Wednesday, December 19, 2018

Packers Have Been Road "Woe-iors"In 2018

To say this has not been the kind of season the Green Bay Packers, and their fans, wanted is an understatement.

All you really have to do is look at the team's lack of success on the road as a major source of the problem. And since Green Bay heads to New York to face the J-E-T-S JetsJetsJets this Sunday, consider the following: You have to go all the way back to 1958 for the last season that the Green Bay Packers failed to win a road game. Yup, 50 years.

That 1958 squad went 1-10-1 for the year, 0-6 on the road. And  for three seasons (that's 1957-1958-1959) the Packers lost 12 straight on the road. Of course, those struggles led to some guy named Lombardi getting the head coaching job, so things probably got a bit brighter.

THIS PROBABLY flew under the radar for most Packer fans. Remember that little to-do when the team played Atlanta's Falcons? That scuffle that started after Aaron Rodgers scrambled for a first down, sliding and getting hit, legally I should add. Think back to center Corey Linsley taking exception to the play and rushing in to protect his quarterback. Linsley was called for an unnecessary roughness penalty, as was one of the Falcons. Off-setting penalties. But lots of "discussions" seemed to be developing.

In the scrums, as we watched on TV, we noticed a Falcon taking a swing at a Packer a bit away from the action. There was no penalty called on that play, but I turned to my wing man and said "Don't worry, the officials may have missed it, but the NFL will see that during film study and issue a fine."

Turns out, I was right. While Linsley got dinged $10,026 for the incident, the NFL issued two pretty hefty fines to the Falcons. Linebacker Deion Jones was fined $33,425 for fighting, wile safety Damontae Kazee was hit for $26,730 for "impermissible use of the helmet" -- whatever that is.

Justice prevails, though to be honest, the two could well have been tossed. And by the way. If you're curious, just google NFL Fines 2018 for a complete listing. It's interesting reading.

Monday, December 17, 2018

Take A Seat, Mr. Rodgers

Quick show of hands. How many of you Green Bay Packer fans think quarterback Aaron Rodgers should sit down and not play the final two games?

I thought so. From Charlie in Jacksonville, Florida to Teddy in Clinton Iowa to Sue in Wautoma, Wisconsin to Bill in San Clemente, California...the majority of fans are pretty clear.

The season is done. The very (very!) slim hopes for a playoff berth died in Chicago yesterday in a competitive 24-17 loss. A 5-8-1 record -- from a team that has yet to win a road game -- is enough for Packer brass to step up and tell their very talented quarterback, who just signed a very large contract before the season started, to take a seat the rest of the season.

Green Bay will play meaningless games at the New York Jets this weekend and close out the season against the Detroit Lions. In both cases, sitting Rodgers won't hurt the integrity of the game. Neither the Jets (4-10) or the Lions (5-9) hold any post-season thoughts of their own.

Let's send second-year quarterback DeShone Kizer in to play out the string behind a make-shift offensive line.

This accomplishes two things. One, it keeps Rodgers (who tweaked a groin late in the first half yesterday and has had knee issues this season) safe. Two, it gives Green Bay a shot at a better draft pick. And with two first-rounders this season, it helps the Packers add some weapons and strength to end a two-season playoff drought.

'Nough said.



Thursday, December 13, 2018

Pushing Techlogy Out Of The Dugout

Meeting in Las Vegas this week, baseball's power brokers are kicking the tires on a lot of different things -- and players.

They should be more concerned about technology available to steal signs -- HD cameras trained on dugout, coaches, catchers, etc. with immediate review readily available, and reigning in this technology.

Stealing signs has always been part of the game, and I appreciate them. But technology should not be part of the equation. Being able to look at a catcher's signs, for example, in real time is total bullshit. Time to get back to the days when this chess match was total brain-driven.

I recall a time from my senior year of high school. I was manager/statistician and we were facing an area team in the playoffs, the third meeting with them. Coach Terry B. suspected they had figured out the signs he was using from the thirdbase coach box. So, he instructed the team to look over at him, but that I would be relaying signs from the bench.

Simple system. If I crossed my legs, the runner on base was to steal. At some point late in the game, I had a momentary lapse and, with a slow-ish runner on base, crossed my legs. The runner took off, successfully stealing. Coach looks over at me and raises his arms in the universal "what?" gesture. I sheepishly smiled and shrugged.

We did win the game, by the way.

Wednesday, December 12, 2018

On The Burners Of Baseball's Hot Stove

The powers that be in baseball have gathered this week in Las Vegas for their winter meetings. From the majors on down through every level of the minor leagues, baseball officials are on hand. There will be some wheeling and dealing, certainly, but also a look at the state of the game.

For example, baseball is looking at eliminating defensive shifts. Yes, these have been much more pronounced in the last couple of seasons, daring left-handed hitters to bunt or punch the ball to the thirdbase side of the infield by overloading the right side. But defensive shifts have been around since the days of Babe Ruth and Ted Williams. Hard to legislate this.

The NL Central Division got a lot tougher with the St. Louis Cardinals trading for 1B Paul Goldschmidt. He's got one year left on his contract, fills a need. That makes St. Louis more dangerous

While the Cards were adding to the line, the Milwaukee Brewers were subtracting. They let 2b Jonathan Schoop walk rather than head to arbitration, where he probably would have gotten in excess of  $10M (he ended up signing with Minnesota for just over $7M). Milwaukee's decision was a good one. Schoop struggled when he came over from Baltimore, and letting him leave gives the Brewers a little more cash to either keep 3B Mike Moustakas.

The team has to figure it has the future covered at second with Keston Hiura, who had a solid season with the Carolina Mudcats (AA ball). Hiura hit .320 in 50 games with 16 doubles, three triples, seven home runs and 23 RBI. The question about him when the Brewers drafted him a couple years ago was his defense, yet he DID NOT commit an error in 2017. They could bring him up in June (thus extending the time the club has him under contract) and make do with Travis Shaw and Hernan Perez.

Of course, if Moustakas signs elsewhere, Shaw heads back to third.

Still, for the Brewers, The Future's So Bright, I Gotta Wear Shades -- that song, done by Timbuk3 (the duo met while one was a student at UW-Madison) pretty much sums things up. The core of  players is solid -- players like Orlando Arcia, Lorenzo Cain, Christian Yelich, Corbin Burns, Brandon Woodruff, Josh Hader.

Yelich won the Silver Slugger and was the near unanimous NL MVP. Why does a knucklehead in Arizona pick pitcher Jacob deGrom (the Cy Young winner) as MVP? A once-every-five-days performer who helped the Mets to 77 wins is valuable? All Yelich did was grab onto Bernie Brewer down the stretch and pull him to the NL Central title with 96 wins. But I digress.

Milwaukee went 33-14 down the stretch and came withing an eyelash of reaching the World Series. For a small market club, the Brewers drew over three million fans, averaging nearly 37,000 per game (that's 85% capacity for Miller Park). And in the four playoff home games averaged 42,804 -- and Miller Park capacity 41,900!


Thursday, December 6, 2018

Packer Organization Shows It's Class

Quick now, how many major league sports would invited a fired head coach back to address the team four days AFTER the firing?

Probably just one, and that's the class that the Green Bay Packer organization showed today, inviting former (fired Sunday night) head coach Mike McCarthy in to address the team and say farewell.

Word from wide receiver Randall Cobb is that McCarthy was given a standing ovation by the players.

Nicely done, Green Bay. Truly don't think ANY other professional sports team would show that much class after showing the coach the door.

Monday, December 3, 2018

Packer Playoffs Would Have Been Fool's (Green &) Gold

If you thought making the playoffs was the cure-all for a dismal Green Bay Packer season, I've got a bridge you're gonna be interested in.

Sunday's shocking loss a terrible Arizona Cardinal team, one that came in with a 2-9 record, was just the final nail in Coach Mike McCarthy's coffin. Deservedly so. Yes, Coach Mac had taken us to a Super Bowl Title in his 13 seasons. And until last year, had made trips to the NFL playoffs a regular thing.

But, it's time to move on. If the past few seasons have shown Packer fans anything at all, it's that McCarthy's time is done. Coaches have a shelf life, just as athletes do, and his has expired. Sunday's loss just moved up his firing date. If you're playing along at home, I count five (yes 5!) games that the Packers let get away this season. Big difference between 9-3 and 4-7-1. Blame injuries. Blame play-calling/ Blame an uncharacteristic Aaron Rodgers season if you want. The bottom line is, McCarthy is the coach.

Well, ex-coach.

Seriously, did any of you think, for even a minute, that wins over sad-sacks like Arizona and Atlanta would justify the playoffs and save McCarthy's job? Even if Green Bay had won out, and the playoff miracle had happened, the team would have been on the road for the first round. And, since the Pack is currently 0-6 away from Lambeau Field, odds of finding success in the playoffs were slim and none.

Now the team turns to Joe Philbin, the Offensive Coordinator, to fill the head coach position on an interim basis. He was, once upon a time, the head coach of the Miami Dolphins, where he compiled a 24-28 record in four seasons before being shown the door in 2015.

Emphasis on interim. Make no mistake, Philbin is just filling the role for now. Who will they bring in? I'm not sure at the moment. Give me some time to think about it.

Gotta hope that the Packers are doing the same. As a team owner, I look for team president/CEO Mark Murphy make the best decision for the franchise possible. We probably have a five-year window open with Aaron Rodgers. That's why the RIGHT hire is important.

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