Saturday, May 20, 2006

JT's WNBA All-Decade Team:

It's the 10th Anniversary of the Women's National Basketball Association... cause for celebration, reflection and trying to see if you can pick the "WNBA All-Decade Team"! Below are my picks. Not an easy task - and I really wanted to pick 11 or 12 players - as it doesn't seem right not to have Diana Taurasi or Lisa Leslie on my list - but the 10 I did chose are "must-keep" picks for me ...

Teresa Weatherspoon, Guard
Sheryl Swoopes, Forward
Ruthie Bolton, Guard
Cynthia Cooper, Guard
Ticha Penicheiro, Guard
Dawn Staley, Guard
Andrea Stinson, Guard
Tina Thompson, Forward
Vickie Johnson, Guard/Forward
Rebecca Lobo, Center

Losing Teresa Weatherspoon from active play was a real disappointment - but she made the right decision. T-Spoon is my "inner basketball player" - she is the player I imagine myself to be. I admire her heart, her toughness and her love of the game. One of my best memories of going to CT Sun games is getting the chance to see T-Spoon play when NY came North to play the Sun. The only downside was - my dilemma of -- who to root for !! T-Spoon's my #1 choice for the top 10 list.

Then there's Lady Swoopes. Class act, elegant play, articulate and dedicated. Sheryl Swoopes is a team player who knows when to take the lead and when to assist her teammates. I was privileged to see her play the Sun several times. Swoopes was a member of three consecutive Olympic good medal teams in 1996, 2000 and 2004.

Long-time player, Ruthie Bolton (Holifield)- a combination of strength, toughness and tenacity. In her position as guard, Ruthie was to be reckoned with ... a loyal, consistent and gutsy player. Playing for the Sacramento Monarchs until 2005, she was the WNBA's fourth all-time leader in 3-pointers, scored over 2,000 career-points and was a two-time WNBA All-Star and on the 1996 U.S. Olympic Team.

After graduating USC in 1986, Cynthia Cooper, played professional basketball in Italy until the WNBA was formed in 1997. Already 34 years old when she joined the WNBA, Cooper was chosen MVP in 1997 & 1998. She and her teammates, Swoopes and Thompson took the Houston Comets to four national championships. Cooper was the first player in WNBA history to score 1,000 and 2,000 career points. She was also part of the 1988 gold medal Olympic team.

Sacramento Monarch guard, Ticha Penicheiro is fun to watch. She loves the game and it shows. She's got speed and grace and passion. Ticha holds the WNBA record for most steals (10) in a game and led WNBA in assists per game in every year from 1998 through 2003 - for 6 years in a row! She's a four-time WNBA All-Star.

Three-time gold medal winning Olympian, two-time World Championship gold medalist, head coach of Temple University, and member of 4 time championship winner WNBA Houston Comets and assistant coach for the 2006 USA Women's World Championship Team is just the beginning of an introduction for Dawn Staley. Dawn Staley runs the floor - wherever she plays. Her intelligence and passion are evident - as is her skill with the ball. Dawn is another player who makes the game fun to watch. She's dead serious and having fun - all at once.

Starting her career in Charlotte, Andrea Stinson was one of the original WNBA players. She was the fourth player in league history to score 2,000 career points (2001). She's also a three-time Italian League All-Star. Andrea didn't miss a game for anything... leading the league in minutes played -- with her performance reliably good every game. Stinson played from 1997 to 2005 with Charlotte and 2005 with the Detroit Shock. Stinson returned to the Sting in 2006 as the team's community relations ambassador. As an honor to her, the Sting retired her jersey (#32) in their opener today against the new team, the Chicago Sky.

Tina Thompson, forward for the Houston Comets became the second player in WNBA history (Lisa Leslie was the first) to surpass the 3,000-point plateau on 8/1/03. She and her teammates, Swoopes and Cooper formed a deadly trio that few opponents could best. A member of the 4 championship Comet teams and the 2004 Olympic gold medal winning team, Thompson is the kind of player you want beside you - making plays and watching your back!

My next to last pick is Vickie Johnson, who, up until 2006, played either the guard or forward spot for the NY Liberty -- since 1997. A versatile, reliable, tenacious team player - Vickie may not be an obvious choice for this top ten list... but I believe her kind of play and dedication is fundamental to the character of the WNBA. Vickie was a two-time WNBA All-Star and the first New York Liberty player to reach 2,000 career points (2002). Vickie began playing for the Silver Spurs in 2006.

Last spot is saved for sentimental choice, Rebecca Lobo. Rebecca is a home-town (or home state) favorite. An integral part of the '95 championship UCONN Huskies. She was a member of the 1996 Olympic gold-medal team, a member of the first-ever WNBA Eastern Conference All-Star Team. One of the founding WNBA players, Lobo was assigned to the New York Liberty, along with Teresa Weatherspoon, in the WNBA's first player allocations in January 1997. But more than all her accomplishments on the court, Lobo has had a significant role off-the-court. Her poise and graciousness brought positive attention to women's basketball in Connecticut. Along with Jen Rizzotti, Lobo represented all that might be... the future of women's basketball. She helped bring the level of involvement in the sport up where it'd been in Tennessee for years. Connecticut suddenly discovered women's basketball -- and Lobo embodied our ideal of what women in basketball should be.

Sun shine at opening game at home

A pleasant surpirse... 2 women's basketball games on today - and the second was the Connecticut Sun v New York Liberty! It was the Sun's game from the start - with Nykesha and Taj doing what they do best and some great plays from newcomers to the team - a youngster named Erin and another named Mahoney. Final score was 74 to 91.

Mercury's speed burns down

Well... the Mercury v Sacramento game started with a bang... with Taurasi hitting 3 straight 3 pointers... it's was fast and fun to watch. But, the team play of the more experienced Monarchs won in the end... with a lop-sided score of 78 to 105. DT was suffering from a hip/thigh injury and clearly not up to speed. Cappie Poindexter put in a good game, but it wasn't enough to quiet the drive of Yo and Kara Lawson and company.

Although I'm a committed Connecticut Sun fan, gotta keep an eye on former UCONN players... call it sentimental, but can't help routing for DT, Bird, Swin and, now, Ann Strothers - also with the Mercury - when I get the rare chance to see their play televised. Keep an eye on the Mercury... if they pull it together, they'll have a good season. It would be good to see DT get a chance at the championship.

Friday, May 12, 2006

from Barack Obama

Thank you Barack Obama for a light in the wilderness...
...from the blog on Barack Obama's web site... "Last Tuesday, the president told us it was time to get serious about America's addiction to oil. Last Wednesday, his advisers told us he didn't mean that literally. To underscore that point, the administration plans to start laying off government researchers who work on the very same renewable energy solutions the president said were our future."

The extent of this President and his administration's lack of insight, leadership and wisdom is amazing. I must keep repeating the mantra, "just two more years, just two more years... ". True, it will feel like way more!

Of all the enemies to public liberty war is, perhaps, the most to be dreaded

The wrongness of our action of aggression against Iraq and all that's come of it is so profound, it almost bears no further explanation. Written over 200 years ago, James Madison's words are both eloquent and prophetic.

"Of all the enemies to public liberty war is, perhaps, the most to be dreaded because it comprises and develops the germ of every other. War is the parent of armies; from these proceed debts and taxes. And armies, and debts, and taxes are the known instruments for bringing the many under the domination of the few. In war, too, the discretionary power of the Executive is extended. Its influence in dealing out offices, honors, and emoluments is multiplied; and all the means of seducing the minds, are added to those of subduing the force of the people. The same malignant aspect in republicanism may be traced in the inequality of fortunes, and the opportunities of fraud, growing out of a state of war . . . and in the degeneracy of manners and morals, engendered by both. No nation could preserve its freedom in the midst of continual warfare.
~ James Madison, April 20, 1795"