Will NHL Be Out Of The Medals At The 2018 Winter Games?
It is less than a year now till the Winter Olympic Games in South Korea. Who knew waiting could be this fun?
Read MoreIt is less than a year now till the Winter Olympic Games in South Korea. Who knew waiting could be this fun?
Read MoreThis time last year fans of the seven Canadian NHL teams were looking at a nuclear winter. Or maybe that should read a nuclear springtime.
None of the teams in the nation where hockey is religion was headed to the postseason. Think of the odds of that. Seven teams in three separate divisions and four time zones had found a way to wilt at the same time. The effects were costly for all the teams as they lost out on theprecious postseason revenue.
Read MoreIn MMA, we don't want puzzles. We want Jenga. Yet the true tension of that game comes in the slow and methodical attempts at pulling out a piece to stack. The tension is in the anticipation of collapse at any given moment. It does not matter how high the tower goes when the stakes are always higher.
Read MoreNot so long ago, Pat Perez would have been writing his professional death obit by criticizing Tiger Woods. The PGA Tour is littered with people who had a golf fatwa issued on them for offering opinions on the inscrutable Mr. Woods. Ask Stephen Ames. But as Jason Isbell sings, those were different days.
A journeyman pro, Perez is best knowfor his incendiary temper on the course. In golf’s pecking order, his elevator wouldn’t get anywhere near Woods’ penthouse suite. But with the former world No. 1 golfer now struggling to restart his career after scandal and injury, Perez had no qualms in offering a withering assessment of Woods’ chances for a revival.
”He’s got this new corporation that he started, so he’s got to keep his name relevant to keep the corporation going," Perez was quoted by golf.com. "He’s going to show up to a few events, he’s going to try to play. He’s gotta go out there and show the Monster Bag, he’s going to show the TaylorMade driver.
“He’s going to get on TV, he’s got the Nike clothes, he’s gotta keep that stuff relevant. But the bottom line is he knows he can’t beat anybody. He knows it.”
As critiques in golf go, Perez was pitiless. He is saying that Woods knows he can’t compete anymore and is in it only for the money. Now anyone who’s seen Woods’ palatial home on Jupiter Island in Florida can tell you, Tiger is not buying at the consignment store. He has assets upon assets.
What Perez was describing is an alpha man transitioning to being the invisible man in middle age. Watching 150-pounders like Justin Thomas smash the ball 330 or 340 yards off the tee is a sobering reminder that, even if he does get off the tee box in good shape, Woods is giving up 20-30 yards to the young guys. In short, they’re doing to him what he did to the Tour for an astounding decade-plus.
It’s called intimidation. The withering gaze that sent players heading back to their cars in fear. (http://www.cbssports.com/golf/news/tiger-woods-clocked-stephen-ames-in-the-best-match-play-moment-ever/)
Tiger’s only consolation as the Pat Perezes of the Tour savage him is that while he’s been replaced atop the leader board, none of the young hot shots can deliver the TV ratings or the media eyeballs that Woods produced. Not Jason Day. Not Dustin Johnson. Not Justin Spieth. Even the rumour of Tiger teeing it up is ratings Viagra for the networks.
Perez aside, the Tour still needs a healthy, competitive Woods to generate the advertiser enthusiasm it enjoyed in the 623 weeks that he topped the world rankings.
There was hope that his Nike colleague Rory McIroy might assume the Tiger mantle when he sprang into prominence as a 20-year-old, winning majors on the course and headlines for his life off the course. The powerful Irishman was given a stupendous contract by Nike (which is now out of everything but golf apparel) based on the hope he might be the one.
McIlroy has flashed moments of that potential since the contract. He was clearly the best player in the world in the back half of the 2016 PGA Tour, winning the FedEx Cup and its $10 million prize. But just as McIlroy seemed poised to finally get a full grasp on the brass ring, he injured himself at the start of 2017.
He has been unable to compete since then. (Although he did tee it up with president Donald Trump as he rehabbed an injured rib.) He was a no-go this past weekend in his own backyard at the Honda Championship in Palm Beach Gardens. He had to watch as Ricky Fowler, another local resident, won all the cheers as he produced an impressive win on the daunting PGA National course.
It was a missed opportunity for McIlroy and for the Tour. Rory says he’ll be ready in the next couple of weeks to make a run at winning the Masters in early April. But he’s missed valuable weeks while rivals such as Johnson, Spieth, Thomas and Fowler picked up momentum.
Still, nothing would stir the emotions of the sports world more than Woods taking his “Monster Bag… and TaylorMade driver” to the course where he cemented his reputation for greatness with four green jackets. If the Gods were really watching they might ask for a Woods/ Perez pairing at Augusta. Best of three falls.
Bruce Dowbiggin @dowbboy.is the host of the podcast The Full Count with Bruce Dowbiggin on anticanetwork.com. He’s also a regular contributor three-times-a-week to Sirius XM Canada Talks Ch. 167. A two-time winner of the Gemini Award as Canada's top television sports broadcaster, he is also the best-selling author of seven books. His website is Not The Public Broadcaster (http://www.notthepublicbroadcaster.com)
The venerable New York Yankees manager Casey Stengel, who won eight World Series, was once asked the secret to managing. The Ol’ Perfessor replied, “The secret to managing is keeping the five players who hate your guts away from the five players who haven’t made up their mind yet.”
Read MoreThroughout his Hall of Fame-worthy career, Terrell Owens' (TO to his friends) name was always in the news, on the lips of fans and pundits alike. But to take a stance that Owens Hall of Fame snub was somehow a terrible injustice is to ignore that sports (as in life), you do not get rewarded for burnt earth policies.
Read MoreLong before there was the endless election in the United States there was extra-innings baseball. A never-ending extension of Major League Baseball games, extra innings can last as long as a bad date or end as quickly as a Vegas wedding. In a game that has no clock to run out, this can be a recipe for a long day’s journey into night.
Read MoreCalder? I didn’t even know her number!
Okay, rimshot Monday. And a chance to revisit our season-long chase for the Calder Trophy, the award for the rookie of the year in the NHL. Or Auston City Limits as we call the pursuit of the prize by Toronto’s Auston Matthews.
Read MoreWhen the NFL and AFL merged in in the late 1960s there was debate about what to call the new championship game between the leagues. Ultimate Bowl and Premier Bowl were among the names suggested. Eventually Kansas City owner Lamar Hunt, inspired by the child’s toy Super Ball, suggested calling it the Super Bowl. By year four of the game, the name had stuck.
Read MoreMaybe Canadians are a little touchy lately, what with all the talk about re-negotiating NAFTA and sealing borders. You can see why some might have been upset when they turned on NBC Golfchannel Saturday to see Abbottsford B.C.’s Adam Hadwin make a run at the magical 59 score in his third round at the Tour stop in Palm Springs.
Read MoreIt hurts to be a fan. But it doesn't have to. Three fans, three different teams, three different ways you can make fandom a burden.
Read MoreWith the Super Bowl just a few weeks away, the NFL has already entered the free-agent phase of its business calendar. But this free agency is not some superstar player looking for a big pay day with another team. This free agency is the movement of NFL franchises— even longstanding franchises dating back half a century— to a market that is seemingly greener.
Read MoreFor a tournament that didn’t have an under-23 team, I suppose the World Junior Hockey Championships were alright. I mean, those close games and dramatic finishes are nice if you like that sort of thing, but without Team Europe as your drawing card, it’s hard to make these 18/ 19-year-olds look interesting.
Read MoreRousey's loss to Amanda Nunes was a tragedy. Rousey's dominance was unlike anything the sport had seen. She became an icon - and icons inevitably crumble.
Read MoreThe Chicago Cubs. The Cleveland Cavaliers. Leicester City. We called them all here at IDLM in 2016. Okay, it was after they’d won, but still… so let’s set some sports resolutions for 2017.
Read MoreThe year 2016 was not a great year for aging pop musicians, Democrats or the newspaper business. It was, however, a year for the shaggy dog, the longshot and the raggedy-pants rabble who walk the sporting earth.
Read MoreIt’s time once again for Auston City Limits, our horse-race analysis of the 2016-17 contest for the NHL’s Calder Trophy, symbolic of the rookie of the year. We’re calling it Auston, of course, in honour of the Toronto Maple Leafs wunderkind Auston Matthews, the kid from the desert who sharpened his skills in Switzerland.
Read MoreThere is a joke that goes a little like this: How many Torontonians does it take to screw in a light bulb? One. They just hold the bulb while the world turns around them. Yes, Toronto has a God thing. They act like they were the first to recognize opposable thumbs. What’s theirs is theirs. What's yours is theirs too. But even for those who chafe beneath the unholy yoke of the TIFF city, you had to like what you saw on Saturday night in the MLS Final at BMO Field.
Read MoreTiger Woods is back. And it’s safe to watch the PGA Tour again. At his own tournament this weekend in the Bahamas, the Hero Challenge, Woods showed enough traces of the greatest golfer ever with a sizzling 65 in Round Two and a respectable fifteenth-place finish overall. This after missing almost two full Tour seasons.
Read MoreConor McGregor has been stripped of the Featherweight title, leaving a paper trail of paper titles. With McGregor having left the Featherweights in disarray, its former king, Jose Aldo, has decided to stay in the division. He shouldn't. He should abandon it. McGregor did and on one seemed to care enough to until now.
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