Thursday, January 31, 2008

NBA All-Star Reserves

I don’t mean to just pile on an entry on top of Besse’s, but with the All-Star reserves in the NBA being announced tonight I thought I would name the players I felt were deserving. Each conference must have on their bench 2 guard, 2 forwards, 1 center, and then 2 whatever you’re feelin’.

First in the Eastern Conference:

Starters: G Jason Kidd, G Dwayne Wade, F Kevin Garnett, F LeBron James, C Dwight Howard.
Don’t really have any problems here. Take a look at the backcourt though with their combined 28 wins.

G Chauncey Billups (17.9 pts., 7.1 assists)
G Joe Johnson (21.2 pts., 4.4 rebs., 5.3 assists)
F Paul Pierce (20.1 pts., 5.7 rebs., 5 assists)
F Caron Butler (21.9 pts., 7 rebs., 4.3 assists)
C Chris Bosh (22.7 pts., 9.1 rebs.)*

F Antawn Jamison (21.4 pts., 10.6 rebs.)
F Josh Smith (18 pts., 8.1 rebs., 3.2 blocks)


*I know Chris Bosh is a forward, I’m putting him in as a center. Other very deserving players include Richard Hamilton, Ray Allen, Jose Calderon, Michael Redd, Richard Jefferson, and Hedo Turkoglu.
Western Conference:

Starters: G Kobe Bryant, G Allen Iverson, F Carmelo Anthony, F Tim Duncan, C Yao Ming.
How Chris Paul is not starting is beyond me. Fan voting is for the birds. My subs are…

G Chris Paul (20.8 pts., 3.9 rebs., 10.7 assists)
G Steve Nash (17.4 pts., 11.9 asts., 48% 3FG)
F Carlos Boozer (22.4 pts., 10.6 rebs., 55% FG)
F Dirk Nowitzki (22.3 pts., 8.6 rebs.)
C Marcus Camby (9.3 pts., 14.3 rebs., 3.9 blocks)

F/C Amare Stoudemire (22.7 pts., 9 rebs., 59.5% FG)
G Baron Davis (22.3 pts., 4.8 rebs., 8.1 assists)


Just missing the cut: Brandon Roy (he needs to be there somehow), Deron Williams, Josh Howard, Stephen Jackson, Shawn Marion, Chris Kamen, and Tyson Chandler.

We’ll have to wait and see until tonight who the coaches pick.

Rich Keefe

Random Thoughts Heading into February

Sox missed out; Mets re-claim top status in NL East

Let's face it: The Red Sox blew a golden opportunity to re-position themselves as the front-runner heading into the 2008 season. The Tigers made a big splash acquiring Miguel Cabrera and Dontrelle Willis from the Marlins, and with a pitching staff of Verlander, Willis, Bonderman, Rogers and Robertson they seem real tough. Having a bona-fide ace, three solid lefties and a another righty with top of the rotation potential is a good thing to have. And that lineup is reminiscent of the Yankees during their late 90's reign. No holes and no let-up for any team's pitching staff.

If Boston had committed to the Santana deal, imagine Johan, Beckett, and Matsusaka at the top of the rotation. With Schilling and Wakefield still around to hold down the back-end for a year, the Sox could have afforded to make a package from a crop of Bucholz, Lester, Ellsbury and Bowden. They certainly could have kept one of the pitchers while giving up some of the young talent that has either arrived or is on its way up through the system.

I know Theo is big on developing in-house, but I've said this before and I'll say it again: the minor league system is like a $1/$2 table at the Mirage - build up your $1 and $5 chips and once the stack starts falling over, color out and head to the $2/$4 table. You keep doing that until you find yourself seated at the Big Game w/ Doyle, the Phils and Negraneau. Pull the trigger, Theo! You have to wonder if he questions his own baseball acumen these days with the list of busts that he has compiled as of late(Drew, Lugo, Gagne and Crisp off the top of my head). Props on his drafting ability, but unless you're the A's or any other small market team, most GMs use prospects to line up big time trades. Not Theo.

The one plus is that it's the Mets who ended up winning the sweepstakes, and not the Yankees or any other AL team for that matter. While they may come out of the National League in '08, I still don't think their pitching staff wins a WS title. They added one of the best in the game, but with the loss of Glavine, they didn't address depth in the rotation (or lack thereof). After Santana and Maine, who faded bigtime down the stretch last year, there's Pedro's and his noodle arm, Perez and his diaper, and El Suckque. Wagner and 'pen give em a chance, but in a 7-game series, Santana will HAVE to pitch 3 games.

Leyritz finally coming down to Earth

It's amazing what one clutch moment can do to someone's head. Jim Leyritz was no better than a serviceable big league back-up during his 11 year stint in the majors. But who would have known that one big WS homerun would cloud this man's judgement for the balance of his life. Looks like his head swelled so big he thought he could pour more booze into it, too. Turns out, a big ego doesn't turn into a big tolerance.

It's unfortunate someone's life was taken, and my sympathies go out to the family of the victim, but it's about time Leyritz got pulled off his high horse. I got to see him interact with media, players and big wigs alike at the ALCS and WS this past season. To say he was his biggest fan would be an understatement. This guy thought he was Mr. Baseball. Here's to serving four more years in jail than you did in the Bigs, pal.

Rondo making strides

The NBA should create an award just to give Rajon Rondo something for what he's done this year. I don't care if it's a certificate of achievement like something out of a Little League Baseball tournament. Give this kid his dues. Watching him run the Celtics' offense has been surprisingly enjoyable thus far, and he continues to get better night in and night out. His defense hasn't lapsed one bit, and he's slashing to the hole and creating shots around big men like a 12-year veteran. His ability to do this is opening up opportunities around him, and I think we're seeing a pass-first attitude become contagious up-and-down the C's roster. I mean, any other year would Paul Pierce pass up a layup to kick it out to Scalabrine in the corner for 3? Absolutely not, but he did against the Magic last Sunday (Scal rimmed out, by the way).

But it's a good thing, because it's giving guys like Perkins, Powe and Big Baby opportunities to score double digits and make meaningful contributions in meaningful minutes. And for the Magic to need a last second 3 to win it against a KG-less C's squad says a lot about the maturation process the rest of the team has gone through this season. Veterans like Eddie House and James Posey, Tony Allen and the like are expected to provide solid time. But this team is now potentially 10-men deep. That's scary in the East.

And with Rondo stepping up game after game, I think he'll be just fine come playoff time matching up against Chauncey Billups.

UFC Divisional Rankings as of 1/31/08

-Besse

Here are my rankings of the UFC’s five divisions as of today. Please note that Henderson appears in two divisions. Simply put, the poor guy is the 2nd best fighter right now in both weight classes. That may change soon (read below). Other than that, they are slightly different than Keefe’s, but that’s to be expected as we are only dealing with one stable of fighters, so there are some issues with depth in certain divisions. I also included some notes to shed light on why some guys appear where they do. Hope you enjoy.

Heavyweight

1. Randy Couture
2. Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira
3. Tim Sylvia
4. Brandon Vera
5. Cheick Kongo
6. Fabricio Verdum
7. Andrei Arlovski
8. Gabriel Gonzaga
9. Mirko Cro Cop
10. Frank Mir

Notes: This division sucks, and it’s not getting any better with “The Natural” letting his contract run out. The winner of the Big Nog/Sylvia fight is a default champion and based on past performances, neither is scary and showing signs of dominance. Arlovski takes a hit due to inactivity, which is why Verdum – whom Arlovski beat in a lackluster decision in his last Octagon appearance – is ranked ahead of him. Mir shows up because he looked like the old champ against Hardonk at UFC 74.

Light Heavyweight

1. Quinton “Rampage” Jackson
2. Dan Henderson
3. Lyoto Machida
4. Keith Jardine
5. Chuck Liddell
6. Forrest Griffin
7. Mauricio “Shogun” Rua
8. Thiago Silva
9. Rashad Evans
10. Tito Ortiz

Notes: Rampage is by far supreme after 2007, and I look for him to dominate Forrest in their matchup later this year by 3rd Round TKO. Griffin shocked everyone with that win over Rua – who may have been hurt – but still doesn’t warrant a title shot with the loss to Jardine. Speaking of, where is the “Dean of Mean”, who owns consecutive wins over Griffin and Liddell? Wanderlei looked old and tired in his last fight, so I left him off, and I still think Tito is a force. Silva and Evans will be an interesting top-10 match between a well-rounded striker and an excellent wrestler with improving stand-up; I still think Evans is slightly overrated.

Middleweight

1. Anderson Silva
2. Dan Henderson
3. Rich Franklin
4. Yushin Okami
5. Patrick Cote
6. Nate Marquadt
7. Travis Lutter
8. Dean Lister
9. Thales Leites
10. Michael Bisping

Notes: Much like the Heavyweight division, there isn’t a lot of depth here. Silva is the clear cut leader of the pack and if Hendo hadn’t been persuaded to drop down, I’d say the Reign of Terror would continue for a long, long time. But I think “Dangerous” pulls the upset on March 1st and here’s why: In Silva’s five UFC fights, he’s spending an average of 4:15 demolishing his opponents. Henderson, meanwhile, has gone the distance in five of his last six fights, including that five-round war of attrition against Rampage. Hendo will drag this fight into the later rounds and win by late stoppage or decision. Meanwhile, I slot Bisping in at number ten b/c this division is weak and he has some decent skills.

Welterweight

1. Georges “Rush” St. Pierre
2. Matt Serra
3. Jon Fitch
4. Karo Parysian
5. Matt Hughes
6. Josh Koscheck
7 Marcus Davis
8. Diego Sanchez
9. Josh Burkman
10. Mike Swick

Notes: Now GSP is the “interim” champ, I can finally put him at the top where he belongs. Unless he gets caught again, he’ll dominate Serra in their rematch. Hughes takes a hit after doing absolutely nothing in that fight against GSP. Meanwhile, I thought Burkman should have won that fight. Although his takedowns continually got stuffed, Swick did nothing offensively aside from the one glancing kick he landed. Burkman was aggressive, took chances and tried to fight; Swick didn’t look right at that weight. And by the way Joe Silva, how are you not having Fitch and Parysian fight a #1 contender match on the same card as GSP v. Serra? Both are deserving, and they need to fight each other to get this mess figured out.

Lightweight

1. B.J. Penn
2. Sean Sherk
3. Joe Stevenson
4. Roger Huerta
5. Kenny Florian
6. Clay Guida
7. Frankie Edgar
8. Tyson Griffin
9. Hermes Franca
10. Joe Lauzon

Notes: Penn is the best P4P fighter in the world, and he beat a great opponent in Stevenson at UFC 80. I think Sherk is seriously underestimating the overall game of Penn, but look for a terrific grudge match when they fight. Huerta takes a break and deserves it after a busy ’07. Florian is ever-improving, and it’s too bad he got thrown in against Sherk so early; he wasn’t ready and still isn’t, but continues to improve. Guida was winning against Huerta until he got blitzed early in the 3rd round, and I like his aggressive style. And let’s not forget Franca. He owned up to his mistake, and w/ or w/o the juice, he’s a top 10 fighter in this organization.

-Besse

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

UFC Rankings (1-30-08; Keefe)

Here is the first monthly UFC rankings. Tristan and I will both rank fighters 1-10 for the 5 divisions in the UFC. Perhaps we will combine the rankings one day and just have a "Sports Brief Rankings," but for now there will be two separate ones. Again these are only fighters in the UFC/ under contract. No Fedor, Paulo Filho, Matt Lindland, Gomi, Arona, etc. Also I have Dan Henderson in both LHW and MW as his last fight in the UFC was for the LHW belt and his next fight is for the MW belt.

Heavyweight:

1. Randy Couture
2. Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira
3. Tim Sylvia
4. Andrei Arlovski
5. Fabricio Werdum
6. Cheick Kongo
7. Brandon Vera
8. Gabriel Gonzaga
9. Mirko Cro Cop
10. Frank Mir


Light Heavyweight:

1. Quinton Jackson
2. Dan Henderson
3. Maurcio ‘Shogun’ Rua
4. Chuck Liddell
5. Keith Jardine
6. Forrest Griffin
7. Lyoto Machida
8. Wanderlei Silva
9. Tito Ortiz
10. Thiago Silva


Middleweight:

1. Anderson Silva
2. Dan Henderson
3. Rich Franklin
4. Nathan Marquardt
5. Yushin Okami
6. Travis Lutter
7. Patrick Cote
8. Jason MacDonald
9. Chris Leben
10. Nathan Quarry


Welterweight:

1. Georges St. Pierre
2. Matt Serra
3. Jon Fitch
4. Matt Hughes
5. Josh Koscheck
6. Karo Parisyan
7. Diego Sanchez
8. Marcus Davis
9. Mike Swick
10. Josh Burkman


Lightweight:

1. BJ Penn
2. Sean Sherk
3. Joe Stevenson
4. Kenny Florian
5. Roger Huerta
6. Frankie Edgar
7. Tyson Griffin
8. Din Thomas
9. Spencer Fisher
10. Clay Guida

We're Back!

That's right. After nearly a 7 month hiatus The Sports Brief is back. Tristan Besse, myself (Rich Keefe), and possibly Brian Sharkey (still haven't heard from him) are going to pick up this blog thing where we left off. Even without the Shark 2 out of 3 ain't bad. I mean look at the Celtics last night without KG and Ray Ray. One of the new features to The Sports Brief will be UFC Rankings for each weight class by Tristan and me.

We will still discuss the world of sports specifically college and pro football, college and pro hoops, baseball, Olympics (I mean why not), and mixed martial arts (mma). So enjoy the resurgence and be sure to tell your friends.

Thanks for giving The Sports Brief another chance.