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Daily Rounds 1/3/2012

They call it pink slip Monday and while the news became real elsewhere, let’s run down the New York teams following their busy Sundays.  The Jets are now in full fledged disgruntled mode.  Gary Meyers of the Daily News said that due to Santonio Holmes’ actions or rather inactions, the Jets should cut their losses and send the brooding WR packing.  Brian Costello of the New York Post says that the Jets aren’t waiting for an apology from Holmes, they are focused on building unity for next season.  As Roderick Boone of Newsday wrote the Jets will, probably as a result of Santonio’s actions, not have a captain from here on out.  In the outgoing meeting, according to Manish Mehta of the Daily News Rex Ryan was emotional, even crying vowing to restore team unity.  Mark Cannizaro of the Post said its all on Rex to bring unity to this team.  GM Mike Tannenbaum said that Mark Sanchez WILL be the starting QB next year according to Peter Bottle of the Daily News. 

There are plenty of culprits in this Jet season to point fingers to but at this point what’s the use?  What exactly will be gained from blaming everything on one player?  That’s where all the focus seems to be.  On Santonio Holmes.  Yes, he’s a problem child.  Yes, he’s a diva.  Yes, the Steelers are nodding their heads in agreement with everything coming out of New York today and for the next few days about him as a leader.  I’m sure some in a Steeler uniform were chuckling when Rex gave Santonio the “C” on his jersey.  Giving the responsibility of captain is a symbolic gesture.  It says something about the player more than his pay grade.  It says he’s a leader and that’s exemplified those traits during his time in that uniform.  They aren’t given randomly and one can only assume that Rex gave it as a motivational tool to Santonio, currently one of two players on the Jet roster with a Super Bowl ring.  Holmes getting that huge contract after just one year in a Jet uni was a mistake but one that the Jets felt they had to make and I don’t blame them.  Santonio is a talented receiver capable of taking over games despite not having any real size advantage over the corners that cover him.  He’s quick on his breaks and cuts and knows how to run routes.  But he pouts and he makes things difficult when he’s not getting the ball.  He’s an only child on the football feild, screaming for attention and needing validation by his quarterback and somebody to pet him when he does something good.  He’s a man child and that’s the problem.  The Jets had too many divas on one team and this is something that was said throughout the year: the Jets over the years cut too many guys who were great locker room guys to bring in the talented yet troubled superstar.  I’m sure Plaxico’s best trait this year was just him being quiet though I wouldn’t be surprised to hear otherwise.

As a Giant fan, going through Plax’s troublesome ways were tough.  You knew the guy was talented but he had no time to be mature and handle the responsibility of being a superstar athlete.  He’d rather waste his time being a huge waste of space and that’s what Santonio is doing.  At some poing Mike Tannenbaum has to see things for what it is and that is, that the Jets need to bring back those glue guys that made this team a two time AFC Championship contender.  The Jets no longer have that kind of presence in the locker room and they are suffering for that.  I have confidence in Mike Tannenbaum to change things in the locker room and elsewhere and it will be interesting to see how the Jets move on from this.  Do they continue going on this path where Rex thinks he can coach these blowhards back into shape or does he just give into Mike T’s personnel skills and allow him to bring in glue guys and guys that fit into the locker room dynamic.  Guys who can raise their voice.  Again, IF Mike T wants to keep Santonio he needs to have a QB in there that can raise his voice and tell Santonio to shut the hell up and he’ll have to respect that.  He’ll need a guy who will eventually give them a presence.  We all know who that guy is.  The Colts are ready for all comers and all their suggested compensation for him but it will take a huge HUGE step for any organization to give up the kind of ransom it will take to pry Peyton Manning loose.  Speaking of which:

Bob Kravitz of the Indy Star agreed with owner Jim Irsay that it was time to let go of Bill and his son Chris Polian from the upper reaches of the Indy power grid.  The decision of what to do with the number one pick and Peyton Manning will be left to a yet unnamed successor.  Interesting to note:  Jim Caldwell was NOT fired.  Jim Thomas of the St. Louis Post Dispatch says that for a business man like Stan Kroenke firing Steve Spagnuolo and his GM Bill Devaney was all about the numbers game.  Namely the 2-14 record.  Martin Fennely of the Tampa Tribune writes that the first job for the new head coach, after Raheem Morris’ dismissal is to revive number five.  That’s quarterback Josh Freeman for those of you not familiar.  

Its a tough position on Monday morning waking up after a disappointing season and knowing your fate.  Knowing you’ll be fired in a minute.  Yet here it is for future Hall of Famer Bill Polian.  He’s the guy who was the architect of those ALMOST WON IT ALL Bills teams.  He’s also, interestingly enough, the guy who was hired the day after the Colts secured the number one pick of the 1998 draft, the one where they picked Peyton Manning and began this unprecedented run of success.  This game is about numbers and what have you done for me lately and Bill Polian was tied to a team and a player and never really accomplished much else personnel wise over the last four years and this season proved it.  IF he had drafted well or had signed some talent from the free agent market, I’m sure it would’ve showed but it never did.  The system that enabled Matt Flynn to immediately step in and throw 6 TD’s against a Lions team that was clearly playing for something Sunday is what most people will look at.  To have such a steep drop off from Peyton Manning to the next guy is troubling.  This is why I feel like the Colts eventually will keep Peyton AND draft Andrew Luck.  Its the right move.  Luck may be ready to start now, but he would benefit from sitting behind Peyton and learning the system for the next two years.  Imagine a fully formed Luck in his third year coming in and the Colts getting elite QB play for another dozen years like they did from Peyton?  Manning’s legacy is in Indy and it would be a shame to ruin it.

But it IS interesting that on the brink of such a huge decision coming for the Colts that Jim Irsay, the Twitter-iffic owner of the Colts would take Bill Polian out and bring in a new guy.  Almost as if to say that he’s washing his hands clean of whatever is to come.  This next decision is all on whoever’s coming in.  Which is why I think the best job is in St Louis.  You have a QB already there.  The number two pick.  You can sell that pick to the highest bidder (you know there’s a sucker out there in Washington) and build that organization with multiple number ones and number twos.  Of course you need to trust that all these picks work out but just from a percentage perspective, you trust that ATLEAST A FEW OF THESE GUYS pan out for you.  Rumblings are that Jeff Fisher was hanging around the lobby of the Rams hotel on Saturday perhaps setting in motion some of the events that will eventually take place.  I expect a few of those positions to be filled up by the end of the week since I’m sure some of these teams have their sights set on some names.  I expect Tampa’s job will take a month to fill since they will again look for the unexpected candidate.  It will be interesting to say the least who will get that Indy job.

In Gotham City, at the world’s most famous arena, the Knicks returned from their west coast swing to lay an egg at home against the Raptors shooting for an abysmal 28.6% from beyond the three point line.  The Knicks took twice as many 3 pointers as the Raptors and the Knicks couldn’t hit that many.  Frank Isola of the Daily News said that Carmelo Anthony and his 35 points could not bail out the Knicks. Marc Berman says that the wrong play was called in the end.   Marc Berman of the Post says that help is on the way as Amar’e and Iman Shumpert are set to return by the end of the week.  Finally, Howard Beck of the New York Times writes what I’ve been saying ALL ALONG.  

Last night’s game was frustrating to watch.  It was as if they forgot ALL the good things they did on Saturday against the Kings.  To beat the same drum beat, the Knicks had nobody that could slash into the paint and draw contact or the defense so they could find an open man.  Toney Douglas is not willing to do that and usually if he does drive its to pull up and try for a 15 foot jumper OR do a weak floater that never seems to go in.  Douglas had 21 points and I’ve said this over and over again: Toney is not afraid to shoot and not afraid of the moment and that is going to be HUGE for this team going forward.  When he is replaced in the starting line up, he’s going to be SO MUCH more effective than he is right now playing major minutes in the starting line up.  This experience will really help him and in a month once he’s gotten used to the feeling of playing the point he will ease Baron Davis’ return which I believe is going to be by the end of this month.

Amazing that Iman Shumpert will return by Thursday or Friday considering the way he went down it didn’t look good.  But Shump’s athleticism and versatility will be needed when you consider that the Knicks don’t have anyone, except for Melo and Amar’e who is as athletic as he is.

One player I wasn’t disappointed in last night was Landry Fields.  He’s building confidence but like I said two days ago, my biggest fear is he goes back into his shell when both Amar’e and Melo are on the court together.  What happens then?  Hopefully he continues to be active.  He’s better on defense and is responding while chasing down faster guards around the league and moving through screens and doing the small things to remain active.  He’s going to be interesting to watch during the year.

One player I WAS disappointed in is Billy Walker.  He has NO IDEA how to play the game of basketball.  Its amazing that he gets any kind of run with a professional team.  He plays so recklessly and with no kind of rhythm that its hard for me to imagine any player being worse.  He has no sense of any moment and barrels into players and refs call him for the charge EVERYTIME because he’s blatantly putting his knee out or taking his arm and using it to shield players against him when he drives and he blatantly fouls players.  I pray that Iman gets back and the Knicks get Jared Jeffries and the much better shooter but softer Steve Novak takes his minutes.

Its tough to judge this entire Knick team till all the pieces are in play then we can make a fair judgement but the Knicks but Beck is on the money.  The Knicks made a terrible decision to trade for Carmelo.  They got nowhere.  They got swept in the first round and they have ZERO depth on the team.  Imagine Melo and Tyson Chandler came via free agency.  You’re talking about Iman Shumpert AND Gallo off the bench.  With Raymond Felton starting AND Mozgov and Toney Douglas OFF THE BENCH.  The Knicks instead chose the impatient route.  The Knicks wasted such a golden opportunity and didn’t listen to Donnie Walsh who had preached patience.  Instead, we have to watch THIS Knick team instead of a team that could’ve been one of the deepest in the East.

In the winter classic the NHL has a great tradition.  But if you hear it from John Tortorella’s mouth it was a concerted effort by NBC and NHL to try and make it an overtime game according to Pat Leonard of the Daily News.    Jeff Klein of the New York Times says that there was one star that shined the brightest and his name is Henrik Lundqvist.  

I don’t usualy watch hockey but after last night, who’s up for a hockey game?  That was some final two minute stretch eh?  There’s nothing more exciting than a penalty shot save and Henrik, excuse me King Henrik made the save that brought the house down.  It did seem fishy that a lot of the calls late went against the Rangers and I’m sure there were enough people screaming at the top of their lungs about the weird plays that went on but make no mistake, the Classic was indeed a Classic but its hard not to be when you have New York and Philly.  The heated rivalry is there and if you can’t get up to play either team then you don’t deserve to play.

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Daily Rounds 12/9/2011 Part 2

In Part One, we took a look at all the NBA crazyness leading into the first day of training camps.  In Part two we look at the Pujols contract and reaction.  A crazy game in Pittsburgh that came down to the wire and a bum leg.  And other small mini notes including breaking news regarding one of my favorite players in the NBA.
Albert Pujols is a Los Angeles (of Anaheim) Angel.  In a stunning turn of events that was confirmed by multiple outlets Albert Pujols agreed to a 10 year $255 million deal to go from the St Louis Cardinals and the National League to the LA Angels and the American League.  Bernie Miklasz of the St Louis Post Dispatch says save the blame game, its just a business.  Bryan Burwell doesn’t believe the Cardinals did everything they could to keep the superstar a Cardinal for life.  Vincent Bonsignore of the LA Daily News shows his reaction.  Bill Plaschke of the LA Times  says this makes the Angels relevant in LA just as much as it does in the AL.  Kevin Baxter writes that Pujols’ Hispanic heritage won’t be that huge here given the low Dominican population in Southern California.  However his reputation could take a hit.  And Boy DOES IT EVER and from an unusual place.  Joel Sherman of the NY Post asks the Angels “have we learned NOTHING from the idiocy of handing a soon to be 32 year old slugger a 10 year contract?” John Harper meanwhile says that the Yankees may be forced to react to this news if the dominoes fall the way that some suggest it will.  Gil Lebreton of the Fort-Worth Star Telegram says that the Rangers insist they aren’t going to budge from their plan and business model.   I agree with Steve Henson of Yahoo Sports that the real winner here was Prince Fielder who’s agent is a fella by the name of Scott Boras.  

The question on everyone’s mind this morning is: IS this deal a good idea for the Angels?  Just take for a second to remove the emotion of a long time Cardinal leaving the only place he knows for bigger dollars and a bigger tank.  Is Albert Pujols worth 10 years $255 million (reportedly)?  (for that matter is ANY player worth that much for that long?)  My answer is yes.  A HUGE yes.  A resounding yes.

Kevin Baxter is right.  There is no latino influence like he would’ve had if he had chosen to go to Miami in South Beach.  Pujols decision to move to Los Angeles was purely based on dollars.  It was a business decision.  And it was a business decision on both sides.

For years I’ve said that Arte Moreno operated his ball club like a weird rich kid.  Unsure about spending all of his money, instead he made smaller purchases to keep people believing that they were big spenders.  Kind of like what the Coupon family did two winters ago when they signed Jason Bay.  I guess Moreno got tired of shopping at the mall and went to Fifth Ave and swallowed up Albert Pujols and got a discount on CJ Wilson.  This is a huge deal for Moreno because now was the time to strike.

The Dodgers are a financial mess and despite their bumbling problems, they will soon be on the receiving end of a huge multi-year TV deal that will make them even richer and they will get new ownership soon, one group rumored to include Magic Johnson.  So now was the time to strike.  Before the Dodgers got their affairs in order.  It was time to get some sour Dodger fans to turn and stare at the red of the Angels while the Dodgers remained blue in the face.  These are the kind of bombs you land when you are fighting a turf battle.  These are the things that give you victory.

Pujols immediately gives them legitemacy.  Wilson gives the Angels another arm on a team full of capable arms.  The Angels move to get Vernon Wells looks dumber now considering they could’ve had an outfield of Torii Wilson, Peter Bourjos and Mike Trout the whiz kid 19 year old who will eventually be a superstar if all the scouts are right.  The Angels have the kind of long term commitment from Pujols that will allow them to win a few battles in the presses and will give the Angels the ability to hold their head high when they walk in this town long run by the Dodgers.

The notion that he is a traitor OR even did anything remotely bad here needs to stop.  I find it hilarious that its New York reporters who are crying foul of this deal though it makes sense.  The A-Rod contract looks like it will be a stain on the Yankees for years and something they won’t be able to remove anytime soon.  But there are several reasons why this deal makes sense and not only that he deserves it:

This is a guy who TOOK a hometown discount already.  His last contract paid him $100 million which was hugely under-market deal.  So Pujols took the hometown discount once.  He wasnt, at the age of 32(?) going to take it again and I don’t blame him.  Its once in a life time that a player of his talents come along and enter the free agent market and any team would’ve been right to offer him that contract.  Leaving St Louis somehow makes this deal a bad one?  Retiring a Cardinal would’ve made sense.  Yes, they offered north of $200 million but their payroll restrictions didn’t allow the Cardinals to go further or take that extra step.

But that’s not what cost them Pujols.  They never, in his mind made that extra push prior to last season to make him an offer he felt he was worthy of.  If we learned anything following the Jose Reyes press conference, its that stars need to be pampered and felt like they are wanted.  They are insecure and shallow and need the reassurance like little kids that they will be looked after.  Pujols CAN be looked at in that light but it wouldn’t be fair.  The Cardinals had an exclusive window to talk contract extension and if they said 10 years $240 million, they would’ve gotten him then.  This would not be going on.  I’m not mad at Pujols for taking the money.  You get offered that kind of money, you would be dumb to NOT take it because this is a business and in the end you take care of yourself, family and loved ones and nobody else.  Everyone else is periphery and don’t really matter.  Pujols’ fans in St Louis need to know that.

I was a fan of Reyes and I know that he did the right thing.  I don’t blame him for wanting out of the Mets, and their current situation, and taking the bigger contract.  He did the right thing.  I don’t begrudge him as a Met fan and I don’t hate the Mets for letting him leave.  This was right for both parties.  It was the right time.  Was there a better way like trading him?  Sure.  But either way I don’t blame Sandy for not offering that kind of money that signed Reyes and I’m not mad at Reyes for not taking the offer.

The Wilson deal part of it makes sense because he won’t be asked to be the number one guy.  That role is Jered Weaver’s.  They have a four man staff that could be Phillies lite and given that Roy Oswalt is no longer there could be better than the Phillies overall.  This gives them needed depth that they can augment with a very strong bullpen which they have.  I like this move because they also got him on a bit of a discount if you believe the rumors that the Marlins offered him 6 years.

The Pujols deal also makes sense because he will instantly improve a lineup that scored 200 runs less than their immediate competitor the Texas Rangers.  For two years the Angels have watched the Rangers go to the World Series and there’s no end in sight in Arlington, so the Angels had to wait for the right guy.  What about the guy that led the team that just crushed your hearts?  What about the guy who had an all-time great World Series game against them?  Pujols is a major swing at the Texas Rangers who may be forced to respond.

What if the Rangers now get crazy and sign Prince Fielder to a 9 year $200 million contract?  What if they post for Yu Darvish who just came on the market?  Doesn’t this mean the Yankees and Red Sox have to respond in kind?  The Yankees would then feel the need to trade for Gio Gonzalez or Wandy Rodriguez even.  So goodbye valuable young assets and future Yankee stars, and hello immediate response to a major league arms race.  Suddenly the Red Sox, would also need to make a big play.  What about trading for Jon Niese AND David Wright?

All scenarios are in play.  But the next few days could be intense and could lead to deals.  This Pujols/Wilson play has major repercussions and I can’t wait to see it play itself out.

Thursday Night Football somehow, seems to get its share of drama to run with and boy did they get it yesterday.  Ben Roethlisberger’s ankle looked like a pretzel…after snapping, and somehow he still managed to get up and throw a game winning touchdown and play a whole second half on a badly injured ankle limping his way on the field.  Ron Cook of the Pittsburgh Post Gazette was as impressed as I was.  Dejan Kovacevic of the Pittsburgh Tribune Review says he was also awed at Ben’s stand.  

I only got to watch the second half but I read on twitter about his injury and then saw it replayed.  It looked gruesome.  The kind that would make the average human being turn their head away or make their face have the look whenever you eat something sour.  It just was insane.  Then you saw him come back out.  You suddenly realized the important.  7-3 ballgame.  Season was on the line.  Steelers had to win this game and ensure they would.  Could their defense hold?  Sure.  But you couldn’t, if you were Ben, take that chance.

Consider that Ben plays behind a very porous offensive line that usually leaves him writing on the floor in a considerable amount of pain.  Nobody would’ve faulted the Steelers for leaving Charlie Batch in for the rest of the game.  But these are the moments that superstars rise and make a name for themselves.  Against a division rival, Big Ben lived up to his name and forever earned my respect.  For all intents and purposes he was hopping like a rabbit out there.  He couldnt put any weight on that foot which was so vital to him planting and being able to drive in through his throws.  His passing would be compromised.  Yet somehow, someway, he threw a 79 yard TD pass to Antonio Brown who made a few guys miss with a few moves and his speed and did most of the leg work.

But it was Ben’s heart that won them this game.  I believe in momentum shifts and small little things like this that may go unnoticed to the average eye that can propel a team to a Super Bowl.  Yes the Ravens swept the Steelers.  Yes the Steelers offensive line is an absolute mess and at times, yes, the defense has looked old.  But last night was something different.

The onus on all the other players to step up their game is ten fold now.  Nobody’s injury is that important that they can’t suck it up.  Lamar Woodley.  You hear me?  No more being laid out because of a hamstring.  That’s bullshit.  This game could’ve galvanized this Steeler team.  Now they get 10 days and for a team nursing injuries and being old and needing rest it couldn’t have come at a better time.  Big Ben showed up last night and now expect a veteran ball club like the Steelers to show up for him.  This victory could be even more special and can be the turning point for the Steelers.  Stay tuned.

Finally, according to Adrian Woj of Yahoo sports, Brandon Roy may have to retire due to medical reasons.  USA Today is reporting it as well.  Sad day for Brandon.  He could’ve been a game changer.  This of course means that depending on his contract status, the Blazers may be in the clear if his contract was insured.  Sad day.   


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One Night in the Colisseum (Father’s Day Tribute)

This isn’t your typical Father’s Day tribute.  I’m not saying that to make this article any more cooler than the other hundred Father’s Day articles you will read or have read today.  This is a story about a man, a boy, and a sport.  One that you won’t expect.

Me and my father aren’t exactly close.  I like basketball, and going to beer gardens, he likes ice skating and gardening.  My mom and me shared a bond growing up: basketball.  We watched it all the time and my dad?  He was in the garden growing his plants and vegetables.  He talked to me through my mom.  He was neat and orderly and my room looked like a paper bomb went off in it.  Papers, magazines and clothes strewn all over the place.  Over the last 5 years I’m pretty sure he’s taken up the policy: only enter if ABSOLUTELY necessary.  I’ve found it funny that my dad knocks to enter my room while my mom knows no such manners and flings the door open like Kramer.  I finally figured that my dad enters my room so infrequently that he must consider himself a guest and be polite and show manners.

So of course, naturally the two most fondest memories of my dad and I are sports related.  Here is ONE of those stories:

Every year I tell myself I’m going to watch more hockey and I find myself watching the Knicks and being more and more depressed.  Mind you the Rangers play at the Garden and all I need to do is turn on MSG every day or every other day and I will catch a game but I never bother doing it.  Nevermind that the Rangers would cause me just as much disappointment so perhaps my subconscious is telling me to avoid such pitfalls.

I really don’t have a good excuse as to why this happens but it does.*  But I swear by my two hockey experiences.  Once my mom got tickets through work.  She came home and told me she got tickets to a game.  Right then and there my eyes went twice their size and thought that my mom was instantly cooler and said “cool, who’s playing?”. She held the ticket in her hand and she put on her glasses and did the classic old people move.  You know the one where they move the paper forward and back, squint their eyes and then search for enough light like the part of the room they are in is just too dark?
*= I use this line more than I care to use it.  I really don’t have a good excuse….wait…

I still remember her saying it: “the EYESIanders”.  Mind you, my mom speaks perfect english but when she sees words she is unsure about she panics and goes into indian mode.*
*=classic defense mechanism for immigrants.  Its the go-to move for those who try hard to hide their accents.  They usually hide their accent in front of two crowds: americans and their kids.  Always.

My heart dropped.  The Islanders? Hockey?  I was disappointed.  But the dilemma was this: she only had two tickets.  I was too young to drive and too small for my parents to send me with a friend.*
*= By the way the age in which your parents are fully confident you can do something by yourself hasn’t been determined but I’m pretty sure its somewhere around 62.

So my devious mom decided that me and my dad should go.  I can’t say that me and my father weren’t talking to each other for any specific reason, we’ve always struggled to communicate with each other but I knew how disappointed I was that it was my dad coming.  So, we went to Nassau Colisseum, which wasn’t exactly the ideal place to bond with my dad.*
*= In fact, I have been to countless Met games and never took my parents.  In my defense I’ve thought about it.  I don’t have a good enough excuse….

But the experience was awesome.  The pace was even faster than television and the fans were great.  It was an Islander/Ranger game and at the time I was a Ranger fan- riding the bandwagon of the 1994 team.*
*= That 94 team is one of the special teams in league and sporting history.  The historical significance of winning after 54 years.  Messier’s guarantee for game 6 and then answering the call with a hat trick.  Matteau! Matteau! Matteau!  Finally Messier screaming and shaking the cup after winning it in 7.  I know people will scream East coast bias but it always seems more important when a Northeast team breaks an extended streak of never winning a title. (See, Red Sox Boston)

The interstate fued was alive.  We saw 4 or 5 fights in the stands between Islander and Ranger fans and my dad was surprised and excited to attend his first sporting match in America.  But the point was, I liked hockey and it grabbed me.

The fighting, the beards, and the beauty of all that violence on ice was exhilirating and a sport made better by listening to the radio call because you’re constantly on your toes.  There is only ONE speed on hockey broadcasts: fast and faster.  Its soccer calls on adderol.  Also the fans being on the ice and banging on the boards like your watching gladiators on ice and you’re in the Roman Colisseum is also very awesome.

Then the lockout happened and suddenly the playoffs weren’t on ESPN anymore and when that divorce happened I chose Barry Melrose and ESPN over following the NHL to Versus and NBC who had broken my heart and given up the rights to the NBA.*
*= Recently someone had put up a status prior to a Finals game about missing the NBA on NBC opening montages and its true.  It almost isn’t fair that the NBA messed that up.  This season in NBC’s hands would have been legen…wait for it…dary.

But since 2005, I began this tradition of tuning into potential clinching games and watching the post game celebration of the Stanley Cup Finals.  Its unlike ANYTHING going in sports.  Have you seen it?  I hope you have because every sport ought to emulate what hockey does.

It starts, naturally, at the end with the finish of the game.  Hockey’s known for its fighting, white men with beards and missing teeth.  When its over, and after a brief celebration, both teams meet at center ice to congratulate each other.  Even though competition demand that there only be one winner everytime- this moment affords the losing team to gain a victory.  In hockey there is actual physical aggression and legal fighting but it always finds itself within the confines of the game and rarely does it turn out ugly like in other sports where order isn’t present.  The losing team congratulates the winning team and immediately the hatred and angst disappears into mutual admiration.  You have to wonder how, but it all seems to work.

In other sports like basketball and football the post game handshake seems somewhat forced and not everyone participates.  You can thank your AAU buddies and then leave, with over 16 other players and coaches waiting to congratulate you.  The Super Bowl is worse with the confetti raining down.  Unless you have a friend on the other sideline you are elated for you don’t go through the effort of crossing sidelines.*
*= I realize the size of the NFL sideline (53 players alone not including coaches, trainers etc.) makes everyone shaking hands impossible but I find the coaches shaking hands almost to signify that the real players were the coaches.  Like Bill Belichiek and Tom Coughlin were playing a real life game of Madden and the players on the field were almost irrelevant.

Then the ceremony begins.  A long red carpet is spun down with a makeshift podium and then it happens.   Two officials carry Lord Stanley’s Cup.  They have white gloves on.  Nobody touches Lord Stanley’s Cup until the victors do.  Gary Bettman, or as I like to call him the Keyser Soze sketch*, then does the formal thanks to the owners, players, etc for a great Stanley Cup Finals and he invites the Captain to come and get the Cup.
*= Seriously, look at those two photos.  You telling me the Hungarian wasn’t drawing Gary Bettman?  Whatever 

This moment is always more electric when the home team wins.  The Captain then accepts the Cup, waves his teammates to come over and then he raises the Cup while everyone cheers and the Cup then gets passed around until everyone has had a chance to raise the Cup.  Once that’s over with the Captain gets the Cup and he comes to center Ice where they gather to take an iconic group picture.

Here’s where it gets that prom feel.   That wedding feel.  That once in a lifetime event feel.  Yes some have raised multiple Cups but nothing personifies the team better than this portrait.  With guys standing and some lying on the floor with sweaty jersies on. It looks like one big fraternity picture- post kegger.  Everyone drunk and high off the feel and still ready for more because the night is still young.

You think it ends there?  No, the Stanley Cup then spends time in every teammates hand for a few days.  There must be thousands of stories of the Stanley Cup findings its way into bars and homes and house parties and all that.  The sheer volume of possible locations is kind of crazy.  The Cup’s journey goes around until a new champion is crowned.  Then a new set of stories begin but that celebration stays the same.

Amazing.

So back to Nassau Colisseum almost 15 years ago in some meaningless November game, as I’m riding back with my father, exiting the Nassau Colisseum we begin to talk about what we just witnessed.  We talk and talk and talk and don’t mind the idiotic drivers holding up traffic.  We don’t make it home till after 12.  I saw my dad drink beer outside of family parties and he did the “here take a sip”.  We shared stories.

Well, everytime I do my now annual routine of watching the Stanley Cup Finals end, I think back to that night where a young boy and his dad found one night where we shared a sport.  Where the silence was swallowed up by fast paced action.

I always wonder what wouldve happened had Hockey caught on with my dad and we watched it.  Who knows if we would have had more conversations over the years or been closer.  Everytime I watch hockey I think of Organized Chaos.  Organized being my dad, chaos being me.  Corny? Yes.  But its still our moment.

As for the other moment of bonding?  When India won the Cricket World Cup, he called me at work to say “INDIAAA WOOOOONNN”.  He had never called me other than to wonder where I was or to ask me why I wasn’t home.  But here we were, brought together by sports.  It was a strange yet endearing moment.

On this Father’s Day its not about how many memories you have, its about the memories you DO have and for me and my dad we will always have that one night in the Colisseum.

P.S.- If what I wrote to you didn’t register..its ok, just watch this and I hope you get it.

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