Showing posts with label Reggie Bush. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reggie Bush. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Kings getting ready to line up


The Sacramento Kings, like all NBA teams, are attempting to finalize their training camp roster.

According to Kings President Geoff Petrie, the Kings have 18 commitments for the start of camp Sept. 28, preceded one day earlier by media day.

"We have 18 committed and we may add one or two more before camp starts," Petrie said Tuesday afternoon. "We're still two weeks away and there's always the possibility that someone could go to Europe or elsewhere."

Elsewhere has become a major option for players over the past 15-20 years. Back in the day, there weren't options of going to play all over the world.

Now, it's nothing for a player to take guaranteed money in Italy or Lithuania or Japan or China or Australia over the non-guaranteed opportunity to make an NBA team.

So far, the Kings expect the usual suspects - Tyreke Evans, Beno Udrih, Francisco Garcia, Samuel Dalembert, DeMarcus Cousins, Omri Casspi, Hasaan Whiteside, Jason Thompson, Carl Landry, Donte Greene, Pooh Jeter and Antoine Wright.

Then there are the hopefuls - Darnell Jackson, Donald Sloan, Luther Head, Joe Crawford, J.R. Giddens and Connor Atchley.

Any of the hopefuls could be swayed by guaranteed loot elsewhere. However, Head, Crawford and Giddens likely will see openings with the Kings for anyone who consistently can make perimeter shots.

Petrie estimates, "close to 30 percent of the league's players are from other countries."

That's an amazing change from 25 years ago when the number of NBA international players was in single-digits.

Bush to surrender his 2005 Heisman Trophy

New Orleans Saints and former USC running back Reggie Bush is taking a hit for a whole lot of people.

Bush announced Tuesday he will return the 2005 Heisman Trophy he won following reports he and his family received hundreds of thousands of improper benefits while playing at USC.

Bush's family reportedly lived rent-free in a home and received substantial cash gifts from two different agent groups positioning themselves to represent him in the NFL.

Bush, 25, was 20 years old in 2005. Since he's opted to return the Trophy, in my eyes, he's admitted wrongdoing of some extent.

However, clearly the adults (i.e., parents, any advisers, agents Mike Ornstein, Michael Michaels and Lloyd Lake) also were at fault in a major way and were at least as responsible for the chicanery.

I'd love to hear from Bush's parents about what they did. I'd love for Ornstein, Michaels and Lake to come clean about their parts in the entire deal.

Plane tickets, free hotel stays and cash would seem highly difficult to bypass, especially for a 20-year-old.

In a related thought, I'd still have the Trophy if I was Reggie. Five years later, they are coming to get it? C'mon now.

Just a thought. Had Reggie Bush been in a car accident and died, would the Heisman folk still have wanted their Trophy returned? As my son and sister say, I'm just saying.

Five years? Come now. What's up with that?

The Barry Bonds trial should be something special at this rate.









Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Strasburg, Vaughn come from different perspectives


Center fielder Cory Vaughn and Stephen Strasburg were two-year teammates on the San Diego State University baseball team, but the similarities pretty much end there.

Strasburg was selected first overall by the Washington Nationals June 8, 2009. Vaughn, meanwhile, was selected Tuesday by the New York Mets in the fourth round of the 2010 first-year draft.

Strasburg's major-league career began Tuesday night in Washington with a 14-strikeout, zero-
walk victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates.

Strasburg already has signed a four-year, $15-million deal with the Nationals.

Vaughn, like nearly all of the players who sign after being selected during the 50-round draft, soon will begin play in a low-level minor league in his quest to get to the big leagues.

Strasburg clearly is a phenom. However, the predominance of young baseball players will take the long, hard route. Strasburg will receive a great deal of attention, even with the likelihood that he cannot duplicate that sterling debut.

Vaughn has perspective and insight delivered from his father, Greg, who hit 355 home runs in 15 major-league seasons.

Greg Vaughn spent 1986 in Helena, Montana; 1987 in Beloit, Wisconsin; 1988 in El Paso, Texas and parts of 1989 in Denver before being elevated for 38 games late in the season.

The senior Vaughn accompanied his son last week to pre-draft workouts in Arizona, Denver, Milwaukee and Minnesota.

It wasn't always like this in baseball. Scouts would do their due diligence and then selections would be made.

The senior Vaughn said his son now will have an opportunity to play baseball and make money once he becomes a major-leaguer.

"Hopefully," he said, "you show your stuff now and get your money when you get into the majors. That's what makes baseball special."

Vaughn, who played for five teams (Milwaukee, San Diego, Cincinnati, Tampa Bay and Colorado), believes American baseball players have been hindered by the way they are taught on the way up the ladder.

"As a kid, you are taught how to play one way, how to run, how to hit, how not to hit," Vaughn said. "Those ways you are taught change at every level, high school, AAU, college and then pro ball.

One advantage Hispanic kids have is they are taught to play one way coming up and there is no confusion about how the game is played."

Vaughn said Strasburg has shown a poise and talent level that has him pointed towards stardom.

"He's one of the best competitors you'll find," Vaughn said of the Nationals rookie, "but you can talk to him. He's a quality guy with a great work ethic. Nothing is a big deal to him. He's got a power arm and he wants to be great. And throwing 95-96 miles per hour certainly can help him be great because he's got other pitches he can go to."

Greatness always will receive grandiose media attention, however, there always will be far more players attempting to make their respective ways - step by step - to the majors.

College sports shows not everything must change

All long-time sports fans sit with open mouths as we watch the state of college sports altered as never before.

Texas, Texas A&M, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Texas Tech and Colorado reportedly are slated to join what was known as the Pacific-10 Conference. Nebraska is headed to the Big 10 and what last week was known as the Big 12 could become a mirage.

And we all know, but rarely hear from powers-that-be, it's about money, network television and TV markets.

Perhaps this is the geographic precursor to what we've always heard out here from earthquake-leery folks about the West Coast. When the Big One hits, the coast will be drastically altered, and there could be an Island division.

The next card to be played likely will come from Notre Dame, which has stood as a high and mighty independent.

Both ironic and disgusting, throughout all of this sports university juggling, is nary a mention of the student-athletes, as the NCAA likes to call them.

Then again, on the same day much of these changes appear legitimate, USC is handed a two-year bowl penalty as well as reduced scholarships among other sanctions for behavior that went against 'the heart of the NCAA's amateurism principles.'

There is no questioning here that Reggie Bush and/or O.J. Mayo may have financially benefited while playing for the Trojans. The point is college football programs are multi-million conglomerates.

Other USC players likely did as well. Ditto for UCLA players, University of Nebraska players, Colorado, you name it. Pick a high-profile university and some players on the basketball and football teams received uhh, upgrades.

That's merely the way of the world. Those who have excesses and acclaim get free dinner, upgraded parking and better seats, just to name a few.

Joey Johnson and Mickey Martin, the postal and garbage workers, have to pay their respective ways.

It says here, the NCAA spent five years going after USC, so don't stop here. Jam up every school for the exact same behavior. Spend those same what likely were millions of dollars to clean up collegiate athletics.

Prevent coaches from moving from school to school and improving their personal financial lots while leaving their recruits high and dry.

Yeah, right, that's going to happen.

As long as schools can make their moves and take in more cheddar, then it's not that unforgivable or unrealistic student-athletes also look to take advantage of their opportunities.

As schools have shown, free money is difficult to turn down.

It still looks like a long NBA Finals

Each of the first three NBA Finals games could have been won by the loser, so it makes little sense to foresee the rest of the series to be any other way.

Both coaches, L.A.'s Phil Jackson and Boston's Doc Rivers, have complained about the officiating. OK, here's another news flash, it'll be hot in Mexico City in August.

Coaches always complain about officiating during series, be it first-round, conference semifinals and conference finals, much less the NBA Finals.

Once the game begins, it always has been about heart. When everything is on the line, the team that gets more of its players performing at a high level will win. The easiest way to perform at a high level offensively is to take the ball to the rack as diligently, relentlessly and strongly as possible.

Only the strongest survives.

Where should LeBron James sign?