Monday, February 25, 2008

Ed Wade Revisited


As we all know, Ed Wade was the Phillies' General Manager for quite a long stretch... two presidential terms worth of time as a matter of fact. During Wade's 8 years here as GM from 1998 to 2005, there was simultaneously quite a lot going on and almost nothing going on. Confused? Well, here's what I mean:

On one hand, Wade managed to draft future stars such as:

-Chase Utley
-Ryan Howard
-Brett Myers
-Cole Hamels
-Pat Burrell (say what you want about him)

(Amazingly all of them have 10 letters in their names, as listed above. Secret to Wade's success, perhaps? You be the judge.)

Wade also brought in a good handful of productive players, with the likes of:

-Bobby Abreu
-Placido Polanco
-Jim Thome
-Kenny Lofton
-Billy Wagner

By all accounts, that's an impressive cadre of players right there, between draft picks and other acquisitions under his watch. Not to mention the fact that he signed Terry Francona as manager, then fired him, allowing Francona to win two World Series titles in Boston, and a generous contract extension that can keep him in Beantown for five more years.

Meanwhile, however, the Phils, under Wade's direction never made the playoffs though they did come within a game or two of making it a couple of seasons in a row. Ultimately, his downfalls came by not bringing in the one or two players (pitchers, most likely) that could have put the team over the top. Us peon fans will probably never know the full story of whether or not Wade couldn't figure out how to land the right deal or if Phillies management held the purse strings too tightly, or what, but the fact is that the team signed too many underperforming players under Wade's watch, including but not limited to: Eric Milton, Kevin Millwood, David Bell, and Travis Lee. Big names, but also big duds for the Phils.

So on one hand we should be grateful for the solid foundation Wade built for us with tremendous draft picks. On the other hand, the walls, A-frame, and roof never went up, leaving us with a half-completed house that finally started to be built this past year as the Phils made the playoffs for the first time in a dozen years. Hopefully there will be even more building this year...

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

A 76ers Throwback Moment

Looking for a highlight featuring the dynamic duo of Andre Turner and Armen Gilliam? (Well, who isn't?)

If that sounds like you... look no further!

Saturday, February 2, 2008

Highlighting Philly-bred Athletes During Super Bowl Weekend

Kyle Eckel and Kareem McKenzie were both featured in Philadelphia Inquirer articles this week about local players that are in this year's Super Bowl between the Patriots and Giants. Good to see local boys doing well for themselves.

While it's unfortunate that no local players on the Eagles made it to the Super Bowl, for obvious reasons, at least some local gents are going for the glory.

Which gives me an idea...

Instead of the out-of-control, over-hyped Wing Bowl that has grown to become a poor man's version of an annual local Super Bowl, let's put the Philly-bred players that are not in the Super Bowl to good use. I propose a flag football tournament featuring 8 teams, each one captained by an NFL player that hails from Philly but is not in the Super Bowl. The remaining 4 or 5 players on each team would be up-and-coming high school stars. The game could be played at the Spectrum indoors on the Soul's arena football field, and money raised by attendance would go to a local charity.

This would give the city many benefits. First off, it would be a fun competition to look forward to during the usually painfully long January/February lull in the local sporting schedule (since the Eagles usually aren't in the Super Bowl, the Sixers are usually not competitive, and the Flyers are just kind of cruising along waiting until the playoffs to get exciting). Secondly, it could boost local pride and help encourage local athletes to excel on the field (and there could also be academic requirements to add to the mix) so they would have the chance to play alongside a pro player. Third, it would generate some good PR for the region. Last, a local charity would benefit from the ticket sales.

But unfortunately, just like the possibility of a Philly team winning a championship, this doesn't sound likely to happen, does it? Can't hurt to dream though...