Jerod Mayo’s powerless, flat Patriots channeling every bit of the bad old daysWhen local teams are at their worst, Shank's writing comes alive. Funny how that works...
GLENDALE, Ariz. — These are games we mocked not so long ago: A 3-10 team against a 6-7 team in mid-December. A couple of Tomato Cans duking it out in a quiet stadium while Football America was riveted to Bills at Lions (48-42, Buffalo) on CBS.
If you were home in New England, forced to watch Patriots-Cardinals ahead of the true Game of the Week, too bad. Instead of a possible prelude to this year’s Super Bowl, you were hostage to the Dumpster Fire In The Desert. It was just like the bad old days of 20th century Patriot-watching.
Under the robin’s egg blue skies of State Farm Stadium’s open roof, the Cardinals pantsed the moribund Patriots, 30-17, Sunday. Jerod Mayo’s 11 dropped to 3-11, clearing the way for 3-14 and another top three pick in this spring’s draft.
New England showed little sign of life, and Bob and Jonathan Kraft looked pretty unhappy in their midfield thrones. Maybe deciding to hire Mayo five years ago because he demonstrated good manners on a trip to Israel wasn’t such a great idea.
Tuesday, December 17, 2024
Bring Back Rod Rust?
With the New England Patriots losing on Sunday, it brings back some bad memories for Shank:
Monday, December 16, 2024
DHL Dan CCXXXIII - Innocent Until Proven Guilty?
That's Shank's somewhat disingenuous statement on certain professional athletes accused of domestic violence:
When employing those accused of domestic violence, teams weigh quest to win against damage to brand, and other thoughtsUnlike the rest of us, our names and faces aren't splashed across the sports pages in print and on the Internet, which tends to cause the ' potential damage to the team’s brand'. To me, that's the disingenuous part.
Picked-up pieces while waiting for more Red Sox news to come out of the Winter Meetings . . .
▪ Aroldis Chapman. Milan Lucic. Jabrill Peppers.
All three are Boston athletes on teams that have not enjoyed a lot of success lately; all were accused of violence against women; none were convicted (Peppers doesn’t go to trial until January); all of them raise questions about the responsibilities professional sports teams face when allegations of domestic violence collide with a team’s quest to win and the experience of its fans.
Every case is different. Like the rest of us, millionaire professional athletes are presumed innocent until proven guilty. But teams hiring baggage-laden players are ever measuring fairness and the quest to win against potential damage to the team’s brand. It’s a high-wire act filled with mixed messaging.
Playoffs?
That's Shank's tone after watching the Boston Celtics so far this year:
Can we get to the playoffs already? This year’s Celtics might be even better than last year’s.
The defending world champion Celtics have played only one quarter of their regular-season schedule. We still have four weeks left in 2024.
I have only one question: When do the playoffs start?
Sorry. I know the NBA regular season is a marathon, not a sprint. I know there are critical games left in the quest for the coveted NBA Cup; the idle Celtics were eliminated Tuesday night. I know we are supposed to take a deep breath, hope everyone stays healthy, and monitor the NBA readiness of Neemias Queta and Drew Peterson.
Not me. I watch the 2024-25 Celtics when I think they might be in for a close game or playing a team that could be a speed bump in the quest for Banner No. 19.
Also, to ponder their place among the greatest Celtics teams of all time.
Sunday, December 01, 2024
DHL Dan CCXXXII - Hitting The Century Mark
As the Boston Bruins turn 100 today (Happy Birthday, Bruins!), Shank writes one of his three yearly hockey columns to commemorate the event:
There is so much to remember in 100 years of Bruins hockey, and other thoughts
Picked-up pieces while refusing to take the cheese on the Juan Soto nonsense …
▪ The Bruins turn 100 Sunday and plan a centennial birthday party before their 3 p.m. game at the Garden against the Montreal Canadiens.
Nice symmetry there. The Montreal Maroons were the Bruins’ opponents for their first game ever — a 2-1 win at Boston Arena Dec. 1, 1924.
The Zamboni of those days was a horse-drawn, plow-like scraper followed by a team of broom-toting sweepers (no jokes about slow horses playing for the 2024 Bruins).
As much as anything, Sunday’s celebration will be a salute to the Hub’s hockey culture, and the grip the Bruins have had on this region for as long as Jimmy Carter has been alive.
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