It’s another Tuesday morning serving of the normally Monday Ten Piece Nuggets. We aim to please and wanted to serve you yesterday, but people named Jeoungeun, Hank, and Tiger keep cutting the buffet line. Enjoy as we cover multiple sports in ten quick bites.
- MLB held the first two rounds of their 2019 draft last evening. Baseball fever. Did you catch it? Probably not. It was on the MLB network. No Nashville. No music. No street parties. No trades. No green room. It’s just one big room with 32 tables, one for each team that take turns picking from pitchers and position players. You can get drafted right out of high school. Or, you can get drafted after three eligible college years. The contrast between the NFL and MLB is arguably never more on display than on their respective draft nights.
- Adley Rutschman went first overall to the Baltimore Orioles on Monday. Rutschman is a catcher. His batting and defense combined to make him irresistible as the first pick. At Oregon St. he stood out on a standout team for his three years there. He’s a “can’t miss” the scouts say.
- Can’t miss? Before they start pushing statues around to make room for him in Cooperstown, know that the road to the majors and success therein isn’t a given. Since 1965 when MLB began holding the draft as it is known today seven catchers have been selected first overall. Rutschman is the seventh. Mostly forgettable names are the first six (actually five as Danny Goodwin was picked first in two separate drafts after he refused to report to the first team) selections. B.J. Surhoff and Joe Mauer are the best of the five names. But, there are no Hall of Fame names to be found.
- Bobby Witt Jr. was selected second overall. The 19 year-old high school shortstop went to the Kansas City Royals. He may be the most famous name in this year’s class. Witt’s father was the No. 3 overall pick in the 1985 draft, making the Witts the first father-son combination to both be selected as top-five picks.
- The NCAA baseball playoffs began last weekend. Sixteen regionals in sixteen cities had sixteen number one seeds hosting a four team double elimination tournament. Obviously, only sixteen survive to participate in the Super Regionals this coming weekend. Of the sixteen no. one seeds, 12 advanced to the Supers. Eight teams will advance to the CWS in Omaha. Because several top seeds square off against one another as few as four, or as many as eight no. one’s could get there. The SEC with six and the ACC with four dominate the Supers. The Pac 12 and the Big 12 have two each. They play great hockey in the north. Baseball not so much as the Big 10 has but one survivor.
- FSU head coach Mike Martin is coaching the Seminoles in the Supers this weekend. When their season ends, his career ends. He’s retiring. He’s been their head coach for 40 years. 40 years. His teams have won over 2000 games. 2000. They have never missed the postseason under his watch. Never. They have won 40 or more games every year of his 40 years. Every year except one, that is. This year they sit at 35 wins. They need to get past LSU at LSU to pick up two more wins and get three more in Omaha to get to the magical forty wins in all forty years.
- It’s 21 months before the NFL and it’s player’s association current labor agreement expires. But, it’s never to early to start negotiating in public. Commish Roger Goodell said yesterday that four preseason games were no longer necessary to get players ready for the season. “I feel what we should be doing is always to the highest quality, and I’m not sure preseason games meet that level right now,” Goodell said. What he really is saying is he wants two more regular season games. This would generate more TV ratings and therefore more revenue. No word on the always safety conscious NFL’s position on if these two games would further endanger the player’s health. Heck, they even have a concussion protocol in place now.
- It’s under three months until the NCAA football season begins. Find us a website or a printed magazine that doesn’t brazenly pick Alabama or Clemson to win it all. Good luck. As a matter of fact USA Today, CBS SportsLine, and The Sporting News all have at 5. THE Ohio St., 4. Oklahoma, 3. Georgia, 2. Alabama or Clemson, and 1. Clemson or Alabama. Should we just fast forward to January? Lee Corso sez, “not so fast my friend.”
- The resilient St. Louis Blues shook off a seven goal by seven different players shellacking on the weekend and bounced back with a 4-2 win to even the Stanley Cup Finals at two games a piece with the Boston Bruins. Six games are assured and seven is quite likely in the this bruising, black and blue(s) final matchup. The seven goal barrage by the visiting Bruins happened on the Blues first home ice Stanley Cup Final in 49 long years. What a statement by Boston. The Blues bounce back last evening was a statement unto itself. Drop the puck.
- Two weeks ago after Kevin Durant’s injury, Sir Charles Barkley predicted that the Golden State Warriors would not win another game v. the Houston Rockets. After knocking out the Rockets and the Trailblazers in the next round sans KD ,Golden St. stands tied with the Toronto Raptors 1-1 in the NBA Finals. Yesterday Stephen A. Smith predicted that the Finals are over if KD comes back for the Warriors. Toronto need not show up apparently. If Stephen A. gets it wrong like Sir Charles did, should Stephen A. Smith change his name to Stephen Eh. Smith in honor of the Canadians? Eh?
Use SPF of 50 or more. Apply frequently. It’s sunny and hot out there.