Month: February 2013 (Page 2 of 2)

A Night At The Arena

We were invited to attend Monday’s Indiana Pacers – Chicago Bulls game by friends. They got tickets from a business associate that had messed up an important transaction at an especially inopportune time. Thus, we enjoyed a fine NBA game from the comfort of row six behind the Pacers bench. Row one is the seats that are on the court, equally close to the action as the bench. Rows two and three are actually the aisle behind the bench. Which makes row six just three rows off the floor. These were great seats.

As I said, it was a fine game recalling the good-old days of the NBA when teams routinely scored over 100 points. The Pacers were up 60-54 at halftime. They won 111-101. The Pacers rarely score that much, and the Bulls being one of the best defensive teams in the NBA made it even more unlikely. It was a good night to go.

We were directly behind the Pacers bench, so I spent a lot of the game geeking out. I stared down the coaches trying to hear their comments. I watched the players on the bench and how they interacted. During timeouts I paid attention to who was wandering around, staring into space (Gerald Green), who was encouraging the guys on the court and sitting next to the coaches (Jeff Pendergraph) and who was grinding his teeth, veins popping out, face turning red after his shitty turn on the court (Tyler Hansbrough).

When the action was in front of us, I tried to not just watch the ball, but pick out a part of the court, or a specific player, and keep my eyes there for the entire play. The amount of motion, the physical contact, the speed on even a routine play is ridiculous. There was 7’2″ Roy Hibbert wrestling with the bull-like Carlos Boozer in the post. There was 5’9″ Nate Robinson ducking into traffic, getting lost, and spinning out to space to get a shot off. There was Marco Belinelli using his Euro game to get free and drill jumpers. There was the ferocity of Lance Stevenson, a freakish player who is just now learning how to harness his physical abilities within a team concept. There was the grizzled veteran David West working his ass off on every play, always doing the fundamentally correct thing. And there was the budding superstar Paul George flicking between-his-legs, across-the-lane passes in traffic, throwing down a reverse alley-oop, and hitting a huge three late to snuff the final Bulls rally.

Man, it was fun to watch. It’s cliche to say that games of any kind are incredibly different on TV than up close and in person. But it’s also absolutely true. The speed and size of these plays isn’t something your brain can properly process on a TV screen. I’m not a huge fan of the NBA. But seeing these guys up close is a reminder than in a sports world filled with fantastic athletes, NBA players are probably the apex of that select group.

Some stray observations from court side.

  • The Bulls were missing a couple key players, and they were players I would have loved to have seen. Former KU great Kirk Hinrich is out with an elbow injury. I didn’t see him behind the Bulls bench. The always-entertaining Joakim Noah was also out, and wearing some funky clothes. During timeouts he would wander out and work the refs. It seems the NBA did not approve of his outfit.
  • It was interesting to watch the third, off-mic, man for the Pacers radio team. He spent most of the game monitoring Twitter and reading NBA news sites on his iPad. I think I could handle his job.
  • We could almost hear conversations on the court. It was tantalizing to hear a player or coach yelling at a referee but not hear the reply. Or watch a player explaining a previous play to coach Frank Vogel as he checked out. We could hear players calling out defensive switches, though, which probably only interested me.
  • There were no local celebrities in our section. There was a woman we thought might be a player’s significant other. But she was just a normal nice looking woman with a baby, not a super model or anything. On our way out Clark Kellogg was sitting a few rows behind us chatting up some folks. I don’t know if the club VP and CBS announcer was sitting that close to us the entire game, or if he just came down after it went final.
  • We debated what the grossest thing players did with their mouthpieces was. The Pacers had a plastic box at the scorer’s table with individual cases for each mouthpiece. I assume they were labeled, but there’s always the chance you pick up the wrong one. We noticed a couple Bulls just tucking them into their compression shorts when they came out of the game. I think that second one is the winner for grossest.

So it was a really fun night. The Pacers are surprisingly good this year. The win put them back into a tie for first with the Bulls and came on the heels of their beatdown of the Miami Heat last Friday. And this has all been done without Danny Granger, who is expected back from an injury around the All-Star break. It will be interesting to see how he fits in now that Paul George has clearly become the team’s alpha dog.

I don’t know that the city is completely in love with the team again, but most nights they have nice crowds and the team hasn’t lost a home game since mid-December. They’re not good enough to win a playoff series against Miami, but they’ve finally emerged from the post-brawl funk where they were always in the 7-8-9-10 range in the Eastern Conference.

Pretty Super

Some delayed, assorted thoughts from what was a pretty super Super Bowl.

I struggled with which team to pull for. I much prefer John Harbaugh to Jim. But the Ravens have Ray Lewis. I admire Joe Flacco but am in awe of Colin Kaepernick. San Francisco is one of my favorite places in the world. But The Wire took place in Baltimore. So many factors. In the end I went with my pick and leaned Niners. Ravens fans, please thank me.

You know what’s crazy? For all the Andrew Luck and RGIII hype for the past year, Colin Kapernick may end up being better and more successful than either of them. He may not be a world-class sprinter, but other than RGIII there isn’t a QB in the NFL who is a more effective and dangerous runner than him. He may not be the prototypical NFL QB like Luck, but he has a cannon for an arm. Who knows if his teams will be good enough to keep him in the title hunt each year, but for a team I have no real rooting interest in, I’m super excited about the Kaepernick era. I hope he stays healthy and the Niners keep their roster stocked so watching him deep into January is an annual event.

That excitement stated, he still has a long way to go. I can’t be too critical given that Sunday was just his 10th start, but I hated the way he managed the clock. The Niners needed time late in the game and he lost so much time on each play throughout the game as he took in the defense, adjusted the play, and then barely got the ball snapped before the play clock ran out. Just think how dangerous he’s going to be once he masters the play book and learns to get plays off quickly.

So no real criticism of him there. But whoever was calling the plays on the Niners’ final possession does get the gasface. What an awful sequence. It’s tough enough to score on the Baltimore defense on a very short field like that. But give your team a chance. Forget the non-calls that Niners fans are bitching about. That felt like a possession that was ruined by the coaches, not the players or refs.

Such a strange game. How often do you see a massive swing in who controls the game like that in the Super Bowl? The Ravens were running the Niners off the field, or about to. Then the Niners were utterly dominant for 20-25 minutes after that.

How does Jima Harbaugh go an entire game without getting marker all over his face as he jabs his pens back into their caps while holding them in his teeth? I think that would be kind of awesome if his face had red and blue smears all over it by the fourth quarter.

When is someone going to come up with HD-friendly confetti? I hate how the end of every Super Bowl, BCS title game, or NCAA title game is marred by those awful, grainy shots because of the streamers that are floating down from the rafters.

But I do love shots of winning players making sow angels in the confetti.

Remember when Super Bowls sucked? Most of the 80/ and 90s were awful. Now it seems like we get a classic each year. By my count, ten of the last 14 Super Bowls have been exciting and interesting and competitive.

Non-football stuff:

Beyonce was an inspired choice. Appeals to the kids without pissing off the hipsters and old folks as the Black Eyed Peas did a couple years back. I’ll admit I was hoping for a wardrobe malfunction. Is that wrong?

Commercials: pretty mediocre crop this year. I liked Amy Poehler’s Best Buy spot, although that was kind of an odd pairing and it didn’t seem like everyone else loved it.

The Taco Bell old folks spot reversed a long run of shitty commercials by them. Perhaps my favorite of the night.

It’s an old joke but its a damn shame that Stevie Wonder has fallen so far that he has to do ads for Bud Light. It was one thing to license “Superstition”. Another to be the voodoo king, or whatever he was supposed to be. But it has been over 30 years since he wrote a decent song.

I’m clearly elitist and out of touch because I didn’t care much for either Dodge’s Paul Harvey ad or the Bud Clydesdale ad. Clearly I hate America.

Pitchers and Catchers report next week!

Bold As In Cold

Last year at this time we were enjoying a perfect mid-winter week in Indianapolis. The temperature was in the mid-40s to low 50s all week, it was dry, and the hordes who had descended upon the city delighted in their Super Bowl week experiences.

As I type this as 2:18 pm on February 1, 2013 the windchill is a brisk 5°. It snowed yesterday and last night. There was a massive pileup on one local interstate yesterday. I spent four hours trying in vain to get to a high school basketball game on another highway that was iced over and littered with stalled tractor-trailers. And we’re going to get 2-4” of snow tomorrow.

Man did we dodge a bullet last year.

Before I share my Super Bowl pick, I would be remiss if I did not point out that I chose the Ravens to win the Super Bowl way back in September. Of course I picked the Bears as their opponent, so perhaps I should not tout my prognostication skills too much.

Most years I get some kind of feel for who is going to win. This year I can’t get an accurate reading. I don’t have a ton of faith in Joe Flacco going against the 49ers defense and getting the big plays he’s been getting for the last month. But I also am not sure that Colin Kaepernick can keep playing like a seasoned veteran in the biggest game of the year. Can the Ravens defense turn back the clock for one more game? Can the Niners count on David Akers to put anything through the uprights?

I have no answers to any of those questions.

But I think San Francisco’s defense is a little better than Baltimore’s, not to mention more likely to play well Sunday. And their offense has more balance and more weapons than the Ravens’. I think I’ve made my pick.

San Francisco 24
Baltimore 20

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