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Was there
ever a better World Series? Well,
yes. The Rangers were very quiet. All those bats did nothing.
That wasn’t Yankee pitching out there on the
hill. Those were the best pitchers in
the National League. And it showed. Whiff, whiff, whiff went the Rangers. Tim Lincecum beat the great Cliff Lee
twice. Matt Cain won Game 2 and would
have won more had the Series been extended. The
very young Madison Bumgarner was lights
out too. Only Jonathan Sanchez was touched
up for some
runs.
While the
Rangers were mostly striking out, the Giants did just enough to win at
the
plate and sometimes did more than that. They
were really very good at the plate,
certainly better than they had
been all season, starting with the World Series MVP, Edgar Renteria. He’d been hurt most of the season. The real stalwarts in the batting order all
season had been Aubrey Huff and Juan Uribe. Andres
Torres had also shown himself to be a
real pain in the neck to
opposing pitchers and catchers both. Otherwise,
that team just didn’t hit at all.
There was no
Cody Ross, no Pat Burrell.. ….just guys like the Panda, Pablo Sandoval,
who had
a horrible year. Freddy Sanchez didn’t
do much either. In the Series, they all
decided to be world beaters. Go figure,
not that they had to do much in this Series. The
Rangers, who had looked so awesome versus
Tampa Bay and New York,
couldn’t touch the Giants pitching most games.
But at least
the Series managers let their teams play. They
didn’t impose their wills on the game
beyond what was needed. The Giants won
because they pitched better,
they batted better and they fielded better. Nobody
pitched on 3 days rest. There were no
outrageous decisions. The managers seemed
happy to fade into the
woodwork, or the dugout as
the case may be. While Bruce Bochy got
credit for making all the right moves, his choices weren’t made to call
attention to himself.
Contrast
that to some or almost all of these NFL coaches. Bonehead
of the week went hands down to Mike
Shanahan, who took out his fine starting quarterback, Donovan McNabb,
in the
final two minutes, only to insert one Rex Grossman, formerly of Bears
fame and
mostly notable for bad throws. Rex was
hit and immediately fumbled, thus ensuring defeat in a game that had
only
seconds ago been winnable.
Shortly
thereafter, Brad Childress, already somewhat infamous for being a boob,
at
least in this column, waived the incomparable Randy Moss, who committed
the
unpardonable sin of all time by questioning one of Brad’s brain farts
that didn’t
work in their loss to Moss’s former team, the New England Patriots.
Now don’t
get me wrong. Randy Moss is an
idiot. But he did make the Vikings a
better team, no matter that the Vikings hadn’t been able to parlay his
receiving
skills into wins. But the Vikings still
have a chance to turn their season around. It’s
not likely that cutting Randy will prove
to be any help in that regard. If nothing
else, Moss’s presence completely
opened the field for the dangerous Percy Harvin.
Cutting
himself would have been a much better idea. Everybody
knows it’s Favre’s team anyway. Childress
has no football instincts
whatsoever. Until and unless Sidney Rice
returns to the Vikings lineup, the Vikings will have no deep threat on
the
field, nobody to keep the opposition off Harvin. And
I don’t think we can count Bernard
Berrian, or Greg Lewis or Camarillo. Oh
yeah, there’s Hank Baskett too.
Childress
cut Moss because he could. It’s as
simple as that. (As this is written,
Moss’s name still isn’t on the list so maybe it’s not so simple after
all). Even given Moss’s rather huge
indiscretions in the locker room, a warning or other disciplinary
action would
have been more appropriate at this time, especially if Childress were
really interested
in what’s best for the Vikings. Childress’s
insecurities notwithstanding (and
he certainly has ample
reason for those), the timing of Moss’s release was poor.
Mike Shanahan
is a different kind of case. He removed
McNabb from the game totally for the sake of his own ego.
He couldn’t stand the thought of the Skins
winning another game and having McNabb get the credit for it. Again. But if
Grossman could have achieved the same
result, then the credit
would have reverted to Shanahan. The
only other possibility is that the Skins winning too many games in
Shanahan’s
first contract year is not part of his 5-year plan.
Either way,
Shanahan’s taking McNabb out of the game was despicable.
That his bonehead move was so spectacularly
unsuccessful just proves that there is a God….in case you were
wondering.
Meanwhile,
closer to home, the Jets coaching staff once again proved its free and
easy
coaching style sometimes doesn’t work. The
Jets punter, totally of his own volition,
faked a punt from the
shadows of his own goal posts. Of course
he didn’t make the first down. But he
surely did surprise both head coach Rex Ryan and the special teams
coach, Mike
Westhoff. Did he really have a green
light? The punter, Steve Weatherford,
seemed to think so.
All I know
is that these things don’t happen to Bill Belichick.
And these Jets seem to be playing their
season as if they’re still doing a reality show.
In Dallas,
Wade Phillips, in response to a question as to whether he had lost
control of
his team, responded that he certainly hoped not. What
the hell kind of an answer is that? He
could have ripped his secondary new butt-holes. He
could have picked on guys like Miles
Austin and other receivers who either tipped catchable balls or simply
weren’t
looking.
Phillips is
the other extreme of the NFL coaching continuum, a total wuss. With all those candidates out there, can’t
these teams find a balanced guy?
You can’t
make this stuff up.
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