Sports. Honestly. Since 2011

Tebow Time or Tanking Time?

Last week Denver coach, John Fox, made the decision to switch to quarterback Tim Tebow.  Given the recent play of former starter Kyle Orton this move alone looks defensible.  But shortly thereafter the Broncos put their most dynamic offensive player, Brandon Lloyd, on the trade market and followed that up by hearing offers for Eddie Royal.  Only Lloyd was eventually moved for a late round pick, essentially a sell off of the guy who lead the league in receiving yards just last season. Put together these moves look like one thing only – a tank job.  The circumstances fit. Fox is in his first year as coach of the Broncos, this gives him a security to lose knowing he will probably get at least two years to prove himself.  Denver is a rebuilding team that doesn’t appear to have much of a direction and they have little chance at the playoffs.  No one can tell if their plan is really to tank or not, but what I want to know is if the Broncos, or anyone else is your team, do you want them to tank?

This year the topic of tanking has come up a lot;  when KC lost multiple offensive players early in the season, when Indy lost Peyton Manning and started 0-4, and now with Denver.  The reason it is such a hot topic is simple, Andrew Luck, star QB at Stanford.  Less than halfway through the college season Luck is the consensus #1 pick.  Picking up a franchise quarterback is a sweet prize for finishing last place in a season when you know you aren’t going to win the Superbowl anyways, and the teams we have mentioned really don’t have any shot at the playoffs either.  Given these circumstances, why not tank?

For my money it is way too early in the season to think about tanking.  If you start giving less than your all to win as a Head Coach than the players will sense it and you will lose them.  Once that happens there is no guarantee you can ever get them back.  Sure it would be sweet to pick up a franchise quarterback but what guarantee do you have he turns into that?  Play out the season and see where the chips fall then.  What would you want your team to do?

They have made this decision along with a few moves that make you question their intentions.  Brandon Lloyd is reportedly  on the trading block.  Lloyd is one of Denver’s few elite players on offense.  Now word has come that they are also hearing offers for Eddie Royal.  These moves combined

Inside Serie A: Week 7 and Week 8

Serie A Review of Week 7

Week 7 of the Serie A can be considered both boring and exciting. Internazionale FC continued their inconsistent and poor run of form losing 2-1 to Catania Calcio. Nerazzurri midfielder Estebian Cambiasso opened the scoring early on in the match with a fine solo effort. In the second half, Catania stormed back out-performing the Inter players with Sergio Almiron, on loan from Juventus, scoring the equalizer in the 47th minute, with Lodi scoring the game-winner from the penalty spot to send Inter spiralling into a crisis.

SSC Napoli also stumbled at the San Paolo against Parma, a team which has proven to be fierce opponents this year. Sebastian Giovinco, who has scored 5 goals this season, looks to be in tip top form as he continues to create goal-scoring opportunities as well as scoring goals himself. In the second half against the Partenopei, Giovinco slipped in a beautiful through ball to Gobbi , who executed the play to give the Gialloblu the go-ahead goal. Napoli however stormed back with an eqiualiser with Giuseppe Mascara. Then, in the closing minutes of the game, it went all wrong for Napoli as Parma was rewarded a spot kick which was converted by Modesto to hand Parma a morale-boosting win.

AC Milan seems to be getting back on their feet as they dominated US Città di Palermo with a 3-0 thumping at the San Siro with Robinho returning to the line-up. Robinho looked as if he did not miss a step performing very well as it was evident his presence was missed on the field for the Rossoneri. Antonio Nocerino opened the scoring in fine fashion with a tap-in from close range set up by a diving-headed pass from Alberto Aquilani! Robinho followed with a clean finish from a beautiful set-up from Zlatan Ibrahimovic. In second half action, Antonio Cassano put the final nail in the coffin as he finished off the Sicilians with a blast into the bottom right corner.

The match of the weekend was the Derby of Rome between SS Lazio v AS Roma. This match injected a shot of excitement in this week’s rather boring soccer action in the Serie A with 5 out of 10 games ending in a scoreless draw. Both teams were on edge as were the fans as the intensity and atmosphere were insane at the Stadio Olimpico. The Giallorossi opened the scoring early with Argentine-born Italian international Pablo Osvaldo showing the Roma faithful his worth by scoring the first goal of the game. Roma could have been leading by 3 or 4 goals in the first half clearly dominating the midfield. At half time, Edy Reja, Lazio head coach, must have given his team an ear full as the Biancocelesti came out flying in the second half and began to put Roma under an extreme amount of pressure. Lazio equalised with a questionable penalty on Hernanes. Then, at the last gasp of the game, German international Miroslav Klose scored the game-winner capitalizing on 2 Giallorossi defensemen who were caught napping at the back.  Roma fell 2-1 to Lazio who climbed to 4th place on 11 points, 1 point off of the league leaders. This was one of the best derbies I ever have seen!

Here are the rest of the results for Week 7…

 

 

Week 7

16/10/11

Atalanta

0-0

Udinese

Cagliari

0-0

Siena

Catania

2-1

Inter

Cesena

0-0

Fiorentina

Chievo

0-0

Juventus

Genoa

0-0

Lecce

Lazio

2-1

Roma

Milan

3-0

Palermo

Napoli

1-2

Parma

Novara

0-2

Bologna

 

 

 

 

 

 

Serie A Preview of Week 8

Internazionale FC will host a very difficult Chievo Verona side in a crucial tie for the Nerazzurri. Inter boss, Claudio Ranieri, knows very well it is a MUST WIN game and that Nerazzurri patron, Massimo Moratti will be expecting the 3 points as Inter sits 4th place from the bottom of the table. It doesn’t get any easier for Inter FC as they will face an eager Atalanta side in Bergamo in mid-week Serie A action, and then the on-form Juventus FC at the Giuseppe Meazza stadium in week 10.  Speaking of the Bianconeri, Juventus FC welcomes Genoa FC at the new Juventus Stadium in Turin looking to stay ahead of the pack. Juve seems to be playing well these days but have proven to have difficulty finding the back of the net. It will not be an easy test against the Grifone who started the season very strongly indeed but have looked a bit sluggish recently as they are winless in last the 3 games, 2 of which were losses to Chievo and Parma. SSC Napoli travels to Cagliari. Walter Mazzarri’s was disappointed the way his men played in mid-week against Bayern Munich in the Champions League, and will be looking to return to form in a tough Cagliaritani environment. AC Milan, who are now only 4 points off pace and seem to have found their stride again, travels to US Lecce for the afternoon kick off. The Rossoneri should easily defeat Lecce, who will be missing star attacker David Di Michele due to injury. AS Roma travels to US Città di Palermo who provide a very tough challenge when playing at the Renzo Barbera Stadium in Sicily. The Giallorossi are coming off an emotional loss to their cross-city rivals SS Lazio and will be looking to rebound this week which may be unlikely to happen.

Here are the fixtures and predictions for Week 8….

Week 8

23/10/11

Bologna

Lazio              Lazio

Cagliari

Napoli           Napoli

Fiorentina

Catania   Fiorentina

Inter

Chievo            Inter

Juventus

Genoa                Tie

Lecce

Milan               Milan

Parma

Atalanta        Parma

Roma

Palermo     Palermo

Siena

Cesena              Tie

Udinese

Novara       Udinese

 

Out of the Gate: Who's Hot, Who's Not?

With seven games in the books so far in the National Hockey League, it’s safe to say which teams will be making the playoffs this year and which teams pulling their spiked shoes out of the closet. I’m kidding of course. Even doing an evaluation at this point in the season is ridiculous. But if you’ve read my articles before, you know that’s not going to stop me. And with the NHL Centre Ice free preview, and my trusty PVR, I think I’ve watched over 100 games so far.

Off to a quick start

Washington– They should be at the top, and they have had an easy schedule so far, but undefeated is undefeated. And just wait till Ovi and Green get going…

Philly– Again, another team that should be at the top of the pack. But I did expect a slightly slower start with the new look offence. And I didn’t expect Giroux to break out like he has.

Toronto– Expected to have a good start with five relatively easy home games, but going 4-1-1 exceeds expectations. And Kessel leading the league in goals and points is amazing! Leaf fans enjoy it while it lasts, cause it won’t, and neither will the Leafs torrent pace. Look for them to even out, but still hold a golden ticket by the end of the season. Oh and good on Kessel for doing what he’s doing with, ya you guessed it, no help yet again!

New York Islanders– Expected to be somewhat bottom-feeders again. They are proving that their recipe of young talent might be ready to come out of the oven earlier then we thought. Tavares has matured on the ice, and looks ready to be the elite player he was born to be. His supporting cast looks ready to help him, although Grabner hasn’t got going yet. And if Montoya is a legitimate solution, they may find themselves in the hunt come April.

Detroit– The only other undefeated team in the league. I know they’ve only played four games, but in those four games they’ve only given up 5 goals! Pretty impressive! But that’s what they’re going to have to be if they want to hold on to first in that division.

Colorado– They lost their first game to undefeated Detroit, then won five straight! They are rolling right now, albeit over weaker teams, but with Vancouver playing like shit, the division is theirs to lose. And it’s almost making Varlamov look like he’s worth his off-season price tag. Almost. They will definitely even out though when they start playing tougher teams. Can Duchene pick up the slack?

Dallas– Going 5-1 to start the season is really good for any team. Going 5-1 after losing your franchise star centre man in the off-season is amazing! Also considering Let-emin-in is only masquerading as an A-1 goalie. Jamie Benn is the cog that’s turning this wheel, and he could spin them right into the playoffs, but it’s not going to be easy considering their division.

Anaheim– Hiller is back, the best line in hockey isn’t. But it doesn’t matter; they’ve quacked their way to a 4-1 record. All I can say is when the big three get going, look out!

Right where they should be

Pittsburgh– No Crosby, no Malkin, no problem! They did it last year, they’ll do it again. 5-2-2 and fighting for the division lead is right were they should be.

Buffalo– Off to the great start a lot of us saw coming. Miller is back, and they are for real. Might have a little trouble with the divisional games down the stretch, but should still take the division.

New Jersey– They win one, they lose one, they pull two more out in shootouts. I think that’s how it’s going to be for Jersey this year, scratching and clawing for their points.

New York Rangers– I think the Rangers are in the same boat, a lot of close games decided in overtimes and shootouts.

Carolina– 3-2-1 start, middle of the road, will be fighting in April.

Florida– Playing .500 hockey actually isn’t bad for Florida. But they’d be better off tanking and getting another top pick.

Ottawa– Alfie still has something in the tank, and that’s great to see. And Ottawa is doing the right thing by keeping him around until he’s ready to retire, as a Sen (and not pulling a Sundin). But in reality, they’re like the Leafs 3 years ago. Let your captain retire gracefully, sell off your aging assets for picks (Spezza etc.), suck it up, and take a high first round pick.

Winnipeg– Bottom in the conference, they might as well make themselves at home… in their new home.

Chicago– Right where they should be, fighting for the lead in the Central division. I expect a bounce back season from their matured core.

Los Angeles– They will be in a three-horse race to win the best, most competitive division in hockey (with a serious nod to the Atlantic division). And that’s right where they are now, with Dallas taking San Jose’s spot as the third horse. Kopitar is the real deal and will lead this team into the playoffs while finishing in the top 10 in scoring. But to be a serious cup contender they need Doughty to return to top form. The guy holds out of training camp and preseason for more cash, shows up rusty as hell, plays 4 games (badly) registering one point, gets hurt, and finishes with a minus one. What was he doing all month leading up to the season? Watching Sports Centre and eating Kraft dinner? Somebody needs to give his head a shake!

Minny– 3-2-2 after their first seven. The Wild are a mediocre team even with Heatley, and will probably be on the outside looking in come playoff time.

Edmonton– Same situation as Minny, but with 10x the potential.

Calgary– Five points from six games is more than I expected, and it’s still below .500. Look for another big shakeup anytime before trade deadline.

Phoenix– Same as Calgary, they’re doing the best with what they have. It’s funny how one player can make such a big difference…

Did the season start yet?

Boston– Can you say hang over? They need to put the champagne down and start playing hockey again. Which I think they will, and I think they will still finish 2nd in Northeast and make the playoffs. But there will not be another parade in Bean town.

Tampa Bay– I can understand the fatigue that comes with going deep into the playoffs for guys like, Rolly, Marty, and Vinny. But guys like Stamkos and Hedman should be energized after getting a real good sniff last year. Anyway, anything but 2nd in the division for these guys is unacceptable.

Montreal– I didn’t expect great things from the Habs this year, in fact I had them middle of the pack. Currently they are sitting in the basement though, where I don’t think they belong. But with a battered defense corps they seem to be taking on a lot of water, and it might be sink or swim time soon if they can’t right the ship.

Vancouver– I think they are still walking down the boulevard of broken dreams. Picking up the pieces from last seasons loss, literally. I think Vancouver will be ok though, both the team and the city. The Sedins will be up to their usual tricks again, and they will finish with a high seed going into the playoffs. I still can’t figure out how the Sedins get away with their two-man cycle though. Like if one of them has the puck, guard the other one! Especially if it’s Daniel (the shooter). But anyway its fun to watch the creativity. The only question mark is Luongo. But again, no parade here.

San Jose– Who spiked the punch? All 4 teams that went deep into the playoffs last year seem to have Stanley Cup hangovers. They are all off to sluggish starts this season, and worst of all is San Jose. Not only do they have the worst record of the 4, they are the best team of the four. Hopefully Havlat’s debut can turn things around for them, because they are in a division that leaves bad teams in the dust.

Nashville– I expected Nashville to have a winning record now and in April, with a playoff spot to go with it. I also expected Rinne to be a Vezina contender. They’re going to have to get better real fast. There are no guarantees for bubble teams.

St. Louis– Another team I expected to be above .500. Some say it’s still early, I say it’s never too early to win. And win they must. They’re not good enough to coast.

Columbus– Six straight winless games. Only winless team in the league. It leaves Columbus fans asking, “Is it too late to renege on the Carter trade?”

College Football Picks, Week 8

#20 Auburn @ #1 LSU: Despite the suspension of three (very good) players, LSU should prevail. Their depth is impressive.

#4 Oklahoma State at Missouri: I’ll be shocked if Missouri somehow pulls off the upset.

North Carolina @ #7 Clemson: Clemson’s on a roll and it won’t stop this week.

#11 Kansas State @ Kansas: K-State might be slightly under-ranked at 11. Kansas has the worst defense in Division I-A. You do the math.

#23 Illinois @ Purdue: Illinois needs a win over a weak Purdue team to atone for the Ohio State disaster last week. They’ll get it.

#9 Arkansas @ Ole Miss: Arkansas, and probably in a blowout.

BC @ #12 Virginia Tech: This isn’t a hockey game, therefore I’m not picking BC.

#13 Nebraska @ Minnesota: Anyone who loses to the Gophers should be relegated to I-AA. Nebraska won’t be that team.

Air Force @ #5 Boise State: Oh for crying out loud. Boise. Next?

#17 Texas A&M @ Iowa State: A&M has had some excellent games this season, including a big win over Baylor last week. They’ll handle the Cyclones.

#22 Georgia Tech @ Miami: This is a tough one to pick. I think GT will win, but it strikes me as the kind of game where the Canes could step up and surprise people.

#10 Oregon @ Colorado: In their first Pac-12 matchup, Oregon will prevail.

Marshall @ #19 Houston: It’s unusual to see a Conference-USA team ranked, but not so much when you consider that their QB is a rare sixth-year senior. Case Keenum has demonstrated poise and accuracy, albeit against weaker competition for the most part. Houston should win easily.

#21 Penn State @ Northwestern: When Northwestern played Michigan, I saw some really impressive things and some really disappointing things. It’s hard to get a feel for them. I think Penn State will win, but I wouldn’t be shocked if Northwestern pulled the upset.

Tennessee @ #2 Alabama: Tide by at least 20.

Texas Tech @ #3 Oklahoma: Texas Tech isn’t terrible, but Oklahoma is really good. Pick: Sooners.

#6 Wisconsin @ #16 Michigan State: This is an interesting game. I’ve seen the Spartans play twice: in their worst game of the year (against Notre Dame) and probably their best (against Michigan). Wisconsin has been dominant, but they haven’t played anybody all that good. I don’t think Michigan State’s defense can stop Russell Wilson behind that mammoth offensive line; I’m picking the Badgers.

#25 Washington @ #8 Stanford: The Huskies are certainly much improved from a couple of years ago, but not to the point where I can see them taking down the Cardinal.

World Series- Game 1

The Cardiac Cards are 3 wins away from completing one of the best Cinderella stories in baseball history. But, there is a pretty big obstacle in their way; That obstacle being the Texas Rangers. This is the second straight World Series for the lawmen. They are a tough team, and they don’t plan on losing – again!

This series has been dubbed “The Battle of the Skips”, pitting two of the craftiest managers in baseball against each other. And with Texas having home field advantage in the series, it kinda reminds me of my favorite western movie, Tombstone, with both managers playing Wyatt Earp.

Ron Washington of the Rangers, walks up to Tony La Russa of the Cards before game one with that cocky Wyatt swagger. He’s looking to win the confrontation without La Russa putting up a fight. Staring him straight in the eye, he says, “Go ahead, skin that smokewagon and see what happens!”

Well, La Russa wasn’t intimidated. He hit the Rangers with a six-shooter of pitchers, followed by six shots from the plate. Winning the first of the dust-ups, 3-2. Then La Russa, with his best Wyatt stare, turns to Washington and says, “You gonna do something? Or just stand there and bleed?”

You better believe Washington won’t stand idle. He has the fire power to win this fight, and he’s gonna do his best to leave it all on the line. These are two great teams, with two great managers, and this duel is gonna go long into the night…

Game 2- today at high noon (8:05 EST)

A Closer Look at the NFL

After six weeks of play the league is starting to fall into place.  But I want to take a closer look at a few of the teams that some people might have made their mind up on already and see if they are who we think they are. And hopefully we don’t let them off the hook.

San Francisco – They are 5-1 and coming off a huge road victory over the previously undefeated Lions.  Harbaugh looks like an all-star as their new coach and the team appears to have a plan they are executing routinely.  They show up and run the ball; whether they are in the lead or playing from behind, they pound the rock.  They are able to do this because they play with a physical style and their defense is living up to the promise it never did under the Singletary regime.  But their strong early run-game has covered up one glaring weakness – they don’t have a quarterback.  In last week’s victory over the Lions starter Alex Smith passed for only 170 yards.  On the season he has broken 200 yards only once.  Given their remaining schedule and the rest of their division, I think San Fran will be able to continue their winning ways, but don’t let Smith off of your radar.  They won’t be able to come from behind like they did against Philly all season long.  If the 49ers are forced to play outside of their style they won’t be successful.  There could be a few stinkers in San Fran’s future.

San Diego – Everything is gravy for the Chargers.  They just completed their first five games with a 4-1 record, they survived some shaky play against some sub-par teams and escaped September with a winning record.  Now they are ready for their annual mid-season push, right?  I’m not sold on that this season.  In years past the Chargers offense was simple;  Send the receivers deep down the field and look to hit the big shot. If they aren’t open you are okay because the best TE in the league will be open over the middle or you can check it down to Darren Sproles who can make a man miss and pick up a first down.  This year Sproles has left the left coast for they bayou, New Orleans, and Gates is more banged up than usual.  In fact Gates, with his long-term foot injury, may never be the same player again.  Without these players picking up the easy yards it puts Phillip Rivers and the offense in some tough long-yardage situations.  This could be the reason Rivers is off to a shaky start with six TD’s and  seven INT’s.  This week’s match-up against the Jets will go along way to proving how good the Chargers really are, because right now a good team takes care of the Jets, period.

Seattle – They start off the season how everyone expected; a loss to the 49ers and a crushing at the hands of the Steelers.  Now they sit at 2-3 with a win over the lowly Cards and a “lucky” victory over the Giants.  Terrible team just as expected, right?  Not so fast. First off let’s say we know the Seahawks have problems on offense. Either Tavaris Jackson or Charlie Whitehurst is the starting QB and neither is a great option.  So we can’t expect too much from Seattle but maybe they are a decent team.  Sitting where we are now the opening loss to the 49ers doesn’t look so bad – a road loss to a team off to a hot start.  The Steelers loss was bad timing to have to play an angry Steelers team.  Since then they have played three very competitive games against Arizona-Atlanta-New York.  Not so bad.  Now remember that the Seahawks did win their division last year and they have three new starters on the offensive line this year that need time to gel.  On top of that Seattle stops the run really well. Maybe they aren’t destined for great things but .500 could be in their future.  Let’s wait and see.

Oakland – The Raiders can run the ball and they had a nice win over the Jets.  But their defense stinks and their QB just got hurt.  Palmer might have been worth two first round picks (essentially) to the Raiders but to everyone who actually watched him play the last few years he is maybe worth a third.  That’s right.  Carson Palmer stinks.  End of story. End of season.

Dallas – They may be 2-3 but I see them as the best team in their division.  Their defense is playing excellent.  They have play makers all over the field on offense.  Once the combo of Romo – Austin – Bryant are totally healthy I think their offense will take off.  They have given away two wins late and the other loss was a road game they lead late against the Pats.  They may not be a complete team but they will be a very good one.

And that is the last word.

Youngsters Showing Star Quality in Edmonton

Oiler's Ryan Nugent-Hopkins gets congratulated by teammates after scoring his first pre-season goal as the Edmonton Oilers play the Phoenix Coyotes in NHL pre-season action at Rexall Place in Edmonton, September 28, 2011.Taylor Hall, Jordan Eberle and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins. Surely you know them, they are the future of hockey’s Edmonton Oilers. If you haven’t heard of these kids, get used to them, they will be household names soon enough. Eberle, born in Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada, is 21 years old. Hall was born in Calgary, is 19 years old and was last year’s first overall draft pick. This year’s top pick, Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, hails from Burnaby B.C. and is only 18. Yeah, I know what you’re thinking, they’re only kids, but on the ice they show talent and poise that takes years of practice and the best is yet to come.

So far this season Hall, Eberle and RNH have four, three and five points respectively. The Oilers have played five games, but Hall was missing in one of the contests. That makes Hall and Nugent-Hopkins point-per-game players. I know it doesn’t sound incredibly impressive, and it’s early in the year, but consider this – The Oilers have scored only nine goals this year. A 10th was tallied for a shootout win. RNH has four of those goals, including his first career hat trick. Hall’s four points came in games that totalled eight goals altogether. That credits him with 50% of the Oiler markers in those games. Eberle has shown great playmaking ability and all three players are posting a plus rating even with a 2-3 team record.

Take a drink, digest, and now try to wrap your head around what these kids will be pulling off when they’re in their prime. That’s just around the corner, well, maybe eight years away!  Regardless, I am seriously considering subscribing to the Sportsnet Oilers channel on my Bell Satellite just so I don’t miss any of the action that is sure to come. The Oilers do have the option of sending Nugent-Hopkins back down to the little leagues, but this would be nothing short of insanity. Keep him up, allow time for the trio to work magic and let them get used to the game in the NHL.

In closing, you really have to love what the future in Edmonton holds. It will certainly boast a ton of skill and excitement. I’m thinking, as long as the Oilers can hold on tightly to these young guns, that they will have the best line in the NHL five years from now. Hopefully Edmonton can develop a supporting cast worthy of this future super line. If they can, they could reach a plateau that rivals the 1980’s Gretzky-era Edmonton Oilers. While that may seem next to impossible, sometimes the unimaginable can happen. Either way the skies are blue and expectations are lofty for this creative trio of young Canadian superstars.

And that is the last word.

Silva vs. Sonnen: The Saga Continues…

After last weekend’s UFC event and Sonnen’s colourful post-fight interview, I think a question on a lot of people’s minds is whether or not Sonnen actually has a legitimate shot at beating the champ… or if he will have to leave the UFC forever, as he claimed.

Personally, I am on the fence about this one – but, I do give Silva a slight advantage. Sonnen clearly dominated Silva in their first meet – and, as the whole MMA world saw (with jaws gaping) Silva submitted Sonnen at the final frame of their match. This would leave many to believe that Sonnen has all the tools needed to defeat Silva, he just needs to be more careful and practice his submission defence.

However, part of me still thinks that there was something awry with Silva. He didn’t quite seem to be himself in the fight, and granted he was on his back for a large portion of it, even seeing him on his feet and get knocked down was new for us. Silva claims that his performance was due to a back injury.  I suppose I believe the back injury story, but whether I think that it’s the only explanation for Sonnen’s apparent domination last time is a different story.

On the other side of things, the few times Silva has faced wrestlers, they have posed significant problems for him. Granted, the only top tier wrestlers that Silva has ever faced have been Sonnen and Henderson – but, both wrestlers created a headache for the champ. Henderson clearly won the first round in their tussle so long ago, and I think we’ve already covered Sonnen’s performance. Part of the reason may be the takedown. While Silva has faced plenty of jiujitsu fighters, typically fighters with a game focused on BJJ have not been very strong take down artists. Fighters with a strong wrestling base have typically been the more successful fighters when it comes to takedowns – and not only takedowns, but control and strength when it gets to the ground.  Look at the current roster of champs and I think the argument for the importance and advantage of a strong wrestling base becomes clear (Velasquez, Jones, St. Pierre, Edgar). Silva’s achilles heel could very well wrestlers and the takedown.

So, do I think Sonnen will win a re-match? Probably not. Silva looked pensive in their first fight, as I contest this was due to an injury. The Silva that we’ve seen in the ring as of late has been the one that exhibited a “ballet of violence” (as Joe Rogan put it) in his early fights. Sonnen has a solid chin – but, some people say Forrest does too, and  a fade away jab from the champ put him away. Hopefully, we see this fight in January and I am proven right, but very few things in MMA are very certain…

… except for two:

1) The build up to this fight is going to be fun to watch – Sonnen is such a great trash talker, and I can’t wait to see what he pulls out of his bag of tricks for this one.

2) If this fight is in Brazil (as it has been rumoured), Sonnen loses either way: either he loses the fight and has to leave the UFC; or he wins the fight and is murdered while leaving the ring by an angry Brazillian mob.

… and that is the last word.

The Biggest Game No One Is Talking About

When you consider the world’s biggest sporting events, the obvious ones surface – The Olympics, Superbowl, Master’s, Wimbeldon, World Cup of Football and Champions League Final. But there is a big event going on now that few people seem to be talking about, at least where I live – the Rugby World Cup.

For whatever reason, rugby hasn’t the following in North America as it does in most other corners of the globe. What makes it more interesting is that rugby was the platform for the establishment of North American football. Many don’t know that the first game of modern football was between the rugby squad’s from McGill University and Harvard in 1874, before the formation of the CFL in 1882, and almost 50 years before the establishment of the American Professional Football Association, later renamed National Football League.

So then why isn’t the Rugby World Cup a big deal? Why aren’t people talking about it? Why have I not heard a single discussion on any of the three popular sports radio stations I listen to? One possible culprit is that North Americans are generally unsure of the rules of the game, making it difficult to follow on a casual basis.  Aside from that, I really can’t figure it out.

Let’s reverse the trend. In the past month or so I have been watching more rugby than ever before, mostly due to my Setanta subscription. I still am unsure of some rules, but I am starting to get it. I like how the game is continuous, like soccer, with the physicality of football.

I challenge you to watch the final match between perennial powerhouse, New Zealand, and the stubborn team from France. The tournament final is being played this Sunday in New Zealand, and the home team is certainly favoured to win.  Only four years ago the All-Blacks from New Zealand lost a quarter-final match to France, and are now looking to dish out revenge on home turf.

If you haven’t watched rugby in a while, or ever, give it a try with an open mind. Come back to this article and let me know what you thought.

And that is the last word.