Thursday, March 23, 2006

Duke is gone

LSU upset Duke 62-54 in the South Regional semifinals tonight. The main culprit: J.J. Redick, who shot just 3-18 from the field. Sheldon Williams had a good night with 23 points and 12 boards, but he and Josh McRoberts (9 points/8 boards) were the few bright spots for a team expected to get to the Final Four.

The numbers pretty much tell the story:
28% FG overall
5-24 from three-land

In the last 8 minutes:
1 FG made (a three)
+
13 FG missed
+
4 FT made
+
4 turnovers
=
7 points scored
The difference between Duke and Carolina?

Duke scored 7 points in the last 8 minutes tonight.
Carolina once scored 8 points in the last 17 seconds to force OT (see Davis, Walter, 1974).

Another disappointment. Sigh.

Wednesday, March 22, 2006

NFL moves: TO in Big D, Adam V to Indy, Garcia to Philly

Terrell Owens [w]rapped up his stay in Philadelphia with a little ditty on his web site aimed at the Eagles, soon after his release from Philly and subsequent signing with Dallas. Good luck to Jerry Jones - he'll need it. And Drew Bledsoe should start taking some herbal green tea to prepare for the turbulent months ahead. "Ha ha - that's funny."

Adam Vinatieri, who was not stuck with the Patriots' franchise tag again, signed with the Colts. Reminds me somewhat of Johnny Damon going to the Yankees. We'll miss you in Foxboro, Adam. Another similarity to the Damon signing: the loss of Vinatieri hurts NE two ways: they lost a clutch kicker, and he signed with a conference rival. Chances are the Pats won't have a knee-jerk reaction by signing Mike Vanderjagt, the departed "idiot" kicker. After all, if they wouldn't pay big money to their own guy in the prime of his career, why would they pay it to someone else?

Jeff Garcia signed with the Eagles, meaning that Mike McMahon's days with the Iggles are over. What a disaster that turned out to be. And the fact that last year Andy Reid went with McMahon over Koy Detmer spoke volumes for Detmer's future, too. See ya, Koy. Garcia may be an old, bald guy who throws INTs as well as McNabb, but he also can learn how to hold for kickers.

Tuesday, March 14, 2006

Free Agent Moves

Culpepper traded to Miami (interesting move)....Brees signs with New Orleans (I'm sure he's going to donate his signing bonus to Katrina refugees, right?)....Dallas releases Keyshawn Johnson (to make room for T.O., perhaps?).

Monday, March 13, 2006

Duke. ACC Champs. Again.

Almost forgot. Duke beat Boston College for their 7th ACC Tournament title in the last 8 years. Ho hum.

Sunday, March 12, 2006

Eagles: Open for Business, Few Customers

Ex-Eagle Shawn Barber signed with his former team last week, the only significant signing the team has made this off-season. Of the free agents on the market that the Eagles were rumored to be interested in, none chose Philly:

WR Reggie Wayne stayed in Indianapolis with the Colts, who signed Wayne to a multi-year deal.

C LeCharles Bentley of the Saints went to Cleveland:
"He only had one team on his mind - the Cleveland Browns," said Jonathan Feinsod, one of the agents representing Bentley. "He's from Cleveland, he went to Ohio State, and that's where he wanted to play. I heard the rumors about the Eagles, but I don't know where they came from."

OL Steve Hutchinson, signed to an offer sheet by the Vikings, will go there or stay with Seattle if the Seahawks match Minnesota's offer.

WR/PR Antwaan Randle El reportedly will go to Washington.

WR Joe Jurevicius went to Cleveland.

T Jon Runyan is basically gone...hopefully not to Dallas.

So where does this leave the Eagles? Going nowhere fast. They will likely take a look at QB Jeff Garcia, though Garcia still wants to start, as does ex-Bengal Jon Kitna. Josh McCown of the Cardinals also looks appealing, since his days in Tempe may be limited by starter Kurt Warner. WR Eric Moulds will also be discussed.

So far, a disappointing beginning for a team known for lightning strikes in Free Agency. When you're 6-10, you're more than just "one player away."

Monday, March 06, 2006

Darby Baseball

Since we're based in Philadelphia, here's a story from ESPN about our neighbor to the Southwest: Darby, PA...home of a largely forgotten Negro League team.

Buck O'Neil - Shafted Again

Buck O'Neil gets shafted by the Baseball Hall of Fame. Again. Joe Posnanski of the Kansas City Star with details...

...and Joe's follow-up story in the aftermath.

All I can say is Buck has a lot of class, even if he isn't in this year's class.

Patrick Ewing and Cameron Crazies (not!)

Yesterday's Sports Reporters on ESPN featured the usual apocryphal Cameron Crazie story, voiced in passing by Howard Bryant as he described how tough it is for teams to play in Cameron Indoor Stadium:
Remember Duke fans holding up signs saying 'Ewing Can't Read This'?

Key word: apocryphal.

Let's see. Ewing played at Georgetown from '81-'82 through '84-'85. A little check of the Duke media guide shows that Duke did not play Georgetown at home, at GU, or at a neutral site (meaning the two schools did not play at all) between 1932 and 1989. Meaning: it never happened.

The crazies have done enough distasteful, crude and vulgar things over the years. Don't keep bringing up an imaginary event when there's so much reality to choose from. Oh, I'm sorry. That would have meant doing a little research. But that's why they call them reporters, not journalists.

-P

Tuesday, February 21, 2006

Harry the K - LA + Wheels = Blah

According to Paul Hagen in today's Daily News, Larry Andersen (who in the opinion of many has developed a good on-air rapport with Harry Kalas) will be moved to radio coverage and will no longer be part of the TV crew. Andersen will be replaced by Chris Wheeler, who will pair with Kalas for the first and last three innings. Since Kalas and Wheeler get along professionally but have a frosty off-air relationship, speculation has begun on whether the Phils are nudging Kalas toward retirement after 2006. An unpleasant work environment would be one step in that direction.

Mind you, this is a trial balloon. But also keep in mind teams are increasingly punishing critical broadcasters (Steve Stone with the Cubs and Jon Miller with the Orioles come to mind. Stone stayed with the Cubs, but Miller was not offered a new contract by owner Peter Angelos several years ago, after Angelos questioned Miller's critical comments about Orioles players, plus Miller's take on umpire calls that benefited the team but appeared to be incorrect.)

Sunday, February 19, 2006

Not-so-Super Bowl

The refs made some borderline calls. The Seahawks had poor clock management and dropped balls that could have helped. The Steelers played poorly but had enough big plays to win. Big Ben did NOT score on one of those big plays.

Monday, January 16, 2006

Pats, Colts self-destruct

So much for the Pats-Colts matchup in this year's AFC Championship Game. On Saturday, the Pats had 5 turnovers, resulting in oh, about 21 Denver points. On Sunday, the Colts spottedthe Steelers a 21-3 lead before coming-so-agonizingly-close to sending the game to OT. Mike Vanderjagt's 46-yard field goal attempt was wider right than most FSU wide rights. You can't blame everything on the idiot liquored-up kicker, though. Peyton Manning was off most of the day, until the Colts' 4th quarter comeback. All in all, not a good weekend. Not looking forward to Broncos-Steelers since WE DON'T CARE.

Wednesday, January 11, 2006

The Rooney "Rule" - Still a Joke

ESPN's Gene Wojciechowski on why the Rooney Rule - mandating interviews of minority candidates for head coaching positions - is still a sham. On the plus side, Herm Edwards was just recycled. Previously recycled: Ray Rhodes (Philadelphia and Green Bay) and Tony Dungy (Tampa Bay and Indianapolis). Here's hoping Art Shell will get a courtesy call about the Raiders' open position, one with which he is intimately familiar.

Wednesday, January 04, 2006

6-10: A Lost Season

Date Opponent Time/Result Away Home
Sep 12 @Atlanta Lost 10-14
Sep 18 San Francisco Won 42-3
Sep 25 Oakland Won 23-20
Oct 2 @Kansas City Won 37-31
Oct 9 @Dallas Lost 10-33
Week 6 BYE
Oct 23 San Diego Won 20-17
Oct 30 @Denver Lost 21-49
Nov 6 @Washington Lost 10-17
Nov 14 Dallas Lost 20-21
Nov 20 @N.Y. Giants Lost 17-27
Nov 27 Green Bay Won 19-14
Dec 5 Seattle Lost 0-42
Dec 11 N.Y. Giants Lost 23-26
Dec 18 @St. Louis Won 17-16
Dec 24 @Arizona Lost 21-27
Jan 1 Washington Lost 20-31

6 wins: 5 were by 7 points or fewer.
10 losses: 5 were by 7 points or fewer.

So what's the Rx? Get McNabb healthy enough to scramble. Get him a veteran to throw to. And get some pass rushers.

Saturday, December 24, 2005

Damon and Millwood - 2 wrongs don't make....

We at Red Sox Nation weep. What would Johnny Damon do? Go for the money, of course! Damon, shorn of his Jesus-like locks, is now the $52 million Yankees' center fielder. Ugh. The only thing worse would be the Sox signing Kevin Millwood, who failed in Philadelphia, especially down the stretch.

Monday, December 19, 2005

Fly Eagles Fly (or were those just penalty flags?)

The Eagles beat the Rams Sunday, but it wasn't pretty. Over 200 yards in penalties. More false starts than TD passes. I see the Eagles with a different backup QB next year, because Mike McMahon can't get it done. And the fact that McMahon is starting instead of Koy Detmer speaks volumes about Andy Reid's (lack of) confidence in Detmer. And why does Reno Mahe continue to get second-half carries when Ryan Moats isn't winded?

And did you catch the latest Campbell's chunky soup ad where McNabb's mom has him running right, running left, running right, then throwing? Looks like he did more running in that ad than he did all year long. I'll agree with J. Whyatt Mondesire on one thing - defenses get flustered when McNabb runs.

Sunday, December 18, 2005

Piling on No. 5

J. Whyatt Mondesire, President of the Philadelphia NAACP and publisher of the Philadelphia Sun, recently blasted Philadelphia QB Donovan McNabb in an editorial. Among other nuggets, Mondesire called McNabb a "mediocre talent" who cheats his fans by not running the ball as often as he could, and consciously made the decision not to run because, in McNabb's mind, this would somehow make him less of a field general.

Reaction ran the gamut. Michael Wilbon of ESPN's Pardon the Interruption and The Washington Post, called the article "hateful" and blasted Mondesire. John Smallwood of the Philadelphia Daily News had this to say:

If McNabb were Caucasian, I am positive white people would not have been motivated to call into talk radio shows and debate whether the quarterback was a true white man.

But debating Donovan McNabb as a true black man is exactly what a good number of African-Americans in Philadelphia are doing since the Owens-McNabb flap became the focal point of the Eagles' demise.

It's fascinating that this has spiraled way beyond the confines of a football debate. And don't tell me it hasn't, when terms such as sellout, token, company man, Uncle Tom and other racially charged ones have been thrown into the debate.

What this black-on-black verbal violence has caused me to wonder is: Who gets to determine who is truly African-American and what is or isn't a part of African-American culture?

Stephen A. Smith of ESPN's Quite Frankly and The Philadelphia Inquirer interviewed Mondesire for today's Inquirer:
Q: How do you feel about the ramifications, how this has affected the life of Donovan McNabb? Black and white folks are now opining on McNabb's blackness because of a column written by you.

A: I'm not sorry it happened, because I felt strongly about it. I think you've seen in the latter part of my piece that we were disappointed in the way he failed to step up in a leadership role. I raised the issue at the end of the piece about why he wouldn't share some of his dollars with either T.O. or Westbrook.

Had McNabb chosen to do that, they would have circled the wagons around him, run through hot coals barefoot for him. It would have cemented the team, kept the T.O. debacle from growing into the massive scandal that it became, and kept the team concentrated on winning football games.

Q: So you're saying Donovan McNabb should have taken a portion of his salary and given it to T.O.?

A: Or offered to do so. The same way Tom Brady did with New England.

Kind of. The difference was, McNabb was already under contract and Brady was negotiating a new contract. And I don't see Brady's teammates backstabbing their QB, either. If a teammate's throwing grenades at you, you don't throw money at him.

And this is how Smith opined about McNabb's season:
Balls were repeatedly underthrown or overthrown. At times, there was no rhyme or reason to his lack of production. His accuracy and timing were sporadic at best.
2005? Yes. But Smith could have just as easily been talking about any other season in McNabb's career, save for last season. McNabb is not mediocre. But he's not the greatest QB since Elway and Montana, either.

Monday, December 12, 2005

since I last posted...

The Eagles squeaked by Green Bay, were slaughtered by Seattle, and lost to the Giants on an overtime field goal.

While the offense remains largely inept in the absence of a healthy Donovan McNabb, you can spread the blame around. Despite Jeremiah Trotter's assertion that some offensive players "quit" against Seattle, looks like his team's 'D' could use some help.

For instance:
Sacks: The lack of sacks and hurries, as noted previously by Rich Hoffman of the Daily News. Trotter himself has one sack this year. One. That's a Mike Mamula-like number.
Red-Zone Efficiency: Opponents scored touchdowns 63.2% of the time against the Eagles once they got to the red zone (prior to the Giants game) - worst in the NFC.
Points per game. We'll give up the yards, the Eagles always said. But judge us based on points. OK. The Eagles are giving up 24.2 points per game. Even if you discount the generous gifts offered up by McNabb against Dallas and McMahon against Seattle, that's still over 22 points per game.

And as for the QBs....
McMahon is not the answer. His horrid passing accuracy is just one reason.
Detmer is not the answer. Koy is still the # 2 QB (apparently in name only, since McMahon got the call first this year), but why? Because David Akers is comfortable with Koy holding? Not acceptable any longer. And for those fans who argue "what about Koy coming to the rescue?" that was three years ago and for part of one game before he got injured.

Saturday, November 26, 2005

TO: Bloched

Now that arbitrator Richard Bloch has ruled against Terrell Owens and the NFLPA's grievance, what now?

For starters, Bloch will be fired as an arbitrator by the union, according to ESPN's Chris Mortenson. Terms of the Collective Bargaining Agreement permit either side to request termination.

Anyone remember Peter Seitz? Same circumstance (following an arbitration)....in that case Seitz was fired by Major League Baseball immediately following his award of free agency to Andy Messersmith and Dave McNally.

And what got the NFLPA so riled up about Bloch's ruling? Perhaps the fact that it was a complete legal victory for the Eagles. Bloch addressed three key points made by the union: that the severity of the punishment was unwarranted due to the player's actions; that Owens was not properly warned of the consequences of his actions, and that the team had a contractual duty to release Owens should his services no longer be desired.
The point of progressive discipline is to properly advise an employee of unacceptable behavior, to warn that their tenure is becoming increasingly challenged and to attempt to provide for the possibility of better behavior in the future. The repeated, unambiguous warnings accomplished all of this....
But the critical issue that continues to elude the Player is that, without regard to who was right on the true meaning of the statements, the team and McNabb were upset by them. Owens knew this. And, he knew that any suspension could be immediately avoided by addressing his teammates, and McNabb, in an effort to make things right. Yet, with full knowledge that discipline was hanging in the balance, he refused to take these steps.......The Association argues that, to the extent the Coach wished to keep the Player from the fields or the locker room, he should have released him. It is a mark of the highly unusual nature of this case that this should be regarded not only as not disciplinary, but as the desired goal of the Player and his representatives. More to the point, while releasing the Player is an available option, it is not a mandatory one.
Reaction was mixed. Stephen A. Smith of the Philadelphia Inquirer, who should no longer be confused with a TO defender, retorted that
They just didn't rob Owens of the right to work. They slapped him, then threw him change for good measure.
Phil Sheridan, also of the Inqy, writes that
The more the Eagles hurt Owens at this point, the more they ultimately hurt themselves. Other players are watching now, around the locker room and around the league. They are watching, and they are forming lasting impressions about what kind of organization the Eagles are running....If this is winning the battle with Owens, what would losing look like?
Bottom line is, there really are no winners here. The Eagles made their point that no player is above the team. But at what cost? Their season is over, with TO out due to suspension and quarterback Donovan McNabb out with season-ending surgery. And as Jason Whitlock of ESPN and the Kansas City Star notes, it's not like a lot of McNabb's teammates came to his defense in the TO mess. I agree with most of what Whitlock says. The Eagles' players are looking at McNabb's $115 million contract, looking at the team drag its feet when re-signing Brian Westbrook and David Akers, and looking at veterans heading into free agency with little hope of re-signing with Philadelphia. Above all else, Eagles President Joe Banner wants cap space. But exactly what did extra cap space help with this season? What veteran wide receiver did the Eagles sign to replace injured WR Todd Pinkston? What help did the Eagles get for the defensive line after letting free agent DE Corey Simon go after slapping him with a franchise tag?

And speaking of defense, this season hasn't been entirely McNabb's fault. The fact that McNabb was hampered by his hernia injury, coupled with some horrible throwing decisions and poor late-game clock management, resulted in bad losses to Washington and Dallas. But the defense is nothing like the unit that has dominated the NFC the last five years. They're giving up big plays (Lito Sheppard and Shelden Brown, for starters), yards and points. And as Rich Hoffman of the Philadelphia Daily News wrote on the eve of the second Dallas game, the Eagles' pass rush has a lot to do with this year's problems, too:
One more stat thing, outlining the impotence of the Eagles' pass rush. Last year, in the 14 games when the starters played, the Eagles got pressure (a sack or hurry) on the quarterback 37.3 percent of the time. In 2003, when they had multiple defensive line injuries and such an alarmingly weak pass rush that Andy Reid reacted by spending a billion dollars to sign Jevon Kearse, they got pressure 30.5 percent of the time.

This year, it is down to 25.7 percent of the time, which is a lot weaker than alarmingly weak. It is the killer stat of the season so far, a number so bad that it exposes not only the pass rushers but also the people left to clean up the mess behind them. That it has nothing to do with McNabb is self-evident.
Of course, that night McNabb proceeded to throw the interception from hell to Roy Williams and put the spotlight back on himself. The next six games won't be fun, folks.

Sunday, November 13, 2005

Next Question

Now that agent Drew Rosenhaus torpedoed Terrell Owens's chances of getting reinstated by the Eagles, Ralph Nader and Rev. Jesse Jackson have joined the fray. Nader argued in a letter to Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie and NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabue that Owens should be reinstated as a consumer protection measure, since there are fans who bought tickets to see Owens play. Jackson noted that
"This does not warrant a one-year ban from the game" and is "much too severe for the charge"
Given that Owens played seven games for the Eagles and may not play for nine, that doesn't add up to a one year ban. Oh, and as for Rosenhaus's argument that the media caused all this trouble, just remember that Owens generally refused to talk to members of the media other than ESPN, and when he appeared on ESPN, his comments didn't exactly shy away from controversy. The Eagles should have cut Owens in the summer, but that's another story.

Tuesday, November 08, 2005

No go on T.O.

T.O.'s greatest dream comes true: The Eagles lose after suspending Owens for the Washington game.

T.O.'s nightmare comes true: the Eagles punt T. O. for the rest of the season, which means possibly no money for four games.

And did you catch T.O.'s wink at Monday's press conference after a reporter asked agent Drew Rosenhaus what else he had done for Owens other than getting him kicked off the team? Rosenhaus quickly said "next question" while T.O. (behind Drew) smiled and then winked at the questioner. As Sam Donnellen of the Philadelphia Daily News observed, it's what would have happened if Quentin Tarantino had written the screenplay to "Jerry Maguire."