1-Man’s Opinion on Sports–Monday. “Aztecs Basketball–Awful Finish–End of Era?”

Posted by on March 22nd, 2021  •  0 Comments  • 

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“Aztecs-End of Run–End of Era?”

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Clank

That’s all I heard most of the night.

It was awful to watch, imaging playing in the game, how much worse it was.

Syracuse’s blowout win over San Diego State.  The Aztecs never looked like the Aztecs.  Looked more like Mt St. Mary’s, Towson State or Colgate.

Overwhelmed and overmatched.  Out coached and out schemed.

It was shocking to see SDSU get stomped the way they did, considering they had 5-days of film and full practices to cope withthe Orange zone defense.

Maybe Brian Dutcher should have watched videos of Syracuse-Pitt when Jamie Dixon coached the Panthers.  He went (15-6) against the Orange.  Jay Wright of Villanova is (10-8) against SU.

I knew it would be a challenge, playing Syracuse, I did not think it would be impossible, but it was.

I am a big believer in body language, and I did not like what I saw some 5-minutes into the first half.  SDSU was shell shocked.  They had a glaze in their eyes.  They were intimidated by the length of the Syracuse guards out on the edge of the zone defense.

Clank.

Who would have thought San Diego State would go 15-possessions without a basket…no points in a span of (9:38)?  Who could have seen a (20-0) Orange run?  Or a (42-12) Orange burst?  Imagine a State team going (1-for-20) from the 3-point arc for nearly a half.  At one point they were down 27-points.

Clank.

So disheartending to see it end this way, but SDSU is (6-13) in NCAA play, and (6-10) in the Steve Fisher-Brian Dutcher era.

The Matt Mitchell-Jordan Schakel team’s have given us a fun four years of basketball, including (54-7) over the last two winters.

Brian Dutcher has been spectacular (96-30) in his era sitting in the first chair on that bench over four seasons.

If Dutcher elects to go home to Minnesota to coach the Golden Gophers, we which him well.

If not, then we will look forward to the next batch of players he brings in to ‘coach em up’, which is what they have done over the last decade and a half.  Make them better players, make them men too.

We should say ‘job well done’ for what they have given us at Viejas.  It may take some time to get over this stomach ache of a loss, the way it happened.

But it is what happens to ‘mid-majors’ and that is what SDSU is.  Till they beat a Gonzaga, a Duke, a North Carolina, a Syracuse, it will always be a reach to think the Aztecs are a big time player.

End of a season, yes, end of an era, hope not.

Clank.

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1-Man’s Opinion on Sports–Friday. “Aztecs-Building Tradition–Syracuse-Is Tradition”

Posted by on March 19th, 2021  •  0 Comments  • 

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“Aztecs-Building Tradition…Syracuse is Tradition”

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San Diego State plays Syracuse in the 1st round of the NCAA tourney late Friday night in Indianapolis.

The Aztecs have become a quality program on the West Coast, but a national following has yet to happen.

Syracuse has all that and more because of Jim Boeheim, and what he did helping form the Big East Conference and then guiding the move to the ACC.

A look at the Orange from Syracuse.com reporter Brent Axe and the some of the storylines that have made Syracuse a national power as I asked-he answered.

Q&A….

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THE DEMISE OF THE BIG EAST…WHAT WAS THE STRUGGLE LIKE FOR THE ORANGE TO LEAVE THE CONFERENCE

It was a moral struggle for sure given the history of Syracuse in the Big East but a no-brainer in terms of finances, television exposure and status in a Power 5 conference. You have to remember that when Syracuse went to the ACC there was a wild reshuffling of the deck in college sports. The pressure was on to cash in and that’s what Syracuse had to do, especially in football where the Big East had no foothold.

HAS THE MOVE TO THE ACC BEEN WELL RECEIVED BY THE FANS IN THE MARKET?

Fans understand why the moved had to be made but still miss the old Big East for sure. Syracuse still plays Georgetown every year, but it’s not the same.

 

A nice rivalry has blossomed with Duke. That game has produced some epic moments and record crowds in a short period of time. The problem is it is not a two-way rivalry. Ask 100 Duke fans who their rival is and they will all say North Carolina. Ask Syracuse fans the same question and it would be hard to get a consensus these days.

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PERCEPTION SYRACUSE HAS SLIPPED IN THE AFTERMATH OF THE NCAA SANCTIONS YEARS AGO?

There is no question Syracuse has slipped a little. They have not finished higher than sixth place in the ACC other than the first year joining the conference and have been on the NCAA bubble every year since 2016. That said, there is a Final Four (2016) and Sweet 16 run (2018) built in to the conversation, so that tends to make up for lost ground in the regular season.

SURPRISE BOEHEIM IS STILL COACHING-FIGURED HE WAS GOING TO RETIRE AND HAND OVER THE REIGNS TO MIKE HOPKINS?

I’m honestly not surprised. I knew Boeheim would find a way to keep coaching. It’s what he does. The man is a lifer. As for when he retires, I honestly have no idea. There is a theory that he will step aside when his son, Buddy, graduates from Syracuse next year. I don’t buy it. I’ve always joked it is going to be a “Weekend at Bernie’s” situation. They are going to look at the end of the bench one day and he will have just quietly passed away.

HOW GOOD IS THIS TEAM….LIVE OFF ZONE….LIVE OFF OFFFENSE….DEFENSE NOT STRONG

This team certainly doesn’t live off the zone defense the way it has in the past, but the defense has been much better down the stretch of the season.

 

Syracuse lives and dies on two things; 3-point shooting and rebounding. Syracuse is undefeated (14-0) when it outrebounds opponents this year. You have to keep the Orange off the boards if you are going to win.

 

As for 3-point shooting, watch out for Boeheim’s son, Buddy. He has been hot down the stretch, averaging 22.5 points, shooting 31-of-67 (46%) from distance in that stretch. Alan Griffin, Joe Girard III and Robert Braswell off the bench can all hit 3’s as well.

GREAT VENUE….IS THE DOME STILL THE DOME…ROCKING WITH FANS?

There is nothing like it when 35,000 fans make the Carrier Dome shake for a big college basketball game, so you can imagine how weird it was to see the building completely empty this season.

 

Syracuse just finished a $118 million renovation of the facility and fans have barely had the opportunity to see what the new center hung scoreboard can do. The experience is only going to be better when those two factors are finally combined once COVID protocols ease.

BOEHEIM VS THE MEDIA…STILL AN ISSUE?

Absolutely! Boeheim is as feisty as ever. I interview Boeheim once a week on the radio and it is truly “box of chocolates” radio. You never know what you are going to get.

 

He got into hot water recently for calling out a reporter’s height during a recent press conference. He also made national headlines last month for his comments on Duke’s Jalen Johnson, though that got a little ridiculous because Boeheim’s opinion that Duke was better without Johnson got attached to some other narratives about the story that he didn’t even say.

 

 


 

 

1-Man’s Opinion on Sports-Thursday. “Aztecs-Syracuse–Who Are the Orange?”

Posted by on March 18th, 2021  •  0 Comments  • 

The Aztecs open the NCAA Tournament on Friday as historic Hinkle Field House, where they shot the movie ‘Hoosiers’ about that legendary 1954 high school team, the move featuring Gene Hackman.

SDSU will face a piece of history in Jim Boeheim, who has coached the Orange for 45-years.  He was one of the architects in the building of the Big East Conference.  His games with the legendary John Thompson and the Georgetown Hoyas are iconic in nature.

Now Syracuse plays in the ACC, and those rivals are Duke-North Carolina and Virginia.

The Orange have been spectacular during this Boeheim run at the Carrier Dome.

Longtime Utica OD sports writer John Pitarresi has covered the Orange during this halcyon era.  A close up look:

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SYRACUSE BASKETBALL
By JOHN PITARRESI

Syracuse is in the NCAA basketball tournament.
Of course, the Orange are. Aren’t they always?

Pretty much, but lately it has been by the skin of their teeth.
Though many SU fans tend to think their guys are owed a spot in the Big Dance every year, Jim Boeheim’s team has become a frequent resident on the bubble in recent seasons.

They were floating along in that perilous spot again this year until earning a berth after they gave Virginia everything they had in a last second loss In the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament last week.

So, the Orange are in and play San Diego State in a first round game March 19.

How did they get there? It’s hard to say. This is a mystifying team that was up and down most of the season until winning three in a row before the UVA loss.

The Orange, 16-9, aren’t outstanding by most
statistical measures, although they do rank in the top 20 in the nation in free throw percentage, steals,and blocks. They have some major flaws. They lack brawn on the front line, so they often have trouble
on the boards, and the defense has been lax at times. They gave up 52 points in the first half at Duke last month.

They have pluses, though, and right now the biggest one is Buddy Boeheim, the boss’s son. If anyone
ever thought the 6-6 junior guard plays because of nepotism – and there were more than a few – they
should be embarrassed by now. Boeheim is SU’s leading scorer at 17.1 points per game, he’s up to .373
from long range, and he’s scored 26, 17, 27 and 31 points in his last four games.

Boeheim might not be a great athlete – although he is better than he looks – but he knows how to play the game, as you would expect from a gym rat coach’s son. He handles well, usually knows when to
shoot, gets rid of the ball quickly, has great form, and recognizes when he has the advantage, as demonstrated by his recent tendency to take smaller defenders into the paint and shoot over them or kick the ball out for open shots. Big, quick guards can give him trouble and defend him well, but no one
has recently.

Boeheim isn’t the only weapon. Illinois transfer Alan Griffin is averaging 14.7 points and is a threat to go off at any time. He has speed, can get to the rim, and is a good 3-point shooter.

Sophomore forward Quincy Guerrier has played well, averaging 14.3 points and 8.8 rebounds, is tough inside, and is going to get better and better. Veteran Marek Dolezaj remains an important contributor, playing a smart all-around game, seeing the court and distributing the ball nicely, averaging 9.9 points, and taking more
hard charges than maybe his 6-foot-10, 200-pound body can stand.

Starting guard Joe Girard, up and down along with the team all season, averages 9.9 points, and sophomore forward Kadary Richmond is at 6.4 and is a defensive ace. Young forwards Robert Braswell and Jesse Edwards (6-foot-11) are likely to see a lot of action against San Diego State.

That crew probably is playing its best basketball of the season right now, moving the ball well and getting good looks, playing reasonably well on defense, and pressing with great effect when needed.
Defensive rebounding remains a weakness, and a bad night on the boards combined with a poor shooting night can put SU in a tough spot. Otherwise the Orange are capable of handling almost anyone
in the tournament.

This is Boeheim’s 45 th season as coach at his alma mater, and he’s piled up a 1,081-408 record, has never had a losing season, made the NCAA tournament three dozen times, reached the Final Four five times, and won a national championship, in 2003. He’s an ultra-competitive person – he was a very good player himself – is not warm and fuzzy, and has his faults – he has not been a noted disciplinarian, but who knows what happens behind the scenes? – but that is a resume few can match, and that’s why he is in the Hall of Fame.

Boeheim turned 76 in November, and the popular belief is that he will retire when Buddy graduates. Don’t bet on it. Unless his wife and family demand otherwise, they will have to drag him off the court by
his heels. He can’t live without basketball.

Boeheim has had to make the transition from the old Big East to the ACC, and it hasn’t been easy. Sanctions following the Fab Melo eligibility fiasco of 2012 – including Boeheim being suspended and
athletic director Daryl Gross losing his job – undoubtedly hurt in terms of recruiting and reputation, but the blowback is no longer a factor.

The Orange have been somewhat better than .500 in conference play
(79-65) since joining the league in 2012-13, they made the NCAA tourney five of the last six years – 2019-20 doesn’t count – and went to the Final Four in 2016.

By contrast, the Big East was no cakewalk for SU, but the Orange almost always were among the league’s top teams, had only two losing conference campaigns in 34 seasons, and almost always were nationally ranked at the end of the year.

Right now, and for a long time, Duke, North Carolina, and Virginia have been the big dogs in the ACC. Joining that group is going to take a while longer for the Orange.

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1-Man’s Opinion on Sports-Wednesday “How Do You Define Greatness = Drew Brees”

Posted by on March 17th, 2021  •  0 Comments  • 

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“Drew Brees-Greatness”

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So what should we remember him for?  Drew Brees-the quarterback.

His drive to get the historically downtrodden New Orleans Saints a Super Bowl ring, so the phrase ‘Who Dat’ became Bourban Street lore?

His 80,000 plus yards and his 571-career touchdowns in a 20-year career in the NFL?

His resurrection of a wretched San Diego Chargers franchise, trying to recover from the (1-15) Ryan Leaf era?

His recovery from a horrible shoulder blade injury in his final game as a Charger just as free agency was about to start?

His comeback from all the insults of his career, just 1-free agent offer after he got hurt, a one year make good contract at a lower price, after Miami pulled an offer off the table?

His determination to take the only college offer he had from Purdue Boilermaker coach Joe Tiller after none of the big schools in Texas offered him anything more, except to walk-on as a safety not a quarterback with the Longhorns or Aggies or Baylor Bears?

His personna to excel when everyone said, too small, to weak an arm to play in college or the NFL?

So many memories of the man who overcame all the doubters.

I’ll add one more, what Drew Brees did when he signed in New Orleans, not on the field, but in the community.

New Orleans, devastated by Hurricane Katrina.  You remember the bodies floating on flooded streets.  Bodies found in attics of flooded houses.  The Superdome turned into a safe haven for those trying to escape from the catastrophic parishes southeast of the city.  The raging waters, the floods, the stench, the death that permeated everywhere in the Gulf South.

That was Drew Brees, carrying a Saints flag, and a Louisiana state flag, starting 5-different foundations to help lead the city back to life.  A football player investing his own millions that first year and rallying NFL players everywhere to help fund trucks upon trucks of food supplies, water and medical supplies to be imported into the Crescent City.

The same Drew Brees who stepped up a year ago this week to make a massive finanical donation to help in the early fight with Covid.

We will remember him on the field, but we should never forget him off the field in his community too.

The quarterback lives here in DelMar in the off season.  He begins his NBC-TV career this summer as an NFL-analyst..Color analyst on Notre Dame games, and work at the Olympics.

Next stop will be the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton.

What a player, what a gentleman.  What a career and life well lived.  Drew Brees-Well Done!

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Below a unique column written by legendary Gil Brandt-a longtime scout for the Dallas Cowboys.  Courtesy NFL.com

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Watching the praise roll in for Drew Brees on the occasion of his retirement from the NFL, I’ve been thinking back on someone I’ve come to know quite well over the years, someone who will go down not just as one of the great quarterbacks of all time but as one of the great people.
And I’ve also been thinking about how his career might not have happened the way it did if not for a phone call I made roughly 20 years ago.
I first became familiar with Drew when he led Westlake High School to the Texas state championship in 1996, beating Abilene Cooper — which was then coached by Randy Allen, who currently helms the program at Highland Park — by the score of 55-15. Though he finished with a record of 28-0-1 as a starter, he was basically ignored by major college programs; the best he got from Texas, where his uncle played, was a walk-on offer. Of course, today, we know Drew is a lifelong overachiever who excels at everything he does, whether in football, business, or whatever else he wants to do. He landed a scholarship from Purdue, and being snubbed because of his height — which officially is 6-foot-3/8 — merely provided him with one of his first chances to show the world what he’s made of.
I personally got a close look at what Brees could do via my role with the Playboy All-American Preseason Team, which I picked (along with Gary Cole) from 1962 to 2011. (Incidentally, our track record selecting notable college players was pretty good: 52 of the players that we picked are currently in the Pro Football Hall of Fame, and 32 became Heisman Trophy-winners.) Drew was our choice at quarterback ahead of his junior year, in 1999. In 2000, we couldn’t decide whether to go with Brees again or Michael Vick, so we included them both, slotting Vick as the QB and Brees as a scholar-athlete.

Tomlinson: I always knew Drew Brees was going to be a Hall of Famer

What we used to do was, we’d have our honored players come to an Arizona resort for a long weekend in the spring. The players loved the chance to golf and fish, and we also had pro-day-type events where they’d test their skills, encompassing both combine-type events (minus the 40-yard dash) and things like a quick-draw contest and a mechanical-bull riding contest. We usually didn’t have multiple quarterbacks, but with Brees and Vick there in 2000, we had them throw passes, to receivers and at targets. Here’s how I remember the results of the targeted event: Brees put the ball through the hole 23 of 25 times, while Vick hit the target on 10 of 25 tries. (And, for what it’s worth, I have to note that Brees hit this mark while also drinking beer, while the 20-year-old Vick was sticking to soda. )
Fast-forward to the 2001 NFL Draft, when the San Diego Chargers held the first overall pick. I called my good friend John Butler, the Chargers general manager (who sadly passed away in 2003), and asked him what he was going to do with the selection. He said, “We’re going to take Vick.” I said, “Well, you’d better send somebody to work him out first, because I think Drew Brees is a lot better.” So the Chargers worked Vick out. When I got a call back, it was to let me know that I was absolutely right, and that the Chargers were going to try to trade the choice. They ended up swapping with the Falcons, who drafted Vick, then used the fifth overall pick to snag future Hall of Fame running back LaDainian Tomlinson in the first round before grabbing Brees in the second. And the rest is history.

Brees will go down as one of the ultimate underdogs after proving doubters wrong at every level. But his career was also marked by twists of fate. Like in 2006, when he might have signed with the Dolphins (Nick Saban wanted him!) and not the Saints (where he put together some truly legendary seasons) if Miami’s doctors hadn’t been scared off by Brees’ shoulder injury. Or in 2001, when he might have missed out on the chance to show his stuff in San Diego if I hadn’t called Butler.
I know we’re losing a great player with Brees’ retirement. I also know he’ll continue to be a factor in the growth of New Orleans. I’ve known a lot of people over the years, and what I have to say about Drew Brees is this: He’s definitely a once-in-a-lifetime type of person.

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1-Man’s Opinion on Sports–Tuesday. “NFL–Free Agent Spending Spree-Day 1”

Posted by on March 16th, 2021  •  0 Comments  • 

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“NFL Spending Spree”

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So what did you do the first day of the work week?  Probably not as much as NFL teams, that is for sure.

It started early, like at 6:30am..and ceased at about 9:30pm, this opening day of NFL free agency.

It was a stunner, not just the amount of money spent on Day 1-of free agency, but who spent it.  33-players in all changed teams.

You know Bill Belichick, you know the Patriots Way, draft, develop, and sometimes rent a vet to plug in.  It all changed yesterday.  Talk about coming out of character.  Belichick opened up Bob Kraft’s check book and signed “7” free agents, yes “7”.

Guess he had to do that considering that (7-9) non playoff team he gave the fans in Foxboro, and coupled with the lousy drafts he and his organization has had.

He gets instant pass rush upgrades in the Ravens DE-Matt Judon and former Jet-Henry Anderson.  He got big play down the field WR-Nelson Agholor, coming off a great season with the Raiders.  And TE-Jonnu Smith-whom he stole from Tennessee.  Now all he has to do is find a quarterback who can get the ball down the field, if it is not Cam Newton.

Kansas City, which cut loose 4-offensive lineman, got the best OG in Joe Thurney from the Patriots, but they need lots more help up front

Tennessee went defense with 3-signings, the best being Steelers LB-Bud Dupree coming off knee surgery.

The Chargers, who dumped 5-offensive lineman among others in a roster purge, signed the Packers offensive center Corey Linsley, the top rated pivot in the league, plus a Steelers OG-Matt Feiler, but they have lots of holes to fill.

The Jets new staff got help for QB-Sam Darnold, by landing the Titans big play WR-Corey Davis.

The Raiders began moves to upgrade a shoddy defense with the signing of ex-Jaguars pass rusher Yannick Ngakoue.

Cleveland raided the Rams for star safety John Johnson.
The Rams also gave up LB-Sam Ekuban to the 49ers

Urban Meyer, making his debut calling all the shots in Jacksonville kept saying he would bring in elite players.  Anybody see any elite names in Jamal Agnew-Rayshawn Jenkins and the six total players he inked?

It was busy, 33-players in all signed from sunrise to sunset.

In addition, a number of big names came off the board, re-signing to stay with teams, including virtually everybody in Tampa Bay…guys named Gronkowski-Godwin-Barrett and David.

Ditto in New Orleans where Jameis Winston will play under Sean Payton.

Aaron Jones got a payday to remain with the Packers.

Now we await to see what happens with names like JuJu Smith-Shuster..Hunter Henry..Mike Williams.. Trent Williams..Gabe Jackson..Trey Hendrickson..Hassan Riddick..plus veterans like Richard Sherman-Patrick Peterson-Eric Fisher-Riley Reiff and more.

Day 1 was wild.  Set your alarm clock for 6am, here comes Day 2-of free agency.

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