Saturday, February 28, 2009

Your Opinion

I know this may be hard to believe, but wise as I am, I, Tiger Woods, am (gasp) not all-knowing. So I have decided that it's time for your opinion. Yes, I have polls for that, but I have decided to use a post for this one because I want your answer to be in your own words. I have two questions; answer whichever you prefer.
Question 1: What should the Lions do with the first overall pick in the draft? Should they draft Matthew Stafford in hope that he will replace Bobby Layne? Or should they choose the safe route and take an offensive lineman. Or do you have a completely different opinion?
Question 2: What should the Red Wings do about their goalie dillema? Should they keep Osgood? Should they go with Conklin? Is the jury still out? Or do you have a different idea?
Please answer these as honestly as you can. Your opinion matters, too.
While I'm gathering your opinions, here's another question I've been dying to ask: What is your opinion on this blog? What are your favorite videos? Do you have suggestions for videos to add in? How about the same questions for polls and articles?
I need to know what readers think, because the primary aim of this blog is to make readers feel satisfied with what their getting. Thank you for your time.

Friday, February 27, 2009

Osgood makes his case

Chris Osgood knew what was at stake.
This was the beginning of his last chance. His final chance to pull himself together and prove that he is capable of remaining the starter.
Throughout the season, Osgood has struggled. He hasn't been himself. He looked really bad.
So he was given 10 days to get his head screwed on straight. The Wings didn't spell it out, but they were basically saying that this was Ozzie's final chance to turn himself around.
He started out the right way. On Friday night Osgood stopped 30 of 31 shots to allow just one goal. The only goal allowed came during a power play when Osgood was peppered with shots. He looked superb, like the Osgood of '08. Thus far in Project Restore Our Goalie's Power, he has a cool 1.00 GAA
The Red Wings desperately need this to continue. If Osgood returns to mediocre play, they're screwed. Why? Because then then their options go down to this: 1.Continue to attempt to improve Osgood, which likely won't succeed soon enough. 2. Try to trade for a goalie, which is out of the question since they have no cap room. 3. Start Ty Conklin, who has spent the majority of his career as a solid backup man, but has yet to succeed with a starting job.
None are appealing. What we want is the easiest route: for Osgood to improve immediately. Well, it started.
Let's hope it continues.

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

More A-Rod

Alex Rodriguez answered the question that many were wondering about. Everyone just had to know. We all just had to find out. We were waiting. We were itching to hear the answer.
And we got it. In an interview following his confession to using performance enhancers, Rodriguez revealed how he got them. According to A-Rod, a cousin repeateedly injected him with a mysterious substance from the Dominican Republic from 2001 to 2003.
Don't take that the wrong way. Rodriguez is not making excuses. He wasn't afraid to say that it was no accident. "I knew we weren't taking Tic-Tacs," he admitted. Thus he is likely telling the truth.
So why the secrecy? Why doesn't he give us a name? The prime reasoning is that A-Rod is likely trying to protect his provider. He wasn't lying. He wasn't throwing the blame on someone else. He wasn't trying to make excuses.
We need to stop blasting this guy. He confessed up. He took the blame. What more do you want? We shouldn't be attacking the man just because he has yet to give us a name. Forget about names. It's not important. What's important is that he screwed up and he's sorry for what he did. Now it's time to forgive.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Playoffs- better than BCS?

The answer isn't as obvious as it may seem.
What would a college football season be without the traditional whining at the end of the year and the push for a playoff system?
This year it was Utah, USC, and Texas who seemed to make the push for playoffs stronger. It seems like the right thing to do. Under the current system, the controversy is overwhelming.
But would a playoff really be any better? The fuel of this proposal is the idea that it would eliminate the "We were screwed" factor. But would it? Do you honestly think that the 11-5 New England Patriots thought it was fair to be eliminated from playoff contention, despite the fact that the San Diego Chargers made it with an 8-8 record?
Do you think the Jets are equally thrilled? What about the 12-4 Indianapolis Colts, who were forced to play on the road against the 8-8 Chargers? Yet no one speaks up. No one bashes the NFL.
The playoff system contains several flaws. You can bet that under a BCS format, New England, Indy, and the Jets would all be ranked well ahead of the Chargers.
The truth is that there is really no foolproof system. Whether it's BCS or playoffs or something else, you can bet that there were always be a group of whiners who insist that they were screwed by the system.
Are you stubborn as a mule? Do you still insist that playoffs are the answer? Do you still curse the BCS? Fine by me.
But the NCAA will never change it's format. The reason for that is that they know more money can be made off of bowl games. A playoff may slightly increase viewings, but the moneymakers thrive mainly because of the tourism that is created by bowls.
Yell all you want, but I doubt the BCS is leaving. The NCAA already announced that they would keep the same format at least until 2014. So why bother complaining? A playoff system wouldn't do much good anyway.
Feedback: Do you agree that playoffs in college football are a lost cause? Or do you still feel that the BCS is the enemy?

Saturday, February 14, 2009

I am returning

Tiger Woods, who has been of the course for a while with a torn ACL, could be in the PGA Tour next month. Additionally, Woods recently celebrated the birth of his second child, Charlie Axel Woods.

Friday, February 13, 2009

Wings fly past Wild 4-2

The Detroit Red Wings defeated the Minnesota Wild 4-2 last night, putting them within one point of the San Jose Sharks, who currently lead the Western Conference.
Goals were scored by Mikael Samuelsson, Jiri Hudler, Kris Draper, and Villie Leino. Marian Hossa led the way with two assists.
Chris Osgood looked much more like his old self, saving 21 of 23 shots to allow just two goals, one of which came on a very long 5-on-3 penalty kill. Osgood's improvement is coming mainly from the crucial fact that he is much more relaxed than he was earlier in the season. Entering the season, Osgood had too much on his mind about breaking records, winning another cup, yada yada yada. The rough start made him panic and become even worse. But Ozzie has finally realized that the best cure is to be relaxed and calm.
The victory creates more momentum for both Osgood and the Wings in general. Now that that rough strech is out of the way, they can back to playing solid hockey.

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Two Heroes Fallen

Thus far, 2009 has not been a good year for sports. At least not for the heroes. Once again, we have experienced dissapointment from that area.
Recently, Olympian Michael Phelps was caught smoking marijuana at party. To follow up Phelps's miscue, word got out that Alex Rodriguez had failed the 2003 steriod test. Though both apologized later, each has left a stain on the sports world.
Phelps's case is bad for sports in general because Olympians have generally had a knack for being better role models than players in the MLB, NFL, and NBA. Now, their answer to Tom Brady has fallen from his pedestal. This isn't the first time that Phelps has screwed up either. Following the 2004 Athens Olympics, he was caught drinking underage. Fans may not find it easy to forgive him a second time.
A-Rod's story is bad mainly for baseball. It seems to be the finishing blow for a battle against steriods that baseball was losing for a long time. It started with McGwire and Sosa. Then along came Bonds, Palmeiro, and others. Things got really bad when the Mitchell Report stated that over 100 players failed the test. In all this, A-Rod was supposed to be the exception, the defender of the Clean Age. Now we know he is no better than the rest.
The lone bright spot in all this is that both players came out the right way. A-Rod knew that it was easier to confess and be forgiven (Thank you, Jason Giambi), then continually deny what everyone knows to be true (Hello, Barry Bonds). Phelps did the same. Hopefully they have learned from their mistakes.

Monday, February 2, 2009

Once again...

Hey everyone, this is the sports Schwab. Looks like I made the right pick for the Super Bowl. That makes me 4 for my last 4. Don't mess with the master.

Steelers defeat Cardinals

On Sunday we saw more than just a Super Bowl. We saw what may have been the greatest Super Bowl of all time.

The game started with Pittsburgh dominance. Then Arizona got pesky. It looked like they would definitely tie it or take the lead when, out of the blue, James Harrison intercepted the ball and ran 100 yards for a touchdown. Then Arizona got pesky again.

But Pittsburgh stormed back, and finished with an amazing touchdown catch by Santonio Holmes.
So what makes this the greatest of 'em all? Here I list the five ingredients to a perfect commercial.
1. Score in unique ways Both teams did this. It started in the second quarter when linebacker James Harrison intercepted a pass inside the endzone and ran 100 yards for a touchdown. How many linebackers can run 100 yards for a touchdown? Heck, how many linebackers can run 100 yards at all? Not many. And, oh yeah, it's not everyday you see a pick-six.
Arizona did the same when they scored on a safety when Pittsburgh had the ball. A safety? When's the last time there was a safety in the Super Bowl? We're lucky to see one safety a week. But the Cardinals got one. Granted, it happened because of a holding penalty, but a safety's still a safety.
2. Prevent the expected with the unexpected One thing that we as humans love is being surprised. Nothing quite gets us going the same way as a surprise.
A prime example of this happening came during a Pittsburgh drive late in the fourth quarter. First, it looks like they're gonna score a touchdown. Then it's 4th down and we're thinking field goal. All of sudden Arizona gets flagged, and we're back to expecting a touchdown. To cap it off, they got stopped and ended up kicking a field goal anyway.
The James Harrison pick-six is another good example. Following an interception it's first and goal.It looks like the Cardinals are about to tie, if not win, it. Then, out of nowhere, Harrison picks it off and scores for the Steelers instead.
If that stuff isn't surprising, I don't know what is.
3.Have big plays It's always good to see something jaw-dropping happen in the game. The great part is, it only takes a second to happen, so it pretty much comes from nowhere.
Where to start in this game? Harrison's pick-six? What about Larry Fitzgerald's big run? Or how 'bout that miracle grab by Santonio Holmes.
Don't forget about Big Ben evading defenders, what, six or seven times in the game? (eat your heart out, Eli Manning)
4. Go back and forth This may be the biggest factor of them all. Nothing is more crucial than making sure this happens. People hate seeing a one-sided matchup. What we love is a game where it's unclear which team will finish on top.
We saw this throughout the game Sunday. First it was Pittsburgh dominance. Then, a touchdown and an interception later, The Cardinals appeared to have the edge. They were about to either tie it or take the lead late in the first half. Plus, they'd get the ball first in the second half. Then Harrison intercepted it and ran for a touchdown, making it a two-score game, and we were back to Pittsburgh dominance.
But Arizona fought it off. Trailing 20-14 late in the fourth, they got a safety against the Steelers, making it 20-16 and giving them possesion. All of sudden, Arizona's on fire again. This continued with Fitzgerald's long TD run, which gave them a 23-20 lead.
But Pittsburgh stormed back. With less than 3 minutes left, Ben Roethlisberger led an aerial assualt downfield, which ended in a Santonio Holmes touchdown and, ultimately, a victory.
Comebacks are a big part of the game. We all love seeing these last-moments-magic.
5.Finish with a bang, and some history This is a big reason why this Super Bowl gets the edge over last year's shocker.
Holmes's catch and Tyree's were both good, but keep in mind that Holmes's was the game-winning touchdown.
But the bigger part of this is the history. Where was it in SBXLII? Brady and Co. failed, right? This year, however, the Steelers won a sixth Super Bowl-the most ever. Not to mention Mike Tomlin became the the youngest coach to win the Super Bowl, and Big Ben was one of the youngest quarterbacks to win multiple Super Bowls. What's the Super Bowl without some history? Not much.

Sunday, February 1, 2009

The Story of Banana Man

So, Nadal beat Federer again. You're probably wondering where I pull "Banana Man" from. The story is that during a quarterfinal game back during Wimbledon, Nadal took a break to eat a banana. The result? His game improved greatly. Later, shortly before the Nadal/Federer classic, I was asked who I picked to win. Answer? Banana Man.

I win Again

Well, it happened just how I expected: Nadal beat Federer. Is this not enough evidence that you should never doubt the Master?