Friday, 25 September 2020

Road Warrior Blue Jays Clinch Postseason Berth

                                                                                                                                    By: Adamo Marinelli

Sept. 25th, 2020


     Buffalo, New York: What an incredible accomplishment for this young team to make! Last night, with their 4-1 win over the New York Yankees, the Toronto Blue Jays clinched their first postseason berth since October 2016, four years ago. 


     The 2020 roster looks very different than their roster the last time they made the playoffs. Very few of their players from 2016 still remain on the current roster. However, in 2015 and 2016, the Blue Jays were one of the oldest teams in the MLB based on average age. They were due for a rebuild that would provide talented youth at all positions. Over these last few drafts and free agency periods, the Blue Jays got younger and improved their triple-A team in the process. Even John Gibbons, the ex-manager is gone. Charlie Montoyo has done well replacing him. 


      The Blue Jays clinching the playoffs is even more impressive when you consider they were homeless at the beginning of the season. To prevent COVID-19 cases from rising, the Canadian Federal Government did not allow the Blue Jays to play at the Rogers Center in Toronto. They attempted to have their ‘home’ games in Pittsburgh, but when their municipal government shut that idea down, the Blue Jays settled on playing their ‘home’ games at Sahlen Field, in Buffalo, where the Blue Jays’ triple-A team plays. 


      The Blue Jays took advantage of the MLB’s expanded playoff structure and will likely enter the playoffs as the 7th or 8th seed in the American League Conference. They clinched a playoff spot with a 30-27 record, and they still have with still three games left on their schedule to improve their seeding. 


     Even though they are in the postseason, their ability to succeed in the playoffs is hindered as a result of injuries to key players like closer Ken Giles, which significantly drops bullpen productivity. This means the Blue Jays’ starting rotation needs to play well; and they need to get production from pitchers behind Hyun Jin Ryu. Their defense also has to play mistake-free. 


     In addition, because this is such a young team, making the playoffs (even though there are six more teams in the playoffs this year compared to in a normal year) is a huge feat. There are few expectations on how far the Blue Jays go in the playoffs, but if there is a phrase this team is familiar with, it is resiliency and hard work. So you can never count them out.


     They are likely to play the AL-leading Tampa Bay Rays in the best of three wild card series. The Rays won the season series 6-4 but the Jays outscored the Rays 48-44. The Blue Jays lost twice via walk-off to the Rays so their closers need to perform.


     This will be a great series to watch and it will be nice to see the Blue Jays playing October baseball again!


Wednesday, 16 September 2020

Kicking for Redemption

                                                                                                                                    By: Adamo Marinelli

September 15th, 2020



     Denver, Colorado: Tennessee Titans’ kicker Stephen Gostowski missed three field goals and one extra point, but was still the hero against the Denver Broncos last night, kicking the game-winning field goal from 25 yards out to help the Titans win 16-14. 


     Both teams left a significant amount of points on the board. The Titans left 10 points on the board by missing three field goals and an extra point. The Broncos left three points on the board by not electing to kick a field goal on 4th down near the goal line in the second quarter and coming up short on 4th down. 


     In hindsight, this field goal would have given the Broncos a 17-13 lead late in the fourth quarter, forcing the Titans to go for the touchdown instead of a game-winning field goal. 


     However, I understand the play call. As a coach, you have to give your young offense a vote of confidence early in the season by letting them go for it.


But in the NFL, you cannot leave points on the board. I would have gone for the field goal.


     Both defenses were very good against the ground and the pass. Both offenses were efficient for most of the game.


     The Broncos limited Derrick Henry to only 116 yards on the ground. Without Von Miller, that is impressive for a young defense. Most of that yardage was gained on non-explosive plays too. Quiet yards, so to speak.


     Despite losing A.J Bouye to a shoulder injury late in the 2nd half, the Broncos secondary played well too. Michael Ojemudia and Essang Bassey played well for their first NFL game without a preseason. Ojemudia would have had his first interception, but a very questionable penalty on Alexander Johnson proved costly and took it away.


     That unnecessary roughness penalty, Vic Fangio’s choice not to take timeouts as the Titans were driving up the field for a game-winning field goal, the choice to go for it on fourth down in the second quarter, and a few overthrows by Drew Lock were the only mistakes in the game for the Broncos. 


     Here is why Fangio elected to not take his timeouts, allowing the clock to run from 1:33 to 0:49 after Derrick Henry’s 13-yard run. 


     “It was two-fold,” Fangio said. “One, their field goal kicker obviously had been having his problems so I didn’t want to extend the drive where they could get closer.


“Number two, we would have used a timeout, but we got the running back out of bounds. We would have used a second timeout, but they threw an incompletion which would have given us one when we got the ball back so that was part of the thinking there.”


     I have two problems with this reasoning. Firstly, call a timeout after Henry’s 13-yard run to keep the clock at 1:33 instead of letting it go to 0:49. Then you have the out of bounds run, incompletion, and the go-ahead field goal and you give your offense 1:20 seconds with two timeouts to respond to a potential game-winning field goal instead of 0:25 seconds.


      Secondly, they were already close to the endzone. They were already in field goal range after Henry’s run. Gostowski missed three field goals all over 41 yards. Despite his struggles, a kicker of his caliber would likely not miss a 25-yard field goal. Meaning you need to use your timeouts to give your offense a chance to get their own game-winning field goal.


      Despite all this, I won’t bang Fangio for his logic. I would have used a timeout, but he knows more than I do about coaching. Regardless, Denver has a good team, and when they get Courtland Sutton, Philip Lindsay, and hopefully A.J Bouye back in week two, they should be fine.


     The Broncos played good offensively, moving the ball up the field using the run game consisting of Philip Lindsay and Melvin Gordon and also using their young receivers like Jerry Jeudy, Tim Patrick, DaeSean Hamilton, and their tight ends like Noah Fant. Fant caught a TD from Lock and Gordon recorded his first rush TD as a Bronco. 


     Their offensive line played well - they did not give up a single sack or get called once for holding. They opened up run gaps in the opposing defensive line and gave enough time for Lock to connect with his receivers. Lock played well too. He recorded 216 passing yards, one TD, and 0 INTs and was consistently escaping the pocket to buy his receivers more time and keep the play alive. If Denver is patient with him, and he develops a bit more, he may be their franchise guy.


     With under seven minutes to play in the game, the Broncos had the ball twice and could only take under four minutes off the clock. This gave the Titans time to get a drive going. The Broncos need to improve closing out games.


     However, the Titans showed why they were the best red-zone offense in the league last year, scoring two touchdowns and the game-winning field goal on their three red-zone appearances. Denver’s best red-zone defense last year couldn’t stop them.


     Early in the game, knowing the Broncos had to use a lot of resources to cover Derrick Henry in the run game, the Titans got huge chunks of yards through the air, using their play-action game. Especially against the Broncos’ young cornerbacks, Corey Davis, A.J Brown, and Adam Humphries were able to consistently move the chains. Ryan Tannehill was efficient, throwing for 249 yards, two TDs, and 0 INTs.


     They stopped doing this in the second half, which led to a few three-and-outs but was still effective on offense all game long.


     The Titans' defense played well too, limiting Gordon to 78 yards, and Lindsay to 24 yards before he left the game with an injury in the second quarter. They played well against the Broncos receivers but got beat on several instances. Most importantly, they were able to get key stops on the Broncos’ fourth and goal chance in the second quarter and when the Broncos were trying to drain the clock in the fourth quarter with a 14-13 lead. 


     They also forced Gordon to fumble deep in Denver territory which led to the Titans’ first touchdown and tied the game at 7-7. If that fumble doesn’t happen, the Titans offense, which had looked not at its best might not have scored any points in the first half. 


     Mistakes were made and points were left off the board for both teams but overall it was a very good game to watch, especially considering there were no preseason games played. The future is bright for both of these teams, who will both be competing for an AFC playoff spot this season. Especially the Broncos, with all the youth they have on offense and all the talent on defense.


     Broncos visit the Steelers in week two, Titans host the Jaguars. 

Thursday, 3 September 2020

O.G Anunoby is the hero; Raptors win a crucial game 3 to stay alive

                                                                                                                                   By: Adamo Marinelli

September 3rd, 2020

     Orlando, Florida: The Toronto Raptors were staring adversity right in the face going into game three, being down 2-0, and wanting to avoid trailing 3-0 in their second-round series against the Boston Celtics. 


     The Celtics had won five of 6 games against Toronto heading into game three. 


     The Celtics proved to be a very talented opponent for the Raptors with many weapons on offense and on defense too.


     All facets of game one were dominated by the Celtics. 


     Game two was a lot closer. The Raptors were competitive for most of the game, but another lackluster shooting performance - from the field and from three - and too many turnovers - including Siakam’s with 30 seconds left in the game - were too much for the Raptors to overcome. 


      Not to mention, Marcus Smart scored 16 of his 19 points in the 4th quarter, with 5 three-pointers. The Raptors had no answers on defense and their offense sputtered too. 


     After game two, many questions surrounding if Pascal Siakam could be the #1 guy for the Raptors, if the Raptors could get back to making 3 pointers, and who will step up for this team in the clutch were floating around. The pressure was also on Nick Nurse to give bench players like Serge Ibaka and Matt Thomas more minutes. 


     The Raptors answered in a big way in game three.


     The Raptors shot 46.6% from the field and 32.5% from beyond the arc, both statistics were much better than their game 1 and 2 output.


     Part of the reason the Raptors’ shooting improved was the fact that they were able to move the ball around and make the extra pass to avoid settling on a bad look. They had 23 assists.


     The Raptors recorded 13 turnovers, the Celtics had 14. Both teams excelled in the paint, scoring 48 and 50 points, respectively.


     The Raptors got back at what they are good at, using their defense to generate offense with 14 fast-break points. The Celtics only had two. 


     The Raptors were also much better defensively, playing a variety of zone coverages that limited the three-point shooting for the Celtics. 


     The Celtics were 0-5 from beyond the arc in the 4th quarter and only 9-29 (31%) in the game. A huge part of the reason the Raptors’ switched their defensive schemes was to limit the Celtics’ three-pointer, especially in the 4th quarter. They did that today.


     If the Raptors lost this game, their 7 missed free throws would be a big reason. You can’t leave points on the board against a good team. 


     Kyle Lowry was huge in game three, playing 46.5 minutes and scoring 31 points, adding six rebounds and eight assists. 


       Pascal Siakam and Fred Van Vleet also had big games recording 16 points, seven rebounds, and two assists and 25 points, three rebounds, and six assists, respectively. 


     O.G Anunoby put up a double-double with 12 points and 10 rebounds, including the game-winner. 


     After receiving criticism in game two for being slow on defense and a bad shooter, Marc Gasol had a good game defensively and put up 10 points, six rebounds, and three assists. Serge Ibaka was huge on defense too. 


     After Fred Van Vleet tied the game 101-101 with an acrobatic layup, Kemba Walker found a wide-open Daniel Theis who slam-dunked it with 0.5 seconds left to take a 2 point lead. 


     The Raptors used their last timeout and Kyle Lowry made an incredible cross-court pass over the 7’5” Tacko Fall right to O.G Anunoby in the corner, who made no mistake in the clutch. 


     Game four tips off 6:30 pm ET on Saturday, August 5th. It is another must-win game for the Raptors who want to avoid a 3-1 series deficit.


     The Raptors will need to continue to excel defensively and shoot the ball well to win game four.