By TERRY LYONS, Editor of Digital Sports Desk
BOSTON – In January, we have the Bowl Games, the CFP national championship and a bunch of wild card and early round NFL Playoff Games to get us through 31 days of cold, damp, raw weather, here in the Northeast. In February, we have the Super Bowl. But those March winds? They bring a ton of sporting events to look forward to each and every year.
From football to ice hockey to college and pro basketball, March is the time of year to get serious. No more mid-winter blues, as Daylight Savings Time brings sunny skies at 6-7:00pm and plenty of entertaining sporting events.
Nothing in sports compares to the frenzy of “March Madness.” It is said to cost the work load efficiency a couple billion dollars every year as office pools with NCAA brackets are cause for research, plotting, guessing or maybe filling out multiple brackets in order to claim the glory and the prizes.
Back when Barack Obama was President of the United States, basketball stalwart Andy Katz (then of ESPN, now of the NCAA media contingent) even got The White House to stop so President Obama could pick his brackets on live television – doing quite well in his predictions.
Unlike the NFL Playoffs, and the void left without a Bowl Game to watch – whether the Pop Tart Bowl or the Super Bowl – sports fans are lost. Left holding an emptiness that can only be filled by next year’s Fantasy Football Drafts and a preaseason game in Canton, Ohio. When March Madness commences late this month, the San Diego Padres and Los Angeles Dodgers will already of the ball bags packed for Seoul, Korea where they’ll open the 2024 MLB season with a pair of “real” games on March 20 and 21, the first regular season MLB games ever played in Korea.
Every other MLB team will play ball starting Thursday, March 28, including the Boston Red Sox opener at Seattle. The Sox home opener will come on April 9 when the reigning AL East champion Baltimore Orioles grace Fenway Park.
Of course, The Masters will be staged in Augusta, Georgia from April 11-14 with the Boston Marathon coming the very next day here in The Commonwealth.
That’s a lot of sporting activities to break through the winter gloom and put some Spring in your step.
HERE NOW, THE NOTES: How about this advice, which could’ve been applied to and utilized by St. John’s head coach Rick Pitino and all his defenders of the flag. Read up on reporter Will Leitch’s thoughts about Social Media hacks, in general …Writes Lietch: “One of the biggest mistakes people make when they feel attacked online is to get defensive, to try to fight back, to post through it. I understand this temptation—when someone says something wrong about you, your first instinct is to correct it—but it is important to resist. The No. 1 rule of online discourse is that you’re not going to convince anyone of anything they’ve already made up their minds about. You can make the most logical, sober-minded, fact-based points, and it will not matter: Simply by engaging them, you’ve already lost. These people are jackals. They are not arguing in good faith: They are just trying to get together with everyone they already agree with so that they can shout you down. You are spitting in the ocean. Any engagement on your part will only encourage them to push harder.”
St. John’s and Pitino met that logic halfway. They did not engage (defensively) heavily on social media but did hold multiple media avails to address Pitino’s Sunday, February 18th meltdown after a loss to Seton Hall at the New York Islanders’ UBS Arena. In the first, Pitino doubled down. In the last, he apologized to his players and the school for his remarks.
But, get this?
Since the horrible loss to The Hall, St John’s has reeled-off three consecutive victories, with one coming at Madison Square Garden against No. 15 Creighton. It was – arguably – St. John’s best performance of the season and it was sandwiched by wins against Big East bottom-feeder Georgetown and another middle of the pack respectables, in an 82-59 scrubbing of Butler at Hinkle Fieldhouse.
While some coaches – the likes of Villanova’s Rollie Massamino or Indiana’s Bobby Knight (RIPs) – would use a complete meltdown to motivate their players, no one can say Pitino’s calling out of individual players by name could’ve motivated the club, now 17-12.
To keep the ball rolling, St. John’s will need to win two more regular season games (vs DePaul and Georgetown) – a task easily accomplished. But, from there, St. John’s will need to carry the momentum of a five-game winning astreak to win games on both Wednesday and Thursday of the annual Big East Conference tournament. Only the four teams playing on Big East Friday will deserve attention for an at-large invitation to the NCAA Tournament.
St. John’s is far, far away, and that’s on the players – not Pitino.
TIDBITS: Back by popular demand is the TIDBITS section of the Sunday Notes, second in popularity to only the “Sure-Fire” investment selections segments written occasionally. Here we go: March comes in like a lion they say, but how about the king of the jungle of sports seminars with the annual MIT Sloan Sports Analytics Conference which began Friday and concluded Saturday out at a packed “Seaport” Convention Center.
It’s 12 days until the Ides of March (March 15). On the ancient Roman calendar, the Ides of March was the deadline for the citizens of the Roman Empire to settle all debts. (Uncle Sam gives us a bonus month to April 15th for U.S. Federal Tax Deadline). The Ides (which defaults to Ideas in this age of spell check) also marks the anniversary of the brutal assassination of Julius Caesar). More pressing than musing about days of the Roman Empire, let’s concentrate on the final regular season games for Conference play in men’s college basketball and the first non-basketball jewel of the great college sports month of March.
Here in Boston, while the vast majority of sports fans are calculating the success of failure of their NCAA Basketball Brackets, ice hockey fans will be treated to the Hockey East postseason tournament with an “everybody’s in” menu.
Hockey East teams, seeded No. 6, 7 and 8 will host seeds No. 11, 10, and 9, respectively, in the Opening Round set for Wednesday, March 13, 2024.
After a reseeding, the top three seeds will host the winners of the Opening Round while No. 4 will host the No. 5 in the Quarterfinals on Saturday, March 16. The Hockey East Men’s Championship Semifinals and Final will return to the TD Garden in on March 22-23rd.
Once the tournament reaches TD Garden the Hockey East semifinalists will play for the Lamoriello Trophy, named in honor of Lou Lamoriello, the first commissioner of Hockey East and a leader in the formation of the conference. The league commissioned the creation of a permanent trophy in 1998, and it was delivered in time for the 1999 championship. Lamoriello served as the Providence College head coach for 15 seasons (1968- 83), guiding the Friars to an overall record of 248-179-13, a winning percentage of .580. Lamoriello is now the head of Hockey Operations and GM for the New York Islanders. He’s a three time Stanley Cup champion as an administrator and inductee of the Hockey Hall of Fame.
A week later – Thursday, March 28 and Saturday, March 30, the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament will be in the “Sweet 16” state, otherwise known as the East Regional final. Four Division I college basketball teams will qualify for Boston and you can pretty much call it a lock that the University of Connecticut Huskies will hold the No. 1 seed in the East and make their way East on I-84 and further East on the Mass Pike to play at Boston’s TD Garden against three other worthy candidates, including a possible East No. 2 seed in either North Carolina or Duke.
LOOKING MUCH FURTHER DOWN the LINE: The USGA announced Shinnecock Hills Golf Club, in Southampton, N.Y. as the host to both the 136th U.S. Open and the 91st U.S. Women’s Open, with the major championships taking place in consecutive weeks in 2036. Yes, right around the corner in 2036!
Quick! How old will you be?
“Few clubs places can match the historic importance of Shinnecock Hills to golf in the United States,” said John Bodenhamer, USGA chief championships officer, in the official news release issued Saturday. “As an organization, we felt that such an iconic venue would be an ideal stage for both our men’s and women’s premier championships. It will offer the perfect opportunity to bring the game’s best to one course and provide fans the chance to watch them compete for a national championship in back-to-back weeks.”