Showing posts with label self promoting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label self promoting. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 19, 2016

More NBA team previews than you can possibly imagine

Last month, I wrote a brief Celtics season preview as part of an NBA blog sharing program where everybody who contributes agrees to post each other's links.  Here they all are, in alphabetical order by team:


Atlanta Hawks
Boston Celtics
Brooklyn Nets
Charlotte Hornets
Chicago Bulls
Cleveland Cavaliers
Dallas Mavericks
Denver Nuggets
Detroit Pistons
Golden State Warriors
Houston Rockets
Indiana Pacers
LA Clippers
LA Lakers
Memphis Grizzlies
Miami Heat
Milwaukee Bucks
Minnesota Timberwolves
New Orleans Pelicans
New York Knicks
Oklahoma City Thunder
Orlando Magic
Philadelphia Sixers
Phoenix Suns
Portland Trail Blazers
Sacramento Kings
San Antonio Spurs
Toronto Raptors
Utah Jazz
Washington Wizards

Saturday, October 15, 2016

I'm breaking the streak at Day No. 2,055

After 2,055 consecutive days of blogging, I'm taking a break.  Tomorrow, for the first time since March 2, 2011, I'm not posting anything on LucidSportsFan.com.

I originally started this site at the suggestion of someone who enjoyed my sports takes on Facebook.  A good friend of mine urged me to write something "at least once a day," so I stuck with that philosophy.  I soon discovered that I might be able to use it as a tool to help me pursue a career outside of bartending (which I officially announced my retirement from on Thursday).  Because of this blog, I was gradually able to write for (and later edit/manage) bigger and bigger sites until I eventually built up a legitimate resume.  Throughout that time, daily posts on LucidSportsFan.com were what kept me motivated.

In a week, I'll be starting a new full-time job as Creative Copywriter for WHOOP.  I can't say for sure what my plan is for the blog going forward, but I do know that it's time to take a day off.


Thursday, October 13, 2016

After a long and storied career, I'm officially retiring from the sport of bartending

In October of 2011, I wrote a mostly sarcastic blog suggesting it was time for me to get Tommy John Surgery to extend my bartending career.  Here's the first paragraph:

"The past few months I've been a little bit off my game.  I'm not the same up and coming young southpaw bartending prospect that I used to be.  At this point in my career I'm more of a crafty veteran.  And lately sometimes I feel a slight pain or twinge in my left elbow.  I mean, here's the thing: I can work through it.  I can still go out there everyday and get the job done.  But I've lost a little speed on my ice scooping.  My bottle pouring doesn't have quite the same rotation.  And I am definitely missing some velocity on my cocktail shake and follow through.  I'm just not the same out there.  I think if I had the surgery I could come back in a year, better than ever." 

Now, five years later, I'm officially calling it quits.  It's been on my mind for quite some time (I actually started a draft of this post in January of 2012) and it's finally time for me to hang 'em up.  A career that began with a bartending class in Boston, MA in 2000, took me to Richmond, VA, Martha's Vineyard, Sanibel Island, FL, Austin, TX, New York, NY,  and San Diego, CA, is coming to a close back where it all started 16 years ago.

Hopefully this will be more of a Jason Varitek retirement and not a Brett Favre retirement.

Monday, September 26, 2016

Boston Celtics 2016-17 Season Preview (all you need to know in just over 37 seconds)


Boston Celtics
Last Year's Record: 48-34 (tied for 3-6 in East)
Key Losses: Evan Turner, Jared Sullinger
Key Additions: Al Horford, Jaylen Brown, Gerald Green


1. What significant moves were made during the offseason?

Boston pulled off its biggest free-agency splash in team history, inking four-time All-Star Al Horford to a four-year max contract.  The C's also selected 19-year-old forward Jaylen Brown with the No. 3 pick in the draft.  Evan Turner and Jared Sullinger signed in Portland and Toronto, respectively, but the Celtics did pick up second-year options on Amir Johnson and Jonas Jerebko, while also re-signing Tyler Zeller.  In addition, Boston brought back veteran shooting guard Gerald Green on a one-year minimum deal.


2. What are the team's biggest strengths?

If you've been listening to Brad Stevens this offseason, it's evident that he's quite pleased with the ability of his players to "fly around."  Stevens has used that expression on multiple occasions when discussing the outlook of his 2016-17 squad.  Along those lines, defense and lineup versatility will be how this club wins games.  Consider the likely second five of Terry Rozier, Marcus Smart, Brown, Jerebko and Kelly Olynyk--Smart and Brown can play in the post with Kelly and Jonas drawing opponents' big men out to the three-point line.  The defense-first small-ball options available to Stevens are also quite intriguing.  Imagine Rozier, Avery Bradley, Smart, Brown and Jae Crowder on the floor together?


3. What is the team's biggest weakness?

When Isaiah Thomas and Horford are out of the game, scoring will be a problem.  Boston's bench will miss Turner's ability to get to the rim and create his own shots.  However, rebounding is the bigger issue.  The Celtics finished 19th in the NBA in rebound percentage last season and their best guy on the boards (Sullinger, 8.3 per game in 23.6 minutes) is now a Raptor.  While he is an elite center, attacking the glass is not Horford's strength.  He averaged only 7.3 rebounds in 32.1 minutes a night for the Hawks in 2015-16.


4. What are the goals for this team?

On the court, anything short of the No. 2 seed in the East and a Conference Finals berth will have to be considered a disappointment.  But, as far as the big picture goes, the C's just want to remain on track to take one more step forward next summer.  Thomas and Bradley will be free agents in 2018, so the window with this group could be closing.  Ideally the final piece of the puzzle will be added in 2017 to turn the current club into a legitimate title contender.


5. Prediction

Vegas set the Celtics' early over/under for wins at 51.5 and most Boston fans are likely expecting a total in the low-to-mid 50s.  I'm not convinced the C's are in line for another big improvement in 2016-17.  My guess for a regular-season record?  49-33.  Since the day Stevens joined the Celtics, he's been a master at doing the most with limited means.  However, for the first time his team has real talent and serious expectations.  The rest of the league is on to him.  Boston isn't going to take anybody by surprise anymore.  It's easy to go from bad to good, but from good to great is a much taller task.



Tuesday, September 13, 2016

An early look at 2016-17 college basketball national championship odds

The college basketball season doesn't begin until mid-November, but that doesn't mean it's too early to bet on who might take home the national title next March.  The following futures numbers are all from 2016/17 NCAA basketball betting in William Hill.  Here are the favorites, plus teams I like, don't like, or just find generally noteworthy based on their odds:

Duke, 7/2: The Blue Devils lost the No. 1 pick in the 2016 NBA draft, Brandon Ingram, but they're getting the potential No. 1 selection in the 2017 draft, Harry Giles.  Betting on the favorite is rarely a good idea in college hoops, particularly when the odds aren't that rewarding at 7/2.

Kentucky, 9/1: The Wildcats have the No. 1 recruiting class in the country according to ESPN Insider, just ahead of Duke.  Could an all-freshman starting lineup take them to a title?  My guess is no.

Kansas, 12/1: The Jayhawks round out the trio schools you always expect to see as preseason favorites.  Kansas brings back a large portion of the squad that went to the Elite Eight last March.

Oregon, 14/1:  Oregon?  The Ducks have the fourth-best championship odds in the country?  They won the Pac 12 last season and earned a No. 1 seed in the big dance, and this year they'll return four of five starters.

North Carolina, 16/1: It wouldn't be a college basketball season if the Tar Heels weren't among the top betting choices.

Michigan Sate, 18/1: The Spartans make it five of six teams you could put at the top of this list without even looking at the rosters.  Michigan State also pulled in the third-best freshman class after Duke and Kentucky.

Villanova, 18/1: Repeat champs seems to come along once a decade, dating back to UCLA's domination in the 1970s--North Carolina 1982-83, Duke 1991-92 and Florida 2006-07.  Could it be 'Nova's turn now?

UConn, 50/1: I love Connecticut at 50/1.  Nobody expected the 2014 Shabazz Napier or the 2011 Kemba Walker Huskies to bring home the title.

Gonzaga, 66/1: Kelly Olynyk's alma mater, first put on the map by John Stockton, fell to Syracuse in the Sweet Sixteen last year.  The Bulldogs lost big man Domantas (son of Arvydas) Sabonis to the NBA.

Butler, 125/1: Brad Stevens coached Butler to back-to-back title games in 2010-11, one of the most amazing stories in sports history.  These Bulldogs played Virginia tough in the second round of the 2016 tourney.

Michigan, 125/1: The Wolverines return seniors Zak Irvin and Derrick Walton to a team that nearly upset Notre Dame, who made the Elite Eight.  With odds on par with mid-major schools like Butler, Michigan is not a bad bet at 125/1.

Monmouth, 1000/1: The Hawks, located in West Long Branch New Jersey, won last year's regular-season title in the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference.  Monmouth's undergraduate enrollment is roughly 4,400, a fun long shot at 1000/1.  On the other hand...

Rutgers, 1000/1: The state university of New Jersey, enrollment 33,000, plays in the Big 10 conference and has the same title odds as Monmouth.  Yikes.  That's only slightly less pathetic than...

Boston College, 2000/1: The Eagles just made major college sports history by going winless in ACC conference play in both basketball and football in the same year.  There are no teams on the board with longer odds than BC.


Sunday, August 21, 2016

2000 consecutive days of blogging

Oak Bluffs, August 19, 2016
Today is the 2000th consecutive day that I've posted a blog on LucidSportsFan.com--no time off for summer vacations, Christmas, or even my honeymoon.  I'm now only 633 days away from passing Cal Ripken.

The first post ever was on March 2, 2011.  In the beginning I wrote more than one per day, so blog No. 2000 actually came back in July.

To celebrate, here's a clip of the best fireworks show on the planet, the annual late-August display in Oak Bluffs, on Martha's Vineyard:




Sunday, August 7, 2016

Recycle Sunday (No. 18)

I'm way past due for a Recycle Sunday post, this is the first of 2016:

A year ago when Tom Brady's four-game suspension was overturned, I suggested it might actually decrease the Patriots' Super Bowl chances.  They fell just short, so maybe now that it's back...

How lazy is it that both villains in The Karate Kid have the same name?

We don't have to call a "Grand Slam" something else because of Serena Williams

The worst haircut in human history

Report: The Patriots kicked your dog, may soon spit on your baby too

Gronk was the best athlete in "Caveman Games," how perfect is that?

Babe Ruth. Mickey Mantle. Reggie Jackson. David Ortiz.

Why I don't like the MLB Wild Card game (imagine an NFL playoff lasting only 6 minutes?)

One of the most amazing/telling Patriots stats I've ever seen

I still don't understand how LeBron James wasn't fined for ripping apart his jersey on national TV.

Could you eat this cucumber sandwich?

The NBA has officially made 20-second timeouts 60 second long.  Huh?

When a screenshot of a SportsCenter graphic is worth 1,000 words (how you destroy a perfect season)



Friday, July 22, 2016

Blog No. 2000

The first-ever post on LucidSportsFan.com (actually LucidSportsFan.blogspot.com at the time) went live on Wednesday, March 2, 2011.  The site has come a long way since the beginning.  Earlier this year I noticed I was approaching 2000 blog entries, so I made a mental note to celebrate post No. 2000--but then I forgot.

This is actually No. 2012, but I'm going with the fireworks anyway.

When I first started writing I often published multiple posts per day, and by my calculations this is my 1,970th consecutive day of blogging.  Maybe I should've saved the 2000 hullabaloo for a month from now?  Or I could just do it again, I like seeing more than one fireworks show each summer anyways...


Wednesday, April 6, 2016

Thoughts on Celtics' upset of Warriors, Marcus Smart's future, playoff opponents and NBA awards predictions

I recently participated in a Celtics roundtable discussion for CLNS Radio, a site I used to write for.  Here are the questions and my responses:

1. Did Friday’s win against Golden State change your opinion of the Celtics?

Honestly, no. This may sound hard to believe, but I actually though the C's had a decent chance to win that one. Their guards match up perfectly with the Warriors and Boston knew it could hang following the double-OT game in December. I do think the confidence the Celtics gained from the victory will be huge down the stretch and in the playoff though.

2. Out of the three likeliest first round opponents (Heat, Hawks, and Hornets), which team poses the biggest threat to the Celtics’ chances?

The Hawks are the team that scares me the most. With the exception of two eight-point losses in Toronto and a pair of OT defeats at the hands of Golden State and Cleveland, Atlanta is 14-1 since late February (before Tuesday's action) against the rest of the league. Having said that, I'll take home court advantage first and the right opponent second. There's a reason all four teams have basically the same record.

3. What are your thoughts on Marcus Smart moving forward? Is he someone the team can build around?

I don't think Marcus is a guy you can successfully build around--he's never going to be an elite scorer. However, he's definitely someone you can build with. I'm not worried about his shooting. He's working hard on it and he just turned 22 years old, it'll come. Whether or not he's a point guard, I'm not so sure. His game is more suited for being a small forward, which he might be able to pull off the way the league is trending.

4. Provide a few end of the year award winners…

MVP?
Curry. There's no reasonable alternative. Isaiah should get a couple votes though.

Rookie of the Year?
It's Karl-Anthony Towns, but Devin Booker has made a nice run down the stretch.
Defensive Player of the Year?
Hassan Whiteside. He's averaging 3.7 blocks per game, nearly 1.5 more than anybody else.

Sixth Man of the Year?
Enes Kanter. 12.4 points and 7.9 rebounds in a very efficient 20.6 minutes per game off the bench for OKC. He's also 10th in the league in PER.

Most Improved Player?
Jae Crowder might have a shot if his scoring average was a little higher, but CJ McCollum has it locked up. He's posting nearly 14 more points per game than he did last year.


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