Blog Home » Archives for May 2012


Wrong Calls Happen But Bad Calls Shouldn’t

By DERON SNYDER

By no means is this an attempt to pick on Tim Welke. He suffered enough in 1998, when a Sports Illustrated cover featured his photo and an incendiary headline: “Kill the Umps! Missed calls and skewed strike zones are marring the postseason.”

I bring up Welke as Exhibit A in my case against the “human element,” though any number of his peers could be used to make the same point. But Welke is timely because he made one of the worst calls ever this month, and his younger brother Bill made a costly bad call Monday.

Both rulings would’ve been overturned instantly after just one replay if baseball allowed such reviews. But expanding the use of technology makes too much sense for commissioner Bud Selig & Co. to take seriously.

In Boston’s 7-4 victory Monday against Detroit, Bill Welke incorrectly ruled that Tigers catcher Gerald Laird didn’t catch a third strike cleanly before it hit the ground, extending the inning long enough for the Red Sox to score three runs.

At least you can understand how Bill Welke was fooled; Laird’s glove hit the dirt and stirred some dust. But it’s beyond comprehension how Tim Welke blew a call May 2 in Colorado’s 8-5 victory against the Dodgers. Jerry Hairston grounded to third and inexplicably was called out on the throw. Rockies first baseman Todd Helton was three feet from the bag.

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Serena Williams Is Gone In A Flash

By DERON SNYDER

Of all the possible scenarios for Serena Williams in her return to the French Open after a two-year absence, no one saw this one coming.

Certainly winning wasn’t guaranteed, considering her career-long struggle to prevail on clay courts. She’s not getting any younger, either, approaching her 31st birthday in September. And health could be an issue at any moment, like May 19, when she cited a back injury and withdrew from the Italian Open semifinals.

But surely Williams, ranked No. 5 in the world, would make it past her opening match against France’s Virginie Razzano, ranked No. 111 in the world. After all, en route to winning 13 Grand Slam titles and competing in dozens more, Williams had never lost in the first round of a Grand Slam tournament.

Until Tuesday, when she blew a big lead and was defeated 4-6, 7-6 (5), 6-3.

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No. 1 Pick No Guarantee To NBA’s Promised Land

David Robinson and Tim Duncan

By DERON SNYDER

One of my most unforgettable “Where were you?” sports memories doesn’t involve an actual game or players, although seven teams took part. It was the NBA’s first draft lottery, held Mother’s Day 1985, the day after my Howard University graduation ceremony.

I was a nervous wreck that Sunday in my dorm room at Carver Hall, anxiously watching the lottery broadcast on CBS. When commissioner David Stern announced that the second pick belonged to the Indiana Pacers, I leapt for joy and ran hollering into the hallway: Patrick Ewing was headed to my beloved New York Knicks.

The Knicks never brought me to the next level of celebration (although they came close as I drove Vanessa to the hospital for our second child’s birth and heard Larry Johnson’s four-point play on the radio). But in that regard I’m like most NBA fans, or at least fans of teams that nab the top pick.

Unfortunately, the result of Wednesday’s lottery proceedings is likely to be as good as it gets for the winner.

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Serena Williams Is Back With A Vengeance

By DERON SNYDER

She was away from the game for nearly a year, sidelined by a foot injury and then scaring us to death when a blood clot was discovered in one of her lungs. But slowly and steadily, Serena Williams has climbed back up. As the French Open begins Sunday, she’s ranked No. 5 in the world and a favorite to win the tournament.

Williams has won 13 Grand Slam singles titles in her storied career but has raised the French Open trophy on the red clay at Roland Garros Stadium just once, in 2002. Clay clearly has been Williams’ least-preferred surface, with only four of her 41 career titles won on such courts. But it’s a different story this year, since no one has a better record on clay — 17-0 — and no one has a better record overall (27-2).

“I absolutely love clay,” Williams said earlier this month after winning in Madrid. “I played on hard court until I was 11, then, until I turned 16, I only played on clay courts. It’s really a myth about me not liking clay.”

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Nationals Keep Coming Close, But…

By DERON SNYDER

Once again, it’s time to check off some items on my “TIDU List” — Things I Don’t Understand:

• Why the Nationals haven’t swept a series.

It’s hard to complain when the team is 26-18 and has spent most of the season in first place. But the Nats haven’t been finishers. In seven series in which they were a combined 16-0 entering the finale, they’re 0-7 in the finale. Philly and Cincinnati twice have staved off sweeps.

The Nats are doing fine, but they’re killing broom sales in D.C.

• How mandatory knee and thigh pads are bad.

NFL players voiced their disapproval when the league increased padding as of 2013. Players said it would slow them down and really wouldn’t prevent injuries. Several said they won’t wear the extra pads, while the union said working conditions must be collectively bargained.

That’s OK. I imagine NFL players in 1943 objected to mandatory helmets, too.

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NFL Players Oppose Move to Mandatory Pads

By DERON SNYDER

Considering the speed and violence of NFL football and the size and strength of players, it’s amazing that many participants eschew certain pads. You might think that players would protect their bodies through every available means. But that’s not the case, particularly at the so-called skill positions like halfback, wide receiver and defensive back.

Look at the San Francisco 49ers’ Frank Gore, among the league’s top runners. His knees are totally exposed during games, not even covered by his pants. If he wears any thigh pads at all, they must be paper-thin. The NFL doesn’t like that and did something about it Tuesday, when team owners approved a rule change that makes knee and thigh pads mandatory, beginning in the 2013 season.

Players across the country immediately spoke out in protest.

“Personally, I won’t be wearing them,” Oakland Raiders cornerback Ron Bartell told the Contra Costa Times. “So I’d better put some fine money away. It takes away from the speed of the game. Hip pads, knee pads, thigh pads. They’re not going to stop you from tearing an ACL. It may stop a couple of soft-tissue injuries, but a knee pad isn’t going to stop a guy from blowing out a knee.”

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Dmitri Young Sells Baseball Cards For Big Money And Good Cause

By DERON SNYDER

We interrupt the stream of reports about athletes falling on hard times — and/or forced to sell valuables such as championship rings — to share the story of Dmitri Young. A two-time All-Star who played 13 seasonsin Major League Baseball, Young recently turned his hobby into seed money for a good cause.

In terms of profit-loss statements, Young’s interest in baseball cards didn’t pay off. He estimates that he spent roughly $5 million in building a collection during his playing career. But he didn’t do it for investment purposes as much as to relieve stress and amuse himself. So the fact that he just auctioned his collection for $2.5 million shouldn’t be the focus here.

His plans for the money are more worthwhile to discuss: A portion will fund the new Dmitri D. Young Foundation, which will help underprivileged kids in Ventura County, Calif., excel in life by learning to make good decisions. Among the areas he’ll emphasize is healthy living, particularly important since he has Type 2 diabetes.

“You come to a time in your life when it’s time to do other things,” Young told CBSSports.com when asked why he was selling. “When you have something as massive as that and that was 12 years in the making, it wasn’t like I inherited it. I started it from scratch. The collection was with me through the good times and the bad times, and now I’ve started a foundation …

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Out West, Storm Front Brings Lots of Thunder

By DERON SNYDER

Champions don’t pass the torch when an up-and-comer nips at their heels, eager for a taste at the summit. Contenders must snatch the crown and pry it away from seasoned winners.

For the Oklahoma City Thunder, once isn’t enough. The NBA’s most exciting young team just vanquished the mighty Los Angeles Lakers, but it’s only halfway through the Western Conference gauntlet of trophy-wielding legends.

It almost seems unfair that the Lakers, one of the league’s most decorated teams of all time, were merely a precursor to the San Antonio Spurs, one of the league’s most decorated teams of recent vintage. If Oklahoma City reaches the NBA finals, it will set a record for former champs in its wake.

The Lakers and Spurs have won nine of the past 13 NBA titles combined. And their respective longtime mainstays, 33-year-old Kobe Bryant and 36-year-old Tim Duncan, are very much alive and kicking.

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Jarvis Jenkins Like A New Gift For Redskins

By DERON SNYDER

The Washington Redskins didn’t have a second-round selection in this year’s draft, having packaged it in the bounty for the No. 2 overall pick. But you could argue that Washington had a second-round draft pick in the bag – defensive end Jarvis Jenkins.

His return to good health could dampen the sticker shock in landing Robert Griffin III.

Jenkins participated Monday in his first full-speed, 11-on-11, drills since tearing the ACL in his right knee last preseason. A black brace was the only reminder of the fateful play Aug. 25 against Baltimore, when he tried to change directions while pursuing halfback Ray Rice and heard a loud pop.

“I’m just getting used to this brace, keeping it on me,” Jenkins said after the team workout at Redskins Park. “It’s not heavy on me; it’s just a matter of knowing it’s there. It keeps sliding up.”

Jenkins was moving up in everyone’s eyes before his injury, impressing coaches and teammates with his power and speed. There was talk that he might have been the team’s best defensive lineman in camp, and he figured to play a prominent role in his first year out of Clemson. At 6-feet-4 and 309 pounds, he had everything the Redskins wanted along their defensive front.

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Nationals’ Phenoms Put Brakes On Skid

By DERON SNYDER

Their early-season success was sputtering out as the Washington Nationals entered Sunday’s series finale against Baltimore. The Orioles were looking for a sweep in the Battle of the Beltways, which would continue Washington’s downward trajectory after racing to a 14-4 record April 25.

Losers of three in a row and five of their past seven, the Nats were running on fumes, a measly 9-13 since the high-water mark. They needed a win badly, not just for pride along the Washington-Baltimore corridor, but also to put a good taste in their mouths entering a brutal stretch of 18 division games and another 13 against the Red Sox, Yankees and Blue Jays.

But that’s the purpose of having phenoms on your side, guys who can make things happen when the team is dying for a pick-me-up.

Thankfully for Washington, it has two of the game’s best in Stephen Strasburg and Bryce Harper, both of whom played huge roles in a soothing 9-3 victory at Nationals Park.

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