Author Archives: Kent Sterling

Indiana Basketball appears to be back under Mike Woodson – winning AND seeking a higher purpose

Mike Woodson may or may not be a Zen Master, but his Hoosiers won Wednesday, so allow me to dream, will you?

Indiana beat St. John’s Wednesday night in a game they would have found a way to lose during the previous four seasons.

The particulars aren’t nearly as interesting as the overall feel of the game.  Yes, Jordan Geronimo‘s seven points and five rebounds in eight minutes were crucial.  Yes, Khristian Lander‘s six minutes spelling the foul-ridden Xavier Johnson and ineffective Rob Phinisee helped set IU up for the win.  Yes, Tamar Bates was very competent for a freshmen playing against grown men for the first time.  Yes, Trayce Jackson-Davis is a double-double machine.

None of that is why Indiana fans are feeling good about this new version of Hoosier Basketball.  Sure, winning is fun – especially a late game, when sleep is sacrificed to watch adolescents throw a leather ball through a metal hoop.  For the first time in years, Indiana Basketball looked and felt like Indiana Basketball.  That won’t necessarily mean the Hoosiers are ready to win the Big 10 or NCAA Tournament, but it is going to make the next four months a lot more enjoyable.

People outside the Indiana Basketball sphere will have no idea what “Indiana looking like Indiana” means.  They just don’t get it.  This is mostly true among people in the media who get paid to dissect games rather than experience and appreciating them.  Some people work to break down basketball into objectively listed components.  Makes, misses, turnovers, fouls, blocks, rebounds, assists, etc…  But Indiana Basketball is about subjectivity.  Do players appear compatible and connected?  Is there a collective energy?  Does leadership hold players accountable?  Do players hold each other accountable?  Does this group understand its potential higher purpose?

Indiana Basketball is not about analytics or math.  It requires embracing the dream of harmony and effort in execution to create on-court perfection.  The suspension of selfishness is necessary to engage Indiana fans.

This bizarre and ethereal ideology confounds and frustrates most basketball fans and experts.  It seems haughty and self-indulgent to them as we attempt to elevate basketball to an allegory for the meaning of life.

For 40 minutes Wednesday night against a pretty good Big East team, Indiana defended and played together toward a common purpose.  That’s a big step in the right direction for a program that recently has had as many agendas as players and coaches, and has very seldom played tough defense as a unit during its five-year hiatus from the NCAA Tournament.

There are issues with the Hoosiers, like shooting (6-18 from beyond the arc and 10-19 from the line are not stats associated with winning teams) and turnovers (16 is too many by half), but the overall vibe of the operation is entirely different this season under Mike Woodson.  It’s as though they are trying to reach a plane of play that previous coaches didn’t understand exists.

Woodson appears to be treating his players like men, meaning he is requiring they behave like men.  He is not a coddler of fragile egos, but a leader who encourages freedom to excel while demanding consistent and selfless effort.  That’s what good coaches do.

I may be reading far too much into the play of 11 Hoosiers led by a new coach with ties to an old coach on a chilly November Wednesday.  This team might just be better at throwing the ball through a hoop and keep their opponent from doing the same.  Maybe basketball IS math, and I’m just some goofy buffoon who believes he sees beauty in basketball because he believes he saw it once a long time ago.

Whatever the case, I had a great time watching Indiana beat St. John’s in the kind of game they would have lost during any of the last five seasons.  And I’m hoping for more.

Colts on Hard Knocks premiers tonight – expect little drama and lots of wholesome

HBO’s Hard Knocks premieres tonight, and the Indianapolis Colts will regret allowing cameras behind the curtain of their operation.

This is the first time the Colts have been featured on Hard Knocks and also the first time HBO has profiled a team in the midst of the regular season.  All other behind the scenes looks at NFL franchises have come during training camp.

The Colts are looking forward to exposing their high character athletes to the world as they serve as goodwill ambassadors throughout central Indiana.  There will be visits to Riley’s Children’s Hospital and Peyton Manning‘s Children’s Hospital too.  We can assume that Colts will be shown serving Thanksgiving dinners to the homeless.  The Colts are rightly proud of their community outreach efforts and the willingness of their players to take part.

That is not why people watch Hard Knocks though.  Football fans want to see into the back rooms and operational crevices where they are normally not allowed.  That is the fascinating aspect of the show.  HBO is aware of that, so they will skulk around with cameras rolling in the hopes that they will catch someone in a moment of raw and dramatic honesty.

It’s happened before.  Here are three instances of the the kind of drama fans love and franchises hope never to have exposed:

  • In 2012, Miami Dolphins coach Joe Philbin revealed a lack of comfort as a leader that made his short tenure in south Florida a fait accompli.  We knew he would be fired two years before the Dolphins brass finally realized what we learned because of the show.
  • When Cleveland Browns general manager convened a “family hug” for coach Hue Jackson and a position coach during the 2018 Hard Knocks, I told my wife Jackson would not survive the season – he was a goner after week eight.  It was also clear Dorsey was a bad fit.  He was fired after the 2019 season.  And don’t get me started on what a profane fool defensive coordinator Gregg Williams appeared to be.  This was no surprise as we had seen his act during the 2016 Hard Knocks visit to Rams camp.
  • In 2019, it was clear that Oakland Raiders wide receiver Antonio Brown was a little more than quirky as we learned that he virtually destroyed his feet with an ill-advised regimen of cryotherapy, and that Jon Gruden is an egomaniacal jock sniffer.

There are two potential outcomes for teams participating in Hard Knocks.  The best is that no one watches.  That means no one humiliated themselves or their employer on camera.  The other is that a combination of idiocy and foolishness drives ratings and internal changes – meaning terminations.  The Colts do not care for drama, so I believe the most likely scenario is that everyone behaves roughly as we would expect.  Here is a look at the cast:

  • Frank Reich will be a paternal presence, similar to Ward Cleaver on the old Leave It to Beaver show.  He will not swear or reveal anything remotely off-brand.
  • Chris Ballard will be alternately angry and thrilled.  He will wear his heart on his sleeve and be very contrite and empathetic when releasing a player.  Ballard is an honest guy, so if they is going to be anything interesting revealed, he will be the guy to do it.
  • Jim Irsay will sing a Bob Dylan song.  My guess is that fans will be surprised at how present and utterly competent he is as the team owner.
  • Carson Wentz will be a prayerful tough guy thrilled over the birth of his daughter.
  • The rest of the team will be what they are – honest, decent, supportive, and boring.  They will not fight for air time or cause any kind of disturbance.  Ballard takes very seriously drafting and signing earnest people, and they will appear to be that – because that is who they are.

Interest in this season of Hard Knocks will be driven by the novelty of seeing the Colts prepare and compete during a regular season on the brink of playoff elimination.  We will look for hints of dissatisfaction among players, and a side of Reich that likely does not exist.  None will be forthcoming.

The longer the Colts are in the hunt, the better.  And if they become the seventh team in NFL history to make the postseason after starting a season 0-3, we will have some fun learning why and how it was done.

My money is on this season being totally empty of chaos and drama, but filled with plenty of feel good generosity and messages about Kicking the Stigma.

Here is a little preview. Enjoy.

13 fascinating statistical nuggets for Sunday’s huge Indianapolis Colts vs. Buffalo Bills game

Corral Josh Allen and run the ball successfully. That’ll do!

We usually wait for the playoffs to uncork a massive list of statistical points of interest for a Colts game.  This week feels like a playoff week though, so in we dig to the data – some trivial, some arcane, but all interesting.

This game can serve as the counter to the Colts overtime loss to Tennessee, if somehow the Colts can earn the win.  It seemed likely that a loss the the Titans closed the Colts playoff window for good, and with it the chance to go to the playoffs in consecutive seasons for the first time since 2014.

It still appears that way, but hopelessness isn’t much fun, especially in November, so we kicked in one small pane in the window to allow just a little light.  Until the Colts are mathematically eliminated, we can indulge ourselves a bit.

Sunday’s game in Buffalo is the game the Colts can use to legitimize playoff dreams.  Only 1/2 game out of the third wildcard spot, FiveThirtyEight.com gives the Colts a 46% chance of getting into the tournament.  That seems high to me, but why argue with beneficial math?

A win would launch the Colts into a better than even shot at getting to 10 wins – the number that appears necessary to qualify.  Here are a lucky 13 nuggets to make thinking and talking about this humungous game a little more fun:

  • Pressure is key!  Josh Allen has been sacked a minimum of three times in three games this season.  The Bills have lost every one of those game – and won the rest.
  • Run Jonathan, Run!  When Jonathan Taylor runs for 80 or more yards in his career, the Colts are undefeated.  Yep, 11-0 when Taylor hits that mark.  When he hasn’t gotten to 80 over the last calendar year, the Colts are a winless 0-7 – including the week Taylor missed while of the Covid list.
  • Getting hot for a trip to the tundra!  Over the last seven games, Colts are 5-0-2 in regulation.  Sadly, overtime has not been kind as those two ties became losses to the Ravens and Titans.
  • Colts success is against the weak!  The Colts have not beaten a team in 2021 that currently has a winning record, and the last team  they beat in 2020 that finished the season with a winning record was the Packers.  That win came in Week 11.  This is Week 11.  I’m just sayin’.
  • Forecast favorable!  The current weather forecast for Sunday, according to weather.com is for partly cloudy skies and a high of 48.  For last year’s wild cards game in Buffalo, it was 14 degrees colder.
  • Open the gates of Hell – or Highmark Stadium!  The attendance for the Colts @ Bills wild card game was 6,772.  Multiply the number of people going to Sunday’s game by 10, and multiply the sound on big third downs the Colts face by that amount too!
  • Allen can run too!  The difference in last year’s wild card game was Josh Allen’s feet, not arm.  He was good throwing the football, but was the Bills leading rusher with 11 carries for 54 yards and a touchdown.  Allen was sacked twice with former Colts Denico Autry and Justin Houston accounting for 1.5 and 0.5 respectively.
  • Dig, Diggs must be dug!  Bills WR Stefon Diggs had six catches for 128 yards and a touchdown.  Diggs has only two 100+  yard games to his credit in 2021.  The Bills have won those two games by a combined score of 85-17.
  • The race is to 26!  The Bills have allowed opponents to score more than 21 points twice, and lost both those games.  The Colts have scored more than 25 points five times and have won four of those games.
  • Ever heard of the Kennedy/Lincoln coincidences?  The most points the Bills have scored in a loss is 31.  The most points the Colts have scored in a loss is 31.  The opponent for both of those games was the Tennessee Titans and the score of each was 34-31!
  • “Would you like a hot turnover with that?”  The Bills (+14) and Colts (+11) rank #1 and #2 among NFL teams in turnover differential.
  • Both Kickers are money!  Tyler Bass and Michael Badgley have missed a combined one kick this season for the Bills and Colts.  Bass is 19-of-20 kicking field goals with the pair’s lone miss coming from 50+.  Badgley has attempted only seven for the Colts, without a try outside 42 yards.  The pair have combined to make 48 extra points without a miss.
  • Put some Hines 57 – or 75 – on it!  The 163 rushing yards the Bills allowed the Colts in the wildcard game is the highest number since the Cardinals beat the Bills in Arizona.  Nyheim Hines was key to the Colts getting to that number with six carries for 75 yards.