Month: June 2013 (Page 2 of 2)

Reporter’s Notebook

Man, it’s been a busy two-plus weeks. Between county tournaments, sectionals, and state finals, I’ve covered seven events over that stretch, most of which were terrific events to write about.

In the county baseball tournament, I had a preliminary round game that was run-ruled after five innings because of a 14-0 rout. Three days later I covered the title game that was an excellent 5-4 game that ended with the tying run on third base. The pitcher I saw that day might get drafted this week, but will play D1 baseball if he doesn’t. He was fantastic and was great to talk to after the game.

The highlight of that game, though, was sitting in front of some parents of FC players who bitched about everything. I’m 99% sure they didn’t know who I was or who I work for, but when I sat down one dad was asserting, loudly, that our paper would write more about the biggest school in the county, CG, not making the title game than the teams that were playing. Our paper has a reputation for covering CG more than the other five schools in the county. But CG is also the biggest school, competes in more sports, and is generally more successful than any other school in the county. The “bias” they see is more a matter of us having to cover more events that CG competes in.

Anyway, you can comment on stories on our paper’s website. There are almost never any comments on my stories. The photographer shooting the title game misidentified one of the FC players in a picture attached to my story. Whoops! When I checked the website Monday morning there were two comments on the story ripping us for the mistake. One of the commenters was clearly the loudmouth I sat near on Saturday, as he repeated some of the cracks he made at the game in his comment. Never mind that we published a glowing article about his son’s team winning their first county title in a decade. It was important to get his “clever” shots at the paper onto the (virtual) public record.

Fortunately, as my editor told me later, another dad of an FC player left him a message thanking us for taking the time to cover the game and complimenting me on the story. Even Stephen!

Two nights later I covered a softball sectional. The team I covered had been ranked #1 in the state a week earlier but lost their final regular season game and fell to #3. They won ugly the night I had them and their season ended in an upset the next night.

While they were losing, I covered a phenomenal sectional baseball game on the west side. The game ended 1-0 in eight innings after the center fielder for my team lost a ball in the lights and let the winning run score with two outs. The winning pitcher went all eight innings, allowed only three hits, just two runners to reach third base, and struck out 11. My pitcher also went the full eight and struck out 18. Eighteen! He gave up eight hits and the saw runners in scoring position with less than two outs in seven of eight innings. But each time he got into trouble, whiff, whiff, whiff. Inning over. Well, except for the last inning.

The big bummer of the game was it poured two hours before first pitch, more or less flooding the infield. First pitch was pushed back an hour so they could get it playable. Between the delay and the extra inning, the last out was recorded at 9:20. I had a 10:00 deadline. And coaches always talk to their teams forever after the final loss of the season. I had to run to my car and write as quickly as possible without getting quotes from any coaches or players. Which sucked, because it was a fantastic game and deserved more than my quick write-up.

Somewhere in there I had a sectional tennis match, and I had the same team, GHS, last Friday in the state quarterfinals. They feature twin sisters as their top two singles players, and neither girl had lost a set or match all season. The #1 singles girl lost a set Friday, but came back to win her match. Her sister wrapped her match up in about 40 minutes. Their opponents knocked out the two doubles matches in about an hour. Which left the #3 singles girls to determine who would go to the semifinals. My girl was up 5-2 in the first set and blew it. She won the second set pretty easily. Third set excitement! It was close through the first four games but my girl wilted and lost 3-6.

And then, finally, Saturday I covered my first ever track meet. It was an important one, too. I went down to Bloomington for the girls state finals. I was kind of dreading it as the storms which pounded Oklahoma, Kansas, and Missouri Friday were expected in southern Indiana Saturday afternoon and evening. When I got to B-town it was overcast and sprinkling. A couple times it rained a little harder but the radar kept showing the rain falling apart and moving away. Eventually the sun broke through the clouds and it turned into a glorious evening.

I only had a few competitors to be concerned with. My high jumper, just a sophomore, took second and was great to talk to after. One of her teammates took fourth in the 1600, her third-straight top five finish, and eighth in the 3200. The top eight get medals and these were the fifth medals of her career. She’s running in college next year and was also great to talk to.

Other than them, I watched a 4×800 relay team run the fastest time in the US this year, and the 8th fastest high school time ever recorded. They took ten, TEN!, seconds off the previous state record. The girl who won the 3200 lapped one runner, nearly caught another, and had the crowd on their feet as she came up 0:02 short of breaking the state record.

And it was just a fun day. There are all kinds of different bodies at a high school track meet. There are some large ladies tossing the discus and shot put around. There are some girls who are ridiculously muscular for being 16, 17, 18 years old. And there are girls who don’t look like much until they start running. That 4×800 squad featured twin sisters who weren’t super tall or have popping muscles or anything like that. They looked like normal girls from a little town in Indiana. But on the track they fly. Each sister won an individual state title to go with that relay win.

That will do it for the 2012-13 academic season. Football is only 10 weeks away.

Coming Up Short

I guess the Heat responded Monday night. They played like the team they were all regular season, like the team they were constructed to be, and after a sloppy first quarter, methodically took control and blew the Pacers out.

Before the game, I told my buddy E-bro in ATX that logic dictated the Heat would win. The odds were far greater that LeBron either had a huge game plus help from his supporting cast, or just a really solid game and big contributions from his teammates, than Paul George going off and getting big lifts from the people around him. It didn’t take some great basketball IQ to make that prediction, but it turned out to be absolutely the case.

LeBron was magnificent, as he was during most of the series. Ray Allen hit some big shots during the Heat’s early run that put the game away. Chris Anderson brought his energy and changed the board battle in his return from suspension. Chris Bosh actually showed up on both ends of the court. And, amazingly, Dwyane Wade looked good for the first time in ages. Put all that together and the Pacers would have needed a perfect game to steal game seven away.

They somehow had the lead after an ugly first quarter. But the moment Miami ratcheted their defense up further and began hitting shots in the second quarter, the Pacers wilted and were done. Paul George wasn’t hitting, and neither was anyone else. For the first time all series Miami was controlling Roy Hibbert in the paint. Hyper Lance Stephenson showed up. And the turnover prone Pacers were extra sloppy with the ball. Miami played great but Indiana did themselves no favors all night.

There were two difference in the series. LeBron is unmatchable as an individual talent. When he’s on, he’s unstoppable. Paul George is fantastic, but still young and disappeared for stretches. LBJ will never fade.

The benches of each team are drastically different, too. The Heat are made up of highly accomplished specialists. Allen and Mike Miller are two of the best deep shooters in recent memory. Anderson is as good an energy and board crasher as you will find in the NBA. Norris Cole is a backup guard they absolutely trust in any situation. The Pacers, on the other hand, are a bunch of young guys looking to find their niche. Some nights they find it. But Tyler Hansbrough, DJ Augustin, Sam Young, Ian Mahinmi, etc. are no where near the class of the Heat’s role players.

And that brought a great series to an end. As a fan, whether interested in the outcome or not, you always feel a little cheated when a tight series comes down to a game seven and it’s decided before halftime. You want to suck every last ounce of drama from the teams. Win or lose, you want to talk about the series 20, 30 years down the road and say, “Man, do you remember that war between the Pacers and Heat back in ’13? That was some great basketball.” This will still be remembered as a great series. But the fizzle of an end takes away from its historical value.


I don’t feel like the TNT crew talked enough about how the Pacers were clearly constructed to give the Heat fits. In fact, I didn’t hear much national talk about that. Sure, we kept hearing about how the Pacers were huge inside and presented match up issues for the Heat. But I didn’t hear much credit-giving to the Pacers front office who clearly assembled their package of players with that exact goal in mind. It might be tough to get through the regular season. But come a seven game series with the Heat in May/June, the Pacers would be as well-equipped as any team to deal with them. Don’t forget, when you throw in the regular season results, the Pacers and Heat split ten games evenly. I don’t think another team in the NBA could have matched that.


A few big decisions ahead for the Pacers. Do they resign David West, who was as important as any player in their success but getting older. If he takes another two-year offer, I say yes. Beyond that, resigning him gets worrisome. What do you do with Danny Granger? He’s owed about $15 million in the final year of his contract, but hasn’t been healthy the last two years. With George’s ascent, Granger is clearly not the #1 option anymore. Do you keep him for a year and hope he can stay on the court and create room for PG to do his thing, then get the cap space next summer? Do you move him in hopes of getting another piece or two for the rotation, or to clear that cap space now and grab a free agent this summer? Finally, what is the future of Lance Stephenson? Do they really trust him to keep his head together and continue to improve and be a starter? Or is he a piece you sell high on and let someone worry about managing his risk?


Worst commercial, but far, of the playoffs is that commercial for, well I’m not even sure what it’s for. But it’s the one where the dad transforms into Kevin Durant overnight after watching too much hoops. While his son calls him out, mom fingers her wedding room and says, “Go play. Mommy’s got some things for Daddy to do.” Sure, moments later he’s changing light bulbs or cleaning gutters. But the implication is that he’s cleaning something else entirely. Creepy, weird, and in poor taste.


Finally, during last night’s game I was thinking about the difference between the NCAA Tournament and the NBA Playoffs. If your team loses, which is harder to take? KU fans will think for years about the 50 things that could have changed the outcome of the Michigan game and what happens beyond that if KU wins. Pacers fans will do the same with this series, but needing to win four games out of seven seems to change the pain of losing. NBA series have a more epic feel to them. There are chances to ebb and flow. React and counter-react. Pauses between games to recharge and rethink. An NCAA game is one night, one shot to win.

Your center has the flu and can’t play? Tough. Your point guard twists an ankle but is fine two days later? Too bad. Winning an NBA series is clearly harder but also less prone to flukey results. That doesn’t mean they aren’t filled with controversial endings, moments for goats and heroes, or the losers are filled with regret after. But at least you have a shot to correct and overcome bad moments in the NBA. The pain of losing in March is much worse than losing in the NBA Playoffs.

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