Author Archives: rustindodd

A Case for Tom Brady*

OK, let’s go ahead and start here.

This is a 30-minute case for Tom Brady. And right there, we’re already being a little misleading. Here’s what I mean by that. This case for Tom Brady isn’t going to take 30 minutes to read. No, hopefully it’ll just take 30 minutes to write. Because honestly, I could think of a lot more productive things to do with my time.

It’s also misleading because the 30-minute case for Tom Brady isn’t really even a case for Tom Brady at all.

Here’s the deal… The 30-minute case for Tom Brady is really about two things.

Tom Brady may be a better all-time quarterback than Peyton Manning.

Then again, Peyton Manning may be a better quarterback than Tom Brady.

See the theme in those sentences? May. Yes. It’s the world “may.”

It’s an auxiliary verb. The kids may* remember it being called a helping verb** in elementary school.

*There it is again.
** May, might, must, can, could…

In the simplest terms, it’s used to express possibility.

I may be wrong. This may end up taking longer than 30 minutes. You get the point.

So yes, Peyton Manning may be better than Tom Brady. He may be the best quarterback of all-time. That certainly seems to be a hot topic this week. After all, it is Super Bowl week. And Peyton Manning and the Indianapolis Colts are in the Super Bowl for the second time in four years. They play the New Orleans Saints on Sunday, and a lot of very smart people seem to think that Peyton Manning can cement his place as the best quarterback of all-time with another Super Bowl title.

And yes, this may be true. By any statistical measure, Peyton Manning belongs in the stratosphere of NFL quarterbacks.

But here’s something that is a little disconcerting.

The Peyton Manning story — the narrative that this is “his moment”, this is the week that he becomes the best of all-time — seems to have taken over the Super Bowl.

Why is this troubling? Well, for one, Drew Brees and The Saints could very easily throw a bucket of water on the story on Sunday.

And secondly, I’ve heard very little discussion on “why” Manning is better than Brady or Montana or Elway or all the rest?

Oh yes, we hear the same talking points*.

*Peyton is the smartest quarterback in football. He’s a guy that makes his teammates better. He watches hours and hours and hours of film, and wow, what a player. He’s the best ever. It’s not even close.

Of course, sometimes people begin to shout these things really loud. And if enough people shout the same thing, then many people begin to regard it as fact.

You know the term group-think? I guess it’s something like that.

And yes, Manning is a phenomenal quarterback. But it’s not exactly clear-cut. And these talking points, these facts people keep bringing up… well, sometimes they’re not even really accurate.

For instance, there seems to be some revisionist history going on about Manning and Brady.

If you’re listening, you might have heard somebody argue that Brady has been surrounded by playmakers in New England all these years. And, oh yea, he had Belichick and that defense. Manning never had that, they say.

And you might hear somebody argue that Manning has been throwing to bums all these years. And that he won a Super Bowl with lesser players –- and an average defense*.

*More on this point in a minute. But Dwight Freeney, Bob Sanders and Robert Mathis say hello.

OK, we’re running short on time. So let’s just break it down. Brady versus Manning. Here we go…

***

Let’s start with Brady.

– In eight full seasons, Tom Brady has 225 touchdown passes and 99 interceptions. He’s thrown for 30,844 yards and has a passer rating of 93.3.

– He set the NFL record for touchdowns in a season with 50 in 2007.

– He has three Super Bowl titles. He has won two Super Bowl MVP’s. He is 14-4 in the postseason. And he is 97-30 in the regular season.

– In the 2002 Super Bowl against the St. Louis Rams, he was 16-27 for 145 yards and 1 touchdown.

– In the 2004 Super Bowl against the Carolina Panthers, he was 32*-48 for 354 yards with 3 touchdowns and 1 interception.

– In the 2005 Super Bowl against the Philadelphia Eagles, he was 23-33 for 236 yards and 2 touchdowns.

– In the 2008 Super Bowl against the New York Giants, he was 28-49 for 266 yards and 1 touchdown.

Tom Brady is 7-4 against Peyton Manning.
*The most completions in Super Bowl history.

Now let’s move on to Peyton.

In 12 full seasons, Peyton Manning has 366 touchdown passes and 181 interceptions. His passer rating is 95.2

In his best season, he threw for 49 touchdown passes.

– He has won one Super Bowl title. He has won one Super Bowl MVP. He is 9-8 in the postseason. And he is 117-59 in the regular season.

– In the 2007 Super Bowl against the Chicago Bears, he was 35-48 for 247 yards with one touchdown and one interception.

Peyton Manning is 4-7 against Tom Brady.

OK. Let’s do a quick recap.

Tom Brady has played four fewer seasons. He has the edge in Super Bowl titles. He has the edge in head-to-head record. Manning, of course, has the better overall statistics, but again, Manning has also played four more seasons.

Now you might bring up the fact that Manning has done more with less. Oh yes, the “Brady had a better team around him” argument.

***

So here’s the question: Has Manning really done more with less? To answer this question, we’re going to get a little help from ColdHardFacts.com.

Here’s a great excerpt from the site. It’s a little dated. And in the past three years, we have seen what happens when Brady is given high-caliber receivers – Randy Moss, Wes Welker – to work with. But it seems the Colts have spent most of their time making sure Manning has had plenty of weapons to work with… — full article here

Excerpt:

…It’s a strategy that seems to have Manning’s full support. In fact, in the 2001 draft, Manning lobbied the team to select wide receiver Reggie Wayne of Miami in the first round despite the fact that the Indy offense already featured a future Hall of Fame receiving talent in Harrison and despite the fact that the porous Indy defense surrendered 20.4 PPG in 2000. (The Indy offense averaged 26.8 PPG in 2000.)

Manning, himself a No. 1 draft pick, was surrounded by top-pick talent in 2004 at

* wide receiver (Reggie Wayne, Marvin Harrison)
* tight end (Dallas Clark)
* running back (Edgerrin James) and
* offensive tackle (Tarik Glenn).

That’s six of 11 offensive starters who are No. 1 draft picks. At least one, Harrison, is a lock for the Hall of Fame. James is a potential Hall of Famer. Manning had the luxury his first year in the league of handing the ball to future Hall of Fame running back Marshall Faulk, one of the most prolific offensive players in NFL history. Manning has also enjoyed the luxury of offensive Pro Bowlers ever year that he’s been in the league: Faulk (1998); James (1999, 2000, 2004); and Harrison (1999-2004).

In other words, the Colts have purposely built a team that gives its quarterback a chance to pad the stat book.

Brady has built his prolific career with a much different set of tools. Consider that he’s New England’s only offensive player to be named to the Pro Bowl since 2001 (New England running back Corey Dillon appeared in the 2004 Pro Bowl, but only as an injury replacement). Brady’s top receiver has been Troy Brown, an NFL journeyman who was drafted in the 8th round (198th pick) out of Marshall. Meanwhile, consider the pedigree of the players on the receiving end of Brady’s six Super Bowl touchdown passes:

* Deion Branch (a second-round draft pick from Louisville)
* David Givens (a seventh-round pick from Notre Dame)
* David Patten (an undrafted free agent from Western Carolina) and
* Mike Vrabel (a journeyman NFL linebacker).

New England’s offensive line in 2004 featured a second-round draft pick (Matt Light), two fifth rounders (Dan Koppen and Russ Hochstein), a seventh-round pick (Brandon Gorin) and three undrafted free agents (Stephen Neal, Joe Andruzzi and Tom Ashworth). In 2005, New England’s offensive line will finally future a first-round draft pick, guard Logan Mankins, who’s likely to fill the starting spot left by Andruzzi.

***

So our 30 minutes is nearly over. Perhaps Manning will win this Sunday. I do have a sneaking suspicion that the Saints are going to do something special. And maybe Manning is the best quarterback ever. But I think it’s debatable. Very debatable. And that’s the whole point. Although, I do think Tom Brady has a very good case.

Tagged , , , , ,

Federer facts

“Roger Federer moves like a whisper and executes like a wrecking ball. It is simply impossible to explain how he does what he does,” — legendary tennis coach Nick Bollettiery

***
On Sunday in Melbourne, Australia, Roger Federer won his 16th Grand Slam title with a straight sets — 6-3, 6-4, 7-6 (13-11) — victory over Great Britain’s Andy Murray in the finals of the Australian Open.

It came one year after a five-set loss to Rafael Nadal in the Australian finals left Federer drained and bawling on the court at Rod Laver Arena.

On Sunday, Federer tried to explain what the match meant. It’s another title, his fourth at the Australian… and his first as a father.

“If tennis ended today, I would still be a happy man,” Federer said, “… But I choose to keep going.”

Thanks, Rog.

***

Now on to the facts…

– On Aug. 8, 1981, Roger Federer was born near Basel, Switzerland.

– On Aug. 1, 1981, seven days before the birth of Roger Federer, MTV launched as a cable channel in America.

– Twenty years later, in the summer of 2001, Roger Federer defeated seven-time Wimbledon champion Pete Sampras in the fourth round at Wimbledon. Federer snapped Sampras’ 31-match winning streak at the All-England Club.

– Federer won Wimbledon in 2003, his first Grand Slam title.

– Since Federer’s 2003 Wimbledon title, there have been 27 Grand Slam tournaments.

– Federer has won 16 of them. No man has ever won more.

– U.S. major champions John McEnroe (7), Andre Agassi (8) and Andy Roddick (1) have won 16 Grand Slams — combined.

– Federer’s contemporary rivals — Roddick, Lleyton Hewitt, Rafael Nadal, Andy Murray, Novak Djokovic and Juan Martin del Potro — have won 11 Grand Slams — combined.

– Federer has appeared in 23 consecutive Grand Slam semifinals.

– Federer has appeared in 18 of the last 19 Grand Slam finals — and 22 of the last 27.

– When Federer wins the first set at a Slam, he is 172-5.

– When Federer wins the first two sets a Slam, he is 156-0.

– Since 2003, Federer is 16-6 in Grand Slam Finals

– Federer won a gold medal in the 2008 Beijing Olympics — in doubles.

Tagged , , ,

The Ghost of Pete Sampras

The man in the white hat slowly bows his head and wipes sweat from his eyes. His fingernails are chewed raw, his feet are burning, and his eyes — those unforgettable eyes — tell the story of man who was blessed with a gift… and cursed with a burden.

The man in the white hat is America’s Only Hope.

And so America’s Only Hope — a man who was born in Omaha, raised in Austin, and trained in Boca Raton — is here, in a faraway land, staring across the net at a 21-year-old kid from Croatia.

He shakes his head. He rolls his head. He looks on in disbelief.

He throws a towel to the ground. There isn’t much time left.

How did he get here? How did this happen? How?

Once again, he wipes sweat from his eyes. The baking sun beats down. And the Australians in the crowd are silent.

They already know the ending.

Andy Roddick is about to lose again.

**

He is America’s Only Hope. He is the greatest men’s player in a country with more than 300 million people.

And yet, he is a failure.

He is one of only two men to be ranked in the top 10 continuously from 2002 to the present.

And yet, he is a failure.

He is America’s Only Hope — the only American man capable of winning on the biggest stages in tennis.

And yet…

They’ve always measured Andy Roddick against the titans of his era. And, of course, he is lacking. He doesn’t have Federer’s grace. He doesn’t have Nadal’s toughness.

Sometimes, they measure him against his American forebearers. And, of course, he is lacking. He doesn’t have Agassi’s dominant return game. He doesn’t have McEnroe’s intensity.

But Andy Roddick’s biggest weakness — his most glaring flaw — has always been something that he couldn’t control.

Andy Roddick’s greatest flaw hovers over him, haunting him in on the blue courts of Melbourne and the dirt of Roland Garros.

The Ghost chases him around the grass at Wimbledon… and it trails him at the U.S. Open, existing in the fog under the lights of Flushing Meadows.

The ghost is always there. And he can’t do anything about it.

Andy Roddick isn’t Pete Sampras.

***

I think of Pete Sampras every January.

Each January, the Australian Open begins, ushering in another year of tennis.

There is snow on the ground in Kansas, but the sun shines in Oz. The best players in the world descend on Melbourne Park. And as they compete under a blue heaven, battling for hours and hours in the midst of Australia’s golden summer, I think of Pete Sampras.

People will remember Peter Sampras, of course. They’ll have to. He left them no choice.

They’ll remember Sampras, the stoic with a serve for the gods. They’ll remember Sampras, the King of the All-England club, the handsome American with jet-black hair who conquered Wimbledon seven times. And they’ll remember Sampras, the steady foil who spent a decade providing agony for Andre.

They have to remember Agassi and Sampras, the great American tennis rivalry, with its two leading men competing in a theater filled with compelling contradictions.

And when they think of Pete and Andre, they’ll think of Andy and the torch he was supposed to carry.

They’ll think of what Roddick was supposed to be.

And then they’ll think about what Andy has become.

He isn’t Pete the Great. He isn’t Pistol Pete, the greatest American tennis player of our time.

To me, Roddick is fascinating. But I don’t want to forget about Pete.

Of course, history is a funny thing. It vary rarely is an accurate description of the past. Most of the time, it’s an amalgamation – a mish-mash – of people’s thoughts, memories and perceptions.

And when those people are gone, and they take their old, rusty memories with them, we are left with nothing but watered down memories of the past, nothing but old reprints of the Mona Lisa.

So yes, I don’t want to forget about Pete.

***

This week, Roger Federer, perhaps the greatest tennis player who ever swung a forehand, won another match on the blue courts of Melbourne Park. He took down a Russian, Nikolay Davydenko in the quarterfinals of the Australian, and later this week, he’ll play in the semifinals.

With two more victories, Federer will win his 16th Grand Slam title and put an early-season stamp on his case for being the most dominant tennis player of all-time.

His case is overwhelming.

Federer has won 15 Grand Slam titles (6 Wimbledons, 5 U.S. Opens, 3 Australian Opens and one French Open), one ahead of Sampras, who won seven Wimbledons, five U.S. Opens and two Australian Open titles.

Sampras’ last Australian title came in January of 1997, when he beat Spain’s Carlos Moya for his ninth Grand Slam. He was the greatest player in the world then, perhaps the greatest force the game of tennis had ever seen.

His serve was dominating, at times unreturnable, and he complimented his greatest gift with a sledgehammer forehand and an overhead that seemed to ripple the clouds.

It’s hard to believe that that was 12 years ago.

The world was a different place then. Barack Obama was a young Chicagoan serving his first year in the Illinois state senate.
Tiger Woods was a couple of months away from his historic 1997 Master’s victory, and Federer was just 15 years old, a young boy in Switzerland who had only begun to discover his other-worldly talent.

And now, of course, we are in a different time.

The world keeps moving, and tennis balls are hit harder, and America still leans on Roddick — its only hope — while searching for its next generation of tennis stars.

Sampras will turn 39 in August. The world tells him he’s still young, but in tennis, he’s a gargoyle. And all we have left are the memories.

***

To understand my view of Sampras, you have to understand my family. My family was a tennis family. My mom and dad started playing tennis in the 70s as the exercise boom was sweeping the country. They joined a neighborhood racquet club.* My dad played in a men’s group. My mom would play in a women’s league, and they played together in a mixed doubles groups.

*It was called Nall Hills Country Club, named for the housing neighborhood where I grew up. The name was a little ironic, though, because there wasn’t really anything country club about it. It had a handful of outside courts, a decent-sized pool and a small clubhouse. That was about it. No golf course, no grand ballroom, not snooty members or dress codes. It suited us fine. We weren’t really a country club family.

Tennis wasn’t just a sport. It was a weekly event. A way to bond.

Then my older sister came into the world in the late 70s — an era where girls were just beginning to compete in youth sports in large numbers.

My parents aren’t particularly tall people. And perhaps they hoped they had the next Chrissy Evert or Tracy Austin. Anyway, they dragged my sister to the old neighborhood club and put a racquet in her hands.

My brother came next, then another sister, and I finally showed up in 1986. Around that time the old neighborhood club closed its doors. My parents were saddened. They’d made a lot of friends at that club, and they’d played a lot matches on those old outdoor courts.

But we were still a tennis family. So we joined one of those new indoor racquet clubs that I imagine started appearing quite frequently in the late 70s and early 80s.

We spent a lot of time at that club. When I was just beginning to play, I would spend hours at the snackbar. I’d order a Red Cream Soda from the soda fountain, and to this day, I don’t think any soft drink has ever tasted better.

I’d wander around that club all day. I’d watch matches from balcony railings above the courts. And I’d find an open racquetball court and slam forehand after forehand against the wall, pretending to be Sampras or Courier or Michael Chang.

I can still hear the sounds of that indoor club. I can still smell that place.

I can hear the ball being shot out the ball machines. I can still smell the snackbar – that combination of popcorn and thrown together turkey sandwiches and all those other little snackbar smells. I can see dozens of 6-and 7-year-olds hitting nerf tennis balls over tiny portable nets. I can hear the sound of hundreds of perfectly struck forehands… and the echo of a tennis ball striking those heavy black leather curtains that hung behind each court.

And I can hear the voice of my father, sending out strict instructions…

OK, forehand cross-court, backhand down the line, forehand crosscourt, backhand down the line.

We all played junior tennis. Each age group would have a rankings ladder. If you wanted to challenge someone above you, you just called them up and set up the match. On the weekends, the top six players would play the top six from another local club.

Those matches meant everything. We might as well have been playing at Flushing Meadows with the lights on and the whole world watching.

***

Sampras wasn’t supposed to be the great one. I think that’s what I loved about him.

I don’t remember the 1990 U.S. Open. After all, I was only four. I was more interested in crawling around my living room floor, watching Sesame Street and eating macaroni.

But it was at the 1990 U.S. Open that the world first found out about Pete Sampras.

He was just 19 years old. He was tall and slender and he had this rugged swath of pitch-black hair.

The world didn’t quite know what to make up him.

Most people don’t realize this, but he was the 12th seed in that tournament. It was a funny tournament all around. Stefan Edberg was the No. 1 seed; he would get bounced in the first round.

So here was Sampras. Here was this young kid with the big serve and quiet nature. He rolled through the first three rounds in straight sets. He beat Thomas Muster in the fourth round, he defeated the once-great Ivan Lendl in the quarters. Lendl had been to eight straight U.S. Open Finals.

He played an aging John McEnroe in the semi-finals. McEnroe was 31, and he was trying to make one last stand, one last-ditch effort at glory at his hometown tournament.

Sampras knocked out Johnny Mac in four sets.

Then came Andre Agassi in the Finals. Agassi was a whole other story. He was a brash kid from Las Vegas with crazy long hair. He was destined to be the great one, destined to be the next big thing in tennis. He had the look, the personality, he was the heir to McEnroe and Connors.

As you may remember, Agassi was the fourth seed at the U.S. Open so, of course, he was favored over Sampras.

Pete beat Andre in straight sets.

I’ve always wondered how that match affected history. You may say that Pete clearly had more talent than Andre, that he had the bigger serve and the bigger forehand, and that he certainly had the better head.

But let’s just say that Andre wins that Open final. Does Pete still have the better career?

I think he does, but I still wonder, how did that final affect Agassi?

***

It was such a strange event. And every year I get older, it seems to get even stranger.

I’m still not sure why the Davis Cup came to Kansas City. And I’m not sure why they played matches at Kemper Arena.

I mean, the Davis Cup is a worldwide event, and sometime in the early 90s, someone decided that the Davis Cup and Kemper Arena would be a winning combination.

It was either 1991 or 1992. I think it was ’92. Of course, we were a tennis family, so my parents made sure we were there.

I went the first night with my brother and dad. It was the night they played singles.

Jim Courier played the first match and lost. I can’t seem to remember who they were playing.

Agassi played the next match and won. They played Lee Greenwood’s “God Bless the USA” and Agassi had tears in his eyes as the match ended. It was quite a sight.

Sampras didn’t play that night. I don’t think he played in the doubles the next night either, although I could be wrong.

I wish I would have seen Pete play on that night in Kansas City.

I would never see him play in person.

***

Sampras didn’t win a Grand Slam in 1991 or 1992. Perhaps success had come to soon, to early.

He would say later that he needed those years to figure out how to become No. 1.

In 1993, Sampras began to figure things out. He began to master his serve and volley game, he figured out how to beat Courier, and without a doubt Sampras was the best in the world.

He won Wimbledon and the U.S. Open in 1993 and he won the Australian in 1994.
He won Wimbledon again in 1994 and 1995.

He won the U.S. Open in 1995 and 1996.

From 1993 to 2000 Sampras won a Grand Slam every single year. He won 12 out of the 32 Grand Slams during that time span.

Of course, Federer would come along 10 years later and blow Sampras’ mark out the water, but we didn’t know it at the time.

Sampras was simply the best in the world.

I have so many memories of Sampras. Memories of him dominating Agassi. Pummeling poor Andre in to submission.

“I was pretty blessed in my career to have Pete,” Agassi would say. “In other times, I’ve been cursed by him.”

There was the time in the 1999 Wimbledon Final. Sampras dominated Agassi like he never had before. It was an annihilation. A massacre. Andre simply had no answer for Pete. Nobody did.

“He walked on water today,” Agassi would say.

***

Eventually my family would slowly move away from the game of tennis. We stopped belonging to racquet clubs, and we slowly stopped playing as a family.

My oldest sister did play it in college. And she would eventually coach the game too.

My other sister played in high school. But she did so more out of fun and obligation, than out of love for the game.

My brother and I would focus on other sports – namely baseball and basketball.

Eventually, it became too much. My summer tennis got in the way of baseball. And, of course, baseball and tennis shared the same season – Spring – in high school.

Perhaps that’s why I love Pete so much.

After awhile, he became my strongest connection to the sport.

Watching Sampras on Sunday morning in the Wimbledon final took me back to that old tennis club with the Red Cream Soda and tennis lessons and the sound of ball machines.

***

After a decade of dominating, and a decade of keeping his emotions to himself, Pete finally gave us something in 2000.

He was at Wimbledon. He’d won 12 Grand Slam titles, tied with Roy Emerson for the most ever.

He played Pat Rafter* in the Final. His parents were sitting in the stands. They’d never been to Wimbledon before. Sampras was gunning for his seventh Wimbledon title in eight years.

And here were his parents, these seemingly normal people with a son with these brilliant gifts.

They were the exactly opposite of normal tennis parents. They were hands off, they weren’t overbearing. They didn’t need to be in the limelight.

*There’s a funny story about Rafter and Sampras. Pete was always so cordial, such a gentleman. But one day, at a press conference Pete showed his competitive side. As you probably know, Rafter was a great player from Australia. He did win a couple U.S. Opens. And I’ll always remember the sunscreen he caked on to his cheeks. Anyways, one time a reporter must have been doing a feature on Pat Rafter, and he wanted Sampras to compare himself to Rafter.

“What’s the biggest difference between you and Pat,” the reporter asked.
Sampras, a little perturbed, looked blankly at the poor guy and said, “You mean, other than 10 Grand Slam titles?”

Sampras won, of course. And after the match, he climbed into the stands, found his parents, hugged his father and broke down.

He’d won his 13th Grand Slam, more than anybody in the history of tennis.

His father hugged him back. He cried too.

***

In the 2001 Wimbledon, Sampras returned to Wimbledon to attempt to win his fifth straight title. Instead, he lost to some young 19-year-old kid named Roger Federer. It was a historic passing of torch, except nobody knew it at the time. It was the only tour match they’d ever play.

Eight years later, we have a new perspective.

Federer has been a brilliant Swiss revelation. A powerful storm of grace, skill and humility.

He’s a champion for the ages.

And then there’s Nadal, perhaps the greatest clay-courter who ever lived, and now he’s making his own history.

It’s tough to say how Sampras and Federer would stack up in their prime.

Federer can probably claim to have the most polished, the most refined all-court game.

Unlike Sampras, Federer broke through to win the French last year.

Of course, some people knock Sampras because of his own failures at the French. They call him a two-trick pony. A player who could only be successful on grass and hard courts.

That criticism may be fair. But I don’t know.

I still have this feeling. This feeling that says that if Sampras and Federer were both in their primes, and if they played in the Wimbledon final, Sampras would hang with Federer all day.

***

His career ended just like it began. He stood on center court at Flushing Meadows at the U.S. Open.

On the other side of the net stood Andre, his old nemesis.

That’s where the story ends. An aging Pete beating an aging Andre in the final of the 2002 U.S. Open.

He wouldn’t announce his retirement for another year. It was typical Pete. He always tried to avoid the fanfare, he never wanted to attract too much attention.

After the match, after Pete had held a Grand Slam trophy above his head for the last time, after he had conquered Andre for the last time, after he had hit that serve for the gods one last time, he simply walked off the court.

It was the last tournament he ever played.

**

America’s Only Hope walks off the court in Melbourne, Australia. He is still the only hope.

And yet, Andy Roddick is a symbol — a symbol for a lost generation of American tennis. A generation that couldn’t live up to a legacy of greatness.

They forget sometimes. They forget that Andy Roddick won the U.S. Open in 2003.

Of course, that was one year after Sampras’ reign ended. Roddick was supposed to take over.

And now, nearly seven years later, Roddick may never win another Grand Slam.

He lost to Federer in the Wimbledon final in 2009. Roddick would say it was greatest match he ever played.

It wasn’t enough. Federer would win in five sets, 5-7, 7-6, 7-6, 3-6, 16-14.

On Tuesday, he lost to 21-year-old Marin Cilic in the quarterfinals — another excruciating five-set loss.

Afterward, he talked to reporters, and he answered questions about another lost opportunity.

“That’s the way it goes sometimes,” he would say.

And slowly, he started to crack a smile.

And for a moment, the ghost lifted. Andy Roddick isn’t Pete Sampras. And for him — and for all of us — that just might have to be OK.

Tagged , , , , , , , , , ,

Favre Facts

“He’s the best, bar none. Whenever God was making them, He put a little extra in him.” — former NFL wide receiver Cris Carter

“He’s a gunslinger.” — former Cleveland Browns great Tim Couch

– Brett Favre is an NFL quarterback.

– He was born in Gulfport, Miss., on October 10, 1969.

– On Oct. 10, 1969, hundreds of young people — including many from the Weather Undergound Organization — started riots in Chicago to protest the Vietnam war and the trial of the Chicago Seven.

– On Oct. 12, 1999, two days after Brett Favre’s 30th birthday, the World’s population surpassed 6 billion people.

– Brett Favre has thrown 317 career interceptions, the most in NFL history.

– George Blanda threw 277 interceptions, the second-most in NFL history.

– Joe Montana, Tom Brady and Ben Roethlisberger have thrown 319 interceptions in their careers – combined.

– Brett Favre has won one Super Bowl, a 35-21 victory over the New England Patriots on Jan. 26, 1997.

– Montana, Brady and Roethlisberger have won nine Super Bowls combined.

– Brett Favre has played for three teams, the Green Bay Packers, the New York Jets and the Minnesota Vikings.

– The last pass he threw for the Packers was an interception. The last pass he threw for the Jets was an interception. And on Jan. 24, 2010, Favre’s last pass for the Vikings was an — wait for it, wait for it — interception.

– Brett Favre has played in five NFC Championship Games (1995, 1996, 1997, 2007, 2010).

– In those five NFC Championship Games, Favre had a total of seven interceptions.

– In 2005, Brett Favre threw 29 interceptions — the most in the NFL since Vinny Testaverde threw 35 in 1988.

– Brett From 2003 to 2008, Favre threw 122 interceptions.

– Brett Favre never led the NFL in passer rating. But he did lead the league in interceptions three different times (1993, 2005 and 2008).

So perhaps all these numbers are a little unfair. After all, I heard these wise words tonight and they seemed to ring true.

“We don’t want to hate you, Brett. It’s the media and the NFL’s fault.”

Of course, I also thought of these words:

“There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics”.

So maybe Brett Favre really is worthy of the hype.

But you probably know that this quote is often erroneously credited to the great Mark Twain.

And, as you probably know, Twain grew up in Hannibal, Mo., a small port town on the Mississippi river, just a short river-raft ride from the city of New Orleans — the same city where Favre threw two more interceptions on Sunday night.

Tagged , , , , , ,

Thursday YouTube Sesh

I’ve told this story before, but I’m going to tell it one more time.

I can still remember the first time I heard about YouTube. It was 2006 — it must have been late January — and I was a freshman in college.

I was sitting in Professor Chuck Marsh’s “Media and Society” class in Budig Hall at The University of Kansas.

There were about 800 people in the class, mostly college freshman, and Old-man Marsh* used to start every class period with a segment called “The Hot Topic.”

*That’s not really Prof. Marsh’s nickname, but hey, it makes the story sound better.

Basically, Marsh would pick a controversial issue in the media, or a new trend, or whatever — and we’d have a class discussion about it. Of course, this is more interesting than it sounds, considering the fact that there were 800 people in the class, and it takes a certain type of personality (read crazy) to speak out in a class of 800.

Well, one day in late January, Marsh comes into class talking about a new website called “YouTube” and a hip, new word — “mash-up.”*

*Back in those days, it did seem that there were very few videos on YouTube, and most of them were movie preview mash-ups. Like this one and this one…

But the original one, the one that started it all, was the mash-up “Brokeback to the Future”. And on that day in late January, Marsh introduced me to a world I’d never imagined…

“Brokeback to The Future*”

In the last four years, that video has been watched more than 5.5 million times.

And like Windows and Google and iTunes and Facebook and Twitter, YouTube has become part of the fabric of our daily lives.

There are YouTube sensations and there are videos that go viral, getting passed around from friend to friend. And personally, I’ve spent way too many hours watching soccer and basketball highlights on the old laptop.

But for me, it all started four years ago.

OK, now fast-forward three years.

I’m working as the sports editor at The University Daily Kansan, and in an homage to the great former Kansas City Star columnist Jeffrey Flanagan, I created a daily Page 2 column entitled “The Morning Brew.”

Long story short, I started a weekly tradition called the “Thursday YouTube Sesh”. Why? Because sometimes, there are just videos that must be shared.

I saw one of those videos today.

If you’re a Kansas basketball fan, you probably know that KU beat Baylor 81-75 on Wednesday night at Allen Fieldhouse.

If you’re a big fan, you probably know that Baylor coach Scott Drew created a mini-controversy before the game.

You see, about four years ago, when Kansas renovated Allen Fieldhoue and added a modern scoreboard that hangs above center court, they started playing a pregame video montage. The montage highlights KU’s incomparable basketball tradition — from Naismith to Allen to Manning to Mario — and works the crowd into a frenzy.

Here’s one version of the video here…

Well, Baylor’s Drew wasn’t having any of it. And he had his team walk out into the Fieldhouse’s concourse during the video. It’s not that surprising. More than one opposing team has looked visibly intimidated while watching the video.

Of course, it’s also true that KU’s Bill Self and Drew have what could be described as a rocky relationship.

Self and Drew battled over Darrell Arthur — and Arthur, in one of the more mysterious recruiting stories in recent memory, picked KU at the last minute after having “a dream” about playing at Kansas.

Let’s just say that Drew was not happy. And according to many reports, he told former KU recruit Dwight Lewis — who eventually went to USC — that he shouldn’t go to KU because KU does a poor job of graduating players (or something to that effect).

So yea, Self was not happy.

“We’d never do that,” he said about Baylor’s walkout.

Drew, for his part, said he wasn’t trying to be disrespectful.

“It was simply because we knew we only had a minute and we wanted to go over what we wanted to do to start the game,” Drew said after the game. “There are no rules against it or anything. We met in the hallway and discussed how we were going to handle the beginning of the game.”

One thing is for certain. And it brings us to our Thursday YouTube Sesh.

There’s no way Baylor would have walked out on this pregame video.

OK, where do we start? First a little background. Apparently, this is the pregame pump-up video for the University of Alaska Fairbanks hockey program. The Nanooks, as they are called, are a legit Division 1 hockey program. They play in a 4,500-seat arena and compete in the Central Collegiate Hockey Association.

Other teams in the hockey-only CCHA include: Michigan State, Ohio State, Miami (Ohio), Michigan and Notre Dame,.

There are 12 members in all, but this explains why the polar bear drops bombs on the Ohio State, Miami and Michigan State campuses.

Of course, this doesn’t explain why the giant killer bear must use a hockey stick to chop a trapped oiler tanker in half. And it doesn’t explain why the fighter pilot polar bear must drop a bomb into a volcano and blow up the planet.

No matter how you slice it, this video just doesn’t make much sense. I just wish I was in the room when the creators of the video were brainstorming ideas*.

Person 1: Ok. We start with a polar bear rising up from the arctic and attacking a huge ship.
Person 2: Yes. Yes. I like that. And then we could cut to a polar bear in a jet fighter.
Person 1: Are you thinking what I’m thinking?
Person 2: Danger zone?
Person 1: Oh my god, Yes!
Person 2: OK, he could drop bombs on our rivals. And then, what about if we had him drop a bomb into a volcano and blow up the entire planet?
Person 1: Wait, the entire planet?
Person 2: Dude, this would be sweet.
Person 1: You’re right, screw it. I’m in.

Part of me thinks the creators were being a little ironic. I mean, polar bears destroying the planet, that has to be a subtle hint about the state of the environment, right?

In the end, all I know is that any video that includes “Highway to the Danger Zone” and polar bears blowing up stuff must be cherished. So enjoy.

Tagged , , , , , , , , ,

Passing around the scorn

“You get smaller as the world gets big
The more you know you know you don’t know shit
“The Whiz Man” will never fit you like “The Whiz Kid” did
So why you gotta act like you know when you don’t know?
It’s OK if you don’t know everything”
— Ben Folds, from the song “Bastard”

So let’s start here, because I really don’t know where else to start.

I usually don’t like to criticize people in the media. I guess that’s just the way I operate.

Of course, I operate this way for a number of reasons. First of all, we all know that there are plenty of people throwing jabs at media members. And really, who wants to join that argument?

Secondly — and I think this is the most important thing — I sincerely dislike the fact that many people seem to refer to the media as one singular body. There seems to be this line of thinking that the “media” is this one huge mass of people. And, of course, they all work in the same way. And, of course, everyone works together in the same room.

Of course, this is an exaggeration. However, I think there’s some truth in that statement, too.

For instance, did you know that “media” is plural?

Yep, it’s the plural form of “medium”. So whenever I hear someone say something like, “the media is” terrible, or “The media is” so biased, I really do start to cringe.

Of course, all of this is not that important. But it did cross my mind today… and that’s where we begin.

So I’m watching ESPN’s “Around The Horn” on Tuesday afternoon. To be honest, I really don’t watch this show that often.

I do enjoy Tony Reali, who seems to be a really gifted TV sports guy. And sometimes it’s nice to get a quick, 30-minute run-through of the bigger stories of the day.

And on Tuesday, believe it or not, “Around The Horn” led off with K-State’s Big Monday victory over Texas. So even though I don’t care much for “Around The Horn”, this did seem to be a nice moment for Kansas State.

I have a personal connection to Kansas State. My parents grew up in Manhattan. My sister went to K-State. And I remember the Tom Asbury and Jim Woolridge years, when K-State took the court with Pervis Pasco, Jeremiah Massey and a bunch of worthless spare parts. Those were tough years.

And now, K-State is back in the top 10, they beat the No. 1 team in America, and for 24 hours, they were the toast of college basketball*.

*And did you see that K-State coach Frank Martin said he’d “destroy” his players if they didn’t come hard at their next practice? That had to be one of the all-time great quotes after a victory, right? Here are the exact words…

“Wednesday, if we don’t come in and compete, I am going to destroy them.”

Tony Reali started by hyping K-State’s win. He mentioned Martin’s quote. He mentioned the fact that the Wildcats hadn’t beaten a No. 1-ranked team since 1994 (Kansas). And he mentioned that K-State’s students didn’t rush the floor — a move that is giving K-State’s students some major street-cred among people who care about such things.

But then Reali had to toss off the discussion to the first pundit, and in this case it was Kevin Blackistone*.

*Let me first say that I don’t want this to come off as a dig at Blackistone. I’ve never met the guy, but I’m sure he’s good people. And the guy is a pretty fine journalist. He’s been everywhere — The Boston Globe, The Chicago Reporter, The Dallas Morning News, and now he’s writing for FanHouse.com. However, I am going to use him as an example in a much larger problem.

Of course, Reali threw it to Blackistone using some hip language like this:

Reali: So, K-State students decide NOT TO RUSH THE FLOOR, you cool with this KB?

Blackistone: Yea. I’m cool with this, Tony. It was a good move. They THOUGHT THEY WERE GOING TO WIN THIS GAME. K-State has a good team this year. They came in ranked ninth (in the coaches’ poll) and Curtis Kelly — this guy is a great player. He’s a National Player of The Year Candidate. He’s a double-double threat every time he takes the floor.

Now, I’m not sure if you follow college basketball. And even if you do, you probably don’t follow K-State basketball that closely. So let’s take things slowly. But there is one sentence here that I want you to pay close attention to.

“Curtis Kelly — this guy is a great player. He’s a National Player of The Year Candidate.”

Thing is, I’ve been following K-State pretty closely this season. Obviously, I haven’t been following the Wildcats as closely as say, an actual “K-State fan”, but let’s just say that sentence seemed a little off.

Hmm. Let’s look closer. How about we find some stats?

Let’s see here… K-State junior forward Curtis Kelly.

So Kelly, who is in first season at K-State after transferring from UConn, is playing 22.8 minutes per game.

He is averaging 11.4 points per game. So he’s not exactly piling up the points.

The 6-foot-8 Kelly is pulling down 6.3 rebounds per game. Hey, that’s not too bad.

He’s shooting 65.7 percent from the free throw line. He has 47 turnovers against just 24 assists. And how about all those double-doubles he’s recording? It seems he’s had two.

Well, to be fair, he did have 18 points and 10 rebounds against Ole Miss in a K-State loss.

And he did have 11 and 11 against IUPUI. And he did put up 15 and 9 against Xavier.

But according to the information I received from the google machine, that only makes two double-doubles. Hmm.

And to be really honest. He has scored in double-figures in 11 games. Then again, he has scored fewer than six points in four different games.

But let’s go back to that statement one more time.

“Curtis Kelly — this guy is a great player. He’s a National Player of The Year Candidate.”

Now let me slowly take a sip of water, and…(clearing my throat) Really? Really, Blackistone? National Player of The Year?

Now perhaps Blackistone made an honest mistake. Maybe he got some bad information from a friend. Who knows? It’s just one measly comment about some basketball team from Manhattan, Kan. Sure, that basketball team just knocked off the No. 1 team in the land. But can we really expect one man to know every little detail about every team in the country?

I guess that’s the whole point of this little exercise. And it’s the same reason I find myself watching ESPN less and less.

It’s just simply unreasonable to expect anyone to know everything about every sports story in the country. It doesn’t matter if it’s Kevin Blackistone, or Woody Paige, or Skip Bayless, or Kornheiser, or Wilbon, or Greeny and Golic.

All these thoughts were coming together when I thought about that great song from Ben Folds.

“So why you gotta act like you know when you don’t know?
It’s OK if you don’t know everything.”

And yet, all these talking heads on ESPN must know. I mean, they do work for ESPN, right?

Hey, I know it’s there job to go on and talk about the big stories of the day. But just once, I want to hear one of these guys say something like this:

“You know what. K-State played great last night. The home crowd was rocking. Frank Martin is an unheralded guy, and he’s doing a great job building that program. And hey, I didn’t watch the whole game, and I don’t know all that much about this K-State team. But keep an eye on them. They just took down the No. 1 team in the country. And they play Kansas in a week… and that place is going to be crazy.”

There’s one more thing that I find interesting about this discussion. And that’s the fans. Listen, I know I’m speaking in huge generalities, but bear with me. Please.

In general, fans seems to hate their hometown media.

The hometown newspaper is a rag. The local TV stations are jokes. And grown men on message boards seem to spend way too much time discussing how much the local sports radio stations suck.

This seems to happen everywhere.

And yet, fans seem to love the national media*.

*Hey, did you see ESPN.com has a story about us?
Yo, we’re on the cover of Sports Illustrated. We’re the shizz.
Hey, Tony and Mike were talking about us on PTI.
Hey, did you see they mentioned us on Around The Horn?

These words have been said by thousands of fans across the country. Fans of many teams and fans from many cities.

At the same time, the local beat writer at the newspaper is a tool. And all the local radio hosts are idiots.

I have so many personal feelings about this discussion. Yet, at the same time, there’s a little bit of truth in everything.

There are some local media member that are brilliant, and there are some local media members that are less than brilliant.

There are some members of the national media that are phenomenal, and there are some that… well, struggle.

And sometimes, I turn on ESPN and I hear someone say that K-State’s Curtis Kelly is a National Player of the Year candidate.

And then, I just don’t know what to say. But then, I hear Ben Folds and I feel better.

Remember… It’s OK, if you don’t know everything.

Tagged , , , , , ,

Stuff my Dad can’t say…

Parents do funny things. We all know this. We do. It’s just a fact of life.

Parents do funny things, because they’re – well, our parents.

Yes, they come from some past generation, and the generational divide serves as a major source of comedy. And yes, parents generally become irrational beings when thinking about their own children. And yes, children find unfounded ways to become embarrassed by their parents. These three things are all true.

But there has to be something more, right?

Think about the fact that Homer Simpson is the most popular television character of all-time. Think about Peter Griffin. Think about Chevy Chase in the Vacation movies. Think about Eugene Levy in American Pie.

And think about this: On twitter, @shitmydadsays has 1,099,818 followers.

Is it really because that guy’s dad says so many funny things?

Maybe, in part. But maybe it has more to do with the fact that everyone’s dad says crazy things. Everyone’s dad has funny quirks*. Everyone’s dad is goofy and awkward — and yet, still loveable.

*I once had a friend whose dad wore FUBU shoes. Seriously, FUBU shoes. They really do exist.

My father is my hero. He is one of my best friends. Imagine every good trait a father should have. My father has them all.

That said, it is simply mind-blowing how bad my father is with names. Seriously. It is utterly baffling. He is the Michael Phelps of botching names. I can’t emphasize this enough. It’s really quite amazing.

He terrible at remembering them. He terrible at pronouncing them. Just imagine a person who is laughably inept at doing both of these things. Remembering and pronouncing. And really, what else is there?

Sometimes he’ll mispronounce a person’s name. Sometimes he’ll forget a person’s name. Occassionally — and it doesn’t get any better than this — he’ll forget a person’s name, then at the last moment it’ll pop into his head, only for him to mispronounce it.

He’ll see the last name “Jones” and he’ll say “Johns.” He’ll see the last name McCullough, and he’ll say “McCullick”. He’ll know somebody with the last name “Smith” and say “Smythe.” He’ll meet somebody with the last name “Smythe” and pronounce it “Smith.” He just can’t win.

On Monday morning, he called me to tell a story about a friend with the last name “Pheiffer.” He started the story by saying, “You know my friend, Mike Peiffer?

Uh, Dad. Isn’t his last name Pheiffer?

Yea, yea. That’s it.

In my dad’s world. Mike Brady plays quarterback for the New England Patriots. Lin Kiffin just became the head coach at USC. Paul Gasol plays center for the Lakers. And Dave Duncan plays center for the Spurs.

Yea Rus, remember when Tim Robinson was playing alongside Dave Duncan. How did anybody stop them?.

It’s probably good my father didn’t become a sports broadcaster. I’m pretty sure some crazy fan would’ve tried to take a swing at him.

Restaurants can be a problem, too.

Last year, my family had dinner at “McCormicks and Smith’s”. On the way, he asked my brother, my sisters and I if we’d been to the “Grand Saloon” lately*.

*Nah, we said. We’ve been hanging out at “Ron Fooleries.”

Of course, watching sports together can be difficult. And when there’s a break in the action, that means there are a few minutes to tell a story*.

Dad: Hey Rus, did I tell you I saw… um, well, … I was out buying groceries at… well, you know the place down the street. And I saw, you know, he used to go to school with you?
Me: …
Dad: You know who I’m talking about?
Me: Uhh, maybe?
Dad: Well, anyway. KU looks good. The Morrie twins are playing well.

Tagged , , ,

Some more Lisztomania (with links)

(Note from the editors… It’s been mighty slow around The Brewhouse lately. No worries. We’re going to try to set a record today with three — gasp, three? yes, three. — posts. Check back for more all day.)

With that in mind, here is another addition of List Mania from The Brewhouse. For those not in the know, List Mania is an ode to former Kansas City Star and current Sports Illustrated columnist Joe Posnanski, who famously wrote lists until one day, many years ago, he wrote a column saying he would never list again…

So here goes…

Five Movies Sequels (or remakes) to Watch For in 2010

1. Wall Street 2: Money Never Sleeps

Wow, I had no idea this movie was coming out. Oliver Stone’s directing, and Michael Douglas is reprising his iconic role as “Gordon Gekko*.”

*”Greed, for lack of a better word, is good.”

Shia LaBeouf will play a young Wall Street trader, Susan Sarandon plays LaBeouf’s mom, and Josh Brolin will also make an appearance. This one comes out in April

Oh, and yes, Charlie Sheen, who played Bud Fox in the original, will also make a small cameo.

2. Iron Man 2

Watch the trailer for the much-awaited sequel here…

3. Robin Hood

“Gladiator” director Ridley Scott is getting back together with Russell Crowe. Cate Blanchett is showing up, too.

4. The A-Team

Ok, so this is remake of the 1980s television show. Still, watch the old television show opening, and then watch the new trailer. Say what you want about Hollywood, but can anyone really be against this movie?

5. Toy Story 3

It’s been almost 15 years since the original Toy Story changed the way people thought about animated films. Now Woody, Buzz and the gang are back again.

One Sequel We Could Do Without

1. The Karate Kid

Jackie Chan and Will Smith’s son? Come on – you just can’t remake Mr. Miyagi. Yikes.

Six Great Pieces of Journalism From the Last Month

1. The toughest player in ‘real life’ – Bill Reiter, The Kansas City Star

A well-written piece on KU football player D.J. Marshall and his battle with cancer.

2. The Dirtiest Player – Jason Fagone, Esquire

Fagone exposes the seedy underworld of Marvin Harrison’s North Philly neighborhood.

3. As The World Burns – Jeff Goodell, Rolling Stone

Rolling Stone goes inside America’s battle over climate change.

4. A Courageous Cowboy Meets His Crush – Donald Bradley, The Kansas City Star

Bring the tissues. A dying young man gets a visit from a beautiful champion barrel racer.

5. The Thrill of It All – Joe Posnanski, Sports Illustrated

A “badass” profile of Vikings defensive end Jared Allen.

6. Haskell Offers Haven for Hidden Talent – Dana O’Neil, ESPN.com

A great read on the struggles of the Haskell basketball program

One Man’s Midseason College Basketball All-American Team

First Team

1. Duke’s John Scheyer

2. Kentucky’s John Wall

3. Syracuse’s Wesley Johnson

4. Texas’ Damion James (National Player of the Year)

5. Wake Forest’s Al-Farouq Aminu

Second Team

1. Villanova’s Scottie Reynolds

2. Kansas’ Sherron Collins

3. Kansas State’s Jacob Pullen

4. Ohio State’s Evan Turner

5. Notre Dame’s Luke Harangody

The 10 Best Basketball Players in the World (right now)

1. LeBron James

2. Kobe Bryant

3. Chris Paul

4. Tim Duncan

5. Carmelo Anthony

6. Kevin Durant

7. Dwyane Wade

8. Dirk Nowitzki

9. Dwight Howard

10. Pau Gasol

Three YouTube Mixtapes to Watch on a Monday

1. Remembering Pistol Pete

Here…

2. …And Jason Williams – the baller with a bullcut

Here…

3. …And Ricky Rubio, the heir to the throne

Here…

Three Interesting Facts from The NFL Playoffs

1. The last time two No. 1 seeds met in the Super Bowl? Buffalo and Dallas in 1993. And it could happen again this year.

2. Yes, Brett Favre really did sing “Pants on the Ground.”

3. In NFL history, 17 franchises have won the Super Bowl. That number counts franchises that have switched cities. The Colts (Baltimore to Indy) and the Raiders (Oakland to LA and back to Oakland). The Steelers have won six titles. The Cowboys are next with five. The 49ers have won four Lombardi trophies. The Patriots, Packers, Redskins and Giants have all won three times. And the Colts, Dophins and Broncos have all won twice. The seven other teams that have won a Super Bowl title have only won once.

That’s the list. This year, we have four teams left. The Colts and Jets have won titles. The Vikings and Saints haven’t. Here’s hoping Drew Brees and the Saints join the club.

The Five Best NFL Quarterbacks (right now)

1. Drew Brees

2. Peyton Manning

3. Aaron Rodgers

4. Brett Favre

5. Tom Brady

Five questions to ponder on a Monday…
1. What do Tiger Woods and Roger Federer talk about when they get together for drinks?

2. Is anybody (besides Stephen Colbert) excited for The Winter Olympics?

3. Are NBA fans seriously voting for Allen Iverson and Tracy McGrady to start the All-Star game?

4. Is Avatar really going to win the Oscar for Best Picture?

5. Do you believe in rock in roll, can music save your mortal soul, And can you teach me how to dance… real slow?

The Ballad of J.R. Richard

There’s a thought that’s been sitting off to the side, like a book on a desk that’s forgotten under a pile of papers. It’s somewhat incomplete, but it has something to do with baseball*, and music, and the things we see — and mostly, the things we don’t see.

*I’m also stewing on a post about the baseball Hall of Fame. Well, it’s not about the Hall of Fame, per se, but it might as well be. If you’ve been paying attention, you know that Andre Dawson was just elected to the baseball Hall of Fame. Sounds fine. I don’t know too much about the guy. His best days were a few years before my time. But I’m going to wager a guess that we remember this Hall of Fame vote as the year Roberto Alomar got royally snubbed. At least, that’s how I’ll remember it. We’re getting to the point where there are Hall of Fame-eligible players, and people my age can actually remember watching these players for their entire career. And to me, that’s interesting. Anyway, the post is coming.

So the other day I was watching the MLB Network* and there was one of those “countdown” shows on. And upon further investigation,I guess MLB network has a show called “Prime 9’s”. This particular show was the about the top nine “Could Have Been Great” players in baseball history. Of course, that’s not what it was called. But you get the point. It was simply a list of the top nine players in baseball history who could have been all-time greats, but — for whatever reason — failed to be.

*The MLB Network really is underrated. It’s channel 199 on my cable provider, so I suppose it gets lost in the shuffle. But I really need to start watching the MLB Network and NBAtv more often.

Rick Ankiel*, the young pitching prodigy, not the average center fielder — he was on the list.

*You know, I’m not sure we celebrate Rick Ankiel enough. Here’s a guy who was a pitching phenom. He, of course, goes into tank and has his crippling control problems. Yet, he rebounds and makes it all the way back to the Majors as an outfielder. Sure, he’s not great. But, wow, what an athlete.

Tony Conigliaro, the Red Sox hitting prodigy from the 1960s who famously took a pitch to the face, wrecking his career — he was also on the list.

Sachel Paige, the Negro Leagues flamethrower who wowed people with the Kansas City Monarchs in the 1930s — he was on the list.*

*Paige was actually No. 1 on the list — and for good reason. But one of my friends made a good point. If Paige is No. 1 (and he’s at No. 1 because he has to pitch in the Negro Leagues during his prime) shouldn’t the rest of the top 10 really be Negro League players as well?

But there was one name on the list that caught my attention. His name was J.R. Richard, and I guess he was a pitcher for the Houston Astros in the late 1970s.

I say, “I guess”, because I’d never heard of J.R. Richard before. Seriously, I’d never heard of him. And it’s not like I’d heard his name in passing, but I didn’t know his story. And it’s not like I’d vaguely heard of him.

I’D NEVER HEARD OF HIM.

And, according to this Prime 9’s program, Richard could have been one of the greatest power pitchers that ever lived.

And, after looking at his stats on BaseballReference.com,
These MLB network folk don’t seem to be that far off.

Richard went 20-15 in 1976 with a 2.75 ERA and a 214 strikeouts. The next season, he nearly had the same exact line. Then in 1978 he went 18-11 with a 3.11 ERA and 303 strikeouts. He followed that up with an unbelievable year in 1979 — 18-3, 2.71 ERA, 313 strikeouts (313!).

But then tragedy struck. During the 1980 season, Richard would have a stroke while playing catch before an Astros game. He would be rushed to the hospital to have a blood clot removed from his neck, and he’d never pitch in the Major Leagues again.

And somehow, I’d never heard this story before.

So I suppose for some people this wouldn’t seem that strange. And I suppose it’s not that odd that a 23 year old wouldn’t know the story of a once-great pitcher who last played 30 years ago.

But for me, it’s different. When I was growing up — let’s say between the ages of 7-13, before I finally discovered girls — I read more about sports than any person could possibly comprehend. I would memorize baseball encyclopedias, I would devour books about the history of basketball, I would sit and memorize the World Series Champions dating back to 1972 (and I can still recite all that information today).

I knew that the Red Sox’s Fred Lynn was named MVP and Rookie of the Year in 1975. And I knew that legendary UCLA coach John Wooden was nicknamed the “Indiana Rubberman” while he was playing college basketball at Purdue. I knew that the NBA was originally called the BAA, and I knew that Harvey Haddix of the Pittsburgh Pirates pitched the greatest game of all time and still didn’t earn a victory. This stuff was my life.

And somehow, I didn’t know who J.R. Richard was. His story was unique and tragic… and I’d never heard of it.

I was thinking about J.R. Richard a few days ago while I was visiting my older brother in Washington D.C. We were taking a break from watching KU play Temple in Philly, and it was freezing out, and so I was sorting through my iTunes. Somehow, I stumbled upon a song I’d never listened too.

It was by The Decemberists, and it was called “Hazards of Love 4 (The Drowned). It was, of course, off their album, “Hazards of Love” from last year.

The song is slow and melodic and spine-tingling. I always sound like some kind of snobby hipster critic when I try to describe songs, but let’s just say the song is phenomenal.

And somehow, I’d never heard this song before.

If you know me, you know that I’m crazy for The Decemberists. I think they’re geniunely great, and I think their lead singer Colin Meloy is fantastic. I have dozens and dozens of their songs on my iTunes. And you know I’ve written about their album, “The Crane Wife”, before.

And somehow, I’d never heard this particular song.

Sure, I’d downloaded the album. I’d listened to a few songs, but I guess I’d skipped over this one. And the rest of the album had left me overwhelmed. So I’d stashed these songs away somewhere in the back of mind, and left them idle on my iTunes playlist.

There is no earthly reason for connecting J.R. Richard and The Decemberists.

J.R. Richard is a hard-throwing Houston Astros right-hander from the 1970s. He had a stroke and never played again.

“Hazards of Love 4 (The Drowned)” is a song from an indie rock outfit from the 2000s. The entire album sold a few copies in places like Lawrence and Austin and Portland.

But both of these things made me think about the things we see — and the things we don’t see. The songs we hear — and the songs we miss. The baseball stories we know — and the baseball stories that are lost.

It seems like these days, we are exposed to so many different forms of media on a daily basis. Sometimes it seems like our senses are simply overloaded.

But what about the things we miss?

What about the stories we don’t hear? What about the books we don’t read? What about the beers we don’t drink? What about the songs we don’t hear? What about the friends we don’t meet?

Of course, most of the stuff we miss is probably inconsequential. Who cares if we miss out on thousands of average songs and books and friends?

But I have to think: There are probably things that are right under our noses, things we would love, things that should be in our lives, things that would are lives just a little bit more enjoyable, and somehow — we miss them.

Or perhaps I’m just floored that I’d never heard of J.R. Richard.

Tagged , , ,

Decades and music

“It’s like the every other decade theory… The fifties were boring. The sixties rocked. The seventies, oh my God, they obviously sucked. Maybe the eighties will be radical. You know, I figure we’ll be in our twenties. It can’t get any worse.” — Dazed and Confused

I first saw the movie “Dazed and Confused” when I was 10 years old. It was 1996. This of course, was a year when people still rented movies, still popped VHS tapes into VCR’s, and still had to push play.

Anyway, my older brother had returned from a movie-rental place with a friend. And they planned on watching some movie I’d never heard of.

Sometimes I wonder why I remember this night. Nothing eventful happened. Nothing memorable happened.

But I do remember it. I remember watching the beginning scene at the high school. And I remember the next scene when they go to the middle school and yell at Mitch Kramer through the loudspeaker.

I’ve always had mixed feelings about the movie. On one hand, I feel it’s wildly underrated. Richard Linklater directed it. He’s the same guy that directed Before Sunrise and Before Sunset — two masterpieces that I’ve always loved. On the other hand, I feel it’s still pretty flawed and a little bit phony.

*I’m pretty sure that my contradictory feelings stem from my high school experiences. I remember being in high school in Overland Park in the early 2000’s. And for some reason, the kids in the burnout clique adopted Dazed and Confused as their favorite movie. Of course, I was friends with most of these people. But I always thought they were missing the point. They all wanted to drive around and listen to music — like the people in the movie (and when you’re in high school, who doesn’t?). But it seemed like three or four guys started talking exactly like the stoner archetype from the movie.
“Hey, man, you just don’t understand, man. Martha Washington, man, she was a good lady, man. Yea, yea. Yea. Whoa, man.” So, yea, maybe my view of the movie was tarnished.

But here’s the thing: If I’m watching television, and Dazed and Confused comes on — I just can’t turn the channel.

This happened again last Tuesday. Dazed and Confused was on television for the 1,713th time. And I had to keep watching. And that’s when I heard Cynthia, the nerdy redhead from the movie, say that quote about her “Every other decade theory.”

“It’s like the every other decade theory… The fifties were boring. The sixties rocked. The seventies, oh my God, they obviously sucked. Maybe the eighties will be radical. You know, I figure we’ll be in our twenties. It can’t get any worse.”*

*I’m fairly certain that Linklater was trying to add a little ironic humor.
Of course, I can’t remember the 80’s… so I can’t be sure. But I’m fairly certain that most people would never describe the 80’s as “radical.”

I’m not exactly sure why, but on this particular viewing, on this particular night, these words made me think a little deeper.

Maybe it was the chilly winter weather. Maybe it was because it was 1:30 in the morning. But mostly, I think it was because I’ve been thinking a lot about decades recently.

We’ve been inundated with lists the last couple weeks. The Top 10 Movies of the Decade. The Top 500 Songs of the Decade. The Top 10 Moments of the Decade. On and on and on.

And at its core, Dazed and Confused is simply a cheap little piece of 1970s nostalgia. It’s about a bunch of high school kids in 1976. They cruise around town, drink, smoke, and listen to music (for all intents and purposes, they basically listen to a greatest hits collection from the 1970s).

They throw ragers at the local park, attempt to throw keggers in their basements, and shoot pool at the local pool hall.

I’m sure there were a few people that did these kinds of things in the 1970s. For all I know, maybe there were lots and lots of people that did these things. But I’m guessing — in fact, I’m fairly certain — that the majority of high school kids did not do these types of things in the 1970s.

Sure, some probably drank. Some probably smoked. Some probably did illicit drugs. After all, it was the 1970s. But that’s not my point.

And here’s the thought I’m stumbling to get to.

One movie cannot define the youth culture in the 1970s. It just can’t.

But here’s the sad truth. For millions… that’s how it works.

Pop culture — movies, music, television — has totally corrupted our views of the past.

When I think of the 1970s, I think of Dazed and Confused.
When I think of the 1980s, I think of Back to the Future and Ferris Bueller’s Day Off and Sixteen Candles.
When I think of the 1990s, I think of Empire Records and Can’t Hardly Wait and Clueless and all those other average Generation X films.

And all that pop culture clouds my perception of those decades.

I guess I’ve been thinking about all this as all these “Lists of the Decades” and “Retrospectives of the 2000s” have been coming out.

For some reason, we feel compelled to peel away the complexities from each decade, and repackage 10 years into a nice, short, easy-to-digest synopsis.

The 1920s – a roaring good time with flappers and drinking and excess. Sign me up.
The 1930s – a dusty decade immersed in a depression… and, oh yes, the New Deal.
The 1940s – WAR! …World War II …and the beginning of the Cold War.
The 1950s – A decade of innocence; moving out to the suburbs; the American Dream
The 1960s – A chaotic period; assassinations, protest, civil rights and more war.
The 1970s – Drugs and disco and long hair.
The 1980s – A new decade of excess and yuppies and Reagan and the end of the Cold War.
The 1990s – Microsoft and computers and the Internet and the tech boom.

…And so on.

So what short synopsis will come to define this decade? How will we remember these long 10 years?

Well, if you’re listening, it’s already started to develop.

And I’m sure we’ll hear about 9/11 and the two wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. And we’ll remember Bush and Obama – their differences and similarities. We’ll remember Google and the iPhone. We’ll remember Katrina. And we’ll remember the financial collapse.

So I suppose people will remember this decade as a period of struggle. A lost decade of calamitous events. Tragedy and terror and more bad news.

And I guess that’s OK. I’ll remember all those things.

But then, some hot young director will make a movie in 2027 — a piece of cheap nostalgia about high school kids in the 2000s — and I’m not sure I’ll totally be able to recognize it.

Because if you strip away all the stuff that the the 2000s were “supposed to be about,” you might just be left with your own memories and your own experiences.

You might just realize that the 2000s were a pretty damn-good time to be alive.

…And yet, as I try to make sense of the decade, and the things that resonated with me. I’m left thinking about the music I listened to. Each song, each album, each downloaded piece of music helps me reflect on 10 years of memories and friends and growth.

So, to make sense of it all –- and to cure a little Christmas-break boredom, I knew I had to make a list of The 10 Best Songs of The Decade. The only problem… I couldn’t stop at 10.

So here’s 20 songs that shaped the decade. Well, they shaped my decade. And that’s the point. We all have our own 20 songs. Listen to your songs. Don’t listen to everyone else’s.

20. Wilco
The Late Greats
2004

In 25 years, young hipsters will still be wearing Wilco T-shirts. Jeff Tweedy, Wilco’s incomparable frontman, will be ordained a music legend. And Tweedy will be on some stage somewhere, collaborating with some young hip band trying to steal a little of Wilco’s mojo.

And I’ll tell my kids, “You know, I loved Wilco when I was growing up.” I’ll say this because I’ll assume that it will give me some marker of credibility, some points in the coolness quotient. I’ll assume that my kids will care. Of course, we know they won’t

*
*
*

19. Empire State of Mind
Jay-Z , ft. Alicia Keys
2009

So, I was convinced to replace Jay’s “Roc Boys (And the winner is…)” with “Empire State of Mind”. After all, “Empire” is one of the newest songs on the list.

Of course, it’s one of the best tracks of 2009, and Jay and Alicia performed at the World Series at Yankee Stadium — and that was a great moment.

But I am curious to know what we will think about this song in 20 years.
Will kids be humming it, like they hum “Sinatra’s “New York, New York?” But in the end, Jay-Z — the new Sinatra — had to be on the list.

*
*
*

18. My Love
Justin Timberlake Ft. T.I.
2006

*
*
*

17. Road to Joy
Bright Eyes
2005

This is the final track on Conor Oberst’s seminal 2005 record, “I’m Wide Awake, It’s Morning.”

…The sun came up with no conclusions
Flowers sleepin’ in their beds
The city cemetary’s hummin’
I’m wide awake, its mornin’

*
*
*

16. The Needle has landed
Neko Case
2006

She’s one of the best artists of the last decade. She was the lead singer in the New Pornographers — one the most underrated bands of the decade. And her voice is iconic.

Around the time I first started to listen to Neko Case, I was in a record store in Fort Collins, Colo. This song was playing in the background. I asked the guy behind the counter if it was Neko Case. He said, “Yea… I think she’s going to be an all-time great.”

*
*
*

15. Paper Planes
M.I.A.
2007

It suffered a little bit from being overplayed. But if you weren’t jamming to this song in 2007-08, you just weren’t paying attention.
Simply put, it’s the most danceable song of the last 10 years.

Plus, anytime you can have a hit record with the lyrics, “We pack and deliver like UPS trucks,” you’re doing something right.

*
*
*

14. New Slang
Artist: The Shins
2001

When I was 17 years old, my older brother took me to a show at Liberty Hall in Lawrence. We saw two bands I’d never heard of. The Rapture and The Shins. When you’ve never heard a band before, it can be hard to totally enjoy their live show. The Shins were different. Within the next year, I had both their albums — “Oh, Inverted World” and “Chutes Too Narrow”.

And then the movie “Garden State” came out. You know, the indie hit starring Zach Braff and Natalie Portman. Of course, it became my favorite movie — mostly because it had three Shins songs featured in it.*

*One time, when I was a senior, I used my nerdy Student Council connections to get like seven kids out of class, and we went to my house to eat lunch and watch this movie.

Well, this song, according to Portman’s character, was supposed to “totally change your life.” I’m not sure it changed anyone’s life — except for Braff’s. But it introduced the world to The Shins. And it made me feel cool because I was a high schooler listening to some quality “college rock.” And that was good enough.

*
*
*

13. Remix to Ignition
R. Kelly
2003

Here’s why this song is on the list. If you had a time machine, you could travel back to the year 2003.

And if you travelled back in time, you could walk into any high school lunchroom in America, and within a few minutes, you’d hear somebody singing “And after the party, it’s the hotel lobby…”

*
*
*

12. Fred Jones Pt. 2
Ben Folds
2001

This song is about an old newspaper man who loses his job. It was great in 2001, and it means even more to me now.

Let’s hope people don’t forget about the greatness of Folds’ first solo album, “Rockin’ the Suburbs.”

*
*
*

11. Whatever You Like
T.I
2008

For me, this song means college. And in 20 years, this song will mean college. And in 30 years, this song will mean college. And when I hear it, I’ll be in college again. And there aren’t many things better than that.*

*Oh, and I guess T.I. just got out of jail. Good for him.

*
*
*

10. I And Love And You
The Avett Brothers
2009

Haven’t listened to the Avett Brothers? Then you’re missing out on the best rock song of 2009.

*
*
*

9. Crazy in Love
Beyonce
2003

Here’s my Beyonce story. If you live in Kansas City, you surely know about the radio station 95.7 “The Vibe.” Well, once upon a time, 95.7 decided it was going to try to challenge 103.3 Jamz, the top Hip-hop station in Kansas City. So 95.7 started playing the top 20 hip-hop and and R&B songs in the country. And that was all it played. It was annoying, but at the same time, it was comforting.

For example, if The Vibe was around in 2003, you would have been able to turn to it and hear “Crazy in Love” withing the next 20 minutes… guaranteed. And that’s what I think about when I think of “Crazy in Love.”

You might not want to listen to it forever, but in a decade that was defined by downloading and iTunes and all the rest, it’s the perfect single. You hear it once, and you want to hear it again. And that’s why I liked 95.7 The Vibe. I wasn’t crazy about the music. (Sure, I enjoyed it enough.) But I knew I was going to hear the same 20 songs.*

*Oddly enough, 95.7 still calls itself The Vibe, but it plays Nickelback and other atrocious mainstream rock songs.

*
*
*

8. This Year
The Mountain Goats
2005

My brother introduced me to The Mountain Goats sometime during the first couple years of the decade. It was essentially one guy, John Darnielle, playing lo-fi, folky, indie-rock. It was raw, and it felt like you were listening to the greatest secret in the word.

A few years later, I was driving on K-10, on my way back to school at KU. This song came on the radio — 90.7 KJHK, the student-run radio station at the University of Kansas. For the next three minutes, I sat and listened. I downloaded the song a few hours later, and it still has the greatest chorus of the decade.

“I am gonna make it, through this year, if it kills me…”

*
*
*

7. What Am I To You?
Norah Jones
2004

…What am I to you
Tell me darling true
To me you are the sea
Vast as you can be
And deep the shade of blue

*
*
*

6. Do You Realize?
The Flaming Lips
2002

…And instead of saying all of your goodbyes – let them know
You realize that life goes fast
It’s hard to make the good things last
You realize the sun doesn’t go down
It’s just an illusion caused by the world spinning round

*
*
*

5. Where’s the Love?
The Black Eyed Peas
2003

This song introduced us to the Peas, to will.i.am, and to Fergie.

Justin Timberlake stops in for a cameo, and against all odds, we somehow get one of the best peace anthems and protest songs of the last 25 years.

*
*
*

4. The Decemberists
The Crane Wife 1&2
2006

The Decemberists spent the decade spewing out sophisticated indie-rock. Songs with inspired lyrics, and albums with actual themes.

They had a pseudo-rivalry with Stephen Colbert, and they wrote the second-best rock album of the decade (the first is coming up).

Here’s my Decemberists story. When I was in college, I worked at the college radio station. I mostly did sports broadcasting stuff, but occasionally, I’d fill in and do a D.J. shift. Sometimes I’d bring my brother to help me with D.J. shifts. Anyways, one time, my brother decided to play The Decemberists’ song, “The Shankill Butchers,” perhaps the most depressing song ever.

Basically, it’s slow and creepy, and it’s about butchers killing people with cleavers and knives. Like I said, it’s depressing.

So my bro puts the song on, and within two minutes, this really laid back dude calls. He’s real laid-back, talking deep and slow. And it seems the laid-back dude thought we were a real downer. I guess we ruined his day by playing such a depressing tune.

As I recall, he said something like this: “Yo, man… come on guys. It’s just not right. Just not right. You gotta bring people up. Bring ’em up, man. Give ’em some hope. This song is just a real downer, man. A downer, man. I mean, I don’t want to tell you how to do your jobs. But let’s bring a little joy to the world, let’s bring people up…”

It was a strange conversation. But I think the weird laid-back Lawrence townie had a point.

*
*
*

3. Death Cab For Cutie
Transatlanticism
2003

Not sure who said it, but here’s the greatest way to describe this song…

You just never want it to end.

*
*
*

2. Hey Yea
Outkast
2003

The most ubiquitous hit of the decades. If Outkast is the artist of the decade — and they just might be — this is their “I Wanna Hold Your Hand.”

Andre 3000 and Big Boi have had their Lennon/McCartney moments, but I really hope we haven’t seen the last of Outkast.

*
*
*

1. Neighborhood Pt. 1 (Tunnel)
Arcade Fire
2004

You could pick any song off Arcade Fire’s 2004 album “Funeral” to put in this slot. In fact, I almost chose “Rebellions.” But this is the first song, your entrance to the best album of the 2000s.

So go listen to the album straight through, and you’ll never hear music the same again.

*
*
*

Tagged , , , , , , , ,