Author: Anthony Stalter (Page 1229 of 1503)

Jeter overrated? Numbers say otherwise

Mike Harrington of THE BUFFALO NEWS is baffled at one of SI.com’s latest polls, which asked: Who is the game’s most overrated player? Derek Jeter was the answer, but Harrington says look at the numbers.

Come on. We’re only talking about perhaps the finest all-around shortstop of a generation and a player who will finish his career with more hits than any New York Yankee in history. More than Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Joe DiMaggio. All of them.

Now, you can certainly make the case this season has not been a vintage Jeter year, especially April and May. And he turned 34 on Thursday — 34! — so his range at shortstop is not what it once was.

But according to the Elias Sports Bureau, Jeter’s team has the highest winning percentage among all active players who have appeared in at least 1,000 games (.601). That counts pretty high in my book.

No coincidence the Yankees’ new dynasty began in 1996, Jeter’s rookie year. And while the Yankees have been a postseason flop since blowing the 2004 ALCS, they keep going back. You get that perspective when you spend three days in a city with a team like the Pirates, who haven’t even been above .500 since 1992.

While the Yankees’ June resurgence is largely credited to the return from the disabled list of Alex Rodriguez and Jorge Posada, Jeter’s play has been a pretty big boost too. Jeter entered Saturday’s game with the Mets with mundane numbers for the season (.285 average, .345 on-base, .397 slugging) but he’s really turned it on of late. He was on a 15-game hitting streak and his June numbers were .316/.391/.459.

People either hate Jeter because he plays for the Yankees or the fact that he’s often referred to of the golden child of baseball. Calling him overrated is laughable. He might not hit a ton of home runs and his RBI numbers are usually low because of where he bats in the order, but the guy gives himself up on every play in every game. He’s also one of the most clutch players this generation has ever seen and I’d take his leadership in the clubhouse any day. Stat freaks like to hammer him, but watch Jeter play on a regular basis and then tell me he’s overrated.

Whitlock: Blame the white media for Imus’ coverage

Jason Whitlock made some interesting points in his latest article for FOX SPORTS about how the “white media” jumped on Don Imus’s recent comments about Adam Jones not wanting to be referred to as “Pacman” from now on.

The hosts are generally clueless about the topic and, worse, scared to death that they’ll say something that provokes Sharpton to call their boss. The other guests are generally just as clueless, afraid they’ll say something that provokes Sharpton to call them an Uncle Tom or a bigot and are primarily concerned with demonstrating they’re worthy of an invite back or their own TV show.

Imus suggested Dallas Cowboys cornerback Adam “Pacman” Jones’ six arrests were rather predictable given his African-American heritage. A day later, Imus clarified his statement — and tried to avoid trouble — by stating that he was making a sarcastic point about America’s unequal criminal-justice system.

Imus was right both times. But Imus being right doesn’t make for good television and certainly does not pay for the conk in Rev. Sharpton’s wig.

No, sir. This was a full-blown racial controversy, a Nielsen-ratings-mover, a chance for white talk-show hosts to climb into the Octagon and let Kimbo Slice and Jimbo White Rice knuckle up until the viewers tapped out.

I digress. My point is that what Imus said warrants discussion. We just don’t need to discuss Imus. He is not our problem. Pacman Jones, with his off-field antics and stupidity, has done more damage to the image of American black men than Don Imus could ever hope to do.

I know this wasn’t Whitlock’s main point, but he hit the nail on the head when he wrote about media hosts and guests being scared when the topic of race in sports is approached. But they’re not only scared because of Sharpton – they’re scared because there are too many sensitive people in this country. It’s gotten to the point where you can’t even have a reasonable debate nowadays because some people just roll out of bed offended at something or somebody. It’s a shame we as a society can’t talk more openly about the topic of race without the discussion turning into one big defensive mechanism.

Cowboys: Joe Horn’s washed up

Just one day after news broke that the Cowboys might pursue Atlanta’s Joe Horn, word is that Dallas has zero interest in the aging receiver.

Forget the media speculation about the Cowboys’ showing interest in Falcons disgruntled wide receiver Joe Horn.

It was never a consideration at the team’s Valley Ranch headquarters. Horn’s agent called to see if there was interest. The Cowboys took 30 seconds to say, hell no. They believe Horn is washed up as a player.

They also believe Horn would be a bad fit in the lockerroom. So the Cowboys never had any interest in Horn.

Horn probably won’t make it out of Atlanta this preseason and it’ll be interesting if any team takes a flyer on him.

That greedy thing called the NFL

THE BLEACHER REPORT recently took a swipe at the greedy NFL and how 15 teams are raping fans by charging them for a Personal Sect License. (For example, the Giants just announced that they would charge some fans upwards of $20,000 for the right to specific seats.)

The NFL leads all other leagues by far. Greed is good. Greed will take you far. It is, after all, morally wrong to let a sucker keep his money.

Bigger stadiums, bigger jets, bigger television contracts, and bigger payrolls.
The only thing able to slay the NFL behemoth is itself. The potentially fatal weapon it wields against itself is greed.

If regular fans, the building blocks of franchises for years, are priced out of the market, the NFL will begin to shrivel and shrink.

Kill the fan, and you kill the goose that laid the golden egg. You kill the goose with greed.

Fans will be disgusted. Children, future customers, will no longer be able to attend over-priced games, at least, certainly not see a season’s worth of games.

In the short term, the NFL will reap millions, as fans still fill stadiums. But in the long run, in a depressing economic climate, how much can the league squeeze from the fans until they say no more?

We just can’t afford it anymore. We just don’t enjoy it anymore.

Outstanding points. The NFL is immensely popular – probably the most popular sport in the country. But they can’t continue to suck every last penny out of their fans without one day reaping what they sow. With the economy the way it is, fans are going to start turning their backs to going to stadiums and if the league answers by blacking out games, then fans might start turning their backs period.

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