28 Jan
Pitt vs. Penn St.
published in category: Sports Talk Radio on Thursday, January 28th, 2016 – 2:18 pm
28 Jan
published in category: Sports Talk Radio on Thursday, January 28th, 2016 – 2:18 pm
28 Jan
published in category: Pittsburgh Steelers on Thursday, January 28th, 2016 – 9:17 am
28 Jan
published in category: Pittsburgh Penguins on Thursday, January 28th, 2016 – 8:34 am
While the TribLIVE Radio Jagoff of the Week hammer fell on me last week (#Yellowknife), this week it came crashing down on Trib columnist-extraordinaire Rob Rossi. Rossi’s Monday column at TribLIVE.com read as more of a love letter to former Penguins and current New Jersey GM Ray Shero, whom Rossi believes the Penguins should “fear” in his new locale. That set our listeners off, who are all too recently familiar with the five straight non-Cup winning years of Shero while he was at the Pittsburgh helm.
I understand why the Pens fired Shero, as largely it was done in the name of change for a franchise that had set a Cup-or-bust standard. They busted. Ray had to go.
My gut feeling, though, is that Shero is an excellent GM and I would have loved to have seen his teams coached by someone other than Dan Bylsma here at the end … but again, after five years it was time for a clean break.
That doesn’t mean Rossi is wrong in many of his assertions, though. Let’s examine a few that Rob made on the air with us on Wednesday:
1 – The Pens’ organization lacked a plan and direction in hiring Ray Shero’s replacement.
Did they really almost hire Pierre McGuire? Was that the plan all along? Or was management seeing too much red when eyeing up Shero at his departure that they couldn’t do the proper due diligence? I think Jim Rutherford has done some good things. The recent acquisition of Carl Hagelin sure looks like a nice swap, and at least GMJR is willing to admit his mistakes (David Perron) and move on. But, the Tri-GM plan of Jason Botterill / Bill Guerin / Jim Rutherford they eventually settled on sure didn’t look like an organized, well thought-out move.
2 – The Pens are in worse shape now than when Shero left.
Sure, you could argue that some of that is Ray’s doing. Shero was in win-now mode, of course, just as Rutherford has seemingly been instructed to be. The current team is lacking young assets or future draft picks to trade for further trade-deadline help. But, part of that is Rutherford’s doing as well (see the departed Kasperi Kapanen and the first-round pick tied up in the Phil Kessel trade). If you’re going to blame Shero for trading away young talent and not re-stocking their future, well what has changed?
And if the bottom-line statement from ownership at the time of Ray’s firing was that the franchise had plateaued and needed a philosophy change to reach the peak again, then the past year-and-a-half has been a failure. At least Shero’s last team won a series, and was a win away from the Eastern Conference final. Paul Martin and Matt Niskanen made that year’s blue line palatable, and right now the team is looking like Kris Letang and his band of traveling 6th defensemen.
3 – Jim Rutherford was NOT handed a bad situation
How can a Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin, Kris Letang, and Marc Andre Fleury core be considered a bad situation?

Rutherford’s first coaching hire was a disaster, also disorganized. The Penguins have been unlucky with injuries, yes, but being forced to play with just five defensemen during last year’s stretch run was unacceptable. Perron, Christian Ehrhoff, Daniel Winnik, Steve Downie, Nick Spaling, Max Lapierre, Blake Comeau, Ian Cole, and Ben Lovejoy were not the supporting-cast correct answer last year. Time will tell in regards to Phil Kessel, Nick Bonino, Eric Fehr, Matt Cullen, Trevor Daley, etc, … but again, the defense corps is still highly questionable.
Now at the All-Star break, the Penguins have won four out of their last five games, and the team’s core is carrying them of late. Malkin’s comeback hat-trick on Saturday was a thing to behold in a win over Vancouver. Crosby scored another game-winner on Tuesday to beat New Jersey, and his eight goals scored in January is as encouraging a sign as Fleury’s star-ability on display almost every night. New coach Mike Sullivan has made some nice changes, and the squad is fun to watch again.
But are they good enough to get to the promised land?
Our guest on Wednesday’s show, TSN analyst Craig Button, doesn’t think so.
“I don’t think they’re good enough. Look at the game the other night against St. Louis. It was a competitive game, but when Ben Lovejoy gets matched up against Vladimir Tarasenko, it’s a mismatch. You’ve got no chance. It’s no different than in football when Antonio Brown is going to eat [a] player alive. It doesn’t mean that cornerback isn’t good, it’s just Antonio Brown is too good.”
“The Penguins have a premier defenseman in Kris Letang. You have Olli Maatta, and to me he isn’t a number-two. He’s pushed too far along the line, and after that you have fives, sixes, and sevens. That’s an Achilles’ heel when you try to go beat the really best teams.”
“This is where I think Mike Sullivan has made some adjustments to their team. He knows they’re going to give up some odd-man rushes and scoring chances. Marc Andre Fleury has been brilliant, a real pillar of strength. So knowing that, you can afford to take a chance instead of always being back on your heels. Mike has made that adjustment, to say ‘Marc, you’re going to asked to make some saves. We need you.’”

“The Eastern Conference is dominated by the Washington Capitals. I don’t think there’s a team in the East that can beat that team. Maybe for the Penguins getting to the Conference final would be deemed success. I’ll be absolutely shocked, barring any serious injury, if the Washington Capitals aren’t playing for the Stanley Cup come June.”
That said, this is the Washington Capitals we’re talking about. Like the Cincinnati Bengals, Chicago Cubs, and San Jose Sharks, they’ve got history to fight. This ain’t over yet.
But if Craig Button is right, it will make Rossi look a lot more right, too. And if that happens, which GM do we blame?
27 Jan
published in category: Pittsburgh Penguins on Wednesday, January 27th, 2016 – 1:46 pm
Pens shutout Devils. Fleury on almost scoring a goal. Sullivan on Crosby playing with more passion. Crosby on his shot totals going up. Jag Off of the Week Candidates. THE MORNING SHOW IS BROUGHT TO YOU BY THE TEAM SPANOS GROUP OF RAYMOND JAMES. RECENTLY HIGHLIGHTED AS THE FACE OF FINACIAL GUIDANCE IN PITTSBURGH MAGAZINE.

TSN Analyst Craig Button joins Tim Benz, Ken Laird and Josh Taylor to talks Pens, trying to improve the defense, can they compete with Caps? Can they make trades?
Rob Rossi joins Ken Laird, Guy Junker and Tim Benz to talk Pens win, their playoff chances and his Ray Shero column.
Rob Rossi wins an extremely close race over the PA Turnpike Commission to claim the Jag Off of the Week.

26 Jan
published in category: Riverhounds on Tuesday, January 26th, 2016 – 7:41 pm
The United Soccer League unveiled their full schedule for the 2016 season, and the ever-expanding league’s 29 teams will contest a total of 435 regular-season matches between March 25th and September 25th. Here are a few things that caught my attention from the Riverhounds schedule:
· The Hounds will play 30 regular season games this year: home-and-away against each of the other 13 teams in USL’s Eastern Conference, plus third matchups against Harrisburg and FC Cincinnati (at Highmark Stadium), and Bethlehem Steel FC and Rochester (on the road). I have no idea why they don’t just play a balanced, 26-game schedule. I understand that the Eastern Conference has 14 teams, and the Western has 15, and the Western teams would need to play 28 games to achieve full balance…..but how’d they settle on 30? More soccer for us, sure, but it feels “off.”

· Opening weekend (March 25th) in USL features 13 matches, but the Riverhounds won’t play in any of them. The Hounds kick off their campaign on Saturday, April 2nd at Highmark Stadium against the Rochester Rhinos, the defending USL champions. Hosting the defending champion (and their consistently stingy defense) in the first match of the year is a nice test to begin Mark Steffens’s second year in Pittsburgh, and a good opportunity to start the campaign off on a strong note.
· The Hounds will begin their defense of the Keystone Derby Cup (with fancy new branding sponsorship from the PA Lottery) against Harrisburg on the 2nd weekend of the year, also at Highmark Stadium. Harrisburg returns to Pittsburgh for the marquee Fourth of July home game. I hope USL has been smart enough (or the team has urged the league enough) to continue scheduling the Hounds at home on Independence Day. The final matchup between the in-state rivals takes place in Harrisburg on August 27th.
· The away game against New York Red Bulls II, who knocked the Riverhounds out of the playoffs in New York (well, New Jersey) last year, is scheduled for May 28th. The schedule says that game will be played at 10 PM. I can only assume that’s a typo or that the game time will be changed. Otherwise, that’s bizarre.
· Last year, the Hounds had to play 2 games in 3 nights on a trip to Canada, and while that was better than the matches on back-to-back nights that some USL clubs had to endure a few years back, it was less than ideal. As the schedule is currently constructed, all games are at least 3 full days apart, and there aren’t any absurdly lengthy road trip. From August 27th to September 10th, the Hounds travel to Harrisburg, then Orlando and Charlotte, and that’s the only instance of having to play more than two consecutive games away from Station Square.
· All home games will start at 7 PM. No more afternoon games at Highmark Stadium. That’s probably for the best, considering some of the scorching temperatures players had to deal with for a couple of summer afternoon kickoffs.
· There are a few more weekday games on the regular season schedule than there were last year, mostly in the second half of the season. Hopefully, the Hounds will fill those empty weekday slots in the first part of the year with another, preferably longer, run in the US Open Cup.
· The new expansion teams for 2016 are: Bethlehem Steel FC, Orlando City (B), Rio Grande Valley FC, Swope Park Rangers KC, San Antonio, and FC Cincinnati. The Riverhounds host Cincinnati in the final game of the regular season.
· As the size of the league increased, so did the size of the playoff field. Last year, six teams from each conference made the postseason, and the USL playoff structure was identical to the NFL’s playoff structure (top 2 seeds in each conference got byes, the highest remaining seed hosted the lowest). In 2016, eight teams from each conference will make the playoffs, no teams get byes, and a single-elimination knockout tournament decides the champion.
· The Hounds preseason training is well under way at their new indoor facility in Bethel Park. Several players under contract, players under trial, and players from last season’s squad who aren’t under contract for 2016 have been scrimmaging and conditioning in “unofficial workouts” as they get ready for the upcoming campaign. Formal practices start on February 15th, followed by several preseason exhibitions against college teams including Penn State, Ohio State, Michigan State, and Akron.
26 Jan
published in category: College Sports on Tuesday, January 26th, 2016 – 4:04 pm
Don’t look now- that is, unless, you’re a fan of the Colonials. For the first time all season, this team looks like the club projected to finish second in the Northeast Conference.
A team ravished by injuries, including its star player Rodney Pryor, and youth stumbled out of the gate, practically falling on its face. Rock bottom came when the team fell to 3-15 and a disappointing 1-4 in conference following a 76-52 rout at the hands of Mount St. Mary’s Mountaineers in a game that saw the Colonials down 43-13 at halftime in front of their own fans at the Charles L. Sewell Center.
It didn’t help matters that players had failed to show confidence in Head Coach Andy Toole and his staff. “There just isn’t a buy-in with our program. The number of times we see same plays occur and don’t fix it is what drives you crazy,” said Toole in a postgame press conference after the setback to the Mountaineers. “I’m embarrassed. I’m responsible for it all, and I can’t get these guys to come together. It’s driving me insane.”
Toole and the Colonials had little time to brood over what had taken place the game before with the first-place Farleigh Dickenson Knights coming to town. The Colonials, still without major players Rodney Pryor and 2015 team MVP Aaron Tate, may have been the only ones who could have imagined what would come next.
In a contest that saw the Colonials down 26-13 early in the first half, the team got help from the most unlikely of places. Walk-on sophomore forward Conrad Stephens turned in a performance to be remembered, hitting all six of his shots from the field, good for 13 points in just 21 minutes of action. Stephens added six rebounds to an already impressive evening that ended with a 64-58 victory for the Colonials, and signs that they were down, but not out of the running in the NEC.

What made Stephens performance all the more impressive was how his teammates responded to the energy he brought. Even the injured players, like Pryor, flocked to Stephens at media timeouts, embracing him and looking genuinely excited for a young man getting an opportunity on a big stage.
“Conrad got guys excited and gave us energy. We’ve been looking for that energy out of our team all year. He’s a great teammate,” Toole said in the postgame press conference. “The way he played today was the way he practices. He was awesome. In the right spot. Kept it simple,” said Toole.
From there, the Colonials found a rhythm. Fueled by the pure athleticism of junior point guard Kavon Stewart and versatility and length of sophomore swingman Elijah Minnie, the Colonials ripped off victories over Central Connecticut State and Bryant, where Pryor scored 10 in a return to action.
Stewart has been especially impressive for the team. While he still makes some of the mental blunders that he always has (he still leaves his feet far too often when passing) Stewart has grown into the leader that the team seemingly needs to capture yet another NEC title.
“Kavon is getting our guys pumped up and keeping the intensity up. He’s taking ownership of this team,” said coach Toole after the Bryant victory.

Matty McConnell has also picked up his play over the course of his inaugural season with the team. His defensive intensity and desire to take- and make- big shots as a freshman are good signs for this squad not only this season, but going forward.
“Our freshmen are coming along. They’re learning. To their credit, they’re putting in extra time to get better,” said Toole.
The three-game winning streak has moved the Colonials to 4-4 in conference, just two games behind the Mountaineers for first.
The NEC is traditionally one of the most parity-filled conferences in college hoops, but this year it seems especially void of front-runners, outside of the Mountaineers. The Colonials will get to put that to the test when the teams meet Thursday in Emmitsburg, Md.
The pieces are there for this team to potentially repeat as NEC champs. They have a guy that can score at will in Pryor, an incredibly gifted athlete at point guard in Stewart, a lengthy and tenacious defender and dunk artist in Minnie, along with a supporting cast that has just enough firepower to get it done, as we’ve seen in the past three games. All of this could be put to good use, if they only buy into Toole and his staff completely, as it seems they may have.
Let’s not forget that last year’s team was struggling well into conference play. While their 9-6 NEC record was nothing to scoff at following a loss to Sacred Heart, the Colonials were in the middle of the pack and playing poorly at the end of games. It wasn’t until the move to put star forward Lucky Jones as the sixth man, dropping him from the starting lineup, that the team finally seemed to buy into what Toole was selling.

That team went from 13-14 and fading fast to 19-14 and owners of an NEC championship and a berth in the NCAA Tournament, where they would win their first game in the “Big Dance” since 1981 when they took down North Florida, 81-77. A team that had multiple players quit halfway through the season found itself in the second round of the tournament against the eventual champions, the Duke Blue Devils. And while the Colonials were beaten by the legendary blue-blood program, they put up a good fight, pulling within 10 midway through the second half.
So the point is really this: Toole has done more with less. Heck, I didn’t even mention the time he beat the Kentucky Wildcats in the first round of the NIT (is there anyone who calls themselves a fan of the Colonials or college hoops who doesn’t know about that?) or how he came back the next year with a team depleted by graduation and injuries to the point of only having eight players able to play when he beat St. John’s to return to the second round of the same tournament.
If the Colonials can come together right now, the script on this season could flip as fast Toole’s comments did in the span of a week in regards to the efforts of his team.
26 Jan
published in category: Wrestling Reality on Tuesday, January 26th, 2016 – 2:27 pm
26 Jan
published in category: Pittsburgh Steelers on Tuesday, January 26th, 2016 – 8:38 am
Want an experiment? Type the words…
“Steelers”
“Should Be”
“Super Bowl”
…into a Twitter search and see what comes up https://twitter.com/search?src=typd&q=steelers%2C%20should%20be%2C%20super%20bowl The results are magnificent. The wave of justifications, assumptions, and leaps of faith will wash over you like a tsunami.
Yes, in the wake of the AFC Championship game many Steeler fans are trying to self medicate their heavy case of the Super Bowl blues with a healthy dose illogical presumption.
-Well, if the Steelers hadn’t been so injured…they’d be in the Super Bowl.
-If Fitz Toussaint didn’t fumble…the Steelers would have been in the Super Bowl.
-Look at New England’s offensive line. If the Steelers had played them instead of Denver, they would have won too.
Not so fast keyboard cowboys.
I love the optimistic sentiment. And there is nothing like taking stock in a good ole’ fashioned hypothetical presumption that can’t be disproven to warm the cockles of a disappointed sports fan’s heart.
But let’s face it, if we want to be objective, nothing that was displayed Sunday in Denver suggests the Steelers would have beaten New England if given the chance.
Let’s establish a very important fact first. If Pittsburgh had managed to upset the Broncos two weeks ago, they would have had to travel TO NEW ENGLAND for the AFC title game. And Pittsburgh has never beaten the Patriots in Foxborough with Tom Brady at quarterback.

We didn’t exactly see either team light up the scoreboard in Denver Sunday. But the defenses were both good. And the Patriot offense would have been much more in sync without having to deal with the road crowd noise. And, like the Steelers have been every time they go to Denver (despite Mike Tomlin’s empty protests to the contrary), I’m sure the altitude was more an issue for New England than it was for the Broncos.
Furthermore, what was the biggest reason why Denver beat New England Sunday? They harassed Tom Brady for sixty full minutes. He was hit 20 times. I’m willing to bet the Steelers haven’t totaled 20 hits on Brady in every game they’ve played in Foxborough combined.
Say what you want about James Harrison’s strong finish to the season. Pittsburgh’s rotating group of four OLBs can’t hold a candle to DeMarcus Ware and Von Miller. Harrison in his prime paired with LaMarr Woodley in his prime probably could. And so could Joey Porter and Jason Gildon in their heyday. But those pairs never affected Brady in New England the way Ware and Miller did Sunday in Denver.
Beyond just the OLBs, Pittsburgh’s collective pass rush isn’t what Denver’s is. Sure, the Steelers were only four sacks off Denver’s pace for the league lead (52-48). However, Pittsburgh’s ability to sack the passer was inconsistent. Forty-seven percent of the team’s sack total came in just four games against non playoff teams. The defense tallied almost half its sacks (23-of-48) against SF, IND, & CLE twice.
And Brady only was sacked for negative yardage vs Pittsburgh in game one this year one time (he was brought down for 0 yards on a scramble by Bud Dupree as well which technically counted as a second sack). He was brought down seven times in two games by the Broncos.
Then there is the secondary. Yes, both the coverage units of Pittsburgh and Denver were tortured by Rob Gronkowski. But who isn’t?! The stud tight end totaled 19 catches for 326 yards and five touchdowns in three games against the Broncos and Steelers this year. The difference is that while allowing Gronk to have a big day Sunday, Denver did manage to limit Julian Edelman. Against Pittsburgh, Brady completed 11-14 to Edelman for 97 yards. In the AFC title game, Edelman only caught seven passes on 13 targets for 53 yards.
Also on Sunday, Denver took away the running back as a Brady pass option. He targeted James White 16 times and only completed five passes for 45 yards. The QB was 4-of-5 for 51 yards when throwing to Dion Lewis in week 1. Granted, is White as good as Lewis? No. But ten more incompletions in one game to a given target suggests credit should be given to the defense as much as blame should be put on the reserve player.
If you’ve talked yourself into believing that this was finally going to be the year Pittsburgh won in New england and beat the Patriots in the playoffs….good for you. You’ve got a greater ability to ignore reality than I do. That can come in handy in life.
If you are of the opinion that the Black and Gold was a mere fumble from a fifth string running back removed from making travel plans to San Francisco…and that those pesky 60 minutes in Massachusetts were just a formality, awesome! Do what you do!

But instead of trying to convince yourself of a fairy land equation that could never be proven, maybe it’s better to just look ahead to next year when the Steelers may actually be better equipped to take another step.
Or, simply be happy that the Steelers got as far they likely deserved to go?