ABOUT OPEN MIKE

Mike Celizic

MSNBC.com contributor Mike Celizic provides his unique slant as he takes an offbeat look into the world of sports beyond the box scores.



Goodell's NFL 'honesty' proposal is brilliant

Posted: Friday, March 07, 2008 4:59 PM

I’m not sure that any professional team sport has ever had a directive like the one NFL commissioner Roger Goodell delivered today. He wants teams to promise not to cheat.

According to this Mike Maske story from The Washington Post, “Goodell pledged to impose more severe penalties on teams and employees who violate rules governing competition. He also proposed a measure requiring team employees to report ‘actual or suspected’ violations and another that would require each team's principal owner, top football executive and head coach to stipulate annually, under the threat of league discipline, that they complied with the rules and reported violations.”

This is really extraordinary. CONTINUED >>

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OK with how OKC trying to snag Sonics

Posted: Wednesday, March 05, 2008 11:51 PM

I’m not a fan of cities engaging in corporate welfare for the owners of sports teams, who would seem to have enough money as it is. But if a city is going to hand out tens of millions of dollars to create a couple of hundred part-time minimum-wage jobs taking tickets, serving $6 beers and parking cars, there’s a right way to do it and a wrong way.

Oklahoma City on Tuesday did it the right way. Instead of the city government just handing the money to local businessman Clay Bennett, who owns the Seattle Sonics and wants to move them to his home town, the matter was put to a vote. By a whopping 62-percent majority, the electorate extended a one-penny sales-tax increase for 15 months to pay for improvements to the Ford Center and to build a swank practice facility for the team. CONTINUED >>

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Randy Moss still seen as a risk

Posted: Sunday, March 02, 2008 8:30 PM

You’d think a 31-year-old receiver coming off a year in which he set an NFL record for touchdown catches would be a hot property. And yet Randy Moss still doesn’t have a job.

Our Tom Curran has already pointed out that Moss needs the Patriots more than they need him. But where are the other teams lining up to get one of the most talented receivers the game has ever seen?

The Sporting News is reporting that talks between Moss and the Pats on a new contract are stalled. As is usual in such cases, the player thinks he’s worth more than the team is offering. What usually follows next is the player going off in a huff to get the money he feels he deserves.

CONTINUED >>

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ESPN should explain why it hired Knight

Posted: Friday, February 29, 2008 10:18 AM

Bobby Knight loved to express his disdain of sports journalists and often said that if he ever needed a brain transplant, he’d want one from a sportswriter because he knew it had never been used.

Too bad he won’t be able to use that line anymore. And it’s not just because now he is a member of the media, but because journalism has rules against plagiarism, and Knight stole that line from former Eagle quarterback Norm Van Brocklin.

I’m not saying ESPN should not have hired Knight; the man does know college basketball as well as anyone alive, and if he can bring himself to criticize his coaching buddies, he could be a great analyst. But it would be nice if the network would at least acknowledge that it once had a problem with him and explain why the guy who busted a dedicated and honest reporter would now be welcomed into the fold. CONTINUED >>

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Key on testing preps, not pros, for 'roids

Posted: Wednesday, February 27, 2008 11:29 PM

I don’t agree that often with commissioners of sports leagues, but I’m with them on this one. Congress has no business getting involved in running their drug-testing programs.

The heads of the four major team sports leagues – MLB, NBA, NHL, NFL – were hauled down before a congressional subcommittee on Wednesday, and not the same one that so recently hosted Roger Clemens. You’d think one would be enough to straighten out something that’s not broken, but you’d be wrong. If it’s worth doing at all in Washington, it’s worth overdoing. If only they’d be that vigilant about their other business. CONTINUED >>

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Congress needs to wake up on drug issues

Posted: Friday, February 22, 2008 6:33 PM

At the risk of beating a maimed horse that refuses to die, I can’t stop thinking about Sen. Arlen Specter’s Captain Ahab-like obsession with the NFL’s Spygate, which even the Patriots’ most fervent opponents say is dead and buried. The reason I can’t help thinking about it is because of a recent blithe assertion by Troy Vincent, president of the NFL Players Association, that human growth hormone (HGH) is not a problem in the league.

Specter’s crusade continues to draw headlines. Vincent’s statement, lacking any evidence, barely elicited a comment. However, because he said it, the subcommittee that can’t resist calling in sports bigwigs to talk about performance-enhancing drugs has called another round of hearings. This time with representatives from both labor and management of each of the four major professional sports leagues. But Vincent wasn’t mentioned and he’s not on the list of witnesses.

These three developments all came about independently. To Congress, they’re not related, and that’s the problem: They should be. CONTINUED >>

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Bonds wants to play? Use the Rickey method

Posted: Wednesday, February 20, 2008 12:30 AM

Barry Bonds hasn’t retired and is ready to play ball right now. He hasn’t said that publically, because he’s way too busy feeling sorry for himself to have time to do anything so common as speak for himself.

So Bonds sent his agent, Jeff Borris, out to spread the word: the greatest home-run hitter of all time (performance-enhanced division) is available. So far, there are no takers, and there don’t look to be any. He’s old, he’s slow, and there’s a federal indictment hanging over his head. Oh, and people aren’t happy with the allegations of steroid and HGH use, either.

Just sign a minor league contract. Prove he can still play. Show them how much he wants it.

It worked for Rickey Henderson. CONTINUED >>

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Spying on Americans, OK -- spying in NFL, bad

Posted: Friday, February 15, 2008 7:11 AM

Far be it from me to suggest that a U.S. Senator could be influenced by such petty concerns as money. But if you’re scratching your head trying to figure out why Sen. Arlen Specter, the Pennsylvania Republican, is so interested in the NFL’s Spygate scandal, you could – just for fun – follow the money.

CONTINUED >>

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'Caddyshack' a relief to this hopeless golfer

Posted: Tuesday, February 12, 2008 10:39 PM

I’m a golfer, and I’m pathetic. Yeah, I know, that’s redundant, like saying I’m a talk-show host, and I’m self-righteous.

This is how pathetic I am: It is three minutes to midnight and I must be up in 6 ½ hours. But I can’t go to sleep. “Caddyshack” – the unedited version – is on HBO Zone. It’s got adult language and nudity. Nudity! And golf! Does it get any better than this? CONTINUED >>

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If Shaq stays healthy, Suns could win title

Posted: Thursday, February 07, 2008 1:58 PM

Shaquille O’Neal is one of the greatest centers ever to play the game. I don’t think there’s any argument about that, and it was confirmed 11 years ago when he was chosen as one of the 50 greatest NBA players of all time. So why is he going to his fourth team, having been traded by two teams that didn’t see themselves winning anymore with him playing center?

CONTINUED >>

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