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Sulzy on Sports
Due for an overhaul? PDF Print E-mail
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Written by Dave Sulz, Sun Times   
Wednesday, 08 September 2010 15:50

I’m embarrassed.
If you’ve been following the world basketball championships being played in Turkey, you’re probably embarrassed, too.
No one expected Canada’s national squad to go in and dominate the way we do in hockey. But, as of this writing, our Canadian team has wrapped up its tournament play with a perfect record — 0-5. The Canadians completed their round-robin schedule with a Sept. 2 loss to defending world champion Spain, 89-67.
Anyone who follows the international basketball scene to even the slightest degree wouldn’t have thought Canada would beat Spain, one of the world powers in the hardcourt game. An earlier loss to Lithuania, another high-ranking roundball nation, also wasn’t unexpected, though Canada made it close, losing 70-68.
Canada also lost to France 68-63, fell to New Zealand 71-61 and, in its opening game, was defeated by Lebanon 81-71.
Yes, you read correctly. Lebanon, a country of about four million people — fewer than are in the Greater Toronto Area — beat us by a comfortable margin.
Now I realize people in Lebanon do more than sit around making goat cheese. Basketball has apparently been played there since the 1920s, when it was introduced at the American University of Beirut. But I find it hard to believe that Lebanon has the kind of basketball infrastructure found in Canada. We’re no United States in that regard but we have a pretty extensive network of high school, college and university programs across the country, along with elite development programs at the provincial and national levels.
We develop players who go on to compete at NCAA schools in the U.S. and we usually have a handful of Canadians playing in the NBA. We even produced a two-time NBA most valuable player in Steve Nash. That’s two more MVP awards than all five countries in our world championship pool have ever won.
I doubt if there are many outside basketball courts in Lebanon where youngsters dream of one day going on to star for the Beirut High School Comets and, if they’re good enough, go on to play university ball. I think soccer’s the big game over there. I expect more youths dream of playing in the World Cup than the NBA.
So what’s going on? How can we lose to countries like Lebanon and New Zealand (another nation of about four million people) at a game that was invented by a Canadian?
If it’s any consolation, Canada fielded one of the youngest and least experienced squads in the world championships. Our leading scorer in the loss to Spain was the team’s youngest player, 19-year-old Kelly Olynyk, the son of former University of Lethbridge Pronghorn men’s basketball coach Ken Olynyk. The younger Olynyk is about to enter his second season at Gonzaga University in Spokane.
Perhaps youngsters such as Olynyk are the forefront of a brighter future for Canadian basketball on the international scene. I certainly hope so. I realize we’re a hockey nation but it bothers me that we should get our lunch handed to us on the basketball court by much smaller countries with less of a basketball culture. If we were to lose to Greece in hockey or Kenya in curling, there’d be a national outcry. James Naismith is probably rolling over in his grave.
One win at the worlds would have been nice. If we can’t beat teams like Lebanon, perhaps our national program needs a major overhaul.
Or maybe we need to eat more goat cheese.

 
Thanks for the memories PDF Print E-mail
Local Content
Written by Dave Sulz, Sun Times   
Wednesday, 18 August 2010 15:37

It was a night of Montreal Expos nostalgia last Wednesday at the Lethbridge Lodge.
The reminiscing was led by Steve Rogers, the most successful pitcher in Expos history, serving as guest speaker at the Celebrity Awards Dinner which benefits local baseball organizations — the Lethbridge Bulls, the Prairie Baseball Academy, Vauxhall Baseball Academy, American Legion Baseball, the Spitz Canadians, area umpire associations, and local Little League Baseball charters.
It was a bitter-sweet evening, since the Expos are, of course, no longer around. They are now known as the Washington Nationals and all Expos fans have left is memories — and Rogers helped revive plenty of them last week.
The colourful Rogers had plenty of stories to share from his baseball days, including how he became a pitcher. It happened during his first Little League tryout when, after several ground balls went through his legs at shortstop, he was told, “OK, you’re a pitcher.”
After Rogers opened the floor to questions, naturally, someone brought up the matter of the famous home run he surrendered to Rick Monday in the final game of the 1981 National League playoffs. That loss killed the Expos’ hopes of going to the World Series and it proved to be as close as the team ever came to the Fall Classic.
Rogers had been lights-out in those playoffs, defeating Philadelphia Phillies’ ace Steve Carlton twice in the divisional playoff and beating the Los Angeles Dodgers in Game 3 of the National League Championship Series. So it seemed to make sense at the time to summon Rogers from the bullpen in the ninth inning of Game 5 instead of struggling closer Jeff Reardon.
By Rogers’ own admission, he threw a bad pitch and Monday hit the game-winning home on what is now remembered by Expos’ fans as “Blue Monday.” I remember it as a bitter-sweet day. Though I’ve been a Dodgers fan since before the Expos came into existence, that was one of the few times I had rooted against the Dodgers. Like many other Canadian baseball fans, I desperately wanted to see the Expos reach the World Series.
Still, that season, which had been interrupted by the infamous baseball strike, was a special time for Expos fans. The team, which also featured stars such as Andre Dawson, Gary Carter and Tim Raines, was among the best in baseball. It was one of the high points of Expos’ history, matched only by the Montreal team of the early to mid-1990s when again, in 1994, a prolonged strike killed the Expos’ dreams of playing in a World Series.
This summer, Dawson was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, joining Carter as the only former Expos to be enshrined. Dawson had initially expressed a desire to be inducted not as an Expo, but as a Chicago Cub. Similarly, Carter, when he was chosen to the hall, had voiced a preference to be enshrined as a New York Met. Though major league baseball decided the players would go into the hall as Expos, Montreal fans felt hurt that the players had seemed to turn their backs on the Expos.
But Rogers offered an interesting perspective on the situation, noting that, since the Expos no longer exist (and were already destined to leave Montreal when Carter was inducted in 2003), there was no Expos organization to celebrate their Hall of Fame induction. After Rogers’ explanation, their preferences made sense.
So all former Expos fans have left is the memories. Thanks, Steve Rogers, for rekindling some of those.

 
Cheap shot on Crosby uncalled for PDF Print E-mail
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Written by Dave Sulz   
Wednesday, 26 May 2010 09:17
Tweeeeet! Two minutes for cross-checking, two minutes for slashing and five minutes for unsportsmanlike conduct.
The communications director for the International Ice Hockey Federation, Szymon Szemberg, deserves some time in the penalty box after his cheap shot against Canadian hockey superstar Sidney Crosby and other National Hockey League stars who chose to pass up the world hockey championships in Cologne, Germany.
Read more...
 
An ode to defence PDF Print E-mail
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Written by Robin   
Wednesday, 28 April 2010 13:55
Defence wins championships, the saying goes.
It doesn’t, however, very often win Most Valuable Player awards.
Last week, Dwight Howard, the muscled giant with the NBA’s Orlando Magic, became the youngest player in history to win a second Defensive Player of the Year award, repeating the honour he first won last year.
Howard, at 24, also became the youngest player to lead the league in rebounds and blocked shots in the same season on two occasions. He contributes at the offensive end, too, averaging just over 18 points per game this season.
Read more...
 
Mickelson writes his own picture-perfect Masters moment‎ PDF Print E-mail
Local Content
Written by Robin   
Wednesday, 14 April 2010 13:10
How about that Tiger Woods?
OK, enough about golf’s No. 1 philanderer. Let’s talk about the fellow who didn’t receive a Tiger’s share of attention going into the Masters tournament but who truly turned in a Masters-ful performance.
Phil Mickelson is quite likely the world’s best golfer not named for a predatory animal. He’s won major championships before, including the Masters on two previous occasions.
Read more...
 
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