Tagged: BU

Bad Weekend in Sports

You would think that because the Red Sox season is over, I would be done attempting to defenestrate myself for the next six months. After this weekend, this is not the case. We’ll discuss the horrors team by team here, since, you know, it’s no fun only rooting for one team or one sport.

BU Hockey
Oh the hangovers from national championships! BU hockey has been, well, fallible this year. Most games they’ve been playing just short of wins. They’re really into doing this thing where they shoot the puck a billion times into the goalie’s chest, which obviously does not really lead to too many goals. BU also is a big fan of not playing defense, and not playing in the second period. Because of this, the team is now 3-6. They are in 9th place (out of 10) in Hockey East and completely tumbled out of all national rankings.
DSCN3725.JPG
Despite this, I made the decision to travel up to Merrimack on Friday to watch the Terriers take on the Warriors. 2007-2008 was Merrimack’s only double-digit win season since 2003-2004. Needless to say, they’re a powerhouse.

BU struggled mightily with the Warriors. Or, well, BU actually didn’t struggle, as they did not show up for the game after the first period. In the words of BU coach Jack Parker, “We stopped competing.” Great, right? The score is deceiving. Merrimack won 6-3, but the final score may have well been 9-0. Additionally, my least favorite player on the team, Colby Cohen, fought two guys. Fighting is illegal in college hockey. He was ejected. This was great, because Colby is a defenseman and at one point, BU had 4 defensemen in the penalty box at once.

BU had six minutes of a 5-on-3 advantage. They didn’t score. Nobody fails to score with six minutes of a two man advantage. Defending national champions do not play the way BU did on Friday night. There was no effort, no spark, no leadership. It was disgusting. I was actually nauseated. After the “game,” the three other people I traveled up there with and myself went to Friendly’s for some comfort food. It was that bad.

Saturday night, BU took a 4-0 advantage in the first period. After that, BU felt that the game was over and it was time for them to partake in Saturday evening festivities. They ended up winning 6-4, but it was more of a “they didn’t lose” than a “they won the game” situation. The good news from Saturday is that two of our injured players returned, including the star and assistant captain, Nick Bonino. Also, BU scored six goals, so perhaps they finally figured out that you need to score goals in order to win games. We’ll see how they rebound this weekend against UNH.

The Bruins
Last week, I went to the Bruins game against the defending champion Pittsburgh Penguins at the Garden in Boston. The Bs played terrific, shutting out Sidney Crosby and friends 3-0. On Saturday night, the Bruins traveled to Pittsburgh for a rematch. This one didn’t go so well.

The game was hard fought, and the Bruins never gave up. They came back from multiple deficits, most remarkably in the third period when they were trailing Pittsburgh 4-3. With 5:47 left in regulation and the Bruins holding a two man advantage (listen to this one, BU), David Krejci swept in on a Zdeno Chara shot and roofed the rebound towards the goal, where Marco Sturm tipped the puck in to tie the game, 4-4. Three minutes later, with 2:29 left in regulation, Zdeno Chara showed off his hardest shot skills, firing a slapshot from just above the left circle past Pittsburgh back-up netminder Brent Johnson. The Bruins were on their way to another victory.
DSCN3703.JPG
Not so fast. With 4/10 of a second remaining, ex-Bruin Bill Guerin slipped a wristshot from the top of the right faceoff circle past Tim Thomas to send the game to overtime. The Bruins were exhausted, and a little over a minute into overtime, Pascal Dupuis netted the game-winner for the Pens.

After a good, hard effort like Saturday’s, you would think the Bruins would come out confident and strong against the Islanders last night.

Nope.

Six minutes into the game, Matt Moulson capitalized on a turnover in the Bruins offensive zone and some poor defense at the hands of Dennis Widemann and Patrice Bergeron to give the Islanders an early 1-0 lead. The Bruins had a chance towards the end of the first to tie the game with a 5-on-3, but like BU, the Bs did not feel the need to take advantage of their opportunity and squandered the chance. Moulson ended up just shy of a hat trick, scoring two goals and briefly getting credit for a John Tavares goal to start the third. The Bruins lost 4-1, and Patrice Bergeron, who has been one of the best players on the ice this season for the Bs, finished the game with a -4 rating.

Claude Julien admitted after the game that the Islanders “wanted it more than we did.” Is there anything more frustrating in sports than when your team does not put forth their best effort? Come on.

The Patriots
Speaking of best efforts . . . I’m not sure if I should title this section The Patriots or Bill Belichick. By now, most people know the story. The Pats were leading the undefeated Colts by a solid 13 point margin coming into the fourth quarter. With a little more than two minutes left, the lead was whittled down to 6. A touchdown could win the game.

On 4th and 2 with 2:08 left in the game, Bill Belichick inexplicably decided to send his offense back out and go for it. Belichick had no challenges left in case he would need them (which he did). Brady threw a short pass to Kevin Faulk who was standing right on the 30-yard line, which is where the Pats needed to get to for the first down. The Patriots got a poor spot, as the referees decided the Patriots were about a yard short of a first down. This gave Peyton Manning two minutes to go 29 yards for the game-winning touchdown. That’s a series he will execute every time.

People are saying that the move says Belichick did not have the confidence in his defense to keep the Colts from covering 70-yards in 2 minutes. However, I believe Belichick has to have enough confidence in his defense to be able to hold the Colts from 29-yards out if the Pats do not convert on fourth down. Belichick is a defensive-minded coach. He most likely has faith every game in his defense, because ultimately, it is the defense Belichick himself creates. Any failure on the defense’s part is a reflection of Belichick himself.
7_faulk_chin__1258379291_2934.jpg
Additionally, why were the Patriots throwing the ball so short? Why are they throwing for exactly two yards? Why not give themselves the insurance of a few more yards and throw a five-yard pass? Converting there is crucial, and they never should have given the referees the opportunity to decide whether or not the play was long enough for a first down. It’s the offense’s job to earn the first down, not the referees job to give it to them.

And why
did Belichick waste a timeout at the beginning of a drive? He ended up needing that timeout if he had wanted to challenge the spot of the ball, because when the Patriots did not convert on third down, confusion about whether to punt or not forced the Patriots to use their final timeout to prevent a delay of game penalty.  

The bottom line here, though, is that Bill Belichick made the completely wrong decision. With Peyton Manning leading an offense, you must punt the ball on 4th and 2 with 2:08 when holding onto a six point lead. Had it even been a seven point lead, this may have been slightly more understandable because the Colts would have to decide between a two point conversion to win or kicking the extra point to head into overtime. Going for it in this situation, however, gift-wrapped the game for the Colts, a game the Patriots players worked hard to win. A game that was negated because of poor coaching from one of the best coaches in NFL history.

Rodney Harrison and Tedy Bruschi, both former players, criticized their coach. For them to say things like “this was the worst coaching decision I have ever seen Belichick make” (Harrison) and “the decision to go for it would be enough to make my blood boil” (Bruschi) means that they had to 150% believe both in what they were saying and in Belichick’s complete and total error.

In my mind, Bill Belichick is still one of the best coaches in football history, but this gaffe definitely mars his reputation. Before Sunday night’s game, Belichick was infallible. He was inhuman. He may have lost important games, big games, playoff games, but never because of such a momentous decision on his part. You cannot let one decision decide a career, yet at the same time, you cannot overlook this one decision in judgement of Belichick, because this one decision takes him down that notch from infallibility to simply extraordinary.

It will be hard to get over this game because it most likely cost the Pats home field advantage in the playoffs, but at the same time, the season goes on. This is not Grady Little. This is not going to cost Belichick his job. This is the regular season. Yet at the same time, it is November, the Colts did, by virtue of their win, tie the Patriots for second in consecutive wins (18), the Colts are a rival. This is a game that I will never forget.

Quotes and Patriots picture from boston.com. The other two pictures are mine.

Top 10 Things I Love About Spring Training

Although I haven’t been here every day, blogging about how my Red Sox are doing in Ft. Myers, I have been paying attention to everything going on south of the Snow Border and have compiled a list of the 10 things I love about Spring Training. Here goes.

11__1234904352_4320.jpg

10. Seeing guys coming in a few pounds lighter (or a few pounds heavier in Jon Lester’s case)
9. Having at least three new articles about the Red Sox to read every day
8. Watching A-Roid whine and cry about 
his cousin and his needles
7. Not being heartbroken and hopeless quite yet – this happens after the Red Sox’s first loss of the season in April when you realize that this may not be The Year
6. Watching the BC baseball team get killed by the Sox at the end of February. This hasn’t happened quite yet, but it will and it proves once more that BC stinks. 
5. Seeing Jacoby’s beautiful face
4. Looking at Tito and not seeing a sick, pallid face with dark circles under his eyes but rather tanned cheeks and a comfortable smile
3. You get that warm, happy, light feeling inside that always accompanies the sight of a baseball field
2. Reading the Boston Globe, you would never know that there are two major league teams in the middle of their seasons right now. The Celtics and Bruins have disappeared under the slew of Red Sox headlines. 
1. It’s almost Opening Day.
P.S. My Terriers have a huge weekend coming up. At 7 PM tomorrow night, they face off against #4 Northeastern at home in the first of the weekend’s battles for first place in Hockey East (the Terriers have been sitting in 1st place nationally for about 3 weeks). At 1 PM on Saturday, Terrier basketball takes on Iona in a bracketbuster. Then, at 8 PM that night, the Terriers (hockey again) travel to Matthew’s Arena to finish off the weekend series of Northeastern. If the Terriers can win one and tie another, they will take over the top of Hockey East. Of course, we’re hoping for a sweep. See if you can tune in to any of the games!
 

DSCN0772.JPG

*The Papi picture is from the Globe, the BU picture is my own.

What I do during the “offseason”

Since the Red Sox are still planning on not bringing a catcher to Spring Training, and not a whole lot of interesting things are going on with the team, I’d figure that I’d share here what I do while not obsessively updating myself on all things Red Sox.

Contrary to what the top of my blog says, I’m not 17 anymore, and I am now in college. I’m enrolled at a school with a great journalism program as well as a top notch sports team. 
We don’t have a football team here, and our basketball team is basically failing at every expectation people had for it. So what sport am I talking about?

DSCN0597.JPG

Hockey.
College hockey is great, and most people don’t even know about it. My school’s team, the Boston University Terriers, are ranked #2 in the country, yet they are very rarely broadcasted on television.
Nevertheless, hockey is huge here. People flock from all ends of campus to fill Jack Parker Rink at Agganis Arena, and game time is full of all sorts of rituals and traditions that our fan base, The Dog Pound, carries out even when the team is facing the weakest of foes. 
This past weekend, the Terriers faced the Boston College Eagles, the defending NCAA champions and our biggest rival. This rivalry between BU and BC is intense, a history that stretches far back to the beginning of college hockey and is renewed each year, even when the faces of the teams change. 

I’m sure many people have heard of Boston College. They supposedly have a fantastic football and basketball program, yet from what I’ve seen of those sports this year, BC is in a little bit of trouble. Anyways, we at BU hold a few grievances against BC, injustices that fire up our fan base every time our Terriers take the ice. 
  1. Contrary to popular belief, BC is neither in Boston nor a college. The campus is located in the Chestnut Hill area of Newton, Massachusetts, and BC is considered a university. Thus, we here at BU find it quite appropo to call them Newton University.
  2. BC stinks. Sure, they may have won an NCAA championship last year, but really, what do championships say about a team. I mean, the Arizona Cardinals are going to the Super Bowl this year. Do I consider them a legitimate football team? No. There are such things as flukes, or aberrations. Whichever you prefer.
  3. The so-called Superfans are actually Super Frauds. These children can’t even buy themselves hockey jerseys to wear to games, and when The Dog Pound mercilessly teased them on Saturday night when BU killed BC, 5-2, these “fans” neglected to even respond. I call that lame.
Anyways, now that we’ve established the basics of BU hockey, I guess there’s the question as to why, as a baseball aficionado, love hockey. 
Hockey, both NCAA and NHL, doesn’t have the largest audience or the largest fan base. As such, I have found that the game isn’t quite as corrupted as other sports. Hockey is a clean, quiet game that often speaks through what happens on the ice. Some people may have heard about Sidney Crosby, but can any non-hockey fan identify an extremely controversial player in the NHL? With the NFL, everyone knows Pacman Jones, Plaxico Burress, Tom Brady etc. MLB has A-Rod, Jeter, Manny, Sabathia. The NBA has Kobe, Shaq, Paul Pierce and others. 
The point is, most other sports are in the news no matter what, year round. Hockey isn’t that way. Hockey, to me, seems to be untouched, separated from the widespread egomaniacal personalities that fill sports pages across the country. Hockey is a clean game, a clear territory, an hour in which teams give everything they have on a field of ice and leave that to speak for itself. It’s competitive, it’s intense, it’s refreshing.

DSCN0247.JPG

So, during those long, cold months when the Red Sox are busy screwing the team over for the next season (Sign Tek!), you can often find me either at Agganis Arena or the TD Banknorth Garden, watching my team duke it out against opponents you’ve probably never heard of with players whose faces you don’t know. 
It’s truly a great game.