This Modern World
Biking along the Potomac while listening to the Boston Pops play Tanglewood after reading a Swedish crime-fiction about Nazi war criminals and e-mailing with my father who’s looking out on the Mediterrean sea.
Mixed messages
Whale Tail
A memorable year for Major League Baseball continues. But which is the bigger fluke: Five no-hitters in four months, or two players getting injured celebrating victories?
Before ‘The Decision,’ there was ‘The Annullment’
With Juwan Howard officially joining the Miami Heat - 14 years after the team first tried to get him - the word “irony” is getting thrown around a lot. But here’s a small one:
When Howard signed with Miami in 1996, he almost broke the NBA. As Howard signs with Miami in 2010, the NBA is almost broke.
Howard’s annulled deal of ‘96 was essentially the pinnacle of his career; he’d been an All-Star in his second season, carried a woefully under-talented and oft-injured Bullets team to the brink of the playoffs and now had teams fighting to offer him a $100 million contract. Read more…
The Great Crimson Hope
I’ve been a fan since his freshman year.
Lin could become the first Harvard player in the NBA since Ed Smith in 1953. As a senior, Lin nearly guided the non-scholarship Crimson to its first NCAA Tournament berth since 1946. He averaged 16.4 points and 4.4 rebounds. He went undrafted and was widely considered a nice story but not an NBA player.
Much like his 8.0 scoring average with 2.0 assists and 2.3 rebounds in 15.7 minutes in four summer league games, Lin’s stat line doesn’t tell the whole story of his production and value. The Mavs came to Las Vegas seeking to train the electrifying guard Rodrigue Beaubois to run the point but will leave knowing that Lin — while not the complete athlete or pure shooter as Beaubois — is the superior point guard.
–Kaplan, ESPNDallas.com, 7/17
Semi-charmed life
Yanks’ best free-agent signing during the Steinbrenner era? One Michael C. Mussina.
I play defense for Cleveland about as well as World B. Free
Click here to see Eric and DD’s full discussion of LeBron James.
Dan-
A few things about Cleveland: it’s a city like anywhere else, where people live and work, raise families, have friends, and enjoy parks, world-class cultural activities, and occasionally major-league level sports. I get that for people who want to be clubbing and partying it up constantly, is as the prerogative of some young multi-millionaires, Cleveland is not the promised land. But for the vast majority of people, including myself, why the naysaying?
I’d like to point out to our reader, if there is one, that you are only one generation removed from living in Cleveland, and that you sound as grateful to not be here as if you left Siberia for the gilded streets of Manhattan in 1895. Cleveland has no Monopoly on depressed areas and economic problems, Mr. Parker Brother. Read more…
In which I find your argument lacking and spurious
Click here to see Eric and DD’s full discussion of LeBron James.
Eric,
You get to be McEnroe, I’ll be Borg. Like aging tennis stars, it’s fantastic that we can still serve and volley on sports, at least for one round. And I’m thrilled by your recent comments - because I totally disagree and can’t wait to take them apart.
Perhaps I’m not getting your A-level material. I’d imagine that blogging isn’t top-of-mind as area businesses fail and bread lines stretch to Chagrin Falls (such was my expectation from a June 2009 e-mail exchange, when you informed me that you’d be leaving Ann Arbor for Ohio):
DD: Cleveland?? I hear they have two buildings there, and the economy’s built on LeBron James.
Eric: I am truly a bit concerned about what will happen to the economy in Cleveland if LeBron leaves next year. It’ll kill property values and unemployment will spike. (Only half-kidding.)
My pressing question: Has the LeBronpocolypse begun? (And if so, how could you tell?)
And now for the view from the banks of the Cuyahoga…
Click here to see Eric and DD’s full discussion of LeBron James.
Dan, thanks for inviting me to this debate. Actually, I pretty much invited myself, because your own comments on Facebook and Twitter made me curious to hear more than 140 characters from you. I root for my hometown Boston teams first and foremost, but do have an interest in the Cavaliers doing well. I was very torn watching the 2010 Eastern Conference finals because of the potential long-term impact of a Cavs’ loss, which has been realized.
You ask why so many fans are upset at Lebron for providing entertainment, given that his primary job description is “entertainer.” (Secondary job descriptions: one man economic stimulus package; property owner; and lung-damager. And yes, this was a form of entertainment, but lots of people doing bad things draw ratings and mass attention, whether they be criminal acts (O.J.), socially frowned-upon behavior (Tiger; Jon and Kate), or general inanity (Paris, the cast of the Jersey Shore). None of these people require last names, by the way. Read more…
