November 24, 2024

Welcome Back John!!

John Daly made his return to golf last weekend and was donning a new look. He not only lost a few LBs, but he is now wearing some pretty loud clothing.

Not that John Daly needs any help attracting attention on the course, but he was certainly making his presence known last week in Spain. You might even say he was giving Ian Poulter a run for his money when it comes to fashion-forward ensembles.

Daly wore several styles from LoudMouth Golf’s line of over-the-top pants while he played at the Open de Espana. Wednesday he sported an orange-pink pair, called “Raspberry SureBet-A,” (why, yes, they were) which showed off his newly-slimmed down figure. Thursday he opted for a more subdued black and tan style.

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We can only hope that this week he’s planning to wear the “Disco Balls” or better yet the “Aloha Girls” style.

Want to tell Daly what you think of his pants? He’s been twittering about them. (And if you want them for yourself, you can purchase them through Daly’s site and part of the money will go to his charity.)

Please Win Boston….

…Cus I cant continue to see this mug on TV anymore

newnoahBeing a Lakers fan I cant believe what I am saying, but if I have to deal with a 41-41 Bulls team and of course Joakim Noah for another 10 days I will freak out.

This series actually has been very entertaining. It has a long way to go to beat the 2002 Lakers v Kings shootout that had the winner inked as World Champs.

The ‘Natinals’ spell as bad as they play

The Washington Nationals seriously suck. Everyone of you know that, but apparently the vortex of suck in DC has also grabbed a hold of the Nationals’ uniforms as well.

Last week, during the Nats’ brutal extra inning loss to the Marlins Adam Dunn and Ryan Zimmerman were seen sporting “Natinals” jerseys.

How exactly does something this stupid happen to a semi pro baseball team? I have no idea, but I tell you what, it makes perfect sense that this happened to the Nationals.

Boston Marathon Breaking News….

an Ethiopian won the Mens and Womens divisions of the Boston Marathon. Now we aren’t 100% positive if this is the first time this has happened or not, but it does seem odd.

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A Love Story:Madden and Favre Retire Together

Isn’t it ironic that John Madden who today announced his retirement from broadcasting and Brett Favre who Madden would adopt if he could have retired in the same year.

Sorrow and Remembrance Hits the MLB World

We are seeing that even the greats are not invinceable with the recent occurrences in MLB. The passing of two very colorful and honorable legends of baseball gives the feeling of sorrow covering the sports world like a fog.

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It’s not that we lost an up and comer in Nick Adenhart just last week via a tragic accident, but now losing Hall of Fame voice Harry Kalas and one of the greatest stories of baseball in the 70’s in Mark ‘the Bird’ Fidrych.

What made Harry Kalas a bigger than life figure in Philly was his passion for every pitch of every game. He coined the phrase ‘Outta here’ when someone hit a homer as well as introducing the world to Hall of Fame 3rd baseman as Michael Jack Schmidt when he hit his 500th homerun.

Taking over for John Facenda as the voice of NFL films was not an easy task but Harry made the transition seamless.

Hall of Fame voice of the LA Dodgers Vin Scully said it best, “If there is one thing I’ve learned in all my years, and I haven’t learned much,” the 81-year-old Scully told his listeners, “but the one thing I’ve learned, don’t even waste your time trying to figure out life.”

In Mark Fidrych he gave baseball a shot in the arm in 1976 when his on the mound antics made him the Rookie of the Year and got him the distinct honor as the first player from any sport to be on the cover of Rolling Stone.  A two-time All-Star Fidrych was killed on his farm in Mass while working on his dump truck.

The Baseball and sports world have lost a trio of men who had gave us a reason to love sports and realize how much life is so precious.

SportsUnderground Hat Tip of the Week

SportsUnderground would like to extend a hat tip to Charles Robinson from Yahoo Sports! on this excellent article:

Social Networking A Potential Trap For Prospects.

SportsUnderground’s Opinion:
We had no idea NFL teams went to these measures to insure they weren’t drafting someone they would regret, but in all reality it makes complete sense. Facebook, MySpace and other internet portals are definitely tools to learn more about someone. If you are about to spend millions of dollars on someone I guess you will pull every trick in the book in order to not flush those millions down the toilet in a few years.

Play Ball!!!

Ryan Howard will again hit more home runs than any other National League player and Johan Santana will win the NL Cy Young award.

Not exactly upsets, there. More intriguing picks run in more intriguing categories. Who will be the first manager fired? The first GM? Who will be the breakout hitters and pitchers? The free-agent flops? How many victories will the Yankees get from CC Sabathia in the first year of that landmark $161 million deal?

My Predictions for personal awards

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AL MVP – Josh Hamilton

NL MVP – David Wright

AL Cy Young – Josh Beckett

NL Cy Young – Johan Santana

AL Rookie of the Year – Matt Wieters

NL Rookie of the Year – Jordan Shaefer

My Team predictions

AL Pennant Winner – NY Yankees

NL Pennant Winner – Los Angeles Dodgers

World Series Winner – New York Yankees

I am into Beavers on Ice

No No .. put your nasty mind to sleep.

I am not talking about Oksana Baiul, or Nicole Bobek , Katerina Witt or even Tanya Harding…although she’d do ya

Bemidji State’s magical run through the NCAA Midwest Regional continued Sunday as the Beavers advanced to the Frozen Four with a 4-1 decision over Cornell at Van Andel Arena in Grand Rapids, Mich.

Three unanswered goals in third period capped the incredible run for the Beavers who become the first 16 seed in tournament history to advance to the Frozen Four since the field was expanded to 16 teams in 2002.

Lets put this into perspective.. This is bigger than George mason going to the Final Four a few years back.. more like Canisius going to the Final Four.. or even bigger than IUPUI playing Florida for the NCAA Football championship..

If ever you had an itch while sports is in transition with MLB starting, Masters and NCAA BBall ending is to watch something different check into the Frozen Four next weekend and pull for a true underdog.

It’s Going, Going … Did You See Where It Went?

The Mets and the Yankees together have spent more than $2 billion on new stadiums partly to bring fans much closer to the action. But that access comes at a cost. For the best views, fans will have to pay eye-popping prices to sit on the field level and in the decks behind home plate in seats angled toward the infield.

Fans on tighter budgets, though, will have to settle for seats in far-off sections, some of which have obstructed views of the field.

Mets fans learned this the hard way on Sunday, when St. John’s and Georgetown played the first game at Citi Field. Steven Gottesman, who has a 15-game ticket plan, went to see his four seats in Section 533, Row 15, near the top of the upper deck down the left-field line. To his “shock and horror,” he could not see the warning track or about 20 feet of the outfield from the left-field line to center field.

“In other words, I will only know if a home run is hit if I am listening to a radio at the game or I wait to see the sign from the umpire,” Gottesman, 45, said in an e-mail message. “If Endy Chávez made his catch in this new stadium and I had been there, I would not have seen it.”

Some Yankee fans will have it even worse. That is because the 1,048 bleacher seats in Sections 201 and 239 have views partly blocked by the walls of the Mohegan Sun Sports Bar, which sits above Monument Park behind the center-field fence. Fans in Section 201, for instance, will not be able to see left field and, in some cases, even third base.

ny-yankeesThe Yankees are mounting five flat-panel screens on each side of the restaurant’s outer walls so fans can see on television what they miss live. After Newsday reported that these sections had obstructed views, the Yankees said they would charge $5 for seats there, less than the $12 that season-ticket holders will pay for other bleacher seats.

Alice McGillion, a spokeswoman for the Yankees, said obstructed-view seats were always supposed to cost $5 and that an invoicing problem led to the mix-up that had them originally being offered for more than twice as much. (The Yankees’ Web site does not reflect the new, lower prices.) Fans there will also get access to other parts of the park and to the Bleachers Café, which is above the sports bar.

“In the old stadium, you had no place to eat and you came in and stayed there,” McGillion said, adding that fans will be able to buy beer, which was not sold in recent years in the bleachers at the old stadium. “People can get up and watch the entire game from the cafe, plus there will be TVs.”

As for the Mets, they continue to maintain that there are no obscured-view seats in Citi Field, despite what some fans were contending after Sunday’s game. Fans might miss a play or two, the Mets conceded. But, they added, the game action will be replayed on the scoreboards and the fans are closer to the field to begin with.

“Whenever you bring seating closer to the action, and put seating in fair territory, there will be certain angles where you lose a sightline here or there,” said Dave Howard, the Mets’ vice president for business operations. “That’s typical in new ballparks, but a little different for our customers because Shea didn’t have much of anything like that.”

Howard admitted that the seats in Section 533 are angled in such a way that fans will be unable to see the warning track and some of the field. He said the team has no plans to lower its ticket prices or label the seats in question as having obscured views.

Seats in many ballparks have blind spots. But Mets and Yankees fans are angry now because the teams did not tell them about the obstructed views before they sold them the tickets. Until recently, fans could not visit the stadiums and had to rely on three-dimensional representations on the teams’ Web sites.

“How they ended up building brand new stadiums and not realize this is a head-scratcher,” said Jim Holzman, president of Ace Ticket, the official reseller of Boston Red Sox tickets. “Here they are with all these high-end seats to sell and they dropped the ball on the cheaper seats.”

The Red Sox, Holzman said, routinely mark their tickets when the seats have obstructed views. That helps the first fans who buy them, but does not necessarily inform fans who buy them when they are resold on StubHub and other ticket-selling sites. That means Mets and Yankees fans who buy their tickets from these sites could be in for a shock, too.

The problem is thornier for the Mets because Citi Field has only 42,000 seats, 26 percent fewer than at Shea Stadium. (The new Yankee Stadium will have 53,000 seats, a 5 percent decrease.) At Shea, seats in the last rows of the loge and mezzanine decks were discounted because the roofs above them obscured views of the field.

But because Shea was so much larger, opportunistic fans could often find better seats sometimes just a few rows away. With far fewer seats at Citi Field, some fans may end up standing in concourses to get better views.

Fans in the bleachers in the old Yankee Stadium, which was routinely sold out, learned to compromise.

“You were clearly giving up views and really being able to call balls and strikes and see close plays,” said Jason Fenton, who had season tickets in the right-field bleachers until 2005. “I would clearly prefer three rows behind the dugout. But you’re buying the tickets in the hope that you can go to the World Series.”

And while the Yankees may have disappointed some fans in the new bleacher seats, the team stands to earn money from the naming rights to the Mohegan Sun Sports Bar and the food sold inside and above it. And fans seem to be willing to put up with their seats’ defects if the price is right. Those $5 bleacher seats at Yankee Stadium are sold out for the season.