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Thursday, February 28, 2013

Mayer: Why I'm Picking Rockville to Win It All

Courtesy MaxPreps
I can't say I went out on a limb by picking the Rockville Rox to win the Class 1A State Championship. After all, Rockville is currently 23-0. Not to mention the Rox were runner ups in Class 1A last year and won the Pizza Hut Wabash Valley Classic Tournament this year. With those facts alone you can probably say Rockville is a solid choice as favorite to take the 1A crown.

While the above paragraph definitely plays a part in my pick there are many other reasons as well. Start with who the Rox have beaten this year. They went through a demanding tournament having to beat four competitive teams; Casey-Westfield, Marshall, Sullivan, and Robinson. The golden Arrows and Maroons in particular are extremely talented squads that could just not find a way to keep up with the Rox. Add in a gutty effort in a hostile environment at Terre Haute North and a victory of Terre Haute South this season.

Here is the main reason I'm picking Rockville to end the season cutting down the nets at bankers life Fieldhouse. Have you watched this team play? Even during their 61-40 sectional victory on Tuesday against Riverton Parke, a game coach Dave Mahurin and star Lane Mahurin described as sloppy and poorly played, the Rox displayed excellent team basketball with players perfectly suited for certain rules.

Courtesy highschoolhoopsreport.com
Rockville has a star and go to scorer Lane Mahurin who will be attending Indiana Weslyn next year. Mahurin has the size to control the post, quickness to drive, and touch to make a shot from anywhere on the floor. Not to mention, he is selfless with little care for individual statistics. At the same time, Mahurin has displayed the tenacity to take over when needed.

Gary Ulrich is next on my list. Some of the shots this kid makes make you do a double take. There are only so many basketball players that can make a contested three pointer without setting. Ulrich is a machine from deep, but he always plays bigger then his size. Ulrich will mix it up in the paint and has sneaky good speed.

Next I'll focus on Jordan McFall who gets them to fall often as I like to saying during my Rockville highlights. McFall has the ability to light up the scoreboard as exemplified by his 22 points in Rockville's first sectional game. He's an all around guy with the ability to hit from deep and match up with similar sized players down low. He's extremely valuable in the rebound game especially when Mahurin is getting boxed out by two opposing players.

Courtesy tribstar.com
Finally, to Kiontre Wilkey who displays the same superb speed and shiftiness on the hardwood as the gridiron during football season. Wilkey is a point guard to the very definition. He controls the tempo and is always looking to pass. Wilkey also plays fantastic defense often pressuring the other guards. Wilkey does have the ability to hit key jumpers, as he did against Riverton Parke, but it's never his primary concern.

The bench is deep and will always put in productive minutes when called upon. This became necessary after suspension, due to a violation of team rules, robbed the Rox of multiple players including a key contributor.

The cherry on top is head coach Dave Mahurin who is in his 23rd year coaching and 10th at Rockville. Mahurin has his squad playing team basketball to perfection. There are no egos on this team and nothing but excellence is accepted.

I'm sure Rockville will run into some greats teams. Immediately, I think about Barr-Reeve (21-1), defending champion Loogootee, and North Daviess not to mention many teams I don't even know about. This prediction is all about the Rox though. I've seen this team play enough to believe they have all the elements to take home a championship. The journey continues tomorrow when the Rox face off against Turkey Run. If they win, Rockville plays the winner of Covington and Attica in the sectional championship.

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Mayer: Colin Cowherd Blames Poor Pacers Attendance on Racism

In case you missed "The Herd" yesterday, well, let's just say host Colin Cowherd stirred things up. Speaking about the Pacers poor attendance numbers despite the team thriving on the court, Cowherd asserted that racism was one of the main factors keeping spectators away from Bankers Life Fieldhouse.

Courtesy aviewfrommyseat.com
Obviously, this is a pretty controversial comment, especially with the certainty Cowherd expressed in saying it. I'll start with this. I think Colin Cowherd is a solid sports media personality, radio host, etc. I watch The Herd almost every day while eating lunch and genuinely enjoy the banter. While I don't always agree with what the host has to say, I still respect him. Cowherd genuinely believes and makes solid arguments about the topic, as opposed to a Skip Bayless type who simply tries to incite drama and controversy.

Back to the topic. I disagree with Cowherd on this subject. There are many reasons the Pacers are failing to draw (26th in attendance averaging 14,433 per game) despite Indiana playing so well (1st place in the Central Division and 3rd best record in the East). Is racism the reason? I really don't think so. Is it a factor? I can't definitively say it is not. However, if race is a factor I think it is such a small percentile that it really is not significant. The Malice in the Palace ended some fans relationship with the Pacers forever and could be a reason that some believe racism is an issue in attendance numbers. Makes some sense, but the brawl was almost a decade ago.

Cowherd continually dismissed the notion that Indianapolis is not a pro sports town by using the Reggie Miller days and the support Indy showed for those teams as an example. Great support for the Colts was also brought up.

Courtesy ihsaa.org
I disagree. Indianapolis is not a professional sports town and Indiana is not a professional sports state. That's not to say that pro sports don't have a place, but they are not the focal point. College and high school athletics, especially in basketball, rule the Hoosier state. One of the main reasons the Pacers are not drawing well is simple: Indiana University is back and taking the nation by storm while Butler has developed into a perennial contender. Those two schools are taking fans away. This is a down year for Purdue but it is a rarity and fans in West Lafayette would much rather support the Boilers then travel to Indy for an NBA game.

To further that point, many callers talked about how basketball fans in Indiana enjoy the team first, sharing the ball philosophy which distances the die hards from the superstar driven NBA. Cowherd retorted that is exactly how the Pacers play, so why wouldn't the basketball lovers in "the basketball state" want to see a pro team built in that image. Other callers said that the Pacers don't have a true super star which effects attendance and Cowherd came back with essentially the same argument: people want team basketball but then complain about not having a star.

It is true that basketball lovers in Indiana hate star driven selfish basketball. But it doesn't matter what kind of style the Pacers play because these are the fans that would choose a high school or college basketball game over an NBA game no matter what. So, the lack of a superstar does hurt because the younger generation (many who may not even be huge NBA fans) wait for Lebron or Kobe to hit the Bankers Life Fieldhouse floor.

Courtesy indyhiphop.com
Reggie Miller was a superstar the city and state fell in love with. The Pacers were also massively successful for a number of years. That is why those teams drew well. No one went to Colts games until Peyton Manning came along, became a superstar, and led the Colts to the playoffs every year.  That goodwill has carried over with another budding superstar in Andrew Luck and was not terribly hurt by only one bad year in between.

The Pacers have not had a superstar since Miller and were not particularly successful until recently. From 2006-2011 Indiana was never above .500. Fan bases simply don't have a light bulb go on as soon as the team in their city starts to play well. If Indiana is able to sustain their winning ways and Paul George becomes the player many think he will be, the fans will return. Indianapolis is not a pro sports town, it takes a certain combination of factors for professional teams to keep the turnstiles clicking every year. Are some fans racist and refuse to support non Caucasian athletes? Sure, but that is a truth for every team in every city. Even if the Pacers do draw well in the next couple of years, Indianapolis will always be a small town, underdog, sports city that prefers high school and college athletics.

Courtesy 1070thefan.com



Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Mayer: A Beautiful Day for Baseball

This is one of my favorite weeks of the year. Pitchers and catchers are reporting and spring training is about to start. Baseball is about to return which means I am once again a whole person.

Courtesy MLB
I love spring training for two main reasons. The first is obvious and essentially stated above. Baseball is back and I love baseball...a lot. The Great American Pastime is the sport I follow closest, played my entire life, and really is the source of my passion for sports. I love the history, the strategy, and the grind. Baseball is the best.

Spring training is a time when every fan can have hope (except the Astros, that is honestly going to be one hell of a dumpster fire). But even Houston fans can salivate during spring training analyzing their young prospects who soon will be counted on to reinvigorate the franchise. The lead up to the season gives fans a chance to dream of championships, get to know new acquisitions, study the depth of the entire farm system.

We argue back and fourth about who should grab the last bench spot, if the non roster invitee or the kid who only got to double A last season should be the last man in the bullpen, and what is the most efficient way to set a lineup. We play owner, general manager, and manager during spring training, even if it's only through debate with friends.

Courtesy MLB
The lead up to the season is fun and I look forward to reading and probably writing predictions of division standings, playoff outcomes, award winners, and all that good stuff. However, the second reason I love spring training gets to the heart of the matter. It's a time where we can step back from professional baseball and look at the MLB through a different lens. That was kind of vague, I know, but allow me to explain.

While I love the MLB and love my Dodgers, that is not why I fell in love with baseball. It is why I fell in love with football for instance. My introduction to football was Brett Favre and the Packers. But with baseball, the sport at a grassroots level is what drew me in. When I think about baseball, the first image that comes to my mind is the final scene in "The Natural." Roy Hobbs in a field playing catch with his son; a majestic sunset as a backdrop. THAT is baseball.

While spring training is still corporate and still about preparation for the MLB season, at no other time are fans able to look at professional players in that way. You can go to a spring training site and watch superstars mingle with unknowns and washed up veterans, then get a picture, autograph, and have a chat with all three as they come off the field. I'm sure people who are not big baseball fans couldn't care less about spring raining. For me and my baseball brethren, it's magical.
Courtesy The Natural




Wednesday, February 6, 2013

National Signing Day in The Wabash Valley

We'll update as the day goes along, but here is a list of the Indiana State Football signings and high school athletes from across the Wabash Valley that are making their college choices today. It's a very exciting day for student athletes and Sycamores across The Valley.

  Terre Haute South Braves:
  Danny Etling: Purdue Football- Quarterback
  Logan Hambrock: Indiana State Track
  Tyler Seibert: Indiana State Track
  Alex Davis: Indiana University Diving

  Terre Haute North Patriots
  Calvin Blank: Ball State Football
  Austin Lewis: Western Michigan Football
  Lee Davis: Army Football
  Chanli Mundy: Indiana University Cross Country
                  

                         Linton-Stockton Miners:
                         Clayton French: Marian Univeristy Golf

South Knox Spartans:
Adam Elkins: University of Saint Franics Soccer





                                                    

Vincennes Lincoln:
                                                    
 Gannon Brochin:  Georgian Court Soccer
 Eric Ramirez: University of Southern Indiana Soccer





  




  Indiana State Football:
  (Courtesy of ISU Athletics: http://tinyurl.com/a2sxkzt)




























































NamePos.HeightWeightClassHometown/Previous SchoolHighlight Video
Matt AdamQB6-1210Fr.Camino Capistrano, Calif./Tesoro HSHighlights
Justice BerryWR6-2205Jr.Coffeyville CCHighlights
Zach BorensOL6-8350Fr.Marion, Iowa/Marion HSHighlights
Antonio BroadusDE6-3230Fr.Aurora, Colo./Regis Jesuit HSHighlights
Lonnell BrownDB5-7155Fr.Cincinnati, Ohio/Colerain HSHighlights
Juice DavisWR5-10185Fr.Cincinnati, Ohio/Colerain HSHighlights
Rhys FeltonP6-3210Jr.Melbourne, Australia/John Curtin HS/Grossmont CCHighlights
Kyani HarrisWR5-10170Jr.Daly City, Calif./Jefferson HS/San Francisco City CollegeHighlights
Jordan JacksonLB6-1230Fr.Indianapolis, Ind./Decatur Central HSHighlights
Miguel JohnsWR5-11185Jr.Newton, Kan./Newton HS/Hutchinson CCHighlights
Aaron KillebrewDB/KR5-10165Fr.Evansville, Ind./Harrison HSHighlights
Dejuan LangCB5-9180Fr.Cincinnati, Ohio/Colerain HSHighlights
Tyler LeeCB6-2180Fr.Xenia, Ohio/Xenia HSHighlights
Sampson LevingstonWR6-1200Fr.Indianapolis, Ind./Cathedral HSHighlights
Weston PainterDT6-3260Fr.New Haven, Ind./Snider HSHighlights
Braxton ShirleyTE6-3245Fr.Canyon, Calif./Mission Viejo HSHighlights
Dimitri TaylorRB5-10190Fr.Wheaton, Ill./Montini CatholicHighlights
Jameer ThurmanDB6-0195Fr.Hillside, Ill./Proviso West HSHighlights
T.J. TuuuOLB6-2215Jr.Seaside, Calif./Seaside HS/Monterey Peninsula CollegeHighlights