The SeedSing NHL Stanley Cup Finals Prediction

Welcome to the first ever, and probably last, SeedSing NHL Stanley Cup Finals prediction. We here at the website are not big hockey fans, but I thought with Ty out of town I would give the sports prediction blog a try.

Let me start with what I know about the two teams playing for the Stanley Cup. I know that the Florida Panthers play in Miami. This is their third straight trip to the finals (they lost last year to Vegas). The Panthers have a player by the name of Matthew Tkachuk, who is the son of Keith Tkachuk who played for the St. Louis Blues the last time I really paid attention to hockey.

As for the Edmonton Oilers I know they were really good when I was a kid. Edmonton is in Canada and a team from our friendly neighbors to the north have not won a cup in a really long time. That’s all I know.

With all my knowledge and borrowing the sports predicting skills from Ty I am going to say the Florida Panthers will win their first cup in a nice six game series. Why I am picking the Panthers you ask? They are from the United States and Edmonton is in Canada, and like I said a Canadian team has not won the Stanley Cup in forever. USA, USA, USA.

In all seriousness enjoy the Stanley Cup hockey fans. The NHL has the coolest trophy in all of sports and hockey is a pretty cool sport to watch. My fourteen year old is getting more into hockey and has been watching the playoffs and he’s been playing NHL 24 for the last month. He is the one that told me Florida would win. When I asked why he told me that Florida has more recent playoff experience, they won more games, and a team from Canada has not won in forever.

RD

RD Kulik is the founder and Head Editor for SeedSing.com

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Is this the End of Sports?

Currently the French Open is on going, tomorrow night is the NBA Finals and then the Stanley Cup Finals begin on Thursday. Both leagues and international professional tennis did not get the most optimal matchups and the sports media will not shut up about it. “Ratings will be down” they say, “the gambling community is not happy” they cry. I personal believe the last point the sports media cries about, gambling, is why clean competitive sports is coming to an end. Let me explain.

In the NHL and NBA both playoffs saw a strong team from New York not make the finals, in the NBA the Knicks missed the conference finals when they were upset by the Indiana Pacers. The Dallas Mavericks did not have to play the defending champion Nuggets to advance, they got to face the young upstart Minnesota Timberwolves. In the NHL the defending champion Las Vegas Golden Knights were bounced in the first round by a big market Dallas Stars team, then Dallas was knocked out by the lower seeded Edmonton Oilers. Over in the east the little thought about Florida Panthers advanced to their second straight cup final over the massively loved New York Rangers. The biggest market to have their team playing for a championship is Dallas or Miami, and Dallas is a football town and most of you readers probably did not know the Florida Panthers played in Miami. For ratings and gambling, these matchups are not the best. Also the French Open, Novak Djokovic, the man everyone wants to watch, withdrew today with a knee injury. This is all not according to plan.

I listen to a lot of sports radio and I follow these sports personalities on social media. I hear each and ever “expert” complain about the matchups and then do an ad read for a gambling website. The studio show for the French Open is sponsored by Fanduel, the hockey and basketball arenas are covered with gambling adverts and every other commercial is telling you to bet. It is annoying and it is getting a little scary because if gambling means this much to the leagues, then getting optimal matchups, with the most popular teams and players, it means more money.

Before I go on I want to make it clear that I am not calling for a ban on sports gambling. I do not gamble myself, but is not for addiction or moral reasons, I just don’t like to spend my money that way. What I am afraid of is that all of our sports leagues/governing bodies have prioritized revenue more than competition. That is why in the span of less than five years we have gone from zero gambling to non-stop advertisement. I have no faith that the NFL, NBA, MLB, ATP, the Grand Slams, NASCAR, the NCAA, the IOC, FIFA, MLS, LIV Golf, or any other letter salad sports organization would take an opportunity to fix an income to drive more revenue towards their sport. I have no proof, but I think it is already happening. (When I have proof I’ll write about it here).

I am ranting here today because the last few days has been non-stop complaining from the sports media on the state of competion in our current professional leagues. The sports media is their for the management of these leagues, so anything they say can be directly tied to management. Seeing how greedy billionaires have become, and it is billionaires that run these leagues, I have little faith that competion will be important in sports moving forward. Only money will matter and getting rid of competition so management can make another couple of million dollars will win out.

When the French Open ends, the NHL Stanley Cup is hoisted, and a new NBA champ is crowned, the media people will complain on behalf of the league and the gamblers. The narrative will be set. The owners will discuss how to increase revenue, and competitive sports will be killed. I hop I’m wrong, but I am truly afraid the process has already started.

RD

RD Kulik is the founder and Head Editor for SeedSing.com

Support us on patreon.

Ty Predicts the NBA FInals

The NBA Finals are set, and it is two teams that I openly loathe. If you read my piece yesterday, you know why I despise this current Mavericks team. As for the Celtics, I've never been a fan. Let’s discuss.

As a kid I loved the Supersonics. The Sonics and Celtics weren't rivals, but I still rooted against the Celtics. It was also easy to hate on the Celtics as a kid because they weren't very good when I was younger. They had Rick Pitino as head coach for a bit, and those teams were horrendous. They would roll out guys like Ron Mercer, old Dominique Wilkins, Xavier McDaniel, Dee Brown and Dino Radja, to name a few. These were bad teams and I rooted against them throughout my childhood. But now they are good. Their best player is from Saint Louis. Jaylen Brown is a ferocious defender and dunker and he can shoot the rock. Derrick White was a perfect trade for them. Al Horford is consistent as hell. Kristaps Porzingis, when healthy, provides what they need from the center position in the modern NBA. The Celtics are legit. The Mavs are good as well, but this feels like found money for them. They are on a real heater. They are getting more free throws than their opponents. They are getting away with fouls constantly. They are setting illegal screens and getting away with it. They are the darlings of the league and it makes me sick to my stomach. But we are now here.

The Mavs and Celtics are playing for a title. One of the brighter young stars, Luka Doncic or Jayson Tatum, will get their first ring. Mark Cuban will go out a champ, or Brad Stevens will prove his move to the front office was the correct choice. And I will hardly watch any of it. I am wildly disinterested in this matchup. I truly do not care who wins. I'd love to see the Celtics lockdown both Doncic and Irving, but I really don't think I'll tune in for more than a half an hour total in this series. I don't like these teams. I think I have made that abundantly clear. I despise the two stars on the Mavs. I only root for Tatum because he is from my hometown, and I don't root for him all that often. But, I know the readers of my sports stuff want me to break it down, so I'll give it a go.

The Mavs have a better backcourt on offense. Doncic and Irving are better than Derrick White and Jrue Holiday on that end. But the Celtics backcourt is far more superior on defense. Holiday is one of the best perimeter defenders currently in the NBA. White is a nuisance. They are going to make it really tough for Doncic and Irving. But those dudes will get theirs on offense. And Holiday has been a non factor on offense. White is fine, but streaky. The Mavs have the backcourt advantage, As for the frontcourt, the Celtics are light years ahead. Tatum is a bonafide star. All these people saying he is "having a rough playoffs" are clearly not paying attention. He is excellent, he just doesn't run his mouth. He is a boring superstar, and I applaud him for that. Jaylen Brown is a force. That dude can play the game of basketball. He is very good, very intense and understands this game maybe better than anyone playing right now. And be it Horford or Porzingis, they can both shoot and rebound the ball. Horford is a better defender, but they are both pretty interchangeable. I'd happily take those three over Daniel Gafford, Derrick Lively and Derrick Jones Jr. Tatum is way, way, way better than Jones Jr. Brown is far, far superior to any 4 or any 5 on the Mavs that may guard him. And while Lively is very good and hyper athletic, he is a rookie and this is, by far, the biggest stage he has ever played on in his life. That is a lot to ask of a rookie. The frontcourt is clearly in favor of the Celtics. Both of these teams' benches are very plain. The Mavs bring PJ Washington or Daniel Gafford off the bench. They also have Tim Hardaway Jr, Dante Exum, Josh Green and Maxi Kleber. No one truly stands out to me. As for the Celtics, they are bringing Payton Pritchard, Sam Hauser, Luke Kornet and Oshae Brisset off their bench. Again, none are world beaters. Then we have the coaches. Jason Kidd has proven his worth. He is getting the most out of this team. He has made the defense better than I ever imagined they could be. Joe Mazzula has the better team, has a better defense and the Celtics were the best team in the NBA all season long. They have hiccups here and there that they need to clean up. For the most part though, this is about as solid a team as the NBA has seen in a long, long time.

If I am looking over everything and trying to pick a winner, I have to go back to defense. The Celtics are a much, much better defense, and I think they will find a way to make guys other than Luka Doncic and Kyrie Irving beat them. They will try to make Derrick Jones Jr hit shots. They won't allow the Mavs guards to throw alley oops with ease. They will make life tough, and when it gets tough for Doncic, he decides to whine instead of just playing through it. For defense alone I'm going Celtics in 6. 

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing, the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast, and the greatest basketball writer on the internet.

Come and support Ty and the podcast on Patreon.

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I am Not Looking Forward to the Luka Doncic Lovefest in the NBA Finals

While watching game 4 of the West Finals the other night, I found myself turning it off. It looked like the Timberwolves were going to get beat, thus ending the series, and I just couldn't watch the end of the game. Luckily, the Timberwolves won, forcing a game five tonight. But, in all likelihood, this series is all but over and we will have a Celtics-Mavericks finals.

This was the worst case scenario for me. These are the two teams in the entire NBA I like the least. I have never rooted for the Celtics, and since Luka Doncic has come into the league, my hatred for the Mavericks has reemerged and remained high. I do want to say, if this ends up being the finals matchup, I will be rooting hard for the Celitcs. I cannot believe I just wrote that, but it is very true. I want to see Saint Louis' own Jayson Tatum get a ring. But, I will also be pulling for the Celtics because I have a deep, deep hatred of Luka Doncic. That is why we are here today.

Right off the bat, if he wasn't a good enough basketball to root against, I wouldn't write anything about him. He would be an afterthought. But, he is good. At least on the offensive end. So he is easy to root for, or, in my case, truly despise. I have never really liked him since he joined the NBA. At first it wasn't his fault though. It was the writers over at ESPN, namely Zach Lowe. I have written about Lowe's eroticism towards Luka Doncic and Nikola Jokic. Since Jokic won it all last season, Lowe had more than enough ammo to shout his love for him from the hills. Now that the Nuggets are out, Lowe has his other white European player to heap endless praise upon while dumping on other players he deems less worthy. This has been happening since day one. Lowe will never, ever say a bad thing about Luka Doncic. And since I listen to Lowe's podcast, I have had to hear about it for a long while now. I will say, the more recent episodes that have some kind of love letter to Luka Doncic in the description, I have been able to easily erase and never listen to. But, it wasn't just Lowe. I got sick of hearing talking heads on tv expunge on his so-called greatness. He is some kind of wizard passing the ball according to them. I'll take Magic Johnson over him all damn day. They give him endless praise for his ability to score in tight spaces and to create said space. I'll happily take Kobe Bryant and Michael Jordan for that any day. And, he is less than zero on the defensive end, which none of these fanboys seem to even care about anymore. They will sit there and spout off statistics until the cows come home, and when pressed about his horrendous defensive play, they try to move the conversation back to saying how great of an offensive player he is. It has gotten so bad that these talking heads will find the smallest effort he gives on defense and talk about his "improvement" on that end. It is akin to getting a participation trophy the way they glaze his attempts to play defense. And lately these memes of him shit talking opponents, that these same talking heads will gripe about when Anthony Edwards does it, they all love. They talk about his competitive spirit. They praise him for ripping out his opponents' hearts. They want him to continue to talk and talk and talk because that gives them the ammo they think they need to somehow prove his greatness. These are the same people that chastised Randy Moss when he fake mooned the crowd at Lambeau.  Being a Packer fan, I found it hilarious. They don't like the way Jim Harbaugh pressed the NCAA, but they love what Nick Saban and Luka Doncic do.. They feel entitled to say that Anthony Edwards should not have waved at the crowd in Denver when the Wolves closed out the Nuggets. They called that classless. But when they can watch their white savior stare down Devin Booker or SGA or AE, they love it. They beam with pride. And that disgusts me.

I wish I could remember which one of my friends posted this on Facebook, but they said that Doncic is incredibly sports hateable, and not a truer statement has been made in a long time. I also heard Carl Tart, I'm a big fan, say that anyone outside of Dallas who roots for Luka Doncic was probably storming the capitol. I couldn't agree more. This whole love affair with Doncic is coded racism from the nerds who work at ESPN. They have been waiting and waiting for someone, anyone to come along that doesn't look like Jordan or Steph or LeBron, and they have it now in Jokic and Doncic. And that bums me the hell out.

So, I guess I will end this by saying, if the Mavs do advance to face the Celtics, I hope Tatum and Jaylen Brown and Derrick White make life miserable for that prick Luka Doncic. Nothing will excite me more than to see that punk get his ass whipped. That doesn't mean ESPN will stop fellating him. But, it will restore my faith in basketball and the NBA. 

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing, the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast, and the greatest basketball writer on the internet.

Come and support Ty and the podcast on Patreon.

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R.I.P. Bill Walton

Hello all, and welcome back after my day off. I've got stuff to write about this week, namely my viewing of "Furiosa", but those other pieces will have to be pushed a day or so.

Yesterday, while swimming with family and friends, one of my family members informed me that Bill Walotn had passed away. I was shocked. I didn't truly believe him when he told me. We are both "CBB" listeners, and Bill Walton is a character that comes up on that show a lot, so I thought he was saying that the character of Bill Walton was going away. I was wrong, and he was right. The real Bill Walton, the actual person, has passed away at 71 years old.

Again, I was floored when I found out on my own time. He was only 71 years old. That, in today's world, is still relatively young. He always seemed so full of life and vibrant during games he was calling. There was, to me, no sign of poor health. I figured we were going to get 5-10 more years of his crazy stories he would tell while calling Pac 12 basketball games. Hell, I even loved it when he would go and call NBA games. He was insightful and hilarious. His nonsensical stories cracked me up. He was always quick with a joke. He would go on these wild tangents that were a true delight if you liked his longer stories. I would get excited when I would see him on a game that I had planned to watch. I know not everyone liked his play by play stuff. I did. It was a true joy for me. I think I liked it so much because he never took it too seriously. He understood that it was a game. Sports are not life and death. It is not the end all be all. I need to understand that even more. I need to be more like Bill Walton was when he was still alive.

He also happened to be an excellent basketball player. He was a dominant high school player. He was even better in college. He was on those UCLA teams that were damn near unbeatable. He was on the undefeated team. He was on the team that had a very long win streak. He learned from Kareem Abdul Jabbar, and kept things rolling at UCLA, winning national titles. Then he came into the pros as one of the better big men in the league. He was everything the Trailblazers could have wanted when they drafted him. He took them to places the team had never been before. He was an all NBa player. And while he never won a title with the Trailblazers, he made them a legit contender. He did get his ring with the Celtics, where he became a bench guy. He was ahead of his time as a player. He played free and loose. When he was dealt injuries, he took on a lesser role, doing what was best for the team. When he wasn't making shots, he became a ferocious rebounder. He did things to help the team.

Walton was incredibly outspoken off the floor. He was not afraid to challenge people. He would call out injustices. He would fight to help people anyway he could. He would say what was on his mind. He didn't care about his persona. And boy oh boy did he love the Grateful Dead and the whole hippy culture. He was one of the first dudes I saw that wore a headband. He had long, flowing blonde hair poking out of said headband. He was all about his tie dye shirts. I have to assume he engaged in smoking pot and other hallucinogens. He was all about, and I was here for it. I say, good for him for always being himself, no matter what the situation may have been.

This is a pretty sad one to lose. Bill Walton was truly one of a kind. He was about as famous as one can get, but it never seemed to really go to his head. The outpouring of condolences yesterday proves how important he was to a lot of people. Rest in Peace Bill Walton. Throw one down wherever you may be at this very moment. 

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing, the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast, and the greatest basketball writer on the internet.

Come and support Ty and the podcast on Patreon.

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JJ Redick is Not What the Lakers Need Right Now

I find it fascinating and incredibly frustrating that the Lakers are seriously considering hiring JJ Redick as their next head coach. Let’s discuss.

This is the Lakers we are talking about here. They are the most storied franchise in the history of the NBA. They have had greats as their head coach. From Pat Riley to Phil Jackson to Magic Johnson to Paul Westhead. These are geniuses, Magic being a genius on the court, he was an awful head coach. But Paul Westhead, he revolutionized the game in the 70's. Pat Riley took over and won titles. Phil Jackson got Kobe and Shaq to work it out and win titles. These are some possible Mt Rushmore guys we are talking about here. And they are now in long, extended interviews with JJ Redick, who to the best of my knowledge, has not coached on any level.

Redick was a fine, run of the mill role player. He could shoot the three and hustle. That was what kept him around for so long. But he never won a title as a player. He was never an all star. He was never close to being all NBA. He was not a guy that you built a team around. And as an analyst, he is your typical hot take guy. He is like Pat McAfee, maybe just a little less annoying. He goes on shows and talks about "when he was a player" in reference to co-hosts who never played basketball professionally. He also has a podcasting empire, where he has a show that he and LeBron James host together. I tried listening to it because I like to hear LeBron talk basketball. And while they are both knowledgeable, it is boring as hell. And just because JJ Redick can sit there and shoot the shit with LeBron about some film they are both looking at, that doesn't make him a good coach.

Coaches are needed for different things now. This is a player empowerment era, which I am totally here for. But coaches kind of have to fit players. There are few coaches that can come in and run the team the way they envision. Frank Vogel, who was the coach of the Lakers in 2020, won a title and was just let go by the Suns after only one season. Darvin Ham, who led the Lakers to the West Finals last season, was fired after this season, and people were thrilled. The Bucks let go of their coach midway through the season, and they were 20 games above .500. Coaches have to know how to work for, not with, superstar players. You need a guy like Phil Jackson or Greg Poppovich. Mike Brown had to go through being an assistant again before he was able to get hired as a head coach, by the Kings. There is a lot more than just X's and O's that go into being a head coach now.

If the Lakers do hire JJ Redick, how is it going to be any different than when the Nets hired Steve Nash? That was who KD, Kyrie and Harden wanted. They got rid of a coach that took a Bad News Bears type of roster to the playoffs because he didn't vibe with the new stars. As for Nash, he never won a ring, seemed confused at times and was let go before he finished his second year. Who's to say that won't happen with Redick if he gets the job and the Lakers start next season 8-12 after 20 games. The West is only getting harder and harder, and LeBron is only getting older, and AD is one injury away from missing half the year. The Lakers don't have money or picks to get more stars. I keep saying that they can trade for Donovan Mitchell or Dejounte Murray. I ask, why would the Hawks or Cavs trade them away for future picks and league minimum players? They both have playoff aspirations, and you don't have to trade with the Lakers just because they are the Lakers. That is not how the NBA works anymore.

I don't think it would be in LeBron's or the Lakers front office best interest to hire JJ Redick. Just because he is friends with LeBron, and can talk shit on tv, doesn't make him a good head coach. That doesn't mean he can build the right staff around him. I would like to give the Lakers the benefit of the doubt and say they will hire someone else. But with each passing day, the Lakers naming JJ Redick their next coach seem likier and likier. And that feels off. 

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing, the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast, and the greatest basketball writer on the internet.

Come and support Ty and the podcast on Patreon.

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Ty Watches the Trailer for "EA Sports College Football 25"

I think I have watched the trailer for the new college football team about a dozen times now. I am so very, very excited for this to come out in the world. I had my doubts. You can go back and read about said doubts. I had heard rumors for years and years, to no avail. And there was hiccup after hiccup when the game was officially announced. I didn't know if the players would give approval. When they did I thought the universities might have some issues. Then I thought EA was going to try and pull something.

But it is really real. It is coming. They have a trailer. The cover athletes have been announced, the cover has come out, the players have talked about it and we have live footage of the actual game play. And the trailer makes this game look as amazing as I have always remembered it being.

This looks like an actual football game. It does not have the video game stuff that I have grown accustomed to. I'm sure that once I play it some stuff will come up, but I don't even care at this point. They have the team entrances down pat. They have the rivalry trophies. They have the players' names on the back of their jerseys. They have the uniforms looking as clean as ever. Chris Fowler's voice is doing the voiceover for the trailer. They play some Guns N Roses to get you all pumped up. Hell, even when they show Wyoming kicking the ball off, I got major goosebumps. I did go on the Playstation website to do a possible pre order, but they only do it digitally. I'm so hype for this game, I want the physical copy. I want to see the players on the cover. I want to hold the actual game in my hands. I want the disc that lets you play the game. I want to see the inside of the game. I want the paper that comes with the physical copy. I am even contemplating buying a new Michigan themed controller. It has the design of the helmet on the controller. I know that is opulent, but at this point, all of that goes out the window when I am thinking about playing this video game.

July 19th cannot come quick enough. I am not going to wait in a line or anything, that is not me, but I plan on playing this game on that date. I will go to multiple stores if I have to. I will find this game. I am not a video game guy, but college football is another animal. This is the only video game I have ever truly cared about in my life. It is the only one that I have ever been good at in my life. I cannot wait to create a player. I'm going to build a dynasty out of Michigan in franchise mode. I will recruit and use NIL with the best of them. I will challenge my son to games. My wife used to play a bunch, and she has mentioned playing around with the game here and there.

This trailer is the best trailer to come out in a long, long time. It has me super excited, as well as millions of other people. So, we just need the 19th of July to come. Until then, I will be watching this trailer a million more times. 

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

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I'm a Bronny James Fan

The NBA combine came and went these past couple of days. A bunch of the top prospects opted out of most of the drills and scrimmages, but some kids were still there trying to up their draft stock. One such prospect is Bronny James. You may know who his father is, LeBron James.

Bronny has been living in his father's shadow since he showed a proclivity for basketball. I remember hearing about Bronny being a decent prospect coming out of high school in regards to playing division 1 college basketball. He moved high schools, played at a prestigious basketball high school and got some D-1 offers. I was hoping Michigan would go after him. He eventually ended up at USC, close to home, and they brought in a monster class. Bronny then had a scary cardiac arrest situation and that sidelined him for a while. He missed the start of the season. He was eventually cleared to play mid-season and he did.

He was fine. He did not set the world on fire. He played in Isaiah Collier's shadow. Collier is one of the top prospects in this upcoming draft. But, Bronny never really set the college basketball world on fire. He plays the game correctly, but that doesn't add up to eye popping stats or highlight plays. USC also played well below their preseason status. They were below .500. They didn't make the NCAA or NIT tournament. And they were easily bounced from the Pac 12 tournament in round 2. The Bronny NBA stock was relatively low.

Then he entered the draft and the transfer portal. He was maintaining his college eligibility, but he was also going to see what his NBA stock looked like. He had a damn good combine. His vertical is big. He had good form and shooting touch. He made a bunch of threes. And he participated in the scrimmages. He looked a little timid in the first scrimmage, but in the second one, he balled out. He looked to score. He was quick to make a move to get to the basket. He played solid defense. He made the correct pass. He showed he has a chance to be drafted. And

I'm here for it. There are people out there that are degrading him. They are saying he is not an NBA prospect. They don't want him to succeed. They are mad at him for no reason, other than the fact that he is LeBron James' kid. The hate he is getting online is brutal. I feel pretty bad for him. These keyboard warriors are calling him all kinds of things, and I am certain they wouldn't score a point against him in a game of 1 on 1. It is easy to shit talk behind a screen name. But these people hold no control over Bronny's NBA future. But because of these keyboard nitwits, I am becoming a big time Bronny fan. I want this kid to make it and have staying power. He is already an above average defender. He showed in the scrimmages that he can hit floaters. He can also spot up for the corner three. He makes the correct decision in a half court offense. He runs the break really well. This kid has the skills to make it in the NBA for a good long while. And he should make it based on his own skill and merit. There is clearly something there. He has the goods. Some team may take a shot on drafting him. Or if he doesn't get drafted, he will most certainly be on a G League team. This isn't the Ball family we are talking about here. Bronny is so much more skilled than LiAngelo Ball. He seems to be much healthier than LaMelo or Lonzo. He has been medically cleared by the NBA.

I'm on Bronny's side. I am rooting hard for him. When/if he gets into the league, I'll be excited to see him play either with or against his dad. 

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing, the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast, and the greatest basketball writer on the internet.

Come and support Ty and the podcast on Patreon.

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I Think I am Chargers Fan Now

Football cannot come soon enough. I enjoy basketball, and the playoffs are good and fun, but my team is not in it this year. I am not a baseball fan at all. I am so bored by the games. I only like watching my son play, and I also coach that team, so I'm heavily involved. I am not a hockey guy. I don't watch car racing. I will goof around on Sunday's and watch "The Ocho" whenever ESPN puts it on for the day. Hell, I miss football so much, I have found myself watching UFL games with my kid because he is heavily invested in our local team.

I have found myself playing a good amount of "Madden" lately, in preparation for the college football video game release. As I progress in the game, I like to be different teams than just the Packers. The Packers are my NFL team. I have rooted for them my whole life. They are the team I want to see win it all. While not on the level of Michigan football, the Packers are very high on my rooting interest list. But, when playing "Madden", there has been one team I have been picking a bunch lately. That team is the LA Chargers.

This is probably an easy pick for people who know me. Jim Harbaugh is the new head coach there. They drafted Cornelius Johnson and my favorite player from the Michigan defense last season, Junior Colson. The coaching staff is made up of a bunch of former Michigan coaches. Harbaugh took those guys over with him when he took the job. I know some Michigan fans were bummed about this, but I understand why they went. It is the NFL. That is as high as it gets in football coaching circles. It was an obvious move. So, while playing the video game, and reading about their staff, and seeing who they drafted, the Chargers are now the second team I root for.

It has been decided. I am, along with the Packers, a Chargers fan. The Packers will be my priority. If the Packers and Chargers are playing each other I will root for the Packers. But, in any other scenario, the Chargers now have my fandom. I'm sure they are thrilled. But, this is where I stand now. Not only do I like the staff and some of the new rookies, I like their uniforms. I enjoy their color scheme. I love the lightning bolts they have on the helmets. Now that they have accepted that the powder blue is their primary color, they have hit an absolute home run. When they wear their 70's throwbacks, the color scheme is very similar to Michigan. It may as well be navy and maize. I think it is supposed to be navy and gold, but I like to imagine it's navy and maize. Along with the new rookies, I like Justin Herbert quite a bit. I have been a Khalil Mack fan ever since he was drafted by the Raiders. I wish Keenan Allen was still there, but hey, I will find some new wideouts to root for in LA. I am not crazy about a center d end and center on their team, but there is nothing I can do about that. And seeing all the offseason stuff with Harbaugh, him living in an RV, him getting his Michigan tattoo, him singing "Hail to the Victors" after drafting Michigan guys, I'm all in.

I think it will take a few seasons, the Chargers have talent, but not a ton of talent, so it is going to be a bit of a rebuild. But, I don't care about that. The Packers are in a good spot, and for the time being, I will enjoy my time cheering for the Chargers as well. Welcome to the fandom Chargers. I'm here and ready to root for you all. 

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

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Jokic Being the MVP is a Joke

Nikola Jokic won his third MVP last night. I knew it was going to happen. The moment Joel Embiid got hurt, it was a foregone conclusion that he was winning the award. No one was going to catch him. Guys could have gone off, the media wanted to give Jokic this award.

When I heard the news, my son told me while we were at karate, I scoffed. I was annoyed. I know I shouldn't let this bother me, but it does. After we returned home, I saw some stories flying around about how this puts Jokic on another level. The only other people who have won at least three MVP's in the NBA are Bill Russell, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Moses Malone, Larry Bird, Magic Johnson, LeBron James and Michael Jordan. Jokic is now going to be mentioned with these other guys, and that seems wrong to me. These other guys are hall of fame caliber players. These other guys are transcendent talents. Jordan is the greatest to ever step on the court. Magic is Magic. He is, quite possibly, the greatest point guard of all time. Moses Malone is the greatest rebounder to ever play the game. He is also the first prep to pro player. Larry Bird was a certified killer. He wanted to rip your heart out. Bill Russell has 11 championship rings and is the best defensive player ever. Kareem is one of the greatest to ever do it. He was also the dominant big man for the Lakers when they started their whole dynasty. And LeBron James is the second greatest to ever do it. He is a point guard in a linebacker's body. He is the icon of the 2000's. He is still producing at an incredibly high rate at 38 years old. He has changed the game forever.

And now we have Jokic. What has he truly done to be on these guys' level? Honestly. I get the whole analytic stuff and the stat counting. That is all well and good. But damn if he is not anywhere near these other guys. He is not even close. And he doesn't even have a personality. When he made a mention that he "doesn't even pay attention to this stuff", that rubbed me the wrong way. He wants to be this aloof guy that doesn't care about what he does as a profession. He cares more about his horses and his bully brothers. If he hates this sport that much, if he doesn't want to continue to do this, why does he do it then? No one is forcing him. I don't find his crummy attitude charming. He annoys the hell out of me. And he is mind numbingly boring to watch play basketball. I don't care what all the white nerdy writers at ESPN and The Ringer have to say about his game, he is dull. I don't think his passing is otherworldly. He is not the rebounder he should be. He is a total zero on defense. And he brings nothing exciting to the game of basketball. Just because nerdy analytic guys like him, that doesn't mean he is the MVP.

Once again there is no possible way he should be mentioned with the other players that won at least three MVP awards. Oh, and he now has more MVP awards than current players like Giannis Antentekoumpo, Joel Embiid, Shai Gilgeous Alexander, Anthony Edwards, Jalen Brunson, Jayson Tatum, Kawhi Leonard, Paul George, Steph Curry and Jimmy Butler, among many others. He also has more MVP's than former players like Tim Duncan, Shaquille O'Neal, Kobe Bryant, David Robinson, Clyde Drexler, Allen Iverson, Hakeem Olajuwon and Kevin Garnett. That is insanity to me. He is not on any of those guys' level either. I'd so much rather have Olajuwon as my center. Give me Shaq all day. David Robinson is a better offensive player than Jokic, and a far, far, far better defender. It doesn't make sense to me.

I feel like when my son, who is 12, is going to look back at this when he is my age and be grossed out that analytics took over the game for a time being. None of the voters seem to care about playing both ends of the floor, about love of the game or about importance to a team. This was a throw away award the moment they added the 65 game limit and Embiid got hurt.

The MVP award is now officially a joke. Jokic being a three time winner is even funnier and kind of sad to me. But hey, at least the analytic nerds can go around and tell people how smart they are now that he has won this award 3 times in 4 years. This makes the NBA MVP award as important as the Grammys. What a joke. 

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing, the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast, and the greatest basketball writer on the internet.

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R.I.P. Darius Morris and Obi Ezeh

Over the weekend two Michigan athletes that I followed pretty closely while they were there unfortunately passed away. Darius Morris was a basketball player and Obi Ezeh was on the football team. I have some thoughts on both men.

Morris was a big deal when he ended up at Michigan. The men's basketball team was going through a transition at the time. They were not very good. They were still reeling from the Fab Five sanctions. And they had hired a new coach the previous year, John Beilein. Beilein was given a good amount of time to turn the team around, which he eventually did, but Morris was kind of the turning point for the program. Morris was a highly sought after point guard prospect. A bunch of division 1 teams were after him. He shockingly picked Michigan and headed from California to Ann Arbor. He, along with Beilein, turned this team around faster than I imagined. In Beilein's system, the point guard gets it all going. They are the important guys. They have to know it all, and have the head coach's trust. Morris came in, immediately got the keys and ran with them. Michigan was a sub .500 team the year before Morris arrived. In his freshman season they won 21 games and returned to the NCAA tournament. They had another solid year behind him in his sophomore year. Much to my surprise, and many others I believe, he left Michigan for the NBA. He was drafted and spent just under a decade in the NBA. While never a real star, Morris carved a place for himself in the NBA. He is notorious for being exceptionally good in the video game NBA 2k13. He was beloved by Lakers fans as well, being a California native. So, to hear that he has passed away at 33, that was heartbreaking. I kept reading the stories thinking maybe it was a hoax. Unfortunately it is true. They have not released a reason for his passing. But, 33 is far too young. He had his whole life ahead of him. I was sure he was going to become a good coach. I didn't want this to be the last thing we ever heard from Darius Morris. My heart breaks for his family and loved ones. I never knew him personally, but I was a fan. He helped turn my favorite basketball back into a threat. Michigan became good again after getting a player of his caliber to commit and play there for two years. Rest in Peace Darius Morris.

The other former Michigan athlete that passed was Obi Ezeh. I was an even bigger fan of his. He was a linebacker at Michigan. As you all know, Michigan football is the end all be all for me as a fan of team sports. And there is no position I watch more than their linebackers. Some greats have come through that university. Guys like Jarrett Irons, David Harris, Devin Bush and Prescott Burgess. They were all Michigan legends. Obi Ezeh was right up there with those guys for me. He played for the team during a transition as well. And while it wasn't always great to watch those teams play, Ezeh brought it every week. This guy worked his butt off. He was a ferocious hitter. He was the type of linebacker that, when he hit you, I could hear it on my tv screen. He was feared by opponents. He looked like a prototypical linebacker. He was quiet, but always did his job. He reminded me so much of David Harris, one of my all time favorite players, and it wasn't just because they wore the same number and played the same position. They both were silent leaders. They both laid the wood on the field. They both did their job at the highest possible level. They both gained a lifelong fan in me as a kid and early 20 year old. They were both players that I looked up to and wanted everyone else on the team to act like. Obi Ezeh was never flashy. He would never go overboard. He never wanted the spotlight. He just wanted to play football and hit dudes. And he did that with the best of them. So, when I saw that he too has passed away, I read about it yesterday, I was crushed again. I couldn't believe two former Michigan athletes that I adored had both died within the same weekend. And, much like Morris, Ezeh was only 35 years old. Again, he had his whole life in front of him. I would have jumped for joy if he was added as a coach this past offseason, if that was something he wanted to do. Obi Ezeh is one of my all time favorite Wolverines. He is going to be missed, and missed hard. This stinks.

These two guys were far too young to have it all end so early. Rest in Peace Obi Ezeh. And Rest in Peace both of you wherever you may be now. Get some rest. You will be missed. 

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

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Darvin Ham is Not to Blame

The Lakers have dismissed Darvin Ham as head coach after only two seasons. Let’s discuss.

This news is not surprising, but maybe it should be. In two short seasons with the Lakers, his record as head coach was 90-74. That is pretty damn good if you think about it. He was also handpicked to be the head coach after they fired Frank Vogel. This is who the players and the front office wanted. They had eyes on some other guys, but of the available coaches, Ham was the number one option. The Lakers got their man. And he did pretty good things with this team and their ever changing roster. They had to make their way to the playoffs through the play-in both seasons he was the head guy, but they let their presence be known. They ran all the way to the West Finals last season. As the 7 seed last year they trounced my Grizzlies in six games, and it was never really in doubt. Dillon Brooks popped off too much, Ja Morant and Brandon Clarke got hurt, as did Steven Adams, and it was done. LeBron James destroyed Brooks, so much so that the Grizzlies let him walk, and the Lakers moved on to face the Warriors, whom they pretty easily displaced in round two. Then they ran into the eventual champs, the Nuggets, and got swept. I don't buy the whole "competitive sweep" nonsense either. A sweep is a sweep. There are no moral victories.

Then this season, making their way to the 7 seed again, through the play-in, they had to face the Nuggets. This time they were competitive enough to take one game from them, but this series could still be going on if they knew how to hold on to a lead. Some may blame this solely on Ham, but some of the blame needs to be given to the players as well.

At what point is it going to be put on the players to take some heat? I get that the NBA is player friendly, as all pro sports leagues should be, but players play the game. Coaches install gameplans, they have ideas that they put out there, they speak with their assistants and tell them what to do, but that is where it all stops. The players have to perform the duties of putting it out there, on the floor, which is the head coach's vision. Coaches deserve blame, don't get me wrong, but we live in an era where every inch of the blame is placed on the head coach. And no one questions it at all. Like I said at the top, Darvin Ham being dismissed was a foregone conclusion. After the Lakers exited the playoffs, every story on sports websites was about this very thing happening. We all knew this was coming. But the dude won 90 regular season games as a head coach. He was 9-12 as a head coach in the playoffs, which isn't great, but the Lakers made it to the West Finals a year ago. He had this team playing defense. While the offense was never the most imaginative thing, the Lakers still found ways to win games. He was tasked with putting guys like Austin Reaves, Jaxson Hayes, Max Christie, Rui Hachimura, D'Angelo Russell and Tauren Prince around LeBron and Anthony Davis. Those names don't pop off the screen. Those guys are not the complimentary players teams covet. This isn't like the Nuggets with players like KCP or Michael Porter Jr. This isn't the Timberwolves with guys like Rudy Gobert and Mike Conley. This isn't the Celtics with players like Derrick White and Jrue Holiday. Hell, this isn't even the Pelicans with dudes like CJ McCollum and Herb Jones. All of those players are so much better than what the Lakers and Darvin Ham had to pair up with LeBron and AD.

But Darvin Ham is the scapegoat this morning. He is the one everyone is making fun of now. He is the new punching bag as a former head coach. He wanted to be a head coach, but I have to figure these last two seasons were hell for him. Frank Vogel was ready to get out of there. In Cleveland, Mike Brown was ecstatic to be let go and coach somewhere else. And whoever the Lakers bring in next, that coach has to understand that the second it starts to go haywire, their ass is on the line. No player will own to blame. The front office will be quiet as a mouse. It will be the coaching staff, and more importantly, all the head coach's fault if it doesn't work again, which is most likely will not.

The West is a juggernaut, and it will only be tougher next year. The Lakers need to look in the mirror and realize that a new head coach will not solve the myriad of problems they have as a mediocre organization at the moment. Darvin Ham should still be their head coach. But I wouldn't be surprised if he is relieved to be out of there. Maybe he will find his love for basketball again coaching somewhere else. 

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing, the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast, and the greatest basketball writer on the internet.

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LeBron's Greatness is Not Enough for the Lakers

The Nuggets disposed of the Lakers in another thriller last night. The series was never in doubt to be honest. I was rooting for the Lakers, for what seems like the first time ever, but it was pretty much a foregone conclusion that the Nuggets would win this series. Jamal Murray woke up, Jokic was efficient, Aaron Gordon played high level defense and the Nuggets advanced to the second round.

What I took away most from this game was the excellent play from LeBron James. James is the second greatest basketball player ever, in my opinion. He has done everything you could ever want from a basketball prodigy. He has more than lived up to the hype and then some. But this felt like the end for him. He was amazing in this series. That needs to be said right off the top. He averaged damn near 28 points per game. He added almost 9 assists and 7 rebounds. He played 40 minutes per game. He did everything he could to win these games and keep this team relevant.

LeBron didn't get much help either. After being healthy most of the season, Anthony Davis appeared to injure his shoulder on a minimal contact play. He was never the same after that. He was timid, he wasn't looking to shoot, his defense wasn't the same and he seemed off. Austin Reaves was clearly overhyped going into this season. He was average at best. Rui Hachumura never got his shot going. D'Angelo Russell gave up two games ago. Gabe Vincent never got going. Jaxson Hayes couldn't stay on the floor. The Cam Reddish experiment didn't work. All the things the Lakers did, to appease LeBron James, did not work how they wanted it to. But, throughout all of this LeBron James produced.

In 71 games this season, James averaged 25 points, 8 rebounds and 8 assists. All of this at 39 years old in his 20th NBA season. He was the leader of the 7th seeded team in the West and was the leading factor to them winning 47 games. But looking back at these stats, this is a Lakers team that needed to get into the playoffs through the play in. This is a Lakers team that truly struggled after winning the inaugural in season tournament. LeBron also looked incredibly tired at the end of their game last night. And who could blame him. He is 39 years old. He has been in the public eye since he was 16. He has been scrutinized, idolized and marginalized by a bunch of people. He has been used and used others to continue his career. And what he has been able to accomplish is truly amazing. No one else will come close to approaching his numbers and his legendary status. He has won every major award. He has won multiple titles. He has been the face of the league since the early 2000's. But it feels like the time is as close as it has ever been to being over.

LeBron cannot continue to carry a mediocre team anymore. The Timberwolves are young and coming. So are the Grizzlies, Spurs, Pelicans, Thunder, Mavericks and Rockets. That is just the good teams in the West. The East has the Celtics, Knicks, Bucks, Cavs, Magic and Pacers. All of these teams, right now, are better than the Lakers. They are younger too. They have so many better contributing players than the Lakers do. And it is too much for the Lakers to ask a soon to be 40 year old LeBron James to continue to carry this team. He shouldn't have to do that to end his career. The Lakers should not strive for another Kobe Bryant ending. But I fear they are trending that way with James. They will probably try to get another big name player this offseason. I've heard Trae Young, Dejounte Murray or Zach Lavine as options. While adding one of these younger guys, does it really move the needle? Is Anthony Davis going to stay this healthy ever again? Who will remain of importance to this team, especially if they trade for one of the young guys I mentioned.

LeBron James has nothing left to prove. He has done it all, stayed out of trouble and won at the highest possible level. He is going to go down as a true legend. He is one of the greatest to ever do it. But last night felt like a blow. It felt like a big push into the inevitable. I'm going to miss watching him play, and I don't know if it will ever look like it used to again. 

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing, the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast, and the greatest basketball writer on the internet.

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Anthony Edwards is Elite

Anthony Edwards announced himself as one of the next big NBA superstars last night. He didn't really have to do too much more for me to notice, he is one of my favorite players, but boy oh boy did he let himself be known to the casual NBA fan after this first round series. Let’s discuss.

Edwards was the first overall pick in the 2020 draft. This was the COVID lockdown draft. He was the consensus number 1 guy, but there were questions. Georgia wasn't very good, he seemed to float in and out of games, his jumper wasn't great and his tenacity on defense was yet to be seen. And when he started playing, it was a lot of the same. But, Edwards has always had freakish athleticism. What attracted me to his game was his dunking ability. He reminded me of a guard version of Shawn Kemp. He dunked on people and he dunked hard on people. The dunk he had against the Raptors a few years back was one of the best in game dunks I'd ever seen. But the Timberwolves, while getting a little better, didn't really look like they would be much more than a first round out in the playoffs.

Then the T’Wolves traded for Rudy Gobert. The trade was maligned, and in year one it looked like the critics were right. The Timberwolves were not very good. They came off a season where they pushed the Grizzlies in round 1 to six games, and it was a hard fought series. The next season, the first with Gobert, they struggled to make the play in and were easily disposed of by the Nuggets in five games. But this season has felt different. And Edwards has looked different. You could see him starting to figure things out in that series against the Grizzlies two years ago. Last season he was the sole reason they got one game from the Nuggets. The athleticism and the ability was still there, but other things were clicking. I feel like this is the year where it has almost fully come together for him.

Minnesota finished as the 3 seed in the West, but they had a shot at number 1. They are a dominant defense, with Edwards fully buying in on that end this year. Edwards doesn't always go one on one anymore. He plays more within a flow of an offense built around his skill set. Karl Anthony-Towns, another number 1 overall pick, has started to relent and make note that it is Edwards' team. Gobert understands that he is there for defense. Mike Conley has taken Edwards under his wing and he looks like a proud basketball dad watching him grow into this supernova talent. Kyle Anderson seems to be really enjoying the ride. The Timberwolves have given Anthony Edwards the keys, and he is running with it all. And it is glorious to watch as a fan.

What Edwards did in this series, the way he dominated, it was one of the more impressive things I have seen on a basketball court. He went out there on a mission every year and he decided he wanted this series over in four games. The Suns were betting favorites in this series. The analytic nerds loved them. Kevin Durant wasn't ready to pass the torch. Rudy Gobert wouldn't be able to stay on the floor. Anthony Edwards was going to have to wait another year. People even mentioned that Devon Booker was possibly better. I'm sure Edwards heard all of that, and he decided his time was now. He was tired of waiting. He went out there on that floor and snatched it all away from the Suns, from KD, from Devin Booker, from Frank Vogel and from ESPN and their analytical staff. Edwards took over each and every game. He mentioned, before game 1, how KD was his favorite player and how cool it would be to beat him in this series. He did just that. Anthony Edwards was the best player on the floor by a wide, wide margin. In the first round sweep, Edwards had games of 33, 36 and 40 points. In game two, the one game he struggled in to score, he was lock down on defense. He also had 9 rebounds in three of the four games. He averaged 6 plus assists per game. He never took more than 24 shots to get all of his points. He played good defense in every game. He took over when he was asked to take over by his coaches and team. He did all the right stuff. And it was amazing for me to watch this kid ascend to these new heights.

I don't like to watch Luka Doncic because I find his game very boring and he whines all the time. Nikola Jokic is, for me, also very, very boring. Giannis cannot stay healthy lately and he is not much of a shooter. LeBron James is amazing, but he is very old now. Ja Morant was hurt most of last season, and he has the whole gun thing. So, for me, watching a player like Anthony Edwards make this leap, watching the same from Shai Gilgeous Alexander, it makes me hopeful for the future faces of the NBA. Not all of these up and comers are zeroes on defense or want to turn the game into a free throw shooting contest. Not every star has to gripe to the officials. Not every star has to be friends with the other stars. A player like Anthony Edwards gets me hyped because he is uber talented and he wants to rip your heart out on the court.

I hope this run continues and Timberwolves continue to develop Edwards into an even bigger star because I want to see him play more than any other player in the playoffs right now. While I'm still a Grizzlies fan, I think Anthony Edwards is my new current favorite NBA player. He is the most fun to watch. 

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing, the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast, and the greatest basketball writer on the internet.

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Ty Watches the 2024 NFL Draft

Round 1 of the NFL draft happened last night, and I have thoughts.

As you may remember, I did my preview on Wednesday with my five players I liked, five I was down on and two sleepers. Most of the ten players I mentioned on Wednesday were picked last night. The only ones who weren't were Cooper DeJean and my two Michigan "sleepers", Mike Sainristril and Junior Colson. So, of the twelve players I mentioned nine were picked in round 1. That is wild to me.

As for the draft, it was pretty wild, after the first five picks. We all knew that Caleb Williams, Jayden Daniels and Drake Maye were going to go 1, 2 and 3. I also feel like these three ended up with the best team's to fit their style of play. I feel as if these three dudes are happy and will have varying levels of success, but I think all will be relatively successful. Then we had the best prospect, Marvin Harrison Jr going to the Cardinals. This is perfect all around. MHJ is the instant number 1 wideout, Kyler Murray has a reliable target and the Cardinals have a cornerstone to build around. Then, as Jim Harbaugh is want to do, he took a big offensive tackle to shore up the o line. Then it got a little odd. Malik Nabers was the second wideout off the board to the Giants. I thought it would be Rome Odunze, but I was wrong. Then the Titans reached hard for JC Latham. No disrespect, but there are better o lineman available today to draft than Latham. He should be a fine starter, but not a world beater.

Then the Falcons went nuts and took Michael Penix Jr at 8th overall. I didn't believe my son when he told me the Falcons took Penix Jr. I think he is a very good QB, and I like him and want him to succeed, but why would the Falcons take him, and take him that high? They signed Kirk Cousins this offseason. They have a bunch of young talent that they haven't figured out how to use yet. They need help everywhere on defense. They hired a defensive minded coach. And they took a project QB who is already 24. This was stunning to me. I don't get it at all. These things are why I could never be a GM in the pros. This is a true head scratcher. This is akin to the Bears traded up from 3 to 2 a few years back to draft Mitch Trubisky. I was floored by this pick.

To wash the bad Trubisky taste out of their mouths, the Bears jumped up and took Rome Odunze to pair with Williams and Keenan Allen. It scares me what the Bears did last night being a Packers fan. They got two excellent players in the first nine picks last night. They were the opposite of the Falcons. They made smart picks that help their team. Then RD's Vikings took Michigan's JJ McCarthy. I have said that I have doubts about McCarthy as a pro, but this was his ideal place to be picked. He won't be under the microscope, he has Justin Jefferson to throw the ball too, has a great o line in front of him and he is going into a situation extremely suitable for a rookie QB who may be starting by mid season. It was chalk with the next pick, the Jets taking Olu Fashanu, they need line help.

And then the Broncos reached almost as hard as the Falcons and took Bo Nix. I do not like this pick one bit. Sean Payton is old school, Bo Nix seems soft, he is older than Penix Jr and not nearly as good. I'd be upset if I were a Broncos fan this morning.

Bowers to the Raiders is nothing special to me. They already have a tight end, but Bowers is younger. Then the Saints addressed issues with the o line and took Tailese Fuaga. Then it was three straight defensive picks, Laiatu Lati to the Colts, which helps their pass rush. Then Byron Murphy to the Seahawks and their defensive minded new head coach Mike McDonald. And Dallas Turner to the Vikings. That pick is more impactful to me than JJ McCarthy. Dallas Turner should help make a very bad defense a bit better. The Bengals got one of my favorite players in Amarius Mims. I don't know how Bengals fans feel about this pick, but I love it for them. He will be an all pro in a few years. The Rams took Jared Verse to help and replace Aaron Donald's retirement. They need defense, they need d lineman and they took one of the better ones in the draft. The Steelers took o lineman Troy Fantanu, who will start day one and is a good blocker. Chop Robinson went to the Dolphins next, and hopefully he can make up for some of the guys who left in free agency. The Eagles got the best defensive back in the draft in Quinyon Mitchell. This was the latest example of the Eagles lucking into a star talent in the draft. Brian Thomas Jr is going to the Jags to add depth in the wideout room. Terrion Arnold fits in perfectly in Detroit. The Packers took a big o lineman in Jordan Morgan, which I am stoked about. The Bucs took Graham Barton next, and he will be one of the best centers in the NFL in two years. The Cardinals, after taking MHJ at 4, got edge rusher Darius Robinson from Missouri. This kid is talented and will rack up tackles on the d line. The Chiefs took a big chance, which I think will pay off, drafting Xavier Worthy in round 1. He is fast as lightning, will get a chance from day one, and will be learning from Andy Reid and Patrick Mahomes. This is a homerun pick. And the final four picks were relatively chalk. The Cowboys got o line depth with Tyler Guyton. The Ravens got more secondary help with Nate Wiggins. The 49ers took Ricky Pearsall, who I was very unaware of, at 31. And the first round ended with the Panther getting Bryce Young an outside threat in Xavier Legette. He is big and fast.

Wrapping this up, I thought, for a draft, that this was kind of wild. It started relatively normal, but then the Falcons decided they wanted to be the talk of the sporting news this morning. And it only got nuttier from there. I'll be watching to see where the rest of the Michigan guys I like go, and where some other players I've watched for four year end up playing. The draft is always an exciting time for fans, and this year has upped the ante. Hopefully we get some more crazy stuff happening. Time will tell. 

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

Come and support Ty and the podcast on Patreon.

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SeedSing is funded by a group of awesome people. Join them by donating to SeedSing.

Ty's 2024 NFL Draft Preview

The first round of the NFL draft starts tomorrow night. As I do every year, I will give you five prospects I like, five I'm not so high on and a few, let's say two, sleepers. I don't do mock drafts. I don't do draft day trades. I don't understand the whole salary cap stuff. I go off eye test. I watch a ton of college football, it is my favorite sport to watch. I know more about college football than any other sport I watch. So, while not a "expert", I think I know this stuff pretty well. Let's get to it.

I'll start with the players I like. This QB class is absolutely loaded. This may be the best crop of QB prospects in the last 10 years. And while Caleb Williams is awesome, and I have my doubts about JJ McCarthy, my favorite QB in this draft, by a long shot, is Jayden Daniels. He is an excellent thrower. He is a wonderful scrambler. He reminds me so much of Randall Cunningham. He is skinny. He needs to bulk up. But, he had the best statistical season of a Heisman QB winner ever. Stats aren't my favorite thing, but I could see how great he can be when I watched LSU this past season. Daniels is the best QB prospect for me. Whatever team picks him is getting a damn good QB. On the defensive side of the ball, I like Dallas Turner from Alabama. I did not see much of him until the Rose Bowl, and he impressed me. He is big, 6'4. He is strong, 250 plus pounds. And he is fast and mean. He can hit. He flies around the field. He played very well against Michigan's o line, which was one of the best in the country. Turner is a day one starter and should be very productive in the NFL. The wideout class in this draft is almost as stacked as the QB class. Therefore, I have two receivers in my personal top five. First we have Marvin Harrison Jr. He is the best overall prospect in this draft. He is the most surefire player. He looks like he is going to have a very long, very impressive career. I don't care about him not working out or going to combine at all. What he did on the football field during games was all I needed to see. Second, we have Rome Odunze. He was the one player that really terrified me going into the college playoff championship against Michigan. He is sure handed, he is big, he is an excellent route runner and he is very fast. He is built like a ready made NFL number 1 receiver. I would jump for joy if Green Bay was somehow able to grab him. Odunze is awesome. My last player that I like, Amarius Mims. He only played nine games his whole college career. He is big, yet hyper athletic. He is raw, but when he figures it out, watch the hell out. He is going to maul players on defense. He is going to become one of the better run blockers in all of football. What he did in his short college career would be so enticing to me. He needs time, but in the end, it will be worth it.

Now to the players I'm not so high on. First off, Bo nix. He is too old. He is not a scrambler. He stayed in college far too long. He was a product of a system. I don't see it, and if he gets picked in round one, that would be a waste of a pick. Then we have Olu Fashanu on the o line. This kid is solid. He is big and can maul people from time to time. But when he had to face a real defense, Michigan for one, he got eaten up by Braiden McGregor and Josiah Stewart. He couldn't keep up with the speed. He got eaten up all afternoon in that game. Fashanu is going to be a long time starter, but being a top 10 pick seems like a reach. On defense I'm not so big on Byron Murphy from Texas. I think there are better options in round one for teams in need of d line depth and production. Murphy seems to be higher on mocks than a guy like Jer'Zhon Newton from Illinois. Newton is a better prospect. I think Chop Robinson is a better pass rusher. And Murphy is nowhere close to Laiatu Latu. Murphy is going to be overdrafted if he goes round 1. I don't like the way Brock Bowers came back after his injury. He was a no doubt first rounder pre injury, but afterward, he just doesn't look the same. He seems slower. His blocking didn't improve far too much. He sat out a bowl game that could have upped his draft stock. I don't like the way his season ended. He will be over drafted. Finally, I think Cooper DeJean is wildly overrated. DeJean got hurt, and hurt bad this past season. He is not the best punt returner. He is just an okay corner. He is small and slow. I'm not a fan at all, which means the Packers will probably take him, and it will drive me nuts. DeJean may be my personal most overrated player in the entire draft.

As for my sleepers, I'm going full on homer here and taking two Michigan guys. First, give me Mike Sainristil all day. He switched positions and became one of the best nickel corners in the country. He did what was best for the team and for himself. He is a great tackler. He can guard slot guys one on one. He is incredibly smart. He can read offenses. And then you have his background as a wideout, which makes him an interception machine. I would reach hardcore for him, possibly in round one. Finally, I have Junior Colson. He is one of the best linebackers to ever come out of Michigan. He was consistent. He was a tackling machine. He can cover backs out of the backfield. He played with broken hands and still put up numbers. He led the best defense in the country last year. Colson is going to be an under the radar guy his whole career, which will probably last well over a decade and most likely end up in the hall of fame. I adore Junior Colson.

That is it for my draft preview. Get ready to see a bunch of QB's and wideouts go tomorrow night. And then when round two starts, that will be where we see some true future stars getting drafted. 

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

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Going to a UFL Game Isn't That Bad

I try to take my son to a professional sporting event every year. We usually go to a NBA game, but time got the best of us this year and we couldn't make it. But, here in Saint Louis we have a UFL team, the Battlehawks. I went and now I want to talk about it.

I have never seen a live XFL, USFL or UFL game. I have watched them on tv, but it was never really the same as an NFL game. I love going to college football games the most, and I fully believe that my dad and I are going to take my son to his first Michigan game this upcoming season. But, until then we have to settle for UFL football. So, I decided we were going to go to a Battlehawks game a few weeks back, and the time had arrived. The timing worked out well and the prices were pretty great. I got us a couple of tickets in the corner, about 12 rows up.

First things first, these seats were great. We could see the whole field if we were standing. We could see the Battlehawks bench. I saw trainers coming in to stretch players out, and we could see the teams when they were close to scoring on our end. I really loved these seats. My son said pretty much the same thing the moment we walked into the stadium. We were both pretty impressed. All the pageantry and little games they played and scoreboard contests were your typical fair. They hid a football in three helmets and you had to guess which one it was in. The cheerleaders threw t-shirts into the crowd. They had dance contests. They were putting people on the scoreboard a bunch. It was run of the mill with that stuff. The food was gross and overpriced. Eat before you go to the Dome at America's Center here in the STL. The toasted raviolis were chewy and the hot dog, according to my son, was oddly dry. And lunch cost us, mind you this is two hotdogs, two orders of t ravs and two drinks, was 58 dollars. Nuts.

The product on the field wasn't great football. These are the minor leagues. These are dudes that had a chance and got cut or guys just trying to make it. It's not great. But, the Battlehawks are actually pretty damn good. They are a heavy passing offense. AJ McCarron threw the ball well over 40 times. But, they can run a little bit too. Their offense is pretty solid. The defense, with former Michigan corner Lavert Hill, is pretty solid too. They group tackle, they play okay enough defense in the secondary and the d line got pressure all afternoon. Even if the football isn't great, at least the Battlehawks are one of the better teams in the UFL.

The fans were not the best. I hate to say it, but the Battlehawks fans are annoying and loud. They complain about some of the players as if they can do their job better. People stand in front of you the whole time. I feel like a lot of people just get wasted during the game. And it is so loud that I could barely hear my son when he would talk to me. As for the Dome, it is still a pile of garbage. It is way too big, way too vast and not the cleanest place in the world. Getting in and out is tough and you have to walk a lot, which I don't mind, but I know other people do.

But, to see how much fun my son was having, to see him be able to meet up with a friend at a pro football game, to see him tell me about these guys, it all made it worth the time. He seemed to be having a wonderful afternoon. He got to dictate most of the day, which makes him ecstatic. He was so happy to be out there watching pro athletes do their thing. His joy made the day so much fun for me. And it was great to spend some one on one time with him.

Would I go again? In a heartbeat, as long as my son was going to be there as well. He made it so fun for me. And I know he had a great time too. 

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

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Thoughts on the Jontay Porter Saga

Jontay Porter was banned for life from the NBA yesterday. Let’s discuss.

This is a way bigger deal than most will make it out to be. Jontay Porter isn't a big name. He isn't an all star. He doesn't have big numbers. He was undrafted and played very sparingly. But what he did is the exact same thing that Pete Rose did to get booted from the MLB. He bet on tons of games with tons of parlays and gave insider info to other gamblers. In fact, what Porter did may be worse than what Pete Rose did when you break it down. He placed an 80,000 dollar bet that, if it had cashed, he could have won 1.1 million dollars. He placed 13 separate bets with an associates online betting account. He also placed a prop bet, I guess based on minutes played, for a game in which he only played a few minutes. He checked himself out because he said that he "wasn't feeling well". I mean, how dumb do you have to be?

Seriously, how did it get this bad for Porter? Why did he have to gamble on these games? What was there to gain for him, basically shaving points? I get that he was a two way player. I understand that he was probably making whatever the league minimum is for NBA players. I'm sure he was making as much as the last few players on the bench. But he was still getting paid pretty well for a bench guy in the NBA. The league minimum for an NBA player is 1.1 million dollars. So, by just being a deep bench player, after getting called up to the Raptors in a down year for them, he was still a millionaire. He was still making six figures. His family was making money hand over fist. His brother, Michael Porter Jr, makes a ton of money playing for the Nuggets. So, I have to believe this was not about the money. There is something else at stake here.

I, if I had to guess, would say that Porter liked the thrill, and by playing in some of these games that were being bet on, he could control the outcome. I have to think that by putting 80 grand on a prop bet, he was excited by the thrill of making close to his base salary on one single bet. I would guess that he is a gambling addict, and I wonder how deep this goes for him. He had no reason to do it. He has more than enough money. So, to continually bet over and over again, that is the sign of a true addict. He couldn't get enough of it. And when he could control some of the bets a little bit, he got greedy. He took it too far. He went way over the line. This could have been stopped. He could have told the people he was placing bets with that he was done. His brother could have tried to stop him. But, like a true addict, he just had to bet. I wonder if the 80 grand bet was him thinking, this is the last one and then I'm out. But, I have to venture to think that it wasn't the last one. Not by a long shot. And now Jontay Porter is paying the price for his addiction. He is no longer allowed in the league that he worked so hard to make it to. He can't even play in the G League. He is going to have to settle for a professional league overseas, if any team will even sign him.

This is a bad look for Jontay Porter. He is done. His NBA days are officially over, and all for some stupid bets. There are many reasons not to gamble, and Porter may have found the main reason why not. His NBA career is over and he did it to himself. That is a bummer. 

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing, the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast, and the greatest basketball writer on the internet.

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Blake Griffin was a Good, Not Hall of Fame, NBA Player

Blake Griffin officially retired from the NBA after 14 years yesterday. Let’s discuss.

Blake Griffin was an exciting, emphatic dunker in his prime. He would do some of the most amazing dunks I had seen since Shawn Kemp. I do feel like some of them, the dunk contest where he "jumped" over a car, were a bit overrated. But, nonetheless, he was a very good in-game dunker. He put a bunch of people on posters. As his athleticism waned, he found, kind of, a jumper. He was never a true threat from the outside, but he could hit the free throw line jumper more times than not. He was an okay enough rebounder, did his part sometimes on defense and the dunking, that was pretty great. I fully believe that is what he will be remembered for most, the dunking. He was one of the best to dunk when he would really go for it. But, a question I saw on social media after his announcement really got me thinking.

After the retirement was released, a person asked if Blake Griffin was a hall of fame basketball player. My gut reaction was no. Outside the dunking, what did he really do to be a hall of famer? He never won a ring. He was a six time all star. He never made first team all NBA. He did make second team three times and third team twice. Other than that, his only other accolades are 2011 rookie of the year and 2011 slam dunk contest champ. No MVP award. No all defense. No conference finals appearances.In his 14 years he played in 68 playoff games. He shot less than 50 percent from the field. He was under 38 percent from 3. And for his playoff career, he was an 18 point per game player who also added 7.7 rebounds. For a 6'9 power forward, seven rebounds per game is not as much as I expected.

Again, Griffin, while a fine player, I do not look at these career numbers and think, hall of fame. His dunking was electric. The way the whole team stood up to the monstrous owner Donald Sterling, which I have to believe Griffin was one of the leaders to stand against that monster, was wonderful. Getting traded to Detroit, which was not on his radar after signing a max contract with the Clippers, and guiding that team to the playoffs kept him relevant. But then we have the Nets and Celtics to close out his career. I actually forgot he was on the Celtics until he announced his retirement. Griffin came into the league like a flash. He did some hyper athletic things. He made tons and tons of highlight reels. He made the Clippers fun and must watch tv. But he does not have the resume to be in the hall of fame. He doesn't have the numbers, the rings, the awards.

While fun to watch, Blake Griffin is not a hall of fame basketball player. Enjoy retirement. I'm sure Blake Griffin has a great comic and acting career ahead of him. He should strive for the hall of fame in those categories. 

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing, the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast, and the greatest basketball writer on the internet.

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R.I.P. Whitey Herzog

After I returned home from coffee and a run I read that Whitey Herzog had passed away. This one hits a little differently. Every time someone passes away, for the most part, it is a sad day. When it's family it hits hardest. When it is friends it hits almost as hard. When it is someone you are a fan of, or appreciate their work, it has a different feel, but it is still a little painful. That is how Herzog's death has hit me.

Whitey Herzog was the manager of the Cardinals when baseball was the most important thing in the world to me. I knew of the MLB, but it wasn't until the Cardinals teams coached by Herzog that I became a big fan. I have lived in Saint Louis my whole life. I have never lived in a different place. But, the Cardinals are the only Saint Louis based team that I have ever openly rooted for. I have to think that all started with Whitey Herzog. Herzog made the game of baseball fun for a kid to watch. His teams were fast. They stole a ton of bases. They hit line drives. They hit to get on base. They played great defense. They won a bunch of games.

I was introduced to players like Ozzie Smith, Vince Coleman, Willie McGee, Keith Hernandez, Jose Oquendo and Joaquin Andujar. These were formidable players in my growth as a fan. Willie McGee is my all time favorite Cardinal and one of my all time favorite players. Jose Oquendo could play every position and was an absolute blast to watch. Vince Coleman was as fast as any player that I ever watched. Ozzie Smith was the greatest defensive shortstop of all time. And Joaquin Andujar had the coolest pitching motion when he was in the league. Herzog coached all of them, and coached them very well. He won a title. He took them to two more World Series appearances. He won his division six times and won three pennants. His number 24 is retired by the Cardinals. He won well over 1200 games as a manager, 700 of which came as the Cardinals head man. He was manager of the year in 1985. And he is in the Royals and Cardinals hall of fame.

Whitey Herzog is a beloved figure in baseball and a big time hero in Saint Louis. All of us Cardinals fans love him and miss him greatly. He is an MLB hall of famer. He created "Whiteyball", which was the best way to watch a game on tv. He concentrated on the important stuff. As said at the top, this team was fast. They stole as many bases as they could. They were almost always on the move. Their defense was the best that baseball may have ever seen in its heyday. They stopped everything all the time. There was nothing better to watch than Ozzie Smith vacuuming up everything at shortstop. Their pitching was key as well. They needed starters to go deep, and then the bullpen was lockdown. They instilled fear in their opponents without having to hit homers all the time. They were such a good all around team that played the game ahead of its time. I was enamored by their play.

Whitey Herzog is a legend. He achieved the highest of highs that a professional player and coach could dream of doing. He has the rings, the accolades and the love of people who played, watched and coached the game. Rest in Peace Whitey Herzog. You will be missed. 

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

Come and support Ty and the podcast on Patreon.

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SeedSing is funded by a group of awesome people. Join them by donating to SeedSing.