Tuesday October 15, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3705 |
In case you missed it on Monday, a sports story garnered national attention and it happened right in downtown Baltimore following the Ravens win over Washington on Sunday.
It was only a sports story because it happened after a football game and the soon-to-be-defendant was seen on video wearing a Lamar Jackson jersey. Otherwise, it was just a garden variety case of assault, albeit a heinous one.
If you saw the video making the rounds late Sunday evening, you were, I'm sure, appalled.
A 20-something male, with a friend/cohort filming the whole thing on his phone, wildly approaches two Commanders fans -- both male as well -- and brutally attacks them. He severely injures both men, quickly, before flexing for his friend-the-camera-man and boasting, "I don't lose."
The video started circulating on Twitter late Sunday night. By Monday, it had gained steam into a national story, published by the likes of Barstool, TMZ and other social media platforms.
Within minutes of widespread circulation, the man was identified by name and his various social media pages were then made public.
By mid-morning on Monday, #DMD has learned, the man was terminated from his position with a Baltimore based insurance agency.
We're not naming him here because the young man has a lot more problems on his plate than having #DMD reveal his identity.
But the incident begs two questions:
Should the internet be a place where "doxxing" someone is not only permissible, but actually encouraged?
And, as #DMD reader Brian Preller asked yesterday via e-mail, should the camera man be charged as some sort of accomplice?
I'm not a lawyer, so I don't know about the legalities of naming someone an accomplice who simply held up their phone and "caught" the fight on camera. It seems to me you might be a degenerate for doing that, but I don't know if that holds up in court.
Clearly, though, the man who assaulted the two Commanders fans was somehow enthused about being on camera for the incident. Again, whether that makes the camera man guilty of a crime or not is something I can't answer.
The first question, though, is the one that people on Twitter and elsewhere threw around on Monday.
"Dude gonna lose his job because you posted his name without his approval," someone wrote yesterday.
The guy who offered that opinion wasn't the only one to feel that way. I know you're probably shaking your head, but it's true.
"He hasn't had his day in court, but everybody always thinks he's guilty because that video got published," someone else wrote.
Let's make sure we get this right: The "dude" who threw the punchces and was doxxed on the internet didn't lose his job because someone posted his name without his approval.
He lost his job because he committed an assault on two people on video.
If his boss saw the video on Sunday night or Monday morning, he or she already knew the defendant's name. Doxxing wasn't necessary.
The community at large now knows his name, of course, which means he might have trouble landing a new job once he's free to move around the county again, which might not be for a while if the legal proceedings snag him along the way.
So, in that regard, social media did "out" him on Monday. His name and three or four social media accounts were the talk of the town.
The real benefit to social media "doxxing", of course, is there is now no real time required to identify the perpetrator of the crime and, I'm guessing here, the collection of evidence and the prosecution of the case is so easy Encyclopedia Brown would have the whole thing tied up in a bow by page 11.
Without social media -- and without the defendant filming and publishing his own crime -- there's no telling if the two men who were assaulted would ever have their crime solved. About 12 hours after their assault, the case was in the books.
So, yes, public "doxxing" when a crime has been committed is a good thing indeed.
I'm sure the Ravens are disgusted at the fact that this guy was plastered all over the internet on Monday wearing a purple #8 JACKSON jersey.
That these things happen every weekend at a college or NFL stadium is very well known. We could do a week's worth of #DMD on the "why" of it all.
In general, though, it's just a wanton disregard for humanity. There's something terribly wrong with us when we take joy in hurting innocent people for no real reason.
And now, we know the name of this individual, where he worked, and, at some point, we'll hear about the charges brought against him and how he fares when he gets his day in court.
The internet always wins.
The young man who threw the punches on Sunday night claimed he never lost, but he sure did this time around.
The internet doesn't lose. Ever.
Give or take a game, depending on your team of choice, we've reached the 33% mark of the 2024 NFL season. Time flies when you're having fun, huh?
I thought we'd take a quick trip around the league and summarize everyone's chances of making the playoffs and, for those that it applies to, chances of making the Super Bowl.
We'll highlight the AFC today and the NFC on Wednesday.
I feel like we're going to mostly be spot-on with this commentary. It's pretty obvious by now who the good teams are and who the bad teams are, right?
AFC North --
Ravens (4-2) -- If not for Kansas City, they'd be the best team in football. And, lean in closely so it's just you and I hearing this: They're actually better than the Chiefs right now. Playoff chances: 95% / Super Bowl chances: 60%
Steelers (4-2) -- Do NOT be fooled by their record. They're a paper tiger. The Ravens will chew them up twice. This is who they are, they beat up on lousy teams and lose to good teams. Playoff chances: 40% / Super Bowl chances: 10%
Bengals (2-4) -- Bengals are always gonna Bengals at the worst time possible. Don't let Sunday night's 17-7 win over the NY Giants lead you down the wrong path. Cincy's defense is terrible. Playoff chances: 30% / Super Bowl chances: 5%
Browns (1-5) -- The Deshaun Watson signing could be the worst contract in the history of sports. Not just in the history of the Browns. Or the history of the NFL. In the history of......sports. Playoff chances: 0% / Super Bowl chances: 0%
AFC East --
Bills (4-2) -- Buffalo's win last night over the Jets isn't quite enough to lock up the division just yet, but Buffalo -- despite losing their top wide receiver -- continues to chug-a-lug along nicely. That they might be overlooked by the likes of the Chiefs or Ravens is their only hope, otherwise, they're not a real threat this season. Playoff chances: 60% / Super Bowl chances: 25%
Dolphins (2-3) -- Their season imploded when Tua went out with his 84th concussion in week #3. If he returns and somehow, improbably, stays healthy, there's a chance for a slight revival in South Florida. Overall, though, it feels like Miami's fate has already been cast for this season. Playoff chances: 30% / Super Bowl chances: 10%
Jets (2-4) -- Boy, firing the coach really helped, huh? Granted, the refs didn't help matters on Monday night in the loss to Buffalo, but this is a Jets team in full disarray just six games into the season. We definitely expected more from these varsity lettermen. Playoff chances: 30% / Super Bowl chances: 10%
Patriots (1-5) -- I assume they'll beat someone else before the season ends, but it's possible that opening day win in Cincinnati will be their only victory of the campaign. Even the glorious Pat-the-Patriot helmet, the best logo in the history of sports, couldn't help them turn back the Texans last Sunday. When wearing that helmet doesn't help, you're done. Playoff chances: 0% / Super Bowl chances: minus 10%
AFC South --
Texans (5-1) -- They might clinch the division title by Thanksgiving. If they stay healthy, they'll have a shot at making some real noise in the playoffs. They have the Lions (home), Chiefs (away) and Ravens (home) left on their schedule. Those three games will tell us a lot. Playoff chances: 95% / Super Bowl chances: 40%
Colts (3-3) -- Is Flacco going to keep the job once Anthony Richardson returns? That will be a story well worth watching. With the Dolphins in the tank, that opens up another playoff spot in the AFC. Could Indy snag that one at 9-8 or 10-7? Playoff chances: 35% / Super Bowl chances: 5%
Titans (1-4) -- This once proud franchise hasn't been the same since the Ravens punched them in the mouth in Nashville a few years ago in the playoffs. They're going nowhere fast. Playoff chances: 0% / Super Bowl chances: 0%
Jaguars (1-5) -- The only reason Trevor Lawrence isn't the owner of the "worst contract in the NFL" is because Deshaun Watson already has that label on lockdown. But make no mistake about it, Lawrence is laying a colossal, epic egg in Jacksonville. The Jags are going backwards. Playoff chances: 0% / Super Bowl chances: 0%
AFC West --
Chiefs (5-0) -- They have four reasonably challenging games left: at 49'ers, at Bills, home vs. Texans and at Steelers. I don't see them running the table and going 17-0, but I think they're a 13 win team at the very least. One thing about them that can't be denied: they know how to win. Playoff chances: 95% / Super Bowl chances: 60%
Chargers (3-2) -- I feel like they're one of the teams we're still drawing an "incomplete" on when we attempt to grade the first 5 weeks of the season. They have a legit QB, but do they have anything else, really? It seems like they're just OK, nothing more than that. Playoff chances: 40% / Super Bowl chances: 15%
Broncos (3-3) -- I mean, they have 3 wins thus far, which is close to the "5" I assumed they'd win all year. I don't know how they've won 3, but they have. That said, I don't see them winning 9 or 10 and being a threat to make the post-season. They're at least a year away from that. Playoff chances: 25% / Super Bowl chances: 5%
Raiders (2-4) -- How on earth did these guys beat the Ravens? Or anyone else for that matter? Once Davante Adams is traded, they'll quickly fall into the regular season abyss. 7 wins for them would be a miracle at this point. Playoff chances: 10% / Super Bowl chances: 0%
such October 15 |
Because I'm older, I don't spend much time on social media. I find it rather exhausting to be honest. Therefore I was unaware of this incident until last night, when my sons began texting me and FaceTiming me. The assailant is a former teammate of two of my sons at Hereford High. Let's just say that his senior year there was punctuated by some extremely poor decisions, likely due to being under the influence. Hereford was his third high school in four years. I'm going to go out on a very short limb here and surmise that he was under the influence on Sunday night in Federal Hill. His actions are inexcusable under any circumstances. Drunk, high, sober, it doesn't matter. Violently assaulting innocent people, unprovoked, is bordering on sociopathic behavior. He should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law, and if civil suits arise from this disgusting incident, he should be made to pay for his victims medical care and pain and suffering. Whatever backlash and public embarrassment he endures because of this are due to his own reckless, irresponsible behavior. You get what you get when you act like a fool. As I've always told my sons, Make good choices. Stop and think about the consequences. |
TimD in Timonium October 15 |
"Clearly, though, the man who assaulted the two Commanders fans was somehow enthused about being on camera for the incident." Live by the sword, die by the sword. The resulting video went viral, and the outcome probably wasn't the "internet fame" he had in mind. Without video, I'm guessing this goes unreported and the perp remains unknown. Oh well. |
Barry October 14 |
Flacco is likely back to not being a starter by next week, no way he's coming here for a playoff game in Jan. @Paul pretending to be positive is hilarious! |
Delray RICK October 14 |
One of my problems with HARBAUGH is when he throws the red flag I'm sitting watching slow-motion, ain't no way he's right. I know it's people upstairs. When you have to rely on others that's where HARBS gets accused of f it up. He's mind is so on this team there isn't anybody else I'd want as coach . Who the he'll is better ??? Crickets |
Vince from SC October 14 |
The only criticism of Harbaugh I have is his clock management at the end of halves can sometimes make you scratch your head. Other than that, he's been a HOF coach no question. Should have won the SB the year before if Lee Evans or Billy Cundiff could do bare minimum. |
Paul from Towson October 14 |
The John Harbaugh hate in this city absolutely astounds me. All this franchise has done since he's been here is win. Sure, they've only hoisted the Lombardi trophy once under him, but that's one more time than most of the rest of the NFL. And, this team has been to the AFC Championship Game four times under Harbaugh. Sure, the 1-3 record could be better, but let's not forget that first one was in Joe Flacco's (and Harbs' for that matter) rookie season when this team was supposed to be 4-12. Of course he's not perfect, and yeah his use of challenges and timeouts can be questionable at best, but it's hard to argue with the overall W-L record. Not to mention, he swallowed his pride in 2018 and did something very few, if any, Super Bowl winning coaches would do, and changed the entire offensive structure of this team to suit Lamar Jackson's strengths. Look at the rest of the league, and the coaching unemployment line, and tell me who you would rather have. Belichick?? No thanks, look at his record without a guy named Tom Brady. Jeff Fisher?? Don't think so. What about all these young, hotshot coaches that the national pundits love so much. Kevin Stefanski? Pass. Zac Taylor? Nah. Nick Siriani? Please! The luntics in Philly are ready to run him out of town despite making it to the Super Bowl two seasons ago. I know this isn't just a Baltimore thing, after all, if you ask any Stooler fan they would tell you that THEY could coach the team in Pittsburgh to a Super Bowl before Mike Tomlin could. But even still, at a time in the NFL (and sports in general) when most teams have a yearly coaching carousel and rampant upheaval (Falcons, Colts, Raiders, Panthers, etc.) having the stability in a head coach that wins, on average, 10 games a season is a luxury very few teams enjoy. And, in my humble opinion, even given his faults, I would take Harbs over just about every other coach in the league, except MAYBE Andy Reid. But even Reid was an also-ran until a guy named Mahomes came into the league. Go Ravens!! Such, you beat me to it this morning. As I watched the replay of yesterday's game, I realized that the Derrick Henry signing seems very Shannon Sharpe-ish to me. When the Ravens signed the two time Super Bowl champion, they already had a championship caliber defense. Sharpe was the missing piece on an offense that was built on the run and timely passing. Now, Lamar Jackson is leaps and bounds better than Trent Dilfer ever was on his best day, but just like Sharpe, Derrick Henry seems to be the missing piece for this offense. Derrick Henry makes LJ8 an the rest of the offense better because, with all due respect to JK Dobbins and Gus Edwards, defenses didn't have to stack the box to stop them. Leaving LJ8 to pic apart man, or in some cases, soft zone coverage. GO RAVENS! |
Howard October 14 |
Tony Siragusa was a great free agent pickup. The 2000 Ravens defense had no offense to pick them up. The defense couldn’t bend and couldn’t break and they didn’t. |
Bud King October 14 |
Not even Harbs could lose this game... go Ravens! |
Nathan Aparisto October 14 |
Is there ANY deal or trade that would convince that mess of a Jets franchise to send Sauce Gardner to the flock for a passel of picks? Could the cap hit be worked out? Hed be the next Ed Reed for a decade and Ravens could truly be a juggernaught! |
such October 14 |
We were having a text conversation last night and the question was raised: Has there ever been a better Free Agent signing by the Ravens than Henry? I can't think of anyone comparable on offense. Maybe Shannon Sharpe, maybe Derek Mason, but as far as instant impact and the ability to effect games the way he does, there's never been anyone close to Henry. Yesterday was just the latest example of the difference he's made. Everyone from Hereford to Upper Marlboro knew he was getting the ball, and the Ravens ran that same little toss sweep to the left they ran in Cincy, and Henry goes for 30 yards and that's ballgame. He's an absolute hammer. I went back and looked at the 2016 Draft and it's just another example of NFL front offices overanalyzing players. The Ravens took Ronnie Stanley at #6 overall, which is undeniably a very good pick. In the second round, at #42 overall, they selected the immortal Kamalei Correa from Boise State. Derrick Henry went to Tennessee at #45. Oh, what might have been. Although Lamar wasn't here yet so there's no telling what the offense would've looked like with Joe Flacco and King Henry. Regardless, he's here now and it's a beautiful sight to behold. |
Chris in Bel Air October 14 |
Even in the loss to KC, you could see the potential of the Ravens. They are clearly starting to put it all together now. As a fan, I'm feeling the optimism. But... we've also watched the Ravens and the NFL long enough to know they will stub their toe a couple more times. It happens. The key is how they bounce back the following week. Moreover, you don't win the Lombardi in October. It's all about January... and hopefully February. IF they end up playing KC again in the playoffs, they are not going to lose that game. I don't care if it is in B'more or KC. They are winning that one. Yes, the secondary seems to be a concern and can't figure out if it's personnel or scheme or both. Either way, like yesterday, the offense just needs to pick them up and respond when they have the ball. A couple random observations. First on Brandon Stephens. Maybe it's just me but it seems like no matter how closely he is covering his man, the opposing QB and WR always seems to come up with an incredible play/catch. Yesterday he had at least one like that, maybe two. I'm not busting on him, I'm just saying, I'm not sure what more he can do. Overall, I think he's become a decent CB for someone that did not play that position in college. Second, good to see Ngakoue in the mix yesterday. I like his potential rotating in the pass rush mix. As for Marcus Williams, he's sort of been a disappointment. He's not a bad player, I just can't remember the last time I saw him do anything of significance. INT? Forced Fumble? Fumble recovery? Key pass break-up? Something. On to Tampa |
Unitastoberry October 14 |
Another win and another big offensive statement. Commandskins done. Swiss Pees and Orr have some work to do. Why was Tony Romo on Kyle Hamiltons case about him being a dirty player on two big plays he made? He reacts before looking at the instant replay. Tony drives me nuts not my favorite commenter. It's a contact sport Tony. Only the offensive guys can lead with the head what a crock. My feelings on Joe Flacco are those of happiness for him. It's just a shame it's Jr Irsay who gets to beat his chest. With all the sub par duel threat QBs in the league now Joe could play another 4 -5 years.Btw I'm not including Lamar in that catagory. This bum in Cleveland should be on the bench watching Joe toss tds. Barry I will never root for PSU. I have my reasons and it's more than the Sandusky child rape coverup they should have had no football there for 5 years just for that one. It goes back to Joe PA coming here long ago and stealing all state and all county guys in Maryland just to keep them out of College Park then he redshirts them in Happy Valley etc and they never see the field playing behind guys like Franco Harris and Lydell Mitchell etc. I know one of them. He would have been a great running back at Maryland. He ran for 150-200 yards a game in Baltimore County. No shame in calling out good players up there now.44 is one of them. I hate to say it this but it could be Penn States year.Would be great if Locksley could pull a Vanderbuilt on them last game of the season. Btw Lenny Moore does get a pass Lou. Gary Cuozzo or Earl Morrall Howard? Well you have to take Earl and his MVP 1968 off the bench year. But I got visions of Jimmy Orr in the endzone waiving his hand wide open to this day and like I have said before the whole thing still stinks like you know what! |
David Rosenfeld October 14 |
If you weren't at the game yesterday you probably heard Tony Romo say that John Harbaugh is a "top 10 coach all time," which of course drew lots of chuckles from the hoi polloi. I'm not gonna get into a conversation about that, but I will say this... I don't see how you can watch the Ravens play on a week-to-week basis and say that John is an "awful coach." Like...of all takes you could have, it just doesn't stand up to any kind of serious analysis. |
Jon October 14 |
How are the league going to stymie the offense? Same way they have last few years in January- wins mask problems- - no more weak O line? enjoyable Sunday but lets not get ahead of oursleves like we did with Os and KC. Keep working Flacco! |
TimD in Timonium October 14 |
The two drives of 90+ yards were beautiful to watch. Hard to find much to complain about from yesterday's Ravens game, but surely someone will. Looks like the O-line has figured it out. Big difference from the 0-2 start. Whew. |
Kenny G October 14 |
Hopefully we saw a defensive change in yesterday's game - bend but don't break. I am not familiar with the WFT scheme but the Ravens keep also everything in front of them. Also for all people complaining about the refs, please offer some solutions vs just ranting about how bad they are. Sinc the game has become faster, covers more area of the field and the rules very complex, my suggestion is add another ref or two and allow for certain replays/challenges of penalties. I would also possibly allow more contact on receivers but penalize DB holding more (the calls are too inconsistent which leads to a lot of "missed" calls) |
Ed October 13 |
Nice day for Will Jackson picking games and props. Congratulations. |
lou@palo alto October 13 |
#24 was from Penn St |
Barry October 13 |
So UTB is actually a closet PSU fan after all eh? |
Howard October 13 |
Kj— tell me where that bar is so I can hang out with UTB and MFC. I would ask them if they think that Joe in his #15 Colts uniform reminds them more of Gary Cuozzo or Earl Morrall. Oh, and Jordan and Pippen keep rolling on |
Vince from SC October 13 |
Not a blowout but also never in doubt. On to Tampa. |
Unitastoberry October 13 |
If Lamar had made it past AFC teams in January like KC, Tennessee,and played nicked up in the Cincinnati game he would have 3 rings . I agree on this one the Commandskins are going down. Even Harbaugh won't screw this up. If you watched Penn State win in overtime over USC you know the NCAA refs are horrible. Worse than the NFL. Remember when the NFL refs went on strike and they used NCAA refs? That why the strike was settled. This number 44 on Penn State was a one man wrecking crew yesterday. He's a number one pick at TE. He's Dave Casper/Gronk quality if he stays healthy. Blocks great too pancakes guys. |
Old George October 12 |
Trolley Dodgers. |
Chris in Bel Air October 12 |
Love the "Reading time: 2 minutes"... or 3 minutes. This should be a regular thing for DMD. Thanks for the throwback. |
kj October 12 |
Everything written by @Bryce about DET was written about our O's two years ago. Funny how fans are always giving other teams a pass but want their team to be perfect 100% of the time. Wonder if MFC and UTB hang out at the local Curmudgeons bar howling at the moon together? The Indians have the best chance to beat NYY, so not sure why anyone would be pulling for DET to win today. Above was my own mini ode to my absolute favorite local sportswriter. DMD did a better job with his tribute, but figured I'd toss in an amateur version. RIP Mr Jackman. |
BRYCE October 12 |
I’d love to see Skubal and company get the last laugh this year with all the talk of Detroit dealing/retaining their ace at the deadline. Would be great to see them eliminate Cleveland and then continue their post-2000 trend of owning the Yankees in the playoffs. That team is going to be sneaky good for the next several years. In addition to its current roster, they have two top-10 prospects waiting in the wings and another at #31, per MLB. What’s even more impressive is that this 2024 surge has been with no contribution from Mize and very minimal from Torkelson, their two recent #1 overall draft picks. Most importantly, they’re playing with the team chemistry to be a force. |
Unitastoberry October 12 |
Why should U of Maryland fire Mike Locksley? So then they pretty much admit they just want a team who beats squads like Gettysburg College and Northwestern then only loses to Penn St and Michigan? It's basically an admission they joined the Big Ten for the money and could care less about a national championship. Remember what the late great Lefty Driesel said when hired by Maryland basketball back in the stone age? He said he wanted to become the UCLA of the east then strap the national trophy on his car and ride around tobacco road with it. It never happened but it was exactly what the fans wanted to hear and they bought in. Now the football team just wants to beat Northwestern and Prairie View. What a bunch of bull. RIP to Phil Jackman who was a great sports writer and not some punk looking to cause trouble.Those days are gone except at DMD. Go USC! |
MFC October 12 |
Hernandez dropping the F bond, after asking if it was live tv was disgusting. Another self Absorbed athlete. I am now rooting for anyone but LA. What a jerk, it wasn’t cute . |
Phil October 12 |
Awesome tribute, I always enjoyed his columns especially the two minute ones. |
Tom J October 12 |
Drew, when I saw the "Reading Time, 2 minutes" it rang a bell but just couldn't put my finger on it until reading down and then seeing and remembering this was Phil Jackman's thing. Didn't know the origin behind it but loved this in The Sun. Yes, please continue his thing as part of DMD. |
hank October 11 |
Top level trolling today. No true Baltimorean would ever wish success for the Yankees. I agree with David, bunch of posers like this current team is the last team I want to see in the World Series. Whoever prevails in the DET-CLE series best take care of business. Mets vs LA, no one worth rooting for there either. |
Paul from Towson October 11 |
The minute the O’s were eliminated, I became an instant fan of whatever National League team comes out of the NLCS to face whatever dumb AL champion. I can never stomach watching the Yankees (or Red Sox for that matter) celebrate anything so I strongly disagree with Drew’s commentary today. I don’t have any issue with the Mets, so if they happen to beat either LA or SD, more power to them. Plus, I would like to see Lindor and Alonso get a ring. Just wish Buck was still there to make rooting for them even that much easier. I will agree with Drew that the Cleat of Reality is hunting Washington this weekend and Jayden Daniels will feel every bit of its fury. Rookie QB’s never fair well at The Bank against our Ravens. This Sunday will be no exception. Ravens win, 34-13. Go Ravens!!! |
Jeffrey “Fireball” Roberts October 11 |
I would personally love a Yankee/Padre WS. The tattooed Padres in those horrible brown uniforms led by Manny against the clean cut Yankee pinstripes led by Judge. East Coast versus West Coast. Atlantic-Pacific. Biggie-Tupac. Bring it on. LOL |
David Rosenfeld October 11 |
Honestly, the 2024 Yankees are a bunch of posers. They act like they dominated the league. Judge and Soto are ridiculous, and Cole is one of the best, but the other 23 guys ain't much better than any other team. Maybe that'll be enough to win the World Series. I'm not sure Cleveland or Detroit will beat them...they just don't hit well enough. |
Delray RICK October 11 |
Baseball season is OVER!!! |
Chris in Bel Air October 11 |
To be honest, I guess I still have a little bit of sour grapes going on with the O's out of the running again. Tough watching other teams/fans celebrate. I suppose a Yankees/Mets series would be interesting. I'm sure other than Yankees/Dodgers (Ohtani vs Judge) MLB execs and whatever network is broadcasting the World Series would really like Yankees/Mets too. I can't imagine those same folks would be too thrilled with say Tigers vs Padres. Ravens will bring Wash and Jayden Daniels back to earth on Sunday. Don't get me wrong, I like Daniels. It's just not quite his/their time. |
TimD in Timonium October 11 |
A Mets / Yankees series could be entertaining, but I suspect most of America would tune out an all-NYC final. But I don't think the Mets will get past LA or SD. We'll see. And the Ryan Ries video was a great watch. |
Dan October 11 |
Drew, thanks for highlighting Ryan Ries. As a fellow skateboard enthusiast I know his story and the impact he has made on the youth all over the USA. God bless Ryan!! |
Unitastoberry October 10 |
I thought is was a joke today when I heard Dean"Swiss"Pees was rehired to be a senior advisor to DC Zach Orr. It's actually true. |
TimD in Timonium October 10 |
"Corbin Burnes, who started for the AL in the All-Star Game, ranked fourth in the AL in ERA (2.92), third in innings pitched (194 1/3), eighth in WHIP (1.10) and 10th in strikeouts (181)." Complete games in 2024? Zero. (His closest was 8 innings vs KC in the playoffs.) We've already seen the Golden Age of Complete Game Pitchers. It's not coming back. |
Unitastoberry October 10 |
Palmer,Cuellar, McNally and Dobson 4 20 game winners. I saw them all get at least one win that year in person. |
Bob October 10 |
2011 was the last year a pitcher logged double digit complete games with James Shields throwing 11 for Tampa Bay. Since then only two pitchers threw more then 5 games, Chris Sale in 2016 and Sandy Alcantara in 2022 both threw 6 games. I think the ship has sailed on the days a starter bangs out double digit complete games. https://www.baseball-almanac.com/pitching/picomg4.shtml |
Chris in Bel Air October 10 |
Yes, the bullpen game is certainly an interesting situation now. I agree it is not my favorite part of the game for sure. But, if a manager wants to blow through 8 arms in one game, doesn't that put him in a disadvantage for the next game? It's a risk in going the bullpen route. I am also not sure the minimum innings or pitches is practical either. If a starter is getting lit up in the first couple innings a proposed rule to remain for minimum number of pitches/innings would then take away the ability for the manager to make a pitching change. That doesn't seem like it is good for the game either. As for making these guys in Jim Palmer again, that's not happening. The days of Palmer, Fergie Jenkins, Bob Gibson, Gaylord Perry and Steve Carlton are long gone and that's not even including the astounding number of CGs thrown by the likes of Cy Young or Walter Johnson. For reference, in 2024, the team with the most CG's thrown was the Phillies with 5. Going back 50 years, here are the leading and total number of team CGs thrown that year: 2014 - 8 2004 - 11 1994 - 17 1984 - 48 1974 - 71 A remarkable trend down and it's just not ever coming back. |
David Rosenfeld October 10 |
The "bullpen game" is an interesting phenomenon because, as much as people might dislike it, it's really common sense. I'm sure that A.J. Hinch would love it if he had even one more guy like Tarik Skubal. But he doesn't, so he feels like this is the best way to win...and he's often right because (unlike in Palmer's day), the "bullpen" guys are more talented than the ostensible starting pitchers. Assuming this a problem, I'm not sure of the answer. And in the playoffs, when the rope is short even for good starting pitchers, I'm even less sure... |
Bam Bam October 10 |
Does @Billy know how to read? @Timmy K was talking about @JK |
Action October 10 |
Same exact situation in Royals Yankees game last night that Os had in game 1 against Royals. Tied ballgame, Royals man on third, 2 outs, Bobby Witt at the plate. But this time the opposing team did what Brandon Hyde and the O’s should have done. They pitched around him and walked him. And guess what the next batter did? Of, course fly out to end the inning. The Yankees scored 1 more after that and that was all she wrote. 2 opposite approaches in the same exact situation with 2 different outcomes. Come on Hyde, get an effing clue! |
Delray RICK October 10 |
Who was the reader of this site who lived west FLORIDA near TAMPA?????? |
Eric in White Plains October 10 |
I attended a game last year, full disclosure, my daughter is a junior at UMD. |
Harold October 09 |
Meet the Mets- Meet the Mets…..on to the NLCS- amazin! |
Billy October 09 |
Did this "James" dude answer "the question"? Maybe Timmy K can tell us lol. |
Monday October 14, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3704 |
OK, so it's very obvious at this point.
As long as Lamar and Derrick Henry stay healthy, this Ravens team is going to waltz to the AFC North title. And, sure, K.C. is off to that 5-0 start thus far, but they better figure out a way to go at least 13-4 or the Ravens might actually snag that #1 seed from them by the end of the season.
I can't see the Ravens losing more than 2 additional games this season. That will put them at 13-4. K.C. owns the tiebreaker, of course, thanks to that season opening win.
But if the Chiefs stub their toe and somehow post a 12-5 mark, they won't be the top seed in the AFC. I don't see that happening, mind you, but it's the NFL and crazy things happen.
As for the Ravens, they're making mincemeat of everyone in their path these days.
And it just doesn't look like they can be stopped.
Who's going to beat them? Tampa Bay next Monday night? I doubt it.
The Chargers later this season in the Harbaugh-Bowl? I don't see that happening, either.
The Texans on Christmas Day? I could see that one being tight, for sure.
But all things being equal and looking at the remaining schedule for John Harbaugh's team, it's really hard to see more than two losses on the horizon.
Lamar and the Ravens made easy work of the Commanders on Sunday. Don't let the 30-23 final score fool you. The game was never in doubt. Washington's defense was borderline inept. They packed the box to stop the run and played man-to-man coverage almost all afternoon and Lamar had a field day with the D.C. secondary.
How is anyone going to stymie the Baltimore offense?
If you employ the Commanders' strategy and overplay the run to make sure Derrick Henry doesn't beat you, Zay Flowers, Rashod Bateman and Mark Andrews are going to chew you up and spit you out.
If you go with five in the secondary and put three or four on the line of scrimmage, Henry, Lamar and Justice Hill will buzz through you for 225 yards on the ground.
There's no stopping the Ravens offense, especially the version we've been treated to over the last month.
One of the more underrated contributors has been Patrick Ricard. When he's in the game, the offense percolates even more. He might not get the box score glory, but watch virtually every big play on offense and Ricard's involved as a blocker, either for Lamar or for Derrick Henry.
Zay Flowers is also blossoming in a big way. Yes, pun intended. Flowers was unstoppable on Sunday vs. D.C. and is quickly starting to look like he might turn into the elite, #1 receiver the Ravens were hoping to get when they drafted Hollywood Brown and Rashod Bateman.
Brown's gone, of course, and Bateman is still in Baltimore and occasionally makes an impact. But Flowers is on a different level right now in just his 2nd year in the league.
In his last two games, Zay has combined for 16 catches and 243 receiving yards. There was a time, circa 2005, when 16 catches and 243 yards was a Baltimore wide receiver's haul at the midway point of the regular season.
Now, let's balance out all of this glee with a little bit of reality.
The Ravens need some help in the defensive secondary.
We saw it last week in Cincinnati when Joe Burrow sliced them up and Jayden Daniels and the Commanders had some modest success in the air yesterday in Baltimore.
Davante Adams, the mercurial wide receiver in Las Vegas, is apparently going to be shipped somewhere before the November 5 trade deadline.
It's a shame he doesn't play safety or cornerback.
While it would be tempting for Baltimore to acquire Adams, the suggestion here to Eric DeCosta is to pass on the wide receiver and get some secondary help.
The Ravens are on a collision course with the Chiefs again. Unless something weird happens to either team's quarterback, Baltimore and Kansas City are going to meet again in the AFC title game in late January.
Davante Adams isn't going to help the Ravens slow down Patrick Mahomes.
A veteran safety to help embattled veteran Marcus Williams would be a good idea. Or a reliable cornerback to take some of the heat off of Brandon Stephens and Marlon Humphrey.
The Baltimore offense is just fine.
The Baltimore defense is decent...but they could use a little help.
But even without any trade deadline activity, the Ravens are a juggernaut.
They're so good, even John Harbaugh, Todd Monken and Zach Orr can't mess 'em up.
Speaking of the three coaches, where are the folks who whine about them every week?
That's four straight wins now. And four weeks of silence, mostly.
There's a lot of football remaining, but fortunately for the Ravens and their fans, almost all of it is going to be a cakewalk.
That is, until a certain game against Kansas City at the end of January rolls around.
I can see it building up on the horizon, like one of those summer storms you see starting to gather steam around 3:30 pm that hits a couple of hours later.
Joe Flacco comes to Baltimore with the Indianapolis Colts in the AFC Divisional Round of the playoffs next January.
It almost happened last year, remember. Flacco and the Browns were destined for Baltimore until they got thumped by the Texans in the Wild Card Round.
I have a bad feeling it's going to happen this January.
In a weird twist of fate, Flacco was replaced by Lamar Jackson midway through the 2018 season. Borrowing a familar story from the world of baseball, you might say Flacco was "Wally Pipp'd" by Lamar and, of course, moved on from the Ravens after the '18 campaign and signed with Denver.
Now?
Flacco looks like he might be the one doing the "Wally Pipping", as the 39-year old is playing in place of the injured Anthony Richardson in Indianapolis. And when Richardson comes back, there's a chance the Colts will just stick with Flacco, the same way the Ravens kept on going with Lamar Jackson in 2018 once Joe recovered from his injury.
Wouldn't that be something?
Flacco comes to Baltimore next January, wearing those memorable white uniforms with that gorgeous horseshoe helmet.
There's a lot of football to be played between now and then, of course.
The Ravens are going to cruise to an easy playoff spot. The Colts are going to have their hands full, for sure. They'll have to sneak in as a Wild Card team and then beat someone on the road in order to even make it to the AFC Divisional Round.
But you know how the football gods work.
If they can make Flacco-and-Indy face Lamar-and-Baltimore, you know they're going to do their best to pull it off.
Sunday October 13, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3703 |
With all due respect to the three D.C. teams currently in their regular season campaign, I'd like to see it finish up 0-3 for those fellas today.
Maryland football got shellacked on Friday night, at home, no less, 37-10 to Northwestern. I know what you're thinking:
Last night in their 50th anniversary season opener, the Capitals fell to the New Jersey Devils in D.C., 5-3.
And today, the D.C. football team plays in Baltimore, and they come to town with a swagger that might be justified...or not.
The Commanders are in town for a game that will tell everyone exactly what they are: contenders or pretenders.
Have you seen Lamar's record against NFC teams?
Jackson is 21-1 vs. NFC opponents as a starter, with the lone loss coming to the Giants in New York a few years back. Lamar is Justin Tucker from 40 yards against the NFC. Automatic.
Unless something really weird happens today, he's going to be 22-1.
The Commanders aren't ready for this step. Not yet, anyway.
Their three wins this season have come against a trio of powerhouses: Giants, Bengals and Cardinals. A win's a win, of course, but it's not like D.C. has just knocked off Kansas City, Buffalo and Houston. They're beating up on the patsies of the league.
Trust me, D.C. isn't ready for what they're going to encounter today.
And neither is Jayden Daniels.
Not having their top running back -- Brian Robinson Jr. is out with a knee injury -- isn't going to help matters for D.C. That puts even more heat on Daniels, who has certainly locked himself in as an early candidate for NFC Rookie of the Year honors.
Because they need something to talk about on sports radio down there, some folks around the 495 corridor are even throwing Daniels' name around for MVP. That talk will be brought to a halt, at least temporarily, later today.
Jayden Daniels isn't coming to Baltimore and beating the Ravens. Not in his rookie season. Not in his first time experiencing a real road stadium.
His last two road victories came in Phoenix, where there were more Commanders fans than Cardinals fans in attendance, and Cincinnati, where the Bengals are having a tough time keeping people in the stadium for four quarters.
This is Baltimore, today.
Jayden Daniels might have played a handful of "big" games in college where the environment was spine-tingling, but college football is a tailgate with white linens and a chef making your food for you and the pro game is a frat party where you make it a point not to wear a nice pair of pants and a nice shirt because you're likely going to get blood and vomit on them by the end of the night.
In other words, there's a huge difference between playing at Georgia on a Saturday night and at Baltimore on a Sunday afternoon.
If this were basketball, Lamar's going to throw up a 36-point game on Daniels.
I'm not trying to poo-poo Jayden Daniels and his potential to be a star in the NFL. The Commanders, almost against their front office abilities, might have hit a grand slam with the former LSU signal caller. Who knows?
But today he gets the Cleat of Reality in Baltimore.
He won't be the first one to come into Charm City with huge expectations and leave shaking his head like the Alonzo Mourning meme.
Jared Goff thought he was going to kick butt and take names last year when he brought the 5-1 Lions in Baltimore for an early-season showdown and it didn't go as well as he thought it might.
C.J. Stroud strolled in for last year's season opener and quickly found out what it's like to play in Baltimore.
An 80 degree day in mid-October? The stadium is going to be on fire today, even with 15,000 Commanders fans walking around thumping their chest because they've started 4-1.
Baltimore jumps out to a 7-0 lead on their first offensive series, with Lamar hitting Zay Flowers on a big pass play on 3rd and 8 and Derrick Henry rumbling in from 3 yards out.
The Ravens make it 10-0 early in the second quarter before the Commanders put together a decent drive that stalls on the Ravens 14 yard line. A field goal there makes it 10-3.
Lamar continues to be Lamar on the next series, running for 35 yards on three carries and then hitting Rashod Bateman for a 14-yard touchdown to make it 17-3.
The Commanders again move the ball nicely but they have to settle for a 40-yard field goal as the clock winds down. Ravens lead at the half, 17-6.
After a punt from each team, Daniels makes his first big mistake of the day, fumbling the ball after being hit on a blitz by Kyle Hamilton. The Ravens cash in from there to go up 24-6, marching 39 yards in four plays, capping it off with a Lamar touchdown run from six yards out.
Baltimore makes it 31-6 in the 4th quarter when Roquan Smith's 21 yard interception return takes the ball to the D.C. 19 yard line. Lamar hits Mark Andrews for a 10 yard touchdown with 5 minutes remaining.
The Commanders tack on a late "who cares?" touchdown with 50 seconds left to finalize the scoring at 31-13.
The Ravens win their 4th straight with ease and the Commanders meet face-to-face with The Cleat of Reality.
WILL JACKSON | ||
Will Jackson will be here every Sunday during the NFL season with his thoughts on games and prop bets that will hopefully yield positive results for you. |
Hi football fans! We're still stuck in a rut with our game picks, going about .500 give or take a game either way. Our prop bets continue to profit for you. If we can just get some of the games and totals right we'd be in great shape!
I like this time of the football season. There is enough data and analysis in place to make some smart wagers. Five or six games is what it takes to know what a team does well and doesn't do well.
Here are my picks for today.
Games and totals
Cardinals (+5) at Packers
Colts (+2.5) at Titans plus Colts/Titans over 42.5
Texans (-6.5) at Patriots
Browns (+8.5) at Eagles plus Browns/Eagles over 42.5
Broncos (+3) vs. Chargers
Steelers/Raiders under 36.5
Giants (+3.5) vs. Bengals
Player props
Derrick Henry anytime touchdown scorer
Lamar Jackson over 203.5 yards passing
Jordan Love +1.5 touchdown throws
C.J. Stroud over 203.5 yards passing
Joe Burrow over 203.5 yards passing
Ja'Marr Chase anytime touchdown scorer
Dak Prescott +1.5 touchdown throws
Jared Goff +1.5 touchdown throws
such October 15 |
Because I'm older, I don't spend much time on social media. I find it rather exhausting to be honest. Therefore I was unaware of this incident until last night, when my sons began texting me and FaceTiming me. The assailant is a former teammate of two of my sons at Hereford High. Let's just say that his senior year there was punctuated by some extremely poor decisions, likely due to being under the influence. Hereford was his third high school in four years. I'm going to go out on a very short limb here and surmise that he was under the influence on Sunday night in Federal Hill. His actions are inexcusable under any circumstances. Drunk, high, sober, it doesn't matter. Violently assaulting innocent people, unprovoked, is bordering on sociopathic behavior. He should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law, and if civil suits arise from this disgusting incident, he should be made to pay for his victims medical care and pain and suffering. Whatever backlash and public embarrassment he endures because of this are due to his own reckless, irresponsible behavior. You get what you get when you act like a fool. As I've always told my sons, Make good choices. Stop and think about the consequences. |
TimD in Timonium October 15 |
"Clearly, though, the man who assaulted the two Commanders fans was somehow enthused about being on camera for the incident." Live by the sword, die by the sword. The resulting video went viral, and the outcome probably wasn't the "internet fame" he had in mind. Without video, I'm guessing this goes unreported and the perp remains unknown. Oh well. |
Barry October 14 |
Flacco is likely back to not being a starter by next week, no way he's coming here for a playoff game in Jan. @Paul pretending to be positive is hilarious! |
Delray RICK October 14 |
One of my problems with HARBAUGH is when he throws the red flag I'm sitting watching slow-motion, ain't no way he's right. I know it's people upstairs. When you have to rely on others that's where HARBS gets accused of f it up. He's mind is so on this team there isn't anybody else I'd want as coach . Who the he'll is better ??? Crickets |
Vince from SC October 14 |
The only criticism of Harbaugh I have is his clock management at the end of halves can sometimes make you scratch your head. Other than that, he's been a HOF coach no question. Should have won the SB the year before if Lee Evans or Billy Cundiff could do bare minimum. |
Paul from Towson October 14 |
The John Harbaugh hate in this city absolutely astounds me. All this franchise has done since he's been here is win. Sure, they've only hoisted the Lombardi trophy once under him, but that's one more time than most of the rest of the NFL. And, this team has been to the AFC Championship Game four times under Harbaugh. Sure, the 1-3 record could be better, but let's not forget that first one was in Joe Flacco's (and Harbs' for that matter) rookie season when this team was supposed to be 4-12. Of course he's not perfect, and yeah his use of challenges and timeouts can be questionable at best, but it's hard to argue with the overall W-L record. Not to mention, he swallowed his pride in 2018 and did something very few, if any, Super Bowl winning coaches would do, and changed the entire offensive structure of this team to suit Lamar Jackson's strengths. Look at the rest of the league, and the coaching unemployment line, and tell me who you would rather have. Belichick?? No thanks, look at his record without a guy named Tom Brady. Jeff Fisher?? Don't think so. What about all these young, hotshot coaches that the national pundits love so much. Kevin Stefanski? Pass. Zac Taylor? Nah. Nick Siriani? Please! The luntics in Philly are ready to run him out of town despite making it to the Super Bowl two seasons ago. I know this isn't just a Baltimore thing, after all, if you ask any Stooler fan they would tell you that THEY could coach the team in Pittsburgh to a Super Bowl before Mike Tomlin could. But even still, at a time in the NFL (and sports in general) when most teams have a yearly coaching carousel and rampant upheaval (Falcons, Colts, Raiders, Panthers, etc.) having the stability in a head coach that wins, on average, 10 games a season is a luxury very few teams enjoy. And, in my humble opinion, even given his faults, I would take Harbs over just about every other coach in the league, except MAYBE Andy Reid. But even Reid was an also-ran until a guy named Mahomes came into the league. Go Ravens!! Such, you beat me to it this morning. As I watched the replay of yesterday's game, I realized that the Derrick Henry signing seems very Shannon Sharpe-ish to me. When the Ravens signed the two time Super Bowl champion, they already had a championship caliber defense. Sharpe was the missing piece on an offense that was built on the run and timely passing. Now, Lamar Jackson is leaps and bounds better than Trent Dilfer ever was on his best day, but just like Sharpe, Derrick Henry seems to be the missing piece for this offense. Derrick Henry makes LJ8 an the rest of the offense better because, with all due respect to JK Dobbins and Gus Edwards, defenses didn't have to stack the box to stop them. Leaving LJ8 to pic apart man, or in some cases, soft zone coverage. GO RAVENS! |
Howard October 14 |
Tony Siragusa was a great free agent pickup. The 2000 Ravens defense had no offense to pick them up. The defense couldn’t bend and couldn’t break and they didn’t. |
Bud King October 14 |
Not even Harbs could lose this game... go Ravens! |
Nathan Aparisto October 14 |
Is there ANY deal or trade that would convince that mess of a Jets franchise to send Sauce Gardner to the flock for a passel of picks? Could the cap hit be worked out? Hed be the next Ed Reed for a decade and Ravens could truly be a juggernaught! |
such October 14 |
We were having a text conversation last night and the question was raised: Has there ever been a better Free Agent signing by the Ravens than Henry? I can't think of anyone comparable on offense. Maybe Shannon Sharpe, maybe Derek Mason, but as far as instant impact and the ability to effect games the way he does, there's never been anyone close to Henry. Yesterday was just the latest example of the difference he's made. Everyone from Hereford to Upper Marlboro knew he was getting the ball, and the Ravens ran that same little toss sweep to the left they ran in Cincy, and Henry goes for 30 yards and that's ballgame. He's an absolute hammer. I went back and looked at the 2016 Draft and it's just another example of NFL front offices overanalyzing players. The Ravens took Ronnie Stanley at #6 overall, which is undeniably a very good pick. In the second round, at #42 overall, they selected the immortal Kamalei Correa from Boise State. Derrick Henry went to Tennessee at #45. Oh, what might have been. Although Lamar wasn't here yet so there's no telling what the offense would've looked like with Joe Flacco and King Henry. Regardless, he's here now and it's a beautiful sight to behold. |
Chris in Bel Air October 14 |
Even in the loss to KC, you could see the potential of the Ravens. They are clearly starting to put it all together now. As a fan, I'm feeling the optimism. But... we've also watched the Ravens and the NFL long enough to know they will stub their toe a couple more times. It happens. The key is how they bounce back the following week. Moreover, you don't win the Lombardi in October. It's all about January... and hopefully February. IF they end up playing KC again in the playoffs, they are not going to lose that game. I don't care if it is in B'more or KC. They are winning that one. Yes, the secondary seems to be a concern and can't figure out if it's personnel or scheme or both. Either way, like yesterday, the offense just needs to pick them up and respond when they have the ball. A couple random observations. First on Brandon Stephens. Maybe it's just me but it seems like no matter how closely he is covering his man, the opposing QB and WR always seems to come up with an incredible play/catch. Yesterday he had at least one like that, maybe two. I'm not busting on him, I'm just saying, I'm not sure what more he can do. Overall, I think he's become a decent CB for someone that did not play that position in college. Second, good to see Ngakoue in the mix yesterday. I like his potential rotating in the pass rush mix. As for Marcus Williams, he's sort of been a disappointment. He's not a bad player, I just can't remember the last time I saw him do anything of significance. INT? Forced Fumble? Fumble recovery? Key pass break-up? Something. On to Tampa |
Unitastoberry October 14 |
Another win and another big offensive statement. Commandskins done. Swiss Pees and Orr have some work to do. Why was Tony Romo on Kyle Hamiltons case about him being a dirty player on two big plays he made? He reacts before looking at the instant replay. Tony drives me nuts not my favorite commenter. It's a contact sport Tony. Only the offensive guys can lead with the head what a crock. My feelings on Joe Flacco are those of happiness for him. It's just a shame it's Jr Irsay who gets to beat his chest. With all the sub par duel threat QBs in the league now Joe could play another 4 -5 years.Btw I'm not including Lamar in that catagory. This bum in Cleveland should be on the bench watching Joe toss tds. Barry I will never root for PSU. I have my reasons and it's more than the Sandusky child rape coverup they should have had no football there for 5 years just for that one. It goes back to Joe PA coming here long ago and stealing all state and all county guys in Maryland just to keep them out of College Park then he redshirts them in Happy Valley etc and they never see the field playing behind guys like Franco Harris and Lydell Mitchell etc. I know one of them. He would have been a great running back at Maryland. He ran for 150-200 yards a game in Baltimore County. No shame in calling out good players up there now.44 is one of them. I hate to say it this but it could be Penn States year.Would be great if Locksley could pull a Vanderbuilt on them last game of the season. Btw Lenny Moore does get a pass Lou. Gary Cuozzo or Earl Morrall Howard? Well you have to take Earl and his MVP 1968 off the bench year. But I got visions of Jimmy Orr in the endzone waiving his hand wide open to this day and like I have said before the whole thing still stinks like you know what! |
David Rosenfeld October 14 |
If you weren't at the game yesterday you probably heard Tony Romo say that John Harbaugh is a "top 10 coach all time," which of course drew lots of chuckles from the hoi polloi. I'm not gonna get into a conversation about that, but I will say this... I don't see how you can watch the Ravens play on a week-to-week basis and say that John is an "awful coach." Like...of all takes you could have, it just doesn't stand up to any kind of serious analysis. |
Jon October 14 |
How are the league going to stymie the offense? Same way they have last few years in January- wins mask problems- - no more weak O line? enjoyable Sunday but lets not get ahead of oursleves like we did with Os and KC. Keep working Flacco! |
TimD in Timonium October 14 |
The two drives of 90+ yards were beautiful to watch. Hard to find much to complain about from yesterday's Ravens game, but surely someone will. Looks like the O-line has figured it out. Big difference from the 0-2 start. Whew. |
Kenny G October 14 |
Hopefully we saw a defensive change in yesterday's game - bend but don't break. I am not familiar with the WFT scheme but the Ravens keep also everything in front of them. Also for all people complaining about the refs, please offer some solutions vs just ranting about how bad they are. Sinc the game has become faster, covers more area of the field and the rules very complex, my suggestion is add another ref or two and allow for certain replays/challenges of penalties. I would also possibly allow more contact on receivers but penalize DB holding more (the calls are too inconsistent which leads to a lot of "missed" calls) |
Ed October 13 |
Nice day for Will Jackson picking games and props. Congratulations. |
lou@palo alto October 13 |
#24 was from Penn St |
Barry October 13 |
So UTB is actually a closet PSU fan after all eh? |
Howard October 13 |
Kj— tell me where that bar is so I can hang out with UTB and MFC. I would ask them if they think that Joe in his #15 Colts uniform reminds them more of Gary Cuozzo or Earl Morrall. Oh, and Jordan and Pippen keep rolling on |
Vince from SC October 13 |
Not a blowout but also never in doubt. On to Tampa. |
Unitastoberry October 13 |
If Lamar had made it past AFC teams in January like KC, Tennessee,and played nicked up in the Cincinnati game he would have 3 rings . I agree on this one the Commandskins are going down. Even Harbaugh won't screw this up. If you watched Penn State win in overtime over USC you know the NCAA refs are horrible. Worse than the NFL. Remember when the NFL refs went on strike and they used NCAA refs? That why the strike was settled. This number 44 on Penn State was a one man wrecking crew yesterday. He's a number one pick at TE. He's Dave Casper/Gronk quality if he stays healthy. Blocks great too pancakes guys. |
Old George October 12 |
Trolley Dodgers. |
Chris in Bel Air October 12 |
Love the "Reading time: 2 minutes"... or 3 minutes. This should be a regular thing for DMD. Thanks for the throwback. |
kj October 12 |
Everything written by @Bryce about DET was written about our O's two years ago. Funny how fans are always giving other teams a pass but want their team to be perfect 100% of the time. Wonder if MFC and UTB hang out at the local Curmudgeons bar howling at the moon together? The Indians have the best chance to beat NYY, so not sure why anyone would be pulling for DET to win today. Above was my own mini ode to my absolute favorite local sportswriter. DMD did a better job with his tribute, but figured I'd toss in an amateur version. RIP Mr Jackman. |
BRYCE October 12 |
I’d love to see Skubal and company get the last laugh this year with all the talk of Detroit dealing/retaining their ace at the deadline. Would be great to see them eliminate Cleveland and then continue their post-2000 trend of owning the Yankees in the playoffs. That team is going to be sneaky good for the next several years. In addition to its current roster, they have two top-10 prospects waiting in the wings and another at #31, per MLB. What’s even more impressive is that this 2024 surge has been with no contribution from Mize and very minimal from Torkelson, their two recent #1 overall draft picks. Most importantly, they’re playing with the team chemistry to be a force. |
Unitastoberry October 12 |
Why should U of Maryland fire Mike Locksley? So then they pretty much admit they just want a team who beats squads like Gettysburg College and Northwestern then only loses to Penn St and Michigan? It's basically an admission they joined the Big Ten for the money and could care less about a national championship. Remember what the late great Lefty Driesel said when hired by Maryland basketball back in the stone age? He said he wanted to become the UCLA of the east then strap the national trophy on his car and ride around tobacco road with it. It never happened but it was exactly what the fans wanted to hear and they bought in. Now the football team just wants to beat Northwestern and Prairie View. What a bunch of bull. RIP to Phil Jackman who was a great sports writer and not some punk looking to cause trouble.Those days are gone except at DMD. Go USC! |
MFC October 12 |
Hernandez dropping the F bond, after asking if it was live tv was disgusting. Another self Absorbed athlete. I am now rooting for anyone but LA. What a jerk, it wasn’t cute . |
Phil October 12 |
Awesome tribute, I always enjoyed his columns especially the two minute ones. |
Tom J October 12 |
Drew, when I saw the "Reading Time, 2 minutes" it rang a bell but just couldn't put my finger on it until reading down and then seeing and remembering this was Phil Jackman's thing. Didn't know the origin behind it but loved this in The Sun. Yes, please continue his thing as part of DMD. |
hank October 11 |
Top level trolling today. No true Baltimorean would ever wish success for the Yankees. I agree with David, bunch of posers like this current team is the last team I want to see in the World Series. Whoever prevails in the DET-CLE series best take care of business. Mets vs LA, no one worth rooting for there either. |
Paul from Towson October 11 |
The minute the O’s were eliminated, I became an instant fan of whatever National League team comes out of the NLCS to face whatever dumb AL champion. I can never stomach watching the Yankees (or Red Sox for that matter) celebrate anything so I strongly disagree with Drew’s commentary today. I don’t have any issue with the Mets, so if they happen to beat either LA or SD, more power to them. Plus, I would like to see Lindor and Alonso get a ring. Just wish Buck was still there to make rooting for them even that much easier. I will agree with Drew that the Cleat of Reality is hunting Washington this weekend and Jayden Daniels will feel every bit of its fury. Rookie QB’s never fair well at The Bank against our Ravens. This Sunday will be no exception. Ravens win, 34-13. Go Ravens!!! |
Jeffrey “Fireball” Roberts October 11 |
I would personally love a Yankee/Padre WS. The tattooed Padres in those horrible brown uniforms led by Manny against the clean cut Yankee pinstripes led by Judge. East Coast versus West Coast. Atlantic-Pacific. Biggie-Tupac. Bring it on. LOL |
David Rosenfeld October 11 |
Honestly, the 2024 Yankees are a bunch of posers. They act like they dominated the league. Judge and Soto are ridiculous, and Cole is one of the best, but the other 23 guys ain't much better than any other team. Maybe that'll be enough to win the World Series. I'm not sure Cleveland or Detroit will beat them...they just don't hit well enough. |
Delray RICK October 11 |
Baseball season is OVER!!! |
Chris in Bel Air October 11 |
To be honest, I guess I still have a little bit of sour grapes going on with the O's out of the running again. Tough watching other teams/fans celebrate. I suppose a Yankees/Mets series would be interesting. I'm sure other than Yankees/Dodgers (Ohtani vs Judge) MLB execs and whatever network is broadcasting the World Series would really like Yankees/Mets too. I can't imagine those same folks would be too thrilled with say Tigers vs Padres. Ravens will bring Wash and Jayden Daniels back to earth on Sunday. Don't get me wrong, I like Daniels. It's just not quite his/their time. |
TimD in Timonium October 11 |
A Mets / Yankees series could be entertaining, but I suspect most of America would tune out an all-NYC final. But I don't think the Mets will get past LA or SD. We'll see. And the Ryan Ries video was a great watch. |
Dan October 11 |
Drew, thanks for highlighting Ryan Ries. As a fellow skateboard enthusiast I know his story and the impact he has made on the youth all over the USA. God bless Ryan!! |
Unitastoberry October 10 |
I thought is was a joke today when I heard Dean"Swiss"Pees was rehired to be a senior advisor to DC Zach Orr. It's actually true. |
TimD in Timonium October 10 |
"Corbin Burnes, who started for the AL in the All-Star Game, ranked fourth in the AL in ERA (2.92), third in innings pitched (194 1/3), eighth in WHIP (1.10) and 10th in strikeouts (181)." Complete games in 2024? Zero. (His closest was 8 innings vs KC in the playoffs.) We've already seen the Golden Age of Complete Game Pitchers. It's not coming back. |
Unitastoberry October 10 |
Palmer,Cuellar, McNally and Dobson 4 20 game winners. I saw them all get at least one win that year in person. |
Bob October 10 |
2011 was the last year a pitcher logged double digit complete games with James Shields throwing 11 for Tampa Bay. Since then only two pitchers threw more then 5 games, Chris Sale in 2016 and Sandy Alcantara in 2022 both threw 6 games. I think the ship has sailed on the days a starter bangs out double digit complete games. https://www.baseball-almanac.com/pitching/picomg4.shtml |
Chris in Bel Air October 10 |
Yes, the bullpen game is certainly an interesting situation now. I agree it is not my favorite part of the game for sure. But, if a manager wants to blow through 8 arms in one game, doesn't that put him in a disadvantage for the next game? It's a risk in going the bullpen route. I am also not sure the minimum innings or pitches is practical either. If a starter is getting lit up in the first couple innings a proposed rule to remain for minimum number of pitches/innings would then take away the ability for the manager to make a pitching change. That doesn't seem like it is good for the game either. As for making these guys in Jim Palmer again, that's not happening. The days of Palmer, Fergie Jenkins, Bob Gibson, Gaylord Perry and Steve Carlton are long gone and that's not even including the astounding number of CGs thrown by the likes of Cy Young or Walter Johnson. For reference, in 2024, the team with the most CG's thrown was the Phillies with 5. Going back 50 years, here are the leading and total number of team CGs thrown that year: 2014 - 8 2004 - 11 1994 - 17 1984 - 48 1974 - 71 A remarkable trend down and it's just not ever coming back. |
David Rosenfeld October 10 |
The "bullpen game" is an interesting phenomenon because, as much as people might dislike it, it's really common sense. I'm sure that A.J. Hinch would love it if he had even one more guy like Tarik Skubal. But he doesn't, so he feels like this is the best way to win...and he's often right because (unlike in Palmer's day), the "bullpen" guys are more talented than the ostensible starting pitchers. Assuming this a problem, I'm not sure of the answer. And in the playoffs, when the rope is short even for good starting pitchers, I'm even less sure... |
Bam Bam October 10 |
Does @Billy know how to read? @Timmy K was talking about @JK |
Action October 10 |
Same exact situation in Royals Yankees game last night that Os had in game 1 against Royals. Tied ballgame, Royals man on third, 2 outs, Bobby Witt at the plate. But this time the opposing team did what Brandon Hyde and the O’s should have done. They pitched around him and walked him. And guess what the next batter did? Of, course fly out to end the inning. The Yankees scored 1 more after that and that was all she wrote. 2 opposite approaches in the same exact situation with 2 different outcomes. Come on Hyde, get an effing clue! |
Delray RICK October 10 |
Who was the reader of this site who lived west FLORIDA near TAMPA?????? |
Eric in White Plains October 10 |
I attended a game last year, full disclosure, my daughter is a junior at UMD. |
Harold October 09 |
Meet the Mets- Meet the Mets…..on to the NLCS- amazin! |
Billy October 09 |
Did this "James" dude answer "the question"? Maybe Timmy K can tell us lol. |
Saturday October 12, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3702 |
* This might have happened before, but I honestly have no idea, because I just don't dive deeply enough into Maryland football to know otherwise. But people in College Park are calling for Mike Locksley's job after last night's 37-10 home thrashing at the hands of Northwestern. It's one thing to lose by that score to Michigan, Ohio State and Penn State. It's another thing to get whipped by 27 points in your own barn by......Northwestern? Yikes.
* The Dodgers are headed to the NLCS for a cross-country showdown with the New York Metropolitans after last night's 2-0 win over San Diego. Of all the things that were cool about L.A. winning a decisive 5th game in the best stadium in baseball, the coolest was "I Love L.A." booming over the loudspeaker as the Dodgers celebrated on the field. And the cameras panning over to see Manny and Fernando standing there brooding......very enjoyable indeed.
* Maybe I'm naive. If so, I'll own that. But I believe Aaron Rodgers when he says he was fond of Robert Saleh is disappointed at "upper management" (I love when players use that word...it basically means "ownership") for bailing on their head coach five weeks into the 2024 season. Rodgers looked disconsolate on Friday when he spoke publicly about Saleh's firing, even going as far as to say: "It's pretty much all on me. If I would have played better, he'd still be here." Stand up guy, it seems.
* For Flyers fans who are wondering, I got you. Disconsolate means, "without consolation or comfort; unhappy; distressed".
* The Capitals start their '24-25 season tonight at home vs. the Devils. I don't quite know what to make of the D.C. team this season. I like their goaltending (Charlie Lindgren and newcomer Logan Thompson) and their defensive side of the ice, but I just don't know where they're going to get their goals. Ovi needs 42 goals to surpass Wayne Gretzky's career total of 894. I think he scores 35 this season. I think it's going to be tight for Washington to make the post-season, but I'll throw them in as the #8 seed in the Eastern Conference when everything shakes out next April.
* Speaking of D.C. teams, the Commanders come to town tomorrow with the dangerous tag of "This is their Super Bowl" attached to the 1 pm battle with the Ravens. The Lions came to town last October at 5-1 and had that same sort of "big test" label attached to their visit and they promptly got battered, 38-6. Look for another clobbering to take place tomorrow in Baltimore. Jayden Daniels, meet The Cleat of Reality.
* I don't have a wagering dog in the race, but I'm really hoping Detroit and Tarik Skubal get past the Guardians today in their 5th and decisive game of the ALDS. For those who might not know, your TV listings could still be showing this as an 8:08 pm first pitch, but the game has been moved to 1 pm today due to potential weather issues in The Land of Cleve tonight. Here's hoping Skubal has one of his patented 7 innings, 3 hits, 0 runs, 8 strikeout performances ready for the Guardians. I'd love to see Detroit in the ALCS.
* The Wizards are +100000 to win the NBA title. So, too, are teams like the Hornets, Raptors, and Trailblazers. I don't follow the NBA a whole lot, but +100000 seems like the kind of odds you place on a team who actually has zero shot of winning the championship and you don't want to even entertain the thought of taking someone's money on the dumbest bet of all time.
What you just read, "Reading time: 2 minutes", was an ode to an old friend of mine who passed away earlier this week. Phil Jackman, former sports columnist at The Evening Sun in Baltimore, died at the age of 87. Jackman authored the column, "Reading time: 2 minutes" and it was always one of my favorite things he penned.
Jackman was, indeed, "one of a kind".
He was a Boston (area) guy by birth and never lost that familiar accent, but he blended in seamlessly in Baltimore and Maryland, where he was honored on 15 different occasions as the state's "Sportswriter of the Year".
"Reading time: 2 minutes" was actually a jab at his first boss in Worcester, Massachusetts, who once chided Jackman for his brief recap of Red Sox games by saying to him, "Put some meat on those stories, heck, people can read the whole thing in one minute. You'll never get anywhere writing stories that people can consume in one minute."
When Jackman moved to Maryland in 1965 to cover the Orioles for The Evening Sun, he created "Reading time: 2 minutes" to take a playful dig at his former editor.
"Reading time" turned out to one of Jackman's most popular pieces, appearing on a twice-monthly basis, probably.
I got to know Phil very well during my time as the Media Relations guy for the Blast soccer team. To this day, if you would ever ask me the question, "Who was the fairest sports columnist in town when it came to covering the Blast and giving them a fair shake?", I would immediately say, "That's easy. Phil Jackman."
Jackman loved hockey and so did I. So that, more than indoor soccer, bonded us when we'd share lunch together once or twice during every indoor soccer season.
"Who do you have that's interesting?" he would always say to me when we would hang out at our favorite place, Sabatino's.
I once told him about goalkeeper Cris Vaccaro, who often spent 30 minutes or more before the game "getting dolled up" as Phil would later write. Most players come to the game in street clothes and then simply change into their uniform for the game. Vaccaro would arrive in street clothes, but he'd shower and clean up (nicely) before the game, getting his hair to look just right before diving around on the field for 60 minutes.
Jackman loved covering interesting people.
"You should do something on Cris Vaccaro," I told him. A week later, Jackman and Vaccaro were breaking bed at Sabatino's and Jackman, who had a penchant for goalies via his hockey coverage, thought our soccer goalie was the cat's meow.
"I don't want to write about Eddie Murray hitting another home run," Phil would say to me. "Anyone can do that. Give me something interesting. Give me a weirdo."
On April 22, 2008, a bunch of us affiliated with the old radio station piled in a limo and headed to D.C. for Game 7 of the Caps-Flyers playoff series.
Along the way, we made a stop.
"We're picking up a special guest to join us," someone said. Minutes later, we stopped at a restaurant and out of a parked car stepped Phil Jackman.
Jackman was a former Capitals writer-turned-agonized-fan, so he fit right in with the rest of us who were heading to D.C. for the decisive game.
As fate would have it, the game went to overtime. For kicks, someone in the group grabbed their phone and started a video, asking the obvious question: "Who is going to score the game-winning goal?"
Everyone picked a Caps player.
Jackman was the last guy to give his prediction.
"Flyers on a cheapie," he said with his trademark smirk.
We all booed him and threw popcorn at him.
"What?" he said. "You really think these guys are going to win this game? It's the Capitals we're talking about."
Sure enough, the Caps picked up a (questionable) penalty in overtime and that rat-fink Joffrey Lupal scored in OT to give the Flyers an undeserved victory.
I never let Phil forget that one.
"You picked against the Capitals!" I said.
"I've seen too many games," he deadpanned.
Phil Jackman was an outstanding writer. And a fair writer. He gave indoor soccer a chance in Baltimore when other columnists wouldn't even bother coming to a game, yet were quick to trash us in a column.
"Reading time: 2 minutes" will become a regular feature here as an ode to him. But maybe we'll make it "3 minutes" instead of two, just to one up an old friend. He'd laugh at that one, I'm sure.
Friday October 11, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3701 |
OK, let's start off with probably one of the more unpopular opinions you can find in these parts.
And, no, before you ask or say it: I'm not trolling for the sake of trolling.
The Yankees eliminated the pesky Royals in four games last night, winning 3-1 to advance to the American League Championship Series.
The Mets needed the same four game total to get rid of the Phillies.
Yes, that leads me to this: I'd be perfectly fine with a Mets vs. Yankees World Series.
I'm not necessarily rooting for it to happen. I certainly wouldn't mind seeing the upstart Tigers get there, but they still have to beat Cleveland tomorrow in Game 5 and then dispose of the Yankees in the ALCS. If it works out that way, I'm cool.
And the Mets still have to work their past either the Dodgers or Padres in the NLCS. San Diego is in Los Angeles tonight for the 5th and deciding game of that NLDS round.
But I'm just saying if it does wind up being New York (NL) vs. New York (AL), I'd be happy with that as a baseball loving fan who enjoys watching the World Series in October.
I realize it's sort of unconventional here to "hope" something good happens to a New York team, particularly the Yankees, but for some weird reason, I'm not nearly as anti-Yankees and/or anti-Mets as I probably should be.
There's something special about sports in New York.
Yes, they're passionate about their teams up there. Sometimes a little too much, even.
But I've grown to appreciate that over my lifetime, even if I've never really "rooted" for any of them to succeed.
There was a time, in the mid 1980's, when I cheered for the Mets, but that was because they were playing the Red Sox in the World Series. Back then, I didn't want Boston doing well at anything.
Overall, though, I've never adopted a New York team or anything like that.
Even when we didn't have football for 11 years, I didn't suddenly start wearing a Jets or Giants jersey.
Like most people in Baltimore, I've always been jealous of the Yankees and their "win at all costs" front office attitude. Most of that stemmed from the fact that the Orioles were lousy for 15 years and signed people like Javy Lopez while the Yankees were stacking up A.L. pennants and signing C.C. Sabathia and 12 other free agents.
The Jeffrey Maier incident didn't help. Neither did Mark Teixeira eschewing an Orioles offer and playing for the Yankees 15 years ago.
I was one of the few in town who didn't rail against Mike Mussina when he bolted for the big bucks in the Bronx. Angelos tried to low-ball and Mussina called him out on it. I probably would have done the same thing, honestly.
But that was then. This is now.
I don't find either the Yankees or Mets to be unbearable. Their fans might be a tad nuts, but if anyone listens to Baltimore sports radio or reads Baltimore-based commentary on the internet, I have to tell you, we're nuts too. I don't know if we're more or less nuts than people in New York, but we're pretty daggone close.
But the two teams are fine. At least by me.
I know the O's had some regular season issues with the Yankees, but a lot of that was based on that idiotic, insane "unwritten rules" thing in Major League Baseball that makes my head want to explode. And both teams were guilty.
"You threw inside, we're throwing inside."
"You hit our guy, we're going to assume it was on purpose and now we're going to throw at your guy."
"We didn't try to hit you but we did. You then hit us on purpose. Now we have to hit you on purpose to make up for you hitting us on purpose."
I can't stand that stuff.
But every team does it, unfortunately.
I don't really follow the Mets or the National League enough to know all the warts and flaws of the Mets, but I'm sure they have some.
The Yankees have a bunch of very talented players and then some guys, like Alex Verdugo, who seems like he's just riding on those pinstripe coattails. He prances around like he's the next coming of Mickey Mantle when in reality he's a lighter version of Cedric Mullins.
Gerrit Cole has an edge to him, for sure, but I kind of prefer my pitchers to be like that, truth be told. Pitchers need to be a little surly. They need to think every umpire in the league is squeezing them on balls and strikes. They should dislike every hitter who stands up there and faces them.
Cole reminds me a lot of erstwhile Orioles/Yankees pitcher Mike Mussina. Mussina was better than you. If you didn't think that was true, just ask him.
But other than Cole and Verdugo, I don't see anyone of real note that's easy to dislike. Aaron Judge seems like the nicest guy in the world, even when he's hitting 430 foot home runs off of your pitchers. Juan Soto can't play right field to save his life, but he seems like a reasonable guy as well.
Hey, maybe I won't even have to worry about this weird feeling of being excited to see a Mets/Yankees World Series. Those two teams still have to win four more games to get there.
But the planets are aligning for another Subway Series.
And I can't believe I'm saying this, but I'd be perfectly fine with it.
I know what you're thinking.
"Has this guy lost his mind?"
Maybe.
faith in sports |
Ryan Ries is co-founder of The Whosoevers movement, a nonprofit organization that empowers students at public schools, colleges, and universities around the world to make positive choices no matter their circumstances.
Ryan teaches Bible studies at Calvary Chapel Golden Spring, and speaks to thousands of teens and adults at music festivals, concerts, skate parks, churches, juvenile detention centers, and rehabs each year.
He grew up as a well known skateboarder in the Los Angeles area who turned into a star in that arena.
He might not be a well known athlete, per se, but he's not afraid to speak the truth to athletes of all levels both here in the U.S. and abroad.
As someone who has passed the work of Ries along to young athletes I coach, I am excited to share his words and thoughts with you here today. Ryan Ries is an amazing man, as you will see in the 11 minute video below.
Thanks, as always, to our friends at Freestate Electrical for their continued support of #DMD and our "Faith in Sports" segment we run here every Friday.
Thursday October 10, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3700 |
Before we get to the good stuff, let's address something far more important than pitchers, baseball, games, scores and so on.
In these parts, given our relative close proximity to Florida, almost everyone reading this today knows someone that either lives there or does the half-here, half-there thing.
I probably have 10 different people I know who fit that profile. Some are in Florida full time and others have homes there where they spend the winter months.
I'm also involved in two "trips" to Florida in early 2025, one for Calvert Hall Golf and one for FCA Maryland Golf, and I've become friendly and familiar with the people in Ft. Lauderdale and Hammock Beach who serve as my point-of-contact at two golf facilities.
We all somebody down there, I'm guessing.
There are several nationwide prayer chains going on this week as people gather -- most electronically -- to pray for the victims of Hurricane Milton. One of those is at 9:00 am this morning and another is at 3:30 pm this afternoon. I'm sure there are plenty of others, but those are two I know about personally.
If at one or both of those times today you could just take a couple of minutes, pause what you're doing, and pray for everyone in Florida that is in Milton's destructive path, it would be appreciated by the people down there who are going through a life changing weather event.
Pray for their well being and that their state and national government will be on hand quickly to aid in the response to help keep everyone safe and start to restore some normalcy to the area that has been hit by the storm.
Thank you for doing that.
OK, so you might very well file this one under "Who cares?" and, if so, I definitely get it.
Wednesday was a great day to be a baseball fan, as all four remaining series' were in action, with the Mets eliminating the Phillies in four games, the Tigers going up 2-1 on the Guardians, the Yankees taking a 2-1 lead on the Royals and the Dodgers forcing a 5th and deciding game (at home) by beating San Diego, 8-0.
I know what you're thinking.
"Wow, who pitched so well for the Dodgers that they shut out that that red-hot Padres lineup?"
Eight guys did.
As in, eight guys pitched so well that they didn't allow San Diego to score a run.
And here's the thing: I'm not so sure that's the way it should be.
Editor's note: This is where you might be hearing that great tune from Bruce Hornsby, "That's just the way it is", in your head for the rest of the day. You're welcome.
But I'm serious.
Just like I wasn't quite sure if I really liked the infield shift (my final vote was, "I don't") or the 10th inning regular season rule that puts a guy on 2nd base to start the inning (I don't, but I see why they do it), I've never been all that certain that I like the idea of "bullpen games" where teams start a relief pitcher and he throws one inning, maybe two, to start the game.
After last night in San Diego, I'm definitely leaning more in the direction of, "I don't like it."
The Dodgers started Ryan Brasier. Now, it's fair to point out he did make 4 starts in 2024. But those were all in similar circumstances to last night vs. the Padres. In 29 appearances in the '24 campaign, he logged a grand total of 28 innings.
Last night, he went 1.1 innings before being lifted in the 2nd for another relief pitcher.
And so it went all night. No L.A. pitcher threw more than 1.2 innings on Wednesday.
I know there are some extenuating circumstances. The Dodgers thought Clayton Kershaw might be able to start Game 4 (if necessary) until he was shelved for the rest of the year earlier this week with a toe problem. L.A.'s rotation has been nicked with injuries all season and, of course, they also don't have Shohei Ohtani at their disposal to use on the mound because of his off-season Tommy John surgery.
But going through 8 pitchers in 9 innings seems a little cheesy to me.
I get it. "Them's the rules", people are going to say.
"Sour grapes from Padres fans," they're saying out in L.A. this morning.
It's just not the way baseball was intended to be played.
Just like they discovered "the shift" wasn't the way it was intended to be played, having relief pitchers start games isn't the way to do it, either.
Now, again, in fairness, Major League Baseball is considering a rule that forces teams to start pitchers and leave them in the game for an extended period of time, either 6 innings or 100 pitches, whichever comes first.
I can't imagine that specific rule will get passed, but I do think a rule of some kind is looming. Maybe 4 innings and 75 pitches (no, that's not a jab at Brandon Hyde, who took Zach Eflin out after those exact numbers last week in Game 2 against K.C.).
OK, maybe it is a jab after all.
Eflin was rolling along and, as we've seen with the Royals in this series against New York, K.C.'s offense is/was lousy.
But Brandon Hyde decided 75 pitches was enough. Jim Palmer almost fell out of his chair, of course. Palmer, for the young 'uns out there who don't know, had 211 complete games in his career.
I know what's going through your head right now.
"You mean he started 211 games."
"You mean he won 211 games."
"You mean..."
"No, son, I mean he threw 211 complete games.
He actually started 521 games and won 268 of them.
But of the 521 he started, he threw all 9 innings in 211 of them.
"Bullpen games" must make Palmer's head explode.
Anyway...
Maybe the new rule is 4 innings or 75 pitches. Or 5 innings and 80 pitches.
Whatever the final numbers turn out to be, I do see a rule coming along soon that restricts teams from doing what the Dodgers did last night in San Diego.
Some people out there definitely say, "Who cares? Someone has to pitch. When they throw the ball, you hit it. If you can't hit it, don't cry about it."
And to that, I say, yeah, OK, but part of the body of a baseball game includes the need for a pitcher to go through the opposing lineup two or three times.
I would almost be willing to predict that if the proposed rule doesn't get passed sometime in the future that some whiz-kid analytics-nerd is going to come along in 10 years and put their roster together with only relief pitchers and every game will be the proverbial "bullpen game".
You'd have 13 or 14 pitchers on the team, all of whom can throw 1, 2 or 3 innings before they run out of gas.
And you just start them every game.
Now, I get it, using that theory, and assuming you used the same 14 pitchers all year (which, you wouldn't), you might have 14 guys throwing somewhere around 150 innings.
And that's probably unreasonable to consider happening, even though 150 innings isn't going to cause anyone's arm to fall off.
But something "like that" could definitely happen, where a team uses 20-22 pitchers over the course of a season to get them through the 162 campaign.
It would require some magical use of the minor league option system, obviously, but where there's a will, there's a way, as the saying goes.
All of this is just a roundabout way of saying, "Bullpen games stink..."
Once upon a time in the NBA, your big guy could just stand under the basket and you'd throw him the ball and he'd dunk it over your guy and if you had the bigger "big guy", you were always going to win.
The powers-that-be figured that out and said, "We have to make a rule that eliminates that from happening." And they did. Now, big guys can still stand under the basket, but only for a short period of time.
Baseball is facing the same sort of thing with these bullpen games.
They're just no good.
I understand why they're being used. And I'd even go as far as giving the Dodgers a pass last night because their starting rotation has been clipped with injuries recently.
But baseball has to figure out a way to get rid of bullpen games.
Pass the rule and make these guys into Jim Palmer again.
such October 15 |
Because I'm older, I don't spend much time on social media. I find it rather exhausting to be honest. Therefore I was unaware of this incident until last night, when my sons began texting me and FaceTiming me. The assailant is a former teammate of two of my sons at Hereford High. Let's just say that his senior year there was punctuated by some extremely poor decisions, likely due to being under the influence. Hereford was his third high school in four years. I'm going to go out on a very short limb here and surmise that he was under the influence on Sunday night in Federal Hill. His actions are inexcusable under any circumstances. Drunk, high, sober, it doesn't matter. Violently assaulting innocent people, unprovoked, is bordering on sociopathic behavior. He should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law, and if civil suits arise from this disgusting incident, he should be made to pay for his victims medical care and pain and suffering. Whatever backlash and public embarrassment he endures because of this are due to his own reckless, irresponsible behavior. You get what you get when you act like a fool. As I've always told my sons, Make good choices. Stop and think about the consequences. |
TimD in Timonium October 15 |
"Clearly, though, the man who assaulted the two Commanders fans was somehow enthused about being on camera for the incident." Live by the sword, die by the sword. The resulting video went viral, and the outcome probably wasn't the "internet fame" he had in mind. Without video, I'm guessing this goes unreported and the perp remains unknown. Oh well. |
Barry October 14 |
Flacco is likely back to not being a starter by next week, no way he's coming here for a playoff game in Jan. @Paul pretending to be positive is hilarious! |
Delray RICK October 14 |
One of my problems with HARBAUGH is when he throws the red flag I'm sitting watching slow-motion, ain't no way he's right. I know it's people upstairs. When you have to rely on others that's where HARBS gets accused of f it up. He's mind is so on this team there isn't anybody else I'd want as coach . Who the he'll is better ??? Crickets |
Vince from SC October 14 |
The only criticism of Harbaugh I have is his clock management at the end of halves can sometimes make you scratch your head. Other than that, he's been a HOF coach no question. Should have won the SB the year before if Lee Evans or Billy Cundiff could do bare minimum. |
Paul from Towson October 14 |
The John Harbaugh hate in this city absolutely astounds me. All this franchise has done since he's been here is win. Sure, they've only hoisted the Lombardi trophy once under him, but that's one more time than most of the rest of the NFL. And, this team has been to the AFC Championship Game four times under Harbaugh. Sure, the 1-3 record could be better, but let's not forget that first one was in Joe Flacco's (and Harbs' for that matter) rookie season when this team was supposed to be 4-12. Of course he's not perfect, and yeah his use of challenges and timeouts can be questionable at best, but it's hard to argue with the overall W-L record. Not to mention, he swallowed his pride in 2018 and did something very few, if any, Super Bowl winning coaches would do, and changed the entire offensive structure of this team to suit Lamar Jackson's strengths. Look at the rest of the league, and the coaching unemployment line, and tell me who you would rather have. Belichick?? No thanks, look at his record without a guy named Tom Brady. Jeff Fisher?? Don't think so. What about all these young, hotshot coaches that the national pundits love so much. Kevin Stefanski? Pass. Zac Taylor? Nah. Nick Siriani? Please! The luntics in Philly are ready to run him out of town despite making it to the Super Bowl two seasons ago. I know this isn't just a Baltimore thing, after all, if you ask any Stooler fan they would tell you that THEY could coach the team in Pittsburgh to a Super Bowl before Mike Tomlin could. But even still, at a time in the NFL (and sports in general) when most teams have a yearly coaching carousel and rampant upheaval (Falcons, Colts, Raiders, Panthers, etc.) having the stability in a head coach that wins, on average, 10 games a season is a luxury very few teams enjoy. And, in my humble opinion, even given his faults, I would take Harbs over just about every other coach in the league, except MAYBE Andy Reid. But even Reid was an also-ran until a guy named Mahomes came into the league. Go Ravens!! Such, you beat me to it this morning. As I watched the replay of yesterday's game, I realized that the Derrick Henry signing seems very Shannon Sharpe-ish to me. When the Ravens signed the two time Super Bowl champion, they already had a championship caliber defense. Sharpe was the missing piece on an offense that was built on the run and timely passing. Now, Lamar Jackson is leaps and bounds better than Trent Dilfer ever was on his best day, but just like Sharpe, Derrick Henry seems to be the missing piece for this offense. Derrick Henry makes LJ8 an the rest of the offense better because, with all due respect to JK Dobbins and Gus Edwards, defenses didn't have to stack the box to stop them. Leaving LJ8 to pic apart man, or in some cases, soft zone coverage. GO RAVENS! |
Howard October 14 |
Tony Siragusa was a great free agent pickup. The 2000 Ravens defense had no offense to pick them up. The defense couldn’t bend and couldn’t break and they didn’t. |
Bud King October 14 |
Not even Harbs could lose this game... go Ravens! |
Nathan Aparisto October 14 |
Is there ANY deal or trade that would convince that mess of a Jets franchise to send Sauce Gardner to the flock for a passel of picks? Could the cap hit be worked out? Hed be the next Ed Reed for a decade and Ravens could truly be a juggernaught! |
such October 14 |
We were having a text conversation last night and the question was raised: Has there ever been a better Free Agent signing by the Ravens than Henry? I can't think of anyone comparable on offense. Maybe Shannon Sharpe, maybe Derek Mason, but as far as instant impact and the ability to effect games the way he does, there's never been anyone close to Henry. Yesterday was just the latest example of the difference he's made. Everyone from Hereford to Upper Marlboro knew he was getting the ball, and the Ravens ran that same little toss sweep to the left they ran in Cincy, and Henry goes for 30 yards and that's ballgame. He's an absolute hammer. I went back and looked at the 2016 Draft and it's just another example of NFL front offices overanalyzing players. The Ravens took Ronnie Stanley at #6 overall, which is undeniably a very good pick. In the second round, at #42 overall, they selected the immortal Kamalei Correa from Boise State. Derrick Henry went to Tennessee at #45. Oh, what might have been. Although Lamar wasn't here yet so there's no telling what the offense would've looked like with Joe Flacco and King Henry. Regardless, he's here now and it's a beautiful sight to behold. |
Chris in Bel Air October 14 |
Even in the loss to KC, you could see the potential of the Ravens. They are clearly starting to put it all together now. As a fan, I'm feeling the optimism. But... we've also watched the Ravens and the NFL long enough to know they will stub their toe a couple more times. It happens. The key is how they bounce back the following week. Moreover, you don't win the Lombardi in October. It's all about January... and hopefully February. IF they end up playing KC again in the playoffs, they are not going to lose that game. I don't care if it is in B'more or KC. They are winning that one. Yes, the secondary seems to be a concern and can't figure out if it's personnel or scheme or both. Either way, like yesterday, the offense just needs to pick them up and respond when they have the ball. A couple random observations. First on Brandon Stephens. Maybe it's just me but it seems like no matter how closely he is covering his man, the opposing QB and WR always seems to come up with an incredible play/catch. Yesterday he had at least one like that, maybe two. I'm not busting on him, I'm just saying, I'm not sure what more he can do. Overall, I think he's become a decent CB for someone that did not play that position in college. Second, good to see Ngakoue in the mix yesterday. I like his potential rotating in the pass rush mix. As for Marcus Williams, he's sort of been a disappointment. He's not a bad player, I just can't remember the last time I saw him do anything of significance. INT? Forced Fumble? Fumble recovery? Key pass break-up? Something. On to Tampa |
Unitastoberry October 14 |
Another win and another big offensive statement. Commandskins done. Swiss Pees and Orr have some work to do. Why was Tony Romo on Kyle Hamiltons case about him being a dirty player on two big plays he made? He reacts before looking at the instant replay. Tony drives me nuts not my favorite commenter. It's a contact sport Tony. Only the offensive guys can lead with the head what a crock. My feelings on Joe Flacco are those of happiness for him. It's just a shame it's Jr Irsay who gets to beat his chest. With all the sub par duel threat QBs in the league now Joe could play another 4 -5 years.Btw I'm not including Lamar in that catagory. This bum in Cleveland should be on the bench watching Joe toss tds. Barry I will never root for PSU. I have my reasons and it's more than the Sandusky child rape coverup they should have had no football there for 5 years just for that one. It goes back to Joe PA coming here long ago and stealing all state and all county guys in Maryland just to keep them out of College Park then he redshirts them in Happy Valley etc and they never see the field playing behind guys like Franco Harris and Lydell Mitchell etc. I know one of them. He would have been a great running back at Maryland. He ran for 150-200 yards a game in Baltimore County. No shame in calling out good players up there now.44 is one of them. I hate to say it this but it could be Penn States year.Would be great if Locksley could pull a Vanderbuilt on them last game of the season. Btw Lenny Moore does get a pass Lou. Gary Cuozzo or Earl Morrall Howard? Well you have to take Earl and his MVP 1968 off the bench year. But I got visions of Jimmy Orr in the endzone waiving his hand wide open to this day and like I have said before the whole thing still stinks like you know what! |
David Rosenfeld October 14 |
If you weren't at the game yesterday you probably heard Tony Romo say that John Harbaugh is a "top 10 coach all time," which of course drew lots of chuckles from the hoi polloi. I'm not gonna get into a conversation about that, but I will say this... I don't see how you can watch the Ravens play on a week-to-week basis and say that John is an "awful coach." Like...of all takes you could have, it just doesn't stand up to any kind of serious analysis. |
Jon October 14 |
How are the league going to stymie the offense? Same way they have last few years in January- wins mask problems- - no more weak O line? enjoyable Sunday but lets not get ahead of oursleves like we did with Os and KC. Keep working Flacco! |
TimD in Timonium October 14 |
The two drives of 90+ yards were beautiful to watch. Hard to find much to complain about from yesterday's Ravens game, but surely someone will. Looks like the O-line has figured it out. Big difference from the 0-2 start. Whew. |
Kenny G October 14 |
Hopefully we saw a defensive change in yesterday's game - bend but don't break. I am not familiar with the WFT scheme but the Ravens keep also everything in front of them. Also for all people complaining about the refs, please offer some solutions vs just ranting about how bad they are. Sinc the game has become faster, covers more area of the field and the rules very complex, my suggestion is add another ref or two and allow for certain replays/challenges of penalties. I would also possibly allow more contact on receivers but penalize DB holding more (the calls are too inconsistent which leads to a lot of "missed" calls) |
Ed October 13 |
Nice day for Will Jackson picking games and props. Congratulations. |
lou@palo alto October 13 |
#24 was from Penn St |
Barry October 13 |
So UTB is actually a closet PSU fan after all eh? |
Howard October 13 |
Kj— tell me where that bar is so I can hang out with UTB and MFC. I would ask them if they think that Joe in his #15 Colts uniform reminds them more of Gary Cuozzo or Earl Morrall. Oh, and Jordan and Pippen keep rolling on |
Vince from SC October 13 |
Not a blowout but also never in doubt. On to Tampa. |
Unitastoberry October 13 |
If Lamar had made it past AFC teams in January like KC, Tennessee,and played nicked up in the Cincinnati game he would have 3 rings . I agree on this one the Commandskins are going down. Even Harbaugh won't screw this up. If you watched Penn State win in overtime over USC you know the NCAA refs are horrible. Worse than the NFL. Remember when the NFL refs went on strike and they used NCAA refs? That why the strike was settled. This number 44 on Penn State was a one man wrecking crew yesterday. He's a number one pick at TE. He's Dave Casper/Gronk quality if he stays healthy. Blocks great too pancakes guys. |
Old George October 12 |
Trolley Dodgers. |
Chris in Bel Air October 12 |
Love the "Reading time: 2 minutes"... or 3 minutes. This should be a regular thing for DMD. Thanks for the throwback. |
kj October 12 |
Everything written by @Bryce about DET was written about our O's two years ago. Funny how fans are always giving other teams a pass but want their team to be perfect 100% of the time. Wonder if MFC and UTB hang out at the local Curmudgeons bar howling at the moon together? The Indians have the best chance to beat NYY, so not sure why anyone would be pulling for DET to win today. Above was my own mini ode to my absolute favorite local sportswriter. DMD did a better job with his tribute, but figured I'd toss in an amateur version. RIP Mr Jackman. |
BRYCE October 12 |
I’d love to see Skubal and company get the last laugh this year with all the talk of Detroit dealing/retaining their ace at the deadline. Would be great to see them eliminate Cleveland and then continue their post-2000 trend of owning the Yankees in the playoffs. That team is going to be sneaky good for the next several years. In addition to its current roster, they have two top-10 prospects waiting in the wings and another at #31, per MLB. What’s even more impressive is that this 2024 surge has been with no contribution from Mize and very minimal from Torkelson, their two recent #1 overall draft picks. Most importantly, they’re playing with the team chemistry to be a force. |
Unitastoberry October 12 |
Why should U of Maryland fire Mike Locksley? So then they pretty much admit they just want a team who beats squads like Gettysburg College and Northwestern then only loses to Penn St and Michigan? It's basically an admission they joined the Big Ten for the money and could care less about a national championship. Remember what the late great Lefty Driesel said when hired by Maryland basketball back in the stone age? He said he wanted to become the UCLA of the east then strap the national trophy on his car and ride around tobacco road with it. It never happened but it was exactly what the fans wanted to hear and they bought in. Now the football team just wants to beat Northwestern and Prairie View. What a bunch of bull. RIP to Phil Jackman who was a great sports writer and not some punk looking to cause trouble.Those days are gone except at DMD. Go USC! |
MFC October 12 |
Hernandez dropping the F bond, after asking if it was live tv was disgusting. Another self Absorbed athlete. I am now rooting for anyone but LA. What a jerk, it wasn’t cute . |
Phil October 12 |
Awesome tribute, I always enjoyed his columns especially the two minute ones. |
Tom J October 12 |
Drew, when I saw the "Reading Time, 2 minutes" it rang a bell but just couldn't put my finger on it until reading down and then seeing and remembering this was Phil Jackman's thing. Didn't know the origin behind it but loved this in The Sun. Yes, please continue his thing as part of DMD. |
hank October 11 |
Top level trolling today. No true Baltimorean would ever wish success for the Yankees. I agree with David, bunch of posers like this current team is the last team I want to see in the World Series. Whoever prevails in the DET-CLE series best take care of business. Mets vs LA, no one worth rooting for there either. |
Paul from Towson October 11 |
The minute the O’s were eliminated, I became an instant fan of whatever National League team comes out of the NLCS to face whatever dumb AL champion. I can never stomach watching the Yankees (or Red Sox for that matter) celebrate anything so I strongly disagree with Drew’s commentary today. I don’t have any issue with the Mets, so if they happen to beat either LA or SD, more power to them. Plus, I would like to see Lindor and Alonso get a ring. Just wish Buck was still there to make rooting for them even that much easier. I will agree with Drew that the Cleat of Reality is hunting Washington this weekend and Jayden Daniels will feel every bit of its fury. Rookie QB’s never fair well at The Bank against our Ravens. This Sunday will be no exception. Ravens win, 34-13. Go Ravens!!! |
Jeffrey “Fireball” Roberts October 11 |
I would personally love a Yankee/Padre WS. The tattooed Padres in those horrible brown uniforms led by Manny against the clean cut Yankee pinstripes led by Judge. East Coast versus West Coast. Atlantic-Pacific. Biggie-Tupac. Bring it on. LOL |
David Rosenfeld October 11 |
Honestly, the 2024 Yankees are a bunch of posers. They act like they dominated the league. Judge and Soto are ridiculous, and Cole is one of the best, but the other 23 guys ain't much better than any other team. Maybe that'll be enough to win the World Series. I'm not sure Cleveland or Detroit will beat them...they just don't hit well enough. |
Delray RICK October 11 |
Baseball season is OVER!!! |
Chris in Bel Air October 11 |
To be honest, I guess I still have a little bit of sour grapes going on with the O's out of the running again. Tough watching other teams/fans celebrate. I suppose a Yankees/Mets series would be interesting. I'm sure other than Yankees/Dodgers (Ohtani vs Judge) MLB execs and whatever network is broadcasting the World Series would really like Yankees/Mets too. I can't imagine those same folks would be too thrilled with say Tigers vs Padres. Ravens will bring Wash and Jayden Daniels back to earth on Sunday. Don't get me wrong, I like Daniels. It's just not quite his/their time. |
TimD in Timonium October 11 |
A Mets / Yankees series could be entertaining, but I suspect most of America would tune out an all-NYC final. But I don't think the Mets will get past LA or SD. We'll see. And the Ryan Ries video was a great watch. |
Dan October 11 |
Drew, thanks for highlighting Ryan Ries. As a fellow skateboard enthusiast I know his story and the impact he has made on the youth all over the USA. God bless Ryan!! |
Unitastoberry October 10 |
I thought is was a joke today when I heard Dean"Swiss"Pees was rehired to be a senior advisor to DC Zach Orr. It's actually true. |
TimD in Timonium October 10 |
"Corbin Burnes, who started for the AL in the All-Star Game, ranked fourth in the AL in ERA (2.92), third in innings pitched (194 1/3), eighth in WHIP (1.10) and 10th in strikeouts (181)." Complete games in 2024? Zero. (His closest was 8 innings vs KC in the playoffs.) We've already seen the Golden Age of Complete Game Pitchers. It's not coming back. |
Unitastoberry October 10 |
Palmer,Cuellar, McNally and Dobson 4 20 game winners. I saw them all get at least one win that year in person. |
Bob October 10 |
2011 was the last year a pitcher logged double digit complete games with James Shields throwing 11 for Tampa Bay. Since then only two pitchers threw more then 5 games, Chris Sale in 2016 and Sandy Alcantara in 2022 both threw 6 games. I think the ship has sailed on the days a starter bangs out double digit complete games. https://www.baseball-almanac.com/pitching/picomg4.shtml |
Chris in Bel Air October 10 |
Yes, the bullpen game is certainly an interesting situation now. I agree it is not my favorite part of the game for sure. But, if a manager wants to blow through 8 arms in one game, doesn't that put him in a disadvantage for the next game? It's a risk in going the bullpen route. I am also not sure the minimum innings or pitches is practical either. If a starter is getting lit up in the first couple innings a proposed rule to remain for minimum number of pitches/innings would then take away the ability for the manager to make a pitching change. That doesn't seem like it is good for the game either. As for making these guys in Jim Palmer again, that's not happening. The days of Palmer, Fergie Jenkins, Bob Gibson, Gaylord Perry and Steve Carlton are long gone and that's not even including the astounding number of CGs thrown by the likes of Cy Young or Walter Johnson. For reference, in 2024, the team with the most CG's thrown was the Phillies with 5. Going back 50 years, here are the leading and total number of team CGs thrown that year: 2014 - 8 2004 - 11 1994 - 17 1984 - 48 1974 - 71 A remarkable trend down and it's just not ever coming back. |
David Rosenfeld October 10 |
The "bullpen game" is an interesting phenomenon because, as much as people might dislike it, it's really common sense. I'm sure that A.J. Hinch would love it if he had even one more guy like Tarik Skubal. But he doesn't, so he feels like this is the best way to win...and he's often right because (unlike in Palmer's day), the "bullpen" guys are more talented than the ostensible starting pitchers. Assuming this a problem, I'm not sure of the answer. And in the playoffs, when the rope is short even for good starting pitchers, I'm even less sure... |
Bam Bam October 10 |
Does @Billy know how to read? @Timmy K was talking about @JK |
Action October 10 |
Same exact situation in Royals Yankees game last night that Os had in game 1 against Royals. Tied ballgame, Royals man on third, 2 outs, Bobby Witt at the plate. But this time the opposing team did what Brandon Hyde and the O’s should have done. They pitched around him and walked him. And guess what the next batter did? Of, course fly out to end the inning. The Yankees scored 1 more after that and that was all she wrote. 2 opposite approaches in the same exact situation with 2 different outcomes. Come on Hyde, get an effing clue! |
Delray RICK October 10 |
Who was the reader of this site who lived west FLORIDA near TAMPA?????? |
Eric in White Plains October 10 |
I attended a game last year, full disclosure, my daughter is a junior at UMD. |
Harold October 09 |
Meet the Mets- Meet the Mets…..on to the NLCS- amazin! |
Billy October 09 |
Did this "James" dude answer "the question"? Maybe Timmy K can tell us lol. |
Wednesday October 9, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3699 |
OK, so I'm not going to go as far as calling this period in our sports calendar year "dog days", even though it might come close to being a fit here in the great state of Maryland.
The Orioles are done.
And now all we have, until Big Ten basketball heats up in January, is Ravens football.
Like I said, not exactly "dog days", but in the neighborhood at least.
This is when we really miss having a college football team to call our own here in Charm City.
Your mileage might vary on this, admittedly. We've never really had a college team in our town that excited us the way the Colts and Ravens (and Orioles) have in my lifetime.
Maybe you didn't get a little jealous of the revelry we saw in downtown Nashville last Saturday night when Vanderbilt football fans treked a couple of miles with one of the goalposts in the aftermath of their shocking 40-35 win over Alabama.
I did.
Get jealous, that is.
Just a little bit.
And therein lies the rub here in Charm City.
We just don't have that here in the fall months. There's baseball until there isn't and, of course, we have the Ravens. But nothing else in these parts gets our collective sports blood boiling.
And occasionally, I'll think about how cool it must be to have a college football team you care about.
I was away in the great city of Philadelphia last weekend playing in a golf event and Saturday it was all anyone was talking about within our team of 16 guys who were there representing our Baltimore team.
Even while we played golf on Saturday, they were following along with what was going on with Alabama, Texas A&M, Tennessee, Ole Miss and so on.
Now, I'm assuming a wager or two might have been involved in those games and that's why my friends were so locked in on those games. But some of it was just good old fashioned passion for college football.
I've never had that about the University of Maryland football program.
This is the truth: I have absolutely no idea who Maryland plays this weekend. If you gave me $1 million to get it right, the only way I'd have a chance is by guessing. I know they lost to Indiana two weeks ago and I'm aware they also lost earlier this year to Michigan State. So I'd leave those two out.
But I have no clue who Maryland plays, because I just don't follow Terps football.
And, frankly, no one in my inner circle of friends -- nearly all of them are sports-loving fanatics like me -- follows Maryland football all that much, either.
OK, I'll take a wild guess just to see if I'd win the million bucks. I'll say the Terps play at home vs. Illinois this Saturday.
Anyway, I'm not trying to denigrate Maryland football here. I've written a number of pieces over the years lamenting how disconnected I've felt throughout my life with College Park, particularly when it comes to the football program.
Instead, I'm merely bringing up the fact that here, once baseball is over, we're in a bit of a lull as far as local sports goes.
Yes, there's the baseball playoffs to keep us interested. And they are worth following, for sure. There are some great storylines in play now that we're on the cusp of the ALCS and NLCS. Just because the O's got dismissed by Kansas City doesn't mean baseball isn't worth following.
And, sure, we have the Capitals hockey season starting up later this week. I don't see them being all that good in 2024-2025, but the Ovechkin goal chase is now officially "on" and we're going to be hearing a lot about that over the next eight months.
On a quick side note, I think it's going to be tight for the Caps to make the post-season in '24-25. It wouldn't shock me if they miss out. As for Ovechkin, I think he finishes the campaign with 885 goals and has to come back to collect those final 10 goals to surprass Gretzky in '25-26.
There's your Caps update. Probably not going to make the playoffs and no record for Ovi this season.
No one in town cares at all about the Wizards. They might as well just play in Buffalo as far as Baltimore sports fans are concerned.
Maryland basketball has a following in Baltimore, no doubt about it. But no one cares about Maryland beating Robert Morris 88-50 on a Wednesday night in November or the Terps clobbering UMBC by 44 over the Christmas holiday.
As far as we (Terps hoops fans, that is) go, Maryland basketball doesn't deserve our interest until Big Ten plays start in earnest in early January.
It's here where I'll point out that, yes, we do have local college football in these parts. Towson plays in the CAA and Morgan State plays in the MEAC. I "loosely" follow Towson. I know they beat William and Mary last Saturday and I know the Tigers were 1-4 heading into that game and William and Mary was 4-1 before getting upset by the Tigers.
But I couldn't name a player on Towson's team unless I just said, "John Smith?" and they just happen to have someone with the name John Smith on their roster.
The Tigers -- and Morgan State, too -- don't do any kind of real, heavy sports marketing to support their football program. I see a couple of billboards up on York Road here and there, but nothing else that I hear or see gives me information about Towson football.
Yes, for those saying, "Wait, what about Navy?", there is football in Annapolis and I think the team is pretty good this year.
But, again, I never get the impression Baltimore sports fans -- and, in particular, football fanatics -- are motivated to go down to Annapolis and watch a game.
Oh, and here's the shame of it. Annapolis in September and October is glorious. If you go down there on a Saturday in autumn, you're likely to consider moving there. It's beautiful.
But no one in Baltimore knows much about Navy football.
Editor's note: Maryland plays host to Northwestern this Friday. Who knew?
So this is all a round about way of saying, "Man, I wish we had college football in Baltimore."
To be ultra-clear and not be disrespectful to the likes of Towson, Morgan State and Navy, I guess I should edit that to read: "Man, I wish we had big time Division 1 football in Baltimore."
You know, like, hearing them say on SportsCenter, "There was bedlam in the streets of Charm City last night as fans of UMBC football tore down the goalposts and paraded them through Federal Hill and Fells Point after the Retrievers knocked off #3 Ohio State Saturday afternoon."
Alas, we've never had that here in Baltimore. Not in my 61 years, at least.
I can remember the feeling we (I) had when the Terps won the basketball title 25 years ago (almost).
I realize College Park is much closer to D.C. than it is to Baltimore, but it's our state school no matter its location and we all felt like one of our teams won a sports championship.
If Maryland football ever did that, I don't know what the reaction would be here in Bawlmer. Sure, everyone loves a winner and people in Charm City would react with the typical bandwagon fandom that comes with "sudden winning", but there's zero chance we'd be as hyped up about the Terps winning the football title as we were about Maryland winning it all in hoops way back when.
I wish it were different, especially now that the O's season came crashing to a sudden halt.
It would be so cool for all of us to pile in the car this Friday night and see "Baltimore University" play Northwestern at M&T Bank Stadium or, here's a dream, at their own 70,000 seat stadium on campus.
Without that, we're left to follow along with the likes of Nashville, College Station and Athens and watch their revelry and passion unfold on a Saturday night after a big football win by their local school.
The Ravens' 34-13 dismantling of the Commanders this Sunday will help a little bit, I'm sure.
We'll have plenty to get excited about after we send our friends back down 295 with their tail between their legs.
And the NFL being what it is and all, the Ravens and the league itself gets us through any down period. There is never a need for content in the fall and winter.
But other than the Ravens, the next few months are mostly bare around here, truth be told.
Jealousy is a bad thing indeed.
And on that note, if you've read this far, here's a question to answer in the Comments section, if you'll take just a second to do so.
Be honest: When's the last time you went to a Maryland football game in College Park?
Tuesday October 8, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3698 |
I was in and out of my car on Monday driving to various locations around town.
That gave me an opportunity to check out the local sports radio scene. What I heard wasn't at all surprising. It was a little distressing, I guess, but certainly not surprising.
I referenced this on Twitter early last night for anyone who follows me there.
Over the course of probably 80 minutes in my car at various hours of the day, I heard, I think, 16 people call in to the show(s) to talk about the Ravens 41-38 OT win over Cincinnati.
Out of those 16 calls, 14 of the people complained about some area of the win. Two of the 16 chimed in with something very similar.
"I don't care how it happened, I'm just glad we won."
"What a breath of fresh air," I said to myself when I heard that commentary.
The other 14 bashed the quarterback, the head coach, the defensive coordinator, the safety, and, yes, someone even took a shot at our kicker -- you know, the one who made the game-tying and game-winning kicks -- because, get this, "neither kick looked very confidently struck".
I think of all the calls I heard, that one, about the kicker, was probably the oddest one of them all.
Justin Tucker absolutely roasted that 56 yarder, into a left to right wind, starting it out just on the edge of the left goalpost and fading it into the middle of the "H" like a 175 yard 8-iron to a back right flag from Scottie Scheffler.
I bet you Tucker was so proud of that kick afterwards he wanted to cry. Not because he made it or it tied the game, but because it was difficult and it was definitely a kick that even a Hall of Fame kicker could have missed given the conditions at that end of the stadium.
The overtime kick was a chip shot that Billy Cundiff would have hit blindfolded.
But the game-tying kick from 56 yards was special.
And somehow, someone waited on hold for, I don't know, 10 or 15 minutes, just to offer that hot take on the game. "I know he made those two kicks but I didn't think he looked very confident in doing it."
The other calls were equally weird. Lamar made 18 great plays in the game and 2 or 3 misfires on passes and then had the botched snap/fumble in overtime. And that is what you're focused on? Sure, the fumble could have been game-deciding. But they don't get to overtime in the first place if not for Lamar.
The Harbaugh hate is old hat by now. Nothing John does is ever good enough. Mistakes are made by almost every staff at some point in every game. It's not something you have to sweep under the rug, mind you. But no coach throws a perfect game, especially in the NFL when the action is happening right in front of you and the clock is running and you're at the whim of down and distance for 60 minutes.
I don't think the time out before the end of the second quarter was a good one, but in their quest to "put the pedal to the floor" and not play conservatively, Harbaugh said on Monday they drew up a stretch play for Zay Flowers that, if completed, might have helped the Ravens pad their 14-9 lead.
Two weeks ago, Harbaugh and Monken got hammered for playing too conservative.
This week they got hammered for not being conservative.
But if Flowers catches that long bomb and the Ravens go up 17-9 or 21-9 at the half, you know what the narrative would have been?
"What a great throw by Lamar!"
"Flowers has that dog in him!"
Instead, Harbaugh's an idiot, even though his secondary and defensive line were the ones who actually allowed the 41 yard TD throw from Burrow to Chase to close out the first half scoring.
Marcus Williams also got lit up on the air yesterday. He was victimized by Chase on one of the TD throws, prompting one caller to say, "He's been horrible every year he's been here."
Except, you know, he hasn't actually been horrible every year. This season, he's struggling a bit and his ranking in the safety position is very low. But Williams has been a nice piece for the Baltimore secondary during his time in purple.
He had an "off day" on Sunday in Cincinnati. But that doesn't mean he's been horrible for three years here.
People just say stuff to say it, mostly. I get it. But it's also troubling to hear some of the things you hear because it just reeks of a general lack of sports sophistication.
You'd think guys (and gals) who played amateur sports in their childhood and, potentially, even into their adult years, would have a better grasp on how the games and seasons work.
The NFL is a wild place. You never know from week to week who is going to win, who is going to play well, who is going to stink it up and who will start to rapidly decline.
The Steelers started 3-0 and now they're 3-2 and, I'm guessing, will never even come close to reaching 10 wins this season. In late September, the towel wavers up there were already starting to save up for playoff tickets. Two weeks later, they'd be even money to beat the lowly Giants if the two teams played this week.
The Ravens won an instant classic on Sunday.
It wasn't pretty.
It had a bunch of mistakes, brain farts and, as I mentioned here yesterday, if we're being honest the Ravens probably deserved to lose the game based on the number of miscues they authored.
But it doesn't work that way every week.
In fact, part of the Ravens' DNA is winning those kind of games, where they're ahead, behind, ahead again, and so on.
That's actually the mark of a good team, I'd say. You know, when they're down 31-21 in the 4th quarter and the coach and quarterback actually don't panic and before you know it, it's 38-38 and you're headed to overtime.
But based on the callers I heard on Monday, you'd think the the Ravens built a 38-0 lead only to see Cincinnati storm back to tie it at 38-38 before they won in overtime.
One thing to add here that is very important. It's OK to scrutinize and criticize. If you want to pick on Lamar for a few bad throws and the fumble, have at it. If you want to knock Harbaugh around for the 2nd quarter time out, do your thing. If you think Marcus Williams had a lousy game, bring it up.
But bring balance with you. That's all. Lamar almost let the game get away with that botched snap in overtime, but in the end, the Ravens got what they wanted...a "W". Same with Harbaugh. Bad time out there, for sure. But he kept the team together in the second half when it wasn't looking all that promising. Let's beat him up for the time out and laud him for the 4th quarter comeback.
I could go on, but it's unnecessary.
You know how it works. Or, at the very least, you know how it should work.
Balance.
Let's not forget one other thing. If it weren't for crazy finishes and game management mistakes and fumbles in overtime and kickers hitting (and missing) big field goals, sports radio would die a quick death.
Everyone wants to be right.
As sure as the sun rises in the East, if the Ravens don't win the Super Bowl next February, scores of people in Baltimore and elsewhere around the country will say, "I told you Lamar can't win a championship."
If the Ravens somehow stub their toe in the playoffs again, it will be, without question, John Harbaugh's fault. It doesn't matter if the final score is 21-20, 44-41 or 10-9. If the Ravens lose in the post-season, Harbaugh will get the blame.
If the Baltimore offense sputters in the AFC Championship Game again, Todd Monken will be the goat. And not the good kind of goat, either.
Those are huge expectations to put on people when only one result and one team left standing will satisfy the fan base.
Sports radio flourishes whenever people get the opportunity to say, "I was right."
The Orioles and Brandon Hyde will face the exact same scenario in 2025. If the Birds don't make the World Series, everyone who said, "They should fire Hyde" after last week's loss to the Royals will be able to say, "I told you so."
I don't think it's just a Baltimore thing. Really, I don't.
But I have this weird feeling we rank near the top of natinoal goofy-ness when it comes to dealing with our two teams in town.
It's good for radio. And, probably, good for websites like the one you're reading right now.
In the end, though, it's kind of maddening. You'd think people would have figured it out by now.
It's sports. It's supposed to be crazy.
Maybe what we need, as fans, is the same theory the team employs. For one day after a win, you simply enjoy it. Don't bring up the bad stuff, the plays that didn't work, the kicks that were missed and the time outs that were or weren't called.
For 24 hours, just bask in the glow of the win.
Tuesday you can start bashing again.
Come on, it's only 24 hours. You can do it.
Can't you?
I am moved this morning to write about something here that is entirely NOT in any way sports related. If you're turned off by that, I understand and I'd urge you to move along and not read the rest of this particular entry.
I'd like to urge all of you to support our Jewish community here in Baltimore, and elsewhere, as our nation continues to be impacted by pro-terror groups representing Hamas and the destructive nature of their antisemitism.
Yesterday, on the one-year anniversary of nearly 1,200 innocent citizens of Israel losing their lives, colleges across the country allowed for pro-terror protests and rallies to be held.
Hamas terrorists -- and let's not be afraid to call them what they are, "terrorists" -- disrupted peaceful anniversary gatherings yesterday at various schools, including one at Columbia University in New York where several people were injured during violent attacks in public settings.
This is what we've come to in America. And it's sad, indeed.
And that we allow it to happen without intervention is the worst crime of the day.
Our Jewish friends deserve better.
I'm asking you to join me in denouncing the terror against the Jewish community in our country and abroad. Here in Baltimore, it's especially important -- to me, and you, I hope -- to protect our Jewish neighborhoods and afford them the most protection we can while also warning anyone who is seeking to harm them that attacks of a violent nature will not be tolerated.
I'm proud to be pro Israel.
Let's do our best to keep our Jewish friends safe here in our country.
Monday October 7, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3697 |
A few weeks ago here, after the Ravens pulled defeat from the jaws of victory in an astonishing home loss to Las Vegas, I wrote about "the pizza" that accompanies every Baltimore football game.
A lot of people in town who otherwise claim to know something about football only see one or two things: "Lamar missed that throw" or "Harbaugh can't coach", for example, are two narratives folks cling to even though there are often six or seven other "slices" -- if you will -- that also help determine the outcome of the game.
Fast forward to yesterday's wild 41-38 OT win in Cincinnati.
The pizza theory was there once again, in high definition, with seven or eight things that conspired against them contributing to a Ravens loss.
"We're gonna have plenty of fodder for discussion tomorrow," I thought as I followed along with the Ravens and their Keystone Cops moments from the Queen City.
But in a weird turn of events, the Ravens should have, could have and would have lost the game yesterday. They actually "deserved" to lose the game, if we're being honest.
Alas, they didn't lose. They won, instead.
And for the one of the first times in recent memory, all of the things that worked against Baltimore still weren't enough to offset a laughable Cincinnati defensive effort and the fact that they were gifted the win in overtime and still couldn't connect on the game-winning field goal.
As for the Ravens, they'll accept that "W" over the Bengals. Gladly.
Over the last couple of years, John Harbaugh breezed through Twitter on the flight home from (insert city here) and saw where people were crushing him over not utilizing first half timeouts.
"Does this moron coach know you can't take them with you into the third quarter?" folks would write.
So Harbs figured out a way to not take them into the first half intermission yesterday. He inexplicably used one in the final minute of the second quarter that gave the Bengals time to march down the field and score a go-ahead touchdown to lead at the half, 17-14.
Now, it's fair to point out that the home team had all three of their timeouts left and they, too, could have called a timeout after Justice Hill was stopped for no gain on 2nd and 10 with 55 seconds left.
But it looked like Zac Taylor was happy to just let the clock run out at that point and take the 14-9 deficit into the locker room.
We'll never know, I guess.
What we do know is Harbaugh called for a timeout to set up a 3rd and 10 playcall from his own 25, then Todd Monken went for the jugular with a deep throw from Lamar to Zay Flowers that fell incomplete.
Look, if you want to call a timeout with 49 seconds left on 3rd and 10 and draw up some sort of run play that might catch the Bengals off guard, I could at least consider buying stock in that idea. At the very worst, if you fail to pick up 10 yards, Cincinnati has to use a time out to stop the clock.
I'm not saying I think that's the right thing to do. But I'll at least sit and have coffee with you and listen to your logic on why a time out and a run play might have been the way to go.
Instead, though, the Ravens went to the air there -- again, perhaps to try and catch Cincy's defense napping, which definitely isn't hard to do -- and the pass to Flowers was incomplete.
So, after stopping the clock on 3rd down with 49 seconds left, that incomplete throw to Flowers forced Baltimore to punt the ball away to their opponent.
The Bengals got the ball back with 34 seconds remaining and Murphy's Law took over.
This, of course, is also where Harbaugh haters forget that he wasn't playing on the defensive line or the defensive secondary on the ensuing series, which saw Joe Burrow riddle the likes of Marlon Humphrey, Roquan Smith and Marcus Williams en-route to a 41-yard TD throw to Ja'Marr Chase.
We'll never know how the first half would have ended if Harbaugh didn't use that timeout with 49 seconds remaining in the second quarter.
But we know how it ended when he did use it.
"You people told me I can't take them into the locker room with me," you can hear Harbaugh say with a giggle in his voice.
But that was just one piece of the pizza.
There were plenty of other moments where the players themselves were responsible for their own undoing.
Dumb penalties. Again.
Fumbles. Again.
Blown coverage schemes. Again.
4th quarter defensive woes. Again.
This time, though, it turned out different.
Right on cue, the Bengals decided to Bengals.
And the Ravens were able to stay in it long enough to get a huge interception from Marlon Humphrey with 3 minutes left and that led to a Justin Tucker 56 yard field goal to send the game to OT at 38-38.
You remember Tucker, right?
He's the kicker a lot of people in town said was "washed" a couple of weeks ago because he missed a long field goal attempt in Dallas.
Anyway, you know how it ended.
The Ravens got the ball first in OT and were going to slice and dice their way through that awful Bengals defense right up until Lamar lost the ball on a shotgun snap and Cincinnati picked it up and moved to the Baltimore 40 yard line before being tackled.
A week's worth of sports radio content hung in the balance of the next two minutes of action.
If the Bengals could put the game-winning points on the board, Harbaugh, Lamar, Zach Orr and anyone involved on the defensive side of the ball was going to smacked around all week.
But then the Bengals-bengaled, as the holder muffed the snap and the game-winning field goal was badly missed.
The Ravens had life yet again.
And this time Derrick Henry made sure that the refs, his head coach and his quarterback couldn't mess up it up.
Justin Tucker's chip shot field goal to win it ended one of the more bizarre victories in recent memory.
It turned Harbaugh and Lamar from goat to hero.
It means the Bengals now have a 94% chance of missing the playoffs now that they're 1-4 and 0-3 at home.
And it means the Ravens are tied for first in the AFC North after their win and Pittsburgh's home loss to Dallas last night, 20-17.
All in a day's work.
And, thanks to the Bengals-bengaling, it turned a week of chaos and vitriol into a week of a triumph, albeit in an unconventional way.
It's a week to week league, as anyone who actually watches and follows along will understand.
Baltimore's defense was awesome last Sunday night vs. Buffalo.
It was dreadful yesterday in Cincinnati.
Next week, they'll post another outstanding performance vs. D.C., then give up 400 passing yards in the very next game.
The NFL is impossible to figure out, which is pretty much what the NFL wants, in case you haven't noticed.
One thing we know in Baltimore. It's not only week to week with the Ravens, it's quarter to quarter. Series to series. Snap to snap.
It's not for the meek of heart, that's for sure.
Sunday October 6, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3696 |
I got into a nice back-and-forth with a friend on Friday when we were discussing the Ravens game in Cincinnati later today.
"This is a big one for a couple of reasons," I said.
"Nah, not really," he shot back. "I don't know why the schedule makers didn't have these two teams play in like week 11 and week 17 or week 18. No matter who loses today, they're still in the race."
Well, that much is true. If Baltimore loses today they're 2-3 and if Cincinnati loses they're 1-4. Both of them are still alive with a loss today.
But I'll still contend this is a big game for both teams.
The Ravens don't want to fall back to below .500, particularly after two straight wins and Washington coming to Baltimore to get the Cleat of Reality next week.
And they certainly don't want to drop a division game. And to the Bengals, no less.
Oh, and a loss for the Bengals hurts them in the ego department as well. You just know Ja'Marr Chase is foaming at the mouth for the chance to prattle on after the game on his social media platform of choosing about how they "punched the Ravens in the mouth".
A Baltimore win today and they've all but extinguished the bad taste left over from that 0-2 start and that home loss to the Raiders in week #2.
It's a week to week league, as we all know, but a Ravens victory and Bengals loss today really puts Joe Burrow and Company behind the eight ball a month into the season.
And for those reasons, I say this game, today, is a big one.
The obvious question, of course, is "which Ravens team shows up?"
If it's the one that made quick, easy work of Buffalo last Sunday night, this one today will have a similar result.
But if Baltimore's offense turns touchdowns into field goals and the defense can't get off the field on third down against the Bengals' offense, then it might not be a warm and fuzzy plane ride home from southern Ohio early this evening.
I'm going to roll on with the Ravens until proven otherwise.
I think the team we see today is the one we saw last week against the Bills.
Burrow might out-throw and "out-quarterback" Lamar, but that's only because the Ravens lead 27-13 going into the fourth quarter and the Cincinnati signal caller is forced to go to the air on every possession in the final 15 minutes.
It's 27-20 after the Bengals get on the board on their first series of the fourth quarter, but Lamar moves the Ravens right back down the field and connects with Mark Andrews on his first TD catch of the season with 8:08 left in the game to make it 34-20.
The Bengals get a field goal on their next series to cut the lead to 34-23, but Lamar and the offense hold on to the ball until just inside the two minute mark before turning it over on downs on 4th and 2 from the Cincinnati 39 yard line.
Burrow hits Chase with a touchdown throw with 48 seconds remaining, but the Ravens deny the 2-point conversion try and the final from Cincinnati reads: Ravens 34 - Bengals 29
Baltimore improves to 3-2 while their AFC North rivals drop to 1-4 and put themselves in a precarious situation with 12 games still left to play in 2024.
Let's tackle a bunch of questions from the Q&A mailbag that have piled up for the last couple of weeks.
As always, if you have a question you'd like me to ponder and answer here at #DMD, please send it to me at: 18inarow@gmail.com
And here we go.
Brett asks -- "Hey Drew, what do you think it would take for the Orioles to fire Hyde after next season? I know every year they make the playoffs it virtually guarantees he's back the next season, but what would have to happen in order for Elias to pull the plug? Thanks."
DF says -- "A non-playoff campaign would probably do it, but you'd have to take into consideration their record and how they wound up not making the post-season. Do they finish 84-78 and miss it because, let's say, Henderson, Eflin and Cowser all miss the final month with various injuries? Or do they go 77-85 and stay mostly healthy but just fail to get the wins they needed to make the playoffs?
Without knowing how they'll miss out on the playoffs, it's almost impossible to answer your question.
But I'll just say, in general, if they don't make the playoffs next year and the season is "fairly normal" in terms of injuries and such, I could see Hyde being moved on after 7 seasons in Baltimore.
That said, if they make the playoffs again, I'm guessing he's back for 2026. It would be hard to fire the manager of a team that went to the post-season three straight years."
R.C. asks -- "Just for fun, I'm wondering what you'd pay Burnes if you were the O's GM and what would you pay Santander?"
DF says -- "No offense, this is kind of a goofy question because the offer I'd make the two of them is so far below what they're both going to wind up gettin. So in that way, it's a non-starter of a question.
I don't know what I'd pay Burnes, but I'm not giving the $50 million annually that he's likely going to receive. I think I'd be willing to give him $35 million or, if I have an extra glass of Silver Oak on negotiating night, maybe $40 million per-season. But I'm not signing a pitcher to one of those insane, 6 year/$320 million deals. I'm sorry, I'm just not doing it.
As for Santander, I'm not as high on him as others, but I do think he created an enormous value for himself this year with all of those home runs and some memorable late-game heroics.
I'm certainly not giving him a 4 year/$120 million deal that everyone seems to think might be coming his way. Sorry, but not sorry. I might be willing to something in the 4-year/$90 million range for him, but I know that's a fairytale contract (for me).
Other teams covet our guys far more than we do, I think. People think Santander is the next coming of Ryan Howard, but it's just not the case.
Santander has made himself into a nice ballplayer. No two ways about it. But he's also homer-or-bust, mostly. His defense has improved a lot, I'll give him credit there. But he's not a "franchise player" in my opinion."
Mark C. asks -- "Maybe I missed it, but I was wondering what your overview of the Presidents Cup was and who really stood out for the U.S. team?"
DF says -- "I thought the event provided for some great drama on Saturday, but the U.S. winning those two sessions by a 3-1 score om Saturday took away from what could have been an incredibly tense Singles session on Sunday.
I do like the extra golf that's played on day one and the one extra match they play (four instead of three). I don't think the Presidents Cup has reached "lame" status just yet, but if the International team doesn't win sometime soon, I think it might reach that description before this decade closes out.
I heard one interesting idea last week to help even things out and at first I thought it was dumb, but after thinking about it I can see some reasoning behind it. Of the 12 American players, only 4 of them can be members of the most recent Ryder Cup team.
That would mean 8 "newbies" (or at the very least, guys who didn't play on the American team in the Ryder Cup the previous September) would have to play the Presidents Cup. While it might bring down the quality of the U.S. team (and make the competition with the International team a little more balanced), it would also give the new players some exposure into team golf.
I'm not saying it's a perfect solution. But when the U.S. has a record of 13-1-1 in the event over the last 30 years, it has to be changed or tweaked to make the competition more balanced.
I thought Patrick Cantlay and Sam Burns both really stood out, which hopefully bodes well for next September at Bethpage Black when the Ryder Cup takes place in New York."
WILL JACKSON | ||
Will Jackson will be here every Sunday during the NFL season with his thoughts on games and prop bets that will hopefully yield positive results for you. |
I'm still trying to have a good week on spreads and outrights for you guys but I hope you've been playing my props at least. I'm way up on the props, so I'll try to keep that good vibe going for you today.
I'm glad I don't dabble much in baseball wagering. I thought the Orioles, Astros and Brewers would win the series they played and all three lost.
Here are my game picks and props for today.
Games
I like the Jets (+2.5) and the over 40.5 today in the London game vs. Minnesota.
Bears (-4) over the Panthers is my play of the day pick.
Commanders/Browns over 43.5
Jaguars/Colts under 45.5
Texans (-1.5) over Bills
49'ers/Cardinals under 48.5
Ravens (-2.5) over Bengals
Cowboys (+2.5) and over 43.5 vs. Steelers
Props
Aaron Rodgers over 1.5 touchdown throws vs. Vikings
Sam Darnold under 203.5 yards passing vs. Jets
Ja'Marr Chase anytime TD scorer vs. Ravens
Derrick Henry anytime TD scorer vs. Bengals
Lamar Jackson over 59.5 yards rushing vs. Bengals
DeShaun Watson under 203.5 yards passing vs. Commanders
C.J. Stroud over 203.5 yards passing vs. Bills
Marvin Harrison Jr. anytime TD scorer vs. 49'ers
Tyreek Hill over 89.5 yards receiving vs. Patriots
Saturday October 5, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3695 |
The NFL Players Association is lobbying for a significant change to the post-game locker room scene and the story has the potential to blossom into something big in these early stages of the 2024 NFL campaign.
In summary, here's the beef. The NFLPA wants to discontinue the long standing practice of allowing media members into the locker room both after practices and regular season and playoff games. They're not looking to restrict members of the credentialed media from interviewing the players and asking them questions. They merely don't want those exchanges to occur in the locker room.
To the right is the statement released by the NFLPA on Friday.
The fine print basically suggests that players take matters into their own hands and ask reporters to move into a separate interview after the NFL and the Pro Football Writers Association failed to come up with a proper resolution to the NFLPA's request three years ago.
The story gathered steam on Friday when the NFLPA published their statement on various social media platforms.
Here's the deal.
Contrary to what the NFLPA believes or suggests, in-locker-room availability is important to the structure of the player/reporter relationship.
Anyone suggesting otherwise simply hasn't been in that setting to understand why it's important.
That said, the story, in general, is a nothing burger.
The locker room has its pros and cons.
In my best James Earl Jones voice, in a scene from the great movie, Coming to America, I'll say this: "I spent hundreds of days in the Ravens and Orioles locker rooms and let me tell you, it's a very overrated experience."
The truth is this: Players don't want the media in the locker room because they don't really want to have to deal with the media. The whole "privacy" angle is garbage. It has nothing to do with football players wanting privacy. That's just the easiest way for them to get what they want, which is to make a reporter's job just a wee bit harder.
And you know what?
The NFL and the Pro Football Writers Association should just give in and let the NFLPA win this one.
Conduct the post-game interviews in a separate room or out in the hallway and just move on with this new way of doing things. It does change the player-reporter dynamic a bit, but in the end the players and their teams have a barrel full of ink and the media members who cover the sport have a pen full of ink.
The guy with the barrel full always beats the guy with the pen full.
In the old days, the players cared what was written or said about them. So did the team. They don't any longer.
It's really not worth fighting over.
The players are all now starting to say less and less after a game, anyway. They're saving their best stuff for their podcast appearances on Monday or Tuesday. Or on one of the team-produced internet shows that the club's PR department helps distribute.
Marlon Humphrey of the Ravens is a perfect example of "the new way".
He's brief, terse and won't say much of anything in the aftermath of a game.
But put the internet or a podcast microphone in front of him and he'll yap for an hour or more.
The team doesn't really have a say in any of it. The players are going to do what the players want to do.
And, honestly, I don't see where it's that big of a deal.
The ship has sailed on media members "covering the team" the way they once did in the 70's, 80's, 90's, etc. And the reason "coverage" doesn't matter is because the team (and league) itself no longer needs or covets daily interaction with members of the media.
There was a time when the newspaper mattered. Above the fold was critical. Front page coverage was huge. The newspaper doesn't mean a hill of beans any longer. The Ravens couldn't care less what Mike Preston writes about this Sunday's game against the Bengals.
Don't get it twisted, there was a time when the Ravens very much cared what Preston and the beat reporters wrote. But that was before the explosion of "get your news right now" social media platforms and before the team was able to produce their own media content and tell the stories the way they want their stories told.
Now, "coverage" doesn't matter.
And because it doesn't matter, teams don't press their players to comply with media requests unless they're of the "national" variety.
When the players have the "option" to do something, they're always going to choose the option that requires the least amount of work or effort.
"It's optional that we talk with the media in the locker room after the game?" a player will ask.
"If it's optional, yeah, I'm gonna pass," will be the next thing they say.
And that's OK.
They don't really say anything of substance anyway.
Plus, the locker rooms are loud, players turn up the volume on objectionable music in an effort to lure someone into an argument, and "I'll be right back" turns into you waiting around 25 minutes for a player to stroll over and grace you with his presence for three questions before he says, "That's enough."
Times change.
20 years ago the locker room mattered.
10 years ago, even, the locker room still mattered.
It doesn't matter any longer.
The players and the teams have made it nearly impossible for a smooth transition from the end of the game to the moment quotes are collected and stories start being written or aired.
The only frustrating thing to me is that the NFLPA just doesn't tell the truth. It's not about privacy and "respecting a player's dignity". It's about not wanting to deal with the media after a game. And given the current state of coverage and how the teams basically cover themselves now, I don't see where it's worth getting all hot and bothered about.
I built great locker room relationships once upon a time with guys like Daniel Wilcox, Evan Oglesby, Matt Stover, Joe Flacco, Cary Williams, Sam Koch and Matt Birk.
But that was 2010.
Almost 15 years ago, now.
Things are different these days.
The NFLPA can talk about privacy and dignity all they want, but the real truth is they just want to get their way.
And, I'm telling you, this is one time when I think the NFL and the media who cover the league should let the players win.
There's a separate but similar story brewing in the WNBA, but in this case, specifically, the women in the league and the organization they've hired to represent them are dead-red wrong.
Players in the WNBA have suddenly created a witch hunt for Christine Brennan of USA Today, of all people. Why is that so odd? Because Brennan is one of the reasons why there's a WNBA in the first place. But we'll get to that momentarily.
The crux of the controversy centers on a question Brennan asked WNBA player DiJonai Carrington of the Connecticut Sun following a game against Caitlin Clark and the Indiana Fever. It was in that game that Carrington struck Clark in the face -- inadvertently according to Carrington -- and that moment became a topic in post-game press conference.
After Carrington explained that the hit, which gave Clark a black eye, was unintentional, Brennan followed up by asking if there was a connection between the collision and a moment caught on camera later in the game in which Carrington could be seen laughing with a teammate on the bench.
That was it. The follow-up question about laughter on the bench triggered an entire episode where the WNBA players union asked the league to "review" the credentials status of Brennan because of her biased coverage. Included in the controversy is the fact that Brennan is writing a book about Clark and, some say, is predisposed to fanning the flames of anything that makes the content of the book more juicy for her readers to enjoy.
The follow up question to Carrington wasn't nearly damaging enough to warrant the outcry it created. Not even close.
All the player had to say was, "No connection at all. We were laughing about something else," and that ends everything. No need to blow the story up into something it wasn't.
But the "story" in the WNBA isn't about a player hitting another player in the face.
Christine Brennan is learning that the hard way.
The story is about a league that is going through an openly unique time of racial tension, diversity and the acceptance of the LGQTB community.
To wit, former U.S. soccer player Megan Rapinoe joined in on the blasting of Brennan earlier this week.
"I think it's so disingenuous for Christine Brennan and other media members to be like 'I am just asking the question,'" Rapinoe said.
"But really what is happening is your natural instinct to protect and narrate white players versus 'go after and narrate black players'. That to me is the issue."
I know what you're thinking.
Why is Megan Rapinoe yapping about this topic?
For starters, she's the partner of former WNBA player Sue Bird. And Rapinoe has confirmed herself as a person the world should look up to when it comes to matters such as racism and homophobic behavior.
Rapinoe is wrong, of course. But that doesn't stop her from getting involved.
She's wrong because Christine Brennan does have the right -- as a longtime, award-winning, national journalist -- to ask the question of Carrington, no matter what color Carrington is or whether Carrington is gay, straight or otherwise.
The WNBA has mostly become an organization that believes everyone who isn't one of them is, by default, against them.
That's simply not true. But that's the message they're ingraining into their younger players. "If they don't look like us or behave like us, they aren't one of us. Stay away from them."
It's an awful way to go about life and, if we're talking about this honestly, it's not doing anything at all to help the growth of racial and sexual diversity. It's actually hurting the growth.
Christine Brennan championed women's sports for decades and urged the NBA to create the WNBA in an effort to give the world's best female basketball players their own platform.
I might not go as far as saying "There would be no WNBA without Christine Brennan", but it's pretty daggone close to that. She pushed, pushed some more, and pushed again. She helped make it happen, if nothing else.
And now the WNBA wants her shoved to the side.
It's a sad story.
But it's not a basketball story at this point. It's gone way beyond that and Christine Brennan just happens to be in the crosshairs for now.
faith in sports |
This is an incredible story. AJ Griffin played two years in the NBA and had everything he could possibly want out of his sporting life, then promptly retired to go into full time ministry.
Everyone was shocked at Griffin's decision.
But to the former Duke star, it wasn't that hard of a decision at all.
If you haven't heard Griffin's story, this 10 minute video below will paint the picture for you. It's an awesome testimony from the former NBA player and one that all of us should follow.
Thanks, as always, to our friends at Freestate Electrical for their continued support of #DMD and our "Faith in Sports" segment here every Friday.
Editor's note: This video was published in the Friday, October 4th edition of #DMD, but a problem with the coding was misconfiguring the content on the website so we pulled the video in order to have the website run properly. We were able to fix the coding issue and wanted to run the video here again today for you.
Friday October 4, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3694 |
Orioles GM Mike Elias held his season ending press conference on Thursday, less than 24 hours after the Orioles were summarilly dismissed by a (more) gritty Royals team in two straight games in the AL Wild Card series.
It's not my time or my press conference, but I probably would have waited a day or three before settling in to meet the media. But Elias got it out of the way quickly.
Fortunately, as is his habit, he didn't say much of anything, good or bad. Elias is nothing if not smart about those kinds of things, particularly after the faux pas in the middle of the 2023 season when he sorta-kinda went public with his thoughts that the Orioles might not have the goods to be a playoff team.
Once bitten twice shy, I think the saying goes.
Elias is much more careful with his public commentary these days, which is very understandable.
But he did say a few things on Thursday worth noting, the most important of which was the status of manager Brandon Hyde.
Hyde will be returning for his seventh season in 2025.
I know what you're thinking.
"Holy cow, Hyde's been here for going on seven years now?"
"And, you're kidding, right? They're not bringing him back."
Yes.
And yes, they are.
The internet predictably erupted with anti-Hyde-venom within minutes of the Elias announcement hitting the streets.
I have no idea what the official percentages are, but a significant percentage of O's fans (here's where I'll take a guess and say 30%, maybe even upwards of 40%, would prefer Hyde to not be returning as the team's manager.
The number is "significant", let's just leave it at that.
Alas, Elias will be spilling no blood in the wake of the team's second straight playoff series loss without even registering a win.
Except maybe if you're a position coach, that is. Elias wasn't ready to announce a full return of the team's coaching staff on Thursday, only that his manager would be returning.
I suppose some of the post-mortem vitriol for Hyde connects to the Brewers-Mets series we all saw over the last three days, where both Milwaukee and New York produced late game magic to stave off elimination. New York started last night's 9th inning down 2-0, then produced two singles in the top of the 9th to give themselves hope and then Pete Alonso homered to give them the lead in a game they'd win, 4-2, to advance to the NLDS vs. Philadelphia.
It's tough when you watch the other teams churn out runs or have their star players come through under the gun when your top guys looked like Charlie Brown trying to kick a field goal with Lucy Van Pelt serving as the holder.
Editor's note: I've often wondered why Lucy and Linus Van Pelt were identified by their last names in the Peanuts comic strip but other prominent characters like Schroeder and Marcie went only by their first names.
So with Hyde returning in '25, we can officially enjoy another 12 months of "I told you so" unless, of course, the Birds do the unthinkable in 2025 and win the World Series. Anything short of that results in all of the anti-Hyde folks in town winning the proverbial argument of whether the team should have fired him after the two losses to the Royals.
I've been asked numerous times in the last two days what I think the Orioles should do.
Fire Brandon Hyde?
Keep Brandon Hyde?
I don't think firing Brandon Hyde is the answer.
Do I think Brandon Hyde could do a better job? Of course. Frankly, we probably all could do a better job at something, whether that's a better job at being a human being, a better job at being a husband, a better job at being an employee or the boss of employees or a better job at being a father, best friend, etc.
We could all use an improvement somewhere along the way.
But here's why I don't think firing Brandon Hyde is the right move. And it's a very simple concept to understand.
Firing Hyde would send the wrong message to the team itself.
"We think what happened in the playoffs the last two years was more about the manager than it was about you guys and your performance." That's what firing Brandon Hyde would tell the team.
And, ultimately, that's not only the wrong message, it's simply the wrong fact about the team.
The team went 0-5 the last two seasons in playoff competition because they failed to play at the same level in the playoffs as they did in the regular season.
Ravens fans are shaking their head right now like that Alonzo Mourning meme and saying, "We know all about that."
But it's true.
The Orioles blew through the American League in 2023 with 101 wins and then flatlined in the ALDS against Texas when Baltimore pitchers stunk it up in Game #2 and Game #3 and the offense sputtered in Game #1 and Game #3.
Brandon Hyde was good enough to help them win 101 games in 2023 but in those three games against Texas, he couldn't pitch the ball or hit the ball for the team.
Texas, let's not forget, was on the heater of all heaters last Fall. It wasn't like the O's lost to a team who then immediately flamed out in the next round.
And if you're being honest about the '24 team, their 91 win total was a bit of a semi-miracle given the plethora of key injuries the club sustained throughout the season.
They didn't have access to the game's (arguably) best closer because Felix Bautista missed the whole season.
They lost Kyle Bradish to Tommy John surgery in mid-June.
Jordan Westburg was having a terrific year until he went on the injured list with a broken hand and missed two months.
Jorge Mateo, Grayson Rodriguez, Ryan Mountcastle and Ramon Urias all went down with various ailments.
It's actually a testament to the players -- not necessarily Hyde, but everyone involved -- that they hung on and managed to win 91 games and make the playoffs.
Give the players credit. 2024 was a season when things could have easily unraveled for the O's, like they did in Minnesota, and they gutted it out. Sure, Hyde gets credit, too. He is the manager, after all. But it was a team effort.
Fast forward to Tuesday and Wednesday of this week.
Here's the truth about the team. You won't hear people talk about this at parties because it's not the popular "fire the coach" kneejerk reaction that Baltimore tends to specialize in, for whatever weird reason.
The "field players" -- nearly every single of them, save for Cedric Mullins -- all gagged it.
No one had a great series vs. the Royals.
Heck, no one had a good series, even.
Except for Mullins, of course. He managed three hits in two games and was responsible for the team's only RBI in 18 innings.
But the reality is the offensive players all stunk.
Those two games were on them.
Yes, yes, yes, the other team tries, too. The K.C. pitching staff was exceptional. The Royals weren't exactly the '27 Yankees at the plate, let's not forget. Their offense looked like Cam Cameron was in charge. But they did manage to squeeze out the big hit at just right the time, which is not something the Orioles could do.
But the Orioles put up very little resistance at the plate over the two games because -- gather around so I don't have to yell -- the players who hit the ball with efficiency and productively in the regular season failed to do so in the playoffs.
Now, this does not absolve the team's hitting coaches.
I do believe their role -- both in '24 and moving forward -- is worthy of evaluation. But here's what people who howl at the moon about firing everybody because of two losses don't know. The hitting coaches might have been preaching "just put it in play" and "get the ball in the air here, the bases are loaded" and anything else that made sense.
People hate to admit this because it crushes their narrative, but the truth is none of us -- ZERO of us -- know what really goes on in the dugout, in the locker room, on the team plane, at the team hotel, etc.
We think we know, based on the results we see.
"They didn't drive in any runs with the bases loaded and no one out, therefore the hitting coach must not have told Anthony Santander to put the ball in play somewhere and make sure you drive in a run. It's the coach's fault because he didn't do any coaching."
That's how people in town think.
"I saw the result and can then assume the hitting coach didn't do his job."
The reality is the guy with the bat in his hand didn't do his job.
Over and over and over.
And that's why firing Brandon Hyde would have been the wrong move.
Is he a "big game manager"? You know what? I'm not sure he is.
But I don't think that question is more important than putting the blame where it rightfully goes in the aftermath of the 1-0 and 2-1 losses to the Royals: On the players themselves.
The pitching was great in the series. Does Brandon Hyde get any credit for that?
The bullpen moves he made all mostly worked out perfectly. Sure, the Royals nicked Cano and Perez for a run on Wednesday in the series finale, but five innings of work and only one earned run is very solid work.
Do we give Hyde the same credit for the pitching that we want to take away from him for the hitting and the in-game management blunders we "think" he made?
I don't subscribe to that, in general.
Players play, coaches coach.
You know who gets the credit for Corbin Burnes in Game 1? Corbin Burnes.
You know who gets the credit for Zach Eflin in Game 2? Zach Eflin.
You know who gets the credit for Danny Coulombe in Game 2? Danny Coulombe.
You know who gets the credit for Cedric Mullins? Cedric Mullins.
Sure, Elias and his staff need to do a deep dive on every coach in their organization to make sure they're still effective at their job. And the guess here is someone probably will be relieved of their duties because Elias and others might discover a flaw somewhere along the way they want to improve upon with a new hire (or two).
But when it comes to firing the manager, that would have been the wrong message to send to the players.
Yes, the offense stunk it up for the better part of the last two months. That much is true. But we also know that had the Orioles spanked the Royals 10-4 and 7-3 that no one in town would be lamenting those regular season struggles.
The two playoff losses are pretty much what we care about. If the O's would have lost those two games 7-6 and 9-6, we'd be bellyaching about the pitching staff and the bullpen and hammering at Elias for getting Trevor Rogers at the deadline instead of Kikuchi or Fedde or someone else other than the lefty from Miami who was a total flop for the O's.
I understand the need to complain. We didn't win. Someone has to get the blame.
But in the case of the Orioles and the 2024 playoffs, the players failed. Plain and simple. They're not JV hopefuls trying to make varsity. They're professional, big league players, making millions of dollars because they're among the best 1,500 at their profession in the world.
The Orioles failed this week.
Everyone, including the manager, failed.
But firing Brandon Hyde would have told the players "it was him" instead of "it was you".
And the players need to know: It was them.
such October 15 |
Because I'm older, I don't spend much time on social media. I find it rather exhausting to be honest. Therefore I was unaware of this incident until last night, when my sons began texting me and FaceTiming me. The assailant is a former teammate of two of my sons at Hereford High. Let's just say that his senior year there was punctuated by some extremely poor decisions, likely due to being under the influence. Hereford was his third high school in four years. I'm going to go out on a very short limb here and surmise that he was under the influence on Sunday night in Federal Hill. His actions are inexcusable under any circumstances. Drunk, high, sober, it doesn't matter. Violently assaulting innocent people, unprovoked, is bordering on sociopathic behavior. He should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law, and if civil suits arise from this disgusting incident, he should be made to pay for his victims medical care and pain and suffering. Whatever backlash and public embarrassment he endures because of this are due to his own reckless, irresponsible behavior. You get what you get when you act like a fool. As I've always told my sons, Make good choices. Stop and think about the consequences. |
TimD in Timonium October 15 |
"Clearly, though, the man who assaulted the two Commanders fans was somehow enthused about being on camera for the incident." Live by the sword, die by the sword. The resulting video went viral, and the outcome probably wasn't the "internet fame" he had in mind. Without video, I'm guessing this goes unreported and the perp remains unknown. Oh well. |
Barry October 14 |
Flacco is likely back to not being a starter by next week, no way he's coming here for a playoff game in Jan. @Paul pretending to be positive is hilarious! |
Delray RICK October 14 |
One of my problems with HARBAUGH is when he throws the red flag I'm sitting watching slow-motion, ain't no way he's right. I know it's people upstairs. When you have to rely on others that's where HARBS gets accused of f it up. He's mind is so on this team there isn't anybody else I'd want as coach . Who the he'll is better ??? Crickets |
Vince from SC October 14 |
The only criticism of Harbaugh I have is his clock management at the end of halves can sometimes make you scratch your head. Other than that, he's been a HOF coach no question. Should have won the SB the year before if Lee Evans or Billy Cundiff could do bare minimum. |
Paul from Towson October 14 |
The John Harbaugh hate in this city absolutely astounds me. All this franchise has done since he's been here is win. Sure, they've only hoisted the Lombardi trophy once under him, but that's one more time than most of the rest of the NFL. And, this team has been to the AFC Championship Game four times under Harbaugh. Sure, the 1-3 record could be better, but let's not forget that first one was in Joe Flacco's (and Harbs' for that matter) rookie season when this team was supposed to be 4-12. Of course he's not perfect, and yeah his use of challenges and timeouts can be questionable at best, but it's hard to argue with the overall W-L record. Not to mention, he swallowed his pride in 2018 and did something very few, if any, Super Bowl winning coaches would do, and changed the entire offensive structure of this team to suit Lamar Jackson's strengths. Look at the rest of the league, and the coaching unemployment line, and tell me who you would rather have. Belichick?? No thanks, look at his record without a guy named Tom Brady. Jeff Fisher?? Don't think so. What about all these young, hotshot coaches that the national pundits love so much. Kevin Stefanski? Pass. Zac Taylor? Nah. Nick Siriani? Please! The luntics in Philly are ready to run him out of town despite making it to the Super Bowl two seasons ago. I know this isn't just a Baltimore thing, after all, if you ask any Stooler fan they would tell you that THEY could coach the team in Pittsburgh to a Super Bowl before Mike Tomlin could. But even still, at a time in the NFL (and sports in general) when most teams have a yearly coaching carousel and rampant upheaval (Falcons, Colts, Raiders, Panthers, etc.) having the stability in a head coach that wins, on average, 10 games a season is a luxury very few teams enjoy. And, in my humble opinion, even given his faults, I would take Harbs over just about every other coach in the league, except MAYBE Andy Reid. But even Reid was an also-ran until a guy named Mahomes came into the league. Go Ravens!! Such, you beat me to it this morning. As I watched the replay of yesterday's game, I realized that the Derrick Henry signing seems very Shannon Sharpe-ish to me. When the Ravens signed the two time Super Bowl champion, they already had a championship caliber defense. Sharpe was the missing piece on an offense that was built on the run and timely passing. Now, Lamar Jackson is leaps and bounds better than Trent Dilfer ever was on his best day, but just like Sharpe, Derrick Henry seems to be the missing piece for this offense. Derrick Henry makes LJ8 an the rest of the offense better because, with all due respect to JK Dobbins and Gus Edwards, defenses didn't have to stack the box to stop them. Leaving LJ8 to pic apart man, or in some cases, soft zone coverage. GO RAVENS! |
Howard October 14 |
Tony Siragusa was a great free agent pickup. The 2000 Ravens defense had no offense to pick them up. The defense couldn’t bend and couldn’t break and they didn’t. |
Bud King October 14 |
Not even Harbs could lose this game... go Ravens! |
Nathan Aparisto October 14 |
Is there ANY deal or trade that would convince that mess of a Jets franchise to send Sauce Gardner to the flock for a passel of picks? Could the cap hit be worked out? Hed be the next Ed Reed for a decade and Ravens could truly be a juggernaught! |
such October 14 |
We were having a text conversation last night and the question was raised: Has there ever been a better Free Agent signing by the Ravens than Henry? I can't think of anyone comparable on offense. Maybe Shannon Sharpe, maybe Derek Mason, but as far as instant impact and the ability to effect games the way he does, there's never been anyone close to Henry. Yesterday was just the latest example of the difference he's made. Everyone from Hereford to Upper Marlboro knew he was getting the ball, and the Ravens ran that same little toss sweep to the left they ran in Cincy, and Henry goes for 30 yards and that's ballgame. He's an absolute hammer. I went back and looked at the 2016 Draft and it's just another example of NFL front offices overanalyzing players. The Ravens took Ronnie Stanley at #6 overall, which is undeniably a very good pick. In the second round, at #42 overall, they selected the immortal Kamalei Correa from Boise State. Derrick Henry went to Tennessee at #45. Oh, what might have been. Although Lamar wasn't here yet so there's no telling what the offense would've looked like with Joe Flacco and King Henry. Regardless, he's here now and it's a beautiful sight to behold. |
Chris in Bel Air October 14 |
Even in the loss to KC, you could see the potential of the Ravens. They are clearly starting to put it all together now. As a fan, I'm feeling the optimism. But... we've also watched the Ravens and the NFL long enough to know they will stub their toe a couple more times. It happens. The key is how they bounce back the following week. Moreover, you don't win the Lombardi in October. It's all about January... and hopefully February. IF they end up playing KC again in the playoffs, they are not going to lose that game. I don't care if it is in B'more or KC. They are winning that one. Yes, the secondary seems to be a concern and can't figure out if it's personnel or scheme or both. Either way, like yesterday, the offense just needs to pick them up and respond when they have the ball. A couple random observations. First on Brandon Stephens. Maybe it's just me but it seems like no matter how closely he is covering his man, the opposing QB and WR always seems to come up with an incredible play/catch. Yesterday he had at least one like that, maybe two. I'm not busting on him, I'm just saying, I'm not sure what more he can do. Overall, I think he's become a decent CB for someone that did not play that position in college. Second, good to see Ngakoue in the mix yesterday. I like his potential rotating in the pass rush mix. As for Marcus Williams, he's sort of been a disappointment. He's not a bad player, I just can't remember the last time I saw him do anything of significance. INT? Forced Fumble? Fumble recovery? Key pass break-up? Something. On to Tampa |
Unitastoberry October 14 |
Another win and another big offensive statement. Commandskins done. Swiss Pees and Orr have some work to do. Why was Tony Romo on Kyle Hamiltons case about him being a dirty player on two big plays he made? He reacts before looking at the instant replay. Tony drives me nuts not my favorite commenter. It's a contact sport Tony. Only the offensive guys can lead with the head what a crock. My feelings on Joe Flacco are those of happiness for him. It's just a shame it's Jr Irsay who gets to beat his chest. With all the sub par duel threat QBs in the league now Joe could play another 4 -5 years.Btw I'm not including Lamar in that catagory. This bum in Cleveland should be on the bench watching Joe toss tds. Barry I will never root for PSU. I have my reasons and it's more than the Sandusky child rape coverup they should have had no football there for 5 years just for that one. It goes back to Joe PA coming here long ago and stealing all state and all county guys in Maryland just to keep them out of College Park then he redshirts them in Happy Valley etc and they never see the field playing behind guys like Franco Harris and Lydell Mitchell etc. I know one of them. He would have been a great running back at Maryland. He ran for 150-200 yards a game in Baltimore County. No shame in calling out good players up there now.44 is one of them. I hate to say it this but it could be Penn States year.Would be great if Locksley could pull a Vanderbuilt on them last game of the season. Btw Lenny Moore does get a pass Lou. Gary Cuozzo or Earl Morrall Howard? Well you have to take Earl and his MVP 1968 off the bench year. But I got visions of Jimmy Orr in the endzone waiving his hand wide open to this day and like I have said before the whole thing still stinks like you know what! |
David Rosenfeld October 14 |
If you weren't at the game yesterday you probably heard Tony Romo say that John Harbaugh is a "top 10 coach all time," which of course drew lots of chuckles from the hoi polloi. I'm not gonna get into a conversation about that, but I will say this... I don't see how you can watch the Ravens play on a week-to-week basis and say that John is an "awful coach." Like...of all takes you could have, it just doesn't stand up to any kind of serious analysis. |
Jon October 14 |
How are the league going to stymie the offense? Same way they have last few years in January- wins mask problems- - no more weak O line? enjoyable Sunday but lets not get ahead of oursleves like we did with Os and KC. Keep working Flacco! |
TimD in Timonium October 14 |
The two drives of 90+ yards were beautiful to watch. Hard to find much to complain about from yesterday's Ravens game, but surely someone will. Looks like the O-line has figured it out. Big difference from the 0-2 start. Whew. |
Kenny G October 14 |
Hopefully we saw a defensive change in yesterday's game - bend but don't break. I am not familiar with the WFT scheme but the Ravens keep also everything in front of them. Also for all people complaining about the refs, please offer some solutions vs just ranting about how bad they are. Sinc the game has become faster, covers more area of the field and the rules very complex, my suggestion is add another ref or two and allow for certain replays/challenges of penalties. I would also possibly allow more contact on receivers but penalize DB holding more (the calls are too inconsistent which leads to a lot of "missed" calls) |
Ed October 13 |
Nice day for Will Jackson picking games and props. Congratulations. |
lou@palo alto October 13 |
#24 was from Penn St |
Barry October 13 |
So UTB is actually a closet PSU fan after all eh? |
Howard October 13 |
Kj— tell me where that bar is so I can hang out with UTB and MFC. I would ask them if they think that Joe in his #15 Colts uniform reminds them more of Gary Cuozzo or Earl Morrall. Oh, and Jordan and Pippen keep rolling on |
Vince from SC October 13 |
Not a blowout but also never in doubt. On to Tampa. |
Unitastoberry October 13 |
If Lamar had made it past AFC teams in January like KC, Tennessee,and played nicked up in the Cincinnati game he would have 3 rings . I agree on this one the Commandskins are going down. Even Harbaugh won't screw this up. If you watched Penn State win in overtime over USC you know the NCAA refs are horrible. Worse than the NFL. Remember when the NFL refs went on strike and they used NCAA refs? That why the strike was settled. This number 44 on Penn State was a one man wrecking crew yesterday. He's a number one pick at TE. He's Dave Casper/Gronk quality if he stays healthy. Blocks great too pancakes guys. |
Old George October 12 |
Trolley Dodgers. |
Chris in Bel Air October 12 |
Love the "Reading time: 2 minutes"... or 3 minutes. This should be a regular thing for DMD. Thanks for the throwback. |
kj October 12 |
Everything written by @Bryce about DET was written about our O's two years ago. Funny how fans are always giving other teams a pass but want their team to be perfect 100% of the time. Wonder if MFC and UTB hang out at the local Curmudgeons bar howling at the moon together? The Indians have the best chance to beat NYY, so not sure why anyone would be pulling for DET to win today. Above was my own mini ode to my absolute favorite local sportswriter. DMD did a better job with his tribute, but figured I'd toss in an amateur version. RIP Mr Jackman. |
BRYCE October 12 |
I’d love to see Skubal and company get the last laugh this year with all the talk of Detroit dealing/retaining their ace at the deadline. Would be great to see them eliminate Cleveland and then continue their post-2000 trend of owning the Yankees in the playoffs. That team is going to be sneaky good for the next several years. In addition to its current roster, they have two top-10 prospects waiting in the wings and another at #31, per MLB. What’s even more impressive is that this 2024 surge has been with no contribution from Mize and very minimal from Torkelson, their two recent #1 overall draft picks. Most importantly, they’re playing with the team chemistry to be a force. |
Unitastoberry October 12 |
Why should U of Maryland fire Mike Locksley? So then they pretty much admit they just want a team who beats squads like Gettysburg College and Northwestern then only loses to Penn St and Michigan? It's basically an admission they joined the Big Ten for the money and could care less about a national championship. Remember what the late great Lefty Driesel said when hired by Maryland basketball back in the stone age? He said he wanted to become the UCLA of the east then strap the national trophy on his car and ride around tobacco road with it. It never happened but it was exactly what the fans wanted to hear and they bought in. Now the football team just wants to beat Northwestern and Prairie View. What a bunch of bull. RIP to Phil Jackman who was a great sports writer and not some punk looking to cause trouble.Those days are gone except at DMD. Go USC! |
MFC October 12 |
Hernandez dropping the F bond, after asking if it was live tv was disgusting. Another self Absorbed athlete. I am now rooting for anyone but LA. What a jerk, it wasn’t cute . |
Phil October 12 |
Awesome tribute, I always enjoyed his columns especially the two minute ones. |
Tom J October 12 |
Drew, when I saw the "Reading Time, 2 minutes" it rang a bell but just couldn't put my finger on it until reading down and then seeing and remembering this was Phil Jackman's thing. Didn't know the origin behind it but loved this in The Sun. Yes, please continue his thing as part of DMD. |
hank October 11 |
Top level trolling today. No true Baltimorean would ever wish success for the Yankees. I agree with David, bunch of posers like this current team is the last team I want to see in the World Series. Whoever prevails in the DET-CLE series best take care of business. Mets vs LA, no one worth rooting for there either. |
Paul from Towson October 11 |
The minute the O’s were eliminated, I became an instant fan of whatever National League team comes out of the NLCS to face whatever dumb AL champion. I can never stomach watching the Yankees (or Red Sox for that matter) celebrate anything so I strongly disagree with Drew’s commentary today. I don’t have any issue with the Mets, so if they happen to beat either LA or SD, more power to them. Plus, I would like to see Lindor and Alonso get a ring. Just wish Buck was still there to make rooting for them even that much easier. I will agree with Drew that the Cleat of Reality is hunting Washington this weekend and Jayden Daniels will feel every bit of its fury. Rookie QB’s never fair well at The Bank against our Ravens. This Sunday will be no exception. Ravens win, 34-13. Go Ravens!!! |
Jeffrey “Fireball” Roberts October 11 |
I would personally love a Yankee/Padre WS. The tattooed Padres in those horrible brown uniforms led by Manny against the clean cut Yankee pinstripes led by Judge. East Coast versus West Coast. Atlantic-Pacific. Biggie-Tupac. Bring it on. LOL |
David Rosenfeld October 11 |
Honestly, the 2024 Yankees are a bunch of posers. They act like they dominated the league. Judge and Soto are ridiculous, and Cole is one of the best, but the other 23 guys ain't much better than any other team. Maybe that'll be enough to win the World Series. I'm not sure Cleveland or Detroit will beat them...they just don't hit well enough. |
Delray RICK October 11 |
Baseball season is OVER!!! |
Chris in Bel Air October 11 |
To be honest, I guess I still have a little bit of sour grapes going on with the O's out of the running again. Tough watching other teams/fans celebrate. I suppose a Yankees/Mets series would be interesting. I'm sure other than Yankees/Dodgers (Ohtani vs Judge) MLB execs and whatever network is broadcasting the World Series would really like Yankees/Mets too. I can't imagine those same folks would be too thrilled with say Tigers vs Padres. Ravens will bring Wash and Jayden Daniels back to earth on Sunday. Don't get me wrong, I like Daniels. It's just not quite his/their time. |
TimD in Timonium October 11 |
A Mets / Yankees series could be entertaining, but I suspect most of America would tune out an all-NYC final. But I don't think the Mets will get past LA or SD. We'll see. And the Ryan Ries video was a great watch. |
Dan October 11 |
Drew, thanks for highlighting Ryan Ries. As a fellow skateboard enthusiast I know his story and the impact he has made on the youth all over the USA. God bless Ryan!! |
Unitastoberry October 10 |
I thought is was a joke today when I heard Dean"Swiss"Pees was rehired to be a senior advisor to DC Zach Orr. It's actually true. |
TimD in Timonium October 10 |
"Corbin Burnes, who started for the AL in the All-Star Game, ranked fourth in the AL in ERA (2.92), third in innings pitched (194 1/3), eighth in WHIP (1.10) and 10th in strikeouts (181)." Complete games in 2024? Zero. (His closest was 8 innings vs KC in the playoffs.) We've already seen the Golden Age of Complete Game Pitchers. It's not coming back. |
Unitastoberry October 10 |
Palmer,Cuellar, McNally and Dobson 4 20 game winners. I saw them all get at least one win that year in person. |
Bob October 10 |
2011 was the last year a pitcher logged double digit complete games with James Shields throwing 11 for Tampa Bay. Since then only two pitchers threw more then 5 games, Chris Sale in 2016 and Sandy Alcantara in 2022 both threw 6 games. I think the ship has sailed on the days a starter bangs out double digit complete games. https://www.baseball-almanac.com/pitching/picomg4.shtml |
Chris in Bel Air October 10 |
Yes, the bullpen game is certainly an interesting situation now. I agree it is not my favorite part of the game for sure. But, if a manager wants to blow through 8 arms in one game, doesn't that put him in a disadvantage for the next game? It's a risk in going the bullpen route. I am also not sure the minimum innings or pitches is practical either. If a starter is getting lit up in the first couple innings a proposed rule to remain for minimum number of pitches/innings would then take away the ability for the manager to make a pitching change. That doesn't seem like it is good for the game either. As for making these guys in Jim Palmer again, that's not happening. The days of Palmer, Fergie Jenkins, Bob Gibson, Gaylord Perry and Steve Carlton are long gone and that's not even including the astounding number of CGs thrown by the likes of Cy Young or Walter Johnson. For reference, in 2024, the team with the most CG's thrown was the Phillies with 5. Going back 50 years, here are the leading and total number of team CGs thrown that year: 2014 - 8 2004 - 11 1994 - 17 1984 - 48 1974 - 71 A remarkable trend down and it's just not ever coming back. |
David Rosenfeld October 10 |
The "bullpen game" is an interesting phenomenon because, as much as people might dislike it, it's really common sense. I'm sure that A.J. Hinch would love it if he had even one more guy like Tarik Skubal. But he doesn't, so he feels like this is the best way to win...and he's often right because (unlike in Palmer's day), the "bullpen" guys are more talented than the ostensible starting pitchers. Assuming this a problem, I'm not sure of the answer. And in the playoffs, when the rope is short even for good starting pitchers, I'm even less sure... |
Bam Bam October 10 |
Does @Billy know how to read? @Timmy K was talking about @JK |
Action October 10 |
Same exact situation in Royals Yankees game last night that Os had in game 1 against Royals. Tied ballgame, Royals man on third, 2 outs, Bobby Witt at the plate. But this time the opposing team did what Brandon Hyde and the O’s should have done. They pitched around him and walked him. And guess what the next batter did? Of, course fly out to end the inning. The Yankees scored 1 more after that and that was all she wrote. 2 opposite approaches in the same exact situation with 2 different outcomes. Come on Hyde, get an effing clue! |
Delray RICK October 10 |
Who was the reader of this site who lived west FLORIDA near TAMPA?????? |
Eric in White Plains October 10 |
I attended a game last year, full disclosure, my daughter is a junior at UMD. |
Harold October 09 |
Meet the Mets- Meet the Mets…..on to the NLCS- amazin! |
Billy October 09 |
Did this "James" dude answer "the question"? Maybe Timmy K can tell us lol. |
Thursday October 3, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3693 |
Well...
That was a bummer, indeed.
There's so much unpacking to do from both Game 2 and the entire wild card series that we might have to come back later today for an "evening" edition of Drew's Morning Dish.
I'm kidding about that. All you'll get from me today is what you're about to read.
But I'm more than happy to dive in on everything, from the manager to the players who couldn't get a hit when it mattered to the lousy crowd of just under 37,000 to the question everyone is asking: "Now what?"
I don't know where to start, because every topic has meat on its bone.
Let's just go to the game itself.
It was actually a heckuva baseball game. Except the wrong team won. It went down to the last half inning and the last three at-bats before the O's were finally put away. No one likes losing. But it was "good baseball" to watch, albeit frustrating to endure if you were a fan of the home team.
Both bullpens were mostly outstanding. The managers pulled a lot of strings and nearly all of their decisions panned out favorably.
For example, I thought Brandon Hyde was insane for having Seranthony Dominguez pitch to Bobby Witt Jr. with a runner on second in the 8th inning after falling behind in the count 2-0, but Hyde stuck with his pitcher there and Witt eventually struck out.
Hyde even yanked Zach Eflin after 75 pitches and four innings of work and the Baltimore bullpen was mostly spot on, allowing just one run in five innings.
I didn't think it was wise to pinch hit Austin Slater for Ryan O'Hearn in the bottom of the 6th, but Slater actually delivered something very rare in the 8th inning -- a base hit.
Let's give the winning team credit. K.C.'s bullpen was also fantastic. Every managerial move turned into a blessing for them in Game 2.
The game turned on two separate occasions, and on both occasions, the Royals were the benefactor.
The Orioles got a leadoff homer from Cedric Mullins in the top of the 5th to tie the score at 1-1, then promptly loaded the bases with no one out.
This moment, as it turned out, defined the series. Santander popped out to first. Cowser struck out. And Rutschman grounded out.
Inning over. Season...sorta-kinda over.
The Cowser whiff was particularly painful because the left fielder actually swung and missed at a ball that hit him and would have produced the go-ahead run. You don't see that much in baseball. But we saw it on Wednesday.
One inning before that, Ryan Mountcastle popped out with runners on second and third and two outs.
Five base runners stranded in two innings. That's how you lose.
The game was also somewhat decided by two plays of almost identical nature.
In the bottom of the 4th, with Anthony Santander at second, Ryan O'Hearn sent a ball up the middle that shoulda-coulda-woulda rolled into centerfield and sent Santander home with the team's first run of the game.
Instead, K.C. second baseman Mike Massey made a remarkable diving stop and was able to get O'Hearn at first, but Santander moved to 3rd and Adley Rutschman scampered into 2nd base, only to set up Mountcastle's aforementioned pop fly out to end the inning.
Two innings later, Bobby Witt Jr.'s grounder at nearly the identical spot on the infield was gobbled up by Jordan Westburg, but he was unable to throw Witt Jr. out at first and the second -- and eventual game-winning -- Kansas City run scored on the play.
One guy made a great play and got a key out and the other made a really nice play but couldn't get the guy out. It's a game of inches, they say.
In the end, the O's managed a total of 6 hits and 1 run. You're simply not winning many games with that kind of production.
The series itself was largely an exercise in total team futility at the plate, as the O's scored one run in 18 innings, struck out 22 times, and left 16 runners on base.
There were multiple occasions when all the Birds needed was what they call in baseball "a productive out" and they couldn't even do that. No one did much of anything at the plate except, perhaps for Cedric Mullins, who had a double in Game 1 and a home run in Game 2.
If you want to see the ugly 2-game totals in black-and-white, here they are.
Gunnar Henderson 0-7, 4 Ks
Adley Rutschman 1-8, 2 Ks
Ryan Mountcastle 0-7, 4Ks
Anthony Santander 1-8, 2Ks
Jordan Westburg 1-6, 1 K
Colton Cowser 1-7, 3 Ks
That's 4-for-39 from your team's best six hitters.
No home runs from that group.
No RBI from that group.
Not one "big hit" from any of them.
Playing the blame game is kind of silly, because anyone and everyone who played or coached has a hand in every loss, but when those six guys go 4-for-39, you're not beating anyone.
But why?
That's the $64,000 question.
Brandon Hyde is the aftermath-scapegoat, of course. "It must be the way Hyde is preparing them," someone screamed on Twitter yesterday.
I don't know much, but I do know this: Brandon Hyde isn't telling guys to intentionally foul up.
I'm quite certain Hyde and his gang of offensive/hitting gurus are preaching and preaching some more about plate discipline, moving runners over, trying to make solid contact, and so on.
I have no idea why those six we listed above all went cold at the same time, but I have a hard time believing it was "managing" that suddenly derailed them at the plate.
And, please, don't take that as a blanket endorsement of Brandon Hyde or an attempt to overlook the mistakes he made in the series. He's a flawed "big game" manager, in my opinion.
But Gunnar Henderson didn't go 0-for-7 because Brandon Hyde somehow "managed him incorrectly".
If you want to pick at Hyde for certain things, by all means go right ahead. But let's put the responsibilty on the proper people. The guys with the bat in their hands failed. Over and over and over.
But why?
We're still back to that question.
And here's what I think.
I won't call it "choking". I don't like that word. And I don't think "choking" is what happened, per se.
I think what happened is the moment simply overwhelmed the team's younger players who were tasked with producing the big hit at just the right time.
I'm not piling on Gunnar when I reflect on his final at-bat in the bottom of the 9th, but it looked almost like he just swung three times to get it over with and bring the whole thing to its disappointing conclusion.
It was an at bat that a JV baseball player would produce. Listless, lazy, and wildly amateur'ish. And that was just one at bat, of course.
But it was also a huge moment since the season would end with an out of any kind. And Henderson looked no more capable of producing there than your Uncle Ted would have been had he stepped up to the plate.
Nothing in life -- not just sports, but life -- beats this word: experience.
You have to get there a time or two and fail, sometimes miserably, before you can learn how to produce. This core of the O's team has mostly been together for two playoff runs and they've yet to win a game. There are lessons to learn with each game. The higher the stakes, the more the lessons have to be learned and remembered.
This team's core of young players were not ready for the moment. Plain and simple.
The attendance on Wednesday was the lowest playoff crowd in OPACY history, a fact that can't make new owner David Rubenstein very happy.
The thing that no one talks about at parties is that crowds in Baltimore are generally boosted by the give-away of a tee-shirt, bobblehead or some other $8.50 trinket that motivates someone to stop what they're doing on a Friday or Saturday and go downtown to the ballpark.
Without some sort of give-away item to entice fans to attend, Friday crowds would be in the 20,000-25,000 range routinely instead of in the 40,000 range.
People are no longer going to games en masse just because they love baseball.
But playoff baseball should be different. The trade-off is obvious: We're not giving you a tee-shirt or bobblehead tonight. But you're going to see a baseball game that 16 other cities don't get the privilege of hosting this October.
The stadium should be full for playoff baseball.
Alas, the O's drew 41,000-plus for Game 1 and 36,000-plus for Game 2.
To call it "dreadful" would be hyperbole. But it wasn't good. It was, in a word, unsettling.
The blame falls directly on the team's clumsy, unprofessional rollout of their 2025 Birdland ticket program back in late August. It was there where the team and their front office honchos tried to pull the wool over their most important and loyal friends -- people who buy full and partial ticket plans -- by not only raising per-game prices in 2025 but also removing or altering the benefits they would receive in 2025.
There's no sugarcoating it. And there's no defending it. It was a terribly misplayed effort by the front office and the fans responded by saying, "I'm not going..."
They also created a scenario where some ticket plan holders who would have purchased tickets to wild card games were told they couldn't purchase them because their particular plan only called for them to purchase a maximum of three (3) playoff games. Given that option, a lot of fans chose the ALCS and World Series games, even though they might not have ever attended those games.
"Clumsy" might be a kind way of putting it. The Orioles completely botched the unveiling of their 2025 Birdland membership and alienated and angered a significant portion of their most loyal group of fans at the same time.
I know I'm sounding overly harsh when I write this, but it's true: They deserved to only have 36,000 people show up on Wednesday afternoon to see the season finale. They get what they get.
And what about the manager? He's public enemy number one after another winless post-season. Would the club actually fire Brandon Hyde?
I would be very surprised if Mike Elias and David Rubenstein relieves Hyde of his managerial duties.
These are the facts and they can't be disputed. Other things -- the team's approach at the plate, pitching decisions, and so on -- are filled to the brim with opinions and "maybe" or "could have".
These are the facts:
1. Brandon Hyde has managed the Orioles to 192 wins in the last two seasons.
2. He's managed the O's to a division title and a wild card playoff appearance.
3. The team hasn't won a playoff game in the last two years.
I don't see the Orioles firing him over five playoff losses.
Now, is 2025 a bit of a "make or break" season for Hyde in Baltimore? I don't know, maybe. In the back of his mind, maybe Mike Elias is thinking, "If we make it again next October and his team doesn't win a playoff game, I'll have enough ammunition to make a move."
I have no idea if Mike Elias thinks that way or not. But he might.
But 192 wins in two seasons and two straight playoff appearances is pretty good stuff on the back of your baseball card.
I'm very luke warm myself on Brandon Hyde. If it's possible to be competent most of the time but still be a guy that might not get you to the promised land, I feel like that sums him up nicely.
I also realize that my opinion doesn't mean jack squat, just like the people on Twitter howling at the moon about firing Brandon Hyde don't mean anything, either.
I don't dislike Hyde as a manager. I've said that here a lot.
But I do see what I believe are flaws in his ability to "read the room", so to speak. Baseball is driven by analytics these days. I get that. But analytics are definitely NOT perfect.
Hyde's inability to step away from them on occasion and play the odds his gut tells him to play are his biggest flaws, in my estimation.
All that said, the Orioles aren't firing him just because they went 0-3 last October and 0-2 this October.
The last piece of this puzzle is something that will become a bigger part of the story of the team's quick exit this week and it's the trade deadline acquisitions made by Mike Elias last July.
Those days leading up to the end of July are crucial. By then, teams and general managers can make honest assessments about where they are, where they think they might be able to go, and, most importantly, what they need to get over that hump.
It then comes down to three things. Who is available? And do you have the necessary pieces to give up in order to obtain the players who are your best fit?
And last but not least: Do you eventually make the right call on the players you pick up?
I won't say Mike Elias "failed" at the deadline. I think that's too harsh. But it was close to a failure.
The deadline acquisitions didn't help get them where they wanted to get, and I'm obviously saying that having watched them lose 2 straight to Kansas City.
One guy totally panned out: Zach Eflin.
Two guys were OK: Seranthony Dominguez and Gregory Soto.
Two guys were complete flops: Eloy Jimenez and Trevor Rogers.
Two guys hardly did anything: Austin Slater and Livan Soto.
One guy didn't even make it a week: Cristian Pache.
We'll explore it in more detail this week, but you can't get a "C" at the trade deadline and expect people to be thrilled in hindsight.
Forget about Slater and Soto and, even, Pache. Those three were just fillers, anyway. No one expected anything from them.
The other five, though, needed to come through.
Three of them did.
Eflin was an "A" in his two month stint. Dominguez and Soto were both "B" guys.
Three of them panned out.
Two of them didn't.
With the team only scoring one run in two playoff games, a bat like the one Jimenez was expected to yield wound up being pretty important this week. Alas, Jimenez wasn't even on the WC series roster.
A lot of people will point to the fact they gave up 12 cases of Surfside Vodka and Tea to get him, but that's not really the point at all. You give up what you have to give up to get the quality you need. They gave up nothing for Jimenez and got nothing in return. What they got in return (nothing) was far more imporant than what they gave up (nothing).
Trevor Rogers was a disaster in August and never saw the light of day in September, or October.
Unlike Jimenez, Rogers came with a price. Sure, Norby and Stowers were both landlocked in Baltimore and weren't likely part of the future, although Norby certainly had a fair amount of promise as he continued to develop. Giving up those two guys for a pitcher who was terrible and then optioned to the minors was a total and colossal whiff.
Those were bad misses by Elias.
But enough of that for today.
For now, let's turn our attention to the Bengals and Sunday's game in Cincinnati.
It's now football season, full time, here.
But in case you're wondering. The Grapefruit League opener is on February 22.
Wednesday October 2, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3692 |
Well, that escalated quickly.
Yesterday morning, the O's were cruising into the post-season winners of 5 of their last 6 games and hosting a Royals team that needed to turn things around in their final week of the regular season just to make playoffs.
This morning, the O's are one loss away from their 2024 campaign coming to an end.
Life comes at you fast when you're held scoreless and can only manage 5 base hits in a playoff game.
It's worth noting, of course, that the Royals also only managed 5 hits in Tuesday's 1-0 win in Game 1 of the wild card series at Camden Yards.
But they happened to produce one RBI on the day and that was the difference.
And, so, here we go today. Win and there's a game 3 on Thursday in Baltimore. Or lose to the Royals again this afternoon and it's to the first tee you go.
As it turned out, the Birds actually lost twice on Tuesday. Once on the field and once at the box office.
Incredibly, the game was played before a little more than 4,000 empty seats at Camden Yards. Capacity at the downtown ballpark is 45,971 and Tuesday's announced attendance was 41,506.
The Orioles didn't sell out a home playoff game.
Frankly, that's more alarming than losing 1-0 and only generating five hits.
At least to me, anyway.
The O's and Major League Baseball grossly miscalculated everything about the playoff market in Baltimore. It's one thing if scattered single seats are available on game day. It's another thing entirely when 10% of the ballpark is unsold.
This all started with the O's and their clumsy rollout of their 2025 season and partial plan programs in late August. They not only raised prices for next season, they removed and/or reduced certain benefits to 2024 plan holders who were keen on renewing for next season in exchange for being guaranteed access to 2024 playoff tickets.
That fiasco, coupled with the high prices of the playoff tickets and the unknown starting times until this past Monday, led to an embarrassing sea of green seats on Tuesday.
You'd expect something like that in Miami or Tampa Bay. But not in Baltimore.
Alas, it happened. The O's and Major League Baseball scrambled yesterday morning and reduced ticket prices in certain areas and also offered partial refunds to the thousands of ticket plan holders they offended, but the result was a crowd of 41,000-plus in a stadium that holds 45,000-plus.
Back to the baseball game we go.
Corbin Burnes was remarkably fantastic on Tuesday, working into the 9th inning before he was finally lifted for Keegan Akin. Burnes' only real mistake of the game was surrendering a 2-out single to Bobby Witt Jr. in the 6th inning that paved the way for the game's only run.
Right on cue, the question boomed all over social media: "Why did Hyde pitch to Witt -- the MLB leader in hits in 2024 -- with first base open and two outs?"
It was a fair question, for sure.
Hyde took the question afterwards and quickly pointed out they gave Burnes the option of pitching to Witt Jr. or walking him in that situation. The veteran right hander said he wanted to pitch to him. And there you have it.
Critics of Hyde will say the same thing they say about John Harbaugh when the Ravens go for it on 4th and 2 and Harbaugh says afterwards that Lamar Jackson wanted the offense to stay on the field: "That's why you're the manager!! You make those decisions, not the pitcher!!"
This is a tough one.
You're talking about the second-best player in the American League in 2024. If not for Aaron Judge, Bobby Witt Jr. is likely be the MVP of the league. He had the most hits in the sport this season. First base was open. There were 2 outs. And you had a guy on deck who hadn't played for a month due to injury.
But when your top pitcher looks back at you in the dugout and says, "I got this one, Skip", I think the logical thing to do is give him a thumbs up and then say a quick prayer.
It's one thing if that's Dean Kremer or Albert Suarez out there. You don't think twice about walking Witt in that scenario.
But it was your best pitcher and perhaps one of the top 3 pitchers in all of baseball.
If Burnes gets Witt Jr. and the Royals don't score, it's no harm, no foul.
But if what happened, happens, the pitchforks come out for Hyde.
I see the logic in walking him there. Me? I would have walked him, no matter what my pitcher said.
But it's hard to blame Hyde there. And it's hard to pin all the blame on Burnes, either. The guy with the bat in his hand tries too, you know.
Hyde also got some heat for not moving Cedric Mullins over from 2nd base with no one out in the 3rd inning and James McCann next up at the plate.
A bunt there made total sense. Get Mullins to 3rd with just one out and try to manufacture a run there which, admittedly, has not been a strength of the O's over the last two months.
Mullins eventually made it to 3rd base with two outs after a McCann strike out and a Gunnar ground out, but Jordan Westburg flew out to deep left field to end the inning and keep the game scoreless.
I'm sure Hyde didn't think his team was going to generate just five hits and no runs on the day when Mullins was camped at second base with no outs in the 3rd. Hindsight being what it is and all, moving Mullins to 3rd base via a McCann bunt was the prudent thing to do.
Hyde's learning a valuable lesson. His offense needs all the help it can get. The bet here is if the same scenario presents itself this afternoon in the 3rd inning of a 0-0 game, Hyde's bunting Mullins to 3rd.
But bunts and strategy and intentionally walking someone is only part of the story from Tuesday's defeat. The real issue was obvious. The O's can't produce the big hit when they need it. Or, at the very least, they couldn't do it on Tuesday.
They had the same ailment in September, too, remember. The problem is when you still have it in October, it can end your season.
So now, it all comes down to today's second game of the series.
Can the O's bats come alive and force a deciding Game 3 on Thursday in Baltimore?
Or is what we saw from the offense on Tuesday just part of their 2024 DNA?
All they needed on Tuesday was a big hit at the right time to open the floodgates.
They couldn't produce it.
Unless something really bizarre happens today, the Orioles will, again, have numerous opportunities to generate a big hit and send the stadium into a frenzy.
But the one thing about today that's different is this: If the ballpark stays silent in Game 2......it will be silent until next spring.
Tuesday October 1, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3691 |
The ESPN headline summed it up best on Monday evening.
Embattled MLB legend Pete Rose dies at 83
He was, for sure, embattled.
Pete Rose never quite lived the life he imagined he might after his historic on field career concluded.
That pesky gambling-on-the-games thing got in the way and baseball, true to its word, never relented once they shunned him from the spotlight and the Hall of Fame.
Perhaps baseball doesn't deserve credit for this, but at least they never tinkered with Rose's on-the-field accomplishments when they banned him from the sport in 1989. Rose finished his career as a 17-time All Star while setting MLB records for games played (3,562) and base hits (4,256).
But his banishment from the game as a result of a gambling investigation turned out to be his scarlet letter.
I was a little lost for words on Monday night when news broke of Rose's death, so I took to Twitter with a simple message.
Pete Rose was a great hitter.
And he gambled on games in which he was managing.
There is no disputing those two facts.
How you judge him and place weight on those facts is your call. There's probably not a more polarizing argument in all of sports than the one centered on Rose: Does he or does he not belong in the Hall of Fame?
I have wavered on a number of much-discussed sports topics in my lifetime.
I always thought Joe Montana was the greatest quarterback I'd ever seen. And I held true to that belief until I saw the full body of Tom Brady's work. And then my mind changed.
I didn't think PED and anabolic steroid users belonged in baseball's Hall of Fame. I later changed my mind on that one, too, offering a spot in Cooperstown if those players would allow a notation of some kind on their plaque connected to either a failed steroid test, the era in which they played, and/or their appearance on the Mitchell Report.
Roger Federer was the greatest tennis player I'd ever seen. Until Novak Djokovic came along, that is.
I changed my mind on those things as time went on. It happens. With age and wisdom comes seeing things in a new way.
But age and wisdom haven't changed my mind on Pete Rose and the topic of whether he should have been enshrined in baseball's Hall of Fame.
The answer was "no" back then. And it's still "no" today.
Supporters of Rose will cling to the notion that the baseball Hall of Fame is a museum first and foremost. "You can't tell the story of the history of baseball without mentioning Pete Rose," they'll say.
And that is true. Very much so.
Pete Rose was a great hitter. If you believe the guy with the most base hits then becomes "the greatest hitter ever" by default, Rose is, then, the greatest hitter ever. I'll stop short of giving him that status, but I certainly won't argue his greatness in general.
But you can't earn a place in the most distinguished setting in baseball when it was proven -- and you admitted as much -- that you gambled on baseball games in which you were managing on the same day.
Some folks have long held the belief that it was the lying that got Rose in the most trouble.
"Had he just 'fessed up from the start and said, 'Yeah, I gambled on the games', he would have been treated differently," a lot of baseball followers suggest.
I don't subscribe to that theory, either.
Admitting you robbed a bank doesn't change the fact that you're a felon.
Rose bet on baseball games that he was managing, potentially impacting the outcome of both wins and losses because of his negligent gambling habit. There can be no worse sin in sports than playing a role in the game not being on the up-and-up.
There will be, of course, a strong push now for Rose's lifetime banishment to be lifted and for him to be inducted into Cooperstown posthumously.
I don't see the sense in that other than to graze the all-time hit leader with one final piece of chin music.
"We wouldn't let you in while you were alive because you would have capitalized on it. But now that you're gone, we'll open the doors for you."
That would be, in my opinion, bad form by Major League Baseball. You made the right call in 1989 when Rose admitted to betting on games in which he was the manager. There's no sense in turning back now.
None of that, though, takes away from what Rose did on the field when he played.
The fuzzy picture created by that dichotomy is what a lot of baseball fans can't grasp.
"Why not put him in for what he did as a player?" they wonder.
And the answer to that, of course, is simple: Because his baseball career included other moments. And those, sadly, were too damaging to sweep under the rug.
Greatest hitter ever? Definitely an argument for that, yes.
Greatest baseball player ever? Maybe. That, too, is certainly worth discussing.
Worthy of the Hall of Fame? Of course.
But the answer always was "no" once it was revealed that Pete Rose placed bets on games that he was involved in.
It's sad that it came to that.
There was no other way it could be, though.
The Orioles and Royals lock horns in their 3-game sprint to the ALDS starting today in Baltimore, and anything less than a series win by the Birds will make their 2024 campaign much more difficult to define.
There will be some folks, should the O's lose to the Royals, who will still claim that '24 was a "very good season".
Others, though, won't tag the team with that kind of positivity. Not after you scuffled for the better part of two months coming down the stretch and then dropped a home playoff series to a team that was barely adequate on the road during the regular season.
This is a huge series for the Orioles for a variety of reasons. If they win this best-of-3 round and then take the Yankees to the final out of Game 5 in the Bronx before being eliminated, that's one thing.
There'd be no real shame in bowing out in either the ALDS or ALCS.
But you can't lose to the Royals, especially when all three games are on home ice.
For the record, I don't see that happening. I think Brandon Hyde's team makes quick work of their visiting foes, winning Game 1 today, 10-4, and Game 2 tomorrow, 6-1.
I hope I'm right.
I noted in the Comments section where several people were bantering about Dean Kremer and the potential conflict he might face with this week's Rosh Hashanah holiday celebration.
There's still no official word on Kremer's status, by the way, so any discussion about it here or elsewhere is just speculation at this point.
But I don't need it to be "official" to know what's right and what's not right.
What's right is that Kremer should be allowed to fulfill whatever faithful obligations are in front of him. And if that means missing a game because he chooses to honor Rosh Hashanah, then so be it.
What wouldn't be right would be for anyone to criticize him for doing that.
Yes, baseball is a different "job" in that your teammates, organization and, by extension, city you're playing in (for) are counting on you and your performance.
To suggest that baseball isn't any different than working as a car salesman, I.T. expert or accountant would be naive at best.
Sports is very different. There's a game today. You have to play. There's a game tomorrow. You have to play. They scheduled a game on your child's 10th birthday. You have to play. Your wedding anniversary is July 10th and you have a game that day. You have to play.
But "have to play" stops when it comes to honoring your faithful obligation.
If Dean Kremer wants to abide by customary Jewish protocol and that means he can't "go to work" this week, then so be it.
My official guess is Kremer is going to take the mound on Thursday and pitch because that's what he does and the organization is counting on him. But I certainly wouldn't criticize him if he doesn't.
Your mileage may vary on this topic. And I respect anyone's opinion and, potentially, anyone's dissenting position.
But ultimately we'll just agree to disagree on this one.
"Randy On The O's" | ||
Randy Morgan takes #DMD readers through the recent week in Orioles baseball as the Birds try to win a second straight A.L. East title. |
Week Record: 5-1
Season Record: 91-71
AL East Finish: 2nd place, 1st Wild Card
Player of the Week: Ryan O'Hearn
After struggling for much of the last two months, the Orioles closed out the season strong with a 5-1 week to head into the playoffs with some momentum. This week saw a wave of key players return from injury, with Jordan Westburg, Ramon Urias, and Ryan Mountcastle re-joining the lineup and Jacob Webb and Danny Coulombe fortifying the bullpen.
The Birds entered the week with a small glimmer of hope to jump the Yankees and retain the AL East title, but after winning the first two in the Bronx the Yankees got the better of them in the finale to seal their division win. The O’s won the series opener in Minnesota on Friday to clinch the top Wild Card spot and secure home field in this week’s matchup, allowing them to give some key players rest on Saturday and Sunday.
With an off day on Monday, the O’s started the week in New York on Tuesday with a 5-3 win. Dean Kremer delivered another nice outing in his final start of the season, allowing just one run in five innings. Homers from Anthony Santander and Ramon Urias pushed the O’s lead to 4-1 by the 7th inning but the Yanks began to mount a comeback before Yennier Cano came on and got out of a jam, recording two key outs, followed by Gregory Soto and Seranthony Dominguez going 1.2 scoreless innings to close the game.
On Wednesday Zach Eflin had his worst start as an Oriole, allowing three runs in 4.2 innings, but the bats picked him up. The offense put up three runs in the first inning with RBI singles from Cowser and Mountcastle, then added three more in the 4th with Gunnar, Santander and Cowser driving in runs. The Yankees rallied late off Michael Bowman, but couldn’t close the gap in a 9-7 O’s win.
The O’s had managed to delay the Yankees division championship celebration for two nights but finally relented on Thursday. It was a good start for Corbin Burnes, but he was pulled after five innings of one-run ball to preserve his arm for the playoffs. The bullpen then collapsed with Cano, Perez, Baker and Bowman combining to allow seven runs over the final four innings for a 10-1 loss.
Friday night was effectively the end of the season for the Orioles as they wrapped up the top Wild Card slot with a 7-2 win over the Twins. A Ryan O’Hearn two-run homer in the 2nd inning gave the O’s a lead they wouldn’t relinquish. Cowser added a homer of his own in the 7th and they rallied for four more in the 8th. Cade Povich blanked his former organization for 5.2 innings, allowing just two hits and one walk in a solid advertisement for a spot on the postseason pitching staff.
The final two games didn’t matter for either team at that point, but the O’s completed the sweep with a 9-2 win on Saturday and a 6-2 win on Sunday. Many of the starters got some rest over the weekend and Hyde went with a bullpen game on Saturday. It was a positive sign to see Jackson Holliday get on base in seven of nine plate appearances over the two games while spelling Gunnar Henderson at shortstop. While Holliday isn’t likely to start in the playoffs he could be needed as a left-handed pinch hitter off the bench.
There was a curious decision on Sunday to start Albert Suarez and let him throw six innings and 71 pitches. That would seem to rule Suarez out for at least the first two games of the Wild Card series, if not the whole thing.
You would think that Suarez could have been useful as a long man out of the bullpen if any of the three starters had a poor outing, but it doesn’t seem he’ll be available now. Perhaps the thinking is Suarez will sit out the Wild Card series so he can be ready to start a potential game one of the ALDS in New York. It could be quite a risk to take though.
There were a few candidates for Player of the Week. In a great sign for the offense, Colton Cowser heated up this week, getting four hits in the five games he played, including two homers and five runs batted in. Jacob Webb was impressive in his return to the bullpen as well, pitching four scoreless innings in relief while allowing three hits, no walks and striking out five.
However, the award for the week goes to another lefty who looks to be getting hot at the right time. Ryan O’Hearn had a big week, hitting safely in five of the six games while batting .400 and hitting two homers.
If the Orioles are going to make a run in the playoffs they are going to need the offense to lead the way and if guys like Cowser and O’Hearn can get hot, that will go a long way towards accomplishing their goals.
Question of the Week --
How do the Orioles matchup with the Royals for the Wild Card Series?
In a final weekend twist, it was the Kansas City Royals sliding ahead of the Detroit Tigers to claim the second Wild Card spot and set up a rematch of the 2014 ALCS. As most will unfortunately remember, the Royals swept that series on their way to losing to the Giants in the World Series. However, Royals catcher Salvador Perez is the only player remaining on either team from that series.
The current version of the Royals limped into the playoffs even worse than the Orioles, finishing 11-14 in September with two separate seven-game losing streaks since late August. With their weekend sweep of the Twins, the O’s managed to finish September with a winning record at 13-12.
The Orioles took the season series between the teams winning four out of six and winning each series, home and away. While that record is better than the alternative, it may not be that informative for the upcoming matchup, since the teams last met in April.
The Royals finished the season with a record of 86-76, 6.5 games behind the AL Central winning Guardians and 5 games behind the Orioles, with a run differential of +91 (four better than the O’s). However, if you remove their games against the historically bad White Sox, the Royals were just .500. They went 41-40 on the road this season and were 45-54 against opponents with a winning record, compared to the Orioles 47-44 record against those opponents.
Offense --
The Orioles had the superior offense by a wide margin on the season, finishing with a 118 OPS+ and 235 home runs, both good for second best in MLB. The Royals on the other hand, finished near the bottom third in both categories, with just 170 homers (20th) and a 98 OPS+ (19th).
If we only look at the past month, both teams slide down the rankings but the O’s still hold the clear advantage. In September the Orioles were 7th in Fangraphs wRC+ and 11th in home runs while the Royals were dead last in the former and 2nd to last in the latter.
The Royals are led by their own superstar shortstop, Bobby Witt Jr., who is a near-lock to finish second behind Aaron Judge in AL MVP voting. Their problem is, after Witt, they only have three other players who finished as above average hitters (OPS+ over 100). That number includes Vinnie Pasquantino, who has been out injured and will just be returning from the IL for the Wild Card series. The Orioles, in comparison, have more than ten hitters who finished the season with an OPS+ north of 100.
Starting Pitching --
Each of these teams finished the season with strong starting pitching numbers. The Royals were 5th in the majors with an overall 113 ERA+ and 2nd with a 3.55 starter ERA on the year. Those numbers were slightly worse in September but still the top third of the league, with the 9th best starter ERA in September at 3.04 and the 6th best team ERA at 2.94.
The Orioles also boasted a strong starting rotation, with their 3.77 starter ERA coming in 5th in the majors. However, their team ERA+ was dragged down by the bullpen and finished at 96, 20th in the league. Their September pitching numbers were in line with the rest of the season, with the 6th best starter ERA in the month but only the 17th best team ERA at 3.85.
Relief Pitching --
As you might guess from the numbers above, the Orioles bullpen was their squeaky wheel. Despite quality starting pitching, the Orioles finished below average in team ERA due to a bullpen ERA of 4.22, which was 23rd in MLB. This was even worse in September, as their 5.31 bullpen ERA was second to last for the month.
Luckily for Birdland, the Royals had similar struggles for most of the season. Their bullpen finished the season with a 4.13 ERA, which was 20th in MLB. Though the Royals will hope they can carry over their improvements in September to the playoffs. Their bullpen managed a 2.77 ERA in the month, good for 5th best in the league, with trade deadline acquisition Lucas Erceg emerging as their closer and converting 11 of his 13 save opportunities.
Pitching Matchups --
Game one will see the two staff aces square off with Corbin Burnes lined up against breakout Royals ace Cole Ragans. Burnes finished the year with a 2.92 ERA and 128 ERA+, providing the O’s with the ace they desperately needed. Ragans was just as good if not better for Kansas City, pitching to a 3.14 ERA and 135 ERA+.
Ragans is the only lefty of the six projected starters, though he had reverse splits this year, with lefties hitting better off him than righties did. It will be interesting to see how Brandon Hyde manages the lineup for this first game given that.
Game two provides another marquee starter pairing with Zach Eflin against Seth Lugo. Eflin was incredible for the Orioles after his acquisition, finishing the year with a 3.59 ERA and 109 ERA+, but an even better 145 ERA+ in his time with the Birds.
A converted relief pitcher, Seth Lugo delivered an outstanding year for the Royals with a 3.00 ERA and 141 ERA+.
With injuries to multiple Orioles starters, most recently Grayson Rodriguez, the game three matchup will favor the Royals.
Barring a shocking surprise, the Orioles will send out Dean Kremer to duel against veteran Michael Wacha. Kremer had a strong September, posting a 2.25 ERA in the final month, but that only lowered his season tally to 4.10, good for a below average 92 ERA+.
Wacha finished the year with a 3.35 ERA and 126 ERA+ and likewise had a strong finish, with a 2.60 September ERA.
Outlook --
The tale of the tape shows the Orioles with a clear advantage with the bats while the Royals have the upper hand in the overall pitching matchup. However, when narrowed down to the top two starters, the Royals advantage dissipates as the combo of Burnes and Eflin can match up to any top two starters.
The Orioles hitting advantage should play across the series as long as they can regain their top of the league form and not suffer a cold snap as they did in August and early September. Throw in the fact that game one will be Ragans' first playoff appearance (we saw how that went for Grayson Rodriguez last year) and the O’s should have the upper hand.
As we know, virtually anything can happen in a condensed three game series. The outcome will largely be determined by which team shows up, the resurgent Orioles of the past week that was more in line with their season record, or the slumping team from early September.
The same goes for the Royals who had an even worse recent month. The return of productive starters Jordan Westburg, Ramon Urias and Ryan Mountcastle in the last week is a positive sign we could see the best version of this team.
The Orioles power bats could be the x-factor in the series, with history showing that teams that score more from the home run ball tend to have more success in the postseason (remember last year’s Texas Rangers).
The other major turning point will be the bullpens. These teams have frontline starters they trust, but each has a bullpen that has been unreliable for long stretches of the season. For the Orioles they will hope that the return of stalwarts Jacob Webb and Danny Coulombe can shift that balance in their favor.
That being said, the O’s will want to get this series wrapped up in the first two games, because there will certainly be some uneasy feelings if it comes down to a duel between Kremer and Wacha.
Hopefully the O’s take the series and I get to write another one of these previews for the ALDS. If not, thanks for reading all season. It’s been an honor and a pleasure to follow the Orioles with everyone this year.
Monday September 30, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3690 |
There are games that tell you more about the team that won and games that tell you more about the team that lost.
Last night in Baltimore, the 35-10 win for the home team told you much more about the Ravens than it did about the Bills.
Yes, the NFL is still very much a week-to-week league. None of us would be completely shocked if John Harbaugh's team goes to Cincinnati next week and lays an egg in a 30-24 loss.
But this Ravens team is going to be a very, very tough out as long as they stay mostly healthy and their quarterback can avoid a significant injury along the way.
Last night told us a lot more about the Ravens than maybe we already knew.
If your defense can't stop the run, you're in big trouble when you play Baltimore.
If your offense can't do something really well, it's going to be tough sledding against the Ravens defense.
Last night's 35-10 shellacking of the Bills was just that -- a mammoth beatdown of a previously undefeated team who showed very little heart early on, rebounded a bit in the third quarter, and then threw in the towel when things once again worked against them.
But it was the Ravens and their dominant first half play that zapped any life at all out of Sean McDermott's team. Buffalo entered the game high on the hog, ready to show the country and the league they are to be taken seriously. Instead, it was the Ravens who proved the latter point.
You better take the Ravens seriously or you're going to get punched in the mouth.
Derrick Henry exploded for an 87 yard running touchdown on the Ravens' first play from scrimmage and that was pretty much the ballgame right there. It eventually became 21-3 at halftime and the game was basically over at that point.
Buffalo started to unsettle the purple faithful in town when they scored an early 3rd quarter TD and got the ball back again after Lamar and the offense couldn't get a first down on their next opportunity.
The game certainly wasn't "on the line" on Buffalo's next offensive series or anything of that nature, but there was tension building as Josh Allen and the Bills offense moved to midfield.
But with one swing of the arm by Kyle Van Noy, the game ended. The veteran linebacker knocked the ball out of Allen's hands and it was scooped up by the ever-present Kyle Hamilton for a much-needed turnover.
The Ravens buzzed right down the field and scored a touchdown on a 9-yard TD run by Lamar.
Checkmate.
The rest of the night was just an effort by everyone on both teams trying not to get hurt. Even John Harbaugh got smart with 8 minutes left in the 4th quarter and pulled his 2-time MVP quarterback from the game to help preserve him for future battles in 2024.
Buffalo had gone a league-record 43 straight regular season games without losing by 6 or more points before getting run out of the gym last night in Baltimore. Most people don't care about those kinds of records. And rightfully so.
But for one night, at least, the Ravens showed the league they're capable of beating you and blowing you out if your chakras aren't in line. Buffalo's were out of whack last night in Baltimore and they paid the price.
And we can all say it now in our best Bill Belichick voice.
"We're on to Cincinnati."
The other bit of good news stemming from last night's game in Charm City? No one has anything to cry about on talk radio or Twitter this week. Both sides of the ball were incredibly effective, so both coordinators can keep their job for the time being, and Justin Tucker didn't miss a field goal on Sunday evening.
The Bengals are next up. They better be ready.
Cincinnati, that is. The Ravens will be more than ready.
Don't look now, but things fell perfectly into shape for the Orioles over the weekend as the Tigers did the improbable and choked away the #6 seed in the American League playoffs, losing back-to-back home games to the worst team in baseball.
With Kansas City winning Sunday's season finale in Atlanta and the Tigers falling to the White Sox, the Orioles will not go down 1-0 in their wild card series to Tarik Skubal on Tuesday in Baltimore.
Instead, they'll beat up on Kansas City 10-4 in Tuesday's opener and then polish off the Royals on Wednesday, 6-1.
I already sent Gavin Sheets a quick thank you text for helping out his hometown nine.
Oh, I almost forgot. The Birds ended their 2024 regular season with a 3-game weekend sweep of the Twins in Minnesota, winning 6-2 on Sunday and ending the campaign at 91-71.
We'd be naive to not recognize that the O's vastly underperformed over much of the final two months of the regular season.
But none of that matters now.
They're in the post-season for a second straight year and, no matter what the talking heads on the radio say, they have as good of a chance as anyone else in the American League entering the playoffs.
It will all come down to offense in October.
Baltimore's wild card rotation appears set; Corbin Burnes will go in the opener against K.C.'s Cole Ragans. Although the Birds haven't yet announced their Game 2 starter, it's assumed that Zach Eflin will go for the Birds against Seth Lugo. And then you'd assume Dean Kremer, if necessary, gets the Game 3 start vs. Michael Wacha.
Advantage, Orioles.
As long as the Birds' bats don't suddenly go silent this week, they should cruise through the Royals. K.C. is just too challenged at the plate themselves to mount much of a threat against the likes of Burnes, Eflin and Kremer.
But baseball is a funky game, as we saw last October when the O's flatlined against the Rangers in the best-of-5 ALDS and were quickly sent packing in a 3-game sweep.
This time around, I'm thinking it's going to be much different.
The Yankees should be very concerned.
They will have their hands full with Brandon Hyde's team starting this weekend in the Bronx.
The weather is starting to turn a little chilly and so, too, is the beer. There's playoff baseball once again in The Land of Pleasant Living.
Here we go...
The American squad won their 10th straight Presidents Cup on Sunday with an 18.5 to 11.5 win over the International team in Montreal.
It wasn't close. But then again, it was.
20 of the 30 matches played over four days went to at least the 17th hole, including nine of the singles matches on Sunday. But it was there, on the 17th and 18th greens in particular, where the U.S. team distinguished themselves.
The event was sorta-kinda over on Saturday afternoon (well, technically "early evening") when Patrick Cantlay rammed home an 18-foot birdie putt in the dusk to turn back the flourishing and flamboyant International duo of Tom Kim and Si Woo Kim.
It could have been 10-8 if Si Woo makes birdie there and Cantlay doesn't.
Instead, Cantlay rolled his putt in and Kim didn't. And that made it 11-7 and the gap was too much for Mike Weir's International side to overcome on Sunday.
Weir has been getting roasted for the last day for his Saturday pairings. Such is life when you're the captain. You don't hit a single shot, but you do decide who plays and who doesn't. And you better hope the guys you pick to play come through or you're getting a healthy dose of the blame.
In Weir's case, his biggest mistake was the one most people in Canada won't criticize. He played his three Canadian players far too much and let talented guys like Min Woo Lee and Jason Day sit on the bench while the U.S. squad piled up a big lead on Saturday.
The Americans played great golf for the most part, save for a Friday whitewashing that made things very interesting until the U.S. won 6 of 8 Saturday matches.
Xander Schauffele finished off his best year ever with a win over Jason Day and Patrick Cantlay was a winner over Canadian Taylor Pendrith. Just like that, the Americans were in position win their 10th straight competition.
And when Keegan Bradley held on for a 1 up with hard-charging Si Woo Kim, the U.S. had accumulated the 15.5 points necessary to retain the cup. It's fitting that Bradley was the deciding match -- albeit only by where he fell in the singles rotation -- since he will be the U.S. team captain at next fall's Ryder Cup in New York.
Most of the post-game chatter on Sunday centered on the lopsided nature of the Presidents Cup, which has the U.S. holding a commanding 13-1-1 lead over the International side.
"Something has to change," was the prevailing commentary on Sunday night.
That "something" could be the inclusion of select International candidates who currently play on the LIV tour and are not eligible to play in the Presidents Cup, namely Cameron Smith (Australia) and Joaquin Niemann (Chile). Although two players likely wouldn't change much overall, the availability of all International players would certainly give that squad a better chance of winning in the future.
What has to change, though, is the most obvious thing of all: The International team just has to play better golf, particularly in the closing stretch of holes.
This year's American squad was solid, but they weren't incredibly deep, throwing guys like Sahith Theegala, Brian Harman and Max Homa into the mix. Sure, there's Scheffler, Schauffele, Cantlay and Morikawa at the top of the U.S. roster and those four are very imposing in any format and on any course.
But the event gets "fixed" with better golf. Plain and simple.
It likely won't get much easier in Chicago in 2026. At least not for the International team.
Sunday September 29, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3689 |
Ravens vs. Bills.
Lamar Jackson vs. Josh Allen.
A potential tiebreaker game if the teams are deadlocked after the regular season.
On national TV, no less.
Oh, and Buffalo is a surprising 3-0 to start the campaign, while the Ravens are 1-2 and potentially in danger of falling three full games behind the Steelers if they lose to the Bills tonight and Pittsburgh wins at Indianapolis earlier in the afternoon.
This is a big one tonight.
Or is it?
Is it just another Sunday night game where the Ravens have a chance to flex their muscles to the rest of the football-loving country?
Or is it a statement game where John Harbaugh's team can officially dismiss the first two losses and hand the Bills their initial loss of the 2024 season?
The narrative with the broadcast team on NBC will be obvious from the moment Chris Collinsworth rolls into the middle of your TV screen around 8:02 pm.
Josh Allen vs. Lamar Jackson.
You can almost hear Collinsworth saying it now, can't you?
"And for the Ravens tonight, this one is all about number 8 and Buffalo's ability to reduce his impact on the game. If the Ravens get the good Lamar, Buffalo's in trouble. But if Lamar isn't spot on, the Ravens might be the ones in trouble."
Lamar Jackson will be mentioned far more than Josh Allen.
And if Lamar somehow doesn't guide the Ravens to a win this evening, he's going to get blamed. No two ways about it.
Fortunately for Lamar, I don't see him having to worry about that.
Buffalo gives up 118 yards per-game on the ground. That's the first stat that should concern them in advance of tonight's game. There's no telling what game plan Todd Monken throws at Sean McDermott's defense, but Derrick Henry and Justice Hill better carry the rock at least 30 times tonight.
The Bills are decent enough shutting down the opposition's passing game. They're 8th in the NFL in that category, allowing 168.3 yards per-game.
The wager here? Baltimore runs for 131 yards tonight and throws for 209 yards.
In other words, Buffalo's defense isn't going to hold serve against the run or the pass.
The Baltimore defense is interesting. They're #1 against the run -- averaging just 50 yards allowed on the ground per-game -- and #32 against the pass. Now, in fairness, they've played the Chiefs already. And Dallas had to throw the ball on almost every play in the 4th quarter of last week's 28-25 Baltimore win.
But the facts are plain to see. Ravens are great against the run and not-so-great against the pass.
I don't see any of that mattering tonight.
This one's sorta-kinda close at halftime, as the Ravens lead 17-13 after two quarters of play.
It's 24-16 heading into the 4th quarter.
Then it's 31-16.
And finally, it's a 34-16 Baltimore victory.
Josh Allen and Buffalo aren't coming to Charm City and beating the Ravens on national TV on Sunday night.
Sure, they're 3-0. And they're coming into the game on the heels of an impressive (maybe?) blowout of Jacksonville on Monday night.
But the Bills aren't winning in Baltimore unless something weird happens, like Lamar getting injured, for example.
Barring an odd occurrence happening, the Ravens cruise to a win tonight.
The Presidents Cup actually got quite interesting on Saturday, thanks in large part to the International team reversing an 0-5 hole on Friday and a handful of matches swinging in favor of the U.S. late on Saturday afternoon.
I've never been a huge fan of the Presidents Cup. To wit, I watched about 90 seconds of it on Thursday and maybe 10 minutes, total, on Friday.
But I got suckered into the alternate shot matches late Saturday afternoon and didn't budge from my recliner for a couple of hours. It was riveting golf theater, to say the least.
The U.S. leads the competition, 11-7, with 12 singles matches remaining to be played today.
The American side needs to win 4.5 points today to reclaim the Cup. The International side would have to pull off a semi-miracle and win 7.5 points out of 12 to capture the trophy.
American captain Jim Furyk is going for the jugular right away today. He's putting out his five top players from the start in an effort to squelch any hopes of the International team. Xander Schauffele, Sam Burns, Scottie Scheffler, Russell Henley and Patrick Cantlay will serve as the front side anchors.
If the International Team can somehow cobble together 3.5 points out of 5 in those matches, they stand a puncher's chance. But that's a big ask, particularly when it comes to beating the likes of Schauffele, Scheffler and Cantlay. Those three have been rock stars in the 4 matches played thus far.
Saturday's play was wild, particularly in the alternate shot format. The match between Cantlay/Schauffele and the two Kim's, Si Woo and Tom, had everything a heavyweight fight would bring to the table. The Kim's made putt after putt, taking the best shots from Cantlay and Schauffele, and staying alive with a miraculous run of spirited golf.
On the 16th hole, Si Woo hit an improbable pitch from a buried lie near the greenside bunker that rolled into the hole with perfect pace and precision. Mimicking his favorite NBA player, Kim ran around the green with his hands next to his ear in what Steph Curry calls his "Night Night" pose.
Undaunted, Cantlay hit an incredible chip from the rough on the 17th hole to keep the match even and then, at 18, in the dark, Cantlay rolled in an 18-foot birdie putt to steal the match from the two International stars.
The only blemish on the whole thing was Tom Kim whining afterwards about "sportsmanship" and some other stuff he let bother him; "staring", "swearing" and "talking down to me".
Kim -- Tom, that is -- jumps around like Kevin Bacon in Footloose every time he makes a putt of significance. And then he complains afterwards about shenanigans from the U.S. team? Kind of laughable, really.
But that's what happens when you pour your heart into a match and it doesn't go your way. Tom and Si Woo have been world beaters in the last two Presidents Cup events. It's been impressive to watch. Unfortunately, bellyaching about stuff in the press conference after losing is a bad look for Tom.
Jim Furyk and Mike Weir both rolled the dice as captains on Saturday. Furyk sat out Sahith Theegala all day, while Weir didn't get Min Woo Lee, Christian Bezuidenhout or Jason Day into one match on Saturday. Those four will all play in today's singles, of course.
It's going to require something special for the International team to come back and win today. The Americans have taken their best punches, over and over, and somehow responded almost every time. The final hour of Saturday's foursomes competition turned what might have been a 9-9 tie heading into Sunday into a commanding 11-7 USA lead.
Those four points could loom huge by the time Sunday's singles end around 6:30 pm.
WILL JACKSON | ||
Will Jackson will be here every Sunday during the NFL season with his thoughts on games and prop bets that will hopefully yield positive results for you. |
I subscribe to an online NFL service that breaks down every league game in great detail for wagering purposes. Last week, their three points of contact were a combined 4-14 with their game picks.
The week before that I think they were 8-10.
This has been a very weird start to the 2024 NFL season. There are survivor pools that have already handed out money to a winner because no one can pick the winners correctly.
I hope I can get back on the winning side this week. My prop bets have been profitable so there's good news there. But my game picks are below the .500 level.
I did have the Ravens and the over in their win at Dallas. I'm going the same way tonight, Ravens and over. Ravens win the game 30-23 over the Bills.
I do feel good about my game picks. I think the season is starting to clear up and we now know who is good and who isn't and which trends are starting to carry over week to week.
Game Picks:
Steelers (-2.5) at Indianapolis plus the total UNDER 40.5 points
Packers (-3) vs. Vikings
Jaguars (+5.5) at Texans plus the total UNDER 44.5 points
Cardinals (-3.5) vs. Commanders is my play of the day game.
Raiders (+2.5) vs. Browns
Chargers (+7) vs. Chiefs
Prop Bets:
Patrick Mahomes over 229.5 yards passing
Saints, Bears, Eagles to score game's first points (all 3 have to succeed)
Marvin Harrison Jr. anytime touchdown scorer
C.J. Stroud over 203.5 yards passing
Anthony Richardson under 189.5 yards passing
Sam Darnold under 189.5 yards passing
Alvin Kamara anytime touchdown scorer
Lamar Jackson over 2.5 touchdowns throwing or rushing
Josh Allen over 203.5 yards passing
Isaiah Likely anytime touchdown scorer
Saturday September 28, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3688 |
The Orioles took care of a lot of business on Friday night in Minnesota and, in the process, gave manager Brandon Hyde some things to think about over the next 48 hours.
A week ago, the faithful in town were worried about the O's even making the playoffs. Now, the Birds are in, hosting the first series and, because of last night's win in Minnesota, even able to start trying to piece together their pitching rotation without worrying about today's game and tomorrow's season finale.
Oh, and the Birds also eliminated Minnesota with last night's 7-2 win.
Things change quickly in sports. On September 5, the Twins were rolling along nicely in the A.L. Central and had a 98% chance of making the post-season.
On September 27, that percentage went to 0%.
Now, in fairness to them, the Detroit Tigers helped them go from 98% to 0% by playing scorching baseball in September. But the fact remains the Twins squandered a post-season trip with their post Labor Day swoon.
Kansas City lost in Atlanta on Friday but still secured a playoff spot with Minnesota's loss. The Royals could still wind up in Baltimore for the wild card round but they now need help to do so.
Speaking of the Tigers, all they have to do is hold serve against the lowly White Sox today and tomorrow and they're headed to Baltimore. If that happens, the Royals will play in Houston in the wild card round next week.
What's interesting about the Tigers is they look a lot like last year's edition of the Texas Rangers, albeit with a far less experienced lineup. Back in mid-July, there were stories circulating about the Tigers potentially "re-booting" and trading off the likes of soon-to-be Cy Young award winner Tarik Skubal and other prominent young players.
Instead, they kept their roster intact, remaining virtually inactive at the trade deadline, and caught fire in September. The Tigers finished off their race to the post-season by winning two straight against the O's in Baltimore, three in a row over visiting Tampa Bay, and then last night's series opener vs. Chicago.
All of this activity on Friday opens up some interesting storylines for Brandon Hyde.
Who opposes Skubal in the series opener on Tuesday in Baltimore, assuming it's Detroit the O's face?
And who goes on Wednesday in Game 2?
Conventional wisdom says Corbin Burnes goes in Tuesday's opener and Zach Eflin starts Game 2 on Wednesday.
Hyde then has multiple options for a potential Game 3 starter, including Dean Kremer and Albert Suarez. Kremer last pitched on Tuesday in New York and was slated to start Sunday's season finale in Minnesota. Now, the O's Saturday and Sunday starters are officially slated as "undetermined" on the MLB website.
If Hyde decides now it's Kremer in Game 3, the Birds can use Albert Suarez today or tomorrow just to keep him on routine and throw anyone who can breathe for an inning or two to start Sunday's game in Minnesota.
By the way, Cade Povich was excellent last night in Minnesota. Naysayers will point to the Twins' woeful offense, of course, and it's true that Minnesota is so lifeless at the plate that Eloy Jimenez smirks in their direction.
But Povich was very good on Friday night.
The first series against (presumably) Detroit sets up well for the O's if they can somehow avoid that 1-0 hole with Skubal going on Tuesday in the opener. Detroit is playing with the hot hand right now, no two ways about it, but they're also a team that probably overperformed in 2024 and doesn't have much, if any, playoff experience on their roster.
They're a little like the O's of 2012, who beat the Rangers in that silly one-game wild card game before falling to the Yankees in a dramatic 5-game ALDS. That Birds team was young, with a few veterans who knew what they were doing in the playoffs, but they were certainly not "experienced" by any means.
This Tigers team will be especially dangerous in the quick 3-game wild card series because Skubal gives them a great chance to win the opener and put the pressure squarely on the O's shoulders right away.
And while the Birds did enjoy a nice final week of the regular season, perhaps going on to win 5 of their last 6 games if they finish with two wins against the Twins, the fact remains they scuffled throughout the last two months of the regular season, albeit with a roster dinged up badly with injuries.
If Kansas City somehow wins in Atlanta this weekend and the Tigers do the unthinkable and lose to the White Sox, it would be the Royals coming to Baltimore next week, which would be, in my opinion, a MUCH better matchup for the O's. Kansas City's suspicious home/away splits at the plate bode well for a quick 2-game O's sweep in Baltimore.
Alas, it's very likely the Royals will head to Houston for a series flooded with irony considering the storyline that's been hovering around Kansas City throughout the second half of the regular season.
And that means we'll get a rematch, 10 years later, of that epic Baltimore-Detroit 5-game series in 2014 when the Birds polished off Detroit in 3 games and Delmon Young produced "the hit that shook Camden Yards".
O's catcher James McCann remembers it well. He played for Detroit in 2014. Other than him, though, no one on either side played in that series a decade ago.
It will be very interesting next week, particularly because it's a 3-game sprint. Skubal vs. Burnes seems like a done deal. And if the O's can snatch that one, winning one of the last two with some combination of Eflin and Kremer seems like a near sure thing.
That said...
The O's had a great 2023 season and then completely flatlined in the series vs. Texas.
The pressure is firmly on the Birds next week, no two ways about it. They're at home, with three games to win two. And they're going to have their rotation set to whatever order they like.
Playoff baseball is back.
Friday September 27, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3687 |
It turns out I was wrong about the eventual outcome of the American League East.
I thought the Orioles would win it. And I figured the Yankees would finish second.
It wound up the other way around, as the Yankees clinched the division title last night with a 10-1 win in the Bronx.
New York will now wait around for five to seven days to see who they play in the American League Divisional Series. It will either be the Orioles, Tigers or Royals.
Brandon Hyde's team might be waiting around, too. Just not for the same reasons.
The Birds still don't know who they will play in the wild card round and they're still not 100% sure they'll be hosting the three game series. Things could go sideways for the O's over the weekend in Minnesota and Baltimore could win up as the visiting team in that first series.
One thing is known: The Birds will face either Detroit or Kansas City in the first round that starts on Tuesday...maybe.
The Royals have a 3-game series this weekend in Atlanta. The Braves and Mets were postponed on Wednesday and Thursday due to rain and they'll have to make those two games up on Monday in Atlanta. If the Royals and Braves can't play all three of their scheduled games this weekend, that might push the A.L. playoffs back a day or two. Stay tuned.
But let's go back to the division title and how it unfolded.
I thought the O's were the easy favorite in mid-June.
The Yankees were scuffling at that point and we were still awaiting their annual flirtation with the injured list. The Bronx Bombers are nothing if not a sure fire bet to get wrecked with various ailments over the summer.
Instead, sadly, it turned out to be the O's who got into a fistfight with the injury bug and the bug wound up winning for the better part of two months. The O's started to sputter in July, then started a full tailspin in August when the likes of Grayson Rodriguez, Jordan Westburg and Ryan Mountcastle were missing from the lineup due to injuries.
September was much of the same, save for a 2-game run in New York earlier this week that gave the orange faithful in town some hope that perhaps things are on the uptick.
But the fact remains this: Without Westburg, Urias, Mountcastle, Webb and Coulombe, the O's wouldn't stand much of a chance in the post-season.
With those five guys back and presumably fully healthy, though, you never know what the Birds might be able to cobble together for four weeks in October.
I'm still waving the flag. I think the O's can do some damage in the playoffs.
If I'm wrong, I'm wrong. Last night notwithstanding, the lineup with Westburg and Mountcastle on the card is much better than when those two weren't available for a month (Mountcastle) or two (Westburg).
I was wrong about the Yankees. I thought their June swoon would have been a major contributor to a summer downfall that would have gift-wrapped the division title to the O's.
New York hung on when the O's didn't. The Birds couldn't beat the likes of Tampa Bay, San Francisco and Detroit in September home series'. When they needed to win 7 of 10 to keep their head above water, they instead lost 7 of 10.
I'm still not 100% sure the Yankees are superior to the O's. We might even get to find that out for real next week in the ALDS. But the Bronx Bombers won the division fair and square. Hats off to 'em.
I'll finish up with some good news for the Birds. Corbin Burnes looked great again on Thursday night in New York and will be on schedule to start Game 1 of the wild card series if it's played on Tuesday as scheduled.
Brandon Hyde can fiddle with his rotation over the weekend in Minnesota if he wants to make sure Zach Eflin is his man for Game #2.
Despite last night's loss in New York and the division slipping away, officially, there are silver linings a plenty for the Birds as they head into October.
Here's what the playoff picture looks like this morning.
Current standings:
New York, 1st in the East at 93-66.
Wild Card #1 - Baltimore, 88-71
Wild Card #2 - Kansas City, 85-74
Wild Card #3 - Detroit, 85-74
(still alive) - Minnesota, 82-77
(still alive) - Seattle, 82-77
This week's remaining schedule:
Kansas City plays at Atlanta (3).
Minnesota hosts Baltimore (3).
Detroit hosts the White Sox (3).
Seattle hosts Oakland (3).
faith in sports |
Their dream season might be over, but that doesn't mean the WNBA's Indiana Fever are out of the spotlight. Not at #DMD, at least.
Today's feature athlete is Fever star Aliyah Boston, who talks about her faith in the 7 minute below and tells us how her upbringing and connection to God helped fuel her in the direction of professional basketball.
Please take 7 minutes of your time today to here Ms. Boston talk about how her faith and how she's more and more comfortable in her career thanks in part to her relationship with God.
Thanks, as always, to our friends at Freestate Electrical for their continued support of #DMD and our "Faith in Sports" segment here every Friday.
Thursday September 26, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3686 |
There was some real irony in the air on Wednesday night as I watched the great Jeff Lynne of ELO fame roar through an incredible 95-minute setlist in Washington D.C.
The O's had 17 hits in New York in their 9-7 win and Lynne played 17 of ELO's hits before a wildly enthusiastic crowd who were on hand to see his final performance ever in the nation's capital.
Lynn is calling it a day once this "Over and Out" tour ends in a couple of months.
The Birds, thankfully, aren't over and out. Heck, they could still win the A.L. East if things continue to go sideways for the Yankees over the final four games.
The 9-7 win last night didn't come as easy as it did for Lynne and his band to tear through some of ELO's all-time classics like "Do Ya", "Evil Woman", "Turn to Stone", "Livin' Thing" and "Sweet Talking Woman".
A 9-3 lead in the 9th suddenly turned to 9-7 when Aaron Judge belted a 3-run homer, but Keegan Akin closed the door on a Yankees comeback and the O's moved oh-so-close to securing the top wild card spot in the American League. The Birds need one more win to earn home ice in next week's playoff series opener vs. either Detroit or Kansas City.
There was bad news to start the day for the O's, though, as the club announced that Grayson Rodriguez (lat strain) will not return to the mound in 2024. That wasn't a title-ending piece of information, obviously, but a healthy GrayRod in the post-season would have been huge for Brandon Hyde's pitching staff.
A 3-run first inning, 6 consecutive hits to start the game off of Marcus Stroman, and an eventual 8-1 lead in the Bronx helped ease the pain of hearing that news about Rodriguez.
It did get a little hairy later on in the night, though. New York loaded the bases down 8-3 but couldn't push any more runs across and then Judge poked his 57th homer into the seats off of Matt Bowman to make it a two-run game with 1 out gone in the 9th inning.
Bowman was removed in favor of Akin, and the lefty retired Austin Wells and Giancarlo Stanton to put another in the "W" column for the O's.
I have ELO on my mind this morning, so forgive the pun, but it does feel like the Orioles might be brewing a little late season "strange magic" with their healthy lineup intact and two straight wins in the Bronx.
Someone even had the nerve to throw it out there last night on X, so I'll go ahead and run with it: Could the Birds be the 2024 version of the 2023 Texas Rangers? You know, a team that scuffled in September and nearly gave away a sure-fire playoff spot before righting themselves and roaring through a 4-week playoff schedule to win the World Series.
I don't know. Neither do you. No one does, of course. But it sorta-kinda feels like maybe the O's are getting their mojo back now that Westburg, Urias, Mountcastle and a couple of valuable relief arms have returned with a clean bill of health.
It's OK to dream.
One more win in New York tonight and suddenly things start to get very interesting in the A.L. East. The O's will head off to Minnesota to face a Twins team that is on the verge of being eliminated from the wild card race and the Yankees will host the Pirates in a means-nothing-to-us series for Pittsburgh.
Remember what I always say, though: The toughest thing to do in sports is to stop losing.
Everyone who needed to win in the wild card race won on Wednesday. K.C. beat the uninspired Nationals in soggy D.C., 3-0. Minnesota pounded the visiting Marlins 8-3 and the Tigers made easy work of Tampa Bay, 7-1, in Detroit. Seattle is barely hanging on after an 8-1 win in Houston on Wednesday.
Oh, and the White Sox won their second straight game, 4-3, over the L.A. Angels. I thought you might want to know.
Here's what the playoff picture looks like this morning.
Current standings:
New York, 1st in the East at 92-66.
Wild Card #1 - Baltimore, 88-70, 4 games behind.
Wild Card #2 - Kansas City, 84-74
Wild Card #3 - Detroit, 84-74
(still alive) - Minnesota, 82-76
(still alive) - Seattle, 81-77
This week's remaining schedule:
Kansas City plays at Washington (1) and at Atlanta (3).
Minnesota hosts Miami (1) and Baltimore (3).
Detroit hosts Tampa Bay (1) and the White Sox (3).
Seattle hosts Oakland (3).
I know we tend to shy away from the word "privilege" these days, but it does occasionally have an appopriate connection to something that transpires in our lives.
I'm going to use it here today.
As I watched 76 year old Jeff Lynne slowly make his way off stage last night at Capital One Arena in D.C., it struck me just how much of a privilege it has been to see him and hear him play music four times in my life.
It led me down a rabbit hole on the ride home. How many people -- in what I'll broadly call the "entertainment world" -- have you felt an emotional reaction to that had you consider it a legitimate, outright "privilege" to be in their presence, albeit 35 yards away as I was last night on the floor of the arena?
I felt that way about Lynne last night. Now, sure, 16,000 people all gathered in one spot, singing his songs like they wrote them, contributed to that sort of feeling.
But I don't know that anyone else in the building had that feeling wash over them. "Man, what a privilege it is to see this guy play music."
And it led me to thinking about the question I posed above. "How many times in my life have I felt this?"
I definitely felt that in May of 2023 when I saw Shohei Ohtani pitch and hit in the same game for the L.A. Angels. It didn't hurt my perspective that on that night he threw a pitch that registered 100 mph and also hit a ball 457 feet that landed somewhere near Little Italy.
But I walked out of the stadium that night knowing I had seen someone play baseball who has a skill set far beyond what 99% of human beings might have. Ohtani is one-of-one. Like, actually, legitimately, the only man alive who can do what he does in Major League Baseball.
Lynne is a musical virtuoso. ELO was one of the greatest bands of my life and Lynne is one of music's all-time most respected song writers, producers and musical influencers.
When Tom Petty, Roy Orbison and Bob Dylan started talking about creating the biggest "supergroup" in music history, Dylan reportedly told those two, "If we're serious about being the best band to ever make music and we don't ask Jeff Lynne to join us, we're missing out. And then the problem is, if we ask Lynne and he turns us down, we might as well fold up shop right then and there because we'll be missing the guy who puts us over the top."
Fortunately, Lynne agreed to join The Traveling Wilburys and Dylan got his wish.
When Bob Dylan says, "We need you to make us a whole", that's really saying something.
But as Snoop Dogg once said, "Back to the question at hand..."
How many people in the entertainment world have you seen, heard, etc. that left you with that "privileged" feeling?
I don't have many.
I saw Wayne Gretzky play hockey a bunch of times and I think I had that feeling with him. I've seen a lot of great players going back to the 1970's -- Lafleur, Bossy, Lemieux, Crosby, Ovechkin, etc. -- but there was always something different about Gretzky. There was, like I felt last night with Lynne, an "aura" around him that was just not something you felt with other players when you watched him play.
Ohtani, for sure, as I mentioned above. It is truly a privilege to watch him. Maybe you see another guy like him in your lifetime. But I'm not so sure.
And I didn't see Lynne at the top of his game last night, either. He's in the December of his musical run, for sure, but that band was incredibly tight last night and the hits sounded just like they did in 1975 and 1980. Lynne still has it. But, to use a baseball analogy, he now throws 90 mph instead of 100 mph. He can still sneak it past you, though, if necessary.
I saw Tiger Woods play golf, in person, four or five times. I know I was watching greatness. I could tell by the sound of the club meeting the ball at impact that Tiger was "different" than any other golfer out there. But "privileged" to watch him play? Sorry, I just never felt that kind of emotional connection to him.
I might have felt something close to that with Bruce Springsteen, but when you see someone 29 times it goes from "privilege" to something else that I can't describe.
I know I left that arena last night feeling privileged to see Jeff Lynne perform.
He is one incredibly talented musician.
such October 15 |
Because I'm older, I don't spend much time on social media. I find it rather exhausting to be honest. Therefore I was unaware of this incident until last night, when my sons began texting me and FaceTiming me. The assailant is a former teammate of two of my sons at Hereford High. Let's just say that his senior year there was punctuated by some extremely poor decisions, likely due to being under the influence. Hereford was his third high school in four years. I'm going to go out on a very short limb here and surmise that he was under the influence on Sunday night in Federal Hill. His actions are inexcusable under any circumstances. Drunk, high, sober, it doesn't matter. Violently assaulting innocent people, unprovoked, is bordering on sociopathic behavior. He should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law, and if civil suits arise from this disgusting incident, he should be made to pay for his victims medical care and pain and suffering. Whatever backlash and public embarrassment he endures because of this are due to his own reckless, irresponsible behavior. You get what you get when you act like a fool. As I've always told my sons, Make good choices. Stop and think about the consequences. |
TimD in Timonium October 15 |
"Clearly, though, the man who assaulted the two Commanders fans was somehow enthused about being on camera for the incident." Live by the sword, die by the sword. The resulting video went viral, and the outcome probably wasn't the "internet fame" he had in mind. Without video, I'm guessing this goes unreported and the perp remains unknown. Oh well. |
Barry October 14 |
Flacco is likely back to not being a starter by next week, no way he's coming here for a playoff game in Jan. @Paul pretending to be positive is hilarious! |
Delray RICK October 14 |
One of my problems with HARBAUGH is when he throws the red flag I'm sitting watching slow-motion, ain't no way he's right. I know it's people upstairs. When you have to rely on others that's where HARBS gets accused of f it up. He's mind is so on this team there isn't anybody else I'd want as coach . Who the he'll is better ??? Crickets |
Vince from SC October 14 |
The only criticism of Harbaugh I have is his clock management at the end of halves can sometimes make you scratch your head. Other than that, he's been a HOF coach no question. Should have won the SB the year before if Lee Evans or Billy Cundiff could do bare minimum. |
Paul from Towson October 14 |
The John Harbaugh hate in this city absolutely astounds me. All this franchise has done since he's been here is win. Sure, they've only hoisted the Lombardi trophy once under him, but that's one more time than most of the rest of the NFL. And, this team has been to the AFC Championship Game four times under Harbaugh. Sure, the 1-3 record could be better, but let's not forget that first one was in Joe Flacco's (and Harbs' for that matter) rookie season when this team was supposed to be 4-12. Of course he's not perfect, and yeah his use of challenges and timeouts can be questionable at best, but it's hard to argue with the overall W-L record. Not to mention, he swallowed his pride in 2018 and did something very few, if any, Super Bowl winning coaches would do, and changed the entire offensive structure of this team to suit Lamar Jackson's strengths. Look at the rest of the league, and the coaching unemployment line, and tell me who you would rather have. Belichick?? No thanks, look at his record without a guy named Tom Brady. Jeff Fisher?? Don't think so. What about all these young, hotshot coaches that the national pundits love so much. Kevin Stefanski? Pass. Zac Taylor? Nah. Nick Siriani? Please! The luntics in Philly are ready to run him out of town despite making it to the Super Bowl two seasons ago. I know this isn't just a Baltimore thing, after all, if you ask any Stooler fan they would tell you that THEY could coach the team in Pittsburgh to a Super Bowl before Mike Tomlin could. But even still, at a time in the NFL (and sports in general) when most teams have a yearly coaching carousel and rampant upheaval (Falcons, Colts, Raiders, Panthers, etc.) having the stability in a head coach that wins, on average, 10 games a season is a luxury very few teams enjoy. And, in my humble opinion, even given his faults, I would take Harbs over just about every other coach in the league, except MAYBE Andy Reid. But even Reid was an also-ran until a guy named Mahomes came into the league. Go Ravens!! Such, you beat me to it this morning. As I watched the replay of yesterday's game, I realized that the Derrick Henry signing seems very Shannon Sharpe-ish to me. When the Ravens signed the two time Super Bowl champion, they already had a championship caliber defense. Sharpe was the missing piece on an offense that was built on the run and timely passing. Now, Lamar Jackson is leaps and bounds better than Trent Dilfer ever was on his best day, but just like Sharpe, Derrick Henry seems to be the missing piece for this offense. Derrick Henry makes LJ8 an the rest of the offense better because, with all due respect to JK Dobbins and Gus Edwards, defenses didn't have to stack the box to stop them. Leaving LJ8 to pic apart man, or in some cases, soft zone coverage. GO RAVENS! |
Howard October 14 |
Tony Siragusa was a great free agent pickup. The 2000 Ravens defense had no offense to pick them up. The defense couldn’t bend and couldn’t break and they didn’t. |
Bud King October 14 |
Not even Harbs could lose this game... go Ravens! |
Nathan Aparisto October 14 |
Is there ANY deal or trade that would convince that mess of a Jets franchise to send Sauce Gardner to the flock for a passel of picks? Could the cap hit be worked out? Hed be the next Ed Reed for a decade and Ravens could truly be a juggernaught! |
such October 14 |
We were having a text conversation last night and the question was raised: Has there ever been a better Free Agent signing by the Ravens than Henry? I can't think of anyone comparable on offense. Maybe Shannon Sharpe, maybe Derek Mason, but as far as instant impact and the ability to effect games the way he does, there's never been anyone close to Henry. Yesterday was just the latest example of the difference he's made. Everyone from Hereford to Upper Marlboro knew he was getting the ball, and the Ravens ran that same little toss sweep to the left they ran in Cincy, and Henry goes for 30 yards and that's ballgame. He's an absolute hammer. I went back and looked at the 2016 Draft and it's just another example of NFL front offices overanalyzing players. The Ravens took Ronnie Stanley at #6 overall, which is undeniably a very good pick. In the second round, at #42 overall, they selected the immortal Kamalei Correa from Boise State. Derrick Henry went to Tennessee at #45. Oh, what might have been. Although Lamar wasn't here yet so there's no telling what the offense would've looked like with Joe Flacco and King Henry. Regardless, he's here now and it's a beautiful sight to behold. |
Chris in Bel Air October 14 |
Even in the loss to KC, you could see the potential of the Ravens. They are clearly starting to put it all together now. As a fan, I'm feeling the optimism. But... we've also watched the Ravens and the NFL long enough to know they will stub their toe a couple more times. It happens. The key is how they bounce back the following week. Moreover, you don't win the Lombardi in October. It's all about January... and hopefully February. IF they end up playing KC again in the playoffs, they are not going to lose that game. I don't care if it is in B'more or KC. They are winning that one. Yes, the secondary seems to be a concern and can't figure out if it's personnel or scheme or both. Either way, like yesterday, the offense just needs to pick them up and respond when they have the ball. A couple random observations. First on Brandon Stephens. Maybe it's just me but it seems like no matter how closely he is covering his man, the opposing QB and WR always seems to come up with an incredible play/catch. Yesterday he had at least one like that, maybe two. I'm not busting on him, I'm just saying, I'm not sure what more he can do. Overall, I think he's become a decent CB for someone that did not play that position in college. Second, good to see Ngakoue in the mix yesterday. I like his potential rotating in the pass rush mix. As for Marcus Williams, he's sort of been a disappointment. He's not a bad player, I just can't remember the last time I saw him do anything of significance. INT? Forced Fumble? Fumble recovery? Key pass break-up? Something. On to Tampa |
Unitastoberry October 14 |
Another win and another big offensive statement. Commandskins done. Swiss Pees and Orr have some work to do. Why was Tony Romo on Kyle Hamiltons case about him being a dirty player on two big plays he made? He reacts before looking at the instant replay. Tony drives me nuts not my favorite commenter. It's a contact sport Tony. Only the offensive guys can lead with the head what a crock. My feelings on Joe Flacco are those of happiness for him. It's just a shame it's Jr Irsay who gets to beat his chest. With all the sub par duel threat QBs in the league now Joe could play another 4 -5 years.Btw I'm not including Lamar in that catagory. This bum in Cleveland should be on the bench watching Joe toss tds. Barry I will never root for PSU. I have my reasons and it's more than the Sandusky child rape coverup they should have had no football there for 5 years just for that one. It goes back to Joe PA coming here long ago and stealing all state and all county guys in Maryland just to keep them out of College Park then he redshirts them in Happy Valley etc and they never see the field playing behind guys like Franco Harris and Lydell Mitchell etc. I know one of them. He would have been a great running back at Maryland. He ran for 150-200 yards a game in Baltimore County. No shame in calling out good players up there now.44 is one of them. I hate to say it this but it could be Penn States year.Would be great if Locksley could pull a Vanderbuilt on them last game of the season. Btw Lenny Moore does get a pass Lou. Gary Cuozzo or Earl Morrall Howard? Well you have to take Earl and his MVP 1968 off the bench year. But I got visions of Jimmy Orr in the endzone waiving his hand wide open to this day and like I have said before the whole thing still stinks like you know what! |
David Rosenfeld October 14 |
If you weren't at the game yesterday you probably heard Tony Romo say that John Harbaugh is a "top 10 coach all time," which of course drew lots of chuckles from the hoi polloi. I'm not gonna get into a conversation about that, but I will say this... I don't see how you can watch the Ravens play on a week-to-week basis and say that John is an "awful coach." Like...of all takes you could have, it just doesn't stand up to any kind of serious analysis. |
Jon October 14 |
How are the league going to stymie the offense? Same way they have last few years in January- wins mask problems- - no more weak O line? enjoyable Sunday but lets not get ahead of oursleves like we did with Os and KC. Keep working Flacco! |
TimD in Timonium October 14 |
The two drives of 90+ yards were beautiful to watch. Hard to find much to complain about from yesterday's Ravens game, but surely someone will. Looks like the O-line has figured it out. Big difference from the 0-2 start. Whew. |
Kenny G October 14 |
Hopefully we saw a defensive change in yesterday's game - bend but don't break. I am not familiar with the WFT scheme but the Ravens keep also everything in front of them. Also for all people complaining about the refs, please offer some solutions vs just ranting about how bad they are. Sinc the game has become faster, covers more area of the field and the rules very complex, my suggestion is add another ref or two and allow for certain replays/challenges of penalties. I would also possibly allow more contact on receivers but penalize DB holding more (the calls are too inconsistent which leads to a lot of "missed" calls) |
Ed October 13 |
Nice day for Will Jackson picking games and props. Congratulations. |
lou@palo alto October 13 |
#24 was from Penn St |
Barry October 13 |
So UTB is actually a closet PSU fan after all eh? |
Howard October 13 |
Kj— tell me where that bar is so I can hang out with UTB and MFC. I would ask them if they think that Joe in his #15 Colts uniform reminds them more of Gary Cuozzo or Earl Morrall. Oh, and Jordan and Pippen keep rolling on |
Vince from SC October 13 |
Not a blowout but also never in doubt. On to Tampa. |
Unitastoberry October 13 |
If Lamar had made it past AFC teams in January like KC, Tennessee,and played nicked up in the Cincinnati game he would have 3 rings . I agree on this one the Commandskins are going down. Even Harbaugh won't screw this up. If you watched Penn State win in overtime over USC you know the NCAA refs are horrible. Worse than the NFL. Remember when the NFL refs went on strike and they used NCAA refs? That why the strike was settled. This number 44 on Penn State was a one man wrecking crew yesterday. He's a number one pick at TE. He's Dave Casper/Gronk quality if he stays healthy. Blocks great too pancakes guys. |
Old George October 12 |
Trolley Dodgers. |
Chris in Bel Air October 12 |
Love the "Reading time: 2 minutes"... or 3 minutes. This should be a regular thing for DMD. Thanks for the throwback. |
kj October 12 |
Everything written by @Bryce about DET was written about our O's two years ago. Funny how fans are always giving other teams a pass but want their team to be perfect 100% of the time. Wonder if MFC and UTB hang out at the local Curmudgeons bar howling at the moon together? The Indians have the best chance to beat NYY, so not sure why anyone would be pulling for DET to win today. Above was my own mini ode to my absolute favorite local sportswriter. DMD did a better job with his tribute, but figured I'd toss in an amateur version. RIP Mr Jackman. |
BRYCE October 12 |
I’d love to see Skubal and company get the last laugh this year with all the talk of Detroit dealing/retaining their ace at the deadline. Would be great to see them eliminate Cleveland and then continue their post-2000 trend of owning the Yankees in the playoffs. That team is going to be sneaky good for the next several years. In addition to its current roster, they have two top-10 prospects waiting in the wings and another at #31, per MLB. What’s even more impressive is that this 2024 surge has been with no contribution from Mize and very minimal from Torkelson, their two recent #1 overall draft picks. Most importantly, they’re playing with the team chemistry to be a force. |
Unitastoberry October 12 |
Why should U of Maryland fire Mike Locksley? So then they pretty much admit they just want a team who beats squads like Gettysburg College and Northwestern then only loses to Penn St and Michigan? It's basically an admission they joined the Big Ten for the money and could care less about a national championship. Remember what the late great Lefty Driesel said when hired by Maryland basketball back in the stone age? He said he wanted to become the UCLA of the east then strap the national trophy on his car and ride around tobacco road with it. It never happened but it was exactly what the fans wanted to hear and they bought in. Now the football team just wants to beat Northwestern and Prairie View. What a bunch of bull. RIP to Phil Jackman who was a great sports writer and not some punk looking to cause trouble.Those days are gone except at DMD. Go USC! |
MFC October 12 |
Hernandez dropping the F bond, after asking if it was live tv was disgusting. Another self Absorbed athlete. I am now rooting for anyone but LA. What a jerk, it wasn’t cute . |
Phil October 12 |
Awesome tribute, I always enjoyed his columns especially the two minute ones. |
Tom J October 12 |
Drew, when I saw the "Reading Time, 2 minutes" it rang a bell but just couldn't put my finger on it until reading down and then seeing and remembering this was Phil Jackman's thing. Didn't know the origin behind it but loved this in The Sun. Yes, please continue his thing as part of DMD. |
hank October 11 |
Top level trolling today. No true Baltimorean would ever wish success for the Yankees. I agree with David, bunch of posers like this current team is the last team I want to see in the World Series. Whoever prevails in the DET-CLE series best take care of business. Mets vs LA, no one worth rooting for there either. |
Paul from Towson October 11 |
The minute the O’s were eliminated, I became an instant fan of whatever National League team comes out of the NLCS to face whatever dumb AL champion. I can never stomach watching the Yankees (or Red Sox for that matter) celebrate anything so I strongly disagree with Drew’s commentary today. I don’t have any issue with the Mets, so if they happen to beat either LA or SD, more power to them. Plus, I would like to see Lindor and Alonso get a ring. Just wish Buck was still there to make rooting for them even that much easier. I will agree with Drew that the Cleat of Reality is hunting Washington this weekend and Jayden Daniels will feel every bit of its fury. Rookie QB’s never fair well at The Bank against our Ravens. This Sunday will be no exception. Ravens win, 34-13. Go Ravens!!! |
Jeffrey “Fireball” Roberts October 11 |
I would personally love a Yankee/Padre WS. The tattooed Padres in those horrible brown uniforms led by Manny against the clean cut Yankee pinstripes led by Judge. East Coast versus West Coast. Atlantic-Pacific. Biggie-Tupac. Bring it on. LOL |
David Rosenfeld October 11 |
Honestly, the 2024 Yankees are a bunch of posers. They act like they dominated the league. Judge and Soto are ridiculous, and Cole is one of the best, but the other 23 guys ain't much better than any other team. Maybe that'll be enough to win the World Series. I'm not sure Cleveland or Detroit will beat them...they just don't hit well enough. |
Delray RICK October 11 |
Baseball season is OVER!!! |
Chris in Bel Air October 11 |
To be honest, I guess I still have a little bit of sour grapes going on with the O's out of the running again. Tough watching other teams/fans celebrate. I suppose a Yankees/Mets series would be interesting. I'm sure other than Yankees/Dodgers (Ohtani vs Judge) MLB execs and whatever network is broadcasting the World Series would really like Yankees/Mets too. I can't imagine those same folks would be too thrilled with say Tigers vs Padres. Ravens will bring Wash and Jayden Daniels back to earth on Sunday. Don't get me wrong, I like Daniels. It's just not quite his/their time. |
TimD in Timonium October 11 |
A Mets / Yankees series could be entertaining, but I suspect most of America would tune out an all-NYC final. But I don't think the Mets will get past LA or SD. We'll see. And the Ryan Ries video was a great watch. |
Dan October 11 |
Drew, thanks for highlighting Ryan Ries. As a fellow skateboard enthusiast I know his story and the impact he has made on the youth all over the USA. God bless Ryan!! |
Unitastoberry October 10 |
I thought is was a joke today when I heard Dean"Swiss"Pees was rehired to be a senior advisor to DC Zach Orr. It's actually true. |
TimD in Timonium October 10 |
"Corbin Burnes, who started for the AL in the All-Star Game, ranked fourth in the AL in ERA (2.92), third in innings pitched (194 1/3), eighth in WHIP (1.10) and 10th in strikeouts (181)." Complete games in 2024? Zero. (His closest was 8 innings vs KC in the playoffs.) We've already seen the Golden Age of Complete Game Pitchers. It's not coming back. |
Unitastoberry October 10 |
Palmer,Cuellar, McNally and Dobson 4 20 game winners. I saw them all get at least one win that year in person. |
Bob October 10 |
2011 was the last year a pitcher logged double digit complete games with James Shields throwing 11 for Tampa Bay. Since then only two pitchers threw more then 5 games, Chris Sale in 2016 and Sandy Alcantara in 2022 both threw 6 games. I think the ship has sailed on the days a starter bangs out double digit complete games. https://www.baseball-almanac.com/pitching/picomg4.shtml |
Chris in Bel Air October 10 |
Yes, the bullpen game is certainly an interesting situation now. I agree it is not my favorite part of the game for sure. But, if a manager wants to blow through 8 arms in one game, doesn't that put him in a disadvantage for the next game? It's a risk in going the bullpen route. I am also not sure the minimum innings or pitches is practical either. If a starter is getting lit up in the first couple innings a proposed rule to remain for minimum number of pitches/innings would then take away the ability for the manager to make a pitching change. That doesn't seem like it is good for the game either. As for making these guys in Jim Palmer again, that's not happening. The days of Palmer, Fergie Jenkins, Bob Gibson, Gaylord Perry and Steve Carlton are long gone and that's not even including the astounding number of CGs thrown by the likes of Cy Young or Walter Johnson. For reference, in 2024, the team with the most CG's thrown was the Phillies with 5. Going back 50 years, here are the leading and total number of team CGs thrown that year: 2014 - 8 2004 - 11 1994 - 17 1984 - 48 1974 - 71 A remarkable trend down and it's just not ever coming back. |
David Rosenfeld October 10 |
The "bullpen game" is an interesting phenomenon because, as much as people might dislike it, it's really common sense. I'm sure that A.J. Hinch would love it if he had even one more guy like Tarik Skubal. But he doesn't, so he feels like this is the best way to win...and he's often right because (unlike in Palmer's day), the "bullpen" guys are more talented than the ostensible starting pitchers. Assuming this a problem, I'm not sure of the answer. And in the playoffs, when the rope is short even for good starting pitchers, I'm even less sure... |
Bam Bam October 10 |
Does @Billy know how to read? @Timmy K was talking about @JK |
Action October 10 |
Same exact situation in Royals Yankees game last night that Os had in game 1 against Royals. Tied ballgame, Royals man on third, 2 outs, Bobby Witt at the plate. But this time the opposing team did what Brandon Hyde and the O’s should have done. They pitched around him and walked him. And guess what the next batter did? Of, course fly out to end the inning. The Yankees scored 1 more after that and that was all she wrote. 2 opposite approaches in the same exact situation with 2 different outcomes. Come on Hyde, get an effing clue! |
Delray RICK October 10 |
Who was the reader of this site who lived west FLORIDA near TAMPA?????? |
Eric in White Plains October 10 |
I attended a game last year, full disclosure, my daughter is a junior at UMD. |
Harold October 09 |
Meet the Mets- Meet the Mets…..on to the NLCS- amazin! |
Billy October 09 |
Did this "James" dude answer "the question"? Maybe Timmy K can tell us lol. |
Wednesday September 25, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3685 |
So you're saying there's a chance?
Those were the words once uttered by Jim Carey's character in the great movie, "Dumb and Dumber".
And they apply to the Orioles this morning as they find themselves 5 games behind the Yankees with 5 games to go after last night's 5-3 win in the Bronx.
Do I think they're going to pull off a miracle and steal the division from the Yankees?
I do not.
But do they still have a chance of winning the A.L. East? Math says "Yes, they do."
More important than chasing a division crown they likely can't win, the Birds are closing in on securing the top wild card spot in the American League, the benefit of which will be hosting the 3-game series against Detroit (likely) or Kansas City (maybe).
With last night's win in the Bronx coupled with Minnesota's home loss to the Marlins, the O's have clinched a playoff spot. They're in. Now they're just waiting to see who they play in their opening playoff round.
Oh, and don't look now, but if the Birds get through that first wild card series, their opponent in the best-of-5 American League Divisional Series will be --- yep, the New York Yankees.
A lot of people gave up on the O's in September when they couldn't knock in a runner from second or third base if their life depended on it.
I kept the faith, though. Mostly because I thought they'd be OK when/if they got their injured players back in the lineup. And I'm still of the mindset the Orioles can do some post-season damage with their "mostly healthy" roster intact for the post-season.
You might feel differently. And if so, that's fine. But I've seen enough weird stuff in sports to know anything can happen. Oh, and don't forget, in order to win the World Series you could go 13-9 in October and still be the one holding up the trophy. You don't have to go 14-8 or 15-7. 13-9 will do the trick.
The Birds can go 13-9 in the playoffs. At least I believe they can.
On to the mailbag we go. A few of the questions are of the sensitive nature this morning. I allowed them to be published here because I think they're questions people (not just one or two readers) are both familiar with themselves and interested in debating with others.
If it gets too testy in the comments section below, I'll shut it down for the day and let cooler heads prevail. As they post on the big scoreboard at Ravens Stadium -- Don't Be A Jerk.
Ben asks -- "Could you answer this in one of your DMD mail bag columns please. Do you think the reason Steve Bisciotti doesn't fire John Harbaugh is because he would have to pay off his contract? And Bisciotti doesn't want to just give away free money? Thank you."
DF says: "John's contract is believed to run through the 2025 season. He makes -- according to reports -- $12 million a year. I can't imagine Steve cares all that much about 12 million dollars. I know that's crazy to say, but 12 million to him is like $120 to you and I.
I don't think Steve is firing John because, you might want to check the stats, the Ravens have been a very good team for the last four years.
Last year, in fact, they made it all the way to the AFC Championship Game.
I'm still of the mindset that John could be dismissed after this season if things go sideways for the Ravens, but I don't see that happening. The AFC North isn't very good. Cincinnati is clearly done. Cleveland is a mess. The Steelers might be the worst 3-0 team of the last 10 years. They'll be 6-6 before you know it.
The Ravens will cruise to the division title, again, which won't make the Harbaugh Haters very happy."
Carl asks -- "I'm surprised we haven't seen coverage or comments from you about the Presidents Cup. Do you think the U.S. will win again?"
DF says -- "I've never been all that interested in the Presidents Cup. I love, love, love the Ryder Cup. But I've just never been motivated to invest myself in the Presidents Cup.
I'll go out on a limb here and say the International Team wins this one up in Montreal. I don't know why I feel that way. I just do.
I even think it would be good for the long and short term value of the event if the International team wins. I think the all-time record if 11-1-1 in favor of the Americans? That's not very exciting.
Sure, I want the U.S. team to win. But for the sake of the Presidents Cup, it would probably be good if the International Team comes out on top."
Marty asks -- "I'm curious about something, unrelated to sports. With your followers and readers here and on the X platform and any other social media avenues, will you pledge support for either of the Presidential candidates leading up to the election on 11/5?"
DF says -- "I will not. I don't see the value in that, frankly. There's no one who could change the way I'm going to vote. No celebrity, sports figure, TV ad, or "public endorsement" would make me change my vote. In that way, I assume no one would be swayed in any way by hearing me (or reading me) prattle on about who I'm voting for and why.
The only election comment I would ever make and potentially publicly endorse would concern the fairness and sanctity of the electoral college voting system.
It's archaic and convoluted, for starters. It does not represent the totality of the American voters. In short, we should be smart enough to figure out a better way to run a Presidential election.
The other thing we do that's completely bass-ackwards is allowing these TV networks with obvious political agendas to host and/or produce Presidential debates. It's beyond absurd. Here's how the debates should work. Each candidate gets a 2-minute "opening statement". They then get to ask one another 7 questions of their choosing. In the end, they get a 3-minute "closing argument".
I'd much rather hear the candidates ask one another questions than to have Wolf Blitzer, David Muir, or some other media member on the political payroll run the show and ask questions.
I'd also be willing to support any kind of policy change that mandates a government issued ID must be displayed in order for you to vote. This lunacy of having people mail in their votes is completely dumb. There's a Presidential election every four years in our country. The whole country should be off work that day, in fact.
If we, as a nation, really wanted to run the election the right way, we'd open the polls 24/7 for three days or a week even, and eliminate any excuse someone had for not being able to show up and vote.
If you're 90 years old and can't drive or somehow be transported to a voting site, we'll arrange for your vote to be obtained in some other fashion. But, in general, you should have to show up, at an election site, with your government issued ID, in order to vote for the President of the United States. No proper ID, no vote. It's not like we're voting for the Treasurer of the PTA. It's the President of the country. Bring your ID or you can't vote. Sorry, but not sorry."
In summary, I really don't care who you think should be President and I don't think you need to know -- or care -- who I think should be President.
But I do think we can both agree that our best national effort should be made to ensure the entire process is fair, equitable and "intelligent". I think the way we do it now is a complete s-show."
Reese asks -- "What's the future hold for Adley Rutschman now that Samuel Basallo is rising up the ranks and appears ready to start embarking on his major league career?"
DF says -- "I have no idea. But they can't both play catcher, obviously. The natural progression would be for Rutschman to follow in the footsteps of Joe Mauer and eventually move to first base. Mauer was able to play 15 years in the big league splitting his time that way.
For all I know, maybe Basallo learns how to play first base and that's his eventual spot. This one's tricky, for sure.
Or perhaps they can do the simple thing and DH/catch those two in Baltimore the way they've done this year with Rutschman and James McCann. Maybe that platoon system works for a year or two?
It's also reasonable to point out that Rutschman will be a free agent after the 2027 season. If Basallo comes up next year and plays a McCann role, the Birds will have two full years to map out a strategy of some kind for when Rutschman's rookie contract expires prior to the 2028 campaign."
T.J. asks -- "I read your story about the MSJ golf coach who passed away (condolences to all) and it got me to wondering. How close off the course are you and the other golf coaches and in general how close are high school coaches with one another? I assume you see each other out and about a lot? Thanks Drew."
DF says -- "We obviously know one another and are certainly cordial and friendly during the season but I wouldn't say any of us are particularly "close" with one another.
At one point the St. Paul's coach was a member with me at Eagle's Nest and we played a lot of golf together. But that was mostly out of season. We didn't connect much during the season.
I can't speak for the other high school coaches and their sports but my guess is most of them are friendly on a professional level but beyond that there isn't much there."
Here's your up-to-the-minute look at the American League playoff picture.
Current standings:
New York, 1st in the East at 91-65.
Wild Card #1 - Baltimore, 87-70, 5 games behind.
Wild Card #2 - Kansas City, 83-74
Wild Card #3 - Detroit, 83-74
(still alive) - Minnesota, 81-76
(still alive) - Seattle, 81-77
This week's schedule:
Kansas City plays at Washington (2) and at Atlanta (3).
Minnesota hosts Miami (2) and Baltimore (3).
Detroit hosts Tampa Bay (2) and the White Sox (3).
Seattle plays plays at Houston (1) and hosts Oakland (3).
such October 15 |
Because I'm older, I don't spend much time on social media. I find it rather exhausting to be honest. Therefore I was unaware of this incident until last night, when my sons began texting me and FaceTiming me. The assailant is a former teammate of two of my sons at Hereford High. Let's just say that his senior year there was punctuated by some extremely poor decisions, likely due to being under the influence. Hereford was his third high school in four years. I'm going to go out on a very short limb here and surmise that he was under the influence on Sunday night in Federal Hill. His actions are inexcusable under any circumstances. Drunk, high, sober, it doesn't matter. Violently assaulting innocent people, unprovoked, is bordering on sociopathic behavior. He should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law, and if civil suits arise from this disgusting incident, he should be made to pay for his victims medical care and pain and suffering. Whatever backlash and public embarrassment he endures because of this are due to his own reckless, irresponsible behavior. You get what you get when you act like a fool. As I've always told my sons, Make good choices. Stop and think about the consequences. |
TimD in Timonium October 15 |
"Clearly, though, the man who assaulted the two Commanders fans was somehow enthused about being on camera for the incident." Live by the sword, die by the sword. The resulting video went viral, and the outcome probably wasn't the "internet fame" he had in mind. Without video, I'm guessing this goes unreported and the perp remains unknown. Oh well. |
Barry October 14 |
Flacco is likely back to not being a starter by next week, no way he's coming here for a playoff game in Jan. @Paul pretending to be positive is hilarious! |
Delray RICK October 14 |
One of my problems with HARBAUGH is when he throws the red flag I'm sitting watching slow-motion, ain't no way he's right. I know it's people upstairs. When you have to rely on others that's where HARBS gets accused of f it up. He's mind is so on this team there isn't anybody else I'd want as coach . Who the he'll is better ??? Crickets |
Vince from SC October 14 |
The only criticism of Harbaugh I have is his clock management at the end of halves can sometimes make you scratch your head. Other than that, he's been a HOF coach no question. Should have won the SB the year before if Lee Evans or Billy Cundiff could do bare minimum. |
Paul from Towson October 14 |
The John Harbaugh hate in this city absolutely astounds me. All this franchise has done since he's been here is win. Sure, they've only hoisted the Lombardi trophy once under him, but that's one more time than most of the rest of the NFL. And, this team has been to the AFC Championship Game four times under Harbaugh. Sure, the 1-3 record could be better, but let's not forget that first one was in Joe Flacco's (and Harbs' for that matter) rookie season when this team was supposed to be 4-12. Of course he's not perfect, and yeah his use of challenges and timeouts can be questionable at best, but it's hard to argue with the overall W-L record. Not to mention, he swallowed his pride in 2018 and did something very few, if any, Super Bowl winning coaches would do, and changed the entire offensive structure of this team to suit Lamar Jackson's strengths. Look at the rest of the league, and the coaching unemployment line, and tell me who you would rather have. Belichick?? No thanks, look at his record without a guy named Tom Brady. Jeff Fisher?? Don't think so. What about all these young, hotshot coaches that the national pundits love so much. Kevin Stefanski? Pass. Zac Taylor? Nah. Nick Siriani? Please! The luntics in Philly are ready to run him out of town despite making it to the Super Bowl two seasons ago. I know this isn't just a Baltimore thing, after all, if you ask any Stooler fan they would tell you that THEY could coach the team in Pittsburgh to a Super Bowl before Mike Tomlin could. But even still, at a time in the NFL (and sports in general) when most teams have a yearly coaching carousel and rampant upheaval (Falcons, Colts, Raiders, Panthers, etc.) having the stability in a head coach that wins, on average, 10 games a season is a luxury very few teams enjoy. And, in my humble opinion, even given his faults, I would take Harbs over just about every other coach in the league, except MAYBE Andy Reid. But even Reid was an also-ran until a guy named Mahomes came into the league. Go Ravens!! Such, you beat me to it this morning. As I watched the replay of yesterday's game, I realized that the Derrick Henry signing seems very Shannon Sharpe-ish to me. When the Ravens signed the two time Super Bowl champion, they already had a championship caliber defense. Sharpe was the missing piece on an offense that was built on the run and timely passing. Now, Lamar Jackson is leaps and bounds better than Trent Dilfer ever was on his best day, but just like Sharpe, Derrick Henry seems to be the missing piece for this offense. Derrick Henry makes LJ8 an the rest of the offense better because, with all due respect to JK Dobbins and Gus Edwards, defenses didn't have to stack the box to stop them. Leaving LJ8 to pic apart man, or in some cases, soft zone coverage. GO RAVENS! |
Howard October 14 |
Tony Siragusa was a great free agent pickup. The 2000 Ravens defense had no offense to pick them up. The defense couldn’t bend and couldn’t break and they didn’t. |
Bud King October 14 |
Not even Harbs could lose this game... go Ravens! |
Nathan Aparisto October 14 |
Is there ANY deal or trade that would convince that mess of a Jets franchise to send Sauce Gardner to the flock for a passel of picks? Could the cap hit be worked out? Hed be the next Ed Reed for a decade and Ravens could truly be a juggernaught! |
such October 14 |
We were having a text conversation last night and the question was raised: Has there ever been a better Free Agent signing by the Ravens than Henry? I can't think of anyone comparable on offense. Maybe Shannon Sharpe, maybe Derek Mason, but as far as instant impact and the ability to effect games the way he does, there's never been anyone close to Henry. Yesterday was just the latest example of the difference he's made. Everyone from Hereford to Upper Marlboro knew he was getting the ball, and the Ravens ran that same little toss sweep to the left they ran in Cincy, and Henry goes for 30 yards and that's ballgame. He's an absolute hammer. I went back and looked at the 2016 Draft and it's just another example of NFL front offices overanalyzing players. The Ravens took Ronnie Stanley at #6 overall, which is undeniably a very good pick. In the second round, at #42 overall, they selected the immortal Kamalei Correa from Boise State. Derrick Henry went to Tennessee at #45. Oh, what might have been. Although Lamar wasn't here yet so there's no telling what the offense would've looked like with Joe Flacco and King Henry. Regardless, he's here now and it's a beautiful sight to behold. |
Chris in Bel Air October 14 |
Even in the loss to KC, you could see the potential of the Ravens. They are clearly starting to put it all together now. As a fan, I'm feeling the optimism. But... we've also watched the Ravens and the NFL long enough to know they will stub their toe a couple more times. It happens. The key is how they bounce back the following week. Moreover, you don't win the Lombardi in October. It's all about January... and hopefully February. IF they end up playing KC again in the playoffs, they are not going to lose that game. I don't care if it is in B'more or KC. They are winning that one. Yes, the secondary seems to be a concern and can't figure out if it's personnel or scheme or both. Either way, like yesterday, the offense just needs to pick them up and respond when they have the ball. A couple random observations. First on Brandon Stephens. Maybe it's just me but it seems like no matter how closely he is covering his man, the opposing QB and WR always seems to come up with an incredible play/catch. Yesterday he had at least one like that, maybe two. I'm not busting on him, I'm just saying, I'm not sure what more he can do. Overall, I think he's become a decent CB for someone that did not play that position in college. Second, good to see Ngakoue in the mix yesterday. I like his potential rotating in the pass rush mix. As for Marcus Williams, he's sort of been a disappointment. He's not a bad player, I just can't remember the last time I saw him do anything of significance. INT? Forced Fumble? Fumble recovery? Key pass break-up? Something. On to Tampa |
Unitastoberry October 14 |
Another win and another big offensive statement. Commandskins done. Swiss Pees and Orr have some work to do. Why was Tony Romo on Kyle Hamiltons case about him being a dirty player on two big plays he made? He reacts before looking at the instant replay. Tony drives me nuts not my favorite commenter. It's a contact sport Tony. Only the offensive guys can lead with the head what a crock. My feelings on Joe Flacco are those of happiness for him. It's just a shame it's Jr Irsay who gets to beat his chest. With all the sub par duel threat QBs in the league now Joe could play another 4 -5 years.Btw I'm not including Lamar in that catagory. This bum in Cleveland should be on the bench watching Joe toss tds. Barry I will never root for PSU. I have my reasons and it's more than the Sandusky child rape coverup they should have had no football there for 5 years just for that one. It goes back to Joe PA coming here long ago and stealing all state and all county guys in Maryland just to keep them out of College Park then he redshirts them in Happy Valley etc and they never see the field playing behind guys like Franco Harris and Lydell Mitchell etc. I know one of them. He would have been a great running back at Maryland. He ran for 150-200 yards a game in Baltimore County. No shame in calling out good players up there now.44 is one of them. I hate to say it this but it could be Penn States year.Would be great if Locksley could pull a Vanderbuilt on them last game of the season. Btw Lenny Moore does get a pass Lou. Gary Cuozzo or Earl Morrall Howard? Well you have to take Earl and his MVP 1968 off the bench year. But I got visions of Jimmy Orr in the endzone waiving his hand wide open to this day and like I have said before the whole thing still stinks like you know what! |
David Rosenfeld October 14 |
If you weren't at the game yesterday you probably heard Tony Romo say that John Harbaugh is a "top 10 coach all time," which of course drew lots of chuckles from the hoi polloi. I'm not gonna get into a conversation about that, but I will say this... I don't see how you can watch the Ravens play on a week-to-week basis and say that John is an "awful coach." Like...of all takes you could have, it just doesn't stand up to any kind of serious analysis. |
Jon October 14 |
How are the league going to stymie the offense? Same way they have last few years in January- wins mask problems- - no more weak O line? enjoyable Sunday but lets not get ahead of oursleves like we did with Os and KC. Keep working Flacco! |
TimD in Timonium October 14 |
The two drives of 90+ yards were beautiful to watch. Hard to find much to complain about from yesterday's Ravens game, but surely someone will. Looks like the O-line has figured it out. Big difference from the 0-2 start. Whew. |
Kenny G October 14 |
Hopefully we saw a defensive change in yesterday's game - bend but don't break. I am not familiar with the WFT scheme but the Ravens keep also everything in front of them. Also for all people complaining about the refs, please offer some solutions vs just ranting about how bad they are. Sinc the game has become faster, covers more area of the field and the rules very complex, my suggestion is add another ref or two and allow for certain replays/challenges of penalties. I would also possibly allow more contact on receivers but penalize DB holding more (the calls are too inconsistent which leads to a lot of "missed" calls) |
Ed October 13 |
Nice day for Will Jackson picking games and props. Congratulations. |
lou@palo alto October 13 |
#24 was from Penn St |
Barry October 13 |
So UTB is actually a closet PSU fan after all eh? |
Howard October 13 |
Kj— tell me where that bar is so I can hang out with UTB and MFC. I would ask them if they think that Joe in his #15 Colts uniform reminds them more of Gary Cuozzo or Earl Morrall. Oh, and Jordan and Pippen keep rolling on |
Vince from SC October 13 |
Not a blowout but also never in doubt. On to Tampa. |
Unitastoberry October 13 |
If Lamar had made it past AFC teams in January like KC, Tennessee,and played nicked up in the Cincinnati game he would have 3 rings . I agree on this one the Commandskins are going down. Even Harbaugh won't screw this up. If you watched Penn State win in overtime over USC you know the NCAA refs are horrible. Worse than the NFL. Remember when the NFL refs went on strike and they used NCAA refs? That why the strike was settled. This number 44 on Penn State was a one man wrecking crew yesterday. He's a number one pick at TE. He's Dave Casper/Gronk quality if he stays healthy. Blocks great too pancakes guys. |
Old George October 12 |
Trolley Dodgers. |
Chris in Bel Air October 12 |
Love the "Reading time: 2 minutes"... or 3 minutes. This should be a regular thing for DMD. Thanks for the throwback. |
kj October 12 |
Everything written by @Bryce about DET was written about our O's two years ago. Funny how fans are always giving other teams a pass but want their team to be perfect 100% of the time. Wonder if MFC and UTB hang out at the local Curmudgeons bar howling at the moon together? The Indians have the best chance to beat NYY, so not sure why anyone would be pulling for DET to win today. Above was my own mini ode to my absolute favorite local sportswriter. DMD did a better job with his tribute, but figured I'd toss in an amateur version. RIP Mr Jackman. |
BRYCE October 12 |
I’d love to see Skubal and company get the last laugh this year with all the talk of Detroit dealing/retaining their ace at the deadline. Would be great to see them eliminate Cleveland and then continue their post-2000 trend of owning the Yankees in the playoffs. That team is going to be sneaky good for the next several years. In addition to its current roster, they have two top-10 prospects waiting in the wings and another at #31, per MLB. What’s even more impressive is that this 2024 surge has been with no contribution from Mize and very minimal from Torkelson, their two recent #1 overall draft picks. Most importantly, they’re playing with the team chemistry to be a force. |
Unitastoberry October 12 |
Why should U of Maryland fire Mike Locksley? So then they pretty much admit they just want a team who beats squads like Gettysburg College and Northwestern then only loses to Penn St and Michigan? It's basically an admission they joined the Big Ten for the money and could care less about a national championship. Remember what the late great Lefty Driesel said when hired by Maryland basketball back in the stone age? He said he wanted to become the UCLA of the east then strap the national trophy on his car and ride around tobacco road with it. It never happened but it was exactly what the fans wanted to hear and they bought in. Now the football team just wants to beat Northwestern and Prairie View. What a bunch of bull. RIP to Phil Jackman who was a great sports writer and not some punk looking to cause trouble.Those days are gone except at DMD. Go USC! |
MFC October 12 |
Hernandez dropping the F bond, after asking if it was live tv was disgusting. Another self Absorbed athlete. I am now rooting for anyone but LA. What a jerk, it wasn’t cute . |
Phil October 12 |
Awesome tribute, I always enjoyed his columns especially the two minute ones. |
Tom J October 12 |
Drew, when I saw the "Reading Time, 2 minutes" it rang a bell but just couldn't put my finger on it until reading down and then seeing and remembering this was Phil Jackman's thing. Didn't know the origin behind it but loved this in The Sun. Yes, please continue his thing as part of DMD. |
hank October 11 |
Top level trolling today. No true Baltimorean would ever wish success for the Yankees. I agree with David, bunch of posers like this current team is the last team I want to see in the World Series. Whoever prevails in the DET-CLE series best take care of business. Mets vs LA, no one worth rooting for there either. |
Paul from Towson October 11 |
The minute the O’s were eliminated, I became an instant fan of whatever National League team comes out of the NLCS to face whatever dumb AL champion. I can never stomach watching the Yankees (or Red Sox for that matter) celebrate anything so I strongly disagree with Drew’s commentary today. I don’t have any issue with the Mets, so if they happen to beat either LA or SD, more power to them. Plus, I would like to see Lindor and Alonso get a ring. Just wish Buck was still there to make rooting for them even that much easier. I will agree with Drew that the Cleat of Reality is hunting Washington this weekend and Jayden Daniels will feel every bit of its fury. Rookie QB’s never fair well at The Bank against our Ravens. This Sunday will be no exception. Ravens win, 34-13. Go Ravens!!! |
Jeffrey “Fireball” Roberts October 11 |
I would personally love a Yankee/Padre WS. The tattooed Padres in those horrible brown uniforms led by Manny against the clean cut Yankee pinstripes led by Judge. East Coast versus West Coast. Atlantic-Pacific. Biggie-Tupac. Bring it on. LOL |
David Rosenfeld October 11 |
Honestly, the 2024 Yankees are a bunch of posers. They act like they dominated the league. Judge and Soto are ridiculous, and Cole is one of the best, but the other 23 guys ain't much better than any other team. Maybe that'll be enough to win the World Series. I'm not sure Cleveland or Detroit will beat them...they just don't hit well enough. |
Delray RICK October 11 |
Baseball season is OVER!!! |
Chris in Bel Air October 11 |
To be honest, I guess I still have a little bit of sour grapes going on with the O's out of the running again. Tough watching other teams/fans celebrate. I suppose a Yankees/Mets series would be interesting. I'm sure other than Yankees/Dodgers (Ohtani vs Judge) MLB execs and whatever network is broadcasting the World Series would really like Yankees/Mets too. I can't imagine those same folks would be too thrilled with say Tigers vs Padres. Ravens will bring Wash and Jayden Daniels back to earth on Sunday. Don't get me wrong, I like Daniels. It's just not quite his/their time. |
TimD in Timonium October 11 |
A Mets / Yankees series could be entertaining, but I suspect most of America would tune out an all-NYC final. But I don't think the Mets will get past LA or SD. We'll see. And the Ryan Ries video was a great watch. |
Dan October 11 |
Drew, thanks for highlighting Ryan Ries. As a fellow skateboard enthusiast I know his story and the impact he has made on the youth all over the USA. God bless Ryan!! |
Unitastoberry October 10 |
I thought is was a joke today when I heard Dean"Swiss"Pees was rehired to be a senior advisor to DC Zach Orr. It's actually true. |
TimD in Timonium October 10 |
"Corbin Burnes, who started for the AL in the All-Star Game, ranked fourth in the AL in ERA (2.92), third in innings pitched (194 1/3), eighth in WHIP (1.10) and 10th in strikeouts (181)." Complete games in 2024? Zero. (His closest was 8 innings vs KC in the playoffs.) We've already seen the Golden Age of Complete Game Pitchers. It's not coming back. |
Unitastoberry October 10 |
Palmer,Cuellar, McNally and Dobson 4 20 game winners. I saw them all get at least one win that year in person. |
Bob October 10 |
2011 was the last year a pitcher logged double digit complete games with James Shields throwing 11 for Tampa Bay. Since then only two pitchers threw more then 5 games, Chris Sale in 2016 and Sandy Alcantara in 2022 both threw 6 games. I think the ship has sailed on the days a starter bangs out double digit complete games. https://www.baseball-almanac.com/pitching/picomg4.shtml |
Chris in Bel Air October 10 |
Yes, the bullpen game is certainly an interesting situation now. I agree it is not my favorite part of the game for sure. But, if a manager wants to blow through 8 arms in one game, doesn't that put him in a disadvantage for the next game? It's a risk in going the bullpen route. I am also not sure the minimum innings or pitches is practical either. If a starter is getting lit up in the first couple innings a proposed rule to remain for minimum number of pitches/innings would then take away the ability for the manager to make a pitching change. That doesn't seem like it is good for the game either. As for making these guys in Jim Palmer again, that's not happening. The days of Palmer, Fergie Jenkins, Bob Gibson, Gaylord Perry and Steve Carlton are long gone and that's not even including the astounding number of CGs thrown by the likes of Cy Young or Walter Johnson. For reference, in 2024, the team with the most CG's thrown was the Phillies with 5. Going back 50 years, here are the leading and total number of team CGs thrown that year: 2014 - 8 2004 - 11 1994 - 17 1984 - 48 1974 - 71 A remarkable trend down and it's just not ever coming back. |
David Rosenfeld October 10 |
The "bullpen game" is an interesting phenomenon because, as much as people might dislike it, it's really common sense. I'm sure that A.J. Hinch would love it if he had even one more guy like Tarik Skubal. But he doesn't, so he feels like this is the best way to win...and he's often right because (unlike in Palmer's day), the "bullpen" guys are more talented than the ostensible starting pitchers. Assuming this a problem, I'm not sure of the answer. And in the playoffs, when the rope is short even for good starting pitchers, I'm even less sure... |
Bam Bam October 10 |
Does @Billy know how to read? @Timmy K was talking about @JK |
Action October 10 |
Same exact situation in Royals Yankees game last night that Os had in game 1 against Royals. Tied ballgame, Royals man on third, 2 outs, Bobby Witt at the plate. But this time the opposing team did what Brandon Hyde and the O’s should have done. They pitched around him and walked him. And guess what the next batter did? Of, course fly out to end the inning. The Yankees scored 1 more after that and that was all she wrote. 2 opposite approaches in the same exact situation with 2 different outcomes. Come on Hyde, get an effing clue! |
Delray RICK October 10 |
Who was the reader of this site who lived west FLORIDA near TAMPA?????? |
Eric in White Plains October 10 |
I attended a game last year, full disclosure, my daughter is a junior at UMD. |
Harold October 09 |
Meet the Mets- Meet the Mets…..on to the NLCS- amazin! |
Billy October 09 |
Did this "James" dude answer "the question"? Maybe Timmy K can tell us lol. |
Tuesday September 24, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3684 |
I probably laughed out loud on 10 different occasions yesterday as I listened to local radio and perused Twitter commentary that centered on the Ravens and Sunday's 28-25 win over Dallas.
People are nuts.
Just completely, out-of-touch-with-reality, nuts.
Here's the thing I can't shake for the life of me. And maybe my stats are wrong, but I'd bet I'm closer to being right than not.
90% of the people I hear call into sports radio played sports at some level in their life.
Now, I get it, there is a huge difference between the professional game and the rec, scholastic and amateur ranks when it comes to sports.
But when you play sports at any level you develop some sort of idea of how it all works. At least I assume you do.
There are several basic tenants of sports as we all know it.
* You win some and you lose some. No player is perfect. No team is perfect.
* You can game plan for the other team all you want. Sometimes it doesn't matter. You prepare the best you can and you lose. They out-game-plan-you. And, of course, sometimes you out-game-plan them.
* Other times it's just luck. The proverbial bounce of the ball. Or, I hope this isn't too soon, sometimes your toe is one inch over the line and it's not ruled a touchdown after all.
* For the most part, the team with the better players usually wins the game. It doesn't always happen that way, which is why you actually play the games in the first place.
But if the Chiefs and Panthers played 10 times this year, K.C. is winning 8 times, if not 9 or, perhaps, even all 10. Why would they win? Because they have better football players.
Winning is contagious and, sadly, so too is losing. When you're winning you think you'll never lose again and when you're losing, you think you'll never win again.
There are average players who are really tough mentally and that makes them better than their athleticism allows for.
And there are great players who are fragile mentally and that makes them worse than their athleticism allows for.
In the old days, we called it, simply, "heart". You knew who had it and who didn't.
When I hear someone on the radio jump in and say something like, "These coaches ain't teachin' Nate Wiggins anything about playing press coverage," the very first thing I say to myself as I hear that commentary is this:
"How, exactly, do you know that?"
Are you at practice with the team? Do you have some sort of inside access no one else does?
And do you say that because Wiggins got beat once or twice during the game on Sunday in Dallas?
From that, you suddenly jump to the conclusion the Ravens' secondary coach is somehow failing him?
You watch CeeDee Lamb beat Nate Wiggins on a pattern and catch a 15 yard pass and your take on that moment was the coach doesn't teach him the right way?
Maybe CeeDee Lamb went up against Wiggins 6 times during the game and went for 1-for-6. Who gets the credit for the 5 times Wiggins didn't allow the catch to happen? I'd generally give the credit to Wiggins. In my mind, players play and coaches coach.
But if the secondary coach is to blame for Wiggins getting beat, shouldn't that secondary coach get the credit when he wins the battle with Lamb?
This isn't to suggest that coaching isn't important. It most certainly is. But most of the coaching at the NFL level happens during the week, while the team and players are preparing for the next game. Once the ball is kicked off on Sunday, the player then has to assume responsibility for his performance.
Another caller on Monday indicated the Ravens "took themselves out of the game by ignoring Likely and Andrews" in Dallas.
Perhaps Dallas "game planned" to stop Likely and Andrews. And in doing so, it might have opened up bigger run options for the Ravens, which they clearly took advantage of in the win.
Maybe the Ravens intentionally moved away from throwing the ball to those two because they figured the Dallas defense would key on them.
The chocolate frosted icing of the comment was: "The Ravens took themselves out of the game..."
Ummmmmm, hello. The Ravens led at one point 28-6. They led the game from start to finish. It was over at halftime.
If they lose 34-13 and Likely and Andrews don't factor in the loss, I could see that comment having some merit.
The won the game, handily, and you're still bellyaching about Likely and Andrews? Weird, man. Just weird.
Someone else chimed in about the play of Daniel Faalele and how improved he was in the win over Dallas.
"He turned himself around," the caller said. "First two weeks he was chopped liver. Yesterday he was awesome."
Shouldn't Faalele's offensive line coach get credit for that? I mean, Faalele didn't fix himself between the Raiders loss and the Cowboys win, did he?
The reality is, there are a myriad of reasons why a player plays better this week than he did last week. It might not have one thing to do with coaching. It could just be that Faalele matched up better with his Dallas counterpart. Maybe he's more fit than he was in week #1 at Kansas City. Perhaps Faalele just had an off day against the Raiders. They happen to everyone, you know.
And then we get to Justin Tucker.
"I'm not a kicker," caller Brad said on Monday afternoon. "But I can tell you just from watching Tucker this season that he's spooked by something. He doesn't look the same as he did last year. I hope we're trying out kickers. It's one thing to miss from outside of 50, but when you're missing inside of 50 you have some real problems."
Brad was right about one thing.
He's not a kicker.
And neither am I. But I am good at math. Not great. But "good".
Here's how many kicks Tucker has missed this year inside the 50 yard line: One.
It came on Sunday.
Harrison Butker missed an extra point on Sunday night in Atlanta. That one came from 33 yards out. Is he washed? Of course not.
Now, Tucker might -- as John Harbaugh indicated on Monday -- be going through an issue with his technique and that's led to some early-season inaccuracies. Kicking is a very technical skill.
But Justin Tucker isn't "washed".
He's nowhere close to that, actually.
There's no doubt about it. He will make big kicks and important kicks this season. It's etched in stone.
The guy missed a kick. Sure, it was indoors. Climate controlled. Blah, blah, blah.
He missed a kick.
Scottie Scheffler missed a routine, 5-foot birdie putt on the 72nd hole of the Valero Texas Open last May. The miss cost him a chance to be in a playoff.
I didn't hear anyone say "Scheffler's washed".
Athletes fail on occasion. It happens to all of them, including Justin Tucker.
If you played sports at all in your life, you know that athletes fail because -- try to think back for me -- you also failed as an athlete. You failed so much as an amateur athlete that the thought of being a professional athlete left you by age 16, most likely.
John Harbaugh and Zach Orr also got raked over the coals on Monday. You knew that was coming, of course, as soon as the Cowboys scored late in the 4th quarter to make it 28-25. That 19-point surge by Dallas was all the fans needed to start their weekly crusade against the coaching staff.
There's no doubt the 19 point run in the final quarter was unsettling.
There was Tucker's field goal. That would have made it 31-6. A four score game, at that point.
Zay Flowers somehow failed to collect a ball that went through his arms on the onside kick. The Ravens practice that stuff every single week. There's a reason why Flowers is the guy on the far edge, like he was on Sunday in Dallas, on the onside kick team. He's great at scooping up those loose balls and sewing up the game.
Except on Sunday, he didn't do it.
He wanted to. He tried to. He failed.
The next one that came his way was an easy one to pick up. He scooped it up and stepped out of bounds. Easy peasy.
It wasn't "coaching" on the first one that he screwed up in the same way it wasn't coaching on the second one that he perfectly collected.
The ball bounces in weird ways on occasion.
Players, sometimes, do let the moment -- whatever it is -- get the best of them. It happens to everyone.
Conventional description is "choking", of course, but I try my best not to use that word if I can avoid it. I'd rather just say, "Stuff happens" and leave it at that.
But maybe Flowers did choke on that first kick on Sunday. Nothing more, nothing less. Golfers do it all the time. They miss a putt they'd make 19 out of 20 times. Basketball players miss foul shots. Baseball players botch easy ground balls.
There's something really weird about football. I've never figured it out.
There always has to be something to blame or some other reason things happened other than, plain and simple, that guy either made the play or didn't make the play.
Is it Zach Orr's fault that Nate Wiggins twice fell for the same double-move by CeeDee Lamb in the first half?
The Ravens probably watched 6-8 hours of film on the Cowboys last week and every route Lamb ran in the first two games of the season was played and replayed for Wiggins and the rest of the defensive backs.
Did Lamb run a new route on Sunday that the Ravens hadn't yet seen? That's certainly possible.
Was Wiggins not paying attention in film study last week? That's also possible.
Or did Wiggins see Lamb line up and say to himself, "I know that double move is coming and you're not beating me with it", only to have Lamb beat him anyway? Sure, that could have happened.
The other guy tries, too.
Here's the other thing people who played sports seem to forget once they go from participant to spectator: Sometimes the other guy is just better than you at (insert sport).
Quick, answer this for me:
Who would you rather have as the quarterback of your football team? Patrick Mahomes of the Chiefs or Daniel Jones of the Giants?
If you said anything except "Mahomes", you know you're lying.
But why did you say "Mahomes"??
Easy answer...
"Because Mahomes is better than Jones."
It's that simple.
I saw up close and personal just how good someone like Retief Goosen is at golf in 2021 when I was blessed to play a practice round with him at the U.S. Senior Open.
We played "real golf" for 9 holes and he shot even par 35 and I shot 3 over 38. But those 3 shots might as well have been 10 shots. He drove it 60 yards past me on every hole, hit his irons to 20 feet on every approach shot while I was more like 35 feet from the hole and he didn't miss a putt inside of six feet while I missed two from that distance.
In the end, it was very obvious. Goosen is better than me at golf.
That exact same thing happens every week in the NFL.
"Player A" is better than "Player B" and, therefore, Player A's team has an advantage in that match-up.
There's a reason why Tyreek Hill is, perhaps, the most dangerous wide receiver in the entire NFL. He's faster than all the other players.
People who follow sports seem to forget this stuff when they're busy crushing people on Twitter or calling in to radio shows on Monday to voice their displeasure with how things unfolded the day before.
Sometimes the players on the other team are better than the players on your team. And vice versa.
The Ravens win 90% of their games because Lamar Jackson is a superior athlete to anyone on the other side of the field. It's that simple.
We know this is true: If Lamar Jackson suffers a season-ending injury next week in the Buffalo game, the Ravens are only going to win 5 of their last 13 games...if they're lucky.
Lamar might not be the entire team. But he's as close as you can get to being the whole team without being the whole team.
Why can't other teams just "coach" or "game plan" and stop him? Because he's better than them, that's why.
Oh, and yes, coaches, too, can be out-coached. It happens all the time. Coaches actually will be the ones to say, "They outcoached us today."
But just because your team lost doesn't mean your coach didn't prepare the players the right way, execute the game plan to the best of their ability and pull the right strings during the game itself.
We seem to have a lot of that going on in Baltimore these days. It might be prevalent elsewhere, I don't know. I don't pay much attention to what happens in Philly, Boston, Chicago, Atlanta and so on.
I just know that here, in Baltimore, we have a habit of blaming everything that happens on the coaches.
O's third base coach Tony Mansolino was under the gun on Saturday for two separate plays that both went against the O's in the 6-4 loss to the Tigers.
He sent Adley Rutschman on single to left and the O's catcher was thrown out at home plate. It took a perfect pick-up, throw and tag to get him at the dish, but that's what happened. Everyone in Baltimore haraunged Mansolino while the people in Detroit lauded the left fielder for his "great play".
Mansolino was, in hindsight, a tad ambitious in sending Rutschman, who is certainly not fleet of foot.
But if anything would have been off in the sequence from left-fielder-to-catcher, Rutschman scores and the stadium erupts and radio callers have nothing to gripe about.
Later in the game, Jackson Holliday was held at third base after a fly ball was caught in shallow left field and two Detroit players collided.
This time everyone was irate because he didn't send Holliday to home plate. Never mind that Holliday would have been out by 10 feet if the Tigers would have completed the catch-throw-relay-tag sequence correctly. Some folks on Twitter even used that as the reason why he should have been sent.
"It would have taken a perfect throw, relay and tag to get him! That's why T Mans should have sent him there!"
Alas, earlier in the game that's exactly what happened. And everyone went ballistic because Rutschman got thrown out.
In both cases on Saturday, what happened more than anything else was "baseball".
Mansolino didn't do anything completely egregious.
Rutschman gave everything he had.
Holliday didn't have a brain fart on third base.
Detroit players made professional plays and, on those two occasions, they wound up winning that small, individual game-within-a-game.
We could go through the same thing 20 times a game when the Ravens play.
Nate Wiggins locked horns with CeeDee Lamb on several occasions last Sunday and was successful in that one-on-one battle more times than not. Who gets the credit when Wiggins wins? Who gets the blame when Wiggins loses?
Coaching definitely does matter. Both during the week and during the game itself.
But if you have better players or, at the very least, players who are better match-ups in that particular game, coaching is only going to you so far.
The rumor is the Panthers want to trade Bryce Young, a former #1 pick, to the Ravens for Lamar Jackson.
How do you feel about that one?
You would never do that deal, of course. No one in their right (or wrong) mind would do that deal.
Why not?
Because, simply put, Lamar is better than Bryce Young.
Better players usually wind up winning in the end.
Game one of the pivotal 3-game series in New York takes place tonight for the O's and it actually is "must win" if they have any hopes of stealing the A.L. East from the Yankees.
New York owns a 6-game lead with six games left to play.
Zach Eflin goes for the Birds and Nestor Cortes gets the start for the Bronx Bombers.
For the O's, the more important task over the season's final week is to secure the top wild card spot and host that 3-game series in Baltimore next Tuesday-Wednesday-Thursday.
Seattle kept their faint hopes alive last night with a win in Houston.
The interesting part about this week's slate of games is that only Detroit plays two teams with nothing to play for down the stretch.
Tampa Bay is technically still alive for the post-season, but it would take a crazy combination of 29 different things to happen for them to make it. The White Sox are, ummmmmm, not really alive in the playoff race any longer.
Kansas City plays D.C., who are done, but they face Atlanta over the weekend and the Braves are still in the hunt for a N.L. wild card spot.
Minnesota has the Marlins, who are out, but they then host the O's over the weekend. The Birds might actually wind up having nothing to play for or they might need to win a game, two or three, to secure wild card spot #1.
Seattle plays Houston tonight and tomorrow and the Astros have still not clinched the division title even though it looks like a done deal.
I know the schedule makers didn't plan it this way, but it's a heckuva final week in the American League, that's for sure.
Here's how things shape up heading into tonight's flurry of games involving the teams vying for wild card spots in the American League.
Current standings:
New York, 1st in the East at 91-64.
Wild Card #1 - Baltimore, 85-70, 6 games behind.
Wild Card #2 - Kansas City, 82-74
Wild Card #3 - Detroit, 82-74
(still alive) - Minnesota, 81-75
(still alive) - Seattle, 81-76
This week's schedule:
Kansas City plays at Washington (3) and at Atlanta (3).
Minnesota hosts Miami (3) and Baltimore (3).
Detroit hosts Tampa Bay (3) and the White Sox (3).
Seattle plays plays at Houston (2) and hosts Oakland (3).
Monday September 23, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3683 |
OK, the good news is we have a lot to talk about over the next six days.
The bad news? We have a lot to talk about.
The Ravens nearly snatched defeat from the jaws of victory on Sunday before hanging on to a 28-25 win at Dallas that looked, smelled and felt more like a loss in the aftermath.
But it wasn't a loss. And John Harbaugh's team escaped with a huge win to move to 1-2 on the season and set up a fairly crucial early season showdown with Buffalo next Sunday in Charm City.
Lamar Jackson and Derrick Henry ran over and through a laughable Dallas defense for most of Sunday's affair, piling up yards and first downs with sublime ease. It was 28-6 in the fourth quarter and the Ravens were about to cruise to a walk-in-the-park win when Justin Tucker missed a 46 yard field goal.
That miss came with 10:41 remaining in the game.
The Cowboys then scored their first touchdown of the game on a quick 6-play drive.
Dallas then announced (new rule) and converted an onside kick when the ball mysteriously zipped right through the arms of Zay Flowers.
Dak Prescott then went to work on the tiring Baltimore secondary, eventually throwing another TD pass with 7:07 left in the 4th quarter.
Right on cue, as they have a habit of doing, the Ravens offense then stalled, running the ball twice with Derrick Henry before Lamar missed Mark Andrews on a 3rd and 3 throw.
The Cowboys then got back in the game -- officially -- when they were gifted with a completely laughable roughing the passer penalty on Odafe Oweh. That infraction moved the ball from midfield to the Baltimore 34. Four plays later Dallas scored another touchdown, their third in 7 minutes, and it was 28-25 after the made extra point.
All eyes were on Lamar Jackson with 2:36 remaining. Could he engineer two first downs and put the game on ice for Baltimore?
There's no telling where the Ravens go from here. There are 14 games left in the season. This is a very mercurial football team, as we've seen so far in the '24 campaign.
They might catch fire and bolt through the next 14 games with 12 wins and finish 13-4 for all I know.
Or they might battle every week and scratch together 9 more wins and make the playoffs on the final day of the season.
I could see that happening, too.
But if either of those scenarios turns out to be the reality of the 2024 season, the final 2:36 of the Cowboys win on September 22 might be responsible.
If Jackson and the offense would have gone three and out and the Cowboys would have somehow magically come back to win that game on Sunday, there's absolutely no telling what might have resulted from that disaster.
The head coach would be on the hottest seat of his career, for starters.
Zay Flowers and Justin Tucker would have been talk-radio fodder all week.
The internet lit up with "Tucker is washed" comments after his field goal miss. I'd pump the brakes on that one a little bit, but you'd have to be naive to not at least be a little concerned with Tucker's start to the 2024 campaign.
And, for sure, Lamar would have been raked over the coals for six days, along with Zach Orr and whatever defensive player factored into Dak's final touchdown throw with 23 seconds remaining.
A loss on Sunday in Dallas, up 28-6 with just over 10 minutes remaining, would have been among the worst regular season defeats EVER for the Ravens and John Harbaugh.
Alas, it didn't happen.
That final 2:36, where Jackson and the offensive unit did what they've been unable to do so many times in the 4th quarter, could turn out to be the biggest 2:36 of the entire 2024 campaign.
And all's well that ends well.
Almost.
It's still hard to wipe the taste of the final 10 minutes out of your mouth, no matter how hard you try.
It was all going to happen again. The same way it always does.
An onside kick mistake.
A questionable penalty.
A botched call earlier in the game on a safety that wasn't called a safety by the referees.
Justin Tucker missing a field goal.
And then, in the end, Lamar and the offense failing to sew up the game when they had it on their racket.
Except this time, Jackson got that elusive first down near the two minute warning and the good guys were putting up a "1" in the win column.
It was really pretty for about 50 minutes. And then it was really ugly for most of the next 8 minutes.
But the good part was especially good, I thought.
The game plan from Todd Monken was excellent and the Baltimore defense snuffed out any offensive energy the Cowboys tried to produce.
It was moving along perfectly until Tucker's field goal miss.
And then it all unraveled.
But a win, indeed, is a win.
On to Buffalo...
Speaking of things to talk about this week, we have six meaningful baseball games on tap for the Orioles, starting on Tuesday night in New York.
With Sunday's 4-3 home loss to the Tigers and the Yankees winning 7-4 at Oakland, the Yankees are now one win or one Orioles loss away from clinching the A.L. East.
I'll wait to do my formal "tip of the cap" to the Yankees when they officially sew up the division, but I give them full credit. I thought their mid-season swoon would have led them to fall apart at the seams when the schedule rolled into September.
Instead, it was the O's who fell apart after Labor Day.
Sunday's defeat to the Tigers marked the fifth straight 3-game series the Birds dropped, 2-games-to-1. It also kept Baltimore's magic number to clinch a playoff spot at 2...with now six games left to play.
The good news? It's still very likely Birds are going to get into the post-season. It would take a catastrophic turn of events for Brandon Hyde's team to get bypassed by three different teams over the last week of the campaign.
The bad news? It might be the Tigers, not the Royals, who come bouncing into Baltimore in two weeks for the wild card round of the American League playoffs. Detroit now has the same record as K.C. and has a much easier schedule this coming week.
All along, a lot of folks were concerned about the prospects of facing Kansas City. Instead, the O's might have to do battle with Tarik Skubal and the Tigers in the best of three series.
Current standings:
New York, 1st in the East at 91-64.
Wild Card #1 - Baltimore, 85-70, 6 games behind.
Wild Card #2 - Kansas City, 82-74
Wild Card #3 - Detroit, 82-74
(still alive) - Minnesota, 81-75
(still alive) - Seattle, 80-76
This week's schedule:
Kansas City plays at Washington (3) and at Atlanta (3).
Minnesota hosts Miami (3) and Baltimore (3).
Detroit hosts Tampa Bay (3) and the White Sox (3).
Seattle plays plays at Houston (3) and hosts Oakland (3).
The local golf community lost a significant contributor over the weekend when longtime Mount Saint Joseph head golf coach Mike Dooley passed away from complications associated with the West Nile Virus.
Coach Dooley will be sorely missed.
I had the pleasure of coaching and competing against Coach Dooley twice a year since 2011, first at John Carroll for two years and then over the last 12 seasons at Calvert Hall.
A few stories about Coach Dooley should highlight what kind of man and coach he was.
In the first match I ever coached at John Carroll, back in 2011, Dooley's Gaels team beat us 21-0 at our home course, Maryland Golf and Country Club. We only won four holes (out of six matches) all day. It was a complete and total throttling.
"I hope you know we weren't trying to bury you guys that bad," Dooley said to me as the team's shook hands afterwards.
I was a brand new coach in the A-Conference, but I knew good golf when I saw it and I knew bad golf when I saw it. Mount Saint Joseph was really good that year and we were really bad.
"Coach," I said. "It's golf. You're supposed to play the best that you possibly can. We need to get a lot better. Thanks for showing me how much work we need to do."
In my first year at Calvert Hall, we shocked the Gaels in the playoff semifinals at Rolling Road, becoming the first team to win at their home course in four seasons.
A couple of MSJ players took to the internet to "chirp" about how we got lucky and how it was a fluke that we beat them and so on.
The next day, Dooley called me. "I was disappointed to read what some of my players posted," he said. "I want you to know I don't condone it. You guys played great yesterday. You deserved to win. There was nothing lucky about it."
And then, a few years ago, we showed up at Rolling Road needing a win to clinch a playoff berth. It is not an easy course for inexperienced players to play, but we did just enough that day to pull out a narrow win to advance to the post-season.
As we boarded the bus for the ride back to Calvert Hall, Coach Dooley summoned me as he walked to his car. "We always seem to bring out the best in your team over here," he said with a smile. "I hope you guys do great in the playoffs."
Some coaches just say that to say it.
But Mike Dooley meant it. In a moment when he could have been down in the dumps about his team's less than stellar season, he took a minute to say some kind things to a coaching friend.
Last year, Dooley's Gaels finished the season at 8-4 and returned to the playoffs after a long absence. He was voted the A-Conference Coach of the Year by his coaching peers.
It was a fitting way for his run at Mount Saint Joseph to end.
He was a terrific coach and a gentleman both on and off the course.
such October 15 |
Because I'm older, I don't spend much time on social media. I find it rather exhausting to be honest. Therefore I was unaware of this incident until last night, when my sons began texting me and FaceTiming me. The assailant is a former teammate of two of my sons at Hereford High. Let's just say that his senior year there was punctuated by some extremely poor decisions, likely due to being under the influence. Hereford was his third high school in four years. I'm going to go out on a very short limb here and surmise that he was under the influence on Sunday night in Federal Hill. His actions are inexcusable under any circumstances. Drunk, high, sober, it doesn't matter. Violently assaulting innocent people, unprovoked, is bordering on sociopathic behavior. He should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law, and if civil suits arise from this disgusting incident, he should be made to pay for his victims medical care and pain and suffering. Whatever backlash and public embarrassment he endures because of this are due to his own reckless, irresponsible behavior. You get what you get when you act like a fool. As I've always told my sons, Make good choices. Stop and think about the consequences. |
TimD in Timonium October 15 |
"Clearly, though, the man who assaulted the two Commanders fans was somehow enthused about being on camera for the incident." Live by the sword, die by the sword. The resulting video went viral, and the outcome probably wasn't the "internet fame" he had in mind. Without video, I'm guessing this goes unreported and the perp remains unknown. Oh well. |
Barry October 14 |
Flacco is likely back to not being a starter by next week, no way he's coming here for a playoff game in Jan. @Paul pretending to be positive is hilarious! |
Delray RICK October 14 |
One of my problems with HARBAUGH is when he throws the red flag I'm sitting watching slow-motion, ain't no way he's right. I know it's people upstairs. When you have to rely on others that's where HARBS gets accused of f it up. He's mind is so on this team there isn't anybody else I'd want as coach . Who the he'll is better ??? Crickets |
Vince from SC October 14 |
The only criticism of Harbaugh I have is his clock management at the end of halves can sometimes make you scratch your head. Other than that, he's been a HOF coach no question. Should have won the SB the year before if Lee Evans or Billy Cundiff could do bare minimum. |
Paul from Towson October 14 |
The John Harbaugh hate in this city absolutely astounds me. All this franchise has done since he's been here is win. Sure, they've only hoisted the Lombardi trophy once under him, but that's one more time than most of the rest of the NFL. And, this team has been to the AFC Championship Game four times under Harbaugh. Sure, the 1-3 record could be better, but let's not forget that first one was in Joe Flacco's (and Harbs' for that matter) rookie season when this team was supposed to be 4-12. Of course he's not perfect, and yeah his use of challenges and timeouts can be questionable at best, but it's hard to argue with the overall W-L record. Not to mention, he swallowed his pride in 2018 and did something very few, if any, Super Bowl winning coaches would do, and changed the entire offensive structure of this team to suit Lamar Jackson's strengths. Look at the rest of the league, and the coaching unemployment line, and tell me who you would rather have. Belichick?? No thanks, look at his record without a guy named Tom Brady. Jeff Fisher?? Don't think so. What about all these young, hotshot coaches that the national pundits love so much. Kevin Stefanski? Pass. Zac Taylor? Nah. Nick Siriani? Please! The luntics in Philly are ready to run him out of town despite making it to the Super Bowl two seasons ago. I know this isn't just a Baltimore thing, after all, if you ask any Stooler fan they would tell you that THEY could coach the team in Pittsburgh to a Super Bowl before Mike Tomlin could. But even still, at a time in the NFL (and sports in general) when most teams have a yearly coaching carousel and rampant upheaval (Falcons, Colts, Raiders, Panthers, etc.) having the stability in a head coach that wins, on average, 10 games a season is a luxury very few teams enjoy. And, in my humble opinion, even given his faults, I would take Harbs over just about every other coach in the league, except MAYBE Andy Reid. But even Reid was an also-ran until a guy named Mahomes came into the league. Go Ravens!! Such, you beat me to it this morning. As I watched the replay of yesterday's game, I realized that the Derrick Henry signing seems very Shannon Sharpe-ish to me. When the Ravens signed the two time Super Bowl champion, they already had a championship caliber defense. Sharpe was the missing piece on an offense that was built on the run and timely passing. Now, Lamar Jackson is leaps and bounds better than Trent Dilfer ever was on his best day, but just like Sharpe, Derrick Henry seems to be the missing piece for this offense. Derrick Henry makes LJ8 an the rest of the offense better because, with all due respect to JK Dobbins and Gus Edwards, defenses didn't have to stack the box to stop them. Leaving LJ8 to pic apart man, or in some cases, soft zone coverage. GO RAVENS! |
Howard October 14 |
Tony Siragusa was a great free agent pickup. The 2000 Ravens defense had no offense to pick them up. The defense couldn’t bend and couldn’t break and they didn’t. |
Bud King October 14 |
Not even Harbs could lose this game... go Ravens! |
Nathan Aparisto October 14 |
Is there ANY deal or trade that would convince that mess of a Jets franchise to send Sauce Gardner to the flock for a passel of picks? Could the cap hit be worked out? Hed be the next Ed Reed for a decade and Ravens could truly be a juggernaught! |
such October 14 |
We were having a text conversation last night and the question was raised: Has there ever been a better Free Agent signing by the Ravens than Henry? I can't think of anyone comparable on offense. Maybe Shannon Sharpe, maybe Derek Mason, but as far as instant impact and the ability to effect games the way he does, there's never been anyone close to Henry. Yesterday was just the latest example of the difference he's made. Everyone from Hereford to Upper Marlboro knew he was getting the ball, and the Ravens ran that same little toss sweep to the left they ran in Cincy, and Henry goes for 30 yards and that's ballgame. He's an absolute hammer. I went back and looked at the 2016 Draft and it's just another example of NFL front offices overanalyzing players. The Ravens took Ronnie Stanley at #6 overall, which is undeniably a very good pick. In the second round, at #42 overall, they selected the immortal Kamalei Correa from Boise State. Derrick Henry went to Tennessee at #45. Oh, what might have been. Although Lamar wasn't here yet so there's no telling what the offense would've looked like with Joe Flacco and King Henry. Regardless, he's here now and it's a beautiful sight to behold. |
Chris in Bel Air October 14 |
Even in the loss to KC, you could see the potential of the Ravens. They are clearly starting to put it all together now. As a fan, I'm feeling the optimism. But... we've also watched the Ravens and the NFL long enough to know they will stub their toe a couple more times. It happens. The key is how they bounce back the following week. Moreover, you don't win the Lombardi in October. It's all about January... and hopefully February. IF they end up playing KC again in the playoffs, they are not going to lose that game. I don't care if it is in B'more or KC. They are winning that one. Yes, the secondary seems to be a concern and can't figure out if it's personnel or scheme or both. Either way, like yesterday, the offense just needs to pick them up and respond when they have the ball. A couple random observations. First on Brandon Stephens. Maybe it's just me but it seems like no matter how closely he is covering his man, the opposing QB and WR always seems to come up with an incredible play/catch. Yesterday he had at least one like that, maybe two. I'm not busting on him, I'm just saying, I'm not sure what more he can do. Overall, I think he's become a decent CB for someone that did not play that position in college. Second, good to see Ngakoue in the mix yesterday. I like his potential rotating in the pass rush mix. As for Marcus Williams, he's sort of been a disappointment. He's not a bad player, I just can't remember the last time I saw him do anything of significance. INT? Forced Fumble? Fumble recovery? Key pass break-up? Something. On to Tampa |
Unitastoberry October 14 |
Another win and another big offensive statement. Commandskins done. Swiss Pees and Orr have some work to do. Why was Tony Romo on Kyle Hamiltons case about him being a dirty player on two big plays he made? He reacts before looking at the instant replay. Tony drives me nuts not my favorite commenter. It's a contact sport Tony. Only the offensive guys can lead with the head what a crock. My feelings on Joe Flacco are those of happiness for him. It's just a shame it's Jr Irsay who gets to beat his chest. With all the sub par duel threat QBs in the league now Joe could play another 4 -5 years.Btw I'm not including Lamar in that catagory. This bum in Cleveland should be on the bench watching Joe toss tds. Barry I will never root for PSU. I have my reasons and it's more than the Sandusky child rape coverup they should have had no football there for 5 years just for that one. It goes back to Joe PA coming here long ago and stealing all state and all county guys in Maryland just to keep them out of College Park then he redshirts them in Happy Valley etc and they never see the field playing behind guys like Franco Harris and Lydell Mitchell etc. I know one of them. He would have been a great running back at Maryland. He ran for 150-200 yards a game in Baltimore County. No shame in calling out good players up there now.44 is one of them. I hate to say it this but it could be Penn States year.Would be great if Locksley could pull a Vanderbuilt on them last game of the season. Btw Lenny Moore does get a pass Lou. Gary Cuozzo or Earl Morrall Howard? Well you have to take Earl and his MVP 1968 off the bench year. But I got visions of Jimmy Orr in the endzone waiving his hand wide open to this day and like I have said before the whole thing still stinks like you know what! |
David Rosenfeld October 14 |
If you weren't at the game yesterday you probably heard Tony Romo say that John Harbaugh is a "top 10 coach all time," which of course drew lots of chuckles from the hoi polloi. I'm not gonna get into a conversation about that, but I will say this... I don't see how you can watch the Ravens play on a week-to-week basis and say that John is an "awful coach." Like...of all takes you could have, it just doesn't stand up to any kind of serious analysis. |
Jon October 14 |
How are the league going to stymie the offense? Same way they have last few years in January- wins mask problems- - no more weak O line? enjoyable Sunday but lets not get ahead of oursleves like we did with Os and KC. Keep working Flacco! |
TimD in Timonium October 14 |
The two drives of 90+ yards were beautiful to watch. Hard to find much to complain about from yesterday's Ravens game, but surely someone will. Looks like the O-line has figured it out. Big difference from the 0-2 start. Whew. |
Kenny G October 14 |
Hopefully we saw a defensive change in yesterday's game - bend but don't break. I am not familiar with the WFT scheme but the Ravens keep also everything in front of them. Also for all people complaining about the refs, please offer some solutions vs just ranting about how bad they are. Sinc the game has become faster, covers more area of the field and the rules very complex, my suggestion is add another ref or two and allow for certain replays/challenges of penalties. I would also possibly allow more contact on receivers but penalize DB holding more (the calls are too inconsistent which leads to a lot of "missed" calls) |
Ed October 13 |
Nice day for Will Jackson picking games and props. Congratulations. |
lou@palo alto October 13 |
#24 was from Penn St |
Barry October 13 |
So UTB is actually a closet PSU fan after all eh? |
Howard October 13 |
Kj— tell me where that bar is so I can hang out with UTB and MFC. I would ask them if they think that Joe in his #15 Colts uniform reminds them more of Gary Cuozzo or Earl Morrall. Oh, and Jordan and Pippen keep rolling on |
Vince from SC October 13 |
Not a blowout but also never in doubt. On to Tampa. |
Unitastoberry October 13 |
If Lamar had made it past AFC teams in January like KC, Tennessee,and played nicked up in the Cincinnati game he would have 3 rings . I agree on this one the Commandskins are going down. Even Harbaugh won't screw this up. If you watched Penn State win in overtime over USC you know the NCAA refs are horrible. Worse than the NFL. Remember when the NFL refs went on strike and they used NCAA refs? That why the strike was settled. This number 44 on Penn State was a one man wrecking crew yesterday. He's a number one pick at TE. He's Dave Casper/Gronk quality if he stays healthy. Blocks great too pancakes guys. |
Old George October 12 |
Trolley Dodgers. |
Chris in Bel Air October 12 |
Love the "Reading time: 2 minutes"... or 3 minutes. This should be a regular thing for DMD. Thanks for the throwback. |
kj October 12 |
Everything written by @Bryce about DET was written about our O's two years ago. Funny how fans are always giving other teams a pass but want their team to be perfect 100% of the time. Wonder if MFC and UTB hang out at the local Curmudgeons bar howling at the moon together? The Indians have the best chance to beat NYY, so not sure why anyone would be pulling for DET to win today. Above was my own mini ode to my absolute favorite local sportswriter. DMD did a better job with his tribute, but figured I'd toss in an amateur version. RIP Mr Jackman. |
BRYCE October 12 |
I’d love to see Skubal and company get the last laugh this year with all the talk of Detroit dealing/retaining their ace at the deadline. Would be great to see them eliminate Cleveland and then continue their post-2000 trend of owning the Yankees in the playoffs. That team is going to be sneaky good for the next several years. In addition to its current roster, they have two top-10 prospects waiting in the wings and another at #31, per MLB. What’s even more impressive is that this 2024 surge has been with no contribution from Mize and very minimal from Torkelson, their two recent #1 overall draft picks. Most importantly, they’re playing with the team chemistry to be a force. |
Unitastoberry October 12 |
Why should U of Maryland fire Mike Locksley? So then they pretty much admit they just want a team who beats squads like Gettysburg College and Northwestern then only loses to Penn St and Michigan? It's basically an admission they joined the Big Ten for the money and could care less about a national championship. Remember what the late great Lefty Driesel said when hired by Maryland basketball back in the stone age? He said he wanted to become the UCLA of the east then strap the national trophy on his car and ride around tobacco road with it. It never happened but it was exactly what the fans wanted to hear and they bought in. Now the football team just wants to beat Northwestern and Prairie View. What a bunch of bull. RIP to Phil Jackman who was a great sports writer and not some punk looking to cause trouble.Those days are gone except at DMD. Go USC! |
MFC October 12 |
Hernandez dropping the F bond, after asking if it was live tv was disgusting. Another self Absorbed athlete. I am now rooting for anyone but LA. What a jerk, it wasn’t cute . |
Phil October 12 |
Awesome tribute, I always enjoyed his columns especially the two minute ones. |
Tom J October 12 |
Drew, when I saw the "Reading Time, 2 minutes" it rang a bell but just couldn't put my finger on it until reading down and then seeing and remembering this was Phil Jackman's thing. Didn't know the origin behind it but loved this in The Sun. Yes, please continue his thing as part of DMD. |
hank October 11 |
Top level trolling today. No true Baltimorean would ever wish success for the Yankees. I agree with David, bunch of posers like this current team is the last team I want to see in the World Series. Whoever prevails in the DET-CLE series best take care of business. Mets vs LA, no one worth rooting for there either. |
Paul from Towson October 11 |
The minute the O’s were eliminated, I became an instant fan of whatever National League team comes out of the NLCS to face whatever dumb AL champion. I can never stomach watching the Yankees (or Red Sox for that matter) celebrate anything so I strongly disagree with Drew’s commentary today. I don’t have any issue with the Mets, so if they happen to beat either LA or SD, more power to them. Plus, I would like to see Lindor and Alonso get a ring. Just wish Buck was still there to make rooting for them even that much easier. I will agree with Drew that the Cleat of Reality is hunting Washington this weekend and Jayden Daniels will feel every bit of its fury. Rookie QB’s never fair well at The Bank against our Ravens. This Sunday will be no exception. Ravens win, 34-13. Go Ravens!!! |
Jeffrey “Fireball” Roberts October 11 |
I would personally love a Yankee/Padre WS. The tattooed Padres in those horrible brown uniforms led by Manny against the clean cut Yankee pinstripes led by Judge. East Coast versus West Coast. Atlantic-Pacific. Biggie-Tupac. Bring it on. LOL |
David Rosenfeld October 11 |
Honestly, the 2024 Yankees are a bunch of posers. They act like they dominated the league. Judge and Soto are ridiculous, and Cole is one of the best, but the other 23 guys ain't much better than any other team. Maybe that'll be enough to win the World Series. I'm not sure Cleveland or Detroit will beat them...they just don't hit well enough. |
Delray RICK October 11 |
Baseball season is OVER!!! |
Chris in Bel Air October 11 |
To be honest, I guess I still have a little bit of sour grapes going on with the O's out of the running again. Tough watching other teams/fans celebrate. I suppose a Yankees/Mets series would be interesting. I'm sure other than Yankees/Dodgers (Ohtani vs Judge) MLB execs and whatever network is broadcasting the World Series would really like Yankees/Mets too. I can't imagine those same folks would be too thrilled with say Tigers vs Padres. Ravens will bring Wash and Jayden Daniels back to earth on Sunday. Don't get me wrong, I like Daniels. It's just not quite his/their time. |
TimD in Timonium October 11 |
A Mets / Yankees series could be entertaining, but I suspect most of America would tune out an all-NYC final. But I don't think the Mets will get past LA or SD. We'll see. And the Ryan Ries video was a great watch. |
Dan October 11 |
Drew, thanks for highlighting Ryan Ries. As a fellow skateboard enthusiast I know his story and the impact he has made on the youth all over the USA. God bless Ryan!! |
Unitastoberry October 10 |
I thought is was a joke today when I heard Dean"Swiss"Pees was rehired to be a senior advisor to DC Zach Orr. It's actually true. |
TimD in Timonium October 10 |
"Corbin Burnes, who started for the AL in the All-Star Game, ranked fourth in the AL in ERA (2.92), third in innings pitched (194 1/3), eighth in WHIP (1.10) and 10th in strikeouts (181)." Complete games in 2024? Zero. (His closest was 8 innings vs KC in the playoffs.) We've already seen the Golden Age of Complete Game Pitchers. It's not coming back. |
Unitastoberry October 10 |
Palmer,Cuellar, McNally and Dobson 4 20 game winners. I saw them all get at least one win that year in person. |
Bob October 10 |
2011 was the last year a pitcher logged double digit complete games with James Shields throwing 11 for Tampa Bay. Since then only two pitchers threw more then 5 games, Chris Sale in 2016 and Sandy Alcantara in 2022 both threw 6 games. I think the ship has sailed on the days a starter bangs out double digit complete games. https://www.baseball-almanac.com/pitching/picomg4.shtml |
Chris in Bel Air October 10 |
Yes, the bullpen game is certainly an interesting situation now. I agree it is not my favorite part of the game for sure. But, if a manager wants to blow through 8 arms in one game, doesn't that put him in a disadvantage for the next game? It's a risk in going the bullpen route. I am also not sure the minimum innings or pitches is practical either. If a starter is getting lit up in the first couple innings a proposed rule to remain for minimum number of pitches/innings would then take away the ability for the manager to make a pitching change. That doesn't seem like it is good for the game either. As for making these guys in Jim Palmer again, that's not happening. The days of Palmer, Fergie Jenkins, Bob Gibson, Gaylord Perry and Steve Carlton are long gone and that's not even including the astounding number of CGs thrown by the likes of Cy Young or Walter Johnson. For reference, in 2024, the team with the most CG's thrown was the Phillies with 5. Going back 50 years, here are the leading and total number of team CGs thrown that year: 2014 - 8 2004 - 11 1994 - 17 1984 - 48 1974 - 71 A remarkable trend down and it's just not ever coming back. |
David Rosenfeld October 10 |
The "bullpen game" is an interesting phenomenon because, as much as people might dislike it, it's really common sense. I'm sure that A.J. Hinch would love it if he had even one more guy like Tarik Skubal. But he doesn't, so he feels like this is the best way to win...and he's often right because (unlike in Palmer's day), the "bullpen" guys are more talented than the ostensible starting pitchers. Assuming this a problem, I'm not sure of the answer. And in the playoffs, when the rope is short even for good starting pitchers, I'm even less sure... |
Bam Bam October 10 |
Does @Billy know how to read? @Timmy K was talking about @JK |
Action October 10 |
Same exact situation in Royals Yankees game last night that Os had in game 1 against Royals. Tied ballgame, Royals man on third, 2 outs, Bobby Witt at the plate. But this time the opposing team did what Brandon Hyde and the O’s should have done. They pitched around him and walked him. And guess what the next batter did? Of, course fly out to end the inning. The Yankees scored 1 more after that and that was all she wrote. 2 opposite approaches in the same exact situation with 2 different outcomes. Come on Hyde, get an effing clue! |
Delray RICK October 10 |
Who was the reader of this site who lived west FLORIDA near TAMPA?????? |
Eric in White Plains October 10 |
I attended a game last year, full disclosure, my daughter is a junior at UMD. |
Harold October 09 |
Meet the Mets- Meet the Mets…..on to the NLCS- amazin! |
Billy October 09 |
Did this "James" dude answer "the question"? Maybe Timmy K can tell us lol. |
Sunday September 22, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3682 |
I thought long and hard about crafting a lengthy preview of today's Ravens-Cowboys game using as many Bruce Springsteen songs as I could within the piece.
Bruce turns 75 tomorrow.
But just when I thought to myself, "It would be nice if the Ravens won one for the Boss today," it dawned on me the "boss" they need to win for today is John Harbaugh, not Bruce Springsteen.
So I'm going to (mostly) skip the ode to Springsteen today and just stick to football.
I guess you could say Harbs and his football team are looking for one of those glory days when they step into the lion's den in Dallas this afternoon as they look for their first win of the '24 season against the Cowboys.
No pun intended, but the Ravens do have high hopes today.
The good news? The Dallas defense isn't very good. Or, at the very least, they weren't last Sunday when they were shellacked at home by New Orleans.
The bad news? The Cowboys offense can put points on the board in a hurry. And receiver CeeDee Lamb is going to be a handful for Nate Wiggins, Marlon Humphrey, Brandon Stephens or whichever cornerback gets assigned to him today. Lamb, you could say, is born to run in a big way. He's very dangerous.
But it wouldn't take a leap of faith to think the Ravens are capable of winning today.
With any kind of magic at all in the first two games, they'd be 2-0 instead of 0-2. A toe in the end zone in the opener at K.C. and a questionable pass interference call in the 4th quarter against the Raiders are the difference between the Ravens having no losses instead of no wins.
So how could it all fall apart today in Dallas?
You want the menu?
Sure...here's how they lose.
With the Ravens already up 7-0 in the first quarter and at the Dallas 38 yard line late in the first quarter, Lamar gets the ball knocked out of his hand and the Cowboys recover it.
On 3rd and 13 from the Baltimore 40, Dak Prescott throws incomplete to Lamb, but Roquan Smith is flagged for a late hit on Prescott and the Cowboys are gifted a free first down.
Five plays later, the Cowboys score a TD to make it 7-7.
It's 17-13 Ravens in the 3rd quarter when Jackson finds a wide open Zay Flowers at the Dallas 25 yard line. Flowers escapes a would-be tackler and fights off another, but the ball gets punched out of his hand on the 10 yard line and Dallas recovers.
A Cowboys missed 48 yard field goal is nullified by a Ravens offsides penalty. Moments later, Lamb scoots past Brandon Stephens and races down the sideline for an easy TD throw from Prescott. It's 20-17 Cowboys heading into the 4th quarter.
On the first series of that final quarter, the Ravens have trouble getting the right personnel on the field for a critical 3rd and 3 play, so Lamar calls time out.
Three minutes later, the Ravens are at the Dallas 40 yard line facing a 3rd and 9 scenario. Jackson scrambles for 14 yards and a key first down, but the play is called back for holding on Ronnie Stanley. Baltimore eventually gets the ball back down to the Dallas 8 yard line but the drive stalls there and the Ravens get a Justin Tucker field goal to tie the score at 20-20.
Luck finally goes the way of the Ravens on the next series, when Prescott's pass on 3rd and 7 is tipped at the line of scrimmage and intercepted by Malik Harrison. Lamar and the offense take over with 6:25 left in the game and get the ball into the red zone, but Jackson tries to jam a throw into the end zone for Isaiah Likely and the ball is picked off.
Dallas then moves down the field, aided by an illegal contact penalty on Marlon Humphrey that looks very iffy on replay.
On 3rd and 8 from their own 49 yard line, Prescott scrambles out of trouble, beats a defender, and scampers all the way down to the Baltimore 37 yard line. He's hit as he's going out of bounds by Roquan Smith, who is flagged for a 15-yard penalty.
On the first play thereafter, Prescott finds Lamb across the middle and he's tackled at the 5 yard line. The Cowboys line up, first and goal, with 2:39 remaining, and the Ravens realize they only have 10 defensive players on the field. Harbaugh calls time out, using his team's second of the three available to them in the half.
The Baltimore defense holds Dallas on the ensuing three plays and the Cowboys kick a 22-yard field goal with 1:04 remaining to make it 23-20.
The Ravens immediately respond, moving the ball 45 yards in just four plays to advance all the way to the Dallas 30 with just 39 seconds remaining.
The next play from scrimmage is a deep ball that's perfectly thrown to Rashod Bateman near the goal line, but the ball inexplicably falls through his hands for an incomplete pass.
Jackson tries to surprise the Dallas defense and run with the ball on 2nd down, but is taken down for a loss of two yards. The Ravens burn their final time out with 22 seconds remaining.
On 3rd down, Jackson makes a great throw to Mark Andrews at the 20, but a Dallas defender, who looks like he got there a second early, knocks the ball out of Andrews' hands as the Baltimore tight end begs for a flag.
Justin Tucker's game-tying field goal attempt from 49 yards hits the left upright and bounces out instead of in, and the Ravens fall to the Cowboys, 23-20.
You already know what the internet is going to say.
"That's the price you pay for making those kind of mistakes again."
"These kinds of losses lead to a lot of restless nights."
"Justin Tucker is really a roll of the dice these days."
And the Ravens head home to face Buffalo with an 0-4 start staring them right in the face.
How do I know the Ravens are going to lose like that today? Well, for starters, I don't know it. It wouldn't shock me at all to see the Ravens beat the Cowboys, in fact.
For starters, they've been historically very good against the NFC under John Harbaugh and Lamar Jackson has experienced the same sort of success since 2018 against NFC opponents.
But the scenario I presented above is the way the Ravens lose. They don't always lose, obviously. But when they do, it looks a lot like the description you just read.
Sadly, I assume that's the way it's going to go today in Dallas.
There's trouble in paradise, indeed.
Speaking of an ode to Springsteen, the birthday boy, the O's squandered a chance to almost reach the promised land on Saturday when they dropped a 6-4 decision to Detroit in 10 innings.
Baltimore entered the day with a magic number of 3 to make the playoffs and looked like they were going push across the finish line when they tied the score at 4-4 in the bottom of the 9th and had runners on 2nd and 3rd with nobody out.
Alas, they made three straight outs and failed to score the winning run. And then Detroit scored twice in the top of the 10th to go up 6-4.
Undaunted, the O's pressured in the bottom of the 10th and had runners on 1st and 3rd with just one out, but Heston Kjerstad and some guy named Daniel Johnson made outs to end the game and snap the O's modest 2-game winning streak.
There were some highlights, yes, including Gunnar Henderson's stadium-rocking game-tying two run double in the bottom of the 9th, but there were far more bad moments than good ones, sadly.
Adley Rutschman was sent home by Tony Masolino and it probably ranks as one of the season's all-time worst "sends" of any player, as Rutschman was nailed at home in the bottom of the 4th with only one out and Detroit up 2-1.
Eloy Jimenez came in to pinch hit in the bottom of the 8th and promptly made an out. He's 1-for-24 in September, which probably isn't what Mike Elias thought he was getting when he plucked him from Chicago at the trade deadline.
In the bottom of the 9th, after Henderson's game-tying double, the O's needed any kind of hit or even a medium depth fly ball and they win the game. Instead, Mullins grounded out to second, Santander popped out to the shortstop, and Cowser flew out to end the inning and preserve Detroit's season at the same time.
Jackson Holliday then whiffed on a grounder in the 10th inning that should have been collected (and called an error, frankly) as the Tigers scored twice off of Yennier Cano.
It was, once again, a game where the O's just didn't have the magic at the plate when they needed it.
And now, with the Yankees winning last night in Oakland, the Birds are facing an almost "must win" situation today in the series finale vs. the Tigers.
Here, as we'll do every day until the end of the regular season, is what the A.L. playoff picture looks like.
New York, 1st in the East at 91-64.
Wild Card #1 - Baltimore, 85-69, 5 games behind.
Wild Card #2 - Kansas City, 82-73
Wild Card #3 - Minnesota, 81-73 (rained out on Saturday in Boston)
(still alive) - Detroit, 81-74
(still alive) - Seattle, 80-75
Kansas City host S.F. Giants today, then play three at Washington and three at Atlanta.
Minnesota plays doubleheader at Boston today, then hosts Miami (3) and Baltimore (3).
Detroit plays at Baltimore today, then hosts Tampa Bay (3) and the White Sox (3).
Seattle plays at Texas today, then plays at Houston (3) and hosts Oakland (3).
WILL JACKSON | ||
Will Jackson will be here every Sunday during the NFL season with his thoughts on games and prop bets that will hopefully yield positive results for you. |
I've been solid on my prop bets for Morning Dish readers but my game picks haven't been all that hot, so I'll try to turn that around today for all of you.
I actually like the Ravens (-1) and the Over 47.5 total today in a 28-24 Ravens win.
Seattle (-4.5) over Miami is my Play of the Day.
Las Vegas (-6) over Carolina.
Chargers (+2.5) vs. Pittsburgh.
New Orleans/Philadelphia over 49.5.
Atlanta/Kansas City over 46.5.
Tennessee/Green Bay under 37.5.
Lamar Jackson over 1.5 touchdown throws.
Derrick Henry anytime TD scorer.
Rashod Bateman anytime TD scorer.
Patrick Mahomes over 1.5 touchdown throws.
Marvin Harrison Jr. over 79.5 yards receiving.
Tyreek Hill under 69.5 yards receiving.
Ja'Marr Chase anytime TD scorer.
C.J. Stroud over 203.5 yards passing.
Saturday September 21, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3681 |
OK, so we're back.
The O's, that is.
Brandon Hyde's team belted five homers on Friday night en-route to a cruise control 7-1 win over Detroit.
The only downer of the night came out of Oakland where the Yankees scored three times in the top of the 10th to nip the A's, 4-2, and maintain their 4-game division lead with 8 games left to play.
The weekend is far from over, though. The Birds still need to win at least one of the next two vs. Detroit if not both of the remaining two games of the series.
That is, if they harbor any hopes of winning a second straight A.L. East.
The playoffs? That's a virtual done deal at this point. Their magic number to clinch a post-season spot is "3". And it's looking more and more like the O's are going to hang on to that first wild card position and host 3 games (if necessary) starting on October 1 at Camden Yards.
I kept trying to give you guys the silver lining of all silver linings during their recent swoon. "Just let them get their injured players back and let's see what happens."
I'm still here, still saying the same thing. When Westburg returns, they'll be better. When Westburg and Urias return, they'll be even better than that. And when Westburg, Urias and Mountcastle all get back in the dugout, healthy, you never know what that might do.
A lot of people quit on the Birds over the last week or so.
You know who you are.
Who needs a mulligan?
Here's your up-to-the-minute A.L. playoff round-up.
The Yankees have clinched a playoff spot and are 90-64. Their remaining games are: two at Oakland, three home vs. Baltimore, three home vs. Pittsburgh
The O's are next at 86-68; two vs. Detroit, at New York, at Minnesota
The Royals, who lost again last night, are 82-72; two vs. San Francisco, three at Washington, three at Atlanta
Minnesota leads Detroit by one game in the chase for the third wild card spot at 81-73; two at Boston, three vs. Miami, three vs. Baltimore
The Tigers (80-74) have two more in Baltimore, three home vs. Tampa Bay and three home vs. the White Sox.
It's all going down to the wire, including the chase for the best record in the American League. The Yankees are one game up on Cleveland (89-65) in that battle.
If there's no more shift in positions in the standings, the O's will host Kansas City in the best of 3 wild card round and Houston will host Minnesota/Detroit.
The PGA of America made a change to their membership policy this week and, in doing so, have paved the way for American LIV golfers to represent the United States in future Ryder Cup competitions, as well as to participate in the PGA Championship.
By adding LIV golf to their "approved list of tours", the PGA of America has made it possible for LIV players to attain an A-3 membership level, which means they are permitted to accrue points and play in the Ryder Cup and PGA Championship.
This decision clears up the muddy space that existed in 2023, when only Brooks Koepka was added to the U.S. team by then captain Zach Johnson.
Next September, American captain Keegan Bradley will have his pick of any 6 Americans he wants, regardless of where they play, as long as they're approved members of the PGA of America via that A-3 membership level.
And that's the way it should be.
This doesn't exonerate any of the Americans who sold their soul to play for those charlatans who created and oversee LIV Golf.
They're still very much in the "reap what you sow" part of their association with LIV Golf. They knew when they took the money from the Saudi-based Public Investment Fund that a conflict with the Ryder Cup was part of that deal.
But if an American LIV golfer is either an automatic qualifier via the points they earn in major championships or a captain's pick, they should be permitted to play on the team.
Right now, Bryson DeChambeau -- a LIV golfer -- is 3rd on the American points list. He'll only have four tournaments next year to continue generating points; the Masters, PGA, U.S. Open and British Open. A win in any of those four majors would guarantee him an automatic spot. A top 3 finish in any of those would bring him very close to an automatic spot.
No one other than DeChambeau is a threat, as of now, to earn enough points to qualify.
Meanwhile, "alliance" talks between the PGA Tour and LIV continue to percolate, although nothing definitive seems imminent. Earlier this week, it was rumored that several members of the Tour's policy board want LIV players to return some or most of the "up front" money they received in exchange for signing with LIV golf if the PGA Tour is going to allow those players to return at some point in the near future.
I've heard of some dumb ideas in my life. That one's a cake topper.
There will be, I'm sure, some sort of modest financial penalty for LIV players who want to double-dip and play on the PGA Tour. But Phil Mickelson, for example, isn't "giving back" $100 million of the $200 million he received three years ago.
It's a very confusing situation. I'm still not 100% sure why the two tours feel like they need one another.
The PGA Tour is still doing fine even with all the players LIV mooched off of them.
And LIV is rolling along doing their thing, too, despite no one in golf giving a damn about them.
The two should just continue to forge their own paths and leave it at that.
Questions from the readers.
Darryl asks -- "Hi Drew, just wondering what you thought of Camden Yards as a concert venue for Bruce and how did you like the setlist at the show?"
DF says -- "Well, it was a Chamber of Commerce night, weather wise, so it was hard to top that. And I thought the whole place looked just awesome. The pit looked like a lot of fun!
I thought the setlist was "good", but nothing more than that.
"Hungry Heart" was an excellent choice to start the show. As I've said before, I'm just not a huge fan of the cover stuff ("Nightshift" by The Commodores) and some of the obscure songs like "Last Man Standing" and "I'll See You In My Dreams". But I also get it. Bruce is almost 75 (tomorrow) and he probably figures, "I'll play whatever I like, thank you very much."
I loved the inclusion of "Reason To Believe". That's a very underrated song off of Nebraska.
One thing I will give him credit for last Friday. There was no political pontificating during the show. It was all about the music."
Brian Preller asks -- "Is there any way at all that Bisciotti would ever fire Harbaugh during the season? Like, if the Ravens started 0-5, let's say. Any chance Bisciotti pulls the trigger at 0-5 or 0-6?"
DF says -- "Never say never, of course, but I just don't see that happening.
I think Steve has far too much respect for John to dump him like that in the middle of the season. If they start 0-5 or 0-6, they'll just ride it out, do the best they can, and then Steve will make that call right after the season ends."
Bart asks -- "If Brandon Hyde gave you the keys to the playoff pitching rotation, who do you start in the three wild card games?"
DF says -- "You're assuming they finish behind the Yankees, huh? I'm not ready to go there just yet. But I'll answer your question for kicks and giggles.
Burnes goes in Game #1. I know he had a rough August and wasn't all that great for a month or so, but he's my guy in the opener.
I'd love to start Suarez in Game #2 and have Eflin available, if necessary, for Game #3 or Game #1 of the ALDS, but I just can't do it.
Eflin gets Game #2 and Suarez, if necessary, goes in the 3rd and final game.
That gives us the benefit of having Kremer and G-Rod available for fill in, semi-long duty if needed."
Art asks -- "What do you make of the rumors that the Ravens might turn to Bill Belichick if they eventually part ways with John Harbaugh?"
DF says -- "I haven't heard that anywhere, but Belichick was pretty good, I hear, at that coaching thing. First of all, I have no idea if he's interesting in returning to coaching. Second, his hiring would go against the recent trend of hiring the new, young, hotshot coordinator.
But.....there are some pieces of the Belichick puzzle that fit in Baltimore.
He has an affection for this area having grown up in Annapolis.
He'd probably love to get his hands on a premium quarterback like Lamar who just needs a little push to get over the top.
And, much like Brady once did when he left and went to Tampa Bay, you have to assume Bill's ego craves a title somewhere other than New England and with someone other than TB12 at quarterback.
I'm not completely ruling out the Ravens pursuing Belichick somewhere down the road, but it doesn't seem like a Ravens-type hire, either. Bisciotti would want to hire a coach who will give stability and longevity to the organization. Belichick doesn't have 16 more years in him like Harbaugh has given to the Ravens."
such October 15 |
Because I'm older, I don't spend much time on social media. I find it rather exhausting to be honest. Therefore I was unaware of this incident until last night, when my sons began texting me and FaceTiming me. The assailant is a former teammate of two of my sons at Hereford High. Let's just say that his senior year there was punctuated by some extremely poor decisions, likely due to being under the influence. Hereford was his third high school in four years. I'm going to go out on a very short limb here and surmise that he was under the influence on Sunday night in Federal Hill. His actions are inexcusable under any circumstances. Drunk, high, sober, it doesn't matter. Violently assaulting innocent people, unprovoked, is bordering on sociopathic behavior. He should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law, and if civil suits arise from this disgusting incident, he should be made to pay for his victims medical care and pain and suffering. Whatever backlash and public embarrassment he endures because of this are due to his own reckless, irresponsible behavior. You get what you get when you act like a fool. As I've always told my sons, Make good choices. Stop and think about the consequences. |
TimD in Timonium October 15 |
"Clearly, though, the man who assaulted the two Commanders fans was somehow enthused about being on camera for the incident." Live by the sword, die by the sword. The resulting video went viral, and the outcome probably wasn't the "internet fame" he had in mind. Without video, I'm guessing this goes unreported and the perp remains unknown. Oh well. |
Barry October 14 |
Flacco is likely back to not being a starter by next week, no way he's coming here for a playoff game in Jan. @Paul pretending to be positive is hilarious! |
Delray RICK October 14 |
One of my problems with HARBAUGH is when he throws the red flag I'm sitting watching slow-motion, ain't no way he's right. I know it's people upstairs. When you have to rely on others that's where HARBS gets accused of f it up. He's mind is so on this team there isn't anybody else I'd want as coach . Who the he'll is better ??? Crickets |
Vince from SC October 14 |
The only criticism of Harbaugh I have is his clock management at the end of halves can sometimes make you scratch your head. Other than that, he's been a HOF coach no question. Should have won the SB the year before if Lee Evans or Billy Cundiff could do bare minimum. |
Paul from Towson October 14 |
The John Harbaugh hate in this city absolutely astounds me. All this franchise has done since he's been here is win. Sure, they've only hoisted the Lombardi trophy once under him, but that's one more time than most of the rest of the NFL. And, this team has been to the AFC Championship Game four times under Harbaugh. Sure, the 1-3 record could be better, but let's not forget that first one was in Joe Flacco's (and Harbs' for that matter) rookie season when this team was supposed to be 4-12. Of course he's not perfect, and yeah his use of challenges and timeouts can be questionable at best, but it's hard to argue with the overall W-L record. Not to mention, he swallowed his pride in 2018 and did something very few, if any, Super Bowl winning coaches would do, and changed the entire offensive structure of this team to suit Lamar Jackson's strengths. Look at the rest of the league, and the coaching unemployment line, and tell me who you would rather have. Belichick?? No thanks, look at his record without a guy named Tom Brady. Jeff Fisher?? Don't think so. What about all these young, hotshot coaches that the national pundits love so much. Kevin Stefanski? Pass. Zac Taylor? Nah. Nick Siriani? Please! The luntics in Philly are ready to run him out of town despite making it to the Super Bowl two seasons ago. I know this isn't just a Baltimore thing, after all, if you ask any Stooler fan they would tell you that THEY could coach the team in Pittsburgh to a Super Bowl before Mike Tomlin could. But even still, at a time in the NFL (and sports in general) when most teams have a yearly coaching carousel and rampant upheaval (Falcons, Colts, Raiders, Panthers, etc.) having the stability in a head coach that wins, on average, 10 games a season is a luxury very few teams enjoy. And, in my humble opinion, even given his faults, I would take Harbs over just about every other coach in the league, except MAYBE Andy Reid. But even Reid was an also-ran until a guy named Mahomes came into the league. Go Ravens!! Such, you beat me to it this morning. As I watched the replay of yesterday's game, I realized that the Derrick Henry signing seems very Shannon Sharpe-ish to me. When the Ravens signed the two time Super Bowl champion, they already had a championship caliber defense. Sharpe was the missing piece on an offense that was built on the run and timely passing. Now, Lamar Jackson is leaps and bounds better than Trent Dilfer ever was on his best day, but just like Sharpe, Derrick Henry seems to be the missing piece for this offense. Derrick Henry makes LJ8 an the rest of the offense better because, with all due respect to JK Dobbins and Gus Edwards, defenses didn't have to stack the box to stop them. Leaving LJ8 to pic apart man, or in some cases, soft zone coverage. GO RAVENS! |
Howard October 14 |
Tony Siragusa was a great free agent pickup. The 2000 Ravens defense had no offense to pick them up. The defense couldn’t bend and couldn’t break and they didn’t. |
Bud King October 14 |
Not even Harbs could lose this game... go Ravens! |
Nathan Aparisto October 14 |
Is there ANY deal or trade that would convince that mess of a Jets franchise to send Sauce Gardner to the flock for a passel of picks? Could the cap hit be worked out? Hed be the next Ed Reed for a decade and Ravens could truly be a juggernaught! |
such October 14 |
We were having a text conversation last night and the question was raised: Has there ever been a better Free Agent signing by the Ravens than Henry? I can't think of anyone comparable on offense. Maybe Shannon Sharpe, maybe Derek Mason, but as far as instant impact and the ability to effect games the way he does, there's never been anyone close to Henry. Yesterday was just the latest example of the difference he's made. Everyone from Hereford to Upper Marlboro knew he was getting the ball, and the Ravens ran that same little toss sweep to the left they ran in Cincy, and Henry goes for 30 yards and that's ballgame. He's an absolute hammer. I went back and looked at the 2016 Draft and it's just another example of NFL front offices overanalyzing players. The Ravens took Ronnie Stanley at #6 overall, which is undeniably a very good pick. In the second round, at #42 overall, they selected the immortal Kamalei Correa from Boise State. Derrick Henry went to Tennessee at #45. Oh, what might have been. Although Lamar wasn't here yet so there's no telling what the offense would've looked like with Joe Flacco and King Henry. Regardless, he's here now and it's a beautiful sight to behold. |
Chris in Bel Air October 14 |
Even in the loss to KC, you could see the potential of the Ravens. They are clearly starting to put it all together now. As a fan, I'm feeling the optimism. But... we've also watched the Ravens and the NFL long enough to know they will stub their toe a couple more times. It happens. The key is how they bounce back the following week. Moreover, you don't win the Lombardi in October. It's all about January... and hopefully February. IF they end up playing KC again in the playoffs, they are not going to lose that game. I don't care if it is in B'more or KC. They are winning that one. Yes, the secondary seems to be a concern and can't figure out if it's personnel or scheme or both. Either way, like yesterday, the offense just needs to pick them up and respond when they have the ball. A couple random observations. First on Brandon Stephens. Maybe it's just me but it seems like no matter how closely he is covering his man, the opposing QB and WR always seems to come up with an incredible play/catch. Yesterday he had at least one like that, maybe two. I'm not busting on him, I'm just saying, I'm not sure what more he can do. Overall, I think he's become a decent CB for someone that did not play that position in college. Second, good to see Ngakoue in the mix yesterday. I like his potential rotating in the pass rush mix. As for Marcus Williams, he's sort of been a disappointment. He's not a bad player, I just can't remember the last time I saw him do anything of significance. INT? Forced Fumble? Fumble recovery? Key pass break-up? Something. On to Tampa |
Unitastoberry October 14 |
Another win and another big offensive statement. Commandskins done. Swiss Pees and Orr have some work to do. Why was Tony Romo on Kyle Hamiltons case about him being a dirty player on two big plays he made? He reacts before looking at the instant replay. Tony drives me nuts not my favorite commenter. It's a contact sport Tony. Only the offensive guys can lead with the head what a crock. My feelings on Joe Flacco are those of happiness for him. It's just a shame it's Jr Irsay who gets to beat his chest. With all the sub par duel threat QBs in the league now Joe could play another 4 -5 years.Btw I'm not including Lamar in that catagory. This bum in Cleveland should be on the bench watching Joe toss tds. Barry I will never root for PSU. I have my reasons and it's more than the Sandusky child rape coverup they should have had no football there for 5 years just for that one. It goes back to Joe PA coming here long ago and stealing all state and all county guys in Maryland just to keep them out of College Park then he redshirts them in Happy Valley etc and they never see the field playing behind guys like Franco Harris and Lydell Mitchell etc. I know one of them. He would have been a great running back at Maryland. He ran for 150-200 yards a game in Baltimore County. No shame in calling out good players up there now.44 is one of them. I hate to say it this but it could be Penn States year.Would be great if Locksley could pull a Vanderbuilt on them last game of the season. Btw Lenny Moore does get a pass Lou. Gary Cuozzo or Earl Morrall Howard? Well you have to take Earl and his MVP 1968 off the bench year. But I got visions of Jimmy Orr in the endzone waiving his hand wide open to this day and like I have said before the whole thing still stinks like you know what! |
David Rosenfeld October 14 |
If you weren't at the game yesterday you probably heard Tony Romo say that John Harbaugh is a "top 10 coach all time," which of course drew lots of chuckles from the hoi polloi. I'm not gonna get into a conversation about that, but I will say this... I don't see how you can watch the Ravens play on a week-to-week basis and say that John is an "awful coach." Like...of all takes you could have, it just doesn't stand up to any kind of serious analysis. |
Jon October 14 |
How are the league going to stymie the offense? Same way they have last few years in January- wins mask problems- - no more weak O line? enjoyable Sunday but lets not get ahead of oursleves like we did with Os and KC. Keep working Flacco! |
TimD in Timonium October 14 |
The two drives of 90+ yards were beautiful to watch. Hard to find much to complain about from yesterday's Ravens game, but surely someone will. Looks like the O-line has figured it out. Big difference from the 0-2 start. Whew. |
Kenny G October 14 |
Hopefully we saw a defensive change in yesterday's game - bend but don't break. I am not familiar with the WFT scheme but the Ravens keep also everything in front of them. Also for all people complaining about the refs, please offer some solutions vs just ranting about how bad they are. Sinc the game has become faster, covers more area of the field and the rules very complex, my suggestion is add another ref or two and allow for certain replays/challenges of penalties. I would also possibly allow more contact on receivers but penalize DB holding more (the calls are too inconsistent which leads to a lot of "missed" calls) |
Ed October 13 |
Nice day for Will Jackson picking games and props. Congratulations. |
lou@palo alto October 13 |
#24 was from Penn St |
Barry October 13 |
So UTB is actually a closet PSU fan after all eh? |
Howard October 13 |
Kj— tell me where that bar is so I can hang out with UTB and MFC. I would ask them if they think that Joe in his #15 Colts uniform reminds them more of Gary Cuozzo or Earl Morrall. Oh, and Jordan and Pippen keep rolling on |
Vince from SC October 13 |
Not a blowout but also never in doubt. On to Tampa. |
Unitastoberry October 13 |
If Lamar had made it past AFC teams in January like KC, Tennessee,and played nicked up in the Cincinnati game he would have 3 rings . I agree on this one the Commandskins are going down. Even Harbaugh won't screw this up. If you watched Penn State win in overtime over USC you know the NCAA refs are horrible. Worse than the NFL. Remember when the NFL refs went on strike and they used NCAA refs? That why the strike was settled. This number 44 on Penn State was a one man wrecking crew yesterday. He's a number one pick at TE. He's Dave Casper/Gronk quality if he stays healthy. Blocks great too pancakes guys. |
Old George October 12 |
Trolley Dodgers. |
Chris in Bel Air October 12 |
Love the "Reading time: 2 minutes"... or 3 minutes. This should be a regular thing for DMD. Thanks for the throwback. |
kj October 12 |
Everything written by @Bryce about DET was written about our O's two years ago. Funny how fans are always giving other teams a pass but want their team to be perfect 100% of the time. Wonder if MFC and UTB hang out at the local Curmudgeons bar howling at the moon together? The Indians have the best chance to beat NYY, so not sure why anyone would be pulling for DET to win today. Above was my own mini ode to my absolute favorite local sportswriter. DMD did a better job with his tribute, but figured I'd toss in an amateur version. RIP Mr Jackman. |
BRYCE October 12 |
I’d love to see Skubal and company get the last laugh this year with all the talk of Detroit dealing/retaining their ace at the deadline. Would be great to see them eliminate Cleveland and then continue their post-2000 trend of owning the Yankees in the playoffs. That team is going to be sneaky good for the next several years. In addition to its current roster, they have two top-10 prospects waiting in the wings and another at #31, per MLB. What’s even more impressive is that this 2024 surge has been with no contribution from Mize and very minimal from Torkelson, their two recent #1 overall draft picks. Most importantly, they’re playing with the team chemistry to be a force. |
Unitastoberry October 12 |
Why should U of Maryland fire Mike Locksley? So then they pretty much admit they just want a team who beats squads like Gettysburg College and Northwestern then only loses to Penn St and Michigan? It's basically an admission they joined the Big Ten for the money and could care less about a national championship. Remember what the late great Lefty Driesel said when hired by Maryland basketball back in the stone age? He said he wanted to become the UCLA of the east then strap the national trophy on his car and ride around tobacco road with it. It never happened but it was exactly what the fans wanted to hear and they bought in. Now the football team just wants to beat Northwestern and Prairie View. What a bunch of bull. RIP to Phil Jackman who was a great sports writer and not some punk looking to cause trouble.Those days are gone except at DMD. Go USC! |
MFC October 12 |
Hernandez dropping the F bond, after asking if it was live tv was disgusting. Another self Absorbed athlete. I am now rooting for anyone but LA. What a jerk, it wasn’t cute . |
Phil October 12 |
Awesome tribute, I always enjoyed his columns especially the two minute ones. |
Tom J October 12 |
Drew, when I saw the "Reading Time, 2 minutes" it rang a bell but just couldn't put my finger on it until reading down and then seeing and remembering this was Phil Jackman's thing. Didn't know the origin behind it but loved this in The Sun. Yes, please continue his thing as part of DMD. |
hank October 11 |
Top level trolling today. No true Baltimorean would ever wish success for the Yankees. I agree with David, bunch of posers like this current team is the last team I want to see in the World Series. Whoever prevails in the DET-CLE series best take care of business. Mets vs LA, no one worth rooting for there either. |
Paul from Towson October 11 |
The minute the O’s were eliminated, I became an instant fan of whatever National League team comes out of the NLCS to face whatever dumb AL champion. I can never stomach watching the Yankees (or Red Sox for that matter) celebrate anything so I strongly disagree with Drew’s commentary today. I don’t have any issue with the Mets, so if they happen to beat either LA or SD, more power to them. Plus, I would like to see Lindor and Alonso get a ring. Just wish Buck was still there to make rooting for them even that much easier. I will agree with Drew that the Cleat of Reality is hunting Washington this weekend and Jayden Daniels will feel every bit of its fury. Rookie QB’s never fair well at The Bank against our Ravens. This Sunday will be no exception. Ravens win, 34-13. Go Ravens!!! |
Jeffrey “Fireball” Roberts October 11 |
I would personally love a Yankee/Padre WS. The tattooed Padres in those horrible brown uniforms led by Manny against the clean cut Yankee pinstripes led by Judge. East Coast versus West Coast. Atlantic-Pacific. Biggie-Tupac. Bring it on. LOL |
David Rosenfeld October 11 |
Honestly, the 2024 Yankees are a bunch of posers. They act like they dominated the league. Judge and Soto are ridiculous, and Cole is one of the best, but the other 23 guys ain't much better than any other team. Maybe that'll be enough to win the World Series. I'm not sure Cleveland or Detroit will beat them...they just don't hit well enough. |
Delray RICK October 11 |
Baseball season is OVER!!! |
Chris in Bel Air October 11 |
To be honest, I guess I still have a little bit of sour grapes going on with the O's out of the running again. Tough watching other teams/fans celebrate. I suppose a Yankees/Mets series would be interesting. I'm sure other than Yankees/Dodgers (Ohtani vs Judge) MLB execs and whatever network is broadcasting the World Series would really like Yankees/Mets too. I can't imagine those same folks would be too thrilled with say Tigers vs Padres. Ravens will bring Wash and Jayden Daniels back to earth on Sunday. Don't get me wrong, I like Daniels. It's just not quite his/their time. |
TimD in Timonium October 11 |
A Mets / Yankees series could be entertaining, but I suspect most of America would tune out an all-NYC final. But I don't think the Mets will get past LA or SD. We'll see. And the Ryan Ries video was a great watch. |
Dan October 11 |
Drew, thanks for highlighting Ryan Ries. As a fellow skateboard enthusiast I know his story and the impact he has made on the youth all over the USA. God bless Ryan!! |
Unitastoberry October 10 |
I thought is was a joke today when I heard Dean"Swiss"Pees was rehired to be a senior advisor to DC Zach Orr. It's actually true. |
TimD in Timonium October 10 |
"Corbin Burnes, who started for the AL in the All-Star Game, ranked fourth in the AL in ERA (2.92), third in innings pitched (194 1/3), eighth in WHIP (1.10) and 10th in strikeouts (181)." Complete games in 2024? Zero. (His closest was 8 innings vs KC in the playoffs.) We've already seen the Golden Age of Complete Game Pitchers. It's not coming back. |
Unitastoberry October 10 |
Palmer,Cuellar, McNally and Dobson 4 20 game winners. I saw them all get at least one win that year in person. |
Bob October 10 |
2011 was the last year a pitcher logged double digit complete games with James Shields throwing 11 for Tampa Bay. Since then only two pitchers threw more then 5 games, Chris Sale in 2016 and Sandy Alcantara in 2022 both threw 6 games. I think the ship has sailed on the days a starter bangs out double digit complete games. https://www.baseball-almanac.com/pitching/picomg4.shtml |
Chris in Bel Air October 10 |
Yes, the bullpen game is certainly an interesting situation now. I agree it is not my favorite part of the game for sure. But, if a manager wants to blow through 8 arms in one game, doesn't that put him in a disadvantage for the next game? It's a risk in going the bullpen route. I am also not sure the minimum innings or pitches is practical either. If a starter is getting lit up in the first couple innings a proposed rule to remain for minimum number of pitches/innings would then take away the ability for the manager to make a pitching change. That doesn't seem like it is good for the game either. As for making these guys in Jim Palmer again, that's not happening. The days of Palmer, Fergie Jenkins, Bob Gibson, Gaylord Perry and Steve Carlton are long gone and that's not even including the astounding number of CGs thrown by the likes of Cy Young or Walter Johnson. For reference, in 2024, the team with the most CG's thrown was the Phillies with 5. Going back 50 years, here are the leading and total number of team CGs thrown that year: 2014 - 8 2004 - 11 1994 - 17 1984 - 48 1974 - 71 A remarkable trend down and it's just not ever coming back. |
David Rosenfeld October 10 |
The "bullpen game" is an interesting phenomenon because, as much as people might dislike it, it's really common sense. I'm sure that A.J. Hinch would love it if he had even one more guy like Tarik Skubal. But he doesn't, so he feels like this is the best way to win...and he's often right because (unlike in Palmer's day), the "bullpen" guys are more talented than the ostensible starting pitchers. Assuming this a problem, I'm not sure of the answer. And in the playoffs, when the rope is short even for good starting pitchers, I'm even less sure... |
Bam Bam October 10 |
Does @Billy know how to read? @Timmy K was talking about @JK |
Action October 10 |
Same exact situation in Royals Yankees game last night that Os had in game 1 against Royals. Tied ballgame, Royals man on third, 2 outs, Bobby Witt at the plate. But this time the opposing team did what Brandon Hyde and the O’s should have done. They pitched around him and walked him. And guess what the next batter did? Of, course fly out to end the inning. The Yankees scored 1 more after that and that was all she wrote. 2 opposite approaches in the same exact situation with 2 different outcomes. Come on Hyde, get an effing clue! |
Delray RICK October 10 |
Who was the reader of this site who lived west FLORIDA near TAMPA?????? |
Eric in White Plains October 10 |
I attended a game last year, full disclosure, my daughter is a junior at UMD. |
Harold October 09 |
Meet the Mets- Meet the Mets…..on to the NLCS- amazin! |
Billy October 09 |
Did this "James" dude answer "the question"? Maybe Timmy K can tell us lol. |
Friday September 20, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3680 |
Shohei Ohtani is the greatest baseball player of my lifetime.
Now, if you want to argue and say I didn't really know anything about baseball in the 1960's and, therefore, I couldn't really make an accurate assessment on the likes of Mickey Mantle, I'll acknowledge that you're right.
But I don't care what Mickey Mantle did.
I know Babe Ruth was great. At least that's what they grainy footage indicates.
But what Babe did or Ty Cobb did doesn't matter.
With all due respect to the great Roberto Clemente, I don't care what he did, either.
And I saw Henry Aaron. And Ken Griffey Jr. And Barry Bonds. And lately, I've seen Mike Trout, whom many modern day baseball historians have said is the best "all around player" of the last 50 years.
Ohtani is better than all of those guys.
And, honestly, it's not even close.
Yesterday in Miami, Ohtani became the first player to ever hit 50 home runs in a season and steal 50 bases in that same campaign. He did it by going 6-for-6, hitting 3 homers and driving in 10 RBI in L.A.'s 20-4 win over the Marlins.
Oh, and don't forget, he did all of this in 2024 while recovering from Tommy John surgery.
No UCL in his right elbow? No problem.
OK, so that's not exactly true. He does have an ulnar collateral ligament in his right arm. It's just not the one he was born with, that's all.
50 home runs. Actually, he's now at 51 after yesterday's hat trick.
50 stolen bases. Well, he's technically at 51 in that category as well after two steals on Thursday.
51/51. It's truly amazing.
Oh, and he's hitting .294 as well. With a .376 on-base-percentage.
He also has, get this, 120 RBI on the season. And he's spent most of the campaign as the Dodgers' lead off hitter, mind you.
We've never seen someone this athletically gifted in the sport of baseball. Ever.
Maybe this is just the East Coast bias in me coming out, but imagine for a second if he played for New York or Boston. The media coverage on him would be ten-fold what it is with Ohtani based out of California.
And, let's be honest, if Ohtani were American, there's no telling how much more adoration he'd receive in the U.S.
Not that we have anything against Japanese baseball players in these parts. It's just a fact that we're far more inclined to cling on to an American superstar, that's all.
Wait until next season when he returns to the mound and goes 17-5 with a 2.59 ERA, all the while hitting 62 homers and winning yet another MVP award.
The craziest part about Shohei is this.......
He could actually get better.
I received an e-mail from #DMD reader John that is worthy of public discussion, even though I honestly don't think there's all that much to talk about.
"Drew, I'm wondering if you're going to comment on the John Harbaugh press conference where he publicly tore down Ben Cleveland and I'm curious if you think that's a good strategy? Love the Dish."
First off, here's what Harbaugh said earlier this week when he was pressed by a reporter about Cleveland's lack of playing time through the first two weeks of the season.
"If Ben had earned the job at right guard, he'd be the starting right guard," Harbaugh said. "So, when you look at the tape, he didn't beat out Daniel Faalele or anybody. I think Ben is a good player. I like Ben. I want Ben to take the next step.
"He's in his fourth year. Ben knows what he needs to do. If he wants playing time, he knows how he needs to play, and he knows how he needs to practice when he gets that chance. So, our evaluation right now is that Daniel outplayed Ben – just a fact, straight up, matter of fact. If we had thought Ben had outplayed Daniel, he'd be the starting right guard."
Earlier this week here, I opined that Harbaugh is on borrowed time if the Ravens don't recover from their 0-2 start and things spiral downward over the last 15 weeks of the regular season. Like the words he used for Ben Cleveland, Harbaugh knows what he has to do in order to continue as the team's head coach.
So, while I poke at Harbaugh for the 0-2 start and the decisions he's made over the last couple of years with regard to both in-game strategy and the hiring of key coaching personnel, what I won't do is criticize him for the way he speaks to and with the media.
But the Ben Cleveland commentary is very interesting on its own.
One thing a lot of Harbaugh haters bang on with regard to John's style is his elusive nature with the media. "Just be honest," is what you'll hear over and over from his detractors.
And, in a rare step in that direction, John actually was honest about Ben Cleveland. Generally, Harbaugh would keep those words private and would likely only speak them to his offensive lineman in private. This time, though, Harbaugh let loose with a pull-back-the-curtain description of why Cleveland isn't playing over struggling Daniel Faalele.
Here, though, is the interesting part of the commentary. Harbaugh tells the whole story in 100 words.
"If Ben had earned the job at right guard, he'd be the starting right guard."
Coach code for: Cleveland didn't have a great training camp and couldn't even beat our Faalele. What Cleveland did a year ago or two years ago, even, doesn't matter. "Now matters", is what Harbaugh is saying. And this past August, Cleveland didn't perform well enough to start at right guard.
"So when you look at tape..."
A vintage Harbaugh swipe at people who just peruse the internet and pile on when it comes to a player, his playing time, or the role he plays.
Harbaugh knows he and his staff are the only ones who actually have the tape from training camp. No one else has it but them. So he says "when you look at tape" knowing full well the people in the stands who think Cleveland should be playing don't have access to the tape in the first place. Crafty, veteran move there, coach.
"So, our evaluation right now is that Daniel outplayed Ben – just a fact, straight up, matter of fact. If we had thought Ben had outplayed Daniel, he'd be the starting right guard."
There it is. It's really all John had to say. Football coaches, paid to evaluate and coach football players, believe Faalele outplayed Cleveland in training camp. They're either right or their wrong, of course, but it's not like Harbaugh is withholding playing time from Cleveland because he dipped a girl's hair in ink or something during recess.
But of all that stuff that was said, here's what's the most interesting thing: Even when Harbaugh is honest, people have their fangs out for him.
"Why doesn't John just be honest?"
"I can't believe Harbaugh undressed Ben Cleveland like that in the media. What a tool."
I've always said here and elsewhere that what a coach says to the media is all done for a reason, whether the coach wants to avoid speaking publicly about a topic or wants to let his public words fuel a player's performance. Most coaches shy away from the latter and use private moments on and off the field to energize someone.
What I said on the record, for example, to a couple of local reporters who covered last spring's MIAA A-Conference championship golf match that my Calvert Hall team lost was much different than what I said to my team afterwards and in our exit meetings the following week.
What Buck Showalter used to say publicly about Manny Machado was not what Showalter felt in reality.
In all of the years of hearing Bernard Pollard cry and whine about the way Harbaugh treated him in Baltimore, have you ever heard the coach flame Pollard publicly to the same degree? You have not. Even though, privately, Harbaugh would tell you Pollard was a selfish, vindictive player who was always concerned with the salaries of all of the other defensive players on the team.
So, you can't have it both ways.
You either want Harbaugh to handle the media "the right way" or you want Harbaugh to bash players when they don't perform up to their expected levels.
I assume John wanted to try and nip the Ben Cleveland stuff in the bud, which is why he jumped from the top rope on Monday afternoon and spoke the truth about Cleveland.
It certainly seemed out of character for Harbaugh, that much is true. He generally doesn't say much of anything when it comes to playing time, injuries, etc.
Alas, he's also trying to get the best out of Ben Cleveland. Because, like you and I, he "watches tape" and see Daniel Faalele is struggling.
And maybe Monday's public undressing of Cleveland was yet another attempt by Harbaugh to get his 4th year player to finally man-up and start living up to his potential.
faith in sports |
As part of a men's faith group I'm in, we take turns sharing either a video or a story with the group every Wednesday and, this week, it was my day to share.
I've shared this video below here at #DMD on a previous occasion.
I'm sharing it again today because it's just amazing.
It's 5 minutes long. 300 seconds of your life. Please take 5 minutes to watch it.
That DeMario Davis took the time after a game to share this message rather than to talk about himself is what's most poignant of all.
And that he was willing to tell the media assembled in the room, "I know you want me to talk about football, but I'm going to talk about God instead" is incredibly heartwarming.
This is a great story. I hope you'll watch it.
Thanks, as always, to our friends at Freestate Electrical for their continued support of "Faith in Sports" here every Friday.
Thursday September 19, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3679 |
I'm a silver lining guy, so this is for all of you who are despondent about the O's late season fall-from-grace.
At least they're not going to to lose 3-2 in 10 innings to the Twins on the final day of the campaign to gift-wrap the A.L. East to the Yankees.
I mean, they might lose to the Twins 3-2 in 10 innings on September 29, but the division title won't be lost that day.
You wanted a silver lining. There it is.
Wait. I have more silver lining commentary for you, particularly if you were no longer a card carrying member of the Craig Kimbrel fan club. The Birds released the embattled veteran pitcher on Wednesday, the day after he gave up 6 runs to the Giants in that 10-0 loss on Tuesday.
Kimbrel, of course, will be signed by the Twins later today and will blank the Orioles in the top of the 9th of a 2-1 loss in Minnesota next weekend. You just know that's coming, right?
The negative part of Kimbrel's dismissal was the arrival of Bryan Baker from Norfolk. I mean, I guess he's better than Kimbrel, but not by much.
When it rains, it pours, they say. And it poured again last night on the Birds, who managed just 7 hits in a 5-3 loss to the Giants at Camden Yards. That, coupled with New York's bizarre 2-1 win in Seattle, pushes the Yankees lead to 5 games in the division with 10 games remaining.
New York, in case you didn't see it, won the game in part because Seattle's Julio Rodriguez got picked off of third base in the 10th inning because he avoided a flying bat that soared out of the hands of Randy Arozarena.
That was a true "baseball gods" moment right there. Why they want the Yankees to win I have no idea.
So with their loss and New York's win, the Birds are now 5 full games in back of the Bronx Bombers.
It's not over, yet. But if the Birds were playing horse, they'd have O-V-E.
You want more silver lining? Here's another smattering of it.
The Royals keep losing.
Kansas City fell at home last night to Detroit, 4-2, so while the Birds now have 68 losses, K.C. has 71. And the Twins (72 losses) also lost on Wednesday, in Cleveland.
The Tigers are the team to watch now, though, as they are sitting at 80-73 and riding a 4-game winning streak as they head into......yep, you guessed it......Baltimore.
The O's and Tigers will battle Friday, Saturday and Sunday in Charm City, then Detroit ends their campaign with three home games against Tampa Bay and three against the Chicago White Sox.
Don't look know, but the Tigers could finish with 86 or 87 wins depending on what they do in Baltimore this weekend.
In case you're one of those -- like me -- who looks ahead, here's what Kansas City and Minnesota have.
Royals: vs. Giants (3), at Washington (3), at Atlanta (3)
Twins: vs. Cleveland (1), at Boston (3), vs. Miami (3), vs. Baltimore (3)
The Tigers probably have the easiest road, even though they're the ones with the most losses of the four teams in the hunt.
The O's desperately need this game vs. San Francisco this afternoon. That would give them 85 wins with 9 games remaining. Even if they just win 3 of their final 9, 88 wins would probably be enough to get them into the post-season.
But they're going to play three teams in the final week of the season who all have a reason to play. Detroit is hot, the Yankees still need to sew up the A.L. East title and home field in the league and Minnesota will likely need to keep playing well to clinch a wild card spot.
86 wins very well might not be enough for the Birds.
87 wins might not, either.
88, though, should do it.
Did I mention the Orioles could still win the A.L. East if they turn things around and the Yankees sputter over their final 10 games?
OK, maybe I should just focus on the wild card scenario.
I'll give you another silver lining effort real quick: Both Zach Eflin and Corbin Burnes are going to face the Yankees in New York next week. Eflin throws today vs. the Giants and Burnes pitches the opener vs. Detroit tomorrow. So we'll get to see both of them in the Bronx, which is really all you can ask for as an O's fan.
Unfortunately, the silver-lining-flip-side is neither of them are scheduled to pitch in Minnesota in the final regular season series. Unless something wacky happens, it will be Suarez-Kremer-Povich against the Twins.
But I'll end this with a final slice of good news: The O's are not scheduled to face Gerrit Cole in New York next week. So they have that going for them......which is nice.
It's pretty remarkable that I'm sitting here on Thursday, September 19 publishing playoff scenarios and being forced to paint various ways the O's can make the post-season and various ways they might not make it as well.
I'm still here, though, saying they are going to make the playoffs. They're not finishing 85-77 or 86-76 and missing out. They're just not. Like I wrote here yesterday, if that happens, the headine the morning after will be: Drew Was Wrong.
The more pressing question at this point is who will the O's play in the wild card series and will they play the three games in Baltimore or elsewhere?
Any of the three candidates could be pesky out for the O's. If the season ended today, it would be a 2014 ALCS rematch with the Royals. K.C. has tailed off of late and their home/away stats are massively different, but all they have to do is win is two games out of three.
If I'm the O's, I'm really laser-focused on securing home field in the wild card round, particularly if it's the Royals you wind up facing. K.C.'s offense at home is so good and their offense on the road is so average that it makes you wonder if they're borrowing a strategy created by Houston from five years ago. If you know what I mean.
With last night's defeat to the Giants, that's yet another home series the O's have lost since the All-Star break. There was a point in 2023 and 2024 when teams just didn't come to Baltimore and take 2 of 3 or 3 of 4 games.
Now, it's becoming a common theme.
One thing for sure: The Tigers better not come in here and win 2 of 3 or sweep the series at OPACY this weekend.
If they do, I might need to write that headline after all.
Oh, and here's one more thing to chew on. I saved it for the very end.
Let's just say the worst case scenario plays out and the O's somehow, almost beyond imagination, wind up missing the playoffs.
If that sort of thing occurs, they will have finished the season something like 14-30 or thereabouts. It would be, by anyone's description, a September collapse of historical proportion.
I don't want that to happen. I'm just saying....
If it does happen.
What do you do with the manager in 2025?
I'll step out for a cup of Royal Farms coffee on that note and allow you all to have the room to yourselves.
such October 15 |
Because I'm older, I don't spend much time on social media. I find it rather exhausting to be honest. Therefore I was unaware of this incident until last night, when my sons began texting me and FaceTiming me. The assailant is a former teammate of two of my sons at Hereford High. Let's just say that his senior year there was punctuated by some extremely poor decisions, likely due to being under the influence. Hereford was his third high school in four years. I'm going to go out on a very short limb here and surmise that he was under the influence on Sunday night in Federal Hill. His actions are inexcusable under any circumstances. Drunk, high, sober, it doesn't matter. Violently assaulting innocent people, unprovoked, is bordering on sociopathic behavior. He should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law, and if civil suits arise from this disgusting incident, he should be made to pay for his victims medical care and pain and suffering. Whatever backlash and public embarrassment he endures because of this are due to his own reckless, irresponsible behavior. You get what you get when you act like a fool. As I've always told my sons, Make good choices. Stop and think about the consequences. |
TimD in Timonium October 15 |
"Clearly, though, the man who assaulted the two Commanders fans was somehow enthused about being on camera for the incident." Live by the sword, die by the sword. The resulting video went viral, and the outcome probably wasn't the "internet fame" he had in mind. Without video, I'm guessing this goes unreported and the perp remains unknown. Oh well. |
Barry October 14 |
Flacco is likely back to not being a starter by next week, no way he's coming here for a playoff game in Jan. @Paul pretending to be positive is hilarious! |
Delray RICK October 14 |
One of my problems with HARBAUGH is when he throws the red flag I'm sitting watching slow-motion, ain't no way he's right. I know it's people upstairs. When you have to rely on others that's where HARBS gets accused of f it up. He's mind is so on this team there isn't anybody else I'd want as coach . Who the he'll is better ??? Crickets |
Vince from SC October 14 |
The only criticism of Harbaugh I have is his clock management at the end of halves can sometimes make you scratch your head. Other than that, he's been a HOF coach no question. Should have won the SB the year before if Lee Evans or Billy Cundiff could do bare minimum. |
Paul from Towson October 14 |
The John Harbaugh hate in this city absolutely astounds me. All this franchise has done since he's been here is win. Sure, they've only hoisted the Lombardi trophy once under him, but that's one more time than most of the rest of the NFL. And, this team has been to the AFC Championship Game four times under Harbaugh. Sure, the 1-3 record could be better, but let's not forget that first one was in Joe Flacco's (and Harbs' for that matter) rookie season when this team was supposed to be 4-12. Of course he's not perfect, and yeah his use of challenges and timeouts can be questionable at best, but it's hard to argue with the overall W-L record. Not to mention, he swallowed his pride in 2018 and did something very few, if any, Super Bowl winning coaches would do, and changed the entire offensive structure of this team to suit Lamar Jackson's strengths. Look at the rest of the league, and the coaching unemployment line, and tell me who you would rather have. Belichick?? No thanks, look at his record without a guy named Tom Brady. Jeff Fisher?? Don't think so. What about all these young, hotshot coaches that the national pundits love so much. Kevin Stefanski? Pass. Zac Taylor? Nah. Nick Siriani? Please! The luntics in Philly are ready to run him out of town despite making it to the Super Bowl two seasons ago. I know this isn't just a Baltimore thing, after all, if you ask any Stooler fan they would tell you that THEY could coach the team in Pittsburgh to a Super Bowl before Mike Tomlin could. But even still, at a time in the NFL (and sports in general) when most teams have a yearly coaching carousel and rampant upheaval (Falcons, Colts, Raiders, Panthers, etc.) having the stability in a head coach that wins, on average, 10 games a season is a luxury very few teams enjoy. And, in my humble opinion, even given his faults, I would take Harbs over just about every other coach in the league, except MAYBE Andy Reid. But even Reid was an also-ran until a guy named Mahomes came into the league. Go Ravens!! Such, you beat me to it this morning. As I watched the replay of yesterday's game, I realized that the Derrick Henry signing seems very Shannon Sharpe-ish to me. When the Ravens signed the two time Super Bowl champion, they already had a championship caliber defense. Sharpe was the missing piece on an offense that was built on the run and timely passing. Now, Lamar Jackson is leaps and bounds better than Trent Dilfer ever was on his best day, but just like Sharpe, Derrick Henry seems to be the missing piece for this offense. Derrick Henry makes LJ8 an the rest of the offense better because, with all due respect to JK Dobbins and Gus Edwards, defenses didn't have to stack the box to stop them. Leaving LJ8 to pic apart man, or in some cases, soft zone coverage. GO RAVENS! |
Howard October 14 |
Tony Siragusa was a great free agent pickup. The 2000 Ravens defense had no offense to pick them up. The defense couldn’t bend and couldn’t break and they didn’t. |
Bud King October 14 |
Not even Harbs could lose this game... go Ravens! |
Nathan Aparisto October 14 |
Is there ANY deal or trade that would convince that mess of a Jets franchise to send Sauce Gardner to the flock for a passel of picks? Could the cap hit be worked out? Hed be the next Ed Reed for a decade and Ravens could truly be a juggernaught! |
such October 14 |
We were having a text conversation last night and the question was raised: Has there ever been a better Free Agent signing by the Ravens than Henry? I can't think of anyone comparable on offense. Maybe Shannon Sharpe, maybe Derek Mason, but as far as instant impact and the ability to effect games the way he does, there's never been anyone close to Henry. Yesterday was just the latest example of the difference he's made. Everyone from Hereford to Upper Marlboro knew he was getting the ball, and the Ravens ran that same little toss sweep to the left they ran in Cincy, and Henry goes for 30 yards and that's ballgame. He's an absolute hammer. I went back and looked at the 2016 Draft and it's just another example of NFL front offices overanalyzing players. The Ravens took Ronnie Stanley at #6 overall, which is undeniably a very good pick. In the second round, at #42 overall, they selected the immortal Kamalei Correa from Boise State. Derrick Henry went to Tennessee at #45. Oh, what might have been. Although Lamar wasn't here yet so there's no telling what the offense would've looked like with Joe Flacco and King Henry. Regardless, he's here now and it's a beautiful sight to behold. |
Chris in Bel Air October 14 |
Even in the loss to KC, you could see the potential of the Ravens. They are clearly starting to put it all together now. As a fan, I'm feeling the optimism. But... we've also watched the Ravens and the NFL long enough to know they will stub their toe a couple more times. It happens. The key is how they bounce back the following week. Moreover, you don't win the Lombardi in October. It's all about January... and hopefully February. IF they end up playing KC again in the playoffs, they are not going to lose that game. I don't care if it is in B'more or KC. They are winning that one. Yes, the secondary seems to be a concern and can't figure out if it's personnel or scheme or both. Either way, like yesterday, the offense just needs to pick them up and respond when they have the ball. A couple random observations. First on Brandon Stephens. Maybe it's just me but it seems like no matter how closely he is covering his man, the opposing QB and WR always seems to come up with an incredible play/catch. Yesterday he had at least one like that, maybe two. I'm not busting on him, I'm just saying, I'm not sure what more he can do. Overall, I think he's become a decent CB for someone that did not play that position in college. Second, good to see Ngakoue in the mix yesterday. I like his potential rotating in the pass rush mix. As for Marcus Williams, he's sort of been a disappointment. He's not a bad player, I just can't remember the last time I saw him do anything of significance. INT? Forced Fumble? Fumble recovery? Key pass break-up? Something. On to Tampa |
Unitastoberry October 14 |
Another win and another big offensive statement. Commandskins done. Swiss Pees and Orr have some work to do. Why was Tony Romo on Kyle Hamiltons case about him being a dirty player on two big plays he made? He reacts before looking at the instant replay. Tony drives me nuts not my favorite commenter. It's a contact sport Tony. Only the offensive guys can lead with the head what a crock. My feelings on Joe Flacco are those of happiness for him. It's just a shame it's Jr Irsay who gets to beat his chest. With all the sub par duel threat QBs in the league now Joe could play another 4 -5 years.Btw I'm not including Lamar in that catagory. This bum in Cleveland should be on the bench watching Joe toss tds. Barry I will never root for PSU. I have my reasons and it's more than the Sandusky child rape coverup they should have had no football there for 5 years just for that one. It goes back to Joe PA coming here long ago and stealing all state and all county guys in Maryland just to keep them out of College Park then he redshirts them in Happy Valley etc and they never see the field playing behind guys like Franco Harris and Lydell Mitchell etc. I know one of them. He would have been a great running back at Maryland. He ran for 150-200 yards a game in Baltimore County. No shame in calling out good players up there now.44 is one of them. I hate to say it this but it could be Penn States year.Would be great if Locksley could pull a Vanderbuilt on them last game of the season. Btw Lenny Moore does get a pass Lou. Gary Cuozzo or Earl Morrall Howard? Well you have to take Earl and his MVP 1968 off the bench year. But I got visions of Jimmy Orr in the endzone waiving his hand wide open to this day and like I have said before the whole thing still stinks like you know what! |
David Rosenfeld October 14 |
If you weren't at the game yesterday you probably heard Tony Romo say that John Harbaugh is a "top 10 coach all time," which of course drew lots of chuckles from the hoi polloi. I'm not gonna get into a conversation about that, but I will say this... I don't see how you can watch the Ravens play on a week-to-week basis and say that John is an "awful coach." Like...of all takes you could have, it just doesn't stand up to any kind of serious analysis. |
Jon October 14 |
How are the league going to stymie the offense? Same way they have last few years in January- wins mask problems- - no more weak O line? enjoyable Sunday but lets not get ahead of oursleves like we did with Os and KC. Keep working Flacco! |
TimD in Timonium October 14 |
The two drives of 90+ yards were beautiful to watch. Hard to find much to complain about from yesterday's Ravens game, but surely someone will. Looks like the O-line has figured it out. Big difference from the 0-2 start. Whew. |
Kenny G October 14 |
Hopefully we saw a defensive change in yesterday's game - bend but don't break. I am not familiar with the WFT scheme but the Ravens keep also everything in front of them. Also for all people complaining about the refs, please offer some solutions vs just ranting about how bad they are. Sinc the game has become faster, covers more area of the field and the rules very complex, my suggestion is add another ref or two and allow for certain replays/challenges of penalties. I would also possibly allow more contact on receivers but penalize DB holding more (the calls are too inconsistent which leads to a lot of "missed" calls) |
Ed October 13 |
Nice day for Will Jackson picking games and props. Congratulations. |
lou@palo alto October 13 |
#24 was from Penn St |
Barry October 13 |
So UTB is actually a closet PSU fan after all eh? |
Howard October 13 |
Kj— tell me where that bar is so I can hang out with UTB and MFC. I would ask them if they think that Joe in his #15 Colts uniform reminds them more of Gary Cuozzo or Earl Morrall. Oh, and Jordan and Pippen keep rolling on |
Vince from SC October 13 |
Not a blowout but also never in doubt. On to Tampa. |
Unitastoberry October 13 |
If Lamar had made it past AFC teams in January like KC, Tennessee,and played nicked up in the Cincinnati game he would have 3 rings . I agree on this one the Commandskins are going down. Even Harbaugh won't screw this up. If you watched Penn State win in overtime over USC you know the NCAA refs are horrible. Worse than the NFL. Remember when the NFL refs went on strike and they used NCAA refs? That why the strike was settled. This number 44 on Penn State was a one man wrecking crew yesterday. He's a number one pick at TE. He's Dave Casper/Gronk quality if he stays healthy. Blocks great too pancakes guys. |
Old George October 12 |
Trolley Dodgers. |
Chris in Bel Air October 12 |
Love the "Reading time: 2 minutes"... or 3 minutes. This should be a regular thing for DMD. Thanks for the throwback. |
kj October 12 |
Everything written by @Bryce about DET was written about our O's two years ago. Funny how fans are always giving other teams a pass but want their team to be perfect 100% of the time. Wonder if MFC and UTB hang out at the local Curmudgeons bar howling at the moon together? The Indians have the best chance to beat NYY, so not sure why anyone would be pulling for DET to win today. Above was my own mini ode to my absolute favorite local sportswriter. DMD did a better job with his tribute, but figured I'd toss in an amateur version. RIP Mr Jackman. |
BRYCE October 12 |
I’d love to see Skubal and company get the last laugh this year with all the talk of Detroit dealing/retaining their ace at the deadline. Would be great to see them eliminate Cleveland and then continue their post-2000 trend of owning the Yankees in the playoffs. That team is going to be sneaky good for the next several years. In addition to its current roster, they have two top-10 prospects waiting in the wings and another at #31, per MLB. What’s even more impressive is that this 2024 surge has been with no contribution from Mize and very minimal from Torkelson, their two recent #1 overall draft picks. Most importantly, they’re playing with the team chemistry to be a force. |
Unitastoberry October 12 |
Why should U of Maryland fire Mike Locksley? So then they pretty much admit they just want a team who beats squads like Gettysburg College and Northwestern then only loses to Penn St and Michigan? It's basically an admission they joined the Big Ten for the money and could care less about a national championship. Remember what the late great Lefty Driesel said when hired by Maryland basketball back in the stone age? He said he wanted to become the UCLA of the east then strap the national trophy on his car and ride around tobacco road with it. It never happened but it was exactly what the fans wanted to hear and they bought in. Now the football team just wants to beat Northwestern and Prairie View. What a bunch of bull. RIP to Phil Jackman who was a great sports writer and not some punk looking to cause trouble.Those days are gone except at DMD. Go USC! |
MFC October 12 |
Hernandez dropping the F bond, after asking if it was live tv was disgusting. Another self Absorbed athlete. I am now rooting for anyone but LA. What a jerk, it wasn’t cute . |
Phil October 12 |
Awesome tribute, I always enjoyed his columns especially the two minute ones. |
Tom J October 12 |
Drew, when I saw the "Reading Time, 2 minutes" it rang a bell but just couldn't put my finger on it until reading down and then seeing and remembering this was Phil Jackman's thing. Didn't know the origin behind it but loved this in The Sun. Yes, please continue his thing as part of DMD. |
hank October 11 |
Top level trolling today. No true Baltimorean would ever wish success for the Yankees. I agree with David, bunch of posers like this current team is the last team I want to see in the World Series. Whoever prevails in the DET-CLE series best take care of business. Mets vs LA, no one worth rooting for there either. |
Paul from Towson October 11 |
The minute the O’s were eliminated, I became an instant fan of whatever National League team comes out of the NLCS to face whatever dumb AL champion. I can never stomach watching the Yankees (or Red Sox for that matter) celebrate anything so I strongly disagree with Drew’s commentary today. I don’t have any issue with the Mets, so if they happen to beat either LA or SD, more power to them. Plus, I would like to see Lindor and Alonso get a ring. Just wish Buck was still there to make rooting for them even that much easier. I will agree with Drew that the Cleat of Reality is hunting Washington this weekend and Jayden Daniels will feel every bit of its fury. Rookie QB’s never fair well at The Bank against our Ravens. This Sunday will be no exception. Ravens win, 34-13. Go Ravens!!! |
Jeffrey “Fireball” Roberts October 11 |
I would personally love a Yankee/Padre WS. The tattooed Padres in those horrible brown uniforms led by Manny against the clean cut Yankee pinstripes led by Judge. East Coast versus West Coast. Atlantic-Pacific. Biggie-Tupac. Bring it on. LOL |
David Rosenfeld October 11 |
Honestly, the 2024 Yankees are a bunch of posers. They act like they dominated the league. Judge and Soto are ridiculous, and Cole is one of the best, but the other 23 guys ain't much better than any other team. Maybe that'll be enough to win the World Series. I'm not sure Cleveland or Detroit will beat them...they just don't hit well enough. |
Delray RICK October 11 |
Baseball season is OVER!!! |
Chris in Bel Air October 11 |
To be honest, I guess I still have a little bit of sour grapes going on with the O's out of the running again. Tough watching other teams/fans celebrate. I suppose a Yankees/Mets series would be interesting. I'm sure other than Yankees/Dodgers (Ohtani vs Judge) MLB execs and whatever network is broadcasting the World Series would really like Yankees/Mets too. I can't imagine those same folks would be too thrilled with say Tigers vs Padres. Ravens will bring Wash and Jayden Daniels back to earth on Sunday. Don't get me wrong, I like Daniels. It's just not quite his/their time. |
TimD in Timonium October 11 |
A Mets / Yankees series could be entertaining, but I suspect most of America would tune out an all-NYC final. But I don't think the Mets will get past LA or SD. We'll see. And the Ryan Ries video was a great watch. |
Dan October 11 |
Drew, thanks for highlighting Ryan Ries. As a fellow skateboard enthusiast I know his story and the impact he has made on the youth all over the USA. God bless Ryan!! |
Unitastoberry October 10 |
I thought is was a joke today when I heard Dean"Swiss"Pees was rehired to be a senior advisor to DC Zach Orr. It's actually true. |
TimD in Timonium October 10 |
"Corbin Burnes, who started for the AL in the All-Star Game, ranked fourth in the AL in ERA (2.92), third in innings pitched (194 1/3), eighth in WHIP (1.10) and 10th in strikeouts (181)." Complete games in 2024? Zero. (His closest was 8 innings vs KC in the playoffs.) We've already seen the Golden Age of Complete Game Pitchers. It's not coming back. |
Unitastoberry October 10 |
Palmer,Cuellar, McNally and Dobson 4 20 game winners. I saw them all get at least one win that year in person. |
Bob October 10 |
2011 was the last year a pitcher logged double digit complete games with James Shields throwing 11 for Tampa Bay. Since then only two pitchers threw more then 5 games, Chris Sale in 2016 and Sandy Alcantara in 2022 both threw 6 games. I think the ship has sailed on the days a starter bangs out double digit complete games. https://www.baseball-almanac.com/pitching/picomg4.shtml |
Chris in Bel Air October 10 |
Yes, the bullpen game is certainly an interesting situation now. I agree it is not my favorite part of the game for sure. But, if a manager wants to blow through 8 arms in one game, doesn't that put him in a disadvantage for the next game? It's a risk in going the bullpen route. I am also not sure the minimum innings or pitches is practical either. If a starter is getting lit up in the first couple innings a proposed rule to remain for minimum number of pitches/innings would then take away the ability for the manager to make a pitching change. That doesn't seem like it is good for the game either. As for making these guys in Jim Palmer again, that's not happening. The days of Palmer, Fergie Jenkins, Bob Gibson, Gaylord Perry and Steve Carlton are long gone and that's not even including the astounding number of CGs thrown by the likes of Cy Young or Walter Johnson. For reference, in 2024, the team with the most CG's thrown was the Phillies with 5. Going back 50 years, here are the leading and total number of team CGs thrown that year: 2014 - 8 2004 - 11 1994 - 17 1984 - 48 1974 - 71 A remarkable trend down and it's just not ever coming back. |
David Rosenfeld October 10 |
The "bullpen game" is an interesting phenomenon because, as much as people might dislike it, it's really common sense. I'm sure that A.J. Hinch would love it if he had even one more guy like Tarik Skubal. But he doesn't, so he feels like this is the best way to win...and he's often right because (unlike in Palmer's day), the "bullpen" guys are more talented than the ostensible starting pitchers. Assuming this a problem, I'm not sure of the answer. And in the playoffs, when the rope is short even for good starting pitchers, I'm even less sure... |
Bam Bam October 10 |
Does @Billy know how to read? @Timmy K was talking about @JK |
Action October 10 |
Same exact situation in Royals Yankees game last night that Os had in game 1 against Royals. Tied ballgame, Royals man on third, 2 outs, Bobby Witt at the plate. But this time the opposing team did what Brandon Hyde and the O’s should have done. They pitched around him and walked him. And guess what the next batter did? Of, course fly out to end the inning. The Yankees scored 1 more after that and that was all she wrote. 2 opposite approaches in the same exact situation with 2 different outcomes. Come on Hyde, get an effing clue! |
Delray RICK October 10 |
Who was the reader of this site who lived west FLORIDA near TAMPA?????? |
Eric in White Plains October 10 |
I attended a game last year, full disclosure, my daughter is a junior at UMD. |
Harold October 09 |
Meet the Mets- Meet the Mets…..on to the NLCS- amazin! |
Billy October 09 |
Did this "James" dude answer "the question"? Maybe Timmy K can tell us lol. |
Wednesday September 18, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3678 |
Rich sent me an e-mail minutes after last night's 10-0 O's loss to the Giants and asked the following:
"Are you ready to push the panic button now?"
The answer to that is "no". But not because it's the wrong thing to do. The reason I wouldn't push the panic button is because panicking isn't going to do any good at this stage of the season.
But..........
I have officially pushed the "concern button".
If Blake Snell shuts you down and it's one of those nights where you lose because "baseball happened" and it's a 2-1 or 3-2 final, that's one thing. But when you get blistered, 10-0, and you sorta kinda have the look of a team that doesn't really care all that much, it's time to be concerned.
The division title is mathematically still a possibility, but the Yankees are now up 4 with 11 to play after they thrashed the Mariners in Seattle last night, 11-2. But here's the -- no pun intended -- real concerning fact. Missing the playoffs is now also a mathematical possibility, as crazy as that sounds.
Now, look, I'll go ahead and say this now and if I'm wrong, I'll roll in here the morning after and the headline will read "Drew Was Wrong": The Birds aren't missing the playoffs.
They'd have to go something like 2-9 to finish the season at 86-76 and, quite possibly, miss out on the post-season.
And even at 86-76, the likes of Detroit, Seattle and/or Minnesota would have to almost run the table in order to sneak past the Orioles.
But let's not ruin the developing story in Baltimore. The O's are a mess right now. The Giants are playing not to get hurt and to pad a stat or two along the way over the last two weeks. Last night, they looked like the team that needed a win and the O's looked like the squad playing out the string.
So, while people around town hammer the third of four nails in the Birds' coffin and claim "there's no way this team's doing anything in the playoffs", I'm going to keep leaning on the only angle I can lean on. They need to get their roster healthy and restored to what it was pre All-Star break.
They need Westburg back. Coulombe will help, too. If Mountcastle returns and he's even close to healthy, he can snag the at-bats that Jimenez continues to waste. More on that guy in a minute. Boy were they ever right about him in Chicago.
And If Grayson gets back before the end of the regular season, that's a plus as well, even if he just throws out of the bullpen in October.
Westburg's return would be huge. They've missed him terribly over the last two months. He's the one guy they need back the most.
I won't completely give up on the division title just yet, but I'll admit it's looking more and more like the Birds are going to come up short in that quest. And then it's a wild card berth and, hopefully, securing that first round home field advantage that comes with being the 2nd place finisher with the best overall record.
But here's something else I'm leaning on. As weird as it sounds, the O's might be better off playing the wild card series on the road. Home cooking just doesn't seem to fit that well with the Birds, particularly since early July, where they've lost series' to the Yankees, Cubs, Padres and Rays.
Maybe playing on the road is better in the long run.
Or maybe I'm just grasping at straws.
Whatever the case, it's getting tight in the American League and the O's are really scuffling.
The O's now have 67 losses. Kansas City has 70. Minnesota has 71. Detroit has 73.
What was once a "sure thing" is now an "it's gonna happen unless they collapse thing".
Like you, I'm not fond of that word, "unless". Because that means there's a chance, slight as it might be.
These are now officially "concerning days" for the Orioles.
No panic here. It wouldn't be a benefit anyway.
But I'm nervous, that's for sure.
Mike Elias is getting pounded on in town these days for his failure to dramatically improve the roster at the trade deadline.
There are now people smashing him as a know-nothing, a fraud and a GM wanna-be. "Just because it worked in Houston didn't mean it was going to work in Baltimore," someone wrote on Twitter last night.
It actually has worked in Baltimore.
Some of these internet guys must be from another planet.
Before Mike Elias got here, the Orioles were pretty much the worst franchise in baseball. They had no real front office or baseball ops direction and they were, without question, at the back of the pack as it relates to analytics and advanced statistics.
Over the last two years, the Birds have become relevant again. They're not only a blossoming product on the field, they're just now starting to see the fruits of their drafting prowess under Elias and his staff.
Now, it's very obvious this 2024 team has hit a major stumbling block at the worst possible time. There's no use trying to avoid it or act as if there's some other reason for it other than players who hit and contributed in the first half of the season tapered off in the second half and, as mentioned above, injuries to guys like Westburg, Mountcastle and, yes, even Mateo, have impacted the roster.
But to think Elias has suddenly "lost it" is patently absurd.
People don't like to talk about this at parties, but it's the truth: Mike Elias forgot more about baseball players and analytics and the like than all of us know. Combined.
Now, let's also state the other obvious fact. His work at the '24 trade deadline was less than stellar.
Trevor Rogers is in the minor leagues and will, barring something bizarre, not contribute to the team's upcoming post-season.
Eloy Jimenez is an all-time top 10 imposter. He smiles a lot and is apparently a real joy to hang around with in the locker room, but none of that matters when he gets to the plate. If he's half-trying when he's up there, that's a lot.
The White Sox weren't giggling or snickering when he cleaned out his locker in late July and headed for Baltimore. They were doing handstands and handing out cigars to celebrate.
That the Orioles didn't give up anything to get Jimenez is the only saving grace in the whole thing. But it was Elias who took him. And unless he somehow comes up with his Delmon Young moment in the playoffs, the Jimenez era in Baltimore will be brief and without anything tangible to reflect upon when he signs with the Nationals or Marlins in the off-season.
The rest of the guys acquired have been reasonably competent. Seranthony Dominguez isn't a closer, but he's playing the role of one because the guy who gave up six runs in the 9th inning last night was removed as the closer in July.
Soto x 2 and Austin Slater have been what we expected they'd be. Good one night, OK the next night and then not playing for two or three nights. As Judge Smails said in Caddyshack: "The world needs ditch diggers, too."
Mike Elias didn't know Westburg, Rodriguez, Mountcastle, Mateo and Urias were going to get hurt.
No one did.
To suggest the team hasn't been impacted by those injuries is silly. Are those guys worth four wins along the way? Sure, they very well might have been the difference between keeping pace with the Yankees and eventually wilting down the stretch.
It's easy -- and fair -- to hold him accountable for Rogers and Jimenez. Elias was, after all, the guy who pulled the trigger on those two deals.
But piling on the general manager and acting as if he's the reason the club has bottomed out over the last 6-8 weeks is #clownshoes stuff.
Tuesday September 17, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3677 |
You've played many a board game in your life, I'm sure. Some of them have dice, some have money and some have those glass products filled with sand. They're often called an hour glass, sand timer or sand clock.
You turn it over and the sand starts filtering from the top down to the bottom. Eventually, the upper half empties and the bottom half is filled.
At some point, all the sand from the top is gone and there's nothing left.
The Ravens, as you're well aware, have started their 2024 season with an 0-2 record.
The "if game" is easy to play.
If Isaiah Likely wears a size 11 shoe instead of a size 12, the Ravens might very well have won the opener vs. Kansas City.
If Brandon Stephens doesn't get nailed for a ticky-tack pass interference call in the 4th quarter on Sunday, the Ravens might have held on to beat Las Vegas.
Yes, they could easily be 2-0 instead of 0-2.
But they're not.
And it isn't just that they're 0-2, it's how they got there that's the bigger issue.
The head coach is the one taking the brunt of the criticism in Baltimore two weeks into the season. His most ardent supporters will point out the obvious: He didn't miss a wide open Zay Flowers in the end zone against the Chiefs. He didn't hit the Kansas City quarterback in the head after he released the ball. He didn't miss a 53-yard field goal. And he didn't get the ball knocked out of his hand and turn it over to the Chiefs.
Supporters of John Harbaugh would offer the same rhetoric from the Raiders game. On field mistakes, made by professionals earning millions of dollars, don't always correlate to trangressions authored by the head coach.
On the flip side, Harbaugh's critics -- and there's a growing legion of them in Charm City, in case you haven't noticed -- will dispute the idea that mistakes made by his players shouldn't be connected to the head coach. And at the same time, they'll point out game management and play style scenarios within each contest that should be directly attached to Harbaugh himself.
Who is right?
The supporters?
Or the critics?
In the mid 1990's, with team revenues stalling and expenses always creeping up, the owner of the indoor soccer team in town advised me to trim our team payroll by approximately 35% over a two year period.
He wanted me to shave the payroll by roughly 20% the first year and then another 15% in year two, hoping that would stem the tide of the financial losses he was incurring without impacting the on-field product all that much.
I wasn't thrilled with the idea.
But I was thrilled with the salary I was making and the new contract I had just signed, so I shook his hand and promised I'd do my very best.
As a result of our cost-cutting efforts, we turned our attentions to foreign players in places like Serbia, Croatia and even Brazil. There, we found, high caliber young players were eager to bolt for a chance to play in the United States, even for as little as $3,000 per-month.
The very first year, we identified three players from Serbia who came in at what we considered "discount prices". They didn't have any real indoor soccer experience, of course, but they had outstanding raw, technical soccer skills that we could refine over time.
And best of all, we could sign them for something like $24,000 for a seven month season as opposed to giving a veteran player in the league roughly double that salary.
On paper, it looked smart.
On the field, not so much.
The team's performance waned considerably as my head coach and assistant coach tried to turn the rookies into veterans overnight. The effort was there. The wins, unfortunately, didn't follow along.
We moved roughly a half dozen players in and out that first season, trying to find the right mix. The players came in from all over, including one from Brazil, one from Australia and others from Serbia and Eastern Europe.
Late in the season, the owner came to town for a weekend set of games and, as we would always do, the two of us caught up over lunch in Little Italy on a Saturday afternoon.
"So what's wrong with the team?" he asked.
Trying to tread as lightly as I could, I gave him an honest answer without trying to pile on about his pre-season edict to lower the payroll.
"Well, we signed Nesko, and he didn't really pan out. He was OK at first, but he just didn't pick up the indoor game like we thought he would. We basically signed him over Dan O'Keefe, remember. Dan was a goal-scorer. We thought Nesko would score goals. But he didn't."
"So we sent him home and brought Belic over," I continued to explain. "He didn't grasp the indoor game, either. Highly skilled. But not tough enough. Didn't like the contact."
I went on to go through the others we brought in and released, giving what I thought was a fairly reasonable explanation on each of them.
"So when I hear all of this," the owner said, "I keep hearing one common theme. You sign a player and then a month or so later, you cut him."
"Yeah, well, we're not having a lot of success with them, that's true," I stated.
"Who keeps signing the players?" he asked.
Checkmate.
I took a bite of my Sabatino's bookmakers salad and let the question linger for a second, hoping it would go away.
He looked at me.
I wanted so badly to say, "Had you not cut the friggin' budget, I wouldn't be chasing those guys all over Eastern Europe."
But I didn't.
Because the reality was the owner didn't tell me who to sign. He merely told me how much I had at my disposal to spend on the player roster.
The rest of the decisions were made by me, in concert with my head coach.
"Who keeps signing the players?" the owner asked again.
"I do," I replied.
"That's correct," he said, sharply. "I just want to make sure you know that."
And that was it. I didn't get fired or anything like that. It was merely an exercise to point out that someone, somewhere had to take the brunt of the blame for the underperformance of the team that season.
And the owner decided it should be the person who signed the players in the first place.
The Ravens have a coaching problem.
That's not a knee-jerk, two-game reaction, either.
It's a commentary made after years of watching the team play well most of the time but then stunningly falter at some of the most inopportune times possible.
Fourth quarter leads, squandered.
Playoff games, lost.
Individual player performances rapidly diminishing or, in some cases, never coming close to their expected level of fulfillment.
In game tactical and management decisions rendered puzzling at best, negligent at worst.
These are all by products, in some way, of one word. Do you know what that word is?
Here's where I stall for a second while you think about the word.
.
.
.
.
.
.
OK, do you have the word?
It's this: personnel.
Everyone associated with the organization can be filed under that word.
Front office "personnel".
Coaching staff "personnel".
Player "personnel".
So it's very apparent, at this point, that the Ravens have a personnel issue.
And while it might be true that the head coach doesn't actually go out and acquire the player personnel, that's really not part of this discussion today.
The Ravens have a lot of talented players.
They have one of the best quarterbacks in either league.
They have a dynamic tight end combination and a speedy #1 wide receiver who was a first round pick in 2023.
The defensive side of the ball boasts one of the top middle linebackers in the NFL, a former 1st round pick at cornerback, and an interior lineman they backed up the Brinks truck for last off-season.
Whether the Ravens have the most talented roster in the league is certainly a water cooler debate. But they aren't lacking in talent, that's for sure.
When the former President was shot at in Butler, PA back in July, the uproar over "who tried to kill the President" was the talk of the land.
I said this over and over to anyone who wanted to hear it: "Only two parties could have benefitted from Donald Trump being killed. The party opposing him. Or the party he represents, attempting to somehow marry an assassination attempt with a mental and physical toughness that voters should want to support."
Figure out who benefits the most and you'll figure out who likely ordered and orchestrated the events in Butler, PA. That's the way I see it, anyway.
I don't know much, but I know this: Some goofy 20-year old kid didn't just get in his car on a Saturday morning and drive an hour away from home with guns in his trunk and finagle his way around the best security professionals in the world and climb up on the roof of a building he knew nothing about.
Figure out who helped that kid get up there and you'll have your responsible party.
So why do I bring that up?
Because the situation involving the Ravens is oddly similar in nature. It can only be one of two things. Either the Ravens don't have the right players. Or they don't have the right coaches.
Is that right?
I mean, sure, you could say "It's a little of both", but in reality you either believe the Ravens have the personnel and player roster to win a title or they don't. And you either believe the coaching staff can coach them to a title or they can't.
It's either the players or the coaches.
Are the Ravens 0-2 because of the players?
Or are they 0-2 because of the coaches?
Did they lose to Kansas City last January because of the players?
Or did they lose because of the coaches?
I have never been a "fire the coach" guy. I fired one, once, in mid-season and it was a gut-wrenching thing to do. I've also been fired, not as a coach, per se, but fired nonetheless. It's an awful feeling.
Going all the way back to my days on the radio when people like Dave Tremblay, Juan Samuel and Sam Perlozzo were tasked with winning games with a roster comparable to The Bad News Bears, I never went on the air and said, "That dude has to go."
I didn't necessarily think Brian Billick deserved to be fired, either.
I thought Buck Showalter did an excellent job in Baltimore for the most part.
And even though I think Brandon Hyde does some really wacky stuff more often than I'd prefer, when he's been given a competent player roster, his teams have consistently won.
There are people in town who think Hyde should be fired. I'm certainly not one of them.
Coaches are always the low hanging fruit, mostly because all of the judging that gets done about coaches almost always, always, always happens after the play, after the game or after the season. In other words, once you know the result, it's then that you say, "Yeah, well, the blame there goes on the coach."
So, I've never been a "fire the coach" guy.
But as I watch the very early returns on the 2024 Ravens, I'd say this: They have a coaching problem.
I'm not a football expert. I didn't play in the NFL. Or in college, even. So my opinion might be as meaningless as it could possibly be.
I don't think Todd Monken is a NFL coordinator.
And I don't think Zach Orr is a NFL coordinator.
Not now, at least.
Monken was thoroughly out-foxed last January in the AFC Championship Game.
And Orr has appeared to be in over his head in the early stages of 2024.
Can you fire both of them right now? Of course not.
Should you fire both of them right now? Of course not.
But here's the question? The same one my owner asked me 30 years ago over lunch in Little Italy.
Who hired Monken?
And who promoted Orr?
If the answer is "John Harbaugh" and it was, in fact, the head coach's call to hire Monken away from the University of Georgia and gift Orr the job after Mike Macdonald left, then it's Harbaugh who should have to ultimately pay the price for their shortcomings.
The Raiders came to town on Sunday with realistically only one way to beat the Ravens. They had to throw the ball to two players, basically. Davante Adams. And Brock Bowers. Vegas has no running game at all. They can't really do anything offensively except try to somehow unlock Adams and Bowers.
Everyone in the stadium knew that on Sunday.
Who beat the Ravens? Adams. And Bowers.
That was either the team's defensive personnel not being good enough to contain those two players or it was the coaching staff not effectively scheming to stop those two.
It can really only be one of the two.
I think it was coaching.
Zach Orr is the guy coordinating the Baltimore defense. Therefore, it falls on him.
Or does it fall on the guy who hired him?
A defensive coordinator spot in the NFL is an extremely coveted position. You're not only raking in beaucoup bucks, but you're essentially one step away -- as Mike Macdonald showed -- from being an attractive head coach candidate.
The Ravens could have had their pick of the litter last January when Macdonald took the Seattle head coach job.
For reasons only they know, they went with Zach Orr.
I sure hope I'm wrong here, but I think they went with the wrong guy.
Nothing against him. He could turn into an awesome coordinator someday down the road.
But his hire, like Monken's in 2023, is a head scratcher.
Who hired those two guys?
Find that out and you'll start to see where the Ravens problems lie.
I am a card carrying member of the John Harbaugh fan club. I have been since the first day I met him. I've never been ashamed to say that or proclaim it here at #DMD.
He's a football guy, through and through. He loves Baltimore. He raised a family here and has been a critical contributor to our community since 2008.
In full disclosure, he's been a friend to me and has helped me with some personal endeavors with both Calvert Hall Golf and FCA.
In a nation with diminishing numbers of quality human beings, John Harbaugh is a stand out, stand up guy. If you don't think John Harbaugh is a high quality man, you're a really poor judge of character.
But the hourglass has been flipped over and the sand is starting to move from the top to the bottom.
And it's going to keep going until eventually there's nothing left.
Time and the movement of such always winds up winning. Nothing lasts forever.
If this Ravens season goes sideways, as I'm now suspecting it will, the ultimate solution is the obvious one, even though it might not be completely fair.
The head coach will need to be removed.
I can't see it happening during the season, mind you.
But if the offense continues to sputter and if the defense continues to fail under the gun, the only person left who hasn't been fired or replaced at some point in the last decade is the head coach himself.
It will be his turn, unfortunately.
And whether the word "deserved" applies or not, the reality is it will be justified by the team's performance and the simple fact that the same mistakes keep happening and the same losses keep mounting.
There's still a lot of football left, of course. A win in Dallas this Sunday and the Ravens are right back on track, sort of.
But my gut says even a win over the Cowboys won't stitch up the wounds that have been opened by some curious personnel decisions over the last two years.
Todd Monken might beat the Cowboys this Sunday, but he won't beat the Bills the following Sunday. And he won't beat the Chiefs, Bills, Chargers or Texans in January with the season on the line.
Zach Orr might befuddle Zak Prescott this week, but he won't confuse Josh Allen on September 29 in Baltimore. And he won't be able to nullify guys like Mahomes, Herbert or Stroud in the post-season when it matters most.
I sure would love to be wrong on those two. I'd proudly say, "I was wrong about Todd Monken" or "I was wrong about Zach Orr" in the same way I'm delighted to say "I was wrong about Anthony Santander in 2024." I called for Santander to hit 19 home runs and have a "down season". I was dead-red wrong.
I just don't see the Baltimore offense and Baltimore defense having what it takes to rise to the top.
The hourglass is almost empty.
And you know what that's going to lead to, I suspect.
My wish is simple: I hope the Ravens turn this around and Harbaugh sticks it up everyone's back side with a red hot poker.
I hope he's standing there on stage with the TV talking head in February, shoving the Lombardi Trophy in the air as if to say, "This is for you, Forrester, and you, Preston, and you (insert other critics here), and all the rest of you know-nothings in Baltimore who said I was the problem. How does that humble pie taste?"
Man, I'd give anything to see the Ravens do an about-face and roll through the season and into the Super Bowl.
If it happens, John gets the last laugh. And rightfully so.
But if it doesn't.......
The sand will have emptied from the top. And there won't be anything left.
And what do you do with an hourglass when it's no longer working?
You turn it over and start again.
Monday September 16, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3676 |
Quick, what's the NFL record for sacks in a game?
Micah Parsons of the Cowboys wants to know.
He's absolutely licking his chops in advance of the Ravens visit to Dallas next week. After yesterday's stunning home loss to Las Vegas, the Ravens will visit the Cowboys trying to avoid an improbable 0-3 start.
Since the NFL schedule increased to 17 games in 2021, only 2 of 32 teams who started the season 0-2 went on to make the playoffs. Those aren't great numbers, but 0-3 is even worse. In other words, next Sunday might not be "must" win, but if we were playing horse the Ravens would have M-U-S at this point.
Before the 2024 campaign started, I called for an 11-6 Ravens season and an eventual playoff dismissal. My main reason for the "down" year? The offensive line, I said.
I'll play John Harbaugh's role for a second and state the obvious: The Ravens have 15 games remaining and they might wind up proving me wrong on that pre-season assessment. But for now I'll double down on it. The offensive line in Baltimore is a bottom tier unit in the NFL and, I'm fairly sure, is the worst (healthy) offensive line group in the history of the Ravens franchise.
Oh, the NFL record for sacks in a game is 7, held by former Chiefs linebacker Derrick Thomas in a game vs. Seattle back in 1990.
Micah Parsons might get 7 in the first half next Sunday.
Yesterday's loss in Charm City was much more of the same old, same old.
Bizarre play calling by Todd Monken.
Questionable penalty calls.
Inability to cover the opposing tight ends, again.
Ill-timed penalty on Brandon Stephens that probably could have been called either way, but was called against the Ravens cornerback.
Missed field goal by Justin Tucker.
Odd challenges that resulted in losing valuable time outs.
And Lamar Jackson having the game on his racket in the 4th quarter and being unable to drive the final nail in the Raiders' coffin.
I don't know that any of those outweigh the other, but Monken's failure to use Derrick Henry properly ranks near the top.
The Baltimore defense was gifted a 10-point 4th quarter lead and couldn't put the sleeper hold on Gardner Minshew and the Las Vegas offense, as the visitors connected for a field goal, touchdown and game-winning field goal to steal the 3-point win.
John Harbaugh said all the right things after the game, but the reality is an 0-2 start is almost season ending, as the stats above indicate.
The good news?
Cincinnati is also 0-2 and the Browns are 1-1.
Pittsburgh is 2-0 after beating a pair of JV squads on the road. Let's see where they are at the end of October once they start playing real teams.
In other words, if the Ravens can go 4-2 or 5-1 in the division, they're still likely going to win the AFC North.
And if they're going to lose a game to drop to 0-3, losing to an NFC team next Sunday would be the only reasonable way to fall to 0-3.
The only problem? Buffalo comes to town the following week. They won't be a walk in the park, either.
John Harbaugh gets raked over the coals after every loss, no matter the score, how it happened or which of his players were most negligent in the defeat.
Harbaugh, of course, wasn't the one who forgot to run Derrick Henry in short yardage situations. And he wasn't the one who got flagged for a crucial pass interference call late in the game. And he definitely didn't miss that 56 yard field goal in the first half.
But at some point, Harbaugh's going to have to pay the price for his team's inability to close out these double-digit 4th quarter leads.
I know what ardent Harbaugh supporters will say: "The team just went to the AFC Championship Game last season."
That's correct, of course. They did.
But at some point, the buck has to stop somewhere. And if the Ravens continue to drop these games they have in hand, like the one they squandered yesterday, Harbaugh's going to get the blame. It's just the way it is.
At some point, another guy is going to get blamed, too. The quarterback. We'll get to him shortly.
Look, here's the reality that the Ravens don't want to talk about parties. Their rock-star offensive coordinator they stole from the most high powered college program in the country hasn't done anything in two years to make you go "Wow!".
And their rock-star defensive coordinator they stole from one of the more prestigious programs in all of college football is now the head coach in Seattle.
Oh, and in an incredibly sad turn of events, one of the more respected position coaches in franchise history passed away during training camp.
If the Ravens have a "coaching problem", it extends well past John Harbaugh. The offensive coordinator is a dud, the defensive coordinator is a rookie who was basically gifted the position for some weird reason and, together, it's adding up to some unimpressive football.
Harbaugh's expiration date might soon be approaching. That much is true. But at least it took him the better part of 16 years to finally spoil.
Monken was just opened last year and people are already saying, "Maybe it's me, but this doesn't smell good."
As for Zach Orr, that one was a little weird right from jump street. It's spilled milk now, but it's hard not to believe someone with more experience and more know-how didn't want that gig last January.
All that said, here's the other guy now officially under the microscope. Lamar Jackson.
The Ravens rightfully rewarded him with one of the biggest contracts in league history a year ago and he responded with a MVP performance until the AFC Championship Game. And while he didn't play "poorly" in that game vs. K.C., he also didn't win that game, either.
And when you give a guy $52 million a year, you do so with the expectation that there will be games along the way that he just outright figures out a way to win all on his own.
Sure, football is a team game. Everyone has a role on every play and if someone botches their assignment, the chain of events thereafter might possibly lead to the whole play breaking down.
But there are situations where the quarterback has to be the difference. And in the Ravens case, they have perhaps the best athlete in the entire league on their roster.
Next Sunday sets up to be one of those occasions where Lamar has to be the reason the Ravens win.
While his contract is cap-friendly (this year and next), the Ravens have to make hay. Once the 2027 campaign rolls around, either the QB himself or others around him are going to have to restructure their deals to help keep the club competitive. In the meantime, though, the current (healthy) roster should be good enough to beat sorry teams like Las Vegas at home.
I say this all the time when dissecting losses and such. It's a pizza.
And in the Ravens situation, both because he makes the most money and plays the most important position on the field, Lamar always gets two or more slices when they don't win.
Next Sunday is a supreme test for him. Can the 2-time MVP go to Dallas and extricate his team from an 0-2 start with a win over a Cowboys squad that just got blistered at home by New Orleans?
He can't do it all. That much is true.
But next week he might have to.
Tomorrow here at #DMD, I'll be doing a deep dive into John Harbaugh and his future in Owings Mills. You might want to come around and check it out. You also might be surprised with what you read.
"Randy On The O's" | ||
Randy Morgan takes #DMD readers through the recent week in Orioles baseball as the Birds try to win a second straight A.L. East title. |
Week Record: 2-4
Season Record: 84-66
AL East Standing: 2nd (3 GB NYY, 2 GA KC for WC1)
Player of the Week: Gunnar Henderson
Maybe you can remember back to September 17 last year, a magical day where the Orioles came from behind to beat the Tampa Bay Rays and start their surge for the division title at the same time the Ravens were beating the Cincinnati Bengals on their home field. Well, Sunday was the exact opposite of that, a sort of Black Sunday for Baltimore sports.
While the Ravens have plenty of season left to figure out their shortcomings, the Orioles are running out of time. Their defense of the AL East title is rapidly fading after another week of mediocrity. Unfortunately for the Orioles, the Yankees managed to win five of their seven games against the Royals and Red Sox, pushing themselves three games ahead of the O’s in the division.
At this point the Orioles may need to be more concerned with staying ahead of the surging Royals for the top Wild Card spot, as they currently lead by just two games. As someone who shelled out for the Birdland membership mostly for the priority on playoff tickets, I’m really hoping they can at least hold on to that to guarantee a couple home playoff games.
It will be an abbreviated recap of the games this week because honestly, I don’t want to relive them. The O’s got decent starting pitching but the offense was anemic, even with three games in the bandbox that is Fenway Park.
If you want to look on the brightside, Corbin Burnes appears to be back on track. His seven shutout innings with seven strikeouts in the win on Saturday was his third straight solid start after the calendar turned to September. If Burnes returns to ace form, sending him and Eflin to start any playoff series should put the O’s in good position, if the offense can score any runs.
The only other positive from the week was the first few reinforcements coming off the injured list. Heston Kjerstad and Jacob Webb both returned to the Orioles on Sunday, with Danny Coulombe close behind after two shutout innings this week in Norfolk.
One can only hope that Jordan Westburg, Grayson Rodriguez and Ramon Urias are close behind them. None of them have begun rehab assignments yet, so the time is winding down for them to get some reps before the playoffs. Westburg is reportedly fielding and hitting in the cage, Rodriguez is supposed to throw a “live bullpen” soon and Urias is “ahead of schedule.” It seems like there is no timetable for Ryan Mountcastle so he may be done for the year.
If you squint, you can imagine how the Orioles get back to health and make a run in the playoffs, but the time is certainly running out for them to turn the corner and get back to winning baseball.
They started off this week with a complete meltdown in Boston, losing 12-3 on Monday after a rough Cade Povich start and an even worse effort from the bullpen. Two homers from Cedric Mullins and a six inning one-run start from Albert Suarez got them a 5-3 win on Tuesday, but they dropped the series finale in Boston by the same score on a 10th inning walk off homer off Keegan Akin, spoiling another strong start from Dean Kremer.
Things didn’t get any better as they traveled to Detroit, where they managed just six runs in three games against mostly the Tigers bullpen. Zach Eflin took a frustrating loss on Friday after delivering 6.2 innings of one-run pitching, as Gunnar Henderson managed the only hit of the night with a triple in the 9th inning. On Saturday it was again Mullins and Gunnar who provided the only offense, but the four runs they generated were enough for a 4-2 win thanks to a gem of a start from Corbin Burnes.
On Sunday the O’s started a day of Baltimore sports misery with a 4-2 loss after a decent start from Cade Povich. Riley Greene played the role of Brock Bowers and Davante Adams, hitting two homers and driving in three while the Orioles only managed two runs on an Adley Rutschman homer.
It doesn’t feel like we should even award a Player of the Week today, but Gunnar Henderson did his best Lamar Jackson carry the team on his back this week, getting on base at a .370 clip with a home run, five runs and two RBI. The starting rotation also deserves a shout out, with Burnes, Eflin, Suarez and Kremer all producing quality starts on the week.
Down on the Farm --
With the season winding down the minors are becoming less relevant to the outcome of the team this year. The lower levels have completed their seasons with just Norfolk and Bowie still playing. The biggest news out of the minor leagues this week were the rehab appearances of Jacob Webb, Heston Kjerstad and Danny Coulombe, the former two who returned to the majors on Sunday.
In Norfolk, top prospect Samuel Basallo had a bounce back week as he adjusts to AAA pitching, batting .333 on the week with a double and two RBI. Brandon Young pitched 5.1 shutout innings with four strikeouts and one walk in his appearance and Trevor Rogers looked better with six shutout innings and seven strikeouts. However, at this point it doesn’t look like either will help the big league team down the stretch unless there are even more injuries.
At AA Bowie, outfield prospect Enrique Bradfield Jr. hit safely in five of six games, batting .350 with his first AA homer along with four walks and four stolen bases. Fellow outfield prospect Dylan Beavers continued his strong September, pushing his OPS to .989 for the month and looking ready for a move up to Norfolk next season.
Question of the Week --
Who are the three starters for the Wild Card series?
With the Orioles falling three games behind the Yankees after Sunday’s results, it's looking more and more like they will need to be ready for a Wild Card series. Fangraphs gives them just an 11.9% chance to win the division now, but still a 99.7% chance of making the playoffs. Given that, let's consider what the rotation should look like for that potential series.
As it stands now, the O’s would be in position to host the two or three games against the Kansas City Royals. Assuming the Birds could arrange their starters as they prefer going into the series, how would that look?
It seems there are two locks to start in this three game series. Zach Eflin has been lights out since the Orioles acquired him from the Rays. He has been more than the front office could have hoped down the stretch and he has given no reason to doubt he’d give the team a great chance to win in any playoff game.
Corbin Burnes has been among the best pitchers in the league over the past few years and he was on track for some Cy Young votes before a disastrous August. After three September starts he appears to be back on his ace-level game and will surely start one of the first two games. While you could argue Eflin has been the better of the two since coming to Baltimore, my guess is Burnes will get game one, as a show of confidence in the veteran and top offseason acquisition.
After those two is where the tough decisions come in. Grayson Rodriguez has been the second or third starter for the Orioles all season when healthy, but given that he has yet to make a rehab start, huge questions remain about his readiness for the playoffs.
Would you trust Rodriguez to pitch a playoff game if he hasn’t made more than one start back in the big leagues before the finish of the regular season? He struggled massively in his one playoff start last year, not even making it out of the second inning.
If it’s not Rodriguez then that leaves either Dean Kremer or Albert Suarez. Both have been solid in September, with Suarez in competition for the Most Valuable Oriole this season, or at least the unsung hero award.
You would probably have more faith in Suarez in a decisive game three, especially after Kremer’s outing in last year’s postseason went even worse than Rodriguez’s. However, Suarez is the only one of the group that has experience pitching out of the bullpen. So Hyde and Elias may prefer to start either Kremer or Rodriguez and have Suarez ready to go if anything goes wrong.
GRod has an intriguing profile to come out of the bullpen. Perhaps his power arm could work well in a high leverage spot, but who knows how hard it would be for him to transition to that role at the most important point of the season. It may be more realistic to move Suarez into that spot and let Rodriguez or Kremer start a game three.
The other possibility would be holding Eflin for a potential game three and letting one of the aforementioned trio pitch game two. If you win game one that may be a gamble worth taking, allowing Eflin to start game one of the ALDS if the team wins the Wild Card in two games. However if game two is a must-win, then Eflin has to start.
We have a few weeks to see how it plays out, but this will be the most important decision of the season for Hyde unless the O’s can pull off the improbable and come back to take the division from the Yankees.
Sunday September 15, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3675 |
The Ravens and Raiders tackle today at M&T Bank Stadium and it's one of those no-brainer games for Baltimore that better well be a win.
An 0-2 start wouldn't be catastrophic, but losing at home to the Raiders would be.
I know there aren't style or blowout points available, but I'm expecting a Ravens romp this afternoon in sunny Charm City.
This feels like one of those games where the Ravens flex their offensive muscles and pour it on, adding more depth to the conversation that the two best AFC teams played in the Thursday night opener ten days ago, no matter what goofy Ja'Marr Chase thinks.
I don't see the Raiders offense being able to do much against the Baltimore defense. But this will be a good test for Zach Orr nonetheless. Let's see if he can dial up a winning game plan against Gardner Minshew, who was actually somewhat decent last week in the loss to the L.A. Chargers.
In the end, the game will hinge on the Raiders ability to stop Lamar, Zay, Likely and Derrick Henry.
And, no pun intended, it's very unlikely they'll be able to do that.
It's a semi-blow-out from the start, as the Ravens lead 10-0 after one and build a 20-7 halftime lead. It's 27-10 after three quarters and the Ravens add another TD and field goal in the 4th quarter to polish off a 37-13 home smashing of Las Vegas.
OK, it wasn't exactly an offensive explosion or anything like that, but four runs and three of them in one inning was certainly a welcome sight on Saturday night for the O's.
Their 4-2 win coupled with New York's 7-1 home loss to Boston moved the battlin' Birds back to within two games of the Bronx Bombers with 13 games remaining in the regular season.
Corbin Burnes threw what both Brandon Hyde and James McCann called his "best start of the year", going seven innings and allowing just two hits while striking out seven Detroit batters. Burnes has been scuffling for the better part of six weeks, so a return to form was not only a welcome sight but much needed on a night the O's entered the game knowing the Yankees had lost earlier in the day.
And give Hyde some credit, too. He somehow had a gut feeling that Livan Soto would be a reasonable choice to play second base on Saturday night and the little-used 24 year old responded with two hits and a sparkling play or two in the field as well. His double in the 7th inning moved Emmanuel Rivera to third base and Rivera would score on the very next at bat when James McCann lofted a sacrifice fly into left field.
Gunnar Henderson followed McCann's contribution with a 2-run homer to right field for his 37th dinger of the campaign. With Anthony Santander cooling off dramatically over the last few weeks, Henderson is now the obvious clubhouse leader for the team's MVP award and will almost certainly snag the honor barring something really weird happening in the final two weeks of the season.
Seranthony Dominguez made things interesting in the bottom of the 9th when he surrendered two runs, but it all ended well and the O's picked up that vital game on New York after all.
So there's one more with the Tigers this afternoon (early start, 12:10 pm) and then it's home for the final six games of the regular season against the Giants and that same Detroit club.
Looming in the distance, of course, is the pivotal 3-game series in New York against the Yankees in 10 days.
In the meantime, the walking wounded will start trickling back in this week, with expected returns by Jacob Webb, Danny Coulombe and Jordan Westburg at the very least. Those three alone should give the O's a big boost heading into that series with the Yankees.
A few weeks back, a potential MLB rule change was bandied about that would eliminate what the Tigers did the last two days. Detroit, in case you missed, it, started Beau Brieske on both Friday and Saturday. In the opener, he "worked" 1.1 innings and and then last night he was only able to hang in there for the first inning.
I say "hang in there" with a smirk, of course. But the whole thing is a joke. That said, if the rule is there to be manipulated, you can't blame teams for manipulating it.
To wit, there actually isn't a rule in the first place, which is part of the problem. And it's also why MLB is considering instituting a rule that says the pitcher who starts the game must complete six innings.
That move would/will get rid of so-called bullpen games all together.
There would be some exceptions to the 6-inning mandate, though. A starting pitcher can be removed prior to completing six innings if one of the following takes place:
* He throws 100 pitches
* He gives up four or more earned runs
* He gets injured (with a required injured list stint to avoid manipulation)
I don't know that I'm a huge fan of the 6-inning rule. But I do know I'm completely not a fan of the relief-pitcher-starting-a-game-and-throwing-one-inning option.
So I'd vote "yes" for the 6-inning rule on that principle alone. Much like the upcoming Presidential election, one option is better than the other simply because that "other" option isn't reasonable. That doesn't mean both options are great. It just means one is far worse than the other.
Given a choice between a 6-inning rule and allowing someone to throw just one inning to start the game, I'll agree to the 6-inning rule.
And I'm sure the Players Association doesn't like the bullpen game option. They want starting pitchers creating maximum benefit so they can earn bigger contracts along the way.
Alas, I don't care about contracts and such. Much like the infield shift took away from the game (and helped end some careers, like a certain $161 million first baseman in Baltimore), the bullen-starter concept takes away from the game, too.
I realize managers and stat nerds are in place to get creative and steal a win or three during the season with creative, outside the box thinking, but the bullpen game is stupid. It just is.
If the proposed 6-inning rule gets ratified at some point, I'd be in favor of it simply because I'm in favor of anything that eliminates what we saw from the Tigers on Friday and Saturday.
WILL JACKSON | ||
Will Jackson will be here every Sunday during the NFL season with his thoughts on games and prop bets that will hopefully yield positive results for you. |
Happy football Sunday to everyone reading this. The Ravens host the Raiders, of course, and there's also a full slate of games and prop wagers to consider so let's get right to it.
One thing I want to say about making prop wagers that could help you. NFL players are definitely creatures of habit when it comes to individual performances against opposing teams. Josh Allen was a great prop wager against Miami on Thursday night because he always seems to play well against the Dolphins, whether it's home or away.
If you have time to kill during the week, just a little bit of research on how players do against certain opponents could benefit you in a big way. As you'll see below, I'm buying into the Ravens and their home opener success, especially against someone like the Raiders.
Here are my game picks for the week and some other prop wagers.
Game bets:
Ravens (-8) over Vegas
Ravens/Raiders over the total of 41.5
L.A. Chargers (-5) over Carolina
Denver (+2.5) vs. Pittsburgh
Jacksonville (-3) over Cleveland
Kansas City (-6) over Cincinnati
Kansas City/Cincinnati over the total of 48.5
Prop bets:
Lamar Jackson (Baltimore) over 203.5 yards passing
Justice Hill (Baltimore) anytime touchdown scorer
Zay Flowers (Baltimore) anytime touchdown scorer
Justin Fields (Pittsburgh) over 160.5 yards passing
Justin Herbert (L.A.) over 203.5 yards passing
Aaron Jones (Minnesota) over 61.5 yards rushing
CeeDee Lamb (Dallas) over 6.5 receptions
Jameson Williams (Detroit) over 44.5 yards receiving
Deshaun Watson (Cleveland) under 203.5 yards passing
At least one defensive score in Pittsburgh/Denver
Saturday September 14, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3674 |
I guess there was some real irony in the air on Friday night in Charm City.
While Bruce Springsteen was playing all of the hits at the downtown baseball stadium, the Orioles were only able to record one hit in Detroit in a gut-punch 1-0 loss to the Tigers.
Is it too soon to make Bruce jokes at the expense of the O's? If so, I apologize.
Alas, it's true.
Springsteen tore through a remarkable 3-hour set at Camden Yards and the E Street Band was nearly flawless, as Bruce delighted the hometown faithful with "Hungry Heart" as the show opener to get the folks on his side right from the start.
The O's, meanwhile, were nearly no-hit by four different Detroit pitchers. Baltimore's only hit of the night -- I'd make a Beatles reference here but I'm giving up on low hanging fruit, doctors orders -- was a Gunnar Henderson triple that just snuck down the first base line with 2 outs in the top of the 9th.
That's it. Just one hit.
No, not the Beatles. The Orioles.
To make matters worse, I guess, Henderson was the game-tying run, on third base, in a contest the O's had zero business being in a position to win. And then Anthony Santander struck out to end the game and that was that.
Somewhere here yesterday I mentioned the Yankees would eventually see Aaron Judge break out of his 3-week slump and do something special. That's one I wish I would have been wrong on, frankly. Judge hit a dramatic 7th inning grand slam last night in the Bronx to give New York a 5-4 win over Boston and push them 3 games ahead of the O's with 14 games remaining.
I guess you could say Judge led the Yankees to "the promised land" last night at Yankee Stadium.
And so, the O's are now officially in a pinch in terms of the division crown. It's not out of reach or anything like that. They still have that huge 3-game series in New York in two weeks time that will probably decide the division one way or the other.
But they're starting to enter "can't lose tonight" territory if they want to win a second straight A.L. East title.
Meanwhile, the A.L. Wild Card race is getting very interesting now that Detroit has emerged as a late contender.
The O's are in good shape with 65 losses.
Next it's the pesky Royals with 67.
Minnesota currently has the third and final spot locked down with 69 losses.
Detroit has 72 losses, the Mariners have 73 and the Red Sox have 74.
Don't look now, folks, but the O's are on a collision course with the Royals in the first round of the playoffs. Yeah, I know what you're thinking and I'm of the same mindset. I don't feel great about that one.
I'm going to keep on saying the same thing I've said here for a while now. And, ultimately, I'm either going to be right about it and you'll be glad I was or I'll be wrong and we'll be sad together.
The return of guys like Westburg, Mountcastle, Urias, GrayRod, Webb and Coulombe is going to make a difference. I'm just telling you, they will.
Last night was clearly not a good night for anyone (from Baltimore) at the plate, but when Westburg returns perhaps that means we won't see much more of Jimenez as the designated hitter. I still think he's good for one moment of magic at the plate in the post-season, but having watched him for the better part of five weeks stroll around like he's the next coming of Roberto Clemente, it's easy to see why the White Sox were thrilled to dump him.
A quick look at the box score from last night tells you something indeed. In a game the O's "sorta kinda" had to win, they had Emmanuel Rivera (.223) start at 3rd base and had the likes of Austin Slater (.209) and the completely overmatched Coby Mayo (.091) come into the game as pinch hitters.
I get it. Every team has a Rivera, Slater and Nick Maton on their roster. I'm just not sure those clubs are fighting for a division title and using those three guys in games of huge importance.
Once the injured O's return, we probably won't see much of them in late September and October. Rivera, frankly, has been of useful service of late. Slater has done an Austin Hays thing or two since joining the club at the deadline, but by and large he's just a guy. Mayo, we now know, wasn't ready for the big leagues this time around.
It's a Saturday morning and I'm still flying high from the Bruce show last night, so I'll leave Jimenez alone for now. He was supposed to be a difference maker with runners in scoring position. Key word in that sentence: supposed.
Anyway, there was some good news on Friday night.
The Springsteen show was outrageously good.
And while the obvious main attraction at any Bruce concert is the man from Freehold, it's important to point out just how incredibly talented the entire E Street Band is on every song from start to finish. The band might not "make" the music, but they sure do make the show. Sure, Bruce, could just come out on stage by himself and sing for 3 hours and it would be an event worth attending, but when you mix in the E Street Band, something special happens.
Last night was show #29 for me. I have no real way of ranking them in terms of best, second best, etc., but I would say last night was as good as I've ever heard the band and Bruce produced a terrific set list, although it did get a little cookie-cutter in the last hour or so.
Kicking off the show with "Hungry Heart" and the mention of Baltimore was an obvious no-brainer way to get things started. I knew he'd play that one, but certainly didn't expect him to lead with it. Nice touch, indeed.
"Reason to Believe" -- one of the most underrated tracks of the Nebraska album -- has made its way to recent setlists and Friday night in Baltimore it was a roof-raiser. It seems like Bruce loves the song and loves playing it.
Everyone got their dose of the Born to Run album: The title track, Thunder Road, Backstreets, She's the One and Tenth Avenue Freeze Out were all part of the night.
Bruce still insists on playing something from that goofy Blues album he put out a couple of years ago, but the Commodore's "Nightshift" was well done and The Boss clearly enjoys both the singing and (light) dancing that accompanies the tune. I'd prefer he substitute a cover for something like "Jungleland" or "Kitty's Back", but it's called "artist's preference" for a reason. You're the artist, you pick what you want to play from time to time.
I'm all out of quips about the O's, one hit, and so on, but if there was ever a night where I'd swap the Birds almost being no-hit for something, it was watching Bruce for 3 hours at Camden Yards while the Orioles went down to the last batter before finally getting a base knock in Detroit.
I saw some people on Twitter actually "hoping" the Birds were going to get no-hit, but I don't subscribe to that theory. People were blabbering on about how getting no-hit would "send a message to Elias", as if the O's general manager doesn't already know the team's offense has been struggling for the last 8-10 weeks.
I'm sorry, I don't want my team getting no hit.
That said, I'm glad I did get to see some hits on Friday night.
They were in Baltimore, though, not Detroit.
The Boss ruled center field on Friday night at Camden Yards. It was, as expected, a night to remember in Charm City.
Thank you Bruce.
And, thank you Gunnar.
such October 15 |
Because I'm older, I don't spend much time on social media. I find it rather exhausting to be honest. Therefore I was unaware of this incident until last night, when my sons began texting me and FaceTiming me. The assailant is a former teammate of two of my sons at Hereford High. Let's just say that his senior year there was punctuated by some extremely poor decisions, likely due to being under the influence. Hereford was his third high school in four years. I'm going to go out on a very short limb here and surmise that he was under the influence on Sunday night in Federal Hill. His actions are inexcusable under any circumstances. Drunk, high, sober, it doesn't matter. Violently assaulting innocent people, unprovoked, is bordering on sociopathic behavior. He should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law, and if civil suits arise from this disgusting incident, he should be made to pay for his victims medical care and pain and suffering. Whatever backlash and public embarrassment he endures because of this are due to his own reckless, irresponsible behavior. You get what you get when you act like a fool. As I've always told my sons, Make good choices. Stop and think about the consequences. |
TimD in Timonium October 15 |
"Clearly, though, the man who assaulted the two Commanders fans was somehow enthused about being on camera for the incident." Live by the sword, die by the sword. The resulting video went viral, and the outcome probably wasn't the "internet fame" he had in mind. Without video, I'm guessing this goes unreported and the perp remains unknown. Oh well. |
Barry October 14 |
Flacco is likely back to not being a starter by next week, no way he's coming here for a playoff game in Jan. @Paul pretending to be positive is hilarious! |
Delray RICK October 14 |
One of my problems with HARBAUGH is when he throws the red flag I'm sitting watching slow-motion, ain't no way he's right. I know it's people upstairs. When you have to rely on others that's where HARBS gets accused of f it up. He's mind is so on this team there isn't anybody else I'd want as coach . Who the he'll is better ??? Crickets |
Vince from SC October 14 |
The only criticism of Harbaugh I have is his clock management at the end of halves can sometimes make you scratch your head. Other than that, he's been a HOF coach no question. Should have won the SB the year before if Lee Evans or Billy Cundiff could do bare minimum. |
Paul from Towson October 14 |
The John Harbaugh hate in this city absolutely astounds me. All this franchise has done since he's been here is win. Sure, they've only hoisted the Lombardi trophy once under him, but that's one more time than most of the rest of the NFL. And, this team has been to the AFC Championship Game four times under Harbaugh. Sure, the 1-3 record could be better, but let's not forget that first one was in Joe Flacco's (and Harbs' for that matter) rookie season when this team was supposed to be 4-12. Of course he's not perfect, and yeah his use of challenges and timeouts can be questionable at best, but it's hard to argue with the overall W-L record. Not to mention, he swallowed his pride in 2018 and did something very few, if any, Super Bowl winning coaches would do, and changed the entire offensive structure of this team to suit Lamar Jackson's strengths. Look at the rest of the league, and the coaching unemployment line, and tell me who you would rather have. Belichick?? No thanks, look at his record without a guy named Tom Brady. Jeff Fisher?? Don't think so. What about all these young, hotshot coaches that the national pundits love so much. Kevin Stefanski? Pass. Zac Taylor? Nah. Nick Siriani? Please! The luntics in Philly are ready to run him out of town despite making it to the Super Bowl two seasons ago. I know this isn't just a Baltimore thing, after all, if you ask any Stooler fan they would tell you that THEY could coach the team in Pittsburgh to a Super Bowl before Mike Tomlin could. But even still, at a time in the NFL (and sports in general) when most teams have a yearly coaching carousel and rampant upheaval (Falcons, Colts, Raiders, Panthers, etc.) having the stability in a head coach that wins, on average, 10 games a season is a luxury very few teams enjoy. And, in my humble opinion, even given his faults, I would take Harbs over just about every other coach in the league, except MAYBE Andy Reid. But even Reid was an also-ran until a guy named Mahomes came into the league. Go Ravens!! Such, you beat me to it this morning. As I watched the replay of yesterday's game, I realized that the Derrick Henry signing seems very Shannon Sharpe-ish to me. When the Ravens signed the two time Super Bowl champion, they already had a championship caliber defense. Sharpe was the missing piece on an offense that was built on the run and timely passing. Now, Lamar Jackson is leaps and bounds better than Trent Dilfer ever was on his best day, but just like Sharpe, Derrick Henry seems to be the missing piece for this offense. Derrick Henry makes LJ8 an the rest of the offense better because, with all due respect to JK Dobbins and Gus Edwards, defenses didn't have to stack the box to stop them. Leaving LJ8 to pic apart man, or in some cases, soft zone coverage. GO RAVENS! |
Howard October 14 |
Tony Siragusa was a great free agent pickup. The 2000 Ravens defense had no offense to pick them up. The defense couldn’t bend and couldn’t break and they didn’t. |
Bud King October 14 |
Not even Harbs could lose this game... go Ravens! |
Nathan Aparisto October 14 |
Is there ANY deal or trade that would convince that mess of a Jets franchise to send Sauce Gardner to the flock for a passel of picks? Could the cap hit be worked out? Hed be the next Ed Reed for a decade and Ravens could truly be a juggernaught! |
such October 14 |
We were having a text conversation last night and the question was raised: Has there ever been a better Free Agent signing by the Ravens than Henry? I can't think of anyone comparable on offense. Maybe Shannon Sharpe, maybe Derek Mason, but as far as instant impact and the ability to effect games the way he does, there's never been anyone close to Henry. Yesterday was just the latest example of the difference he's made. Everyone from Hereford to Upper Marlboro knew he was getting the ball, and the Ravens ran that same little toss sweep to the left they ran in Cincy, and Henry goes for 30 yards and that's ballgame. He's an absolute hammer. I went back and looked at the 2016 Draft and it's just another example of NFL front offices overanalyzing players. The Ravens took Ronnie Stanley at #6 overall, which is undeniably a very good pick. In the second round, at #42 overall, they selected the immortal Kamalei Correa from Boise State. Derrick Henry went to Tennessee at #45. Oh, what might have been. Although Lamar wasn't here yet so there's no telling what the offense would've looked like with Joe Flacco and King Henry. Regardless, he's here now and it's a beautiful sight to behold. |
Chris in Bel Air October 14 |
Even in the loss to KC, you could see the potential of the Ravens. They are clearly starting to put it all together now. As a fan, I'm feeling the optimism. But... we've also watched the Ravens and the NFL long enough to know they will stub their toe a couple more times. It happens. The key is how they bounce back the following week. Moreover, you don't win the Lombardi in October. It's all about January... and hopefully February. IF they end up playing KC again in the playoffs, they are not going to lose that game. I don't care if it is in B'more or KC. They are winning that one. Yes, the secondary seems to be a concern and can't figure out if it's personnel or scheme or both. Either way, like yesterday, the offense just needs to pick them up and respond when they have the ball. A couple random observations. First on Brandon Stephens. Maybe it's just me but it seems like no matter how closely he is covering his man, the opposing QB and WR always seems to come up with an incredible play/catch. Yesterday he had at least one like that, maybe two. I'm not busting on him, I'm just saying, I'm not sure what more he can do. Overall, I think he's become a decent CB for someone that did not play that position in college. Second, good to see Ngakoue in the mix yesterday. I like his potential rotating in the pass rush mix. As for Marcus Williams, he's sort of been a disappointment. He's not a bad player, I just can't remember the last time I saw him do anything of significance. INT? Forced Fumble? Fumble recovery? Key pass break-up? Something. On to Tampa |
Unitastoberry October 14 |
Another win and another big offensive statement. Commandskins done. Swiss Pees and Orr have some work to do. Why was Tony Romo on Kyle Hamiltons case about him being a dirty player on two big plays he made? He reacts before looking at the instant replay. Tony drives me nuts not my favorite commenter. It's a contact sport Tony. Only the offensive guys can lead with the head what a crock. My feelings on Joe Flacco are those of happiness for him. It's just a shame it's Jr Irsay who gets to beat his chest. With all the sub par duel threat QBs in the league now Joe could play another 4 -5 years.Btw I'm not including Lamar in that catagory. This bum in Cleveland should be on the bench watching Joe toss tds. Barry I will never root for PSU. I have my reasons and it's more than the Sandusky child rape coverup they should have had no football there for 5 years just for that one. It goes back to Joe PA coming here long ago and stealing all state and all county guys in Maryland just to keep them out of College Park then he redshirts them in Happy Valley etc and they never see the field playing behind guys like Franco Harris and Lydell Mitchell etc. I know one of them. He would have been a great running back at Maryland. He ran for 150-200 yards a game in Baltimore County. No shame in calling out good players up there now.44 is one of them. I hate to say it this but it could be Penn States year.Would be great if Locksley could pull a Vanderbuilt on them last game of the season. Btw Lenny Moore does get a pass Lou. Gary Cuozzo or Earl Morrall Howard? Well you have to take Earl and his MVP 1968 off the bench year. But I got visions of Jimmy Orr in the endzone waiving his hand wide open to this day and like I have said before the whole thing still stinks like you know what! |
David Rosenfeld October 14 |
If you weren't at the game yesterday you probably heard Tony Romo say that John Harbaugh is a "top 10 coach all time," which of course drew lots of chuckles from the hoi polloi. I'm not gonna get into a conversation about that, but I will say this... I don't see how you can watch the Ravens play on a week-to-week basis and say that John is an "awful coach." Like...of all takes you could have, it just doesn't stand up to any kind of serious analysis. |
Jon October 14 |
How are the league going to stymie the offense? Same way they have last few years in January- wins mask problems- - no more weak O line? enjoyable Sunday but lets not get ahead of oursleves like we did with Os and KC. Keep working Flacco! |
TimD in Timonium October 14 |
The two drives of 90+ yards were beautiful to watch. Hard to find much to complain about from yesterday's Ravens game, but surely someone will. Looks like the O-line has figured it out. Big difference from the 0-2 start. Whew. |
Kenny G October 14 |
Hopefully we saw a defensive change in yesterday's game - bend but don't break. I am not familiar with the WFT scheme but the Ravens keep also everything in front of them. Also for all people complaining about the refs, please offer some solutions vs just ranting about how bad they are. Sinc the game has become faster, covers more area of the field and the rules very complex, my suggestion is add another ref or two and allow for certain replays/challenges of penalties. I would also possibly allow more contact on receivers but penalize DB holding more (the calls are too inconsistent which leads to a lot of "missed" calls) |
Ed October 13 |
Nice day for Will Jackson picking games and props. Congratulations. |
lou@palo alto October 13 |
#24 was from Penn St |
Barry October 13 |
So UTB is actually a closet PSU fan after all eh? |
Howard October 13 |
Kj— tell me where that bar is so I can hang out with UTB and MFC. I would ask them if they think that Joe in his #15 Colts uniform reminds them more of Gary Cuozzo or Earl Morrall. Oh, and Jordan and Pippen keep rolling on |
Vince from SC October 13 |
Not a blowout but also never in doubt. On to Tampa. |
Unitastoberry October 13 |
If Lamar had made it past AFC teams in January like KC, Tennessee,and played nicked up in the Cincinnati game he would have 3 rings . I agree on this one the Commandskins are going down. Even Harbaugh won't screw this up. If you watched Penn State win in overtime over USC you know the NCAA refs are horrible. Worse than the NFL. Remember when the NFL refs went on strike and they used NCAA refs? That why the strike was settled. This number 44 on Penn State was a one man wrecking crew yesterday. He's a number one pick at TE. He's Dave Casper/Gronk quality if he stays healthy. Blocks great too pancakes guys. |
Old George October 12 |
Trolley Dodgers. |
Chris in Bel Air October 12 |
Love the "Reading time: 2 minutes"... or 3 minutes. This should be a regular thing for DMD. Thanks for the throwback. |
kj October 12 |
Everything written by @Bryce about DET was written about our O's two years ago. Funny how fans are always giving other teams a pass but want their team to be perfect 100% of the time. Wonder if MFC and UTB hang out at the local Curmudgeons bar howling at the moon together? The Indians have the best chance to beat NYY, so not sure why anyone would be pulling for DET to win today. Above was my own mini ode to my absolute favorite local sportswriter. DMD did a better job with his tribute, but figured I'd toss in an amateur version. RIP Mr Jackman. |
BRYCE October 12 |
I’d love to see Skubal and company get the last laugh this year with all the talk of Detroit dealing/retaining their ace at the deadline. Would be great to see them eliminate Cleveland and then continue their post-2000 trend of owning the Yankees in the playoffs. That team is going to be sneaky good for the next several years. In addition to its current roster, they have two top-10 prospects waiting in the wings and another at #31, per MLB. What’s even more impressive is that this 2024 surge has been with no contribution from Mize and very minimal from Torkelson, their two recent #1 overall draft picks. Most importantly, they’re playing with the team chemistry to be a force. |
Unitastoberry October 12 |
Why should U of Maryland fire Mike Locksley? So then they pretty much admit they just want a team who beats squads like Gettysburg College and Northwestern then only loses to Penn St and Michigan? It's basically an admission they joined the Big Ten for the money and could care less about a national championship. Remember what the late great Lefty Driesel said when hired by Maryland basketball back in the stone age? He said he wanted to become the UCLA of the east then strap the national trophy on his car and ride around tobacco road with it. It never happened but it was exactly what the fans wanted to hear and they bought in. Now the football team just wants to beat Northwestern and Prairie View. What a bunch of bull. RIP to Phil Jackman who was a great sports writer and not some punk looking to cause trouble.Those days are gone except at DMD. Go USC! |
MFC October 12 |
Hernandez dropping the F bond, after asking if it was live tv was disgusting. Another self Absorbed athlete. I am now rooting for anyone but LA. What a jerk, it wasn’t cute . |
Phil October 12 |
Awesome tribute, I always enjoyed his columns especially the two minute ones. |
Tom J October 12 |
Drew, when I saw the "Reading Time, 2 minutes" it rang a bell but just couldn't put my finger on it until reading down and then seeing and remembering this was Phil Jackman's thing. Didn't know the origin behind it but loved this in The Sun. Yes, please continue his thing as part of DMD. |
hank October 11 |
Top level trolling today. No true Baltimorean would ever wish success for the Yankees. I agree with David, bunch of posers like this current team is the last team I want to see in the World Series. Whoever prevails in the DET-CLE series best take care of business. Mets vs LA, no one worth rooting for there either. |
Paul from Towson October 11 |
The minute the O’s were eliminated, I became an instant fan of whatever National League team comes out of the NLCS to face whatever dumb AL champion. I can never stomach watching the Yankees (or Red Sox for that matter) celebrate anything so I strongly disagree with Drew’s commentary today. I don’t have any issue with the Mets, so if they happen to beat either LA or SD, more power to them. Plus, I would like to see Lindor and Alonso get a ring. Just wish Buck was still there to make rooting for them even that much easier. I will agree with Drew that the Cleat of Reality is hunting Washington this weekend and Jayden Daniels will feel every bit of its fury. Rookie QB’s never fair well at The Bank against our Ravens. This Sunday will be no exception. Ravens win, 34-13. Go Ravens!!! |
Jeffrey “Fireball” Roberts October 11 |
I would personally love a Yankee/Padre WS. The tattooed Padres in those horrible brown uniforms led by Manny against the clean cut Yankee pinstripes led by Judge. East Coast versus West Coast. Atlantic-Pacific. Biggie-Tupac. Bring it on. LOL |
David Rosenfeld October 11 |
Honestly, the 2024 Yankees are a bunch of posers. They act like they dominated the league. Judge and Soto are ridiculous, and Cole is one of the best, but the other 23 guys ain't much better than any other team. Maybe that'll be enough to win the World Series. I'm not sure Cleveland or Detroit will beat them...they just don't hit well enough. |
Delray RICK October 11 |
Baseball season is OVER!!! |
Chris in Bel Air October 11 |
To be honest, I guess I still have a little bit of sour grapes going on with the O's out of the running again. Tough watching other teams/fans celebrate. I suppose a Yankees/Mets series would be interesting. I'm sure other than Yankees/Dodgers (Ohtani vs Judge) MLB execs and whatever network is broadcasting the World Series would really like Yankees/Mets too. I can't imagine those same folks would be too thrilled with say Tigers vs Padres. Ravens will bring Wash and Jayden Daniels back to earth on Sunday. Don't get me wrong, I like Daniels. It's just not quite his/their time. |
TimD in Timonium October 11 |
A Mets / Yankees series could be entertaining, but I suspect most of America would tune out an all-NYC final. But I don't think the Mets will get past LA or SD. We'll see. And the Ryan Ries video was a great watch. |
Dan October 11 |
Drew, thanks for highlighting Ryan Ries. As a fellow skateboard enthusiast I know his story and the impact he has made on the youth all over the USA. God bless Ryan!! |
Unitastoberry October 10 |
I thought is was a joke today when I heard Dean"Swiss"Pees was rehired to be a senior advisor to DC Zach Orr. It's actually true. |
TimD in Timonium October 10 |
"Corbin Burnes, who started for the AL in the All-Star Game, ranked fourth in the AL in ERA (2.92), third in innings pitched (194 1/3), eighth in WHIP (1.10) and 10th in strikeouts (181)." Complete games in 2024? Zero. (His closest was 8 innings vs KC in the playoffs.) We've already seen the Golden Age of Complete Game Pitchers. It's not coming back. |
Unitastoberry October 10 |
Palmer,Cuellar, McNally and Dobson 4 20 game winners. I saw them all get at least one win that year in person. |
Bob October 10 |
2011 was the last year a pitcher logged double digit complete games with James Shields throwing 11 for Tampa Bay. Since then only two pitchers threw more then 5 games, Chris Sale in 2016 and Sandy Alcantara in 2022 both threw 6 games. I think the ship has sailed on the days a starter bangs out double digit complete games. https://www.baseball-almanac.com/pitching/picomg4.shtml |
Chris in Bel Air October 10 |
Yes, the bullpen game is certainly an interesting situation now. I agree it is not my favorite part of the game for sure. But, if a manager wants to blow through 8 arms in one game, doesn't that put him in a disadvantage for the next game? It's a risk in going the bullpen route. I am also not sure the minimum innings or pitches is practical either. If a starter is getting lit up in the first couple innings a proposed rule to remain for minimum number of pitches/innings would then take away the ability for the manager to make a pitching change. That doesn't seem like it is good for the game either. As for making these guys in Jim Palmer again, that's not happening. The days of Palmer, Fergie Jenkins, Bob Gibson, Gaylord Perry and Steve Carlton are long gone and that's not even including the astounding number of CGs thrown by the likes of Cy Young or Walter Johnson. For reference, in 2024, the team with the most CG's thrown was the Phillies with 5. Going back 50 years, here are the leading and total number of team CGs thrown that year: 2014 - 8 2004 - 11 1994 - 17 1984 - 48 1974 - 71 A remarkable trend down and it's just not ever coming back. |
David Rosenfeld October 10 |
The "bullpen game" is an interesting phenomenon because, as much as people might dislike it, it's really common sense. I'm sure that A.J. Hinch would love it if he had even one more guy like Tarik Skubal. But he doesn't, so he feels like this is the best way to win...and he's often right because (unlike in Palmer's day), the "bullpen" guys are more talented than the ostensible starting pitchers. Assuming this a problem, I'm not sure of the answer. And in the playoffs, when the rope is short even for good starting pitchers, I'm even less sure... |
Bam Bam October 10 |
Does @Billy know how to read? @Timmy K was talking about @JK |
Action October 10 |
Same exact situation in Royals Yankees game last night that Os had in game 1 against Royals. Tied ballgame, Royals man on third, 2 outs, Bobby Witt at the plate. But this time the opposing team did what Brandon Hyde and the O’s should have done. They pitched around him and walked him. And guess what the next batter did? Of, course fly out to end the inning. The Yankees scored 1 more after that and that was all she wrote. 2 opposite approaches in the same exact situation with 2 different outcomes. Come on Hyde, get an effing clue! |
Delray RICK October 10 |
Who was the reader of this site who lived west FLORIDA near TAMPA?????? |
Eric in White Plains October 10 |
I attended a game last year, full disclosure, my daughter is a junior at UMD. |
Harold October 09 |
Meet the Mets- Meet the Mets…..on to the NLCS- amazin! |
Billy October 09 |
Did this "James" dude answer "the question"? Maybe Timmy K can tell us lol. |
Friday September 13, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3673 |
OK, so I'm one that never believed in mulligans.
For those who aren't golfers, a mulligan in golf is basically a one-time do-over. It generally only occurs on the tee box and depending on the level of seriousness within your foursome, your opportunity for a mulligan might be on the first tee and nowhere else.
Even if I'm in a game at the club or with a foursome who says on the first tee, "Breakfast ball here if you need one", I never use one if I don't hit a good drive. It's not that I'm a golfing purist or anything like that. I understand the need for rolling the ball in the fairway and playing lift, clean and place in the sand traps. Sometimes they're raked, sometimes they're not.
But for some reason, I've just never been cool with taking a mulligan, even in a casual round of golf. I'd rather play my sloppy first tee ball, make a bogey (or worse) and "take my medicine", as the saying goes.
So..........that leads me to the NFL.
Can I have a mulligan, please, on the Miami Dolphins winning the Super Bowl?
Please?
I should have known better.
Not only did they get their rear ends handed to them at home by the Bills last night, 31-10, but Tua Tagovailoa suffered yet another concussion and left the game after throwing three interceptions.
Now, I'm smart enough to know how the NFL works when it comes to concussions. They act like they have it under control and there's an independent physician and all that other stuff, but I think we know the drill by now.
"What's your name?"
"Tua Tagovailoa."
"Excellent, excellent. Where did you attend college?"
"University of Nick Saban, sir. Roll Tide."
"Close enough. He's good for this week."
I assume Tua will return at some point, perhaps even as early as in ten days when the Dolphins travel to Seattle.
But maybe he won't, either.
Miami's two games after the Seahawks contest are at home vs. Tennessee and at New England. Then they have a bye.
Will they either sign a real veteran back-up or can they get by for the next three weeks with Skylar Thompson under center while Tua goes through the concussion protocol?
That's the $64,000 question in Miami.
Meanwhile, here in Baltimore, I need a mulligan.
I don't think Tua is going to finish the season. He might return at some point, but there's another knock on the head in his future and once he gets another concussion in 2024, he's done. Please know I'm not wishing that on the young man. I just fear that's the direction he's heading.
So, yes, I'll take a mulligan. And just because I'm that kind of guy, I won't even take my mulligan and go with the two obvious choices in the AFC; Kansas City and Baltimore. I'll replace a mid-longshot with another mid-longshot. Heads it's Buffalo and tails it's the L.A. Chargers.
The coin is in the air.
We'll go with Buffalo.
I can't believe I'm using my mulligan on a Super Bowl pick instead of a tee ball hit out of bounds.
The Yankees picked up a crucial half-game on the O's last night with a 2-1 "playoff like" win over visiting Boston in ten innings.
Juan Soto did it again, driving in the game-winning run for the Yankees, who saw Aaron Judge reach 16 straight games without a home run in the victory.
The Orioles and Yankees have now played the same number of games, 147. New York sits at 85-62 and the O's are at 83-64.
The Yankees will continue to host the Red Sox in the Bronx over the weekend while the Birds face the Tigers for the first time this season in a weekend series in Detroit.
While the Birds head home next week to face the San Francisco Giants and Detroit Tigers (again), the Yankees will head to Seattle and Oakland for three games out west.
Then it all comes down to the last six games.
The Birds will be in the Bronx for three games in the penultimate series of the season, then travel to Minnesota for a year-ending weekend series with the Twins. The Yankees host Pittsburgh for three games after entertaining the O's in New York.
Of huge importance to the O's is winning at least one game in New York in two weeks time. They need just one victory to capture the season series, which would be huge if the two teams finish tied atop the A.L. East after 162 games.
But worrying about that Yankees series is like worrying about how you're going to play your tee shot on that devilish par 3 eigth hole at Pine Ridge when you're standing on the first tee waiting to hear the starter tell you it's time for your group to play.
The O's likely need to go at least 6-3 against the Tigers/Giants/Tigers to be within striking distance (2 games) of the Yankees when they arrive in New York on September 24.
There's plenty of good news on the horizon for Brandon Hyde's team. They're likely getting guys like Jacob Webb, Danny Coulombe and Jordan Westburg back any day now. Once Grayson Rodriguez returns, it's all hands on deck for the final run.
But you also have to assume Aaron Judge is going to learn how to hit again, too. It's inevitable. And when he gets back in the groove, he's worth a win or two over the final two weeks of the season.
For those of you going to see Bruce Springsteen tonight at the ballpark, I hope you have a wonderful evening.
I'll be there. It's show #29 for me in my lifetime of chasing The Boss around the mid-Atlantic.
Anyone have a favorite song they want to hear this evening?
My list of hopefuls are all sort of obscure tracks that I know he won't play: Walk Like A Man from Tunnel of Love, Jackson Cage from The River and I'll Work For Your Love from Magic.
But of the songs I think might find their way to the setlist, I'd love to hear Blinded By The Light, Rosalita, Spirit in the Night and Prove it all Night.
If I get one or two of those four, I'll be thrilled.
No matter what he brings to the table, though, it's just good to have The Boss in Baltimore after a one-year delay.
faith in sports |
Today's edition of "Faith in Sports" is one of my all-time favorites, mostly because I was always a fan of Drew Brees when he played in the NFL and the more I got to see him discuss the role faith played in his career, the more I grew to like him.
This video clip is short. You can watch it while your coffee is brewing this morning.
But Brees shares some important information in a short amount of time and you learn, quickly, why he became one of the league's all-time best quarterbacks.
Our thanks, as always, to our friends at Freestate Electrical for their continued support of "Faith in Sports" here every Friday.
Thursday September 12, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3672 |
If not you're a fan of nailbiting, riveting baseball, these final three weeks of the baseball season are not for you.
That was a tough one to take last night in Boston.
Yes, the O's hopes for a division title are still very much alive. But Wednesday's 5-3 loss to the Red Sox at Fenway Park was one we won't soon forget.
And I'm sure Keegan Akin won't, as well, especially after the game-winning three-run homer he surrendered that went deep into the Boston night.
Sure, it was just one game. But with the rival Yankees beating Kansas City last night, the Birds are now 1.5 games behind New York in the division standings. Also, keep in mind the O's haven't won three straight games since the All-Star break and are now 41-42 in their last 83 games.
Losses like the one on Wednesday evening at Fenway make you head to the porch for a quick adult beverage before bed. At least that's how I handled it, anyway.
You can look at the glass and season 1/2 full if you want and say, "Yeah, well, that great start in April and May saved us", but those on the other side will laugh and say, "What about July, August and September?"
And it's true, of course. While I wouldn't say the last three months have left wreckage that can't be cleaned up, there's no doubt the Birds have come undone in a number of different ways since they got off to that sizzling start.
For a while last night it looked like trade deadline pick-up Emmanuel Rivera was going to be the man of the hour, with a home run early in the game and a 10th inning hit that put the Birds up 3-2.
But lefty Keegan Akin was alone out there in the 10th, with the O's already having used the likes of Perez, Cano and Dominguez earlier in the night. The Cano outing was particularly strange. He threw all of two pitches to get the Birds out of the 8th inning, then headed to the showers without even coming close to breaking a sweat.
That move...I just didn't quite understand. Some of the moves Brandon Hyde makes I treat with indifference and let the results tell the story. But that decision was weird from the minute the skipper made it. It's moments that backfire like that one that lead to a manager being unemployable sometime down the road.
It's easy to blame Akin. He threw the pitch. But one has to wonder if Cano sticks around for the 9th whether Seranthony Dominguez might not have been the better man for that bottom of the 10th inning. We'll never know, but it's safe to say Akin wasn't able to make the quick escape the Orioles needed.
There's more than a smidgen of hyperbole here, but I'm thinking local radio sports talker Jeremy Conn could have managed that 9th inning situation better than the O's skipper. Maybe, even, our very own MFC here at Drew's Morning Dish could have figured it out.
I know what you're thinking: No way.
But I'm telling you, an elderly woman behind the counter in a small town could have watched that 8th and 9th inning last night and said, "Cano only threw 2 pitches. Let him start the 9th and save Dominguez in the event you need him in the 10th."
It's easy to look in the rearviewmirror and see where you've been. It's not easy to forecast what's in store for you in the future.
The Orioles, I still contend, will be alright. I think the division is going to come down to those last six games; three in New York and three in Minnesota.
Buckle up, baseball fans.
The tension might might erase the smile from the face of the most faithful followers of the team.
Even my own daughter is feeling the heat. She came into the living room just as Tyler O'Neill's home run landed and consoled me. "Dad, don't worry. By seven o'clock tomorrow morning you'll forget all about this."
Well, here I am posting this at 7:30 am and I'm not over it yet.
My grievance with Hyde and his fumbling of the Cano/Dominguez situation is still there.
The O's only scoring one run in the 10th when they were in the garden spot with a runner on first and only one out still doesn't sit well.
The 10th inning error by Jackson Holliday was a low light, too. But who ever said playing second base as a rookie would be easy didn't know what they were talking about. That kid will grow up to be a baseball playing animal, I think, but the mistake on Wednesday night was a big one.
And so it's off to Detroit for a three game weekend series with a Tigers team that has moved themselves into the playoff picture and has the likes of Kansas City and Minnesota hearing footsteps. The Yankees, meanwhile, host Boston for four starting tonight.
All I know is this: No matter what happens in September and October, this is still better than what we watched from 2000 through 2011.
Mike B. asks -- "What do you think of your former radio boss's manifesto this week where he shredded Eric DeCosta of the Ravens for not helping him get his press pass back for this season?"
DF says -- "Didn't read it. I've seen enough of the reactions on social media to know it didn't go over favorably with the majority of people who commented on it. It's a losing battle at the end of the day. That's really all I can say.
"Never fight someone who has a barrel full of ink when you only have a pen full."
That theory seems to fit in this situation.
As someone who once lost his media credential, I know it stings. Alas, the Orioles had bigger muscles than me. They had the proverbial barrell full of ink and I had the pen full. I learned a lot back in 2007 about the way things work. And in the end, the truth is my life went on just fine without having a press credential from the Orioles."
Conway asks -- "In the old days of your morning show you used to say the Pledge of Allegiance on the air. I've always been curious about something. Why did you do that and did that violate some sort of FCC rule? I don't think I've ever heard any body else on the radio ever say the Pledge over the air. Thanks Drew and Go Hall!"
DF says -- "I honestly don't remember where it happened, but I remember reading something one morning about a school district in the U.S. being told by some local governmental agency they were no longer allowed to say the Pledge of Allegiance in school unless they would remove the words "under God".
I thought that was the most shameful thing ever.
So I started reciting the Pledge prior to my show and would always emphasize the words "Under God!" to get my point across.
It wasn't a violation of FCC rules. At least I don't think it was. Although, in this country today, it very well might be now.
The fact that students at all levels of education no longer stand up and recite the Pledge every morning is embarrassing. I know the tradition still carries on in many private and faith-based schools, which speaks volumes about the way they try to raise young men and young men.
Teaching children there's something wrong with the Pledge of Allegiance is pitiful. Alas, it's where we are in some parts of the country. Our government doesn't help either. But what's new?"
M.P. asks -- "What are your thoughts on the Orioles raising prices on everything for 2025 and making people put down a bunch of money now to get playoff tickets (if they make it) this season?"
DF says -- "I covered this a few weeks back when the news first broke. In general, I'd summarize it by saying "Nothing to see here", but I guess the one thing that sticks out is the new ownership group couldn't even go a full season without stepping on people's necks for more money.
Look, I get it. Baseball (and all sports) ticketing is all about leverage. You have to give people a reason to go to the games. During the season, you're getting 15,000 on a weeknight, 25,000 on the weekend, 35,000 if you give away a tee-shirt, floppy hat, replica jersey, etc. You have to leverage folks to come to the games.
Their October leverage is playoff baseball. Only 14 teams make it. That's the leverage the team needs to raise the prices and make you jump through hoops to get in the stadium to see the games.
And, remember, the O's don't set the playoff ticket prices. The league does. The O's do set the protocol by which they sell and distribute the tickets, and some of that is kind of heavy handed in my opinion, but they have the leverage come playoff time.
I'd rather have ticket gouging in October than no ticket gouging in October, if you know what I mean."
Wednesday September 11, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3671 |
We use sports for a lot of things in this country.
On a number of occasions, we can use sports as teaching moments.
And you don't even have to be a sports fan or follower of the teams and players to learn something about life while watching sports.
There are instances, of course, where a sport-specific incident can be a teaching moment.
Each year at Calvert Hall, I tutor my players in both the varsity and junior varsity players about their expected behavior as a member of the golf program. I explain to them that upon joining the program, no matter if they're a freshman, sophomore, etc., they are, until their graduation (or untimely departure), expected to conduct themselves appropriately year around.
In other words, you can't throw clubs, wear your hat backwards, swear and be ungentlemanly any time, whether it's April and we're in season or August and we're out of season. There is no off-season for Calvert Hall Golf. If that doesn't align with you then, sadly, you won't be part of the program moving forward.
If you throw a club at Calvert Hall you get one warning and that's it. It's called the one-strike rule. Everyone knows it. First club throw is a warning, second club throw is dismissal.
To that end, I will soon show them a video of three PGA Tour players who were caught on film this past season throwing their golf club in frustration during a round of competitive golf. Each of the three are well known. Some, in fact, might even be the "favorite player" of some of my own players at Calvert Hall.
I show that video to, A) Let the players see how idiotic you look when you throw your golf club, and B) To reinforce to them that just because Rory McIlroy does it doesn't mean you're OK to do it.
I call it a "teaching moment".
I do my best to provide those kinds of moments whenever I can, whether it's about the golf swing, golf strategy, or, in this case, golf etiquette.
I'm very proud to say this: Over the summer, watching over 25 area junior golf tournaments in person, I've seen a player from every school in the MIAA (A Conference) except Calvert Hall throw a golf club during an actual round of competitive golf.
Your on-course behavior and attitude is learned. It's taught to you. Some people don't need it. Some people need a little teaching. Some people need a lot. But it is learned.
And that brings me to Tyreek Hill.
What happened to him on Sunday in Miami is a sports story that we can all use to teach our children.
I have discussed the situation with both of my children, in fact.
And I started the conversation like this, in simple terms: "No matter what you've read on TikTok or heard from your friends, please know this: Tyreek Hill was wrong. Period. End of story."
And then the discussion and "teaching" begins.
We all know what the complicated elements of the story are: Race, police using force, athletes getting preferential treatment and the power of social media to mold a moment into something that it wasn't.
But what's missing is the most basic element: Following a lawful directive by a police officer.
Your mileage may vary on this, but here are my statistics: In my life, I've been pulled over or otherwise stopped by a police officer while in my car 7 times.
I'm proud to say I'm 7-for7.
Seven times interacted, seven times the procedure and interaction went smoothly.
I've interacted with white officers, African American officers and, most recently, a Latino officer.
They all went off without incident.
You know why?
I followed the same general protocols that -- this is important -- my parents taught me when I was about 12 years old.
"License and registration, please."
"Sure, sir. Here you go."
"I clocked you going 40 in a 30 mile per-hour zone."
"Sorry. I didn't realize I was going that fast. When I saw you step out and flag me down I looked at my speedometer and I was going 37. But I guess you got me a few feet earlier on your radar."
"Sir, I'm going to give you a warning today. We're patrolling this particular area because we've received numerous complaints about people speeding through this neighborhood during school hours."
"Thank you, officer. Appreciate your service."
And off I went.
I'm quite certain nearly all of you reading this have had an encounter of a similar nature in your life. You get pulled over, you comply with basic, non threatening instructions, and you're back on the road ten minutes later, perhaps with a citation of some kind, but you're safe and unharmed nonetheless.
That's the teaching moment I shared with my two kids, who were in the car with me when Officer Silvera pulled me over.
"You see how easy that was?" I said to them.
"He was cool, I was cool, and everything went the way it was supposed to go. He's just doing his job. I was definitely going over 30 miles per hour. He knew it. I knew it, too. And while I wasn't aggressively "speeding" per se, he was doing his job by pulling me over and going through the process of warning me about my excessive speed."
I showed my two children the entire Tyreek Hill incident, from the very start where he was barreling down the road to the whole confrontation with the officers.
The entire thing started because Hill was speeding.
The NFL had a very high profile case a few years ago involving Henry Ruggs where he was speeding and killed someone. The officers in Miami had no idea if Hill was going to do the same thing when he raced by them on Sunday morning. They're out there trying to keep people from getting killed by maniacal drivers like Tyreek Hill.
I don't know how much self-awareness he has, but it all stopped and started right there. It doesn't matter if he's white, black, dressed for church or plays for the Dolphins. The police officers had no idea who Hill was, in fact. They just observed him speeding and then did what they have been tasked to do.
Had Hill simply rolled down his window at the very beginning and handed over his license and registation, the entire process would have been over in minutes.
Instead, he didn't roll down his window.
The police officer then knocked on his window in an effort to get his attention.
"Don't knock on my window like that," Hill then said to the officer.
It all went downhill from there, as you've probably seen by now.
The whole thing became a battle of wills. The police officer(s) wasn't giving in. And Hill upped his frustration level, at one point calling the officer "a cracker".
Can you imagine if Scottie Scheffler would have called one of the arresting officers in Louisville the n-word back in May when he was detained?
What happened throughout the situation with Hill was ugly. He didn't listen and the officers reacted. The more Hill didn't listen, the more their aggression levels increased.
The discussion about police using force and aggressive tactics is one that's also worth having. I'm not here to exonerate those officers. I'm sure their procedural applications will be reviewed by their higher-ups. I'm not a police officer, so I have no idea whether they will eventually be deemed to have been "right" in their treatment of Hill or "wrong" in said treatment.
But here's what I'm teaching my children.
"Just be accountable. You were speeding. You know you were speeding. When the officer says "License and registration, please", just hand him or her your license and registration. The game takes a different turn there. They see you're a reasonable, clear-thinking human being and they, in turn, feel much less threatened by you and the situation."
I'm 7-for-7 doing it that way.
"Yes sir, no sir. Yes ma'am. No ma'am."
It still goes a long way.
I saw a snippet online recently from a courtroom in Michigan where someone called the judge "Jenny". He did it once and the judge said, "Sir, please refer to me as 'Your Honor' during this hearing."
He called her Jenny again and she looked at him and said, "If you refer to me by my first name again, you'll be in contempt of court."
A minute later, he called her Jenny again and that was that. She had him whisked away for contempt and postponed his trial for disorderly conduct (I believe, if I read through the thread correctly, that he urinated by a car outside of a bar IN BROAD DAYLIGHT).
Two days later, he was brought back for a hearing on the charges he was initially facing and he received 6 months in the county jail.
I have no idea if 6 months is fair or not fair, but I know that his insistence on calling the judge "Jenny" instead of "Your Honor" probably didn't help him in the end.
I don't know why we've lost our way in this country when it comes to things like general, common decency.
But I do know it's up to us to teach our children about it.
Tyreek Hill started Sunday's incident.
And he escalated it into something it didn't need to be by continually failing to obey simple, easy directions.
That Hill is parading around the country on various internet platforms talking about how he was "treated" is laughable. And people are giving him an open forum, too, which is beyond bizarre.
He wrote something yesterday on Twitter to the tune of: "Change is needed".
Well, that's correct. The way we interact with one another might need to be changed. The way you interact with police officers who were initially just trying to get you to either not kill yourself or someone else needs to be changed.
This narrative from Hill and others that the officers were somehow supposed to "de-escalate" the situation is comical. How can you do that when the person you're dealing with isn't listening or complying?
Teach. Teach. Teach.
That's what we should be doing.
"Don't speed..."
There's a teaching moment.
"If you do speed and you get caught, own it."
Another teaching moment.
"If the officer asks you for your license and registration, give it to him or hier."
More teaching.
We have to stop making excuses for people. Everything's an excuse. Everyone gets offended by dumb stuff.
You were speeding.
You got pulled over.
You didn't listen.
You challenged the officers.
You wound up on the ground in handcuffs.
One action led to the next one.
All because you don't think the rules apply to you.
Tyreek Hill is a great football player. One of the very best in the NFL.
But he's not a very smart man.
There's the final teaching moment: Just because you're great at an athletic endeavor doesn't automatically mean you're also great at being a human being. Those two are not one and the same.
You actually have to work......at both of them.
I'm certainly not ignoring the fact that today is September 11 and it's a date all of us reading this will remember for as long as we live.
I remember where I was on that bright and beautiful Tuesday morning when the first plane hit the Twin Towers in New York.
I was devastated, like all of you were I'm sure.
I've been up to the 9-11 memorial site and stood there and looked up at the empty sky. It's an incredible scene.
May God grant those innocent people who perished that day eternal peace.
Those who carried out the acts that day have been judged accordingly and, I'm pleased to report, are not enjoying their afterlife.
God sees all.
Tuesday September 10, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3670 |
"This thing isn't getting away from us, is it, DF?"
That's what regular #DMD commenter R.C. asked me last night via e-mail shortly after the O's were thumped in Boston, 12-3.
R.C. went on to list batting average and OPS numbers for guys like Santander, Rutschman and Cowser over the last 30 games and asked an obvious but painful question: "Is this the best they can do?"
Here's the reality.
The baseball season is 162 games in duration.
In their last 81 games -- hang tight, Flyers fans, no need for the calculator, that is half of 162 -- the battlin' Birds are actually an under .500 baseball team. Last night's drubbing dropped them to 40-41 in that span.
You could say "It's been such a long time" since Brandon Hyde's team played great baseball.
And to answer R.C.'s question, directly, yes, maybe it is the best they can do.
Now, for those looking for a little Tuesday morning peace of mind, here it is: The blazing start the O's engineered to start the season still counts, which is why they're 82-63 and still very much in the hunt for the A.L. East title. The playoffs aren't locked up just yet, but that could happen as early as next week if things work out for the Orioles and against teams like Detroit, Kansas City, Minnesota and Boston.
But these last two and a half weeks are going to be tough if the O's continue to sputter at the plate.
They have two more tough ones with Boston, who are on their last legs, and then the Birds buzz into the Motor City to take on a Tigers team that has roared of late and is now back in the playoff picture at 73-71.
These games aren't for the meek of heart.
Last night's contest in Boston wasn't, either. The Birds got shelled by a Boston offense that both hit them far and long and hit 'em where they ain't, as the old baseball saying goes.
Cade Povich is an interesting pitcher. He looks filthy in *this at bat* and then minor league'ish *in the next very at bat*. His slider will fall off the table and make one batter look foolish, then it hangs in the zone on the very next pitch and gets hit so high that Laremy Tunsil is jealous.
But I'll take Povich over Rogers and Irvin at this point.
In fairness, I'd probably take Tippy Martinez over Rogers. But anyway...
The O's offensive woes are both too numerous and too repetitive to list here.
Gunnar Henderson has found his footing again, which is good to see. His defensive challenges are still there, but at least his bat has started breathing again.
Anthony Santander hit his 40th homer last night, which seemed to really excite TV guy Kevin Brown, but Santander is on a two month feast or famine routine at the plate, as his .310 on-base-percentage tells us. This is an exaggeration, of course, but not much of one: Santander hits a home run and a double in tonight's game, then goes for 3 for his next 20 and leaves 8 runners on base along the way.
The stark reality to the O's offense is no one really hits for average except Gunnar. O'Hearn sits at .260, which is acceptable. Other than that, there isn't much dependability at the plate.
I watched the game last night and had to shake my head like that Alonzo Mourning meme. Here we are, 18 games left in the season, and some dude named Livan Soto is playing second base and Coby Mayo is playing third base.
I realize Mayo wouldn't be at third if not for the fact that both Westburg and Urias are injured. But you're playing Soto over Holliday at second for what reason, again? If it's just a "gut feel" thing, that's fine. But your gut was fibbing to you.
The Baltimore offense last night was basically a 6-man lineup if you throw Jimenez in with Soto and Mayo. But we'll get back to Jimenez in a second.
What about pinch hitting Austin Slater for Cedric Mullins in the 6th inning when Mullins has been one of the few reliable hitters you've had for the last three weeks? I didn't get that one.
In fairness to Hyde, his insertion of Emmanuel Rivera as a pinch hitter worked, as he slugged a ball off the wall for a double in his one at bat.
Craig Kimbrel made an appearance and did what he almost always does. Got two batters out. And.....promptly gave up two runs thereafter. At this point, it's not really Hyde's fault that Kimbrel's in the game. Mike Elias is the one who decides the roster make up, after all.
It's also not really Hyde's fault he was saddled with Eloy Jimenez at the trade deadline. And you'd think Fenway Park would be a place that has Jimenez foaming at the mouth. Kevin Brown and the rest of the broadcast team prattle on endlessly every game about how far Jimenez hits the ball during batting practice. Last night he only made contact once in four at bats and struck out three times. Jimenez, that is, not Brown.
So, the maladly lingers on, as the great ex-lead singer of The Smiths, Morrissey, once said.
It's going to be a battle down the stretch if this Baltimore offense continues to chug along and sputter like it has for 8 weeks now.
Their 40-41 record over the last three months tells the story.
So, with last night's 32-19 49'ers win over the Jets, we're one week into the NFL season. Here are your top 5 teams, bottom 5 teams and top 5 storylines from week #1 of the '24 season.
Best 5 --
1. Kansas City - Until they lose at least once, this is where they stay.
2. Detroit - Give them their due, battled back to tie and then beat a good Rams team in OT.
3. Baltimore - They were a toe away from either winning 28-27 or losing 27-26. Either way, they're solid.
4. Miami -- Not overly impressive against Jacksonville, but the mark of a good team is winning when you're "off".
5. Dallas -- It's hard to tell if their win was more about Dallas or more about Cleveland.
Worst 5 --
1. Carolina - We knew they'd be bad again, but getting shellacked like by that New Orleans? Yikes.
2. NY Giants - See above, except change New Orleans for Minnesota.
3. Washington - You already know they're going 6-11 or 7-10. But that was a bad performance on Sunday in Tampa.
4. Cincinnati - They lost to the team that was supposed to be #1 on this list. HAHA.
5. Cleveland - They're better than they showed on Sunday vs. Dallas. They have to be, right?
Top 5 storylines --
1. "Conditions" in the Green Bay/Philly game in Brazil - Just a reprehensible decision by the NFL to make those two teams play a game in Brazil among all the unrest and the treacherous field conditions. The next time "player safety" is ever mentioned by Roger Goodell, he should have his mouth stitched shut.
2. The Bengals losing at home to the Patriots.
3. Impressive start for Jim Harbaugh and his new look Chargers in their win over Las Vegas.
4. Stefon Diggs catching 2 TD's in his Texans debut as Houston wins big division game on the road in Indy.
5. Ravens take Chiefs to the wire and lose a chance to win the game by two inches on a last gasp throw by Lamar Jackson.
Monday September 9, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3669 |
My friend Chris -- the Orioles antagonist, if you will -- started peppering me with texts early Sunday afternoon.
"Told you a month ago, this team is out of gas."
"When will Adley make a difference in a game again? This season?"
"Wasting another great Burnes start. That's our Birds."
There were more messages, but I think you get the vibe by now.
The O's and their sputtering offense are low-hanging-fruit these days, scoring a grand total of three runs in three games against the Rays over the weekend. Sunday's 2-0 defeat saw Baltimore collect just five hits.
And now it's off to Boston for three games with the Red Sox, who are gasping for air in their quest to snag one of the three A.L. Wild Card spots. Baltimore (62 losses), Kansas City (65) and Minnesota (67) are all ahead of Boston (71) at this point.
The O's, of course, are still very much in the hunt for a second straight A.L. East title. With the Yankees losing on Sunday to the Cubs, New York owns just a half-game lead in the East.
While the Birds are in Fenway for their three games, the Yankees will be hosting Kansas City. The O's will then head to Detroit for three this weekend while New York will host Boston for four games starting this Thursday.
One thing for sure: The O's offense needs to start percolating. And soon. It's been a dreadful month at the plate for Brandon Hyde's team.
Here's Sunday's quick summary from the AFC North.
Bengals gonna Bengals.
Steelers gonna Steelers.
And Browns gonna Browns.
The Bengals looked a gift horse in the mouth with a home opening 16-10 loss to the New England Patriots.
Quick, name 5 players on New England's team.
OK, name 3 players.
Right, I can't name 3 players either. So don't feel bad.
I saw one NFL pundit last Thursday predict New England was going to go 2-15 this season. Several national wagering houses had the Pats' season-win total at 4.5. And a lot of people took the under.
All of that makes Cincinnati's loss on Sunday even more laughable. Some things in life are inevitable. Bengals gonna Bengals is one of those things.
The Steelers didn't score a touchdown on Sunday and somehow still managed to win in Atlanta, 18-10. If anything is "typical Steelers", it's Pittsburgh winning on the road without the aid of a touchdown.
Chris Boswell kicked six field goals to give Mike Tomlin's team the win.
There's a lot of football left in 2024, but you wagering types should probably zero in on the Steelers and the under anytime they play on the road. Steelers gonna Steelers, especially away from Pittsburgh.
And the Browns had a chance to make an early statement on Sunday when they hosted Dallas. And maybe they did make one. It just wasn't the statement they were hoping for, as Cleveland got clobbered by the Cowboys, 33-17.
Deshaun Watson went 24 for 45 for 169 yards in the loss. I'm sure that performance rubbed the Browns front office the wrong way.
For the Cowboys, it was indeed a happy ending in Cleveland. Dak threw for 179 yards and one touchdown and Zeke Elliott rumbled into the end zone in his return to the Dallas roster. Browns gonna Browns. Always.
So, after one week in the AFC North, you have three teams at 0-1 and the Steelers somehow at 1-0 despite not scoring a touchdown.
Let's get some questions out of the way in another installment of our Q&A segment here at #DMD. As always, if you have a question to be answered here, just e-mail: 18inarow@gmail.com
Ron asks -- "This might be a question you'd rather not answer on the website publicly. If you're not comfortable with that and you want to reply privately, please do. I'm not trying to stir the pot but I'm curious about your Friday "Faith in Sports" column where you show videos pertaining to Christianity. Are you not concerned about offending any of your agnostic or athiest readers? Further, what about your readers who are of Muslim or Jewish faith?
DF says -- "I'm happy to answer that question here. Nothing to hide. I want to highlight athletes who are proud of their faith and are willing to showcase it both on and off the field.
I want to promote God's great work to everyone here. If you read it and are so moved to learn more about Him, that's great. If you read it and you're not moved, maybe someday you will be. God works in mysterious ways, as you've probably heard a lot in your life.
I'm not looking to offend anyone, agnostic, athiest or otherwise. I'm willing to risk that no one is going to be offended in exchange for potentially someone finding their faith through #DMD.
And I have both Muslim and Jewish friends and none of them have ever said to me, "You know, I don't like that "Faith in Sports" segment you run every Friday on your website."
In general, I publish content about God and Christianity because I want to do my part to spread the good word. That's all."
Ed W. asks -- "With three weeks left in the season, who are the top 3 contenders for O's MVP?"
DF says -- "Well, that's a good question. From April through mid-June, it was definitely Gunnar. From mid-June through mid-August, it was definitely Santander. Heck, now you could make an argument that Albert Suarez has been the team's best performer over the last month.
It's very strange, indeed. Gunnar has had a terrific year at the plate but a pretty dreary last 50 games defensively. I don't know how much stock you put in defense when talking about a MVP award, but his defense has definitely impacted his overall season.
Santander has great power numbers, obviously, but the rest of his offense isn't very good. He's hitting .239 and his on-base percentage is only .309. He's fine defensively, but that's not nearly enough to sway the MVP vote, I wouldn't think.
Corbin Burnes would also receive some honorable mention type stuff, but his ragged August eliminated him from the "real" discussion.
In the end, the best hitter all season has been Gunnar. I know his defense has been shaky, but he's the MVP."
J.S. asks -- "Why is it so hard for the TV networks to come up with an outstanding color analyst for golf? I'm not sure what you think about Trevor Immelman but I wasn't very impressed with him. Same with Kevin Kizner and Brad Faxon on NBC. Neither of them were very captivating in my opinion. And you?"
DF says -- "Well, it's a hard sport to describe to people when you're in the booth at the 18th hole, for example, and you're calling a shot from the 15th hole that you're watching on a TV screen in front of you.
In general, though, I think it's hard to do "color" in golf because most professional TOUR players that you're seeing on TV are playing well and don't make a lot of mistakes. If they made a lot of mistakes, you wouldn't be watching them on Saturday or Sunday afternoons.
So the color analysts don't get much opportunity to really "analyze". Instead, they have to come up with stuff to say, which is how Johnny Miller would always get in trouble. A guy tied for the lead on the 16th hole on Sunday would hit what appeared to be a bad shot and Miller would say, "That was just nerves, there. His nerves got the best of him." When, in reality, the guy might have missed his target by a mere 8 feet from 160 yards and the ball wound up 40 feet from the pin instead of 10 feet from the pin.
I agree about Immelman, by the way. I don't think he's very good at all. I thought Kisner was OK. Faxon was OK as well. Neither of them were great, but I think you have to give them another year or two and see if they can improve."
Greg asks -- "I know you're a John Harbaugh fan, but what about Jim Harbaugh? What do you think of him?"
DF says -- "I don't know. I think he's kinda nuts. Definitely just a "football guy" through and through. I mean, he could coach college, pro, Canadian league. He doesn't care. If it's football, he wants to be around it.
I got a little turned off by the sign stealing stuff at Michigan. I mean, I know you want to win and all and there's pretty much no honor among thieves at that level, but having the assistant coach sneaking into stadiums and then finagling his way onto the sideline to steal signs and calls? Pretty bush league, for sure.
I do think he's a very good football coach, though. I know their saying out in L.A. is "The Worm Has Turned" and maybe it's true. Maybe the Chargers are actually going to be good this season."
"Randy On The O's" | ||
Randy Morgan takes #DMD readers through the recent week in Orioles baseball as the Birds try to win a second straight A.L. East title. |
Week Record: 3-3
Season Record: 82-62
AL East Standing: 2nd (0.5 GB NYY)
Player of the Week: Gunnar Henderson
The Orioles and Yankees each played six games this week and nothing changed. Both teams went 3-3, the Yankees against the Rangers and Cubs and the O’s against the White Sox and Rays. They remain the top two teams in the AL and the Yankees maintain their half game lead on the division heading into the final month of the season.
The O’s took advantage of the historically bad Chicago White Sox, winning two of three with a short-lived offensive breakout. The Oriole bats lit up in the first two against the White Sox, plating 22 runs to start the series. However, the bats then went cold for the remainder of the week, managing just four runs over the next four games.
While it was disappointing to finish 3-3 after winning the first two games, there were a few bright spots for the O’s this week. Corbin Burnes seemed to return to his quality start producing form with two positive starts and Gunnar Henderson saw the reemergence of his home run stroke.
As noted, the Orioles began the week with a blowout of the hapless White Sox. Burnes got somewhat back on track with his start on Monday. After surrendering two runs in the 1st on some weak contact, he shut the White Sox down to complete five innings with just those two runs, one of which was unearned. The offense also awoke against the paltry opposition, with a Gunnar leadoff homer kicking things off. The O’s then piled on with a six-run 6th inning and the route was on. Every starter got at least one hit, while Cedric Mullins and Austin Slater each picked up three hits and three RBI in the 13-3 win.
The offense kept it going on Tuesday with three runs in the 1st inning followed by four more in the 2nd. That was all that Cade (or was this Slim?) Povich needed, as he dominated Chicago, striking out ten and allowing just five hits in 7.1 shutout innings as the O’s cruised to a 9-0 win.
Unfortunately that is where the hitting stopped for the weekend, at least aside from Gunnar Henderson. Gunnar provided the only offense on Wednesday, with yet another leadoff homer, his 35th on the year. That was all the Birds could muster and Albert Suarez did not have his best stuff, with the White Sox tagging him for six runs before chasing him in the 5th inning, leading to an 8-1 loss.
The O’s got back in the win column on Friday with Dean Kremer delivering another strong outing, pitching six shutout innings, striking out seven while allowing just two hits and three walks. The bats were mostly silent except for Gunnar, who went 2-4 and homered for the third straight game to power the O’s to a 2-0 win.
For a couple of days the Orioles briefly held the top spot in the division, but that slipped away on Saturday. Zach Eflin had his first rough outing in an O’s jersey, although it still nearly ended with a quality start. Eflin managed to limit the damage to three runs in 5.2 innings despite giving up eight hits and a walk. That at least kept the O’s in the game, but the offense gave him no support, with a Cedric Mullins homer the only run in a 7-1 loss. The whole game turned in the bottom of the 4th when Jose Siri leapt over the wall to pull back a would-be three run homer from Gunnar that would have made it 3-2 in the O’s favor, it was all downhill from there.
Sunday was another frustrating lack of run support. Corbin Burnes got back on the quality start track, limiting Tampa to two runs in six innings. Sadly, the offense couldn’t do anything against Rays starter Zack Littel and the bullpen that followed him. Gunnar managed to go 3-4 and Cedric Mullins added two hits, but the O’s stranded runners in key spots several times and couldn’t dent the scoreboard for a 2-0 loss.
There were only two real candidates for the Player of the Week. Corbin Burnes pitched eleven innings, allowing four runs on thirteen hits with seven strikeouts. It was a nice return to form for the ace the Orioles need to peak in the playoffs. As nice as it was to see Burnes bounce back, Gunnar Henderson gets the Player of the Week honors. Gunnar posted a .481 OBP for the week to go with his three homers and five runs batted in. He also came an amazing Jose Siri catch from a fourth homer that would have been a game-changer on Saturday.
Down on the Farm --
It wasn’t a banner week down in the Orioles minors. Top prospect Samuel Basallo had some struggles adjusting to AAA pitching. The young catcher went just 3-21 on the week, but did hit a massive 455 ft bomb on Saturday. Brandon Young remains the top pitching prospect at Norfolk, but he also had a rough week, giving up four runs on ten hits in his five inning outing.
It was a little better at AA Bowie, where 2023 1st round pick Enrique Bradfield Jr. managed a .318 OBP with two doubles and three stolen bases. Outfielder Dylan Beavers was the hot player at Bowie, with a .364 OBP along with a triple and three home runs.
Question of the Week --
What does the stretch run look like for the O’s and Yanks?
After the completion of the games on Sunday, the Orioles were left with eighteen games remaining in the season. The Yankees, sitting a half game ahead of the O’s, have one more game, with nineteen left. Breaking down the remaining schedule, the Orioles play three games against each of the following: @Boston, @Detroit, San Francisco, Detroit, @NYY, @Minnesota.
The Yankees schedule shapes up with three games against each of the following, except a four game series with Boston: Kansas City, Boston, @Seattle, @Oakland, Baltimore, Pittsburgh.
Given the opponents and the home/road splits, the schedule slightly favors the Yankees. They have one more doormat opponent, with both Oakland and Pittsburgh, and they also have quite a few more home games (although they have a higher winning percentage on the road). The toughest opponent for the O’s aside from the Yankees themselves are the Twins in the final series. The Yankees have a tough matchup with the Royals this coming week before both teams play a few teams on the edge of Wild Card contention.
With the two teams floundering around .500 for the past couple months, a winning streak by either would likely tilt the balance of the race. Nonetheless, it is certainly set up well for the whole division to come down to the three game series in Yankee Stadium from September 24-26.
The one thing in the Orioles favor is they are just one win from clinching the head-to-head tiebreaker with the Yanks, however, given the schedule imbalance, the O’s will probably need to take at least two of three in New York to have a good chance at claiming their second straight division crown.
Sunday September 8, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3667 |
This first Sunday of September almost always used to be looked upon as the year's saving grace, but then our baseball franchise started trying to win again and now, today, we're excited about September 8 for a couple of reasons here in The Land of Pleasant Living.
We're not all that excited about the O's falling 7-1 to the Rays last night to drop a half-game behind the Yankees in the A.L. East.
But there will be October baseball and football in Charm City in 2024, so that's really all we can ask for at this point.
The Ravens are obviously not part of opening Sunday in the NFL after dropping their 27-20 season opener in Kansas City on Thursday evening. The last couple of days have been met with various forms of criticism and review in the wake of that defeat.
My friend circle had varying commentaries from the loss.
Some guys knew it was going to happen, some lamented the way it happened and some thought it was as close to a moral victory as you can get, if those things matter in any way.
"They weren't going to Kansas City and winning on opening night, who are you kidding?" Mike said yesterday. "That it was as close as it was in the end was a miracle."
"Is Harbaugh still the coach?" Sean asked, knowing the answer. "They're not winning anything with him."
"Lamar..." stated Matt. "He's like the baseball pitcher who throws 5 innings of one hit ball, strikes out 8, walks one, and then suddenly can't get anyone out in the 6th inning and throws a meatball right over the plate to give up a 3-run homer and turn a 2-0 lead into a 3-2 deficit."
"They'll be fine," Dan stated. "They just played their toughest game of the year probably and lost by a hair. How many home games will the Chiefs lose this year? One? Two at the most?"
I certainly am not trying to pick on one comment at #DMD because by and large I tend to agree with what "Benny" wrote here yesterday, but some parts of his contribution are sorta-kinda what's wrong with our country these days.
"So in all those wins the Ravens have had in the Harbaugh Era, are all those "same old same old" too? Again, the Legend We Call Monk used to say it all the time: the league is so balanced, every win or loss is based on one play here, one play there. Mistakes are magnified when they occur on those game changing plays. Likewise, yiou execute on those plays, you win. It's a simple formula. If any team executes on EVERY play, the odds of winning are what, 99%? But it's nearly impossible to have 11 guys on the field all do their jobs right. Not sometimes, but ALL the time. And it's never the same 11."
Talk about classic whatabout'ism...there it is in high definition.
OK, I'll agree to talk about this game but you have to be willing to listen to me tell you about other games.
In other words, "what about all the games the Ravens win?"
Except we're not talking about those games. And, remember, I'm a legion-of-Harbaugh kind of guy. Card carrying member of the fan club and all.
But he blundered that call with 6:34 remaining in the game when it was 4th down and he eschewed the field goal in a 27-17 game.
I can think John Harbaugh is an excellent football coach and still be critical of him for that mistake.
And I don't need to soften that criticism by bringing up the things he does well. He's supposed to do things well. That's why he gets paid $10 million a year.
This happens all the time here in town with Brandon Hyde.
People criticize him for an in-game decision then bring up something he did three weeks earlier that worked out well in an effort to provide balance.
Let's just call it like it is and stop worrying about whatabout'ism.
It's all OK anyway. John Harbaugh's getting $10 million whether you and I criticize him or not.
Jay Gibbons once said something to me near the dugout prior to a game at Camden Yards ("Are you ever going to stop sh*ting on me?") in response to some on-air criticisms I had lobbed his way in recent days.
I couldn't believe it.
I said, "Jay, you're hitting .207 and you have 3 home runs. What do you want me to do, tell people you're hitting .277 with 23 home runs?"
And then I gave him the Roddy Piper coconut to the head.
"Let's remember one thing, too. No matter what I say about you on the air, you're the one making $5 million. The joke's on me. It's definitely not on you."
And, as someone who once took (fair) criticism as the general manager of the indoor soccer team in town, you do realize, even if you don't care for it, that working in the public eye includes opening yourself up to public criticisms as well.
John Harbaugh doesn't like watching Sunday football and hearing about how the Ravens were outcoached or outschemed or outwhatever'd. But it's why he gets $10 million, also.
"Benny" is right, of course. There is a give-and-take you have to apply with wins and losses. You can't win 'em all, for starters. And the other team is trying to win, too. And it's almost mathematically impossible for every guy on the field to do his job to absolute perfection.
You just hope it all balances out in the end.
And it generally does.
I played a state senior team match yesterday where I missed a birdie putt from 8 feet on holes 2, 3 and 7 at Eagle's Nest. But I later made birdie putts of 12 and 15 feet and made a nice downhill par saving putt of about 8 feet to win a hole. I missed the three I thought I should have made and later made three I probably wouldn't make.
It all evened out in the end.
Harbaugh and the Ravens will beat up on the Raiders next Sunday and on Monday it will be "our turn" (as Harbaugh backers) to say, "Well, well, well, would you look at that..."
But Benny's comment yesterday is part and parcel with what ails us as a country today.
Our response to criticism is to say, "Yeah, but what about 'the other guy'?"
In the case of Thursday, as I noted here on Friday and Saturday, the slices of pizza, if you will, go to a number of people who were involved in the loss.
Lamar kept the Ravens in the game and then missed several big throws late. Not a low blow, just a fact.
Harbs not kicking the field goal was a mistake.
The dumb penalties on Mads and Williams were huge game changers. You just can't do those things.
Agholor missing his blocking assignment on that 4th down play. Huge.
Tucker's field goal miss.
Malik Harrison getting lit up time and time again like a doobie at a Dave Matthews Band concert. Not good at all.
Hopefully those things even out next Sunday when Las Vegas comes to town.
1-1 is fine.
An 0-2 start? Yeah, that wouldn't be so fine.
As you'll see below, we're welcoming a new member to our 2024 NFL game-day coverage. Please join me in giving a hand shake to Will Jackson, a 2017 graduate of Georgetown University who currently works in the law field and has been a #DMD reader, he says, for the last four years after moving to Baltimore from Ashburn, Virginia.
Each Sunday here, Will will provide us with some thoughts on game spreads, betting totals, etc. and also offer some favorable prop bets he likes from the slate of scheduled games.
Join me in welcoming him, please.
WILL JACKSON | ||
Will Jackson will be here every Sunday during the NFL season with his thoughts on games and prop bets that will hopefully yield positive results for you. And a gentle but important reminder to always wager within your means. |
Hi everyone, I've been a reader of Drew's site since I came to town in the spring of 2021. I hope to bring some insight into the NFL to you to every Sunday. Most of my wagering interests stem with prop bets and such but I also look at spreads and point totals as well.
I will say that I had 2 right and 2 wrong on Thursday vs. K.C. I had Derrick Henry as a TD scorer and I had a field goal miss, but I lost on the Ravens (+3) and Travis Kelce as a TD scorer.
Here's what I like today in the NFL.
Game spreads --
Take Atlanta (-4) over the Steelers
Take Bengals (-7.5) and the over 40.5 total vs. New England
Take Colts (+3.5) and the under 48.5 vs. Houston
Take Cowboys (+2.5) vs. Cleveland
Prop bets --
Falcons, Kyle Pitts, anytime TD
Achane, Dolphins, anytime TD
Edwards, Chargers, anytime TD
Pickens, Steelers, under 52.5 yards receiving
Collins, Texans, over 66.5 yards receiving
Samuel, 49'ers, over 10.5 yards rushing
Jones, Vikings, over 2.5 catches, receiving
Good luck to all and remember to wager wisely and within your means at all times!
Saturday September 7, 2024 | #DMD | Issue #3666 |
The great Pete Yorn once released a remarkable debut album called "Musicforthemorningafter", which included several hits along with one of my favorite PY songs, "Murray".
Around here, a couple of years ago I came up with "The Morning After...The Morning After" during football season, where I would revisit the most recent Ravens game two mornings later. I found there was sometimes more clarity and more, if you will, balance with what I (we) saw when I had a day to let things digest.
Here's what I can't shake from the 27-20 opening night loss in Kansas City.
It was almost the exact same way the Ravens have lost every big game over the last "X" number of seasons.
Before we delve into it, let me remind everyone here that "insight and opinion" is the template by which we operate this entity. In other words, yes, you are allowed to be critical of individual performances and moments in the game that went either positively or negatively.
I'll use Lamar as an example. As you'll see below, I give him a massive passing grade for his performance on Thursday night. I thought he was outstanding. That said, he whiffed on a potential game-tying/game-winning throw to Zay Flowers in the end zone on the game's penultimate play. I've looked at that play 20 different times from various angles and Rashod Bateman was not open, not close to open and, frankly, not really involved in the play at all.
I'm not saying Jackson was lying in the post-game press conference, either. I don't know what he was thinking. I just know Bateman wasn't open or even in the vicinity of being open when Lamar threw the ball.
Jackson missed a wide open receiver in the end zone. It happens. It's football. You can make 15 great plays in a game (which Lamar did) and make a couple of bad ones too. And it doesn't suddenly mean "you can't play in the big moments" because you missed that throw, as some nitwits on the internet contended in the aftermath of Thursday's loss.
Now...to the game.
Here's how the Ravens have lost big game after big game over the last "X" number of seasons.
Dumb penalties at the worst times.
Coaching/game management blunders.
Poor use of time outs.
Referee impact.
Missed opportunities for scoring plays.
QB turns the ball over.
Obvious misapplication of playbook.
Guess what?
Those are all the reasons why the Ravens lost on Thursday night in Kansas City as well.
I was chatting with my friend Pat about this very thing yesterday. It felt like deja vu all over again, as the saying goes.
"It's a pizza," I said to him, using one of my favorite sports analogies.
"Here are the slices..."
* The penalty on Marcus Williams was huge. Stupid, for starters, and came at a terrible time in the game. Same for the Madubuike penalty earlier in the second half. It's a pretty simple thing to remember: You can't hit the QB in the head or below the knees. Like, ever. Somehow, those two forgot that rule.
Madubuike's penalty took K.C. from 3rd and 20 to 1st and 10 on a series where they eventually scored to make it 20-10 in the 3rd quarter. A disastrous turn of events.
The Williams penalty took what would have been 3rd and 20 and made it 2nd and 10 because K.C. was also called for a penalty on the play. And even though K.C. didn't score on that series, the Williams infraction cost Baltimore almost two minutes because the Chiefs picked up a first down on the play after the penalty.
* Harbs going for it on 4th down in the 4th quarter with 6:34 left when the Ravens needed two scores and could have just kicked the field goal there and made it 27-20. Instead, the offense wasted 90 seconds going nowhere, kicked the field goal to make it 27-20, and gave K.C. the ball back with 4:54 remaining instead of 6:34 remaining.
* The sequence above was impacted by the fact that Baltimore only had 1 time out remaining at that point. And that's because they had to use two of them earlier when Zach Orr couldn't get the right defensive personnel on the field. After the game Harbaugh called it "communication issues", either because he didn't want to just flat-out bust on Orr in his coordinator debut (smart move) or he didn't want to harp on those two time outs as significant factors in the loss.
* People who don't really watch what's going on like to blame Harbaugh for everything bad that happens in the game, including things like those two time outs that had to be used. Zach Orr gets the slap on the wrist for those two, not Harbaugh. But, as I noted on Twitter, those are the things that happen to a rookie defensive coordinator. He'll get better.
But not kicking the field goal with 6:34 left, particularly with one time out remaining, was a blunder on Harbaugh's clipboard. Unless Lamar refused to come off the field there (which I don't think happened), that decision and sequence was on Harbs. Even if his analytics folks upstairs were telling him to go for it there, John has to know, with one time out, you get the points now and try to extend the game clock as much as you can.
* The officials were, as always, questionable. Everyone in Baltimore thinks they were only bad in situations involving the Ravens but that's not true. They missed some calls the other way as well. That said, the refs very obviously mishandled the illegal formation penalties in the first half. I don't know that any of those things cost the Ravens points or "the game", but it was glaring how off-kilter they were with that particular call.
* Justin Tucker's 53 yard field goal miss was big. No two ways about it. Hard to crack down on him too much, there, but he has to make that kick in the same way you'd say "Scheffler has to make that putt" if he missed one from eight feet for birdie on the 8th hole at Augusta National. It's not a "gimmee" from 53 yards. But it's a kick he should make.
* Lamar's aforementioned miss of Zay Flowers in the end zone was massive. He could have also hit Likely in the end zone on the play before, too, don't forget. But that throw was an "8" in terms of difficulty. The throw to Flowers was one Tyler Huntley could have made.
* Sticking with Lamar, getting the ball knocked out of his hand at least once-per-big-game has become a common theme now. It happened again on Thursday night. Sometimes it leads to points against and sometimes it doesn't. In this case it led to a field goal that gave K.C. a 10-7 lead. We can do the "if" game all day, of course, but "if" Lamar doesn't cough up the ball there and "if" Tucker makes that field goal, it's 24-23 on the last drive and all Baltimore needs is a field goal to win it instead of a touchdown to tie it.
* Nelson Agholor not knowing the playbook on the 4th and 3 situation after that field goal made it 10-7 was a huge gaffe on his part. Now, I think anytime it's 4th and 3 and you don't just give the ball to Lamar (or, you know, your 240 pound running back you signed in the off-season) you're asking for trouble, which is exactly what the Ravens got when Agholor missed his blocking assignment and Flowers was tackled for a one-yard gain and the Ravens lost the ball on downs.
Here's the other thing about that failed play I don't understand. Why on earth would you use that in game number one? It was such a great play design...save that one for week 16 or the playoffs, when you need it on 4th and 3 with 2:05 left in the game.
But that has nothing to do with Agholor not paying attention. Terrible moment in the game for him, especially when K.C. was able to turn that into 3 points with a field goal to make it 13-7.
There are other reasons why the Ravens lost. The other team tries, too, of course, and Mahomes is pretty good, you might have heard through the grapevine.
In the end, though, the game on Thursday night looked just like every family picnic you attend over Labor Day weekend.
Aunt Jenny makes her awesome pasta salad with mini shrimp.
Uncle Carl brings the same tangy barbeque sauce he's been bringing since you were 8 years old.
Your cousin Melissa always brings enough of her homemade chicken salad to feed a small army.
Aunt Carol tells everyone she's tweaked her potato salad recipe, but it tastes just like it has for the last 15 years.
Nothing changes.
It's good food and all, but it's the same old, same old.
That's the Ravens.
Because I know the league is week-to-week and how you win or lose this week has almost no bearing at all on what you're going to do next week, I might have preferred to see the Ravens get clobbered on Thursday night, 30-13.
Instead, I got to watch them lose in almost the identical fashion they've lost every big game they've played in recent memory.
The same mistakes. Again.
They don't even look all that different from previous years, just different numbers on the uniforms.
Just like Aunt Jenny's pasta salad.
You know what you're getting before you arrive at the picnic.
such October 15 |
Because I'm older, I don't spend much time on social media. I find it rather exhausting to be honest. Therefore I was unaware of this incident until last night, when my sons began texting me and FaceTiming me. The assailant is a former teammate of two of my sons at Hereford High. Let's just say that his senior year there was punctuated by some extremely poor decisions, likely due to being under the influence. Hereford was his third high school in four years. I'm going to go out on a very short limb here and surmise that he was under the influence on Sunday night in Federal Hill. His actions are inexcusable under any circumstances. Drunk, high, sober, it doesn't matter. Violently assaulting innocent people, unprovoked, is bordering on sociopathic behavior. He should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law, and if civil suits arise from this disgusting incident, he should be made to pay for his victims medical care and pain and suffering. Whatever backlash and public embarrassment he endures because of this are due to his own reckless, irresponsible behavior. You get what you get when you act like a fool. As I've always told my sons, Make good choices. Stop and think about the consequences. |
TimD in Timonium October 15 |
"Clearly, though, the man who assaulted the two Commanders fans was somehow enthused about being on camera for the incident." Live by the sword, die by the sword. The resulting video went viral, and the outcome probably wasn't the "internet fame" he had in mind. Without video, I'm guessing this goes unreported and the perp remains unknown. Oh well. |
Barry October 14 |
Flacco is likely back to not being a starter by next week, no way he's coming here for a playoff game in Jan. @Paul pretending to be positive is hilarious! |
Delray RICK October 14 |
One of my problems with HARBAUGH is when he throws the red flag I'm sitting watching slow-motion, ain't no way he's right. I know it's people upstairs. When you have to rely on others that's where HARBS gets accused of f it up. He's mind is so on this team there isn't anybody else I'd want as coach . Who the he'll is better ??? Crickets |
Vince from SC October 14 |
The only criticism of Harbaugh I have is his clock management at the end of halves can sometimes make you scratch your head. Other than that, he's been a HOF coach no question. Should have won the SB the year before if Lee Evans or Billy Cundiff could do bare minimum. |
Paul from Towson October 14 |
The John Harbaugh hate in this city absolutely astounds me. All this franchise has done since he's been here is win. Sure, they've only hoisted the Lombardi trophy once under him, but that's one more time than most of the rest of the NFL. And, this team has been to the AFC Championship Game four times under Harbaugh. Sure, the 1-3 record could be better, but let's not forget that first one was in Joe Flacco's (and Harbs' for that matter) rookie season when this team was supposed to be 4-12. Of course he's not perfect, and yeah his use of challenges and timeouts can be questionable at best, but it's hard to argue with the overall W-L record. Not to mention, he swallowed his pride in 2018 and did something very few, if any, Super Bowl winning coaches would do, and changed the entire offensive structure of this team to suit Lamar Jackson's strengths. Look at the rest of the league, and the coaching unemployment line, and tell me who you would rather have. Belichick?? No thanks, look at his record without a guy named Tom Brady. Jeff Fisher?? Don't think so. What about all these young, hotshot coaches that the national pundits love so much. Kevin Stefanski? Pass. Zac Taylor? Nah. Nick Siriani? Please! The luntics in Philly are ready to run him out of town despite making it to the Super Bowl two seasons ago. I know this isn't just a Baltimore thing, after all, if you ask any Stooler fan they would tell you that THEY could coach the team in Pittsburgh to a Super Bowl before Mike Tomlin could. But even still, at a time in the NFL (and sports in general) when most teams have a yearly coaching carousel and rampant upheaval (Falcons, Colts, Raiders, Panthers, etc.) having the stability in a head coach that wins, on average, 10 games a season is a luxury very few teams enjoy. And, in my humble opinion, even given his faults, I would take Harbs over just about every other coach in the league, except MAYBE Andy Reid. But even Reid was an also-ran until a guy named Mahomes came into the league. Go Ravens!! Such, you beat me to it this morning. As I watched the replay of yesterday's game, I realized that the Derrick Henry signing seems very Shannon Sharpe-ish to me. When the Ravens signed the two time Super Bowl champion, they already had a championship caliber defense. Sharpe was the missing piece on an offense that was built on the run and timely passing. Now, Lamar Jackson is leaps and bounds better than Trent Dilfer ever was on his best day, but just like Sharpe, Derrick Henry seems to be the missing piece for this offense. Derrick Henry makes LJ8 an the rest of the offense better because, with all due respect to JK Dobbins and Gus Edwards, defenses didn't have to stack the box to stop them. Leaving LJ8 to pic apart man, or in some cases, soft zone coverage. GO RAVENS! |
Howard October 14 |
Tony Siragusa was a great free agent pickup. The 2000 Ravens defense had no offense to pick them up. The defense couldn’t bend and couldn’t break and they didn’t. |
Bud King October 14 |
Not even Harbs could lose this game... go Ravens! |
Nathan Aparisto October 14 |
Is there ANY deal or trade that would convince that mess of a Jets franchise to send Sauce Gardner to the flock for a passel of picks? Could the cap hit be worked out? Hed be the next Ed Reed for a decade and Ravens could truly be a juggernaught! |
such October 14 |
We were having a text conversation last night and the question was raised: Has there ever been a better Free Agent signing by the Ravens than Henry? I can't think of anyone comparable on offense. Maybe Shannon Sharpe, maybe Derek Mason, but as far as instant impact and the ability to effect games the way he does, there's never been anyone close to Henry. Yesterday was just the latest example of the difference he's made. Everyone from Hereford to Upper Marlboro knew he was getting the ball, and the Ravens ran that same little toss sweep to the left they ran in Cincy, and Henry goes for 30 yards and that's ballgame. He's an absolute hammer. I went back and looked at the 2016 Draft and it's just another example of NFL front offices overanalyzing players. The Ravens took Ronnie Stanley at #6 overall, which is undeniably a very good pick. In the second round, at #42 overall, they selected the immortal Kamalei Correa from Boise State. Derrick Henry went to Tennessee at #45. Oh, what might have been. Although Lamar wasn't here yet so there's no telling what the offense would've looked like with Joe Flacco and King Henry. Regardless, he's here now and it's a beautiful sight to behold. |
Chris in Bel Air October 14 |
Even in the loss to KC, you could see the potential of the Ravens. They are clearly starting to put it all together now. As a fan, I'm feeling the optimism. But... we've also watched the Ravens and the NFL long enough to know they will stub their toe a couple more times. It happens. The key is how they bounce back the following week. Moreover, you don't win the Lombardi in October. It's all about January... and hopefully February. IF they end up playing KC again in the playoffs, they are not going to lose that game. I don't care if it is in B'more or KC. They are winning that one. Yes, the secondary seems to be a concern and can't figure out if it's personnel or scheme or both. Either way, like yesterday, the offense just needs to pick them up and respond when they have the ball. A couple random observations. First on Brandon Stephens. Maybe it's just me but it seems like no matter how closely he is covering his man, the opposing QB and WR always seems to come up with an incredible play/catch. Yesterday he had at least one like that, maybe two. I'm not busting on him, I'm just saying, I'm not sure what more he can do. Overall, I think he's become a decent CB for someone that did not play that position in college. Second, good to see Ngakoue in the mix yesterday. I like his potential rotating in the pass rush mix. As for Marcus Williams, he's sort of been a disappointment. He's not a bad player, I just can't remember the last time I saw him do anything of significance. INT? Forced Fumble? Fumble recovery? Key pass break-up? Something. On to Tampa |
Unitastoberry October 14 |
Another win and another big offensive statement. Commandskins done. Swiss Pees and Orr have some work to do. Why was Tony Romo on Kyle Hamiltons case about him being a dirty player on two big plays he made? He reacts before looking at the instant replay. Tony drives me nuts not my favorite commenter. It's a contact sport Tony. Only the offensive guys can lead with the head what a crock. My feelings on Joe Flacco are those of happiness for him. It's just a shame it's Jr Irsay who gets to beat his chest. With all the sub par duel threat QBs in the league now Joe could play another 4 -5 years.Btw I'm not including Lamar in that catagory. This bum in Cleveland should be on the bench watching Joe toss tds. Barry I will never root for PSU. I have my reasons and it's more than the Sandusky child rape coverup they should have had no football there for 5 years just for that one. It goes back to Joe PA coming here long ago and stealing all state and all county guys in Maryland just to keep them out of College Park then he redshirts them in Happy Valley etc and they never see the field playing behind guys like Franco Harris and Lydell Mitchell etc. I know one of them. He would have been a great running back at Maryland. He ran for 150-200 yards a game in Baltimore County. No shame in calling out good players up there now.44 is one of them. I hate to say it this but it could be Penn States year.Would be great if Locksley could pull a Vanderbuilt on them last game of the season. Btw Lenny Moore does get a pass Lou. Gary Cuozzo or Earl Morrall Howard? Well you have to take Earl and his MVP 1968 off the bench year. But I got visions of Jimmy Orr in the endzone waiving his hand wide open to this day and like I have said before the whole thing still stinks like you know what! |
David Rosenfeld October 14 |
If you weren't at the game yesterday you probably heard Tony Romo say that John Harbaugh is a "top 10 coach all time," which of course drew lots of chuckles from the hoi polloi. I'm not gonna get into a conversation about that, but I will say this... I don't see how you can watch the Ravens play on a week-to-week basis and say that John is an "awful coach." Like...of all takes you could have, it just doesn't stand up to any kind of serious analysis. |
Jon October 14 |
How are the league going to stymie the offense? Same way they have last few years in January- wins mask problems- - no more weak O line? enjoyable Sunday but lets not get ahead of oursleves like we did with Os and KC. Keep working Flacco! |
TimD in Timonium October 14 |
The two drives of 90+ yards were beautiful to watch. Hard to find much to complain about from yesterday's Ravens game, but surely someone will. Looks like the O-line has figured it out. Big difference from the 0-2 start. Whew. |
Kenny G October 14 |
Hopefully we saw a defensive change in yesterday's game - bend but don't break. I am not familiar with the WFT scheme but the Ravens keep also everything in front of them. Also for all people complaining about the refs, please offer some solutions vs just ranting about how bad they are. Sinc the game has become faster, covers more area of the field and the rules very complex, my suggestion is add another ref or two and allow for certain replays/challenges of penalties. I would also possibly allow more contact on receivers but penalize DB holding more (the calls are too inconsistent which leads to a lot of "missed" calls) |
Ed October 13 |
Nice day for Will Jackson picking games and props. Congratulations. |
lou@palo alto October 13 |
#24 was from Penn St |
Barry October 13 |
So UTB is actually a closet PSU fan after all eh? |
Howard October 13 |
Kj— tell me where that bar is so I can hang out with UTB and MFC. I would ask them if they think that Joe in his #15 Colts uniform reminds them more of Gary Cuozzo or Earl Morrall. Oh, and Jordan and Pippen keep rolling on |
Vince from SC October 13 |
Not a blowout but also never in doubt. On to Tampa. |
Unitastoberry October 13 |
If Lamar had made it past AFC teams in January like KC, Tennessee,and played nicked up in the Cincinnati game he would have 3 rings . I agree on this one the Commandskins are going down. Even Harbaugh won't screw this up. If you watched Penn State win in overtime over USC you know the NCAA refs are horrible. Worse than the NFL. Remember when the NFL refs went on strike and they used NCAA refs? That why the strike was settled. This number 44 on Penn State was a one man wrecking crew yesterday. He's a number one pick at TE. He's Dave Casper/Gronk quality if he stays healthy. Blocks great too pancakes guys. |
Old George October 12 |
Trolley Dodgers. |
Chris in Bel Air October 12 |
Love the "Reading time: 2 minutes"... or 3 minutes. This should be a regular thing for DMD. Thanks for the throwback. |
kj October 12 |
Everything written by @Bryce about DET was written about our O's two years ago. Funny how fans are always giving other teams a pass but want their team to be perfect 100% of the time. Wonder if MFC and UTB hang out at the local Curmudgeons bar howling at the moon together? The Indians have the best chance to beat NYY, so not sure why anyone would be pulling for DET to win today. Above was my own mini ode to my absolute favorite local sportswriter. DMD did a better job with his tribute, but figured I'd toss in an amateur version. RIP Mr Jackman. |
BRYCE October 12 |
I’d love to see Skubal and company get the last laugh this year with all the talk of Detroit dealing/retaining their ace at the deadline. Would be great to see them eliminate Cleveland and then continue their post-2000 trend of owning the Yankees in the playoffs. That team is going to be sneaky good for the next several years. In addition to its current roster, they have two top-10 prospects waiting in the wings and another at #31, per MLB. What’s even more impressive is that this 2024 surge has been with no contribution from Mize and very minimal from Torkelson, their two recent #1 overall draft picks. Most importantly, they’re playing with the team chemistry to be a force. |
Unitastoberry October 12 |
Why should U of Maryland fire Mike Locksley? So then they pretty much admit they just want a team who beats squads like Gettysburg College and Northwestern then only loses to Penn St and Michigan? It's basically an admission they joined the Big Ten for the money and could care less about a national championship. Remember what the late great Lefty Driesel said when hired by Maryland basketball back in the stone age? He said he wanted to become the UCLA of the east then strap the national trophy on his car and ride around tobacco road with it. It never happened but it was exactly what the fans wanted to hear and they bought in. Now the football team just wants to beat Northwestern and Prairie View. What a bunch of bull. RIP to Phil Jackman who was a great sports writer and not some punk looking to cause trouble.Those days are gone except at DMD. Go USC! |
MFC October 12 |
Hernandez dropping the F bond, after asking if it was live tv was disgusting. Another self Absorbed athlete. I am now rooting for anyone but LA. What a jerk, it wasn’t cute . |
Phil October 12 |
Awesome tribute, I always enjoyed his columns especially the two minute ones. |
Tom J October 12 |
Drew, when I saw the "Reading Time, 2 minutes" it rang a bell but just couldn't put my finger on it until reading down and then seeing and remembering this was Phil Jackman's thing. Didn't know the origin behind it but loved this in The Sun. Yes, please continue his thing as part of DMD. |
hank October 11 |
Top level trolling today. No true Baltimorean would ever wish success for the Yankees. I agree with David, bunch of posers like this current team is the last team I want to see in the World Series. Whoever prevails in the DET-CLE series best take care of business. Mets vs LA, no one worth rooting for there either. |
Paul from Towson October 11 |
The minute the O’s were eliminated, I became an instant fan of whatever National League team comes out of the NLCS to face whatever dumb AL champion. I can never stomach watching the Yankees (or Red Sox for that matter) celebrate anything so I strongly disagree with Drew’s commentary today. I don’t have any issue with the Mets, so if they happen to beat either LA or SD, more power to them. Plus, I would like to see Lindor and Alonso get a ring. Just wish Buck was still there to make rooting for them even that much easier. I will agree with Drew that the Cleat of Reality is hunting Washington this weekend and Jayden Daniels will feel every bit of its fury. Rookie QB’s never fair well at The Bank against our Ravens. This Sunday will be no exception. Ravens win, 34-13. Go Ravens!!! |
Jeffrey “Fireball” Roberts October 11 |
I would personally love a Yankee/Padre WS. The tattooed Padres in those horrible brown uniforms led by Manny against the clean cut Yankee pinstripes led by Judge. East Coast versus West Coast. Atlantic-Pacific. Biggie-Tupac. Bring it on. LOL |
David Rosenfeld October 11 |
Honestly, the 2024 Yankees are a bunch of posers. They act like they dominated the league. Judge and Soto are ridiculous, and Cole is one of the best, but the other 23 guys ain't much better than any other team. Maybe that'll be enough to win the World Series. I'm not sure Cleveland or Detroit will beat them...they just don't hit well enough. |
Delray RICK October 11 |
Baseball season is OVER!!! |
Chris in Bel Air October 11 |
To be honest, I guess I still have a little bit of sour grapes going on with the O's out of the running again. Tough watching other teams/fans celebrate. I suppose a Yankees/Mets series would be interesting. I'm sure other than Yankees/Dodgers (Ohtani vs Judge) MLB execs and whatever network is broadcasting the World Series would really like Yankees/Mets too. I can't imagine those same folks would be too thrilled with say Tigers vs Padres. Ravens will bring Wash and Jayden Daniels back to earth on Sunday. Don't get me wrong, I like Daniels. It's just not quite his/their time. |
TimD in Timonium October 11 |
A Mets / Yankees series could be entertaining, but I suspect most of America would tune out an all-NYC final. But I don't think the Mets will get past LA or SD. We'll see. And the Ryan Ries video was a great watch. |
Dan October 11 |
Drew, thanks for highlighting Ryan Ries. As a fellow skateboard enthusiast I know his story and the impact he has made on the youth all over the USA. God bless Ryan!! |
Unitastoberry October 10 |
I thought is was a joke today when I heard Dean"Swiss"Pees was rehired to be a senior advisor to DC Zach Orr. It's actually true. |
TimD in Timonium October 10 |
"Corbin Burnes, who started for the AL in the All-Star Game, ranked fourth in the AL in ERA (2.92), third in innings pitched (194 1/3), eighth in WHIP (1.10) and 10th in strikeouts (181)." Complete games in 2024? Zero. (His closest was 8 innings vs KC in the playoffs.) We've already seen the Golden Age of Complete Game Pitchers. It's not coming back. |