Sunday, August 17, 2008

Phelps the greatest ever? - Maybe

Now that Michael Phelps has his eight gold medals in these Olympics, we have about another week to yap about whether he's the greatest athlete ever, was this the greatest athletic feat or whether he's just the greatest Olympian.

Greatest athlete is too broad because we can spend all day arguing about whether golfers, race car drivers or baseball players are 'athletes.' I prefer to think in terms of athletic accomplishments.

ESPN's Jemele Hill makes the case that Phelps' feat is the best ever (http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/page2/story?page=hill/080816) but she mixes and matches things by comparing Michael Jordan's six NBA championships (which is a career achievement) and Joe DiMaggio's 56-game hitting streak (which obviously played out over a much longer period). Her argument is that Phelps endured more in these eight days than anyone.

Phelps' run is high on the list of athletic achievements. Wilt Chamberlain's 100-point NBA game 46 years ago still blows me away, and the closest anyone has come was Kobe Bryant's 81 - still 19 points (a good number for an entire game) short. Jesse Owens and Carl Lewis winning winning the 100, 200, long jump and 400-relay in the same Olympics is awesome.

Spanish Flies

The Spaniards will say they'll play better if they meet the U.S. in the medal round of men's basketball, but I'm not sure the Saturday blowout isn't indicative of how big the gap is. Argentina, Spain and Greece were supposed to be the challengers for the 'Redeem Team', but Greece and now Spain have been easily defeated.

Spain is an example of the influx of foreign players into the NBA actually helps the U.S. More of those guys are familiar to the NBAers. One of the disadvantages had been playing countries with players the U.S. didn't know.

Sunday, August 03, 2008

BACK IN BUSINESS

I've given up the web site and decided re-join the blog world. I have this page linked on Facebook also.