Wednesday, June 30, 2021

 

The Conversation

When a Black boxing champion beat the 'Great White Hope,' all hell broke loose

Chris Lamb, Professor of Journalism, IUPUI

An audacious Black heavyweight champion was slated to defend his title against a white boxer in Reno, Nevada, on July 4, 1910. It was billed as “the fight of the century.”

The fight was seen as a referendum on racial superiority – and all hell was about to break loose in the racially divided United States.

Jack Johnson, the Black man, decisively beat James Jeffries, nicknamed “the Great White Hope.” Johnson’s triumph ignited bloody confrontations and violence between Blacks and whites throughout the country, leaving perhaps two dozen dead, almost all of them Black, and hundreds injured and arrested.

“No event yielded such widespread racial violence until the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., fifty-eight years later,” Geoffrey C. Ward wrote in his biography of Johnson, “Unforgiveable Blackness.”

Johnson’s victory, in the manliest of sports, contradicted claims of racial supremacy by whites and demonstrated that Blacks were no longer willing to acquiesce to white dominance. Whites were not willing to give up their power. The story has a familiar ring today, as America remains a country deeply divided by race.

I began my book, “From Jack Johnson to LeBron James: Sports, Media, and the Color Line,” with Johnson because the consequences of the fight’s aftermath would affect race relations in sports, and America, for decades.

A backdrop of racial hostility

Born in 1878 in Galveston, Texas, Johnson grew up as the Jim Crow era in American history was getting started. The previous year, Rutherford B. Hayes became president after promising three former Confederate states – South Carolina, Florida and Louisiana – that he would withdraw federal troops, who had protected the measure of racial equality Blacks were beginning to achieve.

As federal forces left, whites disenfranchised Black voters and passed segregation laws, which were enforced by legal and illegal means, including police brutality and lynchingJournalists, too, sought to maintain social order by preserving myths about white supremacy.

Johnson’s boxing career challenged those myths. He dispatched one white fighter after another and taunted both the fighter and the crowd. He was brash and arrogant and made no attempt to show any deference to whites. He sped through towns in flashy cars, wore expensive clothes, spent his time with gamblers and prostitutes, and dated white women, which Black sociologist and commentator W.E.B. Du Bois considered “unnecessarily alienating acts.”

Setting up a racial battle

Johnson won the heavyweight title by easily defeating the defending champion Tommy Burns in 1908. Novelist Jack London, writing in the New York Herald, wrote about Johnson’s “hopeless slaughter” of Burns and, like other journalists, called on former champion James Jeffries to come out of retirement and “wipe that smile from Johnson’s face.”

Jeffries announced to the world that he would “reclaim the heavyweight championship for the white race.” He became the “Great White Hope.”

The Chicago Defender, a Black newspaper, said Jeffries and Johnson would “settle the mooted question of supremacy.” The Daily News in Omaha, Nebraska, reported that a Jeffries victory would restore superiority to the white race.

Before the fight, there were signs whites feared a Jeffries loss – and that this loss would not be restricted to the boxing ring but would have ramifications for all of society.

The New York Times warned, “If the black man wins, thousands and thousands of his ignorant brothers will misinterpret his victory.” The message was clear: If Jeffries won, white superiority would be proved – but if he lost, whites would still be superior.

Seeking to retain power

After Johnson easily defeated Jeffries, the Los Angeles Times reinforced white supremacy, telling Blacks: “Do not point your nose too high. Do not swell your chest too much. Do not boast too loudly. Do not get puffed up. … Your place in the world is just what is was. You are on no higher place, deserve no new consideration, and will get none.” Nearly a century later, the newspaper apologized for that 1910 editorial.

In response to the violence, many cities forbade a film of the fight to be shown in theaters. In 1912, Congress, citing the same motion picture, passed the Sims Act, banning the transport of fight films over state lines.

In doing so, it kept Blacks and whites from seeing Johnson beat a white man. Historian Jeffrey Sammons says, “in many ways, Johnson represented the ‘bad n—–’ that whites were so willing to parade as an example of why blacks must be kept in ‘their place.’”

An outpouring of violence

No white boxer could defeat Johnson in the ring, so white America worked to defeat him outside the ring. Johnson was arrested in 1912 and charged with violating the Mann Act, which made it illegal to transport women across state lines “for the purpose of prostitution or debauchery, or for any other immoral purpose.” He served 10 months in federal prison.

But he was much more than one man. “No longer the respectful darky asking, hat in hand, for massa’s permission, Johnson was seen as the prototype of the independent black who acted as he pleased and accepted no bar to his conduct,” Randy Roberts wrote in “Papa Jack,” his biography of Johnson. “As such, Johnson was transformed into a racial symbol that threatened America’s social order.”

Whites responded to Johnson’s triumph by using violence to keep Blacks in their place by any and all means. When Black construction workers celebrated Johnson’s victory near the town of Uvalda, Georgia, whites began shooting. As the Blacks tried to escape into the woods, the whites hunted them down, killing three and injuring five, Roberts wrote.

Such scenes were repeated throughout the country, according to local media reports.

When a Black man in Houston expressed his joy over the fight’s outcome, a white man “slashed his throat from ear to ear.” Another Black man in Wheeling, West Virginia, who was driving an expensive car, just like Johnson was known for, was dragged from his car by a mob and lynched. A white mob in New York City set fire to a Black tenement and then blocked the doorway to keep the occupants from escaping.

The sports world responds

Johnson’s punishment served as a cautionary tale for Blacks during the Jim Crow era. Black athletes, however talented, whether it was sprinter Jesse Owens or boxer Joe Louis, were warned they had to be the “right type” of Black person, one who knew his place and did not challenge the racial status quo.

In those sports where Blacks were not banned and instead begrudgingly allowed to compete with and against whites, there were violent attacks on Black athletes. Jack Trice, an Iowa State football player, died of injuries from the attack he suffered in a game against the University of Minnesota in 1923.

The end of professional baseball’s color line in 1946 line was possible only because Jackie Robinson promised he would not respond to racist epithets and physical abuse so that he would be acceptable to white America.

In the 1960s, white America taught Muhammad Ali, whom many considered the “wrong type” of Black athlete, the lesson it had once taught Jack Johnson. Ali, a brash Muslim who refused to defer to the demands of white supremacy, was convicted of draft evasion for refusing to be inducted into the armed services. He was stripped of his heavyweight title and sentenced to prison.

Other Black athletes, like sprinters Tommie Smith and John Carlos, baseball player Curt Flood and football player Colin Kaepernick, all found themselves punished and ostracized for challenging white supremacy.

 

Thursday, June 10, 2021

 I’ve said that no one wants to hear from athletes. Please stop putting microphones in their faces. Take away their twitter and whatever platform. The kerfuffle between Kevin Durant and Jay Williams is a perfect example. I remember when the Bulls drafted Jay Williams. I was excited when the Bulls drafted him in the 2002 draft believing he was the most prepared for the NBA than any other player in the draft. After his horrific accident on a motorcycle while feeling bad for him I had a level of disdain because the following year the Bulls drafted Kirk Hinrich. Not one of my favorite players. Especially when Williams was far more talented.

I’m not clear on what J. Williams said that set KD off but his expletive laced response was disgusting. In the beginning when athletes were forced to face the media it was the like watching paint dry especially when players started letting their kids take over the microphone and the players didn’t have anything interesting to say. The media would ask the stupidest questions or the interviews would always include the line leaving it all on the field/court. Doing my best to help my teammates be the best they can be. Yada yada yada. With social media the content became far more interesting but made me question their use of the English language which can be attested to jargon of their childhood. What I have a problem with is, and LeBron James has been guilty of this, the use of foul Language. Many of the players of all sports have children and it can be said that children are the biggest fans. Just because they cannot afford the price of a ticket they’re the ones who follow the players closest and their stats. Certainly if there’s beef between payers or media they know. Particularly in a time of unrest and protest when people are hanging onto every word athletes are using and certainly they will believe that it is alright to use this language. Players cannot opt out of meeting the media but they can control what they say on social media and whether they want to respond to any criticism or trash talk. Even speak up for the ones who do not have their talent name or platform. Let’s think about what we say before say it. In these times your words can be taken out of context with racist responses giving people the right to do things like throw objects at players where banning them isn’t nearly enough of a punishment.  

Monday, May 31, 2021

What a sight, fans at games again. But it seems more that fans want to act out. Let’s not excuse this and say it’s just a few bad apples especially in the NBA. Not to get political but since the end of the elections and since so many people have been vaccinated thanks to Joe Biden and whatever state and local entities it has allowed people at sporting events close to what they were before Covid. What is bothering me is the number of bad behavior of the fans. From some fans in Atlanta wanting to fight Lebron James over some supposed slight to now players having objects particular food items being thrown at them. I thought this went out in the early two thousands with the big brawl in Detroit in 2004 where the former Ron Artest had a drink thrown at him and he charged into the stands. Now we have Trae Young getting spit on and Ja Morant having racist chants directed towards his family in Utah. Russell Westbrook had popcorn thrown at him And now a fan arrested in Boston for throwing a bottle of water at Kyrie Irving. I have to ask is it worth being banned from watching a game, team, sport you love for what is a minutes worth of chicanery? The answer is not to leave a massive player alone with the fan who committed the transgression as Charles Barkley suggests. And Kyrie Irving issuing an age old  statement that players are human too and not to be treated as if they are in a zoo.

Neither fans nor players would want any sort of barrier between them. And the more raucous the better. And no one knows when someone is going to lose their mind and start chanting racial epithets and throwing things. What is a good sight to see is that with the environment we’re in people are willing to point out the culprit and apprehension is swift. But we didn’t sit around waiting for sports to come back to have to deal with ignorant people. Understandably you have to take the good with the bad and the players are totally excited to be playing in front of fans. The owners are excited to have as many fans to fill their coffers. What happens however if a social justice situation comes up like last year when games are cancelled how are fans going to respond to that particularly during the playoffs (which is one of the most painful playoffs to follow)? It is still hard for fans to understand athletes are not automatons as if we didn’t always know that. But speaking of coming back from Covid, it is certain that we are not the same country prior to Covid. It’s possible these acts would’ve happened anyways. Whatever the reason there is no excuse for them happening.

 

Thursday, May 27, 2021

 

CHICAGO — The 2005 season will always hold a special place in the heart of Chicago White Sox fans, but for the family of Loretta Micele, a World Series championship was just part of the allure of a magical year.

Micele had been a fixture at the Sox home ballpark since 1945 when she started working home games as a concessions worker. So, when Game 1 of the 2005 World Series rolled around, Micele never figured the Sox would honor her for 60 years of employment with the team. The anniversary celebration also included the Sox honoring Micele's years of service with a sign, naming a section of the 100-level concourse after her, “Loretta’s Lounge.”

But seven years after Loretta’s death in 2014, her little piece of the ballpark has been done away with and instead named after first-year manager Tony La Russa. But the rebranding of what is now considered “La Russa’s Lounge” hasn’t gone unnoticed and has Sox fans — and Micele’s family — who are unhappy with how the team handled the renaming of the space.

Much of this week’s firestorm started after Sox fan Tyrone Palmer tweeted out a photo of the new sign bearing the 76-year-old manager’s name.

“This legit pissed me off,” Palmer wrote in a tweet that has garnered more than 29,000 likes and more than 4,500 retweets in less than one day. “This was formerly named Loretta’s Lounge after Loretta Micele. She worked concessions for the Sox for 60 years….She gave so much to the organization and replacing her name to that of TLR is shameful.”

Lou Soto, Micele’s great-grandson, told Block Club Chicago that the family wasn’t even made aware that the change would be made. Soto’s mother still works for the team, and he said that when the family inquired about the sign that has been displayed on the 100-level concourse for nearly the past 16 years, they were told the sign had already been disposed of.

“They told my mother that they threw the sign out,” Soto said. “It was really disheartening. It meant a lot to our family. Every time we’d go to a game we’d take a picture in front of it.”

Soto did not immediately return a message left by Patch on Thursday.

 

Friday, May 21, 2021

LaRussa Right To Be Angry

Over the years I’ve been a huge fan of Tony LaRussa from his days in Chicago. Obviously those days didn’t end well and he moved on to Oakland and St. Louis leaving some to wonder if it was a good idea to let him go with what he was able to accomplish since leaving Chicago: 6 Pennants and Three World Series wins. So why not bring him back and see if there is any magic left in a 70 plus year old baseball genius. There must be some because they currently lead the American Lead Central.

Recently he got himself into a kerfuffle because one of his young hitters during a blowout hit a Homerun with a 3-0 count on a position player the Minnesota Twins threw out on the mound which is not something unusual. All in the mind of saving the bullpen for the next game where the score isn’t a lot to a little. Obviously a fielder cannot get a pitch up to the speed of a Major League pitcher. The game being a laugher by that point a number of times fielders have given up homeruns and no one gets their backs up over it. In this case LaRussa did because of an old school rule or rules, you don’t show up the other team, you never swing at pitch when you have a count of three balls and no strikes (tantamount to fouling a jump shooter in basketball). It looks bad and if it had been a close game you could have swung at ball 4.

When Yermin Mercedes hit a ninth inning homerun with two out in a 15-4 blowout he broke some rules that I can understand LaRussa being upset about. Swinging on the 3-0 count. Trying to add to an already large margin against a position player, not respecting the other team and just ending the misery. I wouldn’t have gone to the media and lambasted the kid but I would have said something. I wouldn’t have talked about punishing him especially with the exceptionally hot start he had to the season where he was hitting close to .400.

A number of players have come out about LaRussa being out of touch with today’s players and bringing up unwritten rules. Everyone has unwritten rules that logically tells you how to handle a situation without having to be told. It shows a level of respect for your comrade even if he happens to be on another team. Plenty of times those comrades become teammates and you have to relive the situation all over again. However you think it might be funny after a while it would make me think twice about trust. It’s great the White Sox clubhouse has Mercedes’ back and it seems if the White Sox do well this year it’ll be in spite of LaRussa rather than because of his tutelage. But how much can you argue with a Hall of Fame Manager?

Friday, April 30, 2021


Fansided

Bears had to outbid division rival Vikings for Justin Fields Steven Kubitza

It turns out the Bears weren't the only team interested in that pick. The Minnesota Vikings were also reportedly trying to move up with the New York Giants to land that No. 11 pick. However, different reports detail different intentions in Minnesota.

Bears outbid Vikings to land Justin Fields

An article on NBC Sports Chicago shared a quote from Pro Football Talk's Mike Florio in which he said the Vikings could have taken Fields at No. 14 overall if he was still on the board.

Then there is The Athletic's Chad Graff, who said the Vikings were interested in moving up to No. 11 to draft offensive tackle Rashawn Slater. He ended up going to the Los Angeles Chargers with pick No. 13 overall.

An early run on defensive backs caused the Dallas Cowboys to swap picks with the Philadelphia Eagles. The Eagles took receiver DeVonta Smith, which then had the Giants open to trading back. That then allowed the Bears to move up and take Fields. The Vikings ultimately ended up with offensive tackle Christian Darrisaw.

The alternate realities are endless when it comes to the NFL Draft. Plenty of other teams could have also taken Fields, which may have left the Bears to be a total disaster in 2021. If Fields does end up being a star, Vikings fans may wonder why the team wasn't more aggressive to add him.

The Bears are entering a new era while Kirk Cousins continues to be the guy in Minnesota. How this plays out will be talked about for years to come.

  

Saturday, April 24, 2021

I'm not sure Billy Donovan for all the pedigree he has in basketball from his days at the University of Florida and the Oklahoma Thunder is the right coach for the Chicago Bulls. Granted he is the better than the last coach which isn't saying much and in the beginning he had the Bulls looking like an actual NBA team but they started losing games in bunches. Whether they had double digit leads and lost or they lost by double digits near the trade deadline when they made a massive trade and we have yet to see any  improvement since then. They look like they are still being run by the duo of Gar-Pax. Some would say they are struggling because Adam Levine is out because of Covid  Protocol but I'm not sure this team at full strength has won ten games since the trade. 

I know Chicago fans were excited to have Donovan because of his ties to Joakim Noah who is still beloved in Chicago. And every new coach has to work with the roster he is given until he can turn the roster over but with the trade this team should be in the conversation for the play - in round which I think is completely unnecessary. I don't know if it's his coaching style but this team plays like a team that has quit on their coach. They gave up some good young players and got back a more veteran group and for some reason gave up a couple of first round draft picks to complete the trade. The best of the transaction has been Nikola Vuevic who has pretty much scored in double digits in every game he's played for the Bulls. Beyond that they've played from behind in every game down by double digits by half time. Once again that sounds like a team that has given up on their coach.

Wednesday, April 21, 2021

 LeBron James Reveals Why He Deleted His Police Tweet Andrew Holleran 

LeBron James tweeted – and later deleted – a blunt message about a Columbus, Ohio police officer on Wednesday afternoon.

The Los Angeles Lakers star tweeted out a photo of the Columbus police officer who shot and killed a young Black girl on Tuesday. Body cam footage from the incident shows the teenage girl getting shot multiple times as she threatened another Black woman with a knife.

“YOU’RE NEXT,” LeBron tweeted along with a photo of the Columbus police officer. The tweet was up for a while, but was ultimately deleted.

While some applauded the message, LeBron faced heavy criticism from others for the tweet, with many pointing to the body cam footage.

On Wednesday night, LeBron addressed his decision to delete it.

“I’m so damn tired of seeing Black people killed by police. I took the tweet down because its being used to create more hate -This isn’t about one officer.  it’s about the entire system and they always use our words to create more racism. I am so desperate for more ACCOUNTABILITY,” the four-time NBA champion tweeted on Wednesday evening.

LeBron James used the same ‘ACCOUNTABILITY’ message following the guilty verdict in the Derek Chauvin trial on Tuesday.

The Lakers star is currently out with an injury, but is making good progress in his rehab, according to coach Frank Vogel.

The post LeBron James Reveals Why He Deleted His Police Tweet appeared first on The Spun.

 

 

Fansided

NBA Twitter thinks they found Kevin Durant's burner and the evidence is overwhelming Patrick Schmidt

NBA fans think they found Kevin Durant's burner account liking tweets saying he's better than Stephen Curry and the evidence is damaging.

Kevin Durant is one of the best athletes to follow on Twitter because he is extremely truthful and open to the point of possibly being too truthful and open. Few professional athletes use social media the way he uses it but that could be a detriment because of his presumed use of burner accounts.

If you're a social media novice and don't know what a burner account is, it refers to a fake or dummy account people use to hide their identity behind an alias or otherwise imposter account.

For instance, if someone is criticizing Durant for joining a superteam to win a ring with the Warriors or forming his own superteam with the Nets and he gets sensitive to the criticism, Durant will hop on his burner account and defend himself without revealing his true identity.

But this time, Durant's burner activity may have been exposed by one intrepid member of NBA Twitter who thinks he's unearthed the evidence that's clear as day.

NBA fans think they discovered Kevin Durant's burner account

When Durant is one of two accounts to like a tweet saying he was better than Stephen Curry during their run together with the Golden State Warriors, it does raise an eyebrow.

Did he forget to sign out of his burner and he got caught?

Is this just a random coincidence?

It's hard to say, but the more fun result is this is definitely KD's burner and he's definitely looking for acknowledgment that he's better than Curry, because his ego needs the boost.

 

 LeBron James Says Officer Who Shot Ma'Khia Bryant Is 'Next' After Derek Chauvin Verdict Jon Jackson 

LeBron James posted a photo of Nicholas Reardon on Twitter today with the message: "YOU'RE NEXT #ACCOUNTABILITY." Reardon is the officer identified with firing four shots that killed 16-year-old Ma'Khia Bryant in Columbus, Ohio. The message seemingly implied the officer would be the next to face repercussions similar to that of George Floyd's killer Derek Chauvin.

The basketball star of the Los Angeles Lakers has been an outspoken supporter of Black Lives Matter and frequently takes to social media to express his opinions regarding social justice. As a player, he is a four-time world champion, including from the Lakers run in 2020, as well as a 17-time NBA all-star.

The police claim Bryant threatened two girls with a knife on Tuesday when she fatally shot by an officer, who was later identified by authorities as Reardon. The incident occurred shortly before a jury reached a guilty verdict in the murder trial of the former Minneapolis police officer Chauvin for the killing of George Floyd. Bryant's caused immediate protest in Columbus and is currently under investigation.

 

NFL owner refuses to take down George Floyd tweet saying, 'I CAN BREATHE' after Derek Chauvin was convicted of murder

The Las Vegas Raiders sent a tweet that read "I CAN BREATHE" after Derek Chauvin was found guilty of the murder of George Floyd on Tuesday.

The tweet drew backlash for being tone-deaf and its similarity to a phrase echoed by NYPD supporters after a New York City police officer killed Eric Garner by putting him in a chokehold in 2014. Pro-police demonstrators wore shirts with the phrase "I can breathe" as a counter-protest to those protesting police brutality.

Raiders owner Mark Davis admitted that he was the one who sent the tweet and did not do so to incite pro-police sentiment. Davis said that the tweet was inspired by a phrase from Floyd's brother Philonese, who said, "Today, we are able to breathe again." after Chauvin's verdict.

"That's my tweet," Davis told the Las Vegas Review-Journal. "I don't want anyone in the organization taking heat. I take full responsibility for that. I was driving home from a meeting when the verdict came in. Soon after, I was listening to George Floyd's brother, Philonise, speak. And he said, 'Today, we are able to breathe again.' I took my lead from him. In my mind, that was all I needed to say, 'I can breathe.'"

Still, despite many finding the tweet offensive, Davis also said that he wouldn't take the tweet down, according to Tashan Reed of The Athletic.

"I felt that was a powerful statement," Davis said. "Today was a day where I can breathe, and we can all breathe again because justice was served. But we have a lot of work to do still on social justice and police brutality."

The tweet was pinned to the top of The Raiders' official Twitter account for the entirety of Tuesday evening. It has since been unpinned, but it is still live on the account's media posts.

Several high-profile figures in sports have called out the Raiders for the tweet and leaving it up, citing a lack of sensitivity on the issue, including LeBron James and Jemele Hill.

Insider has reached out to the Raiders' communication team for comment but has not heard back at the time of publication.

 


Tuesday, April 6, 2021

I remember the last NCAA game I listened to in 2020 was a first round game in the ACC Tournament. I didn’t realize the NCAA had already started playing games without people in the stands. The next day I read all NCAA championships would be suspended. Sports over the next year was a drag. The nonsense with the NBA bubble. A sloppy 60 game season for MLB. NCAA Football was helter skelter with lower division schools more or less cancelling their seasons. Some talk about cancelling the Division I football season or some conferences opting out. And then changing their minds leading to the idiotic end to the Big Ten season where NCAA franchise Ohio State was allowed to jump over other schools who’d played more games, to play in the Big Ten championship and ultimately be put into the College Football Playoffs. In a year where the overriding theme was equality which never played out more on the streets and social media but not on the football field. Especially in a particularly brutal political environment where Covid deniers wanted full stadiums while the more cautious wanted to protect the treasure of youth. Different sides of our national identity came to the fore and it was ugly and violent even when the best thing for the country was to come together and fight the thing that was keeping us apart. It turns out it was more than a Pandemic.

Yet we found a way to fight through the nonsense and have a stellar NFL season culminating in another Super bowl involving Tom Brady and something no one has ever seen in football history which is a Super bowl played at a team’s home field. And it only got better. MLB started Spring Training on time and so far (knock on wood) Covid hasn’t been too much of a disruption and then there was the NCAA Tournament. No matter the circumstance this was one of the best tournaments to ever take place! While there weren’t many buzzer beaters there were a number of teams that shocked the field or just showed they weren’t to be taken for granted. Grand Canyon University, Oregon State, and of course UCLA. Gonzaga going for the first undefeated season in decades. Baylor bringing Scott Drew’s dreams to fruition with a National Title. A doosey of a final four weekend with an awesome finish to one of the best games in tournament history between Gonzaga and UCLA whom no one thought it would go to overtime or even double overtime if not for a miraculous shot at the buzzer. No one could have drawn it up or defended it better, the final shot which left me with my jaw on the floor knowing that UCLA was a play in team that got all the way to the final four. Who does that?

So what happens now? Seniors get an extra year of eligibility because of Covid. Minor changes in future professional sports including a 17 game season in the NFL? Changes in the playoff system? We’ve already seen that an entire baseball league hitting DH doesn’t work and thank goodness for not continuing with the automatic runner in extra innings. And finally full stands for all events. However, it is not as simple as it is written Monday morning quarterback style. With strict voting laws being protested to the point MLB has moved the All- Star game out of Georgia. And Donald Trump stupidly suggesting a boycott when there are hardly anyone in the stands already.

Another period where sports came to our aid in tough times but the underlying epidemic of young black men and women being shot and protests over it amounted to nothing though some would say the conviction of Dereck Chauvin would make the suffering of the past year worth it. Some would say it is only the beginning. It is a matter of forgetting, which is what sports has done for us through the years. The unpredictability of it all without educated individuals butchering the English language and unnecessary bad language in a time when there is more access to younger generations to see adults behaving badly. Never in my life would I imagine an athlete swearing at the President of the United States no matter how wrong he is. 

Wednesday, March 17, 2021

Andy Dalton, You've Got To Be Kidding Me!

I’m not a religious man but I’d though me and the cosmos were at one sometimes. When Andy Dalton was in Cincinnati I thought it sucks to be them. I’m also not a betting man or gambler but the one game I ever considered putting money on was the 2014 Chargers V.S. Bengals game. Bengals were at home that year and I knew in my heart the Bengals would lose.

I’ve followed a few quarterbacks in my lifetime good or bad in the sense that if they were good the Bears should go after them. But only if they fit our system. I’ve followed a few bad quarterbacks as well to be sure the Bears never go after these guys. And one of them was Andy Dalton. I’m like the ’72 Dolphins every year the Bears don’t sign Dalton I exhale and hoist one. I am also very superstitious and know that some of those wishes can come crashing down and I have to pick my jaw up off the floor. This is one of those times. I’ve tried to avoid writing about the many rumors or quarterbacks the Bears were interested in this year because everyone that supposedly on the market the Bears came up.

 

The pundits would mention some of the other names available who were free agents and I knew one of them was Andy Dalton formerly of the dreadful Dallas Cowboys who play in the worse division in football but has some of the best talent. And one of those names, (free agents I mean, not the talent) was Andy Dalton. I would laugh every time the Cowboys would lose with him at the helm. And then…

We have a HC and a Gm trying to keep their jobs and make a big splash. Pundits were saying these guys must not really be on the hot seat because why would anyone sign here when these to fellows might not be here after next season? Hmmmm. Then comes the news The Bears are going to go down the same road they did with Glennon and Trubisky.

 

I have a cousin who gave me advice when I was in high school: Don’t make the same mistake twice. Well here we go again. We have two below average quarterbacks on the team in Dalton and Foles and we have to get rid of one and it’s obviously not going to be Dalton and we definitely have to draft one as the city still screams for a franchise qb. So let’s say that we do draft one and we get a good one. More than likely he’s going to have to sit for a few games if not a season and Dalton will more than likely be the opening day starter. (Audible gasp). And after a three interception or more game against a nowhere team it’ll be time to bench him and put in the rookie. Sound familiar?

 

Chicagoans weren’t mad that we drafted a qb who played one season in college we were mad that we moved up to draft him. Coincidentally the big name quarterbacks drafted that year were acquired the same way. I’ve heard people call for the team to be sold which I’m sure there are a number of people who wouldn’t be too happy about that considering the bloodline. But eventually the Chicago Bulls had to give in and made some big moves and they look like a different team. I figured when they dragged the Matriarch to Green Bay last year to watch the Bears get smoked something would change but after signing Dalton there was a collective, “Get the fuck out of here,” when the news came down about Dalton. At least it will only be a small crowd to boo at Dalton. I didn’t mean that to be funny but we could have saved ourselves some trouble when no one was in the seats and gone after Dalton then instead of Foles. But now that we’ll have people in the seats excited to see live football again I cannot imagine this is what they expected.  

 

Saturday, March 6, 2021

I get it the Bears need a quarterback. The Chicago Bears probably need more than that. Excuse me but they need another running back because we need an offense that can deal with the elements off the lakefront which is why I don’t understand why they let go of Jordan Howard. Granted he couldn’t catch the football out of the backfield but he could pick up 5 five to six yards per carry when the field is frozen and gimmick football doesn’t work. Roles have changed since the magical season of 2018 and everyone was willing to give Tribusky a chance. The Bears weren’t going to win or even make the Super Bowl that year because the one thing in sports that is true is the league will catch up to you.

Unfortunately a couple of things became obvious that year: Matt Nagy has no idea how to coach on game day and Ryan Pace does not know what a good quarterback looks like with the number of them available that year. Now this a year when talented college and veteran quarterbacks are available and while we are happy Pace had the balls to trade for Kalil Mack, do we trust him to pull off another big trade, much less sign a good free agent. I’m sick of hearing the Bears name with every big name free agent out there when they have no reason to come here.

It is asinine to believe a big name free agent will come here when the HC and the GM are on the hot seat. So if they do sign a star at any position why would they believe that either HC or GM will be here next year anyways? I like Russel Wilson but when the Seahawks were dominant and playing in Super bowls they also had a defense that the Bears couldn’t match. So you want Russel to come here with a coach who cannot coach on game days or make changes at half time to change the outcome of a game, a sketchy offensive line. An above average defense but I wouldn’t call them Championship worthy.

It’s one thing to pick up a QB who fits your scheme than one who will fill the seats. We still need to draft a quarterback even if we sign a big name free agent. Look at what New England has done with their drafting of backup Quarterbacks. They didn’t last except Brady and who wants to look over their shoulder that the guy behind him could become the next Tom Brady which is how Brady even got his start when the Franchise quarterback with the belief he is going to get his starting job when he comes back from injury.

 Football is different than other sports in that way. Most sports a replacement player has to perform out of this world in order to stay in the lineup to surpass the starter who is usually beloved. If I remember Drew Bledsoe was highly regarded when he recovered from injury but not given his starting job back. That went to Tom Brady with Bledsoe given spot starts. It isn’t enough to just be beloved. That’s what they play the video montage of highlights for after you’ve retired. Needless to say the Bears have a problem. It’s funny when we think how we got here in the first place. A bad pick on draft night in 2017 and within three years we are a dog chasing its tail. Thinking the answer is to go big is not the answer at all. I mean why not try to talk Drew Brees out of retirement? This team isn’t as bad as when the last head coach left it but damn this is a conundrum with no easy answers. The one thing they do not need to do is go jumping at shadows because a player is pissed at their team. G©

 

Saturday, February 27, 2021

Mike Tomlin Has Blunt Reaction To Eric Bieniemy Not Getting Head Coaching Job Chris Rosvoglou

Why hasn’t Eric Bieniemy landed a head coaching job yet? That’s a question that not even Mike Tomlin can answer right now.

Last week, Tomlin appeared on HBO’s Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel to discuss a plethora of topics. During that discussion, he said the lack of minority head coaches in the NFL is “unacceptable.”

Tomlin then had a follow-up interview with Ron Cook of the Pittsburgh Post Gazette to shed more light on this issue plaguing the NFL.

It appears that Tomlin has reached his breaking point when it comes to this topic, telling Cook “I normally don’t talk publicly during the offseason, but this is a critical issue for us.”

Tomlin also shared his thoughts on Bieniemy not getting a marquee job this offseason. Despite all his success with the Kansas City Chiefs, he remains in a coordinator role.

“Bieniemy is a real head-scratcher for me,” Tomlin said, via the Pittsburgh Post Gazette. “Every offensive coordinator Andy Reid has had in the last 20 years got a head job. One of those guys, Brad Childress, hired me in Minnesota in 2006. Now, Andy has the best offense he’s ever had and [Bieniemy] can’t get a job?”

Bieniemy was linked to a few job openings this offseason, but once again he went another year without an offer.

The Chiefs have been prolific on offense over the past three years. While most of the credit goes to Patrick Mahomes and Andy Reid, a solid portion of the praise should go to Bieniemy.

Hopefully, Bieniemy lands a head coaching gig following the 2021 season.

 

It’s Chicago Cubs outfielder Joc Pederson’s time to seize his opportunity: ‘I don’t think I am respected as an everyday player’ Meghan Montemurro, Chicago Tribune

 

Joc Pederson is betting on himself. The new Chicago Cubs outfielder turned down multiyear offers elsewhere for a one-year deal in Chicago because the organization offered the main thing he coveted. Pederson wanted an opportunity to play every day, and he will get a chance to show he’s more than a platoon option as the Cubs’ starting left fielder.

Pederson, entering his eighth big-league season, knows it is on him to deliver. Manager David Ross isn’t going to keep running him out there if Pederson doesn’t come through against left-handers. Ross brought that up during a phone conversation with Pederson before the 28-year-old signed with the team Feb. 5.

© Armando L. Sanchez / Chicago Tribune/Chicago Tribune/TNS James Norwood delivers a pitch during Cubs spring training workout on Feb. 27, 2021, at Sloan Park in Mesa, Ariz.

“ ‘Hey, I’m going to pencil you in there every day, and if we come to July and you’re not cutting it and you’re hitting .150 against lefties — we’re still here to win ballgames,’ ” Pederson recalled Ross telling him. “I said, ‘Absolutely.’ Like, I’m not looking for anything guaranteed. I just want to have a real opportunity. Basically that’s what he said, ‘We’re going to give you that,’ and I think that was a huge.

“I trusted him and I think he’s trusting me, and it’s going to be a lot of fun.”

Pederson didn’t get many extended looks from the Los Angeles Dodgers to prove that as a left-handed hitter he wouldn’t be a liability against lefties. He started 23 games versus left-handers during his first full season in 2015; over the next five years, he had only 28 total starts. The Dodgers’ organizational depth allowed them to build a consistent winner and a threatening lineup. At times, that meant players had to put the team ahead of themselves. For Pederson, it resulted in a platoon role.

© Armando L. Sanchez / Chicago Tribune/Chicago Tribune/TNS Jake Arrieta walks near a group of pitchers before throwing during Cubs spring training on Feb. 27, 2021, at Sloan Park in Mesa, Ariz.

“I don’t think I am respected as an everyday player, (it’s) why a lot of teams didn’t want to pursue me as that,” Pederson said Friday. “So I’m excited for this opportunity, and it’s fun to come to field every day knowing that I’m getting another shot.”

Most of Pederson’s sample size against left-handers comes from his 2015 season when he hit .216 with a .295 on-base percentage and .691 OPS in 129 plate appearances. When compiling and evaluating the totality of his numbers when a lefty is on the mound, Pederson doesn’t stack up well against other left-handed hitters’ performances. Since the start of the 2015 season, 139 left-handed hitters have at least 150 plate appearances versus a lefty. Among them, Pederson ranks near the bottom in notable offensive categories featuring weighted runs created plus (123rd), weighted on-base average (127th), OPS (127th), batting average (126th) and K% (28th).

Pederson’s history against left-handed pitchers isn’t completely bleak. One encouraging metric is his walk rate in lefty-lefty matchups. His 9.3 BB% is in the top third among the aforementioned group. Pederson also has produced a solid hard-hit rate (30.6 Hard%) that put him in the top 50%.

In six-plus seasons overall with the Dodgers, Pederson hit .230 with 130 home runs and 303 RBIs with a .336 on-base percentage, .806 OPS and 116 OPS+.

Cubs hitting coach Anthony Iapoce has enjoyed getting to know Pederson and watching him work in camp. Iapoce said Pederson has been proactive in his cage work, including how to attack left-handers and right-handers while facing different arm angles. It’s not the practice and work itself that has stood out to Iapoce but Pederson’s approach to the challenge.

 “You can see that he wants it,” Iapoce said this week. "It’s no different from what anybody else is doing in the major leagues to try and get an everyday job. But just the competitive awareness, the spirit that he brings, I think those are the things where you’re like, OK, I can see this happening.”

With Pederson as the lone external addition to the Cubs starting lineup, Ross’ job becomes a little easier if Pederson shows improvement and doesn’t need to be benched every time an opposing team starters a left-hander. Ross could look to pinch hit for Pederson when a lefty comes in from the bullpen, especially against a power arm like the Milwaukee Brewers’ Josh Hader. It will be up to Pederson to force Ross to keep him the lineup.

“I know what type of player I am,” Pederson said. “Just getting opportunities is going to be good. I guess you could say I’ve got to prove some stuff to them. But I’m going to have to prove it for anybody but myself. Like, I know what I can do and I’m not going to add pressure.”

Javier Baez expects to rebound from a subpar 2020 season — and reiterates his desire to remain with the Chicago Cubs: ‘I don’t want to play for another team’