Category Archives: Miscellaneous

Sport Man Toe Episode 1!

It’s the first ever episode of the sports comedy podcast Sport Man Toe, featuring Shane and Spike, and today we’re talking about mayoral sports bets, celebrity divorces, how Tiger treats a rivalry, stabby rascals, coaching mediocrity, lacrosse stereotypes, fat soccer players, Shane Battier’s post-NBA karaoke career, and frivolous lawsuits against Gregg Popovich. It’s a rollicking maiden voyage, so check us out.

 

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Walk-Ons: Duke Loses, Michigan Loses, Hope is Dead

Today we’re talking about Duke’s loss to those earthy cads at N.C. State, Michigan putting up an offensive stinker at Ohio State, and Indiana unleashing 20 minutes of beautiful basketball to beat Minnesota. All that, plus we talk about the best commercials on tv, tackle some reader emails, and explore the question of how far you would go to get good seats at a sporting event. Would you entertain a stalker? Would you put on an orange vest and pretend to take photos? Then we tucker ourselves out debating when it’s okay to charge the court. Does there have to be a game being played? Can it be a court of law? Matt and I then reveal our man crushes on Izzo, and we talk about whether Coach K can get vindictive after games. Last, we bolster Ben’s self-esteem by pointing out that many listeners don’t even know his name. All in all, there’s a good amount of dysfunction here, but that’s how we roll.

 

Got a story you’d like to share or thoughts on Matt’s love life? E-mail us at [email protected]

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Basketball’s Top Title Contenders As if They Were Indie Bands

The Walk-Ons podcast is basically three guys talking about basketball via comparisons to The Bachelor, lazy reductions to crude personal biases, and stories about midgets. Interestingly, all of that varied discussion is book-ended by an indie song.

Given that combination, and my own love of both basketball and the sort of indie music that makes me appealing to girls with black rimmed glasses and/or tattoos, I figured Tobacco Road Blues was the perfect place to run down the top NCAA title contenders by comparing each team to an indie band (in no particular order).

So turn down the volume on that one publicly funded indie music station in your area (WNCW!), give this a read and let me know how my crap musical taste and uninformed basketball analysis make me a Chuck Klosterman wannabe (that’s what the internet is for, after all).

Kentucky = Polica – You might think the Minneapolis-based Polica would equate to hometown University of Minnesota. However, this group of musicians assembled from previously successful local and national bands has a perfect UK freshmen recruiting class feel. Polica’s signature sound is incorporating two drummers, which is the basketball version of stacking up on big post players the way Kentucky does. One of those drummers is Mike Noyce from the nationally hailed band Bon Iver. The lead singer is Channy Leaneagh, a songstress from a local Minneapolis band that broke up. Her local legend and Noyce’s folk hero status make Polica one of the bands to watch going forward. But they’ve only put out one CD, so it’s hard to know if all the disparate pieces will continue to mesh together. If they do, as with Kentucky, they’ll put the rest of the country on notice.

UCLA = Joe Purdy – He may not be as nationally known as UCLA and their star studded roster, but Joe Purdy is one of the most prolific singer/songwriters in the country. Purdy has put out 12 albums in 8 years. And though he gives off the air of a downtrodden troubadour, his songs have been featured on commercials and in television shows. In fact, Grey’s Anatomy used not one, but three of his songs. UCLA, like Purdy, is a team that has promise, is prolific and might pop up on the national stage even if right now they exist outside the musical mainstream.

Missouri = Destroyer – If you listen to The Walk-Ons podcast, then you know that Frank Haith blows. The question is, what does Frank Haith blow? Well the answer might be a saxophone, which is why Destroyer is the indie music equivalent of Missouri. Also, with a band name like Destroyer you’re disappointed when you listen to them and realize it’s dulcet electronic pop. It’s the same kind of disappointment when you see Missouri run up and down the court all game only to pour water on all that excitement by choking down the stretch.

Gonzaga = Okkervil River – Even for indie music fans, Okkervil River is one of the deep tracks. A band from Austin playing old school folk is never going to make it with the masses. Their old-timey music and appreciation by only the most hipster of hipsters makes them the Gonzaga of music. They might be lauded in particularly crunchy coffee houses, but, as with Gonzaga, they’re not a threat nationally.

Minnesota = Old Crow Medicine Show – As with the Gophers, people have been waiting for OCMS to break through nationally for years. In fact, I saw OCMS open for Robert Earl Keen back in the early 2000s. Back then the band members were kids who couldn’t legally drink at the bar, but there was certainly a great deal of musical promise and about a decade later they are delivering. Likewise, Tubby Smith arrived in Minnesota in 2007 and is only now sticking his head above the Mendoza line of mediocrity.

Ohio State = The Black Keys – The Buckeyes are little atypical given that they basically a bunch of small and power forwards. What Ohio State does well, though, is play gritty and hard-nosed basketball. It’s a brand of basketball that fits the narrative of a blue collar rust belt state like Ohio. The Black Keys hail from Akron, Ohio and their style of blues and indie rock is the kind of distorted guitar soundtrack Thad Matta’s squad personifies. Furthermore, The Black Keys were at their best in the older and rawer, less produced albums. Like The Black Keys, the Buckeyes are at their best when the game avoids style and flash in favor of getting a little ugly.

Florida = Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers – Okay, so Tom Petty isn’t an indie band exactly. Still, Tom Petty is the best fit for Florida (and not just because he’s from Gainesville). Most people enjoy the musical catalogue of Tom Petty, but most people would recoil at the idea of Tom Petty as one of the best classic rock acts ever. That’s pretty much Florida in a nutshell. The Gators are good, but you’d hesitate to put forth a full throated case for their title chances. Both are good and maybe under-appreciated, but their case for greatness is somewhat flimsy despite all their merits.

Syracuse = Yeasayer – People will tell you about Yeasayer. They’ll insist that they’re good and if you say, “yeah, they’re alright I guess” you’re seen to be a “hater” or otherwise musically unrefined. Yeasayer are from Brooklyn and toured with MGMT and Beck so, like Jim Boeheim and Syracuse, they’ve got all the required pedigree and bona fides. Still, there’s something less than impressive about both Syracuse and Yeasayer. There’s nothing wrong with either, per se, but you’d be hard pressed to argue that Syracuse or Yeasayer are the best of their respective bunches.

Arizona = Lana Del Ray – In order to get in on the burgeoning mass popularity of indie music a record company found a girl, gave her puffy Angelina Jolie lips, fashionably unfashionable clothes and had her sing a sultry song. Some people really liked her songs, other’s thought she was completely inauthentic. Then everyone bailed out on her when they realized she couldn’t sing live because she wasn’t all that talented. The career arc of Lana Del Ray foreshadows Arizona’s season perfectly. Right now they look hot and ready to set the world on fire, but the Wildcats are a team built on a foundation of lies. They simply aren’t that good. They trailed Clemson for much of that game and should have lost to Colorado were it not for a blown call. That was Arizona’s Lana Del Ray singing on SNL moment. In the end, Arizona will be shown to be a phony just like Lana Del Ray.

Kansas = Gotye – The first time I heard that song I thought, ‘Hey, that’s not a bad song; pretty catchy actually” (note that my thought process uses semi-colons). Three months later I wanted to stab that guy in his body painted face because the radio, from indie stations to the pop ones, wouldn’t stop playing it. That’s going to be Kansas. They’re not bad at first glance, but they’re bound to get overhyped as they walk over the weak competition of the Big 12. In the end, you’ll be as relieved when Kansas gets knocked out of the tournament as you were when they stopped playing “Somebody I Used to Know”.

Indiana = Fun. – The band Fun. is basically Gotye with more staying power. It’s indie pop with mass appeal. Fun. got their song, “We Are Young” all over the airwaves and television to the point that the Glee version of it was way up on the iTune charts. In the end, though, there’s the underlying feeling that both Fun. and Indiana are products of a popularity contest rather than valuable commodities based on their substantive worth. Indiana is favored by the masses, but you can question if they’re in it for the long haul just as you can question whether or not anyone will remember Fun. two years from now.

Louisville = Band of Horses – There are a lot of good things to say about Louisville just like there are a lot of positive things to say about Band of Horses. Both are popular picks and in both cases you can see why. But if you care to poke holes in the team or the band, which neither of their blindly loyal and rabid fan bases care to do, there are some cracks in the façade. Band of Horse has one really, really good song (“The Funeral”), but after that there is a bit of a fall off in terms of the quality of their musical repertoire. Similarly, Louisville has Peyton Silva, who can be counted on for quality, but Russ Smith is kind of all over the place. As with every Band of Horses song not called “The Funeral”, Russ Smith is very hit or miss.

Michigan = Jack White – If there is a universally appreciated figure in indie rock, it’s probably Jack White. No one doubts his musical talent or the fact that he can expertly play a variety of different kinds of music. Michigan might be just as elite in basketball as Jack White is in indie music. Michigan can handle different styles of play and has extremely sound fundamentals. You can take the analogy further when you think that Jack White is a solo artist now, but was formerly part of The White Stripes, a two person band that included his sister Meg White. In that scenario, Trey Burke is Jack and Tim Hardaway Jr is Meg, which I find hysterically funny on a number of levels. All told, Michigan are going to be a staple in the basketball season the same way that Jack White and his White Stripes background are a constant influence on indie music.

Duke = The Avett Brothers – Whether you call it alt-country or indie-folk or neo-hippie, the Avett Brothers are the gold standard. The band with North Carolina roots represents Duke nicely because both are extremely successful and both elicit a quick response from people who either love or hate them. The thing with the Avett Brothers is that they’re playing music that is a throwback to the folk and bluegrass of yesteryear. Naysayers argue that they’re just trying to mimic music from the past but doing so with less talent than their predecessors, which almost exactly what Duke is doing. Talent-wise, the Blue Devils don’t measure up with past incarnations of the team. Still, running the same system as those previous Duke rosters and doing so as a group of guys with great team chemistry has what might be a less talented Duke team set up to achieve the same heights. Both Duke and the Avett Brothers are throwbacks, but both are finding success with their outdated ideology in an ever-changing musical and basketball landscape.

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Walk-Ons: Wild Hoops Wednesday, REAL TALK (Emotional)

Today the los tres locos are talking about a crazy Wednesday in college basketball, where Kansas survived another scare, Minnesota beat up on Illinois, and New Mexico won a big MWC clash (Shane had to force them to even mention this). Then the convo turns to Ryan Kelly’s foot scare, and which of the three remaining undefeated teams might lose this week; Michigan at OSU, Duke at N.C. State, or Arizona at Oregon State. Then the talk gets emotional, philosophical, psychological, and soulful. For real. Plus more relationship stories. This episode features listener voicemails and in-depth analysis of Duke’s Jabari Parker signing.

 

Got a story you’d like to share or thoughts on Matt’s love life? E-mail us at [email protected]

Follow us on twitter at @WalkOnsPodcast

Or leave a voicemail at our Google Voice #, and we will put you on the show: 818-Walk-On1 (that’s 818-925-5661)

Be a pal and subscribe to the podcast in iTunes. Just click “view in iTunes” once you reach that link, and then ‘subscribe for free.’ Voila. If you’re feeling really generous, you could also rate the podcast and write a positive review.

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The Walk-Ons: Cakes, Brackets, and Bachelor References

We’re walking a little bit on the wild side this Tuesday afternoon, with talk about arsenic-laced birthday cake, twitter fiascos, everything the media won’t tell you about Miss Alabama, and even a little bit of basketball. Matt won’t stop referencing “The Bachelor,” his favorite show, while Ben thinks UNC is a fraud and Shane got his twitter name on an ESPN broadcast under false pretenses. Are Duke and Michigan elite teams in comparison to the rest of college basketall? Was this past week in basketball exciting or dull? Can UCLA win the Pac-12? Are Kentucky and Florida the two most underrated teams at the moment? What will the three-man brain trust say about the surprising ascent of Kansas State? All this and more, including the exciting race between Matt and Jay Bilas for basketball commissioner.

 

Got a story you’d like to share or thoughts on Matt’s love life? E-mail us at [email protected]

Follow us on twitter at @WalkOnsPodcast

Or leave a voicemail at our Google Voice #, and we will put you on the show: 818-Walk-On1 (that’s 818-925-5661)

Be a pal and subscribe to the podcast in iTunes. Just click “view in iTunes” once you reach that link, and then ‘subscribe for free.’ Voila. If you’re feeling really generous, you could also rate the podcast and write a positive review.

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If you need to download the file directly, this’ll do it. Enjoy!

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Is Rasheed Sulaimon too much, too little or just enough of a Duke-type player?

It has become almost conventional wisdom within the Duke community that Rasheed Sulaimon is a “better fit” for Duke than Austin Rivers. Obviously there is some disappointment from last year’s team that started off well, beat UNC in one of the greatest games of all time and then become one of only six teams to lose to a 15th seed in the NCAA tournament. A lot of the team’s shortcomings were blamed on Rivers. He seemed like a natural target since he was very highly recruited, the son of an NBA player and overall carried himself as a jerk. There was somewhat of a “over promise / under deliver” aspect that left a bitter taste with Rivers.

Before we get to Sulaimon, lets first look at this year’s Duke team. Nobody will argue this team is playing much better than last year, but if you needed any proof the top 5 returning players (Plumlee, Curry, Kelly, Cook and Thornton) all have better FG%s than last year. Mason Plumlee in particular has gone from a *curse word to possibly the best player in the country. Because of the entire team’s improvement this team has gone undefeated through the nation’s toughest schedule.

*I would often yell Plumlee after a turnover, missed free throw or stupid defensive gamble.I can only assume my wife thought Plumlee was some type of curse word. Really I just thought Mason was Josh McRoberts 2.0 and would never live up to the hype.

So the team is playing much better and has had an amazing start to the season. With that start people have looked for a reason why. Is it because Mason Plumlee worked on his free throw shooting? Is it because Quinn Cook has made huge leap? Is it because Ryan Kelly improved as a defender? All of those are factors, but a lot of people seem to be pointing soley to trading out Sulaimon for Rivers.

The thing is that I don’t disagree that the switch has helped the team. I tolerated Rivers, but love watching Sulaimon play. Give me even 2.5 more years of watching him play and he might reach Nolan Smith/Jon Scheyer/Shane Battier level for me. However, I find it confusing that people automatically point to Sulaimon being a better fit or more of a Duke type player. What about this? Sulaimon is just a better player than Rivers.

Let’s compare.

Sulaimon was the 12th ranked recruit compared to Rivers being 3rd, so while everyone assume Rivers was going to be a NBA level talent, it isn’t like people thought poorly of Sulaimon. And then when you look at actual play you see that Sulaimon has a better FG% (44% to 43%), better FT% (84% to 66%) and better 3PT% (40% to 36%). He also has more rebounds and assists per per game, while averaging almost a turnover less. And if stats aren’t your thing then just watch both of them play and see who you think is a better defender. So yes he is a better fit and this team does have much better chemistry. However, I think it is also clear that Sulaimon is just a much better player than Rivers. That combined with the improvement from everyone else has made this team a legitimate threat to win the national title. Now can we get back to wondering if Jabari Parker is enough of a Duke-type player?

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Tester

2012: Virginia (Rd. of 64)
2011: FSU (Sweet 16), Alabama (NIT title game)
2010: FSU (Rd. of 64), USC (no postseason)
2009: Washington State (First Round NIT), Stephen F. Austin (Rd. of 64)
2008: None
2007: Illinois (Rd. of 64), UConn (no postseason)
2006: Iowa (Rd. of 64), Washington State (no postseason), Southern Illinois (Rd. of 64)
2005: Washington State (no postseason), Iowa State (Rd. of 32), Minnesota (Rd. of 64)
2004: None
2003: Oklahoma State (Rd. of 32)

16 teams, 1 Sweet 16, 2 round of 32, 7 first round, 4 no postseason, 1 1st round NIT, one NIT title game

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The Walk-Ons: 2013, Baby!

It’s 2013, and all the haters who said we couldn’t make it this far are either eating crow, or dead by the hand Mayans. The reunion of the Walk-Ons is finally here, and we’re talking about all the college hoops that happened while we were gone. Kentucky-Louisville? Yep. Minnesota-Michigan State? YES. Cincinnati, Indiana, Cuse, Pitt, Zags, Illini, and a resurgent UCLA??? YOU BETCHA, AMIGO. Good times abound as we cover a lot of personal and professional ground in this hour. Bless your heart for listening, and happy 2013.

 

Got a story you’d like to share or thoughts on Matt’s love life? E-mail us at [email protected]

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Belk Bowl: Anatomy of a Heartbreak

I have documented my complex love-hate-love feelings for Duke in the past, so I’ll forego all that, except for the practical upshot: I really wanted Duke to win the Belk Bowl. As a UNC fan, I know that those Charlotte bowls are fool’s gold. UNC has gone bowling in the Queen City thrice in my lifetime, and I have zero positive memories from any of those outings. Sure, Ric Flair was there once, but in 2004 Boston College’s punter trucked a UNC linebacker for a touchdown on a fake field goal, and UNC lost in Charlotte twice in a row by a combined 3 points during the pitiful doldrums of their Davis-Era mediocrity. So my desire to see a deep blue victory was a combination of my own weird Duke emotions and of my need to see the finest state in the country finally defend itself successfully from an outside threat.[1]

I have just seen Les Misérables, so it’s clouding (or more probably, enhancing) my understanding of the world, and I have come to this conclusion: this year’s Duke team was the Éponine of the ACC. You want what’s best for her in spite of yourself, and she’s way more interesting than Cosette (Florida State? I don’t know. The metaphor kind of falls apart here) but you know how it’s going to end, which is tragic.[2]

In the same way that Éponine is interesting both because of her circumstances and the decisions she makes within the life-parameters that fate has saddled her with, Duke rolled into Charlotte as either a pretty fascinating case study in ACC ascension, or the least-likely flash (such as it is) in the Coastal pan. Either way, much more compelling than Cincinnati’s Cosette: senselessly virtuous and generically pretty in her redundant we-made-it-to-a-bowl-game-chrome helmets. But alas, Duke was to be shot in the chest, and Cincinnati had their victory rescued for them from out of a river of their own crap.

[The only remotely interesting thing about the Bearcats was the name of their backup quarterback, Munchie Legeaux (plus the announcers’ baffling pronunciation of that name, which is French, and seems like it should be phonetically closer to “Let’s go,” than to “leggo my eggo,” right? Although I do love the idea of the Legeaux family as a clan of interlocking Danish blocks)].[3]

But anyway, a few hours, a healthy smattering of various injuries and two goal-line fumbles later, at the end of the game Duke was just another game older, which is all you can say for the life of the poor.

This website’s own benevolent curator has voiced his opinions on the possible fluky-ness of Duke’s “success” under Cutcliffe, and it will remain to be seen if this season was an anomaly or a step forward, but (for whatever reason) I am oddly optimistic. Under Cutcliffe, Duke has had seasons where they won the two-or-so games they should have, and seasons where they pulled of zany upsets (Thaddeus Lewis shredding That One Red Team in 2009 is still one of my absolute favorite things that has ever happened in the ACC) but when was the last time they did both in the same year?            Next year, Duke can replace Florida State and Clemson (really the ACC’s only reliably semi-elite teams) on their schedule with, say, Boston College and NIU-Hillsborough Street, and their non-conference schedule is comprised of Memphis, Navy, and N.C. Central. Wake Forest and Virginia are also on the schedule, plus Georgia Tech (possibly after Navy, and that triple-option is way less pesky when you’re seeing it for the second time in a season). It’s not super delusional to see five or six winnable games in there.[4]

The instant it seemed possible, Duke’s season became about reaching the bowl game, but never winning it. The team used up everything in achieving that sixth win, and then fell to the season’s final onslaught, behind a bunker made of furniture. The Duke team’s presence alone in Charlotte was a validation of those lofty (by uniquely Durham standards) expectations, and they just didn’t have the stuff to exceed them.

Next year, the Blue Devils won’t have the luxury of lowered expectations, but if they can eke out six wins and go bowling two seasons in a row, then the narrative that the announcers touched on Thursday is going to be the one I choose to believe: that Cutcliffe has been re-invigorated by Peyton Manning[5], and Duke football has become some new kind of Duke football, and is no longer singing, sadly and alone, out in the cold, French rain.

 


[1]I know State’s won there twice, but this isn’t the part of the Internet where we care about State.

[2] Incidentally, one of my friends went to a production in Atlanta where Eponine was cut from the play entirely. Isn’t that the most Meta thing you’ve ever heard?

 [3]  An aside: here are a couple of Duke player nicknames I came up with. Need for Snead: Underground, New England Clam Crowder. Also, Connete-Four, but the credit goes to my brother.

 [4] Hope, it should be pointed out, is cruel, probably.

 [5] The uncertain coach has his love of the game re-kindled when one of the greatest players of all time trusts him with a vital part of that player’s journey back from an injury that should have been career-ending. The uncertain coach, with new fire, wrings every drop of the stuff that wins football games out of his players, etc. etc. That’s a beautiful story no matter which shade of blue you prefer.

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Walk-Ons: Big East Imminent Collapse Blues

Today we’re talking about the perils of the Big East, looking forward to the weekend, and exposing my total ignorance of important rock music. Also, what’s the deal with other people named Matt Jones, Ben Swain, and Shane Ryan? Why are they on the Internet? Get those fools outta here.

 

Got a story you’d like to share or thoughts on Matt’s love life? E-mail us at [email protected]

Follow us on twitter at @WalkOnsPodcast

Or leave a voicemail at our Google Voice #, and we may even put you on the show: 818-Walk-On1 (that’s 818-925-5661)

Be a pal and subscribe to the podcast in iTunes. Just click “view in iTunes” once you reach that link, and then ‘subscribe for free.’ Voila. If you’re feeling really generous, you could also rate the podcast and write a positive review.

You can also access our podcast RSS feed.

If you need to download the file directly, this’ll do it. Enjoy!

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