Los Angeles Kings v San Jose Sharks - Game Three

Happy humpday, y’all. On today’s podcast we covered:

* The success of the Bruins 4th line

* The struggles of Seguin and Jagr (despite not playing poorly)

* Quality goaltending

* Joey Thornton is a-okay

* Marleau’s accidental hit on Brown

* The quick whistle on Penner

* And much more

You can listen to it here:

 

Download it here, and subscribe on iTunes here. Facebook yay!

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Chip Kelly’s NFL offense is the great secret of our time, or at least it is now that we have a definitive answer as to whether or not it’s pronounced “Gif” or “Jif”. Really, the Internet conundrum on that matter rages on, and one day it may divide nations.

So far, we still know little, mostly because those who speak of Kelly’s offense in any detail are murdered shortly thereafter. A few weeks ago LeSean McCoy dropped some vague hints, saying there will be much more running, and “different sets with different backs”. Intriguing indeed, and of course the fantasy implications of what this whizz kid may or may not do are widespread, especially if his innovations can bring Michael Vick back to life.

We also have the observations of the beat writers who have spent many hours at May practices as they watch, wait, watch, and eat. They’ve largely relayed a few fun but still expected facts: there will be a significant emphasis on speed, and very little huddling. Actually, “speed” may not be the appropriate word there, although it will certainly be featured in abundance. Instead, Kelly will likely emphasize pace, pushing it often.

But every time the subject of Kelly’s offense with the Eagles comes up and what he will or won’t do is debated by anyone of prominence, it’s been common to assume that he’ll just rip the covers off of his old Oregon playbooks, and slap the Eagles logo on them.

And that feels both wrong, and too easy.

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Detroit Tigers v Baltimore Orioles

It should have been you, Dylan Bundy. After captivating the nerdy end of the baseball world last season with his effortlessly dispatching of the low minor leagues, Dylan Bundy eventually made his way to the big leagues at just 19-years old. It was Bundy’s world, he of the exorbitant contract demands as a high school pitcher from Oklahoma.

But an elbow injury slowed Dylan Bundy’s ascent to Major League stardom. In his place steps Kevin Gausman – the new hope for the next wave of Orioles starters. Unlike Bundy, who was brought up as a reliever, Gausman gets to jump right in and do the real thing: start against the Blue Jays in Toronto on Thursday.

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People crowd around a fire to keep warm

Too often these kinds of posts dissolve into “fun facts and trivia” for the unknowing non-soccer person at a European Cup viewing party, where the author expects the CL newbie to memorize a set of disjointed tidbits in order to try and pretend they know about football when they don’t. This is useless, unless you’re David Mitchell in Peep Show.

That doesn’t mean these guides are entirely useless, however. Here instead are some conversation-starting questions you can throw out there once in a while during the game to goad those who do care into conversation, whereby you might be able to pick up some interesting facts about the two finalists to recycle on Monday at work. They don’t require you to pretend you know something that you don’t, but they give you a means to demonstrate you’re at least paying attention, and to prompt conversations to distract people in the room from the fact you’ve spent the entire game plus extra time playing Minesweeper for iPhone.

“So, I heard that Juergen Klopp is really crazy, like he once took out his entire team on a crazy camping trip, and they like, love the team forever and when one guy leaves, they all like cry and stuff.”

Just read and study this entire Klopp interview. It’s a gold mine of leading questions for the one or two people in the room who read it and desperately want to talk about it, and Klopp is basically football’s man hero of the moment. If an advertiser managed to get Klopp and Pirlo to do an Apple vs PC style ad, the Internet’s face would collectively explode out clouds of messy red goo.

“So how much money do team’s get for winning the Champions League? I heard it’s a lot but not really enough to rely on to run a club better and buy better players.”

This is a bit of a weird one and possibly a conversation stopper so maybe hold off on it a bit. In any case, the answer is that the winner of the final gets €10,500,000 in addition to earnings from previous rounds, the loser €6,500,000 in addition to earnings from previous rounds, and both get a share of the TV rights revenues as determined by the relative strengths of their domestic TV markets in something called “the market pool.”

The point is here: people will start making wild guesses about how much they win, at which point you say, “I think I read somewhere that…” and fill in the above figures. Once they double check you on wikipedia or whatever, you’re good.

“Do you guys know about the Mario Gomez button?”

Pray that they don’t. This one will get you a free pass out of the conversational loop for ages and make everyone else very, very happy.

“I heard Jupp Heynckes is like, crazy good. And he’s leaving Bayern? He must be regretting that, eh?”

Now while Heynckes is almost certainly set to leave Bayern Munich, and has been in the game for fifty years, and has claimed he’s retiring, you can pivot off this reaching BR post to start speculating over whether Heynckes will go to another club and not retire after all. Don’t worry about guess over possible destinations. Everyone around you will speculomasturbate on this idea for at least the next ten minutes.

“So if all these guys like that Goetze guy and the Polish striker are leaving Dortmund, who’s going to replace them?”

Risky. Someone will venture dumb guesses at a host of international stars that Dortmund could not possibly afford. At which point you might add, “But can Dortmund afford to just go out and buy whatever player? Aren’t they not that rich by soccer standards?” At which point you will be the smartest person in the room, and you can drink the extra beer guilt-free. If someone says, “They can use the CL pot money!”, then pull out the big guns in the question above.

Ideally, someone somewhere will say, “I don’t know. Good question. The youth team?” And relax.

“Wait, if some players are good because they give that extra bit of effort and raise their skill for the big final, aren’t they underperforming the rest of the time?”

This question courtesy of James Grayson, will hopefully blow some minds, or start an interesting debate among you and your friends. It should.

“I’ve watched Barcelona a few times, and Bayern are awesome but they play completely differently. I heard that Pep Guardiola has only really ever managed at Barcelona. And Bayern are so good this season, no doubt in part down to luck as well as skill, that chances are they’ll not be as good next year. So he’s pretty much going to have a bad time next year, no?”

Yeah, you might not want to use this one. I like it though. And again, if some person goes on about Pep taking players with him from Barcelona to Bayern, just mention that while Bayern is pretty wealthy by German standards, there’s no way they’ll be able to match Barcelona’s staggering wage bill, even if only for one or two players. Is this getting too inside baseball? Probably. So…

“Ha ha, Robben. Not even Robben’s team-mates like Robben.”

Everyone will laugh and nod. You now have permission to check your phone for the next 45 minutes.

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On Wednesday’s episode of “The Fix,” The Jones discuss Game 2 of the Western Conference Finals, that “exhilarating” NBA Draft Lottery coverage, and the Los Angeles Clippers firing Vinny Del Negro.

All that, plus hugging your dad, Tony Allen’s acting, and sleepless babies.

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Subscribe to The Basketball Jones show on iTunes | Download the .mp3 directly

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We’re now down to the semi-finals of the NHL 14 Cover Vote campaign and it’s down to the final 4: Pavel Datsyuk, Martin Brodeur, John Tavares and Sergei Bobrovsky.

We say farewell to 2 Toronto Maple Leafs who made it far into the campaign. Pavel Datsyuk narrowly defeated Joffrey Lupul in what was the tightest matchup of the last round. James van Riemsdyk made things interesting for Martin Brodeur as they battled for a spot in the semi’s, but Brodeur’s increased social media activity got him the W.

Semi-final voting runs until May 26th at 11:59 PM ET. The winner of the cover vote will be revealed during the Stanley Cup Finals.

Omega Dubai Desert Classic - Final RoundSergio Garcia would like to remind us that racism still exists. Unfortunately, his method for doing so was not a public service announcement, but a joke aimed at Tiger Woods that referred to fried chicken. There are two things that are awful about this: 1) The public reinforcement of an incredibly demeaning stereotype that the majority of us would love to do away with; and 2) His attempt at irreverence wasn’t even remotely funny.

It all started two weeks ago during the Third Round at The Players Championship at Sawgrass. Tiger Woods decided to take a wood out of his bag – signifying to the crowd that he was going for the green on the par-five second hole – just as Sergio Garcia was taking his swing. The crowd cheered Woods’s decision, causing Garcia to slice his shot.

During a rain delay, Garcia vented some of his frustration while speaking with the Golf Channel:

Well, obviously Tiger was on the left and it was my turn to hit. He moved all the crowd that he needed to move, I waited for that. You do have a feel when the other guy is going to hit and right as I was in the top of the back-swing, he must have pulled a wood and everybody started screaming. So that didn’t help very much.

… and so it began.

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2,000 Acts Of Hope Charitable Initiative With The Los Angeles Kings

With the bevy of rumours, reports and general speculation over Bryan Colangelo’s job status running rampant over the last few weeks, we’ve already had plenty of time to assess Colangelo’s actions and words recently. On that note, I’m not going to spend any time on Colangelo’s conference call with the media from earlier today after it was announced that he was being relieved of his General Manager duties.

Having said that, new Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment CEO Tim Leiweke held a much more candid media call on Tuesday morning that is worth talking about, so here are some talking points from that call..

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