Archive for June, 2010

The Cocks Take It!

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010

OMAHA, Neb. — They won’t start tearing down the steel rafters and concrete of Rosenblatt Stadium until sometime later this year.

A minor league baseball team still has games scheduled here this summer, and a United Football League franchise is set to begin play here this fall.

But for all intents and purposes, the curtains fell at Johnny Rosenblatt Stadium shortly before 11 p.m. CT on Tuesday night.

After hosting the College World Series every season for the last 61 years, the old ballpark hosted its final college baseball game on Tuesday night. The CWS moves to a new $130 million stadium in downtown Omaha next year, where it will be played for the next two decades.

But before the College World Series moved to its sparkling new home, the baseball gods scripted a fitting end for Rosenblatt Stadium, the place that somehow became the mecca for aluminum bats and the NCAA’s double-elimination tournament.

Needing one victory to win its first national championship in baseball, South Carolina rallied for a run to tie UCLA in the bottom of the eighth inning, and then won 2-1 on right fielder Whit Merrifield’s RBI single in the 11th.

It was the first CWS championship game decided in extra innings since 1970 and seemed to pack as much drama into four hours, 15 minutes as any game played here during the past six decades.

“This game was special,” UCLA coach John Savage said. “This game was as good as it gets at this level. The national championship is supposed to be played like that.”

While it might have been more fitting for blue-blood programs like LSU, Southern California or Texas to close out the last College World Series at Rosenblatt, the upstart Bruins and Gamecocks produced a game that wasn’t decided until the very last at-bat.

“I know the new stadium will be very special and a great facility,” South Carolina coach Ray Tanner said. “But this is history. We’ll be a part of the College World Series and Rosenblatt for a long, long time. It’s an incredible journey and an incredible ending.”

Opportunity Missed

Perhaps, one day, UCLA will look back and appreciate its place in history. For now, though, all the Bruins feel is heartbreak. Blair Angulo

South Carolina fans won’t forget Tuesday night’s victory anytime soon. It’s the school’s first national championship in any men’s sport and the first in baseball after more than 100 years.

“This is the dream of dreams to be able to compete at this level and to be national champions and the best in the country,” South Carolina athletic director Eric Hyman said. “This is a moment we’ll remember for the rest of our lives. This is a defining moment. This shows everyone that we can.”

For a long time on Tuesday night, it seemed like the Gamecocks would have to wait another night to celebrate. After beating the Bruins by a 7-1 score on Monday night, South Carolina couldn’t muster much offense against UCLA starter Rob Rasmussen.

The Gamecocks left the bases loaded in the second and stranded 14 runners in the game. In fact, they went 0-for-6 with runners in scoring position until Merrifield delivered his big hit in the 11th.

“It was very hairy there for a while,” Tanner said. “I didn’t know if we were ever going to scratch and we were able to tie the thing up and push it to extra innings. But it really was who we were this year. And to have an extra-inning, 2-1 game end this way is magnificent.”

Field Of Dreams

Whit Merrifield delivered the most famous hit in South Carolina history, as his RBI clinched the Gamecocks their first national championship.

After taking a 1-0 lead on shortstop Niko Gallego’s RBI single in the fifth inning, the Bruins were only five outs away from forcing a winner-take-all game on Wednesday night.

But then the Gamecocks finally scratched their way onto the scoreboard against Bruins closer Dan Klein in the eighth. Pinch hitter Brady Thomas led off the inning with a single and pinch runner Robert Beary moved to second on a groundout.

With one out, shortstop Bobby Haney slapped a grounder to first, and Dean Espy muffed the ball into right field, allowing Beary to score from second to tie the score at 1-1. When the inning ended, Espy slammed his fist into a dugout bench in disgust, injuring his hand, and he had to leave the game.

“South Carolina just wouldn’t give us anything,” Savage said. “We just couldn’t knock the door down and get a couple of runs early. It might have been the difference in the game. It would have gotten us to Game 3.”

It would only get worse for from there. The Bruins, who also were seeking their first national championship in baseball, loaded the bases with two outs in the top of the ninth. But South Carolina closer Matt Price struck out leadoff man Gallego on three pitches to end the threat.

“I’ve seen [Price] do that before,” Tanner said. “When you’ve got the stuff that Matt does, he’s going to make some pitches. And it’s not easy to lay off, especially in that situation.”

In the bottom of the 11th, South Carolina second baseman Scott Wingo faced a full count against Klein, one of the best closers in the country this season. Tanner was so impressed by Klein’s repertoire of four pitches that he gave Wingo a sign to push a bunt up the third-base line. Instead, Wingo drew a walk and moved to second on a passed ball.

“I have never done that in my career,” Tanner said. “I just felt they had moved back to third. In that situation, with Klein out there pitching as well as he was, I kept thinking it might be easier to push the ball toward third base than it would be to get a hit. Wingo gave me a double take, a triple take, and he got a pitch low.”

After left fielder Evan Marzilli moved Wingo to third with a perfect sacrifice bunt, Merrifield drove Klein’s 2-0 pitch into right field to bring home the winning run.

Merrifield said he was surprised the Bruins didn’t elect to walk him and center fielder Jackie Bradley Jr. to load the bases for a potential double play to end the threat.

“When I saw the catcher squat down, I knew I had something to prove,” Merrifield said. “In that situation, you’re trying to get a pitch elevated. You’re trying to drive it deep into the outfield. I worked the count in my favor and got a fastball. Even though it was kind of down, I got the barrel on it and it finally went the other way and shot it into the gap.”

With one swing of the bat, Merrifield closed the chapter on South Carolina’s frustrating near misses in Omaha (the Gamecocks had finished second here three times since 1975).

And then college baseball said goodbye to the place where every program in the country yearned to go every season since 1950.

Shortly after the Gamecocks were handed their national championship trophy, and after fireworks were launched from behind the green wall in center field, a lone trumpeter sat at home plate, playing a slower version of “Take Me Out to the Ballgame.”

Beginning next year, the College World Series will be played only a few miles down the road.

But it might never feel the same outside of the Blatt.

“Without question, it’s very, very special,” Tanner said. “To be able to survive and win the last game is really incredible.”

Kobayashi To Skip Hot Dog Contest Over a Contract Dispute….

Tuesday, June 29th, 2010

Pacquiao sworn in to Congress

Monday, June 28th, 2010

World welterweight champion Manny Pacquiao has officially added a new title — Congressman.

Pacquiao was sworn in to the Philippines’ House of Representatives on Monday in the southern province of Sarangani.

“He wants change,” Pacquiao’s trainer, Freddie Roach, said of Pacquiao before the boxer won the election. “I think it’s genuine. People see that he wants to help his country, and that’s why they’re voting. That’s why they support him.”

Pacquiao accepted his third Fighter of the Year award June 4 after a year that featured a spectacular second-round knockout of Ricky Hatton to win a 140-pound belt and a brutal 12th-round stoppage of Miguel Cotto that gave Pacquiao titles in a record seven divisions.

“When he fights they close down Parliament and all the terrorists call for a peace,” Roach said in May, only half jokingly. “It’s not going to change anything. They’ll just announce him as Congressman Manny Pacquiao, that’s all.”

Promoter Bob Arum will continue work on perhaps the most highly anticipated fight in decades, between Pacquiao and the undefeated Floyd Mayweather Jr. The two nearly reached an agreement to fight earlier this year, but negotiations broke down when Mayweather insisted on Olympic-style drug testing and Pacquiao refused to have blood drawn within 24 days of a fight.

But Arum said that Pacquiao is now willing to have blood tests within 14 days of the fight, the cutoff point that Mayweather had agreed to in the first go-around.

Arum also said he believes the fight, which would likely happen in November, will end up in Las Vegas rather than Cowboys Stadium or another venue that could pack upward of 100,000 fans.

NBA Draft Winners and The Sole Loser: Canada

Friday, June 25th, 2010

The BA Draft came and went last night with many newly minted millionaires in the process. Must be an exciting time for players, teams, and fans but there are always those teams that had a great draft so we will look at those teams.

  • Detroit Pistons- Taking Greg Monroe at number 7 was a great pick. Monroe is arguably the most skilled big man since Tim Duncan so the sky is the limit for him. ALready know for his passing, Monroe needs to improve his aggressiveness and show the passion for the game that is necessary for a NBA star. I think he will be a steal at 7 in a couple of years. There second pick, 36, was also a big value pick. Terrico White out of Ole Miss can jump out of the gym and may be able to use that to become a good player. Time will tell but he has the chance to be a top 15 player in the draft.
  • Houston Rockets- They got Patrick Patterson at 14! He may be a little undersized but he plays hard down low and has a good outside game as well. I see him as a Jamison type player. Great pick to play along side Yao, if he ever gets un-injured.
  • LA Lakers- As much as I hate the whiny b***h Kobe, the Lakers got two high potential players in the second round that may be able to help the team immediately. Devin Ebanks at 43 is a steal and Derrick Caracter at 58 may turn out to be the steal of the draft as it seems that he has turned a corner and matured to an adult. I hate Kobe.
  • Sacramento Kings- With all the s**t hitting the fan in Arnold-town, the Kings really needed to give these fans something to cheer about and they did it in a BIG way. Drafting Demarcus Cousins at 5 and Hassan Whiteside at 33 immediately improved their bigs and now have a great pick and roll combo for the next 10 years. My favorite draft of anyone and hopefully they will pick up next year and start winning.

The Loser- Canada

Not only are they going to lose the only thing that keeps their team and their country relevant for basketball, Chris Bosh, they try to draft a lefty PF to replace him. Good thought they need a power forward but then they got ED DAVIS. That is a f**k you from the state of NC to Canada.

The No BS Draft Rankings: “Where the bitches at that suck the d***”

Thursday, June 24th, 2010
  1. John Wall- He may be a jackass and will undoubtably get Kentucky in trouble again but he is an amazing PG and I look forward to watching him when its legal for him to get paid.
  2. Demarcus Cousins- Bad Character, Great player, not much else to say
  3. Evan Turner- Finally a reasonable person get ranked. He will be a great Brandon Roy type player for years to come
  4. Derrick Favors- Athletic Long and Lazy. We will see if he grows up and can play.
  5. Al-Farouq Aminu- Versatile, but a loser see if he can get his stuff right and play some ball

1 Player Not to Drat: Ed Davis

He sucks, has no skills, and I heard him once ask somebody “Where the bitches at that suck the d***” D-Bag