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February 2007 Archives

February 28, 2007

Summitt a Volunteer cheerleader

By Karen Bailis

Never let it be said that Pat Summitt is not a woman of her word. When men’s coach Bruce Pearl painted his chest orange and emblazoned it with a V to spell out “Go Vols” with other members of his staff as the women’s team took on Duke,pat.jpg Summitt promised to reciprocate.

The intense stalker of the sidelines and berater of point guards came through, some would say with flying colors -- orange and white, that is. When the Tennessee men took on No. 5 Florida last night (and won, 86-76), Summitt made her entrance during halftime – in a cheerleading uniform and feathered hat and singing “Rocky Top.” She’d hinted the previous day that her demonstration would be “out of character.” And it was. She stood atop a pyramid of assistant coaches Holly Warlick and Dean Lockwood. It was far from her trademark icy glare.

Summitt had been a cheerleader in seventh and eighth grades. Now, she’s the winningest coach in NCAA history – men or women – with 940. She’s also a heckuva cheerleader for college athletes – women in particular.

Geno Auriemma says she has no sense of humor. Let’s see him don a cheerleading skirt and sing “Rocky Top” during halftime. Uh, let’s not. Well, only if he loses a bet on the outcome of the tournament.

February 26, 2007

NHL deadline blog

By Mike Casey

4:56 p.m. -- More deals

A few more trades have happened in the past hour. You can find all the info here.

4:20 p.m. -- Norstrom to Stars

We finally got wind of where Matty Norstrom is headed. Reportedly, the Dallas Stars. A couple more deals have been made, I'll get to them shortly.

4:14 p.m. -- Ryan Smyth trade analysis

At last check, the league was still approving the Islanders' trade for Edmonton captain Ryan Smyth. Let's just assume this thing gets through. Isles fans should be doing backflips right now, because the have just transformed from pretender to contender.

With good coaching (Ted Nolan), solid goaltending (Rick DiPietro), a much-improved offense (Smyth and Richard Zednik), the Islanders now have the firepower to move up in the standings and maybe win a couple of rounds in the playoffs.

Don't forget, Jason Blake is staying put. I chided Garth Snow earlier for hanging onto him -- but once he found out Smyth was available, I don't blame him for keeping Blake. When you have a chance to acquire a 31-goal winger, you don't offset that gain by dealing away your team's leading scorer.

Smyth has been one of the league's best pure goal scorers during his 12-year career. He's scored 30 goals or more four times. He's on the small side at 6-1, 190, and has had some injury problems because he doesn't shy away from contact in front of the net. But since the debut of the "new NHL," with more room for skating and smaller players, Smyth has posted 30 goals twice, including this year.

Have to move on to cover a few other deals, but I'll get back to this later. . .

4:03 p.m. -- Quickly, on Norstrom

Sorry I disappeared, but I had to update the rest of Newsday.com with the Ryan Smyth news. I'll provide some commentary on that deal in a sec, but first:

We've heard zippo on the Matty Norstrom front in the last hour or so. I'm still trying to find out what's going on with that.

3:33 p.m. -- Wow! Ryan Smyth to Islanders

Newsday's Greg Logan reports the Islanders have traded prospects Robert Nilsson and Ryan O'Marra, plus a first round draft pick to Edmonton for 31-goal scorer Ryan Smyth. Read Greg's blog for the details.

3:30 p.m. -- Bertuzzi trade official

This is from NHL.com:

Detroit will send a conditional pick – either a first-, second- or third-round selection – in this year’s draft and a conditional second-round pick in next year’s draft to obtain the services of Bertuzzi, who is just a year removed from being one of the most coveted players in the League.

Notably, there is no mention of Detroit including prospect Shawn Matthias in the deal, which had been reported earlier.

3:25 p.m. -- Scott Parker traded

Try not get too excited, but the Sharks have traded goon Scott Parker to Colorado for a draft pick. No offense, Scott! Moving on. . .

3:19 p.m. -- Norstrom traded?

TSN is now saying that Kings captain Matty Norstrom has been traded. I'm trying to find out to whom and for whom.

3:16 p.m. -- More Bertuzzi details

Reports linking Tood Bertuzzi to Detroit seem stronger than ever as more unconfirmed details of a trade emerge.

TSN says the prospect Detroit will give Florida in return for Bertuzzi is center Shawn Matthias, a second-round draft pick in 2006.

3:03 p.m. -- Deadline passes, looks like Blake is staying

Newsday's Greg Logan checks in with another blog on Jason Blake. Here's an excerpt:

"When St. Louis traded Bill Guerin to San Jose earlier this afternoon, that was the strongest indication that the Islanders’ leading scorer wouldn’t be going anywhere. The Sharks were said to be the leading bidder for Blake last night, and they obviously have spent their ammunition, dealing both first-round picks they had in this year’s draft in deals for Guerin and Montreal defenseman Craig Rivet, as well as young defenseman Josh Gorges to the Canadiens."

It's hard to know whether or not the Islanders really intended to trade Blake or not, but if they did (and they should have), this is a misstep by general manager Garth Snow. San Jose's first choice may have been Bill Guerin all along, and maybe Bertuzzi was Detroit's first choice.

But now the Islanders will have to take their chances with a player who probably won't be back in the offseason, is mired in a bad scoring slump and just spent the past 24 hours in limbo since no one from Islanders apparently told him what was going on.

Not good. It will be interesting to see how the team reacts. Will they bond together now that Blake seems to be staying put? In the short term, it's nothing but a good thing for the Isles, who will certainly need Blake down the stretch run in the Eastern Conference. But saving him just for 20 more games plus maybe five or six in the playoffs? It doesn't make sense to me.

2:57 p.m. -- Vital Timo Helbling news

A little comic relief here: Defenseman Timo Helbling, just so you know, is the minor-leaguer headed to Buffalo in the Dainius Zubrus deal we blogged on earlier.

2:55 p.m. -- Yanic Perrault to Toronto

Phoenix has reportedly traded face-off wizard Yanic Perrault to the Maple Leafs for young defenseman Brendan Bell and a second-round draft pick.

Perrault, 35, has made a career out of his extraordinary prowess at winning draws, which certainly comes in handy for a team needing an extra boost in the playoffs. Since the league began keeping faceoff statistics in 1998-999, he's won 60 percent or more of his faceoffs in every season but one. This year, he's 62.6 percent on draws.

2:47 p.m. -- Zubrus to Buffalo

They deals are pouring in now, about as hard as the rain outside. The Washington Capitals have reportedly traded RW Dainius Zubrus and a minor-leaguer to Buffalo for forward Jiri Novotny and a first-round draft pick.

Buffalo is going for broke. They made a brilliant move earlier in the day, freeing up cap space by trading Martin Biron to the Flyers and replacing him with Columbus' Ty Conklin, who makes about $1.7 million less.

Then they went out and used the cap space, acquiring Zubrus, who has 20 goals this year and makes $1.85 million. That's absolutely brilliant management by Sabres GM Darcy Regier.

Buffalo has been the class of the East all year long, but recently they've had injuries to top forwards Maxim Afinogenov and Chris Drury (Tim Connolly is already done for the year).

We don't know how well Zubrus will play in Buffalo, but you have to like it when your general manager is creative and aggressive to help patch a hole.

2:39 p.m. -- Rangers dump Dupuis

It looks the Pascal Dupuis' tenure in New York is over after just six games. Several web sites have reported that the Rangers have dealt him to Atlanta.

This is not entirely suprising, as Dupuis had been mostly invisible on the ice since scoring a goal in his first game.

The Rangers will get back a prospect, whose name I do not yet know. I'll try to find out and get back to you.

2:30 p.m. -- Bertuzzi update

TSN reports that Detroit will trade a conditional draft pick (probably based on how many games Bertuzzi plays the rest of the year) and a prospect to Florida for Todd Bertuzzi. Details still emerging. . .

Bertuzzi, 31, is in the final season of a four-year, $27.8 million contract that he originally signed with Vancouver.

2:24 p.m. -- Nothing yet from Isles

Newsday's Greg Logan checks in on his blog. Read it to find out what's up with Jason Blake.

My feeling? If Detroit got Bertuzzi, and San Jose got Guerin, the market for Blake took a big hit. Dallas, Nashville and Vancouver may still be in the bidding.

2:23 p.m. -- TSN: Bertuzzi to Wings

Though it's not confirmed, TSN reports that Detroit has acquired injured winger Todd Bertuzzi from Florida. Details were not immediately available. I'll let you know once I find out more.

2:22 p.m. -- Two more deals

A couple of depth deals reported in Canada: Fourth-liner Brad May was shipped from Colorado to Anaheim and Phoenix sent Oleg Saprykin and a late-round pick to Ottawa for a second-round pick. Big news coming down now . . .

2:19 p.m. -- Quickly. . .

That earlier Ty Conklin-to-Buffalo trade was for a 5th round draft pick. Just making sure you have all that info.

2:17 p.m. -- Great deal for Rangers

Whether or not Paul Mara can be a reliable power play quarterback is open for discussion. But the simple fact that the Rangers were able to unload the ineffective Aaron Ward for him makes this a good move on their part.

The fact that they were able to acquire someone who is 27 years old, makes roughly the same money as Ward, and has the potential to contribute to their power play makes it a great move.

Mara was having a rough year in Boston, where fell out of favor with head coach Dave Lewis and was on pace (3-15-18) for his worst offseason season in six years (he was also an awful minus-22).

But Ward had worn out his welcome in New York after confronting Jaromir Jagr on the Rangers' bench during a Feb. 3 game against Tampa. He reportedly questioned the captain's leadership and the two had not gotten along well ever since.

And Mara provides an element that the Rangers haven't had since they traded Brian Leetch: A legitimate offensive talent on the blueline. Don't make the mistake of thinking he's anywhere near as good as Leetch; it may be fairer to say that he's a notch above Michal Rozsival, talent-wise.

It should be interesting to see how he looks on the Rangers power play if he plays tonight.

1:35 p.m. -- Confirmed: Rangers get Ward for Mara

Newsday's Steve Zipay has confirmed that the Rangers acquired defenseman Paul Mara from the Boston Bruins in return for defenseman Aaron Ward.

Mara had fallen out of favor in Boston, but has the talent to be the power play quarterback the Rangers need.

I couldn't find out much about Mara's contract situation, except that he is making $3 million this year. Ward is signed through next season. He is making $2.75 million this year and $3 million next year.

1:30 p.m. -- Bill Guerin trade & details confirmed

Just saw that NHL.com had posted that the Bill Guerin trade to San Jose is official. Here are the details:

The Sharks get Guerin, 36, from St. Louis in exchange for LW Ville Nieminen, a 2007 1st-round pick, and prospect Jay Barriball.

1:28 p.m. -- TSN: Rangers trade Aaron Ward to Boston

Click here to read Steve Zipay's blog about a reported trade of Rangers defenseman Aaron Ward to Boston.

Ward and Jaromir Jagr had a shouting match on the Rangers' bench in early February which had become the subject of much media discussion. Ward had also played terribly for most of this season, so the move is not entirely surprising.

1:23 p.m. -- Waiver claims

A few minor moves here. Montreal has claimed G Michael Leighton off waivers from Philadelphia. Rangers forward Jason Krog is on his way back to Atlanta. Denis Hamel is on his way to Philly. Niko Kapanen to Phoenix and G Brian Boucher to Columbus.

12:53 p.m. -- Pittsburgh trades Dominic Moore to Wild

TSN reports are saying the Penguins have traded the checking line center (and former Ranger) to Minnesota for a 3rd round draft pick.

I guess Moore became expendable with the Pens acquiring Georges Laraque and Gary Roberts today, and getting a 3rd rounder back for him seems reasonable. After watching Moore play a lot last year and a bit this year, I can tell you that he will definitely help Minnesota.

He's a smart, hustling player and a good penalty killer. He has some playmaking ability, too. A solid third or fourth line guy. Wild coach Jacques Lemaire will probably love him.

12:25 p.m. -- Report: Rangers check Bertuzzi's medical records

According to Montreal radio station Team 990, the Rangers have asked to see the medical records of injured Panthers forward Todd Bertuzzi.

Bertuzzi, a former 40-goal scorer, has only played seven games this season while sitting out with a back injury. He's in the last year of a contract that pays him roughly $5.27 this season.

12:22 p.m. -- Zubrus on the move?

We're now hearing that Dainius Zubrus was not dressed for practice this morning, meaning a trade is likely on the way. According to Newsday's Steve Zipay, the Rangers were looking into Zubrus' availability, but there are a number of other teams who were also reportedly trying to acquire him.

12:18 p.m. -- Guerin details emerging

It looks like Bill Guerin is headed to the Sharks as part of a three-way trade involving the Blues and an unknown team. Early reports are that the Sharks will surrender a first round pick previously acquired from New Jersey and a top prospect in the deal. More to follow. . .

12:12 p.m. -- Biron update

Hold the phone on the Martin Biron trade. It looks like a done deal, but not for a first round pick. We'll let you know when we find out for sure.

I still don't like the move. The point isn't what Philly gave up for him, it's that Philly already has two goalies of similar ability (Robert Esche and Antero Niittymaki).

12:10 p.m. -- Laraque trade details

TSN reports that enforcer Georges Laraque is headed from Phoenix to Pittsburgh. Phoenix gets Daniel Carcillo and an eighth-round pick.

For some reason, Laraque had a no-trade clause, which he had to waive in order for the trade to go through. Figure that one out.

In any event, the Penguins clearly felt they had to get tougher, and with the additions of Laraque and Gary Roberts, they have.

12:02 p.m. -- Guerin a Shark?

TSN is now saying they believe Bill Guerin is headed to the Sharks. We'll wait a few more minutes for the smoke to clear and trade details to emerge, and then provide some analysis.

11:59 a.m. -- More Guerin

TSN is saying that Guerin has definitely been traded, but we don't know where yet. Anaheim, San Jose and Detroit have all expressed interest. Don't be surprised if he ends up in one of those cities.

11:55 a.m. -- Bill Guerin news

TSN has reported that Bill Guerin was not on the ice for the Blues' morning skate. That means a trade is almost certain to be announced. We'll keep you posted.

11:54 a.m. -- Conklin to Buffalo

New reports on TSN say Columbus has traded backup goalie Ty Conklin to Buffalo for an undisclosed draft pick. If that's true, it's a good move for the Sabres.

Not only did they replace Martin Biron, who they have apparently traded to Philadelphia, they also saved a nice chunk of money under the cap. Biron was still owed about $530,000 this year, while Conklin will only make around $128,000 the rest of the way. That extra wiggle room could help the Sabres add a depth player this afternoon.

Buffalo is currently without six regular players, including Maxim Afinogenov, Chris Drury, Jaroslav Spacek and Tim Connolly, who is out for the season.

They have been stuck in cap hell all season, unable to improve their team because they've been right at the $44 million limit. Now they've got a little flexibility.

11:42 a.m. -- Phoenix will trade Laraque

It looks like the Coyotes' firesale has begun. They've told tough guy Georges Laraque that he's going to be traded, but according to Rogers Sportsnet in Canada, they're giving him two choices: Calgary or Pittsburgh.

Check out the link for more info on that deal.

11:07 a.m. -- Sabres to trade Biron?

Reports out of Canada have the Flyers acquiring Sabres backup Martin Biron for one of the first round picks they acquired from Nashville in the Peter Forsberg trade.

If that's true, I don't like the move. Here's why:

Even though the pick Philadelphia is giving up will likely be in the 26th-30th overall range, I don't know if Biron solves the Flyers' ever-present goaltending problems.

Ever since the death of Pelle Lindbergh in 1985, it seems like the Flyers have been searching for the goalie who would take them back to the top. They've tried an endless list of netminders: Ron Hextall, Sean Burke, John Vanbeisbrouck, Antero Niittymaki, Robert Esche, Roman Cechmanek, Garth Snow, Tommy Soderstrom, and Brian Boucher to name a few. And yet in the past 20 years, none of them has led the Flyers to a Stanley Cup title.

And Biron isn't going to do it either. If you look at his career numbers, with a 2.49 GAA and a .910 save percentage coming into this year, you might think the Flyers got a great No. 1 starter.

In fact, they got an average one. Over the past seven seasons, Biron, a former 16th overall pick, has had numerous chances to lock down the No. 1 spot in Buffalo. But for one reason or another, he's never been able to do it.

He's been great the last two years on a very good Sabres team, but he isn't the type of goaltender who can carry a team to the Cup.

Even worse, he's an unrestricted free agent after the season, meaning Philly will probably have to spend big to keep him (definitely more than the $2.2 million he makes now.)

Maybe he'll prove me wrong and play extremely well in Philadelphia. But I wouldn't bet on it. I think in a few years, he'll just be another name in the list I provided above.

10:45 a.m. -- A chat with Steve Zipay

I spoke to our Rangers beat writer for about 20 minutes earlier. He obviously feels today's Jagr reports are totally overblown, and I agree. If the Rangers make a move, it's likely to be relatively minor.

Steve did indicate that the Rangers have shown a bit of interest in Chicago defenseman Brent Seabrook (4-11-15), but didn't provide many details.

He also said the Rangers were checking into the availability of Washington's Dainius Zubrus (20-32-52), who will be a free agent after the season.

Based on my impression of our conversation, I'd say there's about about 25 percent chance the Rangers might get Zubrus, and about a 10 percent chance they'd get Seabrook.

And a 0.01 percent chance they'll trade Jagr.

10:27 a.m. -- Quick note on Roberts

It's all but confirmed now that Gary Roberts will be a Pittsburgh Penguins. This a good move for the Pens, who could scare some teams with their talented offense and potentially hot goaltending. Roberts, 40, will provide a veteran presence alongside Mark Recchi, who last year was a key contributor to Carolina's Stanley Cup run.

9:58 a.m. -- More on Jagr from Steve Zipay

Newsday's Rangers beat man, Steve Zipay, has this to say on the Jagr report in his blog:

"I just seriously doubt that Jagr, the team captain, whose contract has great value and is the face of the franchise, is being "shopped" with any aggressiveness -- or that he'll be traded today."

9:40 a.m. -- Ryan Smyth rumors put to bed?

A report out of Edmonton casts doubt on rumors that the Oilers will trade 31-goal scorer and UFA-to-be Ryan Smyth.

The bottom line is that if the Oilers can hammer out a contract with Smyth -- which they'd clearly prefer to do -- Smyth isn't going anywhere. He's been a mainstay of their team for 12 years.

9:20 a.m. -- First, on Jagr

Wow, lots to talk about this morning.

First, I wanted to discuss the reports this morning that the Rangers are offering Jaromir Jagr around the NHL. Before I saying anything else, two points need to be made:

1) Trading Jagr is not as terrible an idea as it seems.

2) Jagr almost certainly will not be traded today.

By offering Jagr around, Glen Sather is doing -- to use a sports cliche -- his "due diligence." Which is to say that trading Jagr is not so unheard of -- so ridiculous -- that it wouldn't be worth Sather's time to see what he could get in return for him.

That said, I am a little surprised that the Rangers would even consider it. The fact they would even consider dealing him proves to me that, deep down, they know their team has no legitimate chance to win the Stanley Cup this year.

Whether or not they will be willing or able to act on that knowledge remains to be seen.

I know what Jagr has meant to the team, I know he sells lots of jerseys and tickets, and I actually think he's a pretty good guy. But he's 35, he's got a bad shoulder and a recurring groin problem and it's hard to believe he has another 50-goal season in him. His best days are behind him now.

He only counts for about $4.9 million against the salary cap (thank you Washington Capitals), but clearing out that space would open the door for the Rangers to find a new, younger centerpiece for the team this summer. Don't forget, Brendan Shanahan's $4 million and Sandis Ozolinsh's $2.75 million come off the books, too. That's at least $11 million in cap space that Sather would be free to spend on a terrific crop of free agents that will include Buffalo's Chris Drury, Detroit's Pavel Datsyuk, Montreal's Sheldon Souray, and New Jersey's Scott Gomez and Bryan Rafalski.

I'm not saying I'd like to see Jagr go, nor do I think they'll be able to move his bulky $8.36 million contract, but just think about what the Rangers could get for him -- and what they could do with the money they'd save. Now you can understand why Sather might consider it.

Continue reading "NHL deadline blog" »

February 22, 2007

Charles the center of attention

By Karen Bailis

In a season dominated by bigs, there’s a new kid on the block: Christ the King’s Tina Charles. The freshman center is coming into her own, her 34 points and 17 boards nearly single-handedly carrying UConn to the regular-season Big East title with an 81-67 win over Southern Florida.

The 6-4 Charles' 34 points were the most by a UConn player since Diana Taurasi scored 35 in 2003 against Texas Christian and the most by a UConn freshman. Charles' 17 rebounds gave her 238 for the season, breaking Svetlana Abrosimova's freshman total of 235.

So far this month, she’s averaging 17 points and 11 rebounds, including a 20-point, 14-rebound performance against No. 19 Marquette, 15 and 10 against No. 21 Rutgers and 17 and 9 against No. 7 LSU, which boasts 6-6 force of nature Sylvia Fowles at center.

Fowles is among a group of versatile and athletic bigs who are changing the way the game is played inside the paint. Oklahoma’s Courtney Paris, 6-4, with a streak of 53 double-doubles, is a candidate for player of the year as just a sophomore. Duke would not be No. 1 and undefeated without Alison Bales’ 6-7 swats to lead the nation in blocks. Michigan State freshman Alyssa DeHaan, at 6-9, is threatening to pick up where the senior Bales will leave off. And then there’s the 6-4 Candace Parker, who can play any position for Tennessee and recently went off for 27 points and 13 rebounds against Fowles’ defense-minded Tigers. Ohio State’s Jessica Davenport, a 5-5 senior, averages 19 points and 10 rebounds.

Charles has picked the right time to peak. The Huskies have just moved to No. 3 in the AP poll and are looking for a No. 1 seed for the NCAA Tournament. This is the first time since 1997 and the 6-7 Kara Wolters that UConn has the services of a legitimate center. And the five-time champs haven’t cut down the net in the final game since Taurasi graduated in 2004.

Still, the former two-time NY state champ can’t taste it yet. The youngster says the upperclassmen are hungrier.

"I think to them it's going to be way bigger than how it is to us [freshmen]," Charles said in The Hartford Courant. "Probably next year I'll know the feeling."

February 20, 2007

The home run kings*

By Mark La Monica

Ultimately, if record books didn't exist, few baseball fans would really care if their favorite team's players used steroids.

When Barry Bonds steps to the plate in the ninth inning with the bases loaded and San Francisco trailing by one run, do Giants fans really care what may or may not (but likely did) flow through his bloodstream a few years ago?

How about Yankee fans when Jason Giambi gets into the batter's box against the latest Red Sox closer in a September game at Fenway Park to decide the AL East? Fans want a game-winning home run, not an apology.

Or Mets fans once Guillermo Mota returns from a 50-game suspension and comes in with bases loaded and no outs in the seventh inning and the Mets leading by one? They want a strikeout followed by a double play. 'Roids, be damned!

Argue the morality and legality of baseball players using steroids all you want. Even discuss the fairness of an equal playing field for all. But in real game scenarios, fans don't question how the player got there, but rather how he'll get that runner in from second or the ball over the fence.

It's only when we speak in terms of the overall sport and its history that we think about the deeper meaning of baseball players using steroids. Babe Ruth hit his home runs on hot dogs and beer, as that fan sign so eloquently stated last year. Hank Aaron did it in the face of extreme racial hatred.

For Bonds, despite his sure-fire Hall of Fame credentials before 2001, it comes with an asterisk, a punctuation mark as integral to baseball as the home run itself.

We've statistically altered the home run list in response to those who may have chemically altered themselves.

We developed a simple formula, rooted in some logic, that is meant to stimulate the brain and spark some debate. It's not quite John Nash and "A Beautiful Mind," but it's not 2 + 2 = 4 either.

The Keyboard Quarterbacks formula:

1) Determine the average number of home runs hit per plate appearance in seasons prior to suspected steroid use.

2) Using that average number, calculate home runs hit during suspected seasons of steroid use and every season afterward.

3) Add it all up.

We'll use Bonds as an example to explain, since he's the one everyone will be talking, ranting and debating about during the 2007 season.

Bonds averaged a home run every 18.2 plate appearances in the 15 seasons prior to 2001 when he managed to deposit 73 baseballs over the fence. Use that average and divide by plate appearances in 2001, and Bonds's KBQB adjusted home run total for 2001 is 36. Do the math for 2002-2006, add his 1986-2000 total of 494 homers, and you get a KBQB adjusted total of 655 career home runs.

That's how it works. Not the perfect plan, but interesting enough to discuss and see how the list plays out with this formula. The equation doesn't take into account ballparks, expansion, natural power increases as players get older and wiser, interleague play, unbalanced schedules or anything else like that.

The official MLB Home Run List

1. Hank Aaron 755
2. Barry Bonds 734
3. Babe Ruth 714
4. Willie Mays 660
5. Sammy Sosa 588
6. Frank Robinson 586
7. Mark McGwire 583
8. Harmon Killebrew 573
9. Rafael Palmeiro 569
10t. Ken Griffey Jr. 563
10t. Reggie Jackson 563

The Keyboard Quarterbacks Adjusted Home Run List

1. Hank Aaron 755
2. Babe Ruth 714
3. Willie Mays 660
4. Barry Bonds 655
5. Frank Robinson 586
6. Harmon Killebrew 573
7t. Ken Griffey Jr. 563
7t. Reggie Jackson 563
9. Mike Schmidt 548
10. Mickey Mantle 536
11. Jimmie Foxx 534
12. Mark McGwire 527
32. Sammy Sosa 447
46t. Rafael Palmeiro 389

Mathematical breakdowns

Sosa averaged one home run every 20.8 plate appearances in eight seasons before 1998 for a total of 207 homers. Divide 20.8 by plate appearances for 1998 (his 66-homer season) and the adjusted home run total is 34. From 1998-2005, Sosa's career KBQB adjusted total is 240 home runs (as opposed to the 381 he "actually" hit).

McGwire averaged one home run every 14.2 plate appearances from 1986-1997 for a total of 387 homers. His adjusted totals for 1998 and 1999, the year the record book says he hit 70 and 65 homer, respectively, are 47 and 46. His career KBQB adjusted total is 527.

With Palmeiro, things are a bit murkier. Where do we draw the line of demarcation? Is it the 1993 season when Jose Canseco joined the Texas Rangers and supposedly introduced Palmeiro to steroids? Tough call. Palmeiro went from 22 homers in 1992 to 37 homers in 1993.

But he dropped down to 23 in 1994. Then from 1995-2003, he never hit less than 38 homers. (He hit 23 in 2004 and 18 in 2005.)

It's possible that Palmeiro figured out his swing and used the natural power increase with age to hit all these home runs. However, he did test positive for steroids in 2005 after vehemently denying ever using them. So, his word is inversely proportionate to the neat grooming of his mustache.

For the purposes of this debate, we chose 1994 as the determinate season. From 1986-94, he average one home run every 30.5 plate appearances. His adjusted total from 1995-2005 is 389 home runs. Add it to the 155 homers before that and his KBQB career adjusted total is 389.

As for Ken Griffey Jr., he's never been suspected or accused of any steroid use. Is it possible he took them? Sure. However, there's never been a huge spike in his physique or home run totals beyond normal growth and power with age, so we chose to leave his total the same. Could it be naive? Maybe. But that's the beauty of debate.

Check our math: download the PDF.

February 12, 2007

Having fun with Pavano

By Mark La Monica

Word on the street today was that Carl Pavano showed up and threw a baseball around on the first day of spring training with the Yankees.

Not ready to believe that, I checked the wires here at work and found this AP photo with today's date on it.

pavano.jpg

How about that? Pavano pitched today. Sort of. Didn't even get hurt. Yet!

So let's celebrate that monumental achievement and write our own captions for the photo above. Post a comment and hammer away. Here's one to get you started:

"Ouch, I think I just pulled my entire right oblique and will miss the next four years."

February 11, 2007

A letter to Bernie Williams

By Mark La Monica

Dear Bernie,

bernie_silo.jpgDon't do it! Please!

Don't go play for another major league baseball team this season. Heck, don't even play in one of those lame independent leagues just to keep fresh in case the Yankees call in June.

You're a Yankee. Although many other teams now have pinstripes on their uniform, there is only one Pinstripes for you.

Most published reports of late have you realizing your Yankee career is ending and that you're likely leaning toward not going elsewhere. Which is good. Of course, if a team comes across with some nice dollars, perhaps after a key injury during spring training, it may be hard to resist. Please, Bernie, resist.

No athlete wants to admit when the time has come to step aside. No human enjoys facing their mortality. We all want to feel bigger than life, athletes especially. But there comes a time when we all must face reality.

Yes, it sucks the way the Yankees handled your situation, Bernie. You've been nothing but a graceful, thoughtful person since you came up with the Yankees in 1991. They tried to make you a leadoff hitter and a base-stealer because you could run fast. Then Joe Torre made you the first non-traditional cleanup hitter the Yankees had seen since before Babe Ruth. You excelled.

We watched you struggle in that position, then flourish elsewhere in the order. You're right up there with all-time greats in many Yankee franchise career statistics. There's something to be said for that, especially in the George Steinbrenner era. You've also hit in every position in the batting order. Few players can say that. You've got a bunch of postseason records, a few Gold Gloves, a batting title and four World Series rings. You've earned to undying respect and admiration of your peers and the people of New York. You've done quite well for yourself.

Even though you swung at the first pitch and popped up in Game 5 of the 1997 ALDS against Cleveland after Paul O'Neill legged out a double with two outs in the ninth, we forgave you because you were Bernie. A homegrown Yankee and a positional descendant of the Combs-DiMaggio-Mantle lineage. A man know for clutch hitting.

(Plus, according to Stats Inc., Bernie, you put the first pitch in play 1,156 times in your career and had 412 hits, including 44 home runs. A .356 average ain't too shabby.)

Your No. 51 jersey likely will find its way to Monument Park one day, perhaps even the first such to be instilled in the new Yankee Stadium in 2009.

Remember what you said on Nov. 25, 1998, just after you stopped flirting with Boston and signed a seven-year deal to stay with the only franchise you've known? "To me, that was a very important thing," you said. "It was going to be hard for me to go somewhere else. I wanted to be a Yankee. I wanted to remain a Yankee for the rest of my career."

That career is coming to a close, barring some strange events in spring training. Don't misunderstand, Bernie. I want to see you play one more year, even in a limited role as a pinch-hitter off the bench. I just don't want to see you do it in a different uniform. I don't want to see your name added to this list:

Willie Mays, centerfielder, New York Mets
Joe Namath, quarterback, Los Angeles Rams
Johnny Unitas, quarterback, San Diego Chargers
Michael Jordan, guard, Washington Wizards
Emmitt Smith, running back, Arizona Cardinals
Muhammad Ali, loser of 1980 fight to Larry Holmes

You're clearly not as broken down as these fellas were when they jumped ship to another team (excluding Jordan and Smith, who are on par with you now), but isn't this list below much nicer?

Cal Ripken
Tony Gwynn
Don Mattingly
Larry Bird
Dan Marino

Bernie, you're a Yankee. Stay that way.

Best,
Mark La Monica, longtime Yankee fan

February 8, 2007

This Portland's no trailblazer


By Karen Bailis

The same week that Penn State and women’s basketball coach Rene Portland settled an anti-gay discrimination suit brought by a former player, retired NBA player and Penn State alum John Amaechi came out as gay.

I can’t help wonder if Penn State, which has taken at least 20 years to see the anti-gay slurs written on Portland’s gym walls, will ask Amaechi for its 2006 Alumni Achievement Award back.

See, Happy Valley ain’t such a happy place if you’re gay, especially a lesbian playing for Portland. It’s not happy if Portland even thinks you’re a lesbian, as Jen Harris, the player who says she is not gay and brought the suit in 2005 after being dismissed from the team, contended. And while the settlement announced Monday admits no wrongdoing on the part of the school or the coach, Portland has been quoted in multiple publications since at least 1986 saying that she would not tolerate lesbians on her team. Even before the suit, former players and recruits had come forward to confirm that policy and to speak of their fear that their sexuality would be found out.

After a 1991 Philadelphia Inquirer article about Portland’s policy, an outcry prompted the university to add sexual orientation to its nondiscrimination clause and to offer some cursory diversity training that obviously didn’t take.

It took the lawsuit for Penn State to take any “real” disciplinary action, which included a slap on the wrist fine for Portland of $10,000 and the promise that any further discriminatory action would result in dismissal. That came after the university’s internal investigation found Portland fostered a “hostile, intimidating and offensive climate.” Great. At least 20 years of flat-out discrimination, and she gets a “just don’t do it again” finger wag.

In 1986, the Chicago Sun-Times quoted Portland saying about lesbians: “I will not have it in my program.”

Now, just imagine if she’d been referring to blacks or Jews or Asians instead of lesbians and see how long the coach who uttered that phrase keeps her job.

Portland’s had hers since Joe Paterno hired her in 1980 when he was athletic director. She’s had friends in high places ever since. She’d have to, to have endured this long.

Sure, she’s brought positive attention to the school. In addition to a Final Four appearance in 2000, Portland is a two-time WBCA National Coach of the Year, a four-time Big Ten Coach of the Year and the sixth winningest Division I coach of all-time.

But all those honors and accomplishments should mean nothing when a former star player who owes her stellar career as a point guard at the college, Olympic and professional levels to Portland confirms of her coach: “She does make it known when she’s recruiting that she doesn’t put up with homosexuality.” Suzy McConnell Serio said that in the Inquirer in 1991, and other former players joined her with similar assessments.

Other players in a 1992 LA Times story said that each year Portland would giver her “no drinking, no drugs, no lesbians” speech.

Yet Portland coaches on. Are the administrators at Penn State that clueless? Apparently, yes. Now, with more alleged evidence that Portland continued her no-lesbian policy, one wonders if Penn State is simply aggressively uninformed, just does not want to deal with the situation or supports blatant discrimination.

The sad part is, Portland is not alone in what’s called “negative recruiting.” Other coaches, many of them in top programs, are rumored to communicate during the recruiting process their intolerance of same-sex relationships, and they might point to competing programs as more tolerant and thus dens of iniquity.

Women’s sports programs have long battled against the so-called stigma of being a place where an inordinate number of lesbians gather.

That’s why so many had pinned a lot of hope to Harris’ lawsuit. They saw it as a way to address a longstanding, usually whispered problem in sports. Many hoped Portland – and Penn State -- would finally get a comeuppance.

Too bad the settlement of the lawsuit robs us of any real resolution, because the terms were not disclosed. Harris likely came away with a nice sum of money, but Portland keeps her job. And Penn State, though chastised and perhaps on a very slow road to “getting it,” goes seemingly unpunished.

The sports world – women’s and men’s -- is rife with homophobia. That’s why the only male professional team athletes to come out have done so, like Amaechi, after they’ve stopped playing. Perhaps Harris’ willingness to bravely take a stand and Amaechi’s glorious statement about who he really is have done a little more to break down the wall of homophobia that encloses the sports arena.

But until Penn State and Portland – and other programs and coaches like them – make some real changes, discrimination will continue to be a big gorilla in the locker room.

February 6, 2007

Sather's moves anything but shrewd

By Mike Casey

Ahhh, the bitter pang of nostalgia.

It’s February, and once again the Rangers are plummeting in the standings faster than Matt Cullen can trip himself up on a breakaway.

Seated below nine other teams in a playoff race that only advances eight, a Rangers team that began the season with promise is now facing the prospect of missing the playoffs for the ninth time in 10 years.

But never fear. According to widespread reports, the Rangers are interested in acquiring just about every quick-fix veteran under the sun.

Hide your prospects. Bury your draft picks. High-risk, average-reward players abound, and if history has taught us anything, it's that Rangers GM Glen Sather will gamble his future on one of them -- and in the process, he'll be taken for a ride by another team's general manager.

Peter Forsberg. Keith Tkachuk. Bryan Smolinski. Jozef Stumpel. Martin Rucinsky. Ten years ago, acquiring any of these guys would have been a pretty safe bet.

But now, it's more like a lottery, where the one holding the winning ticket to New York gets to help transform the Rangers from underachiers to laughingstock once again.

Maybe the gimpy-ankled Forsberg can be coaxed into playing in sneakers. (It worked for the 1934 Giants.)

Maybe the Rangers can introduce Tkachuk to Jenny Craig, who can help the not-so-svelte power forward tone down after showing up to camp last year grossly overweight. (Incidentally, this spawned one of the funniest nicknames in hockey history: Keith Tka-chunky.)

Maybe Rucinsky can help recreate the magic he and his buddies produced in last year's first-round playoff flop.

Maybe Smolinski and Stumpel can generate the kind of consistent scoring they've produced. . . well, never.

Fortunately, we found out yesterday that Sather is one step ahead of the game.

The Rangers traded former second round draft pick Marc-Andre Cliche, a member of the gold medal-winning Canadian team in last month’s World Junior tournament, to the Los Angeles Kings, for forward Sean Avery, the NHL’s most penalized player in the last two years.

It gets even better. Not only will Avery be able to contribute to the Rangers’ apparent goal of setting the record for most minor penalties in an NHL season, but he apparently gets along great with everyone -- it’s just he doesn’t like members of the NHL’s competition committee. And he doesn’t exactly have a great reputation among black players. Or French guys. Or the media. Or John Cusack.

But don’t for one second think he's a bad guy, just because he was accused of calling Georges Laraque a "monkey" (Laraque is black) or that he ripped new teammate Brendan Shanahan, who is a member of the aforementioned committee. Sure he's had some problems with diving, but how can anyone who is dating Elisha Cuthbert (right) be that bad -- really?

And don't think that old Glen didn’t get the Rangers something more in return for Cliche, hustling forward Jason Ward and prospect Jan Marek – Oh no.

He also landed highly-touted left wing John Seymour, a former 226th overall pick, who's enjoying a career year with Brampton of the OHL. Yep. He set a new personal best with five assists this year, and if things break right, he may even score more than one goal this season (his career high is three.)

That oughta jump start the rebuilding movement!

Sather's motto must be: "Give me your tired, your overpriced, your malcontent." Bring them to New York, the land of the free and the home of the exasperated fan.

Fans of opposing teams might enjoy the next few weeks of the season, as the playoff race intensifies and trade rumors abound. But Rangers fans won't.

They'll just be holding their breath, hoping they slip into a gentle coma until the Stanley Cup finals are over and this season has faded from the rear view mirror.

February 5, 2007

Ad it up

Check out some of this year's best Super Bowl commercials, courtesy of YouTube and Yahoo!:

You can vote for your favorite here: Vote!

Bud Light: "Rock, Paper, Scissors"

Bud Light: "But He Has Bud Light"

Sierra Mist Free: "Beard Combover"

Nationwide: Kevin Federline

Cheverolet: "Ain't We Got Love"

King Pharmaceuticals: "Heart Attack"

E-Trade: "Bank Robbery"

Snickers: "Do Something Manly"

FedEx: "Moon Office"

February 2, 2007

Thank you, NFL Films

By Adam Abramson

I never thought I would say this, but Steve Sabol showed me the way.

The president of NFL films hosts the specials looking back at the league’s past Super Bowls and Friday’s mid-afternoon specials featured games from this century.

I saw the 2001 Ravens and 2003 Buccaneers and started remembering the Patriot and Steeler teams also earning the right to hoist the lackluster Lombardi Trophy.

When the highlights from the extremely boring Ravens-Giants Super Bowl ended, I decided I was taking the 7 points the Bears are getting from the Colts on Sunday.

It’s as if Lovie Smith also watched these Sabol-hosted specials and decided crafting a stout defense, hard-nosed running game and a quarterback who does just enough to get the job done (sans Tom Brady) because that’s pretty much the formula for winning a Super Bowl these days.

I know the tide is flowing in the Colts’ favor right now. Their defense is click and the offense woke up in the second half two weeks ago while the Bears’ defense has slowed some in the playoffs and their offense has remained dormant as it has all year (I know the Bears put up a ton on the Saints, but I probably could have provided tighter coverage than Fred Thomas in the NFC Championship game).

But tide means nothing to me. This is the Super Bowl and not the MPC Computers Bowl. A team’s true colors generally take the forefront and that’s what I expect on Sunday: High-powered offense versus stingy defense and my money’s with the defense.

So I’m taking the Bears, hoping Ricky Manning Jr. will beat up some nerds in celebration and thanking Mr. Sabol for my epiphany.

Exclamation points


By Karen Bailis

With the Super Bowl days away, quarterbacks have been on my mind. No, not Peyton Manning and Rex Grossman. I’ve been thinking about the quarterbacks of women’s college basketball: the point guards. They run the plays, distribute the ball and act as the coach on the court. So, in the spirit of the Super Bowl and with an eye toward the 7-point spread that favors the Colts from the basketball-crazy state of Indiana, here are the Top 7 point guards in NCAA Division I this season:

1. Ivory Latta, University of North Carolina: No, question, she’s the leader of this 24-0 Tar Heel team that’s ranked No. 2 in the nation. As Latta goes, so go the Heels. She leads the team, the highest-scoring in the nation, in points with 16.2 a game, and she doles out 4.7 assists per game. While her 107 assists on the season are almost met by her 91 turnovers, it doesn’t seem to matter. Coach Sylvia Hatchell’s run-and-gun style depends on Latta’s speed and live-on-the-edge passing – and on her precision from the perimeter. Latta shoots 45 percent from behind the arc. The diminutive (she’s listed at 5-6, but if she’s over 5-4, I’ll eat my laptop) South Carolinian comes up big when the stakes are high, and her outsized personality makes her a fan favorite. It’s taken her a while to get back into form after a meniscus-tear suffered in last year’s Final Four loss to eventual champ Maryland, but her season-high 32 points in Sunday’s win against the Terps, shows she’s nearly the “110 percent” she claimed to be afterward. This senior won’t be denied.

2. Kristi Toliver, Maryland: As the ball-distributor for the team with the most balanced attack in the country, she’s got a hot hand and a cool head. As a freshman, she hit the three-point shot that capped a comeback from 13 points down and sent the 2006 championship game against Duke into OT. The young Terrapins have not worn the championship mantle easily this season, dropping from No. 1 to No. 4 after losses to undefeated ACC rivals UNC and Duke and to unranked Georgia Tech last night. However, Toliver is a rock to be reckoned with. Even with capable backup Sa’de Wiley-Gatewood and a sharp-passing big in Marissa Coleman, Toliver’s doled out 135 assists, averaging 5.4 a game. She’s among five players on the team to average in double figures in scoring, and she hits an unbelievable 50 percent of her threes and 88 percent from the foul line.

3. Lindsey Harding, Duke: After playing in the shadows of stars Alana Beard and Monique Currie, the fifth-year senior finally has come into her own. She was in full force in the 81-62 throttling her Blue Devils gave then-No. 1 Maryland Jan. 13, when she scored a career-high 28 points and also tallied eight rebounds and four assists. She’s a versatile player with blistering speed. The only player on this list who might challenge her in a foot race is a pre-injury Latta. Harding is second on the team in scoring, with 14.2, and averages 4.4 assists. She plays intense defense and is her the proven leader of the No. 1, 22-0 Blue Devils.

4. Brandie Hoskins, Ohio State University: How hard can it be when your star is paint maven Jessica Davenport, and all you have to do is get her the ball? We’ll when she’s being double- and triple-teamed, it’s not that simple. Hoskins, who averages 4.9 assists, and is second to Davenport in scoring with 14.8 a game, has to know when to dish to Davenport and her supporting cast and when to shoot. The senior’s decision-making has been stellar this season, as the 20-1 Buckeyes are off to their best start ever and ranked No. 5.

5. Dee Davis, Vanderbilt: With 6.2 assists per game, Davis is old school with her pass-first attitude. Her average ranks her 10th in the country, and her 678 career assists surpass dominant deliverer Ashley McElhiney’s 673 for a school best. Her 2.5 steals per game ranks her first on her team. The senior contributes 7.3 points a game to the 19-4, No. 15 Commodores.

6. Lindsey Medders, Iowa State: Her 6.4 assists per game rank her No. 5 in the country. She leads her team with 12.7 points a game and is the all-time assists leader for the 16-6 Cyclones, with 628 for her career and set a school record in a game last season, with 16 assists.

7. Armintie Price, Mississippi: Not only does she play bigger than 5-9 stature, she plays with more heart than most, after losing her mother to cancer in August. She averages a team-leading 18.7 points, which ranks second in the SEC. The senior leads the team with 97 assists and 78 steals, and her 3.7 steals per game is first in the SEC and fourth in the NCAA. She tops the 17-6 Rebels with 8.7 rebounds a game and has recorded eight double-doubles this season.



February 1, 2007

The eighth best sports day of the year

By Mark La Monica

When the entire nation -- and more than 200 other nations -- are talking about it the next day, you know you've got yourself a terrific sports day.

The Super Bowl, despite all the insanity leading up to it, is still a great day. So great, it's the eighth best sports day of the year.

It meets all the necessary requirements for inclusion: Big event, everyone knows when it happens, occurs every year around the same time, has implications far greater than just a game.

Ever since the NFL went to a bye week between Championship Sunday, the sixth best sports day of the year by the way, and the Super Bowl, many football fans have grumbled about the extra week of hype/worthless stories you'd never hear about it except for the fact that newspapers and TV stations needs words and images to fill their space.

But rather than lament about the slow, methodical demise of the Super Bowl's mystique, think about all the things we get on this final Sunday of meaningful football until September:

A license, a mandate perhaps, to eat greasy, grimy, unhealthy food
An excuse to party
A somewhat acceptable excuse to consider calling in sick from work on Monday
One more real football game
Great deals at the supermarket
Commercials worthy of watching instead of DVRing through them
Societal acceptance to discuss all those commercials the next day at work, thereby delaying having to work
Halftime extravaganzas
The chance to watch previous Super Bowl highlights from NFL Films on ESPN
43 hours of pregame garbage programming

OK, so maybe that last one wasn't such a perk. But it does add to the mighty American tradition that is the Super Bowl. And if your team is fortunate enough to make it the final day of the season, then you'll watch and read everything you can find.

Such overhyping often causes the game to stink. In recent years, we've had some great games, though. From the Patriots beating the Rams (Damn you, Vinatieri!) to the Patriots beating the Eagles and Panthers (Damn you, Brady and Belichick). From the Titans coming up 1 yard shot against the Rams to the Jets beating the Colts (OK, so that one was in Super Bowl III but whatever.)

No matter how much exposure there is leading up to the game, no matter how lame the game may wind up being, it's still the Super Bowl. It has its place firmly stamped on the fabric of American sports. This thing is bigger than Nino Brown.

The Best Sports Days of the Year
1. Opening Day for baseball
2. The start of March Madness
3. Pitchers and catchers report
4. NFL Sunday Week 1
5. Selection Sunday
6. NFL Conference Championship Sunday
7. NFL Draft
8. Super Bowl Sunday
9. Sunday at The Masters
10. Kentucky Derby*

Honorable Mention
FIrst televised baseball game for your team
Bowl games on New Year's Day

* Upon further review, the Kentucky Derby has moved from first runner-up to No. 10 on the list, replacing the first televised baseball game of your favorite team. That game, almost always a spring training game, is still a good day, but perhaps we were caught up in the emotion of it a little too much to think rationally.

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