NCAA Tournament

The NCAA Tournament is under way. It is the most exciting point of every college basketball season and perhaps the most exciting time in all of sports. No other event contains the level of excitement packed in a shorter time period as the tournament. Great basketball, upsets and buzzer beaters have become the norm. Each year seems to be better than the last.

So this year, I am not only going to enjoy the the pageantry that is the tournament, but I also plan to keep a close eye on NBA draft prospects, specifically players that will fit the Cavaliers next season and beyond. Some players I will be watching for the first time, and others, like Victor Oladipo, Trey Burke and Cody Zeller I will be watching to see how they perform on the grandest stage of college basketball. Stay tuned for regular updates. With the Cavs final record and placement in the standings uncertain, there are many high quality players to watch in the coming weeks.

Terry Francona stands atop an elite group

It is not easy to become a major league manager and even harder to stay one. Sometimes success can come from good fortune and sometimes from hard work. But to be looked upon as an elite manager, you need to lead some really successful teams and win the ultimate prize as a World Series Champion.

I am writing this at Spring Training before one game that matters is actually played. I don’t want a slow start or a fast start or, worse yet, a full season to pass before this is written. Terry Francona IS an elite manager! And, better yet, he is the Cleveland Indians manager!

Now you might say I am simply stating the obvious after Francona’s success with Boston or that I am delirious as a Tribe fan considering his lukewarm performance with Philadelphia. Although either could be true, let me explain.

Terry ( or Tito as he prefers to be called honoring his father) is a person driven by his heart and his character and not by his ego. He understands the gift he has been given to play and manage in a game he loves. A game he was around as a little boy. His father gave him the chance to experience the game but did not define his success.

This is why it should be no surprise to anyone but sky nose pointing residents of Boston or New York that Francona hand-picked his return to the game in Cleveland. He knew and had an emotional connection to the city and the management of the Indians. To some, that may seem like a silly reason to take on a team flashing a 68-94 record in front of your face. It obviously is not to Tito.

I have personally seen and heard plenty this spring about Francona, and this, coupled with what I just explained, is why I think he is an elite manager. His success as a manager is far from over. That is the way it is with those rare few.

Let’s briefly look at some things we know about Tito. First, until the season he left, he held together a team of young players and star veterans that crushed much of the competition and outcompeted the rest. He handled more outsized egos and quirky personalities than some managers see in a lifetime. But the Red Sox, through the good years before the collapse in 2011, played together and played with heart. Francona admitted he lost the team and promptly left. That ability to look in the mirror and not always point a finger comes through in his actions as a manager.

Francona has shown this spring on multiple occasions that he is willing to tell players where they stand early and make decisive moves. Some positive and some negative. On the positive side as new starter Bret Myers struggled early, Tito pulled him aside and assured him a spot in the rotation in return for him relaxing and doing what it took for him to get ready for the season. If it worked, only time will tell. Another when Masterson struggled in inning one Sunday, he pulled him aside to help Masterson focus his energies in the right direction. I have no idea what was said, but I did see the result. Four strong innings followed.

On the negative side, after what I detailed last night as a performance confirming he was not ready, Francona pulled Matt Capps into the office and told him it wouldn’t work right now. The cards were left in Capps hands to decide to accept a minor league assignment. I believe a similar discussion was made with Dice-K. Although these are not the kind of discussions the players want to hear, they are ones that build respect and trust.

As Indian fans have witnessed, the roster was enhanced and upgraded to an exciting group after Tito was hired. Holes were plugged with quality in most cases (outfield /bullpen) and silly putty in others (starting pitching). But no one can deny the 2013 Tribe is dramatically improved. Now I think the credit has gone a bit far citing “The Francona Effect”, but his influence has been all over these changes. Antonetti and Dolan have made the moves, but without trust in Francona they would have thought long and hard about making them. Plus, players would be more reluctant to come here.

Often Francona is mentioned as a “player’s manager”. I think there is a great deal of misconception about this term. A player’s manager does not necessarily always complement the players or only give positive reinforcement. A true “player’s manager”, which I think does describe Francona, is one with the ability to relate on a player’s level and be honest and clear about where the player stands with the team. Better yet, one that makes it clear to the player as early as possible where they stand. If a manager always complements a player and then simply “cuts him”, there is an immediate distrust built between not only that player and the manager but other players and the manager once this is revealed. That may not translate to problems at first, but it inevitably does result in problems with players. I think Tito is clearly showing the players very early that he will be honest and let them know when they do or do not fit into the team’s plans.

The final piece of being a true elite manager is the ability to make the players think that they are even better than their talent would predict. This characteristic is the only one I am not certain Francona possesses. This team, in contrast to the many “stacked” teams in Boston, will be a great test of that skill. My hunch is that Francona will clearly reveal his talent in this area as the season progresses. As much as I hated Sparky Anderson (because for a time I was an Indians fan residing in Cincinnati), I always admired his ability to believe in his players even when they were beginning to doubt themselves. He was often a terrible “in-game” manager, but his teams won despite that in part because of his skill at bringing the best out of his team.

It is not by chance that I have not once mentioned in this blog about whether he knows to bunt in this situation or steal in another. I didn’t even mention the ability to know when to pull a pitcher from a game. Because, by it’s very nature, a baseball manager is a manager of men more than a manager of each game situation. I doubt Tito will be “outmanaged” often, but his other skills are what set him apart.

So, it is for all these reasons (and a few more not mentioned), that I honestly believe that Terry (Tito) Francona is one of a select few elite managers in baseball. It isn’t enough by itself to make the Cleveland Indians winners in 2013, but it certainly won’t hurt.

Another comeback by the youngsters ties game

Well we may not know yet if the major league roster can make late inning comebacks but the young bucks for the Indians (with invitees) have roared back twice in two days. Nice to watch but relatively unimportant in the big scheme of things.

More importantly Masterson was pelted with rocket shots in the first inning but recovered nicely. Analyzing his performance with more aplomb reveals a first inning of misplaced fastballs mixed with nothing off speed. From the second inning on he had better command and enough off speed to keep the same hitters off balance that rocked him in the first. I wondered if the plan was to only bring the heat in inning one and throw more off speed later.  But it was clear manager Francona had a lot to say to him after that inning. Terry looked to be giving positive advice and support. Maybe what he said worked. In any case, Masterson saved the outing with his performance after the first.

Cleveland winners today:

Tyler Naquin who ran like a race horse with blinders on out of the batters box to leg out a bouncer that had already safely deflected off the shortstops glove into left field. Nice job impressing the fans and the manager with that one!

Brian Shaw with two solid innings out of the pen to end the game in a tie. He looked good doing it as well with a good fastball and timely off speed pitches.

Losers:

Matt Caps who simply doesn’t look ready coming back from shoulder problems. Stuff is there pretty much but command is not. I would love to hide him in the minors for a month or so because I think he could help us as his command sharpens.

 

2013 Big Ten Champs: Ohio State

Congratulations to the 2013 Ohio State Buckeyes basketball team on winning the Big Ten tournament today knocking off Wisconsin. Any game against the Badgers is a grind out affair and is rarely exciting, but the game had its moments.

Play of the game: With the score tied at 41 all and about 5:30 left to play, Shannon Scott came up with a steal while diving to the floor. In what seemed like one motion, he got the ball to Aaron Craft who went the length of the floor and finished with a difficult layup at the rim. Ohio State would hold this lead to the end.

Player of the game: LaQuinton Ross. Although his stats may not look that impressive, all 7 of his points came in the second half during a stretch where neither team seemed to be able to hit sand if they fell off a camel. Oh, he also had 4 boards and a steal during that stretch.

Big Ten Title Game

It has been a difficult season to be a Buckeye basketball fan. Our record against the RPI top 50 is right around .500 and we lost our only two big non-conference games against Duke and Kansas. We are also 1-1 against all the quality teams in the Big Ten.  I am going to throw this date out there: February 17th, 2013. This is the day that the bucks were pummeled by today’s Big Ten Championship opponent the Wisconsin Badgers 71-49. One of two things would generally happen after a game like that. Either a team will sulk, feel sorry for themselves and realize they don’t have what it takes, or get up, dust themselves off and say this will never happen again.

I am proud to say, that since that date, OSU has played their best and most consistent basketball of the season. They have snapped off 7 straight wins against high quality opponents and are playing with the kind of fire needed to win during championship week and the NCAA tournament. So who are the real Ohio State Buckeyes…The team that couldn’t string wins together against quality opponents, or the team we have all seen the last month of the season?

It all comes to a head today at 3:30pm EDT when the Buckeyes look to continue their roll against the very team that lit a fire under them back on February 17th, the Wisconsin Badgers. In my mind this game contains the answer of whether or not the Buckeyes just win 2-3 games in the NCAA tournament this year, or can make another run at the Final Four.

Key to the game:

  • Sam Thompson is known for his great defense, athleticism and dunking ability, but do you realize he is shooting 61.9% (13 of 21) from three point range since mid January? If he uses his 3 point shot to setup his drives to the basket and backdoor cuts he can be nearly unstoppable and the key to the Buckeyes winning the Big Ten Tournament Championship