Saturday, August 23, 2014

Why I am jumping ship......sort of.


I was born in Houston, TX in 1981.  It is my city.  I love Houston.  I grew up rooting for everything Houston.  The Astros, the Rockets, and the Oilers.  The city is in my blood.  My sports heroes were Craig Biggio, Jeff Bagwell, Hakeem Olajuwon, Warren Moon, and Ernest Givins.  These were the players that I grew up rooting for and placing my faith in.

Life circumstances happen though, and mine took me to Idaho. My love for my city and my teams, however, never wavered.  I continued to root for the Houston teams even while living so far away.  They are a part of me.

Following the 1995 NFL season, the Oilers announced that they were moving to Tennessee.  This came as great news to my father, whose job had just relocated him to Nashville.  To me, it didn’t make that much difference.  I was still in Idaho, and rooting for these players in Tennessee felt pretty much the same as it did when they were in Texas.  I didn’t feel the same sense of abandonment that a lot of Houstonians felt because I wasn’t there.  So, I just stuck with the team.  There was no plans to have another team in Houston, and it was very natural for me to keep rooting for players that I had watch come into our system; players like Steve McNair and Eddie George.  They continued to be a huge part of my sports identity.

In 2002, the NFL added an expansion team located in Houston; the Houston Texans.  I felt a little conflicted, but had stuck with the Titans (formerly Oilers) up to this point and didn’t feel any huge connection to the Texans proximity-wise since I was still living in Idaho.  So, the Titans continued to be my team.  In the back of my mind, however, I always kept an eye on the Texans, paid attention to their drafts, and their offseason moves.  But, it was under the surface. 

Then, in 2012, my family and I moved back to Texas, and I really started to feel conflicted.  I felt very strange being so close to my home town, with all of the Houston games on local TV, and yet rooting for a team 800 miles away.  Adding to this was a change in ownership for the Titans and a complete overhaul of the roster.  It began to feel like a completely different team and organization.

It is with these thoughts in my head that I began to ponder, “Why am I not rooting for my home team?”  A few answers came to my head.  First, people associate me with the Titans; I may look like a fair-weather fan if I switch (which is the opposite of what I consider myself to be).  Second, even though the organization looks and feels different, it is still technically the same organization that drafted Earl Campbell and Ernest Givins.

I struggled with this issue for a long time.  And although it may seem like a trivial thing to some, sports in the Tiner family are anything but trivial.  It is a part of who we are.

And who I am is a Houstonian.

So, having said that, I am writing to say that I have decided to quit fighting what my heart has been leaning toward for quite a while.  I am openly admitting that I am a Houston Texans fan.

I am not jumping ship because the Texans are better; they were actually the worst team in the NFL last year, losing 14 games in a row.  It is more that I am experiencing the removal of the Oilers from the city of Houston 19 years after everyone else did.

Lastly, this is certainly not an easy thing for me.  Honestly, I sat for 20 minutes in front of my computer wondering if I should publish this.  But I feel like I have been right on the edge of this for a while.
I do not want to completely sever ties with the Titans/Oilers organization, as it will always hold a special place in my heart.  But I am ready to fully embrace all of the teams of my city. 

Go Rockets.  Go Astros.  And……   Go Texans.
 
 
 
 

Wednesday, May 7, 2014

In the Year 2000............


Do you remember when Conan O’Brien had that bit on his late night talk show where he would point a flash light at his face (in a darkened room), sing the phrase “In the year 2000….”,  and make predictions about what life would be like in the year 2000ish?  Most of the time his predictions would be funny and often they would be wrong.  On this eve of the NFL draft, I’m hoping to achieve neither of these things with my NFL draft predictions.

I’m not one of those guys who come up with mock draft 1.0 – 137.0, starting the day after the Super Bowl and ending tomorrow afternoon.  When it comes to sports predictions, I like to wait and gather as much information as possible about any situation before forming an opinion or conclusion.  He are my humble opinions about some of the most talked about players entering this year’s draft.  No O-lineman, just my top 3 and the much debated QB’s of this draft.  They are in order of most to least talented (IMO)

 
  1. Sammy Watkins – No other player has the level of talent combined with maturity and work ethic of Sammy Watkins.  If I were a GM, this is the guy I would target and/or trade up to get.  He is the best offensive player on the board.  Probably the next Julio Jones, maybe even better.  If he stays healthy, he will have the best career of anyone in this class.
  2. Khalil Mack – The 1B to Sammy Watkins.  Best defensive player on the board. That’s right, I said board.  He has the potential to be the next Patrick Willis.  If my need is on the defensive side, I’m taking Mack before Roger Goodell can finish announcing whose turn it is to pick. 
  3. Jadeveon Clowny – Freak of nature: skill combined with size.  Not sold on his metal game or work ethic, though.  While he’s got unlimited potential, I see this guy loving more the lifestyle football can bring him rather than what he can bring to the game of football.  I think he’s a Mario Williams clone.  Don’t get burned twice Houston.

Now for the QB’s………………

  1.  Derek Carr – If I have to rank them all on talent level as of this point in time, I’m putting Carr first.  He’s a football junkie, has a cannon for an arm, is accurate, and a grinder.  He’s definitely better than his brother; just ask either one of them. If he and AJ Macarron traded colleges, Carr would have the same amount of titles and would be easily going #1 overall this year. Steal of a pick in late first round and beyond.
  2. Blake Bortles – The next Ben Roethlisberger/ Joe Flacco.  Big, strong arm but a little unpolished.  If he reaches his full potential, Blake could overtake Carr as having the most success in the NFL of all the QB’s.  I like his size, arm, and football IQ, but he needs a couple of years to develop and fine tune.  Don’t know if he’s going to have that luxury.
  3. Teddy Bridgewater – Mature and more accurate than his remaining competition.  Has some potential with the right coach.  Could have some early success, but will be a career back-up.
  4. Johnny Manziel – Poor man’s RGIII and rich man’s Brady Quinn.  Undisciplined, not accurate, undersized, and ok arm.  Having said all of that, he is a playmaker and exciting.  He’s the Reggie Bush of this years’ QB class in that sense, and will be far less successful.  I give him 4-5 years max in the league.
I don’t want to get too carried away, so I’ll stop with my predictions there.  I’ll give this a few years to bake before I comment on this article again.  Hopefully I won’t be apologizing for completely whiffing.  Feel free to tell me how right or wrong you think I am already.


JRob

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Overreaction Monday


          This is a term that is used by a few sports personalities here and there (when discussing football), but never seems to be taken to heart by the masses.  Furthermore, it’s amazing to me how even some members of the media will use this phrase to add satire to a segment, only to then go right into to doing the very thing they were just making fun of.  And just like clock work, “Overreaction Monday” happens EVERY Monday during the NFL season….and Tuesday, and Wednesday, and Thursday, and Friday and all the way up to the next game.  The same holds true for college football.  There is more flip flopping on teams and players from week to week, than a politician who’s running for re-election. 

 

         If you take nothing else away from this piece, please remember this: You have to let things play out, let the players work out some kinks, let the offensive/defensive schemes develop more, LET THINGS BAKE before you rush to judgment on what a team/player is or isn’t!

 

         Week 1 of the NFL season, Colin Kaepernick threw for 412 yards and 3 TD’s.  Monday, he was proclaimed by many in the media to be #2 only to Andrew Luck in terms of potential and a sure lock Hall Of Fame QB.  He was the “new” model of QB that all GM’s were going to draft, a dual threat athlete with a cannon for an arm.  The sky was the limit for Kaep and the 49ers…….ooops.  Now, in full disclosure, I drafted Kaep with my #1 pick in my fantasy keeper league.  I was hoping to get 250 -275 passing yards per game and 2-3 total TD’s per game (passing and rushing).  But with his main receiving weapons being out, I knew to even temper those expectations a little.  It drove me absolutely insane to hear the extreme high praise for him after week 1, to “the sky is falling” comments after week 2 when Kaep threw for 127 yards and 3 INT’s.

 

          Overreacting week to week is like listening to two opposing sides of an argument, and believing what ever side you heard last, to be fact.  I’ll let some of you in on a little secret…..(whispering) the truth always lies somewhere in between.  This is consistently true no matter the subject: politics, sports, baking, movie reviews,….anything.  After the first two weeks of the NFL season, I was guessing Colin Kaepernicks game stats were going to be somewhere close to his averaged results of these games.  But no matter what, before I decided to keep/trade/drop my 1st round pick of my fantasy draft, I was going to LET IT BAKE for a while and see what happened.  IMO it typically takes until week 9 to figure out what a team or players identity is, and that’s the mark I was waiting for before pulling the trigger on any move.

 

Here are Kaep’s stats per game:

-          Through week 9:  Passing Yards = 186.1, TD’s = 1.33, and Rushing Yards = 34.4 

-          For the 2013 season: Passing Yards = 199.8, TD’s 1.56, Rushing = 32.75

 

         So he gained 13.7 passing yards per game, .23 TD’s and lost 1.69 rushing.  All in all, pretty similar stats.  And that’s with getting Crabtree back at the end of the year.  Once again, these stat lines are not the extreme of Week 1 or Week 2, but rather in between.

 

         Another example of “Over-reaction Monday” was with the Auburn Tigers this year.  On December 9th, 2013 ESPN’s Colin Cowherd proclaimed that the Auburn Tigers would not only win this years’ BCS National Championship, but also win next years.  Guess when this prediction came (besides the date I just gave you)….the Monday after Auburn beat Alabama in their own stadium.  Cowherd didn’t stop there.  He then went on to declare that Auburn would consistently beat Alabama from this point on and Nick Saban would start losing more and more each year going forward.  All because of one loss.

 

        Well, we know he was wrong with his first prediction.  Florida State went on to win the BCS title.  (It was a close game, but FSU won none the less.)  We will have to wait and see how his 2nd and 3rd declarative statements turn out, but if I had to bet on it I would wager against both. 

 

       The moral to this story is – don’t be that guy.  This goes for all things in life, not just sports. Let things bake.  Let your emotions cool down, then analyze with a clear head, and make a rational judgment. 


JRob

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

I'm Just Sayin'.........


(January edition)

 

 

Things I’ve been thinking about:


  • The San Antonio Spurs have had one of the NBA’s best records all season long.  However, against the other top teams in the NBA (Oklahoma City, Miami, Portland, Houston, Indiana, and the LA Clippers) they are 1-10.  Are they overrated and simply beating the teams they are supposed to, or are they a sleeping giant no one wants to see in the playoffs?

 
  • The conversation of whether a Quarterback is great often revolves around Super bowl wins.  There are only 11 quarterbacks who have won multiple Super bowls (this list will grow by one if the Denver Broncos win this coming Sunday).  Does this list encompass the great quarterbacks?  Is Terry Bradshaw better than say, Dan Marino?  Here is the list of Quarterbacks who have won multiple Super bowls.

 

 
  • Kevin Durant is on a torrid pace statistically this season averaging 31.3 points, 7.8 rebounds, and 5.2 assists.  The only other players to ever average 31 points, 7 rebounds, and 5 assists for a full season are Elgin Baylor, Wilt Chamberlain, Oscar Robertson, Jerry West, Michael Jordan, and LeBron James.  Good company.

  • Was Richard Sherman's infamous post game interview the best ever?  The worst ever?  How does it compare with Bart Scott's 'Can't Wait' interview?  Is it even the best Richard Sherman interview?  Can anything possibly beat the 'Better at Life' beat down Sherman gave Skip Bayless on TV?

 
  • The 3's are a-flyin'!  Kyle Korver's streak of consecutive games with a 3 pointer is up to 113!  Meanwhile, Houston Rocket Chandler Parsons hit 10 consecutive 3's on January 24th.....in one half!
 

 

……..I’m just sayin’.