With SportsCenter coming to
10. Drafting Cedric Benson
True, the 2005 draft as a whole has been very disappointing thus far, but here’s a list of players selected after the Bears took Benson with the fourth overall pick; Shawne Merriman, Demarcus Ware, Carnell Williams, Frank Gore, Derrick Johnson, Jamal Brown and Logan Mankins. Blame Jerry Angelo if you want, however, remember that a lot of Bears fans wanted Mike Williams from USC, who turned out to be an even bigger bust. Considering Benson recently posed for half as many mug shots as he scored touchdowns last season (yes I made that up myself), letting him go was an easy call.
9. Michael Jordan returning to play basketball
8. The 2001 NBA Draft
What was Jerry Krause thinking? A guy averages 20 points and 10 rebounds his first two years in the league, and then you trade him for a kid straight out of high school? Mistake number two was picking a guy who couldn’t even dominate against a short group of suburban kids from
7. The 2004 Cubs
Once the Cubs added Nomar at the trade deadline, they became a virtual lock for the postseason and even strong favorites to win the World Series. With a stacked lineup that included huge years from Moises Alou, Derrick Lee, and Aramis Ramirez, plus three aces in Kerry Wood, Mark Prior and Carlos Zambrano, this Cubs team was loaded. They won 88 games solely based on talent, choking it away in the final week by losing seven of their final eight games. Thank Latroy Hawkins for blowing three games during that stretch. Plus, the Cubs uninspired play ended up costing Steve Stone and Chip Carey their jobs.
6. Bulls not trading for
I’m still waiting to hear a decent explanation from John Paxson for this decision. Oh wait, now I remember; Luol Deng, Ben Gordon, and Tyrus Thomas were all going to be future all-stars. Meanwhile the Bulls lost a chance to acquire the best player on the planet.
5. Cubs getting swept by Diamondbacks
On paper, it looked like the perfect match up.
4. Injuries to Mark Prior and Kerry Wood
If both those guys had stayed healthy, I’m guaranteeing the Cubs would have at least one or two World Series by now. We saw what happened when they stayed off the D.L. in 2003, but that was a rare occurrence. Prior has won one game since 2005, while Wood is now making Cubs fans extremely nervous every time he takes the mound in the ninth inning. People point to Dusty Baker overusing Prior in 2003, when he averaged 114 pitches per start. What’s ironic is that when Prior first came up, his mechanics impressed all the scouts. Years later, his mechanics are probably what ended up costing him his career.
3.
I wanted to put this at number one, considering how much I followed and enjoyed watching this
2. Bears losing Super Bowl
In all honesty, the Colts were simply better. The talent gap between the two quarterbacks was too much to overcome. The fact that it was pouring certainly didn’t help the Bears either once they got behind. Anytime you lose the Super Bowl, it sucks, but at least the Bears didn’t lose on some fluke play or in heartbreaking fashion. It’s funny how one play can alter a football game. With the Bears trailing only 16-14 and driving, Grossman threw an ill advised pass that Kelvin Hayden returned for a score, basically sealing the deal. At least we’ll always have Devin Hester’s opening kickoff return to remember.
1. Cubs losing 2003 NLCS
Fox showed the Marlins on the bench at the start of the eighth inning in game six, all sitting quietly with their heads down. Even they knew it was over. Unfortunately, someone forgot to tell that to Mark Prior, Alex Gonzalez, Dusty Baker, and of course Steve Bartman. Yes, Alou would have caught that foul ball, but that’s not what cost the Cubs this series. Prior hanging pitches, Gonzalez botching a double play, Baker’s indecision, and Kerry Wood’s game seven performance all played bigger roles in this meltdown. I hate it when people argue how good that Marlins team was. The Cubs were clearly better, and would have beaten the Yankees in the World Series.
7 comments:
We need to sign this kid up before he gets away. Nice post man.
for the love of god, we never had a shot at Kobe!
You have to put something about Frank Thomas leaving and Sammy Sosa becoming a loser. What about the blackhawks not making the playoffs for the las 8 years in the easiest sport ot make the playoffs in.
Scott, it sure sounded like the Bulls could have had Kobe, at least from the reports I read. and how was Frank Thomas leaving or Sammy leaving a disappointment considering the Sox had Thome and Konerko and Sosa couldn't hit anymore?
danny,
that was all a product of media hype which had no actual reports or factual information on any deal being consummated except that Kobe was unhappy and had called Andrew Bynum a pussy the summer before.
The media took an unhappy Kobe, and a rumor and ran wild with it.
scott,
you could be right, but i just think the Bulls could have made a deal if they had really tried. now we'll never know.
The Bulls not getting Kobe is playing well for them. First, despite a huge effort to make Kobe look like he transformed into a team player - he's not. He is a horrible teammate. Look at the way they blew their shot at the championship. Second, I have to stick up for Deng. He may kill for Jordan's Wiz line, but he's close...People forget he is only 23. It just wouldn't be worth giving up him, a 21 year old Tyrus and a scorer like Gordon.
Also, if the 2001 Bulls draft gets a spot, how about the 2001 Bears draft? David Terrell and A-Train Thomas were busts while 2nd Rounders Drew Brees and (ahem) Chad Johnson have become stars. Or what about the 3rd round WR from Utah? I guess Steve Smith was too small to get picked up on the Bears radar.
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