Tree of Life

17 Oct

NHL Submits 50/50 Offer to NHLPA by Jon Pennline

published in category: Pittsburgh Penguins on Wednesday, October 17th, 2012 – 9:26 am

Maybe it was the cancellation of two weeks of games or the $250 million the league has already lost in revenue thanks to having no preseason. Whatever it was, the NHL finally "gave in" and submitted a proposal to the NHLPA to split hockey-related revenue 50-50.

According to Darren Dreger at TSN, the NHLPA is expected to submit a counter proposal in the next 24-48 hours but all signs point to significant progress being made.

Originally, the players were earning 57% of hockey revenue but, since it was resulting in net losses for more than half the league, the owners wanted a change. Their original proposal called for 47% of revenue to go to the players. After a few months of strained negotiations, the owners agreed to offer a split.

Even more encouraging, is that both sides appear eager to play a full 82 game regular season. If both sides can come to an agreement soon, the league could start as early as November 2nd after a week of training camp. Starting a season a month late while still maintaining the full amount of games could jeopardize player safety if the league decides to cram all 82 games into a shorter schedule. On the flip side, adding a month would be ridiculous given that the Stanley Cup champion is usually crowned in mid-June in a normal year.

Without a league in the states, many NHL players have gone overseas to play in the KHL or Swedish league. Evgeni Malkin has teamed up with Sergei Gonchar to play in Geno's hometown, Magnitogorsk, while Alexander Ovechkin and Ilya Kovalchuk faced off last night. Other players, like Sidney Crosby and Kris Letang, have spent their time conditioning and playing in exhibition games.

Once a CBA is in place, all players will be allowed to leave their current leagues and come back to the NHL.

Other parts of the NHL's proposal included a rollback of player salaries (something that was originally denied by the owners), a five year limit on contracts, and the top ten money earning teams will pay 50% of the revenue to lower teams (per Dreger). That means more revenue will be coming to the lower-revenue teams although that may also pose a problem if the NHL can't find more than three teams to make a profit.

There are many more issues to work on that just the revenue sharing including player safety and the 2014 Olympics in Sochi, Russia. But, for now, the Players Association at least has something to work with and discuss. Hopefully, this proposal is a sign that the worst is over and the NHL can get back to playing games real soon.

Posted in Pittsburgh Penguins

 

15 Oct

Nationals Show Pirates How Not to Handle Gerrit Cole by Jon Pennline

published in category: Pittsburgh Pirates on Monday, October 15th, 2012 – 9:03 am

Just when you thought the Pirates had the most heartbreaking end to their season, the Washington Nationals swooped in to take the top prize.

The Nats blew a two run lead in the ninth inning by surrendering four runs to the St. Louis Cardinals. The game five loss ended Washington's incredible run and first postseason appearance since moving from Montreal in 2005. Entering the playoffs with the most wins in baseball, the divisional series loss has to be considered premature; however, given the amount of young talent, as well as a large market and wealthy owner (Ted Lerner), the Nationals will surely reach the playoffs multiple times for the next 5-10 years.

While the Nationals are a larger market with the ability to sign big free agents, there are still plenty of things the Pirates could learn from them. Most notably, how to handle an elite pitcher.

It's kind of like listening to your father when he advises you not to make the same mistake he made. The reason he knows is because he learned his lesson the hard way. Just like that father figure, the Nationals showed the Pirates what not to do with an ace.

When Gerrit Cole becomes a starter and the Pirates are contending for a division title, there should be zero talk of shutting him down for the remainder of the season. ZERO. The only plausible reasons would be injury or fatigue.

Nationals GM Mike Rizzo's handling of Stephen Strasburg was downright inexcusable. There was talk from the beginning of the season that Strasburg would be limited to 160 innings as he recovered from Tommy John Surgery. The idea does make sense but only if you manage the plan correctly. Rather than having him start the season, why wasn't Strasburg shut down for the first two months? The moves to get Edwin Jackson and Gio Gonzalez, and the decision to call up Bryce Harper meant the Nationals were expecting to contend. With that in mind, the Nationals should've used Strasburg starting in June which would have pushed him into the playoffs. He certainly would have been a better choice to start a playoff game than Jordan Zimmermann or Edwin Jackson and he definitely could have stopped the bleeding in game five before Drew Storen completed the meltdown.

For the Pirates, Gerrit Cole has drawn comparisons to Stephen Strasburg since being drafted last year out of UCLA. The 6'4 220 pound pitcher can run his fastball into the triple digits even after throwing 100+ pitches. Cole has explosive stuff that certainly qualifies as ace material. When he is ready, which should be soon, he will become the first true ace for Pittsburgh since Doug Drabek in the early 90's.

When a team has the opportunity to win a championship, they typically do as much as they can to gain an edge. Strasburg gives the Nationals a huge edge and the Pirates are hoping Gerrit Cole can be the same player for them. Neal Huntington's job as GM of the Pirates has come under a lot of scrutiny. Some fair, some unfair. But if he makes a move like Mike Rizzo; if he tries to fall into the same trap to try and protect his star player during a playoff run, his firing will be deserved much like the opening round loss.

This is all speculation, of course. The Pirates still need to be a contender which typically means winning more games than losing. The talent pool isn't nearly as deep in Pittsburgh as it is in Washington which allowed Rizzo to go out and trade for Gio Gonzalez last winter. There are definitely some holes to fill before we can even consider how the young pitching prospects should be handled once they reach Pittsburgh. Should the Pirates get to the playoffs, they already have game tape on how to handle their pitchers.

Posted in Pittsburgh Pirates

 

15 Oct

Pittsburgh Steelers Need To Shift Their Focus Back Onto The Field by Dominic Errico

published in category: Pittsburgh Steelers on Monday, October 15th, 2012 – 9:02 am

Rashard Mendenhall is back at his old Twitter nonsense. This time he is calling out Steeler Nation for not supporting this team.

"Seriously, if you're gonna talk trash about your team and everyone on it, don't call yourself a fan. A fan is a supporter." — Rashard Mendenhall (@R_Mendenhall on Twitter)

Is it really talking trash, or more like discussing the cold hard truth about this team? My gut feeling is that the Steelers need a wakeup call in more ways than one.

Maybe the Steelers need to focus more on themselves and not what the fans or media are saying about them. They have enough issues to worry about. In the end, nothing a fan or media person says about this team matters. All that matters is that you go out and win football games like you are paid to do.

This team is clearly lacking in the focus department. Plenty of stupid penalties, missed tackles, blown coverage, poor fundamentals, poor coaching and playing down to opponents. You name it, they are doing it. They are very hard to watch right now.

Rashard, you are paid to play the game of football. You are paid to win games. Fans pay good money to see you guys play on the field, and many invest their time and passion into a team. They identify with a team. You represent the city of Pittsburgh on and off the field.

God forbid Steeler fans actually call out the team for playing lackluster, uninspired football on the field. Are the fans supposed to blindly applaud when this team is losing to the worst teams in the league? Oakland and Tennessee are terrible and Denver is also a losing team and yet the Black and Gold have found a way to lose to all three.

Pittsburgh fans are some of the most knowledgeable football fans in the world. They recognize a stinker when they see it, and the Steelers right now stink with the worst of them. There's no mistaking their 2-3 record, they've earned it by being one of the most undisciplined teams this year in terms of penalties. They've dug themselves a hole by letting teams hang around and steal victory from them. Good teams find ways to win close games like this, the Steelers aren't and therefore, they aren't a good team.

At what point do we see these losses to inferior teams and conclude the Steelers might also be an inferior team? This was supposed to be the "easy" part of the schedule, and they are 2-3 and face a must-win game next week against Cincinnati. Lose that one and fall to 2-4 with 4 losses in conference already.

The defense can't stop blowing fourth quarter leads. The coaching staff makes head scratching decisions like going for a career long field goal with a high likelihood of failure. Shockingly, the defense couldn't stop the Titans from moving right into field goal range. Not like we haven't seen that story out numerous times this year.

Despite all this, you'd think Mendenhall would be more concerned with finding ways to improve his game. Maybe even stay on the field and help contribute. With all the time he spends standing on the sidelines lately, maybe it's time for the Steelers to hire actor Orlando Jones to serve as his double. They'd probably save some money on his contract.

The Steelers need to get their focus back and soon, or else they'll have an entire offseason to spend tweeting about how good they are. Seeing the lack of focus from them, maybe they're already there.

Posted in Pittsburgh Steelers

 

12 Oct

TribLIVE Radio High School Football Athlete of the Week

published in category: Sports Talk Radio on Friday, October 12th, 2012 – 3:28 pm

Congratulations to Penn-Trafford's Devin Austin, voted TribLIVE Radio High School Football Athlete of the Week. Austin rushed for 172 yards including touchdown runs of 74 and 4 yards as Penn-Trafford rolled to a Quad East victory over Connelsville 38-17.

Penn-Trafford is now 5-1 on the season, 5-0 in their section. Penn-Trafford takes on Kiski Area tonight, and then finish the season with Gateway at home and at Hempfield.

Posted in Sports Talk Radio

 

12 Oct

Steelers Dropping like Flies by Ryan Shaffer

published in category: Pittsburgh Steelers on Friday, October 12th, 2012 – 9:15 am

The Pittsburgh Steelers lost another road game last night to a bad team. The Tennessee Titans (2-4) gave up 30 or more points in each of their first five games, which set an NFL record, yet the team held Pittsburgh under that mark, 26-23. Pittsburgh (2-3) lost all three road games this year, and sits third in the AFC North with the division-rival Bengals next on the agenda. Injuries continue to hurt the Steelers chances of winning the tight division this year, and after last night, .500 seems questionable.
The Pittsburgh Steelers seem to implode without Troy Polamalu in the lineup. Out for the third time this season with a calf injury, the safety's health continues as a lingering concern. The Steelers failed to shake the injury bug thus far in 2012, as linebacker James Harrison missed significant time with knee surgery, and LaMarr Woodley missed most of the last two games with a hamstring injury.
Against Tennessee, All-Pro center Maurkice Pouncey left the game after a Titans' player rolled on his ankle. Pouncey continues to battle injuries, as this one marked the third time in his young career that an injury forced him from play. Most notable, the center missed Super Bowl 45 against Green Bay. Doug Legursky filled in admirably as he did in the championship game in 2010, but when Ramon Foster and Marcus Gilbert left the game with injuries, the team quickly ran out of options. With David DeCastro still nursing a major injury, the makeshift offensive line causes concern for the 6-time champs.
Rashard Mendenhall and Issac Redman left the game with injuries as well. Mendenhall, who missed almost the entire 2011 season and a chunk of 2012, left the game with an undisclosed injury. The Steelers running back ran brilliantly last week in a win over Philadelphia, but another injury forced him to the sidelines for the second half in Tennessee. Redman caught five passes for over 100 yards receiving, then left the game after taking a helmet to his knee. Coach Mike Tomlin watched helplessly as his team crumbled before his eyes.
Though the season remains relatively young, Pittsburgh dropped three AFC games, all on the road, while the Ravens and Bengals continue to win. Last year, the Steelers shared a 12-4 record with Baltimore, but the Ravens held the tie-breaker by beating Pittsburgh twice. Inevitably, the Steelers traveled to Denver and lost to an 8-8 opponent. If the Steelers make the playoffs this year, and travel far again, they will look back to the three losses early in the year against sub-par teams in the AFC and know why. The teams needs to stay healthy, and maybe find some extra trainers, or the season will end early in Pittsburgh.

Posted in Pittsburgh Steelers

 

12 Oct

Lockout Hinders Best NHL Season in Years? by Jon Pennline

published in category: Pittsburgh Penguins on Friday, October 12th, 2012 – 9:14 am

The 2012-2013 season was supposed to start tonight. Instead, the league is in a labor dispute with the Player's Association which has led to a lockout, and subsequent work stoppage. As a result, the first two weeks of the season, totaling 82 games, has been cancelled.

What a shame. After rebuilding a league that was pushed to the brink of extinction in 2006, the owners and players simply cannot find a common ground to get a deal in place and start the season on time. The fans will always come back because the sport, itself, is too entertaining and addicting to become detached. But the level of incompetence by everyone involved in labor negotiations has reached a new level of frustration.

Even more frustrating is the shortening -or outright cancellation- of what is potentially the most story-filled season in years. Yes, this season could be more interesting than the 2008-2009 season that saw Sidney Crosby face Alexander Ovechkin for the first time in the playoffs, resulting in seven entertaining games including dueling hat tricks.

This was supposed to be the make-or-break season for Paul Martin. Entering his third year of a five year contract, Martin was supposed to prove whether or not his five million dollar salary was worth more than making breakfast for James Neal. With the young core of defensemen chomping at the bit to play in Pittsburgh, combined with Martin's trade interest over the summer, this had all the makings of a major story.

And how about those young defensemen? Brian Dumoulin, Simon Despres, Joe Morrow, Olli Maatta, Scott Harrington, and Derrick Pouliot all have the potential to be part of a top defensive pairing. Who will get a chance to play in the big leagues and how will they fair? Will they not only push for Paul Martin's spot but Kris Letang, Brooks Orpik, Ben Lovejoy, and Deryk Engelland's as well?

This year was supposed to be about the return of Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin from the beginning of the season, vying for the Hart Trophy along with a return to the Stanley Cup. To do so, they would likely need to get over their fear of the Philadelphia Flyers.

But it's not all about the Pittsburgh Penguins. How will Jordan Staal look playing next to his brother in Carolina on the top line? Where will Roberto Luongo end up or, will he stay with Vancouver for another year? The LA Kings have a Stanley Cup to defend after their unprecedented cup run last June, while the Washington Capitals look to finally capture Stanley Cup glory with Adam Oates at the helm.

Maybe the New York Rangers -now with Rick Nash- will finally have enough firepower to win their first cup since '94. Or maybe the Minnesota Wild will make a deep playoff run thanks to their $100 million free agent signees, Ryan Suter and Zach Parise. How will the Red Wings fair without Nick Lidstrom commanding the blue line? Is this the year the Oilers reach the playoffs?

This partial list proves the NHL has more than enough drama to captivate fans without the help of a lockout. Unfortunately, the lockout is a story that continues to write itself until a new CBA is agreed upon. No, true hockey fans won't abandon the league because of this issue; however, the NHL missed out on what could have been one of the best seasons in league history.

Posted in Pittsburgh Penguins

 

11 Oct

Win Pitt Football Tickets!

published in category: College Sports, Sports Talk Radio on Thursday, October 11th, 2012 – 10:03 am

Your chance to win two tickets to a Suite at Heinz Field for the Pitt-Rutgers game on Saturday November 24th. Parking pass and free food in the suite is included. Just send an e-mail to sportstalk@tribweb.com with Pitt in the subject headline and your name and address in the body of the e-mail. Winner will be selected randomly from e-mail entries.

Posted in College Sports, Sports Talk Radio

 

11 Oct

Robert Morris Hockey by Marissa Dubaich

published in category: Uncategorized on Thursday, October 11th, 2012 – 10:00 am

Over the weekend, the Robert Morris Men's D1 Hockey Team opened their season with an exhibition game against Wilfrid Laurier. The Colonials pulled a win and scored ten goals against Wilfrid Laurier and are looking good for their regular season opener against Quinnipiac.

Robert Morris had a difficult time in the beginning of the first period, when the Colonials allowed a Golden Hawks goal only 14 seconds in. By the end of the first period, RMU scored the next three goals and held the lead for the rest of the game. Wilfrid Lauier only had a total of four goals and they were struggling the rest of the periods.

A sophomore forward, Scott Jacklin, had a big night on Sunday. He had the first RMU goal that tied the game and also had a goal early in the second period. Zach Hervato, a senior forward, also had a big night and scored a goal in every period. Colin South, Zac Lynch, Jeff Jones, Mac Roy, and Chase Golightly scored the other five goals.

Robert Morris dominated the shots-on-goal during the entire game. The Colonials had 41 shots-on-goal while Wilfrid Lauier only had 13 shots-on-goal. There were a total of 20 penalties called throughout the game. WLU players; Mike Mascioli, Joseph Vanni, and Drew Henry each had disqualifications.

The Colonials will be on the road for their next three games, when they travel to #18 Quinnipiac for a 4 o'clock and a noon face-off on Saturday and Sunday. Robert Morris will not be home until they play Rochester on Thursday, October 25th then finally home on Saturday, October 27th when they play Air Force.

Posted in Uncategorized

 



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