Author Archives: Andrew Long

What’s Going On in Eugene?

Over the last couple months the Oregon Ducks have gone through an interesting time.  Just a few months ago the Ducks were ecstatic about going to a Rose Bowl but things have changed.  So lets take a look at what all has happened since the new year.

January 1st, 2010- Ohio State – 26  Oregon – 17.  In a game where you don’t want either team to win because you dislike both of them way too much, the Buckeyes came in as underdogs and beat up the Ducks.  Oregon proudly extended their drought of not winning Rose Bowls to 93 years.  Suckers.

January 24th, 2010 Part one: 2 Oregon kickers were in a brawl.  Rob Beard was knocked unconscious and put into intensive care for a couple days, he was charged with misdemeanor assault.  The other, Mike Bowlin, has now left the team.  (I don’t blame him)

January 24th, 2010 Part two:  Quarterback Jeremiah Masoli and receiver Garrett Embry are named in a police report for stealing laptops and a guitar from a frat house in Eugene.  Masoli, who has had some legal trouble in the past, is still on the team while Embry has been kicked off.  Some people say this story isn’t true (you probably know my opinion) but no legal action has been taken against Masoli and I expect this to blow over.

February 3rd, 2010:  Defensive end, Matt Simms, was dismissed from the team after being charged with misdemeanor assault in a brawl. 

February 17th, 2010:  At 3 AM, the pac-10’s freshman of the year, LaMichael James, was arrested on the accounts of strangulation, 4th degree assault, and physical harassment.  All of these charges came after James got into a fight with his girlfriend in a parking lot.  Like Masoli, James had been arrested before this.

No one knows if these incidents will lead to anything serious punishments.  Obviously, some players have gotten kicked off the team but those players weren’t very vital to Oregon’s success.  I expect Masoli to be the starting quarterback this season and not have any serious punishment because it’s taking so long for anything to be proven in that case.  But with James it’s a little different.  He was arrested and there’s been no dispute about what he’s done.  That’s the kind of thing that  not only gets you kicked off a team but also gets you kicked out of school.  If either of these kids are not on the team next year the Ducks chances at another Rose Bowl take a significant hit.

This all leads to the question, does Chip Kelley have control of his team?  Remember, he’s only been coach for a little over a year now.  He got the Ducks to produce on the field but, as we witnessed first hand with Rick Neuheisal, it’s important to be in control of your team off the field too.  But maybe this isn’t Kelley’s fault, maybe the blame should fall on former coach, current athletic director, Mike Bellotti for recruiting kids with questionable characters. 

I’m not saying that Oregon is the only school who has problems with their football program.  Heck, the 2000 Huskies had some well documented problems of their own, but the Ducks are really on a roll.  And while I’m usually not too excited about the Ducks getting on a roll, I’d be just fine if this one kept right on going. 

Andrew

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LaMichael James Arrested

Oregon’s star running back was arrested at 3 a.m. this morning on accounts of strangulation, assault, and menacing.  Seems to be a few problems in Eugene this off-season.  More on this later.

Andrew

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Why I can’t cheer for Gonzaga

With March fast approaching (not fast enough) and the Huskies tournament hopes in limbo, I’m stuck in the decision of who I will cheer for in March if my Dawgs aren’t in it.  The obvious choice is Gonzaga.  They’re in-state, have good players, and look like they should get a pretty good seeding come selection Sunday.  But I just can’t do it.

In the early 2000’s I cheered for the Zags.  The Huskies weren’t relevant and I liked the underdog.  Those Casey Calvary and Dan Dickau teams were fun.  Year after year they’d upset someone and became America’s sweetheart.  They were the classic underdog and everyone loves underdogs, myself included.  But I lost that feeling for them. 

It all started with Adam Morrison.  He was annoying, a cry-baby, had that TERRIBLE mustache, and somehow, through all of

Really?

 his years of basketball, didn’t learn how to pass.  I know he was great, the guy could shoot the lights out, but I swear that he took more than half of his teams shots.  He knew how to get the ref’s calls too.  Morrison would get to the free throw line so often that I’d lose track of how many times I’d run into the bathroom to heave from looking at his mustache (I might be exaggerating a little bit).  He changed a team that was fun to watch because of its chemistry into a one man show.  Sure, sometimes the show was phenomenal but it lacked supporting actors and I needed more characters to get attached to.

After Morrison left, my dislike of the Zags only grew.  They stopped playing the Huskies and a feud arose between the two schools.  They weren’t the underdogs anymore and it annoyed me to see them breeze through their terrible league while the Huskies had to put up with playing the Pac-10.  Then Zag fans would brag to me about their great record.  All the while I’m thinking, “Didn’t you guys play the San Francisco school of the blind last night?”  The feud between the two schools has only grown this past year.  With UW proposing to play Gonzaga every year in Seattle (which would never happen) and Mark Few making some comparison to Big Foot.  (When you’re putting down 2 things I love, UW and Big Foot, you aren’t going to be my favorite person).

Let me try to clear up why I dislike Gonzaga by confusing things a little bit more.  A double negative makes a positive, right?  Lets play this game I sometimes play in my head.  It’s called “what major league baseball team would this sports team be?”  (Obviously this game doesn’t work with major league baseball teams because the Mariners = the Mariners).  So for today lets have UW be the Seattle Mariners.  I know there are differences but for this example it works.  The Ducks can be the Yankees, I hate the Ducks and I hate the Yankees.  Again, there are differences (like the Ducks not knowing how to win a championship) but it works.  With these two teams equaling the Mariners and the Yankees this would mean that Gonzaga equals the Boston Red Sox.

For years the Red Sox were the underdog, a team everyone cheered for because of their ridiculously long championship drought.  I cheered for them right along with the rest of America when they came back to beat the Yankees in ’04.  For a while they were America’s team; it was cool to like the Red Sox.  It was great they won, just like it was great to see Gonzaga be the tournaments Cinderella for a few years.  But then the success got to their heads.  They let everyone know they won the world series and that they were going to do it again.  Everyone piled on the bandwagon and that became annoying.  And now they’ve started taking things for granted.  Bill Simmons (the sports guy) wrote a column a year or two ago about how he could see the Red Sox becoming just like the Yankees and I agree with him.  They’ve become arrogant with an attitude that says “I know we’re better than you,”  even if they weren’t.  All of these things that I’m saying about the Red Sox can also be said about Gonzaga. (Although I will never hate the Zags the way I do the Ducks).

I do like Bulldogs!

I realize that some of you are Zags fans and some of you are Red Sox fans.  But you aren’t the typical kind of Red Sox/Zag fans.  You aren’t the annoying fan who has this false sense that your team is out of this world.  But that’s how I feel like a good share of the fans are and that’s how the teams come off as.

So come March I could be searching for a team to cheer for.  I’ll probably just look for some Cinderella team that wins America over in the span of 3 days.  A fun team who is on cloud 9 because they’re living their dream.  You know, the kind of team the Zags used to be.

Andrew

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Why the Huskies COULD Win Out

There seems to be at least a little interest in this topic so I thought I’d try to explain.  Joe, Dan, and me seem to be in agreement that the Huskies very well could win the rest of their regular season games (I haven’t talked to Matthew about this but I think he probably feels the same).  We know that the Huskies have 3 more road games.  We know that they’ve only won one road game out of eight.  We know they are as inconsistent as Pac-10 refs. But I’ll explain why we think this.

When I was young I played basketball and baseball.  My dad was my coach and I loved playing these sports to say the least.  I would practice and practice, not because I was supposed to but because I wanted to.  But no matter how much I practiced dad would tell me that sports were 50% physical and 50% mental.  You could have all the physical skills in the world, but without the right mindset (the mindset that you would make a shot, throw it where you’re supposed to, and that you’re going to win) you wouldn’t be a good player.  All year the Huskies have had this mental problem in which they couldn’t play anywhere near their potential on the road.  Now, they finally won a road game and maybe that problem is gone.  Maybe not, but the Huskies are clearly a better team than their 1-7 road record and now that they’ve got the monkey off their back.  Their mindset might be in the right place now. 

So lets take a look at the next 5 games:

Feb. 18th, home against USC-  This game scares me.  I know the Huskies play like a top 15 team at home but, for whatever reason, it seems like we never match up with them.  They are pretty athletic and completely dominated us when we played them at home.  I think we win this game but not that easily. 

Feb. 20th, home against UCLA-  We should win this game for many reasons.  UCLA is not very good, it’s senior day, national TV, sold out arena, college gameday is there, and we should’ve beat UCLA on the road.  Count this one as a win.

Feb. 27th, @WSU-  It’s hard to win on your rivals home floor and this is probably our toughest road game left.  WSU has had these 2nd half collapses and it would seem like they’d play a complete game sometime but I think their young team is tired.  This game is a toss-up for me.  We match up pretty well with them but it’s their last home game, which makes for a pretty hostile environment. 

Mar. 4th, @Oregon-  Since beating the Huskies at Hec Ed. Oregon has lost 8 of it’s last 10 games.  The Ducks suck but if they’re going to be fired up and ready to win a game it’ll be this one.  Oregon fans don’t like UW (much like we don’t like them) and they will make it a tough place to play.  Even with this I think the Huskies will avenge their only home loss of the season and win this game. 

Mar. 6th, @OSU-  Oregon State is not a tough place to play.  The Beavers can take people by surprise though with their quirky schemes.  On paper we should have no trouble with Oregon State but that’s why they play the game.  OSU is bad and we should win this game but we have to be ready to go and can’t take it easy this game.

If the Huskies have really turned a corner with this road win then they could very well win the rest of their games.  Unfortunately, that’s a big if.  If the Dawgs win out they should lock down a spot in the tournament, if not they’ll have to do some work in the pac-10 tournament.  Regardless of what happens, it makes for an interesting 3 weeks.  I hope they’ve turned the corner.  As one of my favorite bands writes “Just hoping makes me better for it.”

Andrew

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Finally!

We won a road game!  UW beats Stanford 78-61.  I’m not going to give a recap, that might come later by someone, but I just thought this blog should express some excitement!  It’s great to get this “can’t win a road game” thought out of our heads.  If the Dawgs somehow make this a year to remember the play of the year will be Quincy diving a quarter of the way across the court, beating all pac-10 forward Landry Fields to the ball and then passing it to Darnell Gant for a game-clinching dunk.  That’s the kind of play Jon Brockman made.  That’s the kind of play you want from your captain and that play showed how much Quincy wants it.  We have a long ways to go in a short amount of time but that might be the kind of play that turns around a season.  (Knock on wood for me, thank you.)

Andrew

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A Little More on the Possible Pac-10 Expansion

(Authors note: Ted Miller has a good post about this same topic in his blog on espn also.)

Dan did a nice job of summing up the possibility of the Pac-10 expanding to the Pac-12.  I am not a big fan of this idea because I don’t think the teams that could be added don’t bring a lot to the conference and I don’t like what this could to conferencing scheduling.  But I think there could be a way to make me like this move more.

I had thought that if there was an expansion then the pac-10 would split into two divisions, north and south.  Competing in the south division would be USC, UCLA, Arizona, ASU, Cal, and Stanford (Cal and Stanford could be in the north).  That makes for a north division of Colorado, Utah, Oregon, OSU, WSU and UW.  If this were to happen the dawgs would play the 5 teams in their division every year.  They would then cycle through the teams in the south, playing 3 or 4 of those teams in one season.  If this were to happen the north division would miss out on recruiting.  Oregon and UW, who recruit southern California actively, would miss out on playing USC and UCLA some years and thus, would miss out on the exposure those games bring. 

But what if the expansion was set up differently?  Lets forget about the north and south divisions and set them up differently:

Division 1: Arizona, USC, Cal, Oregon State, WSU, and Colorado.

Division 2: Arizona State, UCLA, Stanford, Oregon, UW, and Utah.

Each team would play their whole division, that sets up 5 games.  Then all the natural rivals (UW vs. WSU, UO vs. OSU, etc.) would play every year.  That leaves two games to cycle through teams in the other division.  I say 2 because then the pac has a chance to load up on non-conference games and has a better opportunity to make it to bowl games (like the SEC does now).  The conference would have to set up these divisions correctly; having rivals like Oregon and UW in the same division would be vital.  The winners of the division would go on to play in the conference championship game with an automatic BCS bid to the Rose Bowl at stake.  Like Dan said, the expansion would increase the chance of having multiple pac-10 teams in BCS bowls. 

I don’t know how serious the talk of this expansion is.  It might be as serious as they let on but it could also be to take the attention off of the penalties that are about to come down on USC.  If it does happen I hope the commissioner realizes that north-south divisions would hurt several teams in the pac. 

Andrew (Go dawgs, time for a road win!)

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A few Husky/random thoughts.

Happy Friday to you all and thank you for a great first week on the blog.  We’ve got some ideas that we’re excited to write about coming up soon.  Anyway, here are some thoughts to kick off a three day weekend:

  • I’m as disappointed as anyone that the Huskies lost last night.  Really, I would’ve given my right foot’s pinky toe to win that game but I wasn’t that upset afterwards.  First of all, I expected to lose.  This isn’t exactly a good thing but a win just never seemed likely to me.  Secondly, the dawgs didn’t play that bad.  Cal was simply on fire.  Did you see some of the things Jerome Randle did last night?  When a player gets going like that there’s not much you can do.  Even when falling behind by 18 the Huskies fought.  That’s more than we can say about any of their other pac-10 road games (save UCLA).  I truly believe that if we were playing any other pac-10 team we would’ve won last night, Cal was just ready to go.  One other thought on the game and then we can put it to rest.  The Huskies had just cut the lead to 8 and Randle dribbled the ball down the court.  Gutierrez shoves Thomas right into Overton, they knock each other down and then Randle hits a 3.  Maybe it’s just me but shouldn’t there be a foul called there.  It’s hard to tell how much Thomas flopped but it seemed pretty evident that he was pushed.  I’ll stop now before I start on a rant about Pac-10 refs.
  • Tomorrow’s game is huge.  If the Huskies play like they did yesterday I really think they’ll win, but the last few times they’ve got beat on Thursday they’ve come out flat on Saturday.  Stanford sucks but they’re also 5-0 at home.  If the Huskies lose this game an at-large bid to the tournament seems highly unlikely.  A few suggestions to make the

    Elston Turner?

    Dawgs’ feel more at home.  Purple-shaded sports goggles– Can you imagine Venoy wearing these?  Elston Turner dresses up as the Husky mascot Harry– Lets be honest, Turner isn’t doing us any good.  If he were to dawn Harry’s costume it would give the team a reminder of home.  Plus, if we somehow blew the Cardinal out we could put him in and how cool would it be to see Harry on the court?  Give them the special drink Bugs Bunny uses in Space Jam-  I love Space Jam. 

A few more sports thoughts:      

  • I really don’t like Geoff Baker(Seattle Times Mariners beat writer).  He comes back from his vacation and his first blog post is a sarcastic apology to players he’s made fun of over the years.  A day earlier Steve Kelley wrote a column apologizing to Erik Bedard for his poor treatment by the media (it was a nice idea but poorly executed).  I didn’t like Baker to begin with but this post sent me over the edge.  I admit, I’ll be the first to make a Carlos Silva fat joke but I’m also not a professional journalist.  Baker is good at what he does but he comes off very arrogant to me and doesn’t seem like a very nice guy. 
  • I wonder if there are online classes I could take to become a certified pac-10 ref, it seems like that’s all it takes. 
  • Maybe it’s time to sit Abdul Gaddy.  I like him and think he’ll be a very good player in time but he’s just not helping the team right now.  I know he needs time to develop, but I think that Overton, Thomas, and Suggs all need to play  more minutes than he does.  Breshers also seems like he’s worn down and is getting outplayed by MBA.  When you’re getting outplayed by MBA you know things are bad. 
  • There’s a girl named Hooch Fagaly on the Huskies softball team.  Really??! That poor girl.  Oh, and Danielle Lawrie threw a perfect game in the first game of the season.
  • A few happy thoughts to enter the weekend.  Pete Carroll is no longer coach of USC, Paul Wulff is still coach of WSU, Cliff Lee is a Mariner, and Space Jam is at your local Blockbuster just waiting for you to rent it.

Andrew

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September 19, 2009

(Sorry, this is a little long!)

Actually, lets start a couple hours earlier.  It was around 9:30 p.m. on Friday night.  School had ended for the week and I was on my usual weekend spot, Matthew and Lisa’s couch.  I had finished reading an article by Jerry Brewer, Seattle Times columnist, on how this sports weekend could be a memorable one.  One of the reasons why it would be is because the Yankees were in town.  By this time the Mariners were out of the playoff race but that didn’t change the fact that we needed to beat the evil empire.  Matthew had run up stairs for a few minutes and I was watching the end of the game.  It was all but over, the Yankees were up and the best closer of all time was in to finish off the 9th inning.  He got two quick outs, just like everyone thought he would.  The third out was going to be Mike Sweeney.  But with that beautiful swing of his (sarcasm) Sweeney somehow smacked a double.  Then Ichiro came up and hit his walk off home run.  I was yelling, Lisa might have even let out a little “Whooo!” and Matthew was wondering what was going on downstairs.  With the Huskies playing #3 USC tomorrow, this was the only sports miracle I expected from the weekend.  But, as I went to bed that night, I couldn’t keep myself from dreaming a little bit. 

This was the weekend when all my Husky hopes were going to come crashing down.  After a strong showing against LSU and then finally ending a 15 game losing streak by beating Idaho, I thought the Trojans would come in to Montlake and beat us down.  I know these thoughts were in Matthew’s head too.  In the morning we crammed into the back seat of Danny and Jessica’s car with Katie, who I  knew next to nothing about except that we had sweet, matching Jake Locker jerseys.  Aside from some Sean Kingston tunes, the car ride was relatively quiet.  I was nervous, as I usually am on game day, and so I was quiet.  The bus ride from the Kirkland park & ride to the stadium was no different.  And as we walked to the stadium, the only thing I remember saying is “If we win this game I’m going to jump into the lake.” 

The pregame routine went as usual- get our seats, go to the zone, go over to Hec Ed to see the hall of fame and buy some pop and then back in time for the bands pregame show.  Then the game started and to be honest, it’s all a blur.  USC started out hot and then we caught back up.  Danny and I were texting throughout most of the game.  Going into the 4th quarter I was shocked the Huskies could win the game.  Matthew and me would trade looks back and forth that said, “Is this really happening?”  The texts to and from Danny stopped coming because we both knew it was time to soak this all in.  I imagine you know the story. Locker takes the team on a 4 and a 1/2 minute drive to set up the Eric Folk game-winning field goal.  When the clock finally showed 0:00 the party was on.

After a few seconds of not knowing how exactly how to take all of this in I booked it on to the field, leaving my sister in the dust.  I ended up a few yards away from the W and started jumping up and down with thousands of fans who were already there.  As I was jumping and yelling I felt a few tears in my eyes.  I thought, “Andrew (I guess I talk to myself in third person), are you serious?  Crying at a football game?”  But then I looked around.  There were 40 year-old men standing next to me wiping away tears.  For the next ten minutes I wandered around by myself, trying to soak up every minute possible.  I stood and watched Jake hug his dad, Nick Holt do an interview where the reporter couldn’t hear him, E.J. Savannah cry, and the older season ticket holders stand and applaud from their seats.  I found Dan, Jess, and Katie and many hugs were exchanged.  That night I went to one of my homes (Matthew and Lisa’s) and watched it again.  I’ve watched that game-winning drive countless times but I still get goosebumps when I see all of the purple rush on to the field.

I’m not writing about this to brag about my Huskies.  Heck, the rest of the season was more frustrating than anything else.  I’m writing about this because it’s moments like these that make us sports fans.  The week before this game had been pretty crappy (to put it bluntly).  I was starting to question if I made the right choice of where to go to college.  I was missing friends and family.  And I’d had a bad week of classes.  But in those moments that I was on the field, a week that was filled with frustration was overcome by joy.  Not only had this moment taken out a bad week but it had taken out a win-less season and one of the worst eras in Husky football.  Finally, after sitting through those awful Tyrone Willingham years we had a reason to celebrate.  I believe that loyalty pays off.  With Seattle sports, loyalty can be tested but it was all paid off that day.

As I was walking around the field that day, I found Jake Locker.  I patted him on the shoulder pads and told him thank you.  He probably thought that I was just saying thank you for the win, but I wasn’t.  I was saying thank you for making my week better.  Thank you for taking out all of the frustration Husky nation had in one day.  Thank you for reminding me why I love sports.

– Andrew

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