Monday, June 25, 2012

Where?s ZimBear?: Big League Stew sends the year?s best giveaway out into the big, bad world

Meet ZimBear. He's half-teddy bear, half-baseball lifer and 100 percent terradorable. Yes, that's a combination of the words "terrifying" and "adorable." You find a better way to describe someone melding Don Zimmer's likeness into a beloved children's toy.

As you might have heard, ZimBear will head home with the first 10,000 fans to spin the Tropicana Field turnstiles for the Tampa Bay Rays-Detroit Tigers game on Friday, June 29. The giveaway is just under two weeks away, but Big League Stew headquarters was lucky ? or is it unlucky? ? enough to have a ZimBear show up on its doorstep last Friday.

ZimBear's arrival, however, got us thinking. Why should we be the only ones to experience the singular pleasure of being creeped out by ZimBear's overeager stare during the workday? Shouldn't we share the joys of ZimBear caretaking with our loyal Stewies far and wide?

And then it hit us: We're going to send our ZimBear out into the big, bad world as a Flat Stanley-type experiment in community building. We know that the existence of the commenting maniacs has hampered the Stewies building a true identity in the space below, but we've always felt your love on Twitter, on Facebook, through our different contests�and through emails. We'd like to showcase our smart and creative readers by having some of you play host to ZimBear for a few days before you send him to another willing reader. Along the way, we'll learn a little about you, a little about your community and a lot about how you react when you wake up in a cold sweat to find ZimBear peering down from your headboard.

So email us at bigleaguestew@yahoo.com if you're interested in playing host to our ZimBear over the next few months (and maybe years if this thing really takes off). All we ask is that you're willing to write a post about your time with ZimBear, snap a few creative photos of him in your native city or town (if you want to take him to your local ballpark, all the better) and do not feed him after midnight, expose him to bright light or get him wet under any circumstances. (We have no idea if he has Gremlins-type tendencies but frankly, we're not taking any chances.)

If all goes well, this should be a really fun activity. In addition to your occasional posts on the Stew, we've set up a @WheresZimBear Twitter account and will be posting travel updates on our Facebook page as well.

But first things first: Who wants ZimBear? He's sitting nearby as we write this post and he's starting to twitch in a weird way. It's about time he hits the road.

Are you a loyal Stewie who wants to host ZimBear and be featured on BLS? Send an email to bigleaguestew@yahoo.com with a short explanation of why you want him sent your way and what you would do with him once he's there.

San Antonio Spurs Vince Carter Amare Stoudemire

Kendrick Perkins just doesn?t ?understand? why Oklahoma City goes away from the lineup featuring him at center

The last time Kendrick Perkins was in the NBA Finals, he wasn't in the NBA Finals. We're probably going to have to be mindful of that moving forward. Prior to last Tuesday's Game 1 ? a game that saw heaps of Twitter chatterers roundly criticizing the play of Kendrick Perkins both in game and following ? the last time we saw the man in front of that massive Finals logo he was sitting on the Boston Celtics bench after tearing knee ligaments in Game 6 of the 2010 NBA Finals. This means Perkins had to sit out Game 7. This means he had to watch, as Pau Gasol's crucial offensive rebound pushed the series' deciding game in Los Angeles' favor. This means he was as helpless as any one of the Boston rooters that weren't amongst the five on the floor at the time.

This means we'll have to take it easy on Perk, while he vents and complains, following yet another game that saw the Oklahoma City Thunder go away from him in the final minutes. The final 18 minutes of the contest, to be exact, a jaunt that saw the Miami Heat outscore the Thunder by two points while Perk watched from the sideline. Which had to be hard, considering the team was +11 with him on the court for the first nine minutes of the first quarter, even if we attempt to forget the fact that the team was -7 with Perkins on the court in that six-minute third-quarter turn. Whatever we remember, or forget, Perkins is a wee bit upset. From Daily Thunder:

"I just don't understand why we start out the first quarter the way we did, with the lineup that we had, and all of a sudden we change and adjust to what they had going on. So they won the last three quarters, and that's what happened."

This was a vent, after yet another close loss that could have gone either way, with Perkins again probably thinking that his presence on the floor may have swung the game. Kendrick has played just six minutes combined in each of the Finals' fourth quarters, with all but 12 seconds of that run coming in Game 3. And he doesn't like the pattern. And, because he cares, it's understandable and we should let him vent. Even if he'd modify his comments after toweling off during an off day between games.

The Thunder did "adjust to what they had going on," as you're supposed to when a team like Miami stops acting hesitant with its offense and making the sort of quick decisions that lead to nailed shots, as the Heat accomplished in coming back from an early deficit in Game 4. It's not as if the Thunder, in the midst of their fantastic start to Game 4, suddenly decided that it was time to start matching up with the smaller and quicker Heat; leading to the three-quarter failure. No, it's just that a very good and championship-worthy Heat team got its act together, and everything returned to the mean. A mean that, four games and 16 quarters in, means a very close game between two fantastic teams.

And, to continue on this thread, it's not as if Perk doesn't know this.

He thinks it can be modified, in a way that probably coincidentally hands him more minutes along the way, and he wouldn't be wrong in that assumption. Few players are. How it translates, though, is the problem. Because though we respect Perkins' best attributes and the luxury Oklahoma City has with their starting center, employing a master of low-post defense in a contest that features absolutely no centers or power forwards that are going to the low post means that the luxury should be wearing warm-ups.

It's at this point that most will recall one of the bigger upsets, I suppose, in NBA history. When the 67-win Dallas Mavericks, fully healthy, were upended by the eight-seeded Golden State Warriors in 2007. Mavericks center Erick Dampier started 73 of the 76 games he played in, that season, but by the time the first round rolled around the Mavericks decided to go small to match up with the apparently inferior Warriors. And it didn't work. And because the unsteady relationship between causation and correlation confuses some, observers took Dallas coach Avery Johnson's switch as both a sign of weakness, and a series-tilting maneuver that backfired.

That series wasn't decided because Dallas went small, though, and let Golden State define the terms of competition. It was decided because the Warriors had Dallas' number, because they matched up well and had the personnel needed to pull off the "upset."

It wasn't even decided because GSW coach Don Nelson had run those same Mavericks the year before, because during Warriors coach Mike Montgomery's turn with the team in 2005-06 the Warriors beat the Mavs three out of four times during the regular season. Golden State beat them in all three regular-season contests the following year, so a 4-2 Golden State postseason win following a 6-1 run against the Mavericks over two previous regular seasons shouldn't have come as much surprise.

And Dampier's inclusion or banishment (he did play well in that series, adding 17 rebounds and nine points in 38 total minutes of play) had absolutely nothing to do with the regular rollin' on.

To Perkins' credit, statistically at least, he has done the same. Twenty-two points and 30 rebounds in 96 minutes of play is sound work, borderline Dale Davis-y stuff if you give him a starter-level 33 minutes a night. He's not working the Joel Anthony or Jason Collins tip, here. There are tangible contributions, and he's had his moments defensively.

The team plays better, in this particular series, with him off the floor. Adjusting to matchup is not a weakness, and even if you do it to pair yourself off more equally with an underdog, it's still sound basketball smarts.

Some teams start two lumbering center-types. Some start two point guards. Some, like the Heat, are still determining both their rotation and starting lineup a year and a half into putting their team together. And while I don't want to act as if a heavy-minutes lineup featuring Nick Collison's quicker feet is a panacea, the stubborn sports writer in me is sticking with what he thought before the Finals ? that the Thunder were going to have to severely limit Perkins' minutes in order to keep up with a Heat team that is both formidable in the screen and roll, and able to start five guys who can all swing a game with their perimeter shooting.

Of course, this is a thousand-word column based off of one Perkins quote in the frustration of a sweaty locker room after yet another coin flip game landed on "Heat."

That's OK, though. Perkins has the right to rant, and we've got the right to answer. All while trying to figure out the right way to adjust to a Miami Heat team that appears to be doing absolutely everything right at the absolute right time.

Ales Rodriquez New York Mets Chicago White Sox

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Brian Banks finally gets his NFL shot; impresses Seahawks enough for minicamp invite

Ten years ago, a 16-year-old linebacker from Long Beach Poly High made a verbal commitment to Pete Carroll's USC football team. That linebacker, Brian Banks, never found out what might have been, because he was wrongly accused and convicted of rape and spent five years in prison. The five years after that, which were spent on parole, saw him wearing an ankle bracelet and having to register as a sex offender wherever he went. Two weeks ago, Banks was finally exonerated, and on Thursday, he finally got to work out for Pete Carroll with an opportunity to make Carroll's team.

Only now, and with 10 years away from big-time football in the interim, Banks was trying out for the Seattle Seahawks. His story reached Carroll as it did the rest of the NFL, and of all the teams trying to get Banks into their facilities to see what might be, Carroll's got the first shot.

"When we first heard the story about Brian, I thought it was some remarkable circumstances and a guy up against all odds, extraordinary circumstances, but not until I talked to him on the telephone did I realize what kind of guy this guy is and that he deserved a chance," Carroll said after Banks' workout. "Given other circumstances, he would have earned it under our eyes, but this is a guy that just deserved it."

And it's not hard to create an alternate reality in which Banks would have gone on to star at USC as one of many linebackers Carroll developed, and even made a serious dent in the NFL. Banks can't think about that reality, though -- all he's got is the reality left in his 26-year-old body. He's taken off 50 pounds in the last year and has been running 4.6 and 4.7 40s on his own, and Thursday was his time to show what he could do. Just two weeks away from a different and much more restrictive world, the difference was overwhelming.

"This is by far the second best day of my life," Banks told the Seattle media. "May 24, my exoneration, and just today to be out on this field to work out with the Seahawks. To be given an opportunity to have a tryout. I really don't have words for it. This is a dream come true. I know a lot of people work hard to get to this point. I've also worked hard myself. I'm just thankful for the opportunity. I really am."

[Video: Top fantasy football picks for 2012 | Players to avoid]

Yes, it's a great story. But now that the rubber meets the road, how realistic is it to expect that a player who never had a junior or senior year in high school, much less any college experience, could actually make an NFL squad under any circumstances? As Carroll said, it was time to temper expectations.

"He looks like a guy who has not been schooled and worked out in the fashion that our guys are at this level. It's going to take him some time and I think our expectations need to be fitted to that. He's not had the upscale program and individual workouts and the kinds of things that guys do to get here. So to look as good as he did under those circumstances was worth noting."

Worth noting enough that Banks was invited back to Seattle's mandatory minicamp next week. Banks has other obligations in the meantime -- he's working out for the San Diego Chargers Friday, and there's talk about a trip to see the Redskins as well -- but the bond between Banks and Carroll went deeper than Carroll really knew. When Banks was going through that decade of pain, the USC offer was one of the things that kept him going. When the two men met again, Carroll was taken aback by how much Banks remembered.

"I was really impressed with the details. He really recalled every bit of it. I can see why to us, we've recruited a lot of kids -- but when our coaches were yelling in the background and hooting and hollering that we were excited about his future, he remembers every bit of it.� So it was kind of fun for me to recount with him how it all went down. It was a very short-lived relationship because soon after that one phone call we had in the springtime, he disappeared and he was unable to play his senior year so we lost track of him and didn't know his story. We had really just moved on. But to him, it was so meaningful and he remembers it verbatim. It's great that it stayed with him and helped him along the way."

Banks worked on basic position drills with the Seahawks' coaches, and he had the facility to himself from a player perspective after Seattle was docked two practices for too much OTA contact. In a way, that made the event bigger, but it still leaves the question unanswered: How will Banks do when he's up against the NFL's best? His trip to San Diego will answer that a bit, and he'll know more when he starts training with Travelle Gaines in Los Angeles later in June. As Gaines told me recently, Banks will be going up against running backs like Chris Johnson and LeSean McCoy down there, "and we'll find out pretty quickly" how much work needs to be done.

[Michael Silver: Players got cash incentives for hits during Saints playoff win]

It's not out of the question for a team to believe enough in Banks to take a long-term flyer on him -- there are some interesting precedents. In the early 1970s, the Pittsburgh Steelers monitored running back Rocky Bleier over two full seasons as he fought his way onto the active roster while recovering from injuries suffered in Vietnam. Bleier went on to star as a lead blocker for several Super Bowl-winning teams, and he ran for over 1,000� yards in 1976 -- back when it was a 14-game season and that was a notable landmark. Patience can sometimes be rewarded in situations like these. In Carroll's own case, he brought former USC receiver Mike Williams back from football purgatory after Williams ate his way out of the league, and helped Williams find a measure of professional redemption. Carroll believes in second chances -- he's the beneficiary of one himself right now -- and if you know his history, it becomes easier to see the Banks "experiment" as more than just PR.

"It's against all odds that he could get to this point, but we're going to support the chance and have a vision for what he could become more than what he is today and see where it goes," Carroll said. "It's going to happen quick. This is the highest level of competition you can find in the world of football and it's going to be very difficult, but he deserves a chance. He's a living testament to [the idea that] if you keep hanging and you're tough and you don't give up on what you believe in and your dreams, then you can make things come to life. He's done exactly that. I think that's the message of Brian Banks that will continue to go out, and he deserves every bit of that attention."

For Banks, it's the balance of living one dream (freedom) and trying to make another (football ) come true.� "It was overwhelming," he said, when asked about the fact that so may NFL teams are checking the tires. "There are really no words to express that. The offers that I received, the opportunities that I received ? men dream of those days. They get up every morning and they work hard for that type of offer. I just want to make sure that I'm prepared to?OK, I'll tell it to you like this. I told the coaches today coming out here ? and I absolutely mean it ? I feel more appreciative for the opportunity than I feel deserving. I'm honored to have all of these people, all of these coaches from different teams, give me this opportunity with not seeing me play for so long."

[Related: Troy Polamalu reflects on simplistic approach of Tim Tebow]

There are many opportunities in Brian Banks' future. If he isn't ready for the NFL now, there's the specter of the CFL or another "alternate league." He may have used up his NCAA eligibility by playing for Long Beach City College in 2007, but you'd think that even the NCAA might give him a pass on that one. Perhaps coaching or scouting could be in his future. He has no doubt that he wants to work with organizations like the California Innocence Project, which helped him get his life back. It's a big menu, but right now, Banks is just glad to have it all in front of him.

"It's taken some getting used to," he concluded. "Two weeks ago, I was a guy who was just sitting inside of his house trying to get through parole and deal with the situations that I've been through. Today, having all these cameras in front of me only shows that I have not only the support of my family, but support of people who are just finding out about this story who feel like there is an injustice within our system, flaws that need to be fixed, and I'm realizing that I'm giving people hope to overcome the situations they're also going through.

"And if that is my calling, I'm ready to answer."

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Oakland Athletics Paul Pierce Baltimore Ravens

Bronson Arroyo and Aroldis Chapman nail takeoff on Adam Sandler?s ?Red Hooded Sweatshirt?

The MLB FanCave has made some pretty funny videos in its year-plus of existence. There was David Ortiz hugging random Yankee fans on the streets of New York, an eye-patch wearing Miguel Cabrera staging his own telenovela and Cameron Maybin getting pranked by his Padres pals at a burger joint.

All of those skits, however, feel like one big lead-up to this video, which features Cincinnati Reds pitchers Bronson Arroyo and Aroldis Chapman singing a version of Adam Sandler's classic "Red Hooded Sweatshirt" song.

Yes, all the money and time Major League Baseball has poured into the FanCave seems entirely worth it the moment you see Chapman doing his best Kevin Nealon.

Fantastic. I will now sit, pray and wait patiently for Joey Votto's version of "Lunchlady Land."

Want more baseball fun all season long?
Follow @bigleaguestew,�@KevinKaduk and the BLS Facebook page!

Chicago Bulls Eli Manning Kansas City Royals

Saturday, June 23, 2012

Showtime Sports Launches New Mobile Boxing Scoring Game

Paul Pierce Baltimore Ravens John Lackey

Filip Forsberg, Teuvo Teravainen upbeat after Draft day falls

PITTSBURGH --�Every year there's at least one. This year, Filip Forsberg and�Teuvo Teravainen were the two top-rated players who had to wait a little longer than expected to be taken in the first round.

The No. 1 and No. 2 ranked European skaters by NHL Central Scouting, Forsberg landed with the Washington Capitals at No. 11, while Teravainen was selected No. 18 by the Chicago Blackhawks.

According to scouts, Forsberg was one of the better developed forwards in this draft class having played a big role in Sweden's performances at the 2012 World Juniors, 2011 U-18 Worlds and 2011 Ivan Hlinka tournament.

"I would lie if I said I wasn't nervous," Forsberg admitted. "It was a D-man draft this year," he said as eight of the top 10 picks were blueliners.

Teravainen said he will spend next season with Jokerit in Finland and will look to bulk up his 5-foot-11 frame. The 17-year old has dominated playing against those of similar age, and while his production dropped off a bit moving up against men while with Jokerit, another year of developing will help him in the long run.

"Next season is very big for me," he said.�"I have always dreamed to get to [the] Draft and now it's true. But I just know that my work has just begun and it's a lot of work I have to do."

One of Teravainen's favorite players to watch is Patrick Kane. After Blackhawks 2011 No. 2 pick and Pittsburgh native Brandon Saad announced the selection, Teravainen received an endorsement from a possible future teammate:

Follow Sean Leahy on Twitter at @Sean_Leahy

Tampa Bay Buccaneers Mathew Safford Phoenix Suns

Friday, June 22, 2012

Chinese NBA movie starring Dwight Howard and Carmelo Anthony sounds, looks even better than we?d dreamed (VIDEO)

It's not new information that Dwight Howard and Carmelo Anthony are going to star in a feature film titled "Amazing," a joint production between the NBA and the Shanghai Film Group (SFG) that's been billed as "the first NBA-themed motion picture outside of North America." The NBA and SFG announced the film project in August 2010, and we promptly noted how fascinating it sounded, how excited we were for it, and how big an opportunity it appeared to present for sheer filmic disaster.

But you'd be forgiven if you forgot about "Amazing," because things have been pretty quiet on the development front since that initial announcement.�The scheduled summer 2011 release date came and went, as the league and its players tended to other, more pressing business. 'Melo moved from Denver to Manhattan and appeared on "Nurse Jackie," while Dwight seemingly tried to move from Orlando before hemming/hawing his way into a one-year extension with the Magic, and appeared in "The Three Stooges." And in the absence of updates, it seemed like the project had been, at the very least, de-emphasized. Film buffs the world over began to fear that the film would never see the light of day.

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This last weekend, though, roundball-loving cineastes received some long overdue good news. Not only is "Amazing" back, on its way to global cineplexes�and sounding bigger and better than ever, but thanks to the magic of The Basketball Jones' Trey Kerby, we now know what it looks like. And oh, man, does it look even more insane and great than we'd hoped.

Li Anlan of the Shanghai Daily has some details on the film:

For the first time, the NBA is partnering with a non-US film studio to release a major film overseas, the producers announced at a global press conference [...]

"Amazing," a production by the Shanghai Film Group, tells the story of a fictional world known as "The Sixth Sense." It uses basketball imagery to combine the visual elements of a video game with a movie, akin to the 2010 American science fiction film "Tron: Legacy."

Stop drilling, NBA, Shanghai Film Group and acclaimed director Sherwood Hu, because holy cow, have you struck oil. Yes. Yes, yes, yes.�More basketball movies that are, to any degree and in any capacity, like "Tron: Legacy," please.

[Marc J. Spears: Shane Battier hopes to become second of Coach K's Duke players with NBA title]

Like, no disrespect to Kevin Durant's�upcoming "Thunderstruck," but I think we can all agree that we as a society need�more basketball movies that take place in chaotic, neon-soaked, CGI-dominated landscapes, and if we can get Dwight�on a 7-foot-long light cycle, so much the better. More movies that take the NBA and its players out of reality and puts them into "a fictional world known as 'The Sixth Sense,'" which seems like an especially weird name for a world in a movie considering there already is a movie called "The Sixth Sense" that had a world in it that involved ghosts and things, but anyway: Yes, more of that, please.

More movies that star not only Anthony and Howard, but also Yi Jianlian and Scottie Pippen, whom the Shanghai Daily's Anlan reported were both attached to appear and who are there for your viewing pleasure in the trailer. More reported appearances in movies by Yao Ming and Wang Zhi-Zhi, too. More of literally everything this is about.

But wait: There's even more.

SportsGrid's Matt Rudnitsky did some search-sleuthing and found an entry for "Amazing" on a Chinese film site that, run through a translator, offers this synopsis of the film:

"The movie ? is intended to show a few urban white-collar basketball fans realized the truth of life in basketball the face of temptations. The hero of the film played by Huang Xiaoming is a game tester, testing a new 'virtual reality' basketball game, this virtual world is not so simple, even accidentally involved in some thrilling adventure."

This jives with the initial one-line descriptor offered by the NBA and SFG way back when, when they called the film "a basketball-themed movie about young people achieving their dreams through hard work." Except for, you know, the whole virtual reality component, which is obviously a pretty big component.

If Rudnitsky is correct and "Amazing" is, ostensibly, "like Chinese 'Space Jam,' but for adults," it's going to be one of the most unbelievable things ever committed to film/digital video. Actually, scratch that ? it is already that. This is, in every sense of the word, pretty unbelievable to me. I can't wait to illegally download it off the Internet travel to China to cover the premiere this summer.

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