When it comes to following NFL football, we are all drama queens. Whether you sit in the Black Hole in the Oakland Coliseum dressed in a ridiculous and frightening costume cheering on the raiders or you have a Mike Greenberg-type physical appearance and watch football from your couch with your computer tracking your fantasy team, fans who follow NFL football go through ups and downs unlike any other sport. After all, with only one game played in an entire week, there's not much to do in the time between games except to think about your team's last game. The difference between winning and losing that game can result in polarizing highs and lows. Start the season 4 - 0 and fans are thinking super bowl. Drop two games in a row, and they are calling for the back up QB and the immediate firing of everyone having anything to do with the organization. Therefore, with the Chicago Bears' play in their last two games (and particularly the play of quarterback Jay Cutler), it's no surprise at all that some in the Chicago media as well as a good number of faithful fans have already determined that Jay Cutler is a bust.
Thursday, November 26, 2009
Giving Up On Cutler? Spare Me the Drama
When it comes to following NFL football, we are all drama queens. Whether you sit in the Black Hole in the Oakland Coliseum dressed in a ridiculous and frightening costume cheering on the raiders or you have a Mike Greenberg-type physical appearance and watch football from your couch with your computer tracking your fantasy team, fans who follow NFL football go through ups and downs unlike any other sport. After all, with only one game played in an entire week, there's not much to do in the time between games except to think about your team's last game. The difference between winning and losing that game can result in polarizing highs and lows. Start the season 4 - 0 and fans are thinking super bowl. Drop two games in a row, and they are calling for the back up QB and the immediate firing of everyone having anything to do with the organization. Therefore, with the Chicago Bears' play in their last two games (and particularly the play of quarterback Jay Cutler), it's no surprise at all that some in the Chicago media as well as a good number of faithful fans have already determined that Jay Cutler is a bust.
Wednesday, November 11, 2009
For Cub Fans, Joe Girardi Is The Manager Who Got Away
Lou Brock, Dennis Eckersley, Greg Maddux... For cub fans, the pattern is all too familiar. Players who somehow got away from the cubs only to go on to do great things with other teams. Former cub Joe Girardi is one of those players who got away, went on to do great things with the yankees, then came back to the cubs, then got away again. While Girardi fits this pattern as a player, he may eventually be remembered more by cub fans as the manager who got away.
Saturday, September 19, 2009
Ichiro Suzuki: Underappreciated in America
Friday, August 14, 2009
Meaning Behind the Moustache
Wednesday, August 5, 2009
Close The Book On Prior
Major League Baseball is reporting that the padres are releasing Mark Prior. Cub fans remember Prior as the golden arm that guided the cubs to within 5 outs of the 2003 world series. Of course, cub fans also remember Prior as a pitcher who was chronically injured after the 2003 season, and who never regained the same glory there after. Prior's last game in the majors was with the cubs in a game against the brewers on August 10, 2006. For the last three seasons, he was with the padres, trying to rehab his shoulder and make a comeback in their minor league system. But as manager Bud Black reported, he just could never "get over the hump." Most likely it looks like Prior, at the age of 28, is done with baseball.
Friday, July 31, 2009
Weighing In On Cutler: John Lynch Provides Voice Of Reason
So who is he: over hyped gun slinger, man child who pouted and demanded to be traded, and who lacks leadership skills necessary to win a play off game, or....legend waiting to happen, victim of circumstances from bad NFL politics led by a 33 year old rookie head football coach and over the hill owner in Denver? Since Jay Cutler arrived in Chicago this past off season in a blockbuster trade the day after April Fools Day, perception and speculation has varied greatly depending on who you talk to and what you read...all the way from Denver Bronco message boards to rabid bear fans lighting up sports talk radio phone circuits like Christmas trees to talk Cutler. To put in Chicago perspective, bronco fans might describe Cutler as "Mark Prior post 2003", reserved and aloof, not a team player, and snubbing autograph seekers. On the other hand, some bronco fans were so upset Cutler was traded, they were reporting to give up their bronco allegiances. Meanwhile in Chicagoland, it wouldn't be surprising if fans expect Cutler to win multiple super bowls while curing Diabetes at the same time. And then there are those pictures surfacing on the Internet--of Cutler, 26 years old and single, having drinks and enjoying some of the Chicago night life in the middle of the NFL off season. Opinions vary from "no big deal" to "grow up, kid." So when weighing in on Cutler, who can give us a straight answer?
"This is a guy, in my mind, that's a once-in-every-15-year-type talent. He's got that kind of skill. I think he'll grow into the other things. I sometimes think during this whole ordeal, they tried to paint him as a bad guy, but he's not a bad guy at all. He's got some growing up to do, but hopefully he learned something from this whole ordeal and offseason."
"I think he's very reserved and to himself, and that's fine...I think sometimes it's just the way -- I hate to put it on this -- but sometimes the new generation. They just don't understand things that you think everyone should understand. I think he wants to learn. I think he's reached out to people trying to learn, and I think he will because as I said, once you get to know him on a one-on-one basis, he's by no means a bad person or a bad teammate. He's just, as I mentioned, got some things to grow up in."
So there you have it. Sounds like good news for bears fans....based on what Lynch is saying. For right now, I'll take his word.
The following sources contributed to this post:
http://johnlynchfoundation.org/john-lynch-foundation.aspx
http://sports.espn.go.com/chicago/news/story?id=4336504
http://nwe.scout.com/a.z?s=121&p=8&c=1&nid=3902925
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Twins Leaving The Metrodome Doesn't Make A Lot Of Sense
Some things in sports don't make much sense. "Utah Jazz", 11 teams in the Big Ten--these things don't seem to make sense. So when the twins say goodbye to the metrodome at the end of the season to move into the outdoor Target Field next year, I'll add that to my list of things in sports that don't make much sense.
Sunday, July 19, 2009
Hot Stove talk in July: Cubs Should Get Sanchez
Since it feels like winter this July in Chicago and since we are nearing the July 31st trade deadline, why not heat up the hot stove? The cubs should snatch Freddy Sanchez away from the bucs and put him in at 2nd base. The pirates general manager, Neal Huntington, is no different from former pirate GM Dave Littlefield. He's the kid that everyone on the block wants to trade baseball cards with. Maybe that's unfair, given small market economic factors--but that's the way it is. Jim Hendry feasted on the acquisitions of Aramis Ramirez, Randal Simon, and Kenny Lofton from the pirates back in 2003, while giving up almost nothing in return. That worked out pretty well, and so it's time to rethink this same strategy. If the braves were able to pick up Nate McLouth for a bag of marbles from the pirates, why couldn't the cubs offer up some more of the same?