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Happy Retirement, Brock

1 Jan

Brock Lesnar was never shy about his motivation for becoming mixed martial artist; he wanted to make money and feed his competitive urge. He was able to accomplish those goals and claim a UFC Heavyweight title along the way.

Lesnar’s relationship with the UFC was a mutually beneficial one. They made him one of the sport’s highest paid fighters and he provided them with some of their best Pay-Per-View numbers. Maybe he was pushed into the title picture before he was ready or deserving, but Continue reading

2011 in MMA

29 Dec

Fighter of the Year: Jon Jones

Whether you love him for his in-cage brilliance, or hate him for his incessant arrogance, Jones is the definitive choice for the award. He finished his four fights in 2011, three of them against legends (“Rampage” Jackson, “Lyoto” Machida, and “Shogun” Rua), and the other against the then undefeated Ryan Bader.  Like his freakish reach, Jones’ Continue reading

Baseball’s Free Agency

27 Dec

Baseball free-agent classes are determined to be strong or weak based on the quality of the players available in a given off-season. What is sometimes lost in this assessment is that there is not a direct correlation between the quality of players available and the marginal return that player provides. For example Albert Pujols is sure prove a more productive signing this off-season than Casey Kotchman, but at 26 million a season versus an estimated 5 million, not more valuable.

To relate this to a different market, stock-brokers have proven no more effective at picking stocks than random selection; what this proves is Continue reading

Joe Saunders

24 Dec

Baseball Prospectus may rescind my membership for this statement, but I’m going to say it anyways: I don’t think Joe Saunders is a bad pitcher. In fact, I think his career 69-52 record, and 4.16 ERA prove he’s a pretty good pitcher. Sure Saunders doesn’t have swing and miss stuff, and his career FIP is half a run higher than his ERA; however, did he deserve to be derided as worthless when he was traded to the Diamondbacks or non-tendered by the same team after a season with an ERA of 3.69 in 2011?
As much as I love statistical analysis, I’m not in love with Continue reading

Beard of the Week: December 21

21 Dec

Last week was finals week so I gave myself permission to take a break, but I’m back and ready to share the wonderful beards of the world with…the world…

Anyway, Sunday is Christmas, and for all of you who are either Christian or just slaves to our consumer-driven culture, we all know that Santa is kind of this weeks honoree by default. But! I decided since he’s not real, I’m not going to make him the sole honoree this week. Hell, I’m not even gonna put his picture up!

This post is 100% created by my friend Justin, he both gave me a dude to honor and told me what to include. I’m just giving credit where credit is due.

So this week let’s take a look at sports. Basketball, anyone?

James Harden apparently Continue reading

Ryan Braun’s Purist Problem

15 Dec

Major League Baseball has a problem that the other three major sports leagues in this country don’t have to worry about.   I’m not talking about steroids or other performance enhancing drugs, (since, let’s be honest, they ALL have that problem.)  You see the NFL, NBA, and NHL have all embraced change and progression as their particular league evolves, as well as when technology allows them to.  The problem baseball has is the nagging, tired idea of the purist; an unorganized group of people who believe that baseball should never change, and that the game is still as good as it was back in them good ‘ole days.  Things such as instant replay on home run calls, or computerized strike zones can never truly get off the ground because of them.  They worry about the “integrity of the game.”  That is a phrase purists use Continue reading

Appeal to Basketball Reason

9 Dec

As of 6:30 PM yesterday, Chris Paul was a member of the Los Angeles Lakers.  He was a part of a three team trade involving Pau Gasol going to the Houston Rockets, and Luis Scola, Lamar Odom, Goran Dragic, and Kevin Martin heading to New Orleans.  The Hornets also got a first round draft pick  (formerly belonging to the New York Knicks) in 2012.  It seemed to help every team involved.  The Lakers get the first piece of a grand scheme to net two of the top five players in the league.  Houston needed size up front pretty badly.  The Hornets were looking to go lower in payroll, while at least appearing to want to remain competitive and sell tickets.  The deal on paper actually seems to be the least beneficial to the Lakers, and they get the superstar point guard in this scenario.  The deal was met with a considerable amount of Continue reading

RIP Smokin’ Joe Frazier

10 Nov

“Smokin'” Joe Frazier died this past Monday of liver cancer at the age of 67.  It is sort of eerie considering that I just posted an article about George Bellows’ boxing studies earlier this week.

Frazier was both an Olympic Gold Medalist and the Undisputed World Heavyweight Champion from 1970-72.  He will be remembered for his epic battles with Ali and Foreman in the early 70’s.  If you haven’t seen Frazier fight, do yourself a favor and watch him defend his title against Ali in “The Fight Of The Century,” on March 8th, 1971 at Madison Square Garden (in five parts below).  Keep in mind while watching that both men were going in to this fight with undefeated professional records as Ali was stripped of his title and suspended from boxing for three years.

Rounds 1-3

Rounds 4-7

Rounds 8-11

Rounds 12-15

And to think they fought twice more after this, though never recreating the action of the first bout.  If you take a look at the post I did on George Bellows, you can see some of the same violent clashes in this fight.

Frazier retired in1976 after a second loss to George Foreman (he had one comeback fight in 1981).  He owned and managed a boxing gym in Philly for the remainder of his life.  When Frazier’s nemesis, Muhummad Ali, heard of his untimely death he said, “The world has lost a great champion. I will always remember Joe with respect and admiration.”  I will too.

In 1995, my parents were eating at a restaurant in Atlantic City.  My father noticed that Smokin’ Joe was sitting at a table a few feet away. He humbly asked Frazier for a signature (for me).  My father says that shaking his hand was like shaking a catcher’s mit.  In any event, I have a bar napkin signed by Smokin’ Joe at the bottom of my father’s sock drawer.  I’m lucky.  He was a great fighter.

George Bellows and Boxing

5 Nov

When I was younger, my father, who was (and still is) a Hudson River painting collector/dealer, tried desperately to expose me to as many different things as possible and is probably the main reason that I am the collector/hoarder that I am today.  I do greatly enjoy and respect the luminescent pastorals that the Hudson River School had to offer and hung from time to time in my house, but at the same time, they were not the types of paintings that I saw myself owning and hanging in my own house.

One evening, my father, as he was wont to do, asked me to review a Sotheby’s catalog with him in our living room at home.  There were a number of Hudson River School paintings of interest that were up for auction, but as he continued to flip through, something caught my eye.  It was a lithograph of Bellows’ “Preliminaries (to the Big Bout)” (1916).

The subject matter coupled with the close attention to figures and Continue reading

Disc Golf

30 Oct

Disc golf aka frolfing is just plain fun as hell.  For those of you that don’t know what disc golf is, I will try to explain it as simply as I can: golf with frisbees.  The discs aren’t your typical frisbees that get tossed around in college quads, but rather thinner, slightly smaller discs that fall into one of three categories: drivers, mid-ranges and putters.

Drivers are the thinnest, most aerodynamic of the three and are as you could probably assume, intended for distance.  The discs can be assigned all sorts of ratings that govern how the disc sails.  Mid-ranges are slightly thicker and are used almost like a 3 wood is in golf. Putters are the thickest of the three and intended for putts and approaches.

Unlike golf, the “holes” aren’t holes, they’re baskets.  You throw a disc into the suspended chains and hope that it drops in the basket.  If you’re me, it doesn’t happen as often as you’d like.  Typically, courses are 18 holes, but some bigger courses have 27 or more.

The greatest thing about disc golf is its accessibility.  Most courses are free or entirely reasonable (I paid $5 for 18 holes in Maine).  The discs themselves are also inexpensive.  The best discs are only about $16.  I was able to get two drivers, a mid-range and a putter for an investment of $60.  When you think about it, the average round of golf (18 holes and w/ a cart) is about $30 and some people are willing to drop hundreds of dollars on a single club.  Most rounds of disc golf cost me about $9 in gas.

The game itself is just relaxing.  Most courses weave in and out of the woods and so you’re pretty much hiking as you play.  Disc golfers are some of the most “chill” people (I absolutely hate using that word, but I cannot think of a more accurate term); they are comprised mostly of hippies and stoners, but more importantly, they are nice and respectful of the courses (and I don’t have to talk to them about the jam scene).  Disc golf is the type of game where you and a buddy can show up with your discs and a 6-pack.

I also have to say that although it can be frustrating, I never really get angry with disc golf…and I have a particularly childish problem with sportsmanship.  I’m the type of person that will double-fault in tennis and reshape a racket on the ground.  I am still learning i.e. I suck, but I haven’t lost it yet.

More and more courses are starting to pop up.  There are now three courses within an hour of the greater Albany area.  Leagues run for singles and doubles in the spring, summer and fall.  I’m considering joining a league come springtime.

My friend Steve and I played at Joralemon Park in Coeymans, NY.  It’s a nice course to have so close.  And it’s free.  We mans-gamed it through 18 holes even though it started snowing at around hole 12.  By the end, we were soaked, freezing and satisfied.  It took about 45 minutes to get feeling back in my fingertips, not to mention the fact that I threw a + 3,000, but I had a great time.