Author Archives: Kent Sterling

Colts trade for Carson Wentz – perfect timing finally comes for the Colts AND Wentz!

The Colts trade to acquire Carson Wentz has a high ceiling and low risk. Another sweet deal by Chris Ballard.

Timing is everything.

In the NFL, as in life, winning comes to those who do the right thing at the right time.  Today’s trade by the Colts to acquire quarterback Carson Wentz seems to be the right deal for the right guy to the right team for the right price.

If Colts general manager Chris Ballard had tried to wrangle Wentz from the Philadelphia Eagles after the 2019 season, GM Howie Roseman would have laughed and hung up.  There wouldn’t have been a batch of first round picks tall enough to compel the Eagles to turn loose their franchise QB.

A year later, the Colts ponied up a 2021 third rounder and a conditional second round pick to take Wentz and his contract.  The Eagles will continue to remember the massive Wentz deal less than kindly because of the $33.8-million in dead cap space that stays with the Eagles, while the Colts pay him roughly $25M per year over the next four (if everything goes as hoped).

This might just be a perfect marriage between a quarterback in need of a fresh start and a team in dire need of an upgrade at quarterback.  Last year, Wentz was unprotected by a dilapidated offensive line with a gaggle of flawed weapons at wide receiver and an injured running back.  The Colts offer a coach who has already extracted the best out of him, a neighborly fanbase, a well-constructed organization, a stout and healthy offensive line (as long as Ballard finds a left tackle), and a defense ready to win.

The Colts provided a similar circumstance to beleaguered, stationary, and aged Philip Rivers a year ago, and Rivers turned back the clock.  He cut his interception rate from 20 to 11 and increased his wins from five to 11 while enjoying his final season of professional football.

Wentz is 10 years younger than Rivers, and may bring a decade of quality play to the Colts.  The trade allows the Colts the assets needed to patch the remaining holes (receiver, cornerback, edge rusher, and LT) via the draft and free agency.

The $25M Wentz will be paid is roughly $21M shy of the Colts’ expense at the quarterback position last year.  And giving up a third round pick leaves the Colts with their first and second rounders intact for the upcoming draft.

There is always the possibility that Wentz can’t be fixed emotionally or physically for the longterm.  The Colts would then find themselves in the same spot in a year or two.  Given the cost, this was a deal with a high ceiling and very manageable cost that would have no bearing upon their ability to get the QB of their dreams next offseason.

Given their options – trading up to acquire the draft rights to a diamond in the rough like Trey Lance or signing a free agent like Andy Dalton, this was a shrewd deal that might just set up the Colts to reach owner Jim Irsay’s goal of multiple championships.

Sure that’s an optimistic view, but the offseason is exactly the right time for such pie-eyed optimism!

Colts unlikely Ito move up in draft for QB; Indiana shoots lights out, beats Minnesota! Pacers win in OT!

Colts will get QB deal right; Bears won’t! IU Basketball is mediocre by administrators’ choice!

Indiana Basketball – Since Knight, winning hasn’t been worth the hassle for the University

Indiana won games, conference championships, and hung banners with Bob Knight as coach. Since his firing, Indiana University has decided that level of winning is not worth the headaches.

Do you watch Indiana Basketball and wonder why it is on a never-slowing treadmill of mediocrity?

Here is the answer – Indiana University is punishing its Basketball program and its fans for the success it reaped during the Bob Knight era.

Three national championships, five Final Fours, 11 Big 10 titles, and a 659-242 record came with a lot of baggage.  The head butt, kicked shin, flying flower pot, thrown chair, myriad of embarrassing public comments, and Knight’s overall boorishness became intolerable as successes diminished in frequency, so Knight was fired.  But Indiana wasn’t done punishing the program.

Mike Davis was hired to replace Knight, despite being entirely unprepared (by his own admission) for the challenges of the job.  Kelvin Sampson was hired to replace Davis, and he went bananas recruiting talented but behaviorally challenged players.  He broke rules, was fired, and replaced by Dan Dakich.  Too briefly, all was right with the world.  Indiana understood itself again.

Then IU decided to step outside the Knight coaching tree again to hire Tom Crean.  Until he absolutely wore out every coach, player, and recruit’s family in the state of Indiana, Crean found the right combination of in-state and out-of-state talent.  His tenure ended when it became clear his teams were evolving in the wrong direction while his ego remained championship sized.

Archie Miller replaced Crean, and the program has been stuck in suspended animation since.  Each year the promise of growth is broken, and the return to glory is delayed.  This season is still unfolding, but the results so far have been very similar to years past.

As programs at Illinois and Ohio State continue to careen toward excellence after hiring coaches simultaneous to Miller in the 2017 offseason, Indiana sits just under .500 at 6-7.  Brad Underwood and Chris Holtmann have built the Illini and Buckeyes programs that are currently ranked in the top five.

During the 20 years since Knight’s firing, the Hoosiers have won three Big 10 titles (2002*, 2013, and 2016), been to the 2002* Final Four (*with players recruited by Knight), and have compiled a record of 393-285.  That’s right, Indiana won 266 more games under Knight than it has during  for the five coaches who have followed him, while losing 43 more.

Indiana understands exactly what it is doing.  Mediocrity ensures control over a coach, and championships provides popularity that might unleash a massive ego to cause administrative torment and misery in the way Knight did.  Better to be okay in the present with the ability to sell potential for a bright future than play at a championship level.

It’s not really a matter of Indiana punishing itself for creating the monster Knight became, but more an unwillingness to venture down that road again where the basketball coach becomes a campus behemoth – the most famous and popular person in Indiana, not just Indiana University.

IU receding from the blue bloods is a contrived strategy that won’t end with Miller’s firing whenever it comes.  it will continue with yet another underwhelming hire, and another, and another.

The only hope is that athletic director Scott Dolson will be able to find a generational championship level coach whose managerial strength lies in humility, not arrogance.  That John Wooden and Brad Stevens are the only examples of servant-leaders that won big I can think of tells you a little about their scarcity.

Indiana Basketball is mired in mediocrity because of a willful decision that it should be.  The price necessary for greatness has not been paid by IU’s president, board of trustees, athletic directors, or silly blue ribbon panels convened to vet candidates each time the coaching job opens.

Future banners are unlikely to be won because at Indiana it is believed they can only be hung by self-immersed jerks who fail to understand the consequences of hubris.

Colts – If Bears get Wentz, they deserve him. Hoosiers, Pacers, Butler tonight! Breakfast with Kent!

Colts – should they forget Wentz & Darnold to target Derek Carr? Myles Turner talks about Draymond Greens comments

Draymond Green opens mouth, inserts foot in demand for respect on behalf of Andre Drummond

Draymond Green is very passionate – sometimes for good, and sometimes in a way that underscores a lack of understanding of who watches the NBA.

Golden State Warriors forward Draymond Green demanded respect last night.

The short story is that Green would like franchises and the NBA held accountable for their behavior and attitude at the same level currently reserved for players.

Here is the long story – in Green’s own very honest words:

“I would like to talk about something that’s really bothering me, And it’s the treatment of players in this league. To watch Andre Drummond, before the game, sit on the sidelines, then go to the back, and to come out in street clothes because a team is going to trade him, it’s bulls—.

“Because when James Harden asked for a trade, and essentially dogged it, no one’s going to fight back that James was dogging it his last days in Houston, but he was castrated for wanting to go to a different team. Everybody destroyed that man. And yet a team can come out and say, ‘Oh, we want to trade a guy,’ and then that guy has to go sit, and if he doesn’t stay professional, then he’s a cancer. And he’s not good in someone’s locker room, and he’s the issue.”

“And we’re seeing situations of Harrison Barnes getting pulled off the bench, Or DeMarcus Cousins finding out he’s traded in an interview after the All-Star Game, and we continue to let this happen. But I got fined for stating my opinion on what I thought should happen with another player, but teams can come out and continue to say, ‘Oh, we’re trading guys, we’re not playing you.’ And yet we’re to stay professional.

“At some point, as players, we need to be treated with the same respect, and have the same rights that the team can have. Because as a player, you’re the worst person in the world when you want a different situation. But a team can say they’re trading you. And that man is to stay in shape, he is to stay professional. And if not, his career is on the line. At some point, this league has to protect the players from embarrassment like that.

“We talk all of this stuff about: ‘You can’t do this, you can’t say this publicly, If you say that publicly – Anthony Davis got fined I think $100,000 dollars or something like that for demanding a trade – but you can say Andre Drummond’s getting traded publicly and we’re looking to trade him publicly, and he’s to stay professional and just deal with it?

“And then when Kyrie Irving says, ‘Oh, my mental health is off,’ everybody go crazy about that too. Do you not think that affects someone mentally? As much as we put into this game to be great, to come out here and be in shape, to produce for fans every single night, and most importantly, to help your team win, do you think that doesn’t affect someone mentally?

“As players, we’re told to, ‘Ah, no, you can’t say that, you can’t say this, but teams can? It goes along the same lines of when everyone wants to say, ‘Ah, man, that young guy can’t figure it out.’ But no one wants to say the organization can’t figure it out. At some point, the players must be respected in these situations, and it’s ridiculous, and I’m sick of seeing it. Y’all have a great night. I’ll see y’all tomorrow or Wednesday.”

Colts do not have a great QB choice; Hoosiers need wins – or a new coach! Pacers lose in OT!

Carson Wentz vs. Sam Darnold – Colts choice is clear between this to flawed but talented QBs