Red Sox Backing Into The Playoffs

Red Sox Backing Into The Playoffs

With the regular season coming to a close and the playoffs starting, it seems the Boston Red Sox are backing into the postseason just like last year. Last season the Red Sox won the division with a loss to the Yankees but still wearing goggles and drinking champagne in the clubhouse. The Red Sox play the Astros today and tomorrow to close out the regular season. They have lost four of their last five games and lead the division by two games. With a Red Sox win or a  Yankees loss they would clinch the AL East.

This would be the first time in the team’s history they would clinch the AL East in back-to back seasons. Clinching the division means nothing if you back yourself into the playoffs and get swept in the first round. If the Red Sox don’t win the division today do you pitch Chris Sale tomorrow? In Sale’ s last eight starts he’s 4-4 with 48 hits and 23 runs, 11 home runs and 67 strikeouts. I say keep him rested, clinch today so you don’t have to pitch him tomorrow. The only reason Sale pitches tomorrow is if they haven’t clinched yet or to get to 313 strikeouts.

Will David Price Start A Playoff Game?

I still would have David Price pitch a playoff game like I’ve said before. He’s making way too much money to be coming out of the bullpen. The bats have been quiet too as of late. Losing 12-2 Thursday night and 3-2 last night they just can’t seem to get the hit they need to win.

Pedroia On Last Night’s Loss

Baseball: World Series: Boston Red Sox Dustin Pedroia (15) in action, making throw vs St. Louis Cardinals at Busch Stadium. Game 5.
St. Louis, MO 10/28/2013
CREDIT: Al Tielemans (Photo by Al Tielemans /Sports Illustrated/Getty Images)
(Set Number: X157127 TK3 R1 F82 )I

Pedroia said after last night’s game “it’s just one of those games, we couldn’t find a way to get the big hit and do something offensively. We just came out a couple of runs short we’ll get after it Saturday.” Now if both the Yankees and Red Sox are tied for the division they would play a one game playoff Monday at Yankee Stadium.

TOP 10 – Hefner Edition: If Playmates Were Patriots

If Tom Brady is, in fact, the Greatest of All Time as an NFL Quarterback, then the late Hugh Hefner is certainly the GOAT of the flesh industry (although, Dave ‘El Pres’ Portnoy is chasing a legend).

Hefner, the brains and (anything-but-blue) balls behind the American dream that was Playboy Magazine, passed away at the tender age of 91 this week; no doubt with a giant smile on his face.  This legend spent more than half of a century rocking a velvet robe and a captain’s hat while smiling and sauntering around the globe’s most beautiful women.  Not only did he hang around these goddesses, he dated them.  All of them.  At times, all of them at once!  And did I mention they all posed nude for his magazine?  Yeah, safe to say if there is such a thing as ‘heaven on earth’ – for  American males – the Playboy Mansion is perhaps that place.

What does this have to do with football?

The answer?  Ab-so-lute-ly nothing.  However, doesn’t it all come back to the Pats?  And so, got me to thinking; what if we lined up HH’s most memorable Playboy Playmates and matched them to some of the All-Time New England Patriots.  Sounds stupid, right?  Well, so what, this is fun.  The Boston Sports Extra Research Team took a long, hard (imagery intended) look into the archives and has matched up Playmate for Patriot.  Some of the greatest and most famous cover models matched with their Patriot soulmate.

Here we go…

TOP 10: If Playmates Were Patriots

10.  Barbara Streisand (1 cover): Doug Flutie

Are either one of these really worth of this top 10 list?  Probably not, but, like her or not, Streisand is a legend and Flutie is a Boston icon.  In truth, I’d rather see Doug’s “Flutie Flakes” than any lady part of Babs… but, hey….they make my list.  Just warming up.

9.  Paris Hilton (2 Covers): Vince Wilfork

Both Hilton and Wilfork love the spotlight.  Perhaps both too ugly for TV, but there’s something about each that you can’t turn away from.  Hilton is the  spoiled daughter of a hotel magnate.  Wilfork can eat a shitload of ribs.  It’s all science, really.

 

8.  LaToya Jackson (47 Covers) – Irving Fryar

This seemed like a match made in a very bizarre and haunted heaven, but work with me people.  Both of these talents have one thing in common; batshit craziness.  Before Irving got religified, he imported more drugs in to the system than a Columbian coffee boat.  As for Latoya, she ranks perhaps the craziest in a family that was founded in the very principles of nuttiness.  Scandals, arrests…these two are kindred spirits.

7.  Carmen Electra (44 Covers): Kevin Faulk

Diversity.  That is how I would compare these greats.  Electra could act, take off her clothes, take off her clothes and, um, well, maybe that’s it?  Faulk was Mr. Utility during his tenure.  Run, catch, special teams, you name it, he did it for the Pats.  If he could get naked as willingly as incredibly as his counterpart here, we are talking like a seven-tool player.  Maybe this comparison makes no sense; like Baywatch.

6.  Madonna (11 Covers): Adam Vinitieri

Now let’s talk about the longevity category.  That is the link this dynamic duo shares in common and why they are rocking the number-six slot.  I feel like Vinitieri has been kicking NFL field goals since the Like a Virgin album was released.  While Madonna now looks like a crack-head tranny, there was a time when she reached men across the world ‘right between the uprights’.  And Adam, as far as I am concerned, there should be a statue of you in Boston, my friend.  Maybe one of you kicking Madonna right in the baby-maker?  Just a thought?  No? OK.

5.  Jenny McCarthy (32 Covers) – Stanley ‘The Steamer’ Morgan

Speaking of longevity, rolling in to the Top Five, the talent jumps up a notch.  Jenny McCarthy has been oozing sex for more that two decades and keeps going.  While Stanley Morgan was no sex symbol, he was a constant in the lives of Patriots Nation during his time in Foxborough.  Thirteen seasons in New England.  All-time receiving yards leader.  And, Jenny McCarthy has been giving ‘Steamers’ to men and boys since the Pete Carroll era.  (Was dying to use that one since I started typing)

4.  Marilyn Monroe (22 Covers): Rodney Harrison

Confident, good looking, sexy-to-the-core and ,even a bit, controversial all describe this icon.  And Marilyn was pretty wild too.  Both Monroe and Harrison had swagger in their game.  Rodney was a vicious (some argue cheap-shot artist) but likable assassin on the field and Marilyn banged JFK.  Match to Ms. Monroe.

3.  Anna Nicole Smith (47 Covers): Ted Johnson

Sitting at number three on our list, a  couple of Lunch Pail Crowd-ers .  Tough, gritty, and positively brain-dead.  Poor Anna Nicole, she could never seem to get her act together unless it involved nudity or a sound byte that makes you question if reading is really fundamental?  T.J. was a fan favorite but perhaps stuck around the head smashing game a little too long.

2.  Farrah Fawcett (15 Covers): John “Hog” Hannah

Now this next pairing represent the golden days of greatness; the 1970s.  Every little girl aspired to look like the beautiful Farrah and every little fat kid in Boston knew they were stuck playing offensive line like Johnny Boy.  I am sure Hannah himself had a few missed blocking assignments day-dreaming about this Charlie’s Angel grasping for his….  Nevermind.  Not even gonna make the ‘Hog’ joke.  Sitting right there, but not gonna do it.

And our taking the #1 slot…

1. Pamela Anderson (151 Covers): Tom Brady

No surprises here.  151 Playboy covers for Pam.  Five Superbowls for Tom.  Not much to say.  Best at what they do.  Dodging balls and throwing balls.  I won’t even poll you on who you would rather see naked?  The answer to question may surprise you.

Rest in Peace, Hugh.  No matter what place you are now, it could not be a better place than where you were.

NFL Matchup of the Week

by @inlow005

After another uneventful Thursday Night Football match up, football fans across the nation eagerly await another NFL Sunday. This week features some of the best match ups we will see the entire NFL season. Baltimore hosts Pittsburgh in a fight for first of the AFC North. Division foes Oakland and Denver battle it out at Mile High. And Los Angeles (Rams) travels to Dallas where they look to take down the Cowboys, fresh off a road win in Arizona. But the game that grabs me more than the rest?  The NFC North square-up in Minnesota.

A FIGHT FOR THE NORTH

With both the Lions and the Vikings sitting on a 2-1 record, week four brings with it the ability to fuel much momentum moving ahead.  Green Bay handled Chicago on the road with ease, pushing themselves ahead to first in the division with a 3-1 record.  The winner of Detroit-Minnesota will share the division lead with Green Bay, while the loser will still have a one game lead over the 1-3 Chicago Bears.

DETROIT MAKING SOME NOISE

Detroit has had a rather impressive start to their year, particularly on the offensive side of the ball.  The Lions high-powered offense has averaged over 28 points per game through three weeks.  Although quarterback Matt Stafford has regressed since his four-touchdown performance week one, the Lions have still managed to put themselves in a position to put points on the board.  Last week, in a tough home loss to the undefeated Atlanta Falcons, kicker Matt Prater went 4/4 on field goals, including two from 50-plus yards.

Defensively, Detroit has been causing turnover after turnover.  In just three games, the Lions have forced eight turnovers, three of which came off of 2016 NFL MVP Matt Ryan.  Aside from giving up 30 in that loss to Atlanta, Detroit has held their opponents to a respectable number of points.  They currently rank 15th overall in points allowed per game (ESPN.com).

DEFENDING HOME TURF

With a brand new home venue, the Vikings strive to move to 3-0 at U.S. Bank Stadium.  Following a disappointing 26-9 loss in Pittsburgh during week two, Minnesota bounced back with a vicious 34-17 week-three victory over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.  Case Keenum, Minnesota’s backup quarterback, has had to fill the shoes of Sam Bradford, who put on an absolute clinic week one before being sidelined due to injury.  Keenum struggled on the road against the Steelers but bounced back with a three-touchdown, 369-yard outing against the Bucs.  Bradford hopes to take the field Sunday, but Keenum has been preparing heavily for his shot to start as well.

The Vikings have, in recent years, been viewed upon as a defensive-based team.  With studs like Anthony Barr and Xavier Rhodes heckling the opposition, the Minnesota defense has emerged as one of the finest in football.  The Minnesota D has faced some of the most recognized quarterbacks in the game so far this year, having faced Drew Brees, Ben Roethlisberger, and Jameis Winston.  Stafford represents an easy test, but facing some impressive quarterbacks thus far prepares the Vikings well.

Predictions

When it comes to inner-division matchups among two similarly skilled teams, I have to give the home team the edge.  Minnesota has dominated in their new stadium, with an incredible fan base.  The rowdy atmosphere of Minnesota is not fun for an opposing quarterback.  If I had to hear that violent Vikings horn blaring after turning the ball over, I would be damn straight phased.  Stafford’s composure will be tested this game.

Final Score: Minnesota 31, Detroit 27

Stud Finder: Adam Thielen, 6 receptions, 111 yards, 2 TD’s

 

 

 

 

The Road to the World Series Not Paved with Gold

The Red Sox are in the playoffs with a magic number of one to secure the AL East title. The journey to the World Series starts now.

‘Stros and the Tribe Up Next

There is a good chance that will happen, but then the fun begins. With the Astros and the Indians still competing for home field advantage, the Red Sox have a mountain to climb.  Both possible opponents have been among the best and most consistent teams of 2017.  The Indians have won 100 games, the Astros 99.  The Astros lead the MLB in batting average, RBI, OBP, SLG, OPS, runs, hits and doubles. Offensively, they are a machine with a line up deeper than the Atlantic.  While their pitching is not as strong, the team ERA is 4.13, they strike out a lot of batters and are above average in just about every way.  The also have former CY Young winners in Keuchal and Verlander who have sampled the play offs before.

The Indians also play on the back of that record-breaking winning streak with high confidence. Offensively not as strong as the Astros, but The Indians remain in the top five in most categories.  Their pitching is their strong card. They have the best team ERA, most strikeouts, most complete games, a second best WHIP of 1.17 and they have Terry Francona, a manager who has won and lost in the World Series and understands how to manage his pitching staff in the post season cauldron.

The Up and Down Sox

At the moment, the Red Sox are frustratingly inconsistent. They have the talent but can’t seem to put it all together over a sustained period.  There is no doubt the Red Sox are down on power at the plate. They rank just 27th in home runs with just a mere 167 this season.  The team slugging percentage is just .408, down in 25th spot with an OPS of just .738.

It is brighter on the defensive side. The Red Sox have the fourth-best ERA of 3.71, the third most strikeouts a WHIP of 1.25 and Chris Sale, who on his day is one of the top-three pitchers in the whole MLB.  The problem is that the Red Sox have pitched the most innings of any team, mainly because run support had often been non-existent. Chris Sale has pitched more innings than anyone and it’s beginning to show.  That said, there has been a recent and alarming tendency by the pitching staff to give up runs in the first inning. With the current, offensive state of play its game over.

We know the Indians will have a game plan for the playoffs. We saw it last year and no doubt it will happen again.  The Astros will let their bats do the talking and will just try and outscore everyone. Any off day from a Red Sox pitcher will be punished.

If the Red Sox are to make it to the World Series, it is likely they will have to beat both the Indians and the Astros. To do that they are going to have to shut down the Astros’ offense and overcome Kluber, Miller and co.

That’s a tough ask.

Catching Up with Former Red Sox’s Reggie Jefferson

The other day I had the privilege of speaking with former Red Sox player Reggie Jefferson. Reggie played parts of nine seasons in the big leagues, the final five of which were spent with the Red Sox. He batted .300 for his career, a rare accomplishment in the grand scheme of baseball history. I spoke with him about his playing days, the way the game has changed and what he is doing nowadays.

The Early Years

Reggie’s career began in Cincinnati before quickly moving cross state to the Cleveland Indians. In Cleveland he wore number 44 in honor of Hank Aaron.  Eventually, he would settle on number 18 for most of his career to honor a friend back home who had become like a big brother to him.

Reggie was traded from Cleveland after the 1993 season in a deal that would net the Indians Omar Vizquel, a man I think should be making the Hall of Fame in the coming years. Reggie said when he runs into Cleveland fans he tells them they should love him because he helped bring the club Omar Vizquel. Vizquel, one of the all-time greats defensively at short, blossomed as a hitter for the Indians. Meanwhile, Reggie viewed this as a chance for more playing time. The move also reunited him with Manager Lou Piniella, who he had been with in Cincinnati. As he pointed out, Seattle had Alex Rodriguez coming up through the minors and viewed Vizquel as being expendable. But Piniella must have liked what he had seen from his one-time rookie.

Hitting Stride

Jefferson’s breakout started that season in Seattle. He batted .327 with an excellent .935 OPS before the strike hit. He credits Lou Piniella a lot for his newfound success at the plate. Piniella helped him make changes at the plate; adjust his hands to help put him in a better position to get hits.

That season Reggie abandoned switch hitting. He had switch hit through the minors with good success, hitting for similar averages from both sides of the plate but with more power from his natural left side. However, in the Bigs there were always good right-handed options on the bench. With limited at-bats from the right side, Reggie had a hard time finding a groove. Without finding a rhythm from that side of the plate, his swing became long and he felt like he gave away at-bats. Despite the advice from Eddie Murray to not give up switch-hitting, Reggie would not get the reps needed from the right side to succeed so he made the decision. He says “I think if given the chance to play every day, I think I could have hit.”

Boston

In 1995, Reggie’s agents let him know that the Red Sox signaled the most interest. Reggie was thinking, “What are they doing? They have Mo (Vaughn) and Jose (Canseco)”! The Red Sox didn’t seem to have a spot for another first baseman and designated hitter such as Jefferson. When asked if he felt like he just needed an opportunity to play and prove himself, Reggie said “definitely, that’s it. I tell clients, first need an opportunity, then need to take advantage of it.” When the opportunities came, Reggie didn’t miss them.

Manager Kevin Kennedy was happy to greet the newest arrival in camp, Reggie Jefferson. (Photo by Barry Chin/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)

In 1996, Jefferson had his finest season. He got to play for the injured Jose Canseco for a while, then after Jose came back the Red Sox left fielder Mike Greenwell went down. Since Reggie had been hitting so well, Manager Kevin Kennedy wanted to find a way to keep his bat in the lineup. Kennedy went to Jefferson and asked him if he’d ever played left before. Reggie lied. He told Kennedy he had, despite never before playing there. It worked out great for both parties, the Red Sox came storming back with a strong second half and Reggie finished with a .347 batting average, the fifth-highest mark in all of baseball. When asked about that season in particular, Reggie said he just felt good all year. He swung the bat great, felt comfortable at the plate and hit the ball hard.

Starting with that season, Jefferson became a fixture in the Red Sox lineup for several seasons against right handers. He’d bat over .300 in three consecutive seasons and batted .316 as a Red Sox. He was a career .345 hitter at Fenway Park with a .928 OPS. He says Fenway “just played into [his] natural strengths. The Monster rewards hitters for going the other way and there’s lots of room in right.” This fit Reggie perfectly as he just hit the ball wherever it came in over the plate, using the entire field.

Friendly Fenway

Another aspect of Fenway Park we discussed is the atmosphere. According to Reggie, the Sox have the greatest fans in the world, not only in the support shown at the park, but in the way we follow the game. Fans in Boston have a knowledge of what’s happening with the team on a day-to-day basis. He found himself cheering hard for the Sox in 2004 when they finally won the World Series. Reggie identifies more with the Red Sox than any other team because of the fans. He says there were always high expectations playing in Boston, but that he performed well. Although a bad back that first cropped up in 1990 slowed him down in 1995 and 1998, he “didn’t leave anything on the table.” He always gave it his all and performed at a high level.

I asked Reggie which game, if any, stood out in his memory. He instantly brought up a game played on Father’s Day in 1996. As he said, the Red Sox had been winning but then gave up the lead. After Mo Vaughn and Jose Canseco picked up their fourth hits of the game to begin the 9th inning, Reggie came to the plate. The Sox were trailing by two, two men on, no one out. Facing Mike Henneman, Reggie hit a line drive to the opposite field up over the Monster and into the screen. A walk-off home run in Fenway Park, and on Father’s Day to boot. Reggie was thinking of his Dad and how he had gotten him started in the game of baseball.

Reggie also brought up playing with greats like Pedro Martinez, Roger Clemens and Mo Vaughn. He referenced Pedro’s 17 strike out, one-hit gem at Yankee Stadium. Reggie left the park that night thinking “that’s the best game I’ve ever seen pitched.” He thinks it’s pretty cool nowadays when guys like Tim Kurkjian bring up that game as possibly being the greatest pitching performance ever.

Modern Baseball

We talked some about recent rule changes to the game of baseball and whether they improve the game.  He does believe the rules protecting players from injury top the list.  No need exists for someone to get injured on a take-out slide at second or a catcher run over at the plate. Eliminating those plays and keeping players on the field are for the best. However, he does not like the rules trying to speed up the game; “Baseball is a slow game, I don’t think going to change that much. It’s going to take 2.5-3.5 hours to play.”

As for all the home runs hit this year, we had a discussion about that. Reggie believes there is something up with the balls. Going to games at Tropicana Field, which has been known as a pitcher’s park in the past, he sees balls flying out this year. He says “some balls are getting way out that back in the day wouldn’t even get out [at all]. I see balls there I’m like, how did that get out?!” I’ve been thinking the same thing, Reggie. Balls are just flying out with too much ease. It’s not normal. He says some of it is bad pitching, guys missing their spots, but the balls must be different.

Reggie thinks plays like this, where he is about to run over Joe Girardi trying to score, are not necessary in the game.

Reynolds Sports Agency

We finished up talking about what he is up to nowadays. Reggie works for Reynolds Sports Agency, representing clients in professional baseball. It’s a more tightly knit group than some other agencies, and despite being all under one umbrella, he says you definitely get to forge relationships.

Reggie is excited for the future; they represent a left-handed reliever in Atlanta, Sam Freeman, enjoying a breakout year. Reggie says he has learned to harness his stuff and is having a terrific season. He brought up Keon Broxton and Mallex Smith as two young players on the verge of becoming household names. Reggie has known both of them since the 11th grade, illustrating the point about forging relationships. Another young guy he mentioned was Andrew Toles, who has been out almost the whole season with a torn ACL. Reggie says he’s a great hitter and will show that in the future.

The agencies biggest star is Justin Upton, who still has four years and $88.5M left on a six-year contract. However, rumors claim  he might choose to opt out of the contract, as is his right after the season. Despite the rumors, Reggie denies talks about it, let alone making a decision. Justin is focusing on trying to get the Angels into the playoffs. If he does opt out, he’s having a huge year at the right time, bashing 35 homers.

Final Thoughts

I asked Reggie if his playing days help him out in his career as a sports agent. Reggie said, “Without a doubt. I know what they’re going through, I can be in their mindset.” He tells them one day they are going to get their shot, and they have got to run with it. He says at times during his own career he felt the need to talk to someone who had been there. Now, he can give that needed counsel to his clients. The job is a lot of work, keeping his plate full and requiring him to travel a lot. Reggie enjoys it though, he gets to help guys out who are just getting started in their professional careers.

Fantasy Advice: WR2/Flex, TEs and Defenses

Week four —  back again to give you a little more fantasy support, if you need it 🙂 Iim going to focus on WR2/Flex 1st then TEs and Defenses. PPR leagues apply and I am not advising you to play obvious fantasy studs like Julio, Antonio, Kelce or Gronk.

WR2/Flex

: Danny Amendola- Amendola is Brady’s slot guy, back from a concussion in week one that kept him out week two and limited him in week three as a precaution. With Cooks and Gronk tearing it up, look for Amendola as Brady’s go-to guy. Need I mention he is #12’s most tenured WR.

: Mohamed Sanu- Atlanta goes up against Buffalo this weekend and they give up the 17th most fantasy points to WRs. Julio draws the double teams and stopping Freeman should open up a huge day for Sanu.

: Brandon Coleman- With Sneed back from suspension and Thomas drawing double teams, Coleman will draw a lot of 1-on-1 coverage. Brees looked comfortable targeting him against New England. Last week he found the end zone again. Flex him in deeper leagues.

: JJ Nelson- Nelson might be the hottest fantasy commodity right now. Palmer has keyed on to him like a heat seeking missile. He has been their best and most productive player and without a running game now, Palmer will throw 40 times a game. San Fran gives up the 15th most fantasy points to WRs

: DeVante Parker- A risk, but Cutler targets him consistently as the Dolphins deep threat and long yardage guy. They play the Saints and they are the cure for any offense. RB Jay Ajayi is questionable this week, and the Dolphins may have to air it out. Image result for Amendola

 

Time for TEs

: Hunter Henry- He has a big body and the stands as heir apparent to Antonio Gates. He had a slow start in week one but had a great game in week two. It seems as though the Chargers enjoy playing from behind. This benefits Henry.

: Coby Fleener- Fleener has quickly become Brees’ go-to red zone guy.  He was decent with Luck,  but now that he and Brees have gotten in sync, he has incredible value and will get linebacker  coverage when they roll into Miami on Sunday.

: Evan Engram- I know this is questionable because the Giants offense is pathetic.  They play the Buccaneers who just got thrashed. A healthier Beckam will only open things up for Engram who had five catches for 45 yards last week. Detroit Lions v New York Giants : News Photo

Ben Watson- Yes, that Ben Watson who we remember chasing Champ Bailey down years ago. He is still in the league, healthy and available. I just picked him up. He had a great week two, and Flacco targets him a lot. He got a late TD in London last week and that is the key.

Big D’s

Defenses… I’m only going to do three of these because five is just too many 🙂

: Seattle- After an awful display last week, the Seahawks will bounce back vs the Colts in a big way. The key will be score often and force Jacoby Brissette to throw it.

: Jacksonville- The Jags sport one of the top-scoring defenses in the league. Calais Campbell has had a resurgence and it has been contagious. The anemic Jets offense looks to down Matt Forte.

: New England- After an awful week one, they played better in week two. Hightower should be back, and there seems to be a glimpse of pass rush now. They are playing a very vanilla Carolina team that may be without Kelvin Benjamin. Cam Newton is not the player he was two years ago and he will struggle vs an improving team defense.

Good luck in week three, and may the fantasy gods be kind to you in all of your match ups and if they aren’t, there is always next week 🙂

Yours truly,
BostonBongo

It’s Not About Veterans

Spaceballs

This weekend, the world watched millionaire players and billionaire owners protest the national anthem, speak out against the President, or hide in the locker room. Monday, we saw a decorated Army Ranger who felt compelled to apologize for standing to honor his nation. WTF is wrong with this country?

In the span of a week we have jumped at ludicrous speed from a few guys kneeling to protest social injustice to a full-blown culture war.  The internet flooded with videos of self-righteous fans burning their season tickets and team jerseys. Patriots’ fans booed their team at home – not like in the 70s and 80s when the team deserved it.  Last week, they booed before kickoff.

It’s not about Kaepernick

None of this is new. This didn’t start President Trump tweeting something stupid and divisive. It didn’t start with a bad second-string quarterback in San Francisco taking a knee last year. Anthem protests have been around of years.

Most readers are too young to remember when US Track and Field Olympians gave a Black Power salute during the anthem after receiving their medals in 1968. Some may recall the NBA suspending Denver Nuggets guard Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf in 1996 for refusing to stand for the anthem.

Embed from Getty Images

Tommie Smith and John Carlo’s iconic protest came at the height of the civil rights movement and in the wake of Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassination.  The difference between Rauf and Kaepernick is that Rauf was still a legitimate player in the NBA at the time. He was run out of Denver at the end of that season and was out of the NBA entirely shortly thereafter. Don’t forget – Kaepernick voided his own contract and chose to leave SF at the end of last season.

Is his activism a factor in why he’s still unemployed? Almost certainly. Is it the reason? In NFL terms, it’s less probable than not. Back-up QBs should be inexpensive and neither be seen nor heard. Everyone recognizes that that isn’t Kaepernick.

Enough with the fake outrage

I have attended hundreds of professional sporting events in more than 20 different cities. I have overpaid for nachos and beer in 16 different MLB parks alone.  Rarely have I been impressed with how fans honor America while the song plays.

Across the country, in all major sports, fans ignore the anthem as they buy beer, make their way to their seats, talk with friends, or update social media. They keep their hats on, video the singer, and take selfies. Other than the ballpark at Arlington, I can’t remember attending a sporting event that suspended concession sales during the anthem. God Bless Texas.

I graduated from that same little trade school on the Hudson as Steelers offensive lineman Alejandro Villanueva. I served more than 23 years in the Army and deployed five times. I’ve had friends come home in caskets under the flag. It means something to me. I will always stand in silence for the anthem and will smack my kids if they so much as sneeze before it’s finished.

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Symbols and Rights

This fake controversy isn’t about disrespecting Veterans. The soldiers and friends I and others lost in the service to this country represented diversity racially and ideologically as any NFL locker room. They didn’t die for the flag or the anthem. They served, sacrificed, and died for their fellow Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen, and Marines.

The flag and the anthem are not totems to bow down to, but rather symbols of the ideals of this country. Those include the idea that all men are created equal, have the inalienable right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, and to free speech. These represent the very things for which people are protesting. You are not a good American if you claim to love our nation’s symbols but not the exercise of someone’s right’s because you disagree with their message.

I am offended by the jerk who keeps his hat on, usually backwards, and won’t shut up during the anthem. That’s disrespectful. Players using the opportunity to make a peaceful statement about social injustice – whether I agree with them or not – doesn’t bother me at all. For 241 years Veterans have fought for them to have that right, it would be hypocritical for us to ask them not to exercise it.

Easy Solution

Americans used to believe in the market place of ideas – that everyone could exercise their right to free speech, that good arguments would win and bad ones would lose. Now, as a nation, we seem to have lost the intellectual courage to tolerate diverse opinions.  We are so threatened by people who don’t believe exactly like us that we demand they be silenced. The left has done that on college campuses and the right is doing it now in NFL stadiums.

Embed from Getty Images

We have two simple solutions to our current national distraction. First, instead of attacking these players we could seek to emulate them. Every team in the NFL has players from every race, religion, and political ideology.  Yet, somehow, they’re not killing one another in the locker room.  Players like Devon McCourty, Duron Harmon, and others have protested during the nation anthem for more than a year.  Kraft, Belichick, and Brady all have relationships with President Trump.  And yet, somehow, these two different groups have good relationships with one another. How shockingly adult of them.

Second, we could just stop playing the national anthem at sporting events. Don’t pretend that it mattered to you before people started kneeling. It probably didn’t.

A Quick Analysis of the Patriots’ Week 4 Match-Up Against the Panthers

A once-in-a-blue-moon meeting for the Patriots to prepare for this weekend. The Patriots will face the Carolina Panthers, a team they have not played in the regular season since 2013. After a Monday Night Football game in week eleven of that season, the Panthers came out on top in the waning minutes of the match to win 24-20. The game finished with controversy over the referees picking up a penalty flag for defensive pass interference on the last play of the game where Tom Brady took a shot in the end zone to Rob Gronkowski.

Since 2013 the Patriots and the Panthers have been present in a Super Bowl: the Patriots winning two and the Panthers appearing in one. The Panthers have had both successful and unfortunate seasons since this season but have learned from their mistakes. Both teams are very different from four years ago, however Tom Brady and Cam Newton still reign.

Stopping the Panthers’ West Coast Offense

Cam Newton is one of the more popular quarterbacks in the NFL, mostly because of his impressive mobility. He can turn on the burners in an instant and run with the ball himself on a split second decision. At the same time he possesses the arm strength to heave the ball downfield. The Patriots had a similar task last weekend against rookie Deshaun Watson whose pocket presence and speed kept defenders from containing him.

Cam Newton might be quicker than Watson, but the Patriots’ defense should be working on pressuring the quarterback more in this week’s practice. Heavily relying on zone coverage will not fair well against Cam Newton and his strong running back corp. Jonathan Stewart is a well-used power runner who is deadly on screens in the back field. A similar principle goes for rookie Christian McCaffrey, a quick runner and can punish on running an angle or wheel route.  To stop Cam Newton, man coverage QB containment and a few crafty blitzes will come in handy. As for the Panthers’ backs, that’s when cover 3 should be used. Dont’a Hightower, pending if he returns this week from injury, will have a big task covering Stewart and McCaffrey. Malcolm Butler will also have to size up 6’5″ wide receiver Kelvin Benjamin.

Rallying on Offense

The Panthers used to boast one of the stingiest secondaries in the league two years ago under Josh Norman. Lately, they have become more centralized on building up the defensive line along with the linebacker corp: Charles Johnson, Julius Peppers, Star Lotulelei, Kawann Short, Mario Addison, Shaq Thompson, Luke Kuechly, and Thomas Davis. All of these powerful defenders work together on the defensive line. To beat a stacked defensive line like that, Tom Brady will have to replicate his performance last week. It is imperative that he gets the ball off quickly on short routes to receivers. The Patriots’ offensive line faces an even bigger task. Coach Dante Scarnecchia this week has more than likely hammered on his offensive line after they allowed Tom Brady to be sacked multiple times.

Quick slants will help beat a defense that will be trying to capitalize on rushing Brady. Danny Amendola is a perfect receiver for short passes and Rob Gronkowski is always a vertical threat. Chris Hogan might have a mixed role this game where he will catch short passes but at the same time run deep like he has done in the past two games. If it ain’t broke don’t fix it.

Panic At the Citgo

2016/ 2017 parallel collapse?

In 2016 the Red Sox were one of the best teams in baseball down the stretch. From August 31st- September 25th, they put together an impressive stretch of winning going 19-5. Amidst this stretch was an 11-game win streak in which all the wins came against division rivals. However, the Sox fell off at the absolute worst time possible. They barely stumbled through the finish line, losing five of their last six, and had a hot date in the ALDS vs the Indians who won 10 of their last 15 games. The Sox were promptly swept by the Indians in three ugly games.

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Well, here we are again. The Sox put together a terrific end to the season, going 18-9 from August 28th- September 24th. Unfortunately, the Red Sox have seem to lost all momentum in the first two games of the Blue Jays series. Boston has dropped back to back games 6-4 and 9-4. “…So what? they lost two games, what is the big deal?”  Typically a short two-game skid is nothing to sweat over, but these two losses have been particularly concerning. Boston has been outscored by last- place Toronto 15-8 despite throwing their best pitching options (Sale and Pomeranz). Sale surrendered five earned runs, eight hits and four home runs in just five innings of work. Pomeranz was no better as he lasted just two innings while giving up five earned runs and seven hits. Certainly not what #RedSoxNation wants to see from their aces heading into the playoffs. It feels as though one can sense the fear lingering in Boston as fans are afraid this may be the beginning of a collapse similar to last year.

Panic Time?

No. It is too early to panic. It would be panic time if we were battling for a wildcard spot and our playoff hopes were in jeopardy. Fortunately, we still hold a three- game lead over the Yankees in the AL East. While it is possible that New York catches us, it is very unlikely. Three games is an enormous amount of ground to cover with just five games remaining on the season. Also, the Sox have responded very well to slumps this year.

Thinking back on the season, two significant slumps come to mind. The first was a stretch lasting from July 5th-July 30th in which Boston lost 14 of 22 games. They bounced back from this rough stretch in a dramatic way, winning 16 of their next 20 games. Then, In late August, Boston lost four straight, one game against Cleveland and a three-game sweep delivered by Baltimore. During this four game skid, the Red Sox were outscored 36-10. This was a tremendously concerning time. Yet again, the team responded positively to the situation, winning 18 of the next 25 games. *This hot stretch actually brought them to the start of the current series vs the Blue Jays* So yes, it has been a very ugly two games for Boston, but lets not overreact. This team has bounced back from slumps multiple times this season, and we can certainly do it again. As I close out this article, Bogaerts just hit a three-run home run to blow the game wide open. Big sigh of relief for Red Sox Nation. Prepare yourself, October.  Here come the Sox.

 

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*Follow me on twitter @MLBfromNH (Kevin Civiello)* *Stats up to date as of 9/27/17*P

CTE: Where to Place the “Blame”

THE ISSUE

Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy – CTE – has become the biggest issue facing the NFL. After doctors examined the brain of ex-Patriot and NFL star Aaron Hernandez, they discovered he suffered from CTE. Hernandez hung himself in his prison cell while awaiting an appeal of his murder conviction.

CTE has affected many other former players as well. Who is to blame for concussions? Where do they begin? The NFL faces an issue that they never created. The NFL has adopted protocols to prevent reoccurring concussions to current players. They have a physician with no team affiliation who puts players in “concussion protocol.” If he or she sees something they don’t like, the effected player heads to the lockers. They sit for as long as it takes for the doctors to declare the player healthy. A step in the right direction.Image result for aaron hernandez

THE START

I grew up in the 80s, when safety wasn’t in the forefront.  At the time when a child’s body is developing, so is their brain. But still, we rough housed, had rock fights, recklessly sledded, had brutal pillow fights, and rode bicycles without helmets. Have you ever slipped and banged your head on concrete or ice? Head butted with a kid or fallen off a jungle gym? All these things factor into your development physically and mentally – minor concussions are not diagnosed. The other problem that plagues our youth is the age at with they begin contact and collision sports. Children as young as eight engage in full contact. These leagues haven’t the finances or resources to diagnose concussions or other brain injuries. Some parents have suggested switching to flag football to reduce head-to-head hits.  Again, stepping in the right direction.

HIGH SCHOOL TRAUMA

High school first introduced me to the term, “you just got your bell rung.” When this happened, people were expected to simply sit out for a bit and get back out there. After all, football is a “gladiator” sport and players the “cool kids” or “jocks.” Incredible that these labels are put on teenagers just for running around a field having fun. But, competition can easily turn into insanity, as nobody ever wants to be perceived as weak. Health gets tossed off like roadkill. Rub some dirt on it and get back in there. Crazy, right? High schools don’t have the funds to pay a physician to roam the sidelines policing concussions. It is a tough business allocating money, especially in public schools.

RECRUITING PARENTS

Education has been and will continue to be the top priority. Some schools are now asking the players’ parents to get involved. They suggest that the parents stay close to the bench to interact with their children. Coaches hope that a parent can notice any abnormality in their child. Maybe a little slurred speech, odd gait or unnatural behavior that would cause concern. Stepping forward in a great direction here. Get parents involved in helping the development their children and their safety.

COLLEGE AND THE GOLDEN RULE

The next place to help prevent CTE is college football. CFB is a booming business to say the least.  Top teams make tens of millions of dollars per year. Some elite programs can hit a hundred million. This money helps these universities fuel other athletic programs. Smaller schools with less earning power (no TV money) need to play so called “body bag” games. An inferior team that doesn’t make the money it needs to function gets paid to travel to a top program’s home field. The visiting team gains money, experience and a beating of sizable proportions. Finance and health collide again.   And it’s sad that that former seems more important than the latter. The NCAA has now taken the same measures as the NFL exercising caution, but I feel it just protects their bottom lines.

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THE PRO LEVEL

Now on to the NFL, where over the past decade or so they have started to improve safety across the board. They now use technology to redesign the helmets to absorb more force. In addition they take on-the-field actions by fining/suspending players that lead with their helmets. I mentioned before that they now have unaffiliated physicians monitoring hits on the field and reactions to the hits. As this game evolves, it is important to keep evolving with it. Players are getting bigger, stronger, faster and more aggressive, so it is imperative to keep exploring ways to keep our young athletes safe across the board. The tragedy and burden has fallen to the NFL to correct the CTE discussion.

GOING FORWARD

It is imperative to keep exploring ways to keep our young athletes safe across the board. All ages, races and sexes are affected the same. The tragedy and burden has fallen to the NFL to correct the CTE discussion. The NFL has some “blame” for it as they channeled money hand over fist, advertising big, hard hits. They are exciting and motivating to fans, with little thought to how it impacts the players. The rhetoric maintained they get paid well so “suck it” up and “rub some dirty on it.” Maybe society and fans should shoulder a bit of the load here too. Point is that it affects us all and we can all help the cause. I would implore us all as parents, brothers, sisters, friends, coaches, fans and teammates to stay vigilant in preventing the lasting effect of head and brain trauma.

 

Jonathan Salvi

@BostonBongo