USA beats Canada: Tribute to Kesler, Langenbrunner, Rafalski and more...
8:50 AM Mon, Feb 22, 2010 | PermalinkE-mail News tips
About This Blog
Tim Cowlishaw came to the DMN in 1989. He became a columnist in 1998. He is a regular on ESPN's "Around the Horn." On the Air
February 2010
Recent Posts
USA beats Canada: Tribute to Kesler, Langenbrunner, Rafalski and more... Olympic hockey: The Russians are coming... Road trip: Caron Butler meets the Durantula Chat replay: Tim Cowlishaw answered questions about the Mavericks, Cowboys and All-Star Game All-Stars: Here's to Spud Webb, Alonzo Mourning, Dirk and more Dallas Mavericks can trade Roddy Beaubois and others, too The Who, Springsteen and my final word on NFL halftime shows Recent Comments
Categories
dallasnews.com
Sports Blogs |
February 22, 2010
I remember being in Vail in the fall of 1996, watching Team USA beat Canada in the World Cup, watching with Stars scouts and coaches, many of whom were not cheering for the good ol' USA but their native land to the north. That was great hockey. Sunday night was even better. I don't know how to describe the depth of the skill of the Canadian team other than to say they have players like Joe Thornton, Dany Heatley, Patrick Marleau and the Stars' Brenden Morrow playing on their third and fourth lines. They seemed to come at USA goalie Ryan Miller in waves all night. Even though Sidney Crosby's redirection on the power play with 3:06 to play merely cut USA's lead to 4-3, I still thought we were looking at overtime. There was one incredible play to come when Canada won a faceoff in the offensive zone with 2:34 to go and the Americans were unable to clear the puck until 1:12 remained. In between, everyone on the ice for Canada had scoring chances.
Comments (5) Leave comment
| TrackBack (0)
| E-mail entry
The entry "USA beats Canada: Tribute to Kesler, Langenbrunner, Rafalski and more... " is tagged: Brian Rafalski , Jamie Langenbrunner , Loui Eriksson , Martin Brodeur , Rick Nash , Ryan Kesler February 18, 2010It should be a very instructive back-to-back for the Mavericks and their new players this weekend when they travel to Orlando Friday and then host the Miami Heat Saturday night. New center Brendan Haywood, getting plenty of minutes after Erick Dampier suffered a broken finger in Oklahoma City Tuesday, tangles with the Magic's Dwight Howard Friday. If Haywood gets into immediate foul trouble, who guards Superman? Dirk? Caron Butler, who was very solid defensively against Kevin Durant, causing the Thunder star another rough shooting night, gets a suddenly hot Vince Carter Friday and maybe All-Star Game MVP Dwyane Wade Saturday. I say maybe because Wade limped off the court Wednesday night in the first quarter with a straned calf and was wearing a walking boot after the game. So we'll see on that one. But these back-to-backs are a considerable strain on Coach Rick Carlisle's ability to fit new players into the Mavericks' schemes. And as we can see from the way the Thunder, Jazz, TrailBlazers and others have come out of the gate from the break, the rest of the West isn't waiting around for the Mavs to get ready.
Comments (16) Leave comment
| TrackBack (0)
| E-mail entry
The entry "Thinking Out Loud Thursday: Answers coming from new Mavericks, Antawn Jamison, Tiger Woods, Rick Barnes? " is tagged: Antawn Jamison , Caron Butler , Dwyane Wade , Lindsay Vonn , Rick Barnes , Shani Jones , Tiger Woods February 17, 2010Now that men's hockey is underway, I will make time to watch some Olympics. Even if that means watching USA in the afternoon instead of NBC, which favors figure skating and taped skiing, at night. It's also going to be nice to watch Olympic hockey played on NHL-sized rinks. Normally they play on the bigger sheet of ice which some wrongly assume has much to do about the superior Olympic product. Neither the bigger ice (which we won't see) nor the less physical play (which we will see) has a lot to do with why these games are good. It's much simpler than that. Take the best players from 30 NHL teams and stick them on six or seven rosters. You can call them Russia, Canada, Sweden, Czech Republic, USA and Finland or you can call them any other names you like. It's going to be a great product when the quality of the league is squeezed down to a handful of teams.
Comments (12) Leave comment
| TrackBack (0)
| E-mail entry
The entry "Olympic hockey: The Russians are coming..." is tagged: Alex Ovechkin , Dany Heatley , Joe Thornton , Ryan Miller , Sidney Crosby February 16, 2010When you switch from being a beat writer to a columnist as I did 12 years ago, one of the things you miss (on a list you could write on Sarah Palin's hand) is road trips. Mind you, you don't miss ALL of the road trips. But when I first heard my days as the Stars beat writer were over after three years, I thought, "No more Calgary-Edmonton trips? No more Kokanee Gold pints after a late game?'' Or something like that. So, anyway, I'm glad that the post-All-Star break run for the Mavericks (one that just became much more interesting in the eyes of fans) starts tonight in Oklahoma City against a hot team and a red-hot scorer in Kevin Durant, No. 2 behind LeBron James in points per game (29.7). Looking forward to seeing how Caron Butler and Brendan Haywood look running the floor with Jason Kidd, Dirk Nowitzki and all. It's not so much about their totals tonight. It's the first game after no real extended practices with the team. But there's not a lot of time and the Oklahoma City Thunder is one of the teams trying not to just make the playoffs but climb up into the top four for a first-game homecourt in the playoffs. The Mavs, staggering into the break at 2-5, need a boost from the former Wizards. And quickly.
Comments (1) Leave comment
| TrackBack (0)
| E-mail entry
The entry "Road trip: Caron Butler meets the Durantula" is tagged: Brendan Haywood , Caron Butler , Kevin Durant February 15, 2010
Dallas Morning News columnist Tim Cowlishaw answered questions about the Mavericks, Cowboys and the All-Star Game. Click into the coveritlive module below to view the replay:
Comments (0) Leave comment
| TrackBack (0)
| E-mail entry
The entry "Chat replay: Tim Cowlishaw answered questions about the Mavericks, Cowboys and All-Star Game" has no entry tags. February 12, 2010
The NBA All-Star Game's dunk contest grew into a tiresome event long ago. That's why the league is hoping that Dallas' Spud Webb will be able to revive it this weekend. Hard to believe it has been 24 years since 5-foot-7 Spud made those amazing dunks at Reunion Arena. Has to register as one of the three or four best moments in NBA dunk history. And I'm happy for Spud, a friend and genuinely good guy that you will see about town although most people don't get many words out of him. He has come to terms with being known as "the dunk guy'' although because he played on something less than the NBA's great stages as a Hawk and a a King, his career is highly underestimated. He wasn't just a short guy that teams would bring off the bench to entertain the crowd.
Comments (1) Leave comment
| TrackBack (0)
| E-mail entry
The entry "All-Stars: Here's to Spud Webb, Alonzo Mourning, Dirk and more" is tagged: Alonzo Mourning , Dirk Nowitzki , Kobe Bryant , Spud Webb February 10, 2010
On certain days, like this one for example, it seems silly to even write about what the Mavericks should do to contend. They started a lineup last night in which their youngest player in terms of experience in the league was Eddie Najera (10th season) and lost by 36 points. That's a team with a past, not a future. And that may be what Rick Carlisel is stuck coaching these days. Still, their record, despite the recent run of awful play, has them scrapping for a top four spot in the West. And the mere fact that they ARE so darned old means that if the right trade deal comes along, they have to consider it. When owner Mark Cuban says he's not trading newcomer Roddy Beaubois, I figure that's just owner-talk. When one of our columnists whose name rhymes with Othella Harrington writes it (well, his first name doesn't rhyme with that but wouldn't it be interesting if it did?), I figure that's just slow-day columnist talk. I've been there.
Comments (39) Leave comment
| TrackBack (0)
| E-mail entry
The entry "Dallas Mavericks can trade Roddy Beaubois and others, too" is tagged: Andre Iguodala , Dirk Nowitzki , Jason Kidd , Kevin Martin , Mark Cuban February 9, 2010
I have been a fan of The Who since junior high. I have been a fan of Bruce Springsteen since college. And I don't want to see either one of them or anyone like them at Super Bowls any more. The best concert I saw in my teenage years was The Who at Memorial Auditorium in Dallas. Summer of '71, I believe. They played 5 or 6 songs to get going, sounded great and then all of a sudden Keith Moon was playing the opening notes from Tommy's Overture. For the next hour without a break, skipping only 2-3 songs, the band played the double-album of Tommy start to finish. By the time they got through "We're not gonna take it'' and finished, to paraphrase the band "the crowd went crazy (as Tommy hit the stage).'' Saw the Who 2-3 more times. "Who's Next'' is a classic album. And at times I have considered "Quadrophenia'' better than "Tommy'' though not as ground-breaking.
Comments (5) Leave comment
| TrackBack (0)
| E-mail entry
The entry "The Who, Springsteen and my final word on NFL halftime shows" is tagged: Bruce Springsteen , Led Zeppelin , Super Bowl , The Who For those of you not quite old enough to remember, the AFL and NFL merged after the 1969 season to end the competition between the two and create the massive enterprise that has become today's NFL. Bettors still loved the NFL a year later, and the Minnesota Vikings were 13-point favorites, but the Kansas City Chiefs, seen as a team of the future, humbled a team from the past, 23-7. So the Super Bowl was all even at 2-2. When the leagues merged and formed two conferences, the Colts, Steelers and Browns switched to the AFC. But whatever happened to the 10 original AFL teams? Although they started off strong following the merger, the original group has won just 10 of the 40 Super Bowls played since the Chiefs beat the Vikings.
Comments (1) Leave comment
| TrackBack (0)
| E-mail entry
The entry "Super Bowl: Whatever happened to the AFL? " is tagged: Bill Belichick , Super Bowls , Tom Brady February 8, 2010
The Saints were built on an explosive offense and a high-risk defense that thrived on turnovers. Having to face three future Hall of Fame quarterbacks in the post-season was no easy task. But New Orleans survived and thrived. The Saints beat Arizona's Kurt Warner, Minnesota's Brett Favre and the Colts' Peyton Manning to capture their first Super Bowl. All three are first-ballot Hall of Famers. The Saints limited the production of Warner and Manning and beat up Favre enough before intercepting him to win the NFC title game. The last Super Bowl winner forced to run the table against all Hall of Fame-bound QBs was the '93 Cowboys. They made it back-to-back Lombardi Trophies with wins over Favre (how long has this guy been around?), the 49ers' Steve Young and Bills' Jim Kelly. Young and Kelly already are Hall of Fame members. Prior to that, the last team to make a similar (but not quite Hall of Fame run) was the '75 Steelers who knocked off Baltimore's Bert Jones, Oakland's Ken Stabler and a true Hall of Famer in the Cowboys' Roger Staubach for their second Super Bowl trophy.
Comments (15) Leave comment
| TrackBack (0)
| E-mail entry
The entry "Saints' Hall of Fame QB run echoes Dallas Cowboys " is tagged: Bert Jones , Brett Favre , Jim Kelly , Kurt Warner , Peyton Manning , Roger Staubach , Steve Young February 2, 2010
There were at least 33 reasons to make fun of Sunday's Pro Bowl. Right up until the game kickoff on ESPN, anyway. The last count I heard on Friday before the game was that 33 players selected for the game -- or picked as alternates in case of cancellations -- had turned down the opportunity to play. Some were seriously injured and a dozen were getting ready to play in a slightly more important game in south Florida this coming Sunday. Still, when the AFC resorts to Quarterbacks No. 6, 7 and 8, you feel like the game is of questionable value. That and, oh yeah, the fact that nobody wants to hit or get tackled makes the game problematic at best.
Comments (1) Leave comment
| TrackBack (0)
| E-mail entry
The entry "Pro Bowl ratings, Dallas Mavericks struggling and Sidney Crosby flying" is tagged: Alex Ovechkin , Gilbert Arenas , Jordan Hamilton , Norv Turner , Sidney Crosby January 28, 2010
While most of the reports coming out of the Senior Bowl workouts focus on the negatives with Florida QB Tim Tebow -- long, slow release, trouble reading defenses -- you know some team is going to fall in love with his intangibles and draft him too soon. That probably needs early second round or even late first. The Cowboys have the 27th pick. While they have needs like every team, they don't have a single need that just cries out for a first-round selection. Offensive linemen, a potential second or third wide receiver, safety -- quality at those spots can often be found beyond the first round.
Comments (16) Leave comment
| TrackBack (0)
| E-mail entry
The entry "Cowboys gamble on Tim Tebow? I would think not" is tagged: Andre Dawson , Andy Murray , Roger Federer , Tim Tebow , Tony Romo , Vince Wilfork January 27, 2010 We are leading with tennis today. Yes, I said it. Tennis. And you have to wake up pretty early (or stay up late) if you want to see a lot of what's happening in Melbourne at the Australian Open. Those people are way ahead of us -- 17 hours, I think. Probably have their own apple tablets and stuff, already. Anyway, I mentioned tennis yesterday and got a number of responses either on this blog or on email, Facebook, twitter (follow "Itstopcat") saying I should write more about tennis. So here you go. Federer is alive and well and in position to win a 16th Grand Slam tournament. But it didn't look that way around 1 a.m. last night. Davydenko, a slight but really powerful Russian, won the first set and had broken Federed twice in the second. In one game, he broke Federer's serve in one minute, 15 seconds. Basically, it was little more than four Federer serves and four crushing winners on returns by Davydenko. With Rafael Nadal already out of the tournament, I thought we were seeing the emergnece of the next great thing, about to achieve a third straight win over Federer but for the first time in a major. Then the greatness of Federer surfaced. He won every game for an hour. Davydenko made a late run in the fourth set to make the game's greatest player of all time sweat a bit. That's unusual for Roger. Still, Federer advanced with a four-set win. My prediction is he faces Marin Cilic in the men's finals. Cilic beat USA"s Andy Roddick in the quartefinals. Cilic is so long and limber it hurts me to watch him serve. I would be in traction if someone bent my back like that. To get there, Cilic has to beat Scotland's Andy Murray, who eliminated a slightly injured Nadal. Federer plays a rather unlikely semifinals opponent in Jo-Wilfried Tsonga. ...The Dallas Mavericks did what they are so good at it last night at AAC. They won a basketball game by one point. That's 10 one-point margins in a row for Dallas.
Comments (2) Leave comment
| TrackBack (0)
| E-mail entry
The entry "Federer, Davydenko, Mavericks...and more! " is tagged: Bill Russell , Bob Cousy , Marty Turco , Mike Jenkins , Nikolay Davydenko , Roger Federer , Sam Jones , Sergei Zubov January 26, 2010
This is the age of "Me First.'' It's all about the individuals, not the teams in sports. At least that's the case with a lot of outspoken individuals. So I was anxiously waiting for a Saints or Colts player to step up this week and say, "You know, our whole team is going to the Super Bowl, even if they didn't do anything to help us win Sunday's game. But I was invited to the Pro Bowl this week. So I'm playing in the Pro Bowl and if that means I get injured and miss the Super Bowl, so be it.'' Sadly, all 12 Saints and Colts have announced they would skip the Pro Bowl which, in an insane move by the NFL, is being played the Sunday before the Super Bowl, not after. The replacements are pouring in.
Comments (6) Leave comment
| TrackBack (0)
| E-mail entry
The entry "Opportunity knocks for Mavs, Pro Bowlers, Federer...and more!" is tagged: Andy Murray , David Garrard , Elvis Andrus , Rafael Nadal , Vince Young January 25, 2010
1. Brett Favre's final pass was an interception. And it was an awful mistake. He could have run to the 30-yard line, even in his late-game limping state, and set up what could have been a regulation winning field goal from Ryan Longwell. But don't forget what came before it. Favre got the team down to the Saints' 33 with a first-and-10 with 1:06 left in regulation. And then the Vikings stopped throwing. Chester Taylor ran right for no gain. Adrian Peterson ran right for no gain. Precious seconds ticked away. Then came the ridiculous 12-men-in-the-huddle penalty with Favre frantically trying to call timeout, but it was too late.
Comments (12) Leave comment
| TrackBack (0)
| E-mail entry
The entry "Ten Things to Remember about Saints, Vikes, Colts, Jets" is tagged: Adrian Peterson , Brett Favre , Peyton Manning , Pierre Garcon , Tom Brady January 22, 2010
It's easy to make fun of NBA fans for voting Allen Iverson to the East's starting lineup for the All-Star Game to be held Feb. 14 in Cowboys Stadium. After all, he began the season in the West and has spent most of it being irrelevant for a bad Philadelphia team. But I have no problem with Iverson starting the game for three reasons. 1. It's an exhibition and frequently not a very good one. Players with skills as entertaining as Iverson are what it's all about, and he was good enough to win the All-Star Game's MVP award five years ago. 2. It's the fans' game. If they want to see a veteran nearing the end like Iverson or even Houston's Tracy McGrady -- well, now that truly would have been an embarrassment given that the Rockets have been a better team without him for about two years -- then give them what they want. Luckily, Steve Nash passed McGrady down the stretch so we were spared the McGrady fiasco. 3. Frankly, there aren't a lot of great choices among Eastern Conference guards. Look at the players who finished in the four spots behind Iverson in the voting. Vince Carter -- shooting a whopping 38 percent for Orlando.
Comments (15) Leave comment
| TrackBack (0)
| E-mail entry
The entry "Allen Iverson starting, Dirk not starting? No problem" is tagged: Allen Iverson , Derrick Rose , Dirk Nowitzki , Kevin Durant , Ray Allen January 19, 2010
During TNT's broadcast Tuesday, Reggie Miller asked Kevin McHale who he would take in a shooting contest between Larry Bird and Dirk Nowitzki. Longtime Bird teammate McHale picked the former Celtic. No surprise there, and no one can have a problem with that. Nowitzki, because he is tall and white, has been compared unfairly to Bird since about his second year in the league. No one can reasonably compare the two as overall players because of Bird's passing and maybe even his passion for the game.
Comments (27) Leave comment
| TrackBack (0)
| E-mail entry
The entry "Dirk vs. Bird, Not All on Wade, Stars and more..." is tagged: Brett Favre , Dirk Nowitzki , Drew Brees , Jeff Bridges , Larry Bird , Peyton Manning January 18, 2010
SportsDay columnist Tim Cowlishaw is chatting about the Dallas Cowboys at 1:30 p.m. today following their 34-3 loss to the Minnesota Vikings. Ask your question in the Coveritlive module, and Tim will answer as many as he can for about an hour. If you don't see the Coveritlive module, please click on the "Continue reading" link if you see it below.
Comments (35) Leave comment
| TrackBack (0)
| E-mail entry
The entry "Live chat: Tim Cowlishaw discusses the Dallas Cowboys" has no entry tags. January 14, 2010
SportsDay columnist Tim Cowlishaw and StarTribune columnist Jim Souhan chatted about the Cowboys and the Vikings in the Coveritlive module below.If you do not see the Coveritlive module, click the "Continue reading ... " link below.
Comments (13) Leave comment
| TrackBack (0)
| E-mail entry
The entry "Chat replay: DMN's Tim Cowlishaw and StarTribune's Jim Souhan discuss Cowboys-Vikings" has no entry tags. What do these NBA teams have in common (other than no shot at an NBA title this season)? Chicago Bulls. Charlotte Bobcats. Toronto Raptors. Memphis Grizzlies. Anyone? Answer: Better home-court records than the Dallas Mavericks. That's right. The Mavericks may remain in first in the NBA' s Southwest Division but they are No. 17 in home-court advantage. And that's a big, big problem.
Comments (10) Leave comment
| TrackBack (0)
| E-mail entry
The entry "Mavericks remain lost at home" is tagged: Dirk Nowitzki , Kobe Bryant , Pau Gasol |
Tim Cowlishaw columns
|
||
Headlines from dallasnews.com
|
||
|
||
TICKETS & GEAR
|
||
Cowlishaw's favorites
|
||
Coward-shaw: Aren't you the two face re
Canada is in more than a little trouble
good thing Cowlishaw gave the good ol'
Yep, this should be some wild hockey ov
That game made me believe in Hockey aga
It will be great to watch Atlanta Hawks
the swedes are too old. no medal for t
USA is playing stronger than the other
www.uggbootswholesale.net
To cons
After this thursdays games, i cant say