Wednesday, October 31, 2018

Altoona Mirror, October 31, 2018

Good news. The NFL trading deadline passed Tuesday afternoon, and that ended all the crackpot Le'Veon Bell trade rumors.
He'll either play for the Steelers, or he'll stay home and lose in excess of $800,000 every time his erstwhile teammates play a game.
The Steelers did nothing at the deadline, which is exactly what they were expected to do. They can still sign players who have been cut loose by other teams, of course. That's usually a matter of necessity rather than choice, though.
There were a couple of notable notes from Mike Tomlin's weekly briefing. He said the left hand injury Ben Roethlisberger sustained in Sunday's game against Cleveland is actually a fractured index finger.
That's not as significant as an injury to his right hand would be, but it bears watching. The injury, and whatever gear he has to wear to protect it, will make it more difficult to handle the ball.
Tomlin also freely admitted why former first-round draft pick Artie Burns didn't get on the field Sunday apart from special teams duty.
Burns was late for Saturday's walk-through and Tomlin penalized him by keeping him on the bench.
Burns' playing time has diminished so much through this season that his absence was barely noticed.
Still, it's a disturbing development. The Steelers obviously expected big things from Burns when they chose him first in 2016. He did OK as a rookie, seemed to regress last year and can't seem to keep his spot this season.
It's looking like he's following the bad career path of Jarvis Jones, another No. 1 pick who wound up disappointing.
Burns is only 23, and he has a lot of ability, so it's hard to give up on him. But this is fundamental: If you're having a rotten season, at least show up for work on time.
---
Steve Pearce was the Most Valuable Player of the 2018 World Series. You could have won some serious money betting on that underdog.
Pearce spent his first major league years with the Pirates between 2007-11. He had power potential, but posted so-so numbers and was allowed to leave as a free agent.
The Minnesota Twins signed him and then released him at the end of spring training. Pearce has been with seven organizations since he left the Pirates. The Baltimore Orioles had him three different times.
Pearce got hot at the right time and was pretty much a clear-cut choice in the short series. It happens in baseball.
Gene Tenace was the MVP of the 1972 World Series for the Oakland Athletics. He'd had a lousy regular season as a part-time player, batting .225 and hitting five home runs in 227 at-bats.
He was worse in the American League Championship Series, managing one hit in 17 at-bats for a .059 average.
But when the World Series started, he became Babe Ruth...or at least the Babe's cousin. Tenace batted .348 and hit four home runs in 23 at-bats.
So he won the trophy and the car and had a memorable moment in a career that didn't have a lot of them.
And now history will note Steve Pearce has won an award that's named for Willie Mays.
Crazy game.
---
Happy Halloween
It's the day celebrated by ghosts, sugar-crazed kids and dentists.
(John Mehno can be reached at: johnmehnocolumn@gmail.com)


Monday, October 29, 2018

Altoona Mirror, October 29, 2018

Sunday dawned gray and gloomy in Pittsburgh with a persistent drizzle.
It was one of those days when the elements matched the mood.
The Steelers played the Cleveland Browns at Heinz Field, just a few miles from the spot where a hideous tragedy was making international headlines.
An individual armed with automatic weapons and hate started firing at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh's Squirrel Hill neighborhood. By the time he was captured, the destruction was horrific.
Eleven people died, nine of them over the age of 65. Two victims were brothers. A husband and wife died. They were killed because they attended a Saturday morning worship service.
Around the time the players were being introduced on the North Side Sunday, the victims' names were being released to the media by authorities.
When Mike Tomlin and his wife Kiya moved to Pittsburgh with their three children in 2007, they bought a house in Squirrel Hill. He estimated his home is about 800 yards from Tree of Life.
Steelers president Art Rooney II also lives in Squirrel Hill, a leafy green neighborhood known for stately old houses, an eclectic retail and restaurant mix and a unique sense of community. Its main thoroughfare, Murray Avenue, is busy daily with pedestrians. Even if the dog walkers and shoppers don't actually know each other, there's a bond.
By now, we're all familiar with Tomlin's demeanor at news conferences. He stares stonily from beneath his cap and answers questions in a clipped manner that belies no emotion. He's all business.
Sunday was different. Tomlin appeared ready to tear up when he was talking about Saturday's events.
"I'm a member of the Squirrel Hill community personally, and words cannot express how we feel as members of the community," Tomlin said. "We are prayerful."
This was personal for some of the Steelers. The team's former director of community relations, Michele Rosenthal, lost her two brothers in the attack.
Ben Roethlisberger opened his post-game results by saying, "Our thoughts, love and prayers go to all the victims of yesterday's senseless shooting, especially from me and my family to Michele. We love you, Michele, and we are thinking about you."
Defensive end Cam Heyward has done community work in Squirrel Hill and Saturday's images hit him hard.
"It's your own community, so it hurts even more," Heyward said. "It hurt a lot. I'm not going to sugar coat it. I thought about, what if my kids were there? I have friends who live there and I'm calling to check.
"For someone to do such a harmful and hateful crime....Pittsburgh is better than that. Nobody deserves that. They are innocent people. I don't care what you believe, you treat people with respect and care about everybody."
The Steelers observed a moment of silence before the game. Roethlisberger said he had tears in his eyes.
Across town, the Penguins announced they have canceled a Halloween costume promotion for their next home game on Tuesday. Instead, they'll collect money for a victims fund. They are also promoting a blood donation drive.
After Sunday's game, some media people were trying to pursue the angle that the Steelers had given a grieving city a gift with the 33-18 victory over Cleveland. That's just silly. At best, the game was a three-hour distraction from a very grim reality.
"Today was much larger than the game of football," running back James Conner said. "Our hearts are with the victims."
Long after the score and details are forgotten, this will be remembered as the day the quarterback was crying and the head coach was moved to offer a rare and involuntary look behind his ice-cold facade.
Gray and damp and depressing, no football game could fix this.
(John Mehno can be reached at: johnmehnocolumn@gmail.com)

Sunday, October 28, 2018

Altoona Mirror, October 28, 2018

The Cleveland Browns are in town today, and their visits have usually been as welcome as those from Santa Claus.
It's generally been a nice way for the Steelers to pick up an easy win.
Maybe not now, though. The Browns still aren't good, but they aren't awful, either.
The Steelers should have picked up on that when the Browns managed to come out of the season opener with a tie against them. That was with the mediocre Tyrod Taylor at quarterback. He has since been supplanted by No. 1 draft choice Baker Mayfield.
His name may sound like a brokerage ("I moved my money from Hunter Pence to Baker Mayfield") but he's a talented player who has actually helped the Browns win games, something no Cleveland quarterback has seemingly done reliably since the days of Brian Sipe (Good morning, fellow old-timers).
The  Steelers used to be automatic against rookie quarterbacks, devising schemes that would confuse them to the point of nightmares. This current Steelers defense mostly scares just Mike Tomlin.
The Steelers are coming off the bye week, and sometimes that leads to sluggishness. This is a big game for the Browns.
The Steelers and Browns frequently meet at the end of the season, when Cleveland's hopes of respectability have been dashed and the sole priority is exiting the game without an injury that will ruin the offseason.
This time, though, the Browns are 2-4-1 and tap dancing on that thin line between winning and losing. They've lost two games by three points and another by four.
They may not be good, but they're also no longer the Browns who inspire more laughs than a "Seinfeld" rerun.
---
If you're not invested emotionally in the outcome, Pitt's football games are fun to watch.
There's a lot of offense on both sides. The Panthers are either marching on some sort of spectacular drive, or they're allowing one.
If you're teaching an elementary school student basic math skills, Pitt games are a virtual workbook. They're always adding six.
For those who are invested emotionally -- like the university's administration -- it's not such a good thing. Pat Narduzzi got the head coaching job on his resume as a defensive coach, and the Panthers don't stop a whole lot of teams very well.
---
FOX made at least one good decision with its World Series coverage. There are just two people in the booth, Joe Buck and John Smoltz.
They have sideline reporters, but they're not called upon that often and usually have some valid information to offer.
Compare and contrast that with ESPN's coverage of routine Sunday night games, which have three announcers in the booth -- Matt Vasgersian, Alex Rodriguez and Jessica Mendoza.
More often than not, it seems like the game is an inconvenient backdrop for three-way conversation among the announcers. Then ESPN has to wedge in all the material it already has prepared because that justifies the effort of the people who did all the research.
FOX at least keeps it pretty basic during the game. Buck seems to annoy a lot of people, but he's a capable TV play-by-play broadcaster. Smoltz can dive too deeply into analyzing every pitch, as though every pitcher can put every pitch exactly where he wants it.
However, they let the game come through where ESPN suffocates a routine regular season game.
Viewers are advised to come late and leave early to avoid FOX's yuck-filled pre and post-game shows, where a bevy of former players take turns insulting each other.
If there's anything good about it, it's that FOX bounced pathetic Pete Rose after allegations that he enjoyed dating underage women when he was a player.
That was too sleazy, even for FOX.
(John Mehno can be reached at: johnmehnocolumn@gmail.com)


Wednesday, October 24, 2018

Altoona Mirror, October 24, 2018

The NFL trading deadline usually passes with scant interest among Steelers fans.
This year is different.
Patrick Peterson, cornerback for the Arizona Cardinals, has made it known he would like to be traded before the Oct. 30 deadline.
This would make perfect sense for the Steelers for a number of reasons:
--Peterson is a good player and would represent a significant upgrade over players the Steelers currently have manning the position.
--The Steelers appear to have a Super Bowl-capable offense that will only get better if Le'Veon Bell ever shows up. The defense is iffy at best, especially in the secondary.
--Thanks to Bell's absence to this point, the Steelers have the salary cap room to handle Peterson's contract, which includes two seasons beyond this one.
--Peterson is 28 years old, so he's in his prime.
--Cornerback Joe Haden's contract expires after this season, so acquiring Peterson would have potential benefits beyond this season.
All that said, a deal that would be logical probably won't happen for these reasons:
--The Cardinals say they don't play to trade Peterson. OK, but maybe a really tempting offer could change that feeling. After all, why does Arizona want an unhappy player on the roster?
--A tempting offer would probably include a first-round draft pick. The Steelers haven't traded away their first pick in 40 years. They've made deals within the first round, moving up or down, but they haven't let the first round pass without making a pick. Trading top picks is one reason they were so lousy in the 1960s.
--Peterson would be tasked with learning a new defense on the fly. The bye week has passed, so there's no real time to catch up. Perhaps that would negate some of his talent.
--The Steelers don't make a lot of trades, they make fewer in-season trades and they certainly don't make blockbuster deals during the season.
Adding Peterson could improve the Steelers' chances of getting to the Super Bowl. The clock is ticking on Ben Roethlisberger's career, so every season counts.
Still, don't look for it to happen. It's just not the way they traditionally do things.
---
We're on the honor system here, so trust me: This is being typed before a pitch has been thrown in the World Series.
My pick is the Boston Red Sox in six games.
But what do I know?
---
Duquesne announced a new plan for the on-campus A.J. Palumbo Center.
The venue, which opened in 1988, was under-built from the start. Adults don't want to sit on bleachers.
They're going to gut the whole building and redo it with suites, comfortable seats, practice facilities for a variety of sports, and academic space. It will have multiple uses beyond hosting basketball games.
The project is expected to cost $45 million, and the building will get a new name -- the UPMC Cooper Field House. The mens and womens basketball teams will play their games off campus next season, mostly at the PPG Paints Arena.
The new building is supposed to be ready for the 2020-21 basketball season. Capacity will remain just over 4,000. A lot of those seats are empty for Duquesne games these days.
The idea is to fill them. Having seat backs should help.
(John Mehno can be reached at: johnmehnocolumn@gmail.com)

Sunday, October 21, 2018

Altoona Mirror, October 21, 2018

Manny Machado is being paid $16 million to play baseball. Effort is not necessarily part of that package.
Machado, now with the Los Angeles Dodgers, did an interview with Ken Rosenthal last week that is remarkable for being both candid and clueless.
Machado, 26, admitted to Rosenthal that he doesn't always put forth maximum effort.
"There's no excuse for it, honestly," he said. "Obviously I'm not going to change. I'm not the type of player who's going to be Johnny Hustle and run down the line. That's not my personality. That's not my cup of tea. That's not who I am."
Machado has a lot more talent than he has sense, which will serve him well as he hits the free agent market in a few weeks. Someone will likely be willing to pay him hundreds of millions of dollars to play for their team, knowing they won't always get his best effort.
It's not like Machado has exactly spilled a secret. Baseball has a bunch of players who don't always exert themselves. Yoenis Cespedes of the New York Mets is a known slacker. The Pirates' Starling Marte gives a sporadic effort, which actually got him benched for a game this season.
Ex-Pirate Bill Madlock, a four-time batting champion, was known for conserving his energy.
Mike Piazza is in the Hall of Fame even though he often didn't run out ground balls, and had the bad habit of standing at home plate to admire possible home runs -- even when they didn't clear the fence.
Will this admission cost Machado free agent money? Doubtful. Teams have made their peace with understanding there's often good and bad. Machado will be productive enough to offset the times when his manager would like to strangle him.
Machado will likely do fine as he hunts a new contract. The team that signs him just shouldn't expect Johnny Hustle to be part of the deal.
---
Dave Littlefield was interviewed by the Mets for their vacant general manager position.
The New York Post labeled Littlefield a "fringe" candidate who is unlikely to get a second interview.
Whatever, this is the first time he's been known to be under consideration for a GM job since the Pirates cashiered him on Sept. 7, 2007.
His nearly six-year stay with the Pirates is largely remembered as a disaster, and not without justification. He was, of course, hampered by a limited budget and Kevin McClatchy's insistence that he do whatever seemed necessary to end that infernal streak of losing seasons. Thus, the Pirates wound up with Jeromy Burnitz for $6 million a year when they were actually better served by Nate McLouth at a fraction of that price.
Littlefield has worked continuously in baseball since leaving the Pirates. He scouted for the Cubs, then moved on to Detroit. He spent the last three years as the Tigers vice president of player development.
At 58, Littlefield can stay on that track, which offers a six-figure salary, low profile and minimal pressure. Unless he's aching to be a GM again, there's little reason to jump back in a job that requires nearly 24/7 commitment.
---
Once you figure out when they're playing and what channel they're on, you can watch the MLB playoffs.
---
The Penguins are on an extended trip to Canada at the same time recreational marijuana has been legalized in that country.
Go back about 40 years, and there were a certain number of Penguins players who would have been very reluctant to leave Canada at the end of the trip under those circumstances.
(John Mehno can be reached at: johnmehnocolumn@gmail.com)


Wednesday, October 17, 2018

Altoona Mirror, October 17, 2018

Vontaze Burfict was sneaky dirty this time.
The Cincinnati Bengals linebacker dropped an elbow on Antonio Brown's head that TV cameras saw but game officials didn't.
After that, players reported that Burfict yelled across the line of scrimmage, "You're next" at Steelers' second-year receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster.
Smith-Schuster said Burfict spent a good part of Sunday's game verbally threatening him, although nothing tangible came of it.
Just another AFC North game.
Burfict deserves a fine for the shot on Brown. If Steelers linebacker T.J. Watt got a $20,000 fine (and an on-field penalty) for bumping up against quarterback Matt Ryan's legs in the Atlanta game, Burfict deserves at least that much.
Surely some of the officials heard him making threats. Isn't there a time where that comes under the catch-all of "unsportsmanlike conduct" and merits a flag?
Some people think there are too many penalty flags in NFL games. This was a case where there should have been more.
SUBHEAD: Looking back
Some observations from the Steelers' victory in Cincinnati:
--The most impressive performance of the day was turned in by the Steelers' offensive line. The Bengals had no sacks and never knocked Roethlisberger down. In fact, Roethlisberger said he couldn't recall even being touched by a Bengals player more than three times in the game. Credit to the offensive line against a pass rush that is generally pretty good.
--Roethlisberger had an interesting comment about Le'Veon Bell on his weekly radio show. He said that even if Bell showed up now, it would still probably be three or four weeks before Bell would in peak football shape and ready to absorb regular contact.
That should take care of the question of who the starter should be. For the foreseeable future, it's James Conner.
--You could tell there was something special about Sunday's game by the enthusiasm Mike Tomlin displayed in his post-game question and answer session. The coach doesn't like show a lot of emotion in the media room. He puts on that stone face and answers questions by rote. This time, though, he was clearly excited by the way things unfolded and by the way the Steelers played.
--Cornerback Artie Burns was only on the field for 21 snaps on Sunday. The former No. 1 pick has played his way onto the bench for the moment.
--Looks like the radar Roethlisberger and Antonio Brown have shared for years is honed in again.
--Also looks like Roethlisberger is very comfortable with the ability of his tight ends to make plays. Both Vance McDonald and Jesse James have become favored targets. Watching McDonald mow down would-be tacklers has become a special treat for Steelers fans. May all of PennDOT's snow plows be that effective this winter.
---
It doesn't get nearly the notice that Bill Mazeroski Day (Oct. 13) does, but today is the anniversary of the Pirates' last two World Series, 1971 and 1979, both in Baltimore.
The players had to fight their way off the field in '79. Joe Shuta's popular "Two Minute Timeout" has a good feature with catcher Steve Nicosia reminiscing about that experience and an odd reunion with a guy he roughed up. You can find it at: www.2minuteto.com and it only takes two minutes.
(John Mehno can be reached at: johnmehnocolumn@gmail.com)


Sunday, October 14, 2018

Altoona Mirror, October 14, 2018

The Steelers and Bengals will start mixing it up just past 1 o'clock this afternoon.
The relevant question is whether football will be the No. 1 topic of conversation when this one wraps up somewhere around 4 o'clock.
The teams have a heated rivalry, and one of the key figures in that aspect is Bengals linebacker Vontaze Burfict, No. 55 in the game program and close to being No. 1 on the NFL's list of players fined for things they shouldn't be doing.
Let's make one thing clear: The Steelers aren't angels, and never have been. Joe Greene once got thrown out of a playoff game for giving Denver lineman Paul Howard a bolo punch to the midsection.
Last December the Steelers' JuJu Smith-Schuster leveled Burfict with a hit that caused a concussion, then stood over Burfict, taunting the fallen player.
That plot thickened when Burfict was given a four-game suspension to start this season, citing a failed drug test. Burfict maintained he was on a prescribed medication as a result of the concussion.
So there's plenty to watch today, and flag-happy officials will be even more diligent at the sign of anything that might be outside the rules.
They're right to do so, and they'd be even more correct to keep an eye on No. 55 on the Bengals.
He's always angry, but last year's events may have put some extra fuel on his raging fire.
---
The Milwaukee Brewers, who are currently playing in the National League Championship Series, opened this season with a payroll around $90 million.
That's about $3 million more than where the Pirates' payroll was at the same time.
It's also about $65 million less than the Baltimore Orioles, who lost 115 games and finished 61 games out of first place. As always, it's not just how much you spend, it's how you spend it.
What's even more amazing is the Brewers have more than 18 percent of their payroll tied up in Ryan Braun, who is looking like an average player these days at age 34.
Braun had the lowest batting average and OPS of his career. The Brewers still owe him a guaranteed $36 million for two more seasons, and they'll have to spend another $4 million to buy out a final option year.
Fans loved it when the Brewers committed long-term to their best player in 2008, and were probably just as elated when management added on another five years in 2011. Now? Maybe not so much since he hit .254 this season.
It's not just how much you spend, it's how you spend it.
---
There were high school football games Friday in the WPIAL that ended with these scores:
63-20, 70-36, 52-7, 66-6, 55-7, 50-7, and 64-21.
There were shutouts where the winning team scored 42 (two games), 46 (two games), 48, 53, and 49 points.
The big one in the shutout category was a 70-0 final. Imagine that -- the team that lost 53-0 can take consolation in knowing someone else had a worse night.
Blowouts happen, especially in high school, where the talent level can be wildly uneven. Having that many one-sided games in one night is mind-boggling, though.
What does it say when a 48-3 game doesn't even make a list of outrageously lopsided outcomes?
Hard to maintain interest among fans or the athletes when things are that ridiculous.
---
Saturday was the 58th anniversary of Bill Mazeroski's home run that won the 1960 World Series for the Pirates.
We still don't know the exit velocity or the launch angle, but people still seemed to be pretty happy anyway.
(John Mehno can be reached at: johnmehnocolumn@gmail.com)

Wednesday, October 10, 2018

Altoona Mirror, October 10, 2018

Asking the day's relevant question:
Who among us hasn't tossed an ottoman off a 14th floor balcony in a fit of rage?
That bizarre story broke on Tuesday as a man in Florida sued Steelers receiver Antonio Brown, alleging that Brown put his safety in peril by pitching furniture, vases and other objects off the balcony of a Miami apartment high rise.
At this point, you have to wonder if there's any shock value left at Steelers' headquarters when it comes to player behavior.
Brown was also sued for allegedly trashing the apartment.
Just another day in Steelers' land, where something is always happening and it doesn't even have to be about football.
But on the subject of football, let's review some things from Sunday's win over Atlanta:
--Ben Roethlisberger said on his radio show Tuesday that the inaccuracy of his passes in the first half was because of his lingering elbow injury. While the quarterback has been known to pay undue attention to his injuries, this bears watching.
Roethlisberger said he was on target in the second half because he decided to "suck it up" and throw with his normal motion, even though it caused him pain. We're only five weeks into the season. It's not a good sign when the quarterback says his arm hurts.
--By all accounts, linebacker L.J. Fort did a good job filling in for the injured Vince Williams. Good for Fort, but could that mean that replacing Williams really isn't that tough a task?
--Mike Tomlin said the Steelers didn't blitz more against the Falcons. There was clearly more pressure on the quarterback, though. Was that a function of Atlanta's offensive line doing a poor job, or did the Steelers vary their defensive looks enough to cause confusion?
--Tomlin said he's not worried about kicker Chris Boswell, who missed his first extra point try. OK, but what happens when the Steelers are in a game where a field goal might make the difference? Boswell is missing easy kicks on dry fields, and that should be a concern.
--End zone celebrations are OK to a point. JuJu Smith-Schuster's simulation of "giving birth" to a football (aided by James Conner) was as dumb as it was tasteless. If that's what they're going to do, just spike the ball and be done with it.
--Roethlisberger said he hopes Sunday's game in Cincinnati can be tough and hard-hitting without being dirty. Is that possible with the Bengals' Vontaze Burfict on the field? He just returned from a suspension, so he may have a surplus of hostility built up.
--Does Vegas have an over/under on penalty yardage in this game?
---
Watching the New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox play usually involves an investment of more than four hours.
They play, and play, and then they play some more.
The games are even longer when Angel Hernandez is on the umpiring crew and his calls are being challenged on replay.
Hernandez is one of MLB's least competent umpires, but he's working a post-season series. That's probably because he sued MLB for excluding him from past post-season activity.
There's this, too: With six umpires working three post-season events (Division Series, Championship Series and World Series), plus 12 more working the two wild card games, there are 48 post-season assignment to fill.
Some less-than-stellar umpires are going to get called just because of the need.
It was even more complicated this year with two divisions requiring tiebreaker games the day after the season ended.
Too many openings, not enough good umpires.
(John Mehno can be reached at: johnmehnocolumn@gmail.com)

Sunday, October 7, 2018

Altoona Mirror, October 7, 2018

The Penguins opened the season last week, and there was no need to stage a banner-raising ceremony.
The Stanley Cup currently belongs to the Washington Capitals, and it doesn't seem like many people outside of Pittsburgh expect the Penguins to repossess it this spring.
The Penguins appear to be waddling under the radar in discussions of possible Cup winners, which raises the question:
Was last season a bump along the way or was it the beginning of the end?
Sports Illustrated, which cares as much about the NHL as your cat does, has them losing to Florida in the first round of the playoffs. (Hey, at least SI has them making the playoffs, right?)
They're still loaded with talent, especially at the center position. Sidney Crosby is 31, which means his peak years are nearing an end. However, he's not finished.
Same for Evgeni Malkin, now 32. The two sides of Malkin were on display in the opener -- an egregious turnover that led to a Washington goal, followed by an impressive play to set up a Penguins goal.
Kris Letang and Phil Kessel are both 31. When a team's core of stars is all on the wrong side of 30, there's reason to doubt. It's a young man's league, and speed rules.
Letang has a dubious injury history, and Crosby is always a concussion away from having his career in jeopardy. There will come a time when the Penguins' stars exit, which is what the Steelers experienced after their Super Bowl run of the 1970s ended.
There were a lot of wistful press conferences, followed by the acquisition of replacements who weren't nearly as good. After that incredible run, the Steelers sank into mediocrity for a decade.
Sometimes the end comes without much advance notice. Jack Lambert, one of the toughest guys to ever play in the NFL, was done in by turf toe. The Steelers were convinced that Terry Bradshaw was good for another three seasons, but he blew out his elbow and was finished without warning.
It doesn't appear the Penguins are yet at that precipice, but it's coming one of these days. It seems unlikely that will happen during the current season, though.
It's reasonable to think the Penguins won't win the Cup this year, but foolish to exclude them from the discussion.
---
The Steelers need to get in gear, and 1 o'clock this afternoon would be a good time to start.
The Atlanta Falcons visit, and they're a team with great offensive potential and a very questionable defense.
Kind of sounds like the Steelers, doesn't it?
Get ready. This could light up the scoreboard.
Remember that the Steelers have already had a game in which they scored 37 points and didn't win.
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Baseball has changed, and players tend to be much more demonstrative on the field than previous generations were.
Still, it's jarring to see players in high-stakes postseason games taking the time to look at their dugout and pump their fists as they run to first base.
Showing off is so ingrained now that it doesn't even take a break in the postseason.
One other completely pointless observation: If there's that much Gatorade left to spill on the star of the game, the staff is mixing up entirely too much Gatorade.
---
How long until some baseball team stages individual entrances at the start of a game so the players can come out WWE style instead of taking the field as a group?
You know it's coming, complete with a tunnel, music, smoke machines and fireworks.
(John Mehno can be reached at: johnmehnocolumn@gmail.com)

Wednesday, October 3, 2018

Altoona Mirror, October 3, 2018

If this is Wednesday, it's time to sort through some of the things that happened in the Steelers' Sunday night game against the Baltimore Ravens.
--Ben Roethlisberger called it a bad day at the office, and it certainly was. His passer rating was a mediocre 72.5, but you didn't need that number to know he was off most of the night. Despite a long touchdown pass, he and Antonio Brown don't seem to clicking. Play makers have to make plays, and Roethlisberger has only been at his usual level in two of the four games.
--No he's not too old. Roethlisberger correctly noted on his Tuesday radio show that people were praising him for his work in the Tampa Bay game. He didn't age that much in six days. Something is off, though.
--The latest reports suggest Le'Veon Bell will be back in a few weeks. That won't be a moment too soon. For all the angry "who needs him?" sentiments that have come from his holdout, the Steelers clearly need him. You don't take one of the premier offensive players out of the lineup without noticing the difference.
--The Steelers' philosophy has long been "next man up" when injuries hit. In the case of the non-injured Bell and the severely-injured Ryan Shazier, that's hollow talk. The "next man" isn't nearly as good.
--Falling behind 14-0 in a matter of minutes took the crowd out of the game. It's been said before, but it's worth repeating: There's no real home field advantage at Heinz Field. The extra seats and luxury boxes are great for the Steelers' bottom line, but there isn't the noise edge that Three Rivers Stadium provided for 30 years.
--The Steelers only ran the ball 11 times, and only 10 of those were legitimate rushing attempts. All but one of them went to James Conner. Why? Conner couldn't get any traction, so why not try one of the other backs?
--You can make the case the Steelers defense was better because they held the Ravens to field goals in the second half and kept the game manageable. But the case can also be made that the defense failed because they couldn't stop the Ravens and allowed Baltimore to dominate time of possession.
--The Steelers really need to win this Sunday's home game against Atlanta to get back to .500 (plus a tie) and to get some measure of confidence. They're at Cincinnati the following week, and that looks like a tougher assignment than it did a month ago.
---
The Pirates' decision to fire hitting coaches Jeff Branson and Jeff Livesey has a lot to do with the regression of Josh Bell.
Bell went from 26 home runs to 12, and the staff didn't seem to have answers for that. On a team as desperate for power as the Pirates are, that sort of decline can't happen.
Branson and Livesey put in plenty of time with Bell, but couldn't correct things.
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Congratulations to Chris Rickens of Altoona, who accurately forecast the Pirates would win 82 games.
Chris was closer to the number of home runs the Pirates hit (157) and thus  won the tiebreaker to claim the 2018 Guess How Many Games The Pirates Will Win contest.
Honorable mention (but no prize) to Joe Maschue, who also projected 82 wins but lost on the darned tiebreaker.
Thanks to everyone who participated. Here's hoping we can do it again in March.
(John Mehno can be reached at: johnmehnocolumn@gmail.com)