Atlanta Falcons Expecting a Beautiful New $1 Billion Stadium

Arthur Blank, the venerable owner of the Atlanta Falcons, has thoroughly expressed his desire for a new retractable roof stadium as a new home for his franchise. The Georgia Dome, bland as can be, is 20-years-old. In negotiating with the city for a new stadium, he found leverage anywhere he could, including threatening to move the Falcons to LA. Luckily it won’t come to that.

The city of Atlanta, state of Georgia, Georgia World Congress Center & Atlanta Falcons have agreed to build a retractable-roof stadium, with a potential cost of around $1 billion, on the GWCCA campus in time for the 2017 NFL season.

This is great new for the Falcon fans, especially those who don’t live in Atlanta and won’t have to pay for this new stadium (with their tax funds). Ever better news, they’re not planning a cookie cutter Bank of America style stadium. They have some pretty outlandish ideas to incorporate (on top of the retractable roof). This video details some. They include club seats that vibrate during big plays, a lounge for fantasy footballers, and a 100-yard sports bar. It is to be a landmark that people will come from all over to see.

 The Pantheon

Could we see a Chick-fil-A Bowl or a National Championship played in this epic new stadium? I believe so. In fact, I’m confident we’ll see a National Championship played in Atlanta within the next 10-15 years. It is the capital of college football and it just feels right. The college football playoff is already making it appear likely. Atlanta is quickly starting to feel as major as Los Angeles and Chicago. Not just little brother anymore. Good for the Falcons!

If you enjoyed this post, please click the Facebook “Like” button on the right sidebar. You can share your opinions in the comment section below or by tweeting to @Ryan_Kantor. Thanks for reading!

Brad Brownell Gives Harsh, Honest Interview

Clemson’s basketball season was obviously a huge disappointment. Finishing at 13-18 it was the Tigers’ worst season in nearly a decade. They hadn’t been below .500 since Oliver Purnell’s first season in 2003-04. Injuries, youth (only two upperclassmen), and a lack of leadership from the senior class were big reasons for the failure.

Head Coach, Brad Brownell, offered some harsh, honest wisdom in his season wrap-up interview. The quotes are absolute gold.

One of the toughest excerpts was directed right at the seniors:

Some guys got to play more minutes than they should play, or they got to stay out there when they were making mistakes because there weren’t enough guys. Because Milton and Devin were clearly better than our younger post players they probably got to play through some things where if there was another guy that had been older and was very productive, you could take one of them out, like a Bobo (Catalin Baciu). There were times they felt like they were better, and it was harder for me to coach them the way they need to be coached all the time, which sometimes is to take them out.

That’s not even the harshest bit. Be sure to check out my full article on what I thought was an extremely encouraging season wrap interview here, or watch the whole interview below.

If you enjoyed this post, please click the Facebook “Like” button on the right sidebar. You can share your opinions in the comment section below or by tweeting to @Ryan_Kantor. Thanks for reading!

2013 MLB Division Champion Predictions

Each of the last few years I’ve offered my predictions of which clubs will become the eventual division champions. I haven’t been that accurate.

This year, I decided take a more in-depth approach. Below you’ll see my selections for each division’s champion along with a predicted Wild Card matchup for each league. My fellow writers at Reading Between The Seams, a Yardbarker site, and I have written full in-depth previews of each division complete with expected line-ups and rotation (links below). This is the year I get it all right.

I’ve typically just posted my picks to my fantasy baseball league message boards and had everyone similarly post their own in the thread, but this seems so much more official. You can leave your picks in the comments below and we’ll see where we stand in seven months. 

American League

East: Toronto Blue Jays (My Full Preview)

Central: Chicago White Sox (Full Preview by Greg Miller)

West: Los Angeles Angels (My Full Preview)

Wild Card Matchup: New York Yankees vs. Texas Rangers

National League

East: Atlanta Braves (My Full Preview)

Central: Cincinnati Reds (Full Preview by Greg Miller)

West: Los Angeles Dodgers (Full Preview by Gavin Tremblay)

Wild Card Matchup: Washington Nationals vs. San Francisco Giants

The toughest picks for me were who would win the NL East and which team between St. Louis, San Francisco, and the NL East runner-up would miss the playoffs all together. I feel somewhat confident in picking the Blue Jays to win their division now that Granderson is out for all of April with a broken forearm, but really struggled with the American League Central and who would get left out between the AL Central runner-up, New York, and Texas. I think my gutsiest picks were selecting the Orioles, a 2012 playoff team that didn’t lose much over the offseason to finish in 5th (see full preview) as well as leaving the AL Champion Tigers out of the postseason.

Who am I unjustifiably leaving out of the playoff picture? Please use the comments section to submit your own picks. Let the banter begin.

If you enjoyed this post, please click the Facebook “Like” button on the right sidebar. You can share your opinions in the comment section below or by tweeting to @Ryan_Kantor. Thanks for reading!

Mayor Kevin Johnson Wants To Spend Non-Existent Money on a Bad Team

You may have heard by now that the Charlotte Bobcats are thinking about reclaiming their old identity as the Hornets and the Sacramento Kings are on the verge of relocating to Seattle where they’d relaunch the Seattle Supersonics brand. Both make for nostalgic and welcome news in my book, but former NBA player and current Mayor of Sacramento, Kevin Johnson, doesn’t want to see his city’s only professional sports team skip town, an understandable sentiment. After all, where will all the corrupt politicians go to get schmoozed by big donors and lobbyists?

The Sacramento city council voted 7-2 to continue their commitment to finding a public-private partnership in build a new arena. That doesn’t mean much until there is a hard dollar figure behind it, but in theory it indicates that the city will chip in for a new arena. The big problem is that Sacramento County, not to point and laugh, but they’ve put themselves in a ridiculous bind. The county has a $181 million shortfall (not sure about the recency of that number, but whopping regardless). More amazingly, Sacramento isn’t even that big of a city with less than half a million residents. The county has about 1.4 million residents.

California just hiked their sales tax so now residents pay between 7.5%-10% depending on the locality. The state income tax is over 13% for high-income Californians. The revenue side of their equal is maxed out. They’re kaput. How can the NBA expect them to chip in for a new arena? Seattle, while far from a bastion of prudent fiscal policy, has a much more solid budget and a bigger population.

Amazon: Hip to be square

In fact, I recently heard that if the Sacramento Kings moved, it would leave Sacramento as the biggest city without a major professional sports team, but consider this: San Diego, Jacksonville, Seattle, Nashville, Louisville, Las Vegas, Albuquerque, and Fresno all have larger populations and no NBA teams. Some of them don’t have any professional sports teams, but I suppose the pro-Sacramento statistics may have been comparing metro areas.

The Kings are the fourth best NBA team in California. Among those teams they are in the smallest city. After the Warriors jump across the bay into their new PRIVATELY funded arena, the Kings will also have worst arena among those teams. There are bigger cities with better financial situations that will welcome an NBA franchise. The Kings have only been in Sacramento since 1985 when they moved from Kansas City, so it’s not even their original home. At this point it should just be a matter of what the owners want. Sacramento cannot pose a logical argument as to why they deserve the Kings. They blew it when they dried up the city coffers… Go Lakers!

If you enjoyed this post, please click the Facebook “Like” button on the right sidebar. You can share your opinions in the comment section below or by tweeting to @Ryan_Kantor. Thanks for reading!

 

How Do Some Universities Succeed in Their ‘Other’ Sports?

I have been very frustrated with Clemson basketball this season. When I was a student, sell-outs were assumed and we never missed the tournament. Now we can’t even fill Littlejohn for games against Georgia Tech. It’s mind-boggling, because even when our now glorious football program sunk to 6-7, butts were still in seats. So I asked our college athletics expert to weight in on how some schools can find success in their “other” sports while most of us are left to enjoy success in only one major program. Enjoy the guest post below, and please leave your thoughts in the comment section below.

In the world of major college athletics many schools are known for only one specific sport. You have your football schools, your basketball schools, and in some cases even Women’s equestrian schools (I’m looking at you South Carolina). No matter where you go, there are schools that are known more for one sport than the others, and this often comes at the expense of the others. Despite this trend, a number of schools manage to find success in those “other” sports. I wanted to explore this idea, to see why some schools can excel at those “other” sports that they are not traditionally known for, while most universities are confined to the one sport that has always defined them.

To discuss and grasp this topic fully you must first understand one simple rule: every school has a favorite sport. This seems silly to say as it is obvious to most, however when delving further into the idea of why some schools do not excel in the sport they do not favor the rule will reiterated and some will be inclined to argue that the schools respect their sports equally. Wrong! No matter what anyone wants to say, there is always a sport that is seated atop a pedestal in the school’s and fans’ collective eyes. Once we all accept this truth we can begin to delve deeper into the topic.

When we think about certain sport schools we typically think in terms of “basketball schools” and “football schools.” How this comes to be at a school has to do with some combination of geography and whatever sport achieved success earlier. For example:  Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Texas, Oklahoma, Michigan, and Ohio State are all “football schools” due to both their locations and history. The SEC schools and the two Big XII programs are all located in a part of the country that worships college football and thus tend to focus more on their football programs. Even Michigan and Ohio State are in parts of the country that prefer football, not to mention their history of success. The same can be said of the “basketball schools”: Kentucky, Duke, North Carolina, Kansas, and Syracuse.

The question now is how do some of these schools excel at both sports while others fail? To answer this we will look at the success stories as well as the failures.

There are two programs that stand out as successes over the past decade plus: Florida and Ohio State. Both of these programs are

Click here to check out recommended reading

synonymous with football yet they have both achieved greatness in basketball as well. The Buckeyes tout multiple national championships in football as well as 1960 national title in hoops. Meanwhile the Gators have been one of the more successful programs in the country winning three national titles in football and back-to-back titles in basketball all in the last 17 years. Not only have both of these programs been good in the past, but they continue to be in the hunt every December and March. How do they do it? There simply is not a set formula for success in athletics because there are so many variables in play, but there is a loose blueprint that schools follow in hopes of crossing the chasm and excelling in several sports. It all starts with a strong Athletic Director. To become a school that is willing to focus beyond its prized sport, the AD must be willing to swim upstream. This is what both UF and Ohio State have in Jeremy Foley and Gene Smith, the latter’s recent NCAA issues aside. Meanwhile schools that have failed at success on both the gridiron and hardwood such as Kentucky and Kansas lack these great leaders. With all due respect to Mitch Barnhart and Sheahon Zenger, neither man is at the level of a Jeremy Foley. Both have recently made strides in making their football counterparts more successful with the hiring of Mark Stoops and Charlie Weis; however to this point neither has achieved success in their lesser sport.

From there these AD’s must find boosters that are willing to fund and push for more success in the “other” sport. This is a difficult task in many instances as most boosters are typically as invested in their favorite sport as most of the fan base. Despite the difficulty this is an essential part of the process. To succeed in the less celebrated sport, there must first be some attention paid to it along with some help given. Once the other sport has received the help it needs to catch up to its bigger sibling sport, then it is ready to make the next step.

That next step is hiring the right coach. This step includes an element which cannot be overstated: the school needs to get a little lucky. There are a multitude of coaches out there and many seem like fits for the position, but the AD must find once that he believes is willing to take the extra steps necessary to building a successful program. This can be seen with coaches Billy Donovan and Thad Matta. Both coaches had a lot of great attributes that made them right for the job, but so too did many other coaches vying for their positions. What separated them from their competition were their shared characteristics with their AD’s. Both coaches have gelled well with their employer and fit in. This, coupled with a touch of luck, is what has taken them to their great heights. It is not to discount these coaches’ abilities as they are both at the top of their profession, merely just to reinforce the idea that luck does indeed play a role. We need only look at Kentucky and Kansas to prove this. UK and KU have made “splashes” in their hiring in the past with coaches like Guy Morris and Turner Gill, yet neither achieved marketable success. Morris peaked at a bowl berth or two and Gill was an absolute crash and burn. Luck, and according to them, their schools were simply not on their side.

Finally, to be able to succeed in both sports there needs to be a family atmosphere at the schools. This seems like a foolish sentiment, but in my years being around both successful and not-so-successful athletic departments, I have found this to be a key. If a school’s coaches and sports are competitive with one another than the priority sport will eventually smother and suffocate the other sports. If the sports fight for control and do not embrace each other, the smaller sports will never get a chance to thrive. However a school that has coaches and sports that not only respect one another, but also care for each other, has the best chance at success across the board. By having a vested interest in the other coaches and sports the program will gel together better and in turn give each other the best chance to succeed.

So what truly separates Florida from Kentucky and Ohio State from Kansas? The Gators and Buckeyes have strong AD’s, coaches, boosters, and family like bonds. The Cats and Jayhawks are more focused on excelling in their established sports. This is not meant only as a look into why these programs are the way they are but also to serve as a warning to other schools that are teetering on becoming a one trick pony. Schools like Clemson, Florida State, and Texas that all have a strong football identity and have had past basketball success yet continue to backslide on the court. All three schools have the ingredients to get back to being success stories it just takes a new direction from a strong leader and fan base to do so. In the end, no matter the success on the smaller sport; it will always be the smaller sport. The big sibling will always reign supreme, draw the most attention, and garner the most support. However, living in the shadow now is not reason to strive to succeed and maybe become the big kid on the block one day.

If you enjoyed this post, please click the Facebook “Like” button on the right sidebar. You can share your opinions in the comment section below or by tweeting to @Ryan_Kantor. Thanks for reading!

ESPNU Showcasing Softball Instead of National Signing Day? Clemson Manages Another Top 15 Recruiting Class

Wednesday, January 6th was college football’s National Signing Day. Practically a national holiday, signing day can be as exciting as Christmas morning for college football fans. After all it’s the day we find out who they will be watching for the next four years. So, as soon as morning struck I jumped onto ESPNU.com, but rather than in-depth coverage of the industry’s big topic for the day I find this:

ESPNU

Nothing against softball, but give me a break. After all I have to hear about how the SEC invented football you don’t even offer the decency of a good recruiting day primer? God knows they had ESPNU microphones at every announcement. It seems like ESPN and ESPN2 generate so much revenue that they have been able to make this smaller niche network just to cover “non-revenue” sports for the express purpose of making themselves feel really good about themselves. “Look at us. We make these athletes feel so good even when nobody else goes to their games.” Give me a break! Also, notice to peculiar headline. Are they poking fun at her weight there? If so, GUTLESS! C’mon ESPNU!

Anyway, while on the topic, it seems like Clemson pulled in quite the recruiting class by the end of the day. With National Title aspirations it’s hard not to compare the Tigers’ class to Alabama, Notre Dame, and the like and forget the consistency and depth Coach Swinney has brought to the program. I believe this the first time… ever?… that we’ve turned in back-to-back-to-back top 15 recruiting classes (Can someone confirm?). Carl Lawson and Montravius Adams both chosing Auburn over Clemson stung, but we already had some top-notch recruits on the defensive-line (Shaq Lawson, Ebenezer Okendeko) and added Scott Pagano from Hawaii and Dana Rogers, a fellow North Carolinian to the mix (wonder if he’s excited about our tax changes too… probably not). It really wasn’t until late in the day that the class came together though.

Clemson getting an LOI from ESPN’s #4 player and #2 cornerback, Mackensie Alexander, salvaged the class for me. No doubt it was packed with quality players before his signing, but it needed a gem and Alexander provides just that. It sounds like he’ll be able to come in and make an impact immediately.

In last announcement of the day for the Tigers, Clemson signed Tyrone Crowder, a premier offensive lineman, putting this class over-the-top. Clemson fans are always complaining about recruiting and talent on the O-line and it was my biggest concern heading into 2012. I’m glad we were able to find some “SEC-caliber” talent to put in the trenches. Finally, I’d be remiss to not mention linebacker Ben Boulware (ESPN #78) merely because he committed early. We appreciate that and I think he’ll become a fan favorite. This class has 15 ESPN four-star recruits. I can’t remember the last time we had so many. Labor Day weekend can’t come soon enough. What do you think of Clemson’s 2013 recruiting cycle? Impressed? Disappointed? Please leave your comments in the section below. I enjoy hearing from you.

If you enjoyed this post, please click the Facebook “Like” button on the right sidebar. You can share your opinions in the comment section below or by tweeting to @Ryan_Kantor. Thanks for reading!

Why It's Cool To Be a Conservative

February’s book of the month comes from Harvard Graduate, Ms. A.J. Delgado. In it she explains why it’s cool to be a conservative and why it’s the true ideology of rebels and punk rockers. Only available on Kindle.

In-Depth Inside Look At College Football Recruiting

This recruiting season has been packed with even more craziness than usual, and Clemson has experienced more than their fair share of the ups and downs it entails. The nation’s #1 recruit, Robert Nkemdiche of Loganville, GA, originally committed to Clemson, only to decommit and indicate Ole Miss as his new leader. Now LSU joins the hunt and he’ll take a visit to see what the Gators have to offer. Ryan Jenkins, a wide receiver from Marietta, was committed to the Tigers where his brother is a defensive back, but flipped to Tennessee, his father’s alma mater. Then of course we experienced the turbulent ride of the #5 wide receiver in the nation, Demarcus Robinson, who ended up with Florida, but didn’t make his decision clear until he had practically finished moving in to his Gainesville, FL dorm room.

With all that going on, I asked our SEC and college football expert to weigh in, not on any specific player, but his broader experience with the recruiting process over the years. His unique perspective as a high school athlete and high school football coach allows him to bring to light some items, that to outsiders like myself, are rather shocking. Please note that his stories and insights are not specific to any one player unless indicated as such.

This inside look is something you can’t get from your typical recruiting update, and I have to give a huge thanks to Big Fudge for opening up. I hope you enjoy!

With all due respect to the weather, recruiting may be the most unpredictable thing in this world. To predict and understand the thinking of 17 and 18-year-old high schoolers is a crapshoot at best. Or is it?

As a former athlete, albeit a very average one, I did have my fair share of recruitment. This, coupled with my time coaching football, are what I will use as reference points when exploring the thought process of recruits. We will make an effort to understand what factors pull athletes to their schools, focusing specifically on college football recruiting.

The first factor to remember about recruits coming out of high school is that, like any 17 or 18-year-old, they love attention. This is not inherently a bad thing, as they have accomplished plenty in their young lives athletically–and hopefully academically–that would warrant the appreciation they are receiving from colleges, and they should be able to enjoy it. It is this attention they receive that will give them early ideas of where they would like to commit. They will always have a fondness for the first program that shows them interest and therefore you usually see that school in the running to the end.

However this attention is a double-edged sword. If you give a lot of it early on and less at other points during the recruitment cycle, the athlete may become frustrated after having grown accustomed to the initial level of contact. This attention factor is a very important one as the types of attention must be adjusted and changed regularly during recruitment, otherwise a school could fall victim to another flaw possessed by teenagers, they get bored easily.

Eventually the “shine” of the attention from the same schools fades, and new schools become the primary focus, because their message is new and different. This is often seen with late-blooming prospects that have been given attention by smaller programs for years and once they develop further and reach a higher level of talent the big boys come calling. The wonderful attention of the small programs becomes stale and the big school has fresh and flashy appreciation to be paid to the athlete. Needless to say it is only rational for a teenager to be enamored with this new attention and unless the original schools can change-up their messaging they may be left behind.

I have personally seen this many times in my coaching career. I had a star running back that was undersized to say the least going into his senior year. He had only three offers at this point and only one of these was a division one program. He went on to grow about four inches and put on twenty-five pounds while being the best player on the team. By week four of the season, seemingly every school knew of him. By the end of his recruitment he was between his first division one offer and three major programs. He chose that first school to offer him and when I asked him what made him choose this program he answered they gave him the most attention and they were first to believe in him. This school did not let up on him and when the bigger schools offered they turned up the heat even more. All of this attention and care paid to athletes is a huge part of recruiting but it must be handled carefully.

The next factors that pull recruits are their preconceived notions and their openness to new ideas. Growing up in the south, I am no stranger to being raised on a certain team or university. I grew up knowing my school was best and all others were just hoping to be us. I knew that the Big 10 was slow, the Big East shouldn’t have a BCS tie in, the SEC was overly arrogant, the ACC was soft, the Big 12 only had three teams worth anything (OU, UT, and back then Nebraska), and the Pac then 10 now 12 didn’t understand that defense was part of the game. Many of these up and coming prospects are also filled with these beliefs and have favorite schools. Whether or not the parents have attended a school or even gone to college doesn’t come into play as much as many think. It is only a factor in as much as the school is a part of the athletes upbringing. Athletes with parents that never went to college still have their teams, but they may just not have the same loyalty to that school due to lesser exposure and connection.

To use myself as an example, I was only offered by 10 schools coming out of high school and only two of those were division one programs. One of the programs was a very good school with great academics but they did not offer an athletic scholarship only a preferred walk-on status with partial academic scholarships to help with the lofty tuition price tag. The other program was a good school, but it had the misfortune of being a program that I knew a lot about and had distaste for due to my college football upbringing. Needless to say I did not give that school the time of day. In the end I am a rare sort of fool that passed up all of the chances laid before me and enrolled in college just to be a student. Looking back now, the school that I would not consider may have been the best opportunity for me, but my preconceived notions of it would not allow me to truly see the potential in it. This is something that recruits often enter the process with. It’s the athlete’s ability to be open to new ideas and schools that will determine how much these beliefs will factor in their decision.

The intangibles of each school are another big factor weighing on these young minds. Each school is unique and therefore brings different things to the table for each recruit. Many fans wonder why a recruit would choose to go to school X over their school, assuming the school itself is the determining factor, and the answer is never simple nor the same as different recruits are looking for different things. Let’s take a look at five different schools that are very successful and each have had excellent recruiting classes in the past few years: Alabama, Clemson, Florida, Ohio State, and Southern California.

Why would a recruit choose one of these schools, disregarding geography, over another? Each school has features that make it extremely attractive to recruits. Alabama has a history, both ancient and recent, of winning championships and plays in the SEC. Clemson has a unique campus and “family” atmosphere, this is what many recruits have been quoted as saying about the program throughout the years. Florida has the location, SEC, and facilities. Ohio State has tradition and name recognition in the North, and USC has the LA lifestyle. Each school has something that appeals to certain recruits and when an athlete is looking at schools some of these characteristics will speak louder to them than others. Larger, more prominent programs have more to offer than their smaller counter parts in terms of exposure and other intangibles as well. What is important to them is usually sculpted by their upbringing and those that are around them on a daily basis.

This brings us to the most important factor in recruiting, the decision makers. Believe it or not most 17 and 18 year olds are not ready to make completely independent decisions on their own, and they often look to a certain person to guide them in the right direction for their future. This person is different for every recruit and coaches are constantly scrambling to find that person. For me my decision maker was my father (who was happy in the end that I chose not to play college football) and I would look to him to gauge how interested in a school I should be and where I would fit the best. In many cases it is a parent or relative or maybe even a close friend that helps makes this decision–which is not necessarily unhealthy.

It’s when there is an outside person that has undue influence on this decision that a problem arises. Unfortunately this happens far too often in recruiting, and it is not talked about in the open as much as it should be. There have been many instances where high school coaches hold something over a recruit to be able to steer him to the school of the coach’s choice. Often times this is with the promise of a job for the coach if he delivers the recruit. Other times it is just to help out the coach’s favorite school. I have witnessed this first hand both when playing and coaching. I have had a coach I played for threaten to fail an athlete if he did not commit to the coach’s school at which he was promised a job. I have even seen a coach tell a player that he would not start a game if he did not consider his alma mater more in his recruitment. Regardless of who is pulling the strings and whether or not it is beneficial for the athlete, the decision makers are a key factor in the thought process of a recruit.

Even with a better understanding of all of the factors that go into recruiting, no one can still truly predict what an 18-year-old athlete will do. The amount of attention schools send the way of recruits and their preconceived notions and open-mindedness towards that attention is critical. Each school’s intangibles and the decision makers in the recruits’ lives also weigh heavily on their minds. It’s just a guess as to which of these factors makes the biggest impact and dictates decisions. In the end, we enjoy recruiting for its roller coaster like ride, and that won’t change.

However when you wonder why your school just couldn’t flip that big time recruit maybe you can now begin to understand the factors at play and look at the process in a different light. Happy recruiting season!

Thank you Big Fudge for this informative, revealing, and somewhat shocking look into the recruiting process. It certainly gave me a peer into the process and deepened my understanding. I hope it had the same impact on our readers. 

If you enjoyed this post, please click the Facebook “Like” button on the right sidebar. You can share your opinions in the comment section below or by tweeting to @Ryan_Kantor. Thanks for reading!

The Steroid Double Standard – The NFL and NCAA Test Positive

As I’m sure you’ve heard by now, news broke that a clinic in Miami has records showing the distribution of performance enhancing drugs to some very notable MLB stars. If true, this is very unfortunate news, and it brings this admittedly tired topic back to the forefront (but please don’t stop reading just because it’s a retread of a conversation). Right when you think baseball has cleaned up the game, this story breaks and allegedly involves a former Cy Young Award winner, Bartolo Colon, and the 2003, 2005, and 2007 AL MVP Alex Rodriguez. The latest emerging details indicate that Anthony Bosch who ran the Biogenesis of America clinic in Coral Gables, South Florida not only supplied several baseball players with PEDs, he directly injected Yankees’ slugger, Alex Rodriguez.

A-Rod has hired an attorney and is fighting to clear his name. While I badly want to believe his denial, his history of unscrupulous behavior and previous PED admission make it impossible for even I–his most ardent defender–to continue denying the media’s A-Rod Hate-A-Thon.

Rather than delve into this specific news story, I would like to illuminate the big fat steroid double standard that these revelations will only perpetuate: When you think steroids you think baseball. You think Barry Bonds. You think Manny Ramirez, and certainly Alex Rodriguez, but maybe you shouldn’t.

Back in 2006, Shawn Merriman was suspended four games after a drug test indicated he used steroids. Merriman was a NFL Pro Bowler and star defensive end who literally used steroids to hit people harder. Not to hit a ball harder, but literally to smash into other men with more force. His former San Diego Charger teammate, Luis Castillo also got busted for steroids. These aren’t isolated incidents. Julius Peppers (the same one that cheated academically at Chapel Hill) received one of the NFL’s wimpy four-game suspensions after a positive test. Dwayne Bowe, Deuce McAllister, Charles Grant and many more have been suspended. How the NFL keeps this on the down low (at least relative to baseball) is impressive.

Just this year, Ray Lewis tore his triceps, a severe injury with a six month recovery time … only he returned to action a little more than two months later. During the third month of his “recovery,” he made 17 tackles in a double-overtime playoff game in Denver. In 13-degree weather. At age 37. (Insert accusations here as you please.)

There is a steroid double standard among the media (and congress), as they pour over the topic of steroids in baseball without so much as a peep about their role in a sport in which there is so much incentive to use them and where they serve not only to harm the users, but to injure other players who they jump on, stiff arm, and otherwise smash into.

NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell continues his crusade for player safety focusing primarily on tweaks or even major changes to the sport itself. This effort was prompted by accounts of players so banged up at the conclusion of their NFL career that they could hardly function. It includes lawsuits over the matter and is largely being pushed by the players’ union. Conversely, The NFL’s steroid problem has no ignition… No home run record suspiciously broken by a 34-year-old and no lawsuit by the family of a deceased star (the family of the late Junior Seau has a wrongful death suit against the NFL) to spark it into action. Nonetheless, if Roger Goodell truly cares about player safety, tackling the steroid issue is imperative. Doing nothing about steroids in football and trying to make the game safer is like claiming to fix America’s debt problem without reforming entitlement spending.

College football is an even dirtier playground, despite my love for it. It’s been widely circulated that upon Nick Saban’s arrival at Alabama quite a few players were using steroids. Rather then punish them at the time, Saban instituted a no tolerance policy and told all players they would be tested again in six months and violators would immediately be kicked off the team. Just like that, the problem was solved. While he may have cleaned up his own program, the NCAA has essentially no steroid enforcement whatsoever and there is a great deal of reason to believe its use in the college ranks is rampant. To be sure, the NCAA does hound its players for the most unimportant infractions such as a “coach providing lodging,” but to neglect something this big makes me wonder about their priorities.

Top tweeter, @MDouty, explained his apathy to the revelation that Ray Lewis possibly used deer antler spray, which is banned by the NFL, during his recovery from torn triceps.

While I can’t comment on the effectiveness or safety of deer antler spray specifically, I would point out that it’s not the effectiveness of the drug that makes it illegal (e.g., whey protein is very effective, but is safe and I would highly recommend it), rather it is the danger many PEDs present. While deer antler spray may be no big deal, the NFL and to an even larger extent the NCAA’s failure to get a handle on this issue endangers the athletes and the youth that look up to them.

The NFL’s drive towards safety and the NCAA’s incessant investigations, fraudulent they may be, seem nitpicky at best and hypocritical at worst. Their disinterest in solving the steroid problems before it explodes as it did in baseball is a ticking time bomb. I sincerely hope they do something about it, but in 2, 5, or 10 years I will go back to this post to say, “I told you so. Steroids aren’t a baseball thing.”

If you enjoyed this post, please click the Facebook “Like” button on the right sidebar. You can share your opinions in the comment section below or by tweeting to @Ryan_Kantor. Thanks for reading!

Upton Brothers Unite in Atlanta – Best Outfield East of LA?

The Atlanta Braves join the Los Angeles Angels and Toronto Blue Jays as teams that made a splash this offseason. After signing B.J. Upton to a 5-year $38.5 million contract, the Braves have completed a trade to bring his uber-talented younger brother to town. Brothers, B.J. and Justin Upton, will join Jason Heyward to compose the strongest outfield East of Los Angeles (the Angels still hold claim to the best group in baseball with Hamilton, Trout, V. Wells, and Trumbo while the cross-town Dodgers boast Kemp, Crawford, and Ethier). Additionally, the Braves received Chris Johnson to cover third base, as former all-star, Martin Prado, heads to Arizona with a package of prospects. The Braves were not expected to be able to re-sign Prado after 2013.

Entering this offseason, the Braves faced starting the year with a hole at LF or 3B–wherever Prado did not start. This trade somewhat plugs the whole while also providing the club with a potential 30+ HR slugger. Coming off a season in which the new two Wild Card format made them the first team to ever miss the divisional series after ending the season as the #1 Wild Card, this deal comes as welcome news.  With franchise cornerstone, Chipper Jones, retired, it also creates an obvious advertising plan to replace the “Last chance to see Chipper” mantra.

I have long wanted to see the Upton brothers play together, and it’s great that they’ll now have that opportunity. Stories like this just seem so wholesome and American when they happen in baseball. Beyond that, the Braves have a chance to be extremely competitive. Their rotation of Medlen, Hudson, Minor, Maholm, Beachy, and Teheran doesn’t quite stack up to the Nationals’, however their hitting will be formidable and they are my very early pick to claim the division (official picks to come). Justin Upton only had 17 home runs last season, after 31 in 2011. The success of he and his brother will likely be the biggest factor in Atlanta’s 2013 charge, along with continued success from Medlen.

Kudos Braves fans! You have a lot more to look forward to than I do, as my Yankees get older and the Braves get better.

As always, please subscribe to this blog by clicking the “Follow” button at the top of the right sidebar. If you don’t have a WordPress account, you’ll have to enter your email address. You can share your opinions in the comment section below or by tweeting to @Ryan_Kantor. Thanks for reading!

Chris Christie Extinguishes Chances to Become GOP Leader

It wasn’t but a year ago that Republicans across the nation were singing the praises of NJ Governor, Chris Christie. He had just fought entrenched NJ government employees in a liberal state to fix their pension system. He fought the NJ Teacher’s Union and others in the state to bring the state’s finances back within reason. He said:

“The Teacher’s Union is about the accumulation and exercise of raw power.”

His outspokenness against perceived wrongdoers in his state became nationally known and made him a beloved figure among the GOP–and even many moderates.

Unfortunately, that has unraveled. He was the keynote speaker at the GOP Convention that introduced Romney as the nominee. Personally, I thought his speech was very good, but many felt it was too self-centered and didn’t do enough to boost Romney.

Then came the “super storm,” Hurricane Sandy, in his home state. His state was decimated, and when Obama came for photo ops, Christie earned goodwill among the generally Obama-friendly populace of NJ by praising the President and taking loads of amicable photos with him. Many say Sandy stole Romney’s momentum and Christie’s appearances with Obama were a part of that.

Finally on Thursday (1/17/13), Gov. Christie slammed the NRA. They ran an ad calling Obama a hypocrite for rejecting the notion that schools should consider armed guards, while his children have armed guards at school. Christie called the ad “reprehensible,” and said the NRA has lost some credibility. It is below for your viewing.

Gov. Christie is clearly positioning himself to fend off a future Democratic challenger for the Governor’s seat–namely Cory Booker–at the expense of paving the way for a 2016 Presidential run, and that’s his prerogative. It seems that Marco Rubio, Rand Paul, and Bobby Jindal are all eyeing 2016, and they’re stronger candidates anyway. For Gov. Christie, it’ll take a while for Republicans to forget these missteps, just as it took the GOP faithful years to forget forgive Mitt Romney’s liberal moves and statements as the governor of a very blue state. At this point, I don’t even expect him to run in 2016. Ann Coulter will be distraught.

As always, please subscribe to this blog by clicking the “Follow” button at the top of the right sidebar. If you don’t have a WordPress account, you’ll have to enter your email address. You can share your opinions in the comment section below or by tweeting to @Ryan_Kantor. Thanks for reading!