Monday, February 28, 2011

February Finale


PYB offers up this early morning post this last day of February, the shittiest month on the calendar:

--Roy Helu runs 4.43 and 4.42 on consecutive tries at the NFL Combine in Indy. Glad to see Shawn Twatson underutilized him the last three seasons. Helu has to be the fastest straight-ahead back NU has had since Ahman Green and is perhaps the shiftiest of all time. Maybe Keith Williams' performance explains some of that, along w/ the fact that Watson will be doing mop-up QB coach duties in Louisville this season.

--So the vaunted Nebraska baseball offense petered out this weekend, capping their trip to Texas with back-to-back losses against Sam Houston State. The Huskers are at 5-3 and are 0-3 against second-tier Texas schools. In true John Sanders form, all the wins have come against cupcakes: Air Force (who was swept by York College last season), Washington, Missouri State and Northern Colorado x 2. Looks like Anderson's boys are falling apart earlier than usual. Can they axe him this early and just give the job to Darin Erstad? Can't get worse? Hell, we'd take Shawn Watson at this point.

--As far as rigged shit goes, this is pretty cool. Even David Stern would have to be proud. The best part of the video is seeing his two teammates conduct their own private conversation during the press conference.

--Is Ryan Mallett being unfairly singled out? Who knows, but he always has seemed pretty trashy, as in he will star in the sequel to the "Pretty Fly for White Guy" video or was an extra in 8 Mile. Anyone wanna buy a piece of shit Chrysler?

Sunday, February 27, 2011

World #1


Martin Kaymer became the world's top ranked golfer Saturday after his victory at the WGC Accenture Match Play tournament. This, despite not playing on the world's top tour...the PGA Tour...despite residing in Scottsdale, Ariz.

Kaymer has got to be the world's most unproven top-ranked golfer since, um.....Lee Westwood. At least Kaymer has won a major. Westwood has just blown several but claims he now puts more energy into the top ranking than into victories. A loser statement if there ever was one.

Well, Kaymer lost to new world #3 Luke Donald in the final Sunday. His lack of personality likely won't win him many new fans. But his faggy scarf, ascot, neckwarmer, hanky will certainly lose him quite a few. PYB can't see all the scums in Raider jerseys that used to jerk it to every Tiger Woods shot getting down with an ascot-ridden Kraut as their new favorite golfer.

Let's see if Kaymer can man up and play a few more PGA Tour events and see if he can match up over the long haul vs. the world's top players. We doubt it.

Belated Big 12 Preview


PYB's apologies to Seth Svoboda, as our SPAM folder gobbled up his entry Saturday morning for some reason.....

Big 12 Preview and Last Hopes for Husker Fans
By Seth Svoboda

Leaving Devaney Wednesday things didn't look to good for the Huskers. A lot has been made of the fact that Andre Almeida and Jorge Brian Diaz shot so poorly against Kansas State, but it wasn't as if they were missing shots they normally make. They were manhandled underneath and were just throwing up junk that had no chance of going in. I'm pretty sure Diaz had no idea where he was at on the court at times unless he was intentionally shooting into the side of the backboard.

I will also say that while the final score was close the game was not. They worked their offense and tried to spread the ball around a little bit, but they didn't need to. What they did down the stretch guaranteed them points basically every possession. They wore down the shot clock then got the ball to Jacob Pullen with 10-13 seconds left on the shot clock and he drove to the basket either making the shot or drawing a foul for about eight straight possessions.

I was surprised they were able to do this so easily because I thought that Brandon Richardson was quick enough to stay with Pullen, he wasn't. Lance Jeter didn't stand a chance defensively on Pullen because he definitely isn't quick enough and Doc not putting Beranek on him tells me that he wouldn't have been able to keep up either. The good news is that down the stretch we play some good scorers but none with the quickness of Pullen.

The bottom teams in the Big East keep upsetting the top teams so don't look for us to steal a spot away from them. Everyone is picking Colorado State to be one of the last teams in...if they make it over Baylor, Nebraska, or Kansas State it will show what a joke the selection committee is. Quit looking for Cinderellas and let the big boys go at each other. It makes for a better tournament when we have better teams rather than trying for sexy first round upsets by teams that don't have the talent to win multiple games in the tournament.

The Big 12 Landscape

I was confident that the the Big 12 was going to get six bids because of the overall quality of the league. I am no longer so sure. I had it in my head if we could get in front of Baylor we would be the sixth league selection and make the tourney as a 12 seed. Being ahead of Baylor in and of itself will not be enough to get us in.

One team that has felt like they had a bid wrapped up months ago but could be in danger is Missouri. I realize that they are 8-5 but they have to travel to Kansas State today and as we saw on Wednesday the Cats are becoming the team they were predicted to be. I thought when things started going wrong they would fold. However it appears to be a classic case of addition by subtraction. They got rid of some "me" guys and this team is coming together. I think the Cat's could make a deep run in the tourney.

Let's get back to Missouri. As mentioned they play in Manhatton today. They come to Lincoln on Tuesday and finish at home against Kansas. They could lose all three of those games and finish 8-8. I still believe they would get into the tournament but they would have to be selected as a sixth place team. If we can win out we would likely sit in fifth behind Texas, Kansas, Texas A&M and Kansas State.

Baylor needs to keep losing and if Colorado pulls an upset against Texas today they still have a shot to creep up into the mix. There are too many scenarios to cover in one article. The bottom line is we need rise to the occasion and get three in a row.

Today's game will be easy to overlook for the fans. Don't get sucked into thinking this game is automatic just because we play Iowa State. Ames can be tough to leave unscathed and remember they just recently almost pulled the upset against K State only losing by one at home in the final seconds. I have been begging for consistentcy from the Huskers all season and I'm still waiting for that, they need to come out and play solid today or our season could be over. The game plan today is simple; stop Diante Garrett and don't get in a shooting contest with these guys.

Predictions

Missouri 22-6 (8-5) @ Kansas State 19-9 (7-6)

Kansas State is really rolling right now and Missouri has struggled on the road all year. Missouri is going to need to contain Pullen in order to have a chance in this one. The Tigers have won four straight and feel like they are rolling themselves, but other than Baylor in that stretch they faced the bottom of the league. I really like the Cat's swagger right now. Too much Curtis Kelly underneath for the Cat's...pick Kansas State 79-70

Texas Tech 12-16 (4-9) @ Oklahoma State 16-11 (4-9)

Tech has no home court advantage, but they are so uninteresting that nobody goes to watch their team play them on the road thus negating the opposing team's home court advantage. Texas Tech has continued to play hard while OK State checked out after the Husker loss. Don't watch this game, but take the Red Raiders...pick Texas Tech 72-68

Nebraska 18-9 (6-7) @ Iowa State 14-14 (1-12)

This game has such a sneaky feel to it. I can't see how Nebraska could overlook anybody based on their performance thus far this season, but this game makes me very uncomfortable. Nothing would make the Cyclones feel better than crushing our NCAA hopes. Although I gave our big men a hard time earlier they are much better than the Cyclones underneath. If we employ the same strategy against ISU as we did against KSU and just pound the ball inside we could win by 20, we never make it easy on ourselves and constantly just play to our competition. I am hoping that we wake before it's too late in this one and find a way to hold on...pick Nebraska 66-63

Texas 24-4 (12-1) @ Colorado 17-11 (6-7)

I really think that Colorado has a shot to win this game. Boulder is a tough place to play and Colorado is so good in the backcourt that they could just outscore Texas in this one. While that is possible, Texas is so much better underneath than Colorado you would expect them to control the paint and dominate on the boards. If the Buffs shoot lights out in this one they have a chance but just a small one...Texas 86-77

Kansas 26-2 (11-2) @ Oklahoma 12-15 (4-9)

I think that Oklahoma will give good effort, but there is a reason that they have lost six straight in Big 12 play...talent. Kansas is in a pretty good place here, I think the nation is losing respect for them and that's just what a two loss team needs for extra motivation this time of year. No reason the Jayhawks don't win today...Pick Kansas 86-71

Texas A&M 22-5 (9-4) @ Baylor 17-10 (6-7)

Baylor needs this game and they're at home. Texas A&M is one team I just can't get behind. I liked them early on and thought they had a chance to go deep in the tournament, but something just doesn't look right about them. A desperate team with loads of talent or an overrated underwhelming team on the road...Pick Baylor 81-74

Follow me on twitter @SethSvoboda

No Turnin' Back the Clock


Nebraska basketball fans won't be partying like it's 1991, or 1999 for that matter, as another road loss marred with meltdowns killed the Husker's chances at making the field of 68 in a couple weeks.

NU played well for the first two thirds of the first half, and it felt like they were absolutely the better of the two teams as they uncharacteristically cashed seven three pointers in the first 20 minutes. That kind of shooting, as rare as it is, can work wonders for opening up the inside portion of the team's offensive game plan. PYB would even settle for a few more deep misses, just to keep opponents from packing down inside too frequently.

However, very characteristically, NU also surrendered seven threes to the Cyclones and finished by relinquishing a 7-0 run to finish the first stanza and fall behind 41-33. Doc Sadler's team put up three halfassed-at-best shots on three possessions, and had two defensive meltdowns to let ISU take control.

The Huskers made a run in the second half, as Lance Jeter and JB Diaz racked up good numbers. Jeter had 27 points and Diaz had 18 points and 11 rebounds, nine on the offensive glass. Most concerning, however, was the fact that Diaz was too weak to finish inside against the Cyclones' subpar big men.

Brandon Ubel continued to be overmatched against Division I competition, getting blocked by Iowa State's three-point specialist Jamie Vanderbeken and flopping around helplessly on other occasions. For good measure, he missed a free throw that would have tied the game late and bricked an inexplicable 18-foot "jumper" with NU down 79-77 late in overtime.

It was another disappointing finish, as critical errors and game mismanagement cost NU another win. This team is simply not good enough to overcome gaffes like this: 6/13 from the free throw line, interior rotation lapses, two critical drops by Diaz when he was open under the goal and Jeter's panic three with eight seconds remaining and the shot clock turned off.

All in all, it was another typical Ames finish. With the pressure off, can NU win games at home against Mizzou and in Boulder? The Tigers haven't won on the road in the Big 12, but CU beat Texas Saturday. 1-1 looks like the best NU might do here. More of the same. If it is ever going to change, Sadler will need to sign some game winners instead of game losers like Ubel et al.

Saturday, February 26, 2011


As we brace for an early morning road trip to Lebanon, Ariz. (aka Tucson), we wanted to drop the readers a quick-hit post and apologize for our sporadic posting frequency in recent weeks.

--PYB is glad to see that Niles Paul's delusions of his own grandeur haven't faded. Truly amazing. He may not have finished as NU's leading receiver of all time, but he has to be the career leader in singlehandedly blown games.

--Ames is always a tough place to win, especially for Nebraska's basketball team. The bandwagon fan base will expect NU to be able to show up and win, but anyone with a basketball IQ knows this is a 50/50 game. Vegas agrees, as the Cyclones are a one-point favorite. PYB dreads the thought of the faux riche in Ames prancing around in their circa 1988 sweatshirts, made in every color in the rainbow despite ISU's colors being gold and red, as they top off an eight-point win over NU with the help of some bad calls, timely threes and Husker miscues. Been there, done that. Hope we are wrong!

--So confuse. So Ted Gilmore is good enough for USC, who has stocked NFL teams with top-level receivers for years but not for Nebraska, who hasn't had a receiver stick in the league for, well, um, since Irving Fryar????? Something strange here doesn't add up. Are the Trojans really that desperate or was Gilmore a scapegoat?

--Mike Anderson & the NU baseball team continue their propaganda campaign, showing off their POWERFUL offense by beating another overmatched opponent. We like the OWH lead, mentioning that giving up eight runs and committing five errors usually doesn't get you a win. Well, yeah, unless you schedule like John Sanders with 15 games against absolute cupcakes. They've disguised it by scheduling UCLA and Fresno the next two weekends, but the fact that the rest of the non-conference games provide no measure of the team's progress during the spring is embarrassing.


--WGC golf executives must be thrilled with their final eight players. Unpredictability is the nature of the match-play beast, but being stuck with these cardboard personalities will make even the most avid golf fans say ho-hum: Luke Donald, Matt Kuchar, Martin Kaymer, JB Holmes, YE Yang (we like him but he doesn't speak the language so interaction with the crowd is minimal), and Ryan Moore (fake indie wardrobe and attitude). Can they replay the NBA All-Star game instead?

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Wednesday Wrapup


Wednesday was the best of times here at PYB, then it was the worst of times. Highs and lows abound. As usual, let's begin with the lows.

The lows came at the Bob Devaney Sports Center in Lincoln, Neb., as the Cornhuskers floundered throughout their game with Kansas State and eventually pissed away a 61-57 decision. PYB collected a winning wager ticket on the Mildcats at +2, as we saw this coming after the bottle blasting the Huskers took in Manhattan.

Last night's loss was more about Kansas State being a bad matchup for Nebraska than it was a choke job, but let's be clear that both of those factored in. For the second straight game, Jacob Pullen owned Lance Jeter and showed us all the difference between a big-time Division I guard and borderline all-conference guard. Pullen scored 27 points, just two shy than Nebraska's top three scorers combined.

Jeter struggles to check Pullen on defense, as he's just not quick enough. No fault of his. But because of this, in both games against KSU, he's struggled to get into his offensive rhythm and subsequently struggled to get NU's already shaky offense moving.

In both games, he's made more unforced errors than usual and racked up four turnovers with just three assists last night. Even against an underachiever like Kansas State that won't cut it, as Frank Martin's team has big-game experience to draw from while NU just has a bandwagon fan base to supposedly cheer it on. Let's be clear that the crowd was a good one in terms of noise level, but the Devaney was still 2,000 shy of a sellout.

Nebraska didn't play a perfect game (probably below average), but that was the kind of game that could have been affected by an extra 2000 fans going crazy for 40 minutes and making it tough on the Wildcats at the end. In the end, neither the Husker players or fans gave enough.

JB Diaz scored just eight points on four of 12 shooting, as his lack of strength kept him from consistently getting good position for his patented turnaround, twisted-foot jumpers and hooks. "The Bouncer" Andre Almeida was simply too fat and out of shape to keep up with or get his shot off over KSU's more athletic big men. Toney McCray was MIA for the most part.

In the end, though, NU was there with a chance to win the game. Especially after Frarnk Martin's bonehead technical foul gave NU a four-point play and got them within one point. But Jeter missed two huge free throws, and then Eshaunte Jones short-armed another. Doc Sadler (although denying it postgame) had Jones miss intentionally. Too early. Bad call. You must extend the game here and make KSU win the game themselves.

Doc didn't give enough last night, either. But when your team spends 38 minutes making mistakes (17 turnovers.....10 in one 16-possession stretch in the first half), it's hard to make up for it at the end by picking the right miss-or-make free throw strategy.

Pullen's monster game just magnified NU's need for a prime time player and scorer. All the role players are in place. Can they get over the hump and get one or two difference makers? We shall see.

What also remains to be seen is if NU rallies around this loss, realizing KSU is a hard matchup for them, and gets a tough road win at Ames on Saturday? ISU is always a tough game, regardless of how bad they are. And they are bad this year. One game does not a season make, or break. Had you told PYB that NU would go 1-1 these last two games, we would have taken it and run. It's the big picture that matters, and the next three games will finish that portrait.

Now, for the BEST of times. Tiger Woods continued his fall into oblivion with a first-round loss to Thomas Bjorn at the Accenture Match Play Championship. Even better, was the way he choked it away on the first extra hole. Perhaps there's another shit tournament in the Middle East that will pay you $5 million to play there since you can't earn any prize money.

Still, anyone who is "SHOCKED" by a top-seeded player losing early in this match-play format knows nothing about golf. The top 64 player are so good and so close in ability that anything can happen. All the radio hacks and ESPN puppets will be horrified, but that's the way it goes. Not that we don't enjoy it, especially as the television ratings will surely tumble as all the NASCAR and Raider fans won't tune in to see the nerd in his Sunday red.

Interesting bet here....if anyone can find the bet link let us know! Here's a recap of a few more.

Great stuff here, as Tim Floyd gets ejected during UTEP's 83-76 loss at East Carolina. Old school type ejection.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Interview with Dave Duerson


Here is a good article, courtesy of Deadspin...even better considering what happened a few weeks afterward...

"You Have To Accept My Pain": An Interview With Dave Duerson Three Months Before His Suicide

Rob Trucks — On Nov. 27, I spent an hour on the phone with former Pro Bowl defensive back Dave Duerson. It had been seven years since his mother's death and 364 days since his father's burial, and the following day he would celebrate his 50th birthday. Less than three months later, he sent some text messages to his family and shot himself in the chest with a shotgun.

For a time Duerson served as a shining example of the post-career pro athlete. Named the NFL's Man of the Year for his extensive charity work, the Notre Dame grad obtained a certificate from Harvard's Executive Education program, served on his alma mater's board of trustees, and in 2003 started Duerson Foods, his own multi-million dollar meat-processing business.

But in November of that year, two days before his 43rd birthday, Duerson's mother died, and his life seemingly changed course. In February 2005 he was charged with domestic assault after pushing his wife during an argument in South Bend — "a three-second snap," he called it — and soon after he relinquished the board seat of the university he loved. Divorce and business failure followed, and this past fall the father of four filed for personal bankruptcy.

Nonetheless he was open and forthright during our discussion about his life to that point and the prospect of turning 50, an age he once believed he'd never see. Here he is, in his own words.


* * *

I have never jumped from a perfectly good aircraft. I had intended to do that for my 40th birthday, and my mom talked me out of it. She had seen video of me bungee jumping, and it messed her up. So that actually was my plan for my 50th, but I'm up here in the D.C. area right now at my fiancée's home, and the weather's not conducive. But I will do it before my 51st birthday. Somewhere over the course of these next 365 days I will definitely jump out of a perfectly good aircraft.

I got married at 22, you know, two weeks after I graduated from college. The following week I reported. We had one week for a honeymoon, and I reported to rookie training camp, and then we started a family. But in a lot of respects I was ready. I would've considered myself a very mature 22 year old. My parents were married 59 years when my mother passed, and they were best friends. It was an awesome relationship, so I had an incredible example in that regard.

My biggest regret … My wife and I had an argument in South Bend, and, you know, I lost control for three seconds. That was a one-time event. The most disappointing of my entire life, but one that will never ever be repeated.

* * *

I had some great birthday parties as a little kid, no question about it, but my parents didn't make a particularly big deal out of the birthday itself. Thanksgiving has always been a big holiday for me. Christmas, for me, was always anti-climactic. You know, a lot of folks get caught up in "What have you done for me?" And that's never been my M.O. I'm a giver. I love to give. But part of my problem is, I've never been a good receiver.

I've been blessed with so much. I'm not just talking material things. In fact, I'm not even talking material things, really. My life has been so full that for people to make a big deal and give me gifts or whatever has never been my thing — almost to the point where I get uncomfortable. The flip of that is, it's really cool when people do make a fuss about you. At least you know, at least you think, "Well, OK, at least I matter." But I'd rather be showered with love than with gifted items.

My 40th birthday was big for me. I gave myself a big party for my 40th. I threw this big party and I had my favorite vocalist, Vesta Williams, come to Chicago from L.A. and do a concert. That's how I celebrated my 40th.

* * *

My mother passed away seven years ago, November the 26th. Thanksgiving was the 27th, and of course my birthday was the 28th. My dad passed away last year, November the 18th, and we buried him on my 49th birthday. The funeral and burial were on my birthday, which ... that caught me off guard. I've got three siblings. My sister is the oldest. She's 64. I have a brother who's 62. He'll be 63 in January. And a brother who's 52. So when my sister called and told me that my dad's funeral would be on my birthday, her next statement was, "Well, we know you can handle it." There were other days we could've held the funeral, but for whatever reason, my siblings decided, "We'll do this on Dave's birthday."

OK, I consider myself strong and all of that. I'd lived the so-called celebrity life, and they considered me the golden child of my family. But, you know, I think they missed the part where I'm a human. And so that was profound. The flip of that is that I played into the plan God had. Every birthday and Thanksgiving, I will also remember saying goodbye to my parents.

His last three years, my father started deteriorating pretty fast — he had Alzheimer's and some dementia — so my sister and I made sure everything was handled properly. I was the trustee for the family estate, the executor, what have you, so I was very much involved. Once Dad was in a nursing home I was flying back and forth from Florida regularly, and basically taking care of all of his affairs. Dealing with my father and his health, I was constantly looking at my own life in terms of ensuring that all these various things are taken care of. For instance, my condo is in trust. These are things that I had done before, but that I stepped up again to another level since filing for divorce. I filed for divorce almost four years ago. I want to ensure that things are right for my kids so that, when the time does come, it's straight cookie cutter.

I've also told them, on several occasions, "Look, you know I've got these wild eyebrows that I have to trim all the time so I don't look like Einstein." I said, "Don't you guys let me lie up there with my eyebrows all crazy. You know, trim my eyebrows and make sure that the hair's out of my nose. My mustache and my goatee, that's always right, but when it comes to eyebrows, don't let me be up there with a bunch of crazy eyebrows."

* * *

You know, people would ask me about longevity and all that. I would tell them I was going to die at 42. And I don't know what that was about, but, as it turned out, you know, I did suffer the greatest death, from my vantage point, two days before I turned 43. That was the death of my mom, you know, my absolute best friend, my biggest fan. But November 28th of '03, when I turned 43, I did realize I was likely going to make it to old age and so, from a mental perspective, I needed to get ready for things like a slowing gait and losing my step and failed health and all those types of things, whereas I'd always envisioned that I was going to go at the top of my game.

I've always pictured my exit at like 75 or 80 miles an hour, and I just happen to, you know, fall asleep at the wheel or something [laughs].

When I turned 43, the first thing I thought was, "Well, I'm still here." But then in that same, small breath, I did experience a death, my mom's. A lot of redefining took place. And to a large extent, leading up to that February 2nd in '05 when I had my three seconds where I lost control, that was a large part of it. I was in the midst of mourning my mom at that point. I hadn't had the chance to mourn her before, because I was the one who had to tell the doctor to pull the meds. Dad just couldn't do it. And so it fell to me, and I'm the youngest child. So here I am. I'm telling the doctor, "It's time to pull the meds." It was my voice that actually said, "OK, we're now making a definitive motion that, not only is death imminent, but we're executing on it." So a lot of that, you know, all of that came into play as I had my 43rd birthday, and I went through that year, and then the year that followed, just … You know, I'd lost my best friend. I'd lost my support system.

* * *

I do hold myself to a higher standard. I do. But the flip of that is, every one of us has things in their life they regret. For instance, I'm a Trekkie. And it wasn't the series so much as the movies, the Star Trek movies. I remember a scene from one of the latter ones with William Shatner. This guy, Spock's cousin or his brother, he could hug you and take away your pain. And he says, "Come join with me, and let me take away your pain." And Dr. McCoy and everybody else is like, "Jim, you've got to do this. It's wonderful." And Captain Kirk tells him, "I need my pain, because it defines who I am." And so in that regard when people come up to me and they tell me, "Man, I wish I were you," I tell them in the same breath that in order to be me, you have to accept my pain.

* * *

My father worked for General Motors for 38 years, and Muncie, Indiana, where I was born and raised, is where all the transmissions for American automobiles were made. And there were these family days and what have you when we'd go out to the plant with my dad. From the time I was 3 years old, I wanted to own my own manufacturing business. Now, that's not because I'm so brilliant that I began to think in terms of ownership at 3. But I would point to those 600- and 900-pound presses and tell my father, "I want to do that. I want to do that." And my dad said, "No, son. You want to own that." So, growing up and through my adolescence, I would go out to the plant with my dad, and I was still showing that same type of excitement for the factory and the equipment and the moving parts. He always talked to me in terms of preparing to own. That started from the time I was 3 years old, and that was my plan, as I said, all the way through high school and college. I had never planned on playing football professionally. That was never a dream of mine.


In the NFL, I was ostracized from Day One — not by my teammates but by my defensive coordinator. I was drafted by the Bears in 1983. My first day walking into Halas Hall, I met Buddy Ryan. He knew I'd gone to Notre Dame, and he asked me if I was one of those doctors or lawyers. I said, "Yes, sir." He said, "Well, you won't be here too long, because I don't like smart niggers."

I worked for Buddy for three years, and there was not a day that he did not remind me that I was not his draft pick, that he did not want me there or something to that effect: "You won't be here too long because I'm trying my best to get you out of here." That kind of thing. And so it was a very lonely feeling in that regard.

It was not motivational at all. The guy simply hated my guts, without question.

He came as close to apologizing to me as he could a couple years ago when we saw each other at one of these card-signing events in Chicago. Of course, I would always go right up to him and extend my hand and say, "Hello," and I did, and this time he said, "Dave ..." He never called me Dave. He would call me 22, or he would belt out my nickname. My nickname is "Double D," so he would call me "W D" or something like that. The closest he would come to calling me by my name was when he'd say, "W D." And then, two years ago, he said, "Dave." And he said, "This time can I have a hug?" And that was his way of saying, "I'm sorry."

* * *

A couple of years ago I would've described myself as a perfectionist. I would have. But I was watching Jay Leno one night — I've never been big on the late-night TV stuff, but Jim Carrey was on, and Jay was talking to Jim about how awesome he was and about perfecting his roles and what have you, so he says, "You get into a part and you live the part and you are an absolute perfectionist." And Jim Carrey says, "Perfection is God's business. I just try for excellence." And I have to tell you, I dropped in front of the TV, man. I dropped to my knees in front of the TV and said, "Look, I'm sorry. Forgive me for my arrogance."

I know God is real.

Rob Trucks's interview with Dave Duerson is part of an ongoing oral history project with Americans turning 50, including the Flaming Lips' Wayne Coyne, Vanderbilt University basketball coach Kevin Stallings, Wisconsin State Sen. Jon Erpenbach (one of the "Fighting 14"), and Olympic gold medalist Benita Fitzgerald Mosley. Trucks's last Deadspin post was about the late Alex Chilton's time in Tuscaloosa, Ala., and his latest book, on Fleetwood Mac's Tusk album for Continuum's 33 1/3 series, is available through Amazon and better bookstores everywhere. Email him at tusktusktusk@gmail.com.

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Nebraska Basketball


It is nice that Doc Sadler and his team are getting some love from all the people who couldn't have cared less a month ago. But now isn't the time to stop pushing, to stop doing the things that have propelled them past teams with loads more talent: team defense, shot selection, limiting turnovers, playing with maximum effort.

This is a team where one blip will result in a 25-point loss. You can read more about the bandwagon fans in Nebraska in this uninspired Tom Shatel column, 75 percent of which was lifted word-for-word from his Monday noontime chat session.

Give Sadler his deserved credit, but spare us the scenarios where we guess if NU has to go 3-1 to make the field of 68 or whatever the hell it is this year. Spare us the guesses on if 3-1 will get NU a 4th seed in the B12 tournament and a first-round bye. They are meaningless, as a couple losses takes NU from the middle of the conference pack to the bottom third quicker than you can say Barry Collier.

This team must play each possession with equal intensity and solid fundamentals, in hopes of putting together one win at a time. The physical ability and scoring punch aren't strong enough to do otherwise. In other words, enjoy the ride, go to the games, scream at the awful Big 12 officiating and hope for the best...We'll finish with a nice Q & A from Yahoo! Sports that's devoid of all the cliche answers that bore us to tears...

In other CBB notes, a good Bob-Knight type meltdown here....

Yellow 'Melo


How quickly we forget, as Carmelo Anthony finally returns to the scene of the crime to become a New York Knick. Apparently, we forget his studio gangster act of a few years ago, documented on this grainy video only as David Stern and his NBA gestapo have wiped any other accounts of this video from internet existence.

Never before has the NBA seen a pussy act of this magnitude, and likely won't ever again. It's safe to say that if Jared Jeffries is not afraid to chase you 94 feet to the other end of the court, you're not necessarily the next Anthony Mason or even Jerry Stackhouse.

Maybe the Knicks can play his Stop Snitchin' video before his first game at MSG, or recount his DUI or weed arrests before intros......not that this has anything to do w/ the present of future...so let's get to that. ESPN lists the NYK starting five as Anthony, Amare Stoudemire, Chauncey Billups, Landry Fields and Ronny Turiaf.

So what exactly did the Knicks accomplish with this trade? Well they dumped their starting point guard in Raymond Felton, their best shooter in Danilo Gallinari and their most versatile player in Wilson Chandler. In return, they got Anthony, one of the league's top offensive players.

In total, did they get better. Sure, they'll rack up more regular-season wins. But this trade likely means little to the bottom line. With an aging point guard in Billups and two horrible defenders in Anthony and Stoudemire, acing out the Celtics, Heat or Magic in the East ain't going to happen. Throw in the fact that the new unit has fewer than 30 games to play together before the playoffs, and that the other two starters are a journeyman in Turiaf who averages 3.9 rebounds a game for his career and good-but-not-great rookie in Fields, and that only makes it more unlikely.

Hey, but Stern got what he wanted...another mega-star (who hasn't done shit as far as winning goes) in New York City---television market #1. More star power at The Garden, but more substance? PYB says not.

We just hope Stern gets it over with and contracts the league to four teams full of superstars that play 290-point games with no defense, no fundamentals and no heart. It would be just perfect--and we wouldn't have to root for our favorite teams anymore--knowing with certainty now that the NBA is rigged.

We'd still bet on it, though. Enjoy it, Big Apple....and all the rest of us will chuckle when you boo Stoudemire for blowing another defensive rotation in the 101-80 Game 5 loss to Boston.

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Gs Up, Horns Down


PYB thanks Seth Svoboda for his weekend's worth of coverage of Husker Hoops, as we had previous engagements preventing us from the in-depth coverage that loyal followers deserve. We finally saw the upset early this morning on DVR and offer the below preface to Svoboda's coverage:

1. In case you had forgotten, Lance Jeter played football at Cincinnati. After failing to mention in for two straight games, yesterday's announcers made up for it by bringing it at least four times.

2. Apparently, unbeknownst to anyone in Lincoln, Andre Almeida's nickname is "The Bouncer." Mitch Holthus deemed this to be his new nickname, using it at least seven times and following it up with awesome cliches like "if you're name isn't on the list, you ain't getting in" or "The Bouncer slammed the door on the Longhorns!" Great stuff. Are you the security man? Are you the BOOUUNCER?? Yay for killing! Yay for violence! Keep it Behind the Velvet Rope.

3. Texas point guard Dogus Balbay sucks. PYB knew he was awful last year. Now the media excuse for him still starting is that he is such a great defender. Just perfect for him to lead the Longhorns to a second-round loss next month in the NCAA tournament.

4. How the fuck is Toney McCray this team's best three-point shooter?

5. Big 12 officials had another batch of awful calls, headlined by the fourth foul called on Lance Jeter. Doc Sadler's response was multiple "Wows" in a row as he tried to grasp how horrible the call really was.

6. This was the best win for NU hoops in some time, and if it's not enough to get the racist stiffs that call themselves Husker Hoops fans into the seats to the tune of more than 12,000 the last two gams, nothing ever will be.

7. As great as the win was, now is the time to forget about it and move to the next task at hand. What should be remembered is how NU dominated Texas in the paint, outscoring Rick Barnes' boys 36-10 at one point in the paint.

NU's players all looked step quicker on both offense and defense, didn't look tentative and didn't juggled the ball like they were trying not to drop a nuclear warehead.

Next up, Kansas State. No Whammies.....

Returning to Early Season Form
By Seth Svoboda

In the Huskers win over Texas on Saturday they showed a whole different side of themselves. This was a team that was driven, played with energy, passion, and confidence for 38 minutes. For two minutes the Skers tried to choke it away and cower in the corner. As with any good plotline though, good prevailed over evil and Brandon Richardson rose to the occasion hitting two clutch free throws to give the Huskers the late lead.

I think every Nebraska fan was thinking the same thing with 4 minutes left in the game..."What a great victory! We look good, maybe we can make a run at winning the Big 12 tournament." Then again we were all thinking the same thing with 1:30 remaining, "I can't believe we're going to lose this game, this feels just like the Big 12 championship in football."

Then Richardson just kept showing up, he played his ass off yesterday except for missing the front end of a 1-1 that could have all but put Texas away with a few minutes remaining. This was the Richardson that we expected to see this year. There was a stint where you weren't sure if NU was going to be capable of pulling it out but Brandon kept driving aggressively to the bucket and sending a message to Texas and his own team "We're winning today, not you."

Toney McCray had 14, Jorge Brian Diaz and Andre Almeida were both in double figures with 10 and 11, respectively. Eshaunte Jones added 9 with some big threes that helped push that lead bigger. It was an all around great team effort. Nebraska outrebounded the Longhorns 31-28 and that was a big question coming in to the game.

There are always upsets where the underdog finds a way to stay in the game and the win feels like a miracle for them. This was not that kind of upset. Texas was the team that was lucky to be in the game. We overmatched them with the exception of two minutes near the end. This was the Husker team that had a 10pt lead at KU in the second half but with an upgrade to the W. I remember at the beginning of the season we were rolling heading into Mizzou and played them close then the close loss to KU in Lawrence and the Huskers were brimming with confidence. Somewhere along the line we lost that attitude and we may have regained that yesterday. A lot of Nebraska's wins this year haven't been that fun to watch, but this was the most fun a Husker game has been all season by far.

Ok, so now what? We have Kansas State at home on Wednesday. If we can finish 3-1 we put ourselves in great position to make the NCAA tournament. We can't afford to lose more than once though and if we lose to K State we have to win three in a row including two road games where we haven't fared well this season.

It looks to me like we have a great shot to pass Baylor for the sixth selection from the Big 12. Both of us are 6-6 in the league but they finish @ Mizzou, Texas A&M, @ Oklahoma State, Texas. They could easily go 1-3 in that stretch.

Around the League

Texas Tech pulled a huge upset victory at Baylor and the rest went as predicted except for I thought OSU would pull it out against A&M but lost by one. Kansas State won big over Oklahoma and they will pull into Lincoln on quite a roll.

Around the Country

In games of interest to Husker fans there were a few bubble teams I mentioned in yesterday's column that could play a role in determining our NCAA chances.
Marquette beat Seton Hall to improve their resume. West Virginia pulled a huge upset over Notre Dame, also not good for the Huskers, and Cincinnatti won in over time over Providence. Georgia beat Tennessee and Butler won by 27. All wins for teams that are currently ahead of Nebraska, but with our huge win and big games left to play we control our destiny and that's all you ask for at this point.

Follow me on Twitter @SethSvoboda

Saturday, February 19, 2011


How Do the Huskers Get in the Big Dance?
By Seth Svoboda

I apologize for taking the last week off, the truth is I'm lazy and I was getting the kinks worked out of my swing on the golf course. When you get 60's and 70's in Nebraska in February, you hit the links. I beat my caddy earlier this week so that's always a good start.

Speaking of the links, if you are a golf fan at all, make sure you check out the final two rounds at Riviera Country Club in LA. One of my long time favorites is out in front, Freddy Couples. This course is unlike most courses we see on tour. It's short with small greens and plays very different from most of the stops the PGA makes. The kikuyu grass there is unpredictable and presents a tough challenge for these guys because they don't play that kind of grass very often. There are some other big names near the top; J.B. Holmes (although I would short him if you could short a golfer), Paul Casey, Justin Rose, Vijay Singh, Aaron Baddeley and Ryan Moore (my pick to win after watching this tournament over the last two days). Further down the list, but a guy who I'd really like to see make a move today, is Matt Kuchar. This guy is a serious player, I wouldn't be surprised to see him shoo at 66 today and make a move up the leaderboard.

John Daly thinks Miguel Cabrera drinks too much. Another golfer who likes to get after the booze, Steve Elkington...check out some old interviews from the Jim Rome show for a good laugh, he's a great story-teller.

How about some basketball, though? I couldn't find a bracket preview out there that included Nebraska so I guess our boys have an uphill battle to climb. Nebraska does control their own destiny. Here's who they play and how I beleive they need to finish to make the NCAA tourney.
Texas, K State, @ Iowa State, Missouri, Colorado

I think we need to go 4-1. We can go 3-2 as long as the losses are Texas and Missouri and we win two games in the Big 12 tournament. We can't lose to K State because they are the team we have to jump in order to get in. The NCAA will most likely select six Big 12 teams. Texas, Kansas, Missouri, Texas A&M, Baylor, and one more. The Kansas win for K State may be the final dagger for the Huskers. If we are even with K State how can we justify us over them? Their strength of schedule is 8th in the nation and they are 31st in RPI compared to 93rd SOS and 74 RPI for NU. A miracle today for the Skers and this whole thing is thrown for a loop. I'll dive into that when it happens and save my breath and your time.

OK, so is there any way Nebraska can be a 7th team selected from the Big 12 if we can't pass K State? Yes, likely...no. We are going to have to steal a spot from somewhere else in order to do that.

What are the options out there? We take one from the Big East who will get 10-11 teams. We take one from the SEC. We steal one from the Horizon who most likely will only have two to begin with and it's a tough sell to when we already have six teams.

That means we are up against the last three teams to make it out of the Big East: Marquette, West Virginia, and Cincinnatti. Marquette plays at Uconn this Thursday but every other game is winnable for them and if they finish at or above .500 there is no way the NCAA takes us over them with wins over Syracuse, Notre Dame, and West Virginia. West Virginia already finished higher in the Puerto Rico tournament that we both played in and they have wins over Georgetown, Purdue, and Cincinnatti. Cincinnatti already has 20 wins and victories over St. Johns and Louisville. Cincy is probably our best bet if they falter down the stretch, they have Georgetown twice, Uconn, and at Marquette.

Butler is the team in the Horizon we could potentially take a spot from, but their success last year will get them the benefit of the doubt over us. They also beat a solid Florida State team and Cleveland State who will win the Horizon league. No chance we jump them unless they lose one of their two remaining games that happen to be against two of the worst teams in their league.

We will have to beat out either Tennessee or Georgia. Too much star power and brand recognition to pass Tennessee. So it has to be Georgia. This is probably our best overall chance to overtake anyone. They have a win over Kentucky and fluff. They still play at Tennessee, Florida and host Alabama who is 9-2 in the SEC so they have an opportunity to play their way in or out. Three losses down the stretch may be too much for the Bulldogs to overcome without many good wins on the schedule.

As always there are a lot of teams out there who, like us, are on the outside looking in with a chance to play their way in. Colorado, Misssissippi, Arkansas, Penn St, Seton Hall, Washington St, Northern Iowa and Minnesota. I realize that's a lot of information to take in but those are all the teams we are up against.
Let's look at the Big 12

Missouri 20-6 (6-5) @ Iowa State 14-12 (1-10)

Despite ISU's embarrassing record, Hilton Coliseum is still a tough place to play. Missouri has really struggled away from Columbia and it's easy to overlook Iowa State. Remember, Iowa State almost got K State at home two weeks ago. They also played very well against Texas A&M on the road this week. Another heartbreaker for the Cyclones...Pick Missouri 83-78

Texas 23-3 (11-0) @ Nebraska 17-8 (5-6)

Nebraska is really overmatched here underneath. Andre Almeida can't pick up 3 fouls in 90 seconds like he did against Oklahoma. We are going to need a solid group effort from our three big men because Texas is so tough on the boards. This has to be a low scoring game to be close. If Texas gets a bunch of second chances the Skers don't stand a chance. We also need a big game from at least two of our three best athletes Brandon Richardson, Lance Jeter, and Toney McCray. We also need a solid contribution of 10-12 points from either Drake Beranek or Eshaunte Jones. If all of those things don't work out I can't see a way for the Huskers win this game. Similar to Iowa State it's another heartbreaker...Pick Texas 74-60

Colorado 16-10 (5-6) @ Kansas 24-2 (9-2)

This is the type of game that could propel the Buffs into the NCAA tournament if they could get a surprise upset on the road here. They played KU close in Boulder 78-82. The problem for CU is that KU is coming off getting their ass kicked by K State this week 68-84. KU is just too good to lose two in a row. I look for the Jayhawks to rebound in a big way and send another reminder to the league who's who...Pick KU 89-74

Oklahoma 12-13 (4-7) @ Kansas State 17-9 (5-6)

At the surface this seems like all K State. They're coming off a huge win against KU and Oklahoma just lost a heartbreaker at home to Nebraska. K State is starting to think of themselves the same way they did going into this season. If it's close I think Oklahoma could pull it out, the thing is it won't be close...Pick Kansas State 88-62

Texas Tech 11-5 (3-8) @ Baylor 17-8 (6-5)

Baylor is unpredictable. They blow teams out, they squeak by teams, they lose close and they lose big. Texas Tech is not tough to predict though. They won three in a row earlier but have then lost four straight to remind them where they sit in this conference. This just feels like Baylor will need to weather one comeback attempt in the second half and they should...Pick Baylor 76-64

Texas A&M 20-5 (7-4) @ Oklahoma State 16-9 (4-7)

The Aggies have an impressive record but just don't feel very impressive to me. Oklahoma State probably still thinks they have a chance to get into the tournament even though they don't. If you have ever met anyone that is a Cowboy fan you know what I'm talking about. Somehow I can't help but buy into them for this one game...Pick Oklahoma State 72-68

Follow me on twitter @SethSvoboda

Thursday, February 17, 2011

No Whammies in Norman



PYB is the victim of a time crunch today, so we'll have to settle for an abbreviated recap of Nebraska's 59-58 win over Oklahoma last night in Norman. In a complete 180 from the double whammy that describes most of our gambling forays on NU hoops, we wound up victorious thanks to the Sooners' almost-three but only-a-two to win with a line of +1.5. A rare occurrence, indeed.

Almost as rare as that gambling victory were a couple other landmarks Wednesday night:

1. An NU road win....The Cornhuskers first since 2009.

2. The fact that the TV announcers have gone two straight games without mentioning that Husker PG Lance Jeter played football at Cincinnati before coming to Lincoln. Actually, this is more like one game straight because the prior game was done by NU's announcers Greg Sharpe and Eric Piatkowski. They did mention he played in HS and had a football body, but not Cincy!

3. And, as rare as it may seem, Big 12 officials turned in another terribly officiated game which was capped by the WORST FUCKING CALL IN COLLEGE BASKETBALL HISTORY when they called Jeter for a charge in the first half. Atrocious. Embarrassing. Not even close.

All in all, the win is what NU needed to keep its NIT and slim NCAA hopes alive. A great win, but unremarkable in style. Doc & Company pushed the lead to six points with around two minutes to go, but followed that up with two awful possessions and gave OU a quick three and a basket and foul to tie it up. Lead gone. Poof! Hell, Brandon Ubel even tried one of his famous "girl squatting three pointers" while NU tanked the lead.

But they won, despite the fact that Andre Almeida picked up three fouls in 90 seconds in the first half and Brandon Richardson went scoreless in just 19 minutes. Jeter, JB Diaz, Toney McCray and Caleb Walker (PYB Fave) all chipped in nicely and NU ended up with a win.

Next up is a likely bottle blasting vs. UT and its soon-to-be-second-round losing NCAA team on Saturday. It would be fun if the game was close, so we can see Rick Barnes flail cluelessly around like Mack Brown on a fall Saturday. Then, more importantly, another must-win vs KSU in Lincoln. A bad matchup for NU and tough assignment indeed.

The fight goes on. C'mon....No WHAMMIES!

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Pic of the Day


We are not sure of what the message of this picture is......that Mark Cuban has hemmorrhoids or that our Denver correspondent, 3:20 to Beatrice, needs a better fucking camera....

Devaney Doldrums


PYB wants to thank the Omaha World-Herald's Lee Barfknecht for helping us out today, by ripping the NU athletic department (deservedly so) for it's horribly embarrassing basketball gameday environment. We have railed on about this one for several years, and enjoy having someone else do the heavy lifting on this point for once. Simply a great column that will surely draw the ire of all the brain dead Nebraskans who will miss the point, as always.

There is only so much pessimism and rage that we can muster toward the accepted mediocrity now leveled at the NU AD's "minor sports", as TO and Company allow the demise of every program that was once great.

Thanks to the mismanagement of program, not paying attention to detail, and Title IX....the below have gone from great to mediocre or from consistently nationally ranked to damn near dead or from average to horrible or to defunct:

Football
Baseball
Basketball
Men's Gymnastics
Women's Gymnastics
Softball
Men's Track
Women's Track
Men's Swimming
Women's Swimming
Men's Golf
Women's Golf
Women's Soccer
Wrestling

Are women's volleyball, rifle and bowling really the only three sports where NU stands out these days? What exactly is Tom Osborne doing to strive for excellence?

NU is a conflicted program. The folks in Lincoln want to 'embrace tradition', but sacrificed gameday atmospheres at Memorial Stadium & the Devaney Center so they could blast "Start Me Up" before kickoff and "Cotton Eye Joe" during timeouts. They move to the old school Big 10, but are afraid to embrace the old school N from the helmets and Cornhusker identity and use the embarrassing "N-Huskers" or "Iron N" logo and dorky 'Huskers mantra in their place.


There's no getting away from the school's Midwestern roots. Never will be. PYB doesn't see programs like Iowa, Iowa State, Wisconsin or Purdue running from their heritage. NU has had more athletic success than those schools...why is the administration so afraid of using their tradition properly?

Side note: The fact that Tyronn Lue is not properly honored anywhere in the Devaney is a crime and a bad joke.

Barfknecht has been a PYB target for years, because of his overly cynical NU football coverage...especially in comparison to his man crushes on Bill Snyder and the entire Iowa State operation. But he hits home here with great points. And for that, we thank you.

On a positive note, it was nice to see Kansas revert to form last night in Manhattan. In the Jayhawks' first game back at #1, they got bottle blasted by Frank Martin's Mildcats 84-68. So much for Marcus, or Markwieff or whichever overrated brother it was, wishing to be back at the top of the NCAA hoops heap. We absolutely cannot wait for another second-round tourney loss by Bill Self & crew!!!

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Huskers Lasso Cowpokes


Ragged? Yes. Sloppy? Yes. Boring? Sometimes. Regardless of the knocks on the NU basketball team's 65-54 win over a disheveled Oklahoma State team, it counts as a win. And most importantly, the win came in pure Doc Sadler Style: holding the Cowboys to 36 percent shooting from the field, contesting every shot and scrapping enough on the boards to control the game.

Not many statistics jump out to one's eye when scanning the game's box score, save a couple.

1. Lance Jeter with 16 points, only two assists but just three turnovers in 32 minutes as the team's only legitimate ball handler.

2. Caleb Walker racking up seven rebounds and leading the team on the glass, despite being only 6' 5". JB Diaz was second with six.

3. NU shooting 83 percent from the line, going 15 for 18. Just as PYB thought it, the OWH gave us the numbers showing the marked improvement over previous seasons. We thank them for doing our work for us....

4. Eshaunte Jones making two three pointers in the same game, which is amazing in its own right.

So is there much to analyze here? No. Nebraska was the better team. The five-point spread seemed high before the game, but it was clear the Cowboys didn't have much. Any team that shoots worse than NU from three-point range has major problems. Add to that that a starter is on the shelf for raping somebody, and winning on the road is nearly impossible.

It was the proverbial 'must-win' for the Huskers, and they got it. Now, on to Oklahoma in Norman this week in another 'do-or-die' situation as far as NU's slight NCAA tournament hopes go. The Sooners have vacillated from rancid to competitive to rancid again this season, so PYB predicts Jeff Capel's squad will play their best game of the year as most teams seem to against Nebraska. But, if Doc's boys really want to play in mid-March, they'll have to win at least two of their remaining road games at Oklahoma, Iowa State and Colorado. A tough chore for a team that can't score!

Perhaps the only thing that Okie State added to Saturday's story line was coach Travis Ford's abrupt 58-second press conference, which is surely outdone by the fact that he sounds just like Kenny Powers. Listen here, at the bottom of the page. And in the immortal words of the Jheri-curled closer, "No, actually I don't. I play real sports. Not try to be the best at exercising."

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Big 12 Preview--2/12/2011


'Pokes and Smokes
By Seth Svoboda

I keep waiting for someone in the conference to make a move. So far it has been easy to predict, KU and Texas at the top, Texas Tech, Nebraska and ISU at the bottom. Everyone else has been up and down.
 
Lately, the only news the Big 12 has been making is in the tabloids. Frank Martin and the Pussycats are in the news again: desperate Frank is going to play Curtis Kelly against Colorado amidst rumors of a third failed drug test. Three tokes and you're out doesn't apply in Manhattan, apparently. Boulder, Colo. is just where you want to take a guy that keeps getting in trouble for smoking leftys. After he gets his hands on some of Boulder's finest he'll probably hand Martin his transfer papers.

Speaking of players that can't keep their bong in their pants, Darrell Williams did his best Ben Rapelisberger impression and has been suspended due to his legal problems. He has three counts of rape by instrumentation and one count of sexual assault pending.

What is rape by instrumentation you ask?

"an act within or without the bonds of matrimony, in which any inanimate object or any part of the human body, not amounting to sexual intercourse, is used in the carnal knowledge of another person, without his or her consent and penetration of the anus or vagina occurs to that person."

Williams gives a whole new meaning the OSU moniker "Pokes." Don't worry Darrell, if you get the same treatment as Andy Christensen, you'll be back in uniform before you know it. Oklahoma State guard Keiton Page went on record saying that..."Darrell knows we’re going to have his back through this whole thing."

Really Keiton? Are you sure you want to align yourself with this guy? If my friend puts part of his body or an inanimate object in another person without their consent, I'm going to go ahead and make the decision that this guy isn't exactly somebody I want to stick up for. I wonder if Keiton would be cool with his sister going on a date with Darrell.

Iowa State continues to get everyone's sloppy seconds, as a second player is leaving Michigan State after discipline issues and is visiting Ames with a transfer in mind. Christian Stanhardinger as we all remember left the Huskers and then was asked not to come to LaSalle after he was caught having "relations" in the park at four in the morning in Lincoln. The Big 12 is developing a pretty serious image problem, Brett Favre thinks we look trashy. On to the games.

Texas A&M 18-5 (5-4) @ Texas Tech 11-13 (3-6)

The Aggies are the only team with more than one road win in conference play, other than Texas and KU. They probably aren't as good as their ranking, but this is still a decent squad. This should be a close game, though, as Texas Tech is much better at home than they are on the road and they have the benefit of getting overlooked by most of their opponents. In the end, Texas A&M squeaks by on talent...Pick Texas A&M 66-60

Oklahoma 12-11 (4-5) @ Missouri 18-6 (4-5)

Missouri has really struggled on the road (0-5), but has been very solid at home (4-0). Oklahoma played Oklahoma State close last week on the road, but that was a rivalry game. Oklahoma has lost 2 straight and I think they are reverting back to what we originally thought they were--a below average team. Missouri, even though they lost at Kansas this week, is still a top-tier Big 12 team and is undefeated at home (14-0). I look for a big win at home for the Tigers today, but I pick them every week though so tread lightly...Pick Missouri 86-69

Baylor 16-7 (6-4) @ Texas 21-3 (9-0)

Texas is the easy pick here right? Texas can't possibly win every game in conference this year can they? In a word...yes. Baylor picked up a win over the Huskers this week that was covered by PYB already, but they also won a tough game at Texas A&M last Saturday. Those are two good wins, Baylor also has loads of talent even though they do their best to not to live up to expectations.

If you are a total ass and don't realize how good Texas is take this statistic into consideration: Texas is number one in scoring margin in Big 12 games, with an average margin of victory of 18 points. Kansas is second at 11.6 points a game. The third place team Missouri, only averages outscoring their opponent by 2.4 ppg. All this said, I feel a near victory for Baylor here...Pick Texas 81-75

Iowa State 14-10 (1-8) @ Kansas 23-1 (8-1)

This game doesn't need much thought. Horrible mismatch, the only question is will Kansas cover? Pick...Kansas 94-71

Oklahoma State 16-7 (4-5) @ Nebraska 15-8 (3-6)

I've been picking against the Huskers quite a bit lately, and I have been dogging on Doc Sadler about the players he is able to recruit. Oklahoma State is a must win for the Cornhuskers. Darrell Williams will be sitting around in Stillwater, with his thumb up somebody else's ass (Pee Wee Herman thinks this guy is a pervert). Williams is the Pokes fourth-leading scorer and second leading rebounder (he also leads the team in unwanted penetration).

This is a big break for a struggling Husker front court. I like how aggressive Brandon Richardson has been playing, and Toney McCray needs to continue to score buckets for the Huskers to have a chance going forward. Does anyone else wonder why Eshaunte Jones plays a bunch of minutes one game and then Ray Gallegos plays a bunch of minutes the next? What is going on with that?

If they are that even, then play to their strengths: Gallegos when we need athleticism and ball handling, and if we are in a spot where we need to hit a three then bring in Jones (Editor's note: or if NU needs a badly missed three or a turnover). I have a strange feeling, and not because I have been hanging out with Curtis Kelly; I sense a rare blowout in Big 12 play with the Huskers on the right side...pick Nebraska 77-63

Kansas State 16-8 (4-5) @ Colorado 15-10 (4-6)

Who will survive the great American smokeout? The Cats and Buffs are both still clinging to the hopes of an NCAA tournament berth, and this looks to be a key matchup for both teams.

K State has had too many things go wrong this year, from players getting in trouble to quitting the team. It's hard to blame them, though. Have you seen Frank Martin? The guy comes across like a total dick. I would never want to play for him, and it doesn't seem like his players want to play for him either.

Colorado is coming off a loss at Missouri last weekend and then at home against Texas A&M in overtime. Kansas State, meanwhile, hasn't played since their lucky escape from Ames with a one-point victory against lowly Iowa State last weekend. My head tells me that Colorado should win this game, but my gut tells me that Kansas State rolls a better blunt and gets a win here...Pick Kansas State 88-84

Thursday, February 10, 2011

NBA Power Poll 2/10/2011


Thanks to AZBuckeye for his latest NBA Power Poll....gone for a few weeks as he prepped for his wedding. So congrats on that front....And as it sounds more & more like Deron Williams ran Jerry Sloan out of town, we now realize why we've never thought he was as good as advertised. That---and his 1920s hair style.

After a long absence, here is the latest edition of the NBA Top 10. I am doing this in honor of Jerry Sloan today, I hate to see an old school guy like Jerry leave the NBA.

1. Spurs - They have been amazing this year. One of the Top 5 records ever in the NBA 50 games into the season.

2. Celtics - This team is built for the playoffs. Aging veterans and they have a day or two between games to rest and heal their wounds.

3. Mavericks - As Dirk Nowitzki goes, so do the Mavericks. My MVP is Dirk this year.

4. Heat - LeBron putting this team on his back. Is anyone else in Miami concerned that Chris Bosh is just a little above average ballplayer?

5. Bulls - The Bulls' Big Three of Rose, Boozer and Noah should have plenty of time to gel before the playoffs. Would not surprise me at all if they represent the East in the finals.

6. Lakers - If they pull off the Bynum-for-Carmelo trade I will be watching baseball instead of the NBA playoffs! Gasol was a gift from Memphis. Denver better not be that crazy!

7. Thunder - Can't wait to see this team in the playoffs this year. Looking like San Antonio in the semifinals right now.

8. Hawks - Hard team to figure out. They look great two games and then get blown out the third. Maybe that's why the attendance is terrible in the ATL.

9. Magic - All the wheeling and dealing and this team is still average. If Dwight Howard would get injured this would be another Cleveland.

10. Hornets - This team got off to a great start, which I thought was a fluke. They have remained a steady ball club and really have surprised me in the way the compete every night.

Double Whammy


PYB knew it before Wednesday night, and we were proven right. Baylor sucks. They still beat Nebraska, though, 74-70 in a game that featured 44 Bear free throws to 19 for the Huskers.

Contrary to popular belief, the free throw disparity was not the reason NU lost. Baylor's lame press, lack of offensive flow, poor shot slection, terrible free throw shooting (31 of 44), and overall lack of inspiration gave the Husker's plenty of chances to win the game. They couldn't capitalize.

BU coach Scott Drew did the only thing that can keep NU in games on the road--slow the pace. But Doc Sadler couldn't get his men over the hump, as the team fell to 3-6 in B12 play and 0-5 on the road. Most of Baylor's free throws came as a result of NU's big men being pushed around on the boards and then not moving their feet and reaching in on putback attempts or drives to the hoop.

Toney McCray will receive the acclaim today for his 23-point outburst. However, his stone hands caused five turnovers and numerous other offensive problems, as he made Niles Paul look like Larry Fitzgerald in the process. McCray gave fans a perfect summary of the night, as NU made a steal down two points in the final minute and had a three-on-one fast break before he fumbled the ball out of bounds without being contested. Game over. Absolutely painful to watch.

Even worse was that PYB absorbed a double whammy, as our Baylor -6 bet took a dive on Lance Jeter's meaningless trash three pointer, and then the subsequent no-call on the foul after the ball was inbounded. Almost a given: Husker loss, but opponent doesn't cover. Sayonara to our dough. It's expected as much as another deflating road loss, which should make it easier for NU to bounce back in it's next two games against Oklahoma State and Oklahoma. These games both must be won, or any postseason hopes are gone. See you Saturday, Cowpokes.

We cannot wait to see how this fucks up the tournament next month. One of the few pure sports events remaining is on its last legs....All the drunks at the bar enjoy the chaos and then the lull after the second games of the day to catch up on work e-mail, play pool, play Big Buck Hunter or slam a few cigs....

Hey ugly Mark Buehrle and your trophy wife: please spare use your save-the-world causes until you post an ERA under 4.00. You wouldn't have your wife without your money, which makes her a shallow snatch with as much character as Ron Mexico.

Goodbye and good riddance to bitter Jerry Sloan. Thank god MJ and Company made sure he never got a ring.

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Deep Dive


As Nebraska prepares for what appears to be one of its last two shots at a Big 12 road win tonight, PYB examines the team's real chances with a deeper dive into some of the team statistics. We say highly unlikely, although Baylor's low-scoring ways do offer NU a better chance than normal.

Still, the Huskers have shown a complete lack of ability to stop the other team's star scorer, and the Bears have a great one in LaceDarius Dunn. The guard averages 20.5 points a game, and lesser guards have lit Doc Sadler's supposedly vaunted defense up all season.

In fact, the Huskers are giving up more than eight three-pointers per game (38.9%) while making 4.5 (a pathetic 28.3 shooting percentage) in their eight Big 12 games. In our humble opinion, this makes the team's top-five ranking in field goal percentage a fraud. They have given up 65 total threes in Big 12 play, which translates to 32 two-point field goals as far as points are concerned. Add these 32 buckets to their current 186 of 414 field goals against, and the percentage would be 52.7 percent. That would be last in the nation.

Sure, one could add this on to any team's FG percentage defense, but the reason NU's FGA figure is so low is because they relinquish a bevy of uncontested three-pointers every game. The Huskers are just 50th in the country in this category, while ranking 294th in three pointers made per game. That's a disadvantage that's very hard to overcome, especially on the road where a couple shitty calls (a given with B12 referees) can turn a four-point deficit into 10 in a heartbeat.

What makes it even harder is that NU is severely outmatched up front with the likes of Andre Almeida, JB Diaz and Brandon Ubel not making much of an impact yet again. Even more, Baylor's 6' 11" Perry Jones has averaged 18.7 points a game in conference, and will likely have a field day against the Cornhuskers. Throw in 6' 11" J'Mison Morgan (yes, I spelled that correctly) and 6' 10" Anthony Jones and the athletic disparity will be laughable again.

So, is there a chance? Yes. Baylor has been very unimpressive this season. However, they're coming off a nice road win at Texas A&M Saturday and will be ready to grab another important win as they find their rhythm. Is a win likely? No. The oddsmakers agree, as the Bears are a six-point favorite.

We aren't hating on Doc and his boys. We root as hard for NU as anyone. But these are the facts. And NU must get better. Until then, we're still pipe dreaming. Go Big Red.

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Phoenix Open





PYB offers its limited pictorial from this past weekend's Phoenix Open, thanks to the gestapo security detail, the new tee box that is 15 feet farther from the ropes and the prick caddies that insisted on standing between the players and the gallery on the 11th tee.

Still, we thought you might enjoy Hefty's back fat and Rickie Fowler's Strawberry Shortcake-like bonnet, Green Edition. Those who look closely can even see Bubba Twatson, King of the Chicken Strut, in the background.

Sadly, with attendance at a paltry 131,000 Saturday the talent of the snatch was amazingly lower than in past years....hence the lack of pictures. Apparently, the attendance of fake racks increases exponentially as the weather breaks the 70-degree mark and at least half of the 40,000 fans missing from prior years were hot bitches.

First-time attendees were surely cheated, though they didn't know it. They were instead treated to sluts and skanks trying to pull off the outfits that only girls who are in shape should attempt. But judging by the mass alcohol consumption that was still present, they probably got some drunk guy to give them the dick by last call.

Oh well, there's always next year.

Monday, February 7, 2011

Super Bowl Thoughts


It seems this column on Yahoo! Sports has stolen some of our thunder but wanted to cover the subject a bit.

1. Obviously the gal that butchered the national anthem is getting lots of shit, but she had to be rusty. It has been some time since her heyday with Wilson Phillips.

2. Flyovers have been played out for some time (unless of course you're Frank Solich at the Rose Bowl), but when they go with the flyover over a closed roof it is time to put this dog out of its mistery.

3. Do we need to talk about the Black Eyed Peas' so-called performance? All we will say is that they are the biggest sellout act in many years and that we have honestly heard better versions of Sweet Child o' Mine at Karaoke night. At least we didn't have to see Fergie's GUNT like we had to in that Dr. Pepper television commercial.

4. Is it just us, or was the game as boring as hell despite the 56-point performance?

5. Had Jay Cutler tweaked his knee like Ben Rapelisberger did in the first half, would he have left on a stretcher?

6. When's the Pro Bowl?

7. Too bad Blake. These NBA stars won't take your cheap shots and pushes in the back like the saps in college did.

Tarred & Feathered


PYB offers another belated thanks to Seth Svoboda for filling in to cover NU's bottle blasting, as he offers a post-mortem which asks the direction of the Conrhusker program as we sit two thirds of the way through the season.

We say, at this point, one has to take a big-picture view when gauging success. With the current roster, NU will be outmanned athletically in almost every game. But the opportunity to win 19 games is still there, so one should forget the idea of style points while looking at the final record. If Doc's group could somehow make the NCAA tournament, it's the best season in Lincoln in more than 10 years. If they make the NIT, sure it sucks, but it's progress over last season.

So thanks again to Seth, and we promise to get these posted in a more timely fashion and feel confident we can deliver that promise since there are no more Phoenix Open weekends in 2011:

State of the Program: Nebraska Basketball
By Seth Svoboda

What exactly are the expectations of a Husker basketball fan? Where are we heading, and how long will it take to get there? I bring this up because something occurred to me with about 10 minutes left in the second half, as I sat squeezed in my seat about three quarters of the way up in the Devaney Center yesterday: we are never going to be elite with our current style and mindset...never.

I love Doc Sadler because he has brought hope back to Husker basketball fans. He took a program that was flatlining and jolted new life into the lifeless corpse known as Nebrasketball (editor's note: a gay term that needs to be 86'd if the program wants to be taken seriously).

Around here we love comeback stories, underdogs and getting your hands dirty. We live in actual "communities" where we know our neighbors, we farm, we fight hard for what is right and are full of heart, we extend a helping hand, and damnit we're proud of that. That's why we love guys like Ryan Anderson and Lance Jeter, Zac Taylor and Barrett Ruud (Editor's note #2: well PYB hates him but Nebraskans love him). They bust their ass to prove the unheralded recruit can play with the big boys.

Nebraska is in many ways the essence of the unheralded recruit--as a Nebraskan you can't help but feel like you're deserving, but that nobody else thinks you are, so we eat that underdog shit up.

Sadler brings those kind of guys in and we have worked hard to move in the right direction. When push came to shove we didn't have a chance yesterday. KU made just about everything they shot (55% from the field and 54% from behind the arc) and we were no match for the mighty Jaycocks. But we have a chance against most Big 12 teams. I want more than a chance, I want expectations. Unfortunately, the very style of kid--the gritty, disrespected, overlooked guys we love so much can only get us so far. Every once in a great while that team shocks everyone and wins a game...maybe two in the NCAA tournament. That's not enough for me, if I wanted that I'd be a Creighton fan.

We are built like a solid UTEP (Sadler's former school) team. If this collection of players was with Sadler at UTEP, they would dominate their conference (Editor's note #3: NU dominating any conference might be a stretch), go to the NCAAs every year and win a game there every 10 years or so. That just isn't going to get it done in the Big 12 now or the B1G TEN in years to come.

The reason is simple. Nebraska kids have the mindset that they aren't as good as most of the teams they play in conference but that they have to win with defense, playing harder, and catching a few breaks. That mentality never breaks .500 in conference play. (Editor's note #4: Nebraska high schools haven't produced a Division I impact player since Erick Strickland and Andre Woolridge in 1992.)

I'm not calling for Sadler's job...yet...I'm just saying that he better start selling the shit out of the new arena that Lincoln residents just approved, in order to start getting players that don't trying to win by being scrappy but because they're better than their opponent. If he isn't able to do that, we need to thank him for shifting us in the right direction, and then a throw a big payday at somebody who can bring the type of talent it takes to fill a new 14,000 seat arena. (Editor's note #5: who would come to NU? PYB can't think of anyone.)

By the way Husker fans, I want you at the games, just do everyone a favor and educate yourself about basketball before laying into officials and opposing teams. While the behavior itself is only mildly embarrasing, the real problem is lack of knowledge that spews from your mouths and makes us all look bad. It's always the guy there with his wife and two kids that is yelling about the refs throwing the game. Cheer at the game and have a conversation about it sure, just don't embarrass me anymore please. (Editor's note #6: A-FUCKING-MEN)

That goes for Husker football and baseball fan too. If the Husker football, basketball, or baseball games are the only games you watch, you probably think you know your shit, but you don't...and you are also that same dad needs to quit coaching his son's youth sports team. You are actually making your kid and his friends more obnoxious and less knowledgable.

I'm really in more of a big picture mode right now, but I'll give you some quick hits from the game yesterday. Jeter played another great game, he had a double-double (10 points, 10 assists), Brandon Richardson has been playing much more assertively--he scored another 16, and Brandon Ubel put in a solid performance with seven points and five rebounds. Caleb Walker also has been making strides offensively as he finished in double figures with 10.

Ubel's performance was better than his line. Jorge Brian Diaz and Andre Almeida were thoroughly dominated all game underneath the basket, and Ubel really stood out as the guy in the low post trio with the most potential. He's more athletic and physical than Diaz and Almeida combined, but he does need to be more selective on his fouling. He commits too many fouls that are unnecessary, instead of saving those fouls for trying to block shots or send a message in the lane .

Diaz is more polished offensively at this point but doesn't offer much in terms of rebounding and defense. Almeida travels about every time he touches the ball and he fouls like crazy because he is slow and doesn't have good body control. We need to transplant about 40 pounds from Almeida to Diaz if either of them are ever going to be better than just serviceable.

Devaney was really loud yesterday...especially with about 5 minutes left and all the Husker fans were leaving and the KU fans (probably 20-25% of those in attendence) cheered their asses off as our fans piled out early as usual.