Monday, September 25, 2006

Madden Curse Strikes Again

“League MVP Shaun Alexander cracked a bone in his sore left foot and will be lost to the Seattle Seahawks for at least a couple of weeks.

Alexander has had soreness and a bone bruise in his left foot since the season opener at Detroit. Coach Mike Holmgren said Monday that Alexander cracked a bone sometime during Sunday's 42-30 win over the New York Giants. Holmgren said the bruise in Alexander's foot led to the crack and Alexander was walking around team headquarters Monday on crutches,” reports SI.

Playoff Scenarios and Monday Night Football

From a Dodgers web site:

 

If Philadelphia finishes ahead of a tied Los Angeles and San Diego, there would be a tiebreaker game for the National League West title in Los Angeles on October 2.

 

If San Diego finishes ahead of a tied Los Angeles and Philadelphia, there would be a tiebreaker game for the NL Wild Card in Philadelphia on October 2.

 

If Los Angeles finishes ahead of a tied San Diego and Philadelphia, there would be a tiebreaker game for the NL Wild Card in Philadelphia on October 2.

 

If San Diego and Los Angeles finish tied ahead of Philadelphia, San Diego would be the NL West champion and Los Angeles the NL Wild Card.

 

If all three teams finish tied, San Diego would play at Los Angeles to decide the NL West champion October 2, and the loser of that game would go to Philadelphia to decide the wild card October 3.

 

Bottomline, if the Phils are involved in a wild-card playoff tiebreaker, the game's at Citizens bank.

 

Not only is it as Citizen's bank, but it will be held on Monday, October 2. And since the two most likely teams to play the Phils - the Dodgers or the Padres - are west coast teams, the game will likely be played Monday evening given the travel considerations of going cross country.

 

Which means that the Phillies would be playing for a berth in the post-season, while across the parking lot and at the same time the Eagles were thrashing the Packers on Monday Night Football.

 

Sunday, September 24, 2006

My San Fran Prediction

Eagles 31
Niners 17

Play calling

I have no problem with Andy's play calling Sunday (save the empty-house backfield on that one 4th down, and yes I have checked with Ross, who loves the Giants but is still apoplectic over that call).

The problem was with the execution of the plays that were called and the inability - is it unwillingness? - to execute a power running game when it is needed.

It is impossible to play in the NFL without being able to kill the clock with a lead - that is the essence of the West Coast offense, what Madden so eloquently described circa 1982 as the Bill Walsh theory of throwing early in order to run late, which was revolutionary at the time. All great west coast offenses have had the pounde - roger craig, ahman green.

I didn't feel like we went conservative late in the game, we just didn't - couldn't - execute.

Tennessee?

Been thinking about that loss Sunday and I guess I'm not the only one
that's been thinking back to the similarities to the Tennessee opener in
2002, when the Eagles blew a 14 point lead after Reid started calling a
lot of running plays in the 2nd half (that were working, just that the
RB fumbled). Reid then promised not to make that mistake again and since
that time we've seen 75% pass, 25% run calls (or so it seems). Also,
some defensive breakdowns, etc.

Granted, it was on the road rather than at home, but still a collapse
against playoff caliber teams.

Below is what the philly paper had on the Titans game. Hopefully we can
bounce back and not come out flat against the Niners. Very encouraging
that for 3 quarters we dominated the Giants and moved the ball at will.
But then...

What he meant: "Hey, remember the season-opener in '02 when we blew a
14-point, second-half lead to the freaking Titans? We ended up winning
12 games that year and making it to the NFC Championship Game. And we
had James Thrash and Todd Pinkston as our starting wideouts and
320-pound ocean liner Levon Kirkland playing middle linebacker that
year. Things could be a lot worse."

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

whither sports radio in DC

Driving back to DC yesterday, one of the pick me up things my friend and I were looking forward to was the skewering the Redskins were going to take on sports radio – hey if we are miserable after that terrible loss at least we can wallow in similar misery with skins fans.

 

Didn't happen. Didn't really bother with the Redskins radio network, not going to get any good negativity there, but was astounded that 980 with Zaban and Pollin did NOT cover the Skins at ALL. After I dropped Pk off at the metro, these guys spent 15 minutes talking about what the Nationals needed to do in the offseason. It wasn't until 11:49 am, I checked the clock, that they made their first Redskins reference - and that was to Peter King's column about Brunnel and why Portis should have played in a must win game. Then they said Brian Mitchell would have more at noon during his show.

 

I'm guessing these guys came on at 8 am, or maybe even 6 since they went off at noon, but cannot believe they weren't talking Redskins. Is this a directive from the station since snyder's got his own network now? Are they able to get interviews and stuff with Skinns players, or has Snyder prohibited contact with the competition?

 

BTW, Zaban today called Philadelphia "the most rabid sports city in the country."

 

Friday, September 15, 2006

Bush League?

Man, this Reggie Bush thing seems like it could be very, very ugly.  This has the potential to be one of the biggest college sports scandals since SMU got the death penalty.

 

This is really damaging to Bush as a person — there’ve been way too many Christ-like comparisons for the kid, as if he’s the savior of New Orleans — and also will hurt Carroll’s credibility.

 

I also find it kind of funny that Yahoo! Sports is breaking this investigative story – a story that has blockbuster potential.

 

First, the home is the worst, but at least Bush had a claim of plausible deniability there (as Pete Carroll put it, how many college kids know how their parents pay the mortgage?).  Not a good argument, but plausible. Second, you need to read the Yahoo! Sports article. There is much, much more than what you cited.  Including stays for Reggie at the Venetian in Vegas, $1,500 a week payments to his parents ($1,000 to dad and $500 to mom) and a pimped out Chevy Impala to Reggie.

 

Of interest to me is how the ncaa prohibits payments/loans from sports agents to players but somehow allows players, as in the case of Bush, to intern in sports agencies. Talk about temptation.

 

Think about the potential widespread impact this could have.  Hell, it may already be the reason Houston passed on him and why the Saints apparently had to have a meeting the night before the draft to discuss taking him.  It could lead to Pete Carroll coaching in the NFL, the destruction of a program that just 10 months ago I was e-mailing had to be the #1 school that any stud athlete would want to go to.  Vince Young receiving the Heisman.  And an Oklahoma team that was humiliated in the Orange Bowl being deemed National Champions. And Leinart’s college years being put under a microscope by every investigative sports journalist in the country. I’m sure he’s thrilled about that possibility.

 

and those are just the obvious starters.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tuesday, September 12, 2006

Giant Sunday

Eags have proven nothing. Even if they beat the giants it may not prove a whole lot depending on how the game is played. Only saying that if he Eagles are to be contenders they need to beat their division rivals at home (especially since they have that brutal stretch in December playing them all consecutively on the road.). And that if the Eagles win it will be a very good start in division.

 

Regardless of play, maybe most optimistic thing is that Skins lost at home to a team many probably had them beating. Giants lost at home but many had that a toss up at best. For Cowboys, the good news is that they lost to playoff team on road.

Friday, September 01, 2006

branch

Did the patriots ploy of allowing deion branch to seek a trade with other teams blow up in their faces? Expecting no team to match the Pats’ offer – to say nothing of Branch’s exorbitant demands – it now appears that 2 teams – jets and seahawks – will show him the money. But now they have to work out a trade with the pats – who are asking for a #1 and middle round pick. Ridiculous request and now the pats are in the worse negotiating position. Trade him for less, pay him what the jets would or not trade and not pay – with branch not playing.

 

could they really cut gaffney?

I’m beginning to think the stallworth trade wasn’t about pinkston’s abilities so much as gaffney’s play (or lack thereof).

Bowen -- “The logjam at wide receiver might be the most interesting one needing to get sorted out before tomorrow. Let's assume Reggie Brown, newcomer Donté Stallworth, fourth-round rookie Jason Avant and undrafted rookie Hank Baskett are on the team. There probably are six spots. If Reid's words yesterday and other indications recently are any guide, you can make Lewis the fifth receiver. That means either Darnerien McCants or Jabar Gaffney is out of a job tomorrow.

Gaffney has a much more impressive resume, 171 career catches vs. McCants' 58, but McCants is a strong special-teams performer. Eagles special-teams coordinator John Harbaugh said this week that Gaffney hasn't had a special-teams role with the Eagles, and it didn't sound as if he was going to be getting one.”