Basketball picks


Football picks & Basketball picks & Baseball picks07 Jun 2008 09:33 am

by J. Mesa 

I gotta tell ya’ I like the idea of having instant replay for homeruns. Replay will help level the playing field and make the game more fair and legitimate. With MLB still feeling the fallout of the steroids scandal, what better way to help baseball and its fans heal than to do something to make the game more honest?

Fans already have the benefit of the jumbo-tron replay and we can all tell when the umps get the call wrong. Every fan in the yard sees it, every fan watching on TV sees in, but unfortunately, the three people on the field that NEED to see the play often get it wrong. It’s a lot of fun to second guess the umpire and with replay in the field we have a chance to call the ump wrong and we’d all be right.

Pushing for MLB replay

Basketball picks30 May 2008 11:32 am

by J. Mesa 

In every offseason in virtually every sport, we hear over-paid and over-hyped athletes demanding to be traded. This past summer none whined louder and stomped his feet harder than Los Angeles Lakes’ superstar Kobe Bryant. From having to endure listening to him demand to be traded on every sports radio show to every ESPN offseason NBA report, the annual “Kobe is unhappy and wants to be traded” shtick had gotten to be old hat – the same song drilled in our heads over and over like a bad American Idol tune.

Bravo to the Lakers brass that denied Kobe the trade he so demanded (I have it on good authority that Bryant actually held his breath and turned purple when making his demand to be traded).  So then, what to make of this turnaround from “trade me now” to NBA MVP and now Finals participant? When did the Black Mamba decide he was going to rise above the pettiness and carry this Lakers team to one of the best regular season finishes and a NBA MVP award?

Kobe assumed – dare I say – a leadership role anchoring the Lake show as they plowed through the defenseless Nuggets, toppled the Jazz on their own floor to now accepting the changing of the old guard (San Antonio), to bring the Lakers back to ye olde days of Showtime basketball.

The theft of Pao Gasol and his suiting-up for LA certainly helped, but Kobe’s turnaround goes deeper than that. There comes a time in almost every elite athlete’s career where money, fame, cars, etc. ceases to matter, ceases to be a motivating factor. In place of all that fluff is the intense desire for one thing and one thing only – to be a champion. Bryant reached that point this season.

After being dogged for so many years for not being able to win a title without Shaq and seeing O’Neal win another championship in Miami without Bryant served as motivation, an almost direct challenge that put his career in perspective. If Kobe wanted to be considered among the greatest of all time he needed to find a way to win this year – and he did.

So as we are beginning to formulate our NBA picks for the Finals, what will happen this offseason if the Lakers fail to bring the championship trophy back La-La land? What if the Association gets its way and the Lakers and the Celtics meet in the Finals and Boston wins the series? Will Kobe up to his old Jordin Sparks song-and-dance routine and demand another trade this offseason? This may come as a shock to some, but I think the curtain has closed on such antics. If the Lakers don’t win the big one, I think Bryant accepts responsibility for the loss learns from it and uses it as motivation for next season.

We have just witnessed the changing of the guard as the Lakers supplanted the Spurs as the team to beat in the west, but the change that will have more of an impact is the change from ye olde Kobe to a more mature, on-the-court leader that will eventually be included as one of the all-time greats.

Football picks & Basketball picks & Hockey picks & Baseball picks10 May 2008 09:27 am

HOMER ALERT!

Now I usually shy away from my pro-Denver leanings when writing in my own little corner of cyberspace. Whether it is my loathing of the Raiders, the Diamondbacks or the Lakers, I try to lay off expressing my true feelings in an effort to stay neutral. But things have gotten so bad in the Mile High City, that I needed the collective shoulder of the Dog Pound to cry on.

Denver has always been such a great sports town. We have world titles in both football and hockey and it looked like our little brother of a team – the Rockies, was going to mature in front of our eyes and bring home a World Series crown. Alas, it wasn’t to be as our little brother ran into Boston’s big brother and sent us home in four games last year. 

We are used to getting no respect when it comes to baseball. The east-coast, major-market bias has never gotten to us. So we weren’t surprised when early MLB picks for the 2008 season left us out of the pennant conversation. Heck, they even left us out of the NL West conversation, but we took it all with a grain of salt. We were gonna show them! Well, not so much.

A Mile High is really a valley low

Basketball picks25 Apr 2008 09:53 am

We went rounds trying to arrive at a conclusion as to what makes the Most Valuable Player. Is it the best player form the best team? Or is it the player from any team that has meant the most to their team when it matters most?

We here at Wunderdog Sports Picks have determined that a true MVP is the latter. The league MVP should go to the player that has meant the most to his team. The player that has taken the reigns and driven the team where most other players fell short is truly the most valuable.

After considerable debate, many hurled beer cans and several indignant emails; the WD staff has selected New Orleans PG Chris Paul as this year’s MVP.

Wunderdog Sports NBA MVP

Basketball picks16 Apr 2008 10:02 am

From Davidson’s improbable run deep into the tournament to Mario “Superintendent” Chalmers’ buzzer beater to help the Kansas Jayhawks to the National Championship, this year’s March Madness tournament was about as action packed as anyone could have hoped.

Today we highlight some of the off-court fireworks with our list of winners of the inaugural Wunderdog Sports “Lucky 7” March Madness Bracket Contest.

This year, the man with all the right March Madness picks was Rodney, AKA CashMoney. At the end of the tournament, CashMoney was flush with $300 Bodog cash dropped into his account. In addition to the Bodog winnings, Rodney also won a month’s worth of Wunderdog’s premium sports picks.

Our third- place finisher Harry, AKA indyjones9755 said “The contest was very well run, gave you almost immediate results from the games, and definitely affordable (no entry fee!). Wunderdog and Bodog once again were a great team in sponsoring this contest.”

Indyjones9755 also picked up $50 Bodog cash plus a week of premium Wunderdog sports picks.

In addition to the prize money put up by Bodog, they sportsbook giant also contributed a ton of “swag” to help sweeten the prize packages for our winners.

As our sixth-place finisher John, who goes by the handle capperslounge, so eloquently put it “the shirt will be worn proudly.” John also won a one-day subscription to Wunderdog Sports.

Congratulations to all our winners and let the bragging begin!

Wunderdog “Lucky 7″ March Madness Contest Winners!

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