Monday, March 29, 2010

Tom Izzo a Duck?


reported by Tim Twentyman / The Detroit News

The University of Oregon is planning to offer Michigan State's Tom Izzo the largest contract in college basketball, according to a television report out of Eugene, Ore.

A source from the Oregon athletic department told television station KEZI in a report Sunday night that Nike chairman Phil Knight, an Oregon alumnus, would help back the contract.

Kentucky coach John Calipari currently has the largest contract in college basketball at eight years, $31.65 million. Izzo currently makes about $2.5 million a year.

Another source in the Oregon athletic department confirmed to the station that Izzo's name is on the list of candidates provided by the search firm Spencer Stuart, but no offer or discussions between the parties have taken place.

"I haven't been contacted (by Oregon)," Izzo said Monday during a teleconference for the coaches in the Final Four. "The truth of the matter is that whenever you have success you're going to be one of 10 names that pops up on different things.

"I won't comment on it anymore because I have a job to do and I'm happy with the job I have."

The Spartans defeated Tennessee Sunday to advance to the Final Four and will face Butler in the first semifinal on Saturday in Indianapolis.

"I have great respect for Oregon and Phil and everyone out there," Izzo said on ESPN's SportsCenter on Monday morning, in quotes reported by USA Today.

Messages left with Izzo and MSU athletic director Mark Hollis by The Detroit News were not immediately returned.

Oregon athletic director Pat Kilkenny is heading the search to replace Ernie Kent, who was fired earlier this month after 13 seasons with the Ducks. Oregon was 16-16 overall and 7-11 in the Pac-10 this season, and Kent's record at his alma mater was 235-173.

Izzo was courted by the NBA's Atlanta Hawks in 2000 and reportedly was a candidate for the Kentucky job in 2007 after Tubby Smith resigned. The Wildcats hired Billy Gillispie.

Friday, March 26, 2010

Mild TBI and Sports Related Injuries


Athletics are a fun and healthy way to stay active that millions of people take part in each day. However, some of these activities can take a toll on the physical body of the individual. Contact sports like football, boxing, soccer, and hockey can cause damage that can change a person’s entire life and sometimes can even be irreversible. An example of this type of sports injury is traumatic brain injuries. A TBI can permanently alter someone’s life and can even require long-term rehabilitation and care from special facilities like CareMeridian and these injuries are often too common when taking part in sports.


According to the Brain Injury Resource Center, an estimated 300,000 sports related brain injuries occur each year. Most of these injuries are not classified as severe. Many of these mild TBI’s or concussions may appear unthreatening, but in fact they can often cause significant damage if not treated properly. The hidden danger of a concussion comes from the fact that it is usually passed off as nothing more than pain and soreness inflicted from the sporting activity, which is why they can easily be a repeatable injury. Consequently, concussions are often regarded as very hazardous and should be given thorough and constant attention.


Concussions are head injuries that are caused by blows to the head that usually cause the brain to move violently within the skull. For a sport like football this type of injury is common and unfortunately, at times ignored. Many athletes shake off the pain that’s caused from the head injury, because the immediate effects are often unnoticed. Yet, without treatment, a simple injury can cause a lifetime of suffering. The NFL has a concussion rate of 61% and this type of injury not only sidelines the player impacted, but can end their career. Some NFL players, like quarterbacks Troy Aikman and Steve Young, retired from the game rather than take on the risk that comes from the injury, but others are not so lucky. Many retired football players and athletes battle memory loss and constant migraine headaches that result from head injuries.


Participating in athletic competition (football, soccer, basketball, etc…) is inherent in many different peoples’ lifestyles, but comes with risk of injury. Mild TBI is among the most common forms of sports related injuries, which also include fractures, tears, bursitis, sprains and more. As an enjoyable means of human interaction and competitive lift, sports will always be an integral ingredient of modern day society. Ultimately, it’s important to be aware of mild traumatic brain injuries (symptoms, treatment, etc…) and the frequency of occurrence on the field of play.


- By Chelsea Travers




-More Information

Football Players Need Several Days to Recover From a Concussion

NINDS Traumatic Brain Injury Information Page

NHL May Soon Ban Blind-Side Head Checks

Concussion trend changing how sports injuries are handled



MichiganSportGuy.com Facebook Fan Page

Saturday, March 20, 2010

Duane Below


We want to wish Duane good luck in 2010 as Spring Training is kicking off for the Detroit Tigers Minor league!!

Casey Fien takes a crazy Journey

Casey Fein is back with the Tigers!


LAKELAND, Fla. -- Casey Fien is back with the Tigers, three weeks and two waiver claims after they tried to get him into their Minor League camp.

The bizarre journey of the right-handed reliever came full circle Friday night, when the Tigers agreed to terms with him on a Minor League contract. He'll report to the Tigers' Minor League camp, where his adventure across the Grapefruit League began a few weeks ago.

Fien began Spring Training in Detroit's big league camp last month before the Tigers designated him for assignment on Feb. 23 to make room on their 40-man roster for new arrival Johnny Damon. The Tigers allowed Fien to work out on the Minor League side for the next few days while they waited to see if he cleared waivers, so that they could outright him to the Minors.

The Red Sox claimed Fien off waivers March 1, but no sooner had Fien reported to their camp in Fort Myers, Fla., than Boston tried to sneak him through waivers, presumably to outright him. The Blue Jays, who didn't have roster space to put in a claim on Fien a few days earlier, claimed him on March 4.

Fien, who never took part in a workout with the Red Sox, packed up again and moved to Blue Jays camp. Two weeks later, however, Toronto released him.

The Tigers, who never really wanted to lose him in the first place, immediately had interest in bringing him back. A day later, they had a deal.

Fien will most likely open the season at Triple-A Toledo, where he saved 14 games last year to go along with a 2-1 record, 3.41 ERA and 66 strikeouts over 58 innings. He could yet end up as a midseason callup for the Tigers if they

-Reported by Jason Beck on http://detroit.tigers.mlb.com; Jason Beck is a reporter for MLB.com.

Friday, March 19, 2010

March Madness


So how may peoples brackets are already busted? Yes I am raising my hand on that one. March Madness is so much fun becuase everyone seems to get into the games, even the none sports fan will fill out a bracket and watch the games. It seems like the Tournament is kicked off each year by Saint Patrick's Day which kicks it off the right way. It is so popular we even have Barrack Obama filling out a Presidential Bracket. I hope everyone has fun watching the games and Thank You for making March Madness so fun!

Monday, March 15, 2010

THE END OF BASEBALL: A NOVEL By, Peter Schilling Jr.

Do not forget the Paperback of The End of Baseball is available in store today!


"The best baseball novel so far this century." —Allen Barra, Baltimore Sun

"Among the backdrop of patriotic elation, pre-civil rights racism and Cold War paranoia, Schilling's novel offers a deeply inspirational story of faith. A terrific tale.
—Kirkus Reviews

-Press Release

"A blast. Like a Satchel Paige flutter ball, The End of Baseball amuses and beguiles with every sharp turn. This is the best baseball novel I've read in years.” —Jonathan Eig, New York Times bestselling author of Opening Day: The Story of Jackie Robinson's First Season

In this free-spirited baseball story, a team that "almost was" becomes real, and the extraordinary season of 1944 comes vividly to life.

Bill Veeck, the maverick promoter, returned from Guadalcanal with a leg missing and $500 to his name, has hustled his way into buying the Philadelphia Athletics. Hungry for a pennant, young Veeck jettisons the team's white players and secretly recruits the legendary stars of the Negro Leagues, fielding a club that will go down in baseball annals as one of the greatest to play the game.

Here are the behind-the-scenes adventures that bring this dream to reality, and a cast of characters only history's pen could create: the powerful columnist Walter Winchell, who saves the club by whispering in President Roosevelt's ear; the steely commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis, hell-bent on preserving the sport as he knows it; J. Edgar

Hoover, who sees in Veeck's experiment the sowing of communism in the nation's pastime; the sportswriters and the people of Philadelphia who come to love this team; and, of course, the players themselves—the tragic Josh Gibson, the remarkable but self-centered Satchel Paige, the Cuban wonder Martín Dihigo, the veteran stalwarts Cool Papa Bell, Willie Wells, and Buck Leonard, and the rising stars Roy Campanella, Monte Irvin, Artie Wilson, and Dave Barnhill, whose conscience almost ruins the team.


About the Author

Peter Schilling has been a sportswriter, film critic, and freelance writer for over seven years. He has covered the Minnesota Twins for the Minneapolis City Pages in 2007, was the film critic for The Rake Magazine (Minneapolis), and now covers film for the Minneapolis Star-Tribune.

Schilling grew up in Michigan and graduated from Michigan State University with a B.A. in Literature. Since then, he has done extensive research for two novels, with a specific emphasis on the Negro Leagues and the homefront during World War II. He is a member of the Society for American Baseball Research and is a member of that organization's Negro League, Latino Baseball, Baseball and the Arts, and Women in Baseball committees. In addition, Schilling is also on the board of the Cinema Revolution Society in Minneapolis, as well as an advisory board member with Take-Up Productions, a repertory cinema organization in the Twin Cities. He currently resides in St. Louis Park, MN.

"This exciting, fast-paced story is a fine commentary on baseball lore, race relations, and American sentiment during World War II, and it will have the reader hanging on every pitch, wondering how Veeck and his players will overcome racial discrimination to prove they can play in the major leagues."
—Publisher's Weekly

"This rollicking read of a book stars such big names as Satchel Paige, Cool Papa Bell, Josh Gibson, Buck Leonard, Roy Campanella, and Veeck himself. In lesser hands than those of novelist Schilling, these '44 Athletics would breeze to the pennant. But Schilling's season packs lots of lumps before it reaches a curiously realistic climax... [A]s somebody in baseball puts it, The End of Baseball sails straight down central. As somebody else in baseball used to say, it's a winner."
—Harry Levins, St. Louis Post-Dispatch

"Schilling hits a home run with his debut novel... while not only doing a solid job transporting the reader back to the mid 1940s, he takes on the enviable task of developing multiple characters that have tremendous amonuts of complexity."
—Pat Lagreid, The Baseball Book Review

www.EndOfBaseball.com

Saturday, March 13, 2010

Detroit Tigers Spring Training


If you are a true Tigers fan you have to make it to Lakeland to see a spring training game soon. For me spring does not officially start until the Tigers come north in April but when games start in Lakeland then we really can start to feel the anticipation of a new season. Going to spring training has always been extra special for me. You get to talk to the players, visit an awesome park and you get to see the Tigers with a closer vantage point, almost as if they were playing in Toledo or Comstock Park.


This is the 74th season for the Tigers playing in Tigertown. The Detroit Tigers began coming to Lakeland for Spring Training in 1934 and have been coming back each year ever since. The 70 year relationship between the Detroit Tigers and the City of Lakeland is the longest lasting relationship between a Major League baseball team and a Spring Training host city. I have not been to any other spring training facility but when we are in Lakeland it is as if we are at home.


The game we went to was pretty cool becuase it was my favorite Tigers first start of the year. Justin Verlander started right where he left off last year. It was great to see the new youngsters that should help to shape the future of the Tigers in Austin Jackson and Scott Sizemore. A lot of the hype was surrounded around new comer Johnny Damon. Even though he is in the spotlight right now in Detroit it really is a good thing becuase it takes a lot of the focus off of the others players yet it is still a lot less publicity then Damon is used to being in both Boston and New York. There has been a lot of changes to the team over the winter but I think 2010 is going to be a great year for the Tigers.




- Michigan Sports Guy

Monday, March 1, 2010

Fail Tigers

Top Athletes Of The Century

Detroit Tigers

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Mud Hens

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ESPN