Avery and the Rangers hoping for a possible reunion in the near future Posted by Thomas Conroy (02/17/2009 @ 10:33 pm) Before the start of Saturday night’s Manitoba Moose-Hartford Wolf Pack AHL hockey game, the Hartford Civic Center was buzzing with the anticipated return of outspoken forward Sean Avery from his NHL suspension. The Dallas Stars, who hold his contractual rights, assigned him to the New York Rangers minor league affiliate in Hartford last week.
The hope is for Avery to have a successful audition and be reacquired by his former team before the trading deadline in early March. If he shows the same energetic play on each line shift that was his trademark with the Rangers, then it’s a foregone conclusion that they will claim him off waivers from the Stars. Each team will be required to pay half of Avery’s salary for the remainder of the contract. The Rangers need a boost in order to knock themselves out of their lethargic play that has plagued them all season. Their top players have not performed well, as Scott Gomez and Chris Drury have seemingly lost their respective games. Both were supposed to be team leaders, but instead they have played without much confidence. Read the rest after the jump...Posted in: NHL Tags: AHL, Brendan Shanahan, Calgary Flames, Chris Drury, Dallas Stars, Dion Pheneuf, Elisha Cuthbert, Gary Bettman, Hartford Civic Center, Hartford Wolf Pack, Jaromir Jagr, Manitoba Moose, New York Rangers, NHL, NHL Commissioner, Scott Gomez, Sean Avery
Couch Potato Alert: 2/13 Posted by Thomas Conroy (02/13/2009 @ 12:30 pm) This weekend, you will have a wide variety of sports entertainment to choose from for your viewing pleasure. If you’re in the mood for speed, then the Daytona 500 on Sunday should rev your interest. Or if you’re looking for a good rivalry matchup, then the Georgetown and Syracuse contest on Saturday should be at the top of your list. If you’re longing for a star-studded extravaganza, take a moment to tune into the All-Star Weekend from Phoenix. The NBA gets it right by showcasing the incredible talents of their stars in multiple categories, even though they lose points by changing the game of H-O-R-S-E to sponsor approved G-E-I-C-O. All times ET… NBA Saturday, 8 PM: Slam Dunk Competition, Three-Point Shootout, Skills Challenge (TNT) Sunday, 9 PM: The NBA All-Star Game from Phoenix, AZ. (TNT) NHL Friday, 7 PM: Boston Bruins @ New Jersey Devils Saturday, 8:30 PM: Dallas Stars @ Chicago Blackhawks Sunday, 12:30 PM: Philadelphia Flyers @ New York Rangers (NBC) College Basketball Friday, 9 PM: #13 Villanova @ West Virginia (ESPN) Saturday, 12 PM: Georgetown @ #22 Syracuse (ESPN) Saturday, 1 PM: #6 UCLA @ Arizona (CBS) Saturday, 4 PM: #25 Florida State @ #8 Wake Forest (ESPN Full Court) Sunday, 1 PM: #20 Illinois @ Indiana (CBS) Sunday, 5:30 PM: #5 Duke @ Boston College (Fox Sports) PGA Friday-Sunday, see local listings for broadcast times: AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am Tournament (CBS/TGC) NASCAR Sunday, 2 PM: The Daytona 500 (Fox) Posted in: College Basketball, Couch Potato Alert, Golf, NBA, NHL, Television Tags: Add new tag, AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, Boston Bruins, Boston College, CBS, Chicago Blackhawks, Dallas Stars, Daytona 500, Duke, ESPN, ESPN Full Court, Fox, Fox Sports, G-E-I-C-O, Georgetown, H-O-R-S-E, Illinois, NASCAR, NBC, New Jersey Devils, New York Rangers, NHL, Philadelphia Flyers, Phoenix, Syracuse, TNT, UCLA, Villanova, Wake Forest, West Virginia
Couch Potato Alert: 2/6 Posted by Thomas Conroy (02/06/2009 @ 12:50 pm) We have hit a lull in our sports watching season. It’s that period of time between the end of the Super Bowl and the beginning of March Madness where sports fans will go in different directions for their weekend entertainment. Some of us will get reacquainted with our families as we have not had much contact with them since late July (which just happens to coincide with the start of training camp in the NFL). Big shout out to Kobe and LeBron for peaking our interest in the NBA regular season with their back-to-back record breaking performances at Madison Square Garden this week. They will meet this weekend in a national televised game. All times ET… College Basketball Saturday, 12 PM: #20 Syracuse @ #16 Villanova (ESPN) Saturday, 1 PM: Notre Dame @ #12 UCLA (CBS) Saturday, 9 PM: #15 Memphis @ #18 Gonzaga (ESPN) Sunday, 1 PM: #13 Purdue @ #21 Illinois (CBS) NBA Friday, 8 PM: Denver Nuggets @ Washington Wizards (ESPN) Friday, 10:30 PM: Golden State Warriors @ Phoenix Suns (ESPN) Saturday, 7:30 PM: Denver Nuggets @ New Jersey Nets (NBA TV) Sunday, 1 PM: San Antonio Spurs @ Boston Celtics (ABC) Sunday, 3:30 PM: Los Angeles Lakers @ Cleveland Cavaliers (ABC) Sunday, 8 PM: Phoenix Suns @ Detroit Pistons (ESPN) NHL Friday, 8:30 PM: New York Rangers @ Dallas Stars Sunday, 12:30 PM: Detroit Red Wings @ Pittsburgh Penguins (NBC) NFL Sunday, 4:30 PM: The Pro Bowl-AFC vs. NFC (NBC) Posted in: College Basketball, Couch Potato Alert, NBA, NFL, NHL, Television Tags: ABC, AFC, Boston Celtics, CBS, Cleveland Cavaliers, Dallas Stars, Denver Nuggets, Detroit Pistons, Detroit Red Wings, ESPN, Golden State Warriors, Gonzaga, Illinois, Kobe Bryant, LeBron James, Los Angeles Lakers, Madison Square Garden, March Madness, Memphis, NBA TV, NBC, New Jersey Nets, New York Rangers, NFC, NFL, NHL, Notre Dame, Phoenix Suns, Pittsburgh Penguins, Purdue, San Antonio Spurs, Super Bowl, Syracuse, The Pro Bowl, UCLA, Villanova, Washington Wizards
2008 Year-End Sports Review: What We Learned Posted by Staff (12/27/2008 @ 7:02 am) At the end of the year, it’s always interesting to look back at all that has happened in the world of sports over the last 12 months. 2008 brought us a host of compelling sports stories, including the culmination of the Patriots’ (unsuccessful) quest for perfection, a Bejing Olympics that featured incredible accomplishments by the likes of Michael Phelps, Usain Bolt and the Redeem Team, and, of course, Brett Favre’s unretirement, which managed to hold the sports news cycle hostage for a solid month or more. As is our tradition, we’ve once again broken our Year End Sports Review into three sections. The first is “What We Learned,” a list that’s packed with a number of impressive feats. And when there are feats, inevitably there are also failures. Don’t miss the other two parts: “What We Already Knew” and “What We Think Might Happen.” | The New England Patriots weren’t so perfect after all. |
After rolling through the 2007 regular season unscathed, the Patriots entered the 2008 Super Bowl as overwhelming favorites to roll over the pesky, but seemingly inferior New York Giants. The Pats were just one win away from staking their claim as the best football team in NFL history. But thanks to a dominating Giants’ defensive line, an improbable catch by David Tyree, and a virtually mistake-free performance by Eli Manning, the unbeatable New England Patriots were beat. It’ll go down as one of the biggest upsets in Super Bowl history, and considering Tom Brady’s season-ending injury in 2008 cost the Pats a chance for redemption, it seems that many have forgotten how New England stood just one win away from perfection. – Anthony Stalter | Michael Phelps is part fish. |
Eight gold medals in one Olympiad? No problem. Michael Phelps made the seemingly impossible look (relatively) easy en route to one of the most – if not the most – impressive Olympic performances ever. Phelps had to swim all four strokes, compete in both sprint and endurance races, and deal with the constant media attention and pressure that came along with his quest. Sure, NBC turned up the hype, but what Phelps accomplished is simply incredible. – John Paulsen
| Usain Bolt is part cheetah. |
First, Usain Bolt made Jamaica proud by setting a new world record (9.69) in the 100-meter sprint. Then, he broke the 12 year-old 200-meter world record with a time of 19.30 seconds. He showboated during the first race but cleaned up his act to win the second race in a professional manner. Some even say that Usain Bolt – not Michael Phelps – was the biggest story to come out of the Bejing Olympics. – JP
| The Big 12 has the best quarterbacks in the nation. |
The Big 12 housed some of the best quarterbacks in all of college football in 2008. Texas’s Colt McCoy, Oklahoma’s Sam Bradford, Missouri’s Chase Daniel and Texas Tech’s Graham Harrell were all considered Heisman candidates at least at one point during the season, while McCoy and Bradford are still in the running. Amazingly, Bradford and McCoy aren’t done; both will return in 2008. And although they don’t receive as much attention as the top signal callers in the conference, Kansas’s Todd Reesing and Baylor’s Robert Griffin certainly turned heads this year as well. In fact, the highly versatile Griffin is only a freshman and could make the Bears a very dangerous team for years to come. – AS Read the rest after the jump...Posted in: College Basketball, College Football, Fantasy Football, General Sports, Golf, Humor, March Madness, MLB, NBA, NBA Finals, NFL, NFL Draft, NHL, Soccer, Super Bowl, Swimming, Television, Tennis, The Olympics, Video, Women Tags: Aaron Rodgers, AL MVP Award, Al Trautwig, Alabama Crimson Tide, Albert Pujols, Alicia Sacramone, Anna Kournikova, Anna Rawson, Arizona Cardinals, Arizona Diamondbacks, Arizona State Sun Devils, Atlanta Falcons, Baylor Bears, Big 12, Big Ten, Bill Belichick, Bjorn Borg, Brady Quinn, Brandon Webb, Brendan Shanahan, Brian Burke, Calgary Flames, CC Sabathia, Charlotte Hornets, Chase Daniel, Chris Bosh, Christie Kerr, Cleveland Browns, Cleveland Indians, Colt McCoy, Curtis Granderson, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Dallas Stars, David Beckham, Derek Anderson, Detroit Lions, Detroit Pistons, Detroit Tigers, Dustin Pedrioa, Eli Manning, Elisha Cuthbert, Floyd Mayweather Jr., Gary Sheffield, Graham Harrell, Green Bay Packers, Jacque Jones, Jamacia Usain Bolt, Javaris Crittenton, Kansas Jayhawks, Kevin Love, Kurt Warner, Kwame Brown, LeBron James, Los Angeles Galaxy, Los Angeles Lakers, Matt Millen, Matt Ryan, Memphis Grizzlies, Mercury Morris, Miami Dolphins, Michael Phelps, Miguel Cabrera, Mike Miller, Milwaukee Brewers, Minnesota Vikings, Missouri Tigers, Natalie Gulbis, New England Patriots, New Jersey Nets, New York Giants, New York Knicks, New York Rangers, New York Yankees, Nick Saban, NL Cy Young Award, NL MVP, Notre Dame Fighting Irish, O.J. Mayo, Oklahoma City Thunder, Oklahoma Sooners, Oscar de La Hoya, Pau Gasol, Paula Creamer, Pete Sampras, Philadelphia Flyers, Philadelphia Phillies, Pudge Rodriguez, Rich Rodriguez, Rich Suhr, Rick Suhr U.S. Pole Vaulting, Robert Griffin, Roger Federer, Rudi Johnson, Rudy Gay, Ryan Howard, Sam Bradford, San Francisco Giants, Sarah Palin, Sarah Palin curse, Sarah Palin curses the Blues, Sarah Palin curses the Flyers, Sean Avery, Sean Avery sloppy seconds comment, SEC, Spygate, St. Louis Blues, St. Louis Cardinals, Super Bowl XLII, Tatum Bell, Tatum Bell steals Rudi Johnson's luggage, Texas Longhorns, Texas Tech Red Raiders, Tim Lincecum, Todd Reesing, Tom Brady, Tom Coughlin, Toronto Maple Leafs, Tracy McGrady, Usain Bolt, West Virginia Mountaineers, What We Learned: 2008, Wisconsin Badgers
Stars give Sean Avery the boot Posted by Anthony Stalter (12/15/2008 @ 12:00 pm) Sean Avery may be ready to come back to the NHL, but his team isn’t ready to have him back. The Dallas Stars are reporting that Avery won’t be back with the team – ever. “You have to do what’s right for both parties, and that’s what we’re really trying to do,” co-general manager Brett Hull said. Avery was only 23 games into a four-year, $15.5 million deal when NHL commissioner Gary Bettman suspended him for a crude remark about ex-girlfriends dating other hockey players. Simmering tension between Avery and his teammates and his coach boiled over in the aftermath, with the dressing room united in its stance against him ever wearing a Stars sweater again. “I thought [Sean] could bring a little bit of a change in our locker room and on the ice which I thought was missing,” Hull said. “Obviously, it went overboard and didn’t work out.” Details of Avery’s departure still must be worked out. He could be traded, sent to the minors or bought out next summer. The club said it will work with Avery to try making this an amicable divorce. They won’t try voiding his contract on grounds he’s violated the conduct clause. Yet there’s no telling when Avery will play again. He’s at an undisclosed location seeking treatment through a program set up by the NHL players association. When he was suspended, Avery told the Stars he needed help dealing with anger issues. Hull said Avery is in a 10-day, voluntary program that could be extended if counselors determine he needs a longer stay. Avery’s agent and publicist did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
See what happens when you trash Elisha Cuthbert? You get booted from the NHL. Who’s the sloppy seconds now, Sean? |