Redskins gave up way too much for RG3

11 Mar

Apparently some Browns fans are bummed that CLE missed out on Robert Griffin III (RG3) because the Washington Redskins are presumably going to draft him at #2 in this year’s NFL draft (presuming the Colts take Andrew Luck with the #1 overall pick).  If the Browns were willing to trade 3 1st round picks just to move up 2 spots, then thankfully they were only saved by an even more foolish franchise willing to give the St. Louis Rams a better deal for that #2 pick.

Enjoy dumping the ball off to Roy Helu & Jabar Gaffney in the district Mr. Griffin

Daniel Snyder’s Redskins front office jumped the shark, giving up an insane package to move up 4 spots in the 2012 draft.  In exchange for the 2nd overall pick, WAS gave STL the Redskins’ 1st round pick this year (6th overall), plus the Redskins’ #1 pick the next 2 years.  To make the deal look like a shady trade a seasoned Madden franchise owner would do to a CPU team, the Rams were even able to squeeze this year’s 2nd round pick (presumably 38th overall) out of WAS too.

Here’s the full story from ESPN.

If the Redskins were getting a once in a generation QB (like Andrew Luck), I could maybe see this trade being sensible given the fact that the league is so offense-oriented now & rewards teams with good QBs.  But all this for RG3??

Griffin is certainly an athletic specimen & did some nice things at a relatively small school (Baylor was a perennial doormat in the continually watered-down Big 12), but giving up this much for him is totally unjustifiable unless he becomes a transcendent player for WAS.  Transcendent as in Tom Brady, Peyton Manning, Joe Montana – and even those guys were surrounded by Pro Bowl talent for most of their careers.

Griffin will probably be exciting to watch, but with no weapons it will probably be a Jake Plummer/Doug Flutie/Vince Young-type of exciting, not Michael Vick-type of exciting.  Even if he has Vick’s career (minus jail time), that’s not even good enough to justify the draft picks.  Vick has 2 career playoff wins, & only 1 trip to the conference championship (a 27-10 loss @ PHI in 2004), & his style of play has led to more injuries than deep playoff runs.  Yes Vick is great for fantasy football & using in Madden, but RG3 will need to be a top-shelf pocket passer to have continued success in the NFL.

Still think the Redskins’ didn’t give up too much?  Check out this NFL Draft Trade Value Chart, which explains that trading the Redskins’ 1st-round pick this year (6th overall) plus 1 future 1st round pick (given a middle of the 1st round draft value such as the 16th pick in the 2013 draft) is a fair trade (2600 value points for each side).

Based on the trade chart (which is an established system that smart teams seriously consider before making any trade involving draft picks), the Redskins gave away an extra 1st-rounder and 2nd-rounder rather than work to find a better deal elsewhere or trade down & draft a QB later.

 

Here’s how the deal shakes out:

Redskins receive:

2nd overall pick in 2012 draft: Worth 2600 points

Rams receive:

6th overall pick in 2012 draft: Worth 1600 points

38th overall pick in 2012 draft: Worth 520 points

WAS’ 1st round pick in 2013: Worth 1000 points if we generically assign it the 16th pick, though the ‘Skins have finished with an average record of 5-11 the last 3 years, so that pick & the 2014 pick could be much higher/valuable than just the 16th pick, especially if RG3 doesn’t pan out

WAS’ 1st round pick in 2014: Worth 1000 points as well if we generically assign the 16th pick here as well

Total for Rams’ haul: 4120 points

 

Credit the Rams for having the nerve to reportedly sit on CLE’s offer of 3 1st round picks & possibly more to patiently allow WAS to make STL the deal of the century!

Bear in mind that after last season’s lockout, the new Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) restructured rookie salaries, so the high draft picks don’t come in being the highest paid player on the team before they’ve played a down anymore.  In fact, the new rookie wage scale makes rookies much more affordable & therefore more salary-cap friendly than expensive veteran free agents.  Rookies will play just as well (or poorly) as they always have in the last 10-15 seasons, but now they won’t be paid nearly as much, which makes them much more valuable than in year’s past!

Smart teams like NE, PIT, BAL, IND, PHI, GB, etc. traditionally never over-reach for a high draft pick or trade up much, while teams with poor recent track records such as WAS, OAK, CLE, etc. go Bobby Beathard-style rather frequently…some food for thought.

Bobby Beathard as Chargers GM: "Wait, so you'll trade me your 2nd-round pick in this year's draft for my 1st-round pick next year? Let's do it!"

Podcasts anyone?

3 Oct

Sorry for the long break, but I was busy doing some globetrotting around Aruba, Sau Paulo, then Bora Bora…just kidding.  Okay, I’ve really just been working a lot.  Still, I’m taking a hard look at doing a podcast or video podcast for the site.  Which would you rather have?  Something you can listen to in your iPod as an mp3, or something you can watch for breakfast or lunch on YouTube? 

Could we be the next Adam Corolla podcast hit on iTunes? Let us know you want to hear free podcasts ASAP!

Also, topically, would you prefer it center on sports or have focuses on politics, video games, TV shows & movies, etc. or something else?  Let me know, as every day is a democracy here at The Floor Seats.

Lastly, I think the most important aspect of the show is that it’s funny.  It should be informative & make you think, but it had better make you laugh or what good is the rest of it??  I’d love to hear what you all would like to get from The Floor Seats next time you log on, thanks!

How to fix the NBA by Bill Simmons: Plenty of good salary cap & playoff format ideas

14 Jul

Bill Simmons has outdone himself with this latest piece on what should be done to fix the NBA:

Here’s the article:

Greed in its rawest form. That’s the National Football League’s lockout. Both sides were like two billionaire drug cartels splitting up a massive cocaine shipment who got pissed off and just started shooting each other. “You took too much! I saw that!!!” They will settle next week and slink into the sunset with their kilos. We’ll forgive them immediately because we love football and just want our Sundays back. The end.

Stubbornness in its rawest form. That’s the National Basketball Association’s lockout. The owners want to “fix” the system without actually fixing it. The players want everything to remain the same even if that “same” makes no sense. Both sides spent the past few weeks poking holes in each other’s arguments, leaking unflattering tidbits to trusted writers1 and excreting code-word spin control BS like “we’re unified” and “we’re in this for the long haul.” I never heard anyone say the words, “Hold on a second … what’s really wrong here?”

You know what it reminds me of, actually? That scene in Dave after Bill Mitchell impersonator Dave Kovic (played by Kevin Kline) secretly takes over Mitchell’s presidency, when Dave gets his nerdy accountant buddy (played by Charles Grodin) to balance the budget so they can save the First Lady’s homeless program. They meet with the Cabinet, and Dave starts laying out Grodin’s ideas. What if we slashed this by $47 million? What if we cut this program, that’s another $50 million? Every decision is totally logical. Dave ends up finding the extra money in about six minutes, followed by the Cabinet applauding in disbelief.2

Totally improbable scene … and yet, you feel like it’s totally probable as you’re watching it. Why? Because Dave threw out everyone’s agendas and said, “This is extremely important to me, we’re not leaving this room until we figure it out.” Then he did it.

With the NBA’s lockout, we’re hopelessly mired in the “he said/she said” phase of things … only we’re stuck with David instead of Dave. If Dave’s owners lost $340 million last year, he wouldn’t say, “We need to get that money back from the players!” No, he’d say things like, “Wow, David did a terrible job, I can’t believe he left me this mess” and “How could a league that just enjoyed one of its best and most interesting seasons ever be losing money?” Then Dave would gather everyone in a room and figure it out. Maybe not in six minutes … but he’d figure it out.

Let’s tackle the key issues and figure out how Dave (not David) would handle them.

Issue No. 1: The owners lost $340 million last season.

Or so they claim. In retrospect, making a huge deal about opening their books was the league’s smartest move of 2011, narrowly edging Stern’s forcing LeBron to throw the Finals so that Miami’s next season would be more compelling.3 I know it threw me off the scent. They opened their books? That’s enough for me! The Players Association examined all 30 teams and flagged some creative accounting, with Billy Hunter even telling ESPN.com’s Henry Abbott, “If you don’t count interest and depreciation, you already lop off $250 [million] of the 370 million dollars.”4

I have no idea what this means, and frankly, I’m not sure Hunter does, either. But once the sports blogs started stirring things up, that led to (ESPN.com’s cap consigliore) Larry Coon’s concluding the NBA’s number was flimsy at best; Nate Silver’s writing a New York Times blog titled “Calling Foul on the NBA’s Claim of Financial Distress”; the NBA’s putting out a press release disputing Silver’s piece;5 and my spending 10 minutes trying to figure out what “amortization” meant (and failing). This was not how I wanted to spend my summer.

What Dave would tell the owners: “Can we please stop claiming that we lost $340 million? That number can be picked apart too easily. Instead, let’s bang home the point that our league stopped being profitable — which is 100 percent true — and we’re committed to making it profitable again. Let’s take a little responsibility, as well — after all, we just had one of the best seasons in league history and lost money. We should all be ashamed. And also, please remember — nobody is going to feel sorry for you guys because you’re all fucking rich. Well, except for you, George, Joe and Gavin. But from now on, scrap the ‘woe is us, we’re losing money, boo hoo’ routine. We’re just shining a neon spotlight on our own incompetence. Enough. Shut up.”

Issue No. 2: The players are currently getting too big of a revenue share.

The last labor deal guaranteed players 57 percent of basketball-related revenue (better known as “BRI”). If the league makes X.X billion dollars in a season, the owners HAVE to spend exactly 57 percent of that X.X billion on salaries.6 The owners believe that number is too high. And actually, they’re right. By including a luxury tax in the previous two labor deals, they assumed it would frighten teams from overpaying players. Nope. If anything, it’s turned into something of a Jedi mind trick. You can’t win unless you’re overpaying players. Open your wallets. Open them. Our past four champions were luxury tax teams. Not a coincidence. As deputy commissioner Adam Silver told the New York Times, “We had predicted the tax would be more of a drag on salaries than it’s turned out to be. It became business as usual to pay the tax, and therefore it created a league of haves and have-nots, where you have the Lakers at $110 million and Sacramento at $45 million.”

What Dave would tell the owners: “Fifty-seven percent was too high, and the tax created more problems than it solved. I get that. But with all due respect to Real Adam, I’d argue the Lakers should spend 225 percent as much on salary as the Kings. After all, they play in Los Angeles, not Sacramento. They make more local TV money in one year than Sacramento makes in 12. They can charge three times as much for tickets. And their owner has enough money to pay his players without hawking his prized possessions like he’s on an special episode of Pawn Stars. We ARE a league of Haves and Have-Nots. Look at every great season we’ve ever had — when we’re top-heavy and bottom-heavy, that’s when we have the best teams and the best playoff games.

“Here’s a newsflash: We’re not the NFL. They have revenue sharing because it doesn’t matter who plays in the Super Bowl, or where Peyton Manning spends his career. All that matters is parity and television money. Our success hinges on star power and big-market teams; we could never survive one year without a team in Los Angeles, much less two decades and counting like the NFL just did. Our attendance numbers these past few years have told us — pretty convincingly — that small-market fans aren’t forking over money for professional basketball anymore unless their local team is good or great. And even then, they might not show up.

“We have to reinvent our league. We have to figure out which 25 to 30 cities can handle a professional basketball franchise instead of wasting our time protecting the ones that can’t. We have to accept that big-market teams have a better chance of succeeding than small-market teams, for a variety of reasons, but mainly because wealthier owners want to own big-market teams and talented players want to play for big-market teams. That’s the reality. That’s the big picture. But yes, the small picture says we need to knock down that BRI a little. A 50/50 split seems totally fair.”

Sadly, I can see this being something the video game industry would actually release. EA Sports did put Tiger Woods' name on a game cover recently didn't it?

Issue No. 3: Guaranteed contracts are too long
Even the Players Association seems to agree on this one.7 Long-term deals allow players to coast for years on end (how’s it going, Rashard Lewis?), mail in entire seasons (what’s happening, Charlie Villanueva?), or eat themselves out of the league (would you like another slice, Eddy Curry?). Any of those paths make the players look terrible as a whole. From the league’s perspective, you can’t have five- or six-year deals AND a salary cap, not when the wrong contract can singlehandedly submarine a team. Players also play their greedy butts off during contract years … so by having more contract years and fewer Long-Term Deals Gone Wrong, the league’s quality of play would improve. At least that’s the hope.

What Dave would tell the owners: “Fans can’t identify with overpaid players — especially if those guys aren’t trying as hard as they once did. They resent them, which means they resent our league. Why would we ever want that? Think of Clippers fans suffering through 2½ years of Baron Davis, and then losing their no. 1 overall pick because that was the only way their team could dump Davis. How can we expect them to enjoy our product after that? No NBA contract should last longer than four years except for rookie contracts. Period.”8

Issue No. 4 (in 3 parts): NBA superstars should make more money than they do; it should be easier for NBA teams to keep those superstars; and too many nonsuperstars make too much money.

Tackling the superstar issue first: Ten baseball players will earn $20 million or more in 2011 (with Alex Rodriguez leading the way at $32 million); only four NBA players could potentially make $20 million or more in 2011-12. Twenty-nine baseball players earn $15 million or more; only 22 NBA players can say the same. That would make sense if baseball players were more marketable, but actually, it’s the opposite: The NBA has three times as many marketable stars (LeBron, Kobe, Howard, Durant, Wade, Amar’e, Carmelo, Duncan, Pierce, Griffin, Nash, Dirk, Garnett, Yao, Paul, Rose and at least one star I’m probably forgetting) as baseball (A-Rod, Jeter, Pujols, Howard and maybe Lincecum). Hell, you could argue Chris Bosh, Manu Ginobili, Tony Parker and Pau Gasol are more famous worldwide than any baseball players except Jeter, A-Rod and Ichiro.

Baseball stars make more money only because there’s no salary cap in baseball. I get it. But given the NBA is such a star-driven league, why wouldn’t it reward its best players a little more smartly? Why not redistribute NBA salaries so they resemble more of a Hollywood star system? For instance, look at Mission Impossible — Ghost Protocol: Cruise is the “superstar,” Jeremy Renner is the secondary star, and Paula Patton, Simon Pegg, Ving Rhames and Josh Holloway were the supporting stars. If the NBA was funding that movie, Cruise would make $25 million, Renner would make $15 million (even though he would have done it for one-third that), Holloway would inexplicably make $9 million, then the other three would probably be overpaid something like $20 million combined. And that makes sense … how?

Try to follow me here …

a. Twenty-two players are scheduled to make more than $15 million for the 2011-12 season: Kobe Bryant ($25.5m), Tim Duncan ($21.4m), Rashard Lewis ($21.4m), Kevin Garnett ($21.2m), Gilbert Arenas ($19.1m), Dirk Nowitzki ($19.1m), Pau Gasol ($18.7m), Dwight Howard ($18.1m), Carmelo Anthony ($18.4m), Amar’e Stoudemire ($18.2m), Joe Johnson ($18m), Elton Brand ($17.1m), Chris Paul ($16.4m), Deron Williams ($16.3m), LeBron James ($16.0m), Chris Bosh ($16.0m), Dwyane Wade (15.7m), Paul Pierce ($15.3m), Zach Randolph ($15.2m), Antawn Jamison ($15.1m), Brandon Roy ($15m), Rudy Gay ($15m). Only Lewis, Arenas, Brand, Jamison and Roy don’t belong on that list … and if our “four-year max” rule was in place, Lewis’ deal would be done; Arenas, Brand and Jamison would be in their final year, and Roy would have two years left. Either way, we’re batting 78 percent on big-ass deals. Not bad.

b. Forty-six NBA players are scheduled to make between $8 million and $14.9 million for the 2011-12 season (not counting free agents or restricted free agents). We’ll separate them into four groups and throw them into a massive footnote to save space: “Comically overpaid,” “Overpaid,” “Fairly Paid” and “Underpaid.”9 You’ll see in the footnote — 27 of the 46 players were “overpaid” or “comically overpaid,” which means we went from batting 78 percent to 38 percent … and that’s not counting another $75 million worth of dumb deals10 from the $6.5 million to $7.9 million group, or whichever team stupidly overpays Marc Gasol, Jamal Crawford, J.R. Smith, Kris Humphries, Caron Butler and (gulp) Greg Oden. 11

See, that’s what is really killing the NBA: overpaying the Jeremy Renners and TOTALLY overpaying the Josh Holloways. But how do you fix it?

What Dave would tell the owners: “Fellas, this couldn’t be an easier fix. We keep the rookie contracts intact and get a four-year cap on contracts. We abolish the midlevel exception; in return, we back off our 50/50 request on the BRI and give them a 52/48 split. That guarantees them between $1.8 billion and $1.9 billion in salaries, depending on how we’re doing. We want to reward our best players more than we do. We want to make it easier for teams to keep franchise players so LeBron/Cleveland or Carmelo/Denver doesn’t happen every year. And we want to keep our hard cap relatively low so teams don’t overpay role players (a.k.a. Travis Outlaw for $35 million), frustrating our fans and make them think we’re idiots.

“So here’s my radical suggestion in seven parts. Call it the Dave Plan. If you don’t like it, stick with your old system and keep bitching about your $340 million in losses …12

  • “1. We settle on a $52 million hard cap but promise players we’ll spend 52 percent of the BRI on salaries, which should average out to $56 million to $58 million per season, depending on how we’re doing. All extra wiggle room from $52 million to that $56 million to $58 million that we DON’T spend goes into an escrow fund. If we’re over, we get the extra money. If we’re under, the players get it. But we’re going to spend that money. Watch.
  • “2. Going forward, we define an ‘All-Star’ as someone who’s played four consecutive years with one team and made two All-Star teams OR an All-NBA team during that time. Any ‘All-Star’ automatically gets a $12 million cap figure, but his original team can pay him up to 25 percent more than the cap figure (max: $60 million for four years). A new team can only pay him that cap figure (max: $48 million for four years).
  • “3. We define a ‘Franchise Player’ as someone who’s played at least four consecutive years with one team and made three All-Star teams OR two first or second All-NBA teams during that time. Any ‘Franchise Player’ automatically gets a $17 million cap figure, but can be paid $500,000 per years of service beyond that number without it counting on the cap. For instance, if Dwight Howard wants to sign with the Lakers next summer, they could offer only his franchise cap number ($68 million over four years). Orlando gets the benefit of that $500k bump — eight Howard/Orlando seasons multiplied by $500,000 — so they can offer him a four-year deal worth $87 million.13 The longer he stays in Orlando and keeps playing at a ‘Franchise’ level, the more money Howard can earn.
  • “4. Anyone who graduates from ‘All-Star’ to ‘Franchise Player’ during his four-year deal gets an automatic salary bump to ‘Franchise’ status. For instance, Russell Westbrook’s second-team All-NBA would make him eligible for an “All-Star” extension right now ($15 million per year for four years, but with a $12 million per year cap figure). Let’s say he makes second-team All-NBA again this season. Boom! He jumps to “Franchise” status; his cap figure bumps to $17 million, along with the corresponding $500k bumps for each year in Oklahoma City.14 In other words, he’s incentivized to keep kicking ass even after he gets paid.
  • “5. If you can’t maintain ‘All-Star’ or ‘Franchise’ status during your deal, you lose those privileges for the next deal.15
  • “6. Any All-Star who gets traded keeps his salary/cap figure disparity for his new team. Franchise players can veto any trade — if they accept the deal, they lose their accumulated $500k bumps and revert back to the $17 million cap figure.
  • “7. Nobody else can sign for more than $10 million per year unless he made an All-NBA team OR two All-Star teams within the past three years, giving him a 33 percent bump (and enabling him a deal or extension for $13.3 million per year, with the salary doubling as the cap number). Yes, we’re calling this the Zach Randolph Exception.

“Did you follow that? All we did was redistribute our salary output a little: we pulled money from the middle class (where most salary mistakes are made, anyway) and gave it to the upper class; we made it harder for franchises to kill themselves with long-term deals; we made it easier for franchises to keep signature players; and we rewarded stars for sticking with their original teams. That doesn’t make sense … why?”16

Issue No. 5: Nobody is putting a gun to the owners’ heads and telling them to overpay players.

This is the no. 1 argument from every agent and Players Association head, none of whom seem to care that they sound like the parent of an obese child saying, “It’s not my fault the boy is fat, I’m not forcing him to eat.” Let’s skip this one because the lack of accountability is disgusting.

What Dave would tell the owners: “We can’t win here. If you made a conscious commitment to collectively rein in spending, that would be collusion. When you’re left to your own devices, more times than not, you’ll screw up. My only idea: Maybe any NBA franchise that allows an ex-player, a coach, a former scout, or basically anyone without genuine business and/or legal training to negotiate with some of the smartest legal/business minds in the entire world should be fined $10 million by the commissioner’s office. Do you realize that agents laugh about this behind closed doors? They can’t believe they were allowed to negotiate deals with the likes of Mike Dunleavy, Joe Dumars, Kevin McHale, David Kahn, Isiah Thomas, Danny Ferry and the Paxson brothers over the years. It makes them giggle and giggle. Maybe we DO deserve to lose $340 million every year.”

Issue No. 6: The NBA owners need to figure out revenue sharing before they can figure out a labor deal.

The Players Association keeps pointing out the 22 of 30 NBA teams are losing money because the eight teams that make money aren’t sharing it. The owners’ response (pretty weak): It doesn’t matter how we lose $340 million, just that we’re losing $340 million. The players’ response to the response (just as weak): It’s not $340 million, that’s creative accounting! It’s really like $90 million! The owners’ response to the response to the response: No it’s not! My response to the response to the response to the response: Can someone turn on an oven? I want to stick my head inside it.

What Dave would tell the owners: “Let’s spend our energies on making sure the next season doesn’t get compromised or canceled. Once that’s settled, we’ll try to figure out revenue sharing … and fail miserably, because the odds of James Dolan, the black sheep Buss brothers and Jerry Reinsdorf forking over hard-earned profits to make sure basketball can keep limping along in Sacramento, Milwaukee, Philly, Detroit, New Orleans, Charlotte and Indiana are between 0.0 and 0.00000001 percent. We’re going to have a 30-owner Battle Royal over that issue; that’s the last thing we need right now. Besides, you can’t create a revenue sharing plan before you know what you’re getting with a new labor deal. Makes no sense.”

Issue No. 7: The NBA owners need to get their house in order before they can figure out a labor deal.

Here’s where the owners, Real Dave and Real Adam have totally blown it. They keep intimating that they’d sacrifice an entire season to “fix” the league, which is code for, “Our newer owners paid top dollar for their teams and haven’t seen a profit yet — scaring every other prospective new owner off, and in turn, scaring the shit out of us because nobody wants to sell a sports team for less than they paid for it — so we’d rather shut things down, break the players and create a more favorable system over considering any other ambitious alternative.”17

Really, fellas, you’re breaking out a nuclear bomb before trying a few air strikes and naval hits? Who does that? This isn’t anything like skyrocketing salaries nearly sinking the NHL in 2004, when teams suddenly had to charge white-collar ticket prices for blue-collar fan bases just to break even (and failed). Again, we’re coming off one of the most entertaining NBA seasons ever! We really need to bring out Dr. Oppenheimer to solve this one? The league would never admit this publicly, but its long-range concern isn’t about the now-infamous 340 number as much as unpredictable fan behavior the rest of this decade. Secondary ticket markets, the internet, HD televisions, DirecTV’s season pass, the Broadband Pass, short attention spans, DVRs, video games, iPads, a struggling economy … all of these forces have slowly pushed many basketball fans towards the same two conclusions:

“Why should I spend a huge chunk of money upfront on season tickets when I can just cherry-pick seven or eight games online?”

“Why should I pay for mediocre or crappy tickets, drive all the way to a game, pay for parking, pay for food and drink, then spend 150 minutes watching a regular-season NBA game when I could just stay home and watch that same game in HD while doing nine other things?”

People who love basketball will keep coming … but what about everyone else? That’s the fear. And that’s where the players have been totally disingenuous: They want to roll over the current setup, and they want to keep bitching about the owners’ rigging that $340 million number, but have you heard Billy Hunter, Derek Fisher or anyone else even acknowledge the (legitimate) uncertainty with fan behavior going forward? Why do you think rich dudes weren’t exactly lining up to purchase the Hornets, Kings, Pistons, Bucks or Sixers?

Of course, that doesn’t mean the owners should drop a nuclear bomb, either. But the league needs to decide — fundamentally, right now, this month — where it’s going these next 10 years before figuring out anything else. Mention contraction to any league official and they shudder. We can’t do that, we can’t lose those jobs. BUT YOU CAN CANCEL A SEASON??? What???? How does that make sense? You don’t think we’re going to lose jobs during a one-year lockout … not to mention fan interest and TV ratings? How dense can you be?

The NBA’s unwillingness to experiment with anything beyond its digital and international presence has been its Achilles’ heel. Not to step on Dave’s toes, but why haven’t we heard the following ideas or strategies even discussed?:

    • Pulling a page out of the Premier League’s book and getting sponsors for every team’s jerseys and every team’s half-court logo. Let’s say the NBA is leaving $80-100 million on the table every season. (This Forbes.com blog indicates that it would be less. I find that hard to believe, especially after the rating for the 2011 playoffs.) Given they’re bitching about $370 million like it’s $10 billion, isn’t $80 million to $100 million a significant chunk of change? Why aren’t they investigating this? Give me sponsored jerseys over a canceled season every day of the week and twice on Sunday.
    • Canceling the WNBA after this season. You can’t complain about losing money with the NBA after you just spent 15 years funding a women’s league that proved pretty emphatically by about Year 8 that it can’t make money. That’s like saying, “We need to sell our house and move into a cheaper one … but I’m keeping the yacht I never should have bought!”18
    • If anyone other than Donald Sterling owned the Clippers, the franchise would be worth twice as much money.19 He’s squatting on a billion-dollar property the same way he squats on his Malibu lots — he’s like a wealthy version of somebody on Hoarders. Hasn’t the man done enough harm to warrant a legal intervention? How many times has he fired an employee, then refused to pay him and forced that person to chase the money in court? How many times have the Clippers made damaging trades just to save money? How many times has Sterling been accused of insulting minorities or even his own players? Bud Selig sucked it up and went after Frank McCourt’s team, legal consequences be damned; why couldn’t Stern do the same with Sterling? He’s a dreadful owner, a disgrace to the league, and someone who knocks down the value of his franchise in half just by being alive. That’s not enough grounds?
    • The Charlotte Bobcats never should have happened. You know how I know this? Because Michael Jordan spent about 20 bucks in actual cash to buy them two years ago, that’s how. If the Bobcats break their stadium lease and move somewhere else, they’d have to pay the city of Charlotte $150 million. So it would make no sense to move them, unless … you know … Jordan moves them to Chicago (where he still lives), plays in the United Center (where he has a giant statue), ropes Oprah into being a minority owner, then quickly becomes a well-run version of the Clippers to the Bulls’ version of the Lakers.20 Not only would they cover the $150 million pretty quickly, but that would give the league six teams in the three biggest TV markets. And that’s a bad thing … why?21
    • You know what got lost in the Maloofs’ pathetic attempt to sell out Sacramento for Anaheim last spring? Billionaire Henry Samueli pulled out every stop to get them. The Mighty Ducks owners pulled off a $75 million city-funded bond deal to modernize Anaheim’s Honda Center (which he manages), pledged another $25 million of his own money for more repairs (including new locker rooms and a new practice center), and even pledged another $50 million to help the Maloofs pay off their relocation fee. Call me crazy, but that sounds like someone we need in the league. If Sacramento can’t build a new stadium (and it deserves one more year to figure it out), the league needs to force the Maloofs to sell the Kings to Samueli. Or, sell the Hornets to him. But Orange County could and should have an NBA team.22
    • The league can’t own the Hornets for another season, regardless of how this lockout turns out. Not only does it raise legitimate ethical issues, it makes the league look shaky as a whole: You can’t have one of your franchises basically sitting on Craigslist hoping for a buyer. If they can’t find an owner soon, the franchise needs to move to Vancouver (a market that deserves a second chance and has a building ready to go) or Anaheim … or it needs to be contracted.Look, we all love New Orleans. But some cities aren’t meant to have professional basketball in 2011. It happens. There’s a reason Kansas City’s state-of-the-art arena has been sitting empty for four years; there’s a reason the Nets are leaving New Jersey; and there’s a reason nobody wants to buy the Hornets.23 As Bill Parcells always said, “You are who you are.” And the NBA is a place that, in 2011, can’t generate enough revenue from small markets unless someone like Kevin Durant is playing there. Fan behavior has turned against the smaller-market franchises; it’s time to recognize that and adjust accordingly. The NBA’s destiny might be 26 teams, 28 teams, or maybe even 30 teams (but with four or five moving to different markets). But to say we can just keep going with the same 29 cities is bad business, and really, part of the reason we landed in this mess. Jerry Buss, James Dolan and Jerry Reinsdorf shouldn’t have to support flawed businesses in flawed markets. And if believing that makes me an NBA Republican, so be it.
    • I’m re-pitching my 2007 idea for the Entertaining As Hell Tournamentwith a couple of minor tweaks …Let’s say we cut down the regular season to 78 games, lock down the top seven seeds in each conference, then stage a week-long, single elimination, 16-team tournament between the nonplayoff teams for the 8-seeds. (No conferences, just no. 15 through no. 30 seeded in order.) The higher seeds would host the first two rounds (eight games in all) from Sunday through Wednesday; the last two rounds (The Final FourGotten) would rotate every year in New York or Los Angeles on Friday night and Sunday afternoon, becoming something of a Fun Sports Weekend along the lines of All-Star Weekend. Friday night’s winners would clinch playoff berths. Sunday’s winner gets two carrots: the chance to pick their playoff conference (you can go East or West), as well as the no. 10 pick in the upcoming draft (that’s a supplemental pick; they’d get their own first-rounder as well).I’ll flip this around: Why WOULDN’T we do this? Lottery teams couldn’t tank down the stretch or shut down starters for nefarious reasons; not with a possible playoff berth and an extra first-rounder at stake. Fans would remain invested no matter how poorly their team was playing down the stretch (knowing the tournament was coming up). Sponsors would pony up extra money to be involved. We’d get a fun basketball weekend in New York or Los Angeles out of it. The 14 playoff teams would get 10 days off as their bonus. And given that the Grizzlies just topped the Spurs in Round 1, nobody could say the 8-seed is meaningless, right?

      If you’re still not sold, allow me to fall back on a question that never fails: “Would you watch it?”

      Imagine if we did it last year and landed a Friday Final Four of the Grizzlies, Clippers, Pacers and (in a feel-good story) the upstart Cavaliers. Would you have watched that night? Of course you would have! You definitely would have watched the Entertaining As Hell Tournament presented by Klondike. Why won’t the NBA take a chance like this? I have no idea.

What Dave would tell the owners: “What he said.”

Bringing this full circle: Why does the NBA’s brain trust steadfastly refuse to brainstorm radical ideas on par with the ones I just mentioned, or consider contraction, or really, do anything beyond whining about the $340 million? Because that’s what this lockout is about: stubbornness in its rawest form. The league is too proud to change. The players are too proud to admit that they’re a huge part of the problem, and that we wouldn’t be in this mess if more of them took pride in the deals they signed. Both sides would rather point fingers instead of figuring out how to improve their product going forward.

As for us? We might lose a season because of their obstinance, which means we’ll miss out on Year 2 of “Yes We Did!”, Boston’s last run with Garnett, Pierce and Allen, Duncan’s last decent Spurs season, Kobe’s trying to stay on top (and doing anything to do so), Durant and Westbrook continuing their Stringer/Avon plot, another year of Blake dunks (counting his missed rookie season, that means we’d have gone 1-for-3 during this jumping-out-of-the-building apex), contract seasons from Howard/Paul/Williams, our last David Kahn season before he gets fired and becomes my BS Report co-host, our first full Carmelo/Amar’e season, a year of Jimmer, Tyreke, Salmons and DeMarcus impersonating a giant black hole in Sacramento, Dirk’s defending his Mavs title, a year of Love/Rubio outlets and Wall/Vesely alley-oops, the remote possibility of LeBrondown III … I mean, have you really thought about what’s at stake here?

Sadly, this mess won’t end like the movie Dave did, with Dave Kovic fixing the country, turning things over to the vice-president and walking off into the sunset.24 Team Stern will play chicken with Team Hunter, heeding the lessons of the 1999 Lockout, when we realized more NBA players live paycheck-to-paycheck than you’d ever imagine. It will stretch into November, then December, with the players panicking a little more each day. By the end of January, the players will cave: You’ll see a 50/50 BRI split, four-year deals (none longer), a slightly harder cap (thanks to the abolition of midlevel exceptions and Larry Bird rights), the end of the luxury tax and a 50-game season that blows just as much as the last lockout season did. Team Stern’s concession will be a five-year deal through 2016, right when the NBA’s television deal expires, preventing it from getting screwed if the league rakes in more TV money than anyone expects.

The owners will claim they “fixed” the system, but really, they just swung the numbers more in their favor and kept Stern’s “I never lost a franchise while I was in charge” streak alive, which rings just as hollow as Wilt’s “I never fouled out of a game!” streak. Will anything actually get fixed? Where is this league going?

Look, David Stern will always be my favorite commissioner ever, but his lack of resourcefulness during these past few years has been somewhat appalling. He’s starting to resemble Larry O’Brien, who famously blessed the inspired concept of All-Star Weekend by gruffly demanding that it couldn’t cost even a nickel … and by the way, that wasn’t a compliment. The league can’t fix its small-picture issues unless it’s addressing the big-picture ones, too. Can Stern even see that anymore? If he’s really banking on revenue sharing as his long-term solution, that scares me more than anything. I don’t trust wealthy businessmen to act magnanimously. Their track record as a whole is pretty poor. To say the least.

For the past 12 months, every Stern defender claimed that he would never allow a canceled season or a prolonged lockout to become the final chapter of his legacy. I believed that as well. That belief is wavering. Please, start thinking outside the box again, David. You used to live there.

NBA: Cavs build through draft, show why they might be better off without LeBron in the long run

24 Jun

With the Cavs making the right move at #1 last night (drafting Irving) and perhaps reaching at #4 (selecting Thompson), it’s hard to argue they came away the most improved team from draft night.  Whether they managed to trade back a few spots & get Thompson or just draft him a little high like they did, the Cavs still ended up with a 6′ 9″ poor man’s LaMarcus Aldridge and a poor man’s Chris Paul in Irving. 

And both guys could turn out to be much better than those projections!

A fierce rebounder in college, Thompson is going to have to hit the boards like Barkley to be a force on the NBA glass.

While you think about what the Cavs were able to do last night to kick off the 2011 summer, take a look back at an article I wrote last summer following “The Decision” (located below). 

If you’re a Cavs fan, feel free to revel in the fact that while Cleveland didn’t win a ring this year, neither did Miami!

A silver lining for Cavs after LeBron’s exit?

 Note: This article originally debuted on CinciSportsBlog.com on 7-16-2010; that site has been closed for promotional reasons by its site administrators.

As an eternal optimist, I always try to see what positives I can glean from just about any situation.  As a lifelong Cavs fan, my sunny point of view was put to the test last Thursday, when NBA superstar LeBron James announced – on my birthday no less! – his “decision” to head to the “Sunshine State.”

Why it’s good for the Cavs: Cleveland can finally move forward as a franchise rather than operate in frantic 3-year blocks at James’ mercy, and were compensated well to leave the James era behind.  Thanks to LeBron’s desire to be eligible for a 10.5% raise each year with the Heat, Miami was forced to do a sign-and-trade with Cleveland rather than ink LeBron as a free agent outright. 

As a result, the Cavs received Miami’s 2013 and 2015 1st round picks, and have the option to swap 1st round picks with Miami in 2012.  The Heat also gave Cleveland two 2nd round picks.  If the new “Big Three” in Miami (James, Dwayne Wade & Chris Bosh) don’t perform as expected, can’t coexist, or suffer significant injuries, those draft picks could end up much better than advertised. 

What’s more, Cleveland gets a massive $14.5 million trade exception out of the deal.  Trade exceptions are a hot commodity in the NBA these days, as they allow teams over the salary cap to pull off complicated trades even when the salaries don’t exactly match up.  The trade exception even allows separate, “non-simultaneous” trades that are up to one year apart to occur so that a team can stockpile talent or make a late push for the playoffs even when the salaries in each trade don’t closely match.  

Cleveland no longer has to worry about appeasing one player it was so heavily dependent upon that the concept of a “team” was increasingly disturbed.  While James may have angered Cavs fans by glaring at the coaches during that infamous Game 5 against the Celtics in last season’s playoffs, refusing to be aggressive offensively, and then telling everyone he had “spoiled” them with his play, it was his act off the court that sunk any chance of franchise progress.  If you want LeBron the basketball player, then you must also deal with LeBron the GM.

Wanna get away?? LeBron had an ultimate Snickers moment at the Game 6 Finals presser almost a year after "The Decision" made him look like an epic jerk to folks in the 216.

LeBron was rumored to have wanted the Cavs to sign free agent Larry Hughes & hire head coach Mike Brown in 2005.  The Cavs did both, and later traded for Mo Williams, Shaq, and Antawn Jamison – all moves rumored to have been approved or even asked for by “King James.”  No longer will LeBron hold the front office hostage, where it seemed GM Danny Ferry felt compelled to pull off at least one risky deal at the trade deadline practically every season.

LeBron was a local hero, but he quickly became a worldwide basketball icon bigger than the city of Cleveland.  Orlando seemingly had a similar experience with Shaq in the early ‘90s; some said the Magic franchise felt it had to have Shaq’s blessing before it went after a free agent, pulled off a trade, or refrained from firing a coach.  Shaq left the Magic after a 1995 Finals run, which ended about like LeBron’s Finals trip in ’07 – being swept 4-0.

Review: LEGO Indiana Jones 2 (PS3) gets 4 stars out of 10

22 Jun

Is it possible to make a bad LEGO game? 

After playing LEGO Indiana Jones 2, the answer is unfortunately “yes.”

Much like ice cream, snickerdoodles & any reality series with a Kardashian sister, LEGO games were long believed to be a guaranteed hit.

Starting with the early LEGO Star Wars games, it seemed LucasArts had stumbled onto a simple idea everyone loved: Playing a video game where you build stuff in a given fantasy world.  Practically anybody under 40 grew up with LEGOs and has fond memories of playing with them.  Those same happy feelings resonate when fans of the Star Wars, Indiana Jones, Batman or Harry Potter movies start to think about the first time they were swept up into that science fiction fantasy world in the movie theater.  Give the game developers credit for not overthinking this: People like the LEGO universe and they like the Star Wars universe, so it’s only natural to combine them! 

Game makers then applied this same strategy to the other movie franchises, all the while making the games with cute characters, animals and environments, with lots of tongue-in-cheek humor to boot.  These LEGO puzzle games were legitimately fun for all ages, & this mass appeal made them a retail success.

When thinking about the purpose of making a 2nd LEGO Indiana Jones game, I must quote the wisdom of former Philadelphia Eagles RB Ricky Watters: "For who? For what?"

Then, the developers started thinking too much:

How can we make the worlds bigger?

What can we do to make them more segmented and unique?

How can we make the strategy more challenging for older audiences?

How can we integrate more boating and flying challenges?

How can we put more side missions into the game?

The correct answer is a simplistic map selection screen and arrows guiding the user where to go next, as seen in the brilliant new LEGO Pirates of the Caribbean game, which will be reviewed in the future.

That correct answer apparently didn’t arrive until 2011, which is a problem when we’re reviewing a game released in 2009.

LEGO Indiana Jones 2: The Adventure Continues is a maddening dumpster fire that makes you ask “why?”  Why does the adventure continue, & why would anyone want to be a part of it?

The game is about twice as big as some prior LEGO games such as the prequel and original trilogy LEGO Star Wars games, and its repetitive nature makes it extremely boring after about 40% completion.  Worse, once you’ve completed about 4 of the 6 worlds (called “hubs”), the game takes on a “just make it stop” sort of feel.  At that point you’ve invested so much time in finishing the game that you just want to see it through!

The game makers at Traveller’s Tales and LucasArts departed from the simple map concept of past LEGO games (such as the 1st LEGO Indiana Jones release) and went to a horrendous “hub” system where your player must explore a three-dimensional RPG-esque map for each movie.  Worse, to accommodate the disastrous 4th installment, “Indiana Jones & The Kingdom of the Crystal Skull,” that film gets 3 hubs while the original 3 films get 1 hub each.  Yikes. 

Yes, that’s right.  6 hubs.  Lots of replay value, whether you want it or not.  The 6 different hubs would be fine if they had a ton of creativity, but it’s the same mundane tasks over & over: Pulling down a lever, moving a shield to reflect a laser beam, punching 10-20+ enemies after completing a level just so you can buy the last 1 & add him as a character. 

I happened to have the official game guide, & boy did I need it!  With no arrows or hint feature, half the time I was wondering what the game wanted me to do to unlock a race or finish a level & had to resort to using the guide, which thankfully had an abundance of screenshots.  This lack of direction is especially ridiculous considering that the LEGO Star Wars games had a “Mini-Kit” perk feature that pointed arrows at all the places you were supposed to look for hidden objects, where to travel, etc.  This arrow concept came out years ago & should never have been done away with!

Each hub is filled with driving, flying & boating races too, which make sense if you actually raced against another vehicle.  Instead, it’s a race against the clock, with the timekeeper being about the only thing you can see clearly on the screen.  Due to horrendous camera angles you can hardly manipulate, you’re often left to wonder what direction you’re supposed to go.  This is especially problematic on flying or boating missions, where many vehicles turn like an old, malfunctioning tank.  The course will zigzag in the air, and your dirigible won’t exactly turn on a dime (yes, you must literally fly a blimp as nimble as Delta Burke).  By the time the camera lets you see the next checkpoint, there’s no time to turn in case you aren’t lined up just right to pass through it, how frustrating!

Executing jumps in the game is maddening too – can your player make the jump?  Is he supposed to?  Will the quality of the play control allow you to balance him on a beam or avoid getting bumped off a tall crate by your CPU-controlled teammate?  These questions will drive you crazy throughout the game.

Also, the game has no online functionality whatsoever, which is absurd given that it has a level creator mode.  Sure, the creation mode is a poor man’s Little Big Planet level creator, but what’s the point of creating a level or character if you can’t share them online with anyone??

Worse, the game freezes!  Here at The Floor Seats we tested the game on both PS3 models (the original George Foreman grill type & the newer PS3 slim), and it froze at least 4-5 times, probably closer to 10 times total.  It would routinely freeze when you moved your character at all after reaching 1 million coins in the “Super Bonus Levels,” at which point you would have to manually turn your PS3 off and restart it.  Any progress you made since you last saved the game was lost!   

What does the game do well you ask?  The graphics aren’t bad by LEGO standards, and the official Indiana Jones soundtrack from composer John Williams is great as always.  Plus there are plenty of extra features to unlock and enjoy (such as getting 10x the value for the studs you acquire), though even this concept is poorly executed: You must “turn on” each “extra” such as the 10x feature every single time you turn the game on!  Even if you save the game with that extra turned on then quit the game, it will be turned off next time you start it back up.  This is also the case if you merely change from 1 hub to another – why would you go from 1 hub to the next and NOT want to continue getting 10x the value for the studs you find?? 

The game does have trophy support, though I suspect this is only b/c Sony required it have that.  Sony has stipulated that all PS3 games released 1/1/2009 or later must have trophy support; the first LEGO Indiana Jones and LEGO Star Wars games released before that lack trophy support & LucasArts has yet to provide an update to fix that.

All in all, there are certainly worse games out there, and it does start out with some cute, enjoyable levels, but with so many flaws this is clearly the worst LEGO game ever.

Verdict: 4 stars out of 10

Review: “The Perfect Storm” (2000) starring Clooney & Wahlberg gets 3 stars (out of 4)

11 Jun

“Who wants to go swordfishing?”

This phrase won’t be met with much enthusiasm from anyone who just finished watching The Perfect Storm, which spends much of the time dousing its actors in hurricane waves strong enough to send a man overboard at any second.

Thankfully director Wolfgang Petersen (Outbreak, Air Force One) had the sensibility to cut to what’s happening on the mainland at least once every 15-20 minutes, otherwise the constant beating of the 20′ whitecaps might get a little old after awhile.  With this nice balance, the storm special effects create such an immersive environment I would probably have freaked out if I spilled my drink during the movie.  The last thing I want to feel is being awash with water after seeing Marky Mark get blasted with massive waves for about 2 hours!

The Perfect Storm came to Blu-ray not too long ago, so I felt it deserved a review after joining my collection this weekend.  Some critics hated this film (only 47% on Rottom Tomatoes), but it definitely paid for lunch with a $325 MIL haul on only a $120 MIL budget.

Clooney & his men are quite the river boat gamblers in this adaptation of a real tragedy.

Many people like to think that this movie is an accurate representation of what really happened to the Andrea Gail, a swordfishing boat from Gloucester, Mass. that encountered a ”perfect storm” in late October / early November of 1991.  However, it only claims to be based on a 1997 non-fiction book called “The Perfect Storm” by Sebastian Junger. 

Worse, the book itself has been accused of having factual errors, one-sided details & a bias against the fishing industry in its telling of the 1991 event.  So, just remember that Warner Bros. needed to have a story to tell, & so it took some liberties with the known actual events.  Examples of this include making more of George Clooney’s relationship with The Abyss alum Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio’s character, & attempting to recreate what happened to the Andrea Gail after it lost radio contact (which is of course unknown).  I have no problem with this, as the film had a very dramatic ending filled with strong special effects.  In fact, if the final 15-20 minutes didn’t break the way they did, I probably would’ve only given this film 2.5 stars.  Thankfully it closed strong, so it gets a 3 star rating.

The casting in this movie was all over the place: Mastrantonio was perfect for her role, & Christopher McDonald plays an obnoxious weatherman like only he can.  McDonald was so good as villainous jerk golfer Shooter McGavin in Happy Gilmore that I almost couldn’t see him as anything beyond that, but his dark sense of humor definitely adds to the film.  The scene where he checks out his Doppler radar stormcenter is hilarious!  As McDonald excitedly explains to a disinterested female coworker how 3 massive hurricane storm systems are about to converge, he sounds like he’s about to spray his khakis!

Clooney was solid, as was Diane Lane.  Lane’s fisherman love interest in the film was supposed to be played by Drive Angry‘s Nic Cage, who had to back out due to other commitments.  As a result the role went to Wahlberg, who (surprise, surprise) played a tough Boston character to perfection.  While Cage was on a hot streak in the late 90s with The Rock, Con-Air & Face/Off, he could’ve easily sunk this film! (no pun intended) 

Can you even imagine Cage in Wahlberg’s role??  The waves are beating down on the boat, Clooney looks to him for confidence, & Cage just leans in & groans in his tough-guy voice: “We need to launch the green flares & wait for the cavalry” (quote from The Rock) LOL

The one guy I could never take seriously was John C. Reilly.  After seeing him in that vulgar yet funny ”Boats ‘N Hoes“ music video for Step Brothers, it was tough to see him in a dramatic role as a scruffy swordfisherman.  To be fair, Step Brothers came out much later (2008), & when The Perfect Storm finally came to Blu-ray the editors could hardly have taken him out of the film due to logistal & contractual constraints. 

James Horner adds an inspired soundtrack, & the Blu-ray comes with 3 documentaries & 3 audio commentary tracks.  If you like action/aquatic films, add this one to your collection!

Verdict: 3 stars (out of 4)

NBA: Mavs beat the odds to take Game 5, now up 3-2 on Heat

10 Jun

Most of the 2011 NBA Playoffs haven’t made much sense, so this is par for the course.

Dallas, with only 1 star & a bunch of aging veterans, has managed to steal 3 wins so far despite arguably being outplayed in every game in the series.  Dirk fades away from contact, shoots on 1 leg, & shot-puts the ball off his fist, sometimes from 25′ away & it still goes in.  Even if it doesn’t, he still usually gets the whistle in Mav land (last night Dirk shot 10 free throws while LeBron, a much more physical star, only shot 2).

J.J. Berea, who is only a 31% 3-pt. shooter this season & 1-10 from deep in the series heading into Game 5, nailed 4 of 5 treys last night.  Jason Kidd seems to be turning back the clock seemingly every week, improving his defensive quickness & shooting touch at age 38.

Did you catch the Brian Cardinal sighting last night? Good to see The Custodian getting active - when hungry he plays above his head, turning into a poor man's Luke Harangody.

The last time we had the “Battle of American Airlines” barns (talk about confusing – both teams have basically the same arena name), Dallas put together an epic choke job, blowing a lead in Game 3 & its 2-0 series lead to lose in 6 games.  This time, Miami has the chance to “wet the bed” as Kobe once put it.

And that is fantastic!

Who really wants the Heat to win outside of Miami??  Even there, I’m not sure too many folks are crazy about the Heat.  Even Charles Barkley said so, & he’s normally right.  He even picked the Mavs to come out of the West before the playoffs started!

The Heat put together this “super team” that basically banks on Wade, James & Bosh scoring 80+ pts. a night, & incredibly it’s working.  Thanks to poor execution by the Bulls & clutch Miami shooting, the Heat dismantled Chicago in 5 & could’ve swept the Mavs if Miami had its act together.  That epic Game 2 meltdown (blowing a 15-pt. lead at home with about 6 minutes left!) & then the Game 4 “Did LeBron quit again?” mess seemed to follow the Heat right into Game 5.  Miami spotted Dallas a 9-pt. 2nd half lead but turned it on late with a 9-0 run to take the lead, yet couldn’t get a quality shot at the end.  How in the world does Miami with the best slasher in the game (Wade), the best finisher at the basket (LeBron) & an All-Star frontcourt player (Bosh) not hammer it inside once it got in the bonus??  And that ignores all the free dunks they got from Haslem thanks to blown defensive rotations by Dallas!

With all the Heat stars’ whining, making of excuses, & questions about blown leads & quitting, this seems a lot like the questions LBJ was faced with in Cleveland doesn’t it??  While I actually don’t think LBJ quit in Game 4 vs. Dallas, I’m not surprised plenty of people think otherwise.

In the end, these Finals will likely end very much like last year, where the Lakers rode their home court advantage, star play & matchup factors to take the series in 7 after trailing 3-2.  I’m hope I’m wrong, so Dirk, Kidd, Terry, Peja, etc. & Cuban can finally get the title they’ve chased for so long.

Prediction: Heat in 7

In the interest of full disclosure, my original prediction was the Heat in 6, & thankfully that is now an impossibility.  Sorry I didn’t get a chance to get that on here in time, check back for more updates in the future!

Madden ’12 Hall of Fame edition features Marshall Faulk autograph

31 May

What the Faulk!?

That’s right, EA Sports is making a HOF edition of the new Madden game featuring the king of all-purpose yardage from The Greatest Show On Turf: Marshall Faulk.

This is the 2nd time Faulk has graced the Madden cover...does this mean Trung Canidate will be repping the game in a few years??

In a story straight out of “The Onion,” Marshall will be prominently displayed on the HOF game cover in all his bronze, foil embossed glory!  To sweeten the deal, EA is even throwing in an autographed trading card of Faulk.

If you’re old enough to drink, you probably remember growing up watching Faulk put the razzle dazzle on defenders left & right during the late 90s & turn of the century.  He even graced the cover of Madden ’03, so this 2nd bite at the apple just shows you how much love EA wants to give the soon-to-be-enshrined RB.

Ahh the good 'ole days...too bad for Faulk he only came away with 1 Super Bowl ring

Perhaps there will be an edition where you get a life-size bust of Marshall’s head in the coming years??

NBA 2011 Conference Finals Preview

23 May

This year’s conference finals feature a bunch of up-&-coming teams (MIA, CHI & OKC), along with a veteran DAL squad back in the championship conversation for the 1st time in 5 years.  This postseason ushered in a changing of the guard in the NBA, as the reliable playoff teams of the last 3-4 years never even made it out of the 2nd round (BOS, ORL, LAL).  Worse, the Spurs got a bad 1st round draw against the Grizz & were bounced early despite finishing the regular season with the league’s best record.

Here’s how The Floor Seats sees the conference finals playing out:

East:

(1) CHI v. (2) MIA: Bulls in 7
The Bulls have a much more complete team than the Heat, & Derrick Rose should be able to eat the MIA’s PGs for lunch.  Sure, the Heat may put Wade or LeBron on Rose, but then those stars must expend a great deal of energy on the defensive end just to chase the league MVP around.  The Bulls play great team defense and have the right matchups (Boozer to neutralize Bosh, Taj Gibson & Brewer to slow down LeBron & Wade) to win this series.

CHI also has key role players: Joakim Noah is a rebound machine & should thrive against Joel Anthony, while Ashton (Kyle Korver) & Luol Deng are great shooters.  MIA doesn’t play great defense, has a limited bench & routinely relies on Wade, LeBron & Bosh to score about 80% of the team’s points.  On a long enough timeline, this strategy is unsustainable due to off-shooting nights, fatigue & the probability of at least 1 significant injury.

If you're left open, you better shoot the lights out Ashton

Head coach Tom Thibodeau has the Bulls playing extremely hard with fantastic team defense, & in general has both a strategic & motivating advantage over the Heat’s Erik Spoelstra.  The only question is whether they can score enough points to withstand the Heat (no pun intended) - if CHI can get good open looks off of Rose’s penetration (which will draw double teams), they should be in business.   

As for MIA, they always seems to be banking on getting about 20-30+ fast-break points a night, which are easy scores that utilize Wade & LeBron’s acceleration & open-court speed while not requiring them to face much physical contact from defenders.  If CHI can drop its backcourt into coverage at all times to cut off MIA’s transition baskets, the Bulls will win.

West

(3) DAL v. (4) OKC: OKC in 7

This is largely a coin-flip series, so I’ll go with the younger, more athletic unit that’s already proven it can win big games.  OKC won a huge Game 7 against the Grizz & faced some adversity in the 1st round against a physical Nuggets team, while DAL has basically coasted so far. 

A big reason for the Mavs sweep of LAL was the Lakers’ gaping hole at PG.  Jason Kidd, JJ Berea & Jason Terry blew past D-Fish (Derek Fisher) & Stevie Blake, & this had a massive ripple effect of open 3-pointers the entire series.  Plus, DAL was on fire for most of that series, shooting the ball ridiculously well from deep in a couple of those games.  This will not happen against the elite quickness of OKC’s Russell Westbrook, & reserve Eric Maynor isn’t bad either. 

Air Durantula!

With that off the table, DAL must turn to its only real star, Dirk, who has been unconscious so far in these playoffs.  The law of averages says he’s not going to be able to keep this up, & he may just tucker out like Chris Paul did against the Lakers when asked to score so much.  The Thunder have 2 guys who can go for 35+ on any night in Durant & Westbrook, giving them 2 great scoring options.  While DAL seems to be on a mission this year, they did almost give back big leads against the Blazers & Lakers in the earlier rounds, & have a history dating back to the 2006 Finals of being a major choke team.  The Thunder have never been here before, are the underdog, & seem to play very well with house money. 

With neither team being great defensively, my odds are on the Thunder’s balance – they have more legit scoring options & more key players in the prime or younger part of their careers (Durant, Westbrook, Perkins, Ibaka, Hardin) than the Mavs.  DAL has so many older players (Kidd, Terry, Haywood, Peja & Brian Cardinal), & Dirk will be 33 on June 19th with 12 NBA seasons on his knees that I just don’t see DAL being able to weather the Thunder’s storm.  This is especially true when you look at the conference finals schedule – the Mavs must play a playoff game literally every other day!  Older players take longer to recover, & with not even 1 extra day for travel built into this series, the physicality of facing Ibaka & Perk inside should weigh on this DAL squad.  OKC has arrived.

Disturbia (2007) starring Shia LeBeouf & David Morse gets 2 stars

14 May

Disturbia isn’t a particularly bad film, but it just never quite takes off. 

The story starts out with some promising suspense, but then lulls you to sleep with one headfake after another.  Part of the problem is the producers & screen writers didn’t know the film’s identity – something that should have been decided before any sets were constructed.

The 1st 2 acts are slow movers intended to build plot, while the final 1/3 of the film is a pure slasher flick.  Given how boring it is to watch Shia LeBeouf horse around with his binoculars on house arrest, I imagine the studio execs would have just made this a horror movie if they had to do it over again.

Disturbia, like so many movies of this decade, suffers from the problems of having no really likeable characters & a villian who you only get to really hate for a short period of time. With a different screen writer, this movie could've been much better.

LeBeouf’s character seems almost exactly like the kid he played in the fantastic 1st Transformers film – a hyper, funny, nervous teen with raging hormones.  Unfortunately his character spends so much time being a brat & oogling girls that it’s hard to really cheer for this little voyeur.  During the 1st hour we get a steady diet of LeBeuof drooling over little-known actress Sarah Roemer from afar, as if she’s Megan Fox strutting by Bumblebee in her breakout film.

The best thing about Disturbia is the villainous performance of David Morse, who you may remember as George Washington in the 2006 HBO miniseries John Adams.  Morse is the right mix of reputable neighbor/potential creeper in Disturbia, & even proves he can be quite the action star when given a chance.  If this movie had a much faster pace or became a horror flick, Morse would probably even gain greater respect.  Unfortunately it has a rather sloppy ending that leaves you understanding the basics of the action’s aftermath, but yearning for some clarifying details you never get (I’d say more but I don’t want to ruin the plot).

This movie reminded me of a much better film with a bipolar plot, 2005′s The Island starring Ewan McGregor & Scarlett Johansson.  The Island lures you in with suspense in a controlled environment for the 1st half of the film, then all of sudden it’s a frenetic action blockbuster the rest of the way.  Oddly enough, in that film it works!  Disturbia‘s surprise morph from thriller to slasher doesn’t.

Verdict: 2 stars

Here’s a brief recap of how The Floor Seats’ 0-4 star rating system breaks down:

0-1 stars: This is an atrocious movie; an insult to film & a waste of your time

1-2 stars: Bad but not awful – avoid unless you’re dying to see it for a particular genre/subject matter/actor’s performance

2.5 stars: Only worth a rental if you really like that genre/subject matter/actor’s performance

3 stars: Definitely worth a rental unless you hate that type of genre/subject matter/actor’s performance

3.5 stars: Very good but not great – this is a film you should definitely rent & even consider buying if you like that genre/subject matter/actor’s performance

4 stars: Outstanding & unforgettable – almost certainly 1 of the top 100 greatest films you’ve ever seen.  Buy with confidence!

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