Why are game sevens so great?

If you’re a sports fan, there is nothing better than a game seven. If you’re a fan of the team in the game seven, it’s the most dramatic, heart-wrenching, nerve-wracking, squeal inducing sports situation your team can possibly be in. If you’re simply a fan of sports but don’t have a rooting interest one way or another, game seven is a joy. If you’re wondering what I’m talking about and why game sevens are so great, read on.

Sports has developed a wide variety of ways to decide which team or person is the best. The most common ways of doing this are round-robin tournaments, single-elimination tournaments, multiple-elimination tournaments, and three, five, or seven game series. Sometimes a combination of these approaches are used. There is something to be said for each form of playoff but the one we are concerned with today is a seven game series. In a single elimination tournament, like March Madness in college basketball, a team that loses once is eliminated forever. In a double-elimination tournament, a team that loses twice is eliminated forever. This could go on to infinity if you wanted it to. In a quadruple elimination tournament, a team that lost four times would be out. In an undecuple (yes) elimination tournament, a team that loses eleven times would be eliminated from the tournament. The seven game series is a version of a quadruple elimination tournament where two teams play each other in successive games until one team has won (and the other team has lost) four games.

Just reaching game seven in a seven game series tells you so many things about the series. For one thing, both teams have won (and lost) three games. The two teams are close to even in skill and determination, otherwise one would have been eliminated before then. There have been lots of ups and downs during the series. There’s been enough time for the players on the opposing teams to get to know each other and (usually) develop an explosive mixture of begrudging respect and bubbling disdain. This is magnified in sports like hockey where so much physicality is allowed during the game. It’s also magnified the farther you go in the playoffs. A first round game seven is not as dramatic as a second round game seven. Some sports, like baseball, recognize this and save the seven game series for later rounds, using shorter series earlier on. A game seven in the Stanley Cup finals, the NBA finals, or the World Series is the absolute pinnacle of sporting drama. The team that wins these game sevens are achieving life-long dreams and reaching the highest professional success possible.

Even if you put all the other factors aside, game sevens are still really cool because of their emotional resonance for the players. One common complaint about professional sports is that the fans care more about the teams than the players do; that the players are mercenaries who do it just for the money. In a game seven, you know that every player who steps on the pitchers mound or the batting box, every player who vaults over the boards onto the ice, every player who grabs a rebound or makes a layup, somewhere, in the back of their heads is thinking “Game seven, World Series/Stanley Cup final/NBA final…” just like they did when they were nine years-old in their backyards playing with a friend or two. Game sevens have a way of reducing sports back down to their essentials. Box out. Dump the puck. Make contact. Keep your eye on the ball.

Tonight the Kansas City Royals and the San Francisco Giants play in game seven of the World Series. Let’s enjoy it.

Sports Forecast for Wednesday, October 29, 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:

  • Game seven of the World Series between the Kansas City Royals and San Francisco Giants is at 8 p.m. ET on Fox.
  • There are three matches in the 1/8 finals of the British Capital One Cup. The televised game is between Manchester City and Newcastle United on BeIN Sports at 3:30 p.m. ET.
  • The NBA schedule has a dozen games tonight but only two are nationally televised: the New York Knicks vs. the Chicago Bulls at 8 p.m. ET on ESPN and the Oklahoma City Thunder vs. the Portland Trailblazers at 10:30 p.m. ET on ESPN.
  • The NHL schedule features a game between the Detroit Red Wings and Washington Capitals tonight at 7:30 p.m. on NBS Sports Network.

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 Tuesday, October 28, 2014?

  1. Game Six of the World Series: Game six was a blow-out! The Kansas City Royals beat the San Francisco Giants 10-0 to force a deciding game seven tonight. The rout began and was basically complete in the second inning when the Royals scored seven runs!
    Line: That was a Royal beat-down!
    What’s next: Game Seven, tonight, 8 p.m. ET on Fox!!!
  2. The NBA is off to a rollicking start: There were three games yesterday for the first day of the NBA season. The New Orleans Pelicans beat the Orlando Magic 101-84 behind budding superstar Anthony Davis’ performance, the San Antonio Spurs picked up where they left off last year by beating the Dallas Mavericks 101-100, and in what is likely to be a harbinger of many losses for the Los Angeles Lakers this year, they lost 108 to 90 to the Houston Rockets.
    Line: Year after year after year after year, the Spurs are good.
  3. A full night of NHL games: The Ottawa Senators got their first victory since their city was locked down following the Parliament shooting when they beat the Columbus Blue Jackets 5-2. The Pittsburgh Penguins racked up a total of eight goals on their way to beating the New Jersey Devils. The Tampa Bay Lightening were only one goal short of that in their 7-3 victory over the Arizona Coyotes. The Carolina Hurricanes remain the last winless team in the league after losing 4-1 to the Vancouver Canucks.

Sports Forecast for Tuesday, October 28

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:

  • The World Series between the Kansas City Royals and San Francisco Giants continues with game six in Kansas City at 8 p.m. ET on Fox.
  • The NBA season begins tonight with three games, two of which are on national television. The Orlando Magic play the New Orleans Pelicans at 8 p.m. ET. The Dallas Mavericks take on the defending champion San Antonio Spurs at 8 p.m. on TNT. The Houston Rockets play the Los Angeles Lakers at 10:30 p.m. ET, also on TNT.
  • There’s a dozen games in the NHL tonight. We’ll highlight just a couple of them. The Minnesota Wild play the Boston Bruins on NBC Sports Network at 7. The Ottawa Senators look for their first win since the shootings in their city when they play the Columbus Blue Jackets, also at 7. The Anaheim Ducks play the Chicago Blackhawks at 8:30 p.m. ET.
  • Finally, in non-game-based sports news, the first ever official College Football Playoff committee’s top 25 rankings will come out today.

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 Monday, October 27?

  1. Washington upsets Dallas: One of the charms of the National Football League is that the very best teams are only a little better than the worst teams. The gap between them is less than in other sports. The gap between good teams and bad teams is even smaller. Thus the expression “on any given Sunday” or, in this case, Monday night. The Washington Redskins beat the Dallas Cowboys 20-17 in overtime. The story of the game was the great play of Washington’s understudy quarterback, Colt McCoy, and the potential re-injury of Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo’s surgically repaired back.
    Line: The Cowboys lost, but if Tony Romo turns out to be okay, they should feel like they won.
  2. The topsy turvy continued in the NHL: Seems like it was just one of those nights when the unexpected thing kept happening. The Edmonton Oilers upset the Montreal Canadiens 3-0 and the New York Rangers scored five goals (five!!) in the third period to beat the Minnesota Wild in a game that was marred by violence.
    Line: What the huh?
  3. The quiet before the storm: Yesterday was a pretty quiet day in sports. Today is the complete opposite: the NBA season begins, the World Series might end if the Giants win, and the NHL has a full slate of games. Tune in to our sports forecast for the day for more coverage.

Let's get ready for basketball season

Let’s get ready for basketball season together. The National Basketball Association (NBA) season starts tomorrow. To help get excited AND prepared for the new season, here is a collection of our best writing about basketball:

The basics

Even the least familiar person with basketball knows a few things about the game: it’s played by teams of five who try to shoot a round ball into a metal hoop which hangs ten feet up in the air off of a plexiglass backboard. Beyond that though, things can get pretty fuzzy, pretty fast. That’s why we’ve covered a few of the next level questions in these basic posts about basketball.

What are the positions in basketball?

In this post, I run through how all the basketball positions work in this post as well as how they’ve evolved over the last twenty years. Basketball has generally transformed in that time to have more interchangeable parts. There’s less differentiation between positions than ever. This change has been reflected by a shift from referring to positions by name (power forward, shooting guard, etc.) to number.

How long is an NBA basketball game?

Talk about the basics, this post covers how long an NBA game is. Spoiler alert, it’s 48 minutes, divided into four quarters of 12 minutes each. There’s a multiples of four motif throughout basketball —  the shot clock is 24 seconds and teams have eight seconds to get the ball across half court. In the past month, the NBA experimented with reducing the

Are basketball fouls really arbitrary?

They certainly seem arbitrary, don’t they? Of all the sports, basketball fouls are probably the hardest to identify and the most open to interpretation. Well, all the major televised sports anyhow, water-polo, for instance seems to have almost constantly confusing foul calls. The truth is that the more you know about a sport and its rules, the less the rules and the foul calls that follow from them seem arbitrary. This post helps explain some of the most common foul calls.

Vocabulary

All sports, basketball included, have their own technical terms. Understanding the technical and expressive elements of basketball language is essential to enjoying the game.

What does it mean to have a foul to give?

Having a “foul to give” is something you’ll hear basketball announcers say about a team at least a few times a game but none of them ever stop to explain what that means to casual or beginner fans. Luckily, this post has you covered.

What does “and one” mean in basketball?

At any given moment, the cry of “and one” is indignantly echoing around a gym somewhere in the country, shouted by someone who feels righteous and over-confident at that moment. My colleague, Dean Russell Bell took this question and turned his answer into an opus well worth reading.

What does “ball don’t lie” mean in basketball?

Seldom has a piece of sports slang been so tied in association to a single player as “ball don’t lie” is to Rasheed Wallace. Find out why and what it means in this post.

The NBA season begins on Tuesday with three games, two of which are televised on TNT. The games are the Orlando Magic at the New Orleans Pelicans at 8 p.m. ET, the Dallas Mavericks at the defending champion San Antonio Spurs at 8 p.m ET on TNT, and the Houston Rockets at the Los Angeles Lakers at 10:30 p.m. ET on TNT. That’s just the first three of 1,230 games this season. I hope these posts help you enjoy at least one of them a little bit more than you otherwise would.

Sports Forecast for Monday, October 27

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:

  • The Monday Night Football game between the Dallas Cowboys and the Washington Redskins at 8:30 on ESPN.
  • Two games in the NHL, the Minnesota Wild (4-2-0) and New York Rangers (4-4-0) at 7 p.m. and the Montreal Canadiens (7-1) vs Edmonton Oilers (3-4-1) at 9:30.
  • In the Barclay’s British Premiere League, Queens Park Rangers vs. Aston Villa at 4 p.m. on NBC Sports Network.

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

Music by Jesse Fischer.

What happened on Sunday, October 26?

  1. The Giants Ace Game Five: The San Francisco Giants won game five of the World Series thanks largely to their ace pitcher, Madison Bumgarner, who threw a complete game shutout. That means he pitched for all nine innings and didn’t let in a single run. The Kansas City Royals tried their best but just couldn’t figure out how to manufacture a run against him. The Giants are now one win away from winning their third World Series in five years.
    Line: The Royals were being held up as potentially having invented a new strategy in baseball. Last night taught us that nothing beats a great starting pitcher.
    What’s Next: Game Six is Tuesday night at 8 p.m. ET on Fox. 
  2. An overstuffed day of NFL football: On most Sundays during the fall, there’s NFL football on television from 1 p.m. ET to around 11:30 p.m. ET. Yesterday, the league one-upped itself by starting its first game at 9:30 a.m. ET. That’s fourteen hours of straight football! Just in case you didn’t watch it all, we’ve got one liners about all the games, so you can talk about them at work today.
    Line: Woke up, watched football, went to sleep.
  3. CONCACAF Champions: The United States Women’s national soccer team finished off its World Cup qualifying run in the CONCACAF (The Confederation of North, Central American and Caribbean Association Football) region with a 6-0 win over Costa Rica. American Hero, Abby Wambach, scored four goals to bring her total up to 177, the most of any woman or man in international competition. The American team was dominant during this World Cup qualifying tournament. Not only didn’t they lose a game but they weren’t even scored on once.
    Line: [silently bows down to show respect for Wambach and co.]

Week 8 NFL One Liners

On Mondays during in the fall, the conversation is so dominated by NFL football that the expression “Monday morning quarterback” has entered the vernacular. The phrase is defined by Google as “a person who passes judgment on and criticizes something after the event.” With the popularity of fantasy football, we now have Monday morning quarterbacks talking about football from two different perspectives. We want you to be able to participate in this great tradition, so all fall we’ll be running NFL One Liners on Monday. Use these tiny synopses throughout the day:

Week 8

Sunday, October 26, at 9:30 a.m. ET

Detroit Lions 22, at Atlanta Falcons 21 (In London)

A game of two halves. The Falcons won the first half, 21-0. The Lions won the second half 22-0. The Lions won the game, 22-21.
Lion: This wasn’t so much one close game as two blow-outs.

Sunday, October 26, at 1:00 p.m. ET

Buffalo Bills 43, at New York Jets 23

You gotta think this is the final nail in the coffin for head coach Rex Ryan and quarterback Geno Smith’s careers with the Jets. I wouldn’t at all be surprised if the Jets fired Ryan this week.
Line: The Jets are a mess!

Baltimore Ravens 24, at Cincinnati Bengals 27

We thought these two teams were closely matched and they were. I’m not sure we learned much about these teams this weekend.
Line: The Bengals won but the Ravens still look good.

Seattle Seahawks 13, at Carolina Panthers 9

A rare low-scoring football game. This game was the flip-side of the Ravens v. Bengals game. It was close but both teams looked pretty bad.
Line: Sometimes a low score means the teams were well matched and played well. This game was just sloppy.

Chicago Bears 23, at New England Patriots 51

The Bears showed themselves to be just about as dysfunctional as the Jets but unlike the Jets, there aren’t any easy scapegoats or changes to make. They’ll just have to go back to work and try harder. The Patriots, meanwhile, have won four in a row and are probably looking forward to testing themselves against the Broncos in their next game.
Line: The Bears need to fire someone but there isn’t really anyone easy for them to fire.

Houston Texans 30, at Tennessee Titans 16

The Titans aren’t good. The Texans are just good enough to beat up on bad teams but maybe not quite good enough to compete with the best.
Line: The Texans look great… when they’re playing the Titans.

Miami Dolphins 27, at Jacksonville Jaguars 13

The Jaguars are a young team that’s growing together. This game was a big episode of growing pains. Miami needs to beat someone better before we take them seriously.
Line: The next two games for the Dolphins, versus the San Diego Chargers and Detroit Lions will tell us more about them than this one did.

Minnesota Vikings 19, at Tampa Bay Buccaneers 13

Believe it or not, even though the Buccaneers had only won one game coming into this week, people were still saying they had an outside chance to make the playoffs. This result will end that talk in a hurry. At 3-5, the Vikings have a glimmer of hope but it’s flickering.
Line: These two teams aren’t doing anything special this year.

St. Louis Rams 7, at Kansas City Chiefs 34

The Chiefs are probably the team that’s taken the biggest shots this year in terms of losing players to injury and have been able to recover. They look like a legit contender for a playoff spot. The Rams try hard but they don’t have the players to compete.
Line: Rooting for the Rams has been a little like ramming your head into a wall for the last few years.

SUNDAY, October 26, AT 4:05 and 4:25 P.M. ET

Philadelphia Eagles 20, at Arizona Cardinals 24

The Cardinals are a remarkable team. No matter how many of their players get injured, they just keep on winning. I don’t think they’re a legitimate Super Bowl contender but they could certainly beat a legit contender in the playoffs.
Line: The Cardinals are like the watch in that commercial, they take a licking and keep on ticking.

Oakland Raiders 13, at Cleveland Browns 23

The Raiders remain winless. The Browns remain a winning team but one that’s decidedly nerve-wracking to root for.
Line: I’d rather be a Browns fan than a Raiders fan but either way, Sunday can’t be a very fun day.

Indianapolis Colts 34, at Pittsburgh Steelers 51

Colts quarterback Andrew Luck finally played a B- game and the Colts lost their first game in six weeks. Luck is great at football but it’s hard to count on him to be great every week in order to win. On the Pittsburgh side of the ball, Ben Roethlisberger set all kinds of team passing records in this game.
Line: If defense wins championships like people say, I guess these two teams are not going to win a championship any time soon.

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, AT 8:30 P.M. ET

Green Bay Packers 23, at New Orleans Saints 44

The Saints finally got a replica of their normal offense back and unleashed it on the visiting Green Bay Packers.
Line: The Saints looked like the old Saints, finally!

NFL Week 8 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 Week 7 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. If you’re worried about watching too much football or if you’re negotiating for a little break during the weekend, read our weekly feature, Do Not Watch This Game.

Week 8

Sunday, October 26, at 9:30 a.m. ET

Detroit Lions at Atlanta Falcons (In London)

Good cop: What better way to start your Sunday morning than to cook some pancakes and bacon and sit down in front of the television to watch some football! The only thing that could make this better is if Prince were cooking!

Bad cop: I live on the West Coast.

Sunday, October 26, at 1:00 p.m. ET

Buffalo Bills at New York Jets

Good cop: I’m excited to see the Jets newest wide receiver, Percy Harvin, who they acquired in a trade with the Seattle Seahawks!

Bad cop: I’m excited to see Geno Smith and Kyle Orton play quarterback… not.

Baltimore Ravens at Cincinnati Bengals

Good cop: This is an important game for the standings in the rough and tumble AFC North division where every team has at least three wins!

Bad cop: Interesting division. Lots of good teams, no great teams. I’d rather watch great games.

Seattle Seahawks at Carolina Panthers

Good cop: I want to see if the defending champs can get up off the floor after two straight losses!

Bad cop: So far this year Carolina has played like they are the floor.

Chicago Bears at New England Patriots

Good cop: This is a must-win game for the Bears! After last week’s locker room explosion following their loss to Miami, they’re going to either be supremely focused and motivated or a complete mess!

Bad cop: I’m going with complete mess.

Houston Texans at Tennessee Titans

Good cop: This is a game with real historical interest! The Tennessee Titans used to be the Houston Oilers before they moved to Tennessee! Now the Texans have taken over and they’re out to get the Titans!

Bad cop: I’m sorry, did you say “hysterical interest?” That’s the only type of interest in this game that I can imagine.

Miami Dolphins at Jacksonville Jaguars

Good cop: The Dolphins are rounding into shape and the Jaguars just won a game! Plus, it’s a battle for supremacy in Florida!

Bad cop: The Good cop doth protest too much, methinks.

Minnesota Vikings at Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Good cop: Believe it or not, the Buccaneers still have a shot at the playoffs, even at 1-5!

Bad cop: That’s supposed to be an advertisement? This team’s division is so bad that even though they are obviously the worst, they could still make the playoffs?

St. Louis Rams at Kansas City Chiefs

Good cop: Hot off big wins against some of the best teams in football, one of these two teams will keep it going on Sunday!

Bad cop: Does it matter? The Chiefs are stuck behind the San Diego Chargers and Denver Broncos in their division and the Rams are stuck behind the Arizona Cardinals, Seattle Seahawks, and San Francisco 49ers in theirs.

SUNDAY, October 26, AT 4:05 and 4:25 P.M. ET

Philadelphia Eagles at Arizona Cardinals

Good cop: What a great game! Two offensively gifted teams and coaches! Two exciting defenses! Only one team can win!

Bad cop: I love it when you repeat simple rules like “only one team can win” as a way to convince me that a game is interesting. How about, “the ground cannot cause a fumble” or “only one offensive player may be in motion before a snap!!” 

Oakland Raiders at Cleveland Browns

Good cop: The Cleveland Browns gave the Jacksonville Jaguars their first win of the season last week! If they give the Raiders their first win this week, some people, most notably quarterback Brian Hoyer, will lose their jobs!

Bad cop: Hooray for people losing their jobs.

Indianapolis Colts at Pittsburgh Steelers

Good cop: Colts quarterback Andrew Luck may have the skills but Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger has the championship rings! Two of them!

Bad cop: Has been vs. will be. Shoot, Andrew Luck is more of an is than a will be these days.

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, AT 8:30 P.M. ET

Green Bay Packers at New Orleans Saints

Good cop: Aaron Rodgers vs. Drew Brees! Cheese curds vs. jambalaya! 

Bad cop: Can I have all the food and none of the football?

MONDAY, October 27, AT 8:30 P.M. ET

Washington Redskins at Dallas Cowboys

Good cop: The Washington Redskins are giving Colt McCoy a chance at quarterback just in time for the Texas legend to make a triumphant return to his home state!

Bad cop: You do know that McCoy is playing because the first stringer is hurt and the second stringer is awful, right? Do not watch this game.