Archive for June 19th, 2006

Yesterday’s U.S. Open finish was dramatic. I’ll say that for it. But brilliant shotmaking, it was not. And it doesn’t have anything to do with the course being too hard, or the USGA setting up unfair conditions… it’s about two guys who need to hire caddies who know the Heimlich manuever.

First, let’s congratulate Geoff Ogilvy… nothing should take away from his win, although that’s certainly going to happen. No one’s going to remember it as the Open that Ogilvy won, but they’ll remember it as the Open that Phil Mickelson Van-de-Velded away. But the fact is that Ogilvy played 72 holes in fewer strokes than anyone else, and he kept grinding when it looked like he didn’t have a chance, and it paid off. He deserves this win as much as any golfer has ever deserved a win.

That said… Phil Mickelson is a dumbass. At least, he was yesterday. What he did was no better than what Jean Van de Velde did when he choked away the British Open a few years ago. Van de Velde hit bleachers, a creek, and a bunker en route to a triple bogey on the last day of the British Open, eventually losing in a playoff.

Mickelson was equally dumb yesterday. To be honest with you, it was slightly hard to watch, but I wasn’t that upset about it. I’m not a big Mickelson fan and was a little annoyed at how the New York crowd sucked him off all day. Anyway, Phil hit driver off the tee, a club that had been failing him all day. He nearly drilled a hospitality tent. He didn’t just chip out, take his chances with par, or even a bogey to force a playoff… he had to go for the green, and he pegged a tree. His third shot plugged in a bunker, and he failed to get up and down. Double bogey, game over, tournament lost. For no real reason.

“I still am in shock that I did that. I just can’t believe that I did that,” Mickelson said. “I am such an idiot.”

Well, yeah. No argument from me. At least you know it. Live and learn.

And Mickelson wasn’t the only one. Colin Montgomerie finished in the exact same position, one back of Ogilvy after double-bogeying the 18th. Mickelson’s won recently, and he’ll be there again… Colin Montgomerie doesn’t have any such guarantees. I hated that guy for a long time… eventually, he became irrelevant… and then, after absorbing some pretty harsh abuse from American fans and media, and getting back to his previous form, he became sympathetic. It’s gotten to the point where he’s a friendly old guy, instead of an arrogant, grating prick. I felt bad for the guy. If it can be said that anyone out there deserves a major win, it’s him.

Paddy Harrington, too, screwed the pooch. He tripled-bogeyed 18 to finish two behind Ogilvy. Jim Furyk also bogeyed 18 to finish one back of Ogilvy. Bogeys, I can understand… 18′s a hard hole. But three different guys played that hole needed bogey only to at least force a playoff, and not one of them could come up with it. Maybe they’re all just really missing Earl Woods, I dunno.

This guy says USA Soccer has a chance at redemption if they beat Ghana and get some help from the Italians. I disagree… I believe that redemption has already been achieved with the 1-1 tie over Italy.

If it was the case that the United States was the best, or even 2nd best, team in our group, and that we should advance… then sure, we’d need to get out of the group to be redeemed. But anyone who follows soccer at all knows that in a group of Italy, the Czech Republic, Ghana, and the United States… the United States is ranked at least third on that list, and the battle between third and fourth is pretty damn close. And there they are, with one game left, and a legitimate chance to advance.

Of course, this column comes from the same guy who previously said we had no chance whatsoever after the Czech game. I’m pretty sure that before this month, this guy hadn’t seen a soccer game in about, oh, I dunno… four years?

Before this thing started, I had put our chances at advancing out of the group at somewhere between 30 and 40%… probably not, but not impossible. That’s just where we are in the world right now… clearly behind teams like Italy and the Czech Republic. And that’s what we’re looking at as our chances for advancement on Thursday… probably not, but not impossible.

The big thing for me is that we at least came out and played against Italy the way we’re capable of playing. We took it to them… and without Jorge Larrionda (who enjoys cheating and watching zebras fuck) treating us like a team of Jerry Stackhouses, I think we would’ve beaten Italy. I don’t think it’s a stretch at all to say that. The game proved that what happened against the Czechs was an aberration… that was the most important thing. Of course, I want us to advance… that’s the goal. But if we don’t, I don’t think it’s some embarrassing mark on the USA Soccer program, though it will almost certainly be treated as such by the mainstream media.

If you had to pick any NBA player to go on a destructive rampage through your house, Dirk Nowitzki is probably your best option. As he left the court in a huff last night, Dirk was kicking, stomping, or shoving anything in sight… but not in any sort of masculine way. This was not like Ron Artest busting up a TV monitor. This was Dirk applying a gentle shove to a stationary bike, and then immediately apologizing to the bike and offering to buy it a wienerschnitzel and an ice cream sundae.

The source of his anger, though, is up for debate this morning. The biggest gripe is the foul on Dwyane Wade with 1.9 seconds left… and a close second is the timeout that Josh Howard called (or didn’t call) after Wade’s first free throw.

The foul on Wade… well, I didn’t see a foul on Wade. Maybe you could call a little bit of thigh contact on Devin Harris, but 1) that would be the first thigh brush in NBA history ever called a foul, and 2) the foul wasn’t called on Devin Harris, it was called on Dirk Nowitzki. And Dirk Nowitzki certainly didn’t foul anyone.

Mark Cuban also contends that Wade committed a backcourt violation upon receiving the inbounds pass, and then fouled Jason Terry before making his move to the basket. I can’t tell about the backcourt call. Wade catches the pass on the Miami side of the line, and then jumps back over to the Dallas side of the line. In non-HD, I can’t tell if his foot was still on the ground on the Miami side when he caught the ball or not. I don’t see this as a largely relevant thing.

As for the foul on Terry, yes, I think it happened. As Wade makes his first move towards the sideline, Jason Terry and Devin Harris are there with the double team, and wade extends his forearm out into Terry, and Terry goes down… but you’re not ever going to get that call in that situation. At that moment, in that situation, whistles are swallowed. But I don’t know why, less than a second later, the whistle is regurgitated and used on such minimal contact, if there was even contact at all from the guy who picked up the foul.

As for the Howard timeout… the only people who know for sure what happened are Josh Howard and Joe DeRosa. The Mavs say that Avery Johnson signaled to Josh Howard that he wanted the timeout after the 2nd free throw… and then Josh Howard made the same signal back to confirm the plans.

Head ref Joey Crawford says Howard went to DeRosa and twice asked for a timeout. I have no idea who, if anyone, was wronged there. Looking at the tape, I don’t ever see Josh Howard “going to” Joe DeRosa. He makes the timeout signal, but I don’t know if he was actually signaling timeout (which, yeah, doesn’t make any sense… Josh Howard’s a smart player, he knows they don’t want timeout there), or just making the motion in the direction of Avery Johnson. Weird situation… I don’t know what happened.

But really… regardless of any of this, if the Mavs want to point fingers, they can feel free to find a mirror. Don’t get me wrong, I think they were wronged with the Stackhouse suspension, and I think they were wronged with the call on Dirk with 1.9 to play… but at the same time, at the ends of both Games Three and Five, they did not execute down the stretch. The offense got stagnant, and they started missing shots. Free throws, too. If they had done what they were supposed to do, and taken care of their own business, and then some bad calls cost them a chance to win, that would be one thing. But that didn’t happen… they played poorly when it mattered most. That’s becoming a trend.

© Copyright . All Rights Reserved.