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Sonnen Didn’t Earn A Shot At Jon Jones, Good Choice “Bones”

Sure, Chael Sonnen ran his mouth and created some hype behind an eventual match up between himself and Jon “Bones Jones. But, he just came off of a loss in a championship match with Anderson “The Spider” Silva at UFC 148 and in the UFC, after a guy’s lost two straight championship matches in a row, he usually doesn’t get another shot at the title for a couple years. So I give Jon “Bones” Jones a thumbs up for declining the offer as Sonnen for a replacement for the injured Dan Henderson.

Dana White is an intelligent businessman for sure, because I would have likely done the same thing in this situation. There was some buzz created around the fight by Chael’s trash talk in this video and Jones’ twitter response. So with Dan Henderson being injured and out of commission, people would have drop the $60 bucks to tune in to see Sonnen make good on calling Jones a punk kid, or Jones wiping the floor with Sonnen as he’s done with all of his opponents to date.

Some people want to say that Jones is scared. Well that’s a joke and rather naive to say considering he was preparing for Henderson and likely didn’t watch much tape of Sonnen. Also, if he’s like some fighters who don’t watch tape, his training partners and coaches were geared up and making a plan to fight Henderson. There is much more preparation that goes into combat-sports than what goes into real life combat because its against 1 opponent and there is no help from the man next to you (not downplaying military training or engagements in any way, not stupid). It’s one on one, not 10000 on 1000;, this is not war in ancient times. Not only is it a sport, but its also business; and in business you don’t make emotional decisions, even in the fight game. Even Anderson Silva, who was toting a middleweight championship at the time didn’t get an immediate title shot when he moved up in weight. So why should Chael after coming off of a humiliating performance against Anderson Silva in their second go at it, get an immediate shot at another champion, especially one as popular as Jones.

Lastly, there are other light heavyweights who’ve been fighting and working their butts off who should have first crack at Jones (not thrilled about a Machida rematch); rather than a guy who used an on air opportunity to get under Jones’ skin so people would forget he just got his ass handed to him in less than two rounds. Sure, it might sell tickets, but that doesn’t mean its an earned opportunity; all his hard training aside. Thus this is no knock to Sonnen as a fighter, he’s damned good, could likely give Jones trouble, and would most likely assuredly whip my ass. Regardless of those opinions, he does not deserve at shot at the light heavyweight title at UFC 151. So as much as I had prepared to order the event, it is canceled and we’ll have to wait for the next card.

Until next write…

Read my debut novel, The Virgin Surgeon and stayed tuned for The Musings of My Epic Mind

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Posted by on August 24, 2012 in Sports

 

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Mayweather Vs. Pacquiao: Would Have Happened In The UFC

Boxing fans all around the world are still waiting for the day that “Pretty Boy” Floyd Mayweather, Jr. and Manny “Pac-Man” Pacquiao will sign a contract, set a date, and fight in the middle of the ring. What we do know is that a fight between the two of them won’t happen before the summer ends. Mayweather is scheduled take on Puerto Rican star Miguel Cotto on May 5th. After which, Mayweather will begin serving a 90-day jail sentence for a domestic dispute that will likely keep him inside until the end of August. Manny Pacquiao is scheduled to fight unbeaten rising star Timothy Bradley on June 9th. Seeing as both men have fights already set and would want at least 10 weeks of training to prepare once Mayweather is a free man again. We’re looking at November or December if a fight was going to happen before 2012 ends.

For the past 4 years, there’s been a lot of posturing, name calling, contract disagreements, allegations of performance enhancing drugs, promoter issues, and most lately called the biggest issue; money. Mayweather has been the biggest draw in history with his last few pay-per-view outings against Oscar De La Hoya, Shane Mosley, Ricky Hatton, and Juan Manual Marquez. Yet with the exception of Marquez, Pacquiao has been more impressive decimating the competition in the ring. Add in the fact that Pacquiao was ranked #1 pound for pound in the world, just as Mayweather is now, and you’ve got a big argument on whether the split should be 60-40 in one guy’s favor, or down the middle at 50-50. However, from the articles I’ve read and listening to commentary during fights, both fighters stand to make $40-$50M dollars before pay-per-view dollars come in. So for us poor and middle class people who are fans of the sport; we really don’t see money being an issue, since we’d all love a one day payday of even just $1M.

Which brings me to the Ultimate Fighting Championship, affectionately known as the UFC. Dana White, president of the UFC has been instrumental in bringing the sport of Mixed Martial Arts (MMA) into the mainstream. Once scrutinized for bare knuckle fights with little rules and coming under fire by government officials. The UFC become an accepted member of mainstream sports like baseball, football, basketball, and most closely boxing. Both boxing and MMA are combat sports, but inside of the MMA ring; elbow, knee, leg strikes are legal along with punches. Add in throws, locks, submission holds, ground and pound, and you’ve got a whole lot more to worry about as a fighter and a whole lot more to watch and analyze as a fan.

There have been arguments about who the better fighters are, but that argument is pretty unfair. In their weight class there isn’t any MMA fighter I’d put my money on beating Mayweather or Pacquiao in a boxing ring. But comparatively, I’d surely be betting against the two of them in the UFC octagon. However, if the two were the top two fighters in the UFC, they’d have already been in the ring. How do I know this? Aside from the fact that I follow the UFC as closely as I follow boxing, Jon “Bones” Jones is my perfect example.

Jones is the undefeated UFC light heavyweight champion (the loss on his record is from a DQ against Matt Hamil for 12-6 elbow strikes). But his reign as champion began when he fought and knocked out then champion, Mauricio “Shogun” Rua. His next fight and first title defense came against former light heavyweight champion Quinton “Rampage” Jackson. His next fight and second title defense came against former light heavyweight champion Lyoto “The Dragon” Machida. His next fight and third title defense will come against former light heavyweight champion “Sugar” Rashad Evans, on April 21, 2012. In the time that Jones has won the title and defended it, Evans has fought Jackson, and Machida has fought Jackson, and before Jones was champion, Machida and Rua fought twice for the title both winning once, and Machida knocked out Evans to take the title from him. Did I mention there’s only one championship title in each division in the UFC, as opposed to 5 major title organizations and a spoonful of smaller organizations in boxing? So you see, if Mayweather and Pacquiao were in the UFC in the same weight division, they’d have already fought.

Also, the major difference is that in boxing, fighters don’t sign to a promotion like the UFC, which houses most of the highest ranked fighters in every division, in the world. It is the largest MMA organization and fighters who want to be considered the best in the world in 9 out of 10 instances have to fight there. It is a position that has made Dana White extremely popular and extremely unpopular, depending on who you ask. Conversely, Floyd Mayweather can largely choose who he wants to fight and can sign a contract in his own favor because he represents himself. So if he doesn’t want to fight the number two or three guy, he can pick the number 9 or 10 guy who he’s more likely to beat. The same goes for most other boxers who weren’t/aren’t signed to a promoter like Bob Arum. Oh yeah, this is another issue in the hold on the mega fight, because Arum is Pacquiao’s promoter, and Mayweather has issues with Arum. So in boxing you have more ho-hum, back and forth conversation about why fights don’t happen, whether legitimate or not. In the case of Mayweather and Pacquiao, the two biggest names in boxing, you get these issues and fights don’t happen. Fans suffer and we’re left to wait, hope, and continually wonder who’d win. In the UFC we find out, because fighters don’t get a damned choice. If you’re champion like Rashad Evans was, you were fighting the undefeated badass at the time Lyoto Machida whether you wanted to or not. And if you were “Shogun” Rua, you were fighting the undefeated badass Jon Jones whether you wanted to or not.

As you may or may not see by now, I’m pretty passionate about combat sports and I could go on about this forever. So I’ll just end with this. Whatever the issues are that have kept Mayweather and Pacquiao from fighting need to be put aside. While the next two fights for these guys are against quality opposition, they’re just filler fights to onlookers. Unless someone losses, which Mayweather has never done, and Pacquiao hasn’t done since 2005. The fight that doesn’t happen that would have happened in the UFC a long time ago, keeps pissing us off. We want this. Mayweather, Pacquiao, boxing please. We’re literally begging for this fight.

Until next write…

Comment and check out my debut novel, “The Virgin Surgeon,” in paperback or ebook.

 
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Posted by on February 29, 2012 in Sports, Uncategorized

 

The Reason LeBron James May Never Win An NBA Championship

In this YouTube Clip you can see in the first 30 seconds or so Michael Jordan knock down a fade away jump shot to give the East the lead in the 2003 NBA All Star Game. Coming out of the timeout, you will see Kobe Bryant make himself visible to the in bounding player, nearly lose the ball, chase it down and fire up a three and get fouled by Jermaine O’Neal. In both instances you see the team look to these players, give them the ball, and put faith in their ability. In both instances you’ll see these two players pull up, and put the ball up toward the basket. Make or miss, in almost every instance they will shoot the ball. They will shoot the ball because they are intense competitors, want the opportunity, and are supremely confident. Michael Jordan and Kobe Bryant have a killer instinct on the basketball court.

That killer instinct is the one thing that LeBron James seems to lack. Tonight in the 2012 All Star Game LeBron James had the ball in his hands with 12 seconds left. Before that, Kobe Bryant was on the free throw line. He made the first shot, putting the West team up by two. Kobe Bryant, uncharacteristically missed the second shot. Immediately I noticed that he didn’t shoot the ball with the same focus and concentration that he usually does. I posted on twitter (@aswashington at 10:18pm) verbatum “Kobe missed on purpose to find out if LeBron has developed the killer instinct yet.” And at 12 seconds LeBron passes the ball to Deron Williams who is a good three point shooter. But he clanks it. The ball flies wildly in the air and gets tipped and by some divine intervention, LeBron James comes up with it. He dribbles around the top of the key and with one arm, whips the ball across the court and it winds up in the hands of Blake Griffin. He threw a pass that a 6th grader knows better than to throw, albeit with one hand.

I shook my head, but almost as if on cue, solidifying the notion that I thought Kobe Bryant missed his free throw on purpose was him seeing the result of the play. He looked at LeBron and clapped his hands together in anger, disgust, disappointment, disbelief, or some mixture of those feelings, as if they were playing for the same team. When the camera zooms in, you can see Carmelo Anthony‘s face, surprised with that half-cringed-smile that’s screaming “wow.” And if my lip reading ability serves me without fail, Kobe Bryants says, “come on man.” He says “come on man” because the players that want to win, have the will to win, and know that they have the ability to win, never shy away from those kinds of moments. Three minutes later I (@aswashington) tweeted verbatum, “This guy LeBron wouldn’t even pull the damn trigger in an All Star Game and Kobe Bryant told him about it.”

Here’s the clip of LeBron Giving Away The Final Shot.

After that you assume the game was over, but after Blake Griffin gets fouled, he makes one free throw and misses another, the West now only up by three, 1.1 seconds left on the game clock, enough time to get a shot up, taking the ball out from half court. You’d think after passing up that opportunity, LeBron would just die for the opportunity to sink a shot and send the game into over time. No, he decides to take the ball out for his team instead. The play goes awry and the East losses the game by three. When interviewed by Steve Sager following the game, it looks almost as if LeBron wants to cry at his performance in those moments.

My tweet that proceeded that play was “I know Stephen A. Smith is ripping out all of his hair at LeBron James not pulling the trigger.” I tweeted that because Stephen A. Smith is, and has been a big supporter of LeBron James and so have I. Stephen A. has defended LeBron for years when his detractors talked about his passion, will, desire, and drive to win. Eventually, Stephen A. became angry because he knows LeBron has all the gifts, but he’s not seizing the opportunities when they matter. He’s deferring the big moments in the playoffs to other players. Even an an All Star Game, a game that brings your team no losses, he wont shoot the ball in the last few seconds. I like Stephen A. think LeBron James is probably the most gifted basketball player in history. But his major character flaw of a lack of confidence, desire, will, whatever you want to call it, may stop him from ever winning a championship. And if he does eventually get one, it may be as a role player and not as King James leading the charge and carrying his team the way the greats have done. But the bottom line is, fans want to see a guy who puts on displays of greatness night in and night out, seize the moment when it matters most. No one cares if you score 36 points, grab 8 rebounds and dish out 10 assists if you’re afraid to get those 2 or 3 points with 3 seconds left, when it matters the most. Even Steve Kerr, an average all-around player at best told Michael Jordan, “hey, if you get it to me, I’ll be ready.” That gave Michael Jordan the confidence to pass him the ball. But he had to have the confidence in himself to want the ball, and want to take the shot. And no one but LeBron James can give that to you buddy.

Until next write…

Feel free to weigh in and check out my debut novel, “The Virgin Surgeon,” in paperback or ebook.

 
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Posted by on February 26, 2012 in Sports, Uncategorized

 

The Magic of Tim Tebow

I’ve been a Florida Gators football fan for as long as I can remember. And like many fans I enjoy the successes of my favorite college players whenever they transition from amateur to the pro ranks, even when they don’t play for my beloved San Francisco 49ers. Thus, you can imagine that I’m a huge Tim Tebow fan, since he helped my beloved Gators win two BCS National Championships in three years (2006, 2008).

I like everyone who follows the NFL read and listened to the naysayers joke about his belief in Jesus Christ; while commentators and analysts talked about his subpar throwing ability and how he’d probably end up as a solid fullback in the NFL. Yet, over the course of the season when he began starting games, he ran off 5 consecutive wins and finished the season with a 7-3 record as the starting quarterback, winning the division and leading the Denver Broncos to the playoffs.

When the playoffs roll around, all that happened in the regular season has no bearing on results. Everyone’s 0-0 and the inability to execute and secure a win means no game next week. It means we’ll see you in August for the preseason. That was especially true for Tebow and the Broncos, who were playing the Pittsburgh Steelers. The defending AFC Champions and a quarterback in Ben Rothlisberger who led his team to 2 of 3 victories in the Super Bowls he’s played in.

The Broncos led by Tim Tebow were cruising for the first 3 quarters, leading 20-6 and then Rothlisberger and the battle tested Steelers clawed back into the game and by the end of regulation, the score stood 23 – 23. This year, the NFL having always had sudden death overtime instituted new rules for playoff games for the first time in its history. As long as the first team to get the ball didn’t score a touchdown, each team would be entitled to a possession. The coin toss was called by the Steelers, tails, it was heads, and the Broncos of course elected to receive. The ball was kicked off out of the end zone for a touchback, and the Broncos would start from the twenty yard line. The Broncos line up, Tebow calls the snap, drops back, flings the ball down the center of the field to Demaryius Thomas for the catch, who then stiffs arms a Steeler defender and outruns two defenders to the end zone and the win. The Broncos fans go wild. Tim Tebow has done it again, leading the Broncos to a divisional collision with the New England Patriots next Saturday. Check out the footage courtesy of the NFL.

We’ll see what happens when the Broncos meet the Patriots for the second time this season, after having lost to New England 41-23 week 15. One thing’s for sure. After this season, tonight’s overtime victory, and regardless of what happens next Saturday, Tim Tebow will have less detractors. What I thought all year as he ran off wins and proved so many people wrong was what will happen if and when his mechanics improve. If he becomes the kind of quarterback who can read defenses even half as well as Peyton Manning and throws with the fearlessness and accuracy of Tom Brady. Already being a bruiser on the run and a true football player at heart. I dare say he could likely be one of the scariest guys to stare at from the other side of the line of scrimmage.

I hope to see the day. Today “The Magic of Tim Tebow” from my beloved Gator Nation lives on in the Mile High of Denver Colorado. I’m all smiles.

Chime in and check out my debut novel, “The Virgin Surgeon,” in paperback or ebook.

 
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Posted by on January 8, 2012 in Sports

 

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There’s Only One or Two Upsides to a WNBA Salary

Pictured here is Matee Ajavaon dressed in a business suit with a basketball balanced on the tip of her finger. You guessed it, basketball is her business as a guard for the Washington Mystics. In fact, basketball has been Matee Ajavon’s business for the better part of her life, leading the Malcolm X Shabazz Lady Bulldogs to back-to-back Tournament of Champions victories in New Jersey. Following her exploits at “The Doghouse”, as it is affecionately known in Newark, NJ. Matee played her college ball at Rutgers University under head coach Vivian Stringer. In 2007, Matee and her Rutgers University teammates took on the Tennessee Lady Vols (my favorite women’s college team) in the National Championship game, falling by 13pts at Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio.

Even without listing her outstanding statistics, it’s no wonder that Matee was taken in the first round of the 2008 draft by the Houston Comets and eventually landed in Washington after the Comets organization folded in 2008. After having the pleasure to watch Matee since her elementary school days, I finally saw her play sitting courtside against the New York Liberty at the Prudential Center in Newark. And that is where my research began.

We all know of the enormous salaries that their counterparts in the NBA receive. And most professional athletes on average make hundreds of thousands if not millions of dollars a year on average. So we’d think it’d be the same for the 13 year old WNBA. Not quite. Any player with 0-2 years of experience caps out at $37,000. Upon being a 3rd year player or more, salaries cap out around $55,000. Become a superstar akin to the likes of Kobe Bryant or LeBron James and you like Candace parker can earn a maximum of of about $102,000 and no more. Compare that to the NBA and the average rookie who’s not a superstar coming out of high school or college is earning nearly $500,000 for likely sitting on the bench and receiving very little playing time. While the average 2nd year man is earning nearly $900,000. Candace parker has the rare blessing of being taller than most WNBA players at 6 foot 4 inches (as tall as NBA superstar Dwayne Wade), can dunk a basketball, and has a marketable look in more than just sports. Those attributes allow Candace pictured to the left to garner endorsements with Adidas and Gatorade totalling $3 million dollars.

The reason you ask…Interest. The ladies have doctors, trainers, coaching staff, training facilities and play in the same massive stadiums as their male counterparts, but don’t come even close to filling a quarter of the seats in the arena. Which means the overinflated costs of concession stands don’t bring int he same revenue and advertising dollars collected for commercials and sponsors isn’t the same. But the light bill, personnel, and administrative costs stay fixed. The game is sadly not as exciting as the NBA. It’s a bit more fundamental. There are few to no high flying dunks, alley oops, and few one on one match ups to look forward too. So people aren’t attending at a much reduced price, or tuning in on television. From what I saw when I attended the game, there are more male fans of the WNBA than there are female fans. This is of course my observation and has no statiscal evidence, but you’d think more women would be supporting the sport.

The only upside to the salary gap between the NBA and WNBA is that the ladies are able to earn their $37K - $102K is little more than 2 months during the summer, while the men’s season is nearly 10 months if teams play deep into the playoffs. So yeah, they might make close to or in some cases less than what you and I make. But we work all year around with few vacations. While they could kick-up for about 9 and a half months having earned their salary in a shorter period of time. Their only other course for a bigger contract is to venture overseas. In overseas leagues like Israel, Poland and Istanbul, top women can earn salaries from $200,000 to $400,000 per year.

So for those who are not superstar athletes with marketable faces like Candace Parker, their only solace is earning what they’d make if they put off basketball in a shorter time frame. Or going to another country which in most cases is a major cultural adjustment to make. Add that to being away from husbands and children and you could possibly have a very uncomfortable situation. Should it be so difficult to do what you love for a living and make something that’s at least midly comparable to the vast majority of professional athletes in America. Haven’t these ladies but in the same kind of effort and hard work that other top level athletes have? Of course they have, but they aren’t earning what other athletes do.

A great many people remark and whine about NBA, MLB, and NFL players being paid exorbitant sums of money for what is essentially a game for children. But I haven’t heard the outcry for the WNBA. And thus the truth rings true. Players in the NBA and other sports get paid their “exorbitant” sums of money because we are willing to pay $50 bucks to a few thousand bucks for a seat depending on our bank statements. But i’d take a $10 seat at a WNBA game long before a $50 seat in the NBA. Why? It’s a lot closer to the floor.

 
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Posted by on September 8, 2011 in Sports

 

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