IT’S ALL HAPPENING!

by John Walters

Starting Five

Thompson was penalized four strokes for moving her gimme putt an inch or so

Thompson was penalized four strokes for moving her gimme putt an inch or so

1. Viewer Discretion Is Advised

The LPGA became American Idol on Sunday, as home viewers affected the outcome. Well, one home viewer did. On Sunday Lexi Thompson, 22, was leading the field at the ANA Inspiration, a major (and a poorly named major at that), by four holes. a viewer emailed officials to inform them that on the 17th hole the day before, Thompson had misplaced her ball before a putt.

 

The viewer was technically correct. Officials decided to enforce the rule based on that information, penalizing Thompson two strokes for moving the ball and another two for signing an incorrect scorecard (Can anyone say “double jeopardy?”). “Oh my God, this is ridiculous,” Thompson responded when told after the 12th hole on Sunday in Rancho Mirage. “Is this a joke?”

It was one day after April Fool’s, but it was no joke.

Thompson lost four strokes, still forced a playoff, but then lost the playoff to (Fill in name of Korean golfer here that nobody knows).

So much wrong here: 1) Yes, technically, Thompson unknowingly broke the rules, but it’s not, or at least it shouldn’t be, Big Brother’s job to enforce them. 2) One two-stroke penalty  is somewhat understandable, but the second two-stroke penalty seems entirely unfair: if you had no idea you’d broken the rule, why would you sign the scorecard differently? Had Thompson, who TEN YEARS AGO at the age of 12 became the youngest golfer ever to qualify for and play in the U.S. Women’s Open, only been penalized two strokes, she may have won on Sunday. That would have been her second major victory.

In short, men’s AND women’s golf needs to address this problem. Fans don’t want to see tournaments affected an entire day later because someone in Topeka turned on the DVR.

p.s. “Lex” in Latin means law, so it’s unfortunate that Lexi got screwed by the letter of the lex.

2. Dawn of a New Era

Staley was named MOP of the 1992 Final Four, though her Virginia team lost

Staley was named MOP of the 1992 Final Four, though her Virginia team lost to Stanford in the semis

Like the 1980 Team U.S.A. hockey team, Mississippi State pulled off the greatest upset in its sports history in a semi-final on a Friday night (knocking off UConn and ending the Huskies’ 111-game win streak). Unlike the Miracle gang, they were unable to secure the championship on Sunday. One man’s Finland is not another man’s South Carolina.

The Gamecocks—a curious name for a distaff squad—beat the Bulldogs, giving former tournament MOP and coach Dawn Staley her first national championship as a player or coach. It was South Carolina, by the way, that lost to UConn in Storrs when the Huskies got their 100th consecutive win in February. Staley will be the Olympic women’s coach in 2020, taking over for Geno Auriemma.

The biggest curiosity of the final? MSU coach Vic Schaefer sat Morgan William, who scored 41 points in the Elite Eight win and hit the dagger that knocked out UConn, for the entire fourth quarter. She was not having a great game, but South Carolina only led by 8 when the last quarter began.

Doris Burke called it “shocking” and I agree. William is a junior so she’ll be back next year. Perhaps there was something behind the scenes none of us know about, perhaps how the Dawgs celebrated after Friday night’s win. I dunno. Still, that is nuts.

p.s. Our pal @Okerland says that the last five teams that have beaten Stanford in the Final Four (USC included this weekend) have gone on to win the national championship.

3. Giants Lose (Again) By a 6-5 Score

Bumgarner became the first pitcher EVER to hit two home runs on opening day, not to mention and also retire the first 16 batters he faced, not to mention and also fail to get the W.

Bumgarner became the first pitcher EVER to hit two home runs on opening day, not to mention and also retire the first 16 batters he faced, not to mention and also fail to get the W.

Remember that time a San Francisco Giant starter was outstanding, only to hand the ball to a reliever in the ninth and watch him yip the game? Yep, it happened in Game 4 of last year’s NL Divisional Series—San Fran’s final game of the 2016 season—and it happened in Sunday’s opening day game in Arizona.

Last October, Matt Moore pitched eight outstanding innings, allowing two hits and two runs and giving the Giants a 5-2 lead heading into the ninth. Four relievers choked and the Chicago Cubs won 6-5 (they’d go on to win the World Series, as you may have heard). Yesterday Madison Bumgarner retired the first 16 men he faced AND belted two home runs (he’s the home run leader in the Major Leagues), but again the Giants squandered the lead in the ninth and again lost 6-5.

4. Can Enable

I can’t improve upon the Bill Maher rant above, so I won’t try. You can listen to all of the “New Rules” segment, or fast forward directly to the 1:47 mark that begins with the “Fixing A-Hole” graphic. For the record (or off the record, I don’t much care), I don’t think all of these folks are enabling Donald Trump as much as they are Steve Bannon. He’s the puppet master in this White House, he’s the brains. Donald is the front. He’s the Elton John to Bannnon’s Bernie Taupin.

5. Race To The Bottom

Are the Suns and Lakers keeping their eyes (and L's) on the Ball, and is there any way in hell he'll end up in Brooklyn?

Are the Suns and Lakers keeping their eyes (and L’s) on the Ball, and is there any way in hell he’ll end up in Brooklyn?

The Los Angeles Lakers did a terrible thing last night: They won (108-103 over the Grizzlies). The Phoenix Suns, who are far better coached, dutifully lost their 12th straight game (to a Rockets team playing without James Harden or Trevor Ariza.). Now both the Suns and Lakers have identical records (22-55) and now both have the same, second-best chance to get the top draft pick.

My question for the Suns: Who would you take, anyway? The Suns are incredibly top-heavy at guard (even more top heavy at guards from Kentucky). Devin Booker, a second-year player who is 20, scored 70 two weeks ago. Tyler Ullis, a rookie who is 21, scored a career-high 34 last night. Erick Bledsoe, arguably the team’s best player (sitting out final month of season), is also a Wildcat guard.

 

So do the Suns really want Lonzo Ball or Markelle Fultz? Do they pick one or the other and seek a trade? Do they trade that player or do they trade Bledsoe (I’d trade Bledsoe; no way I part with Booker). Is there a front-cout player (Josh Jackson?) worthy of a second pick? Is Lauri Markkannen or Zach Collins even in the conversation?

And wouldn’t it be wonderful if the NBA screwed the Suns and Lakers on the ping-pong balls for being so blatantly devoted to tanking? We’ll see. Meanwhile, if Lonzo Ball doesn’t end up in a Laker jersey, I’ll be surprised.

 

Music 101 

Lollipop

The first time I can recall hearing this tune was the first time I saw Stand By Me (1985, River Phoenix, Will Wheaton, Corey Feldman, Kiefer Sutherland and a pudgy Jerry O’Connell–who could’ve guessed he’d grow up to marry Rebecca Romjin), but the song by The Chordettes hit No. 2 in 1958. I’m taking a not-so-wild stab here, but that looks like a young Andy Williams supplying the sound effect. Also, if you ever wondered where Kristen Wiig unearthed that bizarre SNL character who sang and had incredibly tiny hands, I think we’ve found the source.

Remote Patrol

NCAA Championship Game

Gonzaga vs. North Carolina

CBS 9:09 p.m.

The last school to lose consecutive championship games was Butler, in 2010 and 2011

The last school to lose consecutive championship games was Butler, in 2010 and 2011

Dear Refs: Remember how you called the first half of Gonzaga-South Carolina. If you want to give us a memorable game this evening, go back and watch that tape. That’s how you do it. Do you favor the school that ran the four corners offense winning in a four corners state, or do you take the team with AZ in its name winning in AZ?

PHINAL PHOUR COACHES’ ROW

by John Walters

Just some of the coaches (and wives) I spotted in first row behind announcers’ table opposite where team benches are: Lute Olson, Denny Crum, Jim Calhoun, Jim Boeheim, Steve Lavin, Bo Ryan, Steve Fisher, Jay Wright, Coach K not here (I hear he is in another desert city this weekend).

 

Charles doing homework….

IMG_1848

 

The view from bench-level….

IMG_1850

 

Duck Dancers….

IMG_1858

 

 

LIVE FROM THE PHINAL PHOUR

by John Walters

We’ll try to do a few live hits from Glendale today….

IMG_1824

Arrived at University of Phoenix Stadium and decided to get some exercise. This is taken from Section 404, Row 23, Seat 29. Two of these are selling for $125 for both games today, which I guess, considering the circumstances, is reasonable. I mean, compared to the $30 I spent last night for a dozen Mach 3 razors. Still, this is Peak FOMO, no?

IT’S ALL HAPPENING!

by John Walters

“Downtown Josh Brown” is one of my five favorite people on Twitter. For he’s a jolly good follow, for he’s a jolly good follow…

Starting Five

1. Flynn-trigue* **

*The judges will also accept “General Disturbance”

**Another Day of Trump (71)

Apparently, former National Security Adviser Mike Flynn (who, like the person that appeared in this space yesterday, Sally Yates, was fired by The Worst Wing less than one month into his presdiency) is eager to talk to any Intelligence Committee that wants to listen to him in exchange for immunity. “Gen. Flynn certainly has a story to tell, and he very much wants to tell it,” his lawyer, Robert Keiner, said late Thursday. “Should the circumstances permit.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R-UCb5rOGXo

By that, Keiner elaborated, he meant that General Flynn will speak in exchange for immunity from prosecution. Which is why this quote from Flynn last autumn comes back to bite him in the ass.

2. Final Four: League Of Nations

There are more players in this year's Final Four from this west African nation than there are from Indiana

There are more players in this year’s Final Four from this west African nation than there are from Indiana

I stopped by University of Phoenix Stadium yesterday to pick up my media credential and enjoy a complimentary savory turkey sandwich (and say hello to a journo or two I hadn’t seen in awhile). Anyway, picked up the media guides and was heartened to learn that one team has a “Tut” (who was not born in Arizona nor does he have a condo made ‘a stone’a) and that another has the son of Chris Corchiani and yet another the son of Canadian legend Jay Triano.

Anyway (again with the anyways), here are all the countries represented in this year’s Final Four rosters outside the U.S.A.: Australia, Canada, Denmark, England, Estonia, France, Gabon, Israel, Japan, Poland and Senegal. That’s 11 different nations outside the United States and four continents. Only South America and Antarctica are not represented (I hear the AAU ball in Antarctica is lame).

3. I Love You, Manatee

Manatees were thought to be endangered because not even other manatees wanted to have sex with them

Manatees were thought to be endangered because not even other manatees wanted to have sex with them

Good news, no, great news: Manatees are no longer an “endangered species.” The aquatic mammals have been downgraded to a “threatened species.” More manatees and less man, please. Especially in Florida.

4. Hazing at Hamilton

Not a good time for your suburban Phoenix high school football powerhouse to be making news for alleged hazing, with scores of scribes in town for the Final Four. Six players at Chandler Hamilton High School, which opened less than 20 years ago but has already won seven state championships, were arrested on Thursday in connection with hazing incidents. Details of the incidents are not yet available, but the charges were kidnapping, sexual assault and aggravated assault (MH staffers are working diligently to discern if there were any non-pork by-product items placed in hot dog buns).

Hamilton is coached by Steve Belles, a former All-State quarterback at Phoenix St. Mary’s High School who later went on to play at Notre Dame (mostly on special teams). Belles won a state championship in high school and a national championship in college, and I think he may have won both inside Sun Devil Stadium (the h.s. championship game may have been played in Tucson that year).

5. Go To Hel-sinki

Helsinki

Helsinki

You have to love The New York Times for providing five places to go out in Helsinki, Finland. I perused the story and would argue that all five spots have a reasonable facsimile in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn (who’s with me?). If the NYT actually dispatched writer Esha Chhabra to Finland to do this piece, more power to her. Or him.

Reserves

A Reptile Dysfunction

Never bite the hand that feeds, or the one that slakes your thirst, especially when your bite contains deadly venom.

 

Music 101

Make A Little Magic

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=quMbbvYhIXE

In 1980 the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band released this soft-country-rock tune with the late Nicolette “Gonna Take a Lotta Love” Larson on backup vocals. It felt as if I heard this song all the time on Phoenix adult-contemporary station KOY at the time. The affable KOY morning deejay was a man named Bill Heywood, a local institution. Five years ago Heywood and his wife of 35 years, Susan, took their lives together. Susan was terminally ill and the couple calmly checked themselves into a room and two triggers were pulled.

Remote Patrol

Women’s Final Four

Stanford vs. South Carolina

Mississippi State vs. Connecticut

7 p.m. ESPN

Glad they moved the format back to Friday-Sunday, where it always belonged. Storylines: UConn attempts to extend win streak to 112 and 113 while winning a FIFTH consecutive national championship; the Samuelson sisters of Connecticut and Stanford (the last school to defeat the Huskies, by the way); and Dawn Staley, coach at USC, who will be the next women’s national team coach, succeeding Geno.