The Best Game of THIS Weekend Debate – Cal Trying To Stop Stanford From Seeing Roses, and Harbaugh From Seeing Maize and Blue

November 20, 2009

Read the arguments from Bleacher Fan and Loyal Homer about what they believe is the best game or sporting event this weekend.



For all of the SEC, Big XII, and Big Ten talk I hear – and I hear quite a bit of each – it is amazing how the Pac-10 always seems to fly under the college football radar. How quickly fans seem to forget that it was not any of those conferences that went undefeated in the bowl season in 2008. It was the Pac-10. It is the Pac-10 that boasts six teams with a record of 6-3 or better. It is also the PAC-10 that features the weekend’s best game between the California Golden Bears and the Stanford Cardinal.

Obviously, this game is important in the race to win the Pac-10. Stanford has the best opportunity to snag the top spot in the conference from Oregon and Arizona which, as of this writing, both control their destiny in conference. Should Oregon lose in one of its last two games – a distinct possibility with matchups against a resurgent Arizona and an always strong Oregon State (at least the Beavers are always strong at the end of a season) – Stanford owns the tiebreak over the Ducks. With a win over rival Cal, Stanford has an excellent chance of winning the conference. Cal has the chance to disrupt the Cardinal’s Rose colored dreams, but will have to do so without star running back Jahvid Best.

Best has 12 touchdowns on the season with 6.1 yards per carry, and is sorely missed by the Cal offense. With Best out the offense has managed just 38 points in two games. Best was one of the best running backs in the country before going down to injury. His replacements, Shane Vereen and CoVaughn DeBoskie-Johnson have been good, but not as great as Best. An underrated aspect of Best’s game was his ability to catch the ball out of the backfield. He is third on the team with 22 receptions and second on the team with four receiving touchdowns. Best’s absence changes the offense and the preparation of opposing defenses, and the Golden Bears have not fully adjusted.
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While Best is out, Stanford’s sudden Heisman Trophy candidate, running back Toby Gerhart, is very much in. Gerhart, who has scored 19 touchdowns on the season in just 10 games, averages over five yards per carry and nearly 140 yards per game. He has a bruising style and runs behind an excellent offensive line. Quarterback Andrew Luck has been impressive in his freshman season, too. Thirteen touchdowns against just three interceptions is quite impressive, but his 2,220 passing yards are good enough for second in the conference.

Ironically, the more Stanford wins, the greater – it seems – the chance that the team will lose its coach. Jim Harbaugh, who has done a credible job of turning the Cardinal football program around, graduated from Michigan. Michigan, we all know, has a coach whose time seems to be running out. Should Rich Rodriguez be jettisoned from Michigan, it is understandable if the athletic director’s first call is to Jim Harbaugh. The rumors first started early this month, then Harbaugh refused to address them, then he finally gave the standard coach’s comment where he did not deny the possibility of moving on to Michigan but kept the interview focused on the current situation. Kudos. But, fans have seen this game a million times before.

This is a game that Stanford must win. This is a game that Stanford should win. This is a game that, if the team wins, it may lose a coach where every win adds to an already impressive resumé. If the team loses, this game may be the reason why the coach stays around next season.

Oh, and there is that whole rivalry thing. These two teams genuinely dislike each other, and have for decades. Not only is this a compelling game in a compelling conference, it is an example of what makes college rivalries great.

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The Most Important Player on the Hot Stove Debate – Adrian Gonzalez is Ready To Breakout

November 19, 2009

Read the arguments from Bleacher Fan and Loyal Homer about which player they believe is the most important on this off-season’s MLB Hot Stove.



If you are a Chicago Cubs fan like me, you live for Hot Stove and Spring Training every year. Sure, there is a lot of poetic mumbo jumbo about the Spring season and how just as flowers are coming into full bloom and a seemingly relentless Winter is subsiding baseball teams are again taking the diamond and setting out on their yearlong adventure for supremacy. It seems like every baseball story in the Spring has some element of hackneyed seasonal drivel. Real baseball fans do not need the empty hype. Real baseball fans know that the Hot Stove and Spring Training are the best times for baseball because of one reason: unrelenting and perfectly rational expectations.

Hot Stove is a great time of year because it gives diehard baseballs fans the chance to discover really impressive players who have been stuck in obscurity and are ready to break out. Obscure players are not obscure because they lack great stats. Rather, they lack notoriety on a national scale. They may not be on the tip of every fans tongue, or the “hot” player that every GM is salivating over. Generally they are reliable, consistent, and playing in a ballpark that hides their true potential. For me, these are the characteristics of players that are the most important, whether they are free agents or valuable and tradable players making the rounds on the rumor mill. No player fits these characteristics better than San Diego Padres first baseman Adrian Gonzalez.

Gonzalez has had an interesting career. Once a prospect in the Texas Rangers system that was believed to never pan out, Gonzalez was let go in free agency to the San Diego Padres and has toiled away in Petco Park’s spacious surroundings for the last four seasons. His first year in San Diego was okay, but he led the National League in GDPs. Still a work in progress, considering he was just 24 years of age.

Fast forward to an established 27 year-old who just completed the 2009 season where he earned his second All-Star appearance and second consecutive Gold Glove at first base. After two consecutive seasons at the beginning of his tenure with San Diego where he had 140+ strike outs, he led the Major Leagues in walks in 2009. While his batting average has come down since the 2006 season when he hit .304, his OBP has increased every season and he put up a career high .407 in 2009. Speaking of increasing totals, Gonzalez also hit 40 home runs this season, a mark he has improved every season he has been a member of the Padres. Despite his 40 homers in 2009, he failed to crack 100 RBI. Yep, San Diego was that bad in 2009. Overall, Gonzalez has put up impressive numbers in San Diego. He appears to be ready to break out.

Like a muscular dude in an oversized suit, Petco Park has hidden the greatness of Gonzalez’s game. While he uses all parts of the field when hitting, his main power comes in the right field power alley at Petco… you know, the deepest power alley in baseball at 411 feet. Imagine that same power in Boston where all Gonzalez has to do is wrap those pitches around Pesky Pole.

Gonzalez is a left-handed power hitter that definitely hits right handed pitching well, with a career .298 batting average. Here is another fun stat – he is a .408 hitter in October over his career. I think he is ready to jump to the next level. He plays a capable first base when on defense with two Gold Gloves and is a middle of the order asset.

Gonzalez is a hot commodity now not in the Alfonso Soriano way but in the Victor Martinez way. If Martinez were on the open market, his consistency, poise, and overall ability make him a valued asset, and the type of player that can push a team from good to great.

As a Cubs fan, as much as I like Derrek Lee, I would love to have Gonzalez. He is a young, powerful left handed bat and consistently performs. Despite the fact that my team has an established, though aging, first baseman, I would be comfortable with Gonzalez displacing him. All 30 teams are forced to consider Gonzalez for exactly that reason. I, for one, am extremely curious about where he lands. That team will be the front runner.

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