Author Archives: Kent Sterling

Top nine positives from cancelled Colts vs. Packers NFL Hall of Fame Game

All the king's horses and all the king's men couldn't make that field in Canton playable.

All the king’s horses and all the king’s men couldn’t make that field in Canton playable.

Idiocy, heresy, stupidity, lunacy, buffoonery.  Yep, last night at the Pro Football Hall of Fame Game brought all those words and more to mind.

By now, we all know the NFL Hall of Fame Game between the Indianapolis Colts and Green Bay Packers was cancelled last night due to unsafe field conditions caused by the Hall of Fame itself.

People who drove from Indy or Green Bay to enjoy an evening of football played in celebration of former Colts Tony Dungy and Marvin Harrison, and Packers great Brett Favre left Canton quite disappointed, regardless of the full refunds promised to all ticket holders.

Seeing the silver lining to the self-induced cloud that caused the cancellation will be too much to ask of ticket holders, but for those who planned to watch part of the game on TV, there are some positives.

Here are 10 of them:

9 – We got to see Michael Phelps win a 19th gold medal and Katie Ledecky set a world record.  The Olympics are a big deal, but pale in comparison to the preseason opener for a local NFL team.  Colts and Packers fans would have rather watched fifth string guards battle for a roster spot than pay attention to the world’s best male freestylers cavort in a Rio de Janeiro pool.  With the game’s cancellation, we all got to enjoy swimming history as Phelps extended his record for gold medals to 10 beyond the next best. Continue reading

Bryan Clauson died yesterday after a crash. He will be missed.

Bryan Clauson died yesterday after a crash. He will be missed.

I got to spend a lot of time around Bryan Clauson the last two Mays as he prepared to drive the Jonathan Byrd’s Racing entry in the Indianapolis 500.  I was one of the lucky who got to know him a little bit.

Talking to a guy on the radio is sort of strange in that unlike real life, you ask the person you are interviewing the kind of questions that even friends might be uncomfortable posing.  The result is getting to know a person a little bit faster.
Getting to know Bryan just that little bit, I can tell you a few things – he loved racing, and he loved his family and fiancee.  He was a very normal guy with a very abnormal job.
Some drivers have a haughtiness about them – maybe regal is a better word.  They aren’t obnoxious, but because of the risks they take on a regular basis they kind of operate on a different plane.  Bryan wasn’t like that.  He was an ordinary guy in the very best way.
If not for the fire suit, Bryan would have been indistinguishable from the members of his race team or the fans who gathered around his garage at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway hoping to get an autograph.
Next May will be very different.
Here is a statement from Bryan’s family released earlier today by USAC:
Last night, the 7th of August, we said goodbye to our son, my fiancé, our friend, Bryan Clauson. He was surrounded by family and friends and we were grateful that we could experience his final moments with him.
Our Bryan fought to the end with the same desire that he demonstrated behind the wheel of all the various race cars he would park in victory lane. However, we were more proud of our Bryan that took a moment to make a young fans day, or demonstrated his uncommon kindness and appreciation toward his friends, family and fans.
We would like to thank everybody who has shown their concern toward us and kept us in their prayers. We will never be able to truly thank you. We would also like to thank the staff at Bryan Medical Center who stood and fought with our Bryan since he arrived here early yesterday morning.

We know that our Bryan is also your Bryan and that you would like to participate in honoring him. A service will be held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway at a date and time to be announced soon.In lieu of flowers, or to make a donation, people may direct their contributions to the USAC Benevolent Fund website at http://usacbf.org/cash-donation/ or checks can be made out to the USAC Benevolent Foundation in the name of Bryan Clauson. The address is 124 E Northfield Drive, Suite F #129, Brownsburg, IN 46112.

Thank you for being a part of our Bryan’s life.
-The Clauson Family

Top seven reasons you should pay attention to University of North Carolina Academic scandal

UNCStudent-athletes at the University of North Carolina were enrolled in classes that awarded excellent grades without requiring any work.

That is academic fraud.

Because of fancy lawyering by those representing the school, the NCAA will likely look the other way, and that’s too bad for the athletes who are promised an education in exchange for the prestige and cash they brought UNC through their excellence on the court and gridiron.

The arcane bickering the university proffers to obfuscate and delude is not important or worth your attention.  What matters here is that young men who were (and are) banned from monetizing their images or being paid as employees because the education they receive is plenty, were denied the very education they were promised.

And the NCAA will likely do nothing because academic fraud of this type is likely rampant among many member institutions.  Those schools use athletics as a marketing tool that primes the applications pump as they prospect for the next generation of children with parents well-heeled enough to stroke ever increasing checks for mostly useless sociology, finite math, and T-com classes.

College sports are a wonderful diversion.  Young men and women who are students run, jump, throw, and shoot for the love of the game – while coaches and administrators who trumpet the majesty of amateurism while filling their pockets with the cash earned by student-athletes’ efforts buy second homes and a big boat.

I’m willing to look the other way a little bit, but not for enough to embrace the full-fledged fraud by the University of North Carolina.

Here are seven reasons you shouldn’t either:

7 – The only reason student-athletes are not paid is because the adults don’t want to share.  College football and men’s basketball programs are among the very few businesses where employees go unpaid for their work.  Forget all about the wonders of amateur athletics, selfishness drives the economic decisions by schools like UNC, who claim a flawed – or non-existent – education is enough for their efforts.

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6 – There are some schools that take academics very seriously.  Notre Dame announced this morning that Alize’ Jones, a sophomore who would have started at tight end, will miss this season.  An apology written by Jones leads many to believe it is because of an academic issue.  The Fighting Irish have been unwavering in their willingness to suspend or expel athletes for academic transgressions.  This UNC fraud doesn’t happen everywhere.

5 – The loudest boosters and grads at UNC just don’t give a damn.  Read the vitriolic replies to posts and tweets asking for some measure of consequence to be meted out in this mess, and you get the clear view that college football and men’s basketball fans at UNC care only about winning, and that it was Rashad McCants athletic excellence that led to the 2005 NCAA Tournament win for the Tar Heels that matters to them, not the well-being of McCants the human being, who was encouraged to enroll in shadow classes to retain eligibility.

4 – Mary Willingham told the truth, and was pilloried.  Stand up for students, but against the cash flow of the athletic department and life becomes difficult.  Willingham, a UNC athletic academic advisor who loved her job, was marginalized and ultimately fired for not walking the Carolina Blue line.  She outed the practice of completing work on behalf of students and admitting athletes incapable of answering the academic challenges of UNC.

3 – The NCAA needs to represent the best interest of the student-athletes, not the schools.  To understand the problem, you need to know that the NCAA is a member institution comprised of the schools they are tasked with overseeing.  The NCAA is not some independent arbiter that exists for the good of the athletes.  If the schools are incapable of understanding their correct roles in the lives of athletes, someone needs to be in a position to teach them.  If not the NCAA, who?

2 – The university should be there for the kids, not the other way around.  In some schools – and it certainly appears UNC is among them – and with some coaches, the construct and mission of higher education has been flipped on its head.  In those places and with those coaches, the student-athletes are there for the adults, who earn millions because of their athletic prowess.  Academics in those places are a distraction from the task at hand, which is winning.

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1 – If a degree is the comp plan for competing, it should stand for something.  Millions and millions of dollars pour into athletic departments of the Power Five conference schools, and for their trouble, athletes net an education – or they should.  North Carolina passed kids along, awarded Dean’s List status, and conferred degrees upon student-athletes whose work was done in large part by others – when it was required at all.  That is according to athletes like McCants who helped win a National Championship for UNC’s lauded basketball program.

The entire sordid affair is only being compounded by the Tar Heels endless bickering and posturing.  Their assertion that the NCAA has no jurisdiction over academic affairs is clever, convenient, and perhaps even legally accurate.

But it is also amoral and a distortion of the systemic problem that existed within UNC Athletics, according to reports.  Denials in legalese are beneath the mission of any university or college.

UNC should be bigger than this.

Kent Sterling hosts the fastest growing sportstalk show in Indianapolis on CBS Sports 1430 every weekday from 3p-6p, and writes about Indiana sports at kentsterling.com.

Top 10 takeaways from a calmly optimistic Indiana Football Media Day

Kevin Wilson and the Hoosiers sound like they are ready for the next step, whatever that is.

Kevin Wilson and the Hoosiers sounded like they are ready for the next step at IU Football’s Media Day today.

Indiana University’s football program is the losingest in the history of college football.

I bring that up only to reinforce the difficulty of executing a longterm pivot from terrible to bad to mediocre to good to championship contender.  It’s taken a long time to get here – wherever on that continuum you believe the Hoosiers to be – and it might take longer for the needle to move farther.

But one thing is for sure, the days of Hoosiers walking into a media room filled with gloom and doom are over in the wake of Indiana’s first trip to a bowl in a decade and their seemingly rational thoughts that more bounty is coming.

Things were different today, and it wasn’t just a bunch of smiles and platitudes.  This was the first time I have been at an IU Media Day where we weren’t being sold on the promise of improvement.

There was a quiet confidence that permeated all conversations with players and coaches that felt for lack of a better word – competitive.

Here are the 10 takeaways for a reasonable and fascinating IU Football Media Day:

10 – Slot receiver Mitchell Paige is IU’s Justin Bieber.  Last Friday, Paige dyed his hair blond.  With a Wes Welker build, Paige has never quite stood out on campus as a member of the football team, but with this blond hair, he is going to draw immediate curiosity among co-eds.  Not saying he did it to generate an influx of attention.  Some people lose a bet and bleach their hair.

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9 – It’s “takeaway” not “turnover”.  Among the many changes new defensive coordinator Tom Allen brought to Bloomington is the need to use very active and specific language.  He insists defensive players view the opposing offense losing possession of the football as a takeaway, not a turnover.  The difference is that the offense turns the ball over while the defense takes it.  Taking it is active.  Waiting for the offense to turn it over is passive.  I love that.

8 – Indiana’s receivers are big.  Four of IU’s wide-outs are 6’2″ or taller and weigh 220 lbs. or more.  Those are big targets for whomever is throwing the football at <emorial Stadium.  It helps if they have good hands and great speed, but big is good, and at Indiana we take good.

7 – Extension has given Wilson and staff a calm focus.  After last season, Kevin Wilson was given a six-year extension with a substantial raise and a larger pool of cash for his staff.  The result was the kind of long-term planning that is impossible when you are fighting for your immediate career health.  It’s kind of like a guy with heart failure getting a prostate exam.  The prostate isn’t going to get you.  With a deal stretching through 2021, Wilson can continue to plot beyond the now as the first head coach since Bill Mallory to enter a sixth season running IU Football.

6 – Devine Redding is ready to be the next.  Tevin Coleman put together a historic 2014 season, and Jordan Howard followed suit at tailback last year with the 11th best year running the football in Indiana history.  It’s Redding’s turn, and his teammates are very bullish on the chances of his following suit. One lineman told me, “He doesn’t have Tevin’s speed or Howard’s ability to bruise, but he explodes through the hole and makes guys miss.”

5 – Defense is going to be aggressive.  Every incoming defensive coordinator in the history of football has preached aggression.  “We are going to play downhill!” they all say.  When Allen says his team is going to be aggressive, people believe it.  The quiet passion in his explanation of why a defense needs to dictate terms compels absolute buy-in – at least it has to this point.  He’s a unique guy whose lessons are being lapped up by a team thirsty for them.

4 – Kevin Wilson continues to mature.  During his first two or three seasons as head coach, Wilson and the media lived on opposite sides of a wide divide.  Wilson tried to sell a vision of the program (and himself) that no one was eager to buy.  Now, he just talks football with the media – no sales job, no credentialing – just football.  He’s likable, decent, and honest.  Wilson has evolved into a coach comfortable in his position and his own skin.

3 – Lots of fifth year seniors.  Indiana has an unusual number of red shirt seniors – fifth year players who are at the very end of their eligibility.  Many are on an offensive line that has spent the last two seasons opening gaping holes for Tevin Coleman and Jordan Howard.  This is a group that will run block well, and if they can protect whomever Wilson decides should play quarterback, that young man’s entry into being a starter will be a smooth transition.

2 – There is no starting quarterback yet.  The battle right now is between Richard Lagow and Xander Diamont.  Fans know Diamont.  He’s a runner who can also throw a little bit.  Lagow comes from a junior college, and he is a more traditional quarterback who has never played at anything near the Big Ten level.  Players who were asked about the quarterback battle were obviously coached to voice no preference, but when Wilson and offensive coordinator Kevin Johns explained why neither might win the job outright, I bought that there is no frontrunner in this battle.

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1 – The evolution did not end with the New Era Pinstripe Bowl.  The players each lamented losing the bowl game to Duke, and seemed quite unimpressed with the accomplishment of being the first IU team in a decade to earn a berth.  The lack of satisfaction was interesting and may be a portend of positive things to come.

Bonus – Confidence seems to fit this time around.  Last year, when defensive lineman Darius Latham claimed the Hoosiers goal was to play in the National Championship Game, I wanted to check his vital signs to make sure he hadn’t lapsed into a fever-driven psychosis.  When players spoke of goals this year – like winning the Big Ten – somehow it fit.  I’m not saying they have a chance to beat Ohio State, Michigan, and Michigan State for the Big Ten East crown, but hearing it today didn’t make me worry for anyone’s health.  The players sounded reasonable and confident – two words that haven’t fit well in the same sentence for Indiana Football since the halcyon days of the Bo McMillan era.

Kent Sterling hosts the fastest growing sportstalk show in Indianapolis on CBS Sports 1430 every weekday from 3p-6p, and writes about Indiana sports at kentsterling.com.

 

Top 10 rules for enjoying your next trip to the casino

This is the casino at French Lick.  Good things can happen in there if you follow a few simple rules.

This is the casino at French Lick. Good things can happen in there if you follow a few simple rules.

I hate losing, so I am not a fan of casinos as a rule.

After all, casinos weren’t built to give away money to those who gamble there.

But as a person who has a genetic disdain for rules, I occasionally follow my wife and friends to French Lick to try my hand at a rigged game of chance or two.

One of these rare experiences came Saturday night.  Good friends invited us to a family gathering at the casino, so we went.

To try to maximize my enjoyment of the experience, I follow a few very simple rules that I help keep my head from exploding as I wager hard earned cash.

10 – Bring only the money you can afford to leave at the casino – and NEVER go to the ATM while there.  This is pretty self-explanatory, but one of the tactics I employ to manage the cash I gamble with is to watch others I care about as they gamble.  I’m a decent spectator, so taking an hour off here and there as my wife or friends get busy is plenty entertaining for me.  Once you lose your cash on hand, unplug from the gaming and retire.  Don’t turn a bad beat into and nightmare that costs you the ability to pay your mortgage. Continue reading

Top 10 reasons to feel good to very good about IU Football’s immediate future

It's taken some time, but Kevin Wilson appears ready to lead Indiana to the next level.

It’s taken some time, but Kevin Wilson appears ready to lead Indiana to the next level.

No undergraduate student on Indiana University’s campus was alive the last time the Hoosiers went to a bowl in consecutive seasons.

Indiana remains the losingest program in college football history.

So did Indiana coach Kevin Wilson lose his mind/slip a cog/have bubbles in his think tank when he boasted about the potential for his sixth IU team during Big Ten Media Day?

Not so much.  For the last three seasons, there has been a shift in both the expectations and production of the Hoosiers.  Recruiting continues to progress, culture evolves toward and beyond competence, and confidence has replaced correctly invested doom and gloom.

Here are the 10 reasons Indiana fans should be guardedly excited about the Hoosiers:

10 – Senior-laden offensive line.  Four seniors will start on the line, including Dan Feeney, who passed up a chance to start his NFL career a year early to ride the wave that has been building in Bloomington since he arrived.  Experience doesn’t always foretell greatness, but given the overall high level of play by this unit as they opened holes for Tevin Coleman and Jordan Howard, and how they kept Nate Sudfeld mostly clean, it’s a good sign that so much experience is back. Continue reading

Top 10 quotes from the first day of Indianapolis Colts training camp

Andrew Luck faces a media throng as he arrives in Anderson for his fifth training camp.

Andrew Luck faces a media throng as he arrives in Anderson for his fifth training camp.

A Super Bowl championship would surprise the experts, but not the Colts themselves.  At least that’s the vibe the Colts communicated yesterday during their first media availability at Anderson University.

The quotes flew from players about leadership, expectations, and their love of football.

There were two major stories – Art Jones took responsibility for his stupidity in using a banned PED, and Luck being relentlessly praised for taking another step forward as a leader for this team.

A year ago, the 2015 season looked like a parade to a coronation.  That parade took as sharp a left as the Faber College homecoming parade in “Animal House”.

This year, no one is quite sure what to make of the Colts – other than the Colts themselves.

These quotes from Colts players and coaches yesterday show a drive not unique to NFL teams as they report to camp, but certainly reveal a sea change in attitude and maturity

Here are the top ten:

10 – Wide receiver Donte Moncrief on missing OTAs and minicamp because of a toe injury – “It killed me every day seeing those guys go and I just wanted to rip that boot off.” Continue reading

Top 10 things to look for if you head to Anderson to see the Indianapolis Colts train

Colts safety Mike Adams poses with fans at Colts Camp in 2015.

Colts safety Mike Adams poses with fans at Colts Camp in 2015.

Indianapolis Colts training camp starts today, and thousands of fans jonesing for some football  will make the short drive to Anderson to get an eyeful of what should inspire substantial hope for a bounce back 2016.

Most of what happens in camp is difficult to project toward regular season success or failure, so figuring out what to watch and what it means is sometimes difficult.

There are two things I know about Anderson – the fast food employees there are the most courteous in the world and Good’s ice cream is the most delicious I’ve ever eaten.  Assessing the progression of the Colts is not the third thing.  Whether the Colts will be great or suck is impossible to distinguish because they compete against themselves.

Even in preseason games, success means very little.

There are a few things worth watching in Anderson if you make the trip.  Here are 10:

10 – Is Scott Tolzien a suitable replacement for Matt Hasselbeck as back-up QB?  Hasselbeck was incredibly accurate in every drill – a true tactician who worked tirelessly to keep himself ready to compete at the age of 40.  Unlike Hasselbeck, Tolzien has never succeeded as a starter, so it will be interesting to see what Tolzien does if Luck should miss time.  Continue reading

Top 10 ways to fix the exceptionally dull Brickyard 400

Jeff Gordon in the pits while the crowd for the Brickyard was the pits.

Jeff Gordon in the pits while the crowd for the Brickyard was the pits.

Kyle Busch won the 23rd running of the Brickyard 400 yesterday in front of dozens at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

At least it looked like no more than dozens.  The Indianapolis Motor Speedway is a gargantuan facility capable of holding more than a quarter million race fans – as it did for the 100th Indianapolis 500 two months ago – so when entire grandstands are empty, it’s easy to exaggerate weak attendance.

It wasn’t always like that.  The Brickyard used to be a tough ticket.  The bleachers were filled in all corners, and people in Indianapolis looked forward to the Brickyard with nearly the same enthusiasm as they did the Indy 500.  Then came the parades and mandatory red flags every 11 laps due to tire wear, and local interest plummeted.

Hoosiers are a loyal group until they feel violated, and then they never forget.  They haven’t forgotten the mandatory red flag race, just as they never forgot the Michelin fiasco with the United States Grand Prix.

There are plenty of reasons for the parade-esque racing at the Brickyard, and very few possible solutions.

Here are 10 ways to make the afternoon of the Brickyard 400 more enjoyable:

10 – More races.  This is actually a terrible idea that has no business on this list.  More bad races on Sunday would create more boredom, not alleviate that created by the Brickyard 400.  The Xfinity race on Saturday was no more thrilling than the Sprint Cup event.  Additional races that are exciting would make the Brickyard appear even less inspiring.  Maybe cutting the Brickyard in half to 80 laps would be a better #10.  “If an event bores people, bore them for less time,” is a terrible mission statement, but it beats boring them longer. Continue reading

Top 10 reasons to attend the 23rd Running of the Brickyard 400

Jeff Gordon was thought to have won his final Brickyard 400 in 2014.  Not so fast!

Jeff Gordon was thought to have won his final Brickyard 400 in 2014. Not so fast!

The Brickyard 400 used to be an event that rivaled the Indianapolis 500 for local excitement.  It was different – slower – but still fun.

Then came the mandatory red flags because of tire wear, and an admission by NASCAR that the nine-degree banking of the corners at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway are not conducive to passing.  The result was more parade than race.

But there have been moments of grace at the Brickyard 400 that resonated with fans.  Seven combined wins from Hoosiers Jeff Gordon and Tony Stewart were a big deal, as were occasional runs that were compelling.

This weekend’s race will galvanize interest throughout the state in a way that it hasn’t since the mandatory red race, and fans will have plenty of reasons to enjoy another day at the landmark that defines our city and state around the world.

Here are 10 reasons to join the throng at the corner of 16th and Georgetown for a weekend of racing, music, and fun:

10 – Tickets are reasonably priced and still plentiful (or what the hell else is there to do?).  Lots of tickets at $40, and they will likely be lower through secondary markets.  If you know anyone in Indy, you can probably get a hold of some freebies.  There are tickets at Stub Hub for $25 right now.  When you consider the concessions savings by packing your own cooler, this is a cheap day of fun regardless of ticket cost. Continue reading