Articles in
April 2012

Petrino fails as a human being

There is a little stone tablet that was created by the Man upstairs called the Ten Commandments that explicitly states in the seventh commandment, “Thou shalt not commit adultery.” That means a lot. It matters to people of faith and there are a lot of them in this country. In that regard, Bobby Petrino not only broke a sacred trust with his wife and children, which is a terrible travesty, but also with the Lord. You may think I sound evangelical about it, and maybe I am, but I believe once you make a commitment to your wife, you’re told by God not to betray that commitment, not under any circumstances. I don’t know the circumstances of Bobby Petrino’s marriage, it hasn’t been detailed anywhere, but there is no excuse for infidelity. He cheated and deceived people in so many ways, but mainly his wife and children, and the sacred trust that is explicitly laid out in the Bible.
His past was questionable enough. The “Jetgate” scandal in which a couple of Auburn trustees flew up to the University of Louisville to try to get him to become the head coach at Auburn while Tommy Tuberville was coaching in 2003. He betrayed the trust of the school where he was coaching, and he betrayed Tuberville, who had employed him as his offensive coordinator before Petrino landed the Louisville head job.

Then it was the Atlanta Falcons, whom he left 13 games into the 2007 season, to become the head coach at Arkansas. I’m not saying the NFL cannot be a total pain in the neck because some of the players are uncontrollable, but to do that to your owner with whom you told earlier in the day that you were staying, is a total betrayal of trust. He has a track record of being amazingly untrustworthy. But this topped it off and was the most egregious error of his unethical track record.

I know Mike Dubose and Rick Pitino had affairs, long term and one night stands, and kept their jobs. They shouldn’t have. They should have been fired immediately afterwards. I’m glad there is someone who was willing to stand up for integrity for once. Society has become too permissive of people’s bad behavior, particularly athletes and coaches. All because they win. Milwaukee Brewers outfielder Ryan Braun somehow got out of his performance enhancing drug charge by Major League baseball and a 50 game suspension this season because two of the arbitrators in the case let him off. His is a recent example that comes to mind. O.J. Simpson is the most abhorrent case of injustice in modern times. “The glove doesn’t fit you must acquit” was an acting job by an unethical lawyer and the guy walked. Fortunately, he’s back in jail where he belongs. I don’t believe Orenthal has a very good shot at making it to Heaven.

I know there are other things Petrino did. He lied about the girl being on the motorcycle with him, hired her in the football office over 150+ other applicants and paid her $20,000 as a “gift.” But the affair to me is the most telling of the guy’s character and his integrity. It should have been punished and punished severely. And fortunately this time it was. He got exactly what he deserved. It’s nice and optimistic that someone or a group of people stood up for the right thing to do. I just feel terrible for his wife and kids who have had to suffer through this public humiliation, and, worse, have lost total trust in their husband and father. In my opinion, the guy does not deserve to be coaching for quite a while, a year, maybe two. I don’t even know if the NFL will take him. Falcons’ owner Arthur Blank has to have spread the word that this guy cannot be trusted and is not an honorable guy. With the latest New Orleans Saints incident against Sean Payton, his coaches and players, may think this guy is not a guy you want on your sideline. He may be hired as an assistant in the future in the NFL, I’m sure he has connections and friends in the league, or he may get a job at a smaller school in college. But he needs to be out of football for at least a year. Let him pay the price for his repeated cheating and lying.

Who will Arkansas hire? Garrick McGee, though I would hate it for UAB, would be a logical choice. He was an excellent offensive coordinator for the Razorbacks for the last two years and knows quarterback Tyler Wilson, running back Knile Davis and wide receiver Cobi Hamilton, very well. They trust him. He’s an excellent offensive football coach and there are coaches in place whom he has worked with for four years. They have the players to have a very good year, though I don’t think they can beat S. But what about McGee’s loyalty to Bobby Petrino? He really showed his admiration for Petrino in his press conference upon being hired as UAB’s head coach. Is he trustworthy in the long run?  McGee would probably be a good choice. McGee has a DUI in his past, in 2006 when he was 33 and coaching at Northwestern as an assistant, but he seems to have gotten through that and is a solid guy right now. McGee could be a good choice, but he has no head coaching experience. I think he’ll be a very good head coach. He may need the experience at UAB before he takes on a job the magnitude of Arkansas. Personally, I hope he stays on the Southside. I think he has great potential and would be terrific for the Blazers’ program. Gus Malzahn is another name that’s come up. Possible. No head coaching experience there either though, and his last year at Auburn was not the successful offensively. Somewhat of a disaster really. Butch Davis is another guy, but he has a very questionable reputation from his stint at North Carolina recently. It looked like he was running a rogue program there Jimmy Johnson is a name that’s interesting. I think he would be a pretty good choice, but his character to me is a little questionable, too. Jon Gruden of course come up. When has Jon Gruden not been mentioned in a coaching search? He’s a good commentator on Monday Night football and he had good success in the NFL, but he did get fired by Tampa Bay, so he’s not perfect. Some people in Arkansas will want a slam dunk hire and a couple of these guys could fit that description. But they need a guy who will win and WILL be an honorable guy. As a matter of fact, we need many more honorable guys in the athletic world.  There are guys out there like Tim Tebow and others who are, like newly crowned Masters champion Bubba Watson, who says his religious faith and his family are his first priorities. But many, including coaches, are not honorable. That needs to change. Arkansas need to hire a guy who has character and, of course, can win. Can’t ever forget the winning part can we? It seems to trump everything else for sports fans. Personally, I think you can do both. There’s no weakness in being honest. It’s a strength. You can be a strong personality when you have to be and you can also have character. It’s been done by a lot of people and it’s just not that hard.

It took AD Jeff Long some time to make the decision. I’m wondering if he was brokering a deal with another coach. It’ll be interesting to see if Long goes ahead and pulls the trigger, or waits until after spring ball and finds a coach.

Meanwhile, who knows what will happen to Petrino. I don’t know if his wife will have him back. She shouldn’t, though it’s hard for me to say how she feels about her husband. She may love him and want to stay married to him and work things out. He’s got a lot of work ahead of him to repair his relationship with his wife and kids. Then he can start thinking about coaching again. He needs to get out of his selfish fishbowl and step up and be a man and take care of his family. I’m not sure he’s capable.

Bubba takes home the green jacket

Wow, that was something else, again. The Masters always delivers and this one was another one for the ages. Thought Bubba, with his immense distance and his ultra creative shot making, had a shot if his short game was on. It was, particularly when he birdied four holes in a row starting with no.13 and topping it off with an eight footer on 16. Louis, Lou-ah, gave it a great go as well. Played solid golf throughout the tourney and his four iron from 253 yards that went down for double eagle was as good as I’ve ever seen. That was one exciting shot. Louie was all class in defeat. Seems like a great guy and he was happy for Bubba.
Bubba’s gap wedge from 155 yards was the clincher after Louis left it short of the green on his second shot. Bubba just shaped that shot with a 40 yard draw from the woods. He said he loves to draw it. Seemed impossible to execute. When Louis chipped up about 15 feet past the cup and just barely missed his par putt on 10, it was all academic. Bubba had a six inch par putt and he put his hand up to the crowd to calm down them down. He was taking nothing for granted. When he sank the putt  his emotion was fantastic. Bubba, who played two years at Faulkner State in Bay Minette, Al. before transferring and starring at Georgia, broke down. He was thinking about his dad, Gerry, a former Green Beret, who passed away two years ago in October, a couple of months after Bubba finished second in a playoff in the PGA, losing to Martin Kaymer. He was in the late stages of cancer at the time and Bubba really wanted to win the PGA for him before he lost him. This helped ease that pain. It was also for his wife, Angie, who has struggled with some health issues, and his newly adopted baby boy, Caleb. Bubba, after round three, said he couldn’t wait to get home to “his boy,” and spend more time with him.

It was a dream come true for this patriotic country boy from Bagdad, Florida and in another classic Masters. Bubba won his fourth tournament of his career. He won the Travelers Championship in 2010, the Farmers in 2011, the Zurich Classic in 2011 and now the 76th Masters. He has played in four playoffs now and is 3-1 in those sudden deaths with his only loss coming to Kaymer in the PGA. The 33-year old said he never got this far in his dreams. Well now, he’s reached the ultimate in any golfers dreams. He is the Masters champion and a fine representative of the Green Jacket. He looks like a guy who could do this in majors three or four more times. Augusta suits his game with his ability to pound it (longest driver on tour at 313 average), and work the ball right or left. If his short game is on, I expect Bubba to be donning a few more Green Jackets and maybe securing a couple of U.S. Opens or a PGA. Just proud of him. Proud for him.

Seven who can win the 76th Masters

Always phenomenal golf played this weekend at the penultimate tournament in golf. Here are six guys whom I like to win it with the winner at the bottom.

1. Tiger Woods:

He’s not all the way back to 2000 form, but he’s about there. He’s leading the tour in scoring average at 68.27. He’s driving the ball very well and his putter looks like it’s catching on again. The guy on his bag, Joe LaCava, caddied for Fred Couples when he won the ’92 Masters, and has been on Dustin Johnson’s bag the last four years. That’s a good combination there. Like the formula here with one of the top three golfers of all time (along with Jack and Ben Hogan), and a fired up one at that along with an experienced, major winning caddie on his bag. Woods looks primed to win his fifth green jacket  ( won in 1997, 2001, 2002 and 2005), and his 15th major in his pursuit of Jack’s record of 18. Like him a lot on a course he loves and plays extremely well on. If he’s in the final group on Sunday, he’ll probably get it done.

2.Hunter Mahan:

Two victories already on tour at the WGC Match Play in late February, where he beat Rory McIlroy 2 and 1, and the Shell Houston Open last week. Phil won at the Bellsouth Classic in Atlanta the week before he won the Masters in 2006, so it can be done. And if you’re hot and playing the way Mahan is, it definitely can be done. He looks like a guy who can stand up to Tiger on the final day if he’s paired with him. Seems to be pretty mentally tough. Great player who’s got it all: Ball striking, iron play and short game. Like Hunter’s chances.

3. Phil Mickelson:

A three-time winner at Augusta (2004, 2006 and 2010), Phil has already won at the AT&T this year at Pebble Beach and is playing very good golf with a top five at the Shell Houston last week. Still a terrific player at 41. If Phil can drive it down the middle–he’s certainly long enough–and his putter is clicking, he could be donning his fourth green jacket in the Butler Cabin come Sunday afternoon.

4. Luke Donald:

Playing really well right now after winning the Transitions Championship three weeks ago. Seems to have attained that clutch gene it takes to win a major at 34 years old. Not real long, but an excellent putter; some say the best on the tour. Saves a lot of strokes on the green. You can win a lot of tournaments if you put like Donald. This could be Luuuke’s year. Good shot.

5. Rory McIlroy:

Got to include Rory. He was number one in the world after winning the Honda Classic March 4, but Donald overtook him a couple of weeks later at the Transitions. No doubt about the arsenal here. Could be a multiple major winner on tour. But I’m not coronating him yet. Still got a lot of proving to do. He needs to win three or four majors to be considered elite. He’s young at 22, so the future is very  bright, but can he close at Augusta? That’s a major question. Not sure he’s at that point yet. There’s no guarantee he ever will be. Won the U.S. last year so he knows how to win. But he won by a large margin and there wasn’t a ton of pressure on him on Sunday. If he’s in it come the back nine Sunday there will be. Didn’t handle it well last year when he had the lead heading into the back nine and shot 77. Great kid though. Quite a contrast from Tiger. But does he have the fortitude and toughness to get it done on Sundays and win multiple majors, starting right here? This weekend could give us an indication of where he’s at if he’s in the hunt Sunday. He couldn’t get it done last year, but maybe he can this time. He’s still got a lot of time left to win majors; he’s very young. It would be pretty exciting if he could take this and become the new superstar on the tour.

6. K.J. Choi:

He’s been so close at the Masters. He tied for fourth in 2010 and tied for eighth in 2011. Has been playing Augusta very well. He’s got the game at 41-years old. He’s long, a solid iron player and a very good putter. Won the Players last year, so he’s basically got a major under his belt. Got that Asian calm, cool toughness that is so important in this tournament. He’s another guy who could hold up against Tiger in the final group on Sunday. Give K.J. a chance.

7. Bubba Watson:

Longest hitter on the tour averaging 316.9 yards. Also leads the tour in greens in regulation percentage at 73.61%. Great player who is primed. If his short game is on, he’s got a good shot. Another tough-minded guy who can get it done.

 

The winner: Tiger Woods:

Just like where he’s at right now. He loves this course and the Hank Haney book, The Big Miss, gives him even more motivation to excel. He’s on a mission right now. Not absolutely sure he can sustain it for the long haul, but right now he’s getting back to where he wants to be. He’s the ultimate closer still. Like him here.

Kentucky 67, Kansas 59

Not too much to say. Kentucky was the best team all year though I thought teams like Michigan State, Ohio State or Syracuse could have given them a run in the tournament, but they lost out. Syracuse with Fab Melo was pretty outstanding, but lost out to Ohio State without him. The Buckeyes looked great against the Cuse, but fell apart against Kansas. And Michigan State went cold against Louisville; pretty disappointing tournament for them.
But Kansas played hard all year long and ended up with a very good season. They played hard and played well in the second half last night turning up the defense and penetrating Ky’s defense for scores. But Kentucky did what they had to do down the stretch to get it done. Doron Lamb hit some big shots as did Marquis Teague. Those guys, to me, looked like they were playing for NBA contracts. Davis was his usual dominating self. 15 boards and six blocks, something like that. He’s from another stratosphere. Superior player. Should be an NBA All-Star multiple times and lead a team to championships if he has some help which he should in the NBA. Michael Kidd-Gilchrist is a warrior. Terrence Jones is, too, at least he was last night. I expect Davis to be the first pick in the draft, and Davis and Kidd-Gilchrist to be lottery picks. Think Lamb will go first round. Miller could be in the first round, though he didn’t have a real good game last night. Tegue, to me, could use another year to perfect his point guard skills. But he may go too. They have two five-stars and a four star center coming in next year. They’ll be good. I don’t know if they’ll be as good as they were this year because they’ll lose a lot. Davis and Lamb coming back this year was huge for them. Along with Miller, they had experience and Davis is a once every 15 years talent. He’s as special as they come.

Calipari had a lot of pressure on him to win it this year. He’s done a heckuva’ job at Kentucky and deserves a lot of the credit. I’ve never seen a better recruiter outside Nick Saban. A lot of people say he just recruits championships, that he’s really not that great with X’s and O’s. He’s not the best X’s and O’s coach in the game in my opinion, but when you recruit players like that and you motivate them, it’s a pretty good winning formula. He’s elite.

With Alabama winning the football title and Kentucky winning the basketball title looks like the IBM teams are back on top. Alabama’s been for four years now and Kentucky for the last three. Great coaches make all the difference. They recruit great players and they coach them up.

But there are a lot of great teams out there in both sports returning, so next year will be riveting in college football and basketball. USC, Florida State, Texas,Michigan, teams like LSU, Arkansas, Georgia and maybe Florida in the SEC will challenge the Tide. Auburn will be better. Kentucky will have teams like Louisville, the ‘Cuse, Ohio State, Michigan State, UNC and Duke to contend with. So it should be highly entertaining in both sports.  Trying to get down to ‘Bama’s football practice tomorrow so will have a full report on that on Thursday weather permitting tomorrow, and, of course, the tradition continues with the playing of the 76th Masters this week beginning Thursday. Should be highly exciting. Can Tiger Woods recapture the glory and get closer and closer to Jack’s 18 majors. Tiger now with 14. Or will Luke Donald, Hunter Mahan or the young phenom Rory McIlory claim greatness as they’ve shown in regular tour events and McIlory in the U.S. Open last year. Should be fun. Will have a full Masters preview tomorrow about 11. Football spring practices going on. Will give rundown of SEC teams after spring games later this month.

Big Blue nation livin’ large right now.

Wildcats to cut down nets for eighth time in history


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Kentucky won national titles in 1948, ’49, ’51 and ’58 under legendary coach, Adolph Rupp. They won the title in 1978 under Joe B. Hall. Rick Pitino won the title in 1996, and Tubby Smith won it in 1998. Now it’s John Calipari’s turn. He will get his first national title tonight against Kansas.

Anthony Davis may be the most dominant college basketball player since Danny Manning. Danny Manning led his team to the 1988 national championship as part of the ‘Danny and the Miracles” Kansas team. That team was an underdog in the tournament. This team is not. Davis just won the Naismith Award and has dominated the postseason awards as well he should have. Darius Miller has been an excellent senior leader for this team and is a game changer just like Davis is. Terrence Jones, though erratic, can have dominant moments. Michael Kidd-Gilchrist, when he’s not in foul trouble, is a fantastic driver, scorer, a warrior. Doron Lamb is a good shooter and valuable player. Marquis Teague can be outstanding at times, while at other times he doesn’t really take charge at point guard and can go to sleep. But, overall, the Wildcats are unbeatable this year.

For Kansas it will take the perfect game to beat the Wildcats and Ky will have to struggle. Thomas Robinson is an outstanding power forward averaging 18 and nine this year and Tyshawn Taylor can be a dominant point guard.  Seven-footer Jeff Whithey is a very good player and Travis Releford reminds me of T.R. Dunn back in the day at Alabama. He’s a solid, heady player, a winner. They’ve got some other good players, but I just don’t think they have enough firepower to overcome this dominant team.

Rick Pitino was highly complimentary of  this ky team after his Louisville team’s game with them Saturday. It was pretty interesting coming from a coach who is not too fond of the Wildcats usually. Pitino said he hasn’t always liked the ky teams (bad kids, Cousins, Wall 2 years ago), but he really likes this group. He said they’re really good kids and really likes their character. Pitino was asked to compare this present ky team to his Ky team in ’96 that won the title, and Pitino said the ’96 team was a lot deeper and beat opponents by an average of 28 points (amazing), but he thought this first six for this year’s team is just as good as his first six were then. They had All-Americans in Ron Mercer, Tony Delk and Antoine Walker and some stellar guys around them. They were loaded. But the difference to me in this Calipari team from HIS previous two is experience. Jones (though erratic) and Lamb are older and the senior Miller is a terrific leader and player. Teague, to me, is their weakness at times, but Lamb and Miller seem to make up for his inability to quarterback the team at the point. Teague is good but he’s inconsistent. I’ve always thought if the opposing point guard could rattle Teague, that could cause the Wildcats some problems. But with Lamb and Miller it almost seems not to matter how Teague plays. Taylor could be the x factor for the Jayhawks if they are to have a chance.

Just don’t think they’ll have enough. They should give the Wildcats a good game for a while, but just won’t be able to get over the top. Davis and company will earn the title and then Davis will look forward to becoming the first pick in the draft in June. That’s pretty exciting stuff for that young guy. His future is unlimited. You’ll see Miller, Jones and Kidd-Gilchrist go in the draft as well. Probably in the first round. Lamb and Teague may need another year. Lamb may be ready, but not sure he’s in the first two rounds where you can get solid money. He could use another year.

Think Teague should definitely come back. But they don’t have to worry about that tonight. They can just take care of business and enjoy the fulfillment of winning it all. John Calipari will cement himself in the elite category of coaches in the country along with Coach K, Pitino and Tom Izzo. Calipari has always been the best recruiter in the country and one of the best motivators. Now he’ll show he’s one of the overall best of all time. I’d put Coach K and Pitino just above him, but he’s right there with two of the greatest of all time. I’d say Coach K is right there with Wooden as the best of all time. Would give Wooden the overall number one nod with Coach K second. Pitino is top five. You gotta have Bobby Knight as three, Dean Smith as four  and Pitino as Pitino as five. Calipari will move into that category and overtake Pitino tonight with this title. He could pass Smith and maybe Knight with a few more titles. Maybe even Coach K before he’s through depending on how long he wants to coach at the pressure cooker in Kentucky. But he’s got it going and he’s elite, no doubt. Tonight will cement his legacy.

Kentucky 68, Kansas 58

 

(Anthony Davis (left, above), Darius Miller and Coach Calipari will get it done tonight and celebrate for the Big Blue Nation.)

Latest & Greatest

Fresh Tweets:

Vanderbilt women’s tennis player Astra Sharma 1 on 1. https://t.co/D0WS0rVnqG @VandyMeg @mmhamlett @Vandywtennis @ManOfVandy @SkipPrince
May 18, 2017, 2:34 PM

Topics:
Archives

Join My newsletter

I'll send you a brief email each time I post a new piece.