The 2010 Summer’s Best Event Debate… World Watches for a Reason

May 10, 2010

Read the opposing arguments from Babe Ruthless and Loyal Homer.

The entire world will tune into Johannesburg, South Africa, on June 11 as the 2010 FIFA World Cup officially kicks off. Over the following 30 days, 32 teams, each representing 32 different nations, will participate in the single greatest sporting tournament in the entire world.

Even with the global passion for this sport, the single most populous nation that is represented in the 2010 World Cup – the United States of America – ironically does not carry the same level of passion as does the rest of the world. Whatever the reason, the United States does not show nearly the same fervor as is seen elsewhere.

So for all of you American sports fans out there, here are three reasons for why the World Cup is the best sporting event of this summer. And, more importantly, why you should watch it.

REASON #1: 6.5 BILLION People Can’t Be Wrong

Soccer is the most popular sport in the world. It is played by young and old, women and men, and in countries from Canada to Zimbabwe to Japan. There must be a reason that people from the Arctic North share the same passion as those from the Rainforests of South America, the Saharan Desert, and the Australian Outback. Yet, many Americans remain ignorant of the game, and consequently fail to capitalize on an opportunity to BOND with our neighbors.

It makes me think that we are missing out on something!

Reason #2: There is Nothing Wrong With Fitting In

To put it into terms that many Americans can understand… think about the last time you played fantasy football with a guy who doesn’t actually follow the NFL or college football. You know who I’m talking abou, the guy who takes a kicker in the first round of the draft and doesn’t know the difference between Steve Smith of the Giants and Steve Smith of the Panthers.

You probably wouldn’t have even invited him, except that you work with him and he overheard you talking to a couple of guys about it, so you felt guilty about excluding him. But now your draft is loaded with awkward pauses, dirty looks, and a group of ten other KNOWLEDGEABLE football fans who are getting frustrated while you explain the difference between a forced fumble and a fumble recovery.

You don’t mean to judge, but you just can’t help it. You think less of this person, and ultimately end up avoiding them around the office, so as not to be associated with them anymore.

Well, in soccer terms, the United States is THAT avoidable guy. We are the ones that the rest of the world talks about behind our backs. We were only invited to play because our parents were friends with their parents, and so they were FORCED out of guilt to include us, but it is clear that we are just not part of the “cool” crowd. And the real shame is that they would happily welcome us into their group if we just shared something in common with them by paying a little more attention to soccer.

Reason #3: The U.S. Has a Shot

The United States soccer team has the potential to be very successful in this tournament.

In no way am I suggesting that the United States would (or should) be a favorite to win. However, they are also much more than simple underdogs. I would instead like to think of them as a dangerous sleeper (like Butler in the NCAA Basketball tournament) who CAN beat any team, including the best in the world, on any given day.

Their grouping in the first stage includes a suspect English team that has shown a propensity for choking on the big stage when the game matters most, and is rounded off by Algeria and Slovenia (both of whom required last minute heroics against very long odds just to reach the round of 32).

Meanwhile, the United States has played some of the most consistent and impressive international soccer of recent years. Last year the team actually reached the championship match of the FIFA Confederations Cup, which included a stunning 2-0 victory over Spain (the then top-ranked team in the world), and carrying a lead late into the championship game against Brazil (the CURRENT top-ranked team in the world). They have competed in the last three championship matches for the international confederation they belong to (the CONCACAF Gold Cup), winning two out of those three.

Currently ranked number 14 in the world, they have proven the capacity to beat the very best, and could very easily find themselves moving into the second stage of this tournament. From there, ANYTHING is possible!

All of those reasons point to the same conclusion: The 2010 FIFA World Cup will be the best sporting event of the summer, EVEN for American sports fans.

In just one month, 32 teams will represent their respective 1.5 BILLION compatriots in a competition before the eyes of more than SIX BILLION fans, and when all is said and done, one team will stand victorious as the greatest team in the world’s greatest event.

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The 2010 Summer’s Best Event Debate… Two Perfect Summer Days

May 10, 2010

Read the opposing arguments from Loyal Homer and Bleacher Fan.

Summer has always held a special place in the hearts and minds of Americans. When we were children it offered a retreat from teachers, homework, and the annoyance of school. In our adulthood it provides a similar escape from the stress and rigors of dealing with work, bills, and, in general, adult responsibilities. The magical moments made possible by more daylight and warmer temperatures may not be measureable, but they are very real. For a sports fanatic like me, summer comes to a fevered pitch for two days in July with the pinnacle of all Summer sporting events.

With the patriotism of the Fourth of July still fresh on our minds, Americans turn to their national pastime to be treated to one of the most grandiose displays in all of sports. Two days of clutch hits, eye-popping Web Gems, and jaw dropping long ball blasts that reward the baseball faithful, and convert the nonbelievers. It is two days of, unequivocally, the most anticipated and greatest sporting event of the summer. The two days are the MLB All-Star Game and Home Run Derby.

The marquee event itself, the MLB All-Star Game, is truly fantasy baseball in the real world. Fans get to see what an N.L. infield of Albert Pujols, Chase Utley, David Wright, and Hanley Ramirez is capable of, or the A.L. lineup containing the potent fire power of Ichiro Suzuki, Derek Jeter, Manny Ramirez, and Alex Rodriguez. But, the All-Star Game is not just a glorified batting practice. Elite level pitching gets its chance to shine as well. Fans are treated to watching many of their favorites and frontrunners for the Cy Young Award engage in matchups against the best hitters in the game. In the same respect, All-Star rosters contain mind-blowing bullpens that include shutdown closers like Joakim Soria, Jonathan Papelbon, and Mariano Rivera in the AL. and Jonathan Broxton, Francisco Rodriguez, and Trevor Hoffman in the N.L. The All-Star Game is a virtual cavalcade of the best players in baseball. The greatest pitchers and batters converge on that one night creating lasting memories of one unforgettable experience.

Like baseball itself, the All-Star Game has a rich history. The game isn’t just about what might happen, but what already happened. The Great Bambino hit the first home run in All-Star Game history during the 1933 game. Just 16 years later, number 42 continued to break barriers as he and three other African American players integrated the All-Star roster. Some 50 years after the tradition of the All-Star Game began there had never been a grand slam, but the California Angel’s Fred Lynn hit the game’s first. And he did it in Comiskey Park, the same place the game began, and where Babe went yard half a Century before. Even in the modern millennia the game reaches new heights. In 2007 Ichiro hit the first inside the park homerun in the game’s impressive history. As records get broken and history gets written, fans are treated to one of the greatest displays in all of sports. The All-Star game is simply a can’t-miss event.

As exciting as the All-Star Game is, it is preceded by an event of equal magnitude – The Home Run Derby. The Derby is pure excitement. What do people like about baseball more than a home run? Absolutely nothing! The home run is the most exciting aspect of baseball, and the derby puts it on center stage. The shock and awe display of batting firepower leaves fans breath-taken. Players don’t just hit homers at the derby; they perform superhuman feats, smashing balls into the Summer night. In 2002 “Slammin” Sammy Sosa mashed the longest dinger in the history of the Home Run Derby, sending the ball on a 524 foot one way trip. In 2005 Bobby Abreu surprised the fans at Comerica Park in Detroit by shattering records hitting a massive total of 41 homeruns into the Detroit night. It turns players and casual fans alike into children again. Little boys that marvel at the greatest hitters in the game doing what they do best. Grown ball players ask each other to pose for pictures and sign autographs. They even overlook team and divisional rivalries to represent baseball and their league. It is one great night for baseball, and one great night to be a fan.

The best part of the All-Star Game and Home Run Derby are the unexpected storylines. In 2008 the All-Star Game and Derby returned to New York for Yankee Stadium’s swan song. Everyone expected Yankee Stadium itself to steal the show as the Yankees spared no expense to give Baseball’s Cathedral the type of send off the hallowed grounds deserved. But another story dwarfed any story the baseball world was pushing. Josh Hamilton did something special during the 2008 Home Run Derby.

Rangers outfielder Josh Hamilton, who was once banned from baseball and struggled through multiple stints in rehab, seemed to be living his dream, and America was there to witness every emotional minute of it. On that one night in Yankee Stadium Hamilton let the world see how far he had come. Hamilton’s fight against substance abuse nearly cost him his baseball career, and more importantly, his life. But the world saw him overcome his personal demons one swing at a time. With his old (and I mean old) BP pitcher Claybon Council throwing to him, Hamilton established himself as one of the premier sluggers in the game. He hit an astonishing 28 homers… in one round. Hamilton’s historic shots surpassed the previous benchmark of 24 established by Bobby Abreu in 2005. Hamilton also hit the third longest home run in derby history, a 518 foot blast. The big story of the night was not the incredible number of home runs Hamilton hit, but the unforgettable tale of redemption that it represented.

Completely spent from the first two rounds, and his 71-year-old pitcher Council still somehow hanging on, Hamilton finished in second place overall, but walked away as the peoples champ and clear winner on the night.

Each year’s All-Star Game and Home Run Derby bring the opportunity for stories like these to be written. This year, when the greatest players in baseball converge on Anaheim California, another unscripted, miraculous story will develop. You don’t want to miss it.

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The 2010 Summer’s Best Event Debate… Prime Time at Pebble Beach

May 10, 2010

Read the opposing arguments from Babe Ruthless and Bleacher Fan.

I was all set to build this argument around the return of the U.S. Open to Pebble Beach, California, which is where the 2000 U.S. Open was held and certain person dominated at that tournament. Any guesses who won in 2000? Tiger Woods won by a record 15 strokes, as he was the only golfer under par that year. However, it remains to be seen if Woods will be able to tee it up at all at this year’s U.S. Open. He had to withdraw from The Players Championship on the seventh hole due to an apparent neck injury. With the U.S. Open beginning June 17, it is uncertain as to what Woods’ playing status is. Either way, the show must go on, and the event still promises to be quite a show.

Depending on what happens in the next month, it could be an opportunity for Phil Mickelson to overtake Woods for the number one ranking in golf. If Mickelson had won at Sawgrass this past weekend he would have. As of today, Mickelson sits a little over a point behind Woods in the world ranking system. I could spend all day explaining the Official World Golf Ranking points system to you, and I still wouldn’t cover it all. Just know that this is the closest it has been in quite some time.

It’ll also be a chance for Mickelson to win his second consecutive major. If he wins, that would keep open the possibility of a “Mickel-slam.” That would happen if Phil the Thrill went on to win the Open Championship and the PGA Championship later in the year, giving him all four majors in one calendar year.

The great thing about golf is that good stories always develop as the tournament develops. Despite what the national media would have you believe, the golfing world doesn’t always rotate around Woods and, to a lesser extent, Mickelson. As the PGA Tour slogan goes, “These guys are good.” And yes, they are! Many of you may not have watched The Players Championship this past weekend due to the usual big names not being up there, but it was very entertaining. The three guys vying for the title, Tim Clark, Robert Allenby, and Lee Westwood, had either never won on the PGA Tour or not won at all.

What’s really going to make this year’s U.S. Open exciting is the fact that weekend action will be played in prime time on the East Coast. This was tried two years ago when the championship was played at Torrey Pines . That was the year Woods held off Rocco Mediate in a Monday playoff. That also was the third-highest rated U.S. Open ever. NBC holds the broadcast rights and must be hoping to cash in once again.

I’m definitely looking forward to this year’s U.S. Open. It’s going to be played at one of the world’s most majestic golf courses. Whether or not Woods will participate will be a popular topic over the next month. But even if he doesn’t, it still promises to still be as exciting as ever.

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