Friday, August 19, 2011

Goodell is an ass

In a recent interview with GQ Magazine, Eagles QB Micheal Vick said he did not want to go to the Eagles and be a 3rd string QB, he wanted to go to Buffalo or Cincinnati where he would have started right away.

How did Vick end up in Philly then? He was pushed by NFL consultant Tony Dungy and by Commissioner Roger Goodell. Why is the Commisioner getting involved in where Free Agents sign? I don't think Dungy should even get involved, he may or may not get paid from the NFL (I don't know what they offer a consultant) but he does work for them and should not be pushing players to teams.

Will there be an investigation? No. Vick already retracted his statement and no one will take on Goodell.

Just goes to show that the NFL has their darlings and Andy Reid is one of them. Is it that the NFL wants the city of Philadelphia to embrace the Eagles? Could be. It is a big market and Philly has been one of those teams that is always good but can't seem to win the big one. Maybe they want to see Buffalo continue to fail, as they are one of the candidates to move to Los Angeles.

Either way, Goodell is an ass.
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Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Horrible Bosses by Rick Reilly

Taken from ESPN.COM
By Rick Reilly

In this episode of "Horrible Bosses," we feature the owner of the Cincinnati Bengals, Mike Brown, and his mission to make everybody who works for him wish they had become podiatrists instead.

Brown's football career peaked upon birth. He was born the son of legendary football genius Paul Brown and has done zilch to remind anybody of him since.

Here's how bad it is working for Brown: His best and most honorable player, Pro Bowl quarterback Carson Palmer, is vowing to walk away from $46 million rather than work another day in Brown's prison stripes.

"Carson just finally got fed up," says a close friend of Palmer. "He's just sick of the same 5,000 mistakes the franchise repeats every year. He's tired of wallowing in mediocrity. He won't ever talk about it, but that's how he feels. He's a very tolerant guy, but when he gets pushed over the line, he gets mad and doesn't go back. He'd love to play, he's dying to play, but he's never going to play there."

Yes, Palmer has four years left on his nine-year, $118 million deal. You signed the contract, you say. Live up to it. In fact, that's what Brown has said. "He gave his word. … He's going to walk away from his commitment. We aren't going to reward him for doing it."

If Palmer should suddenly go blind, would Brown still give him the money? Are you kidding? Brown is cheaper than your local Goodwill.

But Brown is a hypocrite. He has cut hundreds of players before their contract was up and given them nothing. Why should Palmer live up to a deal that works only one way? If Palmer should suddenly go blind, would Brown still give him the money? Are you kidding? Brown is cheaper than your local Goodwill.

Brown makes four people do the work of eight. Most teams have four or five scouts; Brown keeps one or two. One time in the 1980s -- before the Internet -- I flew in and asked to see the newspaper clip files on a few players. "We aren't quite caught up on our clip files," the weary PR guy said, "but you could go through those." He was pointing to three 12-foot stacks of unopened Cincinnati Enquirers. Nice.

What's hair-pulling for Palmer is that there are so many teams out there that are starving for a good, veteran quarterback. Seattle, for instance, is going to start Tarvaris Jackson, a man who will not take you to the promised land. Tarvaris Jackson will not even get you out of Egypt.

Seattle would be a perfect solution. Even at this late date, Brown could probably get two 2s for Palmer and Palmer could play for his old college coach, Pete Carroll. But Brown would rather get bubkes for Palmer than embrace sanity. He's going to let Palmer rot like an overripe banana, out of pure spite. Brown is the kind of guy who sledgehammers his own lawnmower just so you can't borrow it.

This leaves Cincinnati starting a rookie QB, TCU's Andy Dalton, a baby who has been a pro for six whole weeks. Good luck, kid.

Why won't Brown "reward" Palmer the way he did RB Corey Dillon? Or Chad Ochocinco, the wide receiver who whined, bitched and threatened to "whup" Bengals coach Marvin Lewis' butt? Brown finally gave in and traded Ochocinco to New England this offseason. That's like going from Motel 6 to the Four Seasons.

Palmer, meanwhile, has left large portions of his body on the field for Brown. His nasty ACL and MCL tear in a 2006 playoff game, his ripped elbow in '08. He's worked alongside fools and pretenders, and all under an owner who could make the '72 Dolphins mediocre. And he's done it all without a single discouraging word about an owner who invented discouragement.

Of course, Brown has made such a vomitorium out of this team that, if he gave into Palmer now, he might open Pandora's box. He'd have a line down the hall and all the way to Starbucks of guys who want out.

What I don't get is why the taxpayers of Cincinnati aren't boycotting. Mike Brown promised if they built him a stadium, he'd win. They built it. Brown has gone 72-103-1 since. The mayor should sue. Where's Jerry Springer when you need him?

At the very least, I'd be trying to force Brown to move to L.A. and start over someday with a new franchise. L.A. wouldn't mind. Those fans tolerate the Clippers!

Even worse for Palmer, he owes the Bengals four more years. Even if he unretired at age 65, he'd still be Bengals property. He's only 31. Steve Young had six killer seasons after his 31st birthday. Unfortunately, Palmer is stuck with the only boss in the league who can make you yearn for Al Davis.

If I'm Palmer, I watch the signing wires like a hawk. As soon as the Bengals climb to within $11.5 million of the hard salary cap, I beeline it to Cincinnati and sign. That would force Brown to either cut five or six players to be able to pay me -- or sign my freedom papers.

Until then, Cincinnati, enjoy what Brown can do for you. It won't be much. If you win two games this year, throw him a parade.

On the front of a departing Amtrak.

Love the column, hate the column, got a better idea? Go here.

Rick Reilly is the 11-time National Sportswriter of the Year. He contributes essays and commentary to "SportsCenter" and ESPN/ABC golf and tennis coverage. He's also the host of "Homecoming," ESPN's unique, one-hour interview show set in the hometowns of legendary athletes. For more Rick, check out the archive.

Feel like taking a detour from sane sports? Try Rick's latest book, "Sports from Hell."
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Saturday, August 13, 2011

Here we go!

If you want to know who will be in the Super Bowl, you are about to find out. I can say that with a good amount of confidence as the past two years I have picked at least one conference champion correctly and last year I correctly chose the Green Bay Packers to win it all.

2009/10 Prediction: Indianapolis Colts over New York Giants ended up being New Orleans Saints over Indianapolis Colts

2010/11 Prediction: Green Bay Packers over Baltimore Ravens ended up being Green Bay Packers over Pittsburgh Steelers

2011/12 Here we go

First the standings, I went week by week marking winners and losers to come up with the most accurate predictions that I could. There were a few errors and missed games so I balanced those out, but I feel confident in my choices.

AFC East
New England Patriots 13-3 (1)
New York Jets 9-7
Miami Dolphins 5-11
Buffalo Bills 3-13

AFC North
Pittsburgh Steelers 11-5 (3)
Baltimore Ravens 10-6 (5)
Cleveland Browns 6-10
Cincinnati Bengals 2-14

AFC South
Indianapolis Colts 11-5 (2)
Houston Texans 9-7 (6)
Jacksonville Jaguars 6-10
Tennessee Titans 6-10

AFC West
San Diego Chargers 11-5 (4)
Kansas City Chiefs 9-7
Denver Broncos 6-10
Oakland Raiders 4-12

Wild Card Round
Houston Texans at Pittsburgh Steelers (Steelers win)
Baltimore Ravens at San Diego Chargers (Ravens win)

Divisional Round
Pittsburgh Steelers at Indianapolis Colts (Colts win)
Baltimore Ravens at New England Patriots (Pats win)

AFC Championship
Indianapolis Colts at New England Patriots (Patriots win)

NFC East
Philadelphia Eagles 13-3(1)
New York Giants 10-6 (6)
Dallas Cowboys 9-7
Washington Redskins 3-13

NFC North
Green Bay Packers 12-4 (3)
Chicago Bears 10-6
Detroit Lions 9-7
Minnesota Vikings 6-10

NFC South
New Orleans Saints 12-4 (2)
Atlanta Falcons 11-5 (5)
Tampa Bay Bucs 9-7
Carolina Panthers 4-12

NFC West
St.Louis Rams 11-5 (4)
Seattle Seahawks 8-8
Arizona Cardinals 6-10
San Francisco 49ers 4-12

Wild Card
New York Giants at Green Bay Packers (Packers win)
Atlanta Falcons at St.Louis Rams (Falcons win)

Divisional
Green Bay Packers at New Orleans Saints (Packers win)
Atlanta Falcons at Philadelphia Eagles (Falcons win)

NFC Championship
Atlanta Falcons at Green Bay Packers (Packers win)

Super Bowl

New England Patriots 27 Green Bay Packers 24

There you go. Patriots over Packers in the Super Bowl, the road to this may not be correct but I feel rather confident in this scenario for the Super Bowl. 

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Steve Smith

Big news here in Giant land as 3rd down specialist and favorite Eli target Steve Smith signs a 1 year deal with the Philadelphia Eagles. Fans are outraged not only that Smith would go to our biggest rival but that the Giants let him go.
The Giants made it quite clear that they weren't heavily interested in bringing back the injured WR and I don't think they knew the Eagles had been talking to Steve for a few weeks.
Personally, I think the Giants are setting Coughlin up for a fall. Rumors have circulated that Cowher will only come back into coaching if the Giants job becomes available. I think the Giants want the younger Cowher over the oldest active coach in the NFL and will sacrifice a season to have reason to fire Tom Coughlin.
Giants have lost DT Barry Cofield, TE Kevin Boss , and WR Steve Smith all of them were drafted in 2007 and all were key in the Giants winning the SuperBowl that same year. Not to mention to contract issues going on with Osi Umenyiora. I didn't post my predictions yet but I had the Giants going 11-5 and losing the Wild Card to Green Bay (in GB) but now....8-8 at best.

Saturday, August 6, 2011

Coaches in the hot seat

I was just thinking about what Coaches in the NFL are most likely to be fired after this season. Unfortunately, Tom Coughlin is one of them. Here are a few more...

Marvin Lewis, Cincinnati Bengals- The Bengals are going to be the worst team in the NFL this year. I feel really bad for Andrew Luck because he is going to have the same frustrations that Carson Palmer has had since being the first pick in the 2003 draft by the Bengals. The organization is a mess, they have the most salary cap room of any team and yet do nothing to improve the team, year after year. Lewis will be the scapegoat, this will be his last season in Cinci.

Jack Del Rio, Jacksonville Jaguars- Coach Del Rio doesn't have the obstacle of  bad owners in his way, his main problem is Peyton Manning. The Jags have put together some mediocre seasons under Del Rio, and at times have played the spoiler card well. They made a great run in the playoffs in 2007 and were almost the first team to defeat the Patriots in the playoffs that season. The Jags haven't made the playoffs since, but did put together a decent season last year. They need to get 10 wins and a playoff berth in order to save his job, good luck with that.

Tony Sparano, Miami Dolphins- Coach Sparano will be the first one fired after this year, maybe even during the season. If it weren't for the Bills and Bengals the Phins would be the worst team in the AFC this year. He won the AFC East with a 10-6 record three years ago, and has had a stellar defense but has not been able to lock down the QB position. This will cost Tony his job.

Norv Turner, San Diego Chargers- In my mind the worst coach in the NFL. I cannot believe after his failures in Washington that Turner even got another job, or that San Diego has kept him this long. If the Chargers don't make the AFC Championship (they won't) then Turner can say good bye to one of America's greatest cities.

Tom Coughlin, New York Giants- Couglin took over a 4-12 team and 3 years later they were holding the Lombardi Trophy over their heads after defeating the 18-0 Patriots, 3 years later the Giants have failed to make the playoffs for two straight years. They went 12-4 as defending champs and lost in their first playoff game and have gone 8-8 and 10-6 since. If the Giants don't get into the playoffs or don't win at least one playoff game, Coach Coughlin will be fired. The Giants suffer the same frustrations as the Chargers, a team with tons of talent that can't keep it going when the playoffs come.

Gary Kubiak, Houston Texans- The Texans have been on the cusp for too long, I'm shocked he survived last year's debacle. The Texans need a playoff berth to save his job, not going to be easy with the Jags looking for the same thing. What's making it harder? I see the Colts being a dominant force in the AFC this year.

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Getting predictions ready

I am almost done with my predictions for the 2011 NFL Season. It's hard to believe we're almost a month away already? The summer is flying by, and September 8th is almost here with the Saints at the Packers to get things started. To make sure the standings I put up equal out okay I am going week by week and picking winners and losers to get more accurate results. I can tell you this already...the Arizona Cardinals are going to start hot, they could start 3-0 but won't win too many games past that, teams with cold starts will be Chicago, Pittsburgh and Seattle but I see things leveling out during the season. I see my Giants having a fast start as usual then cooling off immensely. I think to start they have the easiest schedule in the NFL then end the season with Green Bay, New England, New York Jets, New Orleans, Philadelphia and Dallas.

I'm still figuring who wins in the playoffs, I'm under a lot of pressure here because the past two seasons I have correctly picked one Conference Champion. In 2009 I took the Colts over the Giants, it ended up being Saints over Colts, last year I took Packers over Ravens and it was Packers over Steelers.

I don't think the Eagles will win it all, they will be the best team in the NFC but that's it, I have them losing in their first playoff game as the #1 seed in the NFC.

A few teams that were in the playoffs last year will not be there this year, such as the Seahawks. I think the Seahawks will win more games than last year (I have them at 8-8) but 7 wins won't win the NFC West this season, and I have the Chiefs out of the playoffs with a winning record  (9-7). The Jets will not make a 3rd straight AFC Championship game, actually, I see two old rivals battling it out for the AFC crown.

A few things to remember heading into the season, the best team in the season is not necessarily the best team in the playoffs. I think the Giants will get in just based on strength of schedule but can they beat the big teams like Green Bay or Philadelphia? Last year the Falcons looked unbeatable as they went 13-3 and the Pats went 14-2, but neither even made it to the Conference Championship. The Packers, who made it into the playoffs by winning the tie breaker game over the Giants in week 16, made an incredible run, and that could happen again this year. Never count out the wild card teams. It's all about how you finish, if you start the season 2-4 don't fret, we saw the Patriots start a season 0-2 and finish 14-2 with a Super Bowl. In 2008 the Giants started 11-1 but ended up 12-4 and lost in their first playoff game 24-11 because they slacked at the end of the year. It's going to be a great year and I am pumped up and ready to go!

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

The birds at it again

The Philadelphia Eagles and the Seattle Seahawks have each landed another Free Agent.

The Eagles gave RB Ronnie Brown (Miami) a 1 year deal and the Seahawks have signed TE Zach Miller (Oakland) for 5 years.

No teams in the NFC have been as busy as these two, in fact, no team in the NFL has signed on more big names than the Eagles.

Dallas' defensive coordinator Rob Ryan has mocked the Eagles calling them a "dream team" but insists "we'll beat their asses".
I loathe the Cowboys but I despise the Eagles. I will be wearing silver and blue in each Dallas/Philly matchup.

Monday, August 1, 2011

Interesting debate

Peyton Manning just signed a 5 year $90 million contract. Peyton is a 4x MVP, 11x Pro Bowler, Super Bowl MVP and his next TD pass will be #500. I just read an article about whether or not the Colts will regret this contract. What's the problem?...Manning turned 35 this past March and will be 40 heading into the last year of his contract.
Has the future Hall of Famer lost his touch? How will he perform in 3 years? In 5 years? Will he be live Favre and be just a poor reminder of what he used to be? Or will he be like Montana and still succeed after his team gives up on him?
Manning just may be the greatest QB in NFL history but sadly he may not be the best QB in the NFL right now anymore. The one advantage I give Manning over Brady is that Peyton won no matter how bad the rest of his team was. When he led the Colts over the Bears, they had an average at best defense. He can make any WR look like an All Pro, he studies game film in his sleep and is the undoubted Captain of his team.
I say Manning will play until he's 40, or until he wins another ring, and I don't think the Colts will ever regret locking up Manning for the rest of his career.

Thoughts? I know Sarge does...

Moss hangs it up...

Problem WR Randy Moss has decided to retire after 13 years in the NFL. Personally, I won't miss him. He had a great situation in New England and ruined it. He joins Carson Palmer on the list of surprising retirements this year, although I don't believe that Carson will stay away.

Also, the Osi rumor was true!! Happens to the best of us, he is shopping for a trade, the Giants are looking for a 1st round pick for the 2x Pro Bowler who had 8 sacks and 10 FF last year.