Wednesday, April 14, 2021

Unbelievably Believable

“This is unbelievably believable. “It's unbelievable because in the moment we're all amazed when great things happen. But it's believable because great things don't happen without hard work.”

The words above come from Robert Griffin III's Heisman Trophy acceptance speech back in 2011.  Those same words seem appropriate as a description of my reaction to the fact that the BAYLOR BEARS ARE NATIONAL CHAMPIONS IN BASKETBALL!

Much has been said and written about the job that Scott Drew has done with the Baylor program.  Some people have called it the best rebuilding job in college basketball history.  But to "rebuild" something implies that there was a foundation or something there from which to rebuild.  In the case of Baylor basketball, I'm not sure that's really the case.

Many of you may be aware of the sordid goings on that ultimately led to Scott Drew's arrival in Waco.  His predecessor, Dave Bliss, was fired after one player murdered another player and then Bliss tried to cover up illicit and impermissible tuition payments by painting the deceased player as a drug dealer.  It was a disgusting and disturbing situation which led to Bliss's termination as well as the termination of the athletic director and the resignation of the university president, not to mention the tragic death of the player.  At that point in time, considering all of the awful things that had occurred, the Baylor head coaching job wasn't just a bad job - it might have been the worst major conference job in the country.  Scott Drew accepted the job knowing that the program was going to be handed serious penalties (including an unprecedented ban on all non-conference games in the 2005-06 season) and scholarship reductions.  Needless to say, it was a daunting task and he was not walking into a good situation.

But, even if you said aside the mess that the program became under Bliss, Baylor was a moribund program with little history of success or prestige.  Sure, they went to two Final Fours in three years between 1948 and 1950, but then they followed that up with decades of irrelevance.  Sure, they had a few really good players who went on to have successful NBA careers (Vinnie "The Microwave" Johnson and Brian Skinner), but that's about it.  Consider the following:

  • Between 1951 and 2010 (60 seasons), Baylor had zero NCAA tournament wins
  • Between 1951 and 2007 (57 seasons), Baylor only had 1 NCAA appearance
  • In the 2,197 games of Baylor basketball history prior to Drew's arrival in Waco, Baylor had only been ranked in the Top 25 for two of them
It wasn't like Scott Drew was walking into a program that was emerging from a scandal but had a robust basketball history.  He was taking over a program that was emerging from a terrible scandal that had next to nothing to offer in terms of attractiveness to sell to recruits.  No recent prior success, no storied history. But Scott Drew took it on and did so with a smile.  Even through those first few years when he was forced to routinely play multiple walk-ons because of scholarship limitations.  Even through those first three seasons when the Bears went 21-53 and were the doormats of the Big 12.  He believed that he could build not just a competitive program but a championship-caliber program.

That belief first bore some semblance of fruit in 2008 when Baylor won 20 games and was selected for the NCAA tournament for the first time in 20 years.  The Bears' stay in the NCAA tournament was short-lived, getting knocked out in the first round by Purdue.  They followed that up in the 2008-09 season with another 20 win campaign and a run to the championship game of the NIT.  But Drew and the Bears finally broke through on a national level in 2010 when they won a school record 28 games and advanced to the Elite Eight where they lost a heartbreaker to Duke after some questionable, late game officiating.  ("It was a block!!!")  The Bears returned to the Elite Eight two years later when they set another school record with 30 wins.  Drew still had his doubters - he wasn't the best at making in-game adjustments and some highly touted recruits didn't seem to develop during their time in Waco - but he had at least made Baylor basketball relevant again and proved that it could compete not just within the Big 12 but on a national scale. 

The Bears won an NIT championship in 2013, followed by four consecutive NCAA tournament appearances, including two Sweet 16s.  But the best was yet to come...

Anchored by the best backcourt in America, the Bears went on a two year run of excellence that pushed them to the upper echelon of college basketball programs.  In 2019-20, the Bears at one point won 23 games in a row - including a blowout win over Kansas at Allen Fieldhouse - in route to their first ever #1 ranking and a 2nd place conference finish.  They were on the cusp of a #1 seed in the NCAA tournament when COVID hit and the tournament got cancelled.  Baylor fans everywhere were despondent.  The best team in school history never got a chance to show what they could do on the biggest stage.  Some of their much ballyhooed backcourt seemed headed to the NBA and it looked like the Bears' window to finally get back to the Final Four was closing.

...And then a funny thing happened.  Those incredible guards decided to keep the band together and come back to Waco for one more year.  And, as good as the Bears were in 2019-20, they were even better in 2020-21, routinely trouncing opponents with a shut down defense and an explosive offense that led the nation in 3 point field goal percentage. They finally ended Baylor's conference championship drought with the first conference title since 1950 - a run of 71 years.  But that was just the appetizer before the main course; just the preview of coming attractions before the main event.  Baylor didn't just go on to make the Final Four and win a national championship.  They did emphatically.  Consider the following:

  • In their last 7 halves of basketball (2nd half of Sweet 16 vs. Villanova, Elite Eight vs. Arkansas, Final Four vs. Houston and national title game vs. Gonzaga), Baylor trailed for a TOTAL of less than 5 minutes.
  • They never trailed against Arkansas or Gonzaga, leading from buzzer to buzzer.  While they did briefly trail early on against Houston, they were up by 25 at halftime.  They didn't just win those games, they completely dominated their opponents, removing any doubt about who the best team in the country was.
And this Baylor team looked and played nothing like some of their predecessors.  While Baylor's two Elite Eight teams were led by a lot of size and length than made their 2-3 zone very effective, this year's team played a tenacious man-to-man defense.  While Drew was oft criticized in his early years for not being a very good Xs-and-Os guy and not being very good at making adjustments, his team thrived this year in the 2nd half of games.  I can't tell you how many times this year the Bears were locked in a close game at halftime only to come out and blow the doors off the opponent in the 2nd half.  Drew showed that he can coach not just well enough to win games and make the NCAA tournament.  He showed that he can coach well enough to win a national championship...something that seemed like a complete pipe dream before he came to Waco.

Remember the fact I shared earlier - that in 2,197 games of Baylor basketball over 99 seasons prior to Drew's arrival, the Bears had only been ranked in 2 of them?  In Drew's 18 seasons in Waco, they have been ranked for 263 games.  Quite the difference, right?

When Scott Drew gave his introductory press conference, he talked about not just winning games but winning conference championships and national championships.  To many, that was the typical "win the press conference" spiel, the sort of thing that pretty much every coach says in pretty much every introductory press conference.  At the time that Drew uttered those words, they seemed far-fetched, unrealistic, unbelievable.

Now, 18 years later, those words aren't just believable -- they are reality.  The Baylor Bears are on top of the college basketball world...and I'm still in shock.  But I'm also very, very happy.  For Baylor students, alumni and fans all around the world.  For Baylor players past and present who strove to reach that mountaintop and helped pave the way.  But, most of all, I'm happy for Scott Drew, a relentlessly positive, upbeat Christian man who walked into about the worst college basketball situation possible and through hard work, patience and unyielding faith helped turn the seemingly impossible task into a real life happy ending.

Sic 'em Coach Drew and sic 'em Bears!

Wednesday, February 24, 2021

Another Current Events Rant

It has been a while since I've gone on one of my patented rants about current events.  I suspect some of you will agree with some of my comments below, while I suspect some of you will vehemently disagree with others.  You are entitled to your opinion just like I am and that's all this is: a Festivus-style airing of grievances.  Let's go...

Climate Change, Forced Electrification and Natural Gas- If the polar vortex and record winter cold last week taught us nothing else, it's that we need reliable energy and safeguards in place to ensure people are able to heat their homes in bitter winter cold and cool their homes during scorching summer heat waves.  If Texas taught us nothing else (more on that in a bit), it's that maybe a little regulatory oversight isn't be a bad thing.  Solely trusting in and relying upon energy companies to "do the right thing" to winterize their equipment and ensure that the power grid is capable of handling weather extremes is clearly not the answer.  From windmills to gas pipelines to electrical substations, shortcuts were taken and corners were cut and the results were nearly catastrophic.

We also should hopefully now all understand the importance of diversification in our respective national energy portfolios.  Much like financial advisors encourage investors to diversify their portfolios and not put all of their proverbial eggs in one basket, we as a nation need to apply that same lesson to our energy needs.  Forced electrification is a bad idea.  Solely relying on so-called "renewable energy" like wind and solar is likewise a bad idea.  Wind and solar should certainly be a part of the solution but we also need things like natural gas or electricity from coal to help balance things out.  That way, if the winds aren't blowing and the sun isn't out, we still have energy resources we can use to heat homes and businesses.  Pipelines may be repugnant to some but they also help ensure energy reliability and energy independence, not to mention offer some really good paying jobs.  We can't just shut them down and then cross our fingers and hope for nationwide sunny, windy, mild weather.

Don't get me wrong - climate change is real and we need to take steps to address it.  But much like investing all of your 401k in Enron stock was a bad idea in the early 2000s, relying solely on renewable energy is a bad idea in 2021.  If we focus on balancing things out between renewable sources like solar and wind and more reliable things like natural gas, we can help fight climate change while also avoiding horrifying scenes like we saw in Texas last week.

Texas politicians - Speaking of Texas, it was NOT a very good week for most politicians in Texas, in particular the governor (who blamed frozen windmills for the power crisis while ignoring the fact that said windmills only account for a small percentage of the energy Texans use) and a certain Senator who flipped his constituents the bird and decided to take a vacation while the people he is supposed to represent are, in some cases, literally freezing to death.  More on that jackass in a minute.  Some of the very politicians who were making fun of California for rolling blackouts last year looked like idiots when similar rolling blackouts showed up in the Lone Star State.  From Greg Abbott to Ted Cruz to Rick Perry to some small town yahoo mayor named Tim Boyd, Texas politicians had a very, very bad week last week.  However, there was one notable exception. Beto O'Rourke, who was defeated in his campaign for Senate in 2018, rose to the challenge and made phone calls and arrangements to get people into warming centers, amongst other things.  I wonder if Texans will remember the stark difference between how Cruz handled the crisis vs. how O'Rourke handled it when they go to the polls in 2024.

Ted Cruz - A college acquaintance recently referred to Cruz as a "despicable loser" when responding to one of Cruz's gratuitous Facebook posts following the Cancun debacle and I really can't think of a better phrase to describe him.  Keep in mind, this is a guy who responded to insults about his wife and father made by Donald Trump in 2016 by endorsing Trump and becoming his lapdog for the next 4 years.  He even tried to overthrow the 2020 presidential election to keep the guy who insulted his family in power.  Talk about despicable and spineless!  Then, when the rest of Texas is hunkering down in cold houses without power and water, Cruz responds to the crisis by taking a family trip to Cancun where they will stay at the friggin' Ritz Carlton.  Then, when he gets caught playing hooky, he lies about how long he was going to be there and then blames his daughters.  Now that's what you call a stand-up guy!

To me, however, the most galling thing about Cruz is that he casts himself as somebody who is fighting for the average American.  Never mind that the guy was born in Canada, went to a private high school, Princeton for his undergrad and Harvard for law school.  Never mind that he apparently has the resources to not just book a vacation on a whim but to do so in Mexico at a luxury hotel.  He bashes career politicians while neglecting to point out that he's spent his entire adult life in politics.  He's as divorced from reality as any politician in the country.  He lambasts Democrats for being too partisan while being the epitome of a partisan hack himself.  If the voters of Texas look at Ted Cruz and say "Yeah, give me more of that!," I don't know what can be done to help them.

Josh Hawley - No discussion of out of touch politicians can be had without including Missouri Senator Josh Hawley, whom I not so fondly refer to as Senator Phony Carpetbagger.  Like Cruz, he portrays himself as being a champion for the average American, usually by playing up the fact that he grew up in a small town in Missouri.  Of course, that little narrative ignores that fact that he went to high school at an elite private prep school in Kansas City and that he did his undergrad at Stanford and law school at Yale.  He then taught in London before moving back to Missouri to plot his political future.  When running for Attorney General in 2016, he aired ads blasting his opponents as only being concerned with using the Attorney General role as a springboard for higher office.  (The ad used a bunch of ladders to illustrate the point.)  But then, after winning election as Attorney General, he does the very thing that he excoriated his opponents for doing.  Barely more than a year later, he ran for Senator.

But it's more than that.  He claims to be in touch with the average Missourian while not even living or having a house in Missouri.  In order to vote in this past fall's election in Missouri, he used his sister's address as his own address.  Why?  Because the only house he owns and lives at is in Virginia.  In early January, after making it known that he was going to contest the presidential election results on January 6, he whined and complained about people who demonstrated outside of his Virginia home.  He blasted them on Twitter. He said they made his wife and young child feel threatened.  But what happened when rioters broke into the U.S. Capitol a few days later and actually threatened and killed people?  He went hours without saying a damn word about it before issuing a lame tweet sort of condemning the attack.  He's a smarmy, calculating, power hungry snake who will do and say whatever he thinks might help him get elected to higher office.  While I thought Trump was dangerous, I think Hawley is even MORE dangerous because he's more polished and more capable of concealing his schemes and machinations.

Rush Limbaugh - I'm not one to rejoice over the death of anyone, but I will say that the world is definitely a better place without Rush Limbaugh on the airwaves.  He was intolerant and divisive and he helped foment the political discord that has been growing in this country for the past few decades.  I'll never understand how a thrice divorced drug addict ever managed to become a voice for so-called "family values."  Then again, many of the people who viewed him as such also thought a twice-divorced, adulterous con man was a great president, so perhaps those folks are a bit delusional.  Unfortunately, Limbaugh is a native Missourian, so the yahoos in Jeff City want to honor him with a Rush Limbaugh Day in Missouri.  Because celebrating a garrulous, xenophobic bigot is always such a good look for a state.  Sadly, these days, it seems very on-brand for the Show-Me State.

QAnon/MAGA Morons - Have all of those doofuses who bought into the whole QAnon satanic pedophile cabal, Donald Trump as savior people come to their senses yet?  Or are they still waiting with baited breath for that much ballyhooed Emergency Broadcast Message?  The fact that so many people fell for that garbage would be incredibly sad if it wasn't so scary.

Minimum Wage Increases - I realize that most of my rant thus far as skewed to the left, so let me balance it out a bit.  There's still a lot of talk about a $15 national minimum wage.  This is, quite frankly, not a great idea.  While I agree that a $7.25 minimum wage is too low, I think we need to rely on states, municipalities and businesses to address the issue rather than it be driven by federal edict.  Thirty states + DC along with countless cities have already increased their respective minimum wages above (and, in most cases, well above) the federal minimum wage.  While I think the "minimum wage hikes kill jobs" argument made by some conservatives is a little overblown, there is a tipping point where an increase in wages will result in either more automation or fewer hours for those low wage employees.  I also think that the wage rates necessary in Seattle or San Francisco or New York may not make as much sense in Poplar Bluff, MO or Tifton, GA.  While it's unconscionable for employers like Amazon to skimp on employee wages while making money hand-over-fist, I also know that there are some small businesses that genuinely can't afford to pay every one of their employees twice as much as they are now.  They are already hanging on by a thread and the increased cost could put them out of business. Rather than taking a one size fits all approach, I think it needs to be an approach that's tailored both by the geographic location of the business as well as the size of said business.  A Target or a Walmart in a large city or suburban area can afford to pay more per hour than a small diner or antiques business in a small town and they shouldn't both be forced to play by the same set of rules.

I think the people advocating for the $15 federal minimum wage need to look at what has happened at grocery stores and big box stores all across the country over the last decade.  Go to a Target or a Walmart and notice that only a few registers have cashiers (with undoubtedly long lines) while the number of "self service kiosks" has increased.  This is partly a response to increased wages for employees.  They may pay the employees $12 an hour instead of $9 an hour but they are also going to have fewer of those employees and more self checkouts.  I'm not saying I agree with that approach by the corporations but we also need to be realistic and acknowledge that it exists and it might be exacerbated if we push the wage envelope too far too fast.

College Loan Forgiveness - Let me start out by saying that I am incredibly grateful that my parents paid for my college education, so I was able to graduate without any student debt.  My wife and I are fortunate enough to be in a position to do the same for our kids.  Having said that, I know there are millions of young people who rely on college loans in order to get that college degree. However, the notion that we should just up and forgive all college loans doesn't strike me as a good idea, either.  If banks and other loan agencies are just forced to forgive that debt and not collect that money, that money still has to come from somewhere - either the government or they are going to raise interest rates on other loans.  Also, forgiving college loans now may make it more difficult to get similar loans for future prospective students.  What bank or agency is going to lend a student money if they know they aren't ever going to get that money back?  Rather than focusing on just unilaterally forgiving college loans, the focus should be on making college more affordable in the first place to reduce the need for those loans.  One of the best ways to do that is for state governments to stop cutting education funding or diverting that money to other pet projects.  If states did a better job of funding their colleges and universities, those schools could potentially keep tuition lower.  More affordable tuition = less need for loans.

The Filibuster in the U.S. Senate - Many people much smarter than me have written treatises in support of and against the filibuster.  In short, the filibuster essentially means than it takes 60 votes in the Senate to approve a bill and pass it into law.  There are a few ways around it but that is the general intent.  However, the result is that only the most non-controversial legislation ever gets passed and instead our Senators waste their time and our tax money mindlessly arguing and engaging in partisan politics.  For most of the first 200 years of our country, the filibuster and this "60 vote" threshold was seldom employed.  It wasn't until the 1970s when it became more common.  The result? In the late 1950s (1957-59), 25% of bills introduced in the Senate became law.  By 2005, that number had been cut in half to 12.5%.  Just 5 years later, in 2010, that amount was a miniscule 2.8%.  So, when it seems like Congress never does anything, it's because they don't and the filibuster is a big culprit of that.  The notion that 59% of a voting body can be in favor of something but essentially be overruled by 41% is not healthy.  I understand that, conceptually, the 60 vote threshold should result in more moderate legislation in order to get enough buy-in to get it passed.  But as American politics have become more and more partisan and compromise has become a dirty word, it has just resulted in gridlock and a lack of bills being passed.  The other impact is that it has resulted in more increased use of executive orders by presidents.  Because the Senate has, in essence, abdicated their responsibility and can't get anything passed, the executive branch instead tries to get things done via executive fiat.  This can be a very dangerous path and it is surely not what the Founders had in mind when they tried to craft a government with three co-equal branches.  I think we can all agree that we do not want the executive branch - regardless of which party holds the White House - to become too powerful.  The time has come to dump the filibuster - something that isn't required by the Constitution - and move to a simple majority vote.  In this way, perhaps Congress can actually spend time legislating and passing laws as opposed to doing little else besides arguing.

The Golden Globes - I'll finish things on a less serious (and less political) note and give my take on a few huge misses by The Golden Globes in terms of nominations.  The fact that Better Call Saul, one of the best shows on TV (not just currently but ever) is not nominated for best drama series is a JOKE.  The show is nuanced, the cinematography is incredible, the acting top notch and the gradual unfolding of the titular character from ambulance chasing Jimmy McGill to the criminal lawyer Saul Goodman of Breaking Bad is nothing short of brilliant.  It's criminal (pun intended) that the show wasn't even nominated.  Likewise, the fact that Rhea Seehorn's didn't receive a nomination for her portrayal of Kim Wexler is ridiculous.  She was arguably as big a piece of last season as Bob Odenkirk's title character and the fact that she didn't even receive a nomination is an injustice.  Her performance in the final scene of the penultimate episode of the season ALONE should have garnered a nomination.  It was an incredibly tense scene that was largely carried by Seehorn. Also, I'm about 3/4 of the way through the final season of Schitt's Creek and I still don't understand what the fuss is all about.  I'll tackle that a bit more in an upcoming blog post but I think that show is every bit as overrated as Better Call Saul is underrated.  I am in total agreement with the serious and multiple acting nominations for Ozark, a show that has gotten better with each successive season.  My only beef with that show - aside from Julia Garner's way too frequent use of the f word - is that it wasn't actually filmed in Missouri.

Whew....that was a long one with a lot of content.  Thanks for sticking with it through the whole thing and reading it until the end.  I feel better having gotten that rant out of my system.


 


Friday, January 1, 2021

Things I Learned in 2020

Well, we made it. 2020, a year that has been a terrible for many, many people, is finally over.  We're on to 2021, a year that - surely - will be better than this past year.  Right?

As we push into a new year, I thought I'd share a list of things that I learned from and during 2020.  Here we go:

In 2020, I learned:

  • What "social distancing" is
  • How many Americans apparently really hate concrete things like science and facts; it's quite frightening
  • That people (mainly Americans) are much more selfish, self-centered and self-involved than I ever realized
  • That wearing a mask really isn't that big of a deal; the fact that it has become a political statement is complete garbage
  • That maybe a health insurance system that ties insurance to employment isn't such a good idea
  • That a shocking number of Americans are okay with authoritarianism and fascism
  • That a shocking number of Americans think fascism and communism are the same thing
  • That a shocking number of Americans have no idea what "socialism" and "Marxism" actually mean; they just merely parrot talking points that they've seen online or on TV
  • That having a president who runs the government like a mob boss is every bit of a bad idea as you would expect
  • That millions of Americans are perfectly okay with voter suppression and disenfranchisement
  • That white supremacy and xenophobia are (unfortunately) alive in well in America
  • That the members of Trump's cult are even more delusional than I realized
  • That Trump is as big of a loser and crybaby as we all thought
  • That many conservatives and evangelicals apparently agree with "my body, my choice" after all - well, maybe, sometimes...but don't point out their hypocrisy
  • That Josh Hawley is even more of a ladder-climbing douche bag that I previously thought; seriously, it's embarrassing that this fake, carpet bagging sycophant serves as my "representative" in the Senate
  • That Eliah Drinkwitz was a really good hire for Mizzou and I look forward to what he can accomplish in CoMo
  • That Doug Armstrong is a stone cold killer as a GM and the Blues are better off because of it
  • That the Blues still care about trying to win a championship while the Cardinals are content to be mediocre
  • That my son will become a Mizzou Tiger in 2021
  • That I don't think I ever want to work from home on a permanent basis
  • How much I miss sitting down at a restaurant and eating a meal
  • That I really miss going to live sporting events but didn't miss watching them on TV as much as I thought I would
  • That Vince Gilligan is a friggin' genius who has given us two of the greatest TV shows of all time, "Breaking Bad" and "Better Call Saul"
  • That a quarantine without Netflix would be absolutely brutal
  • What a great lyricist B.J. Barham is - American Aquarium's "Lamentations" was a masterpiece
  • That sometimes hard work and stepping up and taking on more responsibility doesn't pay off
  • That I am incredibly blessed - with a good job, a wonderful wife and two terrific kids; I've grown to appreciate those things even more this year
Happy New Year to you and yours!  Thanks for reading!