NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 7 New Articles Added 11/6/06

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 3 New Articles Added 8/30/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 3 New Articles Added 8/30/06)

Miami has edge in division dogfight


posted: Wednesday, August 30, 2006 | Feedback | Print Entry
filed under: New England Patriots, Miami Dolphins


I recently wrote about the outstanding preseason the Patriots have had through three weeks. They have been extremely impressive and are hitting on all cylinders right now. It doesn't appear the absence of Deion Branch has affected the offensive output in any way.

But the preseason is the preseason. It's nice to see your team play well and not have major injuries going into the opener, but we should not read too much into the dominance New England has displayed thus far. While the Patriots obviously have to be the favorites to repeat as AFC East champion, I believe it is going to be a dogfight.
The division is somewhat weak, with two new head coaches on two marginal teams. But while the Jets and Bills will struggle in 2006, Miami has improved and has a chance to give New England a run for its money.
Every season coaches, players, sportswriters and fans study the schedule and try to guess how many wins and losses a particular team will have. Most coaches and players won't admit to marking certain games as Ws, or pointing to particular teams or matchups, but it happens.
So I went through the schedules for both the Dolphins and the Patriots, and took an educated guess. By my count, both teams have a good chance to finish with double-digit wins.
The Dolphins' bye week comes after Week Seven, and I believe they have a good chance to be 6-1 or 5-2 at that point. The final nine games should be a little tougher, but I still see Miami winning at least five, and maybe six. They finish the season with a four-game stretch that includes two against tough opponents, but only one of them is on the road. So by my count, Miami should finish somewhere between 10-6 and 12-4. Those numbers add up to a playoff spot, and possibly a division championship.
Looking at the New England schedule, it appears the Patriots will have a similar road to the playoffs. Their bye week comes after Week Five, and they appear to have a good chance to be 4-1 or 3-2. They have a longer run after the bye week (11 games), and their final-four stretch run includes two tough road games, including Week 14 at Miami. Nevertheless, the Patriots could do as well as 8-3 after their bye, and should be at least 7-4. That adds up to no worse than 10-6 and possibly even 12-4, the same as Miami. Of course, anyone who could consistly hit a high percentage in predicting NFL wins and losses would be sitting on their own island sipping their favorite adult beverage. I do believe that, barring injury, the AFC East title will be won down the stretch, and that gives the slight edge to the Miami Dolphins.
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 3 New Articles Added 8/30/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 3 New Articles Added 8/30/06)

Miami has edge in division dogfight


posted: Wednesday, August 30, 2006 | Feedback | Print Entry
filed under: New England Patriots, Miami Dolphins


I recently wrote about the outstanding preseason the Patriots have had through three weeks. They have been extremely impressive and are hitting on all cylinders right now. It doesn't appear the absence of Deion Branch has affected the offensive output in any way.

But the preseason is the preseason. It's nice to see your team play well and not have major injuries going into the opener, but we should not read too much into the dominance New England has displayed thus far. While the Patriots obviously have to be the favorites to repeat as AFC East champion, I believe it is going to be a dogfight.
The division is somewhat weak, with two new head coaches on two marginal teams. But while the Jets and Bills will struggle in 2006, Miami has improved and has a chance to give New England a run for its money.
Every season coaches, players, sportswriters and fans study the schedule and try to guess how many wins and losses a particular team will have. Most coaches and players won't admit to marking certain games as Ws, or pointing to particular teams or matchups, but it happens.
So I went through the schedules for both the Dolphins and the Patriots, and took an educated guess. By my count, both teams have a good chance to finish with double-digit wins.
The Dolphins' bye week comes after Week Seven, and I believe they have a good chance to be 6-1 or 5-2 at that point. The final nine games should be a little tougher, but I still see Miami winning at least five, and maybe six. They finish the season with a four-game stretch that includes two against tough opponents, but only one of them is on the road. So by my count, Miami should finish somewhere between 10-6 and 12-4. Those numbers add up to a playoff spot, and possibly a division championship.
Looking at the New England schedule, it appears the Patriots will have a similar road to the playoffs. Their bye week comes after Week Five, and they appear to have a good chance to be 4-1 or 3-2. They have a longer run after the bye week (11 games), and their final-four stretch run includes two tough road games, including Week 14 at Miami. Nevertheless, the Patriots could do as well as 8-3 after their bye, and should be at least 7-4. That adds up to no worse than 10-6 and possibly even 12-4, the same as Miami. Of course, anyone who could consistly hit a high percentage in predicting NFL wins and losses would be sitting on their own island sipping their favorite adult beverage. I do believe that, barring injury, the AFC East title will be won down the stretch, and that gives the slight edge to the Miami Dolphins.
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 6 New Articles Added 8/30/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 6 New Articles Added 8/30/06)

<TABLE width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD>NFL Rumor Central: McCareins on the market?
</TD><TD align=right width="30%">Other Rumors: MLB | NBA
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE class=tablehead cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=3><TBODY><TR><TD align=middle>You are signed into Insider and have access to this premium feature.
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
<TABLE class=tablehead cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=3><TBODY><TR class=stathead><TD colSpan=3>Thursday, August 31</TD></TR><TR class=colhead><TD width=65>WHO</TD><TD>INTERESTED</TD><TD>THE SKINNY</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD noWrap align=middle>
Justin McCareins
Jets
</TD><TD>Bears?
</TD><TD>McCareins on the market?
<Aug. 31> Trade talks for McCareins have slowed down in recent days, writes ESPN.com's John Clayton. The Bears were interested, but they thought the receiver's $2.2 million salary was a little steep. McCareins made an impressive 40-yard catch in the Jets' third preseason game that got some momentum going for him with first-year coach Eric Mangini. McCareins is running behind Jerricho Cotchery as the team's No. 2 wide receiver. It's not out of the question that trade talks could heat up over the weekend.

</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 6 New Articles Added 8/30/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 6 New Articles Added 8/30/06)

<TABLE width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD>NFL Rumor Central: McCareins on the market?
</TD><TD align=right width="30%">Other Rumors: MLB | NBA
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE class=tablehead cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=3><TBODY><TR><TD align=middle>You are signed into Insider and have access to this premium feature.
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
<TABLE class=tablehead cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=3><TBODY><TR class=stathead><TD colSpan=3>Thursday, August 31</TD></TR><TR class=colhead><TD width=65>WHO</TD><TD>INTERESTED</TD><TD>THE SKINNY</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD noWrap align=middle>
Justin McCareins
Jets
</TD><TD>Bears?
</TD><TD>McCareins on the market?
<Aug. 31> Trade talks for McCareins have slowed down in recent days, writes ESPN.com's John Clayton. The Bears were interested, but they thought the receiver's $2.2 million salary was a little steep. McCareins made an impressive 40-yard catch in the Jets' third preseason game that got some momentum going for him with first-year coach Eric Mangini. McCareins is running behind Jerricho Cotchery as the team's No. 2 wide receiver. It's not out of the question that trade talks could heat up over the weekend.

</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 6 New Articles Added 8/30/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 6 New Articles Added 8/30/06)

Eleventh hour for running backs


posted: Thursday, August 31, 2006 | Print Entry
filed under: NFL, Carolina Panthers, Chicago Bears, Denver Broncos, New Orleans Saints, Oakland Raiders, Pittsburgh Steelers, Tampa Bay Buccaneers


Several running backs will be fighting for roster spots Thursday and Friday as the preseason ends in the NFL. Ron Dayne is fighting an uphill battle to make the Denver Broncos roster. Mike Shanahan has Mike Bell and Tatum Bell ahead of him. It's not out of the question for the Broncos to trade Dayne for a conditional draft choice. Recently, Dayne was working with a scout team, so he needs a good showing to make the Broncos roster. The same might be said for Eric Shelton of the Panthers. Panthers offensive coordinator Dan Henning was quoted as saying he hasn't seen much out of Shelton, a second-round choice of the Panthers in 2005. Shelton was injured during his rookie year. The player who probably won't be cut is Duce Staley of the Steelers. Even though Staley hasn't shown much in the past two games, coach Bill Cowher believes in him and will keep him unless they find someone better, which probably won't happen.

McCareins trade winds: Trade talks for Jets wide receiver Justin McCareins have slowed down for a couple of days. The Bears were interested but they thought his $2.2 million salary was a little steep. McCareins made an impressive 40-yard catch in the Jets third preseason game that got some momentum going for him with first-year coach Eric Mangini. McCareins is running behind Jerricho Cotchery as the Jets No. 2 wide receiver. It's not out of the question for trade talks to heat up over the weekend.
No shock in Tampa: Jay Fiedler's release wasn't a surprise. If the Bucs were going to keep him around he was going to start the season on the physically unable to perform list and not be available until six weeks into the season at the earliest. Jon Gruden likes what he sees from rookie Bruce Gradkowski, the team's sixth-round pick, and might make him the backup. But Gruden still has Tim Rattay as an experienced backup.
Raiders' quarterback carousel: Art Shell is saying he could keep four quarterbacks on the roster after the signing of Jeff George. Oakland's last preseason game is important for Andrew Walter, who is trying to secure the backup job. Walter missed the third preseason game because of shoulder tendonitis and soreness. The team is concerned about the shoulder. George was signed as an insurance policy. If Walter eases the concerns about his shoulder, the team could keep George or cut him and bring him back after a few weeks if needed. It's also not out of the question for the Raiders to trade Marques Tuiasosopo if Walter is healthy and the team can get the right value. Saints put faith in Colston: The word coming out of New Orleans is that Marques Colston is the reason the Saints felt as though they could trade Donte' Stallworth. A sixth-round pick with good size and a decent work ethic, Colston jumped ahead of Stallworth, Devery Henderson, and Bethel Johnson to be the starting receiver on the other side of Joe Horn. His surprise story is similar to the Mike Bell story in Denver. Bell is an undrafted free agent running first team at halfback for the Broncos. Having a sixth-round pick beating out a former first-rounder who is coming off a 70-catch season is a big surprise.
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 6 New Articles Added 8/30/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 6 New Articles Added 8/30/06)

Eleventh hour for running backs


posted: Thursday, August 31, 2006 | Print Entry
filed under: NFL, Carolina Panthers, Chicago Bears, Denver Broncos, New Orleans Saints, Oakland Raiders, Pittsburgh Steelers, Tampa Bay Buccaneers


Several running backs will be fighting for roster spots Thursday and Friday as the preseason ends in the NFL. Ron Dayne is fighting an uphill battle to make the Denver Broncos roster. Mike Shanahan has Mike Bell and Tatum Bell ahead of him. It's not out of the question for the Broncos to trade Dayne for a conditional draft choice. Recently, Dayne was working with a scout team, so he needs a good showing to make the Broncos roster. The same might be said for Eric Shelton of the Panthers. Panthers offensive coordinator Dan Henning was quoted as saying he hasn't seen much out of Shelton, a second-round choice of the Panthers in 2005. Shelton was injured during his rookie year. The player who probably won't be cut is Duce Staley of the Steelers. Even though Staley hasn't shown much in the past two games, coach Bill Cowher believes in him and will keep him unless they find someone better, which probably won't happen.

McCareins trade winds: Trade talks for Jets wide receiver Justin McCareins have slowed down for a couple of days. The Bears were interested but they thought his $2.2 million salary was a little steep. McCareins made an impressive 40-yard catch in the Jets third preseason game that got some momentum going for him with first-year coach Eric Mangini. McCareins is running behind Jerricho Cotchery as the Jets No. 2 wide receiver. It's not out of the question for trade talks to heat up over the weekend.
No shock in Tampa: Jay Fiedler's release wasn't a surprise. If the Bucs were going to keep him around he was going to start the season on the physically unable to perform list and not be available until six weeks into the season at the earliest. Jon Gruden likes what he sees from rookie Bruce Gradkowski, the team's sixth-round pick, and might make him the backup. But Gruden still has Tim Rattay as an experienced backup.
Raiders' quarterback carousel: Art Shell is saying he could keep four quarterbacks on the roster after the signing of Jeff George. Oakland's last preseason game is important for Andrew Walter, who is trying to secure the backup job. Walter missed the third preseason game because of shoulder tendonitis and soreness. The team is concerned about the shoulder. George was signed as an insurance policy. If Walter eases the concerns about his shoulder, the team could keep George or cut him and bring him back after a few weeks if needed. It's also not out of the question for the Raiders to trade Marques Tuiasosopo if Walter is healthy and the team can get the right value. Saints put faith in Colston: The word coming out of New Orleans is that Marques Colston is the reason the Saints felt as though they could trade Donte' Stallworth. A sixth-round pick with good size and a decent work ethic, Colston jumped ahead of Stallworth, Devery Henderson, and Bethel Johnson to be the starting receiver on the other side of Joe Horn. His surprise story is similar to the Mike Bell story in Denver. Bell is an undrafted free agent running first team at halfback for the Broncos. Having a sixth-round pick beating out a former first-rounder who is coming off a 70-catch season is a big surprise.
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 2 New Articles Added 8/31/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 2 New Articles Added 8/31/06)

Robinson's downfall sad to see


posted: Thursday, August 31, 2006 | Feedback | Print Entry
filed under: Minnesota Vikings


As I promised in my last blog, I will address the Minnesota Vikings, who, once again, have been forced to deal with serious off-field distractions. The biggest issue involved the man coach Brad Childress penciled in as the No. 1 wide receiver for 2006, Koren Robinson.
<!---------------------INLINE HEADSHOT (BEGIN)--------------------->

Robinson

<!---------------------INLINE HEADSHOT (END)--------------------->Robinson's problems with alcohol were well documented in Seattle and eventually led to his release. The Seahawks made him their first-round draft choice out of North Carolina State in 2001, following his junior season. Unfortunately, he was not mature enough at age 21 to handle the dramatic transition to being a star with tremendous expectations in the NFL. He enjoyed the good life, letting it consume him and ruining his career with the Seahawks.

Robinson was given a second chance in Minnesota by then-head coach Mike Tice after former college teammate Brian Williams, a former Vikings cornerback now with Carolina, made an introduction. As the Vikings running back coach, I also assisted on special teams, working with the kick returners. In that role, I spent a lot of time with K-Rob and enjoyed our daily conversations. He was working very hard to control his addiction and made a very conscious effort to turn his life around, including symbolically selecting jersey No. 18, as opposed to the 81 he had worn in Seattle.
Our daily talks included my lectures about "doing things right and doing the right things," while he shared stories from college and high school, as well as his supportive family and close friends. Koren is a tremendously personable young man, always offering a warm smile along with a charismatic personality that just made you like him. The more you were around him, the more you found yourself supporting his challenges and appreciating his successes.
As tough as the 2005 season turned out for our team, it was enjoyable seeing his growth. I was not alone witnessing such positives in Robinson, as he was voted by his teammates the winner of the Ed Block Courage Award and was honored by the local media with the Korey Stringer Good Guy Award. His successful professional rejuvenation seemed complete, and it was highlighted by his being voted to the Pro Bowl.
The storybook ending was happening for Robinson. During the offseason he was awarded a new multi-year, multi-million dollar contract, got married and headed into training camp as the No. 1 receiver. Everything seemed so perfect. His confidence soared to new heights. Then those small daily details he had so closely monitored slipped by unnoticed. The one-day-at-a-time, humble attitude gained a hint of arrogance. The jersey number switched back to 81. All that was going so well fell apart, hard. Koren tested his limits and lost.
On the night of Aug. 15, Robinson raced down Minnesota highway 169 in his customized BMW, testing the limits of coach Childress' curfew, as well as the posted speed. Just north of the small town of St. Peter, Minn., the BMW flew past a police vehicle, and the police lights flipped on. The pursuit of Robinson's car continued through town and on for another 12 miles to Mankato, site of the Vikings' training camp. As Robinson's speed topped 100 miles per hour, his ticket changed to a felony fleeing charge. With multiple law enforcement agencies now represented, Robinson finally came to his senses and stopped just outside his training camp dormitory, minutes before curfew. Robinson was immediately handcuffed and arrested. He had not only challenged the Vikings curfew and lost, he had challenged the authorities and lost. Perhaps more importantly, he had challenged his sobriety and lost.
The Vikings released Robinson this week, and as a second-time offender in the NFL's substance abuse program, he could face a one-year suspension from the league. I like Koren Robinson, and I wish him all the best in conquering the grip the demons of alcoholism have on him.
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 2 New Articles Added 8/31/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 2 New Articles Added 8/31/06)

Robinson's downfall sad to see


posted: Thursday, August 31, 2006 | Feedback | Print Entry
filed under: Minnesota Vikings


As I promised in my last blog, I will address the Minnesota Vikings, who, once again, have been forced to deal with serious off-field distractions. The biggest issue involved the man coach Brad Childress penciled in as the No. 1 wide receiver for 2006, Koren Robinson.
<!---------------------INLINE HEADSHOT (BEGIN)--------------------->

Robinson

<!---------------------INLINE HEADSHOT (END)--------------------->Robinson's problems with alcohol were well documented in Seattle and eventually led to his release. The Seahawks made him their first-round draft choice out of North Carolina State in 2001, following his junior season. Unfortunately, he was not mature enough at age 21 to handle the dramatic transition to being a star with tremendous expectations in the NFL. He enjoyed the good life, letting it consume him and ruining his career with the Seahawks.

Robinson was given a second chance in Minnesota by then-head coach Mike Tice after former college teammate Brian Williams, a former Vikings cornerback now with Carolina, made an introduction. As the Vikings running back coach, I also assisted on special teams, working with the kick returners. In that role, I spent a lot of time with K-Rob and enjoyed our daily conversations. He was working very hard to control his addiction and made a very conscious effort to turn his life around, including symbolically selecting jersey No. 18, as opposed to the 81 he had worn in Seattle.
Our daily talks included my lectures about "doing things right and doing the right things," while he shared stories from college and high school, as well as his supportive family and close friends. Koren is a tremendously personable young man, always offering a warm smile along with a charismatic personality that just made you like him. The more you were around him, the more you found yourself supporting his challenges and appreciating his successes.
As tough as the 2005 season turned out for our team, it was enjoyable seeing his growth. I was not alone witnessing such positives in Robinson, as he was voted by his teammates the winner of the Ed Block Courage Award and was honored by the local media with the Korey Stringer Good Guy Award. His successful professional rejuvenation seemed complete, and it was highlighted by his being voted to the Pro Bowl.
The storybook ending was happening for Robinson. During the offseason he was awarded a new multi-year, multi-million dollar contract, got married and headed into training camp as the No. 1 receiver. Everything seemed so perfect. His confidence soared to new heights. Then those small daily details he had so closely monitored slipped by unnoticed. The one-day-at-a-time, humble attitude gained a hint of arrogance. The jersey number switched back to 81. All that was going so well fell apart, hard. Koren tested his limits and lost.
On the night of Aug. 15, Robinson raced down Minnesota highway 169 in his customized BMW, testing the limits of coach Childress' curfew, as well as the posted speed. Just north of the small town of St. Peter, Minn., the BMW flew past a police vehicle, and the police lights flipped on. The pursuit of Robinson's car continued through town and on for another 12 miles to Mankato, site of the Vikings' training camp. As Robinson's speed topped 100 miles per hour, his ticket changed to a felony fleeing charge. With multiple law enforcement agencies now represented, Robinson finally came to his senses and stopped just outside his training camp dormitory, minutes before curfew. Robinson was immediately handcuffed and arrested. He had not only challenged the Vikings curfew and lost, he had challenged the authorities and lost. Perhaps more importantly, he had challenged his sobriety and lost.
The Vikings released Robinson this week, and as a second-time offender in the NFL's substance abuse program, he could face a one-year suspension from the league. I like Koren Robinson, and I wish him all the best in conquering the grip the demons of alcoholism have on him.
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 2 New Articles Added 8/31/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 2 New Articles Added 8/31/06)

Offseason moves help Falcons


posted: Thursday, August 31, 2006 | Feedback | Print Entry
filed under: New Orleans Saints, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Carolina Panthers, Atlanta Falcons


Ricky, Knoxville, Tenn.: If a fast and aggresive Miami defense did well against the Panthers, what do you think a fast and aggresive Falcons defense will do to them? Also, I realize the stats say 7-for-14, but Michael Vick put the ball on the receivers' hands consistently, and there were a lot of drops. My question is this: I've noticed Vick is hitting the slants so far. Have you seen any improvement in Vick's passing game this preseason?


Keith: Hey Ricky, I like what the Falcons have done with their defensive personnel. The addition of John Abraham, Lawyer Milloy and Chris Crocker should only improve a unit that had a lot of deficiencies due to injuries in 2005. However, when you sign a veteran defensive tackle like Grady Jackson in mid-August to a three-year deal, it's a definite alert in my mind that the Falcons' brass is still concerned about their run defense. As to your question about Michael Vick, I don't get caught up too much in the performance of a great player in the preseason. The true evaluation on Vick starts in Week 1 against the Panthers.
John, Boston: Hi Keith, fantasy speaking, who will Drew Brees' tight end be this year? We had our fantasy draft yesterday, and a Saints tight end was not drafted. I have a gut feeling a good one will emerge because of Brees' history with Antonio Gates. What do you think of my prognostication, and who will it be? Thanks.

Keith: Hey John, I haven't thought about that one, but that's a good call. The trade that sent Donte' Stallworth to the Eagles probably means the Saints' tight ends will be more involved in the passing game. Ernie Conwell should be the starter as we move toward the regular season. Conwell has battled through injuries over the last few seasons but still has some value as a receiver in the short and intermediate areas. He has 195 receptions and 14 touchdowns over his career.
Brian, Houma, La.: With the NFC South being so tough on the defensive side of the ball, why don't the Saints go in that direction? I know you can't pass on Reggie Bush, but it seems they did very little to improve on defense.
Keith: Hey Brian, I talked about this a little last week. It's too hard to fix all your problems in one offseason, especially with a new head coach. However, it is always a work in progress, and the Saints have tried over the last few weeks to improve their linebacker corps by acquiring Scott Shanle (Cowboys) and Mark Simoneau (Eagles) in trades. In looking at the Saints' 2006 draft, a player you want to keep an eye on is second-round pick, safety Roman Harper. He is a good building block for the Saints future on defense.
Jerry, Tampa, Fla: What is your take on the Bucs' offensive line this season? Thanks for the question Jerry. Better than last year! I like what the Bucs did as far as incorporating youth with experience along the offensive line. I really like the upside of guard Davin Joseph and tackle Jeremy Trueblood. Guard Dan Buenning got a lot of starting experience last year due to injuries and has a solid upside to develop into a frontline starter in the NFL. They added solid depth with the signing of Toniu Fonoti. However, I still have concerns about the edges, with tackles Anthony Davis and Kenyatta Walker due to their inconsistencies.
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 2 New Articles Added 8/31/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 2 New Articles Added 8/31/06)

Offseason moves help Falcons


posted: Thursday, August 31, 2006 | Feedback | Print Entry
filed under: New Orleans Saints, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Carolina Panthers, Atlanta Falcons


Ricky, Knoxville, Tenn.: If a fast and aggresive Miami defense did well against the Panthers, what do you think a fast and aggresive Falcons defense will do to them? Also, I realize the stats say 7-for-14, but Michael Vick put the ball on the receivers' hands consistently, and there were a lot of drops. My question is this: I've noticed Vick is hitting the slants so far. Have you seen any improvement in Vick's passing game this preseason?


Keith: Hey Ricky, I like what the Falcons have done with their defensive personnel. The addition of John Abraham, Lawyer Milloy and Chris Crocker should only improve a unit that had a lot of deficiencies due to injuries in 2005. However, when you sign a veteran defensive tackle like Grady Jackson in mid-August to a three-year deal, it's a definite alert in my mind that the Falcons' brass is still concerned about their run defense. As to your question about Michael Vick, I don't get caught up too much in the performance of a great player in the preseason. The true evaluation on Vick starts in Week 1 against the Panthers.
John, Boston: Hi Keith, fantasy speaking, who will Drew Brees' tight end be this year? We had our fantasy draft yesterday, and a Saints tight end was not drafted. I have a gut feeling a good one will emerge because of Brees' history with Antonio Gates. What do you think of my prognostication, and who will it be? Thanks.

Keith: Hey John, I haven't thought about that one, but that's a good call. The trade that sent Donte' Stallworth to the Eagles probably means the Saints' tight ends will be more involved in the passing game. Ernie Conwell should be the starter as we move toward the regular season. Conwell has battled through injuries over the last few seasons but still has some value as a receiver in the short and intermediate areas. He has 195 receptions and 14 touchdowns over his career.
Brian, Houma, La.: With the NFC South being so tough on the defensive side of the ball, why don't the Saints go in that direction? I know you can't pass on Reggie Bush, but it seems they did very little to improve on defense.
Keith: Hey Brian, I talked about this a little last week. It's too hard to fix all your problems in one offseason, especially with a new head coach. However, it is always a work in progress, and the Saints have tried over the last few weeks to improve their linebacker corps by acquiring Scott Shanle (Cowboys) and Mark Simoneau (Eagles) in trades. In looking at the Saints' 2006 draft, a player you want to keep an eye on is second-round pick, safety Roman Harper. He is a good building block for the Saints future on defense.
Jerry, Tampa, Fla: What is your take on the Bucs' offensive line this season? Thanks for the question Jerry. Better than last year! I like what the Bucs did as far as incorporating youth with experience along the offensive line. I really like the upside of guard Davin Joseph and tackle Jeremy Trueblood. Guard Dan Buenning got a lot of starting experience last year due to injuries and has a solid upside to develop into a frontline starter in the NFL. They added solid depth with the signing of Toniu Fonoti. However, I still have concerns about the edges, with tackles Anthony Davis and Kenyatta Walker due to their inconsistencies.
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 4 New Articles Added 8/31/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 4 New Articles Added 8/31/06)

Updated: Aug. 31, 2006, 11:35 AM ET
<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD></TD><TD></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>

The W's are in the details


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By David Fleming
ESPN The Magazine

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<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD style="PADDING-TOP: 10px" vAlign=top><!-- begin leftcol --><!-- template inline -->Editor's Note: This story appears in the Sept. 11 edition of ESPN The Magazine.

Before opening the door to his dorm suite on Minnesota State's campus, Brad Childress offers a warning: "It's pretty funkified in here." Ah, the glamour life of an NFL head coach. Shortly after Childress arrived in Mankato for training camp, the AC in his room blew up, leaking water all over the carpet and, after a few hours, releasing a stank that can only be described as eau de Blutarsky. An assistant tried to mask the mess-up with carpet freshener, to no avail. "Now it smells like sugar on vomit," says Childress. "So come on in!"
For Childress, the more funkified the better. How else to explain why, as a candidate for any of this past off-season's 10 head-coaching vacancies, he signed quickly with the Vikings, whose performances of late, both on and off the field, have truly reeked. The hard-nosed, no-nonsense Childress is exactly what the Vikes went looking for last January. In fact, owner Zygi Wilf was so taken with the ex-Eagles offensive coordinator that he wouldn't let Childress leave town until a deal was reached. Wilf thinks he's found his team's savior, someone with a personality and plan powerful enough to improve the team and keep Love Boat scandals at bay. Someone so intense his idea of decorating is limited to hanging a fly swatter on his dorm wall.

ESPN The Magazine
Click here to subscribe to the magazine.



But piled atop Childress' kitchen table, next to a bag of Jolly Ranchers, are his blueprints. It's the first day of August, opening day of camp, and Childress has scripted every play for every practice for the next three weeks. His rules are so detailed that even pranks (like superglueing bike locks) are listed as no-nos. And written in bold red letters across the top of the first handout given to players is the phrase "Shooting for Miami."
It's an ambitious trajectory, one perfectly suited to a man who approaches his job with the focus of a NASA flight director. Failure is not an option for Childress, as he tries to transform the Vikes from scandal-ridden to playoff-bound. Here's a look at the first four days of his first training camp, from inside mission control.
<HR align=left width=150>
Aug. 1, 2006: 9:22 a.m.

It's raining. But water can't wash away details.
A strip of purple-and-gold tape is laid across the line of scrimmage, as running backs warm up with a series of simple, seemingly meaningless handoffs. Then, 37 minutes into the first practice, Childress blows the drill dead. He walks to the 32-yard line, bends so close to the grass that rain splashes back up into his face and points to a single cleat mark. He begins chomping his gum so hard it makes his thick mustache dance. He marches up to running back Adimchinobe Echemandu and, while pointing to a tiny dimple in the turf, says "course integrity" over and over and over.
A psych major back at Eastern Illinois, Childress believes that repetitive speech leads to retention. He calls his mantras "fence posts," and he likes to, as he says, "plant 'em deep by repeating them until guys are sick to death. Then I say them once more, because that's usually when the light goes on."
On this play, Childress tells the players, the goal is to move the linebacker laterally before he attacks the hole. This will square him up on the shoulders of a 320-pound offensive guard. Advantage, Vikes. The whole play, he continues, hinges on the back drawing the 'backer to a specific spot, which means the runner must be precise about hitting his mark: the inside foot of the offensive tackle.
Echemandu sheepishly follows his coach's finger down to the grass. He was off by less than half a foot, but it might as well have been a half mile.
No team in the league has experienced as much wholesale change as the Vikings. Childress traded franchise QB Daunte Culpepper, hired 21 assistants and installed new West Coast and Cover 2 schemes. But the coach is convinced that his squad's transformation will be subtle, taking place on an almost subatomic level, one play, one inch, one cleat mark at a time. "Everybody in the NFL has the same plays," he says. "That means the minutiae, the mastery of the details, separates great teams from everyone else. You always want the perfect game, perfect practice, perfect play. But it hasn't been coached yet."
<HR align=left width=150>
Aug. 1, 2006: 4:37 p.m.


Tom Dahlin/WireImage.com
New head coach Brad Childress has brought a hard-nosed brand of football to Minnesota.



On the final play of the afternoon practice, Brad Johnson tucks the ball under his arm and runs. The dumbfounded defense eventually chases him out of bounds, but not before the nearly 38-year-old QB flashes a hand-behind-the-head high-step. The move draws the ire of linebacker Napoleon Harris, and gut-busting laughter from everyone else, Childress included.
The West Coast O is predicated on receivers gaining yards after the catch, which requires a quick-thinking, accurate QB to hit them in stride. Johnson may be old and a tad dorky, but he's working on an NFL record of 10 straight seasons with a completion rate of at least 60%. In a scrimmage later that week, Johnson will hit every one of his passes while facing blitz pressure from the Chiefs D.
Still, much has been made about Johnson's age and, therefore, his fragility. Childress took steps to protect his QB by giving free agent Steve Hutchinson a seven-year, $49M deal, the largest ever for an offensive guard. And Johnson allayed any of his new boss' fears about his age by acting as excited as a rookie when camp opened. In the team cafeteria, Johnson rushed up to Childress and handed him a list and some tape of plays he'd been thinking about during the off-season. "How about this job, huh?" Johnson roared with delight. "Three squares, a bed to sleep in, all this football. What more could you ask for?"
<HR align=left width=150>
Aug. 1, 2006: 7:30 p.m.

Under a threatening indigo sky, Childress walks across campus to meet with the Vikings offense. Today they install their third-and-short game plan.
As a teenager growing up in Aurora, Ill., Childress was set adrift by his parents' nasty divorce. Before he was too far gone, he moved into the basement of family friend Chuck Dickerson, football coach at Marmion Military Academy. Childress played QB at Marmion, and after graduating from EIU, became a coach -- one who still subscribes to Dickerson's belief that teaching and mentoring are the most sacred aspects of the job.
These "install meetings" are where Childress shines, making complicated concepts straightforward and easy to absorb. Using an overhead projector, the offense reviews each play, position by position, so that every player understands his tactical link to the others. Childress doesn't just draw up a play, like All Go, and expect players to have learned its nuances by reading the playbook. He says, "This is an All Go, and [wideout] Aaron Hosack, you need to get closer to the red line on this." Or maybe, "Shallow Cross here, and Jermaine [Wiggins], remember, when you approach a wall of linebackers, the rule is you have to go underneath." Every once in a while, he'll even put up a short PowerPoint about a specific topic, such as how tipped balls can damage an offense. "This is Generation Y," Childress says later. "You can't just tell them to do something. You have to explain the why, too."
He is disciplined and detail-oriented without coming across as condescending or draconian. Cornerback Fred Smoot calls this the Joe Gibbs effect. "There are coaches you play for because it's your job, and others you lay it on the line for because you respect them like your granddaddy," says Smoot, who played for Gibbs two seasons ago. "With the talent even, great coaching is the difference in the NFL. And that's what we got here now."
First-time offensive coordinator Darrell Bevell runs the meeting, while Childress picks and chooses spots to interject. Sometimes he asks his coordinator a question, other times he just gives orders. Three-quarters of the way through, a tornado alarm sounds. Childress must decide what's more important: safety or third-and-short? He pauses, then tells Bevell to continue while he goes outside to check the sky. It's all clear.
<HR align=left width=150>
Aug. 2, 2006: 5:20 a.m.

As Childress steps onto a treadmill inside a cavernous but perfectly still field house, he has one thing on his mind: nose tackle Pat Williams.
Williams arrived at camp weighing 334 pounds, two pounds heavier than his assigned reporting weight. Having stressed a "culture of directness" and "accountability" as two of his fence posts, Childress couldn't start camp by letting Williams slide. So he placed him on the physically unable to perform list, forcing an embarrassed Williams to spend the first week of camp working with trainers, ostracized from the team. It was a risky move for a seemingly insignificant amount of weight, especially since star players can lead a revolt as easily as they can support a new agenda. The day after, the decision was still weighing on the coach's mind. "As much as you want to say, Gosh dang, that's our starting nose tackle, you can't," Childress says. "Some things can't be negotiable."
Childress didn't yet know that, after No.1 wideout Koren Robinson's arrest two weeks later, dealing with Williams' spare tire would be a pleasure.
For a man charged with rehabbing the Vikings image, re-signing Robinson was as risky a move as trading Culpepper. Robinson had spent four seasons as a problem in Seattle, which cut him after a DUI in the spring of 2005. Yet, following a 28-day stint in rehab last August, he signed with the Vikes as a free agent, became a Pro Bowl kick returner and was awarded the Ed Block Courage Award by his teammates. Last March, Childress anointed Robinson his No.1 receiver by signing off on a three-year, $12.7M contract offer. Then, on Aug. 15, the players' first full day off from camp, Robinson was charged with DWI and fleeing police after he was clocked going 104 mph (Editor's note: The Vikings released Robinson on Aug. 26 after The Magazine went to press).
To fed up fans, Robinson's arrest is just the latest in boorish behavior from a lawless franchise. For Childress, though, it's a reminder that his biggest challenges may not come on Sundays. He's trying to change what he calls the "it's all good" 'tude that has infected a generation and a franchise. "You wanna drink a case of beer, you wanna stay out all night? Guys tell each other, It's all good," he says. "No one wants to tell a teammate, Hey, get your head out of your ass." Childress says he doesn't want to be the guard in Cool Hand Luke -- with every infraction meaning a night in the box. What he wants is a culture where players police, push and praise one another. And Robinson's arrest is proof that sometimes he'll feel like he's running in place.
<HR align=left width=150>
Aug. 2, 2006: 11:15 a.m.

On his way back to his room after Wednesday morning's practice, Childress passes a picture of Edvard Munch's The Scream on the lobby wall. Seconds later his cell phone rings. It's Wilf.
"Coach, we need to look into something," the owner says.
"Sure, what's up?" says Childress.
"Mark [Wilf's younger brother and team president] says yesterday's practice is on YouTube."
"It's on YOUWHAT?!" yells Childress.
With four kids, the 50-year-old Childress knows exactly what YouTube is, and that having his team's practice on the site is bad. Remaining calm while mentally Rolodexing every play he might have to change, Childress calls his assistant to get the story. Turns out, a newbie from the team's radio affiliate has taken video of yesterday's practice and posted it on the station's website, which uses YouTube's server. The footage is taken down, and the station apologizes. Disaster averted.
In 1993, when Wisconsin played Michigan State in Japan, Childress, the Badgers offensive coordinator at the time, consulted NASA experts about combating the effects of jet lag. (Wisconsin won the game and, later that season, the Rose Bowl.) This summer, he researched an Army study on dehydration, becoming an expert on testing urine to detect dehydration.
YouTube aficionado. Sleep expert. Urine specialist. If it helps win games, Childress is for it. "You plan and you organize, and you expect your day to go one way," he says, laughing. "And pretty soon you're racing in another direction, because of YouTube. That's what no one tells you about in head-coaching school, right?"
<HR align=left width=150>
Aug. 3, 2006: 9:30 a.m.

After the day's first two series of drills, Childress walks up to his defense. "I haven't heard a single pad pop yet, men!" he shouts. His vision for the Vikes D is this: A frenzy of disruption caused by big guys who can run fast and little guys who can hit hard. But this morning, Childress hasn't seen anything of the kind.
Each day he makes a point to connect with a handful of defensive players, acutely aware of his offensive bias. "I used to jump up and down for first downs in practice," Childress says. "Now I sit there, ambivalent. When something goes good on offense, something went wrong on defense."
Childress gets an idea of how the defense is responding to him during the very next drill, when safety Dwight Smith charges into a pileup screaming, "I will kill your weak ass. Come on, come on, let's get this on!" On the next play, safety Tank Williams levels wideout Kevin Kasper. And on the play after that, rookie safety Greg Blue leaves tight end Richard Owens noodle-legged on a seam route, like a boxer taking a standing eight count.
As the defense celebrates around Owens, DB coach Joe Woods screams to Blue, "That's why we drafted your ass." Later, Smith relates the defense's new motto: Play like your hair's on fire. Asked to clarify, the safety glares for a moment, then says, "Light your hair on fire and find out."
<HR align=left width=150>
Aug. 4, 2006: 2:30 p.m.

The notion of being referred to as a savior in this story has been eating at Childress. He's worried that he'll come across as a first-year head coach who sounds like he invented the game. So, a few hours before the Vikings practice with the Chiefs, he dials the phone and gets sent to voice mail. "This stuff is not revolutionary," his message says. "I'm just passing along what I've learned from great coaches over 30 years, ya know?"
<HR align=left width=150>
Aug. 4, 2006: 7:01 p.m.

Covered in purple bunting, the steep cement-bench stands of Minnesota State's Blakeslee Stadium are packed to capacity. When the Chiefs jog onto the field, they drag along the smell from a brat stand. Childress' wife, Dru-Ann, looks on from the grass behind the end zone. The air is crisp, crackling with nervous energy.
After calling the first play, Childress moves to the side and watches, cap low and hands on knees. Johnson barks out the signals. It's a run. Pads collide. Players grunt and groan. The back hits his landmark, bursts through a hole and goes untouched toward midfield. The crowd erupts. Childress rocks forward, adjusts his cap and unfolds his script, searching for play No.2.
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 4 New Articles Added 8/31/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 4 New Articles Added 8/31/06)

Updated: Aug. 31, 2006, 11:35 AM ET
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The W's are in the details


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By David Fleming
ESPN The Magazine

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<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD style="PADDING-TOP: 10px" vAlign=top><!-- begin leftcol --><!-- template inline -->Editor's Note: This story appears in the Sept. 11 edition of ESPN The Magazine.

Before opening the door to his dorm suite on Minnesota State's campus, Brad Childress offers a warning: "It's pretty funkified in here." Ah, the glamour life of an NFL head coach. Shortly after Childress arrived in Mankato for training camp, the AC in his room blew up, leaking water all over the carpet and, after a few hours, releasing a stank that can only be described as eau de Blutarsky. An assistant tried to mask the mess-up with carpet freshener, to no avail. "Now it smells like sugar on vomit," says Childress. "So come on in!"
For Childress, the more funkified the better. How else to explain why, as a candidate for any of this past off-season's 10 head-coaching vacancies, he signed quickly with the Vikings, whose performances of late, both on and off the field, have truly reeked. The hard-nosed, no-nonsense Childress is exactly what the Vikes went looking for last January. In fact, owner Zygi Wilf was so taken with the ex-Eagles offensive coordinator that he wouldn't let Childress leave town until a deal was reached. Wilf thinks he's found his team's savior, someone with a personality and plan powerful enough to improve the team and keep Love Boat scandals at bay. Someone so intense his idea of decorating is limited to hanging a fly swatter on his dorm wall.

ESPN The Magazine
Click here to subscribe to the magazine.



But piled atop Childress' kitchen table, next to a bag of Jolly Ranchers, are his blueprints. It's the first day of August, opening day of camp, and Childress has scripted every play for every practice for the next three weeks. His rules are so detailed that even pranks (like superglueing bike locks) are listed as no-nos. And written in bold red letters across the top of the first handout given to players is the phrase "Shooting for Miami."
It's an ambitious trajectory, one perfectly suited to a man who approaches his job with the focus of a NASA flight director. Failure is not an option for Childress, as he tries to transform the Vikes from scandal-ridden to playoff-bound. Here's a look at the first four days of his first training camp, from inside mission control.
<HR align=left width=150>
Aug. 1, 2006: 9:22 a.m.

It's raining. But water can't wash away details.
A strip of purple-and-gold tape is laid across the line of scrimmage, as running backs warm up with a series of simple, seemingly meaningless handoffs. Then, 37 minutes into the first practice, Childress blows the drill dead. He walks to the 32-yard line, bends so close to the grass that rain splashes back up into his face and points to a single cleat mark. He begins chomping his gum so hard it makes his thick mustache dance. He marches up to running back Adimchinobe Echemandu and, while pointing to a tiny dimple in the turf, says "course integrity" over and over and over.
A psych major back at Eastern Illinois, Childress believes that repetitive speech leads to retention. He calls his mantras "fence posts," and he likes to, as he says, "plant 'em deep by repeating them until guys are sick to death. Then I say them once more, because that's usually when the light goes on."
On this play, Childress tells the players, the goal is to move the linebacker laterally before he attacks the hole. This will square him up on the shoulders of a 320-pound offensive guard. Advantage, Vikes. The whole play, he continues, hinges on the back drawing the 'backer to a specific spot, which means the runner must be precise about hitting his mark: the inside foot of the offensive tackle.
Echemandu sheepishly follows his coach's finger down to the grass. He was off by less than half a foot, but it might as well have been a half mile.
No team in the league has experienced as much wholesale change as the Vikings. Childress traded franchise QB Daunte Culpepper, hired 21 assistants and installed new West Coast and Cover 2 schemes. But the coach is convinced that his squad's transformation will be subtle, taking place on an almost subatomic level, one play, one inch, one cleat mark at a time. "Everybody in the NFL has the same plays," he says. "That means the minutiae, the mastery of the details, separates great teams from everyone else. You always want the perfect game, perfect practice, perfect play. But it hasn't been coached yet."
<HR align=left width=150>
Aug. 1, 2006: 4:37 p.m.


Tom Dahlin/WireImage.com
New head coach Brad Childress has brought a hard-nosed brand of football to Minnesota.



On the final play of the afternoon practice, Brad Johnson tucks the ball under his arm and runs. The dumbfounded defense eventually chases him out of bounds, but not before the nearly 38-year-old QB flashes a hand-behind-the-head high-step. The move draws the ire of linebacker Napoleon Harris, and gut-busting laughter from everyone else, Childress included.
The West Coast O is predicated on receivers gaining yards after the catch, which requires a quick-thinking, accurate QB to hit them in stride. Johnson may be old and a tad dorky, but he's working on an NFL record of 10 straight seasons with a completion rate of at least 60%. In a scrimmage later that week, Johnson will hit every one of his passes while facing blitz pressure from the Chiefs D.
Still, much has been made about Johnson's age and, therefore, his fragility. Childress took steps to protect his QB by giving free agent Steve Hutchinson a seven-year, $49M deal, the largest ever for an offensive guard. And Johnson allayed any of his new boss' fears about his age by acting as excited as a rookie when camp opened. In the team cafeteria, Johnson rushed up to Childress and handed him a list and some tape of plays he'd been thinking about during the off-season. "How about this job, huh?" Johnson roared with delight. "Three squares, a bed to sleep in, all this football. What more could you ask for?"
<HR align=left width=150>
Aug. 1, 2006: 7:30 p.m.

Under a threatening indigo sky, Childress walks across campus to meet with the Vikings offense. Today they install their third-and-short game plan.
As a teenager growing up in Aurora, Ill., Childress was set adrift by his parents' nasty divorce. Before he was too far gone, he moved into the basement of family friend Chuck Dickerson, football coach at Marmion Military Academy. Childress played QB at Marmion, and after graduating from EIU, became a coach -- one who still subscribes to Dickerson's belief that teaching and mentoring are the most sacred aspects of the job.
These "install meetings" are where Childress shines, making complicated concepts straightforward and easy to absorb. Using an overhead projector, the offense reviews each play, position by position, so that every player understands his tactical link to the others. Childress doesn't just draw up a play, like All Go, and expect players to have learned its nuances by reading the playbook. He says, "This is an All Go, and [wideout] Aaron Hosack, you need to get closer to the red line on this." Or maybe, "Shallow Cross here, and Jermaine [Wiggins], remember, when you approach a wall of linebackers, the rule is you have to go underneath." Every once in a while, he'll even put up a short PowerPoint about a specific topic, such as how tipped balls can damage an offense. "This is Generation Y," Childress says later. "You can't just tell them to do something. You have to explain the why, too."
He is disciplined and detail-oriented without coming across as condescending or draconian. Cornerback Fred Smoot calls this the Joe Gibbs effect. "There are coaches you play for because it's your job, and others you lay it on the line for because you respect them like your granddaddy," says Smoot, who played for Gibbs two seasons ago. "With the talent even, great coaching is the difference in the NFL. And that's what we got here now."
First-time offensive coordinator Darrell Bevell runs the meeting, while Childress picks and chooses spots to interject. Sometimes he asks his coordinator a question, other times he just gives orders. Three-quarters of the way through, a tornado alarm sounds. Childress must decide what's more important: safety or third-and-short? He pauses, then tells Bevell to continue while he goes outside to check the sky. It's all clear.
<HR align=left width=150>
Aug. 2, 2006: 5:20 a.m.

As Childress steps onto a treadmill inside a cavernous but perfectly still field house, he has one thing on his mind: nose tackle Pat Williams.
Williams arrived at camp weighing 334 pounds, two pounds heavier than his assigned reporting weight. Having stressed a "culture of directness" and "accountability" as two of his fence posts, Childress couldn't start camp by letting Williams slide. So he placed him on the physically unable to perform list, forcing an embarrassed Williams to spend the first week of camp working with trainers, ostracized from the team. It was a risky move for a seemingly insignificant amount of weight, especially since star players can lead a revolt as easily as they can support a new agenda. The day after, the decision was still weighing on the coach's mind. "As much as you want to say, Gosh dang, that's our starting nose tackle, you can't," Childress says. "Some things can't be negotiable."
Childress didn't yet know that, after No.1 wideout Koren Robinson's arrest two weeks later, dealing with Williams' spare tire would be a pleasure.
For a man charged with rehabbing the Vikings image, re-signing Robinson was as risky a move as trading Culpepper. Robinson had spent four seasons as a problem in Seattle, which cut him after a DUI in the spring of 2005. Yet, following a 28-day stint in rehab last August, he signed with the Vikes as a free agent, became a Pro Bowl kick returner and was awarded the Ed Block Courage Award by his teammates. Last March, Childress anointed Robinson his No.1 receiver by signing off on a three-year, $12.7M contract offer. Then, on Aug. 15, the players' first full day off from camp, Robinson was charged with DWI and fleeing police after he was clocked going 104 mph (Editor's note: The Vikings released Robinson on Aug. 26 after The Magazine went to press).
To fed up fans, Robinson's arrest is just the latest in boorish behavior from a lawless franchise. For Childress, though, it's a reminder that his biggest challenges may not come on Sundays. He's trying to change what he calls the "it's all good" 'tude that has infected a generation and a franchise. "You wanna drink a case of beer, you wanna stay out all night? Guys tell each other, It's all good," he says. "No one wants to tell a teammate, Hey, get your head out of your ass." Childress says he doesn't want to be the guard in Cool Hand Luke -- with every infraction meaning a night in the box. What he wants is a culture where players police, push and praise one another. And Robinson's arrest is proof that sometimes he'll feel like he's running in place.
<HR align=left width=150>
Aug. 2, 2006: 11:15 a.m.

On his way back to his room after Wednesday morning's practice, Childress passes a picture of Edvard Munch's The Scream on the lobby wall. Seconds later his cell phone rings. It's Wilf.
"Coach, we need to look into something," the owner says.
"Sure, what's up?" says Childress.
"Mark [Wilf's younger brother and team president] says yesterday's practice is on YouTube."
"It's on YOUWHAT?!" yells Childress.
With four kids, the 50-year-old Childress knows exactly what YouTube is, and that having his team's practice on the site is bad. Remaining calm while mentally Rolodexing every play he might have to change, Childress calls his assistant to get the story. Turns out, a newbie from the team's radio affiliate has taken video of yesterday's practice and posted it on the station's website, which uses YouTube's server. The footage is taken down, and the station apologizes. Disaster averted.
In 1993, when Wisconsin played Michigan State in Japan, Childress, the Badgers offensive coordinator at the time, consulted NASA experts about combating the effects of jet lag. (Wisconsin won the game and, later that season, the Rose Bowl.) This summer, he researched an Army study on dehydration, becoming an expert on testing urine to detect dehydration.
YouTube aficionado. Sleep expert. Urine specialist. If it helps win games, Childress is for it. "You plan and you organize, and you expect your day to go one way," he says, laughing. "And pretty soon you're racing in another direction, because of YouTube. That's what no one tells you about in head-coaching school, right?"
<HR align=left width=150>
Aug. 3, 2006: 9:30 a.m.

After the day's first two series of drills, Childress walks up to his defense. "I haven't heard a single pad pop yet, men!" he shouts. His vision for the Vikes D is this: A frenzy of disruption caused by big guys who can run fast and little guys who can hit hard. But this morning, Childress hasn't seen anything of the kind.
Each day he makes a point to connect with a handful of defensive players, acutely aware of his offensive bias. "I used to jump up and down for first downs in practice," Childress says. "Now I sit there, ambivalent. When something goes good on offense, something went wrong on defense."
Childress gets an idea of how the defense is responding to him during the very next drill, when safety Dwight Smith charges into a pileup screaming, "I will kill your weak ass. Come on, come on, let's get this on!" On the next play, safety Tank Williams levels wideout Kevin Kasper. And on the play after that, rookie safety Greg Blue leaves tight end Richard Owens noodle-legged on a seam route, like a boxer taking a standing eight count.
As the defense celebrates around Owens, DB coach Joe Woods screams to Blue, "That's why we drafted your ass." Later, Smith relates the defense's new motto: Play like your hair's on fire. Asked to clarify, the safety glares for a moment, then says, "Light your hair on fire and find out."
<HR align=left width=150>
Aug. 4, 2006: 2:30 p.m.

The notion of being referred to as a savior in this story has been eating at Childress. He's worried that he'll come across as a first-year head coach who sounds like he invented the game. So, a few hours before the Vikings practice with the Chiefs, he dials the phone and gets sent to voice mail. "This stuff is not revolutionary," his message says. "I'm just passing along what I've learned from great coaches over 30 years, ya know?"
<HR align=left width=150>
Aug. 4, 2006: 7:01 p.m.

Covered in purple bunting, the steep cement-bench stands of Minnesota State's Blakeslee Stadium are packed to capacity. When the Chiefs jog onto the field, they drag along the smell from a brat stand. Childress' wife, Dru-Ann, looks on from the grass behind the end zone. The air is crisp, crackling with nervous energy.
After calling the first play, Childress moves to the side and watches, cap low and hands on knees. Johnson barks out the signals. It's a run. Pads collide. Players grunt and groan. The back hits his landmark, bursts through a hole and goes untouched toward midfield. The crowd erupts. Childress rocks forward, adjusts his cap and unfolds his script, searching for play No.2.
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 4 New Articles Added 8/31/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 4 New Articles Added 8/31/06)

Updated: Aug. 31, 2006, 12:28 PM ET
<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD></TD><TD></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>

Bold move or big mistake?


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By Tom Friend
ESPN The Magazine

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<!-- end bylinebox -->
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<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD style="PADDING-TOP: 10px" vAlign=top><!-- begin leftcol --><!-- template inline -->
Editor's Note: This story appears in the Sept. 11 edition of ESPN The Magazine.
Dear Tuna,


Heard you gave your "No whining" speech to your Cowboys this summer, the one where you tell your players, "I don't have time for crybabies." Interesting you said that with No. 81 in the room, because pouting seems to be TO's M.O. Seriously, no one thinks you and Terrell Owens can co-exist, Coach. You want him to run on his sore hamstring, and he wants to jog. You can be insensitive, and he can be oversensitive. You win Super Bowls, and he writes tell-alls. His philosophy is to speak his mind, and yours is, "The less you say, the less you have to take back." It's a train wreck. Jerry Jones called TO's acquisition "one of the happiest days of my career," but that's easy for him to say -- he doesn't have to coach him. Jerry's setting you up to fail, or thinks TO gets a bad rap, or is selling his soul to win one more Lombardi. Either way, you have no choice: You have to find out what makes TO tick. All it takes is a phone call, or 10.
<HR align=left width=150>

ESPN The Magazine
Click here to subscribe to the magazine.



TALKED to TO's first college coach at Tennessee-Chattanooga, Buddy Nix, and, Buddy won't help you. He's now personnel director for the Chargers, and all he'll say is, "I don't give interviews on TO. He don't talk about me, and I don't talk about him. I don't see any good that can come out of it."
Nix's silence speaks volumes, because the people in Chattanooga say Buddy went through hell with TO. As a freshman, TO got into a locker-room brawl and threatened to cut a teammate with a broken bottle. He also complained about playing time, and by the end of that year, Buddy -- who'd been schooled under Bear Bryant -- booted him off the team. "Owens was the same then as he is now," says a former UT-C staff member.
But Buddy never tried to nurture a relationship. He knew TO had come from impoverished Alexander City, Ala. He'd been inside TO's wood-framed house. He'd seen how TO's grandmother allowed only one lamp in there, how it felt like a cave, how TO removed the lamp shade to get more light. But Buddy thought that was no excuse for being late to meetings and brandishing a bottle.
Nix left UT-C for the Bills after TO's freshman season, and they didn't see each other again until the 1996 Senior Bowl. Nix showed up for the weigh-in, and every time he eyeballed TO, Owens dropped his head. Other NFL scouts saw Nix sidle up to Owens and say, "I ain't ever gonna hurt you, son. Or say anything to hurt you. So quit dropping your eyes every time I look at you, and get your ass up there and do the best you can."
But a seething TO never looked up or said a word. And that's what you can learn from Buddy Nix, Tuna. TO holds a grudge.
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TALKED to TO's first NFL quarterback, Steve Young, and he has mostly good memories. TO's last two college coaches, Tommy West (now at Memphis) and Buddy Green (Navy) say they enjoyed the kid, too. Maybe he'd finally grown up, because his bravery impressed 49ers scouts. His senior year, he'd actually covered punts and kickoffs. He'd been a team guy! That's what sold the Niners, because his hands were a C-.
In San Francisco, TO studied that other receiver on his team, Jerry Rice. He watched how Rice caught 500 balls after practice, how he ran all day, how he did yoga stretches. "TO was the only receiver I'd been with in 15 years who challenged Jerry," Young says. "Jerry out-worked everybody. Kind of like, I'm the king, and I'll make sure you know I'm the king. TO was the only guy that actually thought, well, I don't know about that."
This may be sacrilege to say, Tuna, but Rice could also be a horrible influence. At various times he demanded the ball, yelled at his QB, fumed at his coaches. And TO noticed Rice was never vilified for it. He watched Rice sign autographs and drive away in a Bentley. That's who TO wanted to be, dammit. The sooner, the better.
And that's why, in 1998, a relatively unknown Terrell Owens showed up at the 49ers practice facility with this personalized license plate: "XPOSUR."
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TALKED to some former and current 49ers who say TO got his wish on January 3rd, 1999.
In a home playoff game that day against the Packers, Owens' stone hands resurfaced. He fumbled once and dropped four balls. As he sat on the sidelines, awful childhood memories flooded back. Like when he'd fallen asleep on a high school bus with his mouth open, and a teammate spit on his tongue. Like when kids called him "Purple Pal" for being so dark-skinned. That's how those four botched passes made him feel -- angry, insecure -- and he figured, that's it, they're not going to throw to me again. He didn't trust them, Tuna. He doesn't trust anybody, Tuna.

After his big TD catch vs. Green Bay, Terrell Owens officially became TO.




So he walked up to Young and said, "Steve, believe in me." And Young was stunned. He told TO, "You're one of the best in the league, and you're only your third year in, so don't worry about me believing in you, okay? Just catch the next one."
The next one came with three seconds left, the 49ers trailing by four. Owens ran a route called "All Go Double Comeback," and caught it at the goal line with two Packers aiming for his skull. He sobbed afterwards, which was an odd reaction to some, but not Derrick Deese, the 49ers left tackle who played dominos with Owens virtually every day. "TO was emotional because the touchdown signified that we knew what he knew -- that we had to go back to him to win the game," Deese says. "That meant more than the catch."
That catch and those tears put TO on the map. Exposure? Earned it. Self-esteem? Had it. Years later, he'd tell Young, "Thanks for believing in me, man." That's how much of a breakthrough it was. But 49ers staffers noticed Owens began craving attention. He got his teeth fixed, for possible endorsements. He bought stylish clothes. He got a new personalized license plate: "Catch II." To a lot of people in the organization, the TD had changed the kid forever. "Before the catch, he was Terrell Owens," says one. "After the catch, he became TO."
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TALKED to Ken Norton, Jr., and he says it didn't help the 49ers locker room was changing. Most of the bully vets who kept TO in line were retiring or moving on, while a distracted Rice was in the final year of his 49ers career, whining for the football. It meant TO was free to be his own man. In Dallas, he made his infamous run to the midfield star after a TD, raising his arms to the heavens. When he tried it again, Cowboys safety George Teague rammed him from behind. It started a melee.
After the game, TO couldn't understand why Norton criticized him and the 49ers suspended him. He said he'd done it for them! That he'd danced on the star to announce the 49ers arrival, to announce himself as the new Rice, the new King. And even though management balked at that, young teammates like long snapper Brian Jennings thought it was "cool as hell." Young says the old 49ers locker room never would have tolerated it, but now it was -- gulp -- TO's locker room.
Two years later came the Sharpie incident, which caused another maelstrom. His touchdowns were becoming mini-series, and when teammates asked what else he had planned, he'd say, "Get your popcorn, 'cause it's going to be a show." But, "get your popcorn" was o TO's catch phrase for "expect more drama," and that's why Steve Mariucci and owner John York wouldn't stick up for him. "I remember him telling me, 'No one has my back,'" Deese says. "He gets upset when he feels people don't like him."
TO was already moody -- "I'm his friend, and he'd go weeks without looking at or talking to me," Jennings says -- but it was worsening. Didn't 49er execs know what he meant to the team? That he threw parties at his house for unity? That he let young players live with him? That he wore crooked teeth and Goofy ears during Halloween practices, to keep it loose? "Let me get something straight," Deese says. "We had more good times than bad with TO. Anybody who said they didn't, they're lying. Don't buy into the idea everyone hated TO."
So TO lashed out. When Randy Moss out-gained him by more than 100 yards in a 2003 49ers-Vikings matchup, TO laced into O-coordinator Greg Knapp during the game, and Jeff Garcia afterward. That was the difference between TO and Rice. Rice was politically correct; TO wasn't. When TO sensed the 49ers weren't going to pay him, that they wanted Garcia controlling the locker room, he spared no one. He ripped Garcia's throwing arm, and after his inevitable trade to the Eagles, he implied in the Sept. 2004 issue of Playboy, that Garcia was gay. To the 49ers, TO had developed the worst possible malady.
Over-XPOSUR.
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Icon Sports Media
Things started off well for Owens and McNabb but ended up going south.



TALKED to some other execs about TO's 2004 move to Philly, and they were stunned at how well he fit in at first. But it's very simple, Tuna. The Eagles made TO feel like he was king, like he was Rice.
They'd done their homework. Right after the trade, Andy Reid called Young for advice, and Young told him, "TO's work ethic is a 10, but you've got to check in with him every day." Young said TO's moody, and that if he's ticked off, you can't let it fester. He told Reid to joke with TO, which is why Reid promised to wear tights if TO caught 15 TDs. And Young said Donovan McNabb needed to check in daily, too. "Because conflict resolution has never been TO's forte," Young says.
We know what happened next. During a November 2004 game against the Giants, TO says he told McNabb, "I was open. Dude, you missed me," and McNabb supposedly answered, "Shut the #%#* up." TO says McNabb snubbed him after the game, and it all blew up in their faces when the Eagles -- ignoring Young's advice -- let it fester. So he'll tear up a team if you let him, Tuna. He'll tear up a team.
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TALKED to Deese about TO's Philly implosion, and Deese wants to tell you about TO's dad. He swears this'll help figure the whole thing out. When TO was 11, he thought his dad was either dead or living in some other state. He'd come to grips with that, which was good. Then, one day, when he was flirting with a girl across the street, this girl's father shooed TO away.
"You can't be interested in her," the man told TO.
"Why not? I like her," TO said.
"Because she's your half-sister," the man said. <!-- PULL-QUOTE (BEGIN) -->
"TO loves a war of wills. It fuels him. He wants to see if he's the strongest person in any setting. He likes breaking people down, and Parcells is a challenge: Who will break down first? " -- Former 49ers staffer

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That's how TO met his father, Tuna, and Deese wants you to know how traumatic that is. "How are you supposed to feel when you're living across the street from your dad, but you don't know it's your dad, and he's never come told you he's your dad?" Deese says. "That's a defining moment in life. Now you're wondering, if my dad didn't want to tell me he's my dad, what's wrong with me?"
It's why TO needs all these coaches and QBs to kiss up to him now. Another buddy who's heard that story -- someone who wants to remain nameless -- says it's amazing TO even made it out of Alabama. He says he was joking about his own rough childhood when TO, with a straight face, said, "Sh**, man, I couldn't even leave the yard growing up. Got a bike for Christmas, and couldn't even take it out of the driveway. And I had to live in the dorm all through college, 'cause I had no cash. And I only ate like three days a week. Had no car or bike or nothing."
Over the years, that buddy also heard how TO's grandma used to drink, how she'd keep him cooped up in that cave with the windows shut and the heat turned off, how she'd to tell him not to trust a soul. "So he's this kid finding out the world is evil, the world is hard," says this former 49ers teammate. "That's what he's raised believing. He can't even go to his best friend's house because he's told he's too stupid, too ugly. So socially, with people, with relationships, he's been led to believe he's worthless. And now he gets into a situation with Garcia and McNabb, and he says these ugly things because it's how he feels about himself. It has nothing to do with Jeff and Donovan. It's a confession: I'm miserable, and I want you to hurt as bad as I hurt. You're talking about his dark side, and you can't tap into that. Because you're unleashing the demons.
"So Parcells has to focus on TO's football playing. Don't tap into that dark side. Don't bring out that 10-year-old that lives in a basement with no lights, that doesn't know who his dad is, who thinks he's worthless. Tap into his football. The only place that sets him free is the field. You can see it in his body language, you can see it in his face, you can see it in his physique. Look at that body. Parcells needs to make sure TO hears: We need you. You're a Cowboy. Thank you."
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TALKED to some of your old Giant players, Tuna, and they've never known you to be Mr. Sensitive. They remember gaining only 13 rushing yards in a game against the 49ers, and you nicknaming the offensive line, "Club 13." They remember cornerback Elvis Patterson getting burned for TDs, and you calling him "Toast." They remember your sayings, like "Act like you've been there before," or "Don't act like a ball in high grass." They remember asking you, "What's a ball in high grass, coach?" And they remember you snapping: "Lost."
They wonder how TO's going to react to all that, because the Tuna they knew wouldn't have brought a TO to the Giants. "Well, he could've, but the guy would've have been gone in a couple weeks," says your former center Bart Oates. "The players would've tortured him to death. And don't tell me TO is like LT was. No comparison. LT wasn't a showman. He did his job, didn't show guys up, didn't draw undue attention to himself."
So, Tuna, how long? How long before you call TO a ball in high grass?
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TALKED TO people at Cowboys camp, and they think you're ready to do it now! They say TO's sore hamstring has you agitated, that he's already challenged your authority, and it's not surprising you had to fine him $9,500 for skipping a team meeting and rehab session. They say you still won't refer to TO by name, that you call him "this player" or "this guy" because you hate when someone becomes bigger than the team. They say you're only communicating with him via intermediaries, and that it's the first sign of war. But don't worry, TO does not milk injuries. His old 49ers teammates say TO had a torn groin in training camp of 2002, and brought in the same posse he brought for his hammy: chiropractor, massage therapist, kinesiologist. They say after 49ers evening meetings, TO would be in treatment from 10 p.m. until 2 a.m. That his posse would set up in a conference room and work on TO like mad scientists. "So when people say he's not a team guy," Jennings says, "they don't see he's doing everything he can to help his team by getting healthy."
Downside is, TO enjoys ticking you off. A former 49er staffer says, "TO loves a war of wills. It fuels him. He wants to see if he's the strongest person in any setting. He likes breaking people down, and Parcells is a challenge: Who will break down first?"
See, it's just part of his circus, Tuna, it's part of his circus.
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TALKED to your wide receiver Terry Glenn, the guy you once called "she," and Terry thinks you and TO will eventually hit it off. Not only that, Terry thinks TO's going to be fine with Drew Bledsoe. No one else thinks that, mind you. Everybody else thinks the minute Drew ignores a wide-open TO, there'll be a fight. But not Terry. "He won't be mad at Drew," Glenn says, "because it won't be Drew's decision where to throw the ball. It'll be Bill. It's coming from Bill. If TO is balling and having a great game, he'll get the ball. So I don't see TO getting upset. Bill wants TO to want the ball. He wants TO to play with an ego." An ego, he's got.
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TALKED to Bledsoe, and he already seems bored by the subject. Asked him if his buddies have placed bets on when TO's going to go off on him and Drew didn't even chuckle. "Last year, I talked about Bill all year," he said. "And I guess this year I'll have to talk about TO." He wasn't rude about it, but right then Bledsoe just got up and walked away.
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TALKED to Jerry Jones, and it sounds like he can be the good cop to your bad cop. This signing was all Jerry's idea, and Jerry's going to be at every practice, patting TO on the back. Jerry's no dummy. Jerry knows that TO needs to feel like the king, and the key is he's just paid him like he's the king. Ten mil this season? No one in the league would have dared, but that's why Jerry thinks Dallas will be different for TO than Philly and Frisco. "I don't think Terrell's had satisfaction financially before," Jerry says.
Jerry isn't messing around. He hasn't won a Super Bowl in 10 years, and wants another one -- this season. He keeps saying the TO move was "about now, not years from now." He says if the move "looks desperate, that's because I feel that way." Jerry's not getting any younger, you're not getting any younger, and TO, at 32, isn't getting any younger. Not to put any pressure on you, Tuna, but there's pressure on you.
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TALKED to an AFC exec, who bluntly summed everything up. He says you only have TO because no one else wanted him. That TO's only played in the West Coast offense, and your longer pass routes aren't up his alley. That you have a young, hot-tempered passing-game coordinator, Todd Haley, who's bound to clash with TO. That you don't have enough vets in your locker room to keep him in line. That you aren't equipped to handle this. "My opinion is that TO will be fine until he gets the upper hand," the executive says. "Once he gets established and they're depending on him, he will be the same disruptive guy as always. It don't mean sh** that Parcells is the coach. Parcells is not the savior. He's a good football coach, but he can't re-do people. He can't! If he could, he'd win it all every year."

This is what you're up against, Tuna. The final days of your NFL career boil down to a relationship with a tortured, complex receiver who might mean more to your owner than you do. So be careful. Because if this ends badly, you know what TO's going to do. He's going to write another book. About you.
<HR align=left width=150>TALKED to TO. He said, "Get your popcorn, 'cause it's going to be a show."
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Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 4 New Articles Added 8/31/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 4 New Articles Added 8/31/06)

Updated: Aug. 31, 2006, 12:28 PM ET
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Bold move or big mistake?


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By Tom Friend
ESPN The Magazine

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Editor's Note: This story appears in the Sept. 11 edition of ESPN The Magazine.
Dear Tuna,


Heard you gave your "No whining" speech to your Cowboys this summer, the one where you tell your players, "I don't have time for crybabies." Interesting you said that with No. 81 in the room, because pouting seems to be TO's M.O. Seriously, no one thinks you and Terrell Owens can co-exist, Coach. You want him to run on his sore hamstring, and he wants to jog. You can be insensitive, and he can be oversensitive. You win Super Bowls, and he writes tell-alls. His philosophy is to speak his mind, and yours is, "The less you say, the less you have to take back." It's a train wreck. Jerry Jones called TO's acquisition "one of the happiest days of my career," but that's easy for him to say -- he doesn't have to coach him. Jerry's setting you up to fail, or thinks TO gets a bad rap, or is selling his soul to win one more Lombardi. Either way, you have no choice: You have to find out what makes TO tick. All it takes is a phone call, or 10.
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ESPN The Magazine
Click here to subscribe to the magazine.



TALKED to TO's first college coach at Tennessee-Chattanooga, Buddy Nix, and, Buddy won't help you. He's now personnel director for the Chargers, and all he'll say is, "I don't give interviews on TO. He don't talk about me, and I don't talk about him. I don't see any good that can come out of it."
Nix's silence speaks volumes, because the people in Chattanooga say Buddy went through hell with TO. As a freshman, TO got into a locker-room brawl and threatened to cut a teammate with a broken bottle. He also complained about playing time, and by the end of that year, Buddy -- who'd been schooled under Bear Bryant -- booted him off the team. "Owens was the same then as he is now," says a former UT-C staff member.
But Buddy never tried to nurture a relationship. He knew TO had come from impoverished Alexander City, Ala. He'd been inside TO's wood-framed house. He'd seen how TO's grandmother allowed only one lamp in there, how it felt like a cave, how TO removed the lamp shade to get more light. But Buddy thought that was no excuse for being late to meetings and brandishing a bottle.
Nix left UT-C for the Bills after TO's freshman season, and they didn't see each other again until the 1996 Senior Bowl. Nix showed up for the weigh-in, and every time he eyeballed TO, Owens dropped his head. Other NFL scouts saw Nix sidle up to Owens and say, "I ain't ever gonna hurt you, son. Or say anything to hurt you. So quit dropping your eyes every time I look at you, and get your ass up there and do the best you can."
But a seething TO never looked up or said a word. And that's what you can learn from Buddy Nix, Tuna. TO holds a grudge.
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TALKED to TO's first NFL quarterback, Steve Young, and he has mostly good memories. TO's last two college coaches, Tommy West (now at Memphis) and Buddy Green (Navy) say they enjoyed the kid, too. Maybe he'd finally grown up, because his bravery impressed 49ers scouts. His senior year, he'd actually covered punts and kickoffs. He'd been a team guy! That's what sold the Niners, because his hands were a C-.
In San Francisco, TO studied that other receiver on his team, Jerry Rice. He watched how Rice caught 500 balls after practice, how he ran all day, how he did yoga stretches. "TO was the only receiver I'd been with in 15 years who challenged Jerry," Young says. "Jerry out-worked everybody. Kind of like, I'm the king, and I'll make sure you know I'm the king. TO was the only guy that actually thought, well, I don't know about that."
This may be sacrilege to say, Tuna, but Rice could also be a horrible influence. At various times he demanded the ball, yelled at his QB, fumed at his coaches. And TO noticed Rice was never vilified for it. He watched Rice sign autographs and drive away in a Bentley. That's who TO wanted to be, dammit. The sooner, the better.
And that's why, in 1998, a relatively unknown Terrell Owens showed up at the 49ers practice facility with this personalized license plate: "XPOSUR."
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TALKED to some former and current 49ers who say TO got his wish on January 3rd, 1999.
In a home playoff game that day against the Packers, Owens' stone hands resurfaced. He fumbled once and dropped four balls. As he sat on the sidelines, awful childhood memories flooded back. Like when he'd fallen asleep on a high school bus with his mouth open, and a teammate spit on his tongue. Like when kids called him "Purple Pal" for being so dark-skinned. That's how those four botched passes made him feel -- angry, insecure -- and he figured, that's it, they're not going to throw to me again. He didn't trust them, Tuna. He doesn't trust anybody, Tuna.

After his big TD catch vs. Green Bay, Terrell Owens officially became TO.




So he walked up to Young and said, "Steve, believe in me." And Young was stunned. He told TO, "You're one of the best in the league, and you're only your third year in, so don't worry about me believing in you, okay? Just catch the next one."
The next one came with three seconds left, the 49ers trailing by four. Owens ran a route called "All Go Double Comeback," and caught it at the goal line with two Packers aiming for his skull. He sobbed afterwards, which was an odd reaction to some, but not Derrick Deese, the 49ers left tackle who played dominos with Owens virtually every day. "TO was emotional because the touchdown signified that we knew what he knew -- that we had to go back to him to win the game," Deese says. "That meant more than the catch."
That catch and those tears put TO on the map. Exposure? Earned it. Self-esteem? Had it. Years later, he'd tell Young, "Thanks for believing in me, man." That's how much of a breakthrough it was. But 49ers staffers noticed Owens began craving attention. He got his teeth fixed, for possible endorsements. He bought stylish clothes. He got a new personalized license plate: "Catch II." To a lot of people in the organization, the TD had changed the kid forever. "Before the catch, he was Terrell Owens," says one. "After the catch, he became TO."
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TALKED to Ken Norton, Jr., and he says it didn't help the 49ers locker room was changing. Most of the bully vets who kept TO in line were retiring or moving on, while a distracted Rice was in the final year of his 49ers career, whining for the football. It meant TO was free to be his own man. In Dallas, he made his infamous run to the midfield star after a TD, raising his arms to the heavens. When he tried it again, Cowboys safety George Teague rammed him from behind. It started a melee.
After the game, TO couldn't understand why Norton criticized him and the 49ers suspended him. He said he'd done it for them! That he'd danced on the star to announce the 49ers arrival, to announce himself as the new Rice, the new King. And even though management balked at that, young teammates like long snapper Brian Jennings thought it was "cool as hell." Young says the old 49ers locker room never would have tolerated it, but now it was -- gulp -- TO's locker room.
Two years later came the Sharpie incident, which caused another maelstrom. His touchdowns were becoming mini-series, and when teammates asked what else he had planned, he'd say, "Get your popcorn, 'cause it's going to be a show." But, "get your popcorn" was o TO's catch phrase for "expect more drama," and that's why Steve Mariucci and owner John York wouldn't stick up for him. "I remember him telling me, 'No one has my back,'" Deese says. "He gets upset when he feels people don't like him."
TO was already moody -- "I'm his friend, and he'd go weeks without looking at or talking to me," Jennings says -- but it was worsening. Didn't 49er execs know what he meant to the team? That he threw parties at his house for unity? That he let young players live with him? That he wore crooked teeth and Goofy ears during Halloween practices, to keep it loose? "Let me get something straight," Deese says. "We had more good times than bad with TO. Anybody who said they didn't, they're lying. Don't buy into the idea everyone hated TO."
So TO lashed out. When Randy Moss out-gained him by more than 100 yards in a 2003 49ers-Vikings matchup, TO laced into O-coordinator Greg Knapp during the game, and Jeff Garcia afterward. That was the difference between TO and Rice. Rice was politically correct; TO wasn't. When TO sensed the 49ers weren't going to pay him, that they wanted Garcia controlling the locker room, he spared no one. He ripped Garcia's throwing arm, and after his inevitable trade to the Eagles, he implied in the Sept. 2004 issue of Playboy, that Garcia was gay. To the 49ers, TO had developed the worst possible malady.
Over-XPOSUR.
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Icon Sports Media
Things started off well for Owens and McNabb but ended up going south.



TALKED to some other execs about TO's 2004 move to Philly, and they were stunned at how well he fit in at first. But it's very simple, Tuna. The Eagles made TO feel like he was king, like he was Rice.
They'd done their homework. Right after the trade, Andy Reid called Young for advice, and Young told him, "TO's work ethic is a 10, but you've got to check in with him every day." Young said TO's moody, and that if he's ticked off, you can't let it fester. He told Reid to joke with TO, which is why Reid promised to wear tights if TO caught 15 TDs. And Young said Donovan McNabb needed to check in daily, too. "Because conflict resolution has never been TO's forte," Young says.
We know what happened next. During a November 2004 game against the Giants, TO says he told McNabb, "I was open. Dude, you missed me," and McNabb supposedly answered, "Shut the #%#* up." TO says McNabb snubbed him after the game, and it all blew up in their faces when the Eagles -- ignoring Young's advice -- let it fester. So he'll tear up a team if you let him, Tuna. He'll tear up a team.
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TALKED to Deese about TO's Philly implosion, and Deese wants to tell you about TO's dad. He swears this'll help figure the whole thing out. When TO was 11, he thought his dad was either dead or living in some other state. He'd come to grips with that, which was good. Then, one day, when he was flirting with a girl across the street, this girl's father shooed TO away.
"You can't be interested in her," the man told TO.
"Why not? I like her," TO said.
"Because she's your half-sister," the man said. <!-- PULL-QUOTE (BEGIN) -->
"TO loves a war of wills. It fuels him. He wants to see if he's the strongest person in any setting. He likes breaking people down, and Parcells is a challenge: Who will break down first? " -- Former 49ers staffer

<!-- PULL-QUOTE (END) -->
That's how TO met his father, Tuna, and Deese wants you to know how traumatic that is. "How are you supposed to feel when you're living across the street from your dad, but you don't know it's your dad, and he's never come told you he's your dad?" Deese says. "That's a defining moment in life. Now you're wondering, if my dad didn't want to tell me he's my dad, what's wrong with me?"
It's why TO needs all these coaches and QBs to kiss up to him now. Another buddy who's heard that story -- someone who wants to remain nameless -- says it's amazing TO even made it out of Alabama. He says he was joking about his own rough childhood when TO, with a straight face, said, "Sh**, man, I couldn't even leave the yard growing up. Got a bike for Christmas, and couldn't even take it out of the driveway. And I had to live in the dorm all through college, 'cause I had no cash. And I only ate like three days a week. Had no car or bike or nothing."
Over the years, that buddy also heard how TO's grandma used to drink, how she'd keep him cooped up in that cave with the windows shut and the heat turned off, how she'd to tell him not to trust a soul. "So he's this kid finding out the world is evil, the world is hard," says this former 49ers teammate. "That's what he's raised believing. He can't even go to his best friend's house because he's told he's too stupid, too ugly. So socially, with people, with relationships, he's been led to believe he's worthless. And now he gets into a situation with Garcia and McNabb, and he says these ugly things because it's how he feels about himself. It has nothing to do with Jeff and Donovan. It's a confession: I'm miserable, and I want you to hurt as bad as I hurt. You're talking about his dark side, and you can't tap into that. Because you're unleashing the demons.
"So Parcells has to focus on TO's football playing. Don't tap into that dark side. Don't bring out that 10-year-old that lives in a basement with no lights, that doesn't know who his dad is, who thinks he's worthless. Tap into his football. The only place that sets him free is the field. You can see it in his body language, you can see it in his face, you can see it in his physique. Look at that body. Parcells needs to make sure TO hears: We need you. You're a Cowboy. Thank you."
<HR align=left width=150>
TALKED to some of your old Giant players, Tuna, and they've never known you to be Mr. Sensitive. They remember gaining only 13 rushing yards in a game against the 49ers, and you nicknaming the offensive line, "Club 13." They remember cornerback Elvis Patterson getting burned for TDs, and you calling him "Toast." They remember your sayings, like "Act like you've been there before," or "Don't act like a ball in high grass." They remember asking you, "What's a ball in high grass, coach?" And they remember you snapping: "Lost."
They wonder how TO's going to react to all that, because the Tuna they knew wouldn't have brought a TO to the Giants. "Well, he could've, but the guy would've have been gone in a couple weeks," says your former center Bart Oates. "The players would've tortured him to death. And don't tell me TO is like LT was. No comparison. LT wasn't a showman. He did his job, didn't show guys up, didn't draw undue attention to himself."
So, Tuna, how long? How long before you call TO a ball in high grass?
<HR align=left width=150>
TALKED TO people at Cowboys camp, and they think you're ready to do it now! They say TO's sore hamstring has you agitated, that he's already challenged your authority, and it's not surprising you had to fine him $9,500 for skipping a team meeting and rehab session. They say you still won't refer to TO by name, that you call him "this player" or "this guy" because you hate when someone becomes bigger than the team. They say you're only communicating with him via intermediaries, and that it's the first sign of war. But don't worry, TO does not milk injuries. His old 49ers teammates say TO had a torn groin in training camp of 2002, and brought in the same posse he brought for his hammy: chiropractor, massage therapist, kinesiologist. They say after 49ers evening meetings, TO would be in treatment from 10 p.m. until 2 a.m. That his posse would set up in a conference room and work on TO like mad scientists. "So when people say he's not a team guy," Jennings says, "they don't see he's doing everything he can to help his team by getting healthy."
Downside is, TO enjoys ticking you off. A former 49er staffer says, "TO loves a war of wills. It fuels him. He wants to see if he's the strongest person in any setting. He likes breaking people down, and Parcells is a challenge: Who will break down first?"
See, it's just part of his circus, Tuna, it's part of his circus.
<HR align=left width=150>
TALKED to your wide receiver Terry Glenn, the guy you once called "she," and Terry thinks you and TO will eventually hit it off. Not only that, Terry thinks TO's going to be fine with Drew Bledsoe. No one else thinks that, mind you. Everybody else thinks the minute Drew ignores a wide-open TO, there'll be a fight. But not Terry. "He won't be mad at Drew," Glenn says, "because it won't be Drew's decision where to throw the ball. It'll be Bill. It's coming from Bill. If TO is balling and having a great game, he'll get the ball. So I don't see TO getting upset. Bill wants TO to want the ball. He wants TO to play with an ego." An ego, he's got.
<HR align=left width=150>
TALKED to Bledsoe, and he already seems bored by the subject. Asked him if his buddies have placed bets on when TO's going to go off on him and Drew didn't even chuckle. "Last year, I talked about Bill all year," he said. "And I guess this year I'll have to talk about TO." He wasn't rude about it, but right then Bledsoe just got up and walked away.
<HR align=left width=150>
TALKED to Jerry Jones, and it sounds like he can be the good cop to your bad cop. This signing was all Jerry's idea, and Jerry's going to be at every practice, patting TO on the back. Jerry's no dummy. Jerry knows that TO needs to feel like the king, and the key is he's just paid him like he's the king. Ten mil this season? No one in the league would have dared, but that's why Jerry thinks Dallas will be different for TO than Philly and Frisco. "I don't think Terrell's had satisfaction financially before," Jerry says.
Jerry isn't messing around. He hasn't won a Super Bowl in 10 years, and wants another one -- this season. He keeps saying the TO move was "about now, not years from now." He says if the move "looks desperate, that's because I feel that way." Jerry's not getting any younger, you're not getting any younger, and TO, at 32, isn't getting any younger. Not to put any pressure on you, Tuna, but there's pressure on you.
<HR align=left width=150>
TALKED to an AFC exec, who bluntly summed everything up. He says you only have TO because no one else wanted him. That TO's only played in the West Coast offense, and your longer pass routes aren't up his alley. That you have a young, hot-tempered passing-game coordinator, Todd Haley, who's bound to clash with TO. That you don't have enough vets in your locker room to keep him in line. That you aren't equipped to handle this. "My opinion is that TO will be fine until he gets the upper hand," the executive says. "Once he gets established and they're depending on him, he will be the same disruptive guy as always. It don't mean sh** that Parcells is the coach. Parcells is not the savior. He's a good football coach, but he can't re-do people. He can't! If he could, he'd win it all every year."

This is what you're up against, Tuna. The final days of your NFL career boil down to a relationship with a tortured, complex receiver who might mean more to your owner than you do. So be careful. Because if this ends badly, you know what TO's going to do. He's going to write another book. About you.
<HR align=left width=150>TALKED to TO. He said, "Get your popcorn, 'cause it's going to be a show."
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 4 New Articles Added 8/31/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 4 New Articles Added 8/31/06)

Updated: Aug. 31, 2006, 12:08 PM ET
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Carolina better with Foster


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By KC Joyner
ESPN Insider
Archive
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The Super Bowl hopes of the Carolina Panthers may very well rest on their running game. The Panthers averaged a meager 3.4 yards per rushing attempt last season, tied for 31st in the league. The number was surprisingly low given that Carolina's offensive linemen had zero missed starts.
So why did the Panthers rushing attack struggle last year? A closer look at the metrics shows that Stephen Davis was actually the primary culprit for the lack of productivity.
Davis started the 2005 season as the lead runner after recovering from microfracture leg surgery. The Panthers didn't ask him to carry the load by himself, as DeShaun Foster spelled him for eight to 10 carries a game. As the season wore on, Davis started to be slowed by injuries. Foster kept getting more and more carries until Davis finally had to be put on IR. Davis and Foster ended the year with a similar number of carries (Davis 180, Foster 205), but Foster gained 330 more yards.
It wasn't just that Foster was more successful than Davis. One of the metrics I track for running backs is the number of yards gained on each of the seven major run types. These metrics show how Davis was actually hurting the Carolina running game last year. Take a look at the yards per attempt numbers for both Davis and Foster in each category:
<!-- INLINE TABLE (BEGIN) --><TABLE id=inlinetable cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=3 width=420 border=0><TBODY><TR><TH style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #000000" colSpan=4>Deshaun Foster</TH><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ececec" vAlign=top><TD style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #999999" width=101>Run type</TD><TD style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #999999" width=101>Runs</TD><TD style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #999999" width=101>Yds</TD><TD style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #999999" width=101>Yds/Att</TD></TR><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffffff" vAlign=top><TD width=101>Counter </TD><TD width=101>49 </TD><TD width=101>206 </TD><TD width=101>4.2 </TD></TR><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ececec" vAlign=top><TD width=101>Dive </TD><TD width=101>18 </TD><TD width=101>35 </TD><TD width=101>1.9 </TD></TR><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffffff" vAlign=top><TD width=101>Draw </TD><TD width=101>23 </TD><TD width=101>107 </TD><TD width=101>4.7 </TD></TR><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ececec" vAlign=top><TD width=101>Isolation </TD><TD width=101>24 </TD><TD width=101>114 </TD><TD width=101>4.8 </TD></TR><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffffff" vAlign=top><TD width=101>Off tackle </TD><TD width=101>28 </TD><TD width=101>106 </TD><TD width=101>3.8 </TD></TR><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ececec" vAlign=top><TD width=101>Slant </TD><TD width=101>12 </TD><TD width=101>68 </TD><TD width=101>5.7 </TD></TR><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffffff" vAlign=top><TD width=101>Sweep </TD><TD width=101>23 </TD><TD width=101>76 </TD><TD width=101>3.3 </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><!-- INLINE TABLE (END) -->
<!-- INLINE TABLE (BEGIN) --><TABLE id=inlinetable cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=3 width=420 border=0><TBODY><TR><TH style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #000000" colSpan=4>Stephen Davis</TH><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ececec" vAlign=top><TD style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #999999" width=101>Run type</TD><TD style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #999999" width=101>Runs</TD><TD style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #999999" width=101>Yds</TD><TD style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #999999" width=101>Yds/Att</TD></TR><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffffff" vAlign=top><TD width=101>Counter </TD><TD width=101>33 </TD><TD width=101>88 </TD><TD width=101>2.7 </TD></TR><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ececec" vAlign=top><TD width=101>Dive </TD><TD width=101>33 </TD><TD width=101>67 </TD><TD width=101>2.0 </TD></TR><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffffff" vAlign=top><TD width=101>Draw </TD><TD width=101>6 </TD><TD width=101>5 </TD><TD width=101>0.8 </TD></TR><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ececec" vAlign=top><TD width=101>Isolation </TD><TD width=101>18 </TD><TD width=101>70 </TD><TD width=101>3.9 </TD></TR><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffffff" vAlign=top><TD width=101>Off tackle </TD><TD width=101>33 </TD><TD width=101>106 </TD><TD width=101>3.2 </TD></TR><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ececec" vAlign=top><TD width=101>Slant </TD><TD width=101>2 </TD><TD width=101>4 </TD><TD width=101>2.0 </TD></TR><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffffff" vAlign=top><TD width=101>Sweep </TD><TD width=101>28 </TD><TD width=101>131 </TD><TD width=101>4.7 </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><!-- INLINE TABLE (END) -->
They ran behind the same blockers and had a fairly similar run distribution, but Foster gained more yards per attempt in five out of the seven run types, and the difference in some cases was significant. The only run type in which Davis ranked significantly better was the sweep, partly because it was the only run type Foster did not do well.
This is not meant to knock Davis' comeback efforts last year. Davis fought back valiantly from what could have been a career-ending injury, but he did slow down the Panthers' rushing attack.
How do things bode for the Panthers this season? The metrics show they could be primed for an excellent year. Three of Carolina's returning starting offensive linemen topped the 80 percent run-blocking success mark last year -- the benchmark of a good run-blocker -- and that group didn't include Mike Wahle.
One of Wahle's primary responsibilities in this offense is to be the pulling guard on the counter play, and his relatively low success percentage may have been caused by Davis' inability to run that play well. Foster is much better at running the counter so that problem should be solved.
The Panthers also have two very good run-blocking tight ends in Kris Mangum and Michael Gaines. Both ranked in the top 11 in run-blocking success percentage in 2005. Throw in fullback Brad Hoover (88 percent) and it becomes clear the Panthers have a collection of earthmovers who can lead a dominating rushing attack. If DeAngelo Williams can contribute 100-plus carries and keep Foster fresh, there is every reason to believe Carolina's running game could rank in the top 10 in the NFL this year.
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 4 New Articles Added 8/31/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 4 New Articles Added 8/31/06)

Updated: Aug. 31, 2006, 12:08 PM ET
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Carolina better with Foster


<!-- end pagetitle --><!-- begin bylinebox -->
<!-- firstName = KC --><!-- lastName = Joyner -->
By KC Joyner
ESPN Insider
Archive
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<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD style="PADDING-TOP: 10px" vAlign=top><!-- begin leftcol --><!-- template inline -->
The Super Bowl hopes of the Carolina Panthers may very well rest on their running game. The Panthers averaged a meager 3.4 yards per rushing attempt last season, tied for 31st in the league. The number was surprisingly low given that Carolina's offensive linemen had zero missed starts.
So why did the Panthers rushing attack struggle last year? A closer look at the metrics shows that Stephen Davis was actually the primary culprit for the lack of productivity.
Davis started the 2005 season as the lead runner after recovering from microfracture leg surgery. The Panthers didn't ask him to carry the load by himself, as DeShaun Foster spelled him for eight to 10 carries a game. As the season wore on, Davis started to be slowed by injuries. Foster kept getting more and more carries until Davis finally had to be put on IR. Davis and Foster ended the year with a similar number of carries (Davis 180, Foster 205), but Foster gained 330 more yards.
It wasn't just that Foster was more successful than Davis. One of the metrics I track for running backs is the number of yards gained on each of the seven major run types. These metrics show how Davis was actually hurting the Carolina running game last year. Take a look at the yards per attempt numbers for both Davis and Foster in each category:
<!-- INLINE TABLE (BEGIN) --><TABLE id=inlinetable cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=3 width=420 border=0><TBODY><TR><TH style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #000000" colSpan=4>Deshaun Foster</TH><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ececec" vAlign=top><TD style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #999999" width=101>Run type</TD><TD style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #999999" width=101>Runs</TD><TD style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #999999" width=101>Yds</TD><TD style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #999999" width=101>Yds/Att</TD></TR><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffffff" vAlign=top><TD width=101>Counter </TD><TD width=101>49 </TD><TD width=101>206 </TD><TD width=101>4.2 </TD></TR><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ececec" vAlign=top><TD width=101>Dive </TD><TD width=101>18 </TD><TD width=101>35 </TD><TD width=101>1.9 </TD></TR><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffffff" vAlign=top><TD width=101>Draw </TD><TD width=101>23 </TD><TD width=101>107 </TD><TD width=101>4.7 </TD></TR><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ececec" vAlign=top><TD width=101>Isolation </TD><TD width=101>24 </TD><TD width=101>114 </TD><TD width=101>4.8 </TD></TR><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffffff" vAlign=top><TD width=101>Off tackle </TD><TD width=101>28 </TD><TD width=101>106 </TD><TD width=101>3.8 </TD></TR><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ececec" vAlign=top><TD width=101>Slant </TD><TD width=101>12 </TD><TD width=101>68 </TD><TD width=101>5.7 </TD></TR><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffffff" vAlign=top><TD width=101>Sweep </TD><TD width=101>23 </TD><TD width=101>76 </TD><TD width=101>3.3 </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><!-- INLINE TABLE (END) -->
<!-- INLINE TABLE (BEGIN) --><TABLE id=inlinetable cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=3 width=420 border=0><TBODY><TR><TH style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #000000" colSpan=4>Stephen Davis</TH><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ececec" vAlign=top><TD style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #999999" width=101>Run type</TD><TD style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #999999" width=101>Runs</TD><TD style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #999999" width=101>Yds</TD><TD style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #999999" width=101>Yds/Att</TD></TR><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffffff" vAlign=top><TD width=101>Counter </TD><TD width=101>33 </TD><TD width=101>88 </TD><TD width=101>2.7 </TD></TR><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ececec" vAlign=top><TD width=101>Dive </TD><TD width=101>33 </TD><TD width=101>67 </TD><TD width=101>2.0 </TD></TR><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffffff" vAlign=top><TD width=101>Draw </TD><TD width=101>6 </TD><TD width=101>5 </TD><TD width=101>0.8 </TD></TR><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ececec" vAlign=top><TD width=101>Isolation </TD><TD width=101>18 </TD><TD width=101>70 </TD><TD width=101>3.9 </TD></TR><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffffff" vAlign=top><TD width=101>Off tackle </TD><TD width=101>33 </TD><TD width=101>106 </TD><TD width=101>3.2 </TD></TR><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ececec" vAlign=top><TD width=101>Slant </TD><TD width=101>2 </TD><TD width=101>4 </TD><TD width=101>2.0 </TD></TR><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffffff" vAlign=top><TD width=101>Sweep </TD><TD width=101>28 </TD><TD width=101>131 </TD><TD width=101>4.7 </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><!-- INLINE TABLE (END) -->
They ran behind the same blockers and had a fairly similar run distribution, but Foster gained more yards per attempt in five out of the seven run types, and the difference in some cases was significant. The only run type in which Davis ranked significantly better was the sweep, partly because it was the only run type Foster did not do well.
This is not meant to knock Davis' comeback efforts last year. Davis fought back valiantly from what could have been a career-ending injury, but he did slow down the Panthers' rushing attack.
How do things bode for the Panthers this season? The metrics show they could be primed for an excellent year. Three of Carolina's returning starting offensive linemen topped the 80 percent run-blocking success mark last year -- the benchmark of a good run-blocker -- and that group didn't include Mike Wahle.
One of Wahle's primary responsibilities in this offense is to be the pulling guard on the counter play, and his relatively low success percentage may have been caused by Davis' inability to run that play well. Foster is much better at running the counter so that problem should be solved.
The Panthers also have two very good run-blocking tight ends in Kris Mangum and Michael Gaines. Both ranked in the top 11 in run-blocking success percentage in 2005. Throw in fullback Brad Hoover (88 percent) and it becomes clear the Panthers have a collection of earthmovers who can lead a dominating rushing attack. If DeAngelo Williams can contribute 100-plus carries and keep Foster fresh, there is every reason to believe Carolina's running game could rank in the top 10 in the NFL this year.
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 4 New Articles Added 8/31/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 4 New Articles Added 8/31/06)

Cut-down day ends a lot of dreams


posted: Thursday, August 31, 2006 | Feedback | Print Entry

Throughout the season I want to take some time and talk about some of the more prevalent and interesting questions that I would often get asked while working in the front offices of the NFL. I may bore some of you, but you might be surprised as to what people who have never worked in the NFL think they know and what it is actually like on the inside.

Has anyone ever thought about how dismal cut-down days really are? Many players refer to it as the "Grim Reaper Day." For the casual fan who is unaware of roster limits and rules and regulations, I will keep this scenario in its simplest form to make my point. The NFL sets a roster limit of 80 players per club throughout the entire season, which includes all players in reserve categories (i.e., reserve injured, reserve/physically unable to perform, etc.). "Exempt" players, such as those from NFL Europe and other special categories, do not count towards this limit, which allows teams to be over this number at various time of the year.
Nonetheless, let's keep it simple. Each team enters training camp with 80 players and eventually has to trim its roster all the way down to 53. The final cut takes place after the final preseason game. Simple math tells us that at least 27 players per club will pass through the waiver, release or cut-down process (pick your verbiage). Again, 27 players per club never really have a chance to make the roster, which can be very dismal for the un-drafted rookie and/or the aged veteran. If we multiply that number by all 32 clubs we get 864 of your friends, families, neighbors, and/or favorite players that will cycle through this process.
This, to say the least, is not very exciting news for anyone with dreams and aspirations of making it onto a final 53-man NFL roster. Sprinkled throughout those 864 players are some who will return to rosters as practice-squad players (eight per team), as long as they have less than two accrued seasons of experience.
Now think about this process happening year after year. In three years, that is 2,592 players released at some point during training camp. That's far more players than there are active-roster jobs in the NFL -- 53 slots per team, multiplied by 32 teams equals 1,696 players on active rosters in the NFL each year.
So next time you engage in a conversation about too many preseason games being played or you get upset about your favorite player getting hurt, remember the little guy on the roster who is looking forward to every one of those games so that he can take advantage of every situation and opportunity that comes his way. "Grim Reaper Day" is coming, and no player hoping to make the team looks forward to it.
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 4 New Articles Added 8/31/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 4 New Articles Added 8/31/06)

Cut-down day ends a lot of dreams


posted: Thursday, August 31, 2006 | Feedback | Print Entry

Throughout the season I want to take some time and talk about some of the more prevalent and interesting questions that I would often get asked while working in the front offices of the NFL. I may bore some of you, but you might be surprised as to what people who have never worked in the NFL think they know and what it is actually like on the inside.

Has anyone ever thought about how dismal cut-down days really are? Many players refer to it as the "Grim Reaper Day." For the casual fan who is unaware of roster limits and rules and regulations, I will keep this scenario in its simplest form to make my point. The NFL sets a roster limit of 80 players per club throughout the entire season, which includes all players in reserve categories (i.e., reserve injured, reserve/physically unable to perform, etc.). "Exempt" players, such as those from NFL Europe and other special categories, do not count towards this limit, which allows teams to be over this number at various time of the year.
Nonetheless, let's keep it simple. Each team enters training camp with 80 players and eventually has to trim its roster all the way down to 53. The final cut takes place after the final preseason game. Simple math tells us that at least 27 players per club will pass through the waiver, release or cut-down process (pick your verbiage). Again, 27 players per club never really have a chance to make the roster, which can be very dismal for the un-drafted rookie and/or the aged veteran. If we multiply that number by all 32 clubs we get 864 of your friends, families, neighbors, and/or favorite players that will cycle through this process.
This, to say the least, is not very exciting news for anyone with dreams and aspirations of making it onto a final 53-man NFL roster. Sprinkled throughout those 864 players are some who will return to rosters as practice-squad players (eight per team), as long as they have less than two accrued seasons of experience.
Now think about this process happening year after year. In three years, that is 2,592 players released at some point during training camp. That's far more players than there are active-roster jobs in the NFL -- 53 slots per team, multiplied by 32 teams equals 1,696 players on active rosters in the NFL each year.
So next time you engage in a conversation about too many preseason games being played or you get upset about your favorite player getting hurt, remember the little guy on the roster who is looking forward to every one of those games so that he can take advantage of every situation and opportunity that comes his way. "Grim Reaper Day" is coming, and no player hoping to make the team looks forward to it.
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 8 New Articles Added 8/31/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 8 New Articles Added 8/31/06)

Patriots deserve more respect


posted: Friday, September 1, 2006 | Feedback | Print Entry

My place of employment, ESPN The Magazine, didn't really listen to my Super Bowl picks.

Every year my editor, Chad Millman, polls all of the NFL writers and editors for their Super Bowl picks, then builds some sort of consensus, from which he declares The Magazine's pick.
Like many of You The Reader last year, he did not find a lot of credence in the first Wick Pick of the ?06 season. Chad picked the Dolphins to face the Panthers.
I shake my head. The Panthers I understand. But Miami?
A team that didn't win its division last year?
A team that didn't make the playoffs last year?
Don't get me wrong: Miami will be a good team. But I'm not buying them as a Super Bowl team. In fact, I'm not buying them as the best team in their division.
My AFC Super Bowl pick is New England. It sounds crazy, but the Pats are going to sneak up on people again this year. Feel free to write me that the Pats won't have any weapons for Tom Brady to throw to. Write that their linebackers won't scare anyone. Write that they lost their Hall of Fame kicker. Write whatever you want.
The Pats are the AFC's best team. They have the best quarterback in the league and are going to be a punishing running team this year. The combo of Laurence Maroney -­ who will probably lead the Pats in carries -- and Corey Dillon will give the Pats the best running attack of Bill Belichick's tenure. People worry about what they'll do in the event that Deion Branch misses most of the season. I do too, but not too much. For one, the Pats have proven they can win with lunch-pail receivers. For another, Branch has missed games in his career and the Pats know how to play without him. For yet another, Ben Watson and Daniel Graham are featured more as receivers than people realize. One of the Pats' best plays last year was the tight end screen. Belichick and Mike Shanahan are by far the best in the league at creating mismatches and putting their best players in the best spot to make plays.
The Linebackers are a question mark, but they're protected by a loaded D-line and a secondary that is better than people think.
My NFC team? Seattle. The Hawks took a hit on the O-line with Steve Hutchinson's departure to Minnesota, but gained on defense with Julian Peterson and the return of Ken Hamlin. Lofa Tatupu will be a dominant force with a year under his belt. They still have the NFC's best player -­ Shaun Alexander ­- and an offensive cast that has been in every type of game situation together.
Carolina might actually be a better team than Seattle, but as You The Reader know, I think the NFC South will be hell this year, with teams beating up on each other every week. Even with the improved Cardinals and dangerous Rams, Seattle has an easier ride.
So Wick's Preseason Picks are:
AFC East
1. Pats
2. Dolphins
3. Jets
4. Bills
AFC North
1. Steelers
2. Ravens
3. Bengals
4. Browns
AFC South
1. Colts
2. Jags
3. Texans
4. Titans

AFC West
1. Broncos
2. Chargers
3. Chiefs
4. Raiders
AFC Playoffs
Wildcard: Dolphins over Chargers; Broncos over Steelers
Divisional: Colts over Broncos; Pats over Dolphins
AFC Championship: Pats over Colts
NFC East
1. Giants
2. Redskins
3. Eagles
4. Cowboys
NFC North
1. Bears
2. Vikings
3. Packers
4. Lions
NFC South
1. Panthers
2. Falcons
3. Bucs
4. Saints
NFC West
1. Seahawks
2. Cardinals
3. Rams
4. 49ers
NFC Playoffs
Wildcard: Falcons over Bears; Redskins over Giants
Divisional: Seahawks over Falcons; Panthers over Redskins
NFC Championship: Seahawks over Panthers
Super Bowl: Pats 35, Seahawks 31.
Random Stuff
Sifting through my non-Eagles email for a few questions.
Mary (Plano, TX)
So according to your "Griese Theory" he will (at some point) in the season beat out Grossman, but only to have Kyle Orton start later in the season?
Seth: That's the scary part, isn't it, Mary? Griese never, ever sits on the bench long. But he's never the long-term answer, either. In this case, I think they'd go back to Grossman ­- assuming he's healthy ­- rather than turn to Orton. (For those of you who aren't aware of my Griese theory, check my blog archives from this spring.)
Leonard (Falls Church, VA) Which "high" pick from the 2005 draft has more to prove in 2006: Pacman Jones or Cedric Benson?
Seth: Interesting question. Both need to endear themselves to their teams. Pacman, with his off-field problems, has more work on a PR front. Benson doesn't have the character problems that Pacman does, but it's obvious his team isn't too high on him after what happened when he walked off the field in the preseason. Jones has shown more of what he can do on the field, as unimpressive as it was at times. Even though Benson is on a better team in a bigger market and was a higher pick, I'm going to go with Jones because of his arrest issues and all that baggage he's brought to the Titans.
Lloyd (Boston, MA)
Hey man. Not really a sports question. I was wondering how you got started with your gig writing for ESPN.com? Seth: The ESPN.com blog came because I've spent five of my six years at ESPN The Magazine writing about the NFL. John Hassan, an ESPN.com editor, was kind enough to offer me a blog when they were in their infancy. (I think Buster Olney and Bruce Feldman were the first bloggers, with Eric Karabell and I joining a few months later.) Even though ESPN The Magazine is my full-time gig and first love, the blog is a good place to vent every now and then -­ and of course get hate mail from Eagles fans.
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 8 New Articles Added 8/31/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 8 New Articles Added 8/31/06)

Patriots deserve more respect


posted: Friday, September 1, 2006 | Feedback | Print Entry

My place of employment, ESPN The Magazine, didn't really listen to my Super Bowl picks.

Every year my editor, Chad Millman, polls all of the NFL writers and editors for their Super Bowl picks, then builds some sort of consensus, from which he declares The Magazine's pick.
Like many of You The Reader last year, he did not find a lot of credence in the first Wick Pick of the ?06 season. Chad picked the Dolphins to face the Panthers.
I shake my head. The Panthers I understand. But Miami?
A team that didn't win its division last year?
A team that didn't make the playoffs last year?
Don't get me wrong: Miami will be a good team. But I'm not buying them as a Super Bowl team. In fact, I'm not buying them as the best team in their division.
My AFC Super Bowl pick is New England. It sounds crazy, but the Pats are going to sneak up on people again this year. Feel free to write me that the Pats won't have any weapons for Tom Brady to throw to. Write that their linebackers won't scare anyone. Write that they lost their Hall of Fame kicker. Write whatever you want.
The Pats are the AFC's best team. They have the best quarterback in the league and are going to be a punishing running team this year. The combo of Laurence Maroney -­ who will probably lead the Pats in carries -- and Corey Dillon will give the Pats the best running attack of Bill Belichick's tenure. People worry about what they'll do in the event that Deion Branch misses most of the season. I do too, but not too much. For one, the Pats have proven they can win with lunch-pail receivers. For another, Branch has missed games in his career and the Pats know how to play without him. For yet another, Ben Watson and Daniel Graham are featured more as receivers than people realize. One of the Pats' best plays last year was the tight end screen. Belichick and Mike Shanahan are by far the best in the league at creating mismatches and putting their best players in the best spot to make plays.
The Linebackers are a question mark, but they're protected by a loaded D-line and a secondary that is better than people think.
My NFC team? Seattle. The Hawks took a hit on the O-line with Steve Hutchinson's departure to Minnesota, but gained on defense with Julian Peterson and the return of Ken Hamlin. Lofa Tatupu will be a dominant force with a year under his belt. They still have the NFC's best player -­ Shaun Alexander ­- and an offensive cast that has been in every type of game situation together.
Carolina might actually be a better team than Seattle, but as You The Reader know, I think the NFC South will be hell this year, with teams beating up on each other every week. Even with the improved Cardinals and dangerous Rams, Seattle has an easier ride.
So Wick's Preseason Picks are:
AFC East
1. Pats
2. Dolphins
3. Jets
4. Bills
AFC North
1. Steelers
2. Ravens
3. Bengals
4. Browns
AFC South
1. Colts
2. Jags
3. Texans
4. Titans

AFC West
1. Broncos
2. Chargers
3. Chiefs
4. Raiders
AFC Playoffs
Wildcard: Dolphins over Chargers; Broncos over Steelers
Divisional: Colts over Broncos; Pats over Dolphins
AFC Championship: Pats over Colts
NFC East
1. Giants
2. Redskins
3. Eagles
4. Cowboys
NFC North
1. Bears
2. Vikings
3. Packers
4. Lions
NFC South
1. Panthers
2. Falcons
3. Bucs
4. Saints
NFC West
1. Seahawks
2. Cardinals
3. Rams
4. 49ers
NFC Playoffs
Wildcard: Falcons over Bears; Redskins over Giants
Divisional: Seahawks over Falcons; Panthers over Redskins
NFC Championship: Seahawks over Panthers
Super Bowl: Pats 35, Seahawks 31.
Random Stuff
Sifting through my non-Eagles email for a few questions.
Mary (Plano, TX)
So according to your "Griese Theory" he will (at some point) in the season beat out Grossman, but only to have Kyle Orton start later in the season?
Seth: That's the scary part, isn't it, Mary? Griese never, ever sits on the bench long. But he's never the long-term answer, either. In this case, I think they'd go back to Grossman ­- assuming he's healthy ­- rather than turn to Orton. (For those of you who aren't aware of my Griese theory, check my blog archives from this spring.)
Leonard (Falls Church, VA) Which "high" pick from the 2005 draft has more to prove in 2006: Pacman Jones or Cedric Benson?
Seth: Interesting question. Both need to endear themselves to their teams. Pacman, with his off-field problems, has more work on a PR front. Benson doesn't have the character problems that Pacman does, but it's obvious his team isn't too high on him after what happened when he walked off the field in the preseason. Jones has shown more of what he can do on the field, as unimpressive as it was at times. Even though Benson is on a better team in a bigger market and was a higher pick, I'm going to go with Jones because of his arrest issues and all that baggage he's brought to the Titans.
Lloyd (Boston, MA)
Hey man. Not really a sports question. I was wondering how you got started with your gig writing for ESPN.com? Seth: The ESPN.com blog came because I've spent five of my six years at ESPN The Magazine writing about the NFL. John Hassan, an ESPN.com editor, was kind enough to offer me a blog when they were in their infancy. (I think Buster Olney and Bruce Feldman were the first bloggers, with Eric Karabell and I joining a few months later.) Even though ESPN The Magazine is my full-time gig and first love, the blog is a good place to vent every now and then -­ and of course get hate mail from Eagles fans.
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 8 New Articles Added 8/31/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 8 New Articles Added 8/31/06)

<TABLE width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD>NFL Rumor Central: Branch on the move?
</TD><TD align=right width="30%">Other Rumors: MLB | NBA
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE class=tablehead cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=3><TBODY><TR><TD align=middle>You are signed into Insider and have access to this premium feature.
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
<TABLE class=tablehead cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=3><TBODY><TR class=stathead><TD colSpan=3>Friday, September 1</TD></TR><TR class=colhead><TD width=65>WHO</TD><TD>INTERESTED</TD><TD>THE SKINNY</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD noWrap align=middle>
Deion Branch
Patriots
</TD><TD>Seahawks?
Jets?
</TD><TD>Branch on the move?
<Sep. 1> According to ESPN.com's Len Pasquarelli, Branch has reached agreement with the New York Jets and an unnamed NFC team on a long-term contract that meets his demands. The NFC team is believed to be the Seattle Seahawks.
But neither team has been able to come to an agreement with the Patriots on compensation for the four-year veteran. The deadline for striking a deal is at 4 p.m. on Friday.
It?s believed that none of the suitors involved with Branch are willing to offer the Patriots more than a second-round draft choice. New England is seeking a first-round pick and perhaps a middle-round choice as well. Whether the Pats would consider extending the deadline, to enter into trade negotiations with the two clubs attempting to land Branch is unknown.

</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 8 New Articles Added 8/31/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 8 New Articles Added 8/31/06)

<TABLE width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD>NFL Rumor Central: Branch on the move?
</TD><TD align=right width="30%">Other Rumors: MLB | NBA
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE class=tablehead cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=3><TBODY><TR><TD align=middle>You are signed into Insider and have access to this premium feature.
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
<TABLE class=tablehead cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=3><TBODY><TR class=stathead><TD colSpan=3>Friday, September 1</TD></TR><TR class=colhead><TD width=65>WHO</TD><TD>INTERESTED</TD><TD>THE SKINNY</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD noWrap align=middle>
Deion Branch
Patriots
</TD><TD>Seahawks?
Jets?
</TD><TD>Branch on the move?
<Sep. 1> According to ESPN.com's Len Pasquarelli, Branch has reached agreement with the New York Jets and an unnamed NFC team on a long-term contract that meets his demands. The NFC team is believed to be the Seattle Seahawks.
But neither team has been able to come to an agreement with the Patriots on compensation for the four-year veteran. The deadline for striking a deal is at 4 p.m. on Friday.
It?s believed that none of the suitors involved with Branch are willing to offer the Patriots more than a second-round draft choice. New England is seeking a first-round pick and perhaps a middle-round choice as well. Whether the Pats would consider extending the deadline, to enter into trade negotiations with the two clubs attempting to land Branch is unknown.

</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 2 New Articles Added 9/1/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 2 New Articles Added 9/1/06)

Updated: Sep. 2, 2006, 4:53 PM ET
<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD> </TD><TD></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>

Bengals paying to keep players


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By Len Pasquarelli
ESPN.com
Archive
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It took only three seasons for coach Marvin Lewis to expel the Cincinnati Bengals' reputation as unlovable losers. It's taken owner Mike Brown, and the front office tandem of Katie Blackburn and Troy Blackburn, even less time to move beyond the rap that the team was run on the cheap.

The latest example of the Bengals' new-found willingness to open up the coffers in an attempt to retain key players came on Thursday when the club signed right offensive tackle Willie Anderson to a five-year contract extension worth about $32 million. The deal, which followed by only a month the $40 million-plus deal that Cincinnati awarded left tackle Levi Jones, did more than just extend the team's offseason spending spree.
In keeping Anderson, with whom the Bengals had been discussing an extension for more than a year, Cincinnati officials also demonstrated a willingness to take care of its own. Anderson has been through a lot of bad times during his 10 seasons with the Bengals, and the team's poor play for much of his career cost him plenty of personal attention, and a few Pro Bowl trips. Through the lean times, Anderson not only persevered, but became a fixture in the community and a man who bled in orange-and-black stripes. It was good to see the Bengals, who often overlooked such contributions in the past, reward a player not only for performance but for loyalty as well.
In the big picture, the Cincinnati front office, prodded frequently by Lewis, who knows that he has a Super Bowl contender, has stepped up enormously.
The Bengals, just in the past nine months, have extended the contracts of quarterback Carson Palmer, wide receiver Chad Johnson, fullback Jeremi Johnson, right guard Bobbie Williams, Jones and Anderson. Before that, the Bengals kept tailback Rudi Johnson with a big deal. It's believed that, in less than a year, Cincinnati has doled out $70 million-$75 million in guarantees.
The next four months will demonstrate whether the Bengals have what it takes to be champions. The past nine months showed that ownership, despite its skinflint reputation, was willing to do whatever it took to retain for Lewis the components of a potential championship roster.
Around the league

? The Bengals aren't the only team that has invested wisely in solidifying its offensive line for the long-term. The new deal negotiated by San Diego with right tackle Shane Olivea this week continues the initiative by the Chargers to not only lock up many of their young core players with long-term extensions, but also demonstrates again how much general manager A.J. Smith, an old-guard kind of guy, understands the importance of offensive line stability.
In the past three months, the Chargers have signed both Olivea and starting center Nick Hardwick to contract extensions through the 2011 season. And team officials continue to work on a similar extension for left guard Kris Dielman, who had never started a game before last season, then suddenly emerged as one of the best young in-line blockers in the league.
In the draft, San Diego chose former Auburn standout Marcus McNeill in the second round and he is under contract through 2009. A lot of scouts rated McNeill a first-round talent, but he slipped on most boards because of past back problems, and the Chargers got great value being able to land him in the second stanza. Despite a broken left hand suffered in camp, it looks like McNeill will open the season as the team's starting left tackle, especially with Roman Oben (foot) having been placed on the physically unable to perform list for at least the first six weeks of the campaign. Really, the only relative graybeard on the starting line unit is right guard Mike Goff, who at age 30 continues to perform at a high level, and probably should have been in the Pro Bowl last season. The Chargers' blocking unit is one of the best in the NFL, and thanks to Smith's efforts, should stay that way for a while.
? Whether or not Adam Vinatieri has a broken bone in his left foot or a sprained ligament in the ankle of his "plant" leg --- Indianapolis officials are expected to distribute, before the preseason finale Friday, a clarifying statement from the specialist who examined him -- rumblings are that he will not kick in next week's season opener. The game's best clutch kicker has told friends (and perhaps his mother, too) that he is looking at the big picture, knows the Colts are a Super Bowl caliber team, and does not want to set back his recovery by rushing back before the injury is fully healed. Still, sitting out the opener against the New York Giants would be a tough swallow for Vinatieri, who has never missed a game because of an injury.
<!--------------------------START PLAYER CARD------------------><TABLE class=tableheadFixWidth cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=3 width=200 align=right><TBODY><TR class=stathead><TD class=whitelink colSpan=2>Mike Vanderjagt</TD></TR><TR class=evenrow align=right><TD align=left> Kicker
Dallas Cowboys

Profile</TD></TR><TR class=evenrow><TD align=middle><TABLE cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=1 width=190 bgColor=#ffffff border=0><TBODY><TR class=stathead align=middle><TD align=middle colSpan=6>2005 SEASON STATISTICS</TD></TR><TR style="BACKGROUND: #bcbcb4" align=right><TD width="17%">FG</TD><TD width="17%">Att</TD><TD width="17%">PAT</TD><TD width="17%">Att</TD><TD width="17%">Pts</TD><TD width="17%">Long</TD></TR><TR align=right bgColor=#999999><TD>23</TD><TD>25</TD><TD>52</TD><TD>52</TD><TD>121</TD><TD>48</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><!---------------------INLINE MINI-PLAYER CARD ENDS HERE--------------------->? Even if Vinatieri does have a broken bone in his foot, his prognosis might be better than that of the man he replaced, Mike Vanderjagt, who likely is suffering from a bruised ego after Thursday night's fiasco. In his final big test before the start of the season, Vanderjagt, who missed much of training camp with a groin injury, was wide right on a pair of overtime field goal attempts, from 32 and 33 yards. On his only kickoff of the evening, Vanderjagt got the ball only to the 12-yard line.
Earlier in the week, Vanderjagt, who has a way of finding his mouth with his talented foot, declared to one member of the Dallas media: "I don't choke." Maybe not. But Cowboys coach Bill Parcells might be ready to choke his placement specialist. It's hard to imagine the Cowboys releasing Vanderjagt, especially after paying a $2.5 million signing bonus to the most accurate field goal kicker in league history, right? But Parcells is a pragmatic guy and he just hasn't seen much of Vanderjagt this summer. Dallas would absorb an $833,333 cap hit this year if it lopped Vanderjagt this weekend. The team would have a carryover hit of $1.67 million against its 2007 cap under that scenario. Of course, it would be great irony if Parcells decided to cut Vanderjagt, given that the Cowboys, until signing him, always had tried to get by with minimum-salary kickers that former assistant Steve Hoffman always seemed able to unearth off the street.
? There's an interesting element in the trade that sent New Orleans wide receiver Donte' Stallworth to Philadelphia this week in exchange for linebacker Mark Simoneau and a fourth-round draft pick. The fourth-round selection will escalate to a third-rounder, an all-important "first day" choice, if the Eagles are able to sign Stallworth, who is in the final year of his rookie contract and will be eligible for unrestricted free agency next spring, to an extension.
Here's where it really gets interesting: To get an add-on to Stallworth's current contract, Philadelphia will have to negotiate with agent Drew Rosenhaus, with whom the team famously battled over Terrell Owens last year. Saints officials, who covet the higher choice, are certainly rooting for the Eagles and Rosenhaus to bury the hatchet. And sources told ESPN.com this week that there already has been dialogue about an extension, so stay tuned.
Meanwhile, kudos to ever-creative Philadelphia president Joe Banner, for adding the third-round enticement to the Eagles' trade proposal. Before he did that, Saints general manager Mickey Loomis was poised to swap Stallworth to another team in a trade that also would have landed New Orleans a veteran linebacker and a fourth-round draft pick. By tweaking his proposal just a little, Banner was able to make the deal.
? A reminder to those fans who will be screaming when their favorite teams don't jump right out and sign some of the veteran players who will be jettisoned this weekend: Vested veterans who are on a team's roster for the opening game are guaranteed their entire base salary for the year. That means, unless a club is certain a vested veteran (at least four years accrued toward the NFL pension plan) can be of immediate help, and will last the year on the roster, it will wait until after the opener to sign him. Teams will bring in a lot of veterans for workouts next week, analyze the auditions, and then delay signing guys until the second week of the campaign to avoid having to guarantee salaries.
<!--------------------------START PLAYER CARD------------------><TABLE class=tableheadFixWidth cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=3 width=200 align=right><TBODY><TR class=stathead><TD class=whitelink colSpan=2>Ronnie Brown</TD></TR><TR class=evenrow align=right><TD align=left> Running Back
Miami Dolphins

Profile</TD></TR><TR class=evenrow><TD align=middle><TABLE cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=1 width=190 bgColor=#ffffff border=0><TBODY><TR class=stathead align=middle><TD align=middle colSpan=6>2005 SEASON STATISTICS</TD></TR><TR style="BACKGROUND: #bcbcb4" align=right><TD width="17%">Rush</TD><TD width="17%">Yds</TD><TD width="17%">TD</TD><TD width="17%">Rec</TD><TD width="17%">Yds</TD><TD width="17%">TD</TD></TR><TR align=right bgColor=#999999><TD>207</TD><TD>907</TD><TD>4</TD><TD>32</TD><TD>232</TD><TD>1</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><!---------------------INLINE MINI-PLAYER CARD ENDS HERE--------------------->? There figures to be at least a half-dozen veteran tailbacks released this weekend when teams must reduce their rosters to the regular-season limit of 53 players, and that should enable Miami coach Nick Saban to find a competent backup to starter Ronnie Brown.
Even before Thursday night's revelation by the South Florida Sun Sentinel that backup Sammy Morris will miss the first four games of the season because of a violation of the NFL steroid policy, the Dolphins were seeking to up upgrade a position thinned by Ricky Williams' year-long banishment from the league. But the loss of Morris, the best and most proven of a suspect backup group, further exacerbates things.
Brown is ready to take on a bigger rushing complement in 2006, after logging 207 attempts as a rookie last year, but still has never been asked to shoulder a 20-carry-per-game workload. When he was at Auburn, he never registered more than 175 rushes in a season so, until Brown checks in with a 300- to 325-carry season, there will be doubts about his durability. Look for the Dolphins to have a new No. 2 tailback by early next week.

? Speaking of Saban, great quote this week from the Dolphins coach, on how he feels he is perceived: "I know everybody thinks I'm crazy. I know the players think I'm crazy. I know [the media] thinks I'm crazy. So I just accept the fact that everybody thinks I'm crazy, but I don't get it. I don't get it."

? Even off the field, it seems, Washington Redskins owner Dan Snyder can't resist overpaying for an overrated free agent. Snyder this week reached a development/production deal with actor Tom Cruise, who had been dumped by Paramount for his often inexplicable behavior. Let's see, Snyder, Cruise, Super Bowl. Feel free to insert your own "Mission Impossible" joke here.

Stat of the week: In the preseason, Jacksonville quarterback Byron Leftwich worked 14 series against opposition first-unit defenses and authored zero scoring drives.
Punts: Talk about a quick fall from the penthouse to the outhouse: As a rookie in 2005, seventh-round draft pick William Whitticker started 14 games at left guard for the Green Bay Packers. Then the team hired a new head coach, who brought a new blocking scheme, and Whitticker couldn't even make the team. Too ponderous for the zone-blocking scheme Green Bay installed this spring, Whitticker was released on Thursday afternoon. ? Kansas City coaches continue to be disappointed by the play of linebacker Kendrell Bell, one of the Chiefs' big free-agent additions last summer, who is being pushed by third-year pro Keyaron Fox for the starting job. Bell was the NFL's defensive rookie of the year in 2001, with Pittsburgh, but he hasn't been the same player since. ? It appears that, despite competition from veteran Travis Henry and rookie LenDale White, and his own request to be traded, Chris Brown has retained his starting tailback spot with the Tennessee Titans. ? Given the lack of depth it would create, Buffalo likely won't trade backup quarterback Kelly Holcomb, but expect that Bills officials will have a few inquiries about the 10th-year veteran this weekend. ? Look for the Carolina Panthers, who have a surplus at defensive tackle, to field some calls this weekend as well. Defensive tackle is traditionally one of the most difficult spots to fill, of course, on a depth chart. Carolina arguably has seven tackles with NFL-caliber abilities and can't keep them all. ? The Minnesota Vikings appear to be the team most interested in free-agent wide receiver Todd Pinkston, released by Philadelphia earlier this week. Vikings coach Brad Childress is familiar with Pinkston from their days together with the Eagles. ? The league has loosened its rules a bit on players eligible for practice squads. Under the former rules, a player could not be on a practice squad for more than two seasons. The new rules permit a player to spend a third year on a practice squad, provided that he still has practice squad eligibility and that his team is carrying a full 53-man active roster. ? Dallas officials are deep into negotiations on an extension for inside linebacker Bradie James, who is eligible to become an unrestricted free agent next spring.
The last word: "Are you dying to be a great player? Do you claw the wall every day? Do you understand what that means? Every day you claw the wall. 'I want to be the best player in America.' I want to get 53 men like that, who live and die for football, [who] are here all day, absorb information, eat information. That's what I'm looking for." -- Detroit Lions first-year coach Rod Marinelli on how he will determine the composition of his roster.
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 2 New Articles Added 9/1/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 2 New Articles Added 9/1/06)

Updated: Sep. 2, 2006, 4:53 PM ET
<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD> </TD><TD></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>

Bengals paying to keep players


<!-- end pagetitle --><!-- begin bylinebox -->
<!-- firstName = Len --><!-- lastName = Pasquarelli -->
By Len Pasquarelli
ESPN.com
Archive
<!-- begin presby2 -->
<!-- end presby2 -->
<!-- end bylinebox -->
<!-- begin text11 div -->
<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD style="PADDING-TOP: 10px" vAlign=top><!-- begin leftcol --><!-- template inline -->
It took only three seasons for coach Marvin Lewis to expel the Cincinnati Bengals' reputation as unlovable losers. It's taken owner Mike Brown, and the front office tandem of Katie Blackburn and Troy Blackburn, even less time to move beyond the rap that the team was run on the cheap.

The latest example of the Bengals' new-found willingness to open up the coffers in an attempt to retain key players came on Thursday when the club signed right offensive tackle Willie Anderson to a five-year contract extension worth about $32 million. The deal, which followed by only a month the $40 million-plus deal that Cincinnati awarded left tackle Levi Jones, did more than just extend the team's offseason spending spree.
In keeping Anderson, with whom the Bengals had been discussing an extension for more than a year, Cincinnati officials also demonstrated a willingness to take care of its own. Anderson has been through a lot of bad times during his 10 seasons with the Bengals, and the team's poor play for much of his career cost him plenty of personal attention, and a few Pro Bowl trips. Through the lean times, Anderson not only persevered, but became a fixture in the community and a man who bled in orange-and-black stripes. It was good to see the Bengals, who often overlooked such contributions in the past, reward a player not only for performance but for loyalty as well.
In the big picture, the Cincinnati front office, prodded frequently by Lewis, who knows that he has a Super Bowl contender, has stepped up enormously.
The Bengals, just in the past nine months, have extended the contracts of quarterback Carson Palmer, wide receiver Chad Johnson, fullback Jeremi Johnson, right guard Bobbie Williams, Jones and Anderson. Before that, the Bengals kept tailback Rudi Johnson with a big deal. It's believed that, in less than a year, Cincinnati has doled out $70 million-$75 million in guarantees.
The next four months will demonstrate whether the Bengals have what it takes to be champions. The past nine months showed that ownership, despite its skinflint reputation, was willing to do whatever it took to retain for Lewis the components of a potential championship roster.
Around the league

? The Bengals aren't the only team that has invested wisely in solidifying its offensive line for the long-term. The new deal negotiated by San Diego with right tackle Shane Olivea this week continues the initiative by the Chargers to not only lock up many of their young core players with long-term extensions, but also demonstrates again how much general manager A.J. Smith, an old-guard kind of guy, understands the importance of offensive line stability.
In the past three months, the Chargers have signed both Olivea and starting center Nick Hardwick to contract extensions through the 2011 season. And team officials continue to work on a similar extension for left guard Kris Dielman, who had never started a game before last season, then suddenly emerged as one of the best young in-line blockers in the league.
In the draft, San Diego chose former Auburn standout Marcus McNeill in the second round and he is under contract through 2009. A lot of scouts rated McNeill a first-round talent, but he slipped on most boards because of past back problems, and the Chargers got great value being able to land him in the second stanza. Despite a broken left hand suffered in camp, it looks like McNeill will open the season as the team's starting left tackle, especially with Roman Oben (foot) having been placed on the physically unable to perform list for at least the first six weeks of the campaign. Really, the only relative graybeard on the starting line unit is right guard Mike Goff, who at age 30 continues to perform at a high level, and probably should have been in the Pro Bowl last season. The Chargers' blocking unit is one of the best in the NFL, and thanks to Smith's efforts, should stay that way for a while.
? Whether or not Adam Vinatieri has a broken bone in his left foot or a sprained ligament in the ankle of his "plant" leg --- Indianapolis officials are expected to distribute, before the preseason finale Friday, a clarifying statement from the specialist who examined him -- rumblings are that he will not kick in next week's season opener. The game's best clutch kicker has told friends (and perhaps his mother, too) that he is looking at the big picture, knows the Colts are a Super Bowl caliber team, and does not want to set back his recovery by rushing back before the injury is fully healed. Still, sitting out the opener against the New York Giants would be a tough swallow for Vinatieri, who has never missed a game because of an injury.
<!--------------------------START PLAYER CARD------------------><TABLE class=tableheadFixWidth cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=3 width=200 align=right><TBODY><TR class=stathead><TD class=whitelink colSpan=2>Mike Vanderjagt</TD></TR><TR class=evenrow align=right><TD align=left> Kicker
Dallas Cowboys

Profile</TD></TR><TR class=evenrow><TD align=middle><TABLE cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=1 width=190 bgColor=#ffffff border=0><TBODY><TR class=stathead align=middle><TD align=middle colSpan=6>2005 SEASON STATISTICS</TD></TR><TR style="BACKGROUND: #bcbcb4" align=right><TD width="17%">FG</TD><TD width="17%">Att</TD><TD width="17%">PAT</TD><TD width="17%">Att</TD><TD width="17%">Pts</TD><TD width="17%">Long</TD></TR><TR align=right bgColor=#999999><TD>23</TD><TD>25</TD><TD>52</TD><TD>52</TD><TD>121</TD><TD>48</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><!---------------------INLINE MINI-PLAYER CARD ENDS HERE--------------------->? Even if Vinatieri does have a broken bone in his foot, his prognosis might be better than that of the man he replaced, Mike Vanderjagt, who likely is suffering from a bruised ego after Thursday night's fiasco. In his final big test before the start of the season, Vanderjagt, who missed much of training camp with a groin injury, was wide right on a pair of overtime field goal attempts, from 32 and 33 yards. On his only kickoff of the evening, Vanderjagt got the ball only to the 12-yard line.
Earlier in the week, Vanderjagt, who has a way of finding his mouth with his talented foot, declared to one member of the Dallas media: "I don't choke." Maybe not. But Cowboys coach Bill Parcells might be ready to choke his placement specialist. It's hard to imagine the Cowboys releasing Vanderjagt, especially after paying a $2.5 million signing bonus to the most accurate field goal kicker in league history, right? But Parcells is a pragmatic guy and he just hasn't seen much of Vanderjagt this summer. Dallas would absorb an $833,333 cap hit this year if it lopped Vanderjagt this weekend. The team would have a carryover hit of $1.67 million against its 2007 cap under that scenario. Of course, it would be great irony if Parcells decided to cut Vanderjagt, given that the Cowboys, until signing him, always had tried to get by with minimum-salary kickers that former assistant Steve Hoffman always seemed able to unearth off the street.
? There's an interesting element in the trade that sent New Orleans wide receiver Donte' Stallworth to Philadelphia this week in exchange for linebacker Mark Simoneau and a fourth-round draft pick. The fourth-round selection will escalate to a third-rounder, an all-important "first day" choice, if the Eagles are able to sign Stallworth, who is in the final year of his rookie contract and will be eligible for unrestricted free agency next spring, to an extension.
Here's where it really gets interesting: To get an add-on to Stallworth's current contract, Philadelphia will have to negotiate with agent Drew Rosenhaus, with whom the team famously battled over Terrell Owens last year. Saints officials, who covet the higher choice, are certainly rooting for the Eagles and Rosenhaus to bury the hatchet. And sources told ESPN.com this week that there already has been dialogue about an extension, so stay tuned.
Meanwhile, kudos to ever-creative Philadelphia president Joe Banner, for adding the third-round enticement to the Eagles' trade proposal. Before he did that, Saints general manager Mickey Loomis was poised to swap Stallworth to another team in a trade that also would have landed New Orleans a veteran linebacker and a fourth-round draft pick. By tweaking his proposal just a little, Banner was able to make the deal.
? A reminder to those fans who will be screaming when their favorite teams don't jump right out and sign some of the veteran players who will be jettisoned this weekend: Vested veterans who are on a team's roster for the opening game are guaranteed their entire base salary for the year. That means, unless a club is certain a vested veteran (at least four years accrued toward the NFL pension plan) can be of immediate help, and will last the year on the roster, it will wait until after the opener to sign him. Teams will bring in a lot of veterans for workouts next week, analyze the auditions, and then delay signing guys until the second week of the campaign to avoid having to guarantee salaries.
<!--------------------------START PLAYER CARD------------------><TABLE class=tableheadFixWidth cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=3 width=200 align=right><TBODY><TR class=stathead><TD class=whitelink colSpan=2>Ronnie Brown</TD></TR><TR class=evenrow align=right><TD align=left> Running Back
Miami Dolphins

Profile</TD></TR><TR class=evenrow><TD align=middle><TABLE cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=1 width=190 bgColor=#ffffff border=0><TBODY><TR class=stathead align=middle><TD align=middle colSpan=6>2005 SEASON STATISTICS</TD></TR><TR style="BACKGROUND: #bcbcb4" align=right><TD width="17%">Rush</TD><TD width="17%">Yds</TD><TD width="17%">TD</TD><TD width="17%">Rec</TD><TD width="17%">Yds</TD><TD width="17%">TD</TD></TR><TR align=right bgColor=#999999><TD>207</TD><TD>907</TD><TD>4</TD><TD>32</TD><TD>232</TD><TD>1</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><!---------------------INLINE MINI-PLAYER CARD ENDS HERE--------------------->? There figures to be at least a half-dozen veteran tailbacks released this weekend when teams must reduce their rosters to the regular-season limit of 53 players, and that should enable Miami coach Nick Saban to find a competent backup to starter Ronnie Brown.
Even before Thursday night's revelation by the South Florida Sun Sentinel that backup Sammy Morris will miss the first four games of the season because of a violation of the NFL steroid policy, the Dolphins were seeking to up upgrade a position thinned by Ricky Williams' year-long banishment from the league. But the loss of Morris, the best and most proven of a suspect backup group, further exacerbates things.
Brown is ready to take on a bigger rushing complement in 2006, after logging 207 attempts as a rookie last year, but still has never been asked to shoulder a 20-carry-per-game workload. When he was at Auburn, he never registered more than 175 rushes in a season so, until Brown checks in with a 300- to 325-carry season, there will be doubts about his durability. Look for the Dolphins to have a new No. 2 tailback by early next week.

? Speaking of Saban, great quote this week from the Dolphins coach, on how he feels he is perceived: "I know everybody thinks I'm crazy. I know the players think I'm crazy. I know [the media] thinks I'm crazy. So I just accept the fact that everybody thinks I'm crazy, but I don't get it. I don't get it."

? Even off the field, it seems, Washington Redskins owner Dan Snyder can't resist overpaying for an overrated free agent. Snyder this week reached a development/production deal with actor Tom Cruise, who had been dumped by Paramount for his often inexplicable behavior. Let's see, Snyder, Cruise, Super Bowl. Feel free to insert your own "Mission Impossible" joke here.

Stat of the week: In the preseason, Jacksonville quarterback Byron Leftwich worked 14 series against opposition first-unit defenses and authored zero scoring drives.
Punts: Talk about a quick fall from the penthouse to the outhouse: As a rookie in 2005, seventh-round draft pick William Whitticker started 14 games at left guard for the Green Bay Packers. Then the team hired a new head coach, who brought a new blocking scheme, and Whitticker couldn't even make the team. Too ponderous for the zone-blocking scheme Green Bay installed this spring, Whitticker was released on Thursday afternoon. ? Kansas City coaches continue to be disappointed by the play of linebacker Kendrell Bell, one of the Chiefs' big free-agent additions last summer, who is being pushed by third-year pro Keyaron Fox for the starting job. Bell was the NFL's defensive rookie of the year in 2001, with Pittsburgh, but he hasn't been the same player since. ? It appears that, despite competition from veteran Travis Henry and rookie LenDale White, and his own request to be traded, Chris Brown has retained his starting tailback spot with the Tennessee Titans. ? Given the lack of depth it would create, Buffalo likely won't trade backup quarterback Kelly Holcomb, but expect that Bills officials will have a few inquiries about the 10th-year veteran this weekend. ? Look for the Carolina Panthers, who have a surplus at defensive tackle, to field some calls this weekend as well. Defensive tackle is traditionally one of the most difficult spots to fill, of course, on a depth chart. Carolina arguably has seven tackles with NFL-caliber abilities and can't keep them all. ? The Minnesota Vikings appear to be the team most interested in free-agent wide receiver Todd Pinkston, released by Philadelphia earlier this week. Vikings coach Brad Childress is familiar with Pinkston from their days together with the Eagles. ? The league has loosened its rules a bit on players eligible for practice squads. Under the former rules, a player could not be on a practice squad for more than two seasons. The new rules permit a player to spend a third year on a practice squad, provided that he still has practice squad eligibility and that his team is carrying a full 53-man active roster. ? Dallas officials are deep into negotiations on an extension for inside linebacker Bradie James, who is eligible to become an unrestricted free agent next spring.
The last word: "Are you dying to be a great player? Do you claw the wall every day? Do you understand what that means? Every day you claw the wall. 'I want to be the best player in America.' I want to get 53 men like that, who live and die for football, [who] are here all day, absorb information, eat information. That's what I'm looking for." -- Detroit Lions first-year coach Rod Marinelli on how he will determine the composition of his roster.
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Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 2 New Articles Added 9/1/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 2 New Articles Added 9/1/06)

<TABLE width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD>NFL Rumor Central: Branch staying put?
</TD><TD align=right width="30%">Other Rumors: MLB | NBA
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<TABLE class=tablehead cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=3><TBODY><TR class=stathead><TD colSpan=3>Saturday, September 2</TD></TR><TR class=colhead><TD width=65>WHO</TD><TD>INTERESTED</TD><TD>THE SKINNY</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD noWrap align=middle>
Deion Branch
Patriots
</TD><TD>Seahawks?
Jets?
</TD><TD>Branch staying put?
<Sep. 2> The Seahawks may take another run at trying to complete a trade for Branch, ESPN.com's Len Pasquarelli reports. The Seahawks and Jets had reached a deal with Branch, but neither team could satisfy the demands of the Patriots, who are seeking first- and middle-round choices as compensation, and the 4 p.m. deadline set by New England passed without a trade.
Bu there were indications on Friday night and early Saturday that the Seahawks remain very interested in Branch and could try to resuscitate a potential trade. The deadline was an arbitrary one, established only by New England officials, and there was nothing officially binding about it. Seattle will have to offer more than the second-round draft choice floated in the first round of trade discussions. Whether or not the Seahawks make another move on Branch, the wide receiver plans to proceed with the two grievances filed on his behalf by the NFL Players Association on Friday afternoon.

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Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 2 New Articles Added 9/1/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 2 New Articles Added 9/1/06)

<TABLE width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD>NFL Rumor Central: Branch staying put?
</TD><TD align=right width="30%">Other Rumors: MLB | NBA
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<TABLE class=tablehead cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=3><TBODY><TR class=stathead><TD colSpan=3>Saturday, September 2</TD></TR><TR class=colhead><TD width=65>WHO</TD><TD>INTERESTED</TD><TD>THE SKINNY</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD noWrap align=middle>
Deion Branch
Patriots
</TD><TD>Seahawks?
Jets?
</TD><TD>Branch staying put?
<Sep. 2> The Seahawks may take another run at trying to complete a trade for Branch, ESPN.com's Len Pasquarelli reports. The Seahawks and Jets had reached a deal with Branch, but neither team could satisfy the demands of the Patriots, who are seeking first- and middle-round choices as compensation, and the 4 p.m. deadline set by New England passed without a trade.
Bu there were indications on Friday night and early Saturday that the Seahawks remain very interested in Branch and could try to resuscitate a potential trade. The deadline was an arbitrary one, established only by New England officials, and there was nothing officially binding about it. Seattle will have to offer more than the second-round draft choice floated in the first round of trade discussions. Whether or not the Seahawks make another move on Branch, the wide receiver plans to proceed with the two grievances filed on his behalf by the NFL Players Association on Friday afternoon.

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Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 2 New Articles Added 9/1/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 2 New Articles Added 9/1/06)

Bills, Jets choose their quarterbacks


posted: Saturday, September 2, 2006 | Feedback | Print Entry
filed under: Buffalo Bills, New York Jets


The big question facing fans of the Buffalo Bills and New York Jets this past month has been who their teams' starting quarterbacks would be. It has been obvious based on performances that it was just a formality that J.P. Losman and Chad Pennington would get the nods, but word did not come down officially until this past week. Moving forward with a definitive direction is important to the whole organization.

A couple of weeks ago I wrote about the competition and differences between Losman and Kelly Holcomb, the two quarterbacks vying for the Bills starting job. The choice of the younger, more athletic, stronger-armed player to lead this team in 2006 appears to give Buffalo the most solid chance to win games.
Head coach Dick Jauron and his staff gave Losman a chance to flourish or fail throughout the preseason. My biggest question about Losman was his consistency and accuracy, both in his 2005 season with the Bills and in some of his college efforts. There is no question he has the tools to be a starting quarterback in the league, there still are questions about his ability to perform when under the bright lights.
In the preseason, though, Losman really did a nice job taking charge of the quarterback race, posting with several very solid outings in August. There has been a glaring difference between 2005, when he completed only 49 percent of his passes, and this preseason, in which he has completed 67 percent. There is good reason for optimism up in Buffalo. If they can get their running going with Willis McGahee and Shaud Williams and get the offensive line to gel, they may have a chance to sneak up on some teams.
I never had a problem with the physical attributes of the young gun Losman, and he has somewhat answered the mental and consistency questions that would make any fan leery. It makes the 2006 season for the Buffalo Bills brighter as they head toward their opener. For Losman, opening on the road against the Patriots will be an excellent test.
Pennington was going to be named the starter for the Jets unless he fell flat on his face or his shoulder injury showed signs of not being fully healed. He had a great year in 2004, when he lead the Jets to a 10-6 record and a playoff berth. Pennington has been a career 60-percent passer, and his decision-making has been very good.
I believe the big question for the Jets will be the play of the offensive line, particularly in the running game. They only averaged 3.7 yards per carry in the preseason, and if they don't get the running game going they will struggle to move the ball. With rookies D'Brickashaw Ferguson and Nick Mangold starting on the line and one of the most productive backs over the past 10 years in Curtis Martin out, there is cause for concern. The Jets have several holes to fill, including finding a consistent starting running back, an offensive line that can both give Pennington time and open holes to run effectively, and a defense that can stop the run more effectively. If the Jets struggle, Pennington won't be the reason.
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 2 New Articles Added 9/1/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 2 New Articles Added 9/1/06)

Bills, Jets choose their quarterbacks


posted: Saturday, September 2, 2006 | Feedback | Print Entry
filed under: Buffalo Bills, New York Jets


The big question facing fans of the Buffalo Bills and New York Jets this past month has been who their teams' starting quarterbacks would be. It has been obvious based on performances that it was just a formality that J.P. Losman and Chad Pennington would get the nods, but word did not come down officially until this past week. Moving forward with a definitive direction is important to the whole organization.

A couple of weeks ago I wrote about the competition and differences between Losman and Kelly Holcomb, the two quarterbacks vying for the Bills starting job. The choice of the younger, more athletic, stronger-armed player to lead this team in 2006 appears to give Buffalo the most solid chance to win games.
Head coach Dick Jauron and his staff gave Losman a chance to flourish or fail throughout the preseason. My biggest question about Losman was his consistency and accuracy, both in his 2005 season with the Bills and in some of his college efforts. There is no question he has the tools to be a starting quarterback in the league, there still are questions about his ability to perform when under the bright lights.
In the preseason, though, Losman really did a nice job taking charge of the quarterback race, posting with several very solid outings in August. There has been a glaring difference between 2005, when he completed only 49 percent of his passes, and this preseason, in which he has completed 67 percent. There is good reason for optimism up in Buffalo. If they can get their running going with Willis McGahee and Shaud Williams and get the offensive line to gel, they may have a chance to sneak up on some teams.
I never had a problem with the physical attributes of the young gun Losman, and he has somewhat answered the mental and consistency questions that would make any fan leery. It makes the 2006 season for the Buffalo Bills brighter as they head toward their opener. For Losman, opening on the road against the Patriots will be an excellent test.
Pennington was going to be named the starter for the Jets unless he fell flat on his face or his shoulder injury showed signs of not being fully healed. He had a great year in 2004, when he lead the Jets to a 10-6 record and a playoff berth. Pennington has been a career 60-percent passer, and his decision-making has been very good.
I believe the big question for the Jets will be the play of the offensive line, particularly in the running game. They only averaged 3.7 yards per carry in the preseason, and if they don't get the running game going they will struggle to move the ball. With rookies D'Brickashaw Ferguson and Nick Mangold starting on the line and one of the most productive backs over the past 10 years in Curtis Martin out, there is cause for concern. The Jets have several holes to fill, including finding a consistent starting running back, an offensive line that can both give Pennington time and open holes to run effectively, and a defense that can stop the run more effectively. If the Jets struggle, Pennington won't be the reason.
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 3 New Articles Added 9/2/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 3 New Articles Added 9/2/06)

For some, three's a crowd at QB


posted: Saturday, September 3, 2006 | Print Entry

The biggest surprise of cutdown day on Saturday was how more teams gambled on going into the first week of the season with only two quarterbacks.

Nine teams -- Baltimore, Denver, Carolina, Dallas, San Diego, Indianapolis, Houston, Pittsburgh and New England -- are currently relying on two quarterbacks. Either that's a negative statement on the state of backup quarterback availability or it's just a way to open up another roster spot for other moves during the week. The Panthers cut Stefan LeFors and Brett Basanez, leaving Jake Delhomme and Chris Weinke as the only remaining quarterbacks. It was a little surprising the Colts cut veteran Shaun King considering Jim Sorgi is coming off a recent injury. New Texans coach Gary Kubiak copied Mike Shanahan's formula of starting the season with only two QBs -- David Carr and Sage Rosenfels. The Broncos kept Jake Plummer and Jay Cutler after releasing Bradlee Van Pelt and Preston Parson. Obviously, most of these teams will be scrambling to get quarterbacks on their practice squads or add one during the coming week.
Gabriel's departure opens door for Porter: The trade of Doug Gabriel to New England was the biggest surprise of the day. It's an obvious sign that Jerry Porter has a chance to win back some playing time under Raiders coach Art Shell. The Patriots, meanwhile, had to do something to get a wide receiver. Deion Branch is probably going to hold out into the season and the Patriots for weeks have been calling around for receiving options. It's even more surprising the Raiders would give up Gabriel knowing they placed Carlos Francis on injured reserve. With Ronald Curry coming off Achilles tears the past two years, this is a sign of endorsement for Johnnie Morant. Gabriel's strength is that he can get deep and have a decent average per catch. The Patriots were able to get Gabriel for what is believed to be a fifth-round draft choice.
Tuiasosopo a trade option for Raiders? The Raiders liked what they saw of Jeff George during his brief stay before his release Saturday, but Oakland found out Andrew Walter's right shoulder was good enough to be tested against the Seahawks in Thursday's preseason finale. There are some teams interested in trading for Marques Tuiasosopo. With Tuiasosopo being the third quarterback, the Raiders might try to get some value for him. He's in the final year of his contract. Plus, the Raiders have shown they are willing to deal for draft choices, getting picks for Gabriel and Bobby Hamilton in the past 24 hours.
Running backs to burn: The Panthers felt halfback Eric Shelton was too good to cut, so they kept him instead of Jamal Robertson. The Panthers are loaded at halfback with DeShaun Foster, DeAngelo Williams, Nick Goings and Shelton. John Fox loves to run the ball. He shouldn't run out of backs this year as he did last season in the playoffs.
Volek stuck with Titans, and vice-versa, for now: Things aren't moving quickly on the Billy Volek trade front. The Chargers are interested but it's not as though there are hot-and-heavy trade talks going on. It's not certain that the Titans would even give up Volek unless the trade price is right. Volek won't be happy if the starting job is given to Kerry Collins, so it's still a fluid situation. Seahawks the player for Branch: If Deion Branch is going to be traded, the Seahawks -- not the Jets -- will be the team to get him. The Seahawks are interested because of Darrell Jackson's knee problems that haven't gone away in two years. Jackson didn't practice or play a down during the preseason. He came off the physically unable to perform list Saturday so he will try to practice to get ready for the season opener against the Lions.
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 3 New Articles Added 9/2/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 3 New Articles Added 9/2/06)

For some, three's a crowd at QB


posted: Saturday, September 3, 2006 | Print Entry

The biggest surprise of cutdown day on Saturday was how more teams gambled on going into the first week of the season with only two quarterbacks.

Nine teams -- Baltimore, Denver, Carolina, Dallas, San Diego, Indianapolis, Houston, Pittsburgh and New England -- are currently relying on two quarterbacks. Either that's a negative statement on the state of backup quarterback availability or it's just a way to open up another roster spot for other moves during the week. The Panthers cut Stefan LeFors and Brett Basanez, leaving Jake Delhomme and Chris Weinke as the only remaining quarterbacks. It was a little surprising the Colts cut veteran Shaun King considering Jim Sorgi is coming off a recent injury. New Texans coach Gary Kubiak copied Mike Shanahan's formula of starting the season with only two QBs -- David Carr and Sage Rosenfels. The Broncos kept Jake Plummer and Jay Cutler after releasing Bradlee Van Pelt and Preston Parson. Obviously, most of these teams will be scrambling to get quarterbacks on their practice squads or add one during the coming week.
Gabriel's departure opens door for Porter: The trade of Doug Gabriel to New England was the biggest surprise of the day. It's an obvious sign that Jerry Porter has a chance to win back some playing time under Raiders coach Art Shell. The Patriots, meanwhile, had to do something to get a wide receiver. Deion Branch is probably going to hold out into the season and the Patriots for weeks have been calling around for receiving options. It's even more surprising the Raiders would give up Gabriel knowing they placed Carlos Francis on injured reserve. With Ronald Curry coming off Achilles tears the past two years, this is a sign of endorsement for Johnnie Morant. Gabriel's strength is that he can get deep and have a decent average per catch. The Patriots were able to get Gabriel for what is believed to be a fifth-round draft choice.
Tuiasosopo a trade option for Raiders? The Raiders liked what they saw of Jeff George during his brief stay before his release Saturday, but Oakland found out Andrew Walter's right shoulder was good enough to be tested against the Seahawks in Thursday's preseason finale. There are some teams interested in trading for Marques Tuiasosopo. With Tuiasosopo being the third quarterback, the Raiders might try to get some value for him. He's in the final year of his contract. Plus, the Raiders have shown they are willing to deal for draft choices, getting picks for Gabriel and Bobby Hamilton in the past 24 hours.
Running backs to burn: The Panthers felt halfback Eric Shelton was too good to cut, so they kept him instead of Jamal Robertson. The Panthers are loaded at halfback with DeShaun Foster, DeAngelo Williams, Nick Goings and Shelton. John Fox loves to run the ball. He shouldn't run out of backs this year as he did last season in the playoffs.
Volek stuck with Titans, and vice-versa, for now: Things aren't moving quickly on the Billy Volek trade front. The Chargers are interested but it's not as though there are hot-and-heavy trade talks going on. It's not certain that the Titans would even give up Volek unless the trade price is right. Volek won't be happy if the starting job is given to Kerry Collins, so it's still a fluid situation. Seahawks the player for Branch: If Deion Branch is going to be traded, the Seahawks -- not the Jets -- will be the team to get him. The Seahawks are interested because of Darrell Jackson's knee problems that haven't gone away in two years. Jackson didn't practice or play a down during the preseason. He came off the physically unable to perform list Saturday so he will try to practice to get ready for the season opener against the Lions.
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 1 New Article Added 9/3/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 1 New Article Added 9/3/06)

South teams active at deadline


posted: Monday, September 4, 2006 | Feedback | Print Entry
filed under: New Orleans Saints, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Carolina Panthers, Atlanta Falcons


As teams set their 53-man rosters over the weekend, here are some quick thoughts about the effects of the cuts on the NFC South:

Falcons: Michael Koenen will handle kickoffs, field goals and punting duties in Week 1 vs. the Panthers. Koenen has a strong leg and handled all punts, kickoffs and long field goals (50 yards or more) last season, but veteran kicker Todd Peterson handled most field goals and all PATs. I can't remember the last time in the NFL that one player handled all three kicking phases in a game as the only active kicker. According to the people I spoke to in Atlanta, Koenen simply was the best for both jobs.
What does it do for Falcons? It creates an extra spot on the 45-man roster on game day, and that can upgrade their special teams from a coverage standpoint. The downside for the Falcons would be if Koenen were to suffer an injury or be unable to perform at a high level doing both jobs. Stay tuned.
Panthers: Carolina will enter the season with only two quarterbacks on the roster. Backups Stefan LeFors and Brett Basanez were terminated at the 53-man cut down. LeFors was a fourth-round pick in 2005 who spent last season as the Panthers inactive No. 3 quarterback on game day. Basanez was re-signed to the Panthers' practice squad Sunday, giving them three quarterbacks to practice with during the week.
Saints: By far, the Saints were the most active team in the division over the weekend, putting in claims on a number of players waived by other teams. They were awarded five players off waivers. Wide receiver Terrance Cooper and offensive tackle Rob Petitti (Cowboys), cornerbacks Curtis Deloach (Giants) and Dejuan Groce (Rams) and defensive endMichael Haynes (Bears). It obvious that the Saints have personnel problems on both sides of the ball, and head coach Sean Payton is willing to stay aggressive and try to fix these problems, which is good sign for Saints fans.
Buccaneers: Tampa Bay made a good move under the radar last week, acquiring the rights to tight end Doug Jolley from the New York Jets. Head coach Jon Gruden puts a lot of emphasis on the tight end position in his offense. Jolley is a better receiver than blocker, and he brings another unique dimension to the Buccaneers offense along with Alex Smith, Joey Galloway, Michael Clayton, David Boston and Ike Hilliard. The Buccaneers will carry four tight ends (Anthony Becht, Smith, Jolley and TE Dave Moore) on their 53-man roster as we head toward the regular season.
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 1 New Article Added 9/3/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 1 New Article Added 9/3/06)

South teams active at deadline


posted: Monday, September 4, 2006 | Feedback | Print Entry
filed under: New Orleans Saints, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Carolina Panthers, Atlanta Falcons


As teams set their 53-man rosters over the weekend, here are some quick thoughts about the effects of the cuts on the NFC South:

Falcons: Michael Koenen will handle kickoffs, field goals and punting duties in Week 1 vs. the Panthers. Koenen has a strong leg and handled all punts, kickoffs and long field goals (50 yards or more) last season, but veteran kicker Todd Peterson handled most field goals and all PATs. I can't remember the last time in the NFL that one player handled all three kicking phases in a game as the only active kicker. According to the people I spoke to in Atlanta, Koenen simply was the best for both jobs.
What does it do for Falcons? It creates an extra spot on the 45-man roster on game day, and that can upgrade their special teams from a coverage standpoint. The downside for the Falcons would be if Koenen were to suffer an injury or be unable to perform at a high level doing both jobs. Stay tuned.
Panthers: Carolina will enter the season with only two quarterbacks on the roster. Backups Stefan LeFors and Brett Basanez were terminated at the 53-man cut down. LeFors was a fourth-round pick in 2005 who spent last season as the Panthers inactive No. 3 quarterback on game day. Basanez was re-signed to the Panthers' practice squad Sunday, giving them three quarterbacks to practice with during the week.
Saints: By far, the Saints were the most active team in the division over the weekend, putting in claims on a number of players waived by other teams. They were awarded five players off waivers. Wide receiver Terrance Cooper and offensive tackle Rob Petitti (Cowboys), cornerbacks Curtis Deloach (Giants) and Dejuan Groce (Rams) and defensive endMichael Haynes (Bears). It obvious that the Saints have personnel problems on both sides of the ball, and head coach Sean Payton is willing to stay aggressive and try to fix these problems, which is good sign for Saints fans.
Buccaneers: Tampa Bay made a good move under the radar last week, acquiring the rights to tight end Doug Jolley from the New York Jets. Head coach Jon Gruden puts a lot of emphasis on the tight end position in his offense. Jolley is a better receiver than blocker, and he brings another unique dimension to the Buccaneers offense along with Alex Smith, Joey Galloway, Michael Clayton, David Boston and Ike Hilliard. The Buccaneers will carry four tight ends (Anthony Becht, Smith, Jolley and TE Dave Moore) on their 53-man roster as we head toward the regular season.
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 1 New Article Added 9/3/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 1 New Article Added 9/3/06)

Bolts beef up seconday


posted: Monday, September 4, 2006 | Feedback | Print Entry
filed under: San Diego Chargers, Carolina Panthers, New Orleans Saints


Every week I want to take a little time to answer questions from you, the fans. Here are two that came in last week.:

Jonathan, San Diego: JG, please tell me that the Chargers' secondary will be improved. Was Marlon McCree a good signing? I am most nervous about the secondary.
Hey Jonathan,
I agree the secondary has been a serious cause for concern. While San Diego had the top-ranked run defense last season, the Chargers were 28th vs. the pass.
I think they will be much better in the secondary this season. One of the players you mentioned, McCree, will help. His career got off to a fast start in Jacksonville before he really struggled to get playing time. McCree reinvented himself again last year and had a solid season with the Carolina Panthers.
He is a little undersized for a free safety, which can get him in some trouble in run support. What he does do well, though, is cover, and that will really help the Chargers get better matchups in their base defense. He can handle the tight end in man coverage, and he is a smart player who rarely gets out of position. His presence should help cut down on mental mistakes in the secondary, because he can help get everyone lined up.
The other reason I think the Chargers will be much better in the secondary is the addition of first-round pick Antonio Cromartie. Of all the corners in this year's draft, he had the best pure cover skills. The only thing that prevented him from going in the top 10 were injuries that limited his playing time at Florida State.
It looks like he will begin the season as a backup, but when they go to their nickel package; he is a player he can make a lot of plays in coverage. His presence will also take pressure off former first-round pick Quentin Jammer. I think with more of the spotlight shining on the two new additions, Jammer can settle in, plays his game, and not feel like he has to be the leader of this secondary.
Aaron, Chicago: Why is it when guys like DeAngelo Williams and Reggie Bush come into the league, both weighing around 215 pounds, they are doubted due to durability concerns? Like these guys are soft? I just want to see if you can shed some light on this. Just because a guy is five pounds lighter than the ideal weight, it shouldn't be seen as a glaring weakness. Some guys are football players and can simply play. I bet Williams and Bush battle for ROY honors this year. Thoughts?
Hey Aaron,

I have to agree with you on this one. However, I do have to point out that Bush is closer to 200 pounds, not 215. Nonetheless, I don't think that makes him any less durable.

There is really no correlation between size and durability as it pertains to NFL players. I do know this, though: Guys that were not durable in college are rarely durable when they get to the NFL.
Bush and Williams were both relatively healthy throughout their college careers. Had they been nicked up a lot in college, I would be much quicker to label them as players who could have durability concerns.
A case in point is DeShaun Foster of the Panthers, who is roughly 6-foot, 225 pounds. Domanick Davis is short at 5-foot-9, but he weights in the 220 pound range. Chris Brown (Tennessee) is 6-foot-3, 225 pounds. Yet all three have been consistently nicked up since coming in to the NFL.

These players are not consistently injured because of their lack of size. They are consistently injured because they take a lot of punishment. They tend to run a little erect and don't have that shifty type make-you-miss ability.

I am not saying you have to have that to stay healthy as an NFL back. Take Jerome Bettis, for example. He didn't make too many people miss, but he stayed relatively healthy throughout his career.
What I am saying, though, is guys like Bush and Williams can make you miss, which means they'll take fewer direct hits. As a result, I think both will be a lot more durable than other, bigger backs.

I think another key factor that has to be looked at when talking about durability is how a guy works in the offseason. Does he put the right things into his body? Is he on a solid workout routine? Those are things that also play a role in long term durability. Guys who work hard and take good care of their bodies in the offseason tend to be a little more durable.
Injuries are part of the game. Sometimes it's just as simple as being in the wrong place at the wrong time wen an offensive lineman gets tangled up and falls on a back's lower leg, or it could be a non-contact injury, like cutting and getting caught in a bad chunk of grass.
I do agree that both Williams and Bush will be vying for offensive rookie of the year honors. I think you also could throw Joseph Addai and Laurence Maroney in to that mix, too. I think it is going to be a great race to see who wins. Like you, I don't think size or lack thereof is going to play any role in determining the outcome for these guys. Most will be backups when the season starts, and once they get their shot, they have just as good a chance at staying healthy as the guy that was playing in front of them.
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 1 New Article Added 9/3/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 1 New Article Added 9/3/06)

Bolts beef up seconday


posted: Monday, September 4, 2006 | Feedback | Print Entry
filed under: San Diego Chargers, Carolina Panthers, New Orleans Saints


Every week I want to take a little time to answer questions from you, the fans. Here are two that came in last week.:

Jonathan, San Diego: JG, please tell me that the Chargers' secondary will be improved. Was Marlon McCree a good signing? I am most nervous about the secondary.
Hey Jonathan,
I agree the secondary has been a serious cause for concern. While San Diego had the top-ranked run defense last season, the Chargers were 28th vs. the pass.
I think they will be much better in the secondary this season. One of the players you mentioned, McCree, will help. His career got off to a fast start in Jacksonville before he really struggled to get playing time. McCree reinvented himself again last year and had a solid season with the Carolina Panthers.
He is a little undersized for a free safety, which can get him in some trouble in run support. What he does do well, though, is cover, and that will really help the Chargers get better matchups in their base defense. He can handle the tight end in man coverage, and he is a smart player who rarely gets out of position. His presence should help cut down on mental mistakes in the secondary, because he can help get everyone lined up.
The other reason I think the Chargers will be much better in the secondary is the addition of first-round pick Antonio Cromartie. Of all the corners in this year's draft, he had the best pure cover skills. The only thing that prevented him from going in the top 10 were injuries that limited his playing time at Florida State.
It looks like he will begin the season as a backup, but when they go to their nickel package; he is a player he can make a lot of plays in coverage. His presence will also take pressure off former first-round pick Quentin Jammer. I think with more of the spotlight shining on the two new additions, Jammer can settle in, plays his game, and not feel like he has to be the leader of this secondary.
Aaron, Chicago: Why is it when guys like DeAngelo Williams and Reggie Bush come into the league, both weighing around 215 pounds, they are doubted due to durability concerns? Like these guys are soft? I just want to see if you can shed some light on this. Just because a guy is five pounds lighter than the ideal weight, it shouldn't be seen as a glaring weakness. Some guys are football players and can simply play. I bet Williams and Bush battle for ROY honors this year. Thoughts?
Hey Aaron,

I have to agree with you on this one. However, I do have to point out that Bush is closer to 200 pounds, not 215. Nonetheless, I don't think that makes him any less durable.

There is really no correlation between size and durability as it pertains to NFL players. I do know this, though: Guys that were not durable in college are rarely durable when they get to the NFL.
Bush and Williams were both relatively healthy throughout their college careers. Had they been nicked up a lot in college, I would be much quicker to label them as players who could have durability concerns.
A case in point is DeShaun Foster of the Panthers, who is roughly 6-foot, 225 pounds. Domanick Davis is short at 5-foot-9, but he weights in the 220 pound range. Chris Brown (Tennessee) is 6-foot-3, 225 pounds. Yet all three have been consistently nicked up since coming in to the NFL.

These players are not consistently injured because of their lack of size. They are consistently injured because they take a lot of punishment. They tend to run a little erect and don't have that shifty type make-you-miss ability.

I am not saying you have to have that to stay healthy as an NFL back. Take Jerome Bettis, for example. He didn't make too many people miss, but he stayed relatively healthy throughout his career.
What I am saying, though, is guys like Bush and Williams can make you miss, which means they'll take fewer direct hits. As a result, I think both will be a lot more durable than other, bigger backs.

I think another key factor that has to be looked at when talking about durability is how a guy works in the offseason. Does he put the right things into his body? Is he on a solid workout routine? Those are things that also play a role in long term durability. Guys who work hard and take good care of their bodies in the offseason tend to be a little more durable.
Injuries are part of the game. Sometimes it's just as simple as being in the wrong place at the wrong time wen an offensive lineman gets tangled up and falls on a back's lower leg, or it could be a non-contact injury, like cutting and getting caught in a bad chunk of grass.
I do agree that both Williams and Bush will be vying for offensive rookie of the year honors. I think you also could throw Joseph Addai and Laurence Maroney in to that mix, too. I think it is going to be a great race to see who wins. Like you, I don't think size or lack thereof is going to play any role in determining the outcome for these guys. Most will be backups when the season starts, and once they get their shot, they have just as good a chance at staying healthy as the guy that was playing in front of them.
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 2 New Articles Added 9/4/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 2 New Articles Added 9/4/06)

<TABLE width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD>NFL Rumor Central: Dolphins considering Smith?
</TD><TD align=right width="30%">Other Rumors: MLB | NBA
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE class=tablehead cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=3><TBODY><TR><TD align=middle>You are signed into Insider and have access to this premium feature.
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
<TABLE class=tablehead cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=3><TBODY><TR class=stathead><TD colSpan=3>Tuesday, September 5</TD></TR><TR class=colhead><TD width=65>WHO</TD><TD>INTERESTED</TD><TD>THE SKINNY</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD noWrap align=middle>
Antowain Smith
Texans
</TD><TD>Dolphins?
</TD><TD>Dolphins considering Smith?
<Sep. 5> Smith, who was released by the Texans last week, met with the Dolphins on Monday, according to the South Florida Sun-Sentinel. Smith, who has two career 1,000-yard rushing seasons, gained 659 yards for New Orleans in 2005. With Sammy Morris serving a four-game suspension following a failed drug test, the Dolphins are looking to build depth behind starting RB Ronnie Brown. The team has already added Lee Suggs, who was claimed off waivers from Cleveland.

</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 2 New Articles Added 9/4/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 2 New Articles Added 9/4/06)

<TABLE width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD>NFL Rumor Central: Dolphins considering Smith?
</TD><TD align=right width="30%">Other Rumors: MLB | NBA
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE class=tablehead cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=3><TBODY><TR><TD align=middle>You are signed into Insider and have access to this premium feature.
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
<TABLE class=tablehead cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=3><TBODY><TR class=stathead><TD colSpan=3>Tuesday, September 5</TD></TR><TR class=colhead><TD width=65>WHO</TD><TD>INTERESTED</TD><TD>THE SKINNY</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD noWrap align=middle>
Antowain Smith
Texans
</TD><TD>Dolphins?
</TD><TD>Dolphins considering Smith?
<Sep. 5> Smith, who was released by the Texans last week, met with the Dolphins on Monday, according to the South Florida Sun-Sentinel. Smith, who has two career 1,000-yard rushing seasons, gained 659 yards for New Orleans in 2005. With Sammy Morris serving a four-game suspension following a failed drug test, the Dolphins are looking to build depth behind starting RB Ronnie Brown. The team has already added Lee Suggs, who was claimed off waivers from Cleveland.

</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 2 New Articles Added 9/4/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 2 New Articles Added 9/4/06)

Don't assume NFL is steroid free


posted: Tuesday, September 5, 2006 | Feedback | Print Entry

Tuesday's blog is going to be short as I'm on the road and have to hit the reporting trail early. I had a few ideas for blog subjects, but a line at the end of Rick Maese's superb column warning the NFL to step up its steroid testing got me thinking.


Who will be the NFL's Barry Bonds?
We all know it's a matter of time.
"The NFL season is about to begin," Maese writes, "and from coast to coast we'll find players in pads, fans in seats and league executives with their heads buried in sand. This season should be kicking off under a cloud of steroid suspicion, but in what's either a miracle of marketing or one of black magic, the NFL's recent drug scandal -- twice as salacious as anything that's hit baseball in the past decade -- has raised few eyebrows.
"Is it because there are no steroids in the NFL? Because we love football too much to criticize it? Or more likely: because the NFL suits have spent the past few years bragging about their substance-abuse program and we've grown comfortable taking their words as truth?"
The fantastic reporting by the Charlotte Observer recently about the number of Panthers who doped during the '03 season should be warning enough. It would have been much worse if the Panthers had actually won the game, which they could have. Then what would have happened?
It would have been a mess.
The folks of the NFL and NFLPA are puffing their chests out in defense of their steroid testing. But how will we really know until the league tests reliably for Humane Growth Hormone? As I sit in NFL locker rooms doing interviews I look around and wonder who could be doping. The swelling signs are there -­ the sheer number of massive bodies ­- but not a lot of them are completely ripped, not like many of the allegedly guilty in baseball. But if golfers are talking about steroids creeping into their game, how can we believe football is clean?
We can't, of course. New NFL commissioner Roger Goodell and NFLPA leader Gene Upshaw should learn from MLB and attack this potential problem, as opposed to merely managing it.

Random stuff

? Two mysteries we won't have solved until kickoff: Who will quarterback the Titans, and who will get the jumpstart on a 1,300-yard season for the Broncos?


? New Pats receiver Doug Gabriel got some good advice from Tom Brady in trying to learn the Pats playbook in a week: "If you don't know, ask me."

? This headline in the Kansas City Star tells you all you need to know about the Chiefs' receivers, and the news isn't good.
? Brian Westbrook echoes what roughly 38 Eagles fans wrote me over the weekend: This is a darn talented Philly O.
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 2 New Articles Added 9/4/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 2 New Articles Added 9/4/06)

Don't assume NFL is steroid free


posted: Tuesday, September 5, 2006 | Feedback | Print Entry

Tuesday's blog is going to be short as I'm on the road and have to hit the reporting trail early. I had a few ideas for blog subjects, but a line at the end of Rick Maese's superb column warning the NFL to step up its steroid testing got me thinking.


Who will be the NFL's Barry Bonds?
We all know it's a matter of time.
"The NFL season is about to begin," Maese writes, "and from coast to coast we'll find players in pads, fans in seats and league executives with their heads buried in sand. This season should be kicking off under a cloud of steroid suspicion, but in what's either a miracle of marketing or one of black magic, the NFL's recent drug scandal -- twice as salacious as anything that's hit baseball in the past decade -- has raised few eyebrows.
"Is it because there are no steroids in the NFL? Because we love football too much to criticize it? Or more likely: because the NFL suits have spent the past few years bragging about their substance-abuse program and we've grown comfortable taking their words as truth?"
The fantastic reporting by the Charlotte Observer recently about the number of Panthers who doped during the '03 season should be warning enough. It would have been much worse if the Panthers had actually won the game, which they could have. Then what would have happened?
It would have been a mess.
The folks of the NFL and NFLPA are puffing their chests out in defense of their steroid testing. But how will we really know until the league tests reliably for Humane Growth Hormone? As I sit in NFL locker rooms doing interviews I look around and wonder who could be doping. The swelling signs are there -­ the sheer number of massive bodies ­- but not a lot of them are completely ripped, not like many of the allegedly guilty in baseball. But if golfers are talking about steroids creeping into their game, how can we believe football is clean?
We can't, of course. New NFL commissioner Roger Goodell and NFLPA leader Gene Upshaw should learn from MLB and attack this potential problem, as opposed to merely managing it.

Random stuff

? Two mysteries we won't have solved until kickoff: Who will quarterback the Titans, and who will get the jumpstart on a 1,300-yard season for the Broncos?


? New Pats receiver Doug Gabriel got some good advice from Tom Brady in trying to learn the Pats playbook in a week: "If you don't know, ask me."

? This headline in the Kansas City Star tells you all you need to know about the Chiefs' receivers, and the news isn't good.
? Brian Westbrook echoes what roughly 38 Eagles fans wrote me over the weekend: This is a darn talented Philly O.
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 2 New Articles Added 9/4/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 2 New Articles Added 9/4/06)

Tuesday, September 5, 2006
<TABLE style="PADDING-BOTTOM: 7px" cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD vAlign=top> </TD><TD vAlign=top></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>Scouting Matchups: Week 1


<!-- end pagetitle --><!-- begin bylinebox -->
By Scouts, Inc.


<!-- begin presby2 -->
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<TABLE class=text11 cellSpacing=4 cellPadding=0 width=552 border=0><TBODY><TR vAlign=top><TD width="100%"><TABLE id=inlinetable cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=162 align=right border=0><TBODY><TR><TH style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffffff" colSpan=2></TH><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ececec" vAlign=top><TD width=3> </TD><TD width=156>Only Insiders get access to all of Scouts Inc.'s, in-depth NFL coverage, as well as insight from ESPN's stable of football analysts.
? Take the Insider tour
? Become an Insider
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>NFL advance scouts watch games in person, studying everything from personnel packages to play-calling signals, and on film, looking at individual players, as well as a team's various schemes and recent trends. The goal? Provide their coaching staff with the best possible means of preparation during the week of practice. Scouts Inc. does the same thing, compiling the best advance scouting reports available and delivering them to you by Tuesday afternoon on ESPN.com Insider. On Friday, after breaking down more game film, Scouts Inc. files an updated report with a deeper look at each game, spotlighting key individual matchups and trends and predicting the final score.

<TABLE class=tablehead cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=3><TBODY><TR class=stathead><TD width=100>Matchup</TD><TD>Scouting</TD></TR><TR class=colhead><TD colSpan=2>THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 7, 2006</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD align=middle>
Miami
at
Pittsburgh
Thu 8:30 PM ET</TD><TD>Dolphins at Steelers
Although they did not qualify for the playoffs, the Dolphins won their last six games last season. The only team to finish 2005 hotter than Miami was Pittsburgh, which won its last eight in a row, including three road playoff games and the Super Bowl. Now the Super Bowl champs open against an up-and-coming Dolphins team that hopes to be where the Steelers are.

Beyond the status of each team is the drama surrounding each team's starting quarterback. Pittsburgh's Ben Roethlisberger had the motorcycle accident and now the emergency appendectomy, forcing the Steelers to go with backup Charlie Batch on short notice. Miami's Daunte Culpepper has impressed everyone with his preseason performance after undergoing major knee surgery, but now he has to do it in the regular season against a very good defense.

This is going to be a very physical, well-coached game. Running room will be very difficult to come by, and the team with the better quarterback play probably will end up with the victory. Expect a tight battle where special teams and field position are paramount.
? Complete advance scouting report

</TD></TR><TR class=colhead><TD colSpan=2>SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 10, 2006</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD align=middle>
Baltimore
at
Tampa Bay
Sun 1:00 PM ET</TD><TD>Ravens at Buccaneers
This intriguing matchup features two teams with playoff-caliber defenses and outstanding running backs in Jamal Lewis and Cadillac Williams.

For the Ravens, the offseason was about getting a quarterback (Steve McNair) in place who could lead this organization back to the Super Bowl. The Ravens finally have a strong enough supporting cast on offense that the defense doesn't have to carry this team in 2006. Defensive coordinator Rex Ryan was one of the most impressive young coaches in the league last season. Let's see what he can do this year with a healthy Ray Lewis and Ed Reed.

For the Buccaneers, head coach Jon Gruden is one of the best gameday coaches in the NFL when it comes to offensive playcalling. QB Chris Simms enters his first season has the full-time signal caller with a strong supporting cast at the skill positions. Again, the Buccaneers should have one of the top defenses in the NFL, led by Simeon Rice, Anthony McFarland, Derrick Brooks and Ronde Barber.
? Complete advance scouting report

</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD align=middle>
Atlanta
at
Carolina
Sun 1:00 PM ET</TD><TD>Falcons at Panthers
Winning divisional games is critical in the NFL. This critical NFC South game has all the makings of a classic showdown. Both teams have high expectations and need to get off to a fast start due to their tough schedules.

Falcons' offensive coordinator Greg Knapp will rely on the running game to set up the passing game. The Falcons will rely on a short, quick rhythm passing attack to alter the Panthers fierce pass rush. His ability to make in-game adjustments will be critical in the outcome of this game against an aggressive Carolina defense. Look for the Panthers to have their work cut out for them in containing QB Michael Vick and RB Warrick Dunn.

The Panthers will come out with their power running game and attack the Falcons' front seven with RB DeShaun Foster. The Falcons must improve their deficiencies against the run that haunted this team in 2005. With the return of Pro Bowl receiver Steve Smith. the Panthers should get back on track in Week 1.
? Complete advance scouting report

</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD align=middle>
Denver
at
St. Louis
Sun 1:00 PM ET</TD><TD>Broncos at Rams
This is a showcase of two powerful running games. Running back Steven Jackson will carry the load for the Rams, with Marshall Faulk, who is out for the season. It will be interesting to see how the new-look Rams fair this season after almost a decade of Dick Vermeil and Mike Martz.

Mike Bell will be lead the way for the Broncos, who Mike Shanahan has courageously opted to start an undrafted rookie running back ahead of veteran running backs Tatum Bell and Cedric Cobbs.
? Complete advance scouting report

</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD align=middle>
Buffalo
at
New England
Sun 1:00 PM ET</TD><TD>Bills at Patriots
This would seem to be a lopsided opener for the Patriots, but there are always several question marks to be answered in a team's first game. If Tedy Bruschi is suited up how will he perform not participating in any of the preseason games? How will the loss of Willie McGinest affect the defense? Who will be the go-to guy in the passing game without the presence of Deion Branch? How much will each back (Corey Dillon and Laurence Maroney) carry the mail? There are few things to watch if you're a Patriot fan.

Bills fans have to be a bit nervous going into Foxborough with a new coaching staff and a young unproven quarterback. How will J.P. Losman react on the road in front of a hostile crowd? Can the Bills establish any kind of a running game vs. one of the best defensive lines in the league? How will the change in the defensive philosophy (going smaller and quicker up front) affect the Bills' ability to stop the running game? There are a lot of good reasons to watch this game if you're a fan of either team.
? Complete advance scouting report

</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD align=middle>
Philadelphia
at
Houston
Sun 1:00 PM ET</TD><TD>Eagles at Texans
This seems to be a case of two teams heading in different directions. Houston has been a perennial doormat that seems to be getting stronger. Philadelphia, on the other hand, has been a dominant team that is heading in the other direction. Philadelphia's six-win season in 2005 was a major setback for a team that won 12 and 13 games in the previous two seasons.

Both teams need to start out well to get the bad taste of last season out of their mouths. There is a lot of excitement in Houston with new head coach Gary Kubiak, and the home crowd should be noisy. But don't expect the Eagles to roll over and play dead. They have been a good road team over the past few seasons, winning 58 percent of the time over the last three years.
? Complete advance scouting report

</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD align=middle>
New Orleans
at
Cleveland
Sun 1:00 PM ET</TD><TD>Saints at Browns
Both teams are looking to rebound and get off to fast starts in 2006. Year two of the Romeo Crennel era begins with high expectations after a very productive offseason. However, the Browns have suffered some adversity in the preseason due to the injury of prized free-agent C LeCharles Bentley. Second-year QB Charlie Frye has a lot of potential, and with the return of TE Kellen Winslow and WR Braylon Edwards, the Browns have two explosive playmakers who can hopefully get this offense back on track. The new additions of NT Ted Washington and OLB Willie McGinest should help improve a run defense that finished 30th against the run in 05.

The Saints overcame a lot in 2005. New head coach Sean Payton has the uphill battle of bringing respectability back to this organization. The Saints have some explosive playmakers on offense with WR Joe Horn and the combination of RB Deuce McAllister and the most exciting rookie of this year's draft class, Reggie Bush. Defensively, the Saints must find a way to stop RB Reuben Droughns. They finished in the bottom five last season against the run. However, they have two explosive pass rushers in defensive ends Charles Grant and Will Smith who will fun to watch in 2006.
? Complete advance scouting report

</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD align=middle>
Seattle
at
Detroit
Sun 1:00 PM ET</TD><TD>Seahawks at Lions
The defending NFC champions head back to the site of their Super Bowl XL loss to Pittsburgh. The Seahawks should fare much better on this trip to Ford Field as the stadium will be filled with skeptical Lions fans waiting to see the performance of Rod Marinelli's "new attitude" team. Seattle is a very balanced and talented team that will be trying to buck trends and be the first Super Bowl loser to return to the playoffs.

The Lions need to take the field with not only a new attitude but much-improved performance to garner the support of historically apathetic fans. Marinelli's troops have endured a tougher training camp and must rise to the new head coach's challenges. If they do, the Lions can give Seattle a nice opening game test and compete this season with Minnesota and Green Bay, but they are not yet ready for the Bears. Seattle is a superior team across the board, but some of Seattle's weaknesses could be exposed by the Lions on Sunday.
? Complete advance scouting report

</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD align=middle>
NY Jets
at
Tennessee
Sun 1:00 PM ET</TD><TD>Jets at Titans
There are so many reasons to kick your feet up and watch these two struggling football teams. The New York Jets and new head coach Eric Mangini are starting out the 2006 season with several questions that were not answered in the preseason. The Jets have struggled with being consistent on both offense and defense. The Jets have not established a running game or who will be the No. 1 back. It is interesting that they would trade their top tight end (Doug Jolley) and a reliable backup quarterback (Brooks Bollinger) before the season for future draft picks.

For the Titans, it will be very interesting to see how much rookie quarterback Vince Young will play. After acquiring Kerry Collins late in the preseason there is definitely a quarterback controversy in Nashville. Coach Jeff Fisher and his staff are on the hot seat to win now, while Eric Mangini might have somewhat of a pass in his first season. This game might be between two of the NFL's bottom teams, but there should still be plenty to watch.
? Complete advance scouting report

</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD align=middle>
Cincinnati
at
Kansas City
Sun 1:00 PM ET</TD><TD>Bengals at Chiefs
This game pits two teams that are thinking playoffs. For the Bengals, they got Carson Palmer back from his offseason knee surgery. We know the Bengals are gong to be explosive on the offensive side of the ball, but where is the defense right now? Will this team finally be able to step up and stop the run? Speaking of running the football, the Chiefs have one of the best in the game in Larry Johnson. Had Johnson been the starter all of last season, he would have made a serious run at the NFL's single season rushing record.

The biggest position unit under the microscope in this one? It has to be the Chiefs' offensive line. Gone are the two bookend OTs, Willie Roaf and John Welbourn, who opted for retirement prior to the start of training camp. The biggest reason to watch this game? How about Bengals WR Chad Johnson. Is he making another list? And if so, will Ty Law become the first victim to earn the dreaded check mark?
? Complete advance scouting report

</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD align=middle>
Chicago
at
Green Bay
Sun 4:15 PM ET</TD><TD>Bears at Packers
Bears coach Lovie Smith's No. 1 goal every year is beating the rival Green Bay Packers. His defending NFC North Champions head back to the Lambeau Field to attempt to achieve that goal, repeat as division winners and then win in the playoffs aiming at Super Bowl XLI in Miami.

The No. 1 nemesis working to not let that happen will be Brett Favre. The Packers will truly have a home-field advantage with a sold-out crowd of Cheeseheads screaming for an upset. Anything is possible when Favre has the football.
? Complete advance scouting report

</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD align=middle>
San Francisco
at
Arizona
Sun 4:15 PM ET</TD><TD>49ers at Cardinals
Kurt Warner and the Arizona Cardinals are poised to make a run for the playoffs in 2006. With the addition of running back Edgerrin James and explosive weapons such as All-Pro wide receivers Anquan Boldin and Larry Fitzgerald, the Cardinals should finally take flight.

The San Francisco 49ers have a new-look offense this year, with second-year quarterback Alex Smith at the helm and the addition of WR Antonio Bryant. This should be an exciting game to watch offensively, with the potential for big points to be scored by both offenses.
? Complete advance scouting report

</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD align=middle>
Dallas
at
Jacksonville
Sun 4:15 PM ET</TD><TD>Cowboys at Jaguars
Both teams have received a lot of hype this year and are expected to challenge for division titles in 2006. There is going to be some good drama going into this game. Will Terrell Owens start vs. Jacksonville? Since both teams field solid defenses, this game could come down to field position and turnovers. Dallas has the better receiving corps, but can its offensive line protect the immobile Bledsoe against a good Jaguars' defensive front.
? Complete advance scouting report

</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD align=middle>
Indianapolis
at
NY Giants
Sun 8:15 PM ET</TD><TD>Colts at Giants
This is a natural. The obvious factor is the matchup of the Manning brothers, Peyton for Indianapolis and Eli for New York. Although this game will do little to determine which one will have a more honored place in football history, it will give the winner bragging rights in family gatherings.

The Colts are an obvious favorite to make it into the postseason and the Giants are on the threshold. Because of this, the Giants really want to start the season (especially at home) on the right foot. Don't expect the Colts to take this game lightly, either. They still feel the sting of their playoff loss to the Steelers and want to prove that last season's run of 13-straight wins before ending up with a 14-2 season was not a fluke.
? Complete advance scouting report

</TD></TR><TR class=colhead><TD colSpan=2>MONDAY SEPTEMBER 11, 2006</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD align=middle>
Minnesota
at
Washington
Mon 7:00 PM ET</TD><TD>Vikings at Redskins
The Redskins and Vikings get things started on Monday Night Football on ESPN. For the Redskins, we get to see the regular season debut of Al Saunders' offense, which wasn't very impressive in the preseason. Hopefully the 95 percent that he didn't show in preseason is more successful than the five percent he did show. The Redskins need to pull out all the stops if they are going to make a run for the playoffs. That starts with a win at home vs. the Vikings.
? Complete advance scouting report

</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD align=middle>
San Diego
at
Oakland
Mon 10:15 PM ET</TD><TD>Chargers at Raiders
This is a huge rivalry game. It will mark the first start for third-year QB Philip Rivers as life after Drew Brees begins. The Oakland Raiders will also have a new QB at the helm, as they signed Aaron Brooks this offseason. Oakland star receiver Randy Moss is coming off an injury plagued season, but he and Brooks really seemed to start connecting towards the end of the preseason. Oakland's defense struggled to force turnovers last season, but defensive coordinator Rob Ryan has a young, hungry and athletic group he is working with this season.
? Complete advance scouting report

</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 2 New Articles Added 9/4/06)

Re: 2NFL - ESPN Insider Writeups, etc. 2 New Articles Added 9/4/06)

Tuesday, September 5, 2006
<TABLE style="PADDING-BOTTOM: 7px" cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD vAlign=top> </TD><TD vAlign=top></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>Scouting Matchups: Week 1


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By Scouts, Inc.


<!-- begin presby2 -->
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<TABLE class=text11 cellSpacing=4 cellPadding=0 width=552 border=0><TBODY><TR vAlign=top><TD width="100%"><TABLE id=inlinetable cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=162 align=right border=0><TBODY><TR><TH style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffffff" colSpan=2></TH><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ececec" vAlign=top><TD width=3> </TD><TD width=156>Only Insiders get access to all of Scouts Inc.'s, in-depth NFL coverage, as well as insight from ESPN's stable of football analysts.
? Take the Insider tour
? Become an Insider
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>NFL advance scouts watch games in person, studying everything from personnel packages to play-calling signals, and on film, looking at individual players, as well as a team's various schemes and recent trends. The goal? Provide their coaching staff with the best possible means of preparation during the week of practice. Scouts Inc. does the same thing, compiling the best advance scouting reports available and delivering them to you by Tuesday afternoon on ESPN.com Insider. On Friday, after breaking down more game film, Scouts Inc. files an updated report with a deeper look at each game, spotlighting key individual matchups and trends and predicting the final score.

<TABLE class=tablehead cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=3><TBODY><TR class=stathead><TD width=100>Matchup</TD><TD>Scouting</TD></TR><TR class=colhead><TD colSpan=2>THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 7, 2006</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD align=middle>
Miami
at
Pittsburgh
Thu 8:30 PM ET</TD><TD>Dolphins at Steelers
Although they did not qualify for the playoffs, the Dolphins won their last six games last season. The only team to finish 2005 hotter than Miami was Pittsburgh, which won its last eight in a row, including three road playoff games and the Super Bowl. Now the Super Bowl champs open against an up-and-coming Dolphins team that hopes to be where the Steelers are.

Beyond the status of each team is the drama surrounding each team's starting quarterback. Pittsburgh's Ben Roethlisberger had the motorcycle accident and now the emergency appendectomy, forcing the Steelers to go with backup Charlie Batch on short notice. Miami's Daunte Culpepper has impressed everyone with his preseason performance after undergoing major knee surgery, but now he has to do it in the regular season against a very good defense.

This is going to be a very physical, well-coached game. Running room will be very difficult to come by, and the team with the better quarterback play probably will end up with the victory. Expect a tight battle where special teams and field position are paramount.
? Complete advance scouting report

</TD></TR><TR class=colhead><TD colSpan=2>SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 10, 2006</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD align=middle>
Baltimore
at
Tampa Bay
Sun 1:00 PM ET</TD><TD>Ravens at Buccaneers
This intriguing matchup features two teams with playoff-caliber defenses and outstanding running backs in Jamal Lewis and Cadillac Williams.

For the Ravens, the offseason was about getting a quarterback (Steve McNair) in place who could lead this organization back to the Super Bowl. The Ravens finally have a strong enough supporting cast on offense that the defense doesn't have to carry this team in 2006. Defensive coordinator Rex Ryan was one of the most impressive young coaches in the league last season. Let's see what he can do this year with a healthy Ray Lewis and Ed Reed.

For the Buccaneers, head coach Jon Gruden is one of the best gameday coaches in the NFL when it comes to offensive playcalling. QB Chris Simms enters his first season has the full-time signal caller with a strong supporting cast at the skill positions. Again, the Buccaneers should have one of the top defenses in the NFL, led by Simeon Rice, Anthony McFarland, Derrick Brooks and Ronde Barber.
? Complete advance scouting report

</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD align=middle>
Atlanta
at
Carolina
Sun 1:00 PM ET</TD><TD>Falcons at Panthers
Winning divisional games is critical in the NFL. This critical NFC South game has all the makings of a classic showdown. Both teams have high expectations and need to get off to a fast start due to their tough schedules.

Falcons' offensive coordinator Greg Knapp will rely on the running game to set up the passing game. The Falcons will rely on a short, quick rhythm passing attack to alter the Panthers fierce pass rush. His ability to make in-game adjustments will be critical in the outcome of this game against an aggressive Carolina defense. Look for the Panthers to have their work cut out for them in containing QB Michael Vick and RB Warrick Dunn.

The Panthers will come out with their power running game and attack the Falcons' front seven with RB DeShaun Foster. The Falcons must improve their deficiencies against the run that haunted this team in 2005. With the return of Pro Bowl receiver Steve Smith. the Panthers should get back on track in Week 1.
? Complete advance scouting report

</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD align=middle>
Denver
at
St. Louis
Sun 1:00 PM ET</TD><TD>Broncos at Rams
This is a showcase of two powerful running games. Running back Steven Jackson will carry the load for the Rams, with Marshall Faulk, who is out for the season. It will be interesting to see how the new-look Rams fair this season after almost a decade of Dick Vermeil and Mike Martz.

Mike Bell will be lead the way for the Broncos, who Mike Shanahan has courageously opted to start an undrafted rookie running back ahead of veteran running backs Tatum Bell and Cedric Cobbs.
? Complete advance scouting report

</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD align=middle>
Buffalo
at
New England
Sun 1:00 PM ET</TD><TD>Bills at Patriots
This would seem to be a lopsided opener for the Patriots, but there are always several question marks to be answered in a team's first game. If Tedy Bruschi is suited up how will he perform not participating in any of the preseason games? How will the loss of Willie McGinest affect the defense? Who will be the go-to guy in the passing game without the presence of Deion Branch? How much will each back (Corey Dillon and Laurence Maroney) carry the mail? There are few things to watch if you're a Patriot fan.

Bills fans have to be a bit nervous going into Foxborough with a new coaching staff and a young unproven quarterback. How will J.P. Losman react on the road in front of a hostile crowd? Can the Bills establish any kind of a running game vs. one of the best defensive lines in the league? How will the change in the defensive philosophy (going smaller and quicker up front) affect the Bills' ability to stop the running game? There are a lot of good reasons to watch this game if you're a fan of either team.
? Complete advance scouting report

</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD align=middle>
Philadelphia
at
Houston
Sun 1:00 PM ET</TD><TD>Eagles at Texans
This seems to be a case of two teams heading in different directions. Houston has been a perennial doormat that seems to be getting stronger. Philadelphia, on the other hand, has been a dominant team that is heading in the other direction. Philadelphia's six-win season in 2005 was a major setback for a team that won 12 and 13 games in the previous two seasons.

Both teams need to start out well to get the bad taste of last season out of their mouths. There is a lot of excitement in Houston with new head coach Gary Kubiak, and the home crowd should be noisy. But don't expect the Eagles to roll over and play dead. They have been a good road team over the past few seasons, winning 58 percent of the time over the last three years.
? Complete advance scouting report

</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD align=middle>
New Orleans
at
Cleveland
Sun 1:00 PM ET</TD><TD>Saints at Browns
Both teams are looking to rebound and get off to fast starts in 2006. Year two of the Romeo Crennel era begins with high expectations after a very productive offseason. However, the Browns have suffered some adversity in the preseason due to the injury of prized free-agent C LeCharles Bentley. Second-year QB Charlie Frye has a lot of potential, and with the return of TE Kellen Winslow and WR Braylon Edwards, the Browns have two explosive playmakers who can hopefully get this offense back on track. The new additions of NT Ted Washington and OLB Willie McGinest should help improve a run defense that finished 30th against the run in 05.

The Saints overcame a lot in 2005. New head coach Sean Payton has the uphill battle of bringing respectability back to this organization. The Saints have some explosive playmakers on offense with WR Joe Horn and the combination of RB Deuce McAllister and the most exciting rookie of this year's draft class, Reggie Bush. Defensively, the Saints must find a way to stop RB Reuben Droughns. They finished in the bottom five last season against the run. However, they have two explosive pass rushers in defensive ends Charles Grant and Will Smith who will fun to watch in 2006.
? Complete advance scouting report

</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD align=middle>
Seattle
at
Detroit
Sun 1:00 PM ET</TD><TD>Seahawks at Lions
The defending NFC champions head back to the site of their Super Bowl XL loss to Pittsburgh. The Seahawks should fare much better on this trip to Ford Field as the stadium will be filled with skeptical Lions fans waiting to see the performance of Rod Marinelli's "new attitude" team. Seattle is a very balanced and talented team that will be trying to buck trends and be the first Super Bowl loser to return to the playoffs.

The Lions need to take the field with not only a new attitude but much-improved performance to garner the support of historically apathetic fans. Marinelli's troops have endured a tougher training camp and must rise to the new head coach's challenges. If they do, the Lions can give Seattle a nice opening game test and compete this season with Minnesota and Green Bay, but they are not yet ready for the Bears. Seattle is a superior team across the board, but some of Seattle's weaknesses could be exposed by the Lions on Sunday.
? Complete advance scouting report

</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD align=middle>
NY Jets
at
Tennessee
Sun 1:00 PM ET</TD><TD>Jets at Titans
There are so many reasons to kick your feet up and watch these two struggling football teams. The New York Jets and new head coach Eric Mangini are starting out the 2006 season with several questions that were not answered in the preseason. The Jets have struggled with being consistent on both offense and defense. The Jets have not established a running game or who will be the No. 1 back. It is interesting that they would trade their top tight end (Doug Jolley) and a reliable backup quarterback (Brooks Bollinger) before the season for future draft picks.

For the Titans, it will be very interesting to see how much rookie quarterback Vince Young will play. After acquiring Kerry Collins late in the preseason there is definitely a quarterback controversy in Nashville. Coach Jeff Fisher and his staff are on the hot seat to win now, while Eric Mangini might have somewhat of a pass in his first season. This game might be between two of the NFL's bottom teams, but there should still be plenty to watch.
? Complete advance scouting report

</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD align=middle>
Cincinnati
at
Kansas City
Sun 1:00 PM ET</TD><TD>Bengals at Chiefs
This game pits two teams that are thinking playoffs. For the Bengals, they got Carson Palmer back from his offseason knee surgery. We know the Bengals are gong to be explosive on the offensive side of the ball, but where is the defense right now? Will this team finally be able to step up and stop the run? Speaking of running the football, the Chiefs have one of the best in the game in Larry Johnson. Had Johnson been the starter all of last season, he would have made a serious run at the NFL's single season rushing record.

The biggest position unit under the microscope in this one? It has to be the Chiefs' offensive line. Gone are the two bookend OTs, Willie Roaf and John Welbourn, who opted for retirement prior to the start of training camp. The biggest reason to watch this game? How about Bengals WR Chad Johnson. Is he making another list? And if so, will Ty Law become the first victim to earn the dreaded check mark?
? Complete advance scouting report

</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD align=middle>
Chicago
at
Green Bay
Sun 4:15 PM ET</TD><TD>Bears at Packers
Bears coach Lovie Smith's No. 1 goal every year is beating the rival Green Bay Packers. His defending NFC North Champions head back to the Lambeau Field to attempt to achieve that goal, repeat as division winners and then win in the playoffs aiming at Super Bowl XLI in Miami.

The No. 1 nemesis working to not let that happen will be Brett Favre. The Packers will truly have a home-field advantage with a sold-out crowd of Cheeseheads screaming for an upset. Anything is possible when Favre has the football.
? Complete advance scouting report

</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD align=middle>
San Francisco
at
Arizona
Sun 4:15 PM ET</TD><TD>49ers at Cardinals
Kurt Warner and the Arizona Cardinals are poised to make a run for the playoffs in 2006. With the addition of running back Edgerrin James and explosive weapons such as All-Pro wide receivers Anquan Boldin and Larry Fitzgerald, the Cardinals should finally take flight.

The San Francisco 49ers have a new-look offense this year, with second-year quarterback Alex Smith at the helm and the addition of WR Antonio Bryant. This should be an exciting game to watch offensively, with the potential for big points to be scored by both offenses.
? Complete advance scouting report

</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD align=middle>
Dallas
at
Jacksonville
Sun 4:15 PM ET</TD><TD>Cowboys at Jaguars
Both teams have received a lot of hype this year and are expected to challenge for division titles in 2006. There is going to be some good drama going into this game. Will Terrell Owens start vs. Jacksonville? Since both teams field solid defenses, this game could come down to field position and turnovers. Dallas has the better receiving corps, but can its offensive line protect the immobile Bledsoe against a good Jaguars' defensive front.
? Complete advance scouting report

</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD align=middle>
Indianapolis
at
NY Giants
Sun 8:15 PM ET</TD><TD>Colts at Giants
This is a natural. The obvious factor is the matchup of the Manning brothers, Peyton for Indianapolis and Eli for New York. Although this game will do little to determine which one will have a more honored place in football history, it will give the winner bragging rights in family gatherings.

The Colts are an obvious favorite to make it into the postseason and the Giants are on the threshold. Because of this, the Giants really want to start the season (especially at home) on the right foot. Don't expect the Colts to take this game lightly, either. They still feel the sting of their playoff loss to the Steelers and want to prove that last season's run of 13-straight wins before ending up with a 14-2 season was not a fluke.
? Complete advance scouting report

</TD></TR><TR class=colhead><TD colSpan=2>MONDAY SEPTEMBER 11, 2006</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD align=middle>
Minnesota
at
Washington
Mon 7:00 PM ET</TD><TD>Vikings at Redskins
The Redskins and Vikings get things started on Monday Night Football on ESPN. For the Redskins, we get to see the regular season debut of Al Saunders' offense, which wasn't very impressive in the preseason. Hopefully the 95 percent that he didn't show in preseason is more successful than the five percent he did show. The Redskins need to pull out all the stops if they are going to make a run for the playoffs. That starts with a win at home vs. the Vikings.
? Complete advance scouting report

</TD></TR><TR class=oddrow vAlign=top><TD align=middle>
San Diego
at
Oakland
Mon 10:15 PM ET</TD><TD>Chargers at Raiders
This is a huge rivalry game. It will mark the first start for third-year QB Philip Rivers as life after Drew Brees begins. The Oakland Raiders will also have a new QB at the helm, as they signed Aaron Brooks this offseason. Oakland star receiver Randy Moss is coming off an injury plagued season, but he and Brooks really seemed to start connecting towards the end of the preseason. Oakland's defense struggled to force turnovers last season, but defensive coordinator Rob Ryan has a young, hungry and athletic group he is working with this season.
? Complete advance scouting report

</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 
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