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Pearls of Wisdom (#3)
http://www.e-sports.com/articles/2296/1/Pearls-of-Wisdom-3/Page1.html
Greg Pearl
A recent graduate of the University of Michigan, Greg Pearl is a passionate sports fan and walking encyclopedia of all things NBA, NFL, NCAA and MLB. 
By Greg Pearl
Published on 10/28/2009
 
Five orbs of well-gleaned knowledge regarding the most important folks in sports not in uniform.

Goodbye MLB, Hello NBA!

Here are five more orbs of well-gleaned knowledge regarding the most important folks on and off the fields and courts across the land. Let's get started…

1. Do Pitchers Really Need "Roles?"

The New York Yankees may be representing the American League in the World Series this year, but for the Los Angeles Angels, the 2009 season wasn't without its merits.

Angels manager Mike Scioscia's use of pitcher Jered Weaver was certainly a silver-lining to a disappointing American League Championship Series. Weaver started Game 3 against the New York Yankees and was sharp enough to give his team a chance to win, which they eventually did in eleven innings.

Then, in a win-or-go-home Game 5, Scioscia turned to Weaver again, only this time from the bullpen. Weaver rewarded his manager's faith by throwing a hitless eighth inning enroute to another (and final) Angels win.

Had the Yanks series needed a Game 7, Anaheim would have handed the ball yet again to Weaver. Instead, we're left wondering what more this kid could have done.

It was the second time in his young career Weaver was called upon as a setup man, the first being in Game 3 of the 2008 AL Divisional Series against the Boston Red Sox. Not since 2005 has a starting pitcher in a postseason series also thrown in relief, and had his team win both games.

Since 2001, Weaver became the ninth starting pitcher in a postseason series to also throw in relief, and have his team win both games.

Starter or Reliever?  Either way, these guys are good

2009: Jered Weaver, Angels vs. Yankees
2005: Mark Buehrle($), White Sox vs Astros
2004: Mike Hampton, Braves vs Astros
2004: Pedro Martinez, Red Sox vs. Yankees
2003: Josh Beckett(+), Marlins vs Cubs
2003: David Wells(*), Yankees vs Red Sox
2003: Derek Lowe, Red Sox vs Athletics
2003: Brad Penny, Marlins vs Giants
2002: John Lackey(*), Angels vs Giants

* = Received the Win as a Starting Pitcher.
$ = Received the Save as a Relief Pitcher.
+ = Received the Win and a Complete Game as a Starting Pitcher.

2. The Mark of Inconsistency

It's that time of the season when most mediocre NFL teams start complaining about being mediocre.

Certainly included in the list are the Washington Redskins, who came dangerously close to needing another new head coach after Jim Zorn reportedly contemplated resignation after losing his play-calling job to former retiree Sherman Lewis.

The Redskins followed that move with a 27-17 loss to the Philadelphia Eagles in Week 7, showing signs that maybe Zorn wasn't to blame after all.

Still, going after the head coach in Washington is like shooting dead fish in a barrel – what's new?

Looking at current NFL franchises, the Redskins are behind only the lowly Detroit Lions in coaching swaps, and if Zorn gets his way, look out for a new leading loser.

Current NFL Franchises / Head Coaching Changes (including Interim's)
Detroit Lions (1934) / 24
Washington Redskins (1937) / 23
Philadelphia Eagles (1933) / 19

3) Mike Brown has generally been stellar at preparing his Cleveland Cavaliers for big home games, but not necessarily home openers. Like the 2008-2009 season, the Cavaliers will have to start this year 0-1 thanks to the Boston Celtics.

Since drafting Lebron James in 2003, the opening home game for the Cavs seems indicative of their season as a whole. When losing the first game in Cleveland, they have gone a combined 122-124 during the rest of the season.

Home Openers in the Lebron-era.

Year: Result, Score, Season Record
2009: Lost to Boston, 89-95, ?
2008: Won vs. Charlotte, 96-79, 66-16 (39-2)
2007: Lost to Dallas, 74-92, 45-37 (27-14)
2006: Won vs. Washington, 97-94, 50-32 (30-11)
2005: Won vs. N.O./Oklahoma City, 109-87, 50-32 (31-10)
2004: Lost to Indiana, 104-109 (2OT), 42-40 (29-12)
2003: Lost to Denver, 89-93, 35-47 (23-18)

4. What's a Coach to Do?

Dallas Cowboys head coach Wade Phillips seems to have the "unfortunate" problem of having too many talented receivers.

Roy Williams, Miles Austin and Patrick Crayton all want and deserve to start, but Crayton was the man left outside looking in. Before Week 7's win against Atlanta, Phillips benched Crayton – twice.

The double whammy came after Austin scored a starting receiver job and veteran kick returner Allen Rossum was shipped in from San Francisco. However, the "double benching" appears short-lived, as Rossum was injured on his first return and Crayton stepped in with a 73-yard punt return for a touchdown in the fourth quarter against the Falcons.

5. This Week's Top 5 NFL Head Coaches Poll

Ken Wisenhunt (Arizona Cardinals): A staunch defense again made the New York Giants look like ants.

Jim Caldwell (Indianapolis Colts): Indy picked up right where they left off before the bye week.

Marvin Lewis (Cincinnati Bengals): A career day against his old team helped Cedric Benson and the Bengals take down Chicago.

Mike Tomlin (Pittsburgh Steelers): Two defensive touchdowns in the fourth quarter is what it took to hand Minnesota its first loss of the season. Leave it to Tomlin to figure out how they'll do it again in Denver

Gary Kubiak (Houston Texans): After a close loss to the Cardinals in Week 5, Houston is suddenly on a winning streak. A victory next week in Buffalo would give Kubiak Houston's best start ever.

Good Luck to all the athletes running in this year's ING NYC Marathon on Sunday, November 1. I'll see you there!