The learning curve for a freshman making the transition from high school to college is steep, but with the right core mix of veterans the urgency of a freshman to produce immediately decreases. We can look no further than to James Michael McAdoo in 2012. As a freshman McAdoo struggled for much of the season until the light bulb went off where McAdoo was instrumental in North Carolina reaching the elite before losing to Kansas. With the talented veterans North Carolina had in 2012 Roy Williams could allow McAdoo to work through his growing pains in limited minutes without hurting the team. Marcus Paige did not have the same luxury as McAdoo after Kendell Marshal declared for the NBA. If the Tar Heels looking at the NBA all return Kennedy Meeks, Nate Britt and Isaiah Hicks will be the biggest benefactors.
The McDonalds all American game each year receives too much hype for how players perform in the glorified scrimmage. Kennedy Meeks did not perform the way he is capable or wanted to, but his game is going to be highlighted differently in Roy Williams system. Meeks already understands he will become Jonas Sahratian's best buddy when walks on North Carolina's campus this June. Isaiah Hicks has the ability to run the floor and rebound and if he can do those two things consistently he will see solid minutes next year. North Carolina needs improved front court play specifically on the defensive end of the floor, but with a year in the program along with an offseason of weight training Brice Johnson should be one of the most improved players in the league. What the Tar Heel's will need from Meeks or Hicks is to provide another low post presence and provide solid minutes off the bench. Anything else would be just be a nice bonus for North Carolina.
Marcus Paige clearly earned the right to lead North Carolina after performing in clutch situations late in the season. With Dexter Strickland graduating Nate Britt needs to be a solid contributor and a change of pace guy off the bench for North Carolina. With the pace North Carolina wants to run Britt will receive valuable minutes as a freshman.
Situations where freshman have the ability to learn without being thrown completely into action is the best case situation for most players coming out of high school for their long term career. North Carolina with the return of Hairston, McAdoo and Bullock would make the Tar Heels the exception to the rule in 2013-2014.
The Water Cooler
Bringing you opinions on ACC Sports, NFL News and more.
Sunday, April 7, 2013
Tar Heels Returning Would Help Incoming Freshman
Labels:
Brice johnson,
Isaiah Hicks,
Kennedy Meeks,
Marcus Paige,
Nate britt,
North Carolina Basketball,
Roy Williams,
Tar Heels,
UNC
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PJ Hairston Returning to UNC Per Jeff Goodman: PJ's Mother Refutes Report
According to CBS reporter Jeff Goodman sources say PJ Hairston is returning to North Carolina.
North Carolina's P.J. Hairston is returning to North Carolina, sources told CBSSports. Still not sure about McAdoo and Bullock yet.
— Jeff Goodman (@GoodmanCBS) April 7, 2013
Wendy Mailey PJ's Mother is denying this report saying they have not made a decision at this time according to Andrew Carter from the News & Observer.
P.J. Hairston's mom refutes @goodmancbs report that P.J. Hairston has made up mind to return. “We are still in the process," she says.
— Andrew Carter (@_andrewcarter) April 7, 2013
Roy Williams spoke earlier in the week and to Taylour Zarzour from the Drive that North Carolina was close to having all three return.
Labels:
Jeff goodman,
NCAA,
PJ Hairston,
Tar Heels,
UNC
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Saturday, April 6, 2013
Four Corners:Thanks Jalen Rose for Reminding Me How Great 1993 Really Was
Jalen Rose took to air to remind us all how great the Fab Five
were in college and after finally watching the 1993 National Championship game
Rose had the following thoughts:
"It upsets me looking at the North Carolina
bench, a bunch of no-name players that have championship rings that they can be
proud of forever," he said, "and I don't have one."
The Michigan Wolverines were a talented group, but if I were
to look at Michigans bench at the end of the game I would not be able to
recognize any of them. Outside of the starting five can you name anyone
of importance for Michigan? I am unable to that either.
What Jalen Rose is forgetting is that talent does not always
equal a better team. If the Michigan Woverines were as talented as Mr.
Rose contends then how did they finish 1-5 versus Duke and north Carolina
during his career. Their lone victory came via a tip in during the final
moments in Hawaii versus North Carolina which happens to be that same team of
no-names. At North Carolina and Duke the name that matters is on the
front of the chest first, and since he focuses so much energy on the "Fab
Five" he fails to credit any other class that was a part of those Michigan
teams.
I guess Donald Williams performance in the final four was a
no name performance given he scored 25 points on Michigan on 8-12 shooting.
Williams was the 1993 final four's most outstanding playing knocking down
10-14 three pointers and he had 109 points for the tournament. Perhaps if one
of those fabulous players guarded the arc a little bit better the so called
"better team" would have won.
North Carolina was up two when Chris Webber called his
timeout which only was allowed to happen because of a missed travel call
seconds before that. Regardless of what Jalen Rose believes the better team was
North Carolina, and according to the NCAA the Fab Five never existed.
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Four Corners: Final Thoughts on Today's Final Four
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| espn.com |
The Final Four is upon us and in a year where we thought a mid major would come through and cut down the nets Wichita State as a ninth seed is the lone hope in the category of Cinderella. Traditional names such as Boeheim, Pitino, Louisville, Michigan and Syracuse dominate the tournaments headlines. In the wake of the Kevin Ware injury has the emotional tie toward Wichita State and the role of underdog been swayed in favor of the Cardinals? Today we give our last four parting shots of the final four.
One: Officiating may be a major factor in the first game today. The Louisville loss of Kevin Ware hurts their backcourt depth and effiency on the pick and roll. The sophomore had become very confident in this role providing that energy off the bench. Louisville is going to have to divide those sixteen minutes up and their guards are going to have to play smart defensively. Most of Louisvilles fouls come from aggressive trapping and taking chances. Peyton Siva and Russ Smith cannot afford to sit for a long period in this game. Interesting enough Karl Hess is refereeing this game today. He at one time this had a team shooting free throws on the wrong goal.
Two: One shining moment may be watching the Louisville team lift Kevin Ware up to cut down the nets Monday Night in Atlanta. After last week the character of this young man has taken hold of America. The day he is able to play basketball again will be a great day in college hoops.
Three: Syracuse is only giving up 3.9 points per game in transition. The Michigan Wolverines love to run when it is available, but the Orangemen have been sensational on the break. Syracuse forces you into a grind it out half court contest and if the score is in the fifties or low sixties advantage goes to the Cuse.
Four: Trey Burke has been fun to watch this season and will most likely be headed to the NBA. One of the reasons I do not follow the NBA as I did in my younger years is there is no tie to the players. Growing up I watched future pros for mostly four years in college basketball except for a few exception and built an emotional stance on whether or not i wanted them to succeed in the NBA. That would draw me to watching a random Cavaliers game or Hawks on TBS. That is gone now and it does not make the NBA game any worse, but it takes away from my interest.
My picks for today's games:
Michigan 68 Syracuse 65
Louisville 73 Whicta State 62
Labels:
Boeheim,
Final Four,
Kevin Ware,
Louisville,
Michigan,
NCAA,
Pitino,
Syracuse,
Trey Burke
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NC State's Program May Be Better Without Rodney Purvis
The last week has been hard for NC State Basketball when you consider that five key players will no longer be part of the program next season. Seniors Scott Wood and Richard Howell were the heart of the program and their leadership will be hard to replace. Lorenzo Brown and CJ Leslie both declared for the NBA, but no one in Raleigh expected them to be back after this year. Mark Gottfried expected to be without all for players during the 2013-2014, but the make up of the program took a turn when Freshman Rodney Purvis decided to transfer. Unhappy with his role at NC State the freshman wanted to find another opportunity where he could play point guard. I have been critical of Mark Gottfried's handling of players this season, but wishing Purvis well is a step forward for NC State.
Mark Gottfried has raised expectations at NC State and if you do not agree with that simply go to PackPride and read the message boards where fans are critical of a coach who in his first two years has achieved back to back NCAA tournaments including a sweet sixteen run last March. North Carolina and Duke fans believe NC state is going to slip back to the old Pack next fall after losing five key players in the rotation, but I say that is wishful thinking. Are they going to win the ACC title after losing four pros off their roster? No, but they are not going to be the team we watched under Sydney Lowe for five seasons. There are several key things that must happen, but NC State could be in the top half of the ACC next year.
TJ Warren is a potential lottery pick and could very well lead the league in scoring next season. He will be the focal point of NC State's offense after shooting 62% from the field this past season as well as 52% behind the arc. The area Warren has to improve in is foul shooting. For a player to shoot over 50% from the three point line I cannot understand how that same player shot 54% from the free throw line.
Tyler Lewis needs to go back and watch game film of NC State from the late eighties and early nineties when Chris Corchiani ran the backcourt. Lewis is undersized and may never become an elite ACC point guard, but he is a solid player who can shoot the basketball a little better than he displayed this year. With the Purvis transfer Gottfried may opt to play Barber and Lewis together at times next season. An area that Lewis showed effectiveness in his 12 minutes per game was an ability to take care of the basketball. The freshman average over a 2-1 assist to turnover ratio for the season. Steve Wojciehowski as a freshman averaged 4.0 points a game on a team that was the worst in the ACC in 1994-1995. Tyler Lewis is not a floor slapper, but he is a savvy point guard who is going to improve. NC State doesn't need him to score twenty a night only to run the offense which he is plenty capable of doing.
Anthony Barber shined Wednesday in the McDonalds all American game with a flash of speed and athleticism that the Wolfpack have to be excited about. The issue for Barber will be can he slow down and be efficient in the half court offense necessary to have an early impact in the ACC. Life as a freshman point guard is never easy, but Barber has the skills to be an elite guard in this league. To ease his transition into college basketball Gottfried may use Barber and Lewis at the same time.
Mark Gottfried has no easy task in front of him for next season however with a fresh start with a lot of new faces may be the very thing to move his program further away from Sydney Lowe. Without any of the expectations that were placed on this years team the 2013-2014 NC State Wolfpack will be able to play loose because few even in their own city are giving them much of a chance next year.
You can follow me on twitter @mandmsportshow
Labels:
ACC,
cj leslie,
mark gottfried,
NC STATE,
NC State University Basketball,
NCAA,
NCSU,
Richard Howell,
Rodney Purvis,
Scott Wood,
Sydney Lowe,
TJ Warren,
Tyler lewis,
Wolfpack
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Friday, April 5, 2013
North Carolina Players Leaning Toward a Return to UNC
Roy Williams spoke with Taylor Zarzour from The Drive in
Charlotte regarding North Carolina players James Michael McAdoo, PJ Hairston
and Reggie Bullock impending decision on whether to enter the NBA Draft. Williams
stated that in his mind they think Hairston, bullock, and macadoo will stay,
"they are enjoying school", "and want to do more."
Check out our feature breaking down the games of James Michael McAdoo, PJ Hairston and Reggie Bullock in Analyzing the TarHeel Trio-and the NBA
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Thursday, April 4, 2013
2014 NFL Draft Will Be Effected by the Trenches Between UNC and South Carolina
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| espn.go.com |
Clearly Jadeveon Clowney is the number one projected pick
for the 2014 NFL draft however NFL teams will be tuned in August 29 to watch
UNC left tackle James Hurst match up with Clowney North Carolina visits South
Carolina. In the NFL a quarterbacks best friend is his blind side left
tackle and if Hurst has a good showing versus Clowney he will climb the draft
boards quickly.
If you have not heard of Jadeveon Clowney I
suggest you check out the player James Hurst will be attempting to block. You
can bet UNC quarterback Bryn Renner hopes Hurst can show the world why he was a
five star left tackle when he signed his letter of intent to come to Chapel
Hill.
As you can see James hurst has his hands full with Clowney,
but James Hurst played as a true freshman in Atlanta against LSU in 2010
in a game that was supposed to be North Carolina’s break out performance until
13 players were unable to play due to the NCAA investigation. James Hurst
protected TJ Yates as he had arguably the best game of his career shredding the
LSU secondary for 412 yards and three touchdowns. Hurst was almost invisible in
his first game which is truly remarkable for a true freshman playing one of the
best defensive fronts in the SEC.
This will be one of the more intriguing non skill position
match ups in college football this season. For UNC to have any chance
against the Gamecocks Hurst will have had to play the game of his career for
UNC.
Labels:
College Football,
Jadeveon Clowney,
James hurst,
North Carolina,
south Carolina,
UNC,
USC
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Hall of Fame Break Ups: Franchises Break Ties with Players/Coaches
You may remember back in the time where your favorite player played primarily for one team their entire career. I can remember watching John Elway lead the Broncos to miracle fourth quarter comebacks or Darrell Green snagging one more interception even after turning 40 years old for the Washington Redskins. For those of you who remember the Steel Curtain or Bradshaw to Swann the free agent era has cause Heroes to turn Villains and at times Enemies to Idols. The recent developments that have cause football fans to wonder where Peyton Manning will play next year started me thinking about some of the all time departures in pro sports. Some of the break-ups were closer to the Baldwin/Basinger divorce than others. Here is a break down of the top 5 Pro football break ups.
5. Mike Shanahan
Mike Shanahan was hired by the raiders in 1988, but after a 7-9 finish Al Davis as usual grew impatient with Shanahan. After a 1-3 start in 1989 the Raiders fired Shanahan. Shanahan after serving as offensive coordinator for San Fransisco reunited with John Elway in 1995 and led the Broncos to back to back Super Bowl Victories. Who got the better end in this break up? Shanahan
4. Barry Sanders
Barry Sanders had the best runs in the history of the NFL just to return to original line of scrimmage. What he did not ever have was a quality head coach or a an elite quarterback to take any pressure off of him. Think about this: while being the defensive focus each week Barry Sanders ran for 15, 269 yards while averaging 5.0 yards per carry. He did this with the following signal callers under center: Rodney Peete, Scott Mitchell, Charlie Batch, Andre Ware, Chuck Long and Erik Kramer. Barry pulled the oldest trick in the book to break away from the lions ("its not you its me") to tell the world he was retiring from Pro Football that he just was not interested in playing anymore. The disorganization of a joke of a franchise caused the rest of pro football fans to lose out on seeing the most explosive back ever to just walk away from the game. End the end Barry may have won out because my last memory of Sanders is making all pro linebackers miss wide open tackles instead of seeing an aging superstar fade in the desert.
3.Marcus Allen
Marcus Allen can be rembered for his play in the 1984 Super bowl where he gashed the Washington Redskins and my childhood hero John Riggins for 192 yards and a 38-9 victory. Marcus Allen eventually ran into Al Davis' doghouse and he never could escape. Without free agency Allen was trapped and reduced to a role player playing fullback next to phenom Bo Jackson. Allen kept quiet until a Monday Night football game where he spoke out about his treatment from Davis. In 1993 free agency allowed Allen to leave the Raiders and he signed with their arch rivals the Kansas City Chiefs. In five years with Chiefs Allen rushed for 44 touchdowns. The question never answered was why the Hall of Famer was put out to pasture as a third down back and Al Davis robbed football fans what could have been the most exciting play in Marcus Allens career. Although the chiefs did not win a Super Bowl the Raiders clearly lost after Allen's departure and the career ending injury of Bo Jackson. Once again karma bites Al Davis.
2. Brett Favre
I could not make a decision if Brett belonged at the top of the list or even on the list. Indecision and Brett Favre, that never happens. Favre is on this list because he is ultimate middle school break up. Before practice he was retiring, during practice he was gonna play one more year, after practice he was going to retire and then just before bed he tells the Packers he loves them and he will not leave them. The next day he calls a press conference and retires. As ridiculous as that rant sounded it is about as close to reality with Favre as you can get. Finally the Packers had to be the woman in the relationship and tell him they were moving on with Aaron Rodgers. Favre left and joined the NY Jets where he left the Jets under even more drama than he created with the Packers. Considering that Favre became involved in sexual harassment suit with the Jets and the Packers won a Super Bowl I will say Green Bay got the last word in this fun field drama.
1. Joe Montana
Joe Montana won 4 super bowls for the San Fransico 49ers, and the last thing anyone wanted to see was Joe Montana playing football in another uniform. Montana was injured in a playoff game against the NY Giants in 1991. This injury cause him to miss all of 1991 and most of 1992 season. During this time Quarterback Steve Young started to emerge as a star in the league throwing for nearly 3500 yards and 25 TDs in 1992. Young led San Fransisco to a 1994 Super Bowl win and MVP honors while Montana finished his career in Kansas City 1994, but did lead the Chiefs to the AFC championship game against the Buffalo Bills in 1993. In the case of Montana you cannot blame him or 49ers for parting ways after the injuries he had suffered along with having a future hall of fame signal caller to replace him. Joe Montana belongs at number one on this list and not because of the drama it cause amongst players and the organization, but the arguments it created with the teams own fan base plus putting Favre number one just gives more attention to that wrangler jean wearing drama filled egomaniac. Steve Young may be in the Hall of Fame, but Joe Montana is the reason everyone knows about the "West Coast.
Follow us on twitter and send us us your thoughts @mandmsportshow
5. Mike Shanahan
Mike Shanahan was hired by the raiders in 1988, but after a 7-9 finish Al Davis as usual grew impatient with Shanahan. After a 1-3 start in 1989 the Raiders fired Shanahan. Shanahan after serving as offensive coordinator for San Fransisco reunited with John Elway in 1995 and led the Broncos to back to back Super Bowl Victories. Who got the better end in this break up? Shanahan
4. Barry Sanders
Barry Sanders had the best runs in the history of the NFL just to return to original line of scrimmage. What he did not ever have was a quality head coach or a an elite quarterback to take any pressure off of him. Think about this: while being the defensive focus each week Barry Sanders ran for 15, 269 yards while averaging 5.0 yards per carry. He did this with the following signal callers under center: Rodney Peete, Scott Mitchell, Charlie Batch, Andre Ware, Chuck Long and Erik Kramer. Barry pulled the oldest trick in the book to break away from the lions ("its not you its me") to tell the world he was retiring from Pro Football that he just was not interested in playing anymore. The disorganization of a joke of a franchise caused the rest of pro football fans to lose out on seeing the most explosive back ever to just walk away from the game. End the end Barry may have won out because my last memory of Sanders is making all pro linebackers miss wide open tackles instead of seeing an aging superstar fade in the desert.
3.Marcus Allen
Marcus Allen can be rembered for his play in the 1984 Super bowl where he gashed the Washington Redskins and my childhood hero John Riggins for 192 yards and a 38-9 victory. Marcus Allen eventually ran into Al Davis' doghouse and he never could escape. Without free agency Allen was trapped and reduced to a role player playing fullback next to phenom Bo Jackson. Allen kept quiet until a Monday Night football game where he spoke out about his treatment from Davis. In 1993 free agency allowed Allen to leave the Raiders and he signed with their arch rivals the Kansas City Chiefs. In five years with Chiefs Allen rushed for 44 touchdowns. The question never answered was why the Hall of Famer was put out to pasture as a third down back and Al Davis robbed football fans what could have been the most exciting play in Marcus Allens career. Although the chiefs did not win a Super Bowl the Raiders clearly lost after Allen's departure and the career ending injury of Bo Jackson. Once again karma bites Al Davis.
2. Brett Favre
I could not make a decision if Brett belonged at the top of the list or even on the list. Indecision and Brett Favre, that never happens. Favre is on this list because he is ultimate middle school break up. Before practice he was retiring, during practice he was gonna play one more year, after practice he was going to retire and then just before bed he tells the Packers he loves them and he will not leave them. The next day he calls a press conference and retires. As ridiculous as that rant sounded it is about as close to reality with Favre as you can get. Finally the Packers had to be the woman in the relationship and tell him they were moving on with Aaron Rodgers. Favre left and joined the NY Jets where he left the Jets under even more drama than he created with the Packers. Considering that Favre became involved in sexual harassment suit with the Jets and the Packers won a Super Bowl I will say Green Bay got the last word in this fun field drama.
1. Joe Montana
Joe Montana won 4 super bowls for the San Fransico 49ers, and the last thing anyone wanted to see was Joe Montana playing football in another uniform. Montana was injured in a playoff game against the NY Giants in 1991. This injury cause him to miss all of 1991 and most of 1992 season. During this time Quarterback Steve Young started to emerge as a star in the league throwing for nearly 3500 yards and 25 TDs in 1992. Young led San Fransisco to a 1994 Super Bowl win and MVP honors while Montana finished his career in Kansas City 1994, but did lead the Chiefs to the AFC championship game against the Buffalo Bills in 1993. In the case of Montana you cannot blame him or 49ers for parting ways after the injuries he had suffered along with having a future hall of fame signal caller to replace him. Joe Montana belongs at number one on this list and not because of the drama it cause amongst players and the organization, but the arguments it created with the teams own fan base plus putting Favre number one just gives more attention to that wrangler jean wearing drama filled egomaniac. Steve Young may be in the Hall of Fame, but Joe Montana is the reason everyone knows about the "West Coast.
Follow us on twitter and send us us your thoughts @mandmsportshow
Labels:
Barry Sanders,
Joe Montana,
Peyton Manning,
Steve Young
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Clemson Tiger Tajh Boyd Heisman Campaign Starts with Georgia
Tajh Boyd chose to return to Death Valley and will be a
Heisman candidate in Chad Morris' offense as his campaign can officially begin
with a statement win over the Georgia Bulldogs with quarterback Aaron Murray. Boyd answered any questions about his
toughness in the win over LSU in the Chick Fil A Bowl on New Years Eve.
LSU who
had six defensive players declare for the NFL this year hit Boyd time and time
again only to watch him clutch passes all night. Boyd was sharp throughout the
game and answered any questions about whether he could face an NFL style blitz.
Time after time with pressure in his face Boyd made a last second throw
while getting knocked to the ground. Dabo
Swinney’s Tigers are poised to take their program to that next level and
college football fans will see early in the season if they are ready.
The Tigers have several key positions to figure out this
spring before they open with Georgia on August 31, 2013 at 8:00pm on ABC. The
offense has to find replacements for key losses at running back and receiver,
but the bigger question is the Clemson defense. In the second year under Brent
Venables the Tigers will be more familiar with his system and able to produce
better results as they did down the stretch in 2012. They will have to be sharp right off the bat
as Aaron Murray did not come back to Georgia for an exhibition tour before
graduating to the NFL. The Bulldogs were
very close to playing for the national title and are looking to compete with
Alabama, Texas A&M and Florida for the SEC championship.
Andre Ellington will graduate and leave Clemson University
for life in the National Football League. Ellington was a punishing runner who
was perfect for Chad Morris offense. Ellington rushed for over one
thousand yards this past season with eight touchdowns and the back could be
dangerous out the backfield with nearly three hundred yards receiving including
a 52 yard touchdown. Ellington will not just be missed running the ball
because his knowledge of the passing game and the experience to pick up a blitz
can be a quarterback’s best friend. Roderick McDowell is the second
leading rusher among running backs with 450 yards this past year and the senior
will get his chance this spring to earn the number one spot. Talented freshman Zack
Brooks has watched quietly learning the game behind a veteran group.
Brooks one of the most anticipated players in the 2012 class enrolled last
spring and will have the luxury of a full year on campus when he heads to
spring practice to make his case for more playing time. McDowell and brooks
will be challenged by two incoming freshman Tyshon Daye and Wayne Gallman, but
they have the advantage of experience in this offense.
Sammy Watkins will be back and for college football fans we
can only hope there are no off field issues this summer. The electrifying
player Fort Meyers Beach Florida will be needed as Clemson lost the best wide
receiver in the during the 2012 season when DeAndre
"Nuk" Hopkins declared for the NFL. The Chick Fil A
bowl sealed the deal as Hopkins was dominant against a LSU defense with a ton
of NFL talent. The question for Clemson is who will turn into that second
option for Tajh Boyd and provide the possession type catches that Hopkins was
brilliant at providing.
Labels:
Aaron Murray,
clemson,
Clemson 2013,
Clemson Tigers Football,
Dabo Swinney,
Georgia Bulldogs,
Sammy watkins,
Tajh Boyd
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College Football Before and After the BCS
The BCS or Bowl Championship Series was created to give us the best two teams in college football rather the old system where the voters would crown a national champion each year and in some cases two schools could claim the title as national champions of college football. However since the inception of the BCS we have as much controversy as before and the new playoff format is supposed to solve the issues found within the BCS.
Are we really better off today than we were before the BCS?
Do you enjoy the college bowl games more today than you did in the 70's, 80's or 90's? I for one watched more bowl games when the major games were all on New Years day. Yes I did channel surfing, and missed parts of games however it is easier explain to my wife that the few weeks following new years there will be several nights where I will be consumed with BCS games. For all you married men out there think about how New Years Day used to be. You woke up and the cotton bowl started around 11:30 and you had games until the Orange and Sugar Bowl capped off the night before heading back to work or school two days later. In the present bowl arrangement I have to prioritize which games I want to see and because many happen during the work week with late starts I end up missing some of the best college football of the year. You may say be a man stay up late it won't hurt you, but I am man enough to admit I need more sleep as I get older and if I have a choice between the Orange bowl between Clemson/West Virginia or my kids weekly basketball game the kid wins every time.
The BCS may give us a title game, but do we still have a clear champion every season? Even last year we had a national champion who did not win their own conference. I am not hear to debate whether or not you win your conference should effect your ability to compete for a title, but it does add some cloudiness on whether or not the system works. Any format that depends heavily on rankings created by writers or anyone one watching games has built in bias.
One of the great pieces of college football is debating the rankings each and every week and at the end still arguing over who should be the national champions. The BCS said it would crown a true national champion. Does it every really crown a true champion?, and with new playoff structure will we be any closer to knowing who the best in college football than we were the last time Notre Dame brought a title to South Bend?
Are we really better off today than we were before the BCS?
Do you enjoy the college bowl games more today than you did in the 70's, 80's or 90's? I for one watched more bowl games when the major games were all on New Years day. Yes I did channel surfing, and missed parts of games however it is easier explain to my wife that the few weeks following new years there will be several nights where I will be consumed with BCS games. For all you married men out there think about how New Years Day used to be. You woke up and the cotton bowl started around 11:30 and you had games until the Orange and Sugar Bowl capped off the night before heading back to work or school two days later. In the present bowl arrangement I have to prioritize which games I want to see and because many happen during the work week with late starts I end up missing some of the best college football of the year. You may say be a man stay up late it won't hurt you, but I am man enough to admit I need more sleep as I get older and if I have a choice between the Orange bowl between Clemson/West Virginia or my kids weekly basketball game the kid wins every time.
The BCS may give us a title game, but do we still have a clear champion every season? Even last year we had a national champion who did not win their own conference. I am not hear to debate whether or not you win your conference should effect your ability to compete for a title, but it does add some cloudiness on whether or not the system works. Any format that depends heavily on rankings created by writers or anyone one watching games has built in bias.
One of the great pieces of college football is debating the rankings each and every week and at the end still arguing over who should be the national champions. The BCS said it would crown a true national champion. Does it every really crown a true champion?, and with new playoff structure will we be any closer to knowing who the best in college football than we were the last time Notre Dame brought a title to South Bend?
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Wednesday, April 3, 2013
Top Five Coaches From College to the NFL
Chip Kelly is the new kid from the college ranks on the block. Nick Saban who is one of the best college head coaches of all time figured out quickly the NFL was not his cup of brandy. There are numerous other examples of successful college head coaches who flopped at the next level, but today we will focus on top five the guys who made the transition seamless.
Number Five: Dennis Green
Although Dennis Green never won a super bowl his teams in Minnesota were always competitive and close t reaching that next level. Green who is more popular right now for his Coors Light commercial was motivator and a coach players loved playing for. Green always appeared to be a players coach, but you could always tell he had control of the team. Green had his first losing season in 2001 after a decade of winning seasons in Minnesota.
Number Four: Marv Levy
Marv Levy prior to joining the NFL ranks coached at New Mexico and Levy struck gold in Buffalo with Jim Kelly and their no huddle offense. Levy doesn't get the credit he should for being an offensive innovator but the way he utilized Thurman Thomas in the screen game (just ask Dolphins fans in the playoffs) to the crossing patterns of Andre Reid. The Bills are remembered for losing four super bowls, but the Bills are truly the original Best show on Turf that was even better because they played outside.
Number Three: Tom Coughlin
Coughlin after coaching at Boston College took the Jaguars to the AFC championship game and has won two Super Bowls in New York. Coughlin's teams have found magic in two separate seasons where they looked dead yet somehow turned it around to make runs in the playoffs. In the first Super Bowl win Coughlin's team beat an undefeated New England Patriots team, but the game before New York had to travel to Green Bay and defeat Brett Favre.
Number Two: Jimmy Johnson
While Jimmy Johnson is remembered for the many locker room moments after a big where he yells "How Bout Them Cowboys" he could equally be remembered as a coach who flopped if he was given the same amount of patience given to some of the coaches who were recently fired. Give Jerry Jones credit here as he knew the rebuilding would take time and as much as we like to harp on his recent draft room blunders Jonson and Jones made the move to require what felt like Minnesotas entire draft of the late eighties and early nineties when they sent Herschel Walker in his blockbuster trade. Jimmy Johnson took the 1-15 Dallas Cowboys and turned them into a back to back super bowl champion team.
Number One: Bill Walsh
The West Coast Offense. Need I say more to knowledgeable football fans for why Bill Walsh should be number one on this list? The Cincinnati Bengals had Walsh right under their nose yet let him go when Coach Paul Brown appointed a Bill to run the team. Bill "Tiger" Johnson was selected as Brown's successor and Bill Walsh resigned immediately. Walsh would later coach at Stanford for two successful seasons when the San Francisco 49ers came calling. Walsh like Jimmy Johnson had a terrible record as a first year coach with the 49ers posting a 2-14 record. In 1979 Walsh selected a quarterback in the third round named Joe Montana from Notre Dame. Walsh who was jilted by the Bengals would go on to win three Super Bowls including two against the Bengals.
We live in a day where coaches are fired after one bad season and rarely does any coach have the luxury of an owner willing to stand by through a few years of growing pains as Walsh and Johnson were given. There is an art to knowing when to pull the trigger and fire a head coach. All of the coaches on this list had all pro quarterbacks to work with throughout their careers, which should make Chip Kelly and any other college coach ready to jump to the NFL very picky about which city they choose..
As always send us your comments in 140 characters or less @mandmsportshow
Number Five: Dennis Green
Number Four: Marv Levy
Marv Levy prior to joining the NFL ranks coached at New Mexico and Levy struck gold in Buffalo with Jim Kelly and their no huddle offense. Levy doesn't get the credit he should for being an offensive innovator but the way he utilized Thurman Thomas in the screen game (just ask Dolphins fans in the playoffs) to the crossing patterns of Andre Reid. The Bills are remembered for losing four super bowls, but the Bills are truly the original Best show on Turf that was even better because they played outside.
Number Three: Tom Coughlin
Coughlin after coaching at Boston College took the Jaguars to the AFC championship game and has won two Super Bowls in New York. Coughlin's teams have found magic in two separate seasons where they looked dead yet somehow turned it around to make runs in the playoffs. In the first Super Bowl win Coughlin's team beat an undefeated New England Patriots team, but the game before New York had to travel to Green Bay and defeat Brett Favre.
Number Two: Jimmy Johnson
While Jimmy Johnson is remembered for the many locker room moments after a big where he yells "How Bout Them Cowboys" he could equally be remembered as a coach who flopped if he was given the same amount of patience given to some of the coaches who were recently fired. Give Jerry Jones credit here as he knew the rebuilding would take time and as much as we like to harp on his recent draft room blunders Jonson and Jones made the move to require what felt like Minnesotas entire draft of the late eighties and early nineties when they sent Herschel Walker in his blockbuster trade. Jimmy Johnson took the 1-15 Dallas Cowboys and turned them into a back to back super bowl champion team.
Number One: Bill Walsh
The West Coast Offense. Need I say more to knowledgeable football fans for why Bill Walsh should be number one on this list? The Cincinnati Bengals had Walsh right under their nose yet let him go when Coach Paul Brown appointed a Bill to run the team. Bill "Tiger" Johnson was selected as Brown's successor and Bill Walsh resigned immediately. Walsh would later coach at Stanford for two successful seasons when the San Francisco 49ers came calling. Walsh like Jimmy Johnson had a terrible record as a first year coach with the 49ers posting a 2-14 record. In 1979 Walsh selected a quarterback in the third round named Joe Montana from Notre Dame. Walsh who was jilted by the Bengals would go on to win three Super Bowls including two against the Bengals.
We live in a day where coaches are fired after one bad season and rarely does any coach have the luxury of an owner willing to stand by through a few years of growing pains as Walsh and Johnson were given. There is an art to knowing when to pull the trigger and fire a head coach. All of the coaches on this list had all pro quarterbacks to work with throughout their careers, which should make Chip Kelly and any other college coach ready to jump to the NFL very picky about which city they choose..
As always send us your comments in 140 characters or less @mandmsportshow
Labels:
49ers,
All Pro QBs,
Bill Walsh,
Buffalo Bills,
Chip Kelly,
Cowboys,
Dennis Green,
Jimmy Johnson,
Marv Levy,
New York Giants,
NFL,
Nick Saban,
Super Bowl,
Tom Coughlin,
Vikings
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Why My Cleveland Launcher is the Club I Trust
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| Hitting Cleveland Launcher off the Tee |
The doctors told my parents the long medical term for the
illness I was born with, but to put it in simple terms my arms were lacking the
radius bone. That could have stopped me from experiencing the many
things in life that i have been fortunate to enjoy. When I first picked up my junior
golf set that my parents purchased for me I had no idea of the adventures it
would take me on throughout life.
In high school I was the MVP of our golf team in both my
junior and senior seasons but one aspect of my game limited me from
taking my game to the next level. I made up for it with a relentless
short game and a mental toughness that you find on tour, but physically I just
could muster the same shots as I grew older. I developed a love of the
game through frustration and success, but that frustration of being short off
the tee kept me from playing the game in a way that my golfing friends could.
then one summer I stopped in Carolina Custom Golf in Raleigh NC to pick
up some golf balls on my way to meeting a friend at a local course. I saw
a club that caught my eye and I went over to check it out. My clubs are a
little bit altered than the regular golfers, and this makes finding new clubs a
bit challenging. My irons all have driver length shafts in them and my
woods are all extended as well.
When I picked up this club and tested it out in their indoor
range with the regular shaft in it I knew this was the club for me. This Cleveland Launcher made
me think right away that this club was for me. I spoke to the
local representative who showed me the extension we could put in it
and it would be ready in a few days. A few days later I set up another
afternoon match with my friend Bryan, and on the way to the course I stopped at
a local driving range to try out my new club. Within a few swings i knew
this had been a great investment because right away I was carrying the ball 20
yards further than before and I was certain my opportunities for birdies were
going to increase.
Many of the new course layouts have par fours that average
around 400 yards and unless you can drive the ball over 200 it makes reaching a
green in regulation more difficult. With my Cleveland Launcher i was
averaging over 200 yards a drive and sometimes up to 225-235 depending on how
dry the ground was. What this has done for my game is increase the number of
holes where reaching the green in two is a illegitimate possibility.
After experiencing the success with my Launcher I have
purchased a Cleveland
Hybrid that I use for shots between 160-170 yards. The
combination between my driver and hybrid has made many of my iron obsolete.
I dont hit anything below a 5 iron and the preciseness that the hybrid
has given me allows me to be more aggressive on approach shots.
Labels:
Adversity,
Cleveland Golf,
Drivers
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Fired Rice: Mike Rice Out as Rutgers Coach After Video of Abusive Tactics Released
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| www.ibtimes.com |
The bigger issue is that Pernetti who is charged to oversee the athletic programs and well being of student athletes just brushed this video under the rug as if it would go away. I cannot imagine finding out my child was treated at a practice of any sport in this way.
Tom Pernetti stated he wanted to "regain the trust of Rutgers community." Perhaps the first step would be resigning because how can any parent trust their child's well being while participating in the athletic's program at Rutgers under his watch.
Labels:
NCAAB,
Rutgers Scarlet Knights
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