Thursday, January 28, 2010

Super Bowl and a look ahead to March Madness

The Colts and Saints will square off in 9 days to determine who will become the 44th Super Bowl Champion. Each year, intriguing sub-plots are discussed constantly and beat to death leading up to the game. This year, there are two simple plot-lines in my mind:

Colts: This win would validate Peyton Manning as the best quarterback to ever grace a football field. I don't care what anyone says about Johnny U, Montana, Brady, or Favre, Manning is on a completely different planet than those guys. Think back to last summer - the Colts were dealing with a handful of questions, the biggest being how they would adjust to a new coach. Those days seem like lightyears ago, as Manning has groomed Pierre Garcon and Austin Collie into household names (does anyone remember Marvin Harrison or Anthony Gonzales??). Not only would a win give the Colts their third championship, it would validate Manning as the hands-down unquestioned greatest quarterback of all-time.

Saints: New Orleans is the sentimental favorite. No city in America has struggled through more hardship in the past five years than the Big Easy, and a Super Bowl victory would be a symbol of the city's return to prominence. A victory would also remove the "Dan Marino-esque" cloud from above Drew Brees, and remove his name from the "best quarterbacks to never win a Super Bowl" list.

Key to victory: Saints defense. A unit that thrives on takeaways will have to confuse Peyton Manning into making bad decisions. Good luck with that. But hey, stranger things have happened in the Super Bowl...


- The college basketball season is in full swing and three teams are vying for the #1 ranking in the nation - Kansas, Villanova, and Syracuse. Let me say that being a native of Syracuse, I am completely biased in favor of the Orange. Now that I've gotten that out of the way, let me tell you who I think has the best shot at making a deep run to the title in late March...

Kansas has two studs in Sharron Collins and Cole Aldrich. They will go as far as those two can take them, which I'm betting is at least the Elite Eight.

Villanova has an unquestioned leader in Scottie Reynolds. The Wildcats will go as far as he can carry them, which I'm betting is not past the second round of the tournament.

Syracuse has a go-to man in Wesley Johnson and a bigtime shot-maker in Andy Rautins. If their bigs can learn to make a couple free throws here and there, the Orange will make the Final Four.

- The first few times I heard the song "Shut it Down," I found it to be very cheesy and somewhat lame. However, it has grown on me, and this video only furthered that growth...

Monday, January 4, 2010

Bowl statements, and Leach reaction

The collegiate bowl season is nearly complete, and there have been a few performances that have stood out in my mind as major statements. Here are my top three:

1. Tim Tebow

- Tebow shined in his final collegiate game, torching the Big East Champion Cinncinati Bearcats for nearly 500 yards passing and had as many incompletions as he did touchdowns (4 total TD’s, 4 total incompletions). Tony Dungy said it best – “Winners win” – Tim Tebow is definitely a winner, and will undoubtedly make a splash next season in the NFL.

2. Bobby Bowden

- Bowden’s Seminoles were victorious over the legendary coach’s former team West Virginia in the Gator Bowl, and there was no cooler moment than when Bowden drove Chief Osceola’s flaming spear (or whatever that thing is called) into the turf prior to the coin toss. It was a fitting cap to a stellar career.

3. Ohio State, Terrelle Pryor, and Jim Tressell

- The Rose Bowl victory was a momentus one for Ohio State. The Buckeyes struggles in BCS games over the past number of years has been well documented, and both quarterback and coach helped changed that – Tressel expanded his playbook, and Prior made plays. Look out for the Buckeyes next fall.


- There has been no swifter fall from grace (with the exception of George O’Leary and his tenure at Notre Dame) than that of Mike Leach. The now former Texas Tech head coach is the centerpiece of what will surely be a long, drawn out legal battle over money. What exactly happened to wide receiver Adam James and how he apparently ended up in an electrical closet is in dispute, and Red Raider nation has split in half – those who support Leach, and those who support the administration/Adam James.

Because of the contradictory reports and enormous support for both sides, it is tough for me to take a stance on this issue/ongoing saga. I will say this – Mike Leach, although quirky, uniquely humorous, and downright strange, won football games and graduated players.

Here is Leach’s interview with ESPN. I admire the fact that he thinks he is a right, and is not going to back down or change his stance for anyone. And check out this link regarding an interesting spot where Leach could coach next…