The NBA's second round series have consisted of three sweeps and the lone series going to six, possibly seven games, the Cavs and Celtics, has been full of lopsided contests. On the other side, the NHL's second round will have a five-game series, a six-game series, and two seven-game series. One of the seven game series even started out as a 3-0 for Boston, but it's still a series and for the sixth time in league history, a game seven will come about after a team led 3-0. The Flyers will try and become just the third of those six teams to pull off the unthinkable and rally from a 3-0 deficit for a series victory. It hasn't been
pulled off since the Islanders did it against the Penguins in 1975. The other time was in 1942 when Toronto did it to the Red Wings. Where's that history will be made commercial Versus? Where?
Tonight, the Canadiens pulled off the unthinkable yet again by taking out the defending Stanley Cup champions in Game 7 to advance to their first conference finals since they won the Cup in 1993. This was their encore to a seven-game series in which they ousted the top-seeded Capitals. If I had given a friend of mine 2-1 odds on the Habs winning the Cup (which clearly I didn't because that's illegal in this country), I still wouldn't be worried. Why? Because I don't believe any team other than Pittsburgh or Washington from the Eastern Conference could defeat the West's representative in the finals. I hate both San Jose and Chicago, but I feel it's just unrealistic for the Habs to beat them after two grueling series plus whatever goes down against Boston or Philly. That being said, it could happen, because it's hockey. The NHL hasn't been accused of being rigged seriously before, aside from one little incident this season. The NBA, on the other hand, has a former referee that has done jail tile for fixing games. So when people come out and say that NBA commissioner David Stern want the Lakers and Cavs in the finals, it's a little harder to ignore, which is why if the Habs do become the first eight-seed to win the cup, I'll gladly pay an unspecified hypothetical amount to be a NHL fan instead of an NBA fan.
The Cards really need to quit beating themselves. They've allowed as many unearned runs (9) in the first two games against the Astros as they've scored as a team total. Brendan Ryan has more errors (4) in the last two games than he's had hits in his last eight games. The team could really use getting Felipe Lopez back from the DL as Ryan's offensive shortcomings may have began to affect his defense as well. There were a couple of bright spots in the first two games, however. David Freese continued to hit well on Tuesday, collecting another double, RBI, and walk in three at-bats. Albert Pujols had his second consecutive multi-hit game to begin the home stand and Matt Holliday collected an RBI for the second straight game. If the club can get back to basics like good defense, patient hitting, and good pitching (they've gotten better than that from their starters), they'll be just fine. They've seen a large lead dwindle in the last week, but they still are on top of the Reds by a game. And while I think the Reds are greatly improved, I still think they're a year away from being a true playoff contender. The redbirds have plenty of time to get their stuff together, but they'll certainly be better off if they do it sooner rather than later.
A lot has been made of the Univeristy of Missouri's possible jump from the Big 12 to the Big Ten. Offers were said to have been made by the Big Ten to Mizzou, Notre Dame, Rutgers, and Nebraska, but the conference has denied those rumors. I could see positives and negatives to this for Missouri. It would completely change their rivalries. If Nebraska didn't come, they might not play them every year in football, and now that both teams have been winning in that game, it is a true rivalry once again. The same can be said about the KU game, which has certainly been built up with the neutral-site of Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City. If Mizzou and the other schools wanted to schedule those games every year, they could, but let's face it, most big schools prefer at least three non-conference patsies to start the year. Scheduling KU and Nebraska would require the Tigers to have two tough non-conference opponents in addition to the Big Ten schedule. That's quite a gauntlet. It would also change things a bit in basketball. Could the Bragging Rights Game really stay in St. Louis if the two school were supposed to play twice per year? I highly doubt it. There are several non-conference basketball rivalries that have schools play each year, like Duke and St. John's, for instance, but these games usually are played at alternating campus sites. The dynamic for the Mizzou and Illinois game(s) would certainly be changed and I'm not sure that this would be a positive thing either.
That said, Mizzou has gotten screwed out of better bowl games in nearly every season since becoming part of the national picture. They should've gotten a BCS bowl when they only had one regular season loss, but Kansas, who the Tigers beat, got it instead. The last two seasons, Mizzou has been passed over for a team below it in the conference standings for the better bowl games while the Big 12 has stood idly by without changing their rules to anything that makes sense or is fair. And let's face it. When it comes to college athletics, football is what pays the bills. So if it makes sense academically (and the Big Ten does), Mizzou should do what's best for it's football program, which would mean adios Big 12, Hola Big Ten. We'll see how much truth these rumors hold in the upcoming weeks.
Quick Hits
- San Diego Padres pitcher Tim Stauffer proved once again this week, that there is an app for everything. He pulled up a medical website while not feeling well in which he inserted his symptoms and eventually diagnosed himself as having appendicitis. He called his team's trainer and eventually had his appendix removed the following morning.
- The AP decided to re-vote this week on its annual Defensive Rookie of the Year award, after last season's winner, Brian Cushing, tested positive for steroids and was suspended for the first four games of the upcoming season. It's their award and I suppose they can do what they like with it. However, if you're going to bother re-voting because the winner cheated, wouldn't you take him of the ballot? Isn't that what makes sense? Well, apparently not, as Cushing not only stayed on the ballot but won the re-vote, albeit by a smaller margin. That away AP, I'm sure you taught this young man a valuable lesson. Steroid use in the NFL can win you awards, so why not use them? Well done AP, well done.
I'm most concerned about the Missouri-Kansas rivalry. It's not just something that developed in sports, but out of the history of the states and genuine animosity. It's developed into something much more healthy, but it's still fun to watch it every year in football and at least twice a year in basketball. Screw Iowa State, Nebraska, Colorado, and everyone else. Gotta keep missouri and Kansas together somehow.
ReplyDeleteEveryone keeps talking about Missouri doing this and Texas doing that, and Nebraska going over here, even some about Colorado. I haven't heard anything about Kansas in any of this. I find that really odd. What are they going to do? They're too big a basketball power to just be left out somehow. They aren't going to the Valley. :-p
Still waiting on Pujols, Holliday, Rasmus and/or Ludwick to hit their first homerun in May.
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