Saturday, September 4, 2010

UCF v. USD, 9/4/10



The University of Central Florida Knights kicked their season off on a humid evening Saturday against the University of South Dakota.

UCF got on the board early, grinding out a second-possession, 75-yard touchdown drive capped off by a Johnathan Davis dive from the one yard line.

After the teams battled at midfield for much of the remaining quarter, UCF again punched into pay-dirt on a seven-yard run around the corner from Jamar Newsome, set up by a 31-yard reception by A.J. Guyton, one of eight passes caught for 127 yards in the game.

South Dakota opened up the second quarter with a Marcus Sims kick return that placed the Coyotes within striking distance. Three plays later USD running back Chris Gainous exploded through the line to put South Dakota on the board.

After a Nick Cattoi field goal, UCF forced another Coyote three-and-out to line up great field position, with Guyton catching his first touchdown pass of the game with a little over a minute remaining on the clock before the half.

The Coyotes came out stale again in the third period, another three-and-out allowed the Knights to attempt to grind out another solid drive, however resulting in a UCF punt. QB Calabrese completed his first nine passes of the game before throwing two incompletions on the drive.

A huge, 24-yard sack on the ensuing Coyote drive forced a punt out of their own end-zone, giving UCF great field position even after a muffed punt return. The Knights used the opportunity to free Brendan Kelly near the end zone to drive the score to 31-7, UCF.

South Dakota started the final quarter much like the previous ones, falling short on assembling a drive and punting from their own territory again. Starting from the Coyote 41, it was only 2 minutes before UCF entered the red-zone and scored on a six yard touchdown pass from backup-quarterback Jeff Godfrey, giving the Knights a 38-7 lead with just over nine minutes remaining in the game.

Following another poor drive that stumbled after just four plays, South Dakota punted away only to watch Guyton continue to get open down the field, catching 2 more throws on the drive including a 27-yard completion on third down. UCF's drive faltered as they decided to go for the first down on fourth-and-three from the Coyote 27 to drain the clock, rather than kick a field goal; the attempt was un-successful, and the Knights turned the ball over on downs, their first turnover of the game. The Knights also continued fundamental football by only committing 3 penalties the entire game.

As the clock wound down, few fans were left in the stands with the rout in progress to see the Coyotes finally make a few good plays to reach the UCF red-zone for only the second time in the game, but were unable to score any more points as time ran out. UCF begins the season 1-0, the Coyotes falling to 0-1.


Game Notes:

— This was the first time UCF and USD have faced each other in history, UCF will play another team it has never played in week four at Kansas State.

— All 8 of UCF's drives made it into Coyote's territory.

— Junior A.J. Guyton set career highs in single-game receiving yards with 127, and receptions for a game with eight. He finished last season with 44 catches for 572 yards.

GAME BALL:
Receiver A.J. Guyton shredded the defense tonight, and seemed open over the middle almost all night. He was making life easy for quarterback Rob Calabrese and taking heat off the running game consistently.


Friday, April 16, 2010

Valencia Voice first collegiate publication on iPad

I am a bit late with this, but congratulations to the Valencia Voice student publication for being the first ever collegiate publication on the iPad! The team all banded together to get a iPad friendly app product working and ready for display a mere hour after the iPad was available to purchase. It took a lot of effort, but to be part of a groundbreaking outreach in student media was great. I look forward to continuing to be on the fore-front of student media and it's advancements!

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Mass Effect 2 can't find it's place in Citadel Space

Commander Shepard is becoming something of an icon, a figure that stands out in the galaxy, one person that elicits hate or love from every species in space.

And he isn’t even real.

Mass Effect 2 was released last Tuesday, and I haven’t been able to put it down since it came in my home. The epic sequel to the first Mass Effect from Bio Ware delivered on many fronts, and failed on very few. Again you control the iconic Shepard, already a hero for the defeat he handed the Reapers in the first episode whilst also dispelling the geth and rogue Spectre Agent Saren. Perhaps the most interesting feature about ME2 is it’s ability (and highly recommended) feature allowing you to import your career from the original Mass Effect into the second installment, bringing your perks, a bonus for character level, and appearance with it. It also alters the way NPC’s interact with you and shapes the progression of the game greatly. In the first few hours of play I could already tell my decision to let the Council die so the Citadel could survive in the first game was not perceived well by some of the other alien races walking around.

If you played the first game, you probably crossed paths with the human supremacy group Cerberus, in fact, if you followed the way of the Paragon you most likely mowed down many of their associates in a few different missions; so you can imagine how you feel when Shepard wakes up on a Cerberus operating table after his body was uncovered following the wreck of the Normandy. You will have to learn to love Cerberus; they saved your life and now the association, along with their cryptic leader the Illusive Man (Voiced by Martin Sheen,) enlists your assistance to quell another brewing Reaper threat that the Council seems to be turning a blind eye to.

Already you’re hooked, I can tell. The game did get a bit more difficult as far as the play goes, the firefights are much more intense and ME2 relies heavily on squad combat, almost forcing you to place your team strategically before the fighting starts if you wish to survive. The graphics are better, your controlled character runs faster, and there is much more story to sift through and people to talk to; there better be, the game takes up two discs.

All in all, it is a great game. The user interfaces and upgrading procedures have been all but been killed off, and this is where my complaint list begins. Fans of the RPG aspect of the first game will be sorely disappointed, as the point allocation system for your character has been severely cut back. Also limited, the weapon customization and allocation itself; all your troops use the same gun and you have to find it in the world to upgrade to it. No more finding the right gun, armor or upgrade in the universe by looting, keeping your stash and selling back the trash. In fact, there is no more recovery of goods, period. You don’t have a backpack, and can’t switch weapons unless there is a load-out crate nearby; it almost seems as though by trying to simplify the game, Bio Ware horribly limited the uniqueness of what made ME1 great to begin with. Customization has been revoked in a game where customization is key. (They do allow you to change the color of your armor now, however.)

In the two years that Shepard was missing in action, the universe realized it would be a good time to take a step backwards in technology and go back to using clips of ammo in weapons, making you have to reload often. Frequently I found myself having to use a gun I shouldn’t be simply because you run out of ammo during every fight. There are also no more ambushes or nearly as much exploring. You’re either fighting an epic, repetitious battle or you’re talking to someone in a hallway.

This game could have been amazing. It could have broken boundaries. It could have been one of the greatest games ever made, and that may even be an understatement. Taking the time to make so many improvements, yet at the same time destroying what made the game great is quite disappointing. Its incredibly hard to give this game a rating for that reason; if it was the first game in a series it would be a solid 9, no questions asked (and if you have read my other reviews, that is beyond amazing.) But failing to deliver on what made the franchise great in large quantities has crushed this game.

In memory of the original Mass Effect, I am all but forced to drop this game down quite a bit, I would say around a seven. Imagine Elder Scrolls, or Knights of the Old Republic (another Bio Ware creation) without treasure chests or enemy drops. Great advances were made with this title, but it came with too great a cost. I’m not mad at you, Bio Ware; just very disappointed.

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Miami V. Wisconsin; Harris can't keep the Badgers off his back

Orlando, Fla. -- When the Wisconsin flag-carrying parachuter botched his landing before the opening kick, the Badgers hoped things would only get better.
Then they had to kick the ball to Miami.
Sam Shields ran the opening kickoff back to the house on a designed kick reverse, only to have it called back to the Wisconsin 16 for an illegal block in the back. The next play from scrimmage and 23 seconds was all it took for Graig Cooper to get the Hurricanes on the board, rushing to the right sideline for six.
Luckily, this would be pretty much the end of the Badgers' bad luck.
After a few punts, Wisconsin tailback John Clay gave the Badgers hope as he rushed left end for a touchdown from three yards out to tie the game at 7-7, with 7:12 left in the first; the quarter would come to an end at that score.
With the swirling winds possibly affecting the coaches' decisions to kick a field goal, the Miami defense forced a turnover on downs in their own territory, but were forced to punt it away after two sacks and a botched snap.
After a Miami punt, Clay took the first play from scrimmage 51 yards to the Miami 12, where three plays later he scored from the Miami three yard line once again for his second tour of Orlando Pay Dirt of the night, 14-7 Badgers.
After a quick Miami punt, Wisconsin led a balanced attack down the field with the clock winding down, and with 18 seconds left before the half, Wisconsin kicker Phillip Welch scored on a 37 yard field goal to put the men in red up 17-7 at halftime. After a very quiet third quarter, Miami recovered a fumble as the Badgers drove into the red zone 50 seconds into the fourth, but again Miami was forced to punt after pressure from the Wisconsin D-line continued to pester Miami QB Jacory Harris. After another Welch field goal, Miami took control and headed an 80 yard touchdown drive, taking less than two minutes off the clock. Miami controlled the ball again with 1:20 left in the game thanks to a brilliant onside kick recovery, but Harris came up empty as the Badgers forced him into a sack and three incompletions to win the 2009 Champs Sports Bowl, 20-14. The game set a few records, including longest kick return in Miami bowl history, and a venue record 56,747 in attendance. John Clay finished with over 100 yards rushing and two touchdowns despite missing much of the third quarter and finished as the MVP of the game.

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Ah, NBA, how I have loved thee...

Until recently. No one is unaware of my referee bashing, especially in the last NFL season, but some of these refs need to be FIRED.

Watching the Cleveland Cavaliers play at home is nauseating at best. What these zebras are doing to the game is almost disgraceful; it is almost as bad to see them play anywhere else. The series with the Magic has been a prime example. The reason you havent heard from me yet was because the Cavs are heads over heels better than the last teams they have faced in the postseason, but against a notably better team, the Orlando Magic, the Cavaliers have had to rely on their 6th man...

The boys in stripes.

I think it is because the NBA... and David Stern... all want to see LeBron vs. Kobe. The TV ads have been pushing it, both the NBA's own advertisements, and others providers like Nike. Still, to a hardcore sports fan, this is unacceptable. The best team, the one that proves it deserves to win should win the game. Politics run the world, and that includes sports; but a smaller market, lesser known team should never be cast aside in favor of something people would just like to see. This is what XBox is for, so you can play 23 vs. 24 all night long, where the calls don't kill the faith and heart of thousands of fans who see this happening to their team, and are powerless to stop it.

As I write this, the Magic are about to take a 2-1 series lead, (should be 3-0), and Howard just fouled out on what could be the worst call I may have EVER seen. (look it up. It will be on SportsCenter tomorrow. It was that bad.) It was so bad I forgot I was in parenthesis. Hedo Turkoglu and Rashard Lewis' heroics in game one were overshadowed, and rarely mentioned by the media, but LeBron's last second buzzer beater in game two has been played at least once every few minutes somewhere across the globe. It probably just passed a couple million or so YouTube hits while I am writing this.

Nothing against LeBron James, ever. He is a player that words cannot really describe. Maybe just simply put, amazing. I was not too young to remember, or even see Michael Jordan play, but I was too young to see the refs look the other way for him. I am a "WITNESS" to this now. The Magic will try to dig out of this hole, but I fear this is all for naught unless Orlando can win the next two games by 40 points, keeping it far enough away so that the officials cannot determine the outcome.

So what is really happening? It seems that the calls are going one way, and you stop to take a look, and realize they REALLY are.

Why was there no retroactive flagrant foul against Mo Williams after he chucked the ball at Howard in game two? Its funny that everyone in the arena saw that happen except the stripes, who took their eyes off the ball for the first time ever. All at once. Where is the NBA, and Stuart Jackson, that were handing out so many retroactive fouls during the first two rounds of the playoffs? They gave more of those away than Chinese Restaurants give free samples in the mall to passers. I know they saw that clip.

In summary, "King James" never fouls, and the rest of the league fouls him if they get within a foot of him. James challenged at least 3 fast break layups / dunks the Magic turned, and hit the hands of the shooter on all of them. All fouls, and one goaltend. Guess which plays didn't get calls? All of them.

I wish Charles Barkley would become an NBA official. He always calls it like it is- "Ball don't lie."

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

NFL Rule Changes

*Note: this column has been chosen to represent myself in the National Collegiate Journalists' Association, or something like that. Hope you like it!

NFL CHANGES THE GAME
Apr 1st, 2009
By Alex Barrettabarrett@valenciavoice.com
As with most years, the NFL has decided to do their best this off-season to attempt to assure the safety of players in the league. They do this, of course, by implementing rule changes that butcher the game’s core competencies, and rarely ever make any sense.
This year, another Tom Brady rule has been put forth. Hooray! You may remember the original ‘tuck rule’ that was put in place the year after the Raiders were robbed in the AFC Championship game after a clear fumble by Brady. This rule is a little more involved. Following the season-ending injury to Toy-Boy Brady, the league has now made it illegal to hit a quarterback below the hip pads, and illegal to hit the quarterback if you are on the ground as well.
This rule, joined with a legit rule, not being able to strike above the shoulder pads, now makes the only place for rushers to make contact with the QB from the lower shoulders to the belly button.
Thus, after years of seasons, hundereds of games, and millions of fans who tune in to big hits and grimacing quarterbacks, the league has finally decided to use twohand touch on the field generals of the league.
I have a better idea; let’s give the quarterback a set of flags so the defenders don’t even have to risk touching the frail, breakable QB. It is sad that players like Steve McNair, who injured virtually every bone in his body was able to go out week after week and play, but the first time a flagship player like Tom Brady goes down, all of a sudden there’s a problem.
Poor Brady, who is still dating a supermodel, and who still managed to take pictures for endorsemets of clothing, cologne, and feminine hygiene products during his vacation away from the league.
This guy isn’t a football player, he is a pansy. It’s not like the first player in the backfield against the Patriots this year is going Steven Segal Tom’s knee and kick it in backwards to prove a point. Safties aren’t Chuck Norris roundhouse-kicking receivers coming across the middle. Football is a tough sport where contact is completely necessary. If you’re having problems with your QB staying healthy, maybe they should choose a new line of work, or hit the weight room to bulk up and prevent injuries.
Unfortunately, the No Fun League has struck again, making sure we have another diluted contribution on Sundays. No more “Jacked Up!” No more leveling hits to pollute ESPN’s Top 10 countdown. Players on the gridiron are going to get hurt, no matter how many adaptations to hits you make. Sooner or later, we will find ourselves on a path to abolising contact in sports altogether. No matter how many punishing blows you put on a player, there are still more injuries in other sports, such as basketball, where the players don’t even wear pads with the exception of the occasional face protector, or Horace Grant’s famous goggles.
My advice to the league: end this now; I understand you have to protect your investments and players, but the one thing that keeps you going are the fans. Once they fly for greener pastures, it will be hard to pay those players millions of dollars each year. People love football, not sort-of football. Maybe if the league saw this, they would think a little longer about making decisions as potentially hap-hazard as this one.

Monday, March 23, 2009

Why do rape victims' names get withheld from presses?

Anonymity for rape victims

FOLLOW THIS STORY AT www.valenciavoice.com

By Alex Barrett

ORLANDO - It seems that every time a rape crime, or supposed sexual battery incident occurs, there is always one missing piece of information that no one can identify; the victim's name.

You may think that the names are just lost in translation, or kept from the public, but the truth is, there is no law that prohibits the release of information pertaining to the supposed victims name outside of two states, Florida, and South Carolina. In these states, the law prohibits the publication of rape victims’ names and the constitutionality of those statutes is uncertain. The Supreme Court is considering the Florida statute this term in light of a 1974 high court ruling that struck down a similar Georgia law, stating it was alright to print the names of victims in a manner that is not degratory in any way.

In states outside of Florida and South Carolina, the names of victims aren't printed either, but for a different reason. Simply put, to be respectful to those who have been violated. Orlando Lawyer Emma Ubanks has had some background in criminal trials and admits the law is kind of shaded when it comes to rape crimes. "The real law says that no names should be divulged, either the name of the alleged victim, nor the name of the alleged assaulter," Ubanks said. "The name is normally retained by the authorities or by the council that is representing the victim, and subsequently withheld from the media print due largely out of respect for the parties involved. They really don't need any more stress, much less seeing the media and other people making assumptions about their already trying situation." Ubanks added, "rape crimes are still, for some reason, one of the primary crimes where people continue to lay blame on the victim, sometimes more than the person who committed the crime."

Ubanks is one of many attorneys in the state seeking to have this law used in a proper way to defend not only the victims, but all parties involved. "Take the Kobe (Bryant) case, here we see an individual accused of rape, and he was found to be innocent of the crime. Having his name in the media everwhere cost him sponsorship contracts, and he gained negative feedback from many people over something he was found to be not guilty of, while the woman involved recieved virtual anonymity. That just isn't fair, and it can work both ways in these instances."

All the while, many believe that names should be completely confidential, the only parties that should have knowledge of the people involved should be them, immediate family, and whatever authorities have been assigned to the matter. Still more people feel it aids in what has most likely been a traumatic experience to an individual. Rape is considered one of the more heinous crimes that can be committed, and many individuals don't see anything that can be gained by causing random media and other walks of life to come knocking on a victims door for whatever reason.

"It takes alot of strength to work through something as serious as rape, for both parties. People that are involved have a right to be protected from further harm or damages that may be brought on by individuals looking for a scoop, or a paycheck." Said Ubanks. "In almost all cases, they just want to be left alone. People should respect that request."

Monday, March 2, 2009

Brain Bowl coverage

It was a long day at Valencia Community College for 24 teams from more than 6 states, ranging from VCC’s hometown Red and Black teams all the way up to J. Sergeant Reynolds, Hailing from Richmond Virginia. For some teams, it was a longer process than others.
Valencia fielded two teams for this competition, the Red Team, or their first team, and the Black Team, their secondary team. The Red Team, led by captain Nolan Bensen, had a great day with a final competition record of 10-2, enough to put them in a three-way tie with Chipola College’s A team, considered one of the toughest challengers at the tournament, and the South East Alabama team.
These three teams competed in a playoff scenario, with JSR’s two man team getting a first round bye for their outstanding play. What makes this team so unique, is that it only fields two competitors rather than the traditional four, which is completely legal. in fact, this is the first time JSR’s leading Brain Bowler George Berry has even had another player.
“It puts us at somewhat of a disadvantage, but I try my hardest and put in a lot of study time,” said Berry. His assistant, as he called himself, Gautham Premkumar, competed at Berry’s side, but had to admit he was only a side show. “I am firm saying this, that he (Berry) is the main man. I am just the help.” Just the help or not, the tandem, in a great effort and was able to sit back and rest while the three teams in second duked it out for a chance to face him. What made this rest sweetest, possibly, was the win by JSR less than an hour before the finals where he beat a then-undefeated Chipola team, knocking them into second place and securing his much needed mental health time.
In the first round of the playoffs, the Chipola team faced off against a tough team from the South East Alabama Community College, and from the onset it wasn’t much of a competition. Dominating practically the entire round, Chipola posted a victory with a final score of 155-50, and moving on to try and tackle Valencia’s Red Team.
Valencia started off srong, with Chris Muto nailing three questions in a row, and with Patrice Newkirk grabbing a couple of toss-ups, but the inability of VCC to convert coveted bonus questions left the door open for Chipola. It was a tightly contested match, but Chipola proved too much for Valencia, and defeated the Red Team with a final score of 155-135
Securing third place, the Valencia team was proud of their performance, and optimistic about upcoming tournaments as well.
“We expected to be around the top six or seven, but three is great!” Remarked Mercedes Gosnell in a post-tournament interview.
Valencia was happy with their placement, but the final between JSR’s two man squad, and the highly favored Chipola A team was underway. To say this wasn’t even a real contest would be accurate, as JSR rolled over Chipola for the second time in three matches to secure a first place finish, the best finish in Berry and Premkumar’s Brain Bowl carrers.
After the game had finished, Berry and Premkumar were basking in reflective glory of their triumph. “It means a lot, to come out and be able to beat Chipola. We were aiming for the top seed, but who doesn’t? And then we got it. I couldn’t be happier,” said Berry.
A great victory capped a tiring two days for all of the teams, and when asked about their upcoming plans, more than one team said “food.” “We’re going to Ruby Tuesday immediately,” said Muto.
After that, almost all of these teams will ready themselves for an upcoming tournament in Dallas, Texas, where the national tournament will take place.

NAQT President Hentzel

Many people know about the Brain Bowls, like the one held on Valencia’s West Campus this week, some people even call them Quiz Bowls. Although they identify with many different names, there’s always one company behind the questions; the NAQT.
NAQT stands for National Academic Quiz Tournament, and they have been expanding the minds of collegiate and high school students via their Quiz Bowls since 1996. A big part of the emergence of the NAQT is their president, R. Robert Hentzel, and he was availible at the Valencia championships in Orlando this week to see the competitions and lead the administrative side of the operations.
The Voice had a chance to speak with Hentzel during breaks in the action about how he runs the ship at NAQT, and why Valencia was chosen as the location for the tourney this year.
“Valencia has had the premier community college team now for the better part of the decade,” said Hentzel. “Orlando is clearly a place that people want to visit around this time of year due to the climate, and Chris Borglum (Valencia’s Brain Bowl team captain) really knows how to run a program and commit staff and volunteers to the competitions. He has been invaluable.”
This tournament represented 24 teams, those that made it through the sectionals tournament which narrowed the field down from 50 teams. “We were only looking at 14 teams originally, but Chris (Borglum) knew he had the manpower to have a few more invitees,” remarked Hentzel.
“We have a lot of teams here, from as close as in town, obviously, to as far away as Allen County, Kansas. It is great to be able to get all of the students together to further education in a competitive manner.” When asked about who can field the best teams, Hentzel was split for a few reasons.
“Ivy league schools can field good teams, but realistically, good teams can be found anywhere, either in two or four year colleges. You would be surprised how well some teams perform, especially when pitted against a tougher team. It isn’t always knowledge that makes a winner, speed and balance is a huge part of perservering as well.”
Hentzel has been growing the program for many years, seeking to add not just teams, but states full of teams to the bill, trying to expand the competitions as much as possible. Even though many states are represented, NAQT has only begun what they have set out to accomplish, and that is for every school, large or small, to have a quiz team to compete with. “We definitely want to get more, really as many people and schools as possible involved; from the smaller ones all the way up to the Harvards and Yales. Diversity plays an interesting role in the competitions as well.”
Hentzel thinks that continued exposure is a great way to get other schools interested in fielding a team, whether they have one, two, or 40 people availible to compete. Seeing tournaments and attending them, and word of mouth has helped the NAQT grow to what it is now, and there’s much more room to expand. The big part of the quizzes of course, are the questions themselves, which are formulated in-house and follow a basic format. Think of it as like when you play the NTN quiz games at the bar, where you get hints and the clock ticks down; same concept. “Questions start out with subtle, difficult hints then get easier as the question is read, hence speed and recognition are key to success in the tournaments. The questions then finish with a much easier hint that puts the question in a much easier state to understand, giving contestants a last chance to get some valuable points, and then get to the bonuses.”
Hentzel works hard to make sure everything runs smoothly, and at trying to develop the NAQT until it is a household name, and widely recognized program. “If we can just keep getting a few more teams a year, we can really bring the Brain Bowl to as many audiences as will grant it.” It is a cheap way to get your school’s name out there, and another way to contribute to the competition that makes college great. The way it seems to be growing everyday, under the caring and stoic arms of president Hentzel, it won’t be long before his dream eventually reaches reality. Until then, you can keep cheering on your local Brain Bowlers here at Valencia.

Braves spring training look

The Atlanta Braves have once again returned to Disney’s Wide World of Sports for their spring training games in 2009.
Entering the 12th season in Central Florida, the Atlanta Braves will hope to answer some questions about their upcoming season through rigorous training and exhibition games played at the sprawling Disney complex. In Champion Stadium, the Braves compete in front of about 9,500 fans, not including the luxury boxes, or the special lawn seating in left field, which allows ongoers to unfurl the blanket and enjoy the game like it was happening at the park; just remember your sunscreen because there’s no roof out there.
Inside the locker room and on the field, however, the Bravos have a lot of kinks to work out aside from taking in some sunny weather. The Braves managed to bolster their rotation this year, signing ace pitcher Derek Lowe away from the Dodgers, and again pulling Javier Vazquez away from the Chicago White Sox. These two will join up with Kenshin Kawakami, a new comer to the league, fresh from Japan at 33 years old. The Braves hope Kawakami can add another experienced arm to the rotation while providing new material no one in the league has seen before. Add that to second-year ace Jair Jurrjens, and older than dirt Tom Glavine, and the Braves have a seemingly deep rotation, not to mention Tim Hudson’s possible return at sometime in the season after having successful Tommy-John elbow surgery early last year.
When it comes to hitting, Atlanta is going to have to try a bit harder. Leading the league in mediocrity last year with the bat, aside from Chipper Jones, of course, the Braves had a league low 27 homers from their entire outfield last season, including the platoon-based approach they took in left field after Matt Diaz, who has showed good progress, went down with a freak knee injury. While Jeff Francoeur cannot possibly be as terrible as he was last year, (.239 batting average) he has tweaked his stance and posture while spending plenty of time in Triple-A last season, a great disspointment after and outstanding outing the year before, and a successful World Baseball Classic appearance; the Braves will be hoping for Francoeur to bounce back strong.
While all of these factors look promising, the Braves are trying to enhance their team even more, not wishing to drop another 90 games in the loss column this year again, fielding a far cry from the teams that posted a league record 14 straight division titles through the 1990’s.
Another variable to toss around, this will be Bobby Cox’s 23rd season with Atlanta, and he will celebrate his 68th birthday during the season, and has already hinted at the fact that this may be his last season coaching. The 8-time Manager of the Year has been one of the reasons the Braves made that incredible run at the playoffs so many years in a row.
Whatever the result of this season, the Braves are in Central Florida until the beginning of April, and with ticket prices averaging in the $20.00 range, there’s no reason not to go enjoy a hot dog and beer while taking in a baseball game, something you would normally have to drive to Tampa to do, and see the Rays play; but can baseball ever really be played in a dome? There’s almost nothing better than a beautiful day and America’s greatest past-time.