• USC Football

    USC Trojan Football Watch: Hugh Hewitt Has it WRONG!

    Hugh Hewitt and his Democrat Party UGLY friend have told us about tomorrow’s Rose Bowl.

    They both have it WRONG.

    Hey Hugh – How about a friendly wager – BUDDY?

    For both of you, Flap has FIGHT ON!

    Fight On for ol’ SC
    Our men Fight On to victory.
    Our Alma Mater dear,
    looks up to you
    Fight On and win
    For ol’ SC
    Fight On to victory
    Fight On!

    So, when USC gives Texas the beating they deserve…….and the band begins to PLAY…….

    CONQUEST

    You will know what it means to be a USC TROJAN

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  • NCAA College Football,  USC Football

    USC Trojan Football Watch: Bowl Scenarios

    Southern California quarterback Matt Leinart gets set to throw during the first half against Stanford.

    Bio from Troy has USC Trojan Football bowl scenarios:

    Well, now that two of the BCS bids are locked up, here is a look at the best and worst case scenarios for USC come January (in my opinion, of course)…

    Most Likely Scenario:
    Texas and USC win out, play in Pasadena

    Worst Case Scenario: USC loses to UCLA and has a rematch with Notre Dame in the Fiesta Bowl.

    The Payba:ck Scenario: USC plays LSU in Rose Bowl If Texas loses to get revenge for 2003 BCS snub.

    The Best-Case Scenario: Texas and LSU lose, setting up a traditional Rose Bowl between USC and Penn State.

    Flap wants USC vs. Texas.

    But, we will have to wait a few weeks, won’t we………..

  • USC Football

    College Football: It’s Game Day!

    It’s game day and the start of college football season.

    Flap attended USC and guess who he supports?

    Reggie Bush, a Heisman finalist in 2004, could win it this year.

    But, he will have to beat returning Heisman winner, Matt Leinart.

    Heisman Trophy winner Matt Leinart passed for 33 touchdowns with only six interceptions last year.

    Today’s Game:

    The two-time defending national champion USC football team begins its quest for an unprecedented “three-Pete” when it travels to Hawaii for the 2005 season opener. The Trojans have never lost in 5 games against the Warriors; in fact, victories over Hawaii have been part of 2 of USC’s national championship seasons (1978, although that win wasn’t easy, and 2003). Troy is riding a 22-game overall winning streak and a 9-game road win string, and has also won its past 7 season openers. USC also has never lost a season opener following its previous 10 national title campaigns. The Trojans, No. 1 in the AP poll since the final 2003 ranking, have rarely lost when top-ranked. It’s the first time Hawaii has faced the nation’s No. 1-ranked team. USC has fared well against current Western Athletic Conference foes, winning 25 of 26 meetings. Head coach Pete Carroll’s Trojans are loaded with talented, marquee players on offense, including 2004 Heisman Trophy-winning QB Matt Leinart, the dangerous TB duo of Reggie Bush (a 2004 Heisman finalist) and LenDale White, perhaps the nation’s top receiving corps in WRs Dwayne Jarrett and Steve Smith and TE Dominique Byrd, and a veteran offensive line whose fivesome are all in line for post-season honors. The question is how will the defense, which led the nation in rushing defense and turnover margin last fall, fare after losing 4 All-Americans. Key Trojan defenders include S Darnell Bing, LB Dallas Sartz and DEs Lawrence Jackson and Frostee Rucker. All-American P Tom Malone returns, but there’s a new placekicker. Hawaii, coming off an 8-5 season and a win in the Hawaii Bowl, features the wide-open offensive attack of seventh-year head coach June Jones (whose Warrior coaching debut came against USC in 1999) and a new defense coordinated by former NFL head coach Jerry Glanville. It’s the start of the post-Timmy Chang era at Hawaii, as a new quarterback must fill in for the NCAA record-setter. UH, which lost 13 starters from 2004, sports a duo–OL Samson Satele and DE Melila Purcell–who earned various All-WAC honors last season. The game, which could sell out in 50,000-seat Aloha Stadium, will be shown live on ESPN2 (USC’s first appearance on that air).

    The Complete USC Press Release is here.

    The Los Angeles Times has First Payment Will Be on the Lei-Away Plan.

    See you at 4:05 PM PDT on ESPN2

  • Sports

    Softball and Baseball Eliminated for 2012 London Olympic Games

    Former University of Arizona Star, Jenny Finch

    The International Olympic Committee delivered a shocking message to baseball and softball on Friday: Yer out!

    The two sports were kicked out of the Olympics, unwanted by international sports officials who felt they were too American for the world sports stage.

    The decision, made during a secret vote in Singapore, is effective for the 2012 London Games, meaning the two sports will have a final fling at the 2008 Beijing Olympics. The sports, the first eliminated since polo in 1936, are eligible to reapply for the 2016 Games.

    U.S. women won all three gold medals since softball joined the Olympics, at the 1996 Atlanta, 2000 Sydney and 2004 Athens Games. American pitcher Lisa Fernandez, a three-time gold medalist, blamed the decision on IOC president Jacques Rogge.

    “Rogge has basically conspired against the sports to get them removed. We had done our job as a sport world wide to show we belong,” she said. “I feel one person, the president of the IOC, a person from Europe, has taken it upon himself to ruin the lives of millions, actually billions of women.”

    Crystl Bustos, who hit a record five homers during the 2004 Olympics, said the one-sidedness of the softball tournament should not have been used as a factor. The Americans outscored opponents 51-1.

    Flap is certain that beating up their opponents by such a lopsided margin did not help matters.

    Baseball was a demonstration sport at the 1984 Los Angeles Games and 1988 Seoul Games and became a medal sport in 1992 at Barcelona, where Cuba won the gold. The Cubans beat Japan in the 1996 final at Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium, where the 32 games had an average attendance of 28,749.

    While professionals were first allowed to participate in 2000, major league baseball didn’t allow players on 40-man major league rosters to go. The U.S. team won the gold, led by former Dodgers manager Tommy Lasorda and current Milwaukee pitcher Ben Sheets, but the Americans didn’t even qualify for the Athens Games, eliminated with a 2-1 loss to Mexico in a qualifier.

    “I think they’ve made a big, big mistake,” Lasorda said. “Baseball is played by all countries now, and softball, too. I think that’s really going to hurt the Olympics.”

    Cuba won in Athens for its third gold medal in four tries.

    “That’s like the World Series for people here,” Chicago White Sox pitcher Jose Contreras, who played for Cuba in the 2000 Olympics, said through a translator. “Not having the Olympics will be a big hit in Cuba and for the fans in Cuba.”

    But for U.S. baseball players, the Olympics were less important.

    “There isn’t any player growing up thinking they want to play in the Olympics,” said Sheets, who won a gold medal in 2000. “That was one of my greatest moments, but it has nothing to do with the big leagues.”

    And the lack of American Professional baseball players participating hurt the sport as well.

    Each of the 28 existing sports was put to a secret vote by the IOC, and baseball and softball were the only two that failed to receive a majority. The IOC then rejected adding squash and karate, which failed to get the necessary two-thirds approval.

    IOC officials were unhappy about the absence of major leaguers. The NBA has sent its best players since 1992 and the NHL stopped its season for 1998 and 2002 Winter Olympics.

    “The lack of the MLB players — I think people have looked and said, ‘Well, all right, if there’s to be a change, that seems to be the logic of it,”‘ British IOC member Craig Reedie said.

    Cuban Baseball Federation president Carlos Rodriguez took a similar view.

    “Those who bear most of the blame are the owners of the professional leagues who refuse to free up their ballplayers to compete,” he said.

    But, Major League Baseball really does not care and hence no baseball Olympics.

    Ventura County reaction to the IOC decision is in this piece, Local Olympians ‘blindsided’ by softball rejection

    American softball and baseball will survive without the Olympics.

    Rugby and Cricket enjoyed by much of the British Commonwealth are not Olympic sports either but have great World Cup and Regional Nations Cup competitions.

    So, could go Softball and Baseball, but, Flap doubts it.

    The American amateur/college and professional leagues are too strong and will not fully participate on the international stage.

  • Health,  Major League Baseball

    Baseball Catchers Face Irreversible Hand Trauma

    In a typical pro baseball game, a minor or major league catcher stops about 150 pitches, many slamming into his glove at speeds well over 90 mph. Add in pre-game practice throws, and the total number of catches climbs as high as 300 a day, experts say.

    Now, a new study finds that despite recent improvements in glove design, that kind of repetitive pounding is causing long-term, irreversible damage to many catchers’ hands — especially their index fingers.

    “We think that the repetitive impact over time causes scarring around the digital nerves and arteries, and some of the microvessels,” said study co-author Dr. Andrew Koman, a professor of orthopedic surgery at Wake Forest University School of Medicine.

    While these injuries may not be career-limiting, they will have an impact on hand function and sensation as the catcher ages, Koman said.

    Gloves currently used by professional catchers do not adequately protect the hand from repetitive trauma says a study published in The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery (American). 2005;87:1464-1469.

    Background: Repetitive trauma to the hand is a concern for baseball players. The present study investigated the effects of repetitive trauma and the prevalence of microvascular pathological changes in the hands of minor league professional baseball players. In contrast to previous investigators, we documented the presence of abnormalities in younger, asymptomatic individuals.

    Methods: Thirty-six baseball players on active minor league rosters underwent a history and physical examination of both hands as well as additional specialized tests, including Doppler ultrasound, a timed Allen test, determination of digital brachial pressure indices, and ring sizing of fingers. Data were compared between gloved hands and throwing hands, hitters and nonhitters, and players at four different positions (catcher [nine subjects], outfielder [seven subjects], infielder [five subjects], and pitcher [fifteen subjects]).

    Results: Digital brachial indices in the ring fingers of the gloved (p < 0.05) and throwing hands (p < 0.02) of catchers were significantly diminished compared with those in all other players. Doppler testing showed a significantly greater prevalence of abnormal flow in the ulnar artery at Guyon's canal when catchers were compared with other position players (p < 0.01). Doppler abnormalities were significantly more common in the gloved hand compared with the throwing hand (p < 0.05). Seven of nine catchers (and only catchers) were found to have index finger hypertrophy (average change, two ring sizes; p < 0.01); the hypertrophy occurred at the proximal phalanx and the proximal interphalangeal joint of the gloved hand. Catchers had a significantly higher prevalence of subjective hand symptoms (specifically, weakness in the gloved hand) compared with pitchers and infielders/outfielders (44% compared with 7% and 17%, respectively; p < 0.05). Conclusions: Microvascular changes are present in the hands of otherwise healthy professional baseball players in all positions, with a significantly higher prevalence in catchers, prior to the development of clinically important ischemia. Repetitive trauma resulting from the impact of the baseball also leads to digital hypertrophy in the index finger of the gloved hand of catchers.

    Flap’s son is a baseball catcher and although not a professional has caught a good number of innings (over multiple seasons), since the age of 8 (he is 19 now and plays American Legion ball). His gloved hand is often bruised and his index finger is usually exposed outside his glove.

    Technology needs to develop padding or glove material that is flexible enough to be used in a one handed catching environment.

    Hat Tip: Medgadget