• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Digital Sports Desk

Online Destination for the Best in Boston Sports

  • BOSTON SPORTS
    • Red Sox
    • Patriots
    • Celtics
    • Bruins
  • MLB
  • NHL
  • NBA
    • WNBA
    • USA Basketball
  • NFL
    • Super Bowl LIX
  • PGA TOUR
    • LIV GOLF
    • TGL GOLF
  • NCAA
    • NCAA Basketball
      • Big East
      • March Madness
    • NCAA Football
  • SPORTS BIZ
  • BETTING HERO
  • WHILE WE’RE YOUNG

While We're Young

While We’re Young (Ideas) – Notebook

May 16, 2021 by Terry Lyons

By TERRY LYONS

BOSTON – Whether the sport in being celebrated two hours to the south at Mohegan Sun, an hour and a half to the west in Springfield, Mass, being played at WNBA and NBA arenas nationwide or destinations around the globe, the game of basketball is in the news in a big way this weekend and for many months to come.

The Basketball Hall of Fame is utilizing the Mohegan Sun (Uncasville, Connecticut) as headquarters for the 2020 Enshrinement ceremony this weekend, then packing up the circus tents and heading to the newly renovated Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame museum in Springfield – the birthplace of basketball – to announce the 2021 class of inductees. (The names of Celtics star Paul Pierce and Ben Wallace of the Detroit Pistons’ Bad Boy era have already leaked out as ‘21 inductees).

First! The 2020 class is among the most elite in history, with Tim Duncan, Kevin Garnett and the late Kobe Bryant headlining the group. The 2020 class induction, forever to be known as a memorial tribute to Bryant, has been delayed – for what seems to be forever and a day – because of the global pandemic. While Bryant deserved top billing, for sure, the class of ‘20 represents a wide-ranging group, spanning the globe from FIBA HQ in Europe (to honor the late Patrick Baumann) to Bentley College, only 11 miles down the road where Bentley Coach Barbara Stevens calls home.

The 2020 class represents every aspect of the sport of basketball quite well. Stevens and Baylor/LSU women’s coach Kim Mulkey are inducted as top notch and deserved women’s team college coaches while Tamika Catchings (NCAA: Tennessee, WNBA: Indiana Fever, USA: Multiple Gold) represents the very best the sport has to offer, both on and off-court.

Just as you would expect with such a glorious cast, the coaches on the men’s side are among the very best with the late Eddie Sutton memorialized for his work via the college game and the great Rudy “Rudy T” Tomjanovich honored for his work with the Houston Rockets. Credited for his longtime, loyal assistant coaching efforts for Bill Fitch and as the two-time NBA championship head coach of the Rockets, Rudy T knew the game from the inside out. He was also an NBA All-Star forward (San Diego/Houston Rockets), never mind his impressive work for USA Basketball as head coach at the 1998 Worlds (Bronze during NBA labor dispute) and 2000 Sydney Olympics (Gold medal). … Remember: “Don’t EVER underestimate the heart of a champion.”

Even the media awards pay tribute to the best of the best with ABC/ESPN/MSG Network’s Mike Breen being honored for his play-by-play work and Mike Wilbon honored for print journalism. Wilbon, the Washington Post sports columnist for decades, turned Pardon the Interruption television personality extraordinaire and Breen, the voice of the NBA on ABC and ESPN, are both being honored as the Curt Gowdy Media Award winners for 2020.

Yes, with the 2020 honors, the Basketball Hall of Fame took a page from its counterpart in Cooperstown and “touched all bases” with a class for the ages. But the BHofF enshrinement for 2020 and this week’s announcement for 2021 are merely the dessert being served before the main course of hoops mania over the next few months. How? Let us count the ways:

  1. The 25th Anniversary season for the WNBA tipped-off Friday night with four exciting games, including the return of 2020 No. 1 overall draft pick Sabrina Ionescu, who had her rookie season cut short with a season-ending ankle injury in just her third pro game. Ionescu put an exclamation point on her return, hitting the game-winning three-pointer from the wing with less than a second remaining to give the New York Liberty a 90-87 victory over the Indiana Fever in the WNBA’s season opener. … As part of the WNBA’s 25th season and its focus on innovation, the league will launch the inaugural Commissioner’s Cup in-season competition during the 2021 season. Conference rivalry bragging rights, a new WNBA Commissioner’s Cup trophy and a prize pool of $500,000 will all be at stake when the inaugural WNBA Commissioner’s Cup Championship Game is played on Thursday, Aug. 12, at Phoenix Suns Arena. … Regular season WNBA action will take on an added level of importance as 60 select, intra-conference “Cup games” will determine the Eastern Conference and Western Conference teams that will advance to the first ever Commissioner’s Cup Championship Game. … The “Cup Games” will be the first home game and first road game each team plays against its five conference rivals, all set to take place in the first half of the season between May 14 and July 11, prior to the in-season scheduling break due to the Olympic Games.
  2. The Basketball Africa League, a newly formed but one-year delayed organized pro league spanning the continent of Africa, will debut May 16. Both the International Basketball Federation and the NBA are providing full support to the endeavor which features 12 pro teams.
  3. Not to be forgotten, the BAL’s and WNBA’s big brother, the National Basketball Association, will begin its 2021 NBA Playoffs with a “Play-In” tournament, a new and unproven concept to field the No. 7 and No. 8 seeds in each of the two NBA conferences. Gone is the NBA Bubble in Orlando and the 2021 playoffs will take place with a limited number of fans in each home arena, depending mostly on State and local government rules and authorities.
  4. A couple weeks down the road, the European “EuroLeague” Basketball Final Four will be staged in Cologne, Germany on Friday, May 28 and Sunday, May 30. The competing four teams include CSKA Moscow vs. Anadolu Efes Istanbul, and AX Armani Exchange Milano vs. FC Barcelona
  5. As summer approaches, the FIBA Olympic Qualifying Tournaments for Men and Women will be staged to determine the final national teams to compete in Tokyo. Those qualifiers will be played from June 29 to July 4th, a few weeks before the Tokyo Olympics begin (July 25th) with Iran facing a qualifier to be determined later. The delayed Olympic tournament will run through the gold medal game scheduled for Saturday, August 7 at the Saitama Super Arena, the “Brooklyn” to Tokyo’s “NYC.”

Filed Under: NBA, While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: BAL, While We're Young, While We're Young Ideas

While We’re Young (Ideas) – Our Sunday Sports Notebook on the IVY League

May 9, 2021 by Terry Lyons

By TERRY LYONS

BOSTON – The IVY League led the way back in March 2020. Hopefully, the Presidents of the IVY League schools knew something back then and know something once again. Something more than the rest of us because the IVY League is coming back for Fall Football.

“Given the current steady decline of Covid-19 infections in this country, and the broad availability and uptake of vaccinations, we are optimistic that our campuses will be back to something close to normal by this fall, including in-person learning with students in residence,” the Council of presidents said in their statement. “And this includes our expectation for the resumption of regular competitive schedules for Ivy League athletics across all sports beginning in fall 2021.

 

Here in the Greater Boston area, Harvard announced its plans in March to have invite all undergraduates back to campus to live and attend in-person classes for the 2021 fall semester. University President Lawrence S. Bacowalso wrote to affiliates this week that Harvard will require all undergraduates living on campus in the fall to get inoculated against the coronavirus.

While most major football conferences returned to some on-field activity last fall, the schools in the IVY League sat on the sidelines. As time passed, most Division I conferences permitted conference play for the Winter 2020-21 and Spring 2021 seasons. A handful of Ivy League schools permitted teams to hold local scrimmages this spring, but Ivy League teams were unable to compete against one another.

Specifics for various school graduations and other large gatherings are being scrutinized at campuses all across America, and pro sports are gradually increasing the percentage of capacity allowing fans to watch their favorite teams. The Ivy League decision, for some reason or another, forecasts better times ahead.

Here’s hoping Harvard visits Yale for “The Game,” this coming November and a significant crowd assembles at the 64,000+ capacity Yale Bowl. One thing is for sure, whatever the percentage of capacity is allowed to watch the football game inside, there will be an equal or larger number of alum assembled in the parking lots, tailgating away and reminiscing about “Glory Days” of the past.

For the FULL Notebook – sent to your inbox each weekend, sign-up HERE


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

While We’re Young (Ideas) – May 2

May 2, 2021 by Terry Lyons

Sunday Sports Notes for May 2

By TERRY LYONS

BOSTON – It happens every spring. March Madness fades into One Shining Moment which almost simultaneously brings Major League Baseball’s Opening Day and the crack of the bat. Pro basketball and ice hockey take a back-seat breather in March and early April for the dog days of their seasons, but the playoff races begin to intensify and – soon enough – every single possession of every single minute of every single game matters.

At this time of year, good teams must defeat the bad ones.

That translates to the proverbial “must win” for every team in playoff contention to defeat every team playing .500 or worse.

First, let’s take a look at the NHL’s Boston Bruins who’ve played 50 games and, as of May 1, are 30-14-6 which calculates to 65 points. They are in fourth place but only two victories (or four points) from the NHL East Division-leading Washington Capitals. Sandwiching the Bruins are the Pittsburgh Penguins and New York Islanders. The four best are lengths ahead of the bottom-feeder New York Rangers, Philadelphia Flyers, New Jersey Devils and Buffalo Sabres.

The Bruins have won nine of their last 11 games, all against East Division foes. The six remaining games are also against their division opponents, with the next two against the Devils and the following deuce against the Rangers.

Bruins’ goalkeepers Tuukka Rask and newly elevated back-up Jeremy Swayman have stepped-up their games, peaking at the right time of year for a playoff run. Newly acquired (trade deadline) forward Taylor Hall’s arrival has coincided with the streak. In the 10 games he’s been a Boston Bruin, the team is 8-2 and Hall has five goals and three assists for eight points. He’s recorded a plus/minus rating of (+9,) while his shooting percentage has risen to a lofty 14.3 percent.

To sum it up, the Bruins are winning the games they “must win” if they are to compete – and succeed – in the NHL Stanley Cup Playoffs.

The Boston Celtics of the NBA can not claim such consistency. The Celtics boarded a roller coaster ride since Baylor soundly defeated Gonzaga at the NCAA Final Four. The trade deadline acquisition of Evan Fournier didn’t result in a boost a la Taylor Hall. Instead, Fournier went 0-10 and – after getting on track a game or two later – he landed on the COVID+ injured list.

From April 2nd to 17th, the Celtics won eight of nine games. From April 19th to 27th, the Celtics lost four of five, including two losses against those “must win” opponents – vs. the sub-five-hundred – Chicago Bulls (24-33), and Oklahoma City Thunder (21-41).

Heading into today’s game against the Portland Trail Blazers (35-28), the Celtics are (34-30, .531) and are holding down fourth place in the NBA’s Atlantic Division and the sixth slot in the Eastern Conference, dangerously close to the seventh-seed Miami Heat and the dreaded play-in tournament. Friday night’s miraculous 143-140 Celtics’ overtime victory over the San Antonio Spurs included a franchise/Larry Bird-tying 60-point outing by Jason Tatum to help the Cs overcome a 32-point deficit (65-33, 3:58 left in the 2nd quarter).

Starting this evening, the Celtics play eight more regular season games down the playoff stretch, two against the Miami Heat. The “must wins” are evenly dispersed over the final fortnight of the 2020-21 season and they are circled vs Orlando, Chicago, Cleveland and Minnesota. But, to be a contender and a pretender, the Celtics will need to defeat the Heat, not once but twice.

To get the FULL While We’re Young (Ideas) Sunday Sports Notebook sent each week to your inbox, CLICK HERE

Filed Under: Boston Sports, While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: Sports Notebook, While We're Young, While We're Young Ideas

It’s Time!

March 14, 2021 by Terry Lyons

By TERRY LYONS

Embed from Getty Images

BOSTON – These are the most important things in modern-day life in these United States.

  1. Health
  2. Family (and their health and safety)
  3. Shelter
  4. Friends and Good Neighbors
  5. Time
  6. Happiness
  7. Ambition and vision
  8. Fulfilling or rewarding work
  9. Money
  10. Luck

For the sake of this column, let’s assume nine of the 10 things listed are correct and each person can order them in any fashion they’d prefer. In some cases, the list may vary depending on a persons’ current situation and circumstances and where they were born and live. In other cases, the list and its order can change from day-to-day.

Of course, if one is born into poverty in the USA or many foreign lands and “third world” countries, all bets are off.

There are a few things on my list that don’t change for anyone on this earth. One of them is TIME.

Many of the sporting games we play and spectate are measured by time. Some are not.

Those measured by time, include:

  1. Football
  2. Futbol (and they hide the damn clock)
  3. Basketball
  4. Ice Hockey
  5. Lacrosse
  6. Many of the Olympic sports like swimming and downhill skiing
  7. You get the picture!

Other popular sports are not measured by time and, theoretically, you could play a single game forever and ever and ever. They include:

  1. Baseball
  2. Golf
  3. Tennis
  4. Just to name a few!

The past year (almost to the date of this column) taught us about the concept of time. The value of time was taught suddenly and with significant impact, probably more than any of the years of our lifetimes. For many, time was lost, along with jobs, money, happiness and other things we might’ve previously taken for granted.

The profound question and uncertainty?

How much TIME do we have? And, that is so over our full lifetime or in the case of athletics, maybe just over a relatively short career-length.

How do we manage TIME? What do we prioritize in our daily lives?

To start off the terrible Year of 2020, on January 1 – nonetheless – NBA Commissioner David Stern passed away. His time had come and so many were deeply effected by his incredible life and sudden death after suffering a brain hemorrhage in mid-December, 2019. During his time on this earth, in the words of longtime NBA front office guru and current President of the Golden State Warriors Rick Welts said Stern and his loyal staff pulled off the Sisyphus Act of all-time by pushing the giant boulder of the NBA uphill in very difficult times. The difference in that period of TIME, unlike Sisyphus, for the most part the rise of the NBA to its global prominence in sport was a joy-ride of hard work with th benefit of watching GREAT basketball, working with terrific people and having fun while we did it.

Stern was a master of TIME and enjoyed his career at the NBA so much that he named his post NBA private investment company, MicroManagement Ventures. It was a wonderful joke made together with his lawyerly friends put it underlined one of his own management mantras. “Everything is a priority.”

Stern’s passing was a sign of the time to come, although none of us quite understood it on January 1, 2020 or even at his service, held at Radio City Music Hall on January 21st. We were about to endure a year of crisis, botched crisis management, and then a full shutdown.

TIME would tell and the world and the sports industry pushed onward.

It started with a terrible game of televised and remotely produced H-O-R-S-E, then a golf tournament, called “The Match,” played in driving rain with Peyton Manning and Tiger Woods joining up with Phil Mickelson and former New England Patriots QB Tom Brady. After he struggled through his round of televised golf, who knew that by 2021, Brady would be hoisting the NFL’s Vince Lombardi Trophy once again?

Like that boulder going uphill, sports began to mark time and move forward, step-by-step.

PGA Tour Golf led the way, then some NASCAR, thoroughbred horse racing, the NFL Draft, and Korean baseball all filled vacant airtime. We coveted live sports action to pass the TIME.

Then, the big time, major sports made plans that took hold. The NBA built its bubble in Orlando, thee NHL situated itself in Toronto and Edmonton in Canada, and Baseball picked about labor issues before they finally opened up “Summer” training. We watched the New York Yankees take batting practice on the YES Network and eventually, on July 23, 2020, it was TIME to Play Ball!

Through the year, we wondered:

  1. How much TIME does Tom Brady really have to perform at such a high level?
  2. There’s the same question for Serena Williams in tennis and it was a question that was answered abruptly for the NBA’s Vince Carter when the shutdown ended his final year.
  3. We were shocked that a terrible helicopter accident took the lives of Kobe Bryant and his young daughter and their friends. TIME had come for Kobe and we only wish we could’ve Turned Back Time to warn him of the deadly disaster awaiting.
  4. The biggest sports story of the year came when the 2020 Summer Olympic Games were postponed. Hopefully, the Games of the XXXII Olympiad will be played in Tokyo this July. Once again, only TIME will tell.

How often have you asked for more time, wished we had more time, checked the time, cursed the time. Hell, we just lost an hour, right?

If you could only stop the clock, take time and get organized, prepared and be able to focus without the day-to-day distractions from such a busy lifestyle, created with smart phone devices, instant messaging, global business, real-time decision making at the speed of light. Try to get TIME on Your Side.

Yet, as TIME was stopped the past year, were any of us able to fully take advantage of the extra time?

Some found more time for family as young adult children returned home. Some were separated from family, especially concerned about the risk of exposing parent and grandparents to the deadly and contagious COVID-19 and now its emerging variants. we finally wised up, to some degree (ahem Texas, Mississippi and some other dim-witted, misguided States), and we began wearing masks.

TIME marched on.

Did we accomplish anything of note?

Some did, some didn’t. Some stayed safe and some of our loved ones passed away.

There is still TIME.

Signs of Spring are in the air and with them, growing optimism of three different and effective vaccines to ward off serious illness from COVID-19. with that and remaining guidelines for safety, State governments are gradually easing restrictions, as the Federal government purchases more and more of the vaccine doses with hopes to have the vast majority of Americans vaccinated by May or June. There’s a nice list of things to look forward to as March and its lioness windy ways turn to April showers and flowers.

Here are a few things to ponder for the near future:

  1. This weekend, Daylight Savings Time begins in most places and an extra hour of much-needed sunlight will inject some “Spring Fever” into our lives.
  2. The baseball bats are cracking line-drives in Florida and Arizona. Opening Day nears in Major League Baseball stadiums across the nation.
  3. March Madness will be staged once again, after the 2020 hiatus.
  4. The NHL and the NBA are pushing forward and their arenas are seeing partial capacity for live spectating.
  5. We’re all hoping Tiger Woods recovers from the terrible auto accident in LA.

It might take a few more months, and hopefully, there will be no more major setbacks (see Italy and Brazil, by the way), but THE TIME HAS COME.

Time Has Come Today to get our lives prepared for a new renaissance and re-opening. We’ll have struggles ahead, physically, mentally, and financially, as so many businesses were forced to close down- some temporarily and some for good. Remember as we go up against this virus in its second full year against us, we’re only as strong as our weakest links, whether those links are in our hometowns, Texas or Brazil.

But, we can and we will bounce back. It’s just a matter of TIME.

Filed Under: Opinion, While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: Opinion, While We're Young

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Page 2

Primary Sidebar

NBA & NHL Sports Desk

Loading RSS Feed
Loading RSS Feed

Trending on Sports Desk

2023 NBA Playoffs 2024 NBA Finals Baltimore Orioles Basketball Hall of Fame BC Eagles Big East Big East Basketball Big East Tournament Boston Bruins Boston Celtics Boston College Boston Red Sox Buffalo Bills Chicago White Sox FedEx Cup Playoffs Houston Astros Kansas City Chiefs LIV Golf MLB MLB Postseason NBA NCAAB NCAAF New England Patriots New York Knicks New York Yankees NFL NFL Thursday Night Football NHL PGA Tour PGA Tour Brunch Red Sox Sports Biz Sports Business St. John's Texas Rangers The Masters The Open TL's Sunday Sports Notes TL Sunday Sports Notes Tokyo Olympics Toronto Blue Jays USA Basketball While We're Young Ideas World Series

Twitter

DigitalSportsDesk 🏆 Follow 27,580 10,841

Boston Sports Commentary 🏀 ⚾️🏒🏈 Pro point of view; Expert analysis of #RedSox #NBA #PGATour #NHLBruins #SportsBiz #NFL & BIG EAST hoops

DigSportsDesk
DigSportsDesk avatar; DigitalSportsDesk 🏆 @DigSportsDesk ·
28 May 1927667681798336856

Tyrese Haliburton must be a plumber or fireman in the offseason. Let's ask JJ or the #NBA players @TheNBPA who voted Haliburton as Most Overrated?

DigSportsDesk avatar; DigitalSportsDesk 🏆 @DigSportsDesk ·
25 May 1926711145349472447

And the fine?

And the fine?
Oh No He Didn't @ohnohedidnt24

Griner to the refs before an interview: "Being fucking better!"

DigSportsDesk avatar; DigitalSportsDesk 🏆 @DigSportsDesk ·
24 May 1926320711842296138

Red Sox announced Game 1 start time is 1:30pm EDT

DigSportsDesk avatar; DigitalSportsDesk 🏆 @DigSportsDesk ·
24 May 1926320491343609881

Fenway Park Grounds Crew makes its move at 12:51pm

Image for the Tweet beginning: Fenway Park Grounds Crew makes Twitter feed video.
DigSportsDesk avatar; DigitalSportsDesk 🏆 @DigSportsDesk ·
24 May 1926315779735040292

Game Delay at #FenwayPark

Image for the Tweet beginning: Game Delay at #FenwayPark Twitter feed video.
Load More...

Facebook

Comments Box SVG iconsUsed for the like, share, comment, and reaction icons
DigitalSportsDesk.com
2 months ago
DigitalSportsDesk.com

Sunday Sports Notebook

... See MoreSee Less

Link thumbnail

TL's Sunday Notes | March 30

open.substack.com

While We're Young (Ideas) and March Go Out Like a Lyons
View on Facebook
· Share
Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Linked In Share by Email
View Comments
  • likes 0
  • Shares: 0
  • Comments: 0

0 CommentsComment on Facebook

DigitalSportsDesk.com
4 months ago
DigitalSportsDesk.com

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/
View on Facebook
· Share
Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Linked In Share by Email
View Comments
  • likes 0
  • Shares: 0
  • Comments: 0

0 CommentsComment on Facebook

DigitalSportsDesk.com
4 months ago
DigitalSportsDesk.com

Groundhog Day!

whileyoungideas.substack.com/p/tls-sunday-sports-notes-feb-2 ... See MoreSee Less

Groundhog Day!

https://whileyoungideas.substack.com/p/tls-sunday-sports-notes-feb-2
View on Facebook
· Share
Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Linked In Share by Email
View Comments
  • likes 0
  • Shares: 0
  • Comments: 0

0 CommentsComment on Facebook

DigitalSportsDesk.com
4 months ago
DigitalSportsDesk.com

Plenty O' Notes and a Look at Boston Pro sports for 2025 - ... See MoreSee Less

Link thumbnail

TL's Sunday Sports Notes | Jan 12 - Digital Sports Desk

digitalsportsdesk.com

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...
View on Facebook
· Share
Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Linked In Share by Email
View Comments
  • likes 0
  • Shares: 0
  • Comments: 0

0 CommentsComment on Facebook

DigitalSportsDesk.com
5 months ago
DigitalSportsDesk.com

The first Sunday Sports Notes of 2025 | Including Some Predictions

... See MoreSee Less

Link thumbnail

TL's Sunday Sports Notes | Jan 5 - Digital Sports Desk

digitalsportsdesk.com

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:
View on Facebook
· Share
Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Linked In Share by Email
View Comments
  • likes 0
  • Shares: 0
  • Comments: 0

0 CommentsComment on Facebook

Load more

The Custom Facebook Feed plugin

Digital Sports Desk

May 2025
S M T W T F S
 123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031
« Apr    

Digital Sports Desk: Copyright © 2022
www.digitalsportsdesk.com