Wednesday, July 3, 2013

The Celtics have a Butler? Great. Is that what they do in Arabia, Thorny?

Looks like the Celtics, and more importantly Danny Ainge, have their man.  Brad Stevens, the former Butler University coach, is now the 17th coach in Boston Celtics history.  Danny Ainge signed him to a six year, $22 million contract, which will be made official on Friday, July 5.  During a press conference on June 25, 2013, Danny Ainge said, "We have no urgency and we'll take all the time we need to make this decision..." when talking about choosing a new head coach.  Apparently, "urgency" means something completely different to him than all of us.

Brad Stevens, the new Boston Celtics coach.
And for the record, I love this move. And I don't think Danny ate "...like, a hundred bucks worth of pot, and, like, 30 bucks worth of shrooms man."  I think Danny Ainge made a very bold, shrewd move.  He decided to hire Brad Stevens to coach a college aged team to play a college-style game.  This Celtics team is going to be the best conditioned team in the NBA because they are going to run up and down the court.  Think East Coast version of the "Showtime" Lakers!  And this is just what the (no pun intended) Doc(tor) ordered.  Brad Stevens is going to be able to coach a team of young talent and mold them into the team he wants.  This will mean Rajon Rondo is gone: which I am perfectly fine with.  I want to build this team around Jeff Green, Avery Bradley and Jared Sullinger anyway.  Put those three with some young talent and this team will be fun to watch.  And in a few years, Brad will have them vying for Banner 18.  The Celtics have the room to make trades to bring in quality talent and flexibility to move around the draft with ease over the next few years.  In the trade for Paul Pierce and Kevin Garnett, the Celtics got back the Brooklyn Nets 2014, 2016 and 2018 first round picks and the have the right to swap picks with the Nets for their 2017 first rounder if the Nets pick is higher than the Celtics.  And if they can trade Rondo, there may be more picks for Danny to use or trade.

Danny knows it's going to take a few years to get back to being a good team in the Eastern Conference and he also knows that the Miami Heat aren't going to be what they are now in a few years.  So why not hire a young coach that can help with the rebuilding process?  Get his system installed with some fresh, young players that are going to listen to him as a coach.  Who cares if they don't win a lot of games, Brad Stevens gets to mold these players into the type of team that he wants.  If the Celtics are just terrible enough, they could end up with the #1 pick in next years NBA draft, which by all indications will have Andrew Wiggins, a "can't miss" prospect.  Andrew Wiggins right now is being compared to the likes of Kevin Durant, who doesn't suck.  You add a player(s) like that in the next few years, along with some veteran leadership, the Celtics have the potential to rebuild, get younger overall and get back to being a dominant force in the Eastern Conference in a very short amount of time.

And if I'm wrong,  then I'll just say, "Okie silly dilly dokie-o.  I'm an idiot."

George L. Mitchell, Jr.

Monday, April 15, 2013

04/15/2013

Today we are not Black or White, Hispanic or Asian. It doesn't matter if you are a male or female, young or old. On this day, the tragedy in Boston effects all walks of life. It touches our souls, it breaks our hearts.

But we're Bostonians, a resilient bunch of people who can band together to help heal and comfort those in need. And the rest of America has responded too, with thoughts and prayers and helping hands from all over this great country of ours.

So today, let us as Americans resolve to never let this happen again. Today, let us fight back, standing up to those who work to bring us down. Today we rise up, together as a nation, and in one voice, letting those who oppose us know these type of actions will not be tolerated.

Today we are not just Bostonians or New Yorkers, or Texans.

Today... we are all AMERICANS!!

God Bless America!!
 

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Boston Celtics: To trade, or not to trade

So I have been listening to all the sports talk over the last few days talking about the Boston Celtics and if they should or should not make any trades before the trading deadline Thursday, February 21 at 3 p.m. ET.  I'm putting my two cents into this debate of whether or not to make a deal this year and make a run at the title or blow the whole thing up and start building for the future now.

People seem to be 50/50 on trading either Paul Pierce and/or Kevin Garnett.  But most fans agree they don't want to see the Celtics become the Atlanta Hawks; a one-and-done playoff team, whether they make a trade or not.  Here's how you avoid this, still contend this year and stock up for next year and beyond.

Is Rajon Rondo tradeable even though he just had surgery for a torn ACL?
First, trade that petulant point guard in Rajon Rondo.  Or should it be Rajon "Rhonda" because he acts like such a little bitch sometimes?  (And I'm one of his biggest fans!!)  Well whatever you want to call him, he is a hellava player and is one of the top 5 point guards in this league. Period.  With that being said, you take Rondo and Fab Melo and trade them for Dwight Howard.  I know, I know... you think I've lost my damn mind.  Well I have, but here is why.  Dwight Howard does not R-E-S-P-E-C-T Kobe Bryant, Pau Gasol, Coach Mike D'Antoni or the Lakers organization.  Plus, with Gasol coming back, the Lakers may want to get rid of Dwight to make some room on the ummm... court.  Howard needs to get the hell out of Dodge and Boston looks like a great fit.  He respects Doc Rivers and with the addition of Howard, the Celtics can compete with just about any team in the Eastern Conference.  Now your team will look like Courtney Lee (PG), Avery Bradley (SG), Paul Pierce (SF), Kevin Garnett (PF) and Dwight Howard (C) starting with Jeff Green and Brandon Bass coming off the bench.  Notice I still have Pierce and KG in the lineup.  That is because I believe they still both have the remainder of this year and next year that they can contribute on a high level and I wouldn't trade them.  Plus I need Kevin Garnett to drill into Dwight Howard how to be a pro.  Dwight Howard needs an attitude adjustment and I feel pretty good that KG can "motivate" him.  You now play the rest of this year with this newly constructed Celtics team; which if I'm correct, should make the Eastern Conference Finals.  If they get that far, then they will be playing with house money as far as I'm concerned and if they get to the NBA Finals, that's just icing on the cake.

Imagine Ty Lawson throwing alley-oops to Jared Sullinger?  Umm.. yes please!!
Going into the 2013-14 season, they would need to find a point guard.  My top choice would be Chris Paul, but a guy like Ty Lawson would also fit in nicely with this team.  That gives you a young point guard, Howard, Bradley and Jared Sullinger you can build around for the next few years.  Add that to KG and Pierce for the 2013/14 season, you are again a top 3 team in the Eastern Conference.  Once Garnett and Pierce retire (as Celtics) at the end of the 2013/14 season, you can find a veteran or two to replace them or address those concerns in the next two drafts.  Plus, you still have Jeff Green, who should be just about to break out as a star.

So by just trading Rondo and Fab Melo for Dwight Howard, the Celtics have given themselves a chance to contend this year and by adding a young point guard in the offseason, they have given their team a chance to contend next year and beyond with a young nucleus of talent.  The Celtics fans are happy they get to see Paul Pierce retire a Celtic having only played for Boston and hopefully watch both KG and Pierce raise another championship banner.

So come on Danny Ainge, what are you waiting for?

Saturday, September 29, 2012

An open letter to Gary Bettman and the NHL

Dear Gary Bettman,

As a fan of the Boston Bruins and the NHL in general, I felt compelled to write to you expressing my extreme displeasure with you and the owners for locking out the players.  I cannot believe you let this happen.  After seeing how bad that decision made the owners look during the last NFL and NBA lockout, you would think that somebody amongst the owners would have stepped up and said "We can't let this happen".  Never mind the way the owners, and Commissioner Roger Goodell, look now after this latest fiasco with the NFL officials.  But just like clockwork, an average of one lock out every five years over the last twenty years, you Mr. Bettman (and the owners) decided bring the game of hockey to a screeching halt.  You missed a golden opportunity to continue to grow this sport.  The sport came alive in both Boston and Los Angeles the last two years, which could only mean positive things (revenue) for the league.  With this new 10-year, $2 billion TV deal, you were going to have more games seen on NBC and NBC Sports Network worldwide.  And you get $200 million of that deal whether the league is locked out or not.  So to me, there is absolutely no excuse to lock the players out.  And the fans are the ones who get screwed.  I believe most, if not all, of the diehard fans will come back to watch hockey when the lock out is over.  But what about the new fans that just got introduced to the game?  What about the fan that goes to maybe a game or two a year but isn't a diehard?  You are losing those fans by the minute.  How can they get excited over a team, a league when every five years they shut down shop?  Why would they want to support something that so frequently stops?  Those people are whom you are losing.  So now a parent can't bring their child to game with an overtime goal.  Friends can't gather for some beverages and rivalry game on a Friday night.  The people, who you want and more importantly NEED to grow the game, are getting a giant "EFF YOU!"  Let me remind you that you are not the NFL, NBA or MLB in terms of popularity.  Hell, I'd bet NASCAR and MMA are more popular than your product right now.  Fans were just starting to get really excited about the game being back.  People were talking about at the water cooler, in bars and on sports talk radio.  And you let those fans down.

The other reason this lock out is absurd, and just as important, involves the players themselves.  The first thing is they have a place to play during the lockout.  There is a mini mass exodus of NHL players heading to Europe to play.  Whether it's the KHL in Russia or any league in Switzerland, Finland or other European country, players have signed contracts and some have played in a few games.  They are in no rush to take an unfair deal and good for the players for calling the your bluff.  But what's going to happen when a player gets hurt?  As a fan of that player/team he plays on, I'm going to be friggin pissed.  That player is now out for significant time or the season and my favorite team is screwed once the lock out is over.  All because you wanted to get a bigger piece of the pie now but hurt the game in the long run instead of continuing to grow the game and start becoming more and more relevant in the sporting world.

So do the right thing.  Get back to the table before anything happens to any players and before you lose any more fans that you can't afford to.  Your credibility and popularity of your league just may depend on it.

Sincerely,

George L. Mitchell, Jr

Friday, August 24, 2012

I have absolutely had it with this Red Sox team.  The lack of respect from the top down, starting with the owners "respect" for the fan base to the most blatant sign of disrespect from the players that thought it was more important to go to Josh Beckett's charity drink-fest instead of going to Johnny Pesky's funeral, is down right disgusting.  I never thought I would say this, EVER, but I am rooting for every other team the Red Sox play this year, including the New York Yankees.  I hope these overpaid, under-achieving assholes lose every single game the rest of the year.  In fact, I wish they would have left the Lowell Spinners in the Boston clubhouse after Futures at Fenway to finish the season.  At least you would have a collection of players, managers and owners who seem to care about the game of baseball and be proud to put on that uniform day in and day out and represent their team with pride and dignity.

I wanna touch on the Pesky funeral for a minute.  To quote Dr. Phil, "WHAT WE'RE YOU THINKING?"  I cannot believe the players, manager or owners didn't step up and make this a mandatory team "event".  Johnny Pesky, arguably, the most important person to the Red Sox franchise since Ted Williams, had only four members of the 25-man roster show up for his funeral.  Four??  FOUR!!!!!  Are you shittin' me?  Mr. Pesky, over his 70+ years of service to the Red Sox, meant more to the team then probably anybody else involved with the organization.  He was the Red Sox!!  And for the players to disrespect him, his family, the organization, the fans and themselves in this matter in inexcusable.  But I'll be damned if those players weren't getting their drink (and maybe fried chicken) on at the annual Beckett Bowl that night.  Apparently, they couldn't take an hour out of their morning/afternoon to attend the funeral of a Red Sox legend.  They had to get their rest so they could "John Lackey" (double fist drinks) for the evening.

And where were the owners in all this?  Weren't they the one's who, with open arms, welcomed Johnny Pesky back into the Red Sox clubhouse after MLB and the previous owners kick him out of the dugout?  Weren't they also the one's who made sure he was there in St. Louis when the Sox finally broke the Curse of the Bambino in 2004?  And now the "Three Amigos" decide not to honor the man, so beloved by Red Sox fans everywhere, by telling the players it's optional to show up?!?!  To that I say... SCREW YOU!!  To this entire organization!  From the owners, to the managers, to the players, to the training staff.  Hell, even the peanut, hot dog and beer vendors.  Ok, maybe NOT the beer vendors - they're cool.  But you get my point.

From here on out, I am root, root, rooting for the other teams.

And somewhere, Ted Williams is shaking his head in disapproval.

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

My Moment with Greatness



It was around 5pm on August 11, 2008.  I was heading to pick up my mom and head to the Square One Mall, in Saugus, MA, to meet the legendary Johnny Pesky.  My mom had told me a few weeks prior he would be signing autographs and asked me if I would be interested in going. (Like the question actually needed an answer.)

So we drive up to Saugus, not knowing how long the lines would be and if we would even be able to get to see him.  To our surprise, when we got to the store he was signing at, there was nobody waiting in line.  There was nobody there asking him questions about what it was like to play with Ted Williams or even what it was like to serve in the Navy.  Normally, you might have felt sad for an aged ballplayer sitting, waiting for somebody, anybody, to come talk to him.  But not Johnny, he was holding court with the store personnel, talking baseball of all things.

After I purchased a bat and World Series ball for him to sign, I walked over to the table he was sitting at.  He finished up his story with the staff and addressed me with a "Hello, young fella".  I introduced myself and told him what a huge fan I was of his.  I was wearing a Red Sox jersey at the time and he asked me who's number was on the back as he was tugging on the jersey to get me to turn around.  As I turned, his eyes lit up.  I was wearing his favorite player, and friend, a #9 Ted Williams' jersey.  He then started telling me stories about Ted Williams, Dom DiMaggio some of the other Red Sox greats.

I was fascinated and started hanging on every word he spoke.  He told me about what is was like watching Ted hit batting practice at Fenway Park and how he used to hit baseballs off the Green Monster to help Jim Rice become a better left fielder.  I was mesmerized by this man's recall memory; every detail in every story he described made you feel like you were there with him.  I told him my dad was from Lynn, MA and we started talking about Tony Conigliaro and how much pure talent he had.  He missed Tony C. and sat back in his chair, shaking his head, wondering what might have been.  We talked for a few minutes more as he signed my bat and ball and thanked me multiple times for coming to see him.  He also signed my mom's 2004 World Series hat (which I made her promise never to wear!) and thanked her as well.  I shook the man's hand and thanked him for all the years he has been with the Red Sox and told him what a pleasure and honor it was to meet him.  He smiled and said I'll see you at the ballpark.

I probably spent no more than five to seven minutes with this man, this legend, but he made it seem like we spent a lifetime together.

I never did run into him at the ballpark, but I never forgot the time I had my moment with greatness.

RIP Johnny Pesky.  You will be missed!!

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Red Sox 2012: A Trade Deadline Rant

Was anybody else surprised at the Red Sox and what they did at this years trading deadline?  I for one am not.  This is ownership group is nothing but a bunch of PR experts who know how to put shine to shit and sell it.  And sell it they do.  After Larry Lucchino sent out the letter to the season ticket holders, you should have known they were not going to make a big splash in this year's trade deadline.  Not only is this ownerships/management gutless for not going out and trying to make a big impact and get rid of some of the issues in the clubhouse, but more importantly... THEY ARE CLUELESS!  They think this is actually a good team.  They actually think they have a chance to not only make the playoffs, but also win the title.  Hahahahahahaha!!  (breathe)  Hahahahahahaha!!  And I'm sorry, but trading Matt Albers and Scott Podsednik to the Arizona Diamondbacks for Craig Breslow doesn't exactly shake up the team.  Neither does trading Lars Anderson to Cleveland for double-A knuckleballer Steven Wright.  If "Larry Lucchino runs the Red Sox" as John Henry so eloquently put it earlier this year on 98.5 The Sports Hub, then Larry should be ashamed of himself.  That is if he was a baseball guy.  Unfortunately Red Sox fans, he is not.  He is a business pitchman.  A richer, and less enthusiastic Slap Chop guy.  Hell, at this point, I'd prefer the Slap Chop guy.  At least he seems like he cares about his job.

And were was Ben Cherington during the day?  Was he out getting coffee for everyone like a good office intern?  I friggin' hope so, because if he was sitting at his desk during the day and these two deals are all he/they got done, then what the hell are they paying him for?  He needed to make some major moves and try to rebuild this team one piece at a time and he failed.  His obligation is (and should be) to the baseball operations side of the Red Sox, not to the "Three Amigo's" (see Lucchino, Larry; Henry, John and Werner, Tom).  For Ben Cherington to not trade Josh Beckett and anybody else attached to last years collapse is thoroughly and utterly unacceptable.  We as fans deserve better.  It is almost a slap in the face to watch this team day in and day out win and lose with the coming of the tide.  They are one game over .500 (52-51) and are 8.5 games out of first.  Ben Cherington should have stepped up to the plate (pun intended) and started wheeling and dealing with everybody.  But did he do that?  No... he just sat and played the role of Pinocchio perfectly while Geppetto, aka Larry Lucchino, just pulled the strings.  It's really sad to know that one of your favorite teams makes it so hard to watch and root for them.  I get sick to my stomach when they win because that means the ownership gets to smile and say "See, I told you this team isn't that bad."  Do they not hear the boo's?  Do the not listen to the fans talk about how they need to fix this team?  Apparently not.  The only things they care about are revenue and bringing in a profit.

And screwing their fans out of fun in October.