Other Sports

Die Bundesliga ist wunderbar

“Football is a simple game. Twenty-two men chase a ball for 90 minutes and at the end, the Germans always win.” Gary Lineker, Former England and Tottenham striker.

Lineker made that statement 23 years ago this summer, after England lost their 1990 World Cup semifinal to Germany in a penalty shootout in Italy. On May 25th, football fans around the world will gather in pubs and sports bars to watch the biggest game played in non-World Cup and non-European Championship years, the final of the UEFA Champions League. Unlike during World War II, there’s no need for the English to fear the arrival of the Germans at Wembley Stadium. This time they’ll be bringing the best rivalry in the game to the home of football.

Bayern Munich and Borussia Dortmund weren’t the popular picks to make it this far in the 32-team knockout tournament, not when their opponents in the semifinals were two of the best teams in the world over the past three seasons, Barcelona and Real Madrid. But something strange happened over the course of the home-and-home semis. Munich and Dortmund dispatched the Spanish sides with dramatic and relative ease. It wasn’t even close. It left many experts and journalists alike stunned. They had no choice but to acknowledge the growing influence the German Bundesliga is having on the club game.

This is the first time two German clubs have reached the Champions League final. To say these teams despise each other is an insult to their rivalry. This game means so much to these clubs and their fans; it’s like if game seven of the Stanley Cup Final between the Maple Leafs and Canadiens, game seven of the World Series between the Yankees and Mets and the Super Bowl between the Patriots and 49ers, were all played in the same stadium at the same time. Imagine the passionate fans, the historical rivalry, the hatred the old guard feel to the new boys on the block all packed into one stadium. One game with bragging rights and millions in prize money on the line.

There are enough storylines in this game, it reads like the most clichéd Hollywood script ever written. Bayern is the big spending powerhouse who captured the German league title after losing out the two previous seasons to Dortmund, the smaller, homegrown, budget-conscious club. For Bayern, this is the third final in four years. They lost the previous two to Inter Milan in 2010 and last year to Chelsea on their home ground. They are also in the Cup final for a 10th time, trailing only Real Madrid (12) and AC Milan (11). Despite the regular appearances, their most recent win was back in 2001.

For Dortmund, this will be their second Champions League final. They won their first appearance in a final in 1997. Borussia are a club that have stricter financial restrictions. Like most teams in sports around the world, they go through the traditional cyclical ebbs and flows of building a winner from within before going out and signing the quality pieces they need to reach the peak of the league.

Rodrigo Salazar, co-host of Soccer Senseis, a weekly radio show, sees it this way:

These teams have never liked each other, and I am sure that will be on display at Wembley for the Champions League final. They played a league match a few weeks ago and even though it meant nothing (Bayern was mathematically Bundesliga champions by then) and they fielded mostly second-string players, the game got very snippy.

Bayern Munich is known as FC Hollywood because of all the superstars they have on their roster and the drama they bring on and off the pitch. It’s ironic that the team, as the leading club in Germany, had an inferiority complex when it comes to the Champion’s League. In past years, players of the caliber of Franck Ribery and Arjen Robben seemed to shrink on football’s biggest stage… This year, they turned it around and beat Barcelona, what many consider the best team of all time, to get to the final.

Borussia Dortmund are a young, exciting side coached by the enigmatic Jurgen Klopp. To give you an idea of how good he is, Klopp was mentioned as a possible successor to Sir Alex (Ferguson) at Manchester United and is still being bandied about for the Real Madrid job. He has been able to take a team who pays less in wages than (some of the worst Premier League teams in England) to second place in the German championship and the Champion’s League final.

Ramping up the tension in the game, is the announcement weeks ago that Bayern had signed a 20-year old midfielder nicknamed “The German Lionel Messi”. Mario Götze also happens to be Dortmund’s best player. In North American terms, it would be like the LA Lakers announcing they’ve signed LeBron James to a contract, before playing the Miami Heat in the NBA Finals. Götze made his debut for Borussia back in 2009 and has been a catalyst in the team’s two league titles in the past three seasons.

There’s not much between the two teams. Having played each other three weeks before the final they know each others strengths and potential holes.  Both have formidable strikers who love to score. Mario Mandzukic (BM) has 21 goals in 37 appearances this season while Robert Lewandowski (BR) is even deadlier in front of goal with 35 in 47 appearances.

Bayern have a slight edge, with a deeper midfield that loves to get forward and score goals. Their top five have netted 60 times. Bayern’s ability to push forward and get goals from anywhere on the field will prove to be too much firepower over the course of 90 minutes.

For English fans heading to Wembley to watch two German heavyweights do battle on their turf, goals will both be expected and demanded. There’s no better way to showcase the Bundesliga to those around the globe who think the English Premier League is the best in the world.

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Scorecasting: The Hidden Influences Behind How Sports Are Played And Games Are Won

A Sports UpFront Book Review

Sports sections ofnews media are often considered to be the “sand-box” of journalism.

ABC TV reporter Howard Cosell coined the term and, despite covering sports most of his television career, complained sports writers did not delve deeply into the issues in sports. Cosell complained, for example, that there were too many clichés and unexplored assumptions in the sports world that are taken at face value and not examined further. Critics of the sports coverage often complain sports writing is comprised mostly of action/reaction stories and not more in-depth cause-and-effect explanations one might find in other sections of the news.

Into this sandbox come Tobias J. Moskowitz and L. Jon Wertheim, a finance professor from the University of Chicago and a senior writer at Sports Illustrated, respectively. Suddenly, sports coverage shifts from play-time, to thinking time. The stories in Scorecasting are provocative and profound. They are thorough and well-crafted, providing analysis that can be read and re-read, enjoyed as much for their effectiveness as their aesthetics. There is a lot more to think about here than the one-upmanship that frequently takes place over beer and pretzels.

There is no I in team” is one of the issues they explore. And yet, when the game is on the line, it takes a superstar such as Michael Jordan to come through for the win. Moskowitz and Wertheim examine how Jordan did step up as needed, but when criticized by the coaches or the media, Jordan’s response was that there may be no I in team, but there was an “I” in win.

As you might expect, the book does not shy away from statistical analysis. A first team all-star on a team, the authors explain, gives a 16 per cent chance of the team going deep into the playoffs, and adds a 7 per cent chance of winning a championship. Having two first team all-stars on a team increases those odds to a 37 per cent chance of making the finals and a 25 per cent chance of winning it all. Increase the number of all-stars on a team to three, and the numbers jump again to 70 per cent chance of making the finals and 48 per cent chance of winning the championship. No wonder, then, there was such a hullabaloo when Lebron James joined Chris Bosh and Dwyane Wade on the roster of the Miami Heat.

Is there such a thing as home field advantage? It seems that there is. Moskowitz and Wertheim prove it, with statistics from major league baseball, NHL, professional and college football, basketball and international soccer. With stats that range from just over 50 per cent in baseball to just under 70 per cent in international soccer matches, Moskowitz and Wertheim explain that it is not just the home team hoopla such as cheerleaders, announcers, enthusiastic fans, a good night’s sleep, etc. that makes this so, but there is the bottom line to consider:

There is considerable economic incentive for home teams to win as often as possible,” they write. “When the home team wins, the consumer – that is, the ticket buying fans – leave happy. The better the home team plays, the more likely fans are to buy tickets and hats and T-shirts, renew their luxury suite leases…The better the home team plays, the more likely businesses and corporations are to buy sponsorships and the more likely local television networks are to bid for rights fees. A lot of sports marketing, after all, is driven by the desire to associate with a winner.”

Moskowitz and Wertheim give us a fresh approach to understanding sports events. Their statistical analysis makes for interesting reading, helping us to predict the likelihood of a winning team, the accuracy of the strike count or the success and value of a first round draft pick.

In their epilogue, they say they want to write more, and invite readers to send their suggestions. And indeed, that is one of the weaknesses of this book. There are only so many ways one can mathematically examine sports. It is, after all, human performance, no matter how it may be shaped by the media coverage and the leather-lunged fans in the stands. There is still lots of room in the sandbox of sports journalism, but Scorecasting will provide some thinking time for our play time.

Scorecasting: the hidden influences behind how sports are played and games are won


By Tobias J. Moskowitz and L. Jon Wertheim
Crown, $26 (US) $30 (CDN), 278 pages

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Erik Compton Goes From Two Heart Transplants To The PGA Tour

Golf is one of the most difficult sports to master, if it can be mastered at all.

Every weekend the professionals you see on the PGA Tour do their best work chasing a little white ball around a gigantic piece of real estate. What doesn’t get a lot of coverage is how those pros have gotten to where they are today.  Most of them slugged it out on mini tours for years.

Erik Compton is among those who’ve made the progression to the PGA Tour.

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What about the trainers?

They are the men and women behind, the men and women.

The trainers.  They work tirelessly to make their clients or proteges the best-of-the-best.  Champions.

They’re passionate about their sport and will stop at nothing to keep doing what they feel they were born to do.  It’s the pure love of fighting that keeps these former and current athletes going and so involved.

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Crashed Ice Lifts Off

If, 10 years ago, there was the possibility of an Olympic sport that saw four guys on skates racing down a glorified bobsled track, you might’ve thought you were crazy.

That’s a funny word, crazy. In fact, it accurately describes the mentality of most athletes competing in Red Bull Crashed Ice. But the truth is, crazy has caused a worldwide explosion in the extreme sport, and those involved are hoping it’ll reach the pinnacle of athletics.

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Lockouts: Why They’re Strictly A North American Phenomenon

Lockout.

The dictionary describes it as, “the withholding of employment by an employer and the whole or partial closing of the business establishment in order to gain concessions from or resist demands of employees.”

NHL fans are beginning to call them something else, something much harsher, and vulgar.

The full 2004-05 season was cancelled and the current 48-game campaign was only salvaged after an ugly 113 day lockout.

Labour disruptions in sports overseas don’t happen. Owners wouldn’t be so callous or daring to lockout their players twice in nine seasons. Players wouldn’t have the intestinal fortitude to go ahead with a strike. They know that to do so, would be a death penalty in the court of public opinion.

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