Batzel Men's Basketball Club
Sunday, May 1, 2016
NFL Draft Finally Goes International
There has never been an NFL player to be drafted to not come from an American college, until this year at least. Moritz Boehringer is a Wide Receiver drafted by the Minnesota Vikings out of Germany. Moritz has only been playing football for 5 years but has stood out among his competition in the German professional league. He has a lot of raw talent and it will take him a while to adjust from competing against close to Division 3 level talent in Germany, to facing the best in the world, but the vikings believed in his potential enough to spend a draft pick on him. It will be interesting to see how his career plays out and how it will affect the popularity of American football in Europe.
Thursday, April 28, 2016
Tom Brady's Suspension Upheld
Right when the deflate gate scandal seemed over and done with, it pops back up into the news. This time the U.S. appeals court was at the forefront of the drama by siding with the NFL and upholding Tom Brady's original suspension of 4 games to start the season. I do not agree with the decision and I believe it is unfair to Tom, Patriot fans, and Patriot staff. For one, I feel that 4 games is entirely too long. Four games is the base suspension for players that break the actual law, not for players that are accused of cheating with no solid evidence to prove it. Greg Hardy assaulted and almost killed his girlfriend and he got a 4 game suspension, so basically domestic abuse and deflating balls is the same crime, right?. Secondly, this incident happened two seasons ago, it's time to just let it go. The slightly deflated balls didn't make any difference in that game or on the outcome of the season and people now really don't care about it. At this point it's just beating a dead horse. The NFL has the power to just end this and let one of their best players play and if they were smart they'd do just that.
Sunday, April 24, 2016
Jordy Mercer Finds His Stroke
The Pirates shortstop, Jordy Mercer, hit a league leading 466ft. home run Friday during their game with the Astros. I'll admit I'm not the biggest Jordy Mercer fan, actually he might be my least favorite Pirate, but I can't say I hate any Pirate. Now, before anyone starts hating, let me explain myself. Jordy, throughout his career, has been a player that got playing time for defense, that's why I'm not a fan of his. My view on baseball is if you can't hit a ball, which until this season Mercer was sub-par at, you shouldn't be on the field. I'd rather have a player that commits 30 errors and hit 30 home runs (Hello Pedro) than a player that is a defense only player. My reason being is that a home run will always lead directly to a run, however, an error hardly ever leads directly to a run being scored so therefore the advantage goes to the offense. Now to go back on topic, I hope Jordy can keep up this kind of hitting all year and then give me an actual reason to root for him, instead of hoping he doesn't pop out on a scoring opportunity.
Saturday, April 23, 2016
Safety Comes at a Cost
Football is the most popular sport in America, but it is notoriously considered dangerous. In the effort to reduce the risk of playing many helmet companies have worked to make the safest helmets possible. Currently, the Visis "Zero1'" helmets are considered to be the safest to protect players from concussions. The problem is that to make such a helmet, it costs money. Through grants and other investments Visis has earned the funding to produce the Zero1 helmets, but those investments don't help bring the actual cost down. If any school wanted to buy this helmet they would have to drop $1,500 for just one. This puts pressure on football organizations to decide what is more important, player safety or money. Ultimately small organizations don't have a hope of dishing out $1,500 per athlete to equip them with the safest equipment, so once again, it shows just how much money runs everything and takes precedence over the betterment of the game.
Friday, April 15, 2016
Kobe Brings out the Nostalgia
Kobe said goodbye to basketball the only way he knows how on Wednesday night. He capped his career with a 60 point outing and gave fans exactly what they wanted. I've been a long time Kobe fan through all the ups and downs of his career and now that he is gone I'm afraid it is the end of and era in basketball. The reason I rooted for him was that he wasn't afraid to speak his mind, he wouldn't hesitate to call out coaches or teammates, he never wanted to team up with all-stars to get a ring, he wanted to do it his way and be on top. I feel in today's NBA that competitiveness is lost. Everybody is best friends with everyone now and there's no real rivalries and trash talk that went on between players in years past. I'm an old school basketball fan and I will miss how the NBA used to be when it took more than throwing up deep range three's to win games, but that's the direction its headed and there's nothing that can be done at this point but just enjoy the players that still play the game way it should.
Thursday, April 14, 2016
NCAA Reverses Bans on Social Media Recruiting
The NCAA has recently revoked it's ban on coaches using social media and text messaging to contact their recruits. This ban will be something coaches across the country will be relieved about because it is one less violation they need to worry about getting caught over. Athletes on the other hand probably won't find the same enjoyment in it. With no restrictions coaches will be able to constantly text and be in communication with their recruits as much as they want and I feel as a recruit that would get annoying. I know when I went through the process in high school, at a much smaller scale however, I was only contacted through phone, letters and in person. I can't imagine how much some of these big time recruits phone's blow up with messages they probably won't care about half the time. It'll be interesting to see how this plays out and if the NCAA reacts when athletes start complaining about the harassment of texts coming through their phones.
Saturday, April 9, 2016
Adidas Fights Child Obesity
Child obesity has become a huge concern in schools all across the US and gym classes are obviously a big part of trying to combat obesity. The problem is that gym teachers aren't always able to properly monitor all students in class to make sure they are all participating. Adidas is releasing a new product that students can wear around their wrist during class and have their heart rate monitored. All information from the watches can then be sent to the teachers computer where they can look over all the data and decide who they need to push harder in class. I believe today there are too many kids that sit inside and play video games all day and I'd like to see that change. I hope this new technology will make it possible for teachers to better help those young students that are at risk of becoming obese.
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