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TL's Sunday Sports Notes

TL’s Sunday Sports Notes | May 29

May 29, 2022 by Terry Lyons

Ode to the Wiffle Ball

By TERRY LYONS

BOSTON – There is a Hall of Fame toy company based at 275 Bridgeport Avenue in Shelton, Connecticut. Without a doubt, the company is responsible for keeping youngsters all across the United States of America off the streets and on their driveways or in a school yard for hundreds of thousands of hours. Yes, the Wiffle Ball, Inc. company is an American Dream, a religion, a sports industry icon and relic of our youth and the long gone days of summer.

Baseball claims to be the national pastime. Truth be told, Wiffle Ball is the REAL national pastime. Everyone has a Wiffle Ball story, a league, a tournament, a rivalry and backstory for their particular games, their field, their driveway or alleyway. There is no right or wrong, because every great Wiffle Ball player grew-up with their own big league imagination for such a great game.

Let’s delve into the nuances of the real, true, Wiffle Ball.

First the sporting equipment:

There is one and only one real Wiffle Ball. And, there is only one official hard yellow plastic Wiffle Ball bat (picture above at a display that fills grocery and sporting goods stores nation-wide. Most Wiffle Ball aficionados also prefer the Franklin Pitchback as the preferred backstop, strike zone and umpire.

The official Wiffle Ball was designed by David N. Mullany at his home in Fairfield, Connecticut in 1953 when he sought-out a ball that curved easily for his 12-year-old son. Perfectly placed oval holes on only one side of the sturdy, plastic ball did the trick. A pitcher, holding the ball upright with the holes on the right, allowed for a pretty wicked curveball. The more difficult pitch, the screwball or slider, was executed with the holes on the left. The release-point had to be perfect for the screwball, while the regular curve allowed for a more lenient release point and pitch velocity.

More advanced players enjoyed the fact a pitch could be thrown at high speeds with the holes straight down, to create a riser effect. If one were to toss the ball with the holes up, pandemonium could occur, trust me.

A seasoned Wiffle Ball pitcher can easily throw the ball at 80-90 mph, sometimes clocking in a bit higher, depending on the physics of the day. Windy days are not great for high speed, but wonderful for curves, sliders and screwballs. The Atlantic studied all sorts of physics to properly frame the perfect pitch of a Wiffle Ball. There is such a thing as a professional Wiffle Ball player and some YouTube videos depict Wiffle Ball pitching velocity up to 150 mph, a feat I have not seen by man, beast or batting range/pitching machine. A change-up can fool a batter, much the same way as in hardball.

Next, the set-up and ground rules:

Wiffle Ball games are played on open fields, in small, make-shift stadiums specifically designed for the games (some with Green Monster walls). Most often they are played on the driveways and backyards of America.

For purposes of this notebook, the explanations will come from the firsthand set-up utilized from about 1968-1983 on a Long Island-based Wiffle Ball field right on our home driveway. Some of the details will illustrate the real charm of the game.

  1. The Pitchback (back-stop) was set-up about two feet ahead of the driveway hoop and backboard, so to not interfere with pop-ups or any batted ball, or incredible fall-off-the-cliff, Barry Zito-like curveball.
  2. The pitchers mound was not a mound at all, just the end of the driveway, adjacent to the cement curb. There was no rubber to push from, so a Wiffle Ball pitcher in our neck of the woods relied solely on arm strength, good sneakers, and solid leg/thigh strength, cultivated from years of watching the Mets Hall of Famer, Tom Seaver, who would bear down and release the baseball with his knee nearly touching the mound. when Seaver’s knee was scraped with the clay from the mound at Shea Stadium, you knew he was in a groove. We felt the same way if our knee was bleeding.
  3. The Rules (for singles): 1B (single base hit) was a grounder or line drive that made its way past the pitcher. … 2B (double) landed two-thirds of the way across the street which was marked by a line on the street from cars which passed by over time. … 3B (triple) had to land across the street completely, past the curb and up to the sidewalk. … HR (homers) were tough, as they had to clear the 36-inch and neatly manicured hedges on our neighbors, The Gehrings, front yard. A shorter option was available towards right-center field where The Thomas’ had no hedges and a ball landing on their front yard was gone. … There were variations if playing doubles (2-on-2). … Any fielded ground ball of fly ball was an out, no matter where it went.
  4. Amazement: There were a few shots hit to the Thomas’ front doorstep, and maybe only one or two to the rooftop. Blasts.
  5. Ground Rules were plentiful, but for purposes of this notebook, we’ll simply point-out that fair balls were hit between the lamp post in right field to a car which seemed to be permanently parked across the street but in a place that worked perfectly to mark the left field foul pole.
  6. Issues? Somehow or another with Wiffle Balls being tossed at 75-to-maybe-90 mph and frequent foul-tips flying straight back to the garage door which had five panes of glass windows, we rarely broke a window. … That said, the Thunder Clap-like sounds of a foul ball hitting the garage door could wake up the dead, and until this day, I can NOT understand how our parents put-up with the constant BANG for hours on end.
  7. Supplies: At the start of summer and maybe once every two or three weeks on-going, we’d load up with the official Wiffle Balls, purchasing as few as two or three from the local Five & Dime Store to ordering a case of the baseballs. … The brand new balls had to be treated by rubbing the base and side of the Wiffle Ball some 100-200 times on the rough concrete to create some beat-up ridges on the ball to aid its flight. … A brand new Wiffle Ball, right out of the box, did nothing. A properly conditioned ball, would break 10-feet, at least. … Lastly, in the supply department, after breaking just a few window panes, we wised-up, went to the store with exact measurements and bought about 12 spare windows to make replacements quite easy. My guess is that there are still – at least – four or five spare panes on the ledge of the garage door, stored safely.
  8. Umpires for Balls & Strikes: Simply hitting the pinchbeck was a strike, as long as it was above the bottom strike zone weaved into the middle of the spring back mesh. That responsibility was up to the hitter to call. All others were left to the pitcher, especially the trickiest of strikes, the fastballs that sailed through the upper left and right corners of the pinchbeck which had open spaces between the netting and the steel frame. … Everything else? Playground rules and I can’t remember a single argument.
  9. Other equipment? That was made it “Oh, so simple then.” All we needed were our Micky Mantle pseudo autographed Rawlings brand baseball mitts, secured with five Dutch Masters cigar bands and a couple bucks for two damn-good, but small leather mitts which came by mail and lasted a lifetime. Until this day, I’m 100% sure the mitts are still someplace in the house. I only wish I could find them.

Details of specific and memorable games are plentiful, still locked in our minds, but one summer stands out with the fact we methodically travelled to Shea Stadium for Mets games and each trip allowed us to purchase the plastic helmet for nearly every National League team. Every now and then, especially when the Yankees played two seasons at Shea in the mid-70s, we were able to find a number of American League plastic helmets. Trips to Yankee Stadium in the Bronx supplied others and a trip to Fenway Park in Boston was a goldmine to purchase all kinds of great head gear, useless for protection, but GREAT for being the backbone of a multi-team, summer-long competition when each pairing chose “their team” and acquired those helmets to wear.

It was the BiCentennial Celebration for the USA – 1776 to 1976 for you math wizards out there – and we had special BiCentennial hats, team uniforms, t-shirts and other gear. The best? Team uniforms for the Swingin’ A’s, the funky Houston Astros, classic St, Louis Cardinals, Chicago Cubs, our New York Mets, of course, the Hank Aaron-led Atlanta Braves and a few years later, the “We Are Family” Pittsburgh Pirates were all represented.

My team? The early ‘70s ‘Stros with the Toy Cannon (Jimmy Wynn), Cesar Cedeno, Bob Watson, Roger Metzger among the batters while J.R. Richard, Joaquin Andujar, Joe Niekro and local favorite in Bethpage’s Joe Sambito put out the fires.


HERE NOW, THE NOTES: Last week we previewed the 2022 Basketball Africa League Playoffs and Finals. This week, we bring you the results. Tunisia’s US Monastir defeated Angola’s Petro de Luanda, 83-72, to win the 2022 Basketball Africa League title. The event was staged at BK Arena in Kigali, Rwanda and was broadcast to NBA and BAL fans in 215 countries and territories as part of the NBA’s TV packages.

Following the game, BAL President Amadou Gallo Fall presented US Monastir with the BAL Finals Trophy and US Monastir guard Michael Dixonwith the Hakeem Olajuwon BAL Most Valuable Player award. Dixon recorded per game averages of 16.5 points and 4.1 assists and a team-high 21.3 points per game during the playoffs.

2022 BAL Champion US Monastir went 7-1 during the Sahara Conference group phase and playoffs, defeating South Africa’s Cape Town Tigers and Egypt’s Zamalek in the quarterfinals and semifinals, respectively, to advance to the Finals. Zamalek defeated Cameroon’s F.A.P 97-74 in the third-place game.

U-18: USA Basketball selected 17 finalists for the 2022 USA Basketball Men’s U18 National Team following three days of training camp in Houston, Texas. The players, selected from 27 training camp invitees, will vie for one of 12 spots on the U18 National Team that will compete at the 2022 FIBA U18 Americas Championship in Tijuana, Mexico, from June 6-12. The final roster will be determined early next week before the team begins Group Play June 6 vs. the Dominican Republic. … Finalists were selected by the USA Basketball Men’s Junior National Team Committee and represent the high school graduating classes of 2022, 2023 and 2024.

The 2022 USA Basketball Men’s U-18 National Team players to clear the bar thus far: Mark Armstrong Jr., Anthony Black, Xavier Booker, Kanaan Carlyle, Stephon Castle, Eric Dailey Jr., Caleb Foster, Brandon Garrison, Gregory ‘GG’ Jackson, Jared McCain, Derik Queen, Ty Rodgers, Seth Trimble, Jordan Walsh, Kel’el Ware, Bryson Warren and Cam Whitmore.


DIAMOND DUST-UPs: It’s just a Fantasy! MLB suspended Cincinnati Reds outfielder Tommy Pham for three games for “inappropriate conduct” and also issued an undisclosed fine. The light suspension was retroactive to Friday and runs through May 29, but will cost Pham $111,111 in salary, according to published reports.

Pham slapped San Francisco Giants outfielder Joc Peterson over a season-old disagreement in their Fantasy Football league, apparently over a simple fantasy free agent move on their fictional team rosters.

“I slapped Joc,” Pham told reporters. “He said some s— I don’t condone. I had to address it,” Pham added while Peterson declined comment. “It was regarding my former team [the San Diego Padres]. I didn’t like that and I didn’t like the sketchy s— going on in the fantasy. We had too much money on the line, so I look at it like there’s a code.”

You must wonder what Pete Rose thinks?

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

TL’s Sunday Sports Notes | May 22

May 22, 2022 by Terry Lyons

While We’re Young (Ideas) Examines: Trevor Story

By TERRY LYONS

BOSTON – The marketing mavens and mindless media will overuse the buzzword so much, they’ll be calling him Trevor Narrative.

Embed from Getty Images

Back in the non-buzzword real world, Boston Red Sox second baseman Trevor Story is no longer hearing the boos of Brookline Avenue. He had a fabulous Thursday and Friday this week, homering three times on Thursday night against the Seattle Mariners and hitting a Grand Slam on Friday night against those same Embarrassments Under the Sea.

Narrative, err, Story became only the fifth Sox player with 4+ HRs and 11+ RBI in any two-game span, joining Nomar Garciaparra (5/9-10/1999, 7/21-23/2002), Ken Harrelson (6/13-14/1968), Bobby Doerr (6/8-9/1950), and Jim Tabor (doubleheader on 7/4/1939). Story scored six runs in his Thursday-Friday, while Tabor (7) and Doerr (6) were the only others to score 6+ runs over two days.

After a brutal start to the 2022 season and hearing it from the crowds, as Marv Albert would say, Story leads the Red Sox this season in RBI (27), walks (15), and stolen bases (5) and ranks 2nd in HRs (6), and that includes 22 RBI in his last 17 games leading into Saturday.

On Saturday, Story hit a game-tying sacrifice fly in the fifth, his 12th RBI in the last three games as he leads the Sox in RBI (28). Story is one of 12 Red Sox hitters (21st time) to record 12+ RBI in any three-game span. Prior to Story, the most recent occurrences were in 2016, when Mookie Betts recorded 13 RBI from 8/14-16 and Jackie Bradley Jr. did so from 5/9-11 (13 RBI).

Story’s batting average dipped as low as .194 on May 8 and Boston Manager Alex Cora dropped him from hitting second in the lineup to sixth.

Looking back to 2018, Story hit 37 homers and had 111 RBI for the Colorado Rockies while playing shortstop. This year, he’s a second base as Red Sox great Xander Bogaerts commands the shortstop position, at least until the trading deadline. In 2021, while with the Rockies, he had 24 HRs and 34 two-base hits.

Those numbers were sure to rise in hitter-friendly Fenway Park, but the game at sea level proved harder than the thin air of the Mile High City and Story struggled in the cold weather of the USA northeast. But, as the weather has warmed in late May, so, too has Story and that seems to be the latest narrative coming from Fenway Park. Ahem.


HERE NOW, THE NOTES: The 15th annual Sports Business Awards were held this week in New York, hosted by the good people at Sports Business Journal/and/Daily. Abe Madkour and his staff have seen stiff competition in the world of sports business trade news, most notably from Sportico andFront Office Sports (FOS), but the SBJ/SBD still remains the standard, especially in the daily reporting of news from every corner of the sports industry.

Here’s a list of just some of the winners in this year’s Sports Business award categories:

  1. Sports Event of the Year – MLB Field of Dreams game
  2. Best in Digital Sports Media – ESPN+
  3. Sports Facility of the Year – Climate Pledge Arena (Seattle)
  4. Athletic Director of Year – Sandy Barbour, Penn State (retired)
  5. Sports Break-through of Year – Crypto.com
  6. Best in Sports Media – ESPN
  7. Team of the Year – Tampa Bay Lightening
  8. League of the Year – UFC
  9. Sports Executive of the Year – Michael Rubin, Fanatics
  10. Lifetime Achievement – Robert Kraft, New England Patriots

COMMENCEMENT WORDS of WISDOM: While contemplating this week’s Parting Words & Music section (see below), I was very close to shunning another selection of music and sharing an incredibly important address given by Atlantic editor Jeffrey Goldberg to the Class of 2019 at Johns Hopkins University. In doing so, it was decided that this is far too important a speech and I list it here as a MUST WATCH, a very rare and the highest recommendation I ever list when creating content for this e-News, or for Facebook, Twitter, or Digital Sports Desk. … Jeffrey Goldberg grew up in Malverne, Long Island and attended the University of Pennsylvania where he began his career in journalism. From Penn to the Washington Post to The Jerusalem Times to The New Yorker to The Atlantic, where he now stands as Editor-in-Chief, all he’s done is to report, investigate, dig for the truth, sometimes at great personal risk, travel to dangerous sites and report the news. He is famous in the world of top-notch journalism to us all, but some might simply remember him as the writer to broke the controversial “Trump: Americans Who Died in Wars are ‘Losers and Suckers’ story.” … It shook the USA, especially the Armed Forces as the Commander in Chief of the US military could somehow have such a viewpoint. … Three years ago, almost to the date, Goldberg gave the commencement address at Johns Hopkins University and he was fabulous, much to the credit of one of his opening salvos that “there is no such good thing as a 20-minute commencement address and no such bad thing as a 10-minute commencement address.” … He also noted that by lunchtime, the very next day, no one in attendance would remember what he said. … That is wrong and I share his (15 minutes) and do so at a time when we can look back at the astonishing disinformation that we’ve been subjected to since May, 2019. … By the way, there is a connection to sports in this section, as the address was given at Baltimore Arena, the site of many a New York Knicks vs. Baltimore (then) Bullets games, and I could remember the days of Earl “The Pearl” Monroe lighting up the Knicks in the tiny but wonderfully renovated Arena in downtown Baltimore, a mere 10-15 minutes from the Homewood Campus of Johns Hopkins. I give it to you for free on YouTube, noting that we, as a family received every single cent worth of some $250,000+ for the right to view this in person with thanks for a lending hand from “Daddy Bloomberg.” … Best wishes to all the 2019-to-2022 graduates at all the schools across the USA. You all faced difficult times, the most difficult since the Classes of 1918-19-20.

In seriousness, I can say this address is well worth 15-minutes of your Sunday morning:


TID-BITS: Where does the time go? It was 50 years ago the Indiana Pacers won their second of three ABA titles (1970, ‘72 and ‘73). … Do you remember some of the names/players, like Mel Daniels, Roger Brown, Rick Mount, George McGinnis, Bob Netolicky and Freddie Lewis? … They were coached by Bob “Slick” Leonard, one of the all-time greats. … Big time rivals, the New York Nets, went on to win in 1974 and ‘76. … J.J. Redick played 139 games over four years at Duke University and then enjoyed a 15-year career in the NBA. Now, he should probably do two things: 1). Go back to school. 2). Head to NBAE Entertainment and watch as much old NBA game film as he can get his hands on. … Redick made the colossally stupid remark when discussing the talents of Hall of Fame guard Bob Cousy and his opponents on “First Take.” … “He was being guarded by plumbers and firemen,” Redick retorted, claiming players from the 1950s-60s era can’t be compared with those of today. … Cousy decided to speak softly on a reply: “People with less talent will always try to make a name for themselves by criticizing other people and hopefully getting some attention and perhaps increasing their credibility,” Cousy said. “So when you respond to something like this, you play into their hands. I won’t do that, but I will defend the firemen and the plumbers that he referenced. And I’ll just give you a few of the names of these firemen that I played with and against during those years. … “How about Bill Russell, the aforementioned, not too bad a player,” Cousy added. “Wilt Chamberlain, remember that guy? He wasn’t bad. I guess he must have fought fires as well. … Cousy is 100% correct of course but he might’ve mentioned a few of the guards or small forwards who would’ve shut Redick and nearly every player of his era down, cold. Here are just a few: Oscar Robertson, Walt Frazier, Dave DeBusschere, Bobby Jones, and Norm Van Lier, just to name a few. Certainly, Van Lier’s teammate, the late Jerry Sloan, might’ve broken Redick in half. … During his appearance, Cousy also noted the greatness of Elgin Baylor and how it is oft overlooked. … Cousy said, “In (his) judgement, Elgin Baylor is still the greatest small forward to ever play the game.” … Note to J.J. – Baylor was not a plumber or a fireman and your NBA chops/credibility is now shot. … More importantly, Get Well Soon wishes go out to Boston sports tv legend Mike Lynch (WCVB-Channel 5/ABC) who suffered a stroke earlier this week but is expected to make a full recovery after a rehab sting at Spaulding in Boston. … It’s the same country in summertime, right? It’s 39-degrees and snowing in Denver, 55-degrees, windy with 78% humidity at Southern Hills for the PGA Championship in Tulsa, OK, and temperatures will be soaring to 95-degrees over the next 24 hours in the northeast (Boston). Meanwhile, the NHL is playing an ice-hockey series in Tampa and Sunrise, Florida where temperatures will be a comfortable 75-80 degrees at game time. … Early Voting won The Preakness Stakes in Maryland. The headlines will write themselves! Just wish they would’ve named the horse 11,780 Votes. … Kentucky Derby long shot winner Rich Strike will be back for a run at The Belmont. … Edmonton’s Connor McDavid recorded his NHL-leading 20th point in the ninth Oilers game of the 2022 Stanley Cup Playoffs and is producing at a pace last seen 30 years ago. Mario Lemieux had 22 points in the first nine games of the 1992 NHL Playoffs.

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

TL’s Sunday Sports Notes | May 15

May 15, 2022 by Terry Lyons

By TERRY LYONS

BOSTON – If the great Jerry West is “The Logo,” and Julius Erving is “The Doctor,” the late, great Bob Lanier was “The Ambassador,” possibly the loftiest of all titles in the National Basketball Association.

Lanier passed away this week at the age of 73. The NBA noted his death came after a brief illness, but Lanier had battled bladder cancer, according to reports in The Athletic.

The 6-11 center was born in Buffalo, New York on September 10, 1948 and he became famous playing for St. Bonaventure University and leading the Bonnies to the 1970 NCAA Final Four when an injury sidelined him for a match-up against Jacksonville and 7-footer Artis Gilmore in an age of the great centers.

Once “Big Bob” made it to the NBA as the No. 1 pick in the talent-heavy 1970 NBA Draft, he faced a bevy of big men who would all become Basketball Hall of Famers. From Philadelphia/Los Angeles Lakers’ center Wilt Chamberlain to Portland’s Bill Walton and Milwaukee/Los Angeles Lakers’ Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Lanier held his own or better while playing for the lowly Detroit Pistons. An “easier” night found Lanier battling shorter but stronger centers like Willis Reed of the New York Knicks or Wes Unseld of the Washington (then Bullets). A day or two later, he was facing Elvin Hayes of the Houston Rockets/Washington Bullets or Alvin Adams of the Phoenix Suns. After Cowens, the Celtics brought along Robert Parish and the Sixers re-loaded and acquired Moses Malone. Lanier fought against them all. And so on, and so on until he retired in 1984 as a member of the Milwaukee Bucks, completing a 14-year NBA career as a “20 & 10” man, an eight-time NBA All-Star with one All-Star Game MVP. After his career, he was an assistant coach and brief interim head coach for the Golden State Warriors. He was enshrined as a player at the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 1992 and his uniform number “16” was retired by both the Bucks and the Pistons.

That chronicles Bob Lanier – The Player.

I’m here to tell you about Bob Lanier – The PERSON, the colleague, the office-mate, the rally leader, the Stay-in-School headmaster, the Don’t Foul Out advisor, the NBA Cares Ambassador extraordinaire.

The outpouring of love and admiration by his NBA League Office and NBA team peers this week was as extraordinary as Lanier, and those words and tears flowed like fine wine in Bordeaux.

“R.I.P. Big Bob,” wrote Andre Aldridge, a lifelong fan and admirer of Lanier. “There has never been a basketball player born in Buffalo who was greater. The same can be said after his time at St. Bonaventure University, before becoming the #1 overall pick of the 1970 NBA Draft by Detroit. … “Big Bob was so much more. He was a former President of the NBA Players Association. He was active in civil rights and charitible endeavors while putting up Hall of Fame numbers as a player.

“I’ve been blessed to have many of the heroes I admired growing up watching on TV, become friends,” added Aldridge, once a commentator for NBA TV and now a broadcaster for the Atlanta Hawks. “His friendship will be missed, and he was a friend to tons of people all over the world. There are many great stories and highlights from on the court, however my best memories will be of the times I worked with him through “NBA Cares” events. For that he was an (NBA) Ambassador and he attacked that role as he did everything else, with excellence.”

The NBA’s Commissioner, Adam Silver, wrote in a league statement: “Bob Lanier was a Hall of Fame player and one of the most talented centers in the history of the NBA, but his impact on the league went far beyond what he accomplished on the court. For more than 30 years, Bob served as our global ambassador and as a special assistant to [former commissioner] David Stern and then me, traveling the world to teach the game’s values, and make a positive impact on young people everywhere.

“It was a labor of love for Bob, who was one of the kindest and most genuine people I have ever been around. His enormous influence on the NBA was also seen in his time as President of the National Basketball Players Association, where he played a key role in the negotiation of a game-changing collective bargaining agreement.

“I learned so much from Bob by simply watching how he connected with people. He was a close friend who I will miss dearly, as will so many of his colleagues across the NBA who were inspired by his generosity. We send our deepest condolences to Bob’s family and friends,” said Silver.

Somehow, someway, Lanier connected with every single person on the NBA staff, not just “the basketball people” or those in his department, but everyone. He knew every name, every detail of every life. It made me think about the power within his 6-11 tower of a body.

There is a real, concrete “Force” that wraps around the NBA like the double helix of the very DNA that binds the League and game. It stirs when something goes wrong. It sends shivers up your spine when you sense the disturbance. That happened as we learned of the death of Bob Lanier. From St Bonnies to Detroit to Milwaukee to NBA Legend to Hall of Famer to NBA Ambassador to Don’t Foul Out to NBA Stay in School and Basketball w/o Borders. Lanier was always available to give advice and provide deep and accurate perspective for his NBA colleagues and to the players.

He was ALWAYS UPBEAT.

He will be missed.

Buffalo’s and St. Bonnie’s Best.

Forever.

HERE NOW, THE NOTES: It’s a bit tough to follow a tribute to Bob Lanier with some general sports notes. Let’s try.

First, a quick personal note. At the NBA’s offices at 645 Fifth Avenue in New York, I was fortunate enough to share an adjacent and common wall with Boston Celtics legend Tom “Satch” Sanders and Lanier was just a few doors down. Not a day went by when we didn’t see each other or say a quick hello.

Most days, there was a need to “bounce something off” either “Satch” or “Big Bob,” and great resources like Deputy Commissioner Russ Granik, head of basketball Rod Thorn and his chief lieutenants Matt Winick and Stu Jackson were equally available to those of us in the league’s Communications Department who needed some advice. I found their influences an important tent pole of keeping the sport of basketball as the center and ultimate factor in every decision we made throughout the years.

Lanier went the furthest in his influencing hundreds of thousands of youngsters during rallies held by NBA Cares, rallies he led with a call for “TWO CLAPS,” as he brought the large groups at the rally to pay attention to his messages forthcoming.

👏🏼 👏🏼

DIAMOND DUST-UPs: The Boston Red Sox began their Saturday night game against the Texas Rangers in the basement of the competitive American League East Division. The Sox own a (12-20) record (.375) and find themselves 12 games back of their rivals, the division leading New York Yankees (24-8).

The knee-jerk decision is to blame the Boston starting rotation, but Sox starters rank fourth in the AL and seventh in the Majors in ERA (3.35). They also rank among the Top 5 in the AL in opponent avg (3rd, .222), opponent SLG (3rd, .356), opponent OPS (3rd, .647), and WHIP – (walks, hits vs Innings Pitched) (5th, 1.15). Sox starters have allowed two runs or fewer in 15 of their last 20 games (2.44 ERA, 27 ER/99.2 IP) and in that span, they’ve held opponents to a .198 avg (71-for-358).

Those stats put the focus on the Red Sox bullpen and its league-leading nine blown saves.

AMERICAN SKIN: Milwaukee Mayor Cavalier Johnson was forced to declare a state of emergency and issue a curfew for downtown Milwaukee after he said at least 21 people were shot and injured after the Milwaukee Bucks playoff game Friday night.

The shootings were not connected to the game, the crowd in attendance nor did they take place within the Bucks famed “Deer District,” an area where some 11,000 fans held a watch party.

In a prepared statement, the Milwaukee Bucks organization said, “The shootings that happened in downtown Milwaukee (Friday) night were horrific and we condemn this devastating violence. We are grateful to local law enforcement for its valiant efforts to try to contain what was a dangerous and fluid situation. While these incidents took place outside of Deer District property, it clearly resonated with fans coming out of the arena and leaving the plaza. Security, health and welfare are always our top priorities for our guests and employees and we appreciate the hard work of our security team to keep our fans safe.

“In order to allow law enforcement to devote needed resources to the continued investigation of (Friday) night’s events, we have decided to cancel (Sunday – May 15th’s) planned watch party on the plaza.

Milwaukee police reported three separate incidents, one when three victims were shot and a 20-year old male was taken into custody, a second when one person was shot and then a third incident when 17 people were shot and injured just after 11:00pm, just blocks away from Fiserv Forum and Milwaukee’s Deer District, according to a media release. No victims suffered life-threatening injuries, according to reports and 10 people with nine fire-arms were taken into custody after the 11pm shootings. Milwaukee police reported a total of 11 arrests.

Johnson’s curfew for the downtown area requires everyone age 20 or younger to be off the street by 11pm for both Saturday and Sunday. Extra police patrols will be on the job.


TID-BITS: The NFL dribbled-out its 2022 schedule in a way that would’ve made both the late Curly Neal and Marques Haynes proud. In doing so over multiple days, the league announced they’ll be going head-to-head against the NBA on Christmas Day, December 25, 2022. … The New England Patriots were dealt a tough hand, certainly for their first four games. The Patriots start the season on the road with a Sept. 11th game at Miami, then head to Pittsburgh to play the Steelers on Sept. 18. New England’s first home game comes in Week 3 when the always tough Baltimore Ravens travel to Gillette Stadium on September 25. Those three tough assignments are followed with a Week 4 road game to Green Bay for an Oct. 2 afternoon game starting at 4:25pm (ET). The schedule eases up a bit with the Detroit Lions visiting Foxboro for Week 5, an October 9, 1pm (ET) kick-off. … It is not a reach to think the Patriots could find themselves 1-4 after the first five weeks of the season. … PGA Tour pro Brice Garnett could say: “I shot a 68-68-69 through 54-holes.” … “Brice, you’re only 10 strokes back.”

LARRY’S GOT STYLE: The NBA unveiled a set of six re-imagined trophies, modernizing and providing a sense of uniformity for the postseason hardware. The centerpiece remains the Larry O’Brien Trophy, awarded to the NBA champion.

In addition to the Conference Finals trophies for each team qualifying for the NBA Finals, there will now be Conference Final MVP trophies, which are named after Magic Johnson (Western Conference) and Larry Bird (Eastern Conference), both credited with boosting the league in the early 1980s and raising the profile of the NBA at a time when the league’s popularity was wavering and TV coverage was tape-delayed. Those trophies raise a sterling silver ball, similar to the conference champion trophies.

The Conference Finals trophies have been named “The Bob Cousy Trophy” for the Eastern Conference champion and “The Oscar Robertson Trophy” for the Western Conference champ.

“We wanted to explore and start a new 75 years and bring some aesthetic consistency to that and have some meaning behind all the trophies we had,” said the NBA’s Christopher Arena, who heads up the league’s on-court brand and partnerships.


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

TL’s Sunday Sports Notes | May 8

May 8, 2022 by Digital Sports Desk

BOSTON – The NBA Playoffs are well into the Conference Semi-Finals stage and the intensity of play has risen with each game, just as it normally does come playoff time. In the most physical of series, the Milwaukee Bucks took a 2-games-to-1 lead over the Boston Celtics Saturday with an exciting 103-101 last second victory.

Milwaukee’s Giannis Antetokounmpo bounced back from a Game 2 subpar performance by scoring 42 points and making the go-ahead basket with 44.3 seconds left in regulation as the Bucks defended their home court. Boston’s star forward Jason Tatum shot only 4-for-19 and 0-for-6 from three-point range in scoring 10 points for the Celtics in the losing effort. Center Al Horford had 22 points and 16 rebounds for the C’s

Milwaukee has put up a defensive wall at the rim, anchored by 7-footer Brook Lopez and Antetokounmpo, forcing the Celtics to shoot 37% from the floor. The Celtics were down 14 points in the 4th quarter and managed to claw back but a final minute frenzy saw the Bucks prevail as a Celtics basket came after the final buzzer

In the other Eastern Semi, the Miami Heat took care of business in Florida but lost Game 3 in Philly to set the series at 2-games-to-1 going into Sunday’s Game 4. The 76ers were fined $50,000 for violating league injury reporting rules as the club failed to disclose center Joel Embiid’s playing status for Game 3.

Similarly in the West semi, league-leader Phoenix took care of home court but lost Game 3 in Dallas while the Golden State Warriors and Memphis Grizzlies split the first two games in Tennessee.

The NBA could be looking at a schedule with, at least, three series going the full seven games with the exception being a Miami edge over Philadelphia.

In-series coaching, scouting and adjustments will become the dividing factors, along with staying healthy. Milwaukee’s loss of 6-7 forward Khris Middleton looms large, but the Bucks are getting the “next man up” from 6-10 Bobby Portis who scored 15 points with 11 rebounds in helping the Bucks steal home court advantage in Game 1.

Predictions here believe Milwaukee will defeat Boston in six games but Miami will outlast the defending champion Bucks and the Heat will head to the NBA Finals.

Out West, the Phoenix Suns will prevail over the Mavericks and the Memphis Grizzlies will knock-off the strong and mighty Golden State Warriors. The Suns go the Finals vs The Heat in a very hotly contested seven-game series. Edge: Suns.

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HERE NOW, THE NOTES – If you’re $10 million in the hole, you’re in big trouble and might think of settling up and calling it a day. For a professional golfer, like Phil Mickelson, your career winnings are covering most of it, right? … Ole “Lefty” would surely make it back with an appearance or 10 at golf tournaments around the world. Hell, he might even do some speaking engagements for his loyal sponsors or PGA Tour connections. … At $20 million, it was time to get some serious help. At a reported $40 million, you’ve made a deal with the Devil and it’s getting hotter and hotter.

Mickelson’s vice is noted in a new, unauthorized biography completed by author Alan Shipnuck. It’s the same book that plopped Mickelson into very hot water with his comments on the Greg Norman-led LIV golf venture, backed by Saudi money. … Shipnuck dropped some more scuttlebutt on May 5 when he posted excerpts of his book on the Fire Pit Collective site he participates in regularly. … You must wonder if, aside from its concerns about Mickelson applying to play in the LIV Tour (undoubtedly to raise some cash to help cover his 2010-14 parlays and shortcomings, the PGA Tour might come down on “Lefty” to discipline the rampant gambling problem?

Tell-all books seem to be the common denominator for old gambling stories of long, long ago. It was 1992-93 when “Michael and Me: Our Gambling Addiction … My Cry for Help,” was published by associates of a publisher and investor from San Diego, California – the site of the USA Basketball Dream Team mini-camp of the Summer of ‘92. The over-reaction was predictable and terrible.

Considering the hullabaloo created by Michael Jordan’s reported $1m (settled for $300,000) short falling to Richard Esquinas in 1993, where speculation had the NBA suspending Jordan or the most ridiculous and unfounded/unfair claims that MJ’s golf losses had something to do with his late father’s murder, the PGA Tour might get further involved to secure the integrity of the sport, a sport where gambling is very much a part of the culture.

SPEAKING OF USA BASKETBALL – Back in late September of 2021, USA Basketball’s Chief Communications Officer Craig Miller announced he was stepping down from his post after 31 years of service to the USA’s governing body for basketball. Miller’s USA career spanned from 1990 through 2021 and included service on every level of the USA program, both men’s and women’s. of course that time period included eight Olympic Games for USAB, including the 1992 Dream Team and the amazing 1996 USA Women’s national team – I called them “The Supreme Team,” but no one else liked that moniker.

In the past month, Miller’s cohort in hoops, Caroline Williams, decided to step-down as well, ending her incredible 27 years working for USA Basketball and helping the likes of Lisa Leslie, Dawn Staley, Theresa Edwards, Sheryl Swoopes and dozens of others win gold medals and – in many cases – reach the pinnacle of induction to the Basketball Hall of Fame. … All the while, whenever she had a second to spare, she was right in the thick of it, assisting the Men’s team and Miller to take USA Basketball all over the world, building relationships and goodwill.

From the “Ups” of ‘92 to the “Downs” of 2002 and everything in between, USA Basketball counted on an incredibly dedicated and professional PR team. They were second to none and both While We’re Young (Ideas) and TLwish Craig and Caroline much personal happiness and professional success in whatever they choose to do in the near future.

“A month ago, after 27 years of working for USA Basketball, I made the difficult decision to resign and begin to look ahead to new challenges in life,” wrote Williams. “I have enjoyed my long tenure here (at the Colorado Springs HQ of USA Basketball) and feel blessed to have had the opportunity to work with the best of the best in the basketball world for nearly three decades.”

DI💎MOND DUST-UPs – During a two-game stretch against the Baltimore Orioles, Minnesota Twins infielder Carlos Correa was hit by a pitch on the hand and it was feared he’d broken a bone in his right middle finger. X-Rays showed no broken bones and Correa and the Twins dodged what could have been a six-to-eight week setback. Correa was hitting stride with his new club, with a .412 batting average (14-for-34) and eight RBIs in his past eight games.

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

TL’s Sunday Sports Notes – May 1

May 1, 2022 by Terry Lyons

While We’re Young (Ideas) on the New No-No

By TERRY LYONS

NEW YORK – On April 13th, Los Angeles Dodgers starter Clayton Kershaw was removed from a perfect game bid against the Minnesota Twins. Kershaw, in his season debut on a Wednesday afternoon, struck out 13 batters through seven perfect innings. Dodgers manager Dave Roberts removed Kershaw to begin the eighth inning, inserting lefty reliever Alex Vesia who later surrendered a single to Minnesota’s Gary Sánchez to break-up the no-hitter.

The no-hitter was foiled and there was a significant controversy surrounding Roberts’ decision.

Friday night, New York Mets starter Tylor Megill threw five innings and 88 pitches of no-hit baseball against the Philadelphia Phillies. Four relievers and 71 more pitches later, the Mets had their second no-hitter in franchise history and the team celebrated as if they’d won a World Series game.

Upon Megill’s exit, the Mets entire bullpen took over, with Drew Smith, JoelyRodríguez, Seth Lugo and closer Edwin Díaz completing the second no-hitter in Mets history. Diaz mowed down the Phillies and struck-out the side to secure the no-no.

The 159 pitches thrown by the Mets’ pitchers were the most for any no-hitter since pitch counts have been tracked (since 1988).

Thus is the new no-no. The no-hitter of the roaring ‘2020s when starters only go five or six (maybe seven) innings, then the set-up guy(s), then the closer for the ninth. That’s the way it’s going to be as Major League Baseball, the various team analytics, the protection of pitchers vs rising pitch counts.

Yes, there might be a rare occasion when a big league manager feels comfortable leaving his un-hittable pitcher in the game past the , maybe on a hot summer night when the pitch count is low and the crowd is roaring. But, the game has changed and the combined team no-hitter is going to be just as acceptable to the team, the pitchers, the media and the fans as we all get used to the new era of baseball.


Phil Mickelson

HERE NOW, THE NOTES: We haven’t seen defending PGA Champion Phil Mickelson since he missed the cut at Torrey Pines in January, but we heard a bit more than anyone would prefer when a segment of his unauthorized biography by author Alan Shipnuck was released and “Lefty’s” pushback against the PGA Tour and his (supposed) plans to join-up with Greg Normanand the LIV (Saudi-based) golf tour were made known. This week came news of Mickelson registering to play the PGA and U.S. Open while requesting release from the Tour to participate in the June 9-to-11) inaugural LIV event. … The Mickelson revelation of the Saudi venture being “scary” and his willingness to look past human right violations and the like brought on severe criticism from fans and fellow Tour pros to which Mickelson offered-up apologies days after the controversy broke and his reputation and sponsorships went south. … KMPG and Workday each ended their relationships with Mickelson while golf club maker Callaway “paused” its association with him. … The inaugural LIV event is planned for the Centurion Golf Club on the outskirts of London, England while the fourth scheduled event is planned for the International, located in Bolton, Massachusetts and not far from Boston. … The PGA Tour has threatened suspension (possibly a permanent suspension) for its tour pros who defect to the upstart, rival golf tour. … The LIV is offering huge tournament purses and prize money, team concepts and 54-hole, no-cut tournaments.

NBA IN SINGAPORE: According to a report in The Straits Times, and confirmed by Scott Levy of the NBA’s Asia regional office, the NBA is opening yet another regional satellite office, that being in Singapore, long a mainstay of basketball popularity. With the opening of the new office, the NBA stakes tentpoles in 15 markets worldwide: Beijing, Dakar, Hong Kong, Johannesburg, Lagos, London, Madrid, Manila, Mexico City, Mumbai, New York/New Jersey, Rio de Janeiro, Shanghai, Singapore and Toronto. … Singapore will host the fifth edition of the FIBA’s 3×3 Asia Cup from July 6 to 10 this summer.


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

TL’s Sunday Sports Notes | April 24

April 24, 2022 by Terry Lyons

By TERRY LYONS

BOSTON – In 2019, the Grim Reaper was coming after our Rock Stars with death falling upon such a diverse group of rock legends, from Long Island’s Eddie Money to Cars frontman Ric Ocasek, each passing away within two days of each other. Within a month, Grateful Dead lyricist Robert Hunter and legendary Cream drummer Ginger Baker were dead. … One of my personal favorites passed as Kofi Burbridge, who mastered the keyboards and flute with the Tedeschi Trucks Band from its founding in 2010 until his death on Feb. 15, 2019, at age 57. Kofi was fighting heart disease for the last years of his life. … Malcolm John “Mac” Rebennack, widely known as “Dr. John,”was one of New Orleans’ most beloved musicians who died in 2019. Sadly, the list is long and I could go on-and-on.

In 2020-21, it was a nightmare, of course, as COVID took 6.2 million and counting.

Now, in 2022, they’re coming after our NHL favorites and goal scorers. This column has already documented the deaths of New York Islanders mainstay in Clark Gillies and the team’s best goal scorer in Michel ‘Mike” Bossy, the 50-in-50 sniper who went down to lung cancer after a career as the most efficient goal scorer in NHL history.

This week, Montreal’s Guy Lafleur, 70, was taken, passing from a battle against lung cancer. From 1976 to 1979, the Canadiens were invincible. Lafleur was scoring 50 goals and 100 points, winning a couple scoring titles in what seemed to be an effortless style of play. He was THAT good.

On one occasion, I had the pleasure to watch Lafleur play at The Forum in Montreal, a two-game weekend set against the New York Rangers and New York Islanders. In 1977-78, Lafleur was battling Islanders’ center Bryan Trottier for the NHL scoring title. The Forum crowd would chant, “Guy, Guy, Guy” every time he was on the ice. In one instance, Lafleur’s linemate, Steve Shutt, scored a goal and the announcement was made (en Francais, of course) and there was polite applause for Shutt and then a thunderous reaction when it was announced, “assist, Guy Lafleur!”

Lafleur won the Art Ross Trophy as NHL points-leader in 1976-77-78, scoring 125-136-132 points, respectively, in each of those three seasons.

“You didn’t need to see Guy Lafleur’s name and number on his sweater when ‘The Flower’ had the puck on his stick. As distinctively stylish as he was remarkably talented, Lafleur cut a dashing and unmistakable figure whenever he blazed down the ice of the Montreal Forum, his long blond locks flowing in his wake as he prepared to rifle another puck past a helpless goaltender – or set up a linemate for a goal,” said NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman.

“A native of Thurso, Quebec, selected first overall by the Montreal Canadiens in the 1971 NHL Draft, Lafleur joined the organization with the daunting task of following in the footsteps of franchise legends Maurice Richard and Jean Beliveau. He somehow met those expectations, becoming the Canadiens’ all-time leading point scorer and one of the most beloved players in franchise history – the torch was passed to him and he held it high.

“In 1974-75, his fourth year in the NHL, Lafleur transformed from productive to prolific, recording the first of his six straight seasons of at least 50 goals and 119 points. He won back-to-back Hart Trophies as League MVP in 1976-77 and 1977-78, three straight Art Ross Trophies as NHL scoring leader from 1975-76 to 1977-78, and led the playoffs in scoring three straight seasons (1977, ’78 and ’79), winning the Conn Smythe Trophy in 1977. On one of the most star-studded teams in hockey history, he was the marquee performer, lifting fans out of their seats chanting, ‘Guy! Guy! Guy!’ as he dazzled en route to six straight selections as NHL First-Team All-Star right winger and five Stanley Cups.

“Inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1988, Lafleur was named one of the 100 Greatest NHL Players during the League’s Centennial celebration in 2017.”


HERE NOW, THE NOTES: Brooklyn Nets guard Patty Mills received the Joe Dumars Trophy for winning the 2021-22 NBA Sportsmanship Award. The annual award is designed to honor a player who best represents the ideals of sportsmanship on the court. … Each NBA team nominated one of its players for the NBA Sportsmanship Award. From the list of 30 team nominees, a panel of league executives selected one finalist from each of the NBA’s six divisions. Current NBA players selected the winner from the list of six finalists, with nearly 300 players submitting their votes through confidential balloting conducted by the league office. … In addition to Mills (Atlantic Division), the finalists were Miami Heat center-forward Bam Adebayo (Southeast Division), Phoenix Suns forward Mikal Bridges (Pacific Division), Cleveland Cavaliers guard Darius Garland (Central Division), Denver Nuggets forward Jeff Green (Northwest Division) and Memphis Grizzlies forward-center Jaren Jackson Jr. (Southwest Division).

Mills received 1,975 total points (58 first-place votes) in balloting of NBA players. Green finished in second place with 1,841 points (60 first-place votes). The six finalists were awarded 11 points for each first-place vote, nine points for each second-place vote, seven points for each third-place vote, five points for each fourth-place vote, three points for each fifth-place vote and one point for each sixth-place vote.

A 13-year NBA veteran from Australia, Mills won the NBA Sportsmanship Award for the first time.

STORM: According to Sporttechie and the Sports Business Journal, Amazon Prime Video renewed its streaming deal with the WNBA to show 17 nationally broadcast league games, including the WNBA’s Commissioner’s Cup. The streaming service also added a regional carriage agreement to stream Seattle Storm games throughout Washington State. … Approximately 30 of the Storm’s 36 regular season games will be streamed state-wide. The team’s longtime commentators, Dick Fain and Elise Woodward, will be behind the mic while Rush Media will produce the broadcasts.

59: PGATourBrunch noted in its 6-days-a-week e-News this Friday: With a magic number – 13-under (59) – Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele set the Zurich Classic of New Orleans 18-hole scoring record on Thursday. The team’s bogey-free round included 11 birdies (including Nos. 16-18) and an eagle on the par-5 second hole when Cantlay made a 27-foot, 1-inch putt. … Despite the first-round (59), there’s room for caution as no 18-hole leaders/co-leaders have converted for the win at the Zurich. That said, the duo leads by five strokes heading into Sunday’s final round at the TPC Louisiana in Avondale after shooting (59)-(68)-(60) in the first three rounds. … The format of the Zurich Classic is intriguing enough that the PGA Tour could stage a mid-season, three-weekend, three-site “May Madness”tournament with 64 two-player teams competing until they concluded with a “Final Four.” … It’d be great for bringing attention to pro golf between the Masters and the summertime majors or late summer FedEx Cup Playoffs.

TID-BITS: Why has Father Time caught up with Dwyane Wade, LeBron James, and Carmelo Anthony but has left Chris Paul to flourish, even though the speed needed to excel as an NBA point guard is much more precious than the ability to shoot jumpers? … Did the Tampa Judge – U.S. District Judge Kathryn Kimball Mizelle – issue a ruling on washing our hands and singing Happy Birthday twice? … Before the NBA Playoffs and Play-In started, I didn’t realize that Brooklyn’s Kevin Durant couldn’t play or care less about playing defense. He is, probably, the most gifted offensive player in the league. … Speaking of the Nyets, you know the old adage: “A playoff series doesn’t start until a team wins on the road?” Peter Vecsey‘s esteemed column contributor Frank Drucker wrote: The Boston vs. Nets series doesn’t start until Nets lose a game in Teaneck, Commack, Hempstead, Uniondale, Piscataway, East Rutherford or Newark. … When Jayson Tatum, Jaylen Brown, Marcus Smart, Robert Williams and Al Horford all play and the Celtics score ≥ 100 points, the Cs are (21-0, 1.000) in their last 21 games says Boston Sports Info. … Best wishes to retiring Villanova head coach Jay Wright, one of the very best of all-time. Wright, 60, decided to step down from his post while “on top,” and will be able to spend more time with his family. Wishing him much personal happiness and future professional success with a guess he’ll be taking the Acela to the CBS Broadcast Center in New York City quite often. … Thoughts on studio shows? … While watching Saturday night’s ESPN Countdown show before Game 3 of Celtics vs. Nets, I had to dive for the remote and hit mute. … ‘Til this day, I can NOT believe how great TNT’s studio, pregame, and postgame Sports EMMY award-winning “Inside the NBA” show is and how ESPN just can’t get it right. It’s been a total mess since 2002. … Also, Thank God for ESPN/ABC’s Mike Breen on the big-game NBA play-by-play. (Lisa Salters is pretty good, too).

DIAMOND DUST-UPs: Welcome to MiLB and our coverage of the Portland Sea Dogs vs the Birmingham Rumble Ponies – yes, the Rumble Ponies. Check-out the HBP that led to the all-out brawl at Portland, then the commentary on video. Meet me on the flip side.

SO MUCH TO DELVE INTO: First, the franchise history of the Ponies: In 1976, the franchise played as the Williamsport Bills in Williamsport, Pennsylvania but soon moved to Jersey City, in 1977 and 1978, then Buffalo, New York, from 1979 through 1984.

The club returned to Williamsport in 1987 when they were an affiliate of the Cleveland Indians in 1987 and 1988, but changed affiliations to the Seattle Mariners during the 1989 and 1990 seasons. During that time, the Bills franchise was actually two separate franchises. After the 1988 season, the original owners moved the Bills to Hagerstown, Maryland, while the Eastern League franchise – based in Pittsfield, Massachusetts – moved back to Williamsport before the 1989 season.

Security fell upon the club when it was purchased by the New York Mets in 1991, and moved to Binghamton in 1992 to be crowned the Binghamton Mets.

That’s when it got interesting. In 2016, the franchise announced a plan to stay in Binghamton for the foreseeable future, but to change the team’s nickname.

The club held a “Name-the-team” contest on its website from May 17 to June 1, 2016 and the finalists were the Bullheads (for the bullhead catfish abundant in the nearby Susquehanna River), the Gobblers (for the rich hunting culture of the area, as well as the turkeys in Binghamton), the Rocking Horses (for the Triple Cities’ nickname as the “Carousel Capital of The World”), the Rumble Ponies (also a carousel tribute), the Stud Muffins(for the collections of carousel horses in Binghamton), and Timber Jockeys (for everyone who rides the carousels).

On November 3, 2016, the team announced that it would be rebranding as the Binghamton Rumble Ponies, and released a new logo.

Secondly, let’s dig deeper into this unique team nickname, The Rumble Ponies, as you just can’t make this stuff up: Upon announcement of the new name and branding, the club issued media information that noted the Rumble Ponies are a “fierce horse that no carousel can contain.” “The aggression and fighting spirit in the horse represents the fighting spirit of Binghamton,” team owner and President John Hughes said. “Ready to do battle. Ready to take on the world.”

They were talking about a wooden rocking horse on a merry-go-round! Not surprisingly, soon after, there were personnel changes at the GM spot.

In 2017, Hughes accepted the resignation of team GM – get this – Jim Weed. Yes, Weed quit a position he’d held since 2010 to “pursue other opportunities.” Editor’s Note: Insert wise-crack about the air quality in Jim Weed’s office when they chose “Rumble Ponies” over “Stud Muffins” righthere.

On the other side of the brawl, Sox 1B prospect Tyreque Reed was hit by the pitch and tossed the first haymaker to start the brawl. Keep in mind, if his name was Ron Artest or Jermaine O’Neal, the brawl would be playing in loops on CNN and every newscast all weekend and Reed would be met at the clubhouse door by the men in blue, a la the Hanson Brothers in Slap Shot scene.

But, in baseball, dugout/bench-clearing, bullpen-clearing, assistant equipment manager-clearing brawls – like in ice-hockey – are “a part of the game” and no one bats an eyelash.

I’ve written it before: When I’m Commish, this rule change in the first 100 days – You leave your position during an altercation: FIVE game suspension (if multiple players leave position, tough luck and the AAA team better be ready). If players are on bench and they cross the warning track during an altercation: 10 game suspension. If players leave the BULLPEN during an altercation: 50-game suspension. That’ll nip bench-clearing brawls right in the bud and do wonders for pace of game stats, too.

DEEP IN THE HEART OF TEXAS: Fisticuffs in baseball ranged from the MiLB game in Portland, Maine all the way to central Texas as a Junior College team’s pitcher, Owen Woodward, put the hi jinx on the batter that just took him downtown for a two-run homer. Check out the video from Dallas FOX 4 News closely and you’ll note the umpire was beginning to take action, so there must’ve been some trash talking going on as Josh Phillips rounded the bases.

Woodward was given a four-game suspension by the umpires and league, but the school took it further to kick the pitcher off the team. Phillips was given a two-game suspension for taunting. As Warner Wolf used to say on WABC-TV 7, “Let’s go to the video tape.”


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

TL’s Sunday Sports Notes | April 17

April 17, 2022 by Terry Lyons

While We’re Young (Ideas) Enjoys the Pageantry of Baseball

By TERRY LYONS

BOSTON – This weekend, we’ll delve into the wonderful pageantry of the game of Baseball and its place in the sporting fabric of the City of Boston and the United States of America. There’s nothing quite like it as we work towards a return to our normal lives of pre-COVID virus amidst constantly threatening variants.

First and foremost: Happy Easter and a thoughtful and peaceful Passover to those who celebrate. Our simple wish of peace to people of all faiths as Spring 2022 “Springs Eternal” in the Northeast, USA.

A DAY IN THE LIFE: The Boston Red Sox lost their home opener against the Minnesota Twins, 8-4, on Friday. Aside from some early season/limited Spring Training grumbles (see below), nearly every fan left Fenway Park as happy as could be.

First, because of the fact the home opener came six games into the season, on a 65-degree Boston Friday, the assembled fans at Fenway were downright giddy. It seemed as though the entire City of Boston and Commonwealth of Massachusetts shunned their work obligations and their Tax Man duties and will rely on the fact the true income tax deadline is Tuesday, April 19 (because of Passover and Easter). Even the Pope, the Cardinals (Roman Catholic, not St. Louis) and every Monsignor this side of the Berkshires turned their heads and offered some magical Good Friday dispensation to fans guzzling Sam Wicked Easy by the keg full.

Secondly, there was an indescribable air of normalcy at the park, certainly for the first time since September 29, 2019 which fell – get this – 929 days, as in 9/29 – since that 2019 season finale against the Baltimore Orioles. The Sox defeated the hapless O’s on the final day of the regular season but only after the bullpen blew what could’ve been SP Eduardo Rodriguez’ 20th win of the season. BTW, then-Boston OF Mookie Betts went 2-for-4 with a run scored and an RBI to finish his career with the Red Sox.

Maybe things aren’t all that normal, again, as Betts is LONG gone and OF Jackie Bradley Jr. was here-gone-and came back again. But, Friday afternoon certainly beat an Opening Day a year ago with only 4,500 fans in the building.

Of course not to be overlooked, the Red Sox played quite well last season and filled the joint for Postseason games, including a Wild Card win over the rival New York Yankees, a 3-games-to-1 series win over a very good Tampa Bay Rays team, but an ALCS loss to the Houston Astros last October.

At Friday’s opener, the ballpark was packed (36,266) with the sellout crowd enjoying previously mentioned Sam Adams on one outfield deck or some concoction named TRULY on another deck. Progress in marketing, and changing tastes, changing societal norms, changing team personnel amidst this damn global pandemic that just won’t quit, as evidenced by the current lock-down in major cities in China, including Shanghai.

ON SATURDAY: Boston and its Fenway faithful were treated to yet another seasonably-warm late afternoon date – a 4:11pm (ET) first pitch to start the second game of the four-game set between the Sox and Minnesota Twins. The series will conclude Monday, Patriots’ Day in the Commonwealth, with the traditional 11:10am (ET) start as the Boston Marathon runs its way from the suburbs of Hopkinton all the way to Copley.

To celebrate the weekend, the Red Sox are wearing their “City” uniforms, depicted ⬇️.

Many fans, outside of Boston, might wonder about the colors, but they are the official colors of the Boston Marathon and Boston Athletic Association. Those colors became the foundation of the “Boston Strong” civic campaign to help the city and the victims of the senseless 2013 marathon bombing incident begin the road to recovery after some severe post Traumatic Stress. As you might recall, the initial blast killed three people Krystle Marie Campbell, 29; Lü Lingzi, a 23-year old Boston University student and 8-year old Martin Richard who were all in direct proximity of the two blasts. An MIT security man, Sean Collier, was shot three days after the bombing when the two suspects tried to rob him and flee the scene and Dennis Simmonds, a local police officer, died almost a year later from wounds suffered during a shoot-out in Watertown, Mass. … We remember them all every year – FOREVER.

PANIC BUTTON: A glance to the Green Monster and the AL East standings show Boston is “next to last” place in the division (3-4) as Saturday’s game was on-going. Only the poor Baltimore Orioles (2-5) trail. … Yes, it is FAR too early to scoreboard watch and the usual frenzy and negative buzz of Boston sports talk radio and thus the fans is palpable, even if it’s eight games into the season. … The bulk of the reasoning is the lack of trust in the Red Sox starting rotation and bullpen, as evidenced in Friday’s home opener when the Twins knocked Boston SP Nick Pivetta off the mound in two innings and the bullpen coughed up another four runs in the Sox 8-4 loss. … With star SP Chris Sale out indefinitely, the likes of Pivetta, Tanner Houck, Michael Wacha, Rich Hill, and relievers Garrett Whitlock, Matt Barnes and Jake Diekman (L) are under immediate pressure to perform. That pressure comes without a proper MLB Spring Training period and stretch-out time for pitchers. The Red Sox will need a resurgence from RP Ryan Brasier and their current ace SP Nathan Eovaldi who finished fourth in the 2021 AL Cy Young Award voting. … Time will tell on both the basic situation and the possible return of Sale and SP Jim Paxton (2021 Tommy John surgery) who was acquired in the off-season. By the way, Paxton will pocket a cool $10m for his rehab efforts in ‘22 … It seems a bit early in the Spring to be hopefully awaiting the MLB All-Star break.

HOUCK TO THE RESCUE: Continuing the news from Saturday afternoon, Red Sox SP Tanner Houck walked off the mound, hopped over the first base lines in a superstitious kind-of-way and departed the game with a 4-0 lead. Houck went 5.2 innings, tossing two-hit baseball with three walks, four Ks on 89 pitches/50 strikes. He left only two runners on base and only Nick Gordonof the Twins reached third base, harmlessly.

The Red Sox won their Saturday game, 4-0, behind the pitching of Houck and Garrett Whitlock’s tidy work out of the bullpen. All is not lost in the Fens.

For the complete While We’re Young (Ideas) Sunday Sports Notebook, subscribe HERE.

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

TL’s Sunday Sports Notebook | April 10

April 10, 2022 by Terry Lyons

By TERRY LYONS

BOSTON – The Boston Red Sox will depart New York after tonight’s first ESPN Sunday Night Baseball game against the Yankees, then chill-out in Detroit for a three-game set against the Tigers Monday to Wednesday (two afternoon games) before heading home Thursday for the Friday, April 15, 2:10pm (ET) home opener against the Minnesota Twins at Fenway Park.

Minnesota’s SP Sonny Gray is scheduled to throw against Boston SP Nick Pivetta unless the weather forecast throws a change-up. The four-game set against the Twins concludes with the 11:10am (ET) start on Patriots’ Day, Monday, April 18th – the holiday in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts known best at the day of the famed Boston Marathon.

Reading the Boston Red Sox Tea party leaves this early in the season is nearly as impossible as forecasting the weather. After all, when the Red Sox were playing the New York Yankees on Saturday, Boston saw sunshine and spring-like settings turn to ominous skies, snow, hail, thunder and rain before returning to a beautiful spring evening.

That unpredictable weather pattern might equate to the Sox pitching roster, once again, as Nathan Eovoldi, Pivetta, Tanner Houck, Michael Wacha and Rich Hill could prove to be a formidable staff which can be super-sized if Sox star Chris Sale can return to form at some point mid-season. Currently, Sale is on the 60-day Injured List with rib injuries. He’ll begin throwing next week.

James Paxton, acquired by Boston for a single year deal for a lofty $10m, is recovering from Tommy John surgery last April when he was a member o0f the Seattle Mariners.

One-time Sox closer Matt Barnes is already banged-up as the season begins but could return soon. Until then, it’s bullpen by committee with newly extended four-year contract holder Garrett Whitlock carrying the load with Ryan Brasier and Hansel Robles. Matt Strohm andJake Diekman round out the relievers from the southpaw side. Josh Taylor, a 61 game reliever last season, has been out on the IL with a bad back but could return within weeks.

If you’re scoring at home, that pans out to create uncertainty every time Eovaldi, Pivetta, Hill, Wacha, Barnes and eventually Sale and Paxton take the pitching mound to start a game, whether it be at Fenway or on the road.

Of course, pitching is the key element for all teams to contend in the American League East as the Toronto Blue Jays, Yankees, and Tampa Bay Rays are all worthy to compete for playoff berths while the Baltimore Orioles are likely to hold up the rear in the division but are fast improving.

Lets take a look at the Vegas odds for the American League title as of Opening Day:

  • Toronto Blue Jays | +400
  • Chicago White Sox | +500
  • Houston Astros | +500
  • New York Yankees | +500
  • Tampa Bay Rays | +850
  • Boston Red Sox | +1000
  • Los Angeles Angels | +1000
  • Seattle Mariners | +1000
  • Minnesota Twins | +1700
  • Detroit Tigers | +2300
  • Cleveland Guardians | +4200
  • Texas Rangers | +4800
  • Kansas City Royals | +5000
  • Oakland Athletics | +6000
  • Baltimore Orioles | +16000

In the National League, there’s rarely a bar room argument that the LA Dodgers, Atlanta Braves and San Diego Padres all have an edge and the New York Mets could contend if starters Jacob deGrom and Max Scherzer can combine for 35-40 wins. Meanwhile, while last year’s surprise club, the San Francisco Giants, have slipped.

Here are the Vegas Opening Day odds for the National League title:

  • Los Angeles Dodgers | +175
  • New York Mets | +500
  • Atlanta Braves | +550
  • Milwaukee Brewers | +750
  • San Diego Padres | +750
  • Philadelphia Phillies | +1000
  • San Francisco Giants | +1000
  • St. Louis Cardinals | +1400
  • Miami Marlins | +3400
  • Chicago Cubs | +4800
  • Cincinnati Reds | +6500
  • Washington Nationals | +6500
  • Colorado Rockies | +11500
  • Arizona Diamondbacks | +18000
  • Pittsburgh Pirates | +25000

HERE NOW, THE NOTES: As long as the odds are laid out so nicely, there’s no reason not to make early season predictions for Divisional Winners, Wild Cards, League Championship Series contenders and the winner of the 2022 World Series.

Here now, the picks:

American League:

Divisional Winners: Toronto Blue Jays*, Chicago White Sox, Houston Astros*

Wild Cards: New York Yankees, Tampa Bay Rays, LA Angels.

ALCS: Toronto vs Houston with the Astros advancing to the World Series.

National League:

Divisional Winners: Atlanta Braves*, Milwaukee Brewers, LA Dodgers*.

Wild Cards: San Diego Padres, New York Mets, SF Giants.

NLCS: LA Dodgers vs. Atlanta Braves with the Dodgers advancing.

World Series: LA Dodgers over Houston Astros, 4-games-to-2.


THE MASTERS: There are a few sporting events which take on a “Carnegie Hall” level of prestige in the sports world.

They are:

  1. The Masters
  2. Wimbledon
  3. The Kentucky Derby
  4. The Ryder Cup
  5. The Boston Marathon
  6. The Breeders’ Cup
  7. Tour de France
  8. Monaco Gand Prix

This week’s Masters is living up to its rightful place in sports. The headline-grabbing storyline is the return of Tiger Woods to competitive PGA TOUR golf. While Woods has been both impressive and competitive, his rivals are atop the leaderboard heading into the final round.

The Leaderboard:

Scottie Scheffler – (-9)

Cameron Smith – (-6)

Sungjae Im – (-4)

Shane Lowry – (-4)

Charl Schwartzel – (-4)

Tiger Woods is T-41 at (+7)

Scheffler has won three times in his last five starts on Tour.

IT’s JUST A FANTASY: For this column, rarely do I delve into Fantasy Sports and share my fantasy team ups and downs, whether it be NFL Football or MLB Baseball. And, while we’ve been known to play every kind of fantasy sport imaginable, from Olympic Basketball and Ice Hockey to World Cup to NBA to NBA Playoffs to NFL Playoffs to PGA TOUR Golf to NBA Summer League to – well, you get the idea, the completion for NFL regular season, PGA Golf and the long run of MLB Baseball are the three I’ve settled for over the past five or six years.

The Baseball fantasy league is called the “Teddy Baseball League” to honor the great Ted Williams and its weekly winner is crowned the “Dean RosenTeam of the Week” in memory of one of the league’s former team owners who passed away all too soon. The Teddy is a hybrid of fantasy baseball with the first 17 players for each team picked in “auction” style of bidding, then the final 14 players are picked in snake-draft order to fill-out a 31 player roster for 11 teams.

The standings are rotisserie style, not head-to-head, so it is a long marathon of a season.

The franchise, worth billions – I am sure, is the Chathams, named after one of my favorite places on earth in Chatham, Massachusetts – on The Cape. We are often tagged as “The Cape Codders.” And, that’s alright with me. The Cape Cod Baseball League is a favorite for sure and there will be more on that this summer.

The Chathams have an active owner and a seasoned veteran of a General Manager and head of Analytics in Craig Glazer. The league competition is tough. No team misses a beat, nor a prospect, nor a mistake of a cut. Line-ups are set weekly, on Monday when there’s five minutes before the first pitch of the first game of the week. It’s great.

Our strategy – which has been no secret to our fellow league franchise owners – is to go heavy on offense, grab at least one stud or semi-stud Starting Pitcher, one formidable Reliever for saves and then do our best to fill-out the rest of the line-up. In taking this road to the Teddy Title, we need to thread the needle, acquire a couple up & coming stars who pan out and pray to the heavens our top offensive gems stay healthy.

That was not the case last year when Ronald Acuna Jr. was injured in mid-season and with his injury, so were the days of our Teddy triumph to be. We were also sunk when Los Angeles Dodgers slugger Cody Bellinger, a superstar level player, had his worst season EVVV-AHHH.

That was last year, this is this year. Here is the line-up and I’ll not the bidding numbers for a few of the top players. (A side-note, the most expensive player in the auction was our very own $42 bid for Juan Soto of the Washington Nationals. That came out of a $202 budget).

Here’s our club:

  • Shohei Ohtani LAA, DH – $23 (a surprise that he went for under $30-$40).
  • Vladimir Guerrero Jr. Tor, 1B – $35
  • Juan Soto Wash, RF – $42
  • Gerrit Cole NYY, SP – $35
  • Rafael Devers Bos, 3B – $33
  • Jacob deGrom NYM, SP – $6 (deep discount with 60+ day IL)
  • Marcus Semien Tex, 2B – $17 (shocked he didn’t get more bidding)

That’s where the budget kicked-in and we were left to fill nine players at $1 and one player at $2.

That resulted in the rest of the roster consisting of:

  • Edwin Diaz NYM, RP
  • Taylor Rogers SD, RP
  • Tyler Stephenson Cin, C (a target going into the draft)
  • Austin Meadows Det, LF (shocked he was still available)
  • Amed Rosario Cle, SS
  • Ty France Sea, 1B
  • Jeimer Candelario Det, 3B
  • Eduardo Rodriguez Det, SP
  • Lance Lynn ChW, SP (currently on IL)
  • Josh Bell Wsh, 1B

The snake-draft portion of the night brought:

  • Luis Severino, SP, NYY
  • Andrew Benintendi, OF, KC
  • Jordan Montgomery, SP, NYY
  • Ian Happ, OF, CHC
  • Randal Grichuk, OF, COL
  • Marcus Stroman, SP, CHC
  • Corey Kluber, SP, TB
  • Matt Brash, SP, SEA
  • David Bednar, RP, PIT
  • Reid Detmers, SP, LAA
  • Nick Senzel, OF, CIN
  • Seth Beer, 1B, ARI
  • Josh Rojas, 2B, ARI
  • Kendall Graveman, RP, CWS

A rare, pre-opening day trade sent Senzel, Meadows and Bednar outbound while we filled a weak middle infield position with Dansby Swanson, along with outfielder Anthony Santander of Baltimore and 1B Eric Hosmer.

That’s the club – for now – as transactions have and will continue each and every week of the season. Next update?

How about the 4th of July and then September 1 and October 1?

Filed Under: Red Sox, While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: Boston Red Sox, MLB, The Masters, TL's Sunday Sports Notes, While We're Young Ideas

TL’s Sunday Sports Notes – April 3

April 3, 2022 by Terry Lyons

BOSTON – Next week (April 10), we’ll be three days into the 2022 Major League Baseball regular season and will be awaiting the Boston Red Sox home opener against the Minnesota Twins, scheduled for April 15th. The Red Sox open the season on the road with consecutive three-game sets against their arch rivals NY Yankees and a sure-to-be chilly trip to play the Detroit Tigers.

While your trusted reporter was able to attend a couple MLB Postseason games last October, the last time Digital Sports Desk graced the press box was Sunday, September 29, 2019 when the Sox defeated the Baltimore Orioles in front of 35,427 fans who had no idea that the terrible hurdle of COVID-19 was four months away. The Red Sox finished 84-78 in 2019, 24-36 in the pandemic-shortened 2020 season, then rallied back to a 92-70 mark last year.

They knocked-out the New York Yankees in the AL Wild Card game, then took the five-game set against the Tampa Bay Rays 3-1, after dropping the first game of the series at Tampa, 5-0. Of course, the Sox fell short, losing to the Houston Astros, 4-games-to-2 in the ALCS. They lost the final three games of the series after going up 2-games-to-1.

Boston is 9-6 in 2022 Grapefruit League games (as of the morning of April 2). After Sunday’s game against the Atlanta Braves in Sarasota, the Red Sox have only two more Spring Training games on the docket (April 4 & 5) against Minnesota.

HERE NOW, THE NOTES: 

SVG SAYS: (And, we’re not talking Stan Van Gundy) – The Sports Video Group highlighted the bells and whistles that Turner and CBS Sports compiled to cover Final Four Saturday and Monday Night’s NCAA championship game.

“Sports is match-up driven,” says Craig Barry, EVP/Chief Content Officer, Turner Sports. “It always has been, it always will be. It doesn’t always determine the drama of the event, but it definitely helps determine the dramatic impact of an event. To have Duke, UNC, Kansas, and Villanova, it’s going to be unprecedented.”

“[Duke-North Carolina], Barry continued, “is, historically, one of the biggest match ups in Final Four history. It’s all hands on deck to do this show justice and bring something really special to the fans, without focusing on – and I’ll use this word loosely – any gimmicks. We’re bringing a robust broadcast, where we tell the story of the games that are being played.”

In addition to the elite level matchups, this Final Four is bolstered by the return of live fans, following the cancelation of the tournament in 2020 and an attendance-limited event in 2021. According to Bryant, that energy brings better visuals to the show but also goes a long way into spilling over to fuel the energy of the crew behind the scenes.

“The opportunity to have the energy in the arena again [has been fantastic],” says Bryant. “And that’s not just in the arena, it’s the energy in the studio, the energy in the truck, the energy in the control rooms. We’ve been really leveraging that and bringing that into the broadcast. We need to make sure that we have the technology and the assets to harness that. You can add technology, you can build storylines, but [the atmosphere] was the one large differentiator for us that we really felt was going to push us back to normalization.”

This Final Four is the last for director Bob Fishman, the lead CBS Sports director for college basketball for the past 39 years. It’s not lost with the fact both Fishman and Krzyzewski will both retire after they’re finished working this tournament.

“We have become dear friends over these years. I’ve directed every single one of his national championships,” Fishman said. “I said to him a couple weeks ago ‘You know, I’m impartial coach, but it sure would be cool to be there together to celebrate our retirements together and maybe win a national championship.’ That would really top it off pretty well for me.”


HALL OF A FIVE: The ultimate starting five from the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame’s season-long competition for the best collegiate players at each position.

2021-22 Men’s Naismith Starting Five:

Collin Gillespie (Villanova, Graduate Student) – Bob Cousy Point Guard of the Year Award – 15.6 pts/gm, 3.9 reb/gm, 3.3 ast/gm

Johnny Davis (Wisconsin, So.) – Jerry West Shooting Guard of the Year Award – 19.7 pts/gm, 8.2 reb/gm, 2.1 ast/gm

Wendell Moore Jr. (Duke, Jr.) – Julius Erving Small Forward of the Year Award – 3.5 pts/gm, 5.2 reb/gm, 4.4 ast/gm, 41.1 3pt%

Keegan Murray (Iowa, So.) – Karl Malone Power Forward of the Year Award – 23.5 pts/gm, 8.7 reb/gm, 1.5 ast/gm, 55.4 fg%

Oscar Tshiebwe (Kentucky, Jr.) – Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Center of the Year Award – 17.4 pts/gm, 15.1 reb/gm, 1.6 blk/gm, 60.6 fg%


CHICAGO LAW: NBA Commissioner Adam Silver, (University of Chicago – JD’88), still thinks of himself as a lawyer, wrote Becky Beaupre Gillespie in the u of chicago (sic) news of April 1.

“After all, it’s the skills he learned at the University of Chicago Law School—and later as a judicial clerk and law firm associate—that undergird his approach to the complex issues that have defined his tenure as NBA head, including high-profile decisions related to COVID policy, international relations and more,” she wrote as an intro to a University speaking function headlined by Silver.

“The problem-solving, issue-spotting techniques that you learn, particularly at the University of Chicago, [including] how to reason through issues—I find I use those skills every day of my life, and I really feel indebted to the Law School as a result,” Silver said at a March 22 event co-hosted by the Law School and the University’s Harris School of Public Policy.


OVERTIME: In the past year, the NBA G-League created its Ignite club of talented high school aged players who chose not to attend college but prepare for professional basketball by playing against G-League competition. Similarly, the Overtime Elite team out of Atlanta was mining the same talent.

This weekend, the Commissioner of the Overtime venture, former NBA executive Aaron Ryan, decided to step down from his post to return to his home in New Jersey to spend more time with his family.

“A little over a year ago, no one had ever heard of Overtime Elite,” wrote Ryan. “However, what started out as a novel idea, has transformed the basketball ecosystem and sports media forever. Elite basketball players, for the first time, were prioritized. They were compensated for their value, provided a top-notch education that met them where they are in their academic journey, and they were given access to elite coaches and training. The opportunity to build a league, with the visionary team at Overtime was a true career milestone. And even more than that, for me it was a mission filled with purpose.

“The past 18 months have been rewarding, exhilarating, and exhausting, given that our work was taking place in the midst of a global pandemic where all business and sports norms were upended. Despite the challenges of the pandemic, my work at Overtime Elite bore fruit through hard work with a great team. It also took a personal toll. As many of you know, I have been splitting my time between my home in New Jersey and my office in Atlanta. Time away from my wife and teenage daughters was a tough sacrifice, but became increasingly more difficult as we moved from working remote, to being in Atlanta,” Ryan stated.

“So it is with a heavy heart, and with the agreement of my colleagues at Overtime, I have decided not to seek a contract extension. As much as I enjoyed the job and was dedicated to the larger mission, putting my family first and being present for my daughters as they go through these formative years is best for me and for my family.

“I’ll forever be proud of what we built in the face of adversity. And I’ll always be grateful to our incredible staff, our first 27 athletes and their families, who made the decision to be a part of history.

“I wish the Overtime Elite team every success as they move forward on this powerful mission,” concluded Ryan.

NOTE: This was also a part of the While We’re Young (Ideas) notebook (link)


Parting Words & Music:

As we did a year ago, here’s the song you ‘wanna hear.”

One Shining Moment from the 2021 NCAA’s:

###

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

TL’s Sunday Sports Notebook: On the Real Jerry West and Winning Time

March 20, 2022 by Terry Lyons

“Like Sands Through the Hour Glass, So Are the Days of our Lives.”

By TERRY LYONS

BOSTON – There’s a new soap opera on TV and I tuned in to check it out the other day. I streamed it, actually. It’s entitled “Winning Time,” and it is based on a 2014 book by Jeff Pearlman, entitled “Showtime.”

I’ve watched two of the scheduled 10 episode series which first saw the light of day on HBO Max on March 6. I doubt I’ll bother to watch the third episode because – after two episodes – I’ve had enough.

It is horrible.

The first two episodes were dedicated to the point in time when Dr. Jerry Buss (played by actor John C. Reilly (whose best known work is from Chicago, Gangs of New York and The Perfect Storm) was acquiring the franchise. Reilly plays the part and delivers his lines admirably but goes way overboard, if you ask me.

Why?

Well, I was there.

I can not say I was up at Pickfair sipping martinis or champagne with Buss and the stars, but from 1980-on, I saw Buss in action through dozens upon dozens of NBA Playoff games, NBA Finals games, and NBA Board of Governors meetings. I met his daughter, Jeannie, when she was running the Los Angeles Strings of Team Tennis. She was 20 years old.

As I watched the first two episodes of “Winning Time,” I wondered if I had just missed the dirty secrets of the early days of Buss’ tenure, the days when he negotiated terms of a sale for the team and The Fabulous Forum with longtime Los Angeles Lakers owner Jack Kent Cooke.

I’ve met and chatted with the former Lakers GM and Hall of Fame player/team exec/coach Jerry West many a time, usually off to the side of some cocktail party honoring a mutual friend at the Hall, but, after seeing the depiction of West by actor Jason Clarke in “Winning Time,” I wondered if it was a different man they were bringing to the screen? How could Jerry West change that much from the first 40 years of his life to the most recent 43 years?

I watched a depiction of Forum executive Claire Rothman that was just flat-out wrong and terribly miscast for actress Gaby Hoffman, a very acclaimed actress whose credits include playing little Karin Kinsella – the daughter who fell off the bleachers – in Field of Dreams.

Lemme tell ya, Claire Rothman was almost royal – maybe regal – always confident and solidly “in charge” of The Forum. She didn’t demand respect, she commanded it, using the show of respect to her as an elixir for anyone seeking to accomplish something in the building, or The Forum Club. Hoffman’s portrayal is of a young executive trainee type not of the highly respected Rothman who ran the best venue in town.

The sports drama, created by Max Borenstein (Godzilla, Kong: Skull Island, Godzilla: King of the Monsters, Godzilla vs. Kong) and co-producer Jim Hecht, just misses drastically. They claim it’s not a documentary and admit they’ve taken poetic justice to enhance the show. But, you’d think they’d stay with the basics of human drama and personalities, would you?  The series has been met with mixed reviews but one review, in particular, by NBA super-agent turned Detroit Pistons senior executive Arn Tellem in Hollywood Reporter is the reason for the review you are reading right now.

Tellem knows West and the Lakers better than most as he spent time trying to work together while in the high stakes game of the NBA and compete against him while moving talent and draft picks elsewhere for the benefit of his clients. Tellum’s key move came in 1996 when West maneuvered to acquire Shaquille O’Neal as a free agent after Tellum manipulated his way through the NBA Draft to orchestrate a trade of the late Kobe Bryant to the Lakers.

In Hollywood Reporter, Tellum wrote under a headline that told it all:

Guest Column: ‘Winning Time’ Is “Campy, Mean-Spirited Fiction”

Former NBA uber-agent Arn Tellem, who is now vice chairman of the Detroit Pistons, takes issue with the HBO series’ “cruel, dishonest and staggeringly insensitive” depiction of former Lakers player, coach and general manager Jerry West.

Tellem said:

“The late novelist and screenwriter Gore Vidal observed that it’s not what things are that matter so much as how they are perceived. The media supplies stories that the public accepts, at times literally, as the gospel truth. Through eye and ear, Vidal said, we are both defined and manipulated by fictions of such potency that they are able to replace our own experience, often becoming our sole experience.

“Which is the problem with HBO’s new Winning Time: The Rise of the Lakers Dynasty, a campy, mean-spirited fiction about the Showtime-era Los Angeles Lakers. The show’s paradox is that it prides itself on being faithful to the facts, and yet — between the formulaic script and stick-figure cartoon characters — reality seldom intrudes.

“Hiding behind the disclaimer “this series is a dramatization,” Winning Time imagines itself a “satire” that treats pretty much everyone with equal odium, covers pretty much everything with equal ordure. Pro basketball players are greedy braggarts and narcissists; pro basketball owners, ruthless bigots and hedonists.

“Of all the athletes and executives shamed and ridiculed in the first two episodes, the most brutal — and gratuitous — character assassination was reserved for Jerry West (played in the series by Jason Clarke), the universally beloved former Lakers player, coach and general manager known as Mr. Clutch. In the series opener, which aired on March 6, his character seemed to be modeled on Yosemite Sam — a boozy, impulsive hothead who steamrollered anyone in his path, angrily snapped a golf club over his knee and stormed away to curse out a colleague, and chucked his 1969 NBA Finals MVP trophy through his office window in a fit of frustration.

‘Never mind that West is a health nut who has always shied away from alcohol. Never mind he’s not just a gentleman but a gentle man who prides himself on treating others with grace and compassion. And never mind that his old office at the “Fabulous Forum” didn’t have windows. Indeed, none of the arena’s basketball offices did. I ought to know. I was there.

‘As a former player agent who is now vice chairman of the Detroit Pistons, I have known West for more than 40 years. During that time, I have observed, negotiated and socialized with him. In all of our dealings, he has been courteous, respectful, generous and self-deprecating. He’s never once lost his temper. He’s always heard me out. Many of the players I represented sought his counsel, both professionally and personally. Having battled depression during his entire adult life, West has a deep awareness of the suffering of others, coupled with the wish to relieve it. Sure, he can be moody. But when frustrated, he doesn’t lash out. He withdraws into himself.

“In his 2011 memoir West by West: My Charmed, Tormented Life, he wrote about his father, an oil company machine operator, who beat him repeatedly. At 12, West kept a shotgun under his bed and threatened to use it on his old man if the abuse didn’t end. Today, at 83, he’s still haunted by a sense that he’d let his college down by losing the national championship in 1959, still blames himself that, during the 1960s, his Lakers lost to the Boston Celtics six times in the NBA Finals. “I have a hole in my heart,” he conceded, “a hole that can never be filled.”

“Fans of Winning Time defend the show by saying nothing is sacred, sacred targets are funnier, lighten up, criticism is censorship. And it’s true that, used deftly, satire is a powerful tool to deflate and diminish the powerful, to take them down a peg or two. That’s the power of satire. But Winning Time is less satire than bullying. Though the disclaimer is designed to shield against the possibility of legal action for libel, it’s not a license to damage the reputation that West spent a lifetime building.

“The depiction of Mr. Clutch is cruel, dishonest and staggeringly insensitive,” concluded Tellem.


MUST WATCH:

AFTER-THOUGHTS: From my personal point-of-view, the portrayal  of Jerry West by the creators of Winning Time is a flat-out disaster. It’s wrong. He is the complete opposite of the portrayal.  That’s not opinion. It is a fact drawn from the true reality show we lived and worked in as employees of the National Basketball Association and its teams. I thought it to be so, and Arn Tellem confirmed it.

During my 26+ years, Jerry West was the most competitive person I had ever met until I met Michael Jordan. West’s running mate, Rod Thorn – both West Virginians, I might add – came in as a close third to those two. I can imagine the three of them pitching quarters against the curb and competing like hell for 25-cents.

To some extent, Thorn was my credential of trust and authenticity to West. If you were a friend of Rod’s you were a friend of Jerry West. One time, at a summer USA Basketball exhibition in Charlotte, the two – I’ll call ‘em “hoodlums” – took off with my rental car to head south to Pinehurst to meet up with a bunch of Carolina guys to play some golf as I was returning to work at the NBA office in New York. (Yes, Thorn was kind enough to save the receipt so I could be properly reimbursed and West gave me his “VVIP” gift – a new fangled, wireless home telephone – as compensation for my gesture to hand-over the car. It was a great phone and it lasted for a dozen years or more.

The point being, West is/was/always will be a gentleman. His gesture of gifting a new tech, cool, $150 phone was just a hint of the man’s generosity and depth. He’s a pro’s pro.

In the cone of silence very well respected in the sports television-to-PR world, we are given the direct studio phone lines, dozens of direct mobile numbers for calling or texting information. We have the right email address that is monitored when a show is live. That is the case for The Dan Patrick Show and its producer – the great Todd Fritz.

As a general rule, I never call or write or compliment a writer or reporter on a story, an interview, or a news-breaker unless it’s far above and beyond the realm of the regular ebb and flow of the sports news world.

Twice – yes twice – I stopped in my tracks as Dan Patrick interviewed Jerry West. I can’t think of another interview that was nearly as intriguing as Patrick’s conversations with West. In fact, on one occasion, Fritzy and I traded an email of an A+ level interview Patrick did on air, but we both agreed, it wasn’t quite great enough to be in the “Jerry West Zone.”


REVISIONIST HISTORY: The favorite pastime for sports fans today is to engage in revisionist history. “Today’s game was THE BEST.” … “It was the GREATEST … ever, or “He’s the GOAT.’ … Tom Brady is the greatest NFL player for anyone who didn’t see Jim Brown play football. Michael Jordanand LeBron James are the greatest for everyone who didn’t see Wilt Chamberlain, Bill Russell, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Oscar Robertson or Elgin Baylor dominate in the NBA or Julius “Dr. J” in the ABA.

While Michael Jordan’s “Last Dance” stayed very, very close to reality and also broke some storytelling ground on the backgrounds of Scottie Pippen, Phil Jackson, Dennis Rodman and Steve Kerr, “Winning Time” has done none of that in its first two episodes. Please note, this column is not commenting on Jeff Pearlman’s book, a book I haven’t read yet. I will and will comment further into the basketball season. For now, everyone’s attention might turn to March Madness and then the Final Four, as we dread our choices crossed-off in newly busted and worthless brackets.

Filed Under: NBA, While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: Dan Patrick Show, Jerry West, TL's Sunday Sports Notes, While We're Young Ideas

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TL's Sunday Notes | March 30

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While We're Young (Ideas) and March Go Out Like a Lyons
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Gotta Give Pitino the credit. Constant and Full-Court Press made the difference and his players were in condition to wear down UConn. digitalsportsdesk.com/st-johns-defeats-mighty-uconn/ ... See MoreSee Less

Gotta Give Pitino the credit.  Constant and Full-Court Press made the difference and his players were in condition to wear down UConn. https://digitalsportsdesk.com/st-johns-defeats-mighty-uconn/
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Groundhog Day!

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Groundhog Day!

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In each round-up, there are far too many questions and not nearly enough definitive answers to the woes facing the New England clubs, the Celtics included. It might be time for some major shake-ups at...
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The first Sunday Sports Notes of 2025 | Including Some Predictions

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KEY DATES IN 2025: Everyone needs to circle these dates on their sports calendar: KEY DATES IN 2025: Everyone needs to circle these dates on their sports calendar:
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