Mike Greenburg and Mike Golic: Guiding Light Bound!

December 5th, 2007 by Levi Matthews

mikeandmike.jpg Mike Greenburg and Mike Golic will be making an appearance on Guiding Light in the near future.

The hosts of “Mike & Mike in the Morning” talked about the show yesterday. Here are a few highlights:

Greenburg: We are going down there Friday to tape our episode of Guiding Light. I’m told it will air on February 20th, so we’ll remind you if you want to see Mike and Mike on Guiding Light. But, here are the characters they wrote for us. We’re not playing ourselves. I assumed we’d play ourselves.
Golic: No we’re not. One thing I’m excited about: I immediately searched “wardrobe” for what I was going to have to put on, and I get to wear what I wear on the show here. So, it works out pretty well.

Greenburg: In our scene, the brothers, Greg and Elliott, have a run-in with the town minister, Josh Lewis, and his ex-wife Reva. It seems that one of the minister’s sermons inspired both Greg and Elliott’s wives to leave them for each other.
Golic: Yes! We’re both married, but our wives leave us…
Greenburg: …for each other…
Golic: …and hook up.

To Santana, Or Not Santana, Part II

December 5th, 2007 by Lucas Dwyer

The Sports Truth founder, Levi Matthews, and senior editor, Lucas Dwyer, Yankees and Red Sox fans, respectively, spent two days debating the merits of the hottest MLB rumors - specifically their respective favorite teams’ efforts to trade for Johan Santana.

The debaters started their discussion on November 27th and concluded it on December 4th. For the first part, click here.

December 4th …

Levi: Do you wanna stretch before we talk about Santana?

Luke: First off, I love the Yankee ultimatums. Great subplot of this offseason

Levi: It boggles the mind. Just say it’s your final offer and chill the heck out. Why make a deadline?

Luke: Because they want to move on Haren instead?

Levi: But there’s NO way the Twins actually trade Santana for just Lester, right? Right?!? They have to just be drawing this out to get more from the Yanks.

Jon Lester

Boston Red Sox LHP Jon Lester is rumored to be heading to Minnesota in exchange for Johan Santana.

Luke: The initial offer from the Sox was Lester, Crisp, Jed Lowrie (who’s good) and another minor leaguer.

Levi: But, how is that offer better than Hughes/Melky?!? Lester has a 4.60 career ERA.

Luke: In what, 15 starts? (editors note: Lester has 26 career starts)

Levi: He’s good, sure. But, is his ceiling as high as Hughes?

Luke: Probably not, but he is a lefty. I guess I agree that the Yankees offer is better. It depends on Lowrie who was the Red Sox minor league player of the year.

Levi: Right.. so I think/pray they’re trying to get Kennedy in it, too.

Luke: For whatever it’s worth, the Sox second offer was Ellsbury, Lowrie, and Masterson (basically where Buchholz was this time last year in terms of development).

Levi: They need a CF/pitcher and they’re asking for that from the Yanks - so I can’t see how thy can agree to any trade with Boston that doesn’t include Ellsbury AND Lester/Clay. If the Sox get Santana and keep Ellsbury and Clay…something is amiss dammit.

(more…)

To Santana, Or Not Santana, Part I

December 5th, 2007 by Lucas Dwyer

The Sports Truth founder, Levi Matthews, and senior editor, Lucas Dwyer, Yankees and Red Sox fans, respectively, spent two days debating the merits of their teams’ efforts to trade for superstar pitcher Johan Santana. The debaters started their discussion on November 27th and concluded it on December 4th. For the second part, click here.

Johan Santana

The rumor of rampant trade speculation, Johan Santana, could bring a World Series title to the team he’s traded to. However, the left-handed ace comes at an expensive price.

November 27th …

Levi: I’ve crafted a debate in my head between Santana and Haren. Do you know how cheap Haren is?? $15 million over the next three years. What if the Yanks can get him and keep either Hughes or Kennedy? Is that not better than Santana?

Luke: Why is he available?

Levi: Because the A’s are giving up, apparently. They’re starting completely over… without young, cheap pitching somehow.

Luke: How are they going to get Haren without giving up Hughes or Kennedy or Joba?

Levi: They’d give up one. I’m guessing it takes Melky, Kennedy and Hughes to get Santana, plus maybe one of their minor league pitchers. What if you can keep either, especially Hughes, and get Haren?

Luke: I would say that makes more sense. I don’t think the $ has much to do with it.

Levi: No, just the fan in me who wants to see young players and doesnt wanna hear the nonsense about the Yankees buying their championships makes it an issue.

(more…)

Hank Steinbrenner Loves Jennifer Love Hewitt

November 29th, 2007 by Levi Matthews

Hank Steinbrenner In a recent interview with The New York Post, Hank Steinbrenner spoke on various topics. Including his favorite actresses. Take a look:

Q: How do you think you’re like your father?
A: Someone once said in one of the articles I tend to shoot from the hip like my dad. I’ll analyze things as well, just like he did at times. You don’t get to be as successful as he’s been without analyzing things. He was always thinking.

Q: What was it like working for your father?
A: He was a difficult Boss. As a dad, he’s a great dad, but a very, very difficult Boss. A pain in the (butt).

Q: Favorite actor?
A: Steve McQueen.

Q: Favorite actress?
A: Jennifer Love Hewitt.

NHL Defeats NFL, Record Low In Hell

November 27th, 2007 by Lucas Dwyer

On a day when Hell reported a record low of 85 degrees, the NHL accomplished a rare feat by defeating the NFL for the first time in 64 years.

Not since the NFL had it’s last 0-0 tie in 1963 has the NHL ever had all of its scheduled games score more goals than points scored in an NFL game. The Steelers and Dolphins could only muster three points on a rain soaked Monday evening, but Buffalo defeated Washington 3-1 and Edmonton defeated Columbus 3-1 to go along with Boston over Philadelphia 6-3 and Dallas over the New York Islanders 3-2.

Ice Hockey

“Ice Hockey” for Nintendo; a legendary game in the late ’80s.

While many of the whiny NFLers will claim they didn’t know there was a competition going on, they’re lying. The loss is so devastating to the NFL, Roger Goodell is rumored to have convened an emergency meeting of the NFL owners to talk about how such an embarrassing situation could be avoided in the future. Meanwhile, Gary Bettman was heard telling friends and family that the upset win assures him at least two more years as the NHLs top man.

Pete Sampras Proves He’s The Best

November 25th, 2007 by Lucas Dwyer

MACAU - Pete Sampras still contends that Roger Federer will surpass his all-time record of 14 major championships. In his third exhibition match with Federer, the former top ranked played in the world defeated the younger and widely considered better Swiss star 7-6 (8), 6-4 proving that his assertion is something he’s choosing not to do anything about.

Sampras and Federer

The obviously older Pete Sampras went 1-2 in exhibition matches vs. Roger Federer.

Sampras continued to echo his stance that his time was in the 90s and he will not come out of retirement. Too bad. It’s obvious the seven time Wimbledon winner could compete with today’s players and probably pick up another Wimbledon title to add to his record. Federer did not help quell any wishful thinking from Sampras backers by saying he felt Sampras could beat the top five players in the world on a fast surface.

Simply beating a player as talented as Federer is amazing enough at 36 years old. In their third match, Sampras was able to borrow a page out of the seemingly unbeatable Federer’s tennis play book by not even facing a break point in the straight set win. Or maybe it is Federer who is borrowing a strategy out of Sampras’ arsenal.

It is hard to think that Federer was playing at 100 percent against the man he proclaimed was his idol growing up, especially after winning their first two exhibitions in straight sets. Federer fueled the fire by saying “It’s been tough beating my idol the last two times. I’m happy that he got me at least once.” Not exactly the killer instinct you’d expect from someone trying to win.

A&M Stuns Texas, Franchione Fired

November 23rd, 2007 by Lucas Dwyer

A dramatic win over the Longhorns couldn’t save Dennis Franchione’s job.

Texas A&M defeated #13 Texas on Saturday, 38-30 on senior day at College Station, but that couldn’t save the job for the head coach. In a move that is not surprising, ESPN is reporting that Dennis Franchione will step down as head coach of the Aggies on Sunday and is not expected to coach the team’s bowl game.

Dennis Franchione
Dennis Franchione’s days as the Texas A&M head football coach are over.

Report: Michael Beasley is Big

November 23rd, 2007 by Lucas Dwyer

This just in: Michael Beasley is a large man.

Ok, he’s actually “only” 6′9″ and 235 lbs, nothing like some of the behemoths that patrol the paint in the NBA, but his game belilies his size. Beasley plays like his 7′0″ and 270 lbs.

Michael Beasley

Michael Beasley, center for Kansas State, puts up a shot over Vlad Moldoveanu from George Mason.

Going into last night’s match up with unranked George Mason, Michael Beasley was the first player in Big 12 history to have 20 points and 20 rebounds in 2 games. Any two games in any year. Mr. Beasley accomplished that feat in just his first three games of his Big 12 career.

Beasley didn’t continue his run of 20/20 as Kansas State fell to the Patriots, but had 30 of his team’s 77 points along with 10 rebounds. The freshman center also added a 3-pointer, just to show he has some range.

Lost amongst the star power of Michael Beasley and George Mason’s Will Thomas was George Mason freshman Vlad Moldoveanu. The 6′10, 206 lbs freshamn from Romania had his coming out party for the Patriots, filling up the stat sheet with 11 points including a cool 6 for 6 from the free throw line. Moldoveanu also added two rebounds, two steals, a block, and a clutch three late in the game to put the Wildcats away.

Yankees Addressing All They Can

November 21st, 2007 by Lucas Dwyer

Much has been made of the tumultuous off season for the New York Yankees. Certainly we’re all aware of the A-Rod saga, but catcher Jorge Posada filed for free agency and returned, same for closer Mariano Rivera. Roger Clemens is expected to retire (again) and starting pitcher Andy Pettitte declined his option to stay with the Yankees for another year as he contemplates retirement.

Andy Pettitte

Andy Pettitte keeps the Yankees in limbo as he decides his future.

Certainly not the best of off-season’s for the Bronx Bombers a sentiment Yahoo! Sports’ Tim Brown talks about in his column on November 19th, 2007.

Tim’s point is that the Yankees are not addressing their most pressing need: pitching. While he’s right, what do you want them to do, Tim? Sign Kyle Lohse (another Boras client, by the way)? Trade away every rookie for Johan Santana? Demand that Andy Pettitte not retire and stay with New York another year? Frankly, one of the best things they could have done for their pitching was make sure Rivera returned. Tim thinks the pitching is poor now, imagine if Rivera didn’t come back.

In typical terrible reporting fashion, Tim talks only about the problem and blames the Yankees for not addressing it without coming up with a solution of his own. The reason is, of course, there is not solution. In my opinion, the Yankees have two options. Either move one or more of the kids (Philip Hughes, Joba Chamberlain, or Ian Kennedy) with Melky Cabrera for Johan Santana or stick with the aforementioned kids. The rest of the free agent pitchers out there aren’t worth paying for.

Carlos Marmol & Frank Thomas: MVP candidates?

November 21st, 2007 by Lucas Dwyer

Unless you’re a Chicago Cubs fan or a die hard fantasy baseball enthusiast, most people don’t even know who Carlos Marmol is. For the record, he was/is the set up guy for Ryan Dempster in the Cubs bullpen. He actually had a great year, going 5-1 in 69.1 IP with a 1.43 ERA and a 1.10 WHIP along with 96 Ks and only 36 BBs. He even managed to throw in a save for good measure. But, a candidate for NL MVP?

Carlos Marmol

Carlos Marmol had great year in relative obscurity.

Unless you live in a cave, you probably know who Frank Thomas is. However, unless you live in a cave, you’d never say that he is a MVP candidate. At least not in 2007. Thomas’ splits for the Toronto Blue Jays were 277/377/480 with 26 HRs and 95 RBIs in 531 at-bats. Probably better than most people realized, but how would that ever qualify someone for the MVP?

Ok, realistically no one called them MVP candidates and they were not. However, they each had the distinction of receiving one 10th place vote in the MVP voting from some bird brained baseball writer (likely from Chicago and Toronto, respectively) in each of their respective leagues. Obviously there’s little harm in sticking these guys on a ballot in 10th place, but when Jimmy Rollins beats out Matt Holliday by 17 points, maybe the whole process needs some rectifying.

How silly is this points system and the fact that it is pushed out to 10th place in MVP voting and a player can even get points that far down? What’s the point of voting for 2nd place, isn’t all anyone cares about who’s first? If a few more writers put Holliday into 2nd on their ballot instead of third, Holliday would have won the MVP despite having five fewer first place votes than Rollins. For the record, I think Holliday deserved the MVP over Rollins (and would argue that David Wright was really the best player in the NL this year, more on that later), but I don’t think he should have won it with 2nd place votes. Is there anything wrong with having Rollins win the award with 16 votes over Holliday’s 11?

Rollins
The 2007 NL MVP, Jimmy Rollins.

One of the “comments” posted for the Jimmy Rollins NL MVP article on espn.com was the following:

“there is no stat to explain what jroll did. the last month of the season, there were a few times he hit a standard double in the gap, but when he left the box, you could just see that he was thinking triple all the way, and he never slowed down, or thought twice about it.”

First of all, there is a stat for it, they’re called triples. Second of all, if this absurd logic were true, Curtis Granderson should be the AL MVP.

Look, Rollins is a great player, had a phenomenal year and was deserving of MVP candidacy, just not the MVP. People make the absurd argument that because Rollins said the Phillies would finish first and they did, he gets bonus points. Really? I’m the biggest fan of speed there is, but we can’t throw out the MVP to a fast player who happens to hit home runs. I also despise the argument that SS is a “premier defensive position” and a player who excels there should get extra consideration.

The case for Rollins is that he did everything well, hit, run, throw, play defense, etc. Well, so did David Wright, only better. Anyone who’s watched Colorado SS Troy Tulowitzki knows who should have won the NL gold glove at short stop and it wasn’t Rollins. These people also know Wright was hands down the best defensive 3B in the NL this year. Wright had a higher batting average, much higher on base percentage (Rollins’ was the lowest of any MVP winner of all time), same number of HRs, more RBIs, fewer R and a few less SBs.

The best thing about Rollins MVP is that he’s now going to disappoint someone as a first round draft pick in next year’s fantasy draft.