Best Sports Blog -- 2008 Canadian Blog Awards
The Joy of Sox 318 votes (42.91%)
From The Rink 207 votes (27.94%)
Beijing 2008: A Dual Perspective 109 votes (14.71%)
Food Court Lunch 55 votes ( 7.42%)
Out Of Left Field 52 votes ( 7.02%)
Thanks to everyone who cast a vote!***
Update: Laura won Best Progressive Blog!
Whoo-hoo! Congrats, eh. Well deserved.
ReplyDeleteI will buy a doughnut to celebrate.
ReplyDeleteCongratulations...
ReplyDeleteOutstanding! Well deserved. Congratulations!
ReplyDeleteCongrats! Well done!
ReplyDeleteFirst round of dirty water on me! Congratulations.
ReplyDeleteFuck yeah.
ReplyDeleteAnd in the off season too.
No word on WMTC yet, it looks like.
Wow, a landslide too. Congrats!
ReplyDeleteClearly all the #1 blog got fat and lazy. 2008 was a rebuilding year.
ReplyDeleteWhat I guess I'm saying is: suck it, Pedersen.
ReplyDeleteBut will From the Rink be able to form a minority government with Beijing 2008 and the others? That is the question.
ReplyDeleteBut will From the Rink be able to form a minority government with Beijing 2008 and the others? That is the question.
ReplyDeleteWe are thinking alike: I answered the question on wmtc before I even saw it here.
Beijing 2008 had an ever worse off-season disadvantage than we did.
ReplyDeleteOh well! NO MERCY!
Congratulations my friend, just like the Sox you backed it up with a second one.
ReplyDeleteCongrats, my friend. Top of the heap once again, like a certain baseball team we all know and love have done twice this decade...
ReplyDeleteIn the interest in not being one of those guys, I'm going to post this comment here. It was originally posted at Out of Left Field, a blog where I am a contributor.
ReplyDeleteAs you may know, OOLF finished fifth in the voting for this.
My comments from there:
Ok, I'll say it straight. Joy of Sox does what it does well. And, it clearly has readers. I hold no grudge towards them.
But, I just think that the best sports blog in Canada should actually write about Canadian things. We get U.S. sports up the wazoo here in the Canadian MSM. Blogs are about the margins (as Neate tries to teach me everyday). The Red Sox are pretty much center of the page in bold writing stuff.
Again...nothing against Joy of Sox. But, should a blog that's entire focus is on an American subject even be eligible to win a Canadian award? I have my opinion, but maybe I'm wrong...
Let me say this one more time. I have nothing against Joy of Sox. They deserved to win based on the rules of the competition as they stand today. We were never going to have a chance in this because we write about sports topics that are (sadly, in my opinion) really on the margins (junior hockey, CIS sport, Canadian soccer, etc.). I'm kind of stunned and proud that we have enough dedicated readers to even place fifth.
But, should a blog that's entire focus is on an American subject even be eligible to win a Canadian award? I have my opinion, but maybe I'm wrong...
ReplyDeleteIf you don't like the eligibility rules, you should take it up with the people who created them.
The rules say:
All blogs written by persons living in Canada or by Canadian citizens living abroad are eligible for nomination.
It's not up to a blogger who lives in Canada - and will soon be a Canadian citizen - to disqualify himself.
PS: Many Canadians enjoy baseball, too. Baseball has been played in Canada for a long, long time.
Sorry, incomplete comment.
ReplyDeleteMany Canadians enjoy baseball, too. Baseball has been played in Canada for a long, long time.
And many Canadians follow US baseball teams. In Atlantic Canada, for example, most people are Red Sox fans. People there identify more with New England and often root for the Sox and the Bruins.
But again, if your problem is with the eligibility requirements, then take them up with the people who created the awards.
Or, simply live with the fact that your blog is less popular than this one, and be a gracious not-first-place finisher.
L-Girl,
ReplyDeleteI did not mean this to turn into a pissing match, so I'm going to assume that you did not mean to be as snarky as that came of.
I agree. JoS deserved to win based on what thee award rules were. I said so already.
My issue has nothing to do with baseball. Clearly you've never read our blog if you think that was my issue (think about our name for a minute). The Red Sox are an American team playing in America with mostly American fans. They contribute primarily to the culture of New England. JoS is about the team, not about the experience of cheering for the Red Sox in Canada, nor is it about the sport in Canada in a general way. That's fine, and you do it well, but how does it contribute to our culture as Canadians or our shared dialogue?
If Radiohead recorded an album in Canada do you think it should win the Juno for best Canadian album? Same difference, in my opinion.
Duane:
ReplyDeleteI think the most appropriate place for your comment is at the CBA site itself. (The Red Sox DO play the Blue Jays, though!)
(For what it's worth, I had an issue with one of the five sports finalists being produced by Microsoft/Bell Canada. That blog finished 3rd.)
Blogs are about the margins
ReplyDeleteNo. Blogs are about whatever the creator of the blog decides to write about.
Clearly you've never read our blog if you think that was my issue (think about our name for a minute).
ReplyDeleteYou're right, I have never read your blog. But I clarified my comments above.
My point, which I'm sure I made very clearly, is that you're barking up the wrong tree. Joy of Sox doesn't make the rules.
That's fine, and you do it well, but how does it contribute to our culture as Canadians or our shared dialogue?
You're making an assumption that that is the purpose of the Canadian Blog Awards. The creators and administrators of the awards haven't said that.
If you want blog awards that speak to that issue, you could create your own. After all, these awards are nothing "official". They're the creation of a few people who took an initiative.
By the way, I don't contribute to the writing of this blog.
I poked around the CBA site for a minute or two. The 5th place winner in Culture/Entertainment is a music blog -- not Canadian music, just music (and recent posts suggest mostly music by American bands). Also, is there anything specifically Canadian about yarn or sewing?
ReplyDeletePS: Many Canadians enjoy baseball, too. Baseball has been played in Canada for a long, long time.
ReplyDeleteThis Vermonter misses the Expos oh so very much...
Now if the Sox can comeback like JoS did...all will be good!
This Vermonter misses the Expos oh so very much...
ReplyDeleteMany of the first games I went to were at the Big O (1977-78) when I was 13-14. Vermont Transit had package deals that included bus fare and a ticket to the game, so I was able to go by myself. That's how I got to Fenway, too.
Out of left field guy is a jealous ass. That blog sucks. well it is better than 6th.
ReplyDeleteI poked around the CBA site for a minute or two. The 5th place winner in Culture/Entertainment is a music blog -- not Canadian music, just music (and recent posts suggest mostly music by American bands). Also, is there anything specifically Canadian about yarn or sewing?
ReplyDeleteThe guy wants different awards, ones that he can score better in, no doubt.
To Duane Rollins,
ReplyDeleteNot that it's relevant, but I'm Canadian and I live in Canada. Tell me what a "Canadian thing" is? The CFL? Where there's a limit on foreign imports--otherwise few Canadian-born players would get a job. Hockey? Where the game has truly been internationalized (for the betterment of the game, I might add). Snow-machine racing? Sarah Palin kicks ass. Maple syrup making?
The Joy of Sox is the best blog because Redsock uses his brain and puts a hell of a lot of thought into it, which his many readers appreciate. I'm sure if he wrote about the Winnepeg Blue Bombers he'd be equally effective. The fact that the Red Sox are popular throughout North America is a bonus.
Please lose your Harperite wedge issue outlook, Mr. Rollins. Otherwise people might conclude that the only thing truly "Canadian" is whining about phony nationalism. There's a big world out here.
Duane:
ReplyDeleteAllan is a person who lives in Canada. He does a blog. On the topic of his choice. It could be the "I hate Canada" blog and it would still be eligible. And if it got the most votes, he'd win. Seems fair to me.
Congratulations, Allan! Participating in JOS has greatly enriched my baseball life, and I cannot wait for the 2009 season.
ReplyDeleteI think next year we'll have to have a Best CFL Blog category. That way Rod Pedersen is a shooin again :-)
ReplyDeleteI kid, I kid.
This is quite the interesting discussion though.
I posted my thoughts here to be fair. I have not denigrated the ability of the author of the site in any way. I've stated my opinion in a clear and open way -- posting under my actual name, I might add -- in a place where there is little chance of anyone agreeing with me (you're readers of this blog. Of course you support it. The conversation would be different if it were at OOLF, don't you think). Would you have rather I posted somewhere where you couldn't have responded?
ReplyDeleteSour grapes? I understand how you could think that. For the record, I think James Mirtle should have won, not us. He combines popularity with solid research and strong writing. And, he's been a major contributor to the Canadian blogosphere for many years (and, don't kid yourself, he would have killed us all if he had spent one second soliciting votes. His contacts are vast).
@ andy
Out of left field guy is a jealous ass. That blog sucks. well it is better than 6th.
Way to stay classy. We have put up more than 3,500 posts in a little more than three years. We aren't the most read blog out there, but we are well read. We occasionally break stories. In the past four months alone, we've managed to have things we reported first picked up by the National Post, Globe and Mail, the Fan590 and the Toronto Star. If that's what you call suck, then fine. We suck.
@ L-girl
The guy wants different awards, ones that he can score better in, no doubt.
I do not make assumptions about what you "want." Please do not make assumptions about what I want. We don't know each other. For the record, what I want is criteria that actually allows for quality to be awarded over just popularity and networking. And, I want the person that carries the banner of being the best Canadian sports blog to be a little more inclusive of Canadian sports fans. JoS won with, what, 300 votes? Even we get twice as many readers in a single day. Tell me how this vote is even remotely reflective of what Canadian sports fans think.
@ Woti-woti
Tell me what a "Canadian thing" is?
It's not about any single sport. It certainly isn't about hockey (FWIW it's likely the sport we cover the least ). The sport that I write the most about is soccer. I'm not sure you can get more international than it. What it is about is writing about whatever it is that you are writing about in a way that comes from a Canadian perspective -- something that speaks to a view of sports that is unique to this country. To be frank, this blog reads like it could be written anywhere in the world. I say that not as an attack on its quality, but rather as a claim that it simply isn't Canadian. It's just a blog (a good blog) about the Boston Red Sox written by a guy that lives in Toronto. I'm not sure that's what the awards should be recognizing. And wanting to promote Canadian culture (which is what I believe sports to be) is hardly "whining." I think it's a bit sad, and to be frank, self-hating that you feel that way. There is value in our sports stories and traditions. Something that calls itself the Canadian blog awards should understand and appreciate that, I would think.
@ Jere
I agree. He does deserve to win. I've repeatedly said so...based on the criteria currently set. It's my position that the criteria is flawed and that there should be a requirement that a significant amount of the content should be Canadian. I have brought it up at the awards site, where I've received some support and some disagreement.
Finally, @ redsox
You're right. You can write whatever you please in this space. But, if you are going to put that banner up, do you not think that it might not be nice to be a little more inclusive. At the very least would it be too much to ask that you link some of the better Blue Jays/Canadian baseball blogs as well as some general Canadian baseball links? That would seem like a small compromise that would acknowledge your "Canadian-ness."
JoS won with, what, 300 votes? Even we get twice as many readers in a single day. Tell me how this vote is even remotely reflective of what Canadian sports fans think.
ReplyDeleteIt's not.
That's why L thinks I'm silly for making such a big deal about the awards. L won Best Progressive Blog with a whopping 79 votes!
318 votes is not a lot. I actually expected a lot more -- even in the off-season.
That would seem like a small compromise that would acknowledge your "Canadian-ness."
I link to the Iraq War Resisters and I have a pro-coalition button. Plus I link to Jeff Wells's blog. That'll have to do for now.
Tell me how this vote is even remotely reflective of what Canadian sports fans think.
ReplyDeleteHow about the fact that it's a Canadian blog, written by a Canadian sports fan in Canada, voted on in the Canadian blog awards?
That would seem like a small compromise that would acknowledge your "Canadian-ness."
So there's something that defines Canadian-ness for you better than moving to Canada, living in Canada, and applying for Canadian citizenship? What will you say when that citizenship is actually received -- that he's not "really" Canadian because he was born elsewhere?
Pretty weak.
So there's something that defines Canadian-ness for you better than moving to Canada, living in Canada, and applying for Canadian citizenship? What will you say when that citizenship is actually received -- that he's not "really" Canadian because he was born elsewhere?
ReplyDeleteI've never once brought up whether the author feels Canadian or acts Canadian in his daily life. I have most certainly not said, implied or even though that he's not "really" Canadian because he was born elsewhere. And, I don't much appreciate what you are implying, especially since I doubt M@ is on your birth certificate. If you are going to suggest that I, essentially, hold racist views, sign your post, OK.
On this blog he doesn't write about Canadian things. Period. Since I don't know him, and I can't read anyone's mind, I can't possibly say what he thinks or feels about his new country, can I?
But, I can read what he writes. And, he writes exclusively about the Boston Red Sox. A professional baseball team that plays in New England.
I've never once brought up whether the author feels Canadian or acts Canadian in his daily life. I have most certainly not said, implied or even though that he's not "really" Canadian because he was born elsewhere.
ReplyDeleteSo we agree then -- it's a Canadian blog because it's written by a Canadian living in Canada? That sounds like a qualifying blog to me -- meaning that the basis for your complaint is that this Canadian blog doesn't concern Canadian things.
Except that it's written by a Canadian in Canada, and is also read by many other Canadians (certainly by many who voted in the CBA). So it's of interest to them, too. I guess you're not in the majority in having a problem with it.
don't much appreciate what you are implying, especially since I doubt M@ is on your birth certificate. If you are going to suggest that I, essentially, hold racist views, sign your post, OK.
It should be quite clear that my implication was that you have some definition of what is Canadian that happens to be personally convenient for you. Nothing to do with racism at all.
My full name and e-mail address are readily available in my Blogger account, and have been there since I opened the account -- feel free to click through and check it out for yourself.
Duanerino,
ReplyDeleteSo in order to be eligible for the Award a sports blog must also conform to a mission of promoting Canadian culture? And those who believe that this mission is nebulous and maybe even pointless are self-hating? Like numerous other posters here have noted, you're taking this issue up with the wrong people.
Young man, there are times in life when I can only shake my head and walk away. See ya.
JoS won with, what, 300 votes? Even we get twice as many readers in a single day.
ReplyDeleteAs does JoS - many times that. The number of votes surely isn't reflective of traffic.
As Redsock pointed out, my blog won "best progressive blog" with only 79 votes! Fewer than 400 votes were cast in the entire category. Yet my blog gets 500-700 visits per day.
The awards are just a bit of fun, is all.
Your griping about the fairness or accuracy of the awards to one of the recipients seems a bit - to use your own expression - classless.
Tell me how this vote is even remotely reflective of what Canadian sports fans think.
It's totally not. Nor did anyone say it was.
My apologies for making assumptions about you. I was basing those assumptions on your comments here, which I find misplaced, at best.
And, he's been a major contributor to the Canadian blogosphere for many years (and, don't kid yourself, he would have killed us all if he had spent one second soliciting votes. His contacts are vast).
ReplyDeleteHow do you know JoS's aren't? Who's making assumptions now?
On this blog he doesn't write about Canadian things. Period.
ReplyDeleteAs Redsock pointed out earlier, is yarn Canadian? Do you feel Yarn Harlot should not have won her category - which she did by a landslide - because she writes about yarn and knitting, not specifically Canadian yarn and Canadian knitting (whatver that would mean!)?
Since I don't know him, and I can't read anyone's mind, I can't possibly say what he thinks or feels about his new country, can I?
He chose Canada. He made a conscious decision to go through the exepnsive, time-consuming and life-changing experience of leaving the country of his birth and adopting a new country. That might give you a clue.
You, on the other hand, are (apparently) Canadian because that's where your mother resided when she gave birth to you.
It's my position that the criteria is flawed and that there should be a requirement that a significant amount of the content should be Canadian. I have brought it up at the awards site
ReplyDeleteThat's where it belongs. It never belonged here.
I'm a little late with this, being in off-season mode, but congrats on the win! And congrats to L-girl as well! Very cool on both counts.
ReplyDeleteYou, on the other hand, are (apparently) Canadian because that's where your mother resided when she gave birth to you.
ReplyDeleteSeriously, don't put words in my mouth. I would think that a self-proclaimed progressive would understand how offensive and unfair that is.
All of my comments are directed towards the content . of this site. I'm not the one that's taking things into the realm of the personal (until commentators here told me I had NO IDEA that he was originally from the U.S.). I have repeatedly stated that I do not pretend to to know what motivates redsock, nor do I have an appreciation of how Canadian he feels. AGAIN, my comments are only directed towards what he chooses to write on this site. That's it. Based on what I see here I don't see much evidence that redsock has any interest in Canadian sport or Canadian baseball. He's a Red Sox fan.
As for where I'm posting...I still can't understand why it's wrong to be upfront about something. How would it have been better to not allow redsock to know that I was challenging the validity of his win? Why is it wrong for me to state my opinion directly to him on his own blog in a space that was bound to be hostile towards me (rather than go somewhere to complain about it where I would have an audience that agrees with me)?
This is a culture issue for me. Having a blog that only talks about a big, rich American baseball team be declared Canada's best sports blog is offensive to me. Redsock himself is not. I'm sure if we met under different circumstances we would get along quite well. We might even talk about some of those great battles between the Jays and the Sox in the late 80s. The fact that I think that his blog shouldn't be eligible to win a Canadian blog award has nothing to do with what I think about him as a person.
Seriously, don't put words in my mouth.
ReplyDeleteHow did I do that? What words did I attribute to you that you didn't say?
I made an observation. I didn't say you said anything.
You know, I understand this conversation isn't proving productive for you, but no one is forcing you to continue it.
The fact that I think that his blog shouldn't be eligible to win a Canadian blog award has nothing to do with what I think about him as a person.
ReplyDeleteYes, you've made that clear.
I'm not sure what you have to gain by continuing to repeat it, but... whatever.
I'm staying out of this for the most part, but it's an entertaining side story while we discuss Jeemer's marathon time.
ReplyDeleteAs for where I'm posting...I still can't understand why it's wrong to be upfront about something.
It's not wrong ... but people will respond.
How would it have been better to not allow redsock to know that I was challenging the validity of his win?
"Challenging the validity"? Is there a formal grievance committee over at the CBAs? Is there really a process whereby one can challenge the results of the voting?
Why is it wrong for me to state my opinion directly to him on his own blog in a space that was bound to be hostile towards me (rather than go somewhere to complain about it where I would have an audience that agrees with me)?
It's not wrong. No one is saying it's wrong (I think). But a lot of what you wrote sounds like sour grapes. It just does whether you meant to sound that way or not. (Man, what if you had finished a close 2nd? Yikes.)
How I would have been handled this:
Emailed Saskboy privately or written a comment in the post announcing the winner. That's it. (In fact, that's exactly what I did about the blog connected to Microsoft.)
I never thought of emailing the blog to complain about its inclusion. What would be the point? That blogger, like me, has no control over the CBA rules.
When you don't like the fact that your local store sells Brand X cereal, you complain to the store. You don't go emailing the president of Brand X and tell him his own product should not be on the store's shelves.
You know what?
ReplyDeleteI don't like the fact that the awards are held in late November/December. My readership has dropped by 2/3. It's the worst possible time for a baseball blog to win a popularity contest.
But what can I do, besides nag my readers and hope for the best?
Nothing. It's the way it is. So I deal with it (outside of complaining to Laura a few times).
I think that his blog shouldn't be eligible to win a Canadian blog award
ReplyDeleteYou know, if you had brought up the eligibility during the nomination process, you probably would have had some reason to complain. Bringing it up now, when the blog has (resoundingly) won the category, just sounds like sour grapes. And posting your sour grapes attitude on the blog itself makes you sound like a very poor loser. I'm thinking you're not attracting many new readers this way.
By the way, an e-mail to the CBA administrators giving them your thoughts on the matter and suggestions for next year would have been the mature thing to do.
Or, to put it another way: what Allan said.
ReplyDeleteNote to self: refresh, then post.
Based on what I see here I don't see much evidence that redsock has any interest in Canadian sport or Canadian baseball.
ReplyDeleteNot that it matters:
I guess you missed these two posts, both from this past September. I also sponsor George Kottaras's BR page.
I was thrilled with Adam "the Babe Ruth of Canada" Stern's performance in the 2006 WBC against the US (and posted about it here).
We refer to home runs as "dongs" here. When Jason Bay hits a home run, we call it a "doung". See? Canadian spelling!
Plus I'm in that (very) small group of people who actually enjoyed watching baseball games at Olympic Stadium. I went several times as a teenager in the late 70s and the greatest game I ever saw in person happened there.
Based on what I see here I don't see much evidence that redsock has any interest in Canadian sport or Canadian baseball.
ReplyDeleteHowever, that's none of your concern, nor the concern of the Canadian blog awards, unless the rules change in the future.
It's not wrong. No one is saying it's wrong (I think).
I think it's wrong, and I've said so. It's wrong for the reasons Redsock stated. He has no control over the rules. X-ref cereal and supermarket analogy.
I believe the biggest strength of the blogosphere is that it promotes dialogue. That's why I posted here. I'm a big boy, I can handle criticism (but I will defend my point).
ReplyDeleteI'm not here to raise the readership of OOLF. But, if you are a baseball fan, you should read the posts of my fellow contributor and site founder Neate Sager.
A Sox fans, start here:
http://neatesager.blogspot.com/2008/09/zen-dayley-manny-is-taking-it-easy-for.html
Oh fuck this guy. He is just trying to hype his own shit on here. He wants a big controversy. If I wanted to be classy dipshit I would be at your blog with the other 2 people who give a shit.
ReplyDeleteI'm gonna write a blog about living in canada and being a douche and call it out of left field.
ReplyDeleteHeh. Driving into Toronto to meet a friend for dinner, I was saying to L: "It's about that time for Andy (or 9casey) to appear and be blunt again."
ReplyDeleteI believe the biggest strength of the blogosphere is that it promotes dialogue. That's why I posted here.
ReplyDeleteSo now we know the answer to that question.
Maybe it's just me, but I see very little dialogue going on here. You make a point, other people counter it, you make the same point again, other people counter it again, you make the same point again. And so on.
Well, to be fair, I guess that's dialogue of a sort. It won't be the first off-topic conversation we've had at JoS, and it is the off-season.
you are too cute laura.
ReplyDeleteyou too, andy :)
ReplyDeleteA Sox fans, start here:
ReplyDeletehttp://neatesager.blogspot.com/2008/09/zen-dayley-manny-is-taking-it-easy-for.html
From which:
"It has not been since Manny's old team took their ace left-handed pitcher, a guy by the last name of Ruth, and stuck him in the outfield in 1919."
1918.