Email Contact

.

Pages

Showing posts with label common sense. Show all posts
Showing posts with label common sense. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

This Time, It Shouldn't Count

She's mad about this, too.  Easy, Madam Attorney General.
I actually had a different topic lined up for the first article not written by Janet Reno in awhile, especially since I have absolutely no interest in the MLB All-Star game or the 2011 Home Run Derby presented in crystal clear, high quality HD by State Farm.  Fun for the young fans, not the 30 somethings and up.  Unless you're in Vegas, then I'd gamble on it.

Anyways, watching Sportscenter this morning and came across this little nugget of a stat...



Monday, December 20, 2010

Most Ridiculous Bowl Games, '010

IT…IS…TIME!!! For the first second annual posting here at Logical Betting, the 2nd Annual Most Ridiculous Bowl games of the college season. As you may recall, but probably don’t, last season was highlighted by several bowl sponsors who had been bailed out by the government. Good for the NCAA for cleaning those guys out, but let me tell you, we got some doosies in their place. So without further adieu, bring on this year’s candidates for Most Ridiculous Bowl game of the college season. We are brought to you unofficially by Fisher Price, makers of the swing that is keeping Arg quiet while I start this post.

Sorry, I can’t help it, I need more adieu before I list… one of the primary reasons the NCAA claims they keep the current system is to maintain the integrity of the bowl system, which we all know is crap. But can I just point out a couple things, a list within the list, if you will:

1. There are 35 bowls being played this year, meaning 70 teams, including many undeserving teams like my Wolverines, Fah’s Irish, and Mojo’s Black Knights, will be represented in the bowl system. At the current rate of bowl expansion, it won’t be long before we have losing teams getting into bowl games.

2. Of the 35 bowls being played, fully 16 of them are named solely after their sponsor and/or the location they are being played, e.g., the Texas Bowl and the Meinike Car Care bowl (LB Note: I will not be editing sponsor names out of principle, I hope I misspelled the name of Meinike). That, my dear friends, is 46% OF ALL BOWLS. Reeeeeeeeal classy, NCAA.

3. I, as I’m sure many of you do, have fond memories of spending New Year’s Day with my family eating snacks made (guilted into) by my mom, and watching the big games all day. This year, only 6 of the games will be played on New Year’s Day, including everyone’s favorite Ticketcity Bowl. Only two of the BCS bowls, the Rose and the Fiesta, will be played that day, rather than the traditional “all of them.” The others will be played on Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday of the following week (when no one is watching because, you know, those aren’t holidays), and the BCS title game will be played on January 10th, 9 FREAKING DAYS AFTER NEW YEARS DAY!!!

4. The Cotton Bowl, another traditional New Year’s Day game, has been moved to Friday, January 7th. This is not a BCS bowl. I have no explanation for this, but just thought I’d point it out. Because if we didn’t play it then, we’d lose the integrity of the Cotton Bowl. Oh, forgot to mention, it’s been around since 1937, so naturally we want to maintain this history by putting it on a day when ever fewer people are watching. Oh, and also forgot to mention, the Ticketcity.com Bowl is also being played in the Cotton Bowl stadium. Integrity, I tells ya.

Okay, I can’t do this anymore. Screw you, Cal, why couldn’t you just finish off Oregon? And screw you, too, Alabama, how can you blow a 20 point lead at home to your arch rival? Ugh…

Before we start, let’s give a nod to those bowls from last year who missed this year’s list. The International Bowl (now extinct); Insight Bowl (moved itself off the NFL Network, just missed this year); Eagle Bank Bowl/GMAC Bowl, both extinct. I’m sure you remember that the GMAC Bowl, which was #1 on this list last year, pitted a classic matchup between Central Michigan and Troy, played on January 6th in Mobile, Alabama. It ended with a 44-41 CMU win in double OT. Don’t worry, though, the GMAC Bowl lives on now as the GoDaddy.com Bowl… God bless the GMAC Bowl, soul. But will the tradition carry on, and can the GoDaddy.com Bowl snag the top spot??? Let’s find out!

5a. Military Bowl, presented by Northrup Grumman – East Carolina vs. Maryland – Just a quick nod to our first runner-up for making the list. Sold short because Maryland plays in the area, but the “presented by” thing is awesome, and the fact that the “Military Bowl” doesn’t have a military school in it when there are two military schools playing in bowls is just classic. Had to point that out. It’s in DC, which sucks cause Mojo and I may have been making that roadie if Army were in the game. Oh well. Okay, on to the Top 5.

5. Ticketcity.com Bowl – Northwestern vs. Texas Tech – This be the game being played in the Cotton Bowl on New Year’s Day that isn’t the Cotton Bowl. How are these teams playing on New Year’s Day? It’s worse than Michigan playing on New Year’s Day, to be honest. I had to Google Ticketcity.com, which is a website for you to go buy tickets to NCAA events, among other things. So we don’t promote gambling or paying athletes for sports or finding out who the best team in the country is by playing it out on the field, but we do promote legal scalping. Also has the classic “bowl named only for the sponsor” hook going for it. Scalping and selling out, two virutes touted by the NCAA here. At least it’s two major conference teams, even if they’re terrible ones. Over/under on 12pm viewership of this game: 2.5. People.

4. Beef O’Brady’s St. Petersburg Bowl – Southern Mississippi vs. Louisville – Two former Conference USA rivals collide in this intriguing… right. Google tells us Beef O’Brady’s is a chain restaurant in the South, which bodes well for them, providing there’s a Beef O’Brady’s near where the players mothers live, since they’ll be the ones watching. This game takes place on Tuesday, December 21st, the traditional day for families to go into separate rooms, wrap presents, and flip through channels while muttering, “what the hell is Beef O’Brady’s” as they find reruns of the Real Housewives of Atlanta. These teams have a combined 14-10 record, including Louisville’s 3-5 record in the Big East, the hotbed of college football. Solid resume, but not enough to win this conference if you have a “BCS” conference team playing. Sorry, BOBSPB, maybe next year.

3. BBVA Compass Bowl – Kentucky vs. Pittsburgh – There is nothing I look forward to more than throwing this game on the Saturday after New Year’s and watching two teams with a combined 13-11 record (Kentucky 6-6 with a 2-6 conference record, mind you) and taking down Christmas decorations while the snow gently falls outside. It just reminds me of New Year’s Resolutions (especially sports resolutions posted by Logical Betting… shameless plug of future post! We’re back!) and the gray skies of Michigan. Pros – named solely after a sponsor who does no business in Pennsylvania and little in Kentucky, played in place none of their fans will travel (Mobile, Alabama) on a day no one is watching (January 8th… wow), and two fanbases who care WAY more about basketball than football. Cons – BBVA Compass is a bank that did not take federal bailout money (they are “run by conservative Southerners and Spainairds.” I am not making this up.), and both these teams are from major conferences. Good, but not good enough to take this year’s crown. This year’s runner-up:

2. uDrove Humanitarian Bowl – Northern Illinois vs. Fresno State – So many reasons this game is integral to the traditions of the bowl season… played on Saturday, December 18th when people are either out shopping last minute or at holiday parties; played in Boise, Idaho, where I’m sure many, many fans will be traveling to spend the last weekend before Christmas (I mean, who doesn’t want to make that roadie from Northern Cali or Illinois? Come on, now!); uDrove is a phone application for truckers to help reduce paperwork and keep track of shipping, tracking, compliance… and some other crap that makes no sense to me on their website; I had to look up which conferences these teams play in, and since I accidentally closed the Internets before I wrote this, I can’t even remember which ones they are… and I’m stone sober; and really, do we need other reasons? This bowl used to exist just so they could draw fans for a bowl game involving a 7-5 Boise State team. Now that they’re good enough to get to other bowls, this game has become a bit of a joke. By a bit, I mean, how many people have even heard of this game? Honestly, seeing this game makes me start to understand why the bowl system must be upheld. What would I do without the uDrove Humanitarian Bowl? I know! Wait with undying anticipation for…

1. GoDaddy.com Bowl – Miami (OH) vs. Middle Tennessee State – The Ghost of the GMAC Bowl lives!!! 9-4 MAC Champion vs… hang on… Sun Belt, uhhhh, team 6-6 Middle Tennessee State! Played in Mobile, Alabama on Thursday, January 6th, when the residents of Miami, OH and wherever Middle Tennessee State is (are they really D-I? Can we verify this?) flood Mobile to party in the streets during the first full work week back in 2011! The Bowl Tradition LIVES!!!!!

I mean, seriously? Do I need to go on? I’m pretty sure that this “bowl”, which we give the quotes to since it’s named after a sponsor that seems to change every year, has tie-ins to the MAC and Sun Belt, which pretty much guarantees it the top spot on this list until we either get three major conference teams to go undefeated or we get two non-BCS schools to go undefeated with one of them left out of the BCS. Then, the BCS championship would have a shot. Until then, a bowl named for a sponsor, played in the middle of the week after New Year’s Day, in Alabama where none of the schools reside, is damn near unbeatable.

I think we get the point here, and I’m pretty tired of stating the obvious. If the NCAA really wants to highlight the integrity of the bowl system, 6-6 teams out of the Sun Belt shouldn’t be playing in bowls. Michigan should not be playing on New Year’s Day. And there shouldn’t be 35 freaking bowl games. Getting to a bowl nowadays is like getting a participation ribbon when you’re 6 years old.

Alright, folks, this is about it, other than the NFL picks, til New Year’s. I hope you all have a safe, happy, and joyous holiday season. Comments and suggestions here on the blog or my email. Look for the Sports New Year’s Resolutions and Sports Investment posts early in ‘011, as well as the Logical Betting NFL Playoff Predictions. Until then, thanks for reading, and hasta.

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Discussin' Concussions

Two posts in two weeks, LB??? What gives, are you actually writing again? Well, sort of. I mean, look at the title, you call that writing? Actually, after an atrocious week of NFL picks (3-10-1, yeeeesh!), thought I’d spend a little time talking about something else I don’t know much about: concussions. This post is unofficially sponsored by Excedrin.

I’ve been lucky in my “athletic” career. I suffered no injuries through childhood sports, then none again after four years of track and cross, not even a shin split, which is quite common. Save a mild ankle sprain playing tennis a couple years back and the occasional lower back problem, I’ve stayed off the DL (that sound you hear is me dropping a 30 lb. dumbbell on my toe next time I wake up to lift). A former friend of mine suffered mightily from concussions to the point she eventually was only supposed to ice skate with a helmet on, so I know these puppies are pretty freaking serious.

Not really sure how it happened, probably just a random chance, but there were a hell of a lot of concussions in the NFL this past weekend, and it’s been quite the hot topic on national sports talk and Sportscenter. Maybe it’s just the stereotypical rabbit ears or eagle eyes noticing after last week, but it seems like there have been more of these this year than in the past. Good for the NFL for recognizing this about a year ago, and they now have rules in place that determine what exams are required and how long a player must be symptom free before he can play again. The rules all but prevent any player with a concussion from re-entering a game, which, if you ask me (which I’m glad you did), is a very good thing.

The more interesting thing to me is how players and former players are reacting to it all, most notably the idea that the NFL may start enforcing an already-existing rule about suspending players who they deem are intentionally trying to injure or use “excessive force” (at least, I think that was the quote) when hitting another player. Rodney Harrison, on Sunday Night Football, said that he was never deterred by a fine, only a suspension. Quite a few players have said that if you start legislating how players are allowed to hit, it will make the game worse and that they won’t be able to play the game the same way. James Harrison of the Stilers is even reportedly contemplating retirement, stating, in part, that he doesn’t know if he’ll be able to play the way he knows how to play under proposed rule enforcement.

I heard an interview with Brian Baldinger that said a lot for me about the topic. His point was, how do you determine what’s excessive and what’s not… his example was, say you have a goal line play, and the running back launches himself into the air to try and score. The linebacker, rightfully so, gets a running start and launches himself over the line in an effort to stop the runner from scoring. Let’s then say that the linebacker happens to go helmet-to-helmet with the runner, giving him a concussion. Obviously, the linebacker intended to launch himself, but so did the running back. Who’s to fault? Is that excessive, or what’s called for in that situation? Tough call, right?

If you looked at some of the plays from this weekend (Robinson on Jackson, Harrison on Massaquoi, Merriweather on Heap), it’s hard to tell what’s an attempt to injure someone and what’s just a hard hit in the game. As I mentioned, most players are against the crackdown, saying it’s a part of the game. One mentioned that you would have the change the way guys were coached because they’ve been taught to play like this their whole life. And you know something? They’re right! I mean, as a fan, have you ever been disappointed in the past when you see big hits? Does the crowd boo when they see their guy light up another player? Of course not, silly. And if the NFL had weren’t into seeing those hits (and the excitement it brings fans, which, indirectly, yields more popularity to the sport, which yields… you guessed it, more cash! Oh, and did I mention that up until Wednesday you could buy photos of the Harrison and Merriweather hits on the NFL website? Oops!), they would have cracked down back in the 70s and 80s when this stuff was still going on. Of course, you could argue that the helmets weren’t exactly as good back then, but I think it’s much simpler than that. I think you can pretty much trace it to two things:

1. Increased awareness of concussions in general – similarly to other social phenomenon, good and bad, that I won’t use as examples cause it’s really not relevant, concussions may not necessarily be more prevalent (though I’m going to contradict that take in a minute here, sit tight), but just more known. Diagnosis is better and awareness is high, especially with the increased focus of late on the medical plight of former players. Side note, I read somewhere that for every year an NFL player is active, their life expectancy drops like three years. Isn’t that nuts? Talk about loving a game. Which, side side note, is why the players will be fighting that 18 game schedule. Owners want it because of… money!

Sorry, digressed-ed for a minute. Yeah, so back to what I was saying, we’re all paying attention to concussions a lot more now, and will be paying even more attention to them in the future, so you can expect the reported incident of concussions to go up even more. MLB even announced this week they are considering a special DL for concussions that would shorten the length of time the player had to be out (7 days versus 15), which shows more awareness of diagnosis and treatment of concussions, and treating them differently than other injuries. Then again, maybe there are more concussions occurring. All together now, “why is that, Logical Betting?” Good question, kids.

2. Athletes, across all sports, are just more athletic – just as we have advanced in our ability to diagnose a concussion, we have advanced our ability to be more athletic. As we become more knowledgeable about nutrition, fitness, workout routines, and our bodies in general, we will continue to evolve in our ability to run faster, be stronger, and have more endurance. Marathon records aren’t about to sit dormant for the next 20 years. Weightlifters aren’t about to start decreasing the amount that it takes to win Olympic gold. And football players are going to be no exception. They’ve gotten faster, strong, quicker, and are only going to get better at launching their bodies faster and with more force than ever before. And we can design more and more protective helmets and gear, and it will never keep up with the pace of training and nutrition.

What we probably have is a combination of both of the above. Finding cause isn’t really the issue, I suppose, it’s more about protecting players. But if you check the headlines, they don’t seem that interested in being protected. Then again, if you were a’gin your teammates (yeah, I’m on beer two, starting to make southern accent jokes like I just read Of Mice and Men or Huck Finn), my guess is you aren’t about to be the most vocal in the media, especially in an NFL locker room.

Either way, the rules are set, and the NFL can choose to impose them, the NFL players can choose to appeal, and we’ll see how it goes. For now, it looks like a bunch of fines across the board. Will be interesting to see how players react on the field the next few weeks. Most of this is likely going to blow over through the season, we’ll play the Super Bowl, then hold our collective breaths and hope that there isn’t a lock out. God, please tell me there won’t be a lock out. If not for us passionate fans, and if not for the tailgate lovers amongst us, but if only to prevent a revolt from all the fantasy football stat geeks who will intentionally crash the Internets if there is a lock out (disclosure – I’m in two leagues, but I don’t take it that seriously. Seriously. Ask my dad. I co-own one of those teams with him, and do everything in my power to keep him from “player scoreboard watching.” It’s been mildly effective). But that, my friends, is (hopefully not) for another post, and another day.

Complete side note to sign off… watching Game 4 of the NLCS, and McCarver just made the first intelligent comment I have ever heard him make. When Ruiz got thrown out at home in the 5th on a Victorino single, he pointed out that Victorino should have been at second base on the play. Tim! Nice! Where the hell have you been the last 20 years??? Even more telling, Utley followed with a single that would have easily scored Victorino and tied the game. My feet are getting cold, is hell freezing over?

Oh, and of course, those “I know nothing” NFL picks. 3-10-1 last week, a blustery 10-17-1 on the year.

Titans (-3) v. Eagles – Which Iggle team shows up?
Stilers (-3) at Miami – Simmons called Big Criminal “the White Mamba.” Awesome.
Falcons (-3.5) v. Bengals – Cincy is so overrated
Chiefs (-9) v. Jags – The Chiefs might actually be good.
Redskins (+3) at Chicago – The Bears, on the other hand, are not.
Saints (-13) v. Cleveland – If Saints win big, they are officially back. Kind of.
Ravens (-13) v. Buffalo – Easy win for my AFC champ pick.
Carolina (+3) v. SF – I rarely pick teams crossing the country for early games, and SF isn’t good enough to be an exception.
Tampa Bay (-3) v. St. Louis – This game could actually be relevant in a couple years.
Seattle (-6) v. Arizona – Seahens are tough at home.
Pats (+3) at San Diego – This line absolutely screams Chargers, but I’m taking the bait.
Broncos (-8.5) v. Oakland – Has Oakland been anything less than a 6 point dog all year? Yikes.
Packers (-3) v. Minnesota – Hide your pretty press liaisons, Packer fans, Benedict is back in town.
Cowboys (-3) v. NY Giants – No way they get embarrassed on Monday night, right? And why hasn’t Wade Phillips been fired yet?