If you are a sports fan, you had to love the weekend just completed. There was something for everyone.
The Steelers 26-21 win over Denver yesterday is being categorized as an "ugly win" by most of the pundits in its aftermath. Maybe so, and for sure it never should have been as close as it ended up being, but here is something that wasn't ugly - that 84 yard bomb from Ben to rookie Chase Claypool for a touchdown in the second quarter. That was a jaw dropper.
And as they say in golf, "It's a scorecard, not a post card", and the Steelers are now 2-0.
The predictable uproar of "they should have left him in to go for a no-hitter" arose almost immediately, but putting Keller on a strict pitch count and pulling him when he reached it was absolutely the right thing to do. He remains the #1 pitching prospect that the Pirates have, despite some mixed results in his time with the Big Club. He has also shown some "china doll" proclivities insofar as injuries are concerned. Friday was only his second start since spending a few weeks on the injured list in this shortened season. Maybe leaving Keller in would have yielded a no-hitter, or, at best, would have prevented another Pirates loss, which would mean finishing the season with 16 wins instead of only 15. Big deal. The Pirates need a healthy Keller for 2021 and beyond. His six innings on Friday showed great promise for the future, and insofar as the Pirates are concerned, that is all that matters in 2020.
Speaking of the Pirates, a note in the paper this morning said that on his radio show yesterday, GMBC indicated that the complete lack of box office and in-stadium revenues in 2020 means that teams will have to readjust their way of thinking in terms of spending money in the pursuit free agents in the coming off season. By "teams", of course, he meant "the Pirates", so really nothing will change much in the S.O.P. of our Pittsburgh Pirates as we head towards the 2021 season.
Golf's United States Open was head this weekend and was won by Bryson DeChambeau. He shot six under par and was the only golfer to finish in red numbers for the tournament. He deserved the win, no question about it, so congratulations to him. He also comes across, and maybe I'm wrong about this, as a guy who feels that he is the smartest guy out there on the course with his extensive use of analytics in planning his on course strategy, and other golfers don't seem to like him. He also takes FOREVER between shots, especially putts, by constantly consulting that little notebook he carries and pulls out of his back pocket on, it seems, every shot. Maybe that does make him the smartest guy out there, and his way will be the norm for every golfer on tour within the next five years. Then golf will become populated with a bunch of analytical mumbo-jumbo, just like Major League Baseball has. Won't that be fun?
I made some comments on social media over the weekend about the USGA's tendency to trick up their US Open courses so as to provide a "true test of golf." You saw the results: one guy finishes under par, and the best golfers in the world hack it out of the hay for four days and slog in at eight or nine or double digits over par. I don't like it, but apparently a lot of people do. If that's what the Blue Jacketed Stuffed Shirts from Far Hills, NJ want, so be it, but I'd hate to see that week after week on Tour.
To those of you who beat the shit out of me on Facebook over the weekend for this opinion, no need to do it again. I just managed to stop the bleeding.
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