Thursday, February 4, 2010

The NBA needs more than Magic and Larry




The NBA is predictable. The talent is too diluted. And there are only four teams that have a chance at being champions.

How is this fun exactly?

As the NBA mid-season shortly passed by, The Los Angeles Lakers, Orlando Magic, Boston Celtics, and Cleveland Cavaliers are the only teams in the league who are playing at a championship level. They are the only teams who have the horses, chemistry, experience and toughness to win it all.

The three other contenders you may be thinking of don’t have a chance: The Denver Nuggets, San Antonio Spurs and Atlanta Hawks.

The Spurs “senior citizen” issues have been somewhat fixed by their bench, who leads the league in scoring. Still, there not your nephews Spurs. Although they are seventh in the league in defense they just don’t “D” it up like they use to. Manu Ginobli is a shadow of himself. Tim Duncan rests on back-to-back nights. They can’t beat the Lakers in a seven game series. Like Adrian said to Rocky before he fought the Russian, “You can’t win.”

I actually thought the Denver Nuggets would be the heavy favorite to win the West before the season. But I also thought they needed home-court to beat the Lakers. They can score with anyone, and they play with that cocky chip on their shoulder. They have the league’s best record against teams at .500 or better at 21-8, but because of their mental lapses they have lost to woe teams like the Bucks, Clippers, Timberwolves, Pistons twice, Bobcats, Kings, and 76ers thus far. Something tells me the Nuggets just can’t get it right consistently to win it all.

The Hawks are having a cute run. They have a boat load of young talent. They have some scorers. They play D. We know they can beat Boston. But can they beat the Magic and Cavs? Not with the big men that they have. Josh Smith and Al Horford are their “ Big’s” but neither really plays with their back-to-the basket. They will probably try to cause mismatches by bringing their low post guys away from the paint and shoot from the outside in the playoffs. But how long can you have success playing that way?

Even if those three teams are contenders, that only leaves, at most, seven teams that can contend. The Mavericks, Jazz, Rockets, Trailblazers, Raptors, Heat and Suns just don’t have enough in the tank.

Please.

Some say it’s exciting to have a few power house teams, like in the eighties when the NBA peaked.

Wrong.

True, the eighties was the one of the best decades for the NBA. And there was also only a handful of teams who had a shot in those years. Two men named Magic and Larry, whose teams played in a combined 12 NBA finals in the decade, led the show. Fans flocked to games. Cable TV programs began airing NBA games live, and the leagues popularity was at an all time high. But in the years leading into the eighties, the NBA was struggling with an image problem. Players at insurmountable rates were getting into legal trouble and NBA games were not even televised live. At that time the league needed a rebirth. Magic and Larry brought it. Two great teams, with two of the game’s best, were enough.

But these times are different. We had a guy named Jordan pave the way. We have great players. The image of the league is not nearly as bad as it was back then. The NBA doesn’t need a rebirth. What they need is more good teams who have a shot.

Major league baseball and the National Football league have plenty of it. Don’t think so? Than who is going to win next year’s World Series?

The Yankees, Red Sox, Angels, Cardinals, Phillies, Indians, Rays, Dodgers, Cubs, Giants, Mariners, and Mets all have a chance. And there is always some team that finds a way to get into the mix once the season starts. Barely does that happened in the NBA and this year is no exception.

Check out the NFL. Before each season most fans could pile up a number of teams that can win the big one. It wouldn’t even be crazy to pick the defending champions to win the Super Bowl and them not even making the playoffs that year ( See 2009 Pittsburgh Steelers)

Not so in the NBA, where half of the teams in the league make the postseason.
And maybe that’s the solution. I’ve said in previous blogs that the NBA needs to shorten up its playoff schedule. Allow fewer teams to make it. Make the series shorter and maybe than we could see some upsets.

It doesn’t look like anything will change any time soon.

David Stern, the NBA commissioner, was forced to shell out millions of dollars to over 15 teams in the NBA last year who were hurting financially, which means the teams with the rich pockets and star players ( yes, like the Lakers, Celtics and Magic) will continue to push the little guys around. The little guys just can’t afford to go after the star name free agents. Some people have even suggested that the NBA employ what the NFL calls “ Team revenue sharing” which allows the weaker teams in the league to draw from a small well of cash to help them sign players.

Like Stern would ever go for that.

But I’m just a reporter who writes about sports. I don’t have all the answers. But I can choose to watch if I want.

Wake me up in May.

Saturday, January 2, 2010

NHL Winter Classic Exceeds at the Right Time



Yesterday was just a typical Jan.1st morning for RamblinRob. First, I woke up at 11 a.m. from my hangover. Next, I poured coffee down my throat. Than, I nibbled a doughnut. Finally, I turned on some hockey. (Pause for effect and for the turntables to stop and make the screeching sound you hear in all the movies when the main character says something stupid.)

GASP!

No, that was not a typo. Although the National Hockey League numbers have been dwindling the last decade, for the last three New Years I have began my day with the NHL’s newest game, The Winter Classic. That is impressive because I don’t ever watch hockey except for a few playoff and finals games a year. The outdoor game was nothing but sensational. It was on at the perfect time. If only hockey could show all of its games at the right time maybe fans would watch more often than once a season.

The classic has been featured in a different iconic baseball stadium the last three years and this year it was played outdoors in 30 degrees weather in the historic Fenway Park in Boston. The Boston Bruins beat the Philadelphia Flyers 2-1 in overtime. The official numbers have not yet been announced but so far the information obtained says that the games were a huge success.

The game was also very profitable for the league. The third Classic was expected to generate $8 million in ticket sales at Fenway Park and $3 million in ad revenue for NBC, triple the total of two years ago. And according to Reuters, the games profitability is continuing to grow. Despite it being played in cold weather, 38,112 freezing-cold-fans attended.

There were many reasons that made this event worth watching. NBC covered the game and they usually do a great job, dating back to their experience for when they use to cover the NBA. Their picture was really clear. Bob “ freaking” Costas ran the halftime show and it was really unique to see an outdoor hockey game played in a baseball stadium. The game was also really competitive. A fight broke out in the first quarter between Shawn Thornton and Daniel Carcillo. And although the Flyers were more aggressive offensively, the Bruins came back and won in overtime on a tip-in shot by Bruins left wing Marco Sturm.

But if the game were not on at such a convenient time, on the right channel, I, nor millions of others, would have seen it. If you don’t have the NHL Network the only other channel that shows the NHL during the season is the unknown cable channel, Versus, which is owned by Comcast and recently merged with NBC Universal. ESPN no longer covers the NHL. NBC will cover most of the bigger playoff games and the finals. The league hit a low-point in 2007 when NBC decided to cut away from a playoff game that went into overtime to show the pre-game of the Preakness. Yes, horse racing.

Not surprisingly, the numbers have been dwindling the past decade for the NHL. Partly because Versus is unknown. If the games were on broadcast network or a more known cable network, regularly, it would be easier for TV surfers to find.

There is another reason why hockey is hurting: their playoff schedule is almost on par with the NBA playoffs. In today’s fast moving world, the on the fence fans will choose basketball games that score into the hundreds over a hockey game that may only have a couple of scores each night. The die-hard fans of the NBA will watch the orange ball and the NHL people will keep their eyes fixed on that big black puck. But the problem persists because there are more basketball fans than hockey ones nationally.

But what if hockey altered its schedule? Hockey playoffs start in April, same as the NBA. Moving the playoffs back a month earlier, to March, would allow it to end in May. By the beginning of that month hockey would be in the third round while the NBA would just be starting the first round. In theory, hockey would try to grab fans like me to watch the conference championship as opposed to the first round of the NBA. I probably would watch more NBA, but I surely would glance for a few minutes a night at what was going on in the third round game of hockey. If both leagues are in their conference championships than forget about it, I’m choosing basketball. I feel like many other would choose the same.

Also, when should the Hockey season start if the playoffs began a month earlier? If the playoffs began in March than the season would have to be shortened and that would mess with the statistical records. One of two scenarios could be done; start the season in August, when there are no big sporting events going on. Or, start the playoffs at the regular date in April but only allow four teams, as opposed to eight, to make the playoffs from each conference. That would allow fewer rounds, and a quicker pace to the Stanley Cup Finals. It would also make the tournament somewhat more intriguing than the NBA one which also has 16 teams who make the playoffs. At times, the NBA post season feels worn out.

For those who disagree with my suggestion, surely agree that something needs to be done. One game a year is not enough to keep hockey going. Sports fans like me may not know many hockey names, or understand all the rules, but the game itself is exciting enough to watch, as long as it does not interfere with the three major sports of baseball, basketball and football.

Take the Winter Classic, for example. The game began at 1:00 p.m. eastern time. The Rose Bowl began four hours later, right after the overtime thriller. There were no other big sports games on in the morning (except some dumb bowl games) It was the perfect curve-ball to start a day that I knew would be filled with college football.

Right place, right time.