Author Archives: Kent Sterling

Top 10 thoughts on the worst Indiana Pacers loss in their playoff history

In this moment that best represents the Pacers collapse last night, the closest defender to Rodney Stuckey as he turned the ball over was Drake.

In this moment that best represents the Pacers collapse last night, the closest defender to Rodney Stuckey as he turned the ball over was Drake.

What a miserable game.  The Pacers appeared unready and incapable to claim a stranglehold in their opening round matchup against the Toronto Raptors.

As the fourth quarter began, the Pacers held a commanding 13-point lead, and Paul George was showing himself to be the best player in the series.

An incredible 9:30 elapsed in that final period that brought only two points for the Pacers.  That extended period of ineptitude was too much for the Pacers to overcome, and now the Raptors have two chances to close out the series while the Pacers fight for their season.

Fans will use terms like heartless, inept, stupid, and pitiful to describe the level of play and coaching last night.

We’ll settle for these 10 explanations and reflections to describe last night’s debacle, and will remind you that the Pacers – while seemingly incapable of winning the series – are only two wins from making everyone forget about last night’s meltdown.

10 – CJ Miles picked a bad time to slump.  Whether due to injury or not, Miles has gone stone cold from beyond the arc, making only 2-of-16 from beyond the arc.  His points per game average has dropped from 11.8 in the regular season to 4.0 against the Raptors in this series. Continue reading

Top nine reasons the Deflategate decision to reinstate Tom Brady’s suspension was good and just

Some days I wish I lived in New York just for the headlines.

Some days I wish I lived in New York just for the headlines.

The 2nd U.S. Court of Appeals ruled yesterday that New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady must serve the four-game suspension originally handed down by NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell for his role in deflating the footballs to be used by the Pats offense during the 2014 AFC Championship.

Of course, this was nothing but a procedural step, and will result in Brady exerting his right to further appeals so that he will be a former NFL quarterback by the time the legal process is exhausted and he is forced to serve his suspension.

At the very least, for a brief time, it seems that justice has been served in the Deflategate scandal – that bad deeds do have a consequence – even if the level of cheating perpetrated by the Patriots and Brady amounted to parking in a tow zone.

Here are the top nine reasons the Brady appeal being reversed is good for humanity:

9 – Destroying evidence must bring a consequence.  When we discuss Deflategate, sometimes we forget that Tom Brady destroyed his cellphone rather than allow an NFL emissary review the text messages that might have exonerated or damned him as a conspirator in the deflation of the game balls to be used by the Patriots offense.  The truth must be respected and revealed. Continue reading

Top seven most needed changes to youth summer basketball

This level of bedlam has no place at youth basketball events.

I spent a lot of time in gyms over the weekend watching high school aged young men playing basketball in Indianapolis.  Many of theist players in the country were here, so why not drive a few miles to see them for myself?

My son played summer basketball with a great group of young men for two very good coaches who were committed to the kids having a great experience – and they did.

Because of that, I have long been a honk for summer hoops.  It’s a great experience for the kids.  The travel is fun, and the kids bond in a way that is impossible on high school teams.

I’ve always felt the good outweighed the bad, but what I saw yesterday changed my mind.  A referee walked of the court under police escort, got in his car, and drove away rather than continue to receive the relentless verbal abuse from spectators.

The ref had one guy kicked out of the gym, but that only heightened the mayhem for the rest of the crowd, who continued to relentlessly mistreat the ref.

It was ridiculous and horrifying.

A man who relishes trying to help children enjoy basketball in a safe and fair environment was driven out of a gym by parents, uncles, aunts, and deranged fans who tormented him.

There was a sense of soulless satisfaction that bordered upon glee among the crowd when the ref pulled his bag across the floor and out the door.

Humanity doesn’t sink much lower than when it tortures a well-meaning but easily rattled person just for sport.

Something needs to be done.  In fact, some things need to be done.  Here are seven – and this is just a start.

7 – Technicals on the crowd.  This might cause more problems then it solves, but if fan misbehavior caused a penalty for the team, maybe parents would learn to keep their mouths shut. Continue reading

Top 10 questions about long term direction of the soon-to-be eliminated Indiana Pacers

Whether Larry Bird is smiling during the fast-approaching offseason will depend on his ability to add a quality big and little to his roster.

Whether Larry Bird is smiling during the fast-approaching offseason will depend on his ability to add a quality big and little to his roster.

It’s easy to overreact to a debacle like last night’s Indiana Pacers loss to the Toronto Raptors.

The Pacers failed to compete and were never in the game.  From the brief moment the Pacers led 9-8 until the clock mercifully expired, the team assembled by Larry Bird and led by Frank Vogel failed to match the effort or execution of the Raptors.

Down 2-1, the Pacers still have chances to claw their way back into this series, but after last night – a night where the Pacers should have been able to pony up a great effort – it’s difficult to see a clear path to victory.

Weird things happen in sports, but the Pacers beating the Raptors three-out-of-four seems like a serious longshot.

if the Pacers can’t mount a comeback to extend this postseason to another series, a period of evaluation will follow – as it always does.  Questions will be asked, and answers will be proffered.

Let’s get a jump on the fun with the top 10 questions the Pacers will need to answer this summer:

10 – Can the roster be fixed through free agency?  The Pacers need a big, a true point guard, and have plenty of cap room – like every NBA team because the cap is popping way up this offseason.  Al Horford is the only free agent big that could be an immediate force.  At the point, maybe Ty Lawson is the answer.  He’s already on the roster, and has the level of speed needed to lead a transition offense. Continue reading

Top nine reasons ESPN fired Curt Schilling

Curt Schilling is out at ESPN because the bad outweighed the good for ESPN and Disney - its parent company.

Curt Schilling is out at ESPN because the bad outweighed the good for ESPN and Disney – its parent company.

Baseball analyst Curt Schilling was fired by ESPN yesterday.  It wasn’t for his political beliefs, but because he so loudly and compellingly proclaimed them.

People will say that ESPN pulled the trigger because they are liberals enforcing an agenda against Schilling’s conservative beliefs.  It wasn’t.

The reasons for firing Schilling were entirely pragmatic.  You might applaud Schilling as a conservative, and see ESPN as an evil conglomerate intent on silencing a man whose right to free speech is guaranteed by the United States Constitution, but the truth is that Schilling is out of work for a series of very practical concerns that have nothing to do with his politics.

His views had zero to do with the firing.

Here are the top nine reasons Schilling was fired:

9 – If Rush Limbaugh was fired by ESPN, Curt Schilling surely can.  Limbaugh is a political pundit who has made hundreds of millions of dollars stoking the furnace of conservatives, and came to ESPN in an effort to bring his fans to NFL Sundays.  The intolerance for political takes regarding football were bared almost immediately as Limbaugh was canned.  If a media icon can be terminated for doing what was expected from him, Schilling was living on borrowed time. Continue reading

Top 10 problems with Twitter for sports fans and media

twitterThere is a lot of good that comes with the most dynamic social media force in history.

Twitter allows for a meritocracy to exist in media.  Great takes bring like and retweets regardless of whether you are a newspaper columnist or passionate fan.  That’s good.  There is also the ability to attach links that turns Twitter into an interactive billboard for those without a traditional delivery system for content.

But there is bad too, a lot of bad.

Here are the top 10 reasons Twitter is a miserable venue of social media driven idiocy.

10 – Credentials unnecessary.  It’s nice that a 10-year-old can have the same level of Twitter account as Bob Kravitz or Gregg Doyel, but it also erodes the level of discourse.  Nothing against fourth graders – some are capable of higher thought than the professionals – but the Twitter neighborhood can tend toward the dilapidated due to the tonnage of weak takes.

Click here to follow Kent on Twitter

9 – No editor to proof your work.  It shouldn’t be too difficult to makes sure you spell words and  names correctly given the character limit, but with auto-correct and occasional sloppiness, Twitter can present errors that turn sensible takes into maniacal rants.

8 – Twitter doesn’t know when you are kidding (or drinking).  People without the ability to communicate humor via 140 character blasts are not discouraged from pressing send.  How many tweets have your read or written that were meant to be funny, but were received as a serious, unpleasant attack?  They are everywhere on Twitter, which also has no gauge for whether you have enjoyed a beer or two before deciding to share.  Alcohol seems to impair the user’s ability to convey humor or logic.

7 – Media management understands quantity more than quality.  Most media managers come from sales rather than the content end of the business, and they don’t know how to evaluate message other than through the lens of statistics.  Number of followers is how management views talent.  That has caused a relentless dumbing down of the media business – especially on Twitter.

6 – 140 characters.  Don’t get me wrong, I love the character limit.  Who wants to read silliness that drones on any longer than 140 characters?  But the limit also denies intelligent authors a chance to delve into a little nuance in voicing an opinion.  It has turned journalists into cavemen – “Pacers defense – BAAAD!”  As with most things, what is so cool about Twitter can also be so bad.

5 – Kentucky fans.  Big Blue Nation is a wonderful, almost perfect example of the riot mentality that causes rational human beings to morph into rampaging beasts bent on destroying anything that sands in the way of the will of his or her group.  Twitter is where BBN lurks waiting for the innocent to say anything vaguely (or overtly) critical of John Calipari or one of the eight-month Wildcats who treat the University of Kentucky’s basketball program like a purgatory that must be tolerated in order to achieve the dream of an NBA career.  Take them on at your own peril – or enjoyment.

4 – Trolls.  Twitter rewards idiotic takes through response from people not wise enough to avoid biting.  We tend to shout at those opinions with which we disagree, and for many on Twitter, that’s the point.  The Skip Bayless era of sports media hot takes has made it virtuous to be outrageous.  Worst part is that separating the trolls from those who offer legit options is getting harder.

3 – Sensitivity of hate recipients.  If you are on Twitter, people are going to attack you.  That’s life.  Giving them the satisfaction of knowing they got under your skin validates their assault and will motivate continued unpleasantness.  Ignore them and move on with your day.  That disarms the attackers and what’s more fun than not giving idiots the validation of knowing they ruined a moment for you?

2 – Reveals people at their worst.  In general, people who scream at the world 140 characters at a time are not the swiftest boats in the sea, but puking venom all over a smart phone and pressing send is a safe way to display substantial character flaws.  Pressing send after being a boorish mope is easier than insulting a human being to his or her face.  Twitter is perfect cover for people who are both cowardly and mean.

Click here for a $1 comprehensive dental exam done by the best dentist in Indiana – Dr. Mike O’Neil at Today’s Dentistry

1 – Allows people cloak of anonymity.  Without signing your name to your opinion, no one holds people accountable for their views – no matter how spiteful.  This encourages hate and anger – and doesn’t penalize manipulative belches of stupidity.

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 eight reasons the Trent Richardson trade wasn’t the worst in NFL (or Colts) history

There aren't a lot of smiles in Indianapolis when discussing the Colts trade for Trent Richardson, but there have been worse deals.

There aren’t a lot of smiles in Indianapolis when discussing the Colts trade for Trent Richardson, but there have been worse deals.

Indianapolis Colts general manager Ryan Grigson takes a lot of heat over the 2013 trade for running back Trent Richardson, and rightly so.  The deal was a complete bust.

That’s looking at it through the rearview mirror, which is a luxury afforded to critics.  On the front end, this appeared to be a pretty good deal for the Colts.

Steven Ruiz of the USA Today ranked the 32 NFL GMs in a post yesterday.  Grigson came in 28th overall, and next to last among non-newbies, in large part because of the Richardson trade.

I’m no defender of Grigson because of his liberal and scattershot use of free agents in building the Colts roster, but when the trade was made there were plenty of reasons to believe it was a smart move.

Here are eight reasons to give Grigson a pass on the Richardson deal:

8 – Who knew Richardson would eat his way out of the NFL?  Richardson was fat, and fat running backs have a tough time getting to the hole on time.  He was signed yesterday by the Baltimore Ravens after getting in shape again, but his voracious appetite for fatty foods was not a well-known detriment back in 2013 when Grigson pulled the trigger. Continue reading

Top 10 reasons this will be the most important Indianapolis Colts draft of the Ryan Grigson era

Ryan Grigson will be judged on the strength of his drafts beginning with the 2016 edition.

Ryan Grigson will be judged on the strength of his drafts beginning with the 2016 edition.

Mini-camp for the Indianapolis Colts starts today, but a good portion of the team that will take the field at Lucas Oil Stadium in 2016 will not be working out with the team because they are not on the team yet.

The NFL Draft is 10 days away, and the Colts will use that annual festival of talent acquisition to fill a good number of holes that caused the Colts to miss the playoffs with an 8-8 record in 2015.

Whether the Colts are successful in assessing and acquiring the right mix of physical talent and character to give the team a boost back into the playoffs and beyond won’t be possible to gauge for months after the names of hopefuls are called, but we do know that the success or failure of this team will be due in large part to two things – Andrew Luck’s health and how quickly the new meat can assume a productive role.

Ryan Grigson is the general manager, and he is responsible for building the roster – either through the draft or via free agency.  After spending lavishly on free agents over the past several offseasons, it appears Grigson has settled on the draft as his primary source of incoming talent.

Here are the top 10 reasons the 2016 NFL Draft is the most important of the Grigson era:

10 – Overcoming a bad draft will become even more difficult with Luck accounting for 15% of the cap.  Luck’s cap number is going to skyrocket this season, and for the rest of his career.  That means the resources Grigson used in the past to acquire a bounty of free agents will be spent elsewhere.  The draft will be the chief source of relatively cheap talent necessary to surround Luck for the next decade.   Continue reading

Top 10 lessons for a fun and safe World’s Greatest College Weekend at IU’s Little 500

The bikes are supposed to go in circles.  You don't have to later that night.

The bikes are supposed to go in circles. You don’t have to later that night.

it’s the World’s Greatest College Weekend in Bloomington, Indiana, and very little of what’s great has anything to do with one-speed bicycles that will be ridden in circles for two hours at Bill “Army” Armstrong Stadium as Indiana University students stare bleary-eyed at the colorful storm of fitness.

The Little 500 is a great diversion, but the race is a sideshow for the main event, which is thousands of college students simultaneously combusting in an alcohol-fueled frenzy.

I participated in this silliness until the futility became obvious, and then turned to writing about the exploits of my group of friends until that seemed equally preposterous.  Now, we turn our attention to distilling our vast array of experiences stretching the boundaries of stupidity into helping others make it to Sunday without an arrest or injury.  [If you want to read a fairly extensive chronicle of idiocy, click here.]

Parents hope their children are the outliers who choose to study rather than indulge in copious amounts of fruity-flavored poison, but most suspect otherwise.  If denial helps you get through, that’s fine, but I offer my services to the students who don’t know when to say when.

As a veteran of a great many of these weekends, I am in a unique position to offer sober counsel before the party starts to students so they remain the same person Sunday as they are today.

Here are the top 10 great pieces of advice for enjoying Little 500 Weekend:

10 – Pour your own.  It would be nice if you could trust that whatever is in the red Solo cup some Delt just handed you has only good and safe stuff in it.  Those days are over.  Not only do you need to pour your own, you need to hold your own.  Never put the cup down.  Keep it in your hand at all times. Continue reading