Author Archives: Kent Sterling

Syracuse self-banishment from postseason a child’s prank; NCAA should bring hammer down

by Kent Sterling

Jim Boeheim is one of the nicest guys in coaching, but his program deserves much more than a light slap on an imaginary wrist.

Jim Boeheim is one of the nicest guys in coaching, but his program deserves much more than a light slap on an imaginary wrist.

When I was seven years old, my Mom asked what I would give up for Lent.  My reply was “Asparagus.”  My supposed cleverness did not please her, and she chose my sacrifice for me.

That is exactly how the NCAA should handle the laughable punishment Syracuse University levied upon itself this week as a consequence for academic fraud and allowing players who violated substance abuse protocols to continue to participate in practices and games.

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The Orangemen have injury issues that have rendered their once formidable team quite mediocre, and their participation in any meaningful postseason frivolity – other than the all-inclusive ACC Tournament – was unlikely regardless of sanctions.

To call this a self-inflicted slap on the wrist insults both slaps and wrists.

A part of me wants to congratulate Syracuse for being this uncommonly transparent and bold, and another wants NCAA president Mark Emmert come down on Syracuse with the maximum penalty the rules allow.  The self-imposed penalty is brazen, audacious, and uncommonly disrespectful toward a member institution that is supposed to protect fairness and the educational opportunities of student-athletes.

Anyone paying even a little attention to college athletics knows that the term “student-athlete” is a lie designed to provide legal cover to the nonsense of amateurism.  Even the inventor of the term – longtime NCAA president Walter Byers – acknowledges that.

Syracuse trying to dance between the raindrops to avoid getting wet is futile, as long as Emmert and the NCAA take seriously their charge to hold member institutions accountable for their wayward acts against the mission of education.

But you can’t blame Syracuse for getting nervous as the NCAA continues to dilly-dally in bringing consequences against the school.  The two-day hearing before the committee on infractions was held in October, and no word has come from Indianapolis as to what the tariff for these violations might be.

There are those who will argue that taking away privileges from players today because of violations that occurred prior to their enrollment is patently unfair – and it is – but what is the alternative?  Allowing schools to hide, obfuscate, block, and delay inquiries until those athletes who were in school during a time of moral turpitude are gone allows the system to be further corrupted without answer.

What we rarely talk when discussing corruption in college athletics is that the NCAA is a member institution.  It does not exist as an entity of oversight.  The NCAA is itself overseen by the very institutions that comprise its membership.  If the NCAA steps out to smite one of its members, the members themselves may choose to decisively act to communicate their displeasure.

When the boss is actually the clerk, and the employees are the actual bosses, business gets confusing.  That’s why we are so frustrated with the NCAA.

Fans hold Emmert responsible for the corruption that is revealed to the public, but the blame for occasional miscarriages of justice belongs to the schools themselves.  Until a school like Syracuse is willing to look itself in the eye and hold itself truly accountable, there can be no protection for student-athletes nor equanimity among athletic programs.

And as long as the public continues to consume college football and men’s basketball in record numbers, regardless of the academic fraud that occurred at Syracuse – and North Carolina for that matter – what is the incentive for ensuring the education promised as compensation for providing athletic excellence and success?

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The athletes deserve better than what Syracuse provided, and so do the fans who believe amateurism to be a unique asset to college sports.  For that matter, the NCAA enforcement staff deserves better than to be treated like a toothless cabal of middle school hall monitors by athletic departments.

Schools that prey upon academically weak, athletically superior young men who help perpetuate bloated salaried career of coaches and administrators while receiving nothing of value in return should be ashamed.  Syracuse should feel a special brand of shame for blatantly thumbing its nose at the NCAA, refusing to accept meaningful responsibility for treating its athletes like cattle gathered as assets and turned loose after their use.

Indiana Football Signing Day wins vs. D’Qwell Jackson arrested for punching pizza delivery guy

by Kent Sterling

Colts LB D'Qwell Jackson was arrested for assaulting a pizza delivery driver, and Indiana's Kevin Wilson scored a very nice recruiting class today.

Colts LB D’Qwell Jackson was arrested for assaulting a pizza delivery driver, and Indiana’s Kevin Wilson scored a very nice recruiting class today.

There are only so many hours in the day, and writing about more than one topic is just about impossible given the time needed to prepare for a three-hour radio show where relevant sports information is presented in relative bulk.

This morning, when I would normally be writing, I was in Bloomington covering the National Signing Day event held by the Indiana University Athletic Department for the football team.

Head coach Kevin Wilson, offensive coordinator Kevin Johns, defensive coordinator Brian Knorr, and quarterback Nate Sudfeld shared their thoughts on the 22 new recruits who signed and faxed (this is the only continued use of the arcane technology of the fax machine) letters of intent that bind them to Wilson’s program.  Those interviews will air throughout today’s Kent Sterling Show on CBS Sports 1430 in Indianapolis (3p-6p).

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The good recruiting news seemed like a more uplifting story than the ass whooping Wisconsin dealt to the basketball Hoosiers last night, and more universally cared about than the impressive win by Butler last night over St. John’s at Hinkle Fieldhouse.

That decision was easy until my phone blew up with the news of Colts linebacker D’Qwell Jackson’s arrest in Washington DC for allegedly punching a pizza delivery guy twice in the head after a brief dispute over a parking spot.

The Colts have endured a spate of irrational and irresponsible behavior that includes a rape charge, multiple DUI’s (including one by owner Jim Irsay), several suspensions, and a player missing the team bus to the airport for the AFC Championship Game.

Behavior has been made an issue by the Colts during media availabilities where the term “Horseshoe guys” is bandied about like it represents a culture that is recruited to.  Whatever methodology the Colts are using to weed to Horseshoes from the knuckleheads needs some serious re-tooling if the result is what behavior has been associated with the Colts over the past 12 months.

Interesting decision – another step in the right direction for the Hoosiers, or another mess on 56th Street for the Colts.  Maybe a post about the decision itself splits the baby.  Genius.

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Jackson is by all appearances a really good guy who has seemed genuinely decent in his dealings with the media.  No arrests in his past that I can find, and no incidents of TMZ-like behavior either.  Always seems like a good “Horseshoe guy,”  but we know that the media gets very limited time and small window into the true character of a man.

Is it out of character from what we might expect from D’Qwell Jackson to visualize him pounding the hell out of some minimum wage schlepper of pies?  Absolutely, but what do we know of a man’s character based upon how he behaves with the media around?

In Bloomington, Kevin Wilson appeared to take another couple of dozen swings at that giant rock he’s trying to crack in rebuilding the formerly moribund Indiana University Football program.

On Signing Day, no news can be good news, and it was today.  All of the recruits expected to pledge Indiana faxed in their LOI, and the Hoosiers are being ranked anywhere from third to seventh in the conference in the reports I’ve been tracking.  Those who rank Indiana in the upper third of the Big Ten are including UAB transfers RB Jordan Howard and WR Marqui Hawkins, but why shouldn’t they be included.  Hey, any reason for hope of a season ending with a bowl should be embraced.

Howard was the seventh most prolific running back in the nation last year – replacing second best Tevin Coleman, so where there appeared to be a void, now there is strength.

Area Indiana signees include DL Joe Belden (Avon), athlete Isaac James (Carmel), and OL Brandon Knight (Noblesville).

This is Indiana’s third consecutive outstanding recruiting class, and where Indiana had always been ranked at or very near the bottom of the Big Ten, now the standard is much higher.

The challenge, as always, remains in developing those recruits in winners at the Big Ten level.  More rocks to crack in Bloomington.  And a culture to build, rather than simply sell on 56th Street.

Indiana Basketball – Big night in Madison requires expectation management for Hoosier fans

by Kent Sterling

Enjoy Yogi Ferrell's effort tonight in Madison.  Evaluate the direction of the program at the end of March.

Enjoy Yogi Ferrell’s effort tonight in Madison. Evaluate the direction of the program at the end of March.

Wisconsin just doesn’t lose very often at the Kohl Center, so that should be taken into consideration by Hoosier fans as they look forward to tonight’s visit by the Indiana Hoosiers.

Only 22 times in 225 games has a visiting opponent left that den of iniquity with a win since it opened in 1998.

Playing against the #5 Badgers is hard enough with their experienced and talented roster without home court advantage.  National player of the year candidate Frank Kaminsky is a senior, and so is point guard Josh Gasser.  Somehow Sam Dekker is only a junior despite playing for Wisconsin since what seems like 2004.  Nigel Hayes is a relative youngster as a sophomore, but he’s one of the best players in the Big Ten.

Wisconsin isn’t just experienced and skilled, they are also disciplined and tough.  That’s a combination that sends most opponents home with the closest thing to an acceptable loss there is this side of a game in Rupp Arena.

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Bo Ryan’s team has converted 52 more free throws than their opponents have attempted, their rebounding advantage is +6.5, and the average margin of victory is 18.1 points.

I’m not saying the deal is done, and that Tom Crean’s Hoosiers needn’t bother catching the bus from the hotel to the arena, just that fans need to check their expectations as they watch this game.  It would take an exceptional effort from the Hoosiers and an off night for the Badgers for Indiana to stay within 10 points of this very unique team.

Indiana starts two freshmen, two sophomores, and a junior.  There isn’t a single senior on the roster, and no one earning regular minutes is taller than 6’7″.  Tonight’s game is a tough putt, and while that might frustrate fans, it’s a fact.  Accepting it will make nights like this a little less frustrating.

In fact, the key to being a happy Indiana fan these days has more to do with recalibrating expectations than on court excellence, which has been infrequent over the past two seasons..

There have been moments of very good this season, like the three wins against ranked opponents, but the overall level of play by the Hoosiers will make a berth in the NCAA Tournament a great accomplishment.  Success in the tournament is unlikely, but that feeling of pride over earning a spot is where the Indiana program is.

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And this is no time to assess credit or blame for the state of the Indiana program.  On a night like tonight, fans should sit, hope, and revel in the effort of teenagers working hard to be the very best they can be.  The amount of sacrifice made by players is grossly underestimated by fans, and it should be appreciated.

After the season ends, an honest reckoning of where Indiana is, and whether it’s acceptable should be engaged.  Is Indiana a top five program as fans, alums, and staff assert?  If so, why have they not finished a season among the Elite Eight since the current freshmen were in kindergarten?

If Indiana fans insist on crowing about Indiana as a blue blood, why was its coach not ranked among the top 50 in the nation by a panel of so-called experts from ESPN?  The list was far from perfect – Bruce Weber (#40) cannot reasonably be assessed as a better coach than Crean, and Josh Pastner (#42) is inching closer to being carried by furious fans from Beale Street to the be dumped in the Mississippi.  Hell, Fran McCaffrey (#33) has never led Iowa to a winning Big Ten record, and his Hawkeyes are 4-4 this season.  The point is the list is imperfect, but not so flawed that Crean could be plunked into the top 20.

Enjoying this Hoosiers team on a night like tonight when winning is an unreasonable expectation for fans to indulge requires some psychological tweaking.  The players and coaches will fight for an unlikely win, and that’s enough for me.

When the season ends, it will be time for a different conversation.  Not about what Indiana Basketball is, but what it should be.  But tonight, it’s about kids working hard to defy steep odds as they enter a very inhospitable arena.

Pete Carroll no Vince Lombardi as “clever” call to throw loses Super Bowl; will be remembered as worst ever

by Kent Sterling

Pete Carroll will never forget the decision he made that cost his Seahawks a championship.

Pete Carroll will never forget the decision he made that cost his Seahawks a championship.

Football used to be a game of pure toughness, where 11 men lined up, hit each other as hard as they could, and won or lost with the results.  Somewhere along the line, coaches decided that getting clever wins games.

Almost a half century ago, Green Bay Packers quarterback Bart Starr jogged to the sidelines after calling a timeout, and told coach Vince Lombardi that he thought offensive lineman Jerry Kramer could get leverage on Dallas Cowboys defensive lineman Jethro Pugh.  That might give Starr the window needed to score the winning touchdown in the famed Ice Bowl.

Lombardi’s response, according to Starr, “Well then run the damn thing and let’s get the hell outta here.”

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Seattle Seahawks coach Pete Carroll and his brain trust thought something different with the ball at the New England Patriots one yard line down four points with under :30 left in the season.  They decided clever trumped tough.

Science and toughness molded into a product that compels massive consumption ever Sunday is what fans hoped to see yesterday, but with the game on the line the ratio of those two attributes needed to be assessed and prioritized.  Allowing the players an opportunity to win their matches and thus the game is what a coach owes his players.

With Marshawn Lynch, perhaps the toughest running back in the NFL, in the backfield to quarterback Russell Wilson’s left, the Seahawks threw for the trophy bearing the name of the coach who decided his were tougher than theirs in that Ice Bowl, and Patriots cornerback Malcolm Butler made a play on the ball that ended the game.

Instead of talking about the Seahawks resilience and how the Tom Brady/Bill Belichick era may be better known for their Super Bowl failures than successes, fans and media are yammering about how Belichick may be the best coach ever.

Instead of talking about Brady’s two interceptions, pundits are lauding him as the best quarterback ever.

Instead of Lynch being the first Super Bowl MVP to refuse to comment following a win, Brady is graciously handing out plaudits to current and former teammates into every microphone thrust into proximity of his mouth.

All because Carroll decided clever was more important than tough.

It’s said that in baseball, a great manager might win you four games during the course of a 162-game season, but a bad one can lose you 25.  It’s a little bit different in football.  Coaching in the NFL is crucial in preparation and execution, but at some point a coach needs to look his players in the eye and demand they sacrifice just a little bit more than their opposite number.

It’s called “crunch time” for a reason, and Carroll decided that outthinking provided a clearer path to winning than outhitting.  As a result, the joyous parade hailing a triumph will be held in Boston rather than Seattle.

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Carroll had his moment last night – that perfect moment where the science of football could be set aside in favor of the game played by men named Bronco, Bulldog, Night Train, Badnarik, Nitschke, Butkus, Crazylegs, and Robustelli.  But he decided that clever was the answer to the 12th man’s prayers.

That is the beauty of football – the melding of brute force and exact science.  Carroll’s decision to trust his knowledge rather than his men will haunt him forever.  All losses sting for a lifetime, but a loss based upon a lack of trust is a misery even the most arrogant don’t deserve.

Coaches and players earn their results, and last night Carroll earned the ignominy of making a call that valued cleverness over toughness and a loss that will haunt him forever.

Super Bowl XLIX – No longer a football game; now, it’s an annoying cultural event

by Kent Sterling

Katy Perry's performance at halftime will be more discussed - and watched - than the Super Bowl itself.

Katy Perry’s performance at halftime will be more discussed – and watched – than the Super Bowl itself.

What is shown on NBC Sunday night between the commercials and garish pageantry of Katy Perry belting out the hits might be pretty good too.

The Super Bowl drives me bats.  Sorry, I can’t pay attention to the game.  Nobody watches.  The women at parties wait for the commercials, and the guys lose focus with every beer.

Even when teams of which I’m a fan participate, the timeouts are so damn long and the never-ending halftime so completely overblown that the football being played recedes into the deep dark background of a Sunday night where my attention is more dedicated to making sure I’m ready to work than enjoying a football game that determines a champion.

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My preference would be that the Super Bowl be played just as ordinary NFL games are – timeouts aren’t extended for cash, halftimes not extended for cash, and the hype/analysis would start on Thursday.

Listening to the endless prattling on ESPN about Marshawn Lynch oh so cleverly driving attention to himself and his Beast Mode brand through a refusal to participate in the media circus, and the constant fawning over the culture of excellence Bill Belichick has created bring misery this week for fans who actually enjoy football.

The angst over Deflategate, while fun because of the deflation of the self-importance preferred by Bill Belichick, is just silly.  The statistical analyses of the Patriots dearth of fumbles is – again – most enjoyable, but ultimately meaningless.

And what will people spend more time talking about Monday morning than anything else?  Of course, it will be the commercials that cost corporations an obscene $4.5 million for a :30.  What kind of a world have we created when interest focused toward commercial content trumps that of the event itself?

Katy Perry will sing at halftime – or lip-synch – and dance in an insanely expensive and complicated halftime show that is more glitz and glam than substance.  I like Katy Perry.  She is talented as hell, a master brand builder, and unafraid to be weird.  Home run of a choice – except that she dated John Mayer, and that disqualifies her as a person of substance in any legitimate sense.

Who Katy dated is so far beside the point that it doesn’t bear mention, but that seems to be the magic of the entire Super week.  The Super Bowl used to be a football game, and then morphed into something much more, and now the game has diminished in importance and receded so far into the background that it’s a sideshow in the third ring of a very crowded circus.

The cheapest tickets on Stub-Hub to sit in what amounts to the studio audience of a made-for-TV event are selling at this amount for $8,342.75.  That’s a lot of cash to watch a TV show being shot.

Too bad because this would be a pretty damn good football game.  Two similarly aged coaches at the top of their games with two completely different world views.  One is emotionally constipated and the other is emotionally diarrhea plagued.  One quarterback is prim, proper, and traditional.  The other is an athletic and improvisational master.

The defenses were built to beat their conference rivals, so watching how Patriots offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels and Brady counter schematics offered by the Legion of Boom would be fascinating if they battled alone in a stadium like the third Rocky Balboa vs. Apollo Creed fight at the end of Rocky III.  As part of this madness, it will be an afterthought.

The one change that could make the whole deal much more palatable is to move the game to Saturday night so we can relax a little bit without worrying about Monday morning looming less than 10 hours after the Dan Patrick hands the Lombardi Trophy to an owner who does little more than sign checks for his billions.

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TV network honchos would lose their minds if the game ever came off the highest rated night of the week, and they run things in professional sports these days, so it will never happen.

Sing like a bird, Katy!  Dazzle us with your ads, Go Daddy!  Analyze the hell out of the tiniest detail, every former player in NFL history!  Between the commercials, I hope the football is worth the trouble of watching it.

Indiana Basketball – Loss at Purdue forces Hoosier fans to recalibrate expectations

by Kent Sterling

Tom Crean is just as smart a coach today as he was when the Hoosiers were 5-1 in the Big Ten.

Tom Crean is just as smart a coach today as he was when the Hoosiers were 5-1 in the Big Ten.

Indiana fans have gone from deliriously happy about a 5-1 start in the Big Ten to downright hostile after two straight road losses to Ohio State and Purdue.  Talk of Tom Crean being the national coach of the year have been replaced by renewed calls for his ouster.

That’s the life of a fan, and that’s the life of a coach.

Purdue outfought the Hoosiers last night at Mackey Arena in the most hotly anticipated renewal of one of America’s best college hoops rivalries in seven years, and with three of their next four games against Wisconsin in Madison, Michigan in Bloomington, and Maryland in Landover, this Big Ten season that started with such promise could spin south.

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Defying expectations from game to game has become the hallmark of the Hoosiers over the last two seasons.  Give them a game they are supposed to lose, and somehow a way to win is found.  Conversely, games that fans believe should be easy wins turn into losses.

5-1 has become 5-3, and those who find Crean to be a strange presence on the Indiana sideline have renewed their calls for him to be replaced.  Thankfully, prudence is one of athletic director Fred Glass’s great qualities, and he will wait to indulge in such endeavors.

The time to evaluate Crean will come after the season comes to an end, and his complete body of work can be assessed.  With six weeks remaining in the 2015 Big Ten season, there is a lot of work to be done, and last night’s loss further exposed one serious chink in the Hoosiers armor.

The Boilermakers shot 58.7% from the field, and Indiana has now allowed their last five opponents to make 52.7% of their field goal attempts.  That statistic belies a lack of defensive awareness and intensity that has resulted in the last two mediocre efforts – both losses.

Coaches say,”defense travels.”  Sadly for Indiana, that means both good and bad defense travels, and while many will point to the collective inefficiency of Yogi Ferrell, James Blackmon Jr., and Troy Williams, who combined last night for seven more shots than points, this game was won by Purdue because they were tougher, smarter, and more aware than the Hoosiers.

Don’t mistake the symptom for the disease.  Purdue’s defensive intensity caused Indiana’s inefficiency.

Prior to the season, this Big Ten season appeared to be unpredictable – especially after acknowledging Wisconsin as the favorite to rise to the top and Rutgers to occupy the bottom.  Nothing has changed with six teams (Indiana, Ohio State, Purdue, Michigan, Michigan State, and Iowa) tied with three losses each.  Indiana has one game with each of the other five, and it will be those games that determine the Hoosiers slot at the end of the season, and ultimately the amount of heat emanating from Crean’s seat.

The only safe bet is that when Indiana looks like a likely victim, they will find a way to win – and vice versa.

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Some of the evidence regarding Crean is in – arrests, suspensions, and injuries, along with a recent stretch of consequence-free behavior.  Perfect APRs, stellar graduation rate, transfers, recruiting struggles, wins, losses, and more.  At the end of the season, a good boss evaluates all of it and decides whether a more suitable leader can be enticed to come work for him.

Evaluation happens everywhere, and it will happen at the end of this season for Indiana Basketball.  Coaches are hired knowing that at some point they will be fired.  It happens to almost everyone who sticks around long enough.

It’s not cruel, spiteful, or mean-spirited to discuss it, but calling for Crean’s head the day after a road loss to an amped up team with at least 11 conference games left (including the Big Ten Tournament) is ridiculous.

Indiana vs. Purdue tonight – Time for a return of anger and bitterness in this once great rivalry

by Kent Sterling

Gene Keady and Bob Knight are all smiles now, but through 41 games in the Purdue vs. Indiana rivalry, their relationship appeared to be magically contentious.

Gene Keady and Bob Knight are all smiles now, but through 41 games in the Purdue vs. Indiana rivalry, their relationship appeared to be magically contentious.

Knight vs. Keady was the State of Indiana’s version of Ali vs. Frazier, and fans loved it.

For 20 glorious seasons, those two coaching heavyweights appeared to hate each other and all their rival stood for.  It was glorious era of combative basketball and behavior from two historic programs and coaches.

They played 41 times from the beginning of Gene Keady’s reign in West Lafayette and Bob Knights zero-tolerance ouster with Purdue winning 21 times and Indiana claiming 20 victories.

Knight’s ire toward the Boilermakers brought a donkey on his TV show as a replacement for Purdue athletic director George King, threw a chair, and raised holy hell in a historic locker room rant captured on tape.

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Keady saved his vitriol for practices, tumultuous explosions at officials, and for attendees of his basketball camps.  His face contorted in anger as he told child campers in 2000, “You don’t have to wear Purdue shirts all the time around here, but if you wear an Indiana shirt, that’s BULLSHIT!”

Indiana fans love to point to the five national championship banners in Assembly Hall, while Purdue fans extoll the virtues of leading the all-series 113-88.  Indiana fans counter that since the introduction of the NCAA Tournament in 1939, Indiana actually leads the series 78-63.  Purdue fans then start talking football, and Indiana fans order another beer after briefly mentioning the 2014 Old Oaken Bucket game.

Tonight, the two teams play a game with stakes higher than bragging rights for the first time since 2008 – Kelvin Sampson’s final game as Indiana coach, and the only time since Knight was fired that both teams were ranked prior to a game.

Purdue is unranked, but currently sport a 4-3 Big Ten record, while the Hoosiers have been the surprise of the college basketball season by being ranked #22 with a 5-2 Big Ten record.  Tonight’s winner will elevate its status in the eyes of the NCAA Tournament Selection Committee, and the loser will take a significant step toward the NIT.

Isaac Haas and A.J. Hammons bring size to the floor Indiana can’t match, but Indiana has figured out how to exploit an advantage in quickness an deadly shooting accuracy.  Basketball is like boxing – styles make fights, and the contrast in styles for tonight’s game make this game fascinating.

But when Indiana vs. Purdue play, it’s not about Octeus vs. Ferrell, Hammons vs. Hartman, and Blackmon vs. Stephens.  It’s about Knight and Keady with blow-by handshakes, sucker punches between Isiah Thomas and Roosevelt Barnes, shooting battles between Steve Alford and Troy Lewis, Butch Carter at the 1979 NIT final at Madison Square Garden, a donkey in a Purdue cap, and the thousands of arguments so predictable most of us could recite either side verbatim.

College basketball is better when both sides of great rivalries are relatively even – Louisville vs. Kentucky, Duke vs. North Carolina, Kansas vs. Missouri, and Purdue vs. Indiana.  Finally, the Boilers and Hoosiers have it right enough at the same time that fans see this as more than just another game.

And while no one wants a chair thrown, punches exchanged, or a donkey staring blankly at Chuck Marlowe, it would be great to see Indiana coach Tom Crean and Purdue’s Matt Painter staring each other down at midcoast like Crean and Nebraska’s Tim Miles did in this season’s Big Ten opener or never break stride or make eye contacts they share a very quick postgame handshake.

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Keady and Knight never appeared to like each other, and we loved it.

I-65 and the Ruel W.Steele Memorial Highway connect these two schools.  Nothing is gained by either Purdue or Indiana taking the high road in or out of West Lafayette and Bloomington.

With the stakes this high, let’s see top end focus, a surly countenance, and at least a hint of downright unpleasantness tonight.

As we wait for tonight, here are some amusing videos and audio – by the way, the rant by Knight is unedited and features some extreme profanity.  The chair throwing shows the fouls that caused Knight’s outrage.  The donkey thing was extremely entertaining when I watched live as a freshman in Bloomington.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Qxu5cvW-ds

Deflategate – New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft shows how the rich get that way with self-righteous hissy-fit

by Kent Sterling

Patriots owner Bob Kraft is all smiles until he isn't, and then you better sit still and listen if you are NFL commish Roger Goodell.

Patriots owner Bob Kraft is all smiles until he isn’t, and then you better sit still and listen if you are NFL commish Roger Goodell.

There are two ways to amass great wealth – inheritance and balls.

New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft put the second of those points of differentiation on display yesterday in front of the media gathered in Arizona for the Super Bowl.

Net worth is a scorecard in life that has nothing whatsoever to do with decency, compassion, empathy, and character.  It’s a race to cash, and as is the case with all races, advantage is granted to those displaying behaviors most are unwilling to allow themselves.

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Great risk equals great reward (or great failure), and the cool thing about the pursuit of financial success is that failures are immaterial as long as success is achieved once.  People with balls refuse to fear failure because they see it as a necessary milepost on the road to success.

If rich people appear to be wired differently, it’s because most who made their own money are.  And Kraft clawed his way from from an apartment in Brookline, Massachusetts, to be the billionaire he is.

That means when you tangle with Kraft, you will almost certainly lose.  He sits in meetings every day and never blinks because if he does, rivals and subordinates will see it as a sign of weakness.  Kraft knows that virtually everyone with whom he has contact covets what is his.

Those relentless interactions tend to steel nerves, and at the age of 73, Kraft has been around the block again and again.

Because of his background and success, it should have come as no surprise last night when Kraft laid down the law on Deflategate, basically daring NFL commissioner Roger Goodell to continue to press the issue with his investigation, “I want to make it clear that I believe unconditionally that the New England Patriots have done nothing inappropriate in this process that were in violation of NFL rules.

“(Tom Brady, coach Bill Belichick) and I have been together for 15 years,” Kraft continued.  “They are my guys. They are part of my family, and Bill, Tom and I have had many difficult discussions over the years, and I have never known them to lie to me. That is why I am confident in saying what I just said. It bothers me greatly that their reputations and integrity, and by association, that of our team, has been called into question this past week.”

He was on a roll and had one final volley to lob directly at Goodell, “I am disappointed in the way this entire matter has been handled and reported upon. We expect hard facts as opposed to circumstantial leaked evidence to drive the conclusion of this investigation…  If the Wells investigation is not able to definitively determine that our organization tampered with the air pressure of the footballs, I would expect and hope the league would apologize to our entire team, and in particular, coach Belichick and Tom Brady for what they have had to endure this past week.”

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There you go.  Think Goodell and Kraft being pals means a damn thing to Kraft.  Some men gather friends; some gather cash.  Few indulge in both.  Goodell is nothing but a clerk in Kraft’s eyes, and communicating that was the point of Kraft’s performance.

Kraft was like the surly parent of a 15 year-old last night, dropping the, “not as long as you live in a house I pay for” bomb.

The Patriots might be guilty of manipulating the footballs prior to the AFC Championship Game against the Colts – or they might be innocent as they claim – but when you are Bob Kraft, you have become conditioned to setting the rules and level of discipline for breaking them.

Nobody puts Baby in a corner, and no $40-million per year bureaucrat weakened by the Ray Rice investigation is going to dictate terms to Kraft.

Yesterday’s Kraft press conference was a perfect example of big boy hard ball – a game an employee like Goodell is invited to lose by a man like Kraft.

Indiana Basketball – After Robert Johnson’s injury, time has come to get people and stuff off baseline

by Kent Sterling

That Robert Johnson may be  forced to miss time because of an injury caused by a folder being left just beyond the baseline by an Ohio State cheerleader is evidence enough to move non-essential personnel off the baseline.

That Robert Johnson may be forced to miss time because of an injury caused by a folder being left just beyond the baseline by an Ohio State cheerleader is evidence enough to move non-essential personnel off the baseline.

Please understand this is not a lament about a reason the Hoosiers lost to Ohio State yesterday in Columbus.  Indiana lost because its defense sucked.

Allowing Ohio State players to catch and finish without resistance led to them hitting 62.3% of their field goal attempts, and beating a team that shoots better than 60% is almost impossible.

This is about the continued encroachment of non-essential basketball personnel being allowed close enough to the players that injuries are a near certainty.  Photographers and cheerleaders crowding the baseline has been allowed for years, and the time has come to put them back where they belong – out of harm’s way.

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Indiana wing Robert Johnson converted a layup yesterday in the first half, landed on a folder left by a cheerleader, and his knee gave.  Coach Tom Crean was forced to remove him from the game, and despite returning for a few minutes in the second half his status for a huge game Wednesday night at Purdue is not known.

A far worse incident occurred during a USA Basketball scrimmage during the summer when Paul George landed awkwardly because the standard was unusually close to the baseline.  His tibia and fibula snapped, and a full season of his career has been lost.  A Pacers team that was believed to have a chance to make it to the NBA Finals now sports a record of 16-30 in a season most believe is lost.

The situations for Johnson and George were different, but both underscore the need for the baseline to be clear of obstructions for the well-being of the players.

I spent a night in the Kohl Center a couple of years ago with a photog credential sitting on the baseline, and was in constant fear that even well behind the line that supposedly separated us from the players and referees I was going to cause mayhem.

Ed Hightower officiated that night, and he never crossed the line, but he came within an inch of my feet on a dozen different occasions.  He had been at it for 30 years and knew how to avoid spraining an ankle on the feet of guys sitting cross-legged trying to do their jobs, but players crossed the line constantly because their momentum carried them outside the parameters of the playing floor.

I was in almost constant motion as a I tried to do my job while also not corrupting Hightower’s ability to earn a living.

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While college and professional basketball enjoy the up-close coverage provided by those who squat in quiet anonymity just beyond the baseline and from the excitement generated by the cheerleaders, players’ and officials’ health can be jeopardized by that proximity.  Changes need to be made.

Hopefully, Johnson is able to return Wednesday, but regardless, college and professional basketball needs to remove feet, folders, chairs, and pom-poms from the wooden playing surface.  And the standard for the basket needs to be kept at a safe and uniform distance.

Health should never knowingly be jeopardized to facilitate media coverage and cheerleader interaction.

Mr. Cub dies – the great Ernie Banks taught Chicagoans (and me) to love their work and smile on the job

by Kent Sterling

Ernie Banks was a genius of hope and glee.  His relentless optimism will be missed.

Ernie Banks was a genius of hope and glee. His relentless optimism will be missed.

When I was a kid, I thought Ernie Banks was the coolest man alive.  He got to play baseball for a living, and he always did it with a smile on his face.  Like few men or women who walk among us, we are better for his example.  Today, he died at the age of 83 without ever seeing his beloved Cubs win a World Championship.

Faith is a weird phenomenon.  We believe that anything is possible.  Whether the Cubs were talented or sucked, Ernie either actually believed they were going to the the World Series, or did a great job or faking it.

As a ballplayer he had quick and strong wrists – so strong they  were responsible for allowing his skinny frame to produce enough torque to launch 512 baseballs over outfield fences all over the National League.

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But the excellence on the field is not what Cubs fans of Banks era (1953-1971) will always remember about Mr. Cub.  It’s his endless love for what he did for living that continues to inform so many who refuse to view their jobs as work.  Instead of playing one game, Ernie always said, “Let’s play two!”

Banks made other ballplayers appear whiny and dour by comparison, and that has always been my professional goal.  Tough days?  Banks must have had plenty as he played through the season after his 40th birthday.  His knees failing, and his gait slowed, Banks continued smiling despite manager Leo Durocher relegating the proud Banks to part-time status in 1971.

Through the 1950s and 1960s when an afternoon at Wrigley Field was made palatable only by Banks’ superb play, ballplayers were unable to capitalize on their value because they were bound to their teams by the reserve clause which allowed teams to maintain rights to a player forever.  Cubs owner Phillip Wrigley made a lot of money because of Banks.  As a token of thanks, Wrigley continued to pay Banks $25,000 per year long past he ceased to function in any capacity for the team.

When the Tribune Company bought the Cubs from Wrigley’s son William, Dallas Green was hired as the team’s general manager.  One of Green’s first acts was to fire Banks because “I couldn’t figure out what he did.”  What he did was bring joy to millions for 19 seasons, and become the face – the hero – of the franchise.  He was Mr. Cub, and Green fired him.

My Dad wrote a scathing letter (one of many he penned to the Cubs) questioning the humanity and business acumen of a man so narrow minded that he would fire a first ballot Hall of Famer who kept the Cubs solvent for years over a measley $25,000.  There was no response.  Logical men without romance in their hearts could never understand, much less run the Cubs.

As a comparison, Jon Lester will “earn” more than 30 years worth of Banks salary every time he takes the mound in 2015.

We take lessons as boys from some unusual people and places, and buying into the possibility the justice will eventually be done and that the Cubs will one day earn that ring that has eluded them for 106 years still grips generations of Cubs fans is due in large part to what appeared to be the naive and childlike poems that have been a part of Cubs spring trainings for what seems like forever.

“The Cubs will be heavenly in 1970!” Banks crowed when I turned eight.  I bought into it, and was crushed by the reality of yet another collapse during what was Banks last productive season.  Every year, another poem.  Every year, another disappointment.

I became cynical about the Cubs in my 40s, and decided they were hardly worth my attention as idiots ran the franchise into the ground.  What was the point?  That level of excitement is unbecoming a grown man.

What I learned through becoming a cynic was that living a life of ridiculous and baseless optimism is one hell of a lot more fun than steeling myself against yet another round despondence.

Over this past offseason, my anger turned back to a cheer as I peeled the pessimism from my soul like a man strips himself of a suit that just doesn’t fit right.  I figured, what the hell, do I want to grumble through life as a surly frown-emblazoned mope whose reward in life is to claim that he knew better every time reality bit, or as a happy sap who continues to buy in long after most learn the lesson of expecting the worst?

I would rather go down like Ernie – with a smile on my face, and a song in my heart.  Screw reality.  A man could be a lot worse off than dying with hope that tomorrow will be a better day, and until that day comes – a smile will serve as reward enough.

Mr. Cub taught me that.  Thanks, Ernie.