What happened on Wednesday, December 17, 2014?

  1. Liverpool shows their class: The game between Liverpool, currently 11th in the top British soccer league, the Premier League and AFC Bournemouth, currently the best team in the second league, could easily be seen as a referendum on the difference between the two leagues. The result was a 3-1 Liverpool win, a clear result that showed Liverpool’s players to be bigger, faster, and more in control despite Bournemouth having some good chances to score.
    Line: Liverpool’s class showed through.
  2. Bruins breakthrough: After a longish dry streak for Boston, the Bruins finally broke through and beat the Minnesota Wild 3-2 in overtime. It was particularly a relief for Bruins fans to see Loui Eriksson score the winning goal because one of the frustrating things during this slump has been tracking the success of Tyler Seguin, who the Bruins traded away primarily for Eriksson. Seguin has 23 goals so far this season, Eriksson now has six.
    Line: The Bruins may be ailing but I think they’ve got the power to climb up the standings again in the next couple months.
  3. Epic triple overtime game in San Antonio: The Memphis Grizzlies finally won, 117-116 at the end of the third overtime period in their game against the San Antonio Spurs. The game was pushed into overtime when Marc Gasol, a seven footer who is much more comfortable scoring from within a few feet of the basket, hit a leaning three point shot in the last seconds of regulation. To me, the funniest thing to think about is how angry Spurs Coach Gregg Popovich must have been every time the game went to another overtime. He’s famous for being at the forefront of the movement to rest his players during the regular season, something that’s difficult to do when the game goes an extra fifteen minutes!
    Line: Three overtimes! Pop must have been pissed he had to play his guys so much longer.

Sports Forecast for Thursday, December 18, 2014

Sports is no fun if you don’t know what’s going on. Here’s what’s going on:

In today’s segment, I covered:

  • NHL Hockey — St. Louis Blues at Los Angeles Kings, 10:30 p.m. ET on regional cable.
  • NBA Basketball – New York Knicks at Chicago Bulls, 8 p.m. ET on TNT.
  • NBA Basketball – Oklahoma City Thunder at Golden State Warriors, 10:30 p.m. ET on TNT.
  • NCAA Basketball – University of Connecticut vs. Duke in East Rutherford, NJ, 8 p.m. ET on ESPN.
  • NFL Football – Tennessee Titans at Jacksonville Jaguars, 8:25 p.m. ET on NFL Network (but do not watch this game.)

For email subscribers, click here to get the audio.

You can subscribe to all Dear Sports Fan podcasts by following this link.

Music by Jesse Fischer.

Sports Forecast for Wednesday, December 17, 2014

Sports is no fun if you don’t know what’s going on. Here’s what’s going on:

In today’s segment, I covered:

  • Capital One Cup Soccer — Liverpool at AFC Bournemouth, 2:45 p.m. on beIN sports.
  • NHL Hockey — Boston Bruins at Minnesota Wild, 8 p.m. ET on NBC Sports Network.
  • NBA Basketball – Brooklyn Nets at Toronto Raptors, 8 p.m. ET on ESPN.
  • NBA Basketball – Houston Rockets at Denver Nuggets, 10:30 p.m. ET on ESPN.

For email subscribers, click here to get the audio.

You can subscribe to all Dear Sports Fan podcasts by following this link.

Music by Jesse Fischer.

What happened Tuesday, December 16, 2014?

  1. Golden State loses, finally: After winning 16 games in a row, the Golden State Warriors finally lost an NBA basketball game. The game was to the Memphis Grizzlies and they lost 105-98. The Grizzlies are like a photo-negative of the Warriors. The Grizzlies are all about their big men who play near the basket and the Warriors are a team whose best players are little dudes who shoot well from the outside.
    Line: I guess the streak had to end sometime. It’s still impressive though.
  2. If the Blues don’t get you: The St. Louis Blues are a prototypical young, talented team that’s just waiting to break through and win the Stanley Cup. Last night they beat the Stanley Cup Champions, the Los Angeles Kings, 5-2. The game was 2-1 in favor of the Kings after two periods but the Blues absolutely exploded in the third period with four unanswered goals, two of them on the power play.
    Line: The Blues have the talent to win it all, games like this will help get them the experience needed.
  3. Down goes Southampton: One of the great things about British soccer is that there are a few tournaments throughout the year that pit the teams from the top league, the Premiere League, against what should be inferior teams from lower leagues. The Capital One Cup, commonly called the League Cup, is one of those tournaments. It’s a single elimination deal with the 20 Premiere League teams and 72 teams from the Football League which is the next league down. This kind of competition is inconceivable in the United States, but it seems like a lot of fun. Yesterday, a Football League team, Sheffield United, beat a Premiere League team, Southampton 1-0 in the quarterfinals of the tournament!
    Line: Sheffield United beating Southampton is like if the Durham Bulls beat the Baltimore Orioles.

Week 15 NFL One Liners

Green Bay Packers 13, at Buffalo Bills 21

Buffalo’s defense did something virtually no one has been able to do this year: make Packers QB Aaron Rodgers look bad.
Line: Buffalo’s defense is legit. If only they had a decent quarterback!

Jacksonville Jaguars, 12 at Baltimore Ravens 20

Baltimore made it harder than it had to be – but ultimately their defense was too much for Jaguars rookie quarterback Blake Bortles.
Line: Baltimore sure wins ugly – and Blake Bortles looks like he may be a bust, too.

Cleveland Browns 0, at Cincinnati Bengals 30

Polarizing Browns rookie Johnny Manziel was absolutely terrible – he gave the ball away and couldn’t get the offense going at all, meaning long-suffering Cleveland fans will have to go another year without making the playoffs.
Line: Johnny Football just led the Browns right out of the playoffs.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers, 17 at Carolina Panthers 19

This game is all about how bad the NFC south – which both teams play in – is this year. Carolina won and has a record of 5-8-1. They are currently leading that division.
Line: I mean, does someone actually HAVE to win the NFC South?

Houston Texans 10, at Indianapolis Colts 17

This was a battle between two of the rising stars in the league – Colts QB Andrew Luck and Texans defensive lineman JJ Watt – with the division title on the line. Luck threw two touchdowns to bring the Colts back in the second half and the Texans couldn’t do anything on offense all day.
Line: Luck looked shaky, but he came through when it counted – like he always does.

Oakland Raiders 13, at Kansas City Chiefs 31

The Chiefs won the latest game in this traditional rivalry – which has faded a bit because the Raiders frankly stink – by taking advantage of Oakland’s mistakes and not making any of their own.
Line: Remember when this rivalry used to matter? Is Oakland ever going to be good again?

Miami Dolphins 13, at New England Patriots 41

New England’s offense was too much for a Miami team that blew them out the first week of the season. Tom Brady was…well…Tom Brady, and the Pats clinched their 375th AFC East title in a row.
Line: Brady looks as good as he ever has – I don’t see who’s going to keep them out of the Super Bowl if he keeps playing like this.

Washington Redskins 13, at New York Giants 24

One of two truly meaningless and painful games to watch this week. Controversial Redskins QB Robert Griffin III was not as bad as he had been, but ultimately exciting Giants rookie Odell Beckham Jr won the suffix battle by scoring three touchdowns.
Line: Beckham’s practically unstoppable – when Victor Cruz gets back next year the Giants will have one of the most exciting receiver combos in the league.

Pittsburgh Steelers, 27 at Atlanta Falcons 20

Pittsburgh built a lead on the arm of Ben Roethlisberger and the legs of rookie RB Le’veon Bell and withstood Atlanta’s late comeback attempt. Both of these teams still have a chance at the playoffs.
Line: Big Ben wouldn’t let the Steelers lose – Atlanta didn’t look great, but they may still win the NFC South.

Denver Broncos, 22 at San Diego Chargers 10

Peyton Manning was sick and hurt, but he did just enough – along with some smothering defense – to lead the Broncos past their divisional rival Chargers.  They clinched a spot in the playoffs – meanwhile, the Chargers are all but eliminated.
Line: Peyton’s not looking great, but he’s got enough to give them a chance, especially with that defense playing the way they are.

New York Jets, 16 at Tennessee Titans 11

The second meaningless game that was painful to watch – more painful to watch than Redskins-Giants. It’s best not to discuss this one, even if you’re asked.
Line: [shake head].

Minnesota Vikings, 14 at Detroit Lions 16

Detroit came from behind to win this game, helped by two interceptions thrown by Vikings QB Teddy Bridgewater. The Lions kicked the game winning field goal with a few minutes left and kept their playoff hopes alive.
Line: The Lions could still get in, but I’m not sure they deserve to after seeing this game.

San Francisco 49ers, 7 at Seattle Seahawks 17

San Francisco’s disappointing year continued as they’re eliminated from playoff contention – done in by Seattle’s defense and their own mistakes. As the Niners swoon continues (they may lose their head coach, John Harbaugh, this offseason), the Seahawks seem to be returning to the style and level of play that won them a Super Bowl.
Line: I don’t know what happened with the Niners, but I think Harbaugh’s gone.

Dallas Cowboys 38, at Philadelphia Eagles 27

Dallas looked like they were going to run away with this game, opening up a 21 point lead – Philly stormed back but ultimately had no answer for Cowboys receiver Dez Bryant, who caught three touchdowns. For once, the Cowboys didn’t choke in an important game. They’re now in the driver’s seat in the NFC East.
Line: I never would’ve thought Romo would be the one to come up big – but then, he was playing against Mark Sanchez.

 

NFL Week 15 Good Cop, Bad Cop Precaps

The NFL season has started but how do you know which games to watch and which to skip? Ask our favorite police duo with their good cop, bad cop precaps of all the matchups in the National Football League this weekend. To see which games will be televised in your area, check out 506sports.com’s essential NFL maps.

Week 15

Sunday, December 14, at 1:00 p.m. ET

Green Bay Packers at Buffalo Bills

Good cop: The Buffalo fans are consistently among the best in the league! They’re going to find a way to help their team in this must-win game against the mighty Packers!

Bad cop: How? What if one of them transformed the world into a cartoon and then the other 71,856 threw banana peels at Aaron Rodgers? That might work. Maybe.

Jacksonville Jaguars at Baltimore Ravens

Good cop: What luck for the Ravens who are fighting for a playoff spot and their division lead! They play the woeful Jaguars while the Browns and Bengals play each other and the Steelers play the dangerous Falcons!

Bad cop: The “dangerous falcons?” You must be mistaken — the Steelers are playing the Atlanta Falcons football team, not a flock of predatory birds. The football team is not dangerous.

Cleveland Browns at Cincinnati Bengals

Good cop: Finally! Finally, we’ll get to see the most talked about rookie quarterback, Johnny Manziel, start a game for the Cleveland Browns!

Bad cop: Yes… Manziel is so exciting that his coaches waited until their team was basically eliminated from playoff contention to start him. Exciting like a rusty roller coaster is exciting.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Carolina Panthers

Good cop: With their quarterback sidelined after a scary looking car accident that luckily ended with only a couple small broken bones in his back, the Panthers turn to journeyman Derek Anderson who beat the Buccaneers earlier this year! Even at 4-8-1, the Panthers’ playoff hopes are still alive!

Bad cop: The only small broken bones are ones other people have. The only hope the Panthers have for the playoffs are mathematical.

Houston Texans at Indianapolis Colts

Good cop: The Texans are only game out of a wild card spot and I think this is the week they finally break through their division rivals, Indianapolis Colts! If anyone can outsmart and outbeard Andrew Luck, it’s the Texans erudite wildman Quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick!

Bad cop: I don’t care about all that. When it’s December and cold, windy, and snowing across larger parts of the United States, the last thing I want to watch is a mediocre football game inside a dome. I want weather.

Oakland Raiders at Kansas City Chiefs

Good cop: Just a month ago, the Chiefs were 7-3 and looked like they could stroll into the playoffs this year! Then they played the winless Raiders on Thursday, lost, lost their next two games, and are on the outside looking in! That Raiders loss really derailed their season and I’m interested to see them get their revenge!

Bad cop: “My name is Alex Smith, you defeated my football team, prepare to lose.” Not exactly the thing legends are made of.

Miami Dolphins at New England Patriots

Good cop: It’s another divisional revenge game! The Patriots don’t really need to win this game, but that’s never stopped Brady and Bellichick for looking to destroy a team that beat them the last time they played!

Bad cop: Brady, Bellichick, Brady, Bellichick. I’m getting bored with those two. Can we swap them out for the characters from True Detective? Then you’d have an interesting football team — okay Gronkowski, on this play I want you to run a flat circle and then I’ll throw you the ball…

Washington Redskins at New York Giants

Good cop: HEY! After this game, we’ll only have to se– I mean get to see these teams two more times!

Bad cop: [quietly nods]

Pittsburgh Steelers at Atlanta Falcons

Good cop: Ben Roethlisberger has thrown for six touchdowns in two games this year! I expect he’ll come close to that again this Sunday against the Falcons “pass defense!”

Bad cop: [quietly nods proudly]

SUNDAY, December 14, AT 4:05 and 4:25 P.M. ET

Denver Broncos at San Diego Chargers

Good cop: Doesn’t it seem like the Broncos always have to go through the Chargers on their way through the playoffs?!!

Bad cop: Yep — and they always beat them, every time, so where’s the drama?

New York Jets at Tennessee Titans

Good cop: It’s the only head to head matchup this week among the five teams tied at the bottom of the schedule at 2-11! Whoever wins this game gets bragging rights!

Bad cop: And loses an important chance to grab the first overall draft pick next year.

Minnesota Vikings at Detroit Lions

Good cop: Don’t sleep on the Vikings! They’ve won their last two games and are sneaking closer and closer to .500! Not bad for quarterback Teddy Bridgewater’s first year!

Bad cop: I would never sleep on a Viking. Too spiky.

San Francisco 49ers at Seattle Seahawks

Good cop: A rematch of the Thanksgiving night game! A rematch of last year’s NFC Championship!

Bad cop: Since last year’s NFC Championship, the 49ers are 7-6. Since Thanksgiving, they’ve lost to the Raiders. Not interested.

SUNDAY, December 14, AT 8:30 P.M. ET

Dallas Cowboys at Philadelphia Eagles

Good cop: I’m basically speechless! A division rivalry! Both teams are 9-4! Drama! Action!

Bad cop: Expectations lead to disappointment.

MONDAY, December 15, AT 8:30 P.M. ET

New Orleans Saints at Chicago Bears

Good cop: It’s a matchup between two of the most surprising teams of the season!

Bad cop: Yep — even I have been surprised at how terrible these teams are.

Sports Forecast for Friday, December 12, 2014

Sports is no fun if you don’t know what’s going on. Here’s what’s going on:

In today’s segment, I covered:

  • NHL Hockey — Los Angeles Kings at Montreal Canadiens, 7:30 p.m. ET on regional cable.
  • NBA Basketball – Portland Trailblazers at Chicago Bulls, 7 p.m. ET on TNT.
  • NBA Basketball – Los Angeles Lakers at San Antonio Spurs, 9:30 p.m. ET on TNT.
  • NCAA Basketball – Iowa State Cyclones at Iowa Hawkeyes, 8 p.m. ET on the Big Ten Network.
  • And more!

For email subscribers, click here to get the audio.

You can subscribe to all Dear Sports Fan podcasts by following this link.

Music by Jesse Fischer.

What happened on Thursday, December 11, 2014?

  1. Football game mercifully ends, one team wins: Even though it’s not statistically true, it’s become normal for people to complain about the low quality of Thursday Night football games. The argument is that there’s not enough time for coaches to plan or players to recover from the last game. Those arguments were bolstered by last night’s dreadfully played game between the St. Louis Rams and Arizona Cardinals. The Cardinals won 12-6 which is exactly the score you might expect when two teams with good defenses and incompetent offenses play each other.
    Line: The Cardinals lost another starting quarterback last night. By the time they limp into the playoffs, they’ll not just be limping, they’ll be in a walking boot, on crutches.
  2. LeBron is human, Cavaliers lose: One of the strongest signs of LeBron James’ dominance is that it’s hard to remember him ever being injured. Oh, sure, there was that little issue with cramps in last year’s playoffs, but everyone gets cramps. It’s pretty amazing that someone who is 6’8″ and plays at something between 250 and 280 lbs can run and jump as hard as him for so long and not suffer some kind of real injury. We were reminded of this last night when he sat out the game against the Oklahoma City Thunder because of some knee soreness. The Cavaliers without James lost handily, 103-94.
    Line: I can’t ever remember LeBron actually being injured, can you?
  3. Harden loves overtime: It’s almost as if James Harden, who was traded to the Houston Rockets from the Oklahoma City Thunder in a move that has been pilloried by the basketball intelligentsia,  knew he was going to be on TV after his old teammates and wanted to remind everyone that he’s still a great player in his own right. He scored 44 points, ten of them in five minutes of overtime, to help his team beat the Sacramento Kings, 113-109.
    Line: Harden just said, “Remember me? I’m still here!”

Should we talk about social issues on a sports site? My thoughts on Eric Garner, Michael Brown, police violence, and grand juries

I was on the sports-only social networking site Fancred a few days ago and I saw a post showing a photograph of Anthony Ujah, a Nigerian striker playing on a German soccer team. Ujah had just scored a goal and, in celebration, had raised his jersey to reveal a white undershirt with a handwritten message, “Eric Garner #can’tbreathe #justice”. I quickly upvoted (Fancred’s version of Facebook’s like) and then looked down at the comment thread below the post. Another Fancredder had posted a brief complaint. “Should stay out of sports”, he wrote. The original person who posted the photo challenged him by asking, “Then where can we discuss racism and injustice?” The answer from the commenter was, “Not on FANCRED and not on the field.. Do it after the game there are other ways to deal with this.”

This conversation got me pretty worked up. This view of sports as a refuge from social issues is a common one but not one that I believe holds any historic accuracy or moral righteousness. Sports has often been a forum for social or political expression. Just in my lifetime, I’ve witnessed the rise and mainstream reaction against the “hip-hop” athlete as personified by basketball player Allen Iverson. I’ve seen Jason Collins’ coming out as the first active male athlete in one of the “big four sports”. I’ve seen issues as wide-ranging as dog-fighting, gender equality, gender testing, using the N-word, and xenophobia played out in the context of sports.

Sports in America, even with a Black president, are home to the most visible African-Americans in our society. Insofar as the issues underneath the Eric Garner, Michael Brown, and Tamir Rice cases are racial, it makes sense that they are discussed in the context of sports. In the last few week, athletes in football, basketball, and as we saw above, even soccer, have been making that point for us by reminding us of these issues before and during games. Four St. Louis Rams players came out on the field before a game with their hands held in the air, a symbol of protest in the Michael Brown Case. Basketball players, starting with Chicago’s Derek Rose, moving to LeBron James, Kevin Garnett, and several other Cavaliers and Nets, and continuing with the entire rosters of the Los Angeles Lakers and Georgetown Hoyas have worn “I can’t breathe” T-shirts during warm ups. Even lesser known players got in on the action, like Ariyana Smith of Knox College who was initially suspended for her protest preceding a game in Clayton, Missouri, where the Michael Brown grand jury was, and Johnson Bademosi of the Cleveland Browns, who wore a handmade shirt with the same message during a game and wrote about why in The MMQB later.

There have certainly been times when sports has been a refuge for some people, including African-Americans, from the worst forms of discrimination in society, but the argument that sports should be a refuge from the discussion of social issues is simply wrong. Sports has not ever been, nor should be a refuge from actively participating in social issues.

As I thought about this and made that case in my mind, I realized that I was not exactly living up to my own ideals. I have a platform (small though it may be) in Dear Sports Fan that I write in every day and which every day is seen by hundreds of people but I had not used it to express my own opinions about Eric Garner, Michael Brown, Tamir Rice, the police that killed them, and the local legal response to their deaths. So, whether it’s my responsibility, my choice, or my privilege to use Dear Sports Fan as a platform for my thoughts on the issues of police violence and the legal system’s response to it, I am going to go for it.

Here’s what I think:

I’ve been wondering why Eric Garner’s case has captured my passion more than Michael Brown’s or the many other incidents of police brutality. There are several reasons. First, Garner was killed in New York, where I live, so his death has more immediacy for me. Second, the results of the grand jury proceedings about his death were just that, second — they came out right after the Ferguson grand jury had primed us to react in a particular way. Third, while it’s possible for me to imagine (rightly or wrongly) Michael Brown’s killing as the result of misguided panic, the killing of Eric Garner is much harder to rationalize. Oh sure, the police who attacked him were never intending to kill him, but the use of a prohibited choke hold which there have been over 1,000 complaints to the police about in the last 5 years, is not the result of a momentary and unfortunate lapse. No, the choke hold that killed Eric Garner is a symptom of systemic abuse on the part of a police force that suggests a cynical negligence for the wellbeing of the public. The last reason why Eric Garner’s death was so striking is one that we sports fans should be familiar with: video. There was video of Eric Garner being killed but none of Michael Brown. Video is so powerful. It’s a key reason why the sports world was stirred up so much more by Ray Rice’s domestic abuse crime than by previous incidents. For that matter, it’s most of why you’ll find many more sports fans who think Michael Jordan was the greatest basketball player ever than who argue it was Bill Russell or Wilt Chamberlain, whose 100 point game is captured only in a photograph, not on video.

I’m afraid we have too many of the wrong people in our police force. Police should be people so passionately opposed to violence that they are willing to devote their lives to preventing violence and catching people who perpetrate violence on others. Police should not be people with violent tendencies who seek to have their nature legitimized. While I am sure that there are many police of the first sort, it doesn’t seem like we have sufficient skill at avoiding the second type of police recruit or of weeding them out of active duty before they are able to be violent from the privileged position their badge grants them. This issue is not dissimilar to the one we face in politics where it seems as though anyone honest and upstanding enough to be a good congressperson or governor is so turned off by the rampant corruption and selfishness in politics that they never enter the political arena. Like in politics, fixing this problem in the police force is going to be a slow, probably even a generational process but it needs to start now.

• Seeking justice from federal authorities in cases of police violence is not good enough. I find it incredibly depressing that this is what leaders of the movement for justice from Al Sharpton to Letitia James were calling for immediately after the Eric Garner grand jury result came out. I understand the dynamic between local prosecutors and police involves close cooperation and mutual support but that is not an excuse for gross misbehavior. I’m unwilling to simply take the past, current, and future refusal of local prosecutors to indict police accused of violent crimes as a given. I’m a fan of movies and television shows about crime on the organized spectrum like The Godfather movies, The Sopranos, and The Wire. One of the redeeming qualities of the cultures that those shows represent is that even in the murky moral world of the Mafia or of drug dealers in Baltimore, there is a shared moral code with boundaries. There are lines beyond which even people who will go to jail for decades without identifying their friends or kill someone on command without questioning why will not protect you if you cross. Why is that not true for police and local prosecutors?

If St. Louis County prosecutor, Robert McCulloch was as sympathetic towards the policeman, Darren Wilson, as his twisting of the grand jury process suggests, then I think he should have started a fund for Wilson’s family. He could easily have seeded it with $5,000 or $10,000 of his $160,000 in base annual salary or if he really wanted to make a statement, he could have promised to give a whole year’s salary to the policeman’s family. I would have no problem with him using the celebrity the case has given him to express his support of the police or of Wilson in particular. But he had to do his job. He had to apply the same standards to Wilson as any other person accused of a violent crime. McCulloch didn’t do that just the same way that the public prosecutor in the Eric Garner case, Dan Donovan, didn’t do his job. Seeking justice from federal authorities may work in individual cases like these but relying on them as a permanent solution is an admission that local systems are immoral and irrevocably broken.

Why don’t we have stats on police violence? Last week, when the Eric Garner non-indictment became public and the streets filled with protesters, I was stuck in my apartment with a fever. It was frustrating because this was the first time in my life I had ever felt clearly and unambiguously about an issue to want to join in a public protest. Stuck at home as I was, I spent a lot of time reading on the internet about the case and I came across something which is unbelievable to me, particularly as a sports fan who has witnessed the statistical revolution in sports over the past twenty years: there are no reliable national statistics about people killed in interactions with law enforcement. This is something which a man named D. Brian Burghart is trying to fix. He’s been working for the past two years on creating a database of people killed in interactions with law enforcement and he wrote about his experience in this article for Gawker. His conclusion, which he admits he cannot prove, is that “The lack of such a database is intentional. No government—not the federal government, and not the thousands of municipalities that give their police forces license to use deadly force—wants you to know how many people it kills and why.” If you’re inspired to donate, as I was, you can do that here.

I know there are far more knowledgable people, far more passionate people, and far better writers than me expressing themselves about these issues but there’s also power in all of us doing our part to make this issue stick around for longer than the normal two-week news cycle. I hope that we all find ways to keep this issue alive until we can transform our society into a more completely fair one. I know that’s a big, long project but it’s an important one as well.

Thanks for reading,
Ezra Fischer

Sports Forecast for Thursday, December 11, 2014

Sports is no fun if you don’t know what’s going on. Here’s what’s going on:

In today’s segment, I covered:

  • New York Islanders at St. Louis Blues, 8 p.m. ET on regional cable.
  • NBA Basketball – Cleveland Cavaliers at Oklahoma City Thunder, 8 p.m. ET on TNT.
  • NBA Basketball – Houston Rockets at Sacramento Kings, 10:30 p.m. ET on TNT.
  • NFL Football – Arizona Cardinals at St. Louis Rams, 8:30 p.m. ET on NFL Network.
  • And more!

For email subscribers, click here to get the audio.

You can subscribe to all Dear Sports Fan podcasts by following this link.

Music by Jesse Fischer.