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Terry Lyons

While We’re Young (Ideas) | February 13

February 13, 2022 by Terry Lyons

TL’s Super Sunday Sports Notes | Tribute to Tuukka Rask

“You could say I lost my faith in science and progress

You could say I lost my belief in the holy Church

You could say I lost my sense of direction

You could say all of this and worse, but

If I ever lose my faith in you

There’d be nothing left for me to do,’

– Gordon Matthew Thomas Sumner, CBE

By TERRY LYONS

BOSTON – He came to Boston from Savonlinna, Finland by way of the 21st overall selection in the 2005 National Hockey League entry draft, a pick made by the Toronto Maple Leafs. His trade to the Bruins is high on the list of the worst trades in Maple Leafs history and that’s a lofty list of mistakes.

By 2007, when goalkeeper Tuukka Rask was first called up from the Providence Bruins to the mother ship in Boston, he would be among four players attempting to crack the Bruins’ line-up of which only two goaltenders share the daily duties. A season in Providence would pass.

In 2008, although Rask had the best save percentage (.952) among the goalies in NHL preseason play, followed by teammates Manny Fernandez(.875), Tim Thomas (.869) and Kevin Regan (.857), the Bruins kept Thomas and Fernandez on their roster.

By 2008-09, a red-hot Thomas would earn the Vezina Trophy honors as the best goalkeeper in the NHL by playing 54 games and winning 36 of them. Fernandez backed up Thomas for 27 games while Rask played in only one. Thomas and Fernandez were 34 years old while Rask was 21 that season.

Two years later, Thomas led the Boston Bruins to drink from the Cup with mask as his primary back-up. Thomas started 55 games and recorded a .938 save percentage and a 2.00 goals against average. Rask started 27, but went 11-14 while posting a .918 save percentage and 2.67 GAA.

In 2012-13, with Thomas retired, Rask led the Bruins to the Stanley Cup Finals in a lock-out shortened season. He started all 22 playoff games but the Bruins came up short, losing to the Chicago Blackhawks, 4-games-2 but Rask recorded a .940 save percentage and 1.88 GAA in the 22 games. The Bruins had their starting goalkeeper and he was only 25 years old.

From that moment – on – the Boston Bruins put their faith in TUUUKKK.

Rask guarded the Bruins’ nets brilliantly, although the club would only get back to the Stanley Cup Finals one more time, losing 4-games-3 to the St. Louis Blues in 2018-19. He went 14-9 that postseason with a 2.02 GAA and a .934 save percentage.

The global pandemic and Father Time soon came a’ visiting and a series of injuries felled Rask. In the pandemic, he opted to return to his family and leave the team. It was later learned that his daughter was undergoing a medical emergency at that time. He also underwent surgery in the summer of 2021, dealing with an acetabular labrum injuries in his hip.

Rask became an unrestricted free agent but made his plans known to play with the Boston Bruins or not play at all. He attempted a comeback between January 2 and February 9 of this year, eventually starting four games with the Bruins, but he decided to retire as of February 9.

Bruins G Linus Ullmark and Jeremy Swayman have started all but four of Boston’s games and will oversee the net minding duties for the time being.

Rask went 308-165-66 over his career, hitting the incredible NHL milestones of 500 games played and 300 wins. He also surpassed the great masked one, Gerry Cheevers, to become the winningest playoff goalkeeper in Boston Bruins history. task also led Finland to the bronze medal at the 2014 Winter Olympics, including a shut-out against the USA in the medal game and a quarter-final victory over Russia on their home ice in Sochi.

Said Rask in a statement announcing his retirement from the Bruins:

“Today is a day that I hoped would never come. But now that it’s here, I feel I owe it to everyone to hear it from me. When I made the decision to have surgery on my hip last summer, I did so knowing that the road to recovery would be challenging. I also knew it was something I would have to do if I wanted to give myself a chance to play my best hockey again. The rehab, the workouts, the practices – all of it was with the intention of getting back to where I needed to be to help my teammates win games and make another run at a Stanley Cup. Over these last few weeks, I’ve realized that my body is not responding the way it needs to for me to play at the level I expect of myself and that my teammates and Bruins fans deserve.

Therefore, it is with a heavy heart that I announce my retirement from the game of hockey.

While I am sad to say goodbye to the game I love, I am so very thankful to have shared these last 15 years with the greatest teammates and fans in the best sports city in the world. We have shared so many special memories over the years – bringing the Cup back to Boston in 2011, our runs to the Final in 2013 and 2019, playing overseas in the Czech Republic, Northern Ireland and China, and of course the Winter Classics. I am also so thankful that I was able to represent Finland on the world stage and win a bronze medal in the 2014 Olympics. While these experiences were all incredible, what I will remember most about all of them is the bond that I had with my teammates, coaches and team staffs, the memories that we will always have, and the friendships that will last a lifetime.

Through all the ups and downs, I am so grateful for all the support this team and the people of Boston have given me. I will miss everything that comes with representing the Boston Bruins. But now, I’m excited to spend more time with my family and friends who never stopped supporting my dream. Boston is special for so many reasons and will always be our adopted home. We look forward to remaining a part of this amazing community.

I especially want to thank the Jacobs family, Cam Neely, Don Sweeney, my coaches, the equipment staff and the rest of the team support staff for all they have done for me throughout my time with the Bruins organization. I’ve never wanted to play for any other team. I’m so proud to have worn the Spoked-B for my entire career and wouldn’t have had it any other way.

Kiitos paljon translates to ‘Thanks a lot” Boston

Farewell TUUUKKK, the hockey fans of Boston never lost faith in you.


HERE NOW, THE NOTES: American downhill skier Mikaela Shiffron had a rough week at the 2022 Winter Olympics. The 26-year old Olympian was disqualified from her first two races this week after missing gates and ultimately skiing off to the side of the course, head in hands and realizing her failure. The social media-verse skewered the TV/media coverage for shining the bright lights of exposure upon her misfortune. Yet, only a few days later, Shiffron did what all real pro athletes do, she competed in the Super-G race, only to finish ninth.

“I didn’t think there was a very big chance to come in and win or even medal in this race, with these women who have been skiing Super-G all season,” she said. “It felt really nice to ski that today. It was a little bit uncertain—or very uncertain. Coming back out and getting the chance to race again, was just the perfect thing to do, actually.”

She also took complete responsibility and “owned” the shortfall: “I do consider it failure,” said Shiffrin. “I think a lot of people do. It’s just tough to see that word in the headline of an article and it feels like clickbait to say, you know: ‘Crashes out!’ ‘Fails!’ ‘Disappoints the world!’ ‘Chokes’! All of it. They’re just harsh words … I failed twice to do the job that I am supposed to do. I can say that. That’s the honest truth.”

What Shiffron discovered through the experience was much more valuable than gold. She realized the amazing compassion and support of an entire nation – maybe the entire world – showing her the support she deserved.

“I would never have expected to feel in this moment, severely under-performing in an Olympics, that humans could be so kind. It’s the most surprising thing of my Olympic experience, how kind people have been in the face of my failure. I mean, it is failure – it’s okay to say that. I’m okay with that. And I’m sorry for it, but I also was trying, and I’m proud of that,’ said the downhill champion skier.

The thrill of victory and the agony of defeat, personified. On TV and properly covered by the TV and media on hand.


ICYMI: On Saturday, February 12, William Felton Russell turned 88 years young. The 11-time NBA champion, 12-time NBA All-Star, five-time NBA MVP and member of the league’s 25th, 35th, 50th and 75th anniversary all-time great teams, hailed from West Monroe, Louisiana but moved to Oakland with his family and attended University of San Francisco from 1953-56. He won a gold medal for the USA in the 1956 Summer Olympics in Melbourne, Australia, was drafted by the St. Louis Hawks but traded to the Boston Celtics for Ed Macauley and Cliff Hagan.

Filed Under: Bruins, NHL, While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: Boston Bruins, Super Sunday, TL Sunday Sports Notes, Tuukka Rask, While We're Young Ideas

TL’s Sunday Sports Notes | Feb 6

February 6, 2022 by Terry Lyons

The Story Behind ‘Linsanity” 

By Terry Lyons

BOSTON – This is a story worthy of narration by Peter Coyote or David McCullough. The voice of Morgan Freeman might be too much to handle.

This is the story of Jeremy Lin and the “Linsanity” which swept through New York and the NBA 10 years ago. To fully understand the story of Linsanity, one must first understand the story of the great Mike D’Antoni for without D’Antoni, “Linsanity” would’ve never materialized.

Here’s how it went down:

The 2011-12 NBA season started on Christmas Day, December 25th after a July 1st expiration of the NBA/NBA Players Association Collective Bargaining Agreement and subsequent lockout. The league was just days away from losing the entire season but came to terms with an agreement to jumpstart the regular season by Christmas to fulfill mega TV dollars.

The season began and looked a lot like NBA preseason. Games came at a frequent pace and the players were tired, out of NBA game shape and feeling it a month into the truncated season.

Coach D’Antoni was at the helm of the New York Knickerbockers and they limped into Boston Garden on February 3, 2012 for the middle game of a back-to-back-to-back in the condensed season schedule. D’Antoni and his Knicks departed with a 91-89 loss to the Celtics, a two-game losing streak and an 8-15 record. Worse than that, the Knicks were badly banged-up, especially at the point guard position.

The New Yorkers were fumbling around with a backcourt of Iman Shumpert, Toney Douglas, a washed-up Mike Bibby, and an injured Baron Davis who was suffering from an elbow infection, severe back pain and couldn’t suit up. When D’Antoni was finished with his media obligations after the loss at Boston Garden that night, I remember walking aside with a friend and confidante of 23 years and asking, “What the hell are you going to do?”

“Jeremy Lin is gonna get his chance,” said D’Antoni in his distinctive West Virginia way.

While some looked at Lin as a deep reserve or a (then) D-League prospect, those of us who saw him play at Harvard from 2006-07 to 2009-10 knew there were some amazing skills hidden beneath his 6-foot-3, weak, lanky frame. Lin showed improvement in his sophomore season of college ball, often bringing Harvard’s tiny Laviettes Pavilion fans to their feet in amazement. By the time he was a junior, he was an All-IVY League point guard and the only NCAA Division I player who was in the Top 10 in his conference in scoring (17.8), rebounding (5.5), assists (4.3), steals (2.4), blocked shots (0.6), field goal percentage (0.502), free throw percentage (0.744), and three-point shot percentage (0.400).

In Lin’s senior year of ‘09-10, he carried the Harvard Crimson team, averaging 16.4 points, 4.4 rebounds, 4.5 assists, 2.4 steals, and 1.1 blocks, and was again a unanimous selection for the All-IVY League First Team. He was one of 30 midseason candidates for the John R. Wooden Award (College Player of the Year) and one of 11 finalists for the Bob Cousy Award named annually by the Basketball Hall of Fame to recognize the best point guards in college basketball.

Lin was on the radar for a small group of Boston/Cambridge basketball fans but few outside of Boston or the IVY League crowd even knew his name. He went undrafted in the 2010 NBA Draft. Soon after, Donnie Nelson of the Dallas Mavericks signed Lin to a make-good summer league contract but the Mavericks did not offer him an NBA deal that summer.

The Golden State Warriors did and on July 21, 2010 Lin became a member of the Warriors (B.T.W.G) which translates to “before they were good,” as evidenced by their 26-56 won-loss record in 2009-10. The Bay Area was a good fit for the American-born guard of Asian (Taiwanese) descent, and that was amplified by the fact he graduated from nearby Palo Alto High School and brought his very own fan club along for the ride, many showing up and buying tickets for rod games, too.

The problem for Lin was that he was playing behind Steph Curry and Monta Ellis, two basketball-needy guards who didn’t flinch at playing 40+ minutes a game. Buried on the bench with only an occasional downgrade to the D-League Reno Bighorns for much-needed seasoning and playing time. In Reno, he averaged 18 points, 5.8 rebounds and 4.4 assists and made the D-League All-Defensive team to boot. Everything he was asked to do, he did. In everything he did, he began to excel. Yet, before the 2011-12 season, the Warriors were forced to waive Lin to clear salary cap space for the free agent signing of DeAndre Jordan.

Lin bounced from the Warriors to the Houston Rockets to the Knicks, a victim of clearing salary cap space once again, as the Rockets went big with the signing of center Samuel Dalembert. Two days after Christmas and the opening of the delayed NBA season, Lin was claimed off waivers by New York, prior to the rapid-fire injuries to their backcourt.

Aside from knowing Lin “was going to get his chance,” D’Antoni elaborated as the Knicks limped back to New York, saying, “the one thing you can say about Jeremy is that he’s very coachable. You never have to tell him something twice and when you teach a step or technique, he uses it immediately.”

I watched the Knicks leave the TD Boston Garden that night, looking at the team bus somewhat sadly as I waved good-bye to my longtime friend like a Band-Aid waving to the Stillwater Band in Almost Famous. It was not a wave of sadness or despair, it was a wave of hope.

To me, D’Antoni became just “Mike” in 1987 at the McDonald’s Open in Milwaukee when he was the starting point guard for Tracer Milan of Italy. After the initial acquaintance, we met frequently, usually along with his wife and son in Europe after he retired from playing but undertook big-time European coaching gigs first with his Milano club but more prominently at Benetton Treviso where he led the rival club to Italian League titles and a trip to the 2002 EuroLeague Final Four in Bologna.

When he wasn’t coaching in the Final Four, he was attending as a celebrated coach and all-time fan favorite – even for rival teams in Spain. Put it this way, Mike didn’t pay for a dinner or a drink in Italy, Spain or West Virginia.

His coaching resume expanded with a job coaching the Denver Nuggets in 1997-98 and short pre-season stint to assist the San Antonio Spurs as they navigated Milan for the 1999 McDonald’s Open. All the while, D’Antoni stressed an up-tempo offense, second to none.

By 2005-06, D’Antoni ran his famed “Seven Seconds or Less” offense for the Phoenix Suns with soon-to-be MVP point guard Steve Nash running the show. The Suns went 62-20 and he won NBA Coach of the Year honors while Nash became the best point guard in the league.

In 2008, with the Suns somewhat imploding a couple years after longtime Suns managing partner and GM Jerry Colangelo sold 30% of the franchise to current owner Robert Sarver, D’Antoni and company headed for greener pastures and that aligned the universe and the world’s Most Famous Arena for Linsanity.

On the third game of that back-to-back-to-back, Saturday, February 12, 2012 at The Garden, Linsanity began with a seat on the bench. D’Antoni started the ailing Shumpert and Landry Fields at the guard position, but substituted Lin who logged a team-high 35:52 minutes, scoring 25 points on 10-for-19 shooting. He added seven assists, two steals and five rebounds with only one turnover as New York defeated New Jersey (now Brooklyn), 99-92.

Knicks star forward Carmelo Anthony encouraged D’Antoni to give Lin more minutes, as did center-forward Amare Stoudimire, but both players would soon be added to the Knicks’ injury lists as the team resembled more of a M*A*S*H unit than an NBA team.

Lin got the start the next game, which ended as a 99-88 home win over the Utah Jazz. Lin played 44:52 minutes, scoring 28 points on 10-17 shooting with eight assists and an equal number of turnovers, a sign of concern.

The phenomenon of insanity grew and grew, and it carried on because of The Garden’s victory-starving crowd who fueled the ride. In his 12 starts before the NBA All-Star break, Lin averaged 22.5 points and 8.7 assists per game, and New York surged to a 9–3 streak, including the first seven in a row since that game up in Boston. The Knicks reached the .500 mark on February 15 and were 17-18 at the break. However, the shooting star was faltering, slightly, as opposing NBA team scouts focused-in on New York’s style, the way to double team Lin while the injury-ridden Knicks had nothing more in the gas tank.

D’Antoni was dismissed in March and former Knicks forward Mike Woodsontook over, slowing the offense down and running few pick-and-rolls as he favored an isolation game featuring Anthony. Meanwhile, Davis returned to play the point and Lin’s run was over.

During the offseason of 2012, the Houston Rockets concocted a free agent offer sheet for Lin with two years at about $5 million and a third year, ‘poison pill’ at $14.5m. The Knicks signed Raymond Felton and Linsanity died a natural death somewhere between the Hudson River and Galveston Bay.

HERE NOW, THE NOTES: José Pañeda, the official Spanish-language voice of the Miami Heat, has been awarded the National Sports Media Association (NSMA) award for Best Broadcaster in Florida. The popular Cuban-American narrator, affiliated with the Heat Spanish Radio Network since the club’s establishment in 1988, became the first Spanish-language broadcaster to win the prestigious NSMA national award.

FROZEN FENWAY: The 2023 NHL Winter Classic will feature the Boston Bruins at Fenway Park, America’s Most Beloved Ballpark. The game will mark the fifth NHL regular-season outdoor game for the Bruins and the second time the Winter Classic is scheduled for Fenway Park, home of the Red Sox. Boston defeated the Philadelphia Flyers 2-1 in OT in the 2010 NHL Winter Classic and the Bruins lost to Montreal, 5-1, when Gillette Stadium played host to the event in 2016. Says the NHL’s official news release, “The game continues the NHL tradition of hosting a regular-season outdoor game at the onset of the New Year. The 2023 edition will mark the 15-year anniversary of the first NHL Winter Classic in Buffalo. Boston’s opponent, broadcast information and a confirmed details for the 2023 NHL Winter Classic will be announced at a later date.

In their two other outdoor games, the Bruins played the Chicago Blackhawks in the 2019 NHL Winter Classic at Notre Dame Stadium in South Bend, Indiana. The Bruins won, 4-2, in front of 76,126 at sold-out Notre Dame, the second largest crowd in nHL history. Tuukka Rask made 36 saves and Sean Kuraly scored the game winner to elevate the Bruins to the victory.

The Bruins played in the NHL ‘Outdoors’ game in beautiful Lake Tahoe, Nevada on February 21, 2021. David Pastrnak recorded a hat trick as the Bruins topped the Philadelphia Flyers, 7-3.

Filed Under: While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: Linsanity, TL's Sunday Sports Notes, While We're Young Ideas

Hoophall Names Top 10 Centers

February 4, 2022 by Terry Lyons

SPRINGFIELD – (Staff report from official News Release) – The Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame named its top 10 watch list members for the 2022 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Center of the Year Award. Named after Class of 1995 Hall of Famer and three-time NCAA Champion Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, the annual honor in its eighth year recognizes the top centers in men’s college basketball. A national committee of top college basketball personnel determined the watch list of 20 candidates in November, which has now been narrowed to 10.

Abdul-Jabbar played for legendary coach and Hall of Famer John Wooden at the University of California, Los Angeles from 1966-1969. He is a three-time NCAA Champion who earned numerous accolades including three-time Final Four Most Outstanding Player, three-time National College Player of the Year and three-time Consensus First-Team All-American (1967-1969). As a professional, Abdul-Jabbar is a six-time NBA Champion, six-time NBA Most Valuable Player, two-time NBA Finals MVP, 19-time NBA All-Star and the league’s all-time leading scorer. In 2021 The NBA created the Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Social Justice Champion Award, which honors players who are making strides in the fight for social justice.

College basketball fans are encouraged to participate in Fan Voting presented by Dell Technologies in each of the three rounds. In late February, the watch list of 10 players for the 2022 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Center of the Year Award will be narrowed to 5. In March those finalists will be presented to Mr. Abdul-Jabbar and the Hall of Fame’s selection committee where a winner will be selected.

The winner of the 2022 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Award will be presented on a future date, along with the other four members of the Men’s Starting Five. Additional awards being presented include the Bob Cousy Point Guard Award, Jerry West Shooting Guard Award, the Julius Erving Small Forward Award and the Karl Malone Power Forward Award.

Previous winners of the Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Center of the Year Award include two-time winner Luka Garza, Iowa (2020-21), Ethan Happ, Wisconsin (2019), Angel Delgado, Seton Hall (2018), Przemek Karnowski, Gonzaga (2017), Jakob Poeltl, Utah (2016) and Frank Kaminsky, Wisconsin (2015).

For more information on the 2022 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Center of the Year Award and the latest updates, log onto www.hoophallawards.com and follow @hoophall and #KareemAward on Twitter and Instagram. Starting Five Fan Voting presented by Dell Technologies will go live on February 4.

 

2022 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Center of the Year Award Candidates*

Walker Kessler Auburn
Adama Sanogo Connecticut
Mark Williams Duke
Drew Timme Gonzaga
Kofi Cockburn Illinois
Oscar Tshiebwe Kentucky
Hunter Dickinson Michigan
Armando Bacot North Carolina
Nate Watson Providence
Zach Edey Purdue

 

*Players can play their way onto and off of the list at any point in the 2021-2022 season*

Filed Under: NCAA, NCAA Basketball Tagged With: Basketball Hall of Fame

Costacos Unveils NFL QB Collection

February 4, 2022 by Terry Lyons

LOS ANGELES – (Staff Report from official News Release) – The Costacos Collection unveiled its second NFT drop in partnership with four legendary former NFL quarterbacks: Troy Aikman, Warren Moon, Jim McMahon, and Dan Marino. Following the company’s inaugural foray with baseball great Willie Mays, the QB Legends Collection re-imagines the four quarterbacks’ iconic ‘80s/‘90s Costacos posters in new digital form. In addition, the quarterbacks have worked closely with John Costacos and acclaimed digital artist Mike Campau to create all-new 3D art pieces capturing the defining moments and themes from the players’ legendary careers. A portion of proceeds from the drop will be donated to the Pro Football Hall of Fame Enshrinees Assistance Foundation, an organization that assists HOF members and their families.

Collectors can access the drop on the newly-launched CostacosCollection.com marketplace. The Costacos Collection has entered into a strategic technology partnership with GigLabs to build on the Flow blockchain, joining NBA Top Shot, NFL ALL DAY, and UFC Strike, created by Dapper Labs. The partnership has enabled the Costacos Collection to build a proprietary NFT marketplace on the environmentally-friendly Flow blockchain, joining other GigLabs partners that include CNN, Turner Sports, Athletes Unlimited, Speedway Motorsports, the University of Miami, and others. The Costacos Collection marketplace includes full credit card support and simple wallet signup requiring only an email address.

“We couldn’t have hoped for a more exciting group of legacy athletes with whom to partner for the launch of the Costacos Collection marketplace,” said CEO Justin Moorad. “Troy, Warren, Jim, and Dan, all with their own unique personalities and career paths, represent a generation of NFL culture that was captured in their original Costacos posters. It’s an honor to help bring those iconic images back to life, and a privilege to watch John and the players work together to create all-new digital art that we believe their legions of fans will be passionate about collecting.”

“We loved working with all the athletes, the pitchers, home-run hitters, point guards, linebackers, all of them,” said Costacos. “But there was nothing quite like creating an image with an NFL quarterback because the great ones are the guys with all the firepower that make the offense go. Jim McMahon was the first poster we printed back in 1986. There we were in Chicago, 2,000 miles from home, a couple of kids with an idea but no experience, who somehow convinced the NFL’s biggest superstar to dress up like Mad Max and take pictures next to a live bear cub in the middle of a thunderstorm. Jim was larger than life, he’d just led the Chicago Bears to their one and only Super Bowl victory and was at the forefront of sports pop culture. We may not have known how we were going to pull it off but somehow we did and had a ton of fun shooting it, and Jim did too. We got lucky with a break in the weather, the shots ended up working, and we ended up with one of the great posters of all time – and a lifelong friend in Jimmy Mac.”

“Being part of the Costacos Collection was what every athlete from our era dreamed about, it was like being on a Wheaties box but better, because you hung on the wall of every bedroom of fans across the country,” McMahon said. “It’s pretty cool that Mad Mac was the first one and the start of it all. I still have it on my wall. And it’s just as cool to be a part of this new era, I’m having tons of fun working creatively with John again. He’s the most creative guy I know, and when we’re done we always make sure to sit down for a beer or six.”

Filed Under: Sports Business Tagged With: NFL, Sports Biz, Sports Business

TL’s Sunday Sports Notes | Brady Retires

January 30, 2022 by Terry Lyons

Tom and daughter, Vivian Brady: (Photo by Getty Images)

Bye-Bye Brady

By TERRY LYONS

Mid-afternoon Saturday, ESPN reported that all-time great NFL quarterback Tom Brady has decided to retire from playing pro football, effective immediately. He leaves with one year remaining on his NFL/Tampa Bay contract.

Brady, 44, is retiring with a record (624) touchdown passes, (84,250) passing yards in 22 seasons of NFL football, mostly with the New England Patriots but concluding with the Tampa Bay Bucs, the 2021 NFL Super Bowl champions. Brady also leaves the NFL with seven Super Bowl championships and a burgeoning business with his TB12 brand.

With the fact Brady’s children are in their formative years, the time for spending valuable days with his family is now. With his wealth, combined with the wealth and celebrity status of his super model wife, Giselle, the timing will allow them to settle in the place of their choosing, most likely New York City or Miami. They are building a home near Miami Beach, in an exclusive paradise called Indian Creek Island.

Late in the day Saturday, Brady’s agent (Don Yee) offered a vague non-denial, denial of the report and Brady’s father, Tom Sr. stated via the NFL Network, “This story Mike is total conjecture. Tommy has not made a final decision one way or the other and anybody else that says that he has is absolutely wrong.”

The take here? You’ve gotta be very happy for Tom Brady and his family. He gave his all to the NFL for 22 years and can retire healthy and at the perfect time to spend time with his wife and children. He deserves nothing but personal happiness and more professional success if he chooses to explore more entrepreneurial outlets like TB12. Otherwise, the links from Pebble Beach Ireland, Pro-Ams and celebrity golf tournaments await.

Side Note: With the announced and now highly expected retirement of Brady, the odds of TE Rob Gronkowski returning to the NFL football field fall to slim and none.

Side Note II: With the retirement of Brady, a Golden Age for Boston sports franchises comes to a full stop with Brady leaving the Patriots (lost to Tampa Bay Bucs), Paul Pierce gone from the Celtics (shipped out to Brooklyn with KG), Zdeno Chara for the Bruins (shipped to DC) and David “Big Papi” Ortiz retiring from the Red Sox and just this week voted as a first ballot National Baseball Hall of Famer. At least Big Papi remained on the Sox and retired as a winner in his Boston uniform, something Sox OF Mookie Bettsdecided against. It is the end of an amazing era in Boston sports history.


SNOWY and WIND-BLOWN BOSTON – The NFL Super Bowl participants will be determined today and the game date will be circled on everyone’s calendar – February 13, 2022 with a 6:30pm (ET) kick-off. Then, if all goes well with their negotiations (see note below), Spring Training for baseball will begin 48 hours later. Pitchers & Catchers reporting is always the first sign of spring.

There will be a February 4-20th time-out for the Beijing Winter Olympics, but with dozens of athletes testing positive for COVID+ and the time change challenges of an Asian Olympics for USA television viewing, the 2022 Winter Games are not generating much buzz or viewer enthusiasm. NBC and Peacock are now beginning 24/7 promotion of the Games, avoiding any connection to China and the obvious human rights protests on-going. NBC Sports is NOT sending broadcasters to call the Winter Olympics on site and, instead, will base much of the coverage out of their Stamford, CT studio. Blah.

That brings us to the “next” season for sports fans. With the NBA and NHL in their dog-days of winter, the focus will shift to NCAA basketball, the various conference tournaments as NCAA “March Madness” fast approaches. The bulk of the college tournaments begin March 9, but some, like the Southern Conference tip-off March 4. Here’s your pocket schedule for planning:

  • March 4: Some mid-major conference tournaments begin
  • March 9: Bulk of NCAA conference championships tip-off
  • March 13: NCAA Selection Sunday
  • First Four: March 15-16
  • First round: March 17-18
  • Second round: March 19-20
  • Sweet 16: March 24-25
  • Elite Eight: March 26-27
  • Final Four: April 2
  • NCAA championship game: April 4
  • MLB Regular Season: March 31

Each week, the Associated Press Top 25 and the NCAA Basketball Coaches Poll rank the best college hoops teams. There’s rarely a spot or two difference between the two polls. As of this week, there’s 99.9% agreement on the Top 10 programs in ‘22:

  • Auburn
  • Gonzaga
  • Arizona
  • Baylor
  • Kansas
  • Purdue
  • Duke
  • UCLA
  • Houston
  • Michigan State

In the Top 11-25 ranked range, these teams should be noted as contenders to go deep into the tournament:

  • Wisconsin
  • Villanova
  • Kentucky
  • Texas Tech

Of course, in the NCAA’s, you can always count on at least one or two teams to catch fire in late February and the first week of March, then become the Cinderella darlings of March Madness. Loyola (Chicago) certainly qualifies in that realm, as does a well-coached and scrappy Providence team from the Big East. UConn and Marquette are two clubs to keep an eye on throughout February.

Winning in-Conference road games by any margin is always the key indicator for this reporter. Don’t let those rankings, Quad-1-to-4 victories, RPI or NET rankings fool you.


HERE NOW, THE NOTES: Saturday, January 29th, 2022 (yesterday – or tonight if you’re reading the bulldog edition) marks the first Saturday without “real” football since August 21, 2021. The NCAA football season began the following Saturday (August 28) and the nFL filled what might’ve been a dormant January 8 with two games of their final regular season weekend. (KS 28-24 over Denver) and Dallas 51-26 over Philadelphia). … The NCAA All-Star exhibitions don’t count.

POWER RANKINGS: Green Bay, Buffalo, Dallas, Tampa Bay and Tennessee all tapped-out last weekend, leaving the January 18 NFL Power Ranking in shambles. No. 7 LA Rams and No. 8 Cincinnati Bengals both advanced and the San Francisco 49ers surprised everyone but the Las Vegas bookies. That leaves us:

Cincy at KC, 3pm (ET) on CBS

SF at LA Rams, 6:30pm (ET) on FOX

Prediction: The home teams win and cover. … That said, Cincinnati is dangerous and will be a team to be reckoned with for at least five more years. KC and Buffalo both in that category, too. Anyone else? Let’s hear it.

PITCHERS & CATCHERS & LAWYERS: The MLB Spring Training countdown clock reads 14 days as of January 30th, with most teams asking pitchers & catchers to report on February 15th. This week, there was a Floridian-style ray of hope as consecutive meeting days (this past Monday-Tuesday) between MLB and the MLBPA concluded with reports of progress in their negotiations for a new Collective Bargaining Agreement. … The deadline for a deal is fast approaching so it is reasonable to think the two sides will continue to meet and chip away on the details for a new deal. … The good news, there has been surprisingly little said to media as the negotiations continue.

Filed Under: NFL, Patriots, While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: TL's Sunday Sports Notes, While We're Young Ideas

TL’s Sunday Notebook | Clark Gillies RIP

January 23, 2022 by Terry Lyons

By TERRY LYONS

Clark Gillies, an NHL Hall of Fame winger and one of the great New York Islanders players of all-time, passed away on Friday night, January 21 at the age of 67. His story is as amazing as the ‘69 Mets, as entertaining as the “Dr. J” Nets and as important to the fans of the glory-years New York Islanders as any story that can be told.

It is the story of the strongest piece to be placed in the foundation of an expansion NHL franchise. It is the story of a young man from Western Canada finding a new home on Long Island, New York and his return to that new home, even after serving his last two NHL seasons in Buffalo. Sadly, it is a story with a very unhappy ending, one that came quite suddenly to those who just saw him at Christmas 2021.

Let the story book dissolve and fade, as the calendar pages turn back in time.

On November 8, 1971, the National Hockey League awarded an expansion franchise to play at the brand new Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Uniondale, Long Island. The team – to be known as the New York Islanders – would join the New York Nets of the American Basketball Association as primary tenants of ‘The Coliseum” The Islanders and the Atlanta Flames joined the NHL and played each other on opening night, October 7, 1972.

The Islanders lost, 3-2, with team captain Eddie Westfall scoring the team’s first goal and hot shot rookie draftee Billy Harris netting the second. Isles’ goalkeeper Gerry Desjardins took the loss. I remember it all because I can state proudly – I was there.

The expansion New York Islanders had a few pieces in place from the expansion draft and the wise choice of Harris, the No. 1 overall pick of the 1972 NHL amateur draft from the Toronto Marlboros. Harris and the highly respected Westfall, gobbled-up in the dispersal draft from the Stanley Cup champion Boston Bruins, were joined by fan favorites like Terry Crisp, Brian “Spinner” Spencer, defenseman Gerry Hart and a handful of others who weren’t ready for primetime NHL minutes.

There were only two foundational pieces in place that first year. The back-up goal-keeper was a young Billy Smith, a fifth round draft choice of the Los Angeles Kings in 1970 and team General Manager Bill Torrey who had signed as GM on February 14, 1972 getting an upgrade in title from that of the California Golden Seals. Happy Valentine’s Day, New York Islanders, little did we all know.

The Islanders struggled mightily as an expansion franchise, going 12-60-6 in their first year. That qualifies as the ninth worst start for a team in NHL history but it did earn the right to choose first in the 1973 amateur draft and the astute Torrey turned down many an offer for money and veteran players to select defenseman Denis Potvin with the No. 1 overall pick. Torrey also coaxed St. Louis Blues coach and former NHL defenseman Al Arbour to become the Islanders’ head coach.

A year later, Torrey scored again. With the No. 4 and No. 22 picks in the 1974 NHL amateur draft, the Islanders selected Clark Gillies, a 6-3, 210 pound left wing from Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan at No. 4 and 5-11, 195 pound center Bryan Trottier, hailing from Val Marie, Saskatchewan, at No. 22, a second-rounder that every team had a chance to pick.

Fast forward to 1975 and the Islanders upset the New York Rangers in the first-round of the NHL Playoffs, went down 0-3 to the Pittsburgh Penguins in the second round but managed to come back to take the series, the first time since the 1942 Toronto Maple Leafs for a team to accomplish the feat. The Islanders nearly repeated the miracle against the Philadelphia Broad Street Bullies Flyers in the third round Stanley Cup semi-finals, but fell short in Game 7.

The Islanders needed one or two more pieces, addressing the need for more scoring, some second-line depth and another solid defenseman or two. In 1977, the scoring issue was checked-off when Torrey used the No. 15 pick to select Michel “Mike” Bossy, arguably among the greatest scorers and snipers in league history.

The next season, Trottier would play center with Bossy on his right and Gillies on his left to form one of the great lines of all-time. Potvin paired with his brother, Jean, or with the steady Dave Lewis and Smith anchored the goalkeeping duties, combined with amazing performances by Glenn ‘Chico” Resch. The foundation for a Stanley Cup champion was in place.

In three short seasons since expansion mayhem, the Islanders were competitive. In eight years, they became an NHL dynasty, reeling-off four Cup victories in a row. A team that was dropped in our laps as Long Island hockey fans allowed us to sing “We ARE the Champions” at the top of our lungs from 1980-to-1984.

When we played Street Hockey on the asphalt school yards, you’d be asked, “Who do you want to be?”

This columnist went to Gerry Cosby’s sporting goods store and had a road, royal blue Islanders jersey affixed with No. 9 for Clark Gillies. I wore it everyday. Every single day when we played on the streets, in the parks, on the cement of ice hockey rinks in the heat of summer.

I was Clark Gillies, growing tall, with some size and a wicked left-handed wrist shot. The only thing Gillies did a thousand times better than i could ever dream of was FIGHT, and fight he did against the toughest enforcers in the NHL. Philly’s Dave Schultz, Behn Wilson of the Flyers and Chicago Blackhawks or the epic playoff fights between Gillies and Boston’s Terry O’Reilly.

This is the fight Gillies had in mind:

It’s important to note, Gillies was NOT an NHL “goon” as he scored 30 or more goals in a season six times and scored 47 playoff goals with 46 assists in his 12 year career which concluded in 1986-87 and 1987-88 as a member of the Buffalo Sabres.

More importantly, Gillies, the native of Western Canada, became an Islander forever and returned to his Long Island digs after his career, bringing up his family and enjoying life with an occasional golf outing and return to the Nassau Coliseum or helping the team open its brand new UBS Arena, near Belmont.

The Islander roots are deep as Gillies’ daughter, Brianna, married the son of one of his best friends’ (NYI center Bob Bourne) son in Justin Bourne.Gillies frequently made appearances and raised money for Islanders great Pat LaFontaine’s Companions in Courage charity but his own charity work funded Huntington (LI) Hospital’s Pediatric unit and emergency room to the tune of a $2 million check to get started and frequent fund-raising efforts of $50,000+ all to help the children of Long Island. (Please see Clark Gillies Foundation).


HERE NOW, THE NOTES: Jim Johnson, Holy Trinity High School ‘76 and a former member of the New York Islanders’ front office staff, now runs the Companions in Courage Foundation along with his friend in NHL Hall of Famer Pat LaFontaine. Over the last decade or more, the Islanders insiders raised millions of dollars for charity, much of it going to help children. Johnson can express the feelings of many of us better than any of us.

“The tributes are pouring in from the hockey world and from an adopted community that Clark Gillies made his home,” wrote Johnson, an accomplished scribe. “But the shock and grief have yet to set in. Even if you only met him once, he made you feel like you had been a friend for life. Clark Gillies had that kind of impact on all of us.

(Left to right): Jim Johnson, Clark Gillies, Pat LaFontaine.

“Some of us just saw him around Christmas, and he was laughing and dancing, seemingly without a care in the world. He was one of those guys who embraced life and stared down any obstacle that might arise. He once told a friend that he had culled the cutest filly from the herd, and that’s how he married Pam. They had three beautiful daughters who made him a grandpa several times over.

“The hockey world is mourning the loss of a guy nicknamed “Jethro,”(dubbed that because of his resemblance to the big, goofy son of Jed Clampett in the ‘60s-70s TV comedy The Beverly Hillbillies). They remember the fierce fighter who never lost a fight until (Friday) night. They remember him riding shotgun on the famed “Trio Grande Line” with Mike Bossy and Bryan Trottier. Maybe they remember the image of him crushing a beer can on his head on the center-ice scoreboard at last year’s playoffs. Rangers fans will no doubt remember his one-punch throw down with Ed “Boxcar” Hospodar, and Bruins fans will reflect on the heroic actions of Clarkie and Terry O’Reilly in the 1980 semi-finals.

“But some had an extra special bond with Clarkie that was something completely different. Yes, we all knew the ferocity that the man represented, but it was his kindness and adoption of our town as his own that made the friendship so special. Plus, he was one of the funniest bastards we’ve ever met.

“I often talk about how the most important reason why you want a pro sports franchise in your neighborhood is not necessarily to win championships (though those four straight Cups didn’t hurt!). Rather, it’s the athletes who become a part of the fabric of the community where they play. The Islanders introduced guys from Hinton, Alberta; Waterford, Michigan; Peterborough, Ontario; and yes, even Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan (where’s Moose Jaw? 6 feet from the moose’s ass!) to this lovely little island we call home. We were all so lucky that guys like Bob Nystrom, Pat LaFontaine, Steve Webb and Clark Gillies came here and stayed.

“Clarkie loved kids, and he has raised more than one million dollars to support Huntington Hospital. If you’ve never visited the pediatric wing and the “Cub Room” he built in that facility, you should do yourself a favor. As I’ve heard more than one hospital administrator say, “this is such a great idea. Why did it take a hockey player to come up with it?”

“We had a running gag at the CiC Golf dinner. How many standing ovations could we get for Clark in one night? I’m really proud that we got it to NINE this year. A personal favorite moment was the night Pat LaFontaine honored Clark for all of his charitable work in the community. He cried when we presented him the plaque. The big tough S.O.B. was such a soft touch when it came to helping kids.

“So, we’ll process the grief over the next few days and weeks over the loss of this very special friend. We’ll get together and share our own stories of how he impacted our lives, and we’ll cherish every one of them. We’ll celebrate a life that helped make us all just a little bit better. RIP, big fella – until we all skate again on that big negative-edge pond in heaven. Save us a spot “in the room” #9,” concluded Johnson.


BRIAN “SPINNER” SPENCER: Mentioned in the story of our beloved Clark Gillies and the New York Islanders was another Long Island fan favorite in Brian “Spinner” Spencer, who played in 11 NHL seasons from 1969-70 to 1978-79. … If you haven’t heard about it, his career story is incredible, unbelievable but sad. … In December of 1970 when Spinner was called-up to play his first NHL game, he called his father, Roy, who was in his hometown of Ft. St. James, British Columbia to tell him the good news and that he’d be on TV for “Hockey Night in Canada” that weekend. A very serious problem arose when a Vancouver Canucks vs California Golden Seals game was aired by the western affiliates of CBC instead of Spencer’s Toronto Maple Leafs eastern game. Spencer’s father – upset by the programming selection – drove 84 miles to Prince George where he ordered the production crew and staff at the station to air the Maple Leafs game. He did so at gunpoint and, although the station complied with his wishes, when Roy Spencer exited the TV station, the Royal Canadien Mounted Police confronted him and he was shot and killed on the spot. … As time went by, Brian Spencer had a decent NHL career, being a fan fave who loved to mix-it-up. His best seasons came with the Buffalo Sabres (1974-75 to 1976-77) and he labored for another few years, eventually finishing-up in the American Hockey League, playing 30 games in 1979-80 with the Hershey Bears. … After his hockey career was over, he turned to crime, violence, alcohol abuse and was arrested for kidnapping and murder in 1987. He was jailed and faced the death penalty. believe it or not, this reporter and Spencer became “pen pals” of sorts that year, while he was in jail awaiting trial. I wrote to say he could take pride in the fact those expansion Islanders games he played in meant a lot to a whole new generation of hockey fans, and that no matter what trouble he was in, he could smile that night, knowing he played a role. … His return letters were incredibly well-written, perfect penmanship by hand, always very appreciative and on-point – the subject matter only about hockey. He did not ask for a thing, but I sent some letterhead, envelopes and stamps. In his last letter, he assured me he was innocent and that he was hopeful he would be declared so and set free after a fair trial. At his trial, many of his former NHL teammates testified and the jury returned a NOT guilty verdict. … Despite the acquittal, Spencer returned to a life of crime and drug abuse and was shot dead in a crack cocaine purchase gone bad in Florida. He died on June 3, 1988 at the young age of 38.


CBS SPORTS: CBS Sports colleague Bob Fishman is calling it a career as one of the top remote, live sports directors of our time. The late Sandy Grossman and Fishman televised NFL, NBA and college basketball games for a generation of sports fans, both foregoing any chance to be at home on a weekend for decades at a time. Fishman will retire after the NCAA Final Four, marking 50 years at CBS Sports.

Filed Under: NHL, While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: Clark Gillies, New York Islanders, TL's Sunday Sports Notes, While We're Young Ideas

New Commitment to Women’s Hockey

January 18, 2022 by Terry Lyons

BOSTON – (Staff report from Official News Release) – At a sports business conference by the The Carnegie Initiative for inclusion and acceptance in the sport of hockey staged today in Boston, the Premier Hockey Federation (PHF) made public a commitment from its Board of Governors to invest over $25 million in direct payments and benefits to its players in the next three years. The pledge includes more than $7.5 million in salary and benefits for the 2022-23 season. The commitment represents the largest one-time independent investment in the history of professional women’s hockey and will ‘provide more financial opportunities for athletes while directly enhancing the player experience,” said a league statement.

“The PHF has been steadfast in its vision to grow the game under a new era that truly provides leading opportunities for athletes in the sport who deserve to be treated as professionals,” said Tyler Tumminia, PHF Commissioner. “This amazing investment by (franchise) ownership reaffirms the strength of their commitment to being difference-makers who advance the professional game so that our athletes can thrive as role models who continue to inspire the next generation.”

The investment to our professional players, which includes cash, full healthcare benefits provided by their club, and equity in the teams, will support the current athletes and attract new players. At the heart of the financial commitment  is a substantial salary cap increase to $750,000 for next year, 150 percent more than the current record figure of $300,000 that is available per team.

The PHF will further support its growth and the development opportunities for its athletes through expansion, updating facilities, purchasing new equipment, and increasing ice time in the form of more practices and an expanded 28 game schedule. All players will benefit from 10 percent of the equity of each team, which will be contributed to an investment pool owned by the PHF players, enabling them to share in the league’s financial success. Additionally, players will have control over their own likeness and be able to profit from their image.

“On behalf of the Board of Governors we are proud to play a part in bringing women’s sports to the next level by investing in the PHF,” said John Boynton, Chairman of the federation’s Board of Governors. “We see the PHF as a platform to address the inequities that women athletes face. We also believe in the sustainability of our developing business model and embrace our responsibility to build a platform that grows this dynamic league to historic heights.”

Over the last 18 months, the PHF has pivoted from a single entity structure to a joint venture model, with all six member clubs owned and operated by private ownership groups in their respective markets. The PHF also generated landmark broadcast and corporate partnerships, the largest sponsorship revenues in its history, and received record digital viewership and engagement during a shortened season. Prior to the 2021-22 campaign, the league announced a historic name change and refreshed logo to redefine the brand based on the skill and talent of the athletes as opposed to their gender.

 

 

Filed Under: Boston Sports, Sports Business Tagged With: PHF, Sports Business

TL’s Sunday Sports Notes – Jan 16th

January 16, 2022 by Terry Lyons

While We’re Young (Ideas) Looks at FIBA, Golf Etiquette and Parting Words from NBPA’s Michele Roberts

By TERRY LYONS

This one almost made it right past us all. If it weren’t for the backdrop of the spectacular Giza Plateau in Egypt, the FIBA Intercontinental Cup might’ve gone astray, like a Russell Westbrook turnover.

FIBA, the international basketball federation, conducts several basketball tournaments throughout the years, including the FIBA World Cup (formerly the World Championship of Basketball) and by declaration of the IOC (International Olympic Committee), FIBA oversees the men’s and women’s hoop tournaments at the Olympics Games. FIBA also dabbles with a European-wide pro league, is partners with the NBA on the Basketball Africa League and now organizes the Intercontinental Cup, as new basketball tournament with representative professional (not national) teams from the Americas, Africa and Europe.

The draw for the February 11-13 event took place a three-point field goal distance away from the great Pyramids of Cairo and that attention-grabber of a draw resulted in the Americas bracket of South America’s Flamengo of Brazil to face none other than the 2020-21 NBA G-League winners Lakeland Magic (near parent club Orlando).

In the other semi-final bracket, Basketball Champions League 2020-21 winners Hereda San Pablo Burgos of Spain will face the inaugural Basketball Africa League champion and tournament host Zamalek SC of Cairo.

According to a FIBA news release, “the ambassador of the 2022 event, Egyptian soccer legend and former Zamalek player Mido, accepted the task of conducting the draw at the Giza Plateau and took the opportunity to profess his love of basketball.”


HERE NOW, THE NOTES: “Honestly, I’m a little bit tired of the situation,” said Rafa Nadal when asked about the Australian Open tennis saga of Novak Djokovic. “The Australian Open is much more important than any player,” Nadal said in his pre-tournament media session. “If he’s playing, finally, OK. If he’s not playing, the Australian Open will be a great Australian Open, with or without him. That’s my point of view.” … There should be more focus on the game of Nikola Jokic of the Denver Nuggets than “Novax” Djokovicplaying tennis (or not) on the other side of the world.

What else?

The sport of golf deserves better than to have SONY Open reigning champ Kevin Na trading cheap shots (on Twitter, no less) with Tour hack Grayson Murray. If only one sport can survive the brutal, insensitive nature of life in 2020-21-22, you’d think it might be golf. But, no…

We’ve got Brooks Koepka and Bryson DeChambeau barking at each other before they teed-up a made for TV event in the PGA silly season and now, just as the 2022 PGA Tour is fully underway, we have this:

Twitter avatar for @GraysonMurrayGrayson Murray @GraysonMurray

Kevin Na taking 3 minutes to putt them. does get old.

Chantel McCabe @chantel_mccabe

Kevin Na walking in putts does not get old.

January 14th 2022

56 Retweets1,582 Likes

Twitter avatar for @GraysonMurrayGrayson Murray @GraysonMurray

If they penalized you like they should for slow play you’d never make another cut either.

Kevin Na @kevinna915

@GraysonMurray u missing the cut is getting old!

January 15th 2022

69 Retweets1,130 Likes


COMINGS & GOINGS: Nice ‘get” by ESPN in hiring Pete Thamel away from Yahoo Sports (anyone remember that Verizon, Yahoo thing called OATH)? … You’d think ESPN would re-hire Andy Katz before Yahoo Sports signs him? … Michele Roberts has officially retired from her gig as the Executive Director of the NBA Players Association. She’d been on the job since 2014. Taking over the prestigious job representing the players’ union is little known Tamika Tremaglio, former Managing Principal of Deloitte’s Greater Washington practice, where she has served as an advisor and consultant to the NBPA since 2012.

EQUITY STAKE: In one of Ms. Roberts’ final interview before departing the NBPA, she waxed philosophic on one serious regret of her tenure repping the players and that was not negotiating equity stakes for the players or Players’ Association (as one) in the rising valuations of NBA franchises. Said Roberts to the Sports Business Journal: “The biggest challenge which I sorely wish I could have met was securing player ownership in the 30 teams they have historically and continue to enrich.” … When contemplating the concept Roberts has in mind, three things immediately come to mind: 1). Do the players as a whole benefit? And, if so, when there’s cash calls during the tenure of various team ownership, does the current roster pony-up or does the Union as a whole pay-in? Can you imagine the 10-day roster signee finding out on Day 2, “Ahh, you owe $100,000 to the team for the recent cash call.” … 2). If a franchise sells, does every single player in its history get a piece of the action? … 3). If a franchise decides to invest in a privately-owned new building, do the players have to help fund the construction? Again? every player on current roster or every player who ever wore that team’s jersey?

The concept seems to be more of some kind of “Flip Tax” on a franchise that increases in value, much like the hated flip tax on a New York City co-op. If LA’s Jeannie Buss decides to sell the Lakers, does the estate of Wilt Chamberlain get a few bucks?

TL

Filed Under: Sports Business, While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: NBA, Sports Biz, Sports Business, TL Sunday Sports Notes, While We're Young Ideas

Big East: DePaul Defeats Seton Hall

January 14, 2022 by Terry Lyons

CHICAGO – (Staff Report from Official News Release) – DePaul recorded its first BIG EAST win of the season on Thursday, while Butler nailed a win at Georgetown to start a three-game road trip.

The Blue Demons got a scare in the final minute, but never trailed in a 96-92 win against the 20th-ranked Pirates. Transfer Jalen Terry, in only his third start, scored a career-high 28 points. David Jones added 24 points and eight rebounds. Javon Freeman-Liberty scored 12 points before leaving with an injury in the second half.

Jared Rhoden led Seton Hall (11-4, 2-3 BE) with 25 points and seven rebounds. Bryce Aiken added 22 points. The Pirates trailed by 11 points with one minute to play before cutting the deficit to two in the final seconds.

Butler used an 18-4 run to start the second half en route to a 72-58 victory at Georgetown. The Bulldogs (9-6, 2-2 BE) were led by Jair Bolden’s 23 points. Bryce Nze helped with 14 points, eight rebounds and three blocked shots. Butler plays Villanova at Wells Fargo Center on Sunday.

The Hoyas (6-7, 0-2 BE), who were led by Tyler Beard’s 15 points and five assists, were without regulars Donald Carey and Dante Harris along with coach Patrick Ewing.

Both games on Saturday tip at noon ET. FOX will telecast Creighton at No. 17 Xavier. Both teams lost to Villanova in their last games. The Bluejays (10-4, 2-1 BE) lost 75-41 on the road on Jan. 5. The Musketeers (12-3, 2-2 BE) dropped a 64-60 home decision on Wednesday. Both teams feature balanced scoring attacks with four players averaging in double figures.

Seton Hall will look to bounce back when it plays at Marquette on FS1. The Golden Eagles (11-6, 3-3 BE) have won three in a row after Tuesday’s 87-76 win against DePaul. Seton Hall has taken the last six meetings between the two teams.

Filed Under: Big East, NCAA, NCAA Basketball Tagged With: Big East, DePaul, Seton Hall

TLs Sunday Sports Notes | Jan 9th

January 9, 2022 by Terry Lyons

While We’re Young (Ideas) and the 2022 Winter Games

BOSTON – When we last left the 2022 Beijing (China) Winter Olympic Games, there was the newsworthy reporting of a Diplomatic boycott of the Games by the United States government. It was a strike against the government of China and a USA protest that specifically addressed “genocide and crimes against humanity” in Xinjiang, a northwestern region of China.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki spoke of the decision which, according to the New York Times report of her conference, was addressing the treatment of “Uyghurs and other predominantly Muslim ethnic minorities in that region, including mass detentions and forced use of contraception and sterilizations.”

Aside from the previously reported support of the diplomatic boycott by US allies Australia, Canada and Great Britain, there was barely a whimper in the global community. Additionally, pre-Olympic promotion of the 2022 Winter Games was dialed down to a very low simmer in the United States.

The low level promotion could be tagged on the lack of participation by the National Hockey League, a decision announced by the league on December 22, just before the annual January 1st NHL Winter Classic would be televised – not by NBC Sports – but by TNT. The NHL noted, however, they were passing on the Beijing Winter Games because of the increasing threat of the COVID-19 virus and its Omicron variant.

The Beijing Winter Games, however, can carry-on without the players of the National Hockey League as the ice hockey competition in both the men’s and women’s games will be scheduled and will have some interest. After all, the athletes are not being asked to boycott the games and that is about the only good news to report.

In the months leading up to the February 4-20 Winter Games, local NBC affiliates laid low in on-air promotion. Daily viewers of The Today Show have not been subjected to endless Winter Olympics features and programming plugs. On January 1, NBC pulled the plug on its NBC Sports Network and shifted programming to its old school USA Network and cable business outlet CNBC. NBC’s OTT network – Peacock – will host many of the events. That strategy is certainly within NBC Universal’s prerogative in their attempt to promote Peacock, but it comes with a cost to the International Olympic Committee and United States Olympic Committee (USOPC) which also represents the Paralympics in the USA. That cost is eyeballs as OTT (Over-the-Top) – even without a paywall – is not OTA (Over the Air).

Bits of Winter Games qualifying events are now dancing in our heads. Figure skating has been on-going in Nashville where veteran skater Mariah Bellwon the women’s national title at the U.S. Figure Skating Championships, likely earning a spot on the three-person U.S. Olympic team when it is announced (right around press/posting time). Bell will be the oldest USA national champion to compete since the 1920s. Karen Chen finished second and Isabeau Levito came in third. Alysa Liu, considered the top American female figure skater, dropped out of the US championships after testing positive for the coronavirus but still can be named to the team for the Beijing Olympics.

There’s been some speed skating qualifying and some snow boarding, glimmers of hope for the upcoming games. Peacock will live stream all of NBC Universal’s coverage of the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics, including every minute of every live event that airs on broadcast and cable TV. They will not put a pay wall up for those with the Peacock app.

Regardless, viewership of the upcoming 2022 Beijing Winter Games will likely be at an all-time low. Reasons are plentiful, starting with 2016-2022 American-China relations at a crossroads and possibly at the lowest point since the 1970s. The Chinese government’s record vs. Human rights is reason enough for viewers to take a pass. The stodgy Olympic suits will make excuses and point to the huge time zone difference between Asia and the USA. The split audiences – traditional TV vs Streaming – will be the built-in excuse for low ratings.

One thing is for sure: the Chinese government doesn’t give a granite Curling stone’s damn what an American viewer thinks or does. China couldn’t care less if an American diplomat shows up.

What will this lover of Olympic Games do?

I’ll watch it all.

I’ll dream of glorious Olympic Games of the past. Dreams of downhill and slalom races in 1968 with Jean-Claude Killy of France or Innsbruck ‘76 with Austria’s Franz Klammer. I’ll think of Italy’s Alberto Tomba or Austria’s Hermann Maier.

I’ll think of all the different Olympics, the many years, the US broadcasters from ABC Sports to CBS Sports to NBC Sports. I’ll fondly remember broadcaster Pat O’Brien hosting an 11:30pm (ET) cozy nightly recap at fireside from Lillehammer, Norway in 1994. And, of course, I’ll think back to Lake Placid and the greatest sporting moments of many of our lifetimes – the 1980 USA Olympic gold medal ice hockey team.

Glory days, all gone by.

Pat O’Brien Late Night from Lillehammer in ‘94 … (Get a load of the theme song and opening graphics).

I might have written about this once before, but you need to understand “TheOlympic Gene.” Either you have it or you don’t. It is passed down along with all the other 20-to-25,000 human DNA-based wirings in our body. Those carrying the Olympic Gene have a little more “pep” in their polypeptides. While the human condition is inborn, it grows with leaned conditioning as the Olympic Games are played in places all over the world.

The Olympic Gene can be limited to love the Summer Games more than the Winter Games, but love of any one sport – whether it be figure skating or curling, handball or weight lifting – tosses the gene pool upside down and all the lovely chromosomes tumble together for, yes, MUST SEE TV.

Those of us with the Olympic Gene pass it along to our children and they queue-up like automobiles at the Field of Dreams and watch alongside us. They are on a first name basis with “Bob” (Costas). They want silence in the room during the women’s free skate or the women’s team gymnastics competition, no matter who is competing or what country they hail from.

Until this day, I can not fathom a family that doesn’t love and experience the world of sports. Whether they participate or watch from the stands or via television. Sports is such a unifier and exactly what we need in 2022.

Now, don’t get me wrong. Politics are very much a part of the international sporting events, especially the Olympic Games. Look back to 1936 and Jesse Owens incredible performances for the USA in Berlin, Germany or look so very sadly back to Munich in 1972 when the pro-Palestine Black September terrorist group invaded, captured and killed members of Israel’s Olympic Team.

US athletes have protested at the Games, too, with Tommie Smith and John Carlos of USA Track & Field raising their black-gloved fists in protest of civil rights in the United States during one of the most tumultuous years (1968) in our country’s history. There is no escaping politics and the Olympics and maybe that’s actually a good thing if it is done in peace.

The youth of the world gather to compete and the youth of the world must solve the problems the prior generations have dumped in their laps.


HERE NOW, THE NOTES: Blast-off … The NBA made an interesting sports business announcement this week with the fact it selected five companies for the inaugural NBA Launchpad program. In a statement, the NBA said Launchpad is “the league’s latest initiative to source, evaluate and pilot emerging technologies that impact the future of the game.” … Says the NBA, “Launchpad was introduced in June 2021 with a global search to identify cutting-edge solutions that directly addressed the following priority areas identified for the inaugural season of the program: Ankle Injury Innovation, Elite Youth Player Performance, Referee Training and Development and Youth Health and Wellness. NBA Launchpad received hundreds of submissions from a diverse applicant pool across 25 countries, ranging from early-stage startups to large research institutions. … To conduct the “pitch” review process, the NBA partnered with Pitchtape, an online pitch platform, and enlisted subject matter experts from the League Office and teams to evaluate each submission. The inaugural class of the NBA Launchpad program includes:

  • BetterGuards (Berlin, Germany): Adaptive ankle protection system that provides advanced freedom of motion for athletes while actively preventing injuries.
  • Breathwrk (Los Angeles, California): Health and performance app that provides science-backed breathing exercises, helping athletes wake up, calm down, increase stamina and fall asleep.
  • Nextiles (Brooklyn, New York): Materials science company that quantifies human movement by merging sewing technologies with flexible electronics.
  • Rezzil (Manchester, United Kingdom): VR-based solution for cognitive training, rehabilitation and game analysis.
  • Uplift Labs (Palo Alto, California): AI-powered technology that delivers real-time movement tracking and 3D analysis to enhance health and performance.

“We are thrilled to introduce our NBA Launchpad program with such a diverse group of innovative products and solutions,” said Evan Wasch, Executive Vice President, Basketball Strategy & Analytics. “Each company brings something unique to the table that will improve the game of basketball.”

Over the next six months, NBA Launchpad portfolio companies will work alongside league and team advisors on R&D projects. Companies will also receive unique access to NBA events and exposure to the NBA’s ecosystem of partners and investors.

HERE’s A COUPLE NEW ONES: The NBA fined New York Knicks forward Julius Randle $25,000 for “the egregious use of profane language during media interviews.” Randle made his comments to the media on two separate occasions — after a Jan. 5 practice and postgame following the Knicks’ 108-105 victory over the Boston Celtics on Jan. 6 at Madison Square Garden. … Earlier in the week, the Sacramento Kings organization was fined $50,000 for violating league rules prohibiting team owners and executives from interacting with scorer’s table personnel during game play. Kings’ Assistant General Manager Wes Wilcox was also fined $15,000. … The incident took place during a timeout with 10:50 remaining in the third quarter of the Kings’ 115-113 win over the Miami Heat on Jan. 2 at Golden 1 Center, when Wilcox left his seat to confront operations personnel at the scorer’s table about their handling of a clock procedure during a jump ball. The clock procedure at issue was, in fact, administered correctly by the shot clock operator.

Filed Under: Sports Business, While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: Sports Biz, Sports Business, While We're Young Ideas, Winter Olympics

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