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Strictly Sports Week Update: 5.19.11

Filed under: Sports — Angel Navedo at 4:00 am on Friday, May 20, 2011

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In case you were unaware, it’s Subway Series season in New York. The Mets will leave Queens and venture into Yankee Stadium this weekend for a three-game series to determine superficial bragging rights amongst self-absorbed baseball fans hometown supremacy. (7:05 p.m., SNY/MLBN)

Okay, you got me — I’m indifferent to the Subway Series. But that’s only because I don’t believe in ostensible stakes. I do really embrace the concept of winning streaks, however brief, coming to an end, though. That’s exciting.

The Mets will carry a two-game streak into the Bronx, despite sitting five games behind first in the NL East. More impressively, the Yanks recovered from a dismal six-game skid with a three-game winning streak of their own, highlighted by last night’s 13-2 thrashing in Baltimore.

But the Subway Series matters to me for other reasons. Trolling.

Check out MyFitteds.com for the Yankees hat in Mets colors, and imagine your response to the two inevitable reactions from the respective Mets and Yankees fanbases.

Mets fans: “Those colors make the logo look better!”
Yankees fans: “Yuck! Those colors disgrace our great logo!”

For a really good time, tell them you can’t decide which team you prefer. Or, if you want to be daring, convince them you don’t see any difference.

Take a trip to ECapCity.com for the Mets hat in navy blue if you want to flip the script. Wash, rinse, repeat.

In all seriousness, and if real-life trolling really isn’t your thing, these mashups are perfect for the proud New Yorker who doesn’t have a favorite baseball team. The hats work as symbols of solidarity — after the requisite brief explanation, of course.

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I run the risk of looking like a know-it-all after the fact with my next statement, but this is my platform from which to speak and the following must be declared: I knew Dirk Nowitzki and the Mavericks wouldn’t match their Game 1 performance in the Western Conference Finals against the Thunder last night.

That’s not to say I’m clairvoyant; it’s just logic. And that’s not to imply that Nowitzki needed to score 48 points in a game again, because that’s illogical and unrealistic.

Kevin Durant and the Thunder absorbed Dallas’ best shot in Game 1. The well-rested Mavericks, fresh off an adrenaline-pumping sweep of the defending-champion Lakers, needed Nowitzki’s record-setting, career-best performance for a win.

Dallas benefited from a masterful combination of Nowitzki’s accuracy and dominant bench support from J.J. Barea and Jason Terry. But that kind of lightning can’t strike twice. The Mavs’ perfect storm of basketball in Game 1 still wasn’t good enough to slow down Oklahoma City; the Thunder rolled to 112 points in a losing effort. That’s insane.

Regardless, Nowitzki hammered out a team-high 29 points in Dallas’ 106-100 loss last night, so the Mavs’ first home loss in seven postseason games doesn’t fall squarely on his shoulders. The Mavs bench was outplayed, with no responses for OKC’s James Harden and Eric Maynor (the two combined for 36 points off the bench).

Given Russell Westbrook’s horrifying Game 1, and the bench-driven victory to close Game 2, it’s safe to assume the Mavericks have yet to see OKC’s best.

Lids.com is the only place to go if you want to show the Thunder some fitted hat love.

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Don’t call it a comeback, yet. It’s too soon to tell if Winnipeg is filled with Jets all the way, but unconfirmed reports indicate that the NHL is returning to Manitoba. More specifically, the Atlanta Thrashers could relocate from Georgia for snowy Canadian landscapes.

It’s more than a rumor, though. A finalized deal hasn’t been reached, but the negotiations are ongoing. Winnipeg has been without a team since 1996 when the Jets became the Phoenix Coyotes.

If you feel like reminiscing, or starting a premature celebration, MyFitteds.com can show you that Jets life, Winnipeg style.

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On Tuesday, May 17, 2011, baseball lost a legend when Harmon Killebrew passed away at 74 of esophageal cancer.

Killebrew made the crack of a bat sound like poetry. He was a pure slugger who knocked homers to obscene distances. His bat escorted 573 pitches out of parks for home runs, while notching 1,584 RBIs in his storied 22-year career. Killebrew was voted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame in 1984.

He spent nearly the entirety of his career with the Washington Senators/Minnesota Twins organization (Washington moved to Minnesota for the 1961 season) with a closing act in Kansas City for one season. In that time, Killebrew was an All-Star mainstay and an American League MVP in 1969 — great enough to have his No. 3 retired in Minnesota.

MyFitteds.com can hold you down with the hat above.

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Angel Navedo is a New York-based writer, specializing in sports, streetwear, frivolous spending, and various other subjects that bring shame to his family. You can learn more about him at thatsangel.com, or follow him on Twitter because that’s what people do now.

 
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