US – Sunday, March 21
SXSW ’10: Get your dance on, great songs optional
The trends that emerged from the SXSW Music Conference in Austin last week are still bubbling to the top as I make sense of the hundreds of songs that filled the city for four days, but one thing I definitely noticed is that popular music may soon have a lot more emphasis on flexibility.
 
Allen: NFL 365
I was a little surprised this week when I saw that media sessions were being set up with Patriots players who are participating in the voluntary offseason workouts down in Gillette Stadium. I guess I shouldn't be, but its just another sign that the National Football League is a 365-days-a-year proposition these days.
 
Record-breaking world flight time
NEW YORK. Swiss aviator Riccardo Mortara and his crew set the record for the fastest flight around the world in a 19,826-pound aircraft.
 
At AKC, it’s score one for the mutts
Founded in 1884 as a registry for pure-bred dogs, the American Kennel Club didn’t traditionally offer many perks for your beloved lab-poodle-schnauzer mix. But as of April 1, the AKC Canine Partners Program will offer mutts not only membership benefits, but opportunities to compete at dog sporting events.
 
Upsets, OTs on first day of Big Dance
So much for that bracket you filled out.

 
BPS program in jeopardy as funds dry up
The John Winthrop School in Dorchester was on the brink before Sheena Collier arrived in 2006. 
 
Brown displaying glimpses of future
It’s easy to see why the Phillies refused to part with minor-league phenom Domonic Brown.
 
Published 00:06, November the 4th, 2009
 
 

Hopelessly devoted to old Charlie

More idle thoughts ...

1 Sorry Krukker. Now that Steve Phillips is gone, John Kruk is the worst baseball analyst on TV. His rant on the instant-replay homer Saturday would have been hilarious if he were actually joking.

2 Full circle. Andy Reid made an amazing discovery in Sunday’s win. The fullback can run the ball, too. Imagine that.

3 Wall of shame. There are no more obnoxious or smug people in any sport than the fans of the New York Yankees. In anticipation of future World Series, we should build a wall in Trenton.   

4 Down and out.
Don’t be shocked if the biggest trade rumor of the winter involves Cole Hamels. What was considered a quirky personality last season has become downright annoying in the clubhouse this year.

5 Sporting news.
Pearl Jam is OK, I guess, but the last show at the Spectrum should have been a big event involving the many sports heroes who performed there.

 

Forget Derek Jeter, Alex Rodriguez and Mariano Rivera. If the Phillies manage to come back and win the 2009 World Series, the biggest hurdle they will have to clear is lovable old Charlie Manuel.

Irealize what a folk hero Charlie Manuel has become in Philadelphia. Just in the past few days, I have had to endure a portrait of Manuel on the front cover of one newspaper with the word “HOPE” emblazoned below it. In another paper, a headline writer actually used the word “genius” to describe the Phillies manager.

“Hopeless” and “clueless” would have been more accurate. Manuel is having a World Series so bad that the only people left to defend him are the blindly loyal or the painfully stupid. And making the situation even more unimaginable is Manuel’s sudden defiance. He actually believes he is beyond criticism.

Well, here’s the one sane voice left in this city to inform you that Manuel has made one major blunder after another in this World Series, placing the Phillies on the brink of elimination, instead of charting the route for another parade.

The trouble began in Game 2, when Manuel defied baseball convention and didn’t send his fastest two runners — Jimmy Rollins and Shane Victorino — with a 3-2 count on Chase Utley and one out in the eighth. The ensuing double play ended the last chance for the Phillies to launch a comeback in the 3-1 loss.

When Fox analyst Tim McCarver accurately pointed out how dumb Manuel’s decision was to hold his best baserunners, Manuel actually had the audacity to snap that he deserves better than to be questioned on decisions like that. Baloney. Smart baseball doesn’t require a doctorate degree. Manuel blew it.

Game 4 was worse because we saw it coming. I have been writing for two months that Manuel’s obsession with burned-out closer Brad Lidge would cost the Phils dearly in the playoffs, and it did. Along the way, the Phils also botched a two-base steal by Johnny Damon because no one covered third.

Manuel did everything he could to screw up Game 5, but Chase Utley’s two homers saved the season. This time, Manuel decided to replace his best outfielder because Victorino had sustained a hand injury — seven innings earlier. As a result, Raul Ibanez stayed in left field while Ben Francisco moved to center, and three runs ultimately scored because Ibanez couldn’t catch a drive that Francisco would have had for dinner.

Look, I’m a realist. I understand that Charlie Manuel will always be beloved here because he won a title. I even readily agree that he is masterful in managing the personalities in the clubhouse. But if you believe that he has performed logically in this World Series, then feel free to enjoy this last game or two.

You know what they say. Ignorance is bliss.

Metro does not endorse the opinions of the author, or any opinions expressed on its pages. Opposing viewpoints are welcome. Please send 400-word submissions to letters@metro.us.

 
 
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