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A.J. Burnett, Colin Cowherd and the Nature of Sports Radio

A.J. Burnett is fuming, steaming and most likely darn right mad.

He’s mad at ESPN voice on the radio, Colin Cowherd.

This one’s a doozie.

Seems the guy with the strange name—that would be Mr. Cowherd—said something on his show about the New York Yankees pitcher that he might, at this moment, want to take back.

Ah, but such is the beauty of our modern day sports talk radio. Once you say it, it’s ON the record. No misquotes, no pleading and no back-peddling.

Seems the guy whose name rhymes with what we used to call Cow Patties put this gem out there on the airwaves for all to absorb:

“A.J. Burnett went through a terrible divorce, and he still might be going through it. His wife was vindictive and spiteful. I don’t feel comfortable telling you everything. The story is ugly.”

So sayeth Colin Cowherd. Oh my.

Now comes Burnett’s agent, Darek Braunecker with his response to Cowherd’s statement. It goes like this:

“A.J. is ticked. He’s not going through a divorce, and if he was, it would not be anyone’s business. They (Burnett and wife Karen) are happily married.”

Oh my.

Looks like the boys in Bristol have themselves a nice little firestorm here, doesn’t it?

And such is the beast that talk radio has become. There’s certainly a lot of it out there.

There’s a guy named Jim Rome who spouts his “take” over and over again. He is the master of repetition and he does take some listener calls, although they are screened harder than guys entering the Pentagon. You are not allowed to take issue with Rome, there is no debate. Praise him and you’re on, otherwise, forget it.

Tampa Bay is blessed with outstanding sports talk radio. We have a guy named Steve Duemig on 620 WDAE who does what talk radio hosts should do—an enormous amount of research and preparation for his three-hour show. He’ll take virtually any call and doesn’t mind screaming at callers who know little about the subject being tossed.

On the same station, former Tampa Bay Buccaneer Ian Beckles can give a perspective on the NFL through the eyes of a player who spent 10 years in the league. Beckles’ takes are typically sharp and he can back up what he says from watching film and from his experience on the field.

Which brings us back to this tizzy now where ESPN, the king of commentary and the worldwide leader in sports, has gone “no comment” on this brewing feud between Burnett and Cowherd.

Cowherd had some explaining to do.

Either Burnett and his wife are getting a divorce or they aren’t. It’s easy enough. Either this has been filed in court or it hasn’t.

Yes, Cowherd’s got some serious explaining to do on this one.

So is the nature of sports talk radio gossip or fact?

The fact is, if any talk radio host is making a claim, he better be able to prove it, back it up and simply know what the heck he’s talking about.

These shows are ratings-driven, that’s a fact. Controversy is always good. It brings listeners, it drives ratings. But there’s still a little thing out there called libel. It’s something everyone is aware of.

If in fact Burnett’s agent is correct and Cowherd is totally uninformed, then there’s bound to be some real scrambling going on with ESPN’s battery of well-compensated lawyers.

The nature of talk radio is that Cowherd could end up at some point in time, eating crow on the air, taking it all back and throwing out a barrage of mea culpas.

But that remains to be seen, or in this case, heard.

Cowherd, he’s always talking.

But for once, on this one, ESPN isn’t.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Cliff Lee Delivers Some Shock and Awe With Philly Finale

Cliff Lee shocked ’em, didn’t he?

He left the Texas Rangers scratching their heads.

He left the New York Yankees in a state of offseason panic, wondering what to do now.

He did the unthinkable, the improbable, the unforeseeable.

He left $30 million on the table to go to the City of Brotherly Love, a place that he deemed a good fit for him, a place of comfort, a place where he will make the pitching staff the strongest in all of Major League Baseball.

What a novel idea! Take a lower offer, do what feels good to you.

It may not be that novel, after all, once you reach that $100 million plateau, what’s another $30 million? Makes you think back to Bud Fox asking Gordon Gekko in the original Wall Street movie: “How many yachts can you ski behind, Gordon?”

Yeah, you’d figure a guy who lives in Arkansas can do that. Leave $30 million on the table and prove that you can go home again.

The Yanks and Rangers never saw this one coming.

The Rangers and the Yankees, like two big-stake poker players, were staring at each other across the table. At the last moment, it’s as if James Bond walked into the casino, joined the game at the last moment, then stole the pot, or in this case, stole Cliff Lee.

The Yankees pushed probably $150 million worth of chips into the middle of the table, the Rangers equalled it then raised the ante to $161 million, reportedly.

Little did those two high-rollers realize that Lee would choose the best hand, the team holding three aces—the two Roys—Halladay and Oswalt—and Cole Hamels. Aces high.

Best staff ever in Major League Baseball? You’d be hard-pressed to equal it unless you go back to the Jim Palmer-era Orioles or the Greg Maddux Braves.

These Phillies are now simply loaded for bear and the only downside is that come the eighth or ninth inning, the Phils may have to put the baseball in the hands of a lesser pitcher in a close contest.

Still, you gotta love how miffed Brian Cashman must feel today. And no doubt Nolan Ryan needs some sort of stomach antacid.

The Players Union has to hate this. Signing for less money?  How dare he!

In the end, at the 11th hour, Lee didn’t take what was behind door No. 1 or door No. 2, and to the surprise of just about everyone, he revealed that there was actually a door No. 3.

Shock and awesome, baby.

He took less money and came up with the novel idea that Greed Isn’t Good.

Sorry Gordon.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Carl Crawford: The Boston Red Sox Get Tampa Bay Rays’ Heart and Soul

Carl Crawford, the best-ever Tampa Bay Ray is gone. He’s now with the Boston Red Sox.

The Rays will never need a team cardiologist. Boston has the Rays’ heart.

The Rays won’t need a team chaplain. Boston has the Rays’ soul.

To put it in the easiest terms, Carl Crawford was simply the heart and soul of the Tampa Bay Rays. He was their all-time best: best player, best teammate, best guy with the fans.

Tampa Bay’s loss is Boston’s gain.

They’ll love him in Fenway Park. He’ll hit for power and average. He’ll light it up with singles, doubles, triples, whatever is needed. Gold Glover, Silver Batsman. Base stealer extraordinaire.

The bad news is he’ll help beat his old team. The good news is he’ll help beat the Yankees.

While Crawford was getting a free dinner out of Yankee General Manger Brian Cashman on Tuesday night, Theo Epstein was working out the details of Crawford’s seven-year, $142 million deal. Yow-zer!

While the Yankees push all their chips to the middle of the table in the Cliff Lee poker tournament, the Red Sox added a great guy and super teammate, someone the fans can wrap their arms around and welcome with a smile.

Crawford is that kind of guy. He’s paid his dues. He toiled in the early futile years of his career on a Rays team that was simply dreadful with an awful owner named Vince Namoli. At least in the end he enjoyed success with the Rays, with two AL East titles and a World Series appearance.

Terry Francona called Crawford “a game changer.” He is that and more. He can be a one-man wrecking machine and a terror on the bases. He’s a worker and expects his teammates to be the same way.

Throw him in with Jacoby Ellsbury, newly-acquired Adrian Gonzalez, Dustin Pedroia, Kevin Youkilis and Big Pappi and you’ve got yourself some serious bats and talent, something to make the Yankees take notice.

Which means Cashman’s all-in on Cliff Lee and perhaps then some.

Doesn’t matter.

The Red Sox have some real heart and soul, straight from the Tampa Bay Rays.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


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