Showing posts with label Playoffs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Playoffs. Show all posts

Friday, October 4, 2013

Some Ideas on Baseball and Their Playoffs

Some Ideas on Baseball and Their Playoffs

1)  Let's have a DH in all of baseball or none of baseball.

It seems silly to think that since 1973, the AL and NL have been playing under two separate sets of rules.  

The time has come, since Commissioner Bud Selig is leaving, for the NL to adopt the DH, or for the AL to abandon it.

At this point, the best move is probably for the NL to adopt it.  

Fans look down at Forbes Field from the Cathedral of Learning, University of Pittsburgh, 1960 World Series.  Games took around Two Hours back then.  Now they take closer to Four Hours.

2)  Let's have another team in each league

It's nice that Bud Selig thought it would be a good idea to move the Houston Astros to the American League, but in the past forty years, the Milwaukee Brewers have shifted from the American League to the National League, and the Astros from the National League to the American League, so the net difference is "zero".  

The entire reason that Milwaukee moved in the first place was to keep the number of teams in each league even, so that interleague play would not be constant.  

They should simply add one expansion team to each league, making sixteen teams, and then split the teams into four divisions of four teams in each league.  Leading to the next point.

3)  Let's have more playoff teams and more playoffs

Assuming we do what we said above, we could have four division winners.  After that, it would be appropriate to have four wildcard teams in each league play as well.  

Next, the first round and every round of the playoffs should really be seven games.  Just like hockey and basketball.  

A lot of cities go years without seeing playoff baseball.  By having 1/2 the teams in the playoffs each year, the fans won't have to wait as long to get into the playoffs.  

Babe Ruth and George Herbert Walker Bush, later President of the United States (1989-1993), then a Yale First Baseman

4)  Shorten the Games

Pitchers today can't finish nine inning games anymore, leading to 12 and 13 man staffs and super specialist relievers.

A simple solution is to do what high schools do--limit the game to seven innings.  

Radical, but think about it--most baseball games today are lasting well over three hours, and with all the bullpen changes, sometimes longer.

A seven inning game means more complete games, and if the bullpen is needed, only one or two guys will be needed.

It means getting back to a ten man pitching staff and a 15 man hitting roster.  

5) Shorten the Regular Season and Lengthen the Playoffs

Obviously the season is now way, way too long.  Athletes are getting hurt, they are trying all manner of illegal substances to last the season, and it's all out of control.

The obvious answer is to cut down the regular season, and by a lot.

Baseball should shoot for a 130 game regular season, to start in mid April and end in mid-September.  The math is easy:
12 games against your 3 division foes = 36
6 games against your 12 non-division but in league foes = 72
3 games against each of 8 teams in two divisions in the other league = 24 (meaning you cycle through the other league every two years and do home and away every two years)

That makes for a very well-balanced 130 game schedule.  It's about the number of games they play in Japan.  If you add to this 8 teams in the playoffs, then you would have potentially 7-7-7-7 or as many as 28 playoff games in the post season, including the World Series.

But the entire total would only be 158 games total.  

And the ratings for the post-season would be much higher than for the regular season.  

6) Total Revenue Sharing and a Hard Salary Cap

Baseball will never be fully healthy until the owners agree to full and total revenue sharing between all of the clubs of any and tv revenues, and have all tv contracts negotiated by the league office. The MLB Network has to have control of all of this, and there should be no local advantage to being the team from LA, NY or Chicago.  All the money should go into a central pot, and the TV revenue shared equally.  

Likewise the players have to agree to a Hard Salary Cap fixed at a percentage of what the owners earn each year in the CBA.  

People like Scott Boras are making way too much money, and now people like the agents in the Caribbean representing 12 year olds, as well as Japanese baseball teams, have become free riders demanding negotiating rights, from owners who have no sense of what they are doing.

This has led to the bankruptcy of the Dodgers, to name but one team, as well as of the Mets, to name another.  

It all needs to be fixed.

THE BOTTOM LINE

Baseball needs to create a product that moves more quickly, gets done more quickly, has a shorter regular season, has more postseason, is fairer to all fans, has more opportunities for all teams to get into the postseason, does not overpay athletes or owners, and is a better product overall.

One other important notion would be for the American champion to play internationally against the winners of the Mexican and Japanese Leagues.  A shorter season would allow this, and more players would be interested in the World Baseball Classic then.

The MLB Baseball Playoffs 2013

THE MLB BASEBALL PLAYOFFS 2013

Well, it's that time again--well, baseball, having played too many games, now will play too many playoff games.  

Brad Lidge & Chooch Ruiz Celebrate the Phillies Winning the 2008 World Series

1) I made my picks on FB.  

2)  I picked Rays over Rangers.  Got that one right.

3)  I picked Rays over Indians.  Got that one right.  

4)  I picked Pirates over Reds.  Got that one right.

So far, three for three (1.000 batting average).  

5)  NLDS - Cards over Pirates, Dodgers over Braves.  

6)  ALDS - Bosox over Rays, Tigers over As.

7)  NLCS - Dodgers over Cards.

8)  ALCS - Bosox over Tigers.

9) World Series - Dodgers over Bosox.  

The Sheer Joy of Winning - 2008 World Champion Philadelphia Phillies

If you are wondering, the Brooklyn Dodgers faced off against the Boston Red Sox in 1916. The Red Sox won.  Some guy named George Herman Ruth had an ERA+ of 158 over league that year.  23-12, over 320 IP, 230 H allowed, 170 K (in an age when no one struck out) and zero HR allowed.  For good measure, the Babe hit 3 HR and had an OPS+ of 121 over league as a hitter.  So Babe Ruth, as a pitcher, hit more home runs than he allowed in 1916.

The Shoe is on the other Foot this year. Clayton Kershaw is the best pitcher in baseball, and he can pitch, field and hit.  Any comparisons to Sandy Koufax, bring them on.  There is no one on the Red Sox remotely as good as Kershaw.

Thems' my picks.  

Saturday, January 12, 2013

PLAYOFF PICKS FOR DIVISIONAL WEEKEND JAN 12-13 2013

PLAYOFF PICKS FOR DIVISIONAL WEEKEND JAN 12-13 2013

Last Week
Well, last week went pretty well as we got 3 out of 4 right. That wasn't looking so good until Mike Shanahan, who I savaged in last week's column, decided, after going up 14-0 on Seattle, to leave RG3 out there on one leg and see how injured the guy could get facing the best defense in the NFC.

We discussed last week Shanahan's history of abusing QB's and going one and done with guys not named Elway.  Last week was a classic batch of evidence of this.  Up 14-0, Shanahan only had to do one thing--sit RG3 on the bench and go with his competent backup and sit on the lead.  Instead, he left a hobbled, injured QB out there too long--who by the time they actually needed him to come back and get the lead in the 4th Quarter, was way too banged up to play.  Had Shanahan rested him for two and one half quarters, RG3 might have had enough for one last drive--or his backup could have gotten it going enough to keep the 'Skins in the game.  

RGIII was left in last weeks game way too long by Mike Shanahan

Now the Seahawks march on, Pete Carroll is a genius, Shanahan is a ninny, RG3 may be out for 1/2 of next year, RG3 has LCL and possibly ACL damage that is severe to the same knee he destroyed once already in college, and Shanahan is directly responsible for aggravating the injury for leaving in the  kid in there after the kid worked hard in the first quarter to get a two TD lead.   If I'm a tort lawyer, I'm suing Shanahan for negligence.  I mean, c'mon.  

Oh, and by the way, another one and done for Shanahan.  See?  And another playoff win on the road for Carroll, who continues to show his playoff genius.  And makes my pick of last week look like brilliance.  Since I analyzed it as a case of Shanahan will beat himself and Carroll will take advantage.

Cincinnati was lackluster in losing to the Texans in the playoffs for the second year in a row (though I have to give a shoutout to our high school QB, Haverford School/Boston College and former NY Giant Michael Mayock, who was broadcasting that game and actually made it interesting).  Mayock does all of the draft analysis for NFL Network and is one of the best prepared and best NFL and college broadcasters in the game, and one of the greatest athletes I ever saw play high school football (he once dropped 26 points in a 12 year old hoops game that was about five minutes long).  Greatest line from Mayock:  the other broadcaster mentions that Arrian Foster runs like Marcus Allen, and Mayock immediately says "Hey, I played against Marcus Allen" and goes on to note the similarities and differences.

Marcus Allen, OJ, Jim Brown & Walter Peyton v. Adrian Peterson & Eric Dickerson
Thirty years ago this month I was living in LA, and my good friend E.N. was visiting from NYC, and we scored fifty yard line seats for the LA Raiders-NY Jets playoff game in balmy 70 degree weather.  You may remember that this was the game won by the Jets (barely) using Richard Todd at QB, and with their famous defensive combo of Gastineau and Temple's own Joe Klecko.  Famous for the fact that until Rex Ryan came along, the Jets had not won a playoff game since that 1983 contest for a long, long time.  

Anyhow, Marcus Allen was in that game as a rookie, and not ten rows ahead of us was sitting then world famous actor and sports commentator Orenthal James "OJ" Simpson, a white Bronco ride still ten years away in his future, sitting with his beautiful blonde wife and an equally beautiful blonde on the other side of him.  During the entire game we (meaning the whole crowd) were peppering him with cries of "Juice, Juice".  After all, we were in the LA Coliseum, the very place he had played college ball for USC, and he was watching his good friend Marcus Allen play ball.  

Marcus Allen USC and LA Raider HOF RB


It seems a long time ago, but this year some running back made an assault on Eric Dickerson's 16 game rushing record of 2105 yards achieved in 1973 (Adrian Peterson with 2,097).  The only problem being, both Peterson & Dickerson did it in sixteen games, whereas OJ Simpson's record of 2,003 yards, set in 1973, was achieved in fourteen games.  OJ averaged more than 143 yards per game, whereas Dickerson, in the longer season, averaged only 132 yards per game.  Meaning that had OJ played two more games, it's pretty safe to say that OJ would have gained 2,289 yards in a sixteen game season.

No one since OJ has gained 2,000 yards in 14 games or less, and if OJ were playing today, he's probably have already broken the 2,500 yard mark for a running back in a sixteen game season with a bye.  Remember, too, he set that record playing in Buffalo, outside, in the snow, without a bye week.  

OJ Simpson - the greatest RB of them all?


OJ had another year two years later in 1975 where he gained 1817 yards in a 14 games season and averaged 130 yards per game.  If he had played 16 games that year, he'd have rushed for 2,017 yards that year.  That would still be 5th on the all-time list today ahead of all but Dickerson, Peterson, and the famous 2000 yard seasons of Jamal Lewis & Barry Sanders.  

This was probably the OJ look that launched his "Naked Gun" film career


Lest we neglect the greatest RB of them all, Jim Brown played 1/2 of his career in a twelve game NFL season.  In 118 games he rushed for 12,312 yards and averaged over his career 104.3 yards per game.  In 1963, Brown rushed for 1863 yards and averages 133.1 yards per game, which means if he had played 16 games in 1963, he would have rushed for 2,129 yards.  

Needless to say, Jim Brown would have been the all-time rushing leader and the first to break the 2,000 yard barrier if he had played a 16 game season.  Moreover, Brown's retrospective 2,129 yards he would have gained in 16 games played with a bye in 1963 would rank first in the NFL overall today, and would only rank behind OJ's retrospective 2,289 yards which OJ would have carried in 1973 given sixteen games and a bye.

Consequently, let's forget about Adrian Peterson and Eric Dickerson, who are great HOF backs, and concentrate on who were the greatest NFL running backs in history.  That list comes down to three--Jim Brown, OJ Simpson, and Barry Sanders.   And of course, the late Walter Peyton, whose 1977 season rushing for 1852 yards with a pace of 132 yards per carry in a fourteen game season would have propelled him to a total of 2,116 yards in a sixteen game, bye week season.  That would have ranked him third all time in NFL history.  

the late Walter Payton - perhaps the most beloved football player of all time 


And I'd take Marcus Allen after them and before Eric Dickerson or Adrian Peterson.  Allen was as good a receiving back as he was a running back, and in his NFL career rushed for 12,000 plus yards as well as caught passes receiving for another nearly 5,500 yards at a nearly 10 yards per reception clip.  If you split him into two he'd be two HOFers, but as a single back, he was a wrecking crew.  In 1985 he totalled 2314 yards from scrimmage, 1780 on the ground and another 555 in reception yards.  Yikes.  Not even Sanders, Peyton, Simpson or Brown were that versatile.  Peyton could catch and run with the ball more than the others--and Sweetness was truly great--but at his peak, Marcus Allen literally destroyed defenses.  

In the Super Bowl of January 1984 between the LA Raiders and the Washington Redskins, wherein the Raiders destroyed the Redskins 38-9, Marcus Allen rushed for 191 yards on 20 rushing attempts.  John Riggins on the other side only gained 64 yards on 26 attempts.  The combination of Marcus Allen and Jim Plunkett was, literally, unstoppable, and the Raiders crushed a Washington Redskins team that had won the Super Bowl the very previous year over Dan Marino and the Miami Dolphins.  They didn't just beat the Redskins--they destroyed, humiliated and made a laughingstock of them, so much so that everyone forgot that the Redskins had ever been champions the year before.  

Marcus Allen's 9.55 yards per carry Super Bowl rushing average is second all time in Super Bowl history--to the immortal Tom Matte of Baltimore, who averages 10.55 yards per carry back in Super Bowl III (which the Jets, not the Colts won).  Matte rushed for 116 yards on 11 attempts in that game, but that was in a losing effort.  Matte and Unitas were usually a terrific pair, but Namath and his teammates were just better that day--a lot better.  

That was how good Marcus Allen was.  And as good as OJ, Peyton, Jim Brown, and all the rest were, only Walter Peyton won a Super Bowl, and Jim Brown an NFL championship.  Marcus Allen didn't just win a Super Bowl--he dominated it.  

PICKS FOR THIS WEEKEND

Saturday's Games:

Baltimore Ravens at Denver Broncos:

I'm getting this out a little late, so really I shouldn't be picking so late on this one, but I'm going with the conventional wisdom and picking Denver, at home, over Baltimore.  Ave atque value, Ray Lewis.  Those about to do NFL combat for the last time salute you, you are a true warrior.  

Green Bay Packers at San Francisco 49ers:

This is a very close matchup.  Green Bay has a better offense with Aaron Rodgers, but SF has a superior defense, and one has to like the Niner's coaching scheme.  Also, the Niners have the home field, which is a big difference from playing on the frozen tundra of Lambeau Field.  I like the 49ers in a close game.  

Sunday's Games:

Seattle Seahawks at Atlanta Falcons:

On paper, you'd have to like the Seahawks.  However, Atlanta is very tough at home, they have the bye week, and Matt Ryan is a much more veteran and savvy QB than rookie RGIII, and will play for the long haul.  Atlanta has a good rushing attack with Turner and Rodgers to go with the passing attack of Ryan, and Atlanta also has an excellent defense.  Think about Atlanta's 34-0 smackdown of the NY Giants in the Dome, and you get the idea of how good Atlanta can play at home, and their 13-3 record is nothing to sneeze about.  I pick Atlanta.

Houston Texans at NE Patriots:

This is a rematch of last year's playoff game, wherein the Patriots pretty much destroyed the Texans.  As much as one would like to see a different result, the fact is that Tom Brady and the Pats are really good at home, they scored the most points of any team in the league, and their defense is pretty darn good also.  And their QB is very good.  The Texans won last week, but in one of the most boring games ever, and other than Arrian Foster, they just don't have the offensive weapons to keep up with the Patriots, and their defense will not shut down Tom Brady for an entire game--the Patriots scored 557 points this season.  

Footnote:

The Canton Bulldogs, which featured Jim Thorpe, and played in the NFL only during the 1920s (my late grandfather lived in Canton OH for two years and watched Jim Thorpe play football), won two NFL championship.  That is more NFL championships than the Seattle Seahawks, the Houston Texans, the Jacksonville Jaguars, the Carolina Panthers, the Atlanta Falcons, the Cincinnati Bengals, the Minnesota Vikings (all of which have zero NFL or Super Bowl championships), and more than the Baltimore Ravens, the New Orleans Saints, the Tampa Bay Bucs, the NY Jets or the San Diego Chargers (all of which have one Super Bowl or NFL/AFL championship).  The Broncos, Bills, Chiefs, Titans, Dolphins and most embarassingly, since they've been in the league since 1920, the Chicago/St Louis/Arizona Cardinals, are all tied with Canton with two championships.   So much for NFL parity.  18 teams have won the same number or fewer NFL championships as the Canton Bulldogs, a team that last played during the Coolidge Administration.  Even the Philadelphia Eagles have three NFL championships (1948, 1949 and 1960).  

Art Kyriazis, Philly

Thursday, May 17, 2012

Celtic Clobber Sixers in Philly Game 3 of Playoffs Last Nite

CELTICS CLOBBER SIXERS LAST NITE IN PHILLY IN GAME 3 OF PLAYOFFS


Well, took one of my kids to the Sixers-Celtics Playoff game last night in Philly.  


The Atmosphere was electric.  Dr. J. was in the House.  Brian Westbrook, Brent Celek, Michael Vick and other Eagles were all with Eagles Owner Jeffrey Lurie in Mr. Lurie's box (and Mr. Lurie was getting booed more than Vick, an ominous portent, perhaps, of things to come).  


They were playing highlight reels on the Jumbotron of Andrew Toney, "The Boston Strangler", from 1982, the last time that the Sixers had beaten a Boston Celtics team in Boston.  He received that nickname for scoring 25 points in quarter v the Celtics.


The Legend:  Andrew Toney

Andrew Toney - Vintage NBA documentary featuring commentary by Cuttino Mobley - five parts (46 minutes) rare  


Back then, the Celtics played in a humble little arena known as the "Gah-den" filled with the cigar smoke of a clever little fellow "Red Auerbach," whose mission in life, it seemed, was to destroy Philly's playoff dreams each and every spring.  


The cunning Red Auerbach consults with the Wily Bill Russell.  These two fellows combined to win 117 consecutive NBA titles during the 1960s.  Bill also desegregated Boston, was chairman of the JFK for President & RFK for President Campaigns and was host of SNL several times.  Bill Russell never failed at anything.


The Sixers would get Wilt; the Celtics would have Bill Russell, KC Jones, Hondo Havlicek, and a whole team of All-Stars.  Philly would win one title in the 1960s, Boston would win all the others.


John "Hondo" Havlicek.  Played v. Wilt, Dr. J & Doug Collins.

  Wilt "the Stilt" Chamberlain after scoring 100 points v. the NY Knicks in 1962.  Yes Spike Lee, those NY Knicks.   If he played the Knicks of today, he'd score 200 on them.


The Sixers got Dr. J and George McGuinness in the 70s, the Celts got Dave Cowens, Rick Robey, then Larry Bird.  The Sixers eked out one title in 1983, a bunch of finals appearances (with losses), too many to count, and the Celtics walked away with bunches of titles.  


Dr. J Dunk Highlight Reel Top 10 Dunks


The Sixers got AI--Iverson, the Answer.  The Celtics got Paul Pierce, then Garnett, Ray Ray Allen, and finally Rondo.  You know the rest.  Another trip to the finals, another loss in the finals, and when Pierce went head to head with AI, well, Boston won again.  


Iverson Highlights


It's painful to think about.  At least we have this to remember:


Larry Bird-Julius Erving Fight followed by Sixers-Celtics Brawl 1980s Old School

Bird-Dr. J Commercial followed by footage of Dr. J-Bird fight with Boston announcer denouncing Moses Malone as a "coward" during fight for putting chokehold on Bird from behind - classic


After one quarter last night, the Sixers were actually blowing the Celtics out of the Wells Fargo Center.  They put up 35 points on the Celtics while allowing only 29.  


After this, the wheels completely came off.


First Paul Pierce started to be the Paul Pierce of old, scoring inside and out, and seemingly willing his way to the basket.


Then Rondo came alive, seemingly moving faster than everyone.  Rondo dropped 17 points on the Sixers in the first half.  Not quite Toney-like, but he was moving in a totally different gear than everyone else.  


Finally Garnett, who had been sitting due to foul trouble, came back in, and starting hitting shots from distance.  


To make matters worse, the Sixers went stone cold in the 2d quarter.


http://www.nba.com/games/20120516/BOSPHI/gameinfo.html


By halftime, the Celtics had put up a thirty plus spot on the Sixers, while the Sixers had scored very few in the 2d quarter.  The stunned home crowed watched as the Sixers, who had been up by as much as seven in the first quarter, were now down double digits at the half.


It just got worse and worse in the 3d quarter and it was a 20 plus blowout by the 4th quarter.  


http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/17/sports/basketball/nba-playoffs-celtics-dominate-sixers-in-game-3.html?_r=1


Boston's big three of Pierce, Rondo and Garnett all piled on points, and the Sixers, who had started the night so promisingly, seemed to be in utter confusion.


http://scores.espn.go.com/nba/recap?gameId=320516020


There were some bright lights in all of this.


Garnett is an unrestricted free agent at the end of this season and the Sixers are free to sign him.  Since Elton Brand is also a free agent, the Sixers are free to dump Brand and upgrade to Garnett.  


Currently, Boston has three and possibly four future HOFers on their roster, and all four can automatically score at will--Pierce, Allen, Garnett and Rondo.  


Philly is a great young team but it needs a HOF level player, a guy with an established Win Share level of eight or more per year, and ten in good years.  That would be Garnett.  He is a defensive and offensive force, and even at 35 years of age, has at least five years left in the tank.  He can score from outside, from inside, and backed up by Lavoy Allen and Spencer Hawes, Garnett does not have to play 48 minutes to be effective for the Sixers.  


Ray Allen is also a free agent after this season.  He's older and less consistent than Garnett, but also half the money.  He's good for @ five win shares a season.  Adding these two players means adding fifteen wins to your team.  


http://espn.go.com/nba/story/_/page/FreeAgents-12-13/nba-free-agents-2012-2013


It also means taking them away from Boston.  


Other free agents available after this year include Jameer Nelson (five win shares a season) and Tim Duncan, though it is unlikely Tim Duncan is going anywhere but San Antonio again.  


Next year Dwight Howard, Manu Ginobilli, Josh Smith, Kyle Korver and Luke Walton are all available.  Dwight Howard is the one player in all of basketball that I would sign if I were a GM.  He's still very young and has an established WS level of 11 per year, mainly on defense, which means he adds eleven wins per year to your team.  He's not an offensive force, but he is to defense and rebounding and passing what Bill Russell once was.  Smith is a younger and more effective version of Elton Brand, and has an establish WS level of 7.  Korver has become a much better player since leaving the Sixers.  He still drains the three, but now he plays tight D and is good for 5.5 WS per year.  He's a bargain at $5 million per year.  Finally, Luke Walton is Bill Walton's son.  You sign him on that alone.  He's connected to an intangible greatness that is connected to John Wooden, the Pyramid and the Secret.  


The Sixers have some decisions after this year.  Lavoy Allen & Jodie Meeks are restricted free agents.  I would do everything to keep Lavoy Allen, the pride of Pennsbury HS and Temple University.  Allen is per 48 minutes the most effective Sixer in this years playoffs and the Sixer most likely to be a superstar in the years to come.  Meeks is a good scorer but scorers can be replaced so it's not necessary to match his sheet.  


The Sixers unrestricted free agents include Tony Battie, Elton Brand, Spencer Hawes and Lou Williams.  Battie and Brand should be let go.  Brand has been effective, but he is in an age-related decline from last season and at age 33 after several injury plagued seasons, the Sixers need to sever ties.  Spencer Hawes is still pretty young and vastly improved, and next to Allen, the most effective player in this years playoffs.  He should be resigned.  Finally, Lou Williams has improved substantially over the 2008 version of Lou Williams that went to the playoffs under Mo Cheeks--his PER is up, his WS/48 minutes are up, and he has been relatively effective in the playoffs.  He is also the best pure shooter and best pure three point shooter on the Sixers, plus he has playoff and big game experience.  


Of the free agents listed above, Jameer Nelson seems like an obvious fit because he is from Philly.  Andre Miller is available also but he's a few years older than the last tour he took in Philly and he may no longer be effective.  Nate Robinson is too small though he's a good player.  


Looking at the rest of the playoffs, no one should count out the Sixers.  Boston will be tired for Game 4.  Everything now turns on Game 4.  If the Sixers can pull out a win and tie things up, then this could still be a long series.  If the Celtics win Game 4, then look for the Celtics to close this out in Boston in Game 5.  


This is a good Sixers team.  It is the first Sixers team in many, many years to hold the opposition to under 100 ppg for a season.  Sixers teams that have done this for a season have, as a rule, done very, very well in the post-season.  Indeed, most NBA teams that do this perform well in the post-season.  This is because defense wins in the post-season.  


The one piece of the puzzle missing for the Sixers is perhaps a go-to scorer for the playoffs, but otherwise they have all the pieces in place.    Experience will come but the Sixers are a team on the rise.  And, lest we forget, they knocked the first seed Chicago Bulls out of the playoffs in the first round, and won a game in Boston they had no expectation or right to win.  The other game was a one point loss they could well have won.  


The Sixers have exceeded all expectations.  The credit must go not only to their players for playing team ball, but to their coach, Doug Collins, who was the greatest shooting guard who ever played for the Sixers.


Doug Collins, Dr. J, et al. defeat Dave Cowens, John Havlicek, Jo Jo White et al and the rest of the Boston Celtics in Game 7 of the Playoffs on May 1, 1977 on their way to the NBA Finals.  Doug Collins knows the Secret of Beating the Celtics.  He's done it before.  He and Dr. J. beat Dave Cowens and Hondo Havlicek.  'Nuff Said.