Posted on November - 30 - 2009

Line Up: Leafs v. Sabres

133789 feature Line Up: Leafs v. Sabres

Can the boys make it three in a row?  A nice streak and getting to .500 before Christmas would be fantastic considering how the season started.

Mike Komisarek is back in the line-up…Hard-luck Finger finds his usual seat in the team box along side Exelby and Wallin.  Toskala is feeling better but needs more hard practices before Wilson will put him back in.

Projected Lines vs. Sabres

Forwards
Ponikarovsky Stajan Kessel
Blake Grabovski Hagman
Kulemin Primeau Stempniak
Hanson Mayers Orr

Defense
Kaberle Komisarek
Gunnarson Beauchemin
White Schenn

Goalie
Gustavsson
Macdonald

LT

Posted on November - 30 - 2009

Bikini OTD Sports Radio Tonight

Here’s your bikini of the day from bikinibeat.org:
bikini Bikini OTD Sports Radio Tonight

On Fan 590 Tonight

5:20 Tom Anselmi, MLSE COO in studio

5:40 David Shoalts, Globe & Mail

6:06 Rob Becker, Legal Analyst

6:30 Brian Cooper, Head of Sports & Entertainment in studio

6:45 Should be Jim Popp but we’ll see!!

On 640 with Brady and Watters thanks to Mike S.:

- Brian Burke, general manager of the Leafs

- Bob “The Bear” Cowan with his Monday NFL pick

- Jolly Jonas Siegel from the ACC to preview tonight’s Leafs-Sabres game

- Hockey insiders Darren Dreger & Ray Ferraro at 6:10

Posted on November - 30 - 2009

Toronto Sports Media Game of the Night

college of sports media banner Toronto Sports Media Game of the Night

College of Sports Media Game of the Night:

Its seems like over the last couple of weeks the NFL Monday night-er has been off its game. Sure division battles like Cleveland vs Baltimore or Tennessee against Houston are okay, but when one of the teams is likely out of the play off race, the game loses its edge. Tonight lock the doors, hide the women and children because the Monday night-er is coming back with a vengeance. The 7-3 New England Patriots are in the Big Easy to take on the undefeated New Orleans Saints (10-0).  This game is going to be all about offence. Both teams are extremely high powered and ready to go. Quarterback Drew Brees is the catalyst for the Saints. He’s thrown for close to 2800 yards and 22 touchdowns. With a stable of wide receivers like Marques Colston, Devery Henderson and Robert Meachem to chose from opposing corner backs better come prepared to work. All three wide outs are averaging over 15 yards per reception and have combined for 13 touchdowns. The Saints also have a three-headed monster in the backfield. Running backs Pierre Thomas, Mike Bell and Reggie Bush have done a great job at sharing the work load. The trio has combined for 1375 rushing yards and 14 trips to the end zone.

In New England the offence begins and ends with Tom Brady. Brady missed all of last season with a knee injury and although the begin of the season wasn’t that great Brady has returned to form. He’s averaging over 300 yards per game and has thrown 20 touchdown passes. The Pats have the number two offence in the league (behind the Saints). It’s a two-headed beast at the wide out spot for the Patriots. Randy Moss and Wes Welker continue to dominate opposing DBs. The dynamic duo has combined for 142 receptions, 1779 receiving yards and 12 touchdowns. Welker is tied for the league lead in receptions (79). New England is also the last team to have a spotless regular season record. In 2007 the team was a win away from completing the perfect season, but lost to the New York Giants in the Super Bowl. Two weeks ago the Patriots were a fourth and two away from ending Indianapolis’ perfect season. Tonight they get a chance to hang the first loss on the Saints. Is that extra motivation enough to push New England over the top?

Posted on November - 30 - 2009

Someone Get David Shoalts A New Headline Writer

60sbats 2 Someone Get David Shoalts A New Headline Writer

Had Brian Burke taken over the Leafs gig two summers ago, then his second offseason would be worth evaluating. Attempting to evaluate Burke today on his one year anniversary is nuts. I mean, the guy may fail, and he may fail miserably, but come on. He started a year ago, just over a quarter into the season. He has had 1 draft and one free agency, one trade deadline, and we are going to write a story entitled “Jury Still out on Burke”. One friggin year and you are drawing conclusions like that? The problem is the article by David Shoalts of the Globe and mail is only bad because it says NOTHING. The title is brutal and totally misleading.

“One of the things Brian Burke promised when he took over as general manager of the Toronto Maple Leafs was a sea change from the country-club atmosphere that settled over the team in previous years.

With the Burke era officially beginning its second year today with a game against the Buffalo Sabres, opinions are divided about the success of his first year – but most of the critics agree the players work much harder than they did in the past. However, no one should take that as a sign that a change in culture is complete.

True culture change, say those who took on the burden of doing it, takes years, sometimes more than a decade to complete. It takes a lot more than getting rid of a few lazy players who may be a bad influence on their teammates and bringing in some hard-workers.”

Rise your hand if you are care where the Toronto Maple Leafs are after his first year, or after his 5th or 6th. Who is going to spend the time and evaluate him at this point of the season. Let’s at least give him until the end of this season don’t you think?

““If you’re looking at the change to an elite team, it was probably 10 years,” Holland said. “But if you’re talking about going from what was the worst team in the world, as it was in 1985, to a playoff team, then you could say five years.””

Exaclty! So why even bother writing the article in the first place? I mean, if that is the gist of the article, and it is, then why bother. Shoalts makes all the arguments on why these takes time…5 to ten years in some cases, and yet the headline is that jury is out? What did people expect? Burke himself said this was going to be a long process.

“The key to success with youth, Holland said, is patience. That is an issue in Toronto, given defenceman Luke Schenn’s struggles in his second NHL season.

“The odd 18-year-old kid can change the fortunes of your team, but they’re named Gretzky and Lemieux,” Holland said. “For most of them, it takes a long time.

“People think next year you’re going to be twice as good, which is unrealistic. You go home for the summer and think you made it after your first year, plus your buddies are telling you, too. So, it is not until your second off-season that you hit the gym a lot harder than you did after the first year.”

I love that the Red Wings are again the blueprint of success. No one ever would have guessed that this would be the model of success years back. I remember when they were giving away cars at the JLA in attempt to get people to come to the arena. If they are the model, then shouldn’t others be afforded the same time to follow it? Let’s see Burke try to draft the same way Illitch’s team did and then we can talk right?

““We’ve got the work ethic, no one can say we don’t,” he said. “But we don’t have the talent like a team like the Red Wings. We don’t have a leader here who is out there doing the right thing all the time, a genuine Stevie Yzerman or Nicklas Lidstrom.

“[Yzerman] wasn’t regarded as a leader until he was about 10 years into his career. He got the captaincy early, but it was Scotty Bowman who basically brought it out of him and that took three or four years. That’s why if it’s Luke Schenn for us, it’s going to take three or four years.”

Exactly the point. So why the headline, and the intro to the article? Shoalts hit a homerun on the Coyotes. On the Leafs he seems to be striking out an awful lot lately.

Talk to you from Las Vegas

TSM

@yyzsportsmedia

Posted on November - 29 - 2009

Grey Cup preview

Mounties

By making Montreal 9.5 point favourites in tonight’s Grey Cup, odds makers have made the issue not ‘how’ but ‘by how many’.

Hence, it must be impossible to then possibly convince people beyond a reasonable doubt that the Alouettes will not only not cover but lose altogether. But I’ll give it my best shot.

If you’ve been watching or reading anything in the media this week, you know that this is Montreal’s seventh Grey Cup appearance this decade, and their record is a less-than-stellar 1-5. The Als get to punish the three weak teams in the East en route to hosting the East final practically every year.

Don’t get me wrong, their team is solid from front to back and from left to right, but I’d like to see them play in the West next year. True, their out-of-division record this year was 6-2 (furthermore, they didn’t lose the West finalists, Saskatchewan and Calgary), but to play a quality team every week would no doubt weaken that record at least a bit.

Allow me to digress momentarily. Remember following the 2006 NCAA season when there were cries for Ohio State and Michigan to play for the title, even though they’re in the same conference? Florida head coach Urban Meyer cried foul, and basically said that his team, though less hyped, deserved a shot at mighty OSU. They ended up trouncing the Buckeyes 41-14, and the SEC is now seen as the dominant collegiate conference.

At the end of the day, it’s all about results. There must be something in the Prairie water, but Western teams are just better. Calgary, Edmonton and BC have each beaten Montreal in the big game, o why couldn’t Saskatchewan?

The near ten point spread is the highest for a championship football game since Super Bowl XLII, where the New Enland Patriots were expected to go through the motions, and stampede the New York Giants. A funny thing on their way to the title: they lost.

How did the 14 point underdogs do it? They put relentless pressure on the Pats’ MVP quarterback, Tom Brady, sacking him five times and being in his kitchen all night. Defensive ends Stevie Baggs and John Chick have the track record (12 and 11 sacks, respectively) to disrupt CFL Most Outstanding Player Anthony Calvillo in a similar.

Calvillo must still be having nightmares about Calgary’s Mike Labinjo consistently getting to the Montreal backfield during last year’s Grey Cup. Linebacker Ray Williams added three sacks of his own in last week’s West final, so he’s hardly someone for Montreal pass protection to overlook.

Last year’s Grey Cup was were Calgary quarterback Henry Burris shed his reputation of not being able to win the big one. With just one and a half seasons as a starter under his belt, the Riders’ Darian Durant is playing with house money in this year’s game. Win and it could vault him to stardom, yet lose and it will be seen as a positive learning experience.

The knock on him this season was the fact that he threw 21 interceptions to 24 touchdowns. I’m more interested with what he did last week. He found the endzone three times, and didn’t turn it over.

Montreal’s rush defence was the best in the league this season, surrendering just 4.5 yards per carry. The onus will be on Durant to keep that defence honest, which could then set up Wes Cates late in the game.

With so many people doubting them last week(yours truly included), Saskatchewan played almost as close to a perfect game against Calgary as the CFL has seen this year. After so many years of futility, Rider Nation has a team that is set for years to come. Two championships in three years will also conjure up some dynasty talk, but that’s another conversation for another day.

Saskatchewan 36, Montreal 32

-Marc Tessier

Posted on November - 28 - 2009

What A Surprise- Berger Out To Lunch

dilbert out to lunch 800x600 What A Surprise  Berger Out To Lunch

Stay at home Berger has a post about the “Burke” story of the week.

I’ve wondered – since the outset – why Brendan’s personal affairs are business. He is a law-abiding citizen, and should therefore have the same right as any of us to determine, without apology or defense, his druthers toward religion, political following and sexual orientation. Given the stigma that continues to surround homosexuality in our increasingly permissive society, it would have been entirely reasonable for Brendan to maintain his private posture.”

I “bolded” the first part simply, because I am not entirely sure what SAH Berger means. My guess is that he is wondering why Burke Jr.’s personal life is public. The answer to that question is in all the interviews that both Burke and his son have given since the story broke. Brendan chose to go public with story for very personal reasons. That’s his choice and he has let it be known his reasons since he talked to ESPN first.

Why it is such a big story is very easy to ascertain too, his Dad is Brian Burke, the GM of the Maple Leafs, he is one of the bigger names in management in hockey and is in the biggest market in the sport. It’s quite stunning that SAH even goes there…

“Now, I’m certain both he and Brendan would like to shelve the subject and return to the privacy of their family lives. We should grant them that respect.”

Is he kidding?

Shelve the subject? You mean like Tiger Woods would like to shelve his little car accident? Hey, I am going to go out on a limb here but I am sure that Brian told his son that once Brendan goes public he will never be able to “shelve it”. Not only that, but given the profession of Brian, his wife and Brendan you can bet that they threw the term “private lives” out the window a long time ago. I also am quite sure that they fully expect to be asked about this issue for a long long time.

As for respecting that wish, I don’t think anyone will be offside for asking about it either. Brendan has chosen his path and that didn’t include privacy. He had that before and actively chose to “come out”. Don’t get me wrong, Brendan deserves to have his life and be afforded the same privacy that we all do. But once you make yourself a very public figure that comes with a cost.

For SAH to think otherwise is off base.

TSM

@yyzsportsmedia

Posted on November - 27 - 2009

Bikini OTD Sports Radio Tonight

Here’s your bikini of the day from bikinibeat.org:
Jenn Whitt Bikini OTD Sports Radio Tonight

On Fan 590 Tonight-

- open phones with McCown from 4:05 to 4:40
- Grapeline with Don Cherry & Brian Williams at 4:45
- co-host from 5:00 to 7:00 is John Shannon
- Gord Kirke
- Jeff Blair

On 640 with Brady and Watters thanks to Mike S.:

- Jolly Jonas Siegel from Florida to preview tonight’s Leafs-Panthers game
- Ron Wilson, head coach of the Leafs
- Sean Baligian, fantasy football expert
- hockey insiders Darren Dreger & Scott Morrison at 6:10

Posted on November - 26 - 2009

Maple Leafs Article is Full Of Craps

craps Maple Leafs Article is Full Of Craps
Happy Turkey Day..

The Star is the contributor of the Maple Leaf Turkey article of the day, the author Rosie DiManno who clearly is the woman in sports that Mike Toth spoke of months before leaving the Fan and Sportsnet. (Toth by the way is officially gone from the Fan on a permanent basis). DiManno’s column is, in a word brutal. I have no problem with being critical of the Leafs, but at least make sense. They have offered up lots of ammunition to pick on them and she comes up with utter crap.

“Heretofore the difference between crap and craps: The first is played on ice, too many nights, by the Maple Leafs. The second is played with dice.”

Rosie then goes on, and on on the laws of probability. So if you want to bet on the coin flips or dice rolling, read on….

“A rolled dice always has a 1-chance-in-6 of flashing six pips, no matter how often it is thrown. A die doesn’t change it’s, um, spots.

Leaf shooters have been unable to change their luck either, regardless of how many shots they take in a game – like that club-record tying 61 in Monday’s 4-3 overtime loss to the Islanders.

Now, clearly there are permutations, hockey-wise, because scoring opportunities have numerous variables. This is what makes it a game of skill and calculation rather than chance and finite odds. But the Leafs have been making a whole lot of journeymen goalies look like Dominik Hasek by shooting blanks or taking low-profit swipes at the puck on the theory that, eventually, some of them have to go in. Ain’t happening.”

No you see, here is where she goes offline. The problem with her theory is that despite odds, in sports there are these things called streaks. This is true in every sport. There are times where even the best of players go into slumps and there are times when the worst of players still tickle the twine, cause, well shit happens. Ask a goalie or a baseball batter about the times when the puck or ball looks either like a pea or a beach-ball. Is it mathematically explainable? Not really. It just happens. Does that mean Jason Blake is going to score 50 this year? No. Does it mean they will shoot at the same percentage all year- hell no! Does the baseball player who goes 5-5 on opening day with 2 homers mean he isn’t going to miss all year and score 2 every game?

“The Leafs, arguably, have just one pure goal scorer in Phil Kessel, who has been exactly as advertised. This was the dilemma in the Mats Sundin era, when so much of the offensive burden was borne by a single player, rarely with proficient play-making linemates.”

No shit dick tracey- this is news?

“”Snipers have a weird sense of where to go on the ice and they always find a way to score,” said Sundin, when we caught up with him on Wednesday, enjoying retirement in Stockholm.

“It’s a combination of natural skill and hard work. The best pure goal-scorer I ever saw was Alex Mogilny. Now, he was gifted, but he also worked hard on his shooting every day.”

Sundin cleaves to the keep-shooting mantra.

“At least you’re giving yourself a chance to score.”

Ok, so you talked to Mats….What is the point of this article???? What does anything that you have written have to do with flipping coins and rolling dice? The Leafs are putting forth an effort, and are at least playing a more competitive brand of hockey. Are they winning? No. Does it matter in the grand scheme of things that they are trying hard- not really. Effort only goes so far. The reality is this team is devoid of scoring talent. I don’t care how hard Mogilny worked- he had a gift; he was extremely talented. Wade Belak looked like he worked pretty hard too- he didn’t score like Mogilny did. Next time Rosie – have a point.

By the way, many people have asked the question, TSM reached Brian Burke this evening and was told that the Maple Leafs self imposed holiday transaction freeze kicks in on December 9th.

TSM @yyzsportsmedia

Rosie is here

Posted on November - 26 - 2009

Bikini OTD Sports Radio Tonight

Here’s your bikini of the day from bikinibeat.org:
032023 Bikini OTD Sports Radio Tonight

On Fan 590 Tonight-

- open phones with McCown from 4:05 to 4:40
- Grapeline with Don Cherry & Brian Williams at 4:45
- co-host from 5:00 to 7:00 is John Shannon
5:05 Vladislav Tretiak in studio
5:25 Alex Antopoulos, Jays GM
6:06 Dan Shulman, ESPN
6:30 Stephen Brunt, Globe & Mail
6:45 Jim Popp, Als GM

On 640 with Brady and Watters thanks to Mike S.:

- plenty of discussion on last night’s Leafs victory over Tampa Bay
- Peter DeBoer, head coach of the Florida Panthers
- Dave Naylor of the Globe & Mail on football
- Bob “The Bear” Cowan
- hockey insider Pierre McGuire at 6:10

Posted on November - 26 - 2009

Toronto Sports Media Game of the Night

college of sports media banner Toronto Sports Media Game of the Night

College of Sports Media Game of the Night:

It’s turkey day across the border and that means one thing: a full plate of NFL football. Three games on the docket today. The Green Bay Packers (6-4) take their show on the road as their in the Motor City to take on the Detroit Lions (2-8). Both teams are coming off big week 10 wins, but both got are dealing with some serious injuries. The Pack dumped the 49ers 30-24 and in the process lost both defensive end Aaron Kampman and corner back Al Harris for the season. Kampman leads the team in sacks and Harris is a great cover corner. The Lions beat the Browns 38-37 i n the final seconds of their game. Quarterback Matt Stafford dislocated his shoulder at the end of the game, but he’s toughing it out and will be behind centre today. Who knows how effective he will be.

Next up the Oakland Raiders(3-7) are in Dallas to take on the Cowboys (7-3). At first glance this one looks like it’ll be one-sided. Oakland is coming off a monster win over the AFC North leading Cincinnati Bengals last week and the Cowboys have struggled mightally on offence. The Raiders finally benched JaMarcus Russell and gave Bruce Gradkowski the starters job. He responded with two touchdown passes, including a last second score leading to the upset win. Over the last two weeks the Cowboys offence has been less then effective. Over the last two weeks the ‘Boys have scored two touchdowns. If they don’t get things together they may end up being the turkey in a Raider’s feast.

The last game is probably the best as the New York Giants (6-4) battle the Denver Broncos (6-4). Both teams limp into this one. Denver has lost four straight and they got pummeled 32-3 last week by the San Diego Chargers. New York has dropped four of five and needed overtime to beat the Atlanta Falcons 34-31. The Giants come into this one banged-up, on three days rest and have to play in the mile-high air. If Denver can take advantage they just might end their skid.


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