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Behind the Mic: Saquon Barkley

October 20, 2015 By Gary Laubach Leave a Comment

October 17th was a rare Saturday for me.  Campus Insiders, an internet sports streaming group affiliated with the Patriot League, was granted the rights to the Lafayette-Harvard game.  There were slim pickings among the high school match-ups, so we all took the day off, a circumstance usually unheard of at this time of the year.  So what did I decide to do – WATCH football, of course. Specifically, I wanted to watch Penn State freshman “phenom”, Saquon Barkley of Whitehall High School, go up against the #1 team in the nation – Ohio State.  This, as many know, is the same Saquon Barkley who thrilled us on RCN-TV last year.  The 18-year-old is a true freshman and playing Big Ten football.  Watching him on Saturday night and putting it mildly, he did not disappoint.

Saquon had sat out the previous two games due to an ankle injury and his availability for Saturday’s game was not known prior to game time.  Trust me, he was available. Saquon rushed for 194 yards on 26 carries, an average of 7.5 yards per carry.  And he had a 44-yard touchdown run called back in the first quarter.  He did have a season-long 56-yard run in the fourth quarter.  He had four runs of over 14 yards.  He has now rushed for over 100 yards in three games and combined with the 195 yards rushing against Rutgers, he now ranks third and fourth in all-time rushing games at Penn State by a freshman.

His runs were dazzling and included another leap over a potential tackler, his second of the season.  He is spectacular at “putting his foot into the ground” and making cuts that leave defenders grasping at air or just watching him run by them.  To me, he has instincts that match some of the greatest to ever play the game.

Barkley is shredding college defenses much like he did at Whitehall.  In his senior year, he rushed for 1851 yards, 8.6 yards per carry and scored 24 rushing touchdowns.  He added another three receiving and a punt and kickoff return for touchdowns.  Take a look at his high school highlight tape:

When his Penn State highlight tape is put together at the end of the season, it should look almost as impressive.

Add to that, he is a great young man who distinguished himself both as a student and an athlete at Whitehall.  He played basketball, even though he was not a great basketball player and could have easily walked away from the team his senior year after acquiring the full scholarship at Penn State.  He played hard in every game and used all the basketball ability he had.  Then, he went on to be a track star and gave away one of his gold medals to a young lady whom he felt deserved one after a bad break cost her a victory.

For me, it is always special to follow the players who were part of the RCN broadcasts in high school.  I relish their success.  Liberty High School product and Villanova’s Darrun Hilliard comes to mind as he gets ready to launch an NBA career.  I want the same kind of success for Saquon.

Here’s hoping Saquon stays injury-free and continues to create exceptional highlight reels.  He has moved well beyond local television in the Lehigh Valley to national exposure on the major networks. For the next 3 ½ seasons, I will be yelling, like all the Nittany Lions fans,

“We are – Penn State!!”

ABOVE THE EARS (SOME MUSINGS)

  1. Cleveland QB Johnny Manziel got into trouble again this past week when he was stopped and questioned by police following an argument with his girlfriend. He was stopped in his car and admitted to drinking prior to the incident.  He was not arrested and did not play in the Cleveland-Denver game.
  2. In case you did not believe Yogi Berra when he said, “It ain’t over ‘til it’s over”, take a look at the Michigan State-Michigan game this past Saturday:

http://ftw.usatoday.com/2015/10/michigan-state-stuns-michigan-by-returning-punters-fumble-for-td-on-final-play

  1. If you watched the Colts self-destruct against the Patriots on Sunday night, this might be what they really wanted to do:

http://ftw.usatoday.com/2015/10/university-of-maine-ran-a-similar-play-to-colts-trick-play-but-it-actually-worked#cx_ab_test_id=17&cx_ab_test_variant=cx_blend&cx_art_pos=4&cx_navSource=arttop&cx_tag=trend&cx_ctrl_comp_grp=true&cxrecs_s

  1. If you are an Eagles’ fan, you must constantly be bewildered. How can they make so many mistakes on offense and still win?  If “defense wins championships”, the Eagles can still have a good season.
  2. The EPC South picture could become clearer on Friday night when Freedom (5-0; 7-0) visits Parkland (4-1; 6-1). You can watch the game LIVE on RCN-TV.  Saturday’s games are Lafayette at Holy Cross LIVE at 1:00 and Wilson at Pen Argyl at 7:00.

Gary's Picks

NFL PICKS LAST WEEK – 9-5; OVERALL 61-30 (67%)

NFL PICKS (WEEK SEVEN)
SEATTLE
BUFFALO
WASHINGTON
ATLANTA
INDIANAPOLIS
DETROIT
PITTSBURGH
BROWNS
HOUSTON
NEW ENGLAND
SAN DIEGO
GIANTS
CAROLINA
ARIZONA

Behind the Mic: …There Were Six

October 14, 2015 By Gary Laubach Leave a Comment

Agatha Christie, the mystery writer par excellence, once penned a terrific “whodunit”, which was considered her masterpiece – And Then There Were None.  In that book ten characters (all of whom were part of someone else’s death) are brought to an island and one by one they are killed.  Over 100 million copies of this book were sold and it still remains the world’s best selling mystery.

No one was killed, injured, nor in any way harmed when the PIAA Board of Directors was brought to the “island” in Mechanicsburg on Wednesday, October 7, to ostensibly vote to increase the number of classifications for high school football from four to six.  But that is where this mystery begins.

There was supposed to be some serious opposition to this proposal despite the fact that the rest of the country has been classifying their schools this way for many years.  However, that opposition did not happen.  The final vote was 26-4.  Not surprisingly, the three voting members from District 7 (WPIAL) and the District 8 chairman voted against the proposal – that’s it, just those four.  Primarily, their fear was the loss of their one-day football championships played at Heinz Field, the home of the Pittsburgh Steelers and the opposition by 66% of the district’s 123 schools. Obviously, they could not garner any support from the rest of the state.  Even Philadelphia, which as late as September said they would oppose the proposal, voted unanimously in favor.

Now, the plot thickens.  The Board proposed a second vote to the surprise of all who expected this topic to occur later in the year which would have followed the PIAA protocol.  Girls and boys basketball, baseball, and softball would also move to six classifications and girls volleyball, boys soccer, and girls soccer went to four classes, field hockey to three, and boys and girls lacrosse to two.  This whole process took fifteen minutes and was passed by a 23-7 vote.

So, football will lose a week (from 16 to 15) at the end of the season, but will probably make up for that week by scheduling one less scrimmage at the beginning and starting their season one week earlier. The leagues will make that decision. More high school athletes will have more opportunities to play in state playoff games and more communities and schools will be able to rally around their respective teams throughout the playoffs.

Where schools actually fall will be known by November 15, one month after the enrollment figures are due.  Forty-six schools are a part of the District XI.  It appears the 6A would have 12 and 3A 12 with smaller numbers for the other classes.  So the final chapter is yet to be written.

Agatha Christie’s mystery was 272 pages.  The document penned by the Strategic Planning and Football Steering Committee was around 230 pages.  One diminished the participants one by one until they were all gone – the other dramatically increased the number of participants.  That’s a happy ending to be sure.

Re-title it And Then There were Six.  It, obviously, can be sold!

ABOVE THE EARS (SOME MUSINGS)

  1. I watched the entire last round of the President’s Cup from South Korea. It ended at 2:45 AM on Sunday and came down to the last putt.  I lost a great deal of sleep, but no one bothered me.
  2. Chase Utley’s slide which broke Ruben Tejada’s leg in the Mets-Dodgers series was a dirty slide. The best revenge by the Mets would be to win the series.
  3. With all the technology used in the NFL these days, it was ludicrous that in the Monday night game, 18 seconds ran off the clock after a touchback in the fourth quarter with the Chargers leading 20-17. 2:56 was on the clock after the Chargers took the lead over Pittsburgh.  When the Steelers snapped the ball after the touchback, there was 2:38 on the clock.  The Steelers won the game with no time left.  Otherwise, another official’s costly mistake could have changed the outcome.
  4. The Eagles looked good in the second half again after a dismal first half performance. Imagine if they would play good football for four quarters!  Maybe it will happen soon.
  5. Important doubleheader high school football action this Friday night on RCN-TV. Easton hosts Parkland and Whitehall visits Freedom.  There are really great match-ups the rest of the season.  Should be fum!

 

Gary's Picks

NFL PICKS LAST WEEK – 12-2; OVERALL  52-25 (68%)

NFL PICKS (WEEK SIX)
NEW ORLEANS
DENVER
CINCINNATI
MINNESOTA
JACKSONVILLE
DETROIT
JETS
ARIZONA
TENNESSEE
SEATTLE
GREEN BAY
BALTIMORE
NEW ENGLAND
PHILADELPHIA

The SportsTalk Shop: Biggest Philly/DC Disappointments

By Chris Michael Leave a Comment

Many national pundits had the Eagles going to the Super Bowl this year, and the Nationals were odds-on favorites to win the pennant.

The Birds were flirting with what could have been a catastrophic 1-4 start to their season (it was looking that way following Sam Bradford‘s second red-zone interception in the first half against the Saints on Sunday).  That combined with the fact that the Nats had already crash-landed well before the MLB playoffs got underway last week, got me thinking about some of the major sports disappointments that both Philadelphia and Washington, DC residents have had to endure.

Without question, there have been some horrendous teams in both of these cities.  But I’m talking about having even the most stoic fans getting caught up in a frenzy, ready to ride a sea of momentum to glorious new heights, only to have one’s hopes dashed to smithereens, leaving you feeling emotionally drained when your team failed to live up to the extraordinary expectations.

Just how does this year’s Nationals season and the Eagles slow start compare with the other major sports catastrophes in the region?  For argument’s sake—and to avoid using up too much of the internet’s bandwidth–I thought I better limit my Philly/DC-based disappointments to not more than the last 15 years.

Here are my thoughts on what have been the “other” biggest pro sports disappointments for fans in the RCN viewing area.

The Phillies 2011 Playoffs
From December, 2010 until the final week of the regular season, it seemed like it was a magic carpet ride for Phillies fans.  Launched into a frenzy over the signing of Cliff Lee, the regular season and preliminary playoff rounds were a mere formality, and everyone wanted to see the “Aces” baffling hitters right and left en route to another World Series appearance…and presumed victory.

For reasons I’ll never completely understand, nor agree with, Phillies Manager Charlie Manuel decided to play all of his regulars the final weekend of the season, instead of giving a couple blows to his everyday players, who had started advancing in years (by athletes’ standards, that is).  By playing their top players, and ultimately sweeping the series, the final three of those meaningless games (the Phillies had long since clinched the division title), the team missed an opportunity to rest its players, and knocked its opponents, the struggling Braves, out of the playoff race.  While the last three Phillies wins set a new club record for regular season victories for Manuel, it also gave rise to the hard-charging St. Louis Cardinals, a team the Phils did not match up against well, and positioned the Redbirds into the opposing slot to face the Phillies in the wild card playoffs.

Philadelphia’s tired hitters struggled to gain any traction against the Redbirds after the first game, and the team that everyone assumed would become the greatest Phillies team of all-time, went out with a game-five whimper—a 1-0 loss to St. Louis.  That team might have been the most talented club in the organization’s history on paper, but they failed to bring home a single playoff series win, and started what has become an incredibly long, drawn-out, rebuilding cycle.

The Redskins 2000 season
In 1999, the Skins were coming off a 10-6 season and had won the NFC East.  Mix in a renewed belief that the front office was “all in,” and that a promise of spending money in the offseason fueled the fervor that Washington was beginning to build another dynasty in DC.

They did, in fact, spend money and added some great players, including LaVar Arrington, Bruce Smith, Jeff George, Mark Carrier, Chris Samuels and–last and certainly not least flamboyant–Deion Sanders.  This complemented the return of the core of a talented offensive unit and a number of their defensive players.  Many expected another division title was a no-brainer with many people banking on Washington to at least get to the Super Bowl.  The Redskins won six of its first eight games, before the injuries set in to some of its key offensive players and…of all people, their kicker (sound familiar, Eagles fans?).   Then, Head Coach Norv Turner was let go (perhaps foreshadowing, Philadelphians, especially if the Birds don’t at least get back to 8-8?).

Instead of building on the ’99 team’s success and establishing a string of winning campaigns, Washington ended up losing six of its final eight games and failed to cash in on all the revitalized excitement that the ’99 team brought.

Marty Shottenheimer would then take over the head coaching reins for one fateful season the following year, going 8-8 that fall.  But the failure of 2000 started a seemingly endless cycle of revolving coaches over the last 15 years, with none of the seven subsequent head coaches to follow Turner owning a winning record while at the helm of the Redskins.

The Wizards’ “Michael Jordan Era”
After failing to win a playoff game for over 12 years, it seemed like the Wizards were finally headed back in the right direction when, in January 2000, Michael Jordan became the part owner and President of Basketball Operations.   Aside from his baseball experiment, everything that “MJ” had touched during his career had turned to gold.  His basketball playing career, his merchandising and advertisement campaigns…heck, I even liked “Space Jam.”  With his playing days finally behind him, he could focus completely on revamping the franchise using his acute basketball knowledge and business savvy.  Surely, Jordan would have the Midas touch to turn this franchise around and at least get Washington back into the NBA playoffs—whose eight-team format allows for even the most mediocre teams to have a shot at reaching the post-season.

In a short time, he made some positive moves by shedding payroll and unloading some of the dead weight that existed on the team and it looked like he was moving the franchise in the right direction.  Then came the 2001 NBA Draft and the selection of Kwame Brown (who ended up being traded to the Lakers after four inconsistent seasons).  Jordan brought in his former head coach in Chicago, Doug Collins, as the head coach, followed by his announcement that he, himself, would return as a player.

In his first year back (which followed his second retirement, for those keeping score at home), he battled injuries and the team he assembled was just not good enough to compete.  To his credit, he was active from a personnel standpoint prior to the 2002 season and tried to bring in headline names to improve the team.  While he continued to add talent and even agreed to take a reserve role for the betterment of the team (although he ended the year as the team’s top scorer), the chemistry never worked, and the team failed to finish at or above the 500-mark during his tenure, much less had a chance to make the playoffs.

Jordan was then unceremoniously fired as the team President and left the organization in disgust, pushing back the organization’s rebuild efforts for years.

The team finally has made great strides over the last few seasons, a trend I am fully expecting to continue this winter.  But the failures of Michael Jordan left Washington fans, along with MJ supporters around the world, with an empty feeling, and tainted the final on-court chapter of one of the greatest basketball players of all-time.

The 76ers 2001 Playoff Run
I know.   Philly sports fans could just as easily identify this team as one of its brightest moments over the last 15 years.

To be honest, I don’t remember glorious preseason expectations for the 76ers.  However, the way that the team played in the fall of 2000, led by the gutsy, and largely, very focused efforts of Allen Iverson that year, the 76ers quickly captured the attention of the entire Delaware Valley.  Iverson was living up to all his glorious potential, and the team won 41 of its first 55 games.  Even when starting center Theo Ratliff came down with an injury (he was initially supposed to miss 16-20 games per ESPN), it still seemed like the old-time Philly basketball mojo was flowing strong.  The Lakers were heavily favored to win the championship, but if Ratliff could get healthy, he could combine with Todd MacCulloch, Matt Geiger and Nazr Mohammed to form a formidable “hack-a-Shaq” tandem that could neutralize Shaquille O’Neil, and the Sixers speed could push the tempo and have an advantage against most teams in the post-season.

Until….

February 23, 2001, when the Sixers traded Ratliff, Toni Kukoc (one of just two players with NBA Championship experience) and others to Atlanta for Dikembe Mutombo.

Don’t get me wrong.  Mutombo is not only a wonderful person (he was incredibly gracious the few times I had the opportunity to interview him), a great humanitarian, and one of the best centers—when he was at his peak—of that era.  He was still one of the better centers in the game, but his slow, plodding-style kept the 76ers from utilizing its speed against Los Angeles in the championship round.  Furthermore, while that trade might have looked good on paper, the team never quite recaptured the swagger that it had before the Mutombo trade (the Sixers were 15-12 the rest of the regular season).

Iverson’s late game-one jumper and subsequent iconic stomp over Tyronn Lue became a sports moment few Philadelphians will ever forget.  But I remembered thinking when it happened, something along the lines of “yea, we weren’t suppose to be here, and we’re winning tonight’s game, and all things considered, we’re going to be proud of that moment.”  But the adrenaline rush soon subsided, and the O’Neil/Bryant pairing led Los Angeles to four consecutive victories, in which they outscored the slow-footed Sixers by 40 points in the final four games.

In retrospect, the Sixers certainly exceeded what most people had expected out of that team before the season started.  Much like the 1993 Phillies team, the entire Delaware Valley had gotten swept up in the blue-collar efforts and good vibes through that entire fall and winter season, but the feeling was never quite the same as the 76ers finished out their spring playoff run.  Did they overachieve?  Certainly.  It featured a tremendous team effort and the gritty performances of Iverson, Eric Snow, George Lynch and company.  But the team has never really been the same since, and what could have been still lingers among those long-time fans patiently waiting for the “Hinkie Plan” to develop.

Final Eagles game at the Veteran’s Stadium
If there ever was a time in my life when I thought I could bet the house—literally—on a game, it had to be the Eagles/Buccaneers game in January, 2003.  As someone who grew up—both as a fan and a reporter—at what had become an old, rundown ball field, I thought the “Vet” would work some magic one last time for its final professional football game.  And what a game it was.  The Birds were 12-3 coming in.  Donavan McNabb, the franchise quarterback, was living up to what Head Coach Andy Reid had envisioned when he drafted him.  The Birds had the defense, the offensive playmakers, and special team stars.  Even Mother Nature seemed to be helping out—and Tampa Bay had struggled mightily in cold conditions in previous games, and a wind chill in the teens seemed to be the final signal that the Eagles were finally going to advance to the Super Bowl.

Instead, Philadelphia looked flat, was manhandled physically and truly sent Eagles fans home dejected and with lumps in their throats—and not just because of the sorry way the team closed out its tenure at a worn-out stadium.

That game may be lost in an era of missed opportunities and “what could have beens.”  While optimists can say it was the golden era for Eagles football, one can also point examples of post-season futility.  During a ten-year span where the Birds won six division titles and finished second two more seasons, they lost two Wild Card games, two divisional round playoff games, three conference final losses and a pitiful end to the 2004 Super Bowl.

What are your thoughts on this list?  Should other pro sports teams be included, and where would you rank these, along with the 2015 Eagles and Nationals seasons?  Email your opinions to RCNSportsTalk@rcn.com and we might just read your comments on an upcoming “SportsTalk” program.

The SportsTalk Shop: HS Football Poll-Week 6

October 6, 2015 By Chris Michael Leave a Comment

It’s time once again for a look at this week’s District XI high school football poll results, consisting of area head coaches, athletic directors and media members.

Big Schools (10 pollsters)

  1. Parkland (50 points, 10-first place votes)
  2. Freedom (39)
  3. Easton (27)
  4. Nazareth (19)
  5. Liberty (15)

Among the big schools…no changes again for the #1, 4 and 5 teams.  Parkland continues to roll and hasn’t done anything to tarnish its preseason predictions as one of the state’s top teams. Nazareth and Liberty both posted pairs of wins the last two weeks to stay in the mix.

Easton, who had been #3 before an impressive win over Emmaus pushed them up to second in our previous poll, falls back a spot following their loss to Central Catholic.  Freedom had little trouble dispatching the Vikings when they played them last Friday.  The Patriots’ game was our live contest last week–check out the highlights here…

*******
It’s been a much tighter race among the smaller schools.

Small Schools (10 pollsters)

  1. Saucon Valley (41 points, 5-first place votes)
  2. Becahi (39 points, 4-first place votes)
  3. Notre Dame (33, 1-first place vote)
  4. Central Catholic (23)
  5. Northwestern (10)

Also receiving at least one vote: Northern Lehigh, Palmerton, Salisbury

The Panthers hold onto the #1one spot–barely–as we cross into the second half of the regular season.  Undefeated Saucon Valley had probably its toughest game thus far before beating Northwestern, who moved back into the fifth spot in our poll with their solid showing.  Bethlehem Catholic continues to roll as the number-two team with its only loss so far coming at the hands of the Hurricanes.  Another undefeated team, Notre Dame, continues to gain momentum with a solid “W” against Palmerton and replaced the Vikings at the third-top team in our poll.

Although Salisbury failed to place in our poll this week, the Falcons represented themselves well this past Saturday on RCN TV.

Don’t forget, all of our local sports coverage is available to watch for free at any time for up to two months on RCN On Demand.

A reminder about our polls:  our pollsters consist of many people over the entire Lehigh Valley region.  Our voting panel consists of local media members from different outlets, along with local coaches and athletic directors from across the entire district.  The voters are not identified so they can give their honest impressions without any worry of outside pressures or “bulletin board” material, and we rotate different pollsters from different schools each year, including guests from our biggest to our smallest schools.

As in previous years, we take the 400-male enrollment number as the cutoff for schools within the District XI/RCN footprint.  All schools above that number qualify as “big schools” in our poll. These schools consist of Parkland, Liberty, Allen, Easton, Emmaus, Liberty, Dieruff, Freedom, Stroudsburg, Pleasant Valley, Northampton, Nazareth, E. Stroudsburg-South, Whitehall, Southern Lehigh and Bangor.  “Small schools” (below 400-male enrollment) consist of Saucon Valley, Central Catholic, Bethlehem Catholic, Northwestern, Wilson, Palisades, Palmerton, Salisbury, Notre Dame, Pen Argyl, Nolehi and Catasauqua.  Each pollster identifies their top five teams in each group—the top school gets five points, the second team gets four points and so on, with an average score determining the order of teams in the poll.

Keep checking back to the “SportsTalk Shop” as we’ll be updating our pollsters’ opinions once again in a few weeks.

Behind the Mic: Brotherly Love

By Gary Laubach Leave a Comment

The word “Philadelphia” is derived from two Greek words – philos (loving) and adelphos (brother).  Thus, Philadelphia is known as the city of “brotherly love”.

There are twelve U.S. cities with four major professional sports – Boston, Chicago, Dallas, Denver, Detroit, Miami, Minneapolis, New York, Phoenix, San Francisco, Washington, and, dare I say, Philadelphia.  With the Eagles losing again this past Sunday and falling to 1-3, it could be argued that the four Philadelphia teams have carried their moniker, “The City of Brotherly Love”,  just a bit too far.

I will start with the hapless Philadelphia 76ers.  During the 2014-15 season, they lost a franchise record and tied an NBA record by losing 26 games in a row!  They finished the season with a 19-63 record.  The following year, the 76ers started the season 0-17 and were within one game of the worst start in NBA history.  It appears that this upcoming season which is right around the corner will be much like the last two.  You would think that their NBA opponents just “love” coming to Philadelphia, because they are pretty much guaranteed a win.

Did you know that the Flyers are second only to the Montreal Canadiens in all-time points percentage, have the most appearances in the conference finals of all the expansion teams, and are second all-time in playoff appearances by expansion teams.  Sounds great, right?  They have now missed the playoffs in two of the last three years, despite winning 98 games, losing 80.  By Philadelphia standards, however, not making the playoffs is unacceptable for this franchise and certainly unacceptable for the Broad Street fan base.  Only a Stanley Cup would satisfy the rabid Philadelphia hockey fan.  But in early 2015 forecasts, the Flyers are picked in the bottom half of the Metropolitan Division.  That would mean they miss the playoffs again.

Then, there is the Philadelphia Phillies.  They just wrapped up a 63-99 season.  In 2013 and 2014, they lost 178 games (89 in each season).  The Phillies have not been over .500 now since 2011.  This year, they resembled a minor league team for almost the entire season.  Baseball is a long season and the Phillies died a slow, painful death this year and there is little hope that they will be much better in 2016.

That leaves the Philadelphia Eagles.  They are 1-3, 0-2 in the NFC East, and 0-3 in the NFC.  Only the Detroit Lions have a worst record.  And if you watched the first half on Sunday against Washington, you had to wonder whether this team even belongs in the NFL.  Then, they play a good second half only to lose at the end.  There were more injuries again (three defensive starters, two offensive tackles), an offense that was so bad that they had seven possessions under 1:30, a defense so tired they could not stop the Washington Redskins from scoring a touchdown at the end, and sideline clock management that made Andy Reid look like a Swiss watchmaker.  Their only saving grace, at the moment, is they play in the NFC East where everyone (but the Eagles) is 2-2.

I do not think when the founding fathers nicknamed the city they were thinking of the future professional sports teams that would occupy the boundaries.  But right now, those four teams show a great deal of “love” but it is primarily towards their opponents.  In fact, the other nickname for Philadelphia is “The City That Loves You Back”.  And their professional sports teams have been doing a bit too much of that for much too long.

Ironically, it seems they love everyone but their own fan base.

ABOVE THE EARS (SOME MUSINGS)

  1. NFL football started their televised games at 9:30am in the morning and finished up at 11:45pm – 14 hours and 15 minutes of actual on-air games. Add the “pre-game-athons” and it is all-football, all the time!  Just the way the NFL Goliath likes it.
  2. There are almost as many Steelers fans in the Lehigh Valley as there are Eagles fans. They had to be sick on Thursday when they outplayed their arch-rival Baltimore Ravens in almost every category and lost!  This may be a game they look back on later in the season as a crushing defeat.
  3. After Pittsburgh’s Josh Scobee missed two field goals on Thursday night (and was subsequently fired), 11 field goals were missed during the afternoon games on Sunday and many were potential game-winners. Could it be that moving the extra-point distance back has put a little more pressure on these kicks and the kickers are not relaxed on any kick?  Extra-points used to be good practice for field goals.  Now they take just as much concentration (especially when the kicker could be fired on Monday).
  4. Who do you like right now to win the Super Bowl – New England or Green Bay?
  5. Good tripleheader high school football action this weekend on RCN-TV. Friday, Liberty hosts Parkland and Easton visits Whitehall.  Saturday afternoon, Nazareth will travel to Central Catholic.  Every game has post season ramifications.

Gary's Picks

NFL PICKS LAST WEEK – 10-5; OVERALL  40-23 (63%)

NFL PICKS (WEEK FIVE)

INDIANAPOLIS
KANSAS CITY
TAMPA BAY
BUFFALO
BALTIMORE
ATLANTA
PHILADELPHIA
GREEN BAY
CINCINNATI
ARIZONA
NEW ENGLAND
DENVER
GIANTS
PITTSBURGH

Behind the Mic: Yogi

September 29, 2015 By Gary Laubach Leave a Comment

Yogi Berra, the Yankee legend and Hall of Fame catcher, passed away on Tuesday, September 22, at the age of 90.  He appeared in 14 World Series with the Yankees.  The Yankees won ten of them.

I had some ties to Yogi and his death brought those memories back. When I was doing play-by-play for the Allentown Ambassadors independent professional baseball team, I did an Ambassador – New Jersey Jackals game from (you guessed it) Yogi Berra Stadium on the campus of Montclair State University in Little Falls, NJ.  The stadium was dedicated to Yogi because he lived in Little Falls during his playing and managerial days with the Yankees.

While I was there to do the game, I also visited the Yogi Berra Museum and Learning Center, which featured a reconstruction of the original scoreboard from Yankee Stadium and was loaded with Yogi memorabilia.  There was also a sky box overlooking the Stadium which Yogi often used and, in fact, at the end of this past season, where he signed autographs just prior to his death.

I also played a round of golf with Dale Berra, his son, a few years back and spent four plus hours being amused by his stories about his father and Dale’s own major league career with the Pirates and the Yankees.

So I thought it would be fitting to remember Yogi the way almost everybody remembered Yogi after his playing days were over – his famous quotes.  Some of these you have heard many, many times, but some you may never have heard.  It doesn’t matter – they still make you pause to contemplate the meaning, if, indeed, there is one.  Enjoy:

 

  1. When you come to a fork in the road, take it.
  2. You can observe a lot by just watching.
  3. It ain’t over till it’s over.
  4. It’s like déjà vu all over again.
  5. No one goes there nowadays, it’s too crowded.
  6. Baseball is 90% mental and the other half is physical.
  7. A nickel ain’t worth a dime anymore.
  8. Always go to other people’s funerals, otherwise they won’t come to yours.
  9. We made too many wrong mistakes.
  10. Congratulations. I knew the record would stand until it was broken.
  11. You better cut the pizza in four pieces because I’m not hungry enough to eat six.
  12. You wouldn’t have won if we’d beaten you.
  13. I usually take a two-hour nap from one to four.
  14. Never answer an anonymous letter.
  15. Slump? I ain’t in no slump… I just ain’t hitting.
  16. How can you think and hit at the same time?
  17. The future ain’t what it used to be.
  18. I tell the kids, somebody’s gotta win, somebody’s gotta lose. Just don’t fight about it. Just try to get better.
  19. It gets late early out here.
  20. If the people don’t want to come out to the ballpark, nobody’s going to stop them.
  21. We have deep depth.
  22. Pair up in threes.
  23. Why buy good luggage, you only use it when you travel.
  24. You’ve got to be very careful if you don’t know where you are going, because you might not get there.
  25. All pitchers are liars or crybabies.
  26. Even Napoleon had his Watergate.
  27. Bill Dickey is learning me his experience.
  28. He hits from both sides of the plate. He’s amphibious.
  29. It was impossible to get a conversation going, everybody was talking too much.
  30. I can see how he (Sandy Koufax) won twenty-five games. What I don’t understand is how he lost five.
  31. I don’t know (if they were men or women fans running naked across the field). They had bags over their heads.
  32. I’m a lucky guy and I’m happy to be with the Yankees. And I want to thank everyone for making this night necessary.
  33. I’m not going to buy my kids an encyclopedia. Let them walk to school like I did.
  34. In baseball, you don’t know nothing.
  35. I never blame myself when I’m not hitting. I just blame the bat and if it keeps up, I change bats. After all, if I know it isn’t my fault that I’m not hitting, how can I get mad at myself?
  36. I never said most of the things I said.
  37. It ain’t the heat, it’s the humility.
  38. If you ask me anything I don’t know, I’m not going to answer.
  39. I wish everybody had the drive he (Joe DiMaggio) had. He never did anything wrong on the field. I’d never seen him dive for a ball, everything was a chest-high catch, and he never walked off the field.
  40. So I’m ugly. I never saw anyone hit with his face.
  41. Take it with a grin of salt.
  42. (On the 1973 Mets) We were overwhelming underdogs.
  43. The towels were so thick there I could hardly close my suitcase.
  44. Little League baseball is a very good thing because it keeps the parents off the streets.
  45. Mickey Mantle was a very good golfer, but we weren’t allowed to play golf during the season; only at spring training.
  46. You don’t have to swing hard to hit a home run. If you got the timing, it’ll go.
  47. I’m lucky. Usually you’re dead to get your own museum, but I’m still alive to see mine.
  48. If I didn’t make it in baseball, I won’t have made it workin’. I didn’t like to work.
  49. If the world were perfect, it wouldn’t be.
  50. A lot of guys go, ‘Hey, Yog, say a Yogi-ism.’ I tell ’em, ‘I don’t know any.’ They want me to make one up. I don’t make ’em up. I don’t even know when I say it. They’re the truth. And it is the truth. I don’t know.

ABOVE THE EARS (SOME MUSINGS)

  1. Lafayette got a very nice win over Wagner on Saturday night. They got it done with a number of scholarship freshmen and sophomores who have been pressed into action due to a glut of injuries.  These young players are getting valuable experience and the future is looking brighter and brighter for Leopard fans.  The Patriot League season opens this Saturday night at 6:00m when the #16 team in the nation, the Fordham Rams, take the field.  It’s LIVE on RCN-TV.
  2. The Eagles beat the Jets this past Sunday, but they did not look particularly good on offense – the defense and special teams carried them to this win. Only Dallas is 2-1 in the NFC East and lost QB Tony Romo.  It should be easy to stay in the race in this division.
  3. The Cubs and the Pirates have clinched the National League wild card berth. The Yankees will represent the American League wild card, but their opponent is yet to be determined – Texas, Houston, Angels, Twins, or Indians.  The wild card game is one game – winner take all.
  4. With Central Catholic beating Easton on Saturday night, the once-beaten Central Catholic at undefeated Freedom game looks like a good one. It will be LIVE on RCNTV this Friday followed by the Northampton at Nazareth match-up.
  5. Whew! Just when I was about to throw in the towel on trying to pick the NFL this year (7-9 the second week), I have a complete turnaround and go 14-2 this week.  So I’ll keep trying.

Gary's Picks

NFL PICKS LAST WEEK – 14-2; OVERALL  30-18 (63%)
NFL PICKS (WEEK THREE)

BALTIMORE
JETS
INDIANAPOLIS
BUFFALO
CAROLINA
PHILADELPHIA
OAKLAND
ATLANTA
CINCINNATI
SAN DIEGO
GREEN BAY
ARIZONA
DENVER
DALLAS
SEATTLE

The SportsTalk Shop: Another New Innovation

September 28, 2015 By Chris Michael Leave a Comment

I have to admit, I continue to be amazed at all of the technological advances made by RCN.  I come from a long line of family members who are initially slow to appreciate change—ANY type of change.  This includes having reservations about new ways of doing things.  I still joke with my dad that he was the last one to give up his abacus in deference to a calculator.  I myself usually need new tech-related inventions explained to me a few times before I understand and can start to utilize and eventually appreciate them.

And yet, to look back at all the products that RCN has produced for us, its customers, from TiVO and RCN2GO to relationships with Netflix and YouTube, the advancements are really incredible.  Even the lightning fast internet speeds…there are so many avenues available to enhance one’s entertainment viewing lifestyle.  I continue to be impressed with more advances and innovations each and every month.

I had the pleasure recently to witness an almost instant benefit of one of the newest additions to the RCN-TV website, and that is the “SportsTalk” podcast.  Over the last few months, we have had several championship teams in our studio as guests for “RCN SportsTalk” to talk about their achievements in their respective sports.  These shows are always interesting for me – to speak with the young athletes in our area, after a long stretch of hard work is realized with the highest honor achieved at the scholastic level.  While some students are nervous about appearing on television, most everyone is usually smiling and having fun by the time the show wraps.

There was one studio guest, however, who seemed a little more distracted before going on the air and seconds before the red light flashed on, and I asked this athlete if anything was wrong.  The response was that he was excited to be on the show, but was disappointed that his grandmother, who lives outside the RCN coverage area, wouldn’t be able to watch his appearance on the program.

Enter “the podcast.”

Our marketing team has once again come up with a great, new addition to feature for our customers.  Our “RCN SportsTalk” show will be posted online as podcasts, so that if you, your family or friends are traveling outside the RCN coverage area (or even if you are in your car and can’t see the show live), you still have the opportunity to catch our sports conversations with all the wonderful people in our region.  While you can watch the show On-Demand when you get back home, the podcast gives you the ability to hear the show, anywhere and anytime.  It also allows you to hear current sports issues before they become dated (two excellent examples currently on our site was the MLB Draft Preview and also our thoughts and predictions on the start of NFL Training Camps and the Major League Baseball Trade Deadline—both recorded and posted right before those events took place!)

I recently took a step back and glanced at some of our guests since we began our podcasts this summer—a list that includes:

Major League Baseball Player Tony Gwynn Jr.
Associated Press MLB/NFL Writer Rob Maaddi
Eagles Longtime Broadcaster Merrill Reese
Redskins Radio Announcer Craig Hoffman
Georgetown Football Head Coach Rob Sgarlata
Lafayette Pre-Season All-League Corner Matt Smalley
ESPN’s Eric Longenhagen
Olympian Joetta Clark-Diggs
Philadelphia Daily News/PhillyBurb’s Sports Writer Jeff Moeller
Lehigh Valley’s 2015 All-Star Football Coaches & Players
All four Lehigh Valley Spring Sport PIAA/State Champions
District XI 4A & 3A Defending Football Champs
“Reunion Shows” featuring some of the top football players in Bethlehem & Whitehall history & more!

We really have been fortunate to have so many talented and well-respected guests give their opinions on our “SportsTalk” podcast since its inception just a few short weeks ago,  and we are looking to continue building on this list and speak with more special names as we transition into the autumn season.

In some ways I had considered myself an “old school” entertainment viewer…and, in a few ways, I still do.  However, I really am impressed by all the ways RCN is continuing to grow in terms of providing information, entertainment and access to more people than ever before.  I hope everyone enjoys checking out the new “SportsTalk” podcast over the coming weeks and months.  Be sure to be on the lookout for even more creative ways that RCN is making your life more “awesomazing” going forward.

Behind the Mic: Chip, They Cannot Block

September 22, 2015 By Gary Laubach Leave a Comment

I have now wasted approximately seven hours watching the Philadelphia Eagles.  Which is nothing compared to how much time the Eagles wasted so far preparing for this season.  Imagine all the hours Chip Kelly invested in putting this team together and all the hours this team has spent trying to learn to play together.  And for what?  To be embarrassed two weeks in a row; to be described as the “worst performance I have ever seen” by both Troy Aikman and Jimmy Johnson and, I am sure, scores of others.

Just consider these ten thoughts after Sunday’s game:

  1. Against the Cowboys, the Eagles rushed for a total of seven yards. It was actually worse because they only got to positive yardage late in the game.
    1. S. – Cowboys backup QB Brandon Weeden rushed for 11 yards!
    2. P.S. – Brandon Weeden’s rushing total matches DeMarco Murray’s total for the year!!
  2. DeMarco Murray is on pace to rush for 88 yards for the season. He has now carried the ball 21 times for 11 yards.  He carried 13 times for two yards on Sunday against his former team.  This is the worst rushing start to a season in the history of the NFL.  Last year, he ran for a league-leading 1,845 yards and had 285 yards rushing in his first two games last year with Dallas.
  3. The Cowboys were on the field more than twice as much time as the Eagles – 40:30 vs. 19:30. The hurry-up offense is nice when it works, but it destroys the defense when it doesn’t.
  4. The Eagles had one, that’s right – one, first down in the first half and that was via a penalty.
  5. Sam Bradford looks so uncertain in the pocket, when there is one. There is no deep threat and he looks very unsure of himself as he goes through his progressions, often missing an open target.  Add to that the double negatives that there is no run game and no deep threat.  It is easy to understand his uncertainty.  I thought this was a great trade when it was made, but without some blocking up front, it does not matter who stands in the pocket.
  6. The whole offense lacks any creativity. The first-round draft pick was supposed to be a deep-threat receiver, but there has not been a deep threat yet.
  7. Jordan Matthews MUST catch the ball.
  8. Eagles’ special teams allowed a punt block which resulted in a score.
  9. The defense lost two starting inside linebackers in the game and yet, overall played pretty well considering…..
  10. There are so many people to blame – the offensive line, the quarterback, the receivers, the defensive secondary, the special teams, the coaching staff, etc. The NFL season is a long one, but is it long enough for all of these problems to get solved?

The fans were booing by the second quarter this past Sunday.  After watching the Sixers, Flyers, and the Phillies, they could be a very angry mob by mid-season.

Perhaps the Pope could stop in the locker room and offer up a prayer.  Trust me – it cannot hurt.

ABOVE THE EARS (SOME MUSINGS)

  1. I suffered through the Eagles loss on Sunday after suffering through Princeton’s domination of Lafayette on Saturday night. The Leopards have so many players injured it is unbelievable.  Their top running back was injured on Friday when the team was doing their walk-through.  Wagner is up next on Saturday at 6:00pm on RCNTV.
  2. I am really anxious for the baseball post-season to begin. Joe Maddon, former Lafayette baseball player, is managing the Cubs and they should get in.  My announcing buddy, John Leone, is a life-long, die-hard Pirates fan and they should get in.  The Yankees and Mets will be there.  Toronto looks terrific.  There are so many storylines.
  3. Is it any wonder that legal betting venues like Las Vegas love the NFL? Before Monday night’s game, seven underdogs won out of the 15 games played.  The biggest upset occurred in New Orleans where the 10-point favorite Saints lost by seven to Tampa Bay.  I bet (should I use that word?) that quite a few “survivor” pools were destroyed by that loss.
  4. Having seen both Parkland and Easton play the past two weeks, I cannot wait for that matchup on October 16. It should be a great high school game. If you cannot make it to Cottingham Stadium, watch it LIVE on RCN4 or RCN 1004 in HD.
  5. I have been doing NFL picks for many, many years and I cannot remember ever being under .500, but my early results (16-16) are much like the Eagles – embarrassing.

Gary's Picks

NFL PICKS LAST WEEK – 7-9; OVERALL  16-16 (50%)

GIANTS
CAROLINA
PITTSBURGH
MINNESOTA
HOUSTON
JETS
NEW ENGLAND
CINCINNATI
CLEVELAND
INDIANAPOLIS
ATLANTA
ARIZONA
SEATTLE
BUFFALO
DENVER
GREEN BAY

The SportsTalk Shop: “HS Football Poll – Week 4”

September 21, 2015 By Chris Michael Leave a Comment

We’ve had a couple surprises through the first three weeks of the high school football season, yet many of our pre-season expectations remain firmly in place.

The biggest surprise of the District XI high school football season has to be the improved performances of the Nazareth Blue Eagles.  While the football pundits thought Nazareth’s up-and-coming players might be a year away from contending, the Eagles have clearly established themselves as a team to watch this fall.  Jahan Dotson, Travis Stefanik and company have played three outstanding games—all against strong opponents—and have won two of those contests.  Several of those same Eagle athletes who surprised everyone during the basketball season during their tremendous run last winter are stepping up and making noise, pushing Nazareth forward and in to our football poll for the first time this season.

Saucon Valley holds on to their first-place ranking after jumping out to a 49-24 cushion on previously unbeaten Southern Lehigh in posting a victory last Friday night.  Parkland also continued its winning ways by jumping out to a 28-0 lead on Central Catholic last weekend en route to a win and a 3-0 record.  Both Saucon Valley’s and Parkland’s games last weekend are available to watch on RCN On-Demand.

Before we look at the complete list, here’s a quick recap of our poll structure.  Our pollsters consist of many different people over the entire Lehigh Valley region.  Our voting panel consists of local media members from different outlets, along with local coaches and athletic directors from across the entire district.  The voters are not identified so they can give their honest impressions without any worry of outside pressures or “bulletin board” material, and we rotate different pollsters from different schools each year, including guests from our biggest to our smallest schools.

As in previous years, we take the 400-male enrollment number as the cutoff for schools within the District XI/RCN footprint.  All schools above that number qualify as “big schools” in our poll. These schools consist of Parkland, Liberty, Allen, Easton, Emmaus, Liberty, Dieruff, Freedom, Stroudsburg, Pleasant Valley, Northampton, Nazareth, E. Stroudsburg-South, Whitehall, Southern Lehigh and Bangor.  “Small schools” (below 400-male enrollment) consist of Saucon Valley, Central Catholic, Bethlehem Catholic, Northwestern, Wilson, Palisades, Palmerton, Salisbury, Notre Dame, Pen Argyl, Nolehi and Catasauqua.  Each pollster will identify their top five teams in each group—the top school gets five points, the second team gets four points and so on, with an average score determining the order of teams in the poll.

With the particulars out of the way, here’s the full look at how this week’s polls shake out…

BIG SCHOOL FB Poll (10 pollsters)
1)     Parkland – 50 total votes (10 -1st place votes)
2)     Easton — 37
3)     Freedom — 33
4)     Nazareth — 17
5)     Liberty — 9
Other schools receiving more than one vote:  Whitehall

SMALL SCHOOLS FB Poll (10 pollsters)
1)      Saucon Valley – 46 total votes (6 – 1st place votes)
2)      Bethlehem Catholic – 43 (4 – 1st place vote)
3-tie)      Central Catholic– 24
3-tie)      Notre Dame — 24
5)      Northern Lehigh — 9
Other schools receiving more than one vote: Northwestern, Palmerton

Here are clips of the highlights from all of our high school games broadcast on RCN-TV so far this season.

Feel free to email your opinions on our poll to RCNSportsTalk@rcn.com and join us this Thursday, live at 7pm, on RCN-TV.  We might read your emails live on the air during this program.   This week’s guests list includes Head Coach Matt Evancho and members of the Saucon Valley football team to talk about their success this fall and the Panther’s upcoming schedule.

Don’t forget to check back to the “SportsTalk Shop” throughout the fall for the latest results of our bi-weekly high school football poll.

 

 

The SportsTalk Shop: Coach Tracy Remembered

September 15, 2015 By Chris Michael Leave a Comment

It was a tough week for many of us on the RCN sports staff, and for the many people whose lives were touched by our former colleague, and legendary head basketball coach, Francis Richard Tracy.

For me personally, I had the good fortune of knowing Coach Tracy in many roles throughout my life…

  • As a youngster, playing tag under the bleachers at Whitehall’s Gym during basketball games (which, for some five-year olds, is more fun than watching a basketball game—and a low scoring one at that).  I later wondered if my hearing issues are a direct result of Coach’s trademark kicking of the bleachers during games (see video below for a reminder).
  • As a pre-teen, seeing this larger-than-life man, who curiously had the same name as one of my favorite comic strip characters, leading a parade of fire trucks through town following his team’s state championship win in 1982.
  • As a high school student…he was an English teach and my journalism/yearbook advisor.  His first instructions upon hearing my name was that I could rob a bank using my real name, then legally switch my first and last name to avoid persecution (the way he delivered the line, I actually believed him for a few seconds).   As he noticed my intense passion for sports as a writer on his staff, he—gradually—warmed up to me, and provided invaluable instructions on my first ventures into the sports writing arena.  He was a tough critic…and an incredibly accurate
  • As a senior, and after his departure from Whitehall … a man whose eyes widened while smiling exuberantly as he approached me at the Whitehall Library (where his beloved wife, Mary, worked), genuinely seeming interested in my progress and my college planning, followed by him giving me a laundry list of things to work on if I wanted to make a living working in sports.
  • As a high school football radio announcer … Dick was the first one to greet me if we were doing the same game, and quickly went over all of his numerous notes with me, and made sure I knew all the latest news, rumors and a full rundown of items that I should be aware of for that game and for my broadcast.
  • As a colleague at Twin County/RCN … Coach always commanded an amazing, and unique, presence, with everyone he came in contact with.  Among our staff, current and former coaches, athletic directors, players, fans…everyone.   And heaven help the game manager if the game was running long and an important Yankees or Notre Dame football game was scheduled for that evening.
  • As Dick’s driver, set-up man and his foil.  There’s no two ways about it.  When I had the opportunity to work with Coach on-air, he was the broadcast.  I made sure to announce the particulars of the game, confirm we hit all the sponsors, liners and commercial breaks and every once in a while I’d bring up a storyline that I thought Dick might not know about.  He always responded to, and then augmented, whatever facts I mentioned.  Some of the happiest moments of my life were preparing for the broadcasts with Coach, driving to the site (including an unbelievable story regarding a flat tire suffered en route), having a pre-game meal (no one got more free food than Coach) and all the discussions that went on before, in-between (oh, the facial expressions I would get for an athlete’s mental error and during blow-out games!), and after, the broadcasts.  The rides home were filled with reflections … on the game, the broadcast (“NEVER take the game home with you!”), and…strangely enough, about nearly everything else you could possibly imagine.
  • As a fly on the wall for his tribute show, featuring many of his former players and closest friends.  During one of our many long conversations, I once asked him, if he could have one afternoon to relive ANYTHING he experienced during his life…anything at all, what would you do?  My mind raced through games during his championship basketball seasons, running the Wing-T during his football playing days, the various sports he announced, his trips to Yankee Stadium and South Bend…what would he say?  I still remember his response.

He paused for a quick moment, then a smile flashed across his face…

“You know, Chris, that’s an easy question.  If, for one afternoon, I could sit down with some of my former players … and just talk.  Doesn’t have to be about basketball…it doesn’t have to be about anything, really.  Just to sit down, and talk with some of those guys…I don’t think I’d want anything more than that.”

*********
Following Dick’s passing last Friday, we had an opportunity to memorialize him, and to reflect on the many aspects of this colorful man’s life.  Here’s a clip of our discussion of “Coach” on last week’s “SportsTalk” show and a sample from our Liberty/Becahi football broadcast last Saturday.

RIP…Coach Tracy

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