1-Man’s Opinion on Sports–Thursday. “Teams-in-Town-Shutdown But Operating”

Posted by on May 28th, 2020  •  0 Comments  • 

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“In This Town-Shutdown-But Operating”

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In the midst of everything going on, the Pandemic, Politics, the Baseball-Union salary war, and leagues trying to get up and running…a couple of candid comments.

PADRES…Hats off to this organization.  No one is talking about it, but the Padres ownership, despite the layoffs and furloughs of from office employees, guaranteed all employees ‘health care benefits’ for them and their families, thru December 31st, whether they are brought back or not.

The Padres also decided they would continue monthly payments to all 220-minor league players, including health benefits, thru August 31st, which normally would be the end of the minor league season, a season now not likely to be played.  The first wave of payments to all minor leaguers, was to end this Friday night.  The Padres are the first team to announce this plan.  Others like the Orioles, A’s, White Sox are releasing truckloads of lower minor league players.

At last count, according to employees from within, the Padres furloughed or laid off about 110-of-230 employees, a couple of weeks ago.  Some will be brought back once the season starts up in July.  If fans are allowed back in stadiums, sometime in season, other employees could be recalled.

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AZTECS….Facing the loss of 43M in university moneys because of the school shutdown, SDSU Athletics has stood by all their employees.  No one in athletics was asked to take a pay-cut over the last three months.  No employees in the Athletic Center have been laid off or furloughed either during the campus-wide shutdown.

Still on schedule is groundbreaking for the new football stadium, now likely in August, if City Council approves the signed sales agreement in its special session on Friday, called to review SDSU’s agreement.

If approved, SDSU takes over operation of SDCCU Stadium on July 1st.  An outside operator will be hired to run the facility, but it will not be JMI, hired to oversee the construction of the new Aztecs Stadium.

Despite the university wide money-crunch, SDSU will not cut any varsity sports programs, unlike what has happened at Akron, Bowling Green, Furman and other Group of 5-schools with serious money issues.

Target January 2nd on your Aztecs calendar, that’s when the school says football players will be allowed back on campus.  That coincides with the start of the 2nd Summer School Term.  To be decided, would student athletes be required to take on-line summer school courses to be on campus for conditioning drills?  SDSU maintains Coach Brady Hoke wants-needs 6-weeks of preseason camp to get ready for the start of the season.

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GULLS…They are making plans for the 2020-21 AHL season.  Taget date to open would be October 9th, but no one knows if fans will be in the stands.  Of grave concern, of the 31-AHL teams, 19-are owned outright by NHL teams (Gulls-Anaheim), so those clubs are not as reliant on gate receipts, as some of the other 12-teams, run by independent owners.  If there are no fans in the stands in places like Syracuse-Rochester-Charlotte, what happens to those franchises?.

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1-Man’s Opinion on Sports–Wednesday “Baseball at War”

Posted by on May 27th, 2020  •  0 Comments  • 

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“War Fare in Baseball”

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It’s getting worse, rather than getting better.

Talking about baseball’s civil war between the Owners and the Union in the midst of the life and death struggle the US-vs-Virus Crisis.

The next 7-days are may be the most critical baseball has faced ever, with the potential canceling of the 2020 season and postseason, if the two sides cannot come to a financial agreement on the salaries for the 82-games baseball wants to play.

A history of distrust is there now, more so than ever before as the Union questions the documents Rob Manfred presented about the money all the owners are losing with half a season…with no fans…or no season at all.

And then baseball make a new financial offer.  Not one involving deferred payments to all players.  Not one that allowed just ‘pro-rated salaries’.  Not one with revenue sharing.

Instead Manfred wants more cuts in salaries for the 82-games to be played on the schedule.  They promised the players a bigger cut of the TV-playoff pie for the expanded wildcard games and World Series.  The old TV deal was worth 777M to baseball.  The new deal with the expanded playoffs will be worth 1B for this fall.

But the formula of pay-cuts will be massive….especially for the star players.

Here in San Diego, Manny Machado and Eric Hosmer, both slated to make 30M this year, would have earned 15M in the new schedule.  Now according to this proposal, they would be forced to take another M-cut, meaning they play for 7M this season.  It’s a 60-percent paychop overall.

Do the math on the other big stars.

The Angels Mike Trout goes from 37M-to-11MM
The Yankees Gerrit Cole was to earn 36M-now-10M
The Phillies Bryce Harper’s 33M deal will be worth 8M likely.

There will be pay-cuts, maybe not as high as 60%, to mid-level players.  The players making the major league minimum, 580,000 will take as little as a 10-percent cut.

It is a huge giveback..in some cases 65%..

Owners are bleeding money, lots of money.  But asking players to take a 60-percent cut, should be matched by every big name executive, from the owner, to the CEO, to the President, to every GM and VP on an organizational chart.  They should take a 60-percent cut too.

What’s right for one, should be right for the other…right?

The health of the game is at stake, and we are in the midst of warfare.

Not just Republicans-vs-Democrats
Not just Medical Science-vs-the Virus

But now Baseball owners-vs-Union over how much to pay..whatever number of games to be played.

This looks like World War 1…Trench warfare-both sides dug in-both sides suffering massive casualties.

This has the catastrophic look of the end of World War II when the bombs were dropped if there is no season at all.

This next week of talks might look like the Paris Peace Talks in the aftermath of Viet Nam..with lots of talks involving people who do not trust the guys on the other side of the table.

It is baseball warfare at the worst moment in our society.

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1-Man’s Opinion on Sports–Tuesday “Sports-As We Know It–Will Be Different”

Posted by on May 26th, 2020  •  2 responses  • 

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“Sports As We Know It”

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Everyone is trying to move forward, but it surely was a strange weekend, and we don’t have solutions to anything anywhere right now.

We are entering Week 12-of the Pandemic in America.  Countries, doctors, researchers are working around the clock to try and find the right medical balances in research to a Covid-vaccine.

 

In the world of sports, where stats are special, these numbers today, shocking.  Nearing 100,000-deaths in the last 100-days.

President Trump implores sports to return the their facilities, stadiums, workouts and seasons, even if there is no slowdown of sickness or death.  It’s amazing he has time to pay attention to this, considering his tweet to the public schedule, and his desire to play golf as the death toll marches to unimaginable numbers now. .

This was a strange weekend.  For the 1st time since the late 1950s, there was no Indianapolis 500 to pay attention to.  No ‘Gentlemen-Start Your Engines’…no ‘Greatest Spectacle on Earth’….no ‘Back Home in Indiana’….no ‘Kissing the Bricks’ or ‘Swigging the Milk’ in Victory Circle.  I first became aware of the Indy 500-listening on radio, measmurized by a first lap fiery crash that killed drivers in 1955.  It felt strange not to have a race.

There was the NASCAR-Charlotte 600, and 4.3-million viewers watched it.

There was Tiger-vs-Phil….Brady-vs-Manning golf, and it was fun at times to hear the verbal gunfire back and forth.  An impressive 5.8-million viewers sampled that.

This will be an important week in MLB-baseball, as the billionaires face off against the millionaire, in the Owners-vs-Players debate about how to pay the players when baseball starts up in July.  The owners will make a new financial proposal, not for more payouts, not for revenue sharing, but maybe deferred payments of a portion of salaries, to be delivered in 2021 rather than in July.

The NBA is negotiating with Disney World-Orlando, to house a 16-team playoff in a bubble, to start in July, dumping plans to try and finish the season.  The massive hotel complex would house, feed, and allow players to workout and play post season games without fans.  The NBA would dump the Conference alignments, and just seed teams 1-thru-16 and begin playoff series.  Who knows if they would be bet of three, best of five, or best of seven series to start.

The NHL has settled on a 24-team playoff series, in possibly two city hubs…12-teams in the East….12-teams in the West, but the cities have not been chosen, because you need hotels, practice rinks, in addition to the empty main arena.  Still to be decided, the structure, with first round byes for four teams in each division, and the need to shorten the ‘play-in series’.  Challenging too, getting travel restrictions eased to cross the US-Canadian borders, and getting European players, from infected countries, back to their teams and thru a quarantine schedule.

The NFL is forging ahead, needing to finalize plans to get facilities opened, 90-players in camp, and the testing protocols for probably 150-people a day who would be in camp.  That has to happen by late July, if the season is to start in September.  They do have the ability to push the season start back to October and play into January, with the postseason into late February, if need be.

The CFL has enormous problems north of the border.  Camps did not open, no June start to the regular season, no 18-game schedule, and a request for a Canadian Government financial bailout.  They may wind up with an 8-game season and a Grey Cup title game in December in the cold-white-north weather of Canada.

NCAA…Depending on who your Governor is, what state you live in, what college President’s are saying, there is no guideline on what may happen.  If students spend the fall in on-line classes, do you still open campuses to student-athletes?  They say they will in the SEC and Big 12.  They haven’t said that in the Big 10 or PAC-12 yet.  And we still have alot of hot spot states in some of college football’s hot spots.

Sports as we know it-very different right now.

A new norm?  No one knows what normal will be like going forward.

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1-Man’s Opinion on Sports–Monday “Memorial Day–What It Means To Me”

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

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“Memorial Day –Then and Now”

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What happened then forever changed lives.  What his happening now will likely forever change lives too.

What happened then was part of saving our society from the aggressors of war.  What is happening now with the pandemic is an invasion of our lives we cannot control

Memorial Day weekend. It was all about alot of things.  Picnics, family, Padres games, the Indy 500, the NBA playoffs and the NHL playoffs, the Stanley Cup finals. Lots to see, experience and think about.  It is a bit different this weekend, but history should not be lost.

Memorial Day weekend is a time to remember also. We see hometown heroes amongst us in San Diego. The Padres icon broadcaster Jerry Coleman flew fighters and even landed upside down on a flight deck. The late Red Sox hero Ted Williams was a fighter pilot both in the Pacific and in Korea, survived two crashes, and came home to super stardom.

The are two Purple Hearts in my house, family members who served in our World Wars, were wounded, killed, and whose relatives’ lives were forever changed.

When you come from an extended large family of that era, you are influenced by their experiences. Influenced by those you know, those you loved, those you lost.

I’ve been to Arlington, to the Punch Bowl cemetery in Hawaii, to Rosecrans Cemetery here, and now know full well about the U.S. cemetery at Normandy.

I wept when I went to the black granite Vietnam Wall in Washington and was moved by the D-Day Memorial in Virginia. I was overwhelmed visiting Omaha Beach.

If you go to the Balboa Naval Hospital you are impacted. When you know them, when you care about them, when you see them, when you ache for them and their memories, it leaves a lasting impression.

Maybe it is my Baby Boomer mortality catching up to me. Friends are passing, saying goodbyes to family members. Virtually all of them are linked to the military. In this situation, Memorial Day becomes more than a holiday.

I hardly know the full background, except my dad was a Sea Bee in the Navy, in the Pacific. He built runways as the Navy, then the Marines brought in planes to continue the assault to recapture all those islands from Japan. He told me only once about being shot at and diving under planes to avoid snipers. My dad was only 22 at the time and experiencing that.

Nick was my Godfather. He was slight of build, big of heart, with no fear. He was a point man hit by snipers in a hedgerow at Anzio. His life was forever changed. He spoke only once about it to me. Twenty-nine surgeries later, he died from wounds. They gave me his Purple Heart, ribbons, the 1944 telegrams that said he was killed in action, then missing in action, then rescued.

Jack was my uncle. A decorated journalist, island hopping the Pacific with Douglas McArthur. He wrote for the International News Service, the forerunner of UPI and broadcast for Mutual Radio. He saw horror and death. He interviewed Tojo, who tried to commit suicide. He covered the Peace Treaty signing on the USS Missouri. He came home a broken man. He was never the same sports journalist covering the old Brooklyn Dodgers after that. They gave me his war photos, ribbons, and wire service stories when he passed. Last year I found a treasure trove of his reports from Mutal Radio.  He never spoke of it..the horrors..what happened to him.  People have told me of his greatness.  I hardly knew him.

Danny was another uncle. I never knew much, except that he was a teenager who died on the Bataan Death March. I found his name on a plaque, but like so many others, nothing else. Gone at 19.

Vin was a paratrooper. Jumped into the dark behind the Normandy lines. He was 24 and part of the glider brigade. He was wounded twice, but did come home. His Purple Heart is in a glass case, with a piece of autographed fabric from a crashed glider that went into the woods when they missed the landing zone. Virtually all with him perished.  I visited Normandy in his honor to stand among the white crosses of those in his unit.

Vito was in South Africa, chasing Rommel across the desert. All that heavy infantry fire led to his loss of hearing.  He just passed at 99.

Joe was a medic in the heat, humidity and suffering in the Philippines. His lasting memory before he died was malaria and quinine.

Smitty was 19 and a turret gunner on B-17 and B-24 raids. The average life span of those crews was 13 flights. He made 35 missions, over places like Ploesti and Dresden. He laughs that his pilot was only 19, old enough to drop bombs, but not old enough to get a drivers license in Michigan. He told stories till dementia took over his mind.

Curt was a gunner on board a Flying Fortress when 60-planes in all went down in one day over Regensberg, Germany, flying without fighter support.

Family history research showed a great grandfather who fought in the Civil War.  Another great uncle left us a ‘German cross’ taken off a soldier he killed in the Battle of Verdun in the Great War.

Memorial Day touches friends too. Seven in my tiny graduating class on Long Island were lost in my war, Vietnam.
Murph was a wrestler and a jokester. A land mine ended it all very quickly for him. Lew was a basketball player taken out on a ridge by either sniper fire or friendly fire. Charley went off on night patrol in the jungles; he never returned after the firefight. Three others were done in not by the VC, but by Agent Orange and its related cancers.  All from a small village of 5,000.

Memorial Day is also about brothers. One who is a career officer, with service time in Iraq and Afghanistan. He struggles with seeing wounded men booby trapped when our medics go to treat them. He angered many by saying “if you fire on my soldiers from a mosque, it is no longer a mosque.” He has sat on transports with the caskets and body bags of his soldiers.  A 3-star General, he just retired, but never forgets.

The other brother is in anti-terrorism, who never forgot 9/11 and what he sensed the minute the second plane went into the towers. He won’t speak, but he knows much, and this weekend means much to him too after 18-years at the White House.

I will visit a cemetery to say thanks and to remember. An aging friend, who landed on Normandy, told me the only thing missing from the movie Saving Private Ryan was the smell of diesel fuel. Another in a rest home was part of the Royal Air Force and the heroism of the Battle of Britain, with burns and ribbons as remembrances before he passed..

Fly a flag this weekend. It is a very different weekend in our lives now, and we do not know what the future will look like, but we must never forget the past.

Many went and came back. Many went and never came back. Many went, came back, never the same.

Memorial Day is a hard time for me. Two Purple Hearts are in my house. A thankful heart. A heavy heart too.

 

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1-Man’s Opinion on Sports–Friday “Memorial Day Weekend–What It Means”

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

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“Memorial Day Weekend–Then and Now”

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What happened then forever changed lives.  What his happening now will likely forever change lives too.

What happened then was part of saving our society from the aggressors of war.  What is happening now with the pandemic is an invasion of our lives we cannot control

Memorial Day weekend. It was all about alot of things.  Picnics, family, Padres games, the Indy 500, the NBA playoffs and the NHL playoffs, the Stanley Cup finals. Lots to see, experience and think about.  It is a bit different this weekend, but history should not be lost.

Memorial Day weekend is a time to remember also. We see hometown heroes amongst us in San Diego. The Padres icon broadcaster Jerry Coleman flew fighters and even landed upside down on a flight deck. The late Red Sox hero Ted Williams was a fighter pilot both in the Pacific and in Korea, survived two crashes, and came home to super stardom.

The are two Purple Hearts in my house, family members who served in our World Wars, were wounded, killed, and whose relatives’ lives were forever changed.

When you come from an extended large family of that era, you are influenced by their experiences. Influenced by those you know, those you loved, those you lost.

I’ve been to Arlington, to the Punch Bowl cemetery in Hawaii, to Rosecrans Cemetery here, and now know full well about the U.S. cemetery at Normandy.

I wept when I went to the black granite Vietnam Wall in Washington and was moved by the D-Day Memorial in Virginia. I was overwhelmed visiting Omaha Beach.

If you go to the Balboa Naval Hospital you are impacted. When you know them, when you care about them, when you see them, when you ache for them and their memories, it leaves a lasting impression.

Maybe it is my Baby Boomer mortality catching up to me. Friends are passing, saying goodbyes to family members. Virtually all of them are linked to the military. In this situation, Memorial Day becomes more than a holiday.

I hardly know the full background, except my dad was a Sea Bee in the Navy, in the Pacific. He built runways as the Navy, then the Marines brought in planes to continue the assault to recapture all those islands from Japan. He told me only once about being shot at and diving under planes to avoid snipers. My dad was only 22 at the time and experiencing that.

Nick was my Godfather. He was slight of build, big of heart, with no fear. He was a point man hit by snipers in a hedgerow at Anzio. His life was forever changed. He spoke only once about it to me. Twenty-nine surgeries later, he died from wounds. They gave me his Purple Heart, ribbons, the 1944 telegrams that said he was killed in action, then missing in action, then rescued.

Jack was my uncle. A decorated journalist, island hopping the Pacific with Douglas McArthur. He wrote for the International News Service, the forerunner of UPI and broadcast for Mutual Radio. He saw horror and death. He interviewed Tojo, who tried to commit suicide. He covered the Peace Treaty signing on the USS Missouri. He came home a broken man. He was never the same sports journalist covering the old Brooklyn Dodgers after that. They gave me his war photos, ribbons, and wire service stories when he passed. Last year I found a treasure trove of his reports from Mutal Radio.  He never spoke of it..the horrors..what happened to him.  People have told me of his greatness.  I hardly knew him.

Danny was another uncle. I never knew much, except that he was a teenager who died on the Bataan Death March. I found his name on a plaque, but like so many others, nothing else. Gone at 19.

Vin was a paratrooper. Jumped into the dark behind the Normandy lines. He was 24 and part of the glider brigade. He was wounded twice, but did come home. His Purple Heart is in a glass case, with a piece of autographed fabric from a crashed glider that went into the woods when they missed the landing zone. Virtually all with him perished.  I visited Normandy in his honor to stand among the white crosses of those in his unit.

Vito was in South Africa, chasing Rommel across the desert. All that heavy infantry fire led to his loss of hearing.  He just passed at 99.

Joe was a medic in the heat, humidity and suffering in the Philippines. His lasting memory before he died was malaria and quinine.

Smitty was 19 and a turret gunner on B-17 and B-24 raids. The average life span of those crews was 13 flights. He made 35 missions, over places like Ploesti and Dresden. He laughs that his pilot was only 19, old enough to drop bombs, but not old enough to get a drivers license in Michigan. He told stories till dementia took over his mind.

Curt was a gunner on board a Flying Fortress when 60-planes in all went down in one day over Regensberg, Germany, flying without fighter support.

Family history research showed a great grandfather who fought in the Civil War.  Another great uncle left us a ‘German cross’ taken off a soldier he killed in the Battle of Verdun in the Great War.

Memorial Day touches friends too. Seven in my tiny graduating class on Long Island were lost in my war, Vietnam.
Murph was a wrestler and a jokester. A land mine ended it all very quickly for him. Lew was a basketball player taken out on a ridge by either sniper fire or friendly fire. Charley went off on night patrol in the jungles; he never returned after the firefight. Three others were done in not by the VC, but by Agent Orange and its related cancers.  All from a small village of 5,000.

Memorial Day is also about brothers. One who is a career officer, with service time in Iraq and Afghanistan. He struggles with seeing wounded men booby trapped when our medics go to treat them. He angered many by saying “if you fire on my soldiers from a mosque, it is no longer a mosque.” He has sat on transports with the caskets and body bags of his soldiers.  A 3-star General, he just retired, but never forgets.

The other brother is in anti-terrorism, who never forgot 9/11 and what he sensed the minute the second plane went into the towers. He won’t speak, but he knows much, and this weekend means much to him too after 18-years at the White House.

I will visit a cemetery to say thanks and to remember. An aging friend, who landed on Normandy, told me the only thing missing from the movie Saving Private Ryan was the smell of diesel fuel. Another in a rest home was part of the Royal Air Force and the heroism of the Battle of Britain, with burns and ribbons as remembrances before he passed..

Fly a flag this weekend. It is a very different weekend in our lives now, and we do not know what the future will look like, but we must never forget the past.

Many went and came back. Many went and never came back. Many went, came back, never the same.

Memorial Day is a hard time for me. Two Purple Hearts are in my house. A thankful heart. A heavy heart too.

 

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