Roger vs. Tiger

February 2nd, 2007 by ricoalegro

I think there should be no debate on this topic, because as much as I think that Tiger will break all existing golfing records (7th consecutive PGA tour victory as of presstime and counting), I think that the level of difficulty of dominating tennis the way Roger has in the past two or so years practically overwhelms070128_federer_vmed_10arp350x350
what Mr. Woods has done. Think about it: you have a bad day in golf, you can make it up for it in the next 3 days. You have a bad day in tennis ( a bad set even), you’re out of the tounament. And with Federer only losing 5 or 6 times for the past 2 years, and with the relative ease and regularity that he disposes of the likes of players in the top 10, I think that that should end the discussion.

ARNOH

February 2nd, 2007 by ricoalegro

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Yup, that was the name of my college band. And also the name of the security agency that we share office space with whenever we play. And just about 2 weeks ago two of my former bandmates came here to Iloilo with their families for a vacation from England and relived our kapaan days when OPM bandemonium was at its upswing. And funny how after almost a decade since last playing together we had no trouble playing our repertoires- and still can’t remember some of the lyrics of songs which lyrics we always seemed to forget way back then.

How I miss being a class rockstar.

roger federer

January 31st, 2006 by ricoalegro

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ROGER FEDERER overcame a gutsy effort from marcos baghdatis to claim his second australian open title, and his seventh grand slam trophy overall at age 24. wow. and at the rate and manner that he is disposing of seeded opponents left and right, i have no doubt in my mind that he is set to surpass pistol pete’s mark before he turns 30. no need to repeat andre agassi’s assesment of his game, he has absolutely no chinks in his armor. no samprasesque backhand to exploit. and peerless as of the moment, with rising young star rafael nadal still unproven on grass and hard courts. barring major injuries, i think he can win 18 grand slam titles before he calls it quits.

kobe vs. mj

January 31st, 2006 by ricoalegro

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KOBE BRYANT erupted for a mind-boggling 81 points against the lowly raptors last week, and this generated another debate on kobe’s place in the pantheon of basketball immortals, particularly against the Great One himself (Jordan, to the uninitiated ones). i remember that day when i was doing my usual scoreboard-watching before i went out for work, and turned my computer off with the raptors leading LA by almost 20 points at halftime and kobe with a ho-hum 26 markers at that point- on pace for another 40 point game. back from work, i was hoping to find out another laker loss because of a 10 of 100 field goal clip by numero otso. instead, i found myself looking for a stable object to steady myself, my mind and body totally unprepared for the figure that i saw from my computer screen as the website revealed its contents. now you might think that this is grossly exaggerated, and totally expected from a kobe fan. but the weird fact is, i am actually a kobe basher, and instead a true blue (or red, during his bulls days) michael jeffrey jordan fanatic of the highest level. now, 81 points means a lot of things, but what really shook me to the core was the scary realization that maybe jordan’s secure place as basketball’s best scorer is threatened by this accused rapist, insatiable ballhog, and overall selfish basketball player. consider this: mj’s highest ever point total was 69 vs. the cavs in ‘93. didn’t even reach 70. but 81? wilt’s century mark was tainted by controversy, with his team supposedly calling timeouts to ensure his record in the dying minutes of the game, and with the level of competition- or the lack of it- that he faced at that time, he was expected to dominate like he did. and he achieved that by taking 60+ field goal attempts, making roughly half and converting on 28 of 32 foul shots. kobe on the other hand attempted 46 field goals, making 28 and converted 7 threes in the process and also making good with 18 of 20 trips to the line. and he actually rallied his team for the win by scoring 55 points in the second half while playing only 42 minutes overall. no overtimes, unlike mj who needed one to reach his career high. the funny thing was that a lot of people downplayed his remarkable feat, even his own coach who still equated stratospheric scoring as unneccesary icing on the game of basketball. so did tex winter. and jabbar. and all other notable basketball personalities who probably wouldn’t say the same if mj achieved that feat during his time. (to be continued…)

GMA resign?

September 21st, 2005 by ricoalegro

Does anybody really believe that 1) GMA will do the unthinkable and step down for decency’s sake 2) Noli de Castro will be the lesser evil than his pint-sized superior 3) we have a better alternative than GMA right now except for perhaps the recently departed Mr. Roco?