1-Man’s Opinion on Sports-Friday “CHARGERS–WINNING HIRE”

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“CHARGERS-A-WINNER
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The losers hired a winner.
A new day dawns for the Chargers football franchise

The Spanos family, known more for failures and firing big name coaches and general managers, have hired a winner.

Jim Harbaugh, he of winning resume, arrived in Los Angeles.
He brings everything the Spanos family does not have.

Winning culture at Michigan.
Turning around desperate Stanford.
An amazing set of seasons with the 49ers.

That’s what winning looks like, (49-14) at San Francisco.
Look at that record at Michigan (86-25).

He arrives with great fanfare and expectations.
But he arrives donning the Powder Blue with a track record of success.

He was a passion play in his near hour long Press Conference-his quotes too:

..Talent plus effort equals winning
..Bring you ‘A’ game in every sense of the word
..We will be hungry-humble
..We will be tough-resilient
..We will strive to earn your respect
..Be accountable
..Get in the building, get your work in
..Do it or die trying
..I wanted another shot at another World Championship
..Weight room-all you can eat buffet.
..Father told Jim-John..who could have it better-you two brothers
..John Harbaugh-Proof in pudding-how he coaches-how he treats people

So we go from the celebration of the Harbaugh hiring to the reality of what’s next after the Harbaugh hiring.

Dealing with 55M-of salary cap problems.
Likely roster housecleaning.
Decisions on Joey Bosa-Austin Johnson-Mike Williams.
What to do, how to handle Austin Ekeler.
Fixing the offensive line.
Teaching toughness to a terrible defense.

Team Spanos has failed so badly as ownership for most of their 34-years ownership they have that stapled to their family resume.

Maybe something right has happened, this Harbaugh hire.  Better than any decision we have seen Team Spanos make over the decades.

Chargers, hired a winner.  Now we see if he can make them winners.

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1-Man’s Opinion on Sports-Thursday

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“PADRES HISTORY–FORGOTTEN DAY”
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On this day 50-years ago, we almost lost our baseball team.

A last minute move by hamburger baron Ray Kroc prevented the Padres move to Washington, DC, where they would have replaced the Washington Senators franchise in the American League.

Kroc spent and spent and the Padres got to the World Series.  He saved the team.

Then after turmoil filled times with other others, John Moores and Larry Lucchino saved the team again and got Petco Park built.

Then the Seidler family arrived and rebuilt the franchises credibility.

Had there been no Ray Kroc, there would have been no Tony Gwynn, no World Series teams, no beating the Dodgers in the playoffs, and certainly no AJ Preller good-moves bad moves.

Here’s an in depth ‘look’ at this historical story…50-years ago this hour, courtesy of the Washington Post:
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A half-century ago, the San Diego Padres were so close to relocating to the nation’s capital that longtime Washington Post sports columnist Shirley Povich sent a two-word telegram to Commissioner Bowie Kuhn, a D.C. native who had championed a new team for his hometown: “MAZEL TOV.”

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The traditional Jewish congratulations came after National League owners approved the team’s move to Washington in December 1973, Kuhn recalled in his autobiography.

Earlier that year, Joseph B. Danzansky, president of the Giant supermarket chain, had signed a deal with the troubled owner of the Padres to purchase the team for $12 million and place it in the nation’s capital to replace the Washington Senators, who had relocated to Texas the previous season.
But a lawsuit by the city of San Diego, followed by McDonald’s chairman Ray Kroc swooping in to buy the team and keep it in Southern California, wound up sinking the D.C. effort. The conclusion came Jan. 31, 1974 — 50 years ago Wednesday — when NL owners unanimously approved the sale of the team to Kroc.

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“So Ray Kroc got the Padres as spring training approached and Washington’s window of hope closed again,” Kuhn recalled in his memoir. “There would be only robins and Redskins at RFK Stadium.”
It represented a stunning switcheroo, coming less than two months after the mazel tov-inducing vote approved the team’s relocation to D.C. And it set up decades of heartbreak for Washington baseball fans, who lived with fleeting hope and constant uncertainty for more than 30 years before the arrival of the Washington Nationals in 2005 finally ended the city’s baseball drought.

Congressional pressure for a Washington team
The saga really started at the end of the 1971 season, when Senators owner Bob Short got permission to move the team to Texas, where they would become the Rangers in 1972. That angered many members of Congress, and they began agitating for a new team in the nation’s capital.

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At baseball’s December 1971 winter meetings in Phoenix, four members of Congress presented a petition signed by 238 members — more than half of the House’s 435 — calling on MLB to reestablish baseball in Washington. The top of the petition listed several House heavyweights, including Speaker Carl Albert (D-Okla.), Minority Leader Gerald Ford (R-Mich.), Judiciary Committee Chairman Emanuel Celler (D-N.Y.) and Rep. B.F. Sisk (D-Calif.), chairman of the “D.C. Baseball Steering Committee,” according to a Chicago Tribune story at the time.
Celler, a colorful longtime Brooklyn lawmaker, had been furious when the Dodgers left his home borough for Los Angeles in 1958. At the 1971 winter meetings, he delivered a letter to MLB in his typically brash style, criticizing the owners “who in the name of the public interest successfully maintain their blanket exemption from our antitrust laws, occasionally exhibit precious little concern for the community welfare.”
Celler also referenced the NFL’s New York Giants’ announcement earlier that year that they would be leaving Yankee Stadium for New Jersey.

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“The recent exit of the baseball Senators from the nation’s capital — and indeed that of the football Giants from New York City, where they have prospered for years — is symptomatic of a long‐standing pattern,”Celler wrote.
Sisk was even more blunt: “We want a team by next year if possible and we must have one by 1973,” he said, according to the New York Times. Kuhn, the baseball commissioner, said the owners “heard the message” and that he would name a blue-ribbon panel to get a team back in D.C.
“The choices seem to be that baseball could expand again or could move some troubled franchise to Washington from perhaps Cleveland, Oakland or San Diego,” the Times wrote in what almost turned out to be a prophetic line.

‘Baseball’s back!’
Eighteen months later, in late May 1973, came the news that a group led by Danzansky had a deal to buy the Padres and move them to D.C., contingent on the team terminating its lease with city-owned San Diego Stadium and on the approval of NL owners. Two years earlier, Danzansky had tried to buy the Senators and keep them in Washington, but he couldn’t meet Short’s asking price of $12 million (about $90 million today). This time, his group came up with that figure for the Padres that, improbably, was $2 million more than George Steinbrenner and fellow investors had paid for the New York Yankees in January 1973. The plan was for the Padres to relocate in time for the 1974 season.

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The new D.C. team was to play at federally owned RFK Stadium under favorable lease terms — 10 cents for every customer up to 1 million and 30 cents over that threshold, the Times reported.
The team didn’t have a new name lined up for its new city, although fans did get a sneak peek at the road uniform, which minor league pitcher Dave Freisleben modeled in a photo. Freisleben, who would make his MLB debut in 1974, sported a baby-blue 1970s-style jersey with the word “Washington” across the chest and a white baseball cap featuring a “W” that had a red star protruding from the top.
“Baseball’s Back! San Diego Padres Play Here in ’74,” blared a May 28, 1973, front-page headline in The Post, above the fold and just below a story about the spiraling Watergate scandal.

The Padres had a losing tradition that would have fit in with Washington’s. Since their birth as an expansion franchise in 1969, they had come in last place in the NL West every season, never finishing with a winning percentage above .400. They had averaged barely 7,000 fans per game in their first four years, even worse than the paltry crowds the Senators drew in their final season in D.C. (around 8,000 per game).

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“There are some who will scoff that no treasure was snatched from San Diego in preparing Washington for its reentry into major league baseball in 1974,” Povich wrote. “But for two brooding, silent summers, Washington baseball fans have been deprived of most of the sights and all the sounds of the game while lesser cities could give out with whoops. At this point, the caliber of the Padres, which can be subject to change, is less important than their presence in the city.”
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Danzansky told Channel 5′s Maury Povich — Shirley Povich’s son — that his prospects for team manager included “Frank Robinson at the head of my list,” which would have made him the majors’ first Black manager. Robinson would go on to break that barrier with the Cleveland Indians,who named him player-manager for the 1975 season. Thirty years later, Robinson would become the first manager of the Washington Nationals.
“I’m very flattered [Danzansky] feels that way,” Robinson told The Post at the time, adding he wasn’t deterred by the Padres’ losing track record. “I don’t shy away from tough situations. The Padres are a young expansion team, and it’s only fair to give them five to eight years to become a good club.”

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And the team did have some exciting young players, such as rookie outfielder Dave Winfield. After the 1973 season, they traded for veteran superstar Willie McCovey.
Kevin Dowd, a longtime Washington baseball fan, recalled that when the Senators left town, he was optimistic the city would soon land a new team.
“A year or two went by, I was getting impatient, but here come the Padres, and Danzansky had a deal in place,” he said in a recent interview. “When that happened, I was saying: ‘Take it to the bank. It’s done.’ ”
Dowd, who was 29 at the time, had already planned to attend a bunch of games in 1974. “I was single, and that was a good date. It was cheap,” he said, recalling attending Senators games at RFK for $1.50 and paying the same price for a beer. “So you could have a nice date for 10 bucks.”

Politicians rejoice
As the Padres wrapped up what appeared to be a lame-duck season in San Diego, which ended with an NL-worst 60-102 record, President Richard M. Nixon, a California native and huge baseball fan, cheered the team’s expected move. After the Senators left town, Nixon had strategized with D.C. Mayor Walter E. Washington on finding a replacement team, a White House tape recording shows.

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“I just want to cast my own vote in favor of returning major-league baseball to the Nation’s Capital,” the president wrote to NL President Chub Feeney in September 1973. “You can be sure all of us in the Washington metropolitan area would enthusiastically welcome a National League team.”
On Dec. 6, 1973, the NL owners conditionally approved the team’s move to Washington. That same day, Congress deliberated Nixon’s choice of Ford as his new vice president, following the resignation of Spiro Agnew. Sisk, the congressional D.C. baseball booster, broke into the floor debate to announce the Padres news.
“Mr. Sisk and Representative Frank Horton, Republican of Upstate New York, who together had led a Congressional effort to secure a new baseball franchise for Washington, paid tribute to Mr. Ford, a onetime football star and still a sports enthusiast, for his support of their effort,” the Times reported. Ford was sworn in as the new vice president later that day after winning congressional confirmation.

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The Post reported that Washington would open the 1974 season at RFK Stadium for a 2:30 p.m. game against the Philadelphia Phillies, a day before the rest of MLB’s teams started their season. That winter, Topps printed a 1974 set of baseball cards of 15 San Diego players with “Washington Nat’l Lea.” printed on them.
But San Diego officials soon made it clear they wouldn’t give up their lousy baseball team without a fight.
“We’ll see them in court,” warned San Diego Mayor Pete Wilson, a Republican and future California governor, at a news conference the same day of the NL owners’ vote.
“The U.S. Congress, as watchdog of the public purse, has decided that subsidizing the piracy of the San Diego Padres is an urgent national priority, warranting the expenditure of federal taxpayers’ funds,” he added.

Wishful thinking for D.C.
The next week, San Diego followed through on its threat, filing an antitrust lawsuit against the NL, alleging a conspiracy dating from 1971 to yank the Padres from the city and move them to Washington. The other defendants were each of the league’s 12 teams; Padres owner C. Arnholt Smith; and Sisk.
Among the alleged co-conspirators: Vice President Ford, Albert (the House speaker), Celler, Rep. Peter Rodino (D-N.J.) and Missouri Sen. Thomas Eagleton (D); as well as the American League.
Looking to get out from the San Diego lawsuit, Smith tried to find another buyer. That’s when Kroc, who had failed in his attempt to buy his hometown Chicago Cubs, reached out. In January 1974, he came to an agreement to buy the Padres and keep them in San Diego.
“That was almost, but not quite as big, a betrayal as Bob Short,” said Dowd, the longtime D.C. baseball fan.

After the NL approved the sale to Kroc, Danzansky sent a telegram to the league asking owners to consider D.C. as the first city to get an expansion team and said he had several encouraging comments from owners.
“There has been some indication that there is a definite feeling among the owners that we are going to be favored,” he said.
But that proved to be wishful thinking. MLB expanded in 1977, 1993 and 1998 but bypassed Washington each time. Instead, D.C. had to turn to relocation again when the Montreal Expos moved to Washington in 2005.
Meanwhile, the Padres finished last again in Kroc’s first year, 1974. At the Padres’ home opener, which they dropped, 9-5, in the midst of a six-game losing streak to start the season, Kroc went into the press box and told the crowd on the public address mic: “I suffer with you. I’ve never seen such stupid ball-playing in my life.”
Kuhn recalled ordering Kroc to apologize and soon met with him on Kroc’s yacht in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
“I knew right away we had another fascinating egocentric in the world of baseball,” he wrote

1-Man’s Opinion on Sports-Wednesday “CHARGERS–FIX FRANCHISE”

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“CHARGERS–TIME TO TELL THE TRUTH”
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The Chargers have completed the renovations, not of their practice facility in El Segundo, but fixing all that is wrong, in their front office.

The NFL team owned by the Spanos family, liked to refer to itself as the “1st Family of Football”.  AG Spanos, the son of Dean, and the grandson of Alex, coined that phrase on the family when they moved to Los Angeles.

Yes he did that, despite the fact that families who have won alot in the NFL, the Rooneys, the Maras, Jerry Jones, the Krafts, even Al Davis, seemed to have accomplished much-much more than Team Spanos, either in San Diego or their refugee home in LA.

But now the Chargers have raided the real ‘1st Family of Football’, hiring from the Harbaugh family and the Ravens organization.

The scoreboard shows that under the Alex-Dean-John-AG Spanos reign the Chargers have a composite record of (314-346).  So much for the fib about 1st family success.

Now they hire Jim Harbaugh, son of successful coach Jack Harbaugh, brother of Baltimore’s highly successful coach John.  Now that’s a football family with a track record of success.

Jim, (86-25) at Michigan, (49-14) with the 49ers.  Compare that record to the Spanos era.  John is (166-100) in his NFL head coaching career.  The scoreboard does not lie.

And the Bolts have now hired Joe Hortiz, highly successful Player Personnel Director, working with John Harbaugh and going (56-27) in his run with the Ravens.

That’s a big time track record of the two hires in the last week, all with ties to Team Harbaugh, in Ann Arbor and Baltimore.

The new coach is star-struck with the QB he inherits, Justin Herbert.  The incoming GM says ‘it’s time to win’ with the roster he takes over.

But there is alot of work to be done.

There may not be any Austin Ekeler at running back.

There are monster salary cap problems to address with at least 5-players, who have cap figures each north of (30M).

There is a salary cap figure that estimates the Chargers are now (55M) over the cap.

There is an injury history that has wrecked each of the last 3-seasons under Brandon Staley.

So as excited as the new coach is about what he inherits, he does not have a complete roster.  And for the new GM, he takes on the 5th and 37th picks in the opening rounds and a chance to fill holes.

Harbaugh has quite the track record as a head coach, roster builder, QB-developer and a creative of toughness.

Horitiz has done it thru the draft, in free agency, and off the waiver wire.  All will be ways the Bolts rebuild an underachieving-but cursed roster.

So the phony first family of football actually raids the legitimate first family of football to fix all things wrong with Chargers football.

Time will tell if the new hires can make this franchise special.  The past 34-years have not gone that way regardless of what the Spanos family wants you to believe.

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1-Man’s Opinion on Sports-Tuesday “NFL COACHES–DIFFERENCE MAKERS”

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“NFL COACHES-DIFFERENCE MAKERS”
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Players make the plays in the AFC-NFC Championship games.
Coaches create the X’s and O’s that let the players make plays.

The NFL post season is so hard, so competitive, so pressurized, that when you see coaching records of guys in post-season, you know you are watching greatness.

I recall the 1985-Chicago Bears destruction of the New England Patriots, the (45-10) bashing Mike Ditka’s team laid on the Pats, a byproduct of a fierce defense and tons of offensive talent.  The Bears use of personnel overwhelmed the Patriots on both sides of the ball.

I flashback to the 1995 Chargers destruction at the hand of the Steve Young 6-TD outing for the San Francisco 49ers.  The Bolts saw formations they had never seen before on videos, and the Niners had a (14-0) lead after six snaps and San Francisco used 7-different formations the Chargers had never seen..

So we sat and watched everything that happened on Sunday.

Andy Reid is now (25-16) in the playoffs in this illustrious career.  He ran motion formations with all his skill people, creating mismatches all over the field.  Baltimore went zone early and Reid was ready for that, using the magic of Patrick Mahomes to Travis Kelce, targeted 11-times on 11-completions.  They ran wildcat formations for yards with running back Isaiah Pacheco.  When they doubled Kelce, they threw to the other tight ends.  It was Reid’s creative juice at its finest moments.

Kyle Shanahan is now (8-3) in post season play in his career in San Francisco and Atlanta.  His young QB moved the pocket to break off 4-big runs against the Lions.  They threw deep, threw outs, threw crossing patterns and threw to their running back.  From Deebo Samuel to Brandon Aiyuk to George Kittle, to Christian McCaffrey, they figured out Detroit’s defense and roared back to win that game.

John Harbaugh had a (12-9) record heading into that playoff game, but he was one-upped across the field.  The Ravens were on their back heels all night long, right from the start.  Why they stayed in the zone as long as they did was a shocker.  The Ravens coach never was able to help Lamar Jackson deal with the constant blitz pressure the Chiefs unleashed right from the start.  Jackson finished completing 54% of his throws, including 47% under bilitz.  There was so much heat in run gaps, that the Ravens gave up their run game, the staple of what makes everything work.  Harbaugh never had an answer.

Dan Campbell fell on his sword.  The Lions won the way they won all year and he thought it would work in the playoffs.  Jared Goff got knocked around.  His top WR-Amon St-Brown faced all types of coverages all night long and never had any rhythm.  They ran for 182-yards, a superb outing, but fell behind negating that run game in the second half.  Campbell will be a better coach the next time the Lions get to the playoffs, but he saw things he never had to deal with before.

The players made the plays, the coaches drew up for them.  KC and SF flashed new things.  The Ravens and Lions never recovered.

These coaches, this time of the year, win games like this.

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1-Man’s Opinion on Sports-Monday “AFC-NFC PLAYOFFS-CAN YOU TOP THAT?”

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“AFC–NFL WEEKEND”
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Some Sunday watching NFL football.  Big plays, big mistakes, a big upset too.

CHIEFS-RAVENS:  An out-of-character game.  The Chiefs, known for offense, won because of their defense.  The Ravens, the toughest team in the league, got beaten down.  Kansas City moves on.

Andy Reid outschemed John Harbaugh.  Steve Spangnuolo blitzed Lamar Jackson into a defeat.  The Ravens so tough, self-destructed all day long.  Patrick Mahomes and Travis Kelce-were Patrick Mahomes and Travis Kelce.

What a Sunday of self-destruction by Baltimore.  8-penalties, most of them fatal, killed momentum.  Personal fouls, late QB hits, 12 on the field, 3-offensive line flags.  It was so very strange to see.

And for all the big plays they made, trying to catch up (21-32-39-54Y), they were stymied by flag after flag.  Shutoff when their QB was sacked, flushed from the pocket, or had to scramble and throw incompletions.  It was such a different Ravens team than the one who had slugged their way thru this schedule.

And for the Chiefs, they answered every question.  Can they win in the cold and snow?  Can Patrick Mahomes win on the road in the postseason?  Who they trust to catch the ball after a season of wide receiver failures most of the year?

The Chiefs came out firing on all cylinders right from the start.  Dictated tempo.  Torched the Ravens zone defense.  Travis Kelce targeted 11-times, caught 11-passes for (116Y) and was impossible to defend.

So Mahomes is now (14-3) the playoffs, and (34-13) as a road QB.  Reid is (27-14) as a coach in the playoffs.  The Ravens go unrewarded again and Jackson is now (2-4) in games at the most important time of the season, the playoffs.

What happened in Baltimore was so-out-of character.  The Chiefs defense won them the game.  The once powerful Ravens were so substandard

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49ERS-LIONS: As close as you can come to a Super Bowl berth, but it was a win for the Niners and a loss for Detroit.

The Lions did play 30-minutes of dominant football, but could not produce a second half, losing a 17-point lead and watching the Niners score on 5-straight possessions, reel off 27-points in a row, as San Francisco heads back to the Big Show.

Brock Purdy went up and down the field on scoring drives.  Made enough big passes, ripped off 4-runs all in the second half, scampering out of trouble and getting first downs..  Brandon Aiyuk took a deflected pass off a facemask to complete a 51-yard pass play that led to the comeback touchdown.

Detroit’s coach Dan Campbell, always aggressive, bypassed 3-field goals to go for it on 4th down, twice failing and not being able to stay in the game.  The lost points and lost momentum were a difference maker.

Tough night for Jared Goff, disappoining night for a team that ran for (182Y) rushing, a tough night for a deflated defense, trampled in the 2nd half.

That said, a great season in Detroit but a failure to get to the finish line-Super Bowl Sunday.

The Niners kept making play, the Lions fell apart, and the sold out Santa Clara Stadium went crazy.

Take a deep breath for 2-weeks and prepare for the Chiefs-Niners, which could be as wild as what we saw this weekend.

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