cup? Certainly, but as a sports fan you can't pick and choose, so all you can do is continue to cheer the teams you love and hope that the new year brings new prosperity! 

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Mid-Summer nitpicking

As it is the slowest time of the year in sports, with only the MLB, MLS, and WNBA playing regular season games right now, I thought it would be a good time to nitpick about a few things that have bothered me of late. The first topic I want to address is President Barack Obama's ceremonial first pitch at the MLB All-star game in St. Louis last Tuesday, or at least Fox's coverage of the pitch. You see, the problem was that Fox never showed where Obama's pitch went. The station only showed Obama releasing the pitch, but never used the conventional center field camera to show where the pitch ended up. 


While I don't know who is to blame for this gaffe, I have concluded there are two possible reasons why it occurred. Either Fox didn't want to highlight the president's pitch (in case it was a strike) due to the station's conservative bias, or, the more likely reason in my mind, the Obama camp didn't want to show where the pitch ended up in case it wasn't a strike. I believe the Obama camp was being extra cautious after the recent first pitch fiasco for Mark Whalberg before a Red Sox game at Fenway Park last month. Or, the Obama camp didn't want the possibility of the same type of negative press that followed the president's bowling blunder during his campaign last year. As it turns out, the Obama camp had nothing to fear since the president's pitch turned out to be a pretty decent one with a little help from Albert Pujols behind the plate. 


I do have to commend FOX for the fact that the station doesn't feel the need to add a third broadcaster in the booth for big events. This is one of my pet peeves that most notably ESPN tends to do for all the big events the station broadcasts. I was hopeful that after hearing Tony Kornheiser would not be back in the booth for a third season of Monday Night Football (which I think was a good decision by the network) there might be a shift to a two-man booth consisting of only Mike Tirico and Ron Jaworski. Unfortunately that is not to be, as former Bucs and Raiders coach Jon Gruden has signed on to be the third man in the booth. While I think "chucky" will be great on television as an analyst, I don't think that even his charisma and personality can offset the awkwardness that accompanies a three-man booth.
Finally I want to comment on a trend that has become increasingly apparent in articles written about baseball. I don't pretend to be a grammar expert and I'm sure I make many grammatical mistakes in my writing, but I don't see any reason why writers should choose to use the terms RBIs and HRs as opposed to the simple abbreviations RBI and HR, even when writing about multiple numbers of each category. 

The term RBI stands for both "Run Batted In" and "Runs Batted In" depending on how many runs crossed the plate. Similarly the term HR stands for "Homerun" and "Homeruns", so adding the extra (s) at the end of term HR(s) is really stating that multiple Homeruns(s) were hit, and Homerunss is not a word. The same holds true for Runs Batted In(s) because Ins is not a word (though according to dictionary.com it does stand for Immigration and Naturalization Service). While there are those who could argue that the terms RBI and HR are entities unto themselves and thus can be made plural, I would say to them that the true meaning of the abbreviation needs to be examined before carelessly throwing on an extra "s".

Thursday, July 2, 2009

Romo and the challenge of not rooting for the underdog

I never thought I would start my fist blog post talking about the quarterback of the Dallas Cowboys, but I need to unleash my outrage at the fact that Tiger Woods invited Tony Romo to play with him in the Pro-Am at the AT&T National at Congressional Golf Club in Bethesda, Maryland this week. Bethesda is in the heart of Redskin country, where the fan base does not tolerate Cowboys. While I have always admired Tiger Woods and been a big fan of his, I have lost some respect for him after hearing he is pals with Romo. It's not so much that I mind him befriending the enemy, but to invite him to play at a pro-am in the nation's capital is just unacceptable. Tiger should be reaching out to his fan base in DC, assuming he wants to continue hosting his tournament in the area after 2011. I realize most of Tiger's fans in DC will probably look past this incident as nothing more than a little indiscretion, but I, for one, will be holding this against Tiger for the foreseeable future.
I'm also disappointed at the Skins fans in attendance at the Pro-am at Congressional on Wednesday. According to the DC Sports Bog on Washingtonpost.com (recommended reading for any DC sports fan), there wasn't much heckling of Romo going on. Besides the one guy on the 7th tee who shouted "hit it like it's December", according to Steinberg, no one really got on Romo's case. It appalls me no one had the guts to start up a chant of "Tony Homo", especially after the rendition by comedian Artie Lange on the premier of HBO's Joe Buck Live.


Finally, I want to comment on what I believe is one of the toughest challenges for a sports fan, which is when your team is going up against the underdog. It's in everybody's nature to root for the underachiever, and that's why people who aren't Yankees, Cowboys, and Lakers fans not only dislike those team, but hate them. They hate them because more often than not, it is those teams who ruin the dreams of the underdogs. 
As a Red Sox fan, I have noticed the Sox's recent success has launched the team into that category with the Yankees, Cowboys, and Lakers. This is a little hard for me to handle because the other professional teams I root for (the Redskins, Wizards, Capitals, and Natinals) have only had moderate success at best, and often times take the role of the underdog. As a result, I sometimes start to find myself rooting for teams playing the Red Sox to at least be competitive, and this was never more apparent than in Tuesday's 11-10 loss to the Orioles. 

In this game the Orioles were down 10-1 when a rain delay stopped play in the fifth inning. When the teams came back on the field an hour and a half later, the Orioles slowly started to mount a comeback, and I slowly started rooting for the Orioles to complete their comeback. While in my mind I wanted the Red Sox to hold on and win, my heart wanted to see the unbelievable comeback that doesn't happen all that often. Once the game ended, my mind was unsatisfied and my heart wanted to see more, leaving me as a disgruntled Red Sox fan who was happy he had just witnessed history.