By TERRY LYONS
BOSTON – You have to turn the calendar back to Sunday, August 13 (NFL preseason) or Sunday, September 10 (NFL regular season openers) to mark a Sunday when there wasn’t an NFL game to tune into and that discards today’s flag football version of the NFL Pro Bowl.
In place of hard-hitting NFL action, the sports calendar offered up a couple gems, including the NHL All-Star Weekend (to be mentioned later), the first of two Duke vs North Carolina regular season contests – the best rivalry in NCAA College Basketball. Or, you could’ve opted for Caitlin Clark and her Iowa Hawkeyes were live, against the BIG 10 Maryland Terps, in primetime women’s NCAA Basketball on (regular) FOX, Saturday night at 8pm (ET). (Note: FOX Sports deployed a Caitlin Cam for those who wanted to view 100% of the broadcast focused on Ms. Clark, available only on the FOX Sports app).
The Boston Red Sox used the slow sports news weekend to bring back Theo Epstein to the mother ship, as the one-time GM of the Sox returned for a senior Advisory role for all of the Fenway Sports Group (FSG) properties, including the Red Sox. That no worry to newly hired Boston GM Craig Breslow who was hired by Epstein back when Theo the Miracle Worker was orchestrating the first MLB Championship for the Chicago Cubs (2016) which came not long after Epstein broke the 1918 “Curse of the Bambino” with a 2004 Red Sox World Series pennant.
It’s not clear whether Epstein will place more of his attention on FSG’s new investment into the PGA Tour, their efforts with Liverpool in the English Premier League or maybe the new entry – The Boston Common – in the one-year delayed TGL Golf entity.
Regardless, Epstein was welcomed back to New England with open arms of fans hoping his experiences at the Cubs and Major League Baseball might shore-up a baseball team that’s destined for another last place finish in the competitive AL EAST.
Last place? Yes, as in:
AL EAST Prediction:
- Baltimore Orioles
- New York Yankees
- Tampa Bay Rays
- Toronto Blue Jays
- Boston Red Sox
Remember, the Orioles won 101 games last season and they’ve improved while the NY Yankees signed free agent slugger Juan Soto and starters Marcus Stroman and Luke Weaver, all questionable moves with the aging stars.
Rain-drenched Pebble Beach and Spyglass golf courses were of no help to the PGA Tour which threw us another curve ball – let’s call it a flop shot – when they announced a new but long talked-about entity – SSG (Strategic Sports Group) – invested a cool $3 billion into the tour via PGA Tour Enterprises, an investment and marketing arm for the Tour which will be valued at $12 billion to start but will hold a huge open chunk of equity7 for an eventual investment by the Saudi Arabian Public Investment Fund (PIF) with the pot of new dough “subject to all necessary regulatory approvals” by the United States’ Treasury, State and Justice departments.
HERE NOW, THE NOTES: This brings us to today’s BIG TOPIC – the BIG EAST Conference, a highly competitive basketball focused conference now deep into the 2024 regular season with a post season tournament scheduled March 8-12 that is second to none.
The reason it is second to none? It’s an easy answer. It’s The Garden.
Madison Square Garden brings out the best in sports, in music, in everything.
Bono, of U2, said his band “has had our best nights in this building.” That was particularly true when U2 played one of the first rock shows after 9/11 and decided to scroll the names of every person (crews/passengers/everyone) murdered on the three flights and those on the ground at The Pentagon.
The Concert for New York was another magical night, not long after the Trade Towers fell, as was 12/12/12 – The Concert for Sandy Relief. They followed many others, from No Nukes to George Harrison.
But basketball is king at The Garden and St. John’s – which boasts as New York’s Team – is the only college that calls Madison Square Garden its home. Tjhat should be a HUGE advantage when teams visit during the regular season, for the Holiday Festival or for the BIG EAST Conference Tournament.
Sadly of late, it hasn’t mattered one bit.
Truth be told, this columnist owns a handful of seasons tickets for St John’s, dating back to 1977-78. This year, because of the preseason hype and ticket demand – much of it because of the hiring of Coach Rick Pitino – the number of seats was upped to eight – all in the hope of reliving a season as a Top 10 team, one that held court at The Garden and spit out any opponent daring to venture towards Penn Plaza.
That is no longer the case. Other schools waltz into MSG and sell out the joint – like a Baylor vs Duke game earlier this season. Duke even closed down most of the bars and restaurants on 7th Avenue with alumni gatherings and fund raisers. Duke made more money in one night than they do for a whole season at the Cameron Indoor Center on the bucolic campus in Durham, Carolina.
St. John’s lowered its appearances at MSG to four last season but Pitino is planning to schedule more games in the city and leave only some exhibitions, some patsys, and one BIG GAME at Carnesecca Arena, and that being UConn – a college with 10,000 of more ticket-scalping fans. At Saturday’s 77-64 drubbing of the Johnnies in front of 10,000 UConn fans and, maybe, 9,000 St. John’s fans – who were mostly quiet anyway.
As St. John’s center Joel Soriano said quite well, when he said, “There’s a little bit more meaning to it (the games) now just because we have been losing some games that we haven’t been closing out. Our backs are kind of plastered against the wall.
“We’ve got to finish out the season strong if we are going to make the NCAA Tournament,” Soriano added. “We all know that, the coaching staff knows that, our teammates know that and really we are just beating ourselves at the end of the day. We just got to finish our games.”
The fingers could not be pointed elsewhere. Soriano indicated he knew his game was nowhere near where it should be at this point in the season. His honesty and maturity was evident. His game? Invisible.
Thirty-three minutes, 2-of-6 from the field, 2-of-5 from the FT line, a lowly four rebounds and only two assists with one blocked shot. It was one of only four shots blocked by the team – a club which shot 4-of-14 from 3 Pt. FG range (29%) and 14-of-21 from the FT line (67%).
UConn, their opponent, shot 20-of-22 from the line (91%) and drained 47% of their 3 Pt. FGs – all on an unfamiliar rim in The Garden of Eden.
St. John’s hasn’t won the BIG EAST tournament since 2000, and 1986 before that. They haven’t won a Sweet 16 game since that ‘99 season and in 1991 before that. Only 1985 brought the modern day Johnnies to the Final Four where they were smoked by Georgetown.
For the 21st Century, St, John’s has been the FYRE Festival of Fashion Avenue.
Meanwhile their opponents in the BIG EAST have loaded and re-loaded their programs with talent and determination. Only Chicago’s DePaul University can claim to have less success.
In many a year, a typical BIG EAST basketball schedule made it damn near impossible to win a road game. That remains the case for most UConn, Seton Hall, Marquette, Creighton and Providence homers. Not so much for St. John’s as they’ve slipped to a 5-6 BIG EAST record (.455) with an 0-4 record against any team ranked.
UConn coach Danny Hurley and his No. 1 ranked Huskies remain the team to beat. No. 9/10 Marquette is trending upward while No. 13 Creighton – toughest at home – will be a very tough out at the conference tournament or in the NCAAs.
Pitino has nine regular season games to right the ship. Five of the nine are winnable games while four (@Marquette, @Providence, vs. Seton Hall and vs. Creighton) will be tuffies, as the Aussies say.
Pitino seems to have one player he can count on in guard Danis Jenkins, a transfer who followed Pitino from Iona. Other scorers, highly touted in their recruiting nes releases, but overmatched in a step-up (from IVY League types) to BIG EAST level competition.
At this point of the season, it’s really not on Coach Pitino to pull off a miracle, as he’s done in the past at Louisville or in the Wayback machine at Providence. It’s squarely on the players to plant their feet and make a stand. They need to do it on New York city hardwood, at The Garden, the Garden of Eden where they once dominated.
NHL ALL-STAR WEEKEND: The NHL proved something that most hockey fans already knew coming into this weekend’s NHL All-Star Weekend and NHL Skills Competition.
That fact? Connor McDavid of the Edmonton Oilers is the best player in the NHL.
The National Hockey League has fast become a game of speed and McDavid was on display in the fastest skating competition on Friday night. In fact, McDavid was the leader all the way through the Skills competition thanks to finishing first in the previously mentioned NHL Fastest Skater (13.408 seconds), best in the NHL Stickhandling contest (25.755 seconds) and his display in the NHL Accuracy Shooting contest, when he went 4-for-4 on the targets in 9.158 seconds. His only drawback was in the (seemingly impossible) Passing Contest.
The revamped format for the Skills competition featured 12 skaters and eight goalies, leading to one overall winner. McDavid spoke with Steve Mayer, the NHL’s executive vice president and chief content officer, to give his opinion on what could work.
“I thought it was entertaining,” McDavid said. “From a competitive side, it definitely got competitive out there. I was huffing and puffing. Guys were working hard trying to put on a good show, and I feel like we did that and we can feel good about it. Ultimately, it’s up to the fans, and I hope they enjoyed it.”
For his efforts in the Skills contest, McDavid took home a cool $1 million in a “winner-take-all” scenario.