Thursday, November 17, 2011
More NHL dumbness
Friday, October 28, 2011
Friday, June 24, 2011
What do you have on Draft? A trade you say?
As I sit on my draft throne with my ISS draft guide (best 50$ I ever spent), my netbook, a bottle of scotch, some chicken wings, and a 55" LCD television, I am reminded of why I love draft day.
Wednesday, June 15, 2011
Big Mac's 2011 1st Round NHL Mock Draft - Picks 1 through 20
This is a dead lock in my mind. While other centreman have great stature in the top 10 (think Couturier, Huberdeau, and Zibanejad), the Oilers would be foolish not to take a guy like RNH. The guy has incredible vision and playmaking abilities, and is going to be their franchise centreman while Taylor Hall and Jordan Eberle fly on the flanks. A wicked, wicked line for years to come.
Friday, June 10, 2011
Big Mac's 2011 NHL First Round Mock Draft - Picks 21 to 30
As a Leafs fan this hurts. Arguably the best sniper in the draft who dropped in the rankings due to an injury, seeing him go to the Leafs main rival is an extra sting as he is exactly the kind of player Toronto wants and needs. He may need some work on his defence, but most snipers do, and you can't teach the kind of shot and release he brings.
Tim Thomas and the NHL buffoons
I was doubly shocked by this play, take a look…
A goalie playing the player and not the puck was shocking enough. There was no penalty (interference, roughing...), Boston fans cheered as though was a great play, and this all just goes to show (once again) NHL's wacko culture.
There and Back Again... a Sports Bloggers Tale
Alas, so much time has passed since my previous posts... real life and its trials and tribulations wait for no one I suppose!
That said, it is time to awaken.
And now, I bring to you, from the lightning clouds of Venus will a bullet, the long lost D from D&D brings to you from the ether...... my 2011 NHL Draft Preview.
That's right ladies and gents, this is a magical time of year for the truly hardcore hockey afficionados. While I've been fortunate to have attended the 2002, 2008, and 2009 drafts, I was unable to attend last years draft (it was in LA, and the pocketbook did not lend itself favourably), and due to an unexpected but very fortuitous move back into the city of Toronto from the suburbs my plans to attend this years draft in Minnesota fell by the wayside as well due to... well... cost again! As much as I'll miss being one of the devout few, still sitting in the stands during round 5 with the bags under the eyes and the multiple empty coffee cups that both litter the ground and have dripped onto my meticulously prepared draft prep guide on my lap, nothing can take away the thrill of these 2 days for me.
However, what I will be doing this year is a lot of draft-heavy blogging. Over the next 3 days, I will be doing a mock draft of how I see the draft unfolding (barring trades), posting 10 at a time. Next weekend, I will be writing profiles on my most preferred (and realistic) hopes for who the Maple Leafs will select with their picks. During the draft, I will be blogging my thoughts about what is going on, quite simply just thinking out loud! I hope you all enjoy!
Look later today for slots 21-30 of the 1st round!
Friday, May 27, 2011
NBA All-Time
So, for the record, here's how I see the discussion.
First of all, your top four names can be interchanged within the group as anyone cares to deem fit, but these top four names - each one #1 in a category - are the only names in the discussion for the title of greatest ever:
1. Kareem Abdul Jabbar - six championships, six MVPs, career total points leader
2. Bill Russell - career 11 championships in 13 years, (including one as player-coach!)
3. Wilt the Stilt Chamberlain - 50 ppg season average, 100 pt game, 4th in career points
4. Michael Jordan - six championships, six MVPs, career ppg leader, 3rd in career points.
The next two are...
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
The greatest?
That discussion is already out there, with a lot of emotion and stat-parsing on both sides of the debate. Right now, I don't put him at the top, but if he wins a fourth, I think it changes things.
Here's a scary thought - Steelers find a way to win the big show this year and Roethlisberger will have 3 rings. Marino, none, Roethlisberger, 3 - must we have to entertain discussions of where that would put him amongst the greats? Yikes, greats don't foist a 22.6 Superbowl passer rating on their fans, but that's a distant possibility the likes of which we should hopefully not have to entertain at all.
Tuesday, January 4, 2011
Miami rounding into form
We're not yet halfway through the season, but it's a great time to take a look at how far the Miami Heat have come. Yes, that's rather premature since "how far they've come" does not yet include a championship, or even a finals appearance, so far away are we from the end of this regular season.
Let's forget, for now, about how these players got together on one team, and let's think for a moment about the fact that they are together.
Way back in the summer, I was one of the bandwagon jumpers, sort of. I've always been a Dwayne Wade fan, hadn't been much of a LeBron James fan whilst he was in Cleveland, and naturally have a soft spot (no pun intended) for Chris Bosh as he spent his first years fulfilling his rookie obligations in Toronto with the Raptors. His last season in Toronto he led the NBA in field goal percentage and players around the league wanted to play with him, so as far as I'm concerned he is every bit a part of the "big 3" in Miami as solidly as any 3rd wheel in NBA greatness history (again, I use that term loosely at this pre-championship time).
I was surprised so many of my buddies were hating on the way in which the players got together, but I was even more mystified by their expecting these guys to fall flat on their faces. Wade has already won a championship and LeBron has been to a finals, so it's not as though these three together should have expectations of themselves less than at least getting back to the dance. But, why all the vitriol?
Wade said it best after their recent win over the short-staffed Charlotte Bobcats, "To look at us in the Boston game earlier this year, we didn’t know what each other was thinking. Now we’re on the same page. Us not being able to play together is not a conversation anymore. I think we do a good job of playing off each other. This is what we envisioned and it’s starting to come true."
At this point in the season, Miami has their best start in franchise history; they have reeled off the highest road wins in a calendar month in league history, are second in the entire league in wins and tied for first in the Eastern Conference.
How this could be a surprise to anyone simply baffles me. There's just too much talent and expectations of themselves and each other not to be "competitive," to say the least.
It should not be lost in this that the architect was some guy named Pat Riley. Pat Riley...Pat Riley...oh yeah, the guy who ran the Showtime Lakers of the 80s. So, he's "done this before", this being fine-tuning not only chemistry but entertainment value. Yes, the Showtime era did start the season before he became head coach, but he took the on-court talent to a new level, capitalizing on the glitz of Hollywood to transcend basketball and raise the NBA's profile.
He had success in New York, and brought a championship to Miami with Wade and Shaq. Riley knows a thing or two about building championships. This isn't some loose wheel here. He understands players with ego (Magic, Shaq), he understands the media (LA, New York), and the cult of celebrity (Jack Nicholson, Spike Lee).
Back in the summer of 2010, the coming together of this kind of talent both on the court and in the front office demanded that basketball fans take notice and pay attention, and I'm already on record as expecting that we ain't seen nothing yet.