1-Man’s Opinion on Sports–Friday. “NFL–A Changing of the Guard”

Posted by on December 25th, 2020  •  0 Comments  • 

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“Beginning of Playoff Run–End of an Era”

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The Kansas City Chiefs are the elite in the NFL.  All the other good teams are chasing them heading to the final two weeks of the NFL regular season.

The push for the final playoff spots are now front and center.

In the rear-view mirror, the near 20-years of excellent of the New England Patriots, failing for the first time in 20-years in the Bill Belichick era.

How-why?  A close up look at the Pats from the New York Times.

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Just as Constantinople had shrunk to a shadow of its former glory by the time it was finally conquered by the Ottoman Empire in 1453, the New England Patriots were a mere shell of a once mighty dynasty when they were eliminated from the 2020 N.F.L. playoffs on Sunday.

Constantinople’s nigh-impenetrable walls were guarded by a meager militia before the city fell, just as players named Damiere Byrd and Devin Asiasi now occupy positions once manned by Patriots legends like Randy Moss and Rob Gronkowski. The Ottoman conquerors were stunned to see fallow fields encroaching upon the Hagia Sophia; the Miami Dolphins were probably also shocked when the Patriots kept running off tackle and meekly settling for field goals in Sunday’s 22-12 loss. When the end came to the city, the Byzantine capital’s most precious treasures and icons had already been looted by Venice, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers of the late medieval period.
N.F.L. Week 16 Predictions: Our Picks Against the Spread
Dec. 24, 2020

The Patriots have missed the playoffs only twice before since 2000, so when Sunday’s defeat dropped them to 6-8 and guaranteed their first nonwinning season in 20 years, it felt natural to seek world-changing historical precedents for their tumble into mediocrity and irrelevance. And history teaches us that empires never fall in a day. The Patriots have been quietly crumbling from within for years.

The N.F.L. erodes dynasties by design. The salary cap prevents teams from building perennial powerhouses. The draft punishes plutocrats and rewards serfs. The Patriots should have been torn apart by a bloated payroll and a dearth of young talent a decade ago, but Coach Bill Belichick found clever ways to leverage the team’s prestige and organizational continuity to subvert the N.F.L.’s quest for parity.

Image Bill Belichick papered over the Patriots’ cracks for years before the bill finally came due.Credit…Cj Gunther/EPA, via Shutterstock
For many years, the Patriots identified failing prospects from other teams with the potential to succeed in their system, acquired those players at low cost, assigned them roles in which they thrived, then let them depart after a few years. Often they left as top-dollar free agents, with the Patriots acquiring supplemental draft picks from the league in exchange. They used those picks to assemble new rosters with even more role players. In a pinch, the Patriots rented the services, via trade or free agency, of a big-name veteran (Darrelle Revis, Chris Long, Brandin Cooks) eager to win a Super Bowl at Tom Brady’s side.

The Patriots were able to use success to sustain success so long as they rarely made personnel mistakes, and as Brady could still single-handedly elevate the team’s offense while rallying mercenaries to his banner. But years of unproductive drafts led to a slow cycle of diminishing returns. By last season’s quick playoff exit, the Patriots’ roster had grown noticeably patchy, and Brady was showing signs of age and displeasure.
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Jan. 4, 2020

Brady’s departure as a free agent was the obvious tipping point in the decline. Making matters worse, he had outlasted his would-be successors Jimmy Garoppolo and Jacoby Brissett and appeared unwilling to suffer the presence of any other plausible heirs apparent, leaving the Patriots without even a stopgap quarterback. Yet surely Belichick had something up his sleeve: Perhaps Jarrett Stidham, a fourth-round pick, was the new chosen one, or the team would purposely go 0-16 for a year and draft Clemson’s Trevor Lawrence.

Instead, in late June, the Patriots grabbed Cam Newton off the free-agent discount rack. At first, it looked to be typical Belichick brilliance: The Patriots would restore Newton’s most valuable player luster and remain in contention while plotting their next move. In reality, it was a desperate move.

Newton gamely kept New England respectable early in the season, but the depleted Patriots roster was weakened by multiple coronavirus positives and opt-outs, Newton lacked quality receivers to throw to, his own skills were noticeably diminished, and the Patriots’ defense buckled.

Image Cam Newton wasn’t so much the cause of the Patriots’ problems as much as another victim of them.Credit…Elise Amendola/Associated Press
Defeats at the hands of former Super Bowl conquests like the Seattle Seahawks and the Los Angeles Rams and against long-subjugated fiefs like the Buffalo Bills and the Houston Texans took on apocalyptic symbolism. Belichick began appearing before the news media in hoodies that were even more tattered than usual: the emperor now a penitent in sackcloth, muttering about past accomplishments and making uncharacteristic excuses.

Finally, the Dolphins, once an obedient vassal state, coached by a former Belichick subordinate, Brian Flores, and fielding a roster featuring several ex-Patriots, delivered Sunday’s almost merciful coup de grâce.

Few outside the realm mourn the fall of an empire. Bills fans met their team at the airport after Saturday night’s victory over the Denver Broncos to rejoice in their first A.F.C. East title since 1995. The Dolphins, the Cleveland Browns and other franchises appear invigorated by the fact that all roads to a championship no longer lead to an impregnable fortress in the Boston exurbs. Patrick Mahomes’s Kansas City Chiefs are now the conference’s lone superpower, and they are easy to cast as lovable new heroes after Belichick and Brady’s increasingly joyless, generation-long quest to conquer all they surveyed.

The collapse of an empire can lead to a dark age, but it’s just as likely to pave the way for a renaissance. Not long after Constantinople got the works, it became Istanbul and grew back into the cosmopolitan city that it remains to this day. The Patriots will also rise again, thanks in part to the same forces that helped destroy them. It will just take a few years of rebuilding and some fresh talent, ideas and philosophies.

Oh, and Niccolò Machiavelli rose to prominence in Florence not that long after the fall of Constantinople. So Belichick will probably land on his feet.

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1-Man’s Opinion on Sports–Thursday. “College Football–What is Wrong with this Black & White Picture?

Posted by on December 24th, 2020  •  0 Comments  • 

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“College Football Bloodshed”

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The annual blood-letting, the firing of college coaches, did not take place at the high pace it has in recent years.

Auburn, South Carolina, Arizona, Illinois were the marquee schools who axed coaches.  Not like in recent years where there were as many as 15-Division 1-jobs at Power 5-schools open for business.

Auburn hired a coach from Boise State.  Illinois recycled a coach out of the NFL.  Arizona went for a young NFL assistant.  The Gamecocks went young and unproven with a college assistant.

What is the same about all of them?  White.

The biggest issue is schools are in huge financial trouble, and appear unwilling to eat big contracts.  Auburn may be the exception where Gus Malzahn has a 21M-payday ahead of him as part of his buyout.

The second biggest question is why no African American coaches were part of the interview process, and why no Black’s were hired.

The glitzy hiring of Deion Sanders at Jackson State brought attention to the SWAC school, but nothing happened elsewhere.

The NFL has pushed the boulder up the hill, with continued revisement of the Rooney Rule.  Why hasn’t the NCAA adopted further hiring blueprints, call it the Eddie Robinson Rule?

An interesting reading from Yahoo sports, I thought you’d enjoy.

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Is college football going to hire any Black coaches this year?
Dan Wetzel·Columnist
Wed, December 23, 2020, 2:15 PM PST·4 min read

Is college football going to hire any African American coaches this year?

Just wondering, because the trend certainly isn’t headed in that direction. Last season, the 120 FBS schools employed 13 Black head coaches. Three were fired and no African Americans have been hired yet this year (10 open positions have been filled by 10 white men).

And, yes, we know, “college football” isn’t a singular entity. Individually, each hire can be justified (well, unless you read fan message boards). Collectively though, a coincidence that has coincidence-ed for decades just keeps coincidence-ing.

It’s embarrassing.

Or it should be for a sport where the vast majority of administrators, fans and boosters want to be fair-minded and are, at the very least, proponents of a meritocracy that rewards the most qualified, deserving and talented person for a job.

If you agree with the above, yet don’t think there are any problems with the current system of identifying that most qualified, deserving or talented candidate, then you would have to also believe that only 10 African Americans exist who are capable of running a college football program.

Arizona is hiring New England Patriots assistant Jedd Fisch, right, as its head coach. Fisch is filling the vacancy created when Arizona fired Kevin Sumlin. (AP)For generations aspiring Black coaches have been told they need to ascend to the coordinator level of a major program before getting consideration for the head job at a mid-major program. They then need to win at that middle tier level (MAC, Sun Belt, Conference USA) before being a candidate at a big money, Power 5 school (SEC, Big Ten, ACC).

It wasn’t race that was holding them back, they were told, it was experience. Climb the ladder. Put in the time. Boot straps. Things like that.

Shane Beamer was never an offensive or defensive coordinator. He was most recently the tight ends coach at Oklahoma. South Carolina still made him a first-time head coach earlier this month. Welcome to the SEC.

Jedd Fisch spent one season as a college offensive coordinator — at UCLA in 2017. The Bruins went 6-7. He’s held the title in the NFL, although not of late (he was in his first season as quarterbacks coach for New England). Due to his pro experience, he has limited recruiting experience.

Arizona gave him his first head coaching job this week anyway.

This isn’t fair to Beamer or Fisch, of course. These discussions are never fair. They’ve done nothing wrong. You can’t fault them for accepting really good jobs.

Moreover, it isn’t necessarily fair to Arizona (which just employed an African American coach) or South Carolina. You can’t point and say there is a clear racist element to these hires. It never works that way, though.

And perhaps Beamer and Fisch will turn out to be incredible. Their hirings will be examples of eagle-eyed athletic directors who spotted previously unseen talent.

If so, the skeptics will be proven wrong. At least Fisch and Beamer get the chance to prove it, though.

If it’s no longer a prerequisite to rise to major program coordinator or mid-major head coaching success story, then why do these cast-a-wide-net searches or outside-of-the-box hires rarely seem to happen for an African American?

There isn’t a talented position coach out there (generally pigeon-holed with the running backs or secondary)? No one buried on a NFL staff? No 30-something wunderkind anywhere?

Are there no African American diamonds in the rough? Or are these athletic directors just not combing through all the rough?

What about a Black head coach who could use a second shot? Maybe they got hired once but it didn’t work out perfectly. Through failure they learned and are now ready for a reboot. It happens.

After all, Arkansas State just hired Butch Jones, who was fired at Tennessee in 2017. The University of Louisiana-Monroe went one better and took Terry Bowden, who in the 1990s was a force at Auburn, but most recently produced just one winning season in seven years at Akron.

If Bowden got a third chance, then why is it so rare for a Black head coach to get a second? Is a bad Sun Belt job too much to ask?

It sure seems like ADs, whether they realize it or not, seek out reasons to hire some coaches while finding different reasons to not hire different coaches.

Again, there is no concrete proof. And, again, this is not fair to Jones or Bowden. It’s not their fault.

It’s never anyone’s fault, though. It’s just something that keeps happening. And happening. And happening. Right before our eyes.

1-Man’s Opinion on Sports-Thursday “College Football–What’s Wrong with this Black-White Picture?”

Posted by on December 24th, 2020  •  0 Comments  • 

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“College Football–What’s Wrong with this Black-White Picture?”

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The annual blood-letting, the firing of college coaches, did not take place at the high pace it has in recent years.

Auburn, South Carolina, Arizona, Illinois were the marquee schools who axed coaches.  Not like in recent years where there were as many as 15-Division 1-jobs at Power 5-schools open for business.

Auburn hired a coach from Boise State.  Illinois recycled a coach out of the NFL.  Arizona went for a young NFL assistant.  The Gamecocks went young and unproven with a college assistant.

What is the same about all of them?  White.

The biggest issue is schools are in huge financial trouble, and appear unwilling to eat big contracts.  Auburn may be the exception where Gus Malzahn has a 21M-payday ahead of him as part of his buyout.

The second biggest question is why no African American coaches were part of the interview process, and why no Black’s were hired.

The glitzy hiring of Deion Sanders at Jackson State brought attention to the SWAC school, but nothing happened elsewhere.

The NFL has pushed the boulder up the hill, with continued revisement of the Rooney Rule.  Why hasn’t the NCAA adopted further hiring blueprints, call it the Eddie Robinson Rule?

An interesting reading from Yahoo sports, I thought you’d enjoy.

————————

Is college football going to hire any Black coaches this year?
Dan Wetzel·Columnist
Wed, December 23, 2020, 2:15 PM PST·4 min read

Is college football going to hire any African American coaches this year?

Just wondering, because the trend certainly isn’t headed in that direction. Last season, the 120 FBS schools employed 13 Black head coaches. Three were fired and no African Americans have been hired yet this year (10 open positions have been filled by 10 white men).

And, yes, we know, “college football” isn’t a singular entity. Individually, each hire can be justified (well, unless you read fan message boards). Collectively though, a coincidence that has coincidence-ed for decades just keeps coincidence-ing.

It’s embarrassing.

Or it should be for a sport where the vast majority of administrators, fans and boosters want to be fair-minded and are, at the very least, proponents of a meritocracy that rewards the most qualified, deserving and talented person for a job.

If you agree with the above, yet don’t think there are any problems with the current system of identifying that most qualified, deserving or talented candidate, then you would have to also believe that only 10 African Americans exist who are capable of running a college football program.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1-Man’s Opinion on Sports–Wednesday “College Football-Full Blown Crisis”

Posted by on December 23rd, 2020  •  0 Comments  • 

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“College Football in Crisis”

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Ever seen anything like this?
Every morning you wake up and there’s more bad news out there.

What a weekend..and now what a week.

ALABAMA outguns Florida and will be the number one seed in the nation heading to the playoffs.  What firepower, QB-Mac Jones..WR-DaVanta Smith..RB-Najee Harris

CLEMSON..If you can handle the ego of coach Dabo Swinney-you are a better man than I.  The junk that comes out of his mouth.  But his QB-Trevor Lawrence is spectacular.

OHIO STATE…Hoping QB-Justin Fields stays healthy.  He is-they are pretty good

NOTRE DAME…A bit of surprise at how bad the Irish got beat by Clemson in the rematch game.  Team speed was big difference.

ROSE-SUGAR BOWL…Yes, Bill Hancock-who handles the College Football Playoffs is dropping hints the entire slate of New Year’s Day games might be moved back, including the semi finals of the playoffs because of the explosion of the Covid virus.

SOUTH CAROLINA…What a disgrace, a (2-8) Gamecocks team accepting a bid to the Gasparilla Bowl…then waking up Tuesday to find out their entire offensive coaching staff tested positive.  No Bowl game.

ARMY…Equally upsetting that the (9-2) Black Knights had to go begging for a bowl berth, before finally landing in one.

AUBURN..Fires Gus Malzahn as coach, owing him 21M-buyout, despite a (68-35)  record down on the Plains.  It appears they are hiring Bryan Harsin of Boise State.  Somebody must think someone from the Mountain West can win in the SEC.

LSU..Would you want to work for Ed Ogeron.  A year removed from the Joe Burrow-National Championship team, the Bayou Bengals are falling apart.  NCAA investigation, losing season, and the ouster of 3-key assistant coaches.  LSU looks like a house of cards to me.

UCLA…Chip Kelly had great success at Oregon, was a disaster in the NFL with the Eagles, and now sits there with a (10-21) record with  the Bruins.

USC…The hate continues to pile up infront of Trojan Hall.  Clay Helton, losing to a substandard Oregon team, is now just (18-15) the last 3-years there.

NEBRASKA…Scott Frost had lots to say when they shutdown the Big 10-season this summer, let us play, let us change conferences, let us be an independent.  And when they finally started the season, same old junk.  Frost is (12-20) with the Cornhuskers.  This was a Tom Osborn pick.

MICHIGAN…Jim Harbaugh has likely one more year left on his coaching life.  All those losses against Ohio State.  All those losses to Michigan State.  All those losses to top 25-teams.  A (2-4) record this year and now a coaching staff shakeup.  A guy I thought would become a Bo Schembechler lifer in Ann Arbor, may have 1-year left on his coaching life there.

IOWA..Ugly season with all the issues involving racial problems with the Hawkeyes.  Wonder if good coach Kirk Ferentz survives all this.

CINCINNATI…Am surprised no one has scooped up Luke Fickell, who guided the Bearcats to an unbeaten season and the 6th spot in the rankings this year year.  Maybe next coach in waiting at Michigan, Penn State or somewhere else in the Big 10.

LIBERTY-COASTAL CAROLINA…Surprising how good they got so fast.

SYRACUSE…Gave a vote of confidence to Dino Babers after a disastrous (1-10) Orange season.

RUTGERS…Best head coach in the worst tradition situation, Greg Schiano.  Watch him flip the Knights next season.

KANSAS…On the floor, down for the count, former LSU coach Les Miles has been unable to turn the Jayhawks program.  This year’s winless season was the worst.

SAN JOSE STATE…Unbeaten season with a transfer QB from Texas AM and a street tough defensive front.  Best season since 1939 for the Spartans.  Wonder how long they can hang onto Bryan Brennan as head coach.

HAWAII…Big trouble on the Islands.  The City of Honolulu has condemned once beautiful Aloha Stadium.  It’s falling down.  Where are the rainbows going to play.

MOUNTAIN WEST CONFERENCE….Are they going to take a hit?  Boise State is talking to the American Athletic Conference about membership.  If Boise goes, then BYU might wind up going too.  The MWC cannot afford to let this happen.

THE RATINGS…What a season.  Who would have thought we’d see people like Marshall, Appalachian State, Louisiana-Lafayette and Coastal Carolina in the top 25-of the rankings during the season.

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1-Man’s Opinion on Sports–Tuesday “NBA Opener-Lakers-Clippers–What to Watch”

Posted by on December 22nd, 2020  •  0 Comments  • 

“Lakers-Clippers–What to Watch”

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It’s here, opening night of the NBA, Tuesday night.

It seems like we just finished the NBA finals in a bubble in Orlando-actually we did about 8-weeks ago.

They hope to play a 72-game schedule this year, a year that will include positive covid tests, cancelled games and rearranged schedules.

The Lakers play the Clippers in the NBA opener, a year after the teams opened against each other with so many new faces.

Anthony Davis joined the Lakers and LeBron James, driving the team to the NBA championship celebration.

Kawhi Leonard and Paul George came on board with the Clippers only to see a promising championship season burn to the ground with selfishness and stupidity by the time the teams got to the bubble and then the postseason.

The Lakers, despite getting the ring, made 7-roster changes, and got better.  The Clippers, playing the blame game, got rid of their coach and a host of backup players off the bench.

Anthony Davis was everything LA has not had in a big man since the Shaquille O’Neal days.

Kawhi Leonard and Paul George were not what the Clippers hoped they would be.  They earned big money contracts, but were not good teammates, and the off season stories about attitude, culture clashes, and lack of leadership, have hurt their respective reputations.

But it’s a new season, and 2nd year coach Frank Vogel welcomes gritty center Montrzl Harrell, center Marc Gasol and guard Dennis Schroeder.  How good are the new arrivals?  Harrell and Schroeder have won the NBA’s 6th man Awards the last two years, and Gasol will be more reliable than the departed Dwight Howard.  Add in defensive specialist Wes Matthews and the Lakers will be more reliable and probably grittier than last year’s ‘Ring the Thing’ team.

Doc Rivers is gone from the Clippers bench.  He let his star players run roughshod over his coaching style.  Tyronne Lue takes over and takes on a big challenge of dealing with his stars, but Lue did have success in Cleveland where LeBron was the man.

But the Clippers have been weakened.  Harrell goes across the hallway to the Lakers, taking with him 16-points, 8-boards and alot of grit.  Serge Ibaka-Nick Batum and Luke Kennard are new to the team, but it’s doubtful they will be as productive as what got away.

Clippers chemistry will be a big part of keeping score this coming season and the reality they traded away a ton of draft picks, so adding for the future will be a monster challenge.

The Lakers push the ball up the floor mentality should grow with what they added, and their toughness will be better.  The Clippers want to run elements of the triangle offense and need to find a way for Leonard and George to co-exist with just 1-basketball on the floor.

Lots of new faces in new places around the league too, led by Doc Rivers emerging as the 76ers coach..Billy Donovan in Chicago…and tough guy Tom Thibodeau taking over the Knicks.  There is no Mike D’Antoni in Houston.

We also wait to see what happens in Houston with James Harden… the emergence of Rockets teammate John Wall…Russell Westbrook’s arrival in Washington…and whether Zion Williamson stays healthy and changes all things in New Orleans.  Golden State is a year older..Brooklyn is healthier..Miami got deeper.

Let the games begin, but it appears everyone will be chasing the ones who got their rings on opening night, the Lakers.

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