Monthly Archives: April 2008

Kansas in National Championship!

UCLA lost tonight… but Kansas won! And so I’m happy. So very happy. This could be the first national championship for KU basketball since 1988, and if Kansas plays anything like they did in the first fifteen minutes (and last five) of tonight’s game against North Carolina, Memphis should be very, very afraid. Alas, anything is possible on Monday night. But for now, Jayhawk fans everywhere ought to be very hyped up. We beat Roy Williams!

 

Final Four Showdown

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Final Fours are, let’s face it, usually something of a let down after the first two weeks of March Madness. Not so this year (at least on paper). This is the first year all four #1 seeds have made it through to the end–and can duke it out (sans Duke!) as the four best teams in the country should.

It’s doubly exciting for me, because my two favorite college basketball teams comprise half of the final field! I’m from Kansas, and so the KU Jayhawks are and will always be my #1 team. I’m rooting for them to win their first national championship since 1988. But I’m a grad student at UCLA now, and so I’d also love to see the Bruins win it all (it would be their 12th!). As I see it, I have pretty good odds that one of my teams will take home the trophy. That is, unless Memphis and/or Roy Williams’ Tarheels ruin the party.

Which brings me to tomorrow night’s epic matchup between Kansas and North Carolina. Roy Williams (current coach of UNC), was the coach of Kansas for 15 years. The “Roy” years were largely successful at KU, albeit with no national championship to show for it. In 2003, Roy became the most loathed man in Lawrence (KS) when he announced that he was leaving KU for UNC–something he promised three years earlier that he’d never do. Of course, once at UNC Roy promptly won his first national championship in 2005–further incensing the Jayhawk faithful who so hoped Roy would lead them to the prize. Hence, Saturday’s night’s game is a game of emotion, revenge, and bragging rights. Will Bill Self be able to outcoach the white-haired wonder? I surely hope so.

And I hope UCLA beats Memphis too… which means KU and UCLA would meet in the National Championship game, in a rematch of last year’s Elite Eight game which UCLA won. I would be delighted by this scenario, b/c either outcome would suit me fine. Truth be told, I would be pulling heavily for KU (honestly, does UCLA need a 12th banner?), though the game would be epic regardless.

Don’t Pick Romney

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I’m not sure McCain has much of a chance in November, but what little chance he does have depends largely on who he picks as his running mate. This is definitely an election where the running mate will make a big difference.

On that note, I hope hope hope that the rumors swirling about Mitt Romney being a leading VP contender are untrue. Senator McCain: please do not pick Romney. This would be a big mistake. With Romney on your team you might get Ann Coulter’s vote, but is that really something you want?

Mitt Romney is the Al Gore of the Republican party. He’s totally faux, robotic, waffling, and insincere. He’s an opportunist and political scavenger, which means he’s likely chomping at the bit to get on the McCain ticket. He would be a liability for McCain in the way Dan Quayle was for George Bush Sr.

So, if not Romney, then who should McCain choose? Well, if I was on his advisory team, I’d suggest the following options:

  • Joe Lieberman: Okay, so this choice wouldn’t exactly build McCain’s already unenthusiastic conservative base. But if Obama wants to play “unity politics,” what better way for McCain to respond than to do it himself—picking a Democrat for a running mate? Let Obama have Mitt Romney.
  • Matt Blunt: The governor of Missouri, Blunt comes from a strong political pedigree and has appealing military credentials that would nicely compliment McCain’s (Blunt graduated from the Naval Academy and was called to active duty after 9/11). Also, at 37 (roughly half of McCain’s age), Blunt would bring some much-needed young blood into the fray.
  • Condaleeza Rice: She’s one of the most intelligent Republicans ever to exist, and would intellectualize anyone’s presidential ticket. It’s just too bad she’ll forever be associated with the failures of Iraq under the Bush regime. But who knows? Maybe she can redeem herself in a different political capacity?
  • JC Watts: He’s a former college football quarterback (for the University of Oklahoma), a four-term congressman, and a well-spoken conservative thinker. He’s also black, which makes him all the more unique (black republican?!) and potentially valuable in what will surely be a racially charged election.
  • Tim Pawlenty: This would be a bit on the boring and safe side, but definitely a smart pick. Pawlenty is the two-term governor of Minnesota, a swing state that McCain could win with the help of a popular governor. Pawlenty is also more conservative than McCain on several issues (immigration, for one), which could help pull in the skeptical holdouts within the Republican party.