1-Man’s Opinion on Sports-Monday “Baseball–Hot-Cold Teams”

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“This-That-The Other”

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A great sports weekend with lots to watch, cover and have opinions.

PADRES…Maybe a turn the season type weekend, winning two of three against the hottest team in baseball, Tampa Bay

..Blake Snell was dazzling.  Bottle this-cap it-use it once a week in starts.  That 12-strikeout outing, the fact he has given up 1-run in his last 25-innings, is ahead of the count with most every batter.  Impressive, if he can keep this going.

..Fernando Tatis running like a wild horse in right field and doing the same on the bases.  He has given the Friars the leadership and energy we have not seen this season.  The sraw that stirs the San Diego drink?

..Josh Hader has 18-saves now and looks nearly unhittable most outings.

..Some weekend of games with the Rays.  Padres lay down 3-straight bunts in Saturday’s win.  Stealing bases with reckless abandon all weekend long.  2-hit batsmen in a row by Joe Musgrove.  Tatis picked off at third.  Tatis gunning down a runner from right.  Strong pitching.  Sloppy play.  A little bit of everything

..Up next the road trip, in fact a long haul away from home with 10-of-13 on the road starting with Monday nights game in San Francisco.  Somehow the Giants are playing well with 7-wins in a row with a rag-tag roster.  This two week stretch of game either puts the Padres back in the NL-West pennant race or might bury their playoff chances if things fall apart.  The Friars are  6th in the standings of teams fighting for the 3-wildcard playoff spots.  Alot of games to play but alot of teams they have to jump over to get this done.  Stay tuned.

DODGERS…How do they survive this?  The injury wipe out of the pitching staff, only superceded by the terrible performances of a hot and cold bullpen.

..The rotation has an ERA now of (4.36) and a bullpen ERA of (4.92) and there isn’t much help left to call up from Oklahoma City.  The big question is whether Team President Andrew Friedman will do something  to bolster either the rotation or the relief corps.  The big issue is the Dodgers  failures  have come the same days first place Arizona lost, meaning thru all the adversity the Dodgers are still only 4-games out of first place.

..A bad losing stretch for sure having lost 10-of-14..and 14-of-22.  Is the GM going to get the manager some veteran pitching from somewhere else?  Add in, how long with Max Muncy-Chris Taylor be out?  And how ready is Julio Urias after two setbacks with the hamstring injury?

..Bad history on Saturday.  The Dodgers (15-0) loss to the Giants at Chavez Ravine was awful.  How bad in history is it?  It was the worst home field loss for the Dodgers dating back to 1898 when they played on dirt fields in Brooklyn before Ebbets Field.

ANGELS…Are they the real deal?  If they can keep this batting order in the lineup and on the field, they might be a playoff team, despite the strength of teams in the American League East.

..Shohei Ohtanin continues his drive towards free agency, rocketing his 23rd home run of the season, with Mike Trout doing the same thing, and the Angels  went to (41-33) on the year.  Included in the past week, were winning series against first place Texas and then beating the other team in the division they have to stay ahead, Seattle.  They have won 11-of-14.

..All this with really a substandard starting rotation and an iffy bullpen.  They are playing hard  and are aggressive under Phil Nevin’s guidance.  In a year of surprise teams, the Orioles, the Marlins, the Reds, what the Halos have been able to do has  put them into the conversation too.  Only time tells if they can keep this up.

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1-Man’s Opinion on Sports-Friday “So How Really Good Are They”

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“So How Really Good Are They”

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That’s the question, and it fits accordingly for the Padres, the Chargers and Team USA-Soccer.

 

PADRES..Now we find out if they have put things together as the 1st place Tampa Bay Rays, with the best record in baseball, come to town for the weekend series.  Tampa is (50-22), with a ton of young guys hitting the ball, and MLB’s top winner Shane McClanahan, bringing a (10-1) record to the mound at Petco Park.

So are the Padres ready?  Fernando Tatis has put on superstar games, including the wild Wednesday night performance, home run-2 doubles-2 stolen bases-shoestring catch-and throwing out a runner at first base after he singled.

Big questions, Juan Soto is dialed back in at the plate.  Manny Machado is hitting some homers, but not hitting back to where he has been in recent years.  Xander Bogaerts is back, though not as hot as before.  Catcher Gary Sanchez has 6-home runs in 14-games and has thrown baserunners out better than anyone else.

But this is the same Padres team that is still under water (.500) at (33-35).  They are (14-17) at Petco Park in front of 23-sellouts this season.  They are just (17-19) against teams .500 or worse this year.

How good are they?  Not there yet to call themselves a pennant contender.  We get a much better read by Sunday night after this series against the 50-win, 73M-dollar payroll, Tampa Bay Rays.

 

CHARGERS…They are ready for training camp come the last week of July.  The offense looks loaded and Justin Herbert will be healthy.  Beyond the hot young 4th year quarterback, Austin Ekeler returns as maybe the most complete back in the league.  The pass catchers are deep, big, and everywhere, from route runner Keenan Allen, to big yardage Mike Williams, the fast developing Josh Palmer and the impressive rookie first round pick Quinton Johnston.

The Bolts have 4-young offensive lineman, who have arrived, anchored by the veteran center Cody Linsley.  The group could be really good.

Unknown, is the depth on defense, the question if they have enough toughness up-inside on the defensive front, and how quickly the kids on the back end can quickly develop to compliment Derwin James.

 

TEAM USA…What a night.  The Red-White-Blue battered Mexico (3-0) in the opening game of the Nations League Cup.  Christian Pulisic had two goals.  Ricardo Pepe showed great explosiveness on a breakaway.  Gio Reyna was very active playing the ball out on the wing.

Add on the story that Gregg Berhalter will return as head coach, his 6-month stay in limbo over.  The move to bring him back came within a day of stories breaking that he was being pursued by Club America-Mexico and Sparta-Rotterdam in Holland.

 

So here we are on a Friday.

The Padres have to prove how good they are.  The Chargers think they are ready to take another step forward.  Team USA showed how dynamic they could be.

 

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1-Man’s Opinion on Sports-Thursday “3-Players in Trouble”

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“3-Troubled Players”
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Out of a job for a wide variety of reasons.

Mistakes made…sure.
Blackballed…possibly

Trevor Bauer is back in the news.  Matt Araiza is in the background in the news.  Colin Kaepernick has disappeared off the radar.

Each a victim of what they have done.

TREVOR BAUER…A 4th woman has surfaced charging Bauer raped her, got her pregnant, gave her money for an abortion and abused her.  The ex-Dodgers pitcher says it was a consensual relationship and the woman in Arizona wanted to extort 1.6M from him, then went to court.  This on the heels of 3-other women coming forward that Bauer was involved in all types of rough sex episodes in which he abused the women.  Another lawsuit here in San Diego  is pending.  Bauer was suspended for 194-games by the Commissioner, lost an enormous amount of money in his Dodgers contract, was released, and exiled.  He is now pitching in Japan, but the controversy continues to trail him.

MATT ARAIZA…The legendary Aztecs punter was embarking on his NFL career with the Buffalo Bills, when allegaitons of a gang rape at SDSU happened.  Police investigated but never filed charges against the kicking star.  The Bills released him, even with the data he had consensual sex with a 17-year old, whom he thought was 18.  He has had just 1-tryout and is still without a job as NFL camps open within a month.

COLIN KAEPERNECK….A star at quarterback, who spoke out about police brutality, becoming a leader before the Black Lives Matter movement ever began.  He was coming off a poor season, coming off surgery.  And he seemingly took on the world for racial discrimination.  Despite all the charity things he did, he never got back into the NFL.

People make bad decisions, Bauer’s sexual misconduct lifestyle seems to make him radio-active.  He might still be an established major league pitcher, but who wants to be affiliated with a player who has been involved in such  seedy stuff.  Bad choices for sure.  Just too toxic to have wearing your jersey.

Araiza made a bad decision with an underage girl who lied to him.  Since when is being stupid or immature or being full of yourself, enough to get you barred from the NFL?  This is the same league that has allowed drug abusers, drunks, women abusers, and steroid users to serve a penalty and then return and play.  Never charged.  Neither was Deshaun Watson, who is playing quarterback in Cleveland, after a year’s paid leave while the case for sexual misconduct, was settled.  Araiza deserves better.  Seems he is being dealt with unfairly.  The NFL is about second chances to lots of people.  Why not him?

Did NFL teams stay away from Kaepernick because he had become a social cause spokesman or because he had a series of injuries that left him no longer the star QB he was with the 49ers?  It is a complex story..  Now at age 38-time has passed him by, though he works in politics and charity and has alot of good guy stars on his post-football resume.  Sure looks like a blatant blackball job and shame on the NFL for that.

Interesting to watch how player’s decisions have led to bad outcomes, some deserved, some unfair, some irresponsible.

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1-Man’s Opinion on Sports-Wednesday “Golf-US Open Q&A”

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“The US Open comes to LA”
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They tee off in the US Open on Thursday at the historic Los Angeles Country Club, a tourney that dates back to the late 1890s.

A history that encompasses Tiger Woods 15-stroke blowout win, stunning upsets, raging controversy over high rough and the argument about ‘saving the integrity of par’.

It’s a monster event, almost equal to the Masters, but no where near the historical perspective of the real Open, the British Open in England-Scotland-Ireland.

Time out from the anguish of the PGA-LIV merger, sportswashing, hypocrisy and all.  Time in for four days of great golf here on the West Coast.

Here’s a thumbnail sketch of US Open questions, courtesy of NBC Sports
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How old is the tournament?

One hundred twenty-eight years. The first one was played in 1895.

How many times has it been played?

This year will mark the 123rd U.S. Open. It was not played in 1917 or 1918 because of World War I, nor was it played in 1942-45 because of World War II.

Who started it?

The United States Golf Association, an organization formed in 1894 by five prominent golf clubs to be the game’s national governing body.

Is it the oldest national championship in the world?

No. The Open, also referred to as The Open Championship, dates back to 1860.

Where was the first U.S. Open played?

It was played on a nine-hole course at Newport (R.I.) Country Club.

Who was the first winner?

Horace Rawlins, a 21-year-old Englishman, shot 173 for 36 holes to beat Scotsman Willie Dunn by two strokes.

Who is the most recent winner?

That would be Matt Fitzpatrick. The Englishman captured his first major championship by saving par from a fairway bunker on the 72nd hole at The Country Club in Brookline (Mass.) to edge Will Zalatoris and Scottie Scheffler by a stroke.

Who has won the most U.S. Opens?

Four players have won the U.S. Open four times each: Scotsman Willie Anderson and Americans Bobby Jones, Ben Hogan and Jack Nicklaus. Hogan also won the 1942 Hale America Open, which some of his supporters claim should be counted as his fifth U.S. Open. The Hale America was a substitute for the U.S. Open, was held in the same time slot and was run like the U.S. Open with local and final qualifying.

How many times has a player won consecutive Opens?

Six players have won back-to-back Opens and one has won three in a row. Chronologically, they are Scotsman Willie Anderson (1903-05), and Americans John McDermott (1911-12), Bobby Jones (1929-30), Ralph Guldahl (1937-38), Ben Hogan (1950-51), Curtis Strange (1988-89) and Brooks Koepka (2018-19).

Who are the most noteworthy players who have NOT won a U.S. Open?

This list would have to start with Sam Snead, whose failure to win a U.S. Open cost him a career Grand Slam. Snead was runner-up in the Open four times – in 1937, 1947, 1949 and 1953. But his most painful loss probably came in 1939, when he came to the final hole needing only a par to win but instead made a triple bogey. As on-course scoreboards did not yet exist, Snead didn’t know he needed only a par; a spectator erroneously told him he needed a birdie. Phil Mickelson is also in this category; he has a record six runner-up finishes (1999, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2009, 2013).

Where is this year’s championship?

Los Angeles Country Club in Los Angeles, California. It will mark the first time LACC has hosted a major championship and it’s the first men’s major in the L.A. area since the 1995 PGA Championship at Riviera The last U.S. Open in the area was in ’48, when Ben Hogan won at Riviera. LACC hosted the 2017 Walker Cup, won by the U.S. The North Course was designed by George C. Thomas, Jr. It underwent an extensive restoration, headed by architect Gil Hanse and Thomas biographer Geoff Shackelford, and reopened in 2010.

Which U.S. Opens have been the most memorable?

It’s all a matter of opinion, of course, but here is our Top 20 list. Working backwards in the top 10: 10. 1973: Johnny Miller shoots a record 63 in the final round to win. 9. 1982: Tom Watson chips in from deep rough on the 71st hole to win at Pebble Beach. 8. 2008: Limping on what would turn out to be a broken leg, Tiger Woods edges Rocco Mediate after an 18-hole playoff and one sudden-death hole. 7. 1930: Bobby Jones wins the third leg of a Grand Slam he would soon complete. 6. 2000: Woods destroys the field by a record 15 shots at Pebble Beach. 5. 1950: Less than a year and a half after a near-fatal car accident, Ben Hogan wins at Merion. 4. 1966: Seven shots ahead of playing partner Billy Casper at the final turn, Arnold Palmer is caught and loses in an 18-hole playoff. 3: 1913: Francis Ouimet stuns the golf world. 2. 1962: Rookie Jack Nicklaus takes it to Palmer in front of Arnie’s home crowd at Oakmont. 1. 1960: Seven shots back after 54 holes, Palmer drives the green on the first hole, a par 4, shoots 65 and wins his first – and only – U.S. Open.

How do you get to play in a U.S. Open?

There are various categories of exemptions, including winners of the previous 10 U.S. Opens, winners of the other three majors for the past five years, and the top 60 in the Official World Golf Ranking at multiple cutoff dates. In addition, local and final qualifying is held. Local qualifying is open to any professional and amateurs with up-to-date USGA Handicap Indexes not exceeding 1.4. In other words, you have to be pretty good just to try to qualify. The USGA also on occasion grants special exemptions to players who have not qualified but are deemed worthy of being in the field. Such exemptions have gone to accomplished veterans such as Arnold Palmer, Tom Watson, Gary Player, Seve Ballesteros and Lee Trevino. Mickelson was awarded one two years ago, but didn’t need it after winning the ’21 PGA Championship. Click here for the full list of qualifications.

How big is the Open field?

It is 156 players.

Which course has hosted the most Opens?

Oakmont Country Club in Oakmont, Pennsylvania, near Pittsburgh, has hosted nine Opens, including in 2016.

Who is the oldest player to win the Open?

Hale Irwin was 45 years and 15 days old when he won in 1990.

Who was the youngest winner?

John McDermott was 19 years, 315 days old when he won in 1911.

Who was the youngest player?

In 2012 a 14-year-old amateur from China, Andy Zhang, qualified.

Who had the largest victory margin?

Tiger Woods won by 15 strokes in 2000. This is the record for any major.

Who holds the 72-hole scoring record?

Rory McIlroy shot 268 in 2011. That was 16 under par – also a record – on par-71 Congressional. Brooks Koepka won in 2017 at par-72 Erin Hills with a 16-under total (272).

Who holds the 18-hole Open scoring record?

Johnny Miller set the record by shooting 63 in 1973 at Oakmont. That score was subsequently equaled by Jack Nicklaus (1980, Baltusrol), Tom Weiskopf (1980, Baltusrol), Vijay Singh (2003, Olympia Fields) and Justin Thomas (2017, Erin Hills).

What does a player get for winning the U.S. Open?

Last year’s winner collected $3,150,000 (out of $17.5 million, overall purse). The winner is also exempt from qualifying for the other three majors and The Players Championship for the next five years, and exempt from U.S. Open qualifying for the next 10 years. If the winner is a PGA Tour member, he would receive a five-year exemption to all PGA Tour events.

What happens if the U.S. Open is tied after 72 holes?

There used to be an 18-hole playoff the following day. Now, if two or more players are tied at the end of regulation there is a two-hole aggregate playoff, followed by sudden death.

1-Man’s Opinion on Sports-Tuesday “Big Stories-Lots Background”

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“Big Stories-Big Background Stories”

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An interesting couple of days in sports and the stories behind the stories.  There is more to life than the NFL-NBA-MLB-NHL.  Let me connect the dots for you::

TRIPLE CROWN HORSE RACING
..The story is now off the track, the health and deaths of so many horses, whether it is the 12-that died in 30-days at Churchill Downs, or the 5-that perished at Belmont Park, including 2-more right after the Belmont Stakes.  I think track surfaces need to be re-examined by engineers, in addition to the medical protocol of past injuries, medical exams, workout schedules and the track record of trainers whose horses broke down.  We had the bad run at Santa Anita a couple of years ago, 20-horses perished, and then at Delmar.  Problems have exploded again.

PGA-LIV MERGER
..Details still to be worked out but it appears there will be a bonus structure and there will be discipline for the golfers who stayed and those who left to take the money in Saudi Arabia.  The PGA is proposing that the Rory McIlroys of the world, who rejected offers, will be given equity and bonus money from the newly formed Marketing venture the two groups will operate.  And there is a push that the Phil Mickelson’s of the world, who violated their tour card by leaving, will either be fined or have to pay an entrance fee to rejoin the Tour.  Stay tuned for that.  Mickelson was hit with a Trademark lawsuit by a South American marketing firm for using  a ‘Hi-Flyers’ logo on his LIV team gear that the company has used to sell skateboarding gear since 2000.

SOCCER
..It’s exploding, whether it’s Lionel Messi signing with Inter-Miami of MLS…or the 500M-expansion fee to be paid by the San Diego group getting an expansion franchise.  Add on what Manchester City just did, winning the trebel trophy, the Champions League, in addition to the English Premier League trophy and the FA Cup crown.  And just think soccer free agency is about to start and Team USA starting training for the 2026-World Cup.  Soccer in the spotlight.

FORMULA 1-RACING
..Is it good if one team dominates?  It’s like yesteryear with the Yankees in baseball.  Team Red Bull, led by superstar driver Max Verstappen, has won all 6-F1 races this spring in convincing fashion.  Now of course, Team Mercedes dominated in a 7-year span with their superstar Lewis Hamilton.  But the sport is lopsided, hardly anyone else has a chance to win.  The TV ratings are exploding, the fans continue to buy volumes of tickets to party and watch, but the sports isn’t very competitive.  Cost controls are still an issue between the haves and have notes.  Stay tuned, things will change.

NASCAR
..Fast cars, fist fights, wrecks, it’s all part of what made the ‘Good Ole Boys’ so popular as stock car racing went from a Deep South phenomena to a national sport with a huge following.  We have seen so much unruliness this year, intentional wrecks, confrontations on the track, fights in the pits, you wonder in NASCAR will get some of this under control.  It’s dangerous and a bad look.  But it excites fans.  Ross Chastain has become the modern day villan, like Dale Earnhardt-Senior was two decades ago, and Cale Yarbrorough of years prior.

TENNIS..Novak Djokovic wins his 23rrd Grand Slam event, the French Open, bypassing the legends.  He is the last of the old lions still playing.  There is no Nadal or Federer, injuries ending their careers..  Serena Williams has left.  Carlos Alcaraz may become the next superstar post Djokovic.  Iga Swiatek has shown some dominance.  The big issue, is there an American coming that will be a difference maker in the future?
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