Thursday, July 22, 2010

What's wrong with college basketball?

NORTH AUGUSTA, S.C. -- The image of college basketball has taken a beating in recent years, with rumors, murmurs and innuendo about cheating spreading like wildfire. Cynics believe no one is trying to follow the NCAA rulebook and that the game has fallen victim to the begging hands of agents, runners and hangers-on looking to collect on the next NBA star.

Is it that bad? What are the real problems? And is the NCAA doing enough to fix those problems?

To get the answers, ESPN.com went to the sources. During the EYBL Peach Jam last week, we interviewed 20 high-profile head coaches, representing each of the six power conferences. With the promise of full anonymity, we asked them to tell the truth about their sport.

And they did.

What is your least favorite part of summer recruiting?

No one likes the constant travel, the bad basketball and the emphasis on individual skills instead of team play.

But of the coaches surveyed, many -- eight of the 20 -- cited the time away from campus and their own players as the biggest problem with the summertime.

"I have my team over for a barbecue before I leave in July,'' one coach said. "Little do they know it's a farewell, not a welcome barbecue.''

"You walk into a living room and promise a mother that you'll be there for her son,'' said another. "And as soon as they get on campus, you're gone.''

"They're all on campus and I'm on the road,'' added another. "If they do something stupid, I'm going to get fired -- but I can't be there to see what they're doing.''

Some other popular grievances:

"What don't I like? All of it. I don't think there should be summer recruiting, period. They want to clean it up? Get rid of it.''

"I'll tell you another problem -- 70 percent of the kids we're sitting here watching should be in summer school. They shouldn't be here.''

"What don't I like about summer? Everything. The babysitting, the ass-kissing. Does that cover it?''

If you could change, add or delete one rule in the NCAA Manual, what would it be?

Like the endless rulebook, the suggestions here were endless. In fact, there were so many opinions that it was impossible to get any sort of consensus.

One coach even offered a sweeping renovation: "All of it. Get rid of the whole thing. There are so many stupid rules in that thing that you can't enforce. We need to throw it away.''

The hottest topics?

• April recruiting: In 2009, the NCAA board accepted a proposal from the Basketball Issues Committee to prevent college coaches from evaluating prospects in April, unless the prospects are on a high school, prep school or junior college campus. The idea was to keep high school kids in school.

"That passed with 60 percent of the vote,'' one coach said. "Where are all those people who were in favor of eliminating it?''

Apparently overruled, because no one seems happy that the spring evaluation period essentially has been eliminated.

"They stopped it because they didn't want the kids out of school,'' one coach said. "Well, they're still having the events, so why can't we go?''

"Give me April and time in July off the road so I can be with my players,'' another said, combining the two biggest complaints. "Everyone likes to talk about the APR [Academic Progress Rate] and they want to hold us accountable for the APR. Well, let me be on campus in the summer when my guys are getting started. Let me make sure they get off on the right foot.''

• Phone calls: In an age of immediate technology, most everyone agreed that the limit on phone calls was laughable, though there was one dissenter who said, "To me, your brain is like this [making a fist] and with enough phone calls to a kid, you can mold that brain by twisting it and turning it with the information.''

That coach, however, was a lone wolf screaming in the wind.

"Everyone has caller ID; everyone has unlimited texting. If you don't want to talk to me, hit ignore. I hit ignore all the time.''

"I get a kick out of the phone calls. Who gets caught with that anymore? It's a joke. They're out there catching the guy with the one phone. How about the guy with two and three bat phones?''
• The so-called bump rule: Back in the day, summer league games ended with an on-court receiving line, with coaches lined up to glad-hand and talk to the prospects and their coaches.

It got so ridiculous that the NCAA decided to make the summer an evaluation-only period. That means no talking at all, as in no hello in a crowded hallway.

"We have the NCAA gestapettes around here like World Cup officials,'' one coach said, referring to the NCAA representatives -- most of whom are women -- who monitor the summer circuit. "You smile at a kid, they give you a yellow card. Do it twice, it's a red card and you're off the road.''

How many of your peers do you trust?

Let's put it this way: There is more honor in politics. Here's the breakdown:

• Eight said flat-out no, they do not trust their peers.

"No, not at all. Maybe some of it is hearsay, but I don't trust them at all.''

• Five said they trust fewer than 10 of their colleagues.

"How many? Five,'' one coach said. Five percent? "No, five total,'' he said. "And those five are my assistants.''

• Three said they actually have faith in their fellow coaches and trust "most."

"I'd say 95 percent. There have been very few times in my career where someone did something absolutely underhanded to me. It's happened, but not a lot.''

• One said 50 percent with a caveat.

"Half, but maybe I'm overly optimistic.''

• One dodged the question.

"That's a loaded question. I think at heart, coaches are in it for the right reason. But I also know that everyone is trying to gain an advantage.''

• One evaded it.

"I would say I respect everybody because I know how hard they work.''

• One gave an answer within a non-answer.

"Well, everybody talks about you. You do this long enough, someone is going to say something bad about you. Last year someone said I didn't go to practice.''

The one thing everyone agreed on: The lack of trust is disheartening.

"I would send my kid to play for seven coaches,'' another said, before going on to name them. Those names, however, could compromise his identity, so they won't be revealed here.

"It's sad,'' another coach said. "I grew up in this game with an idea of what I thought it was or what I thought it should be. Now I see it's not like that at all. You have low- to mid-major guys aspiring to move up who will do anything to get there and you have guys who, once they get used to a certain lifestyle, will do whatever it takes to keep it.''

"There's less of a brotherhood here than there is in football and that bothers me,'' another added. "We have more guys stabbing each other in the back or using you guys [the media] to go after their agenda. That's a big problem.''

How many programs do you think are committing major violations? Secondary? And why does no one snitch?

Here's the silver lining for college basketball: Virtually every coach thinks that the majority of Division I programs are not intentionally breaking major rules. Of the 20, only four said 25 percent or more of the programs were, in the words of one coach, "committing felonies.''

"I had a question about e-mailing a kid and I asked another coach,'' someone explained. "He thought we could; I thought we couldn't. We both called our compliance directors and got two different answers."

So why, then, do most people think college basketball is like the Wild Wild West, full of outlaws and renegades?

Backstabbing.

"Here's what I think happens a lot -- a team loses a kid to someone else and all of a sudden that someone else is cheating. Every time North Carolina loses a kid, someone else is cheating. It's like there's so much arrogance with them; they can't believe someone would rather go somewhere else, so the other team has to be cheating.''

Those who have been around the game the longest will tell you cheating has been going on as long as the game has been played.

"In the old days, the coaches had bird dogs. A guy would walk in a gym and you knew, 'OK, he's working for Frank McGuire; he's working for Al McGuire.' But funny enough, there was almost an honor in the fact that it was so out in the open. Now you don't know who the bad guys are.''

Indeed, most everyone agrees that the cheaters have become far more nuanced. Gone are the days of the bags of money; in their place are people inventing ways to circumvent the meaning of a rule.

"I know guys help a kid get into a school that's not really a school. Is it breaking a rule? Technically, no. Is it on the up and up? Absolutely not. I don't think guys are climbing in windows and changing grades, but they are massaging things to make it easier for kids.''

"One of my players [who left early for the draft] was working out with another top-five draft pick,'' a coach said. "They got to talking and my kid said something about not having money or whatever on campus. The other kid said, 'My coach set up expense accounts all over town for me. Yours didn't?'''

So with so much information on teams, why doesn't anyone snitch?

"If you snitch, you're Abar Rouse [the former Baylor assistant who taped the phone conversation with then-coach Dave Bliss and has since been ostracized from coaching]. That's why no one talks. Plus, how do you prove it? I know stuff. I know stuff that is 100 percent happening right now, but the NCAA wants proof. How can I prove it?"

Which league is the cleanest? The dirtiest?

Congratulations, Jim Delany. Your league wins in a landslide. Of the 20 coaches surveyed, 11 said the Big Ten was the cleanest in the country. Three others cited the land where time stood still, also known as the scholarship-less Ivy League. (Although even the Ancient Eight earned one disparaging nod: "The Ivy League,'' one coach said before pausing to add, "I mean the Ivy League a couple of years ago, before all of that stuff at Harvard.")

But coaches cited the Big Ten's perceived willingness to police itself and rosters that "made sense," in which players traditionally come from the footprint of the schools they choose to attend.

"Look at Michigan State,'' one coach said. "They're there every year. When you see the dips, then you wonder. What happened? What didn't happen? But a guy like Tom Izzo, he's there every year because you know what his program is about and so do his players. There's a consistency and an integrity.''

As for the dirtiest, despite Mike Slive's best efforts to clean up the image, the Southeastern Conference was perceived as the worst, with three coaches partnering the SEC with the Big East and another tossing in the Big 12 (one coach went league-by-league, counting up schools). All in all, the SEC was named by 14 of the coaches.

"Oh no, it's not just a myth,'' one coach said about the SEC. "It's the truth.''

Others weren't so sure, however.

"Everyone says the SEC, but that's because of [the] football thing," said one coach. "That's the standard answer, but I'm not sure it's true.''

Added another: "The perception is the SEC doesn't have a good reputation. I don't know if that's legit or fair. I was on the other side 10 years ago. If a program starts getting better, starts getting kids, the question is always the same: What's he doing? He's gotta be doing something. And that adds to the perception.''

One longtime coach said the image is slowly getting repaired.

"I do think by hiring guys like Anthony Grant at Alabama, the SEC is on the right track to cleaning things up.''

If you could land a top-five player but had to break a major rule to do it -- knowing there was a zero percent chance of getting caught -- would you?

This interesting ethical/moral question brought out a lot of interesting answers.

Only one coach hinted that he would consider it, asking: "Where am I in my career? It's a risk-reward. If you're at the beginning of your career or at the end of your contract, you might take the risk.''

And one other admitted, "Now would I break a minor rule? A secondary? Yes, absolutely.''

Everyone else said absolutely no way they would take the devil trade (though, naturally, everyone agreed that someone else would and has).

But here's where it gets interesting. Six coaches said they wouldn't do it because they couldn't look at themselves in the mirror or because they wouldn't knowingly break a rule, regardless of the outcome.

Most everyone else?

The rationale went like this: "You can't coach him,'' one coach explained. "He'd always have something over you, so how do you make him practice hard? How do you make him go to class?''

Or they pointed to strict liability, which means a head coach can be fired for the transgression of an assistant, or new contractual clauses as deterrents.

"A lot of universities now have clauses where, if you're found guilty of a major violation, you have to pay for any costs incurred from the investigation,'' a coach said. "You start adding up lawyer costs and that will stop people.''

Are rules being broken here this week at Peach Jam?

The simple answer: Yes. The more complicated: Define "rules."

Only two coaches thought something truly nefarious was happening on the Georgia/South Carolina border.

"I may bump into a coach at a hotel and say hello," said one, "but I also know there are people who purposely stay in a hotel because a team is there. That's shady."

"Are there meetings going on in hotels right now? Absolutely. The deals and plans are being hatched.''

Everyone else thought it was of the minor violation type -- i.e., saying hello to a recruit in the hallway or his parents in a restaurant.

However, the silly bump rule can get downright dirty if taken to the extreme. Most of the NCAA reps are women, and women can't go into men's rooms. There's a real paranoia that some coaches are following prospects or their coaches or parents into the restrooms to broker deals.

"I don't know. I've never won a recruit in the bathroom,'' one coach said. "Maybe I need to pee more.''

How often during the recruitment of a player does someone -- a coach, a parent, someone else -- ask for something in return? How does it happen?

Here's where it really gets ugly. This hasn't happened to every coach (12 said they've faced it directly), but all 20 of them know it goes on.

"It happened to me this morning,'' one coach said. "I had a guy try to hand me a résumé, get them a job.''

Sometimes it's subtle; sometimes it's overt, but the implication is understood -- if you want to recruit my player/son, you'll need to take care of me first.

"It will start off as, 'You know, he's had a part-time job and now that he's going to college, I won't have that income … what can you do to help me?''' one coach said. "Or it's, 'I've never missed one of his games. How am I going to afford to travel to see him play now?'''

"I almost cringe when I have a job opening,'' another coach said. "Here it comes. I used to get calls from other coaches. Now it's AAU coaches, trying to place their guys.''

No one admitted to completing the transaction, yet all 20 said they lost a player because they chose not to complete the transaction.

"I think a lot of times they're just floating it out there, see if you'll bite,'' another coach said. "But you know what? If you don't, someone else might.''

What is the biggest problem facing college basketball?

Finally, 100 percent consensus: It's agents and runners. Not only are they sullying the game, but they're also changing the way players look at their college careers.

That's no news flash. Agents have long been considered the boogeyman of college athletics. What's interesting? How they're doing business:

• Loans or lines of credit: "Say you've got a top-10 kid but you don't have a lot of money,'' one coach explained. "The agent will get a line of credit through his financial adviser for you in your name. When your kid goes pro, you pay it back.''

• Prepaid debit cards: Slightly different than a loan, these allow an agent to offer a constant stream of cash by giving a prospect or a prospect's family member a card with a cash value that can be constantly stuffed with more money, not unlike an actual bank account. The kicker: As of now, the NCAA has no way of tracking the transaction.

"That's the latest one I've heard,'' said one coach.

• Tying in to a summer league program: Numerous coaches said that agents now have ties to specific summer league teams and that the people serving as coaches are actually already agents' runners.

Another coach, who recently coached a top-five draft pick, said that every agent who came to sign his player offered the same thing: "If you sign with me, I'll deliver you this guy and that guy. Every single one of them is tied to an AAU team. Every one. They cook the deal with the AAU coach. He gets the kid on campus and then cuts a cut.''

• Hiring parents as "consultants": Shoe companies sponsor virtually every summer league team. The team wears the shoe company's gear and plays in the shoe company's sanctioned events.

"I've heard of shoe companies hiring parents at ridiculous salaries as their consultants,'' one coach said. "Parents are making a big comeback. They look at their children as property or dollar signs, not children. They all see the big cashout.''

The big cashout, of course, is the NBA, the albatross hanging around many a coach's neck. Hemmed in by the league's age limit, many coaches are wondering what exactly they're doing for a living.

"We don't coach anymore,'' one coach said. "This job isn't about coaching. It's about acquiring talent.''

"What's happening at Kentucky, all these one-and-dones, that's not good for our game,'' another added.

Indeed, many coaches thought that the one-and-done rule has diminished the value of a college career -- even a one-year college career. They point to players who are more concerned with their individual stats or who are so preoccupied with their future, they aren't paying attention to their present.

"I told a kid recently, 'If you say NBA one more time I'm walking out the door,''' a coach said. "If you're good enough, you'll leave after one year or two years or three years. I'm here to talk to you about coming to college and playing for me. I had six kids leave early. The ones who were all-in went [top 10]; the ones who had one foot out the door went late.''

Do you have faith in the NCAA to monitor and control college basketball?

Sort of.

All but three coaches thought the NCAA was at least trying to get a handle on the problems of college basketball. The catch? No one thought it could succeed.

"They're trying,'' said one coach, echoing the sentiments of the majority. "But no matter what the rule, people are going to cheat and the problem is, the best of the best, you're never going to catch them.''

Coaches pointed to an unfair numbers advantage -- more coaches than NCAA investigators -- and a savvier coaching fraternity as the top problems.

And others thought the organization was little more than a bureaucratic hypocrisy.

"The NCAA is stealing money from television and they don't want to kill the golden goose,'' one said. "Look at the people on the NCAA committees. The guys who are doing things the right way, they aren't on the NCAA committees. Why is that?''

There's also an interesting gender dynamic at work. As noted earlier, almost all of the NCAA investigators are women and they are policing a man's game. That doesn't go unnoticed by the coaches, nor does it help the investigators get taken seriously all the time.

Along with the coach who called the women, "the gestapettes," another said, "If the NCAA was serious, they'd hire someone who knew what they were doing, not these women out here trying to get a husband.''

Are you optimistic/pessimistic about the game?

Mixed bag here. Most coaches (15 of 20) thought the game was more scrutinized and regulated than it's ever been and believe that the sport is on its way to redemption. Yet even they concede there are major problems with college basketball's image and its actions.

"I think there are more good than bad out there,'' one coach said. "But if you keep saying something, people believe it and we keep saying it. Things have been going on for 50 years and they'll be going on 50 years from now, but we make it seem like it's the worst it's ever been now. I don't think so. I don't know if the game has ever been better or the competition has ever been better.''

Others, however, were far more pessimistic.

They see coaches perceived as rulebreakers being rehired -- and the NCAA, in their opinion, is doing little to stop them.

"I sometimes wonder, 'Can I survive in this profession without compromising who I am?''' one said. "I'm not sure about that answer and it really disappoints me.''

Added another: "I know this: I'm glad I'm not 40 and just getting started in this business. I can see the light at the end of the tunnel, but I would say I'm a little more pessimistic about things than I was a few years ago. It just seems like we can't stop it. The bad guys keep winning.''


Read More: http://sports.espn.go.com/

Vandy coach Caldwell brings much-needed levity to SEC

HOOVER, ALA.—Every once in a while we get something so wonderful, so beautifully perfect in its simplicity, it overwhelms the moment.
The million-dollar coaches in the billion-dollar league spent the first two days of SEC Media Days focused on all that's suddenly wrong with college football. And wouldn't you know it, when you least expect it, all that's right comes strolling through the door.
"This is the greatest thrill of my life," Robbie Caldwell says, "other than my child being born."
Finally, some sanity—in a spectacular display of humility and appreciation rarely seen in the coaching profession.
Nick Saban began SEC Media Days calling agents pimps. Urban Meyer spoke of the pressure of his job, and how it nearly drove him to quit. Mark Richt has won 90 games in nine seasons at Georgia, yet has been fielding questions about job security.
And here comes Robbie Caldwell, a 30-year career assistant who was lining the field for a Vanderbilt football camp when he was summoned to an all-staff meeting with Johnson. A couple hours later, he was cleaned up and being introduced as the man in charge.
"I can still walk places and nobody knows me," Caldwell said. "Last night at dinner, I was opening the door for people and they gave me a tip. I thought, hey, that's great. How can you get it any better than that?"
College football needed this. One of the decade's top teams (USC) is now on probation, and one of the sport's most storied programs (Michigan) is staring down probation. USC turned in Reggie Bush's Heisman Trophy, and Texas nearly seceded from the Big 12 to start a mass reshuffling of a sport built on tradition.
Meanwhile, here is Caldwell, who grew up in a broken home in Pageland, S.C.—"population of about 1,500 including cats and dogs"—playing sports because he didn't want to pour concrete or be a pipe fitter or work on that turkey farm where he did everything from inseminating turkeys to clearing away dead ones.
"That's a fact, man," Caldwell said. "Best job I ever had."
Now he has arguably the hardest job in college football. He's an interim coach at a school with a long history of losing in the biggest, baddest conference in the game. He's still working off his former contract—about $200,000 annually, and about $4 million less than Saban—and likely will be out of a job by December.

He's country hard and soulfully engaging, and will run things at Vandy on his terms. And when it's over—no matter how it ends—he'll be elated for the opportunity. No pimps or agents, no probation or problems.
Just the greatest thrill of his life.
"I wish I knew the name of the restaurant here where we ate last night," Caldwell said. "Golly, it was fantastic. By the way, I ate quail. I kept my heritage there."
Of course he did.

From: http://www.sportingnews.com/

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Position rankings: quarterbacks

Josh Katzowitz’s top five

5. Aaron Rodgers, Packers

4. Brett Favre, Vikings



3. Philip Rivers, ChargersP. Manning (US Presswire)

2. Drew Brees, Saints

1. Peyton Manning, Colts


This top five quarterbacking exercise is interesting. You basically can put the league’s starting quarterbacks into three categories. The top guys (about seven players), who you’d pick if (for some reason) you needed somebody to go 80 yards in 2 minutes in order to save your mortgage. The middle guys (maybe nine players) who used to be really good but now aren’t or who are young but could turn out to be really good. Then, the lower-end guys (the rest) who are interchangeable and probably wouldn’t lead your team to the top of the division. In that end, this exercise isn’t that difficult, because, basically, we’re picking from about seven quarterbacks.

That said, I’d be surprise if anyone argued against Peyton Manning as the top quarterbacks in the league – and maybe one of the best-five of all time. I could run through the stats, but you know they’re awesome. Perhaps most impressive about Manning, like Favre, is that he’s so durable. Part of that has to do with the performance of his offensive line – Manning was sacked 10 times last year – but he’s also tough, never missing a start in his career (that’s 192 straight games).

Brees had an incredible year last season, recording a QB rating of 109.6 and completing an NFL-record-tying 70.6 percent of his passes. I’d feel safer with Manning with the game on the line, but not much. Rivers and Rodgers passed for at least 4,200 yards, 28 touchdowns and less than 10 interceptions last season. And it’s tough to discount Favre, especially after how he performed last year in his 19th season. Yeah, he plays cowboy too often and throws atrocious interceptions in clutch moments, but for consistent greatness, he’s tough to beat. 




Andy Benoit’s top five
5. Brett Favre, Vikings

4. Ben Roethlisberger, Steelers

3. Drew Brees, Saints

2. Tom Brady, Patriots

1. Peyton Manning, Colts

Josh, seven of the last nine Super Bowls have been won by quarterbacks who are NOT on your list. I can understand omitting Eli Manning – he ranks in the 10-12 range, not the 1-5 range. But I can’t, for the life of me, figure out how Tom Brady and Ben Roethlisberger don’t show up.

The only explanation for a “healthy-minded” individual omitting Brady is that said “healthy-minded” individual thinks Brady isn’t the same after his ’08 knee injury. True, Brady had some trouble getting comfortable in the pocket during the first half of last year, but he still finished the season with nearly 4,400 yards and 28 touchdowns. The knee can’t be THAT grave a concern.

The argument against Big Ben, I’m assuming, is that he’s suspended for character issues, which calls his leadership into question. Whatever. The man is 28 and already owns two rings. Physically-speaking, Roethlisberger is the most gifted quarterback in the NFL.

Go ahead and retort these Brady-Roethlisberger arguments – I’m prepared to argue all day. (And if you’re prepared to say that Brady has weapons around him, I’m prepared to say that he won his three titles with Troy Brown and David Patten; if you’re ready to mention Roethlisberger’s sack numbers, I’m ready to remind you that his improvised plays have been a more than adequate tradeoff, and I’ll also ask, “If sacks are so bad, then what is Rodgers doing on your list?”)

A few other notes from your list…

**I agree with your analysis on Manning and Favre. Something I’d add is that no two quarterbacks transform average receivers into stars like these two. Favre made the careers of Robert Brooks and Antonio Freeman. He built fantastic chemistry with Donald Driver. Most recently, he’s helped Sidney Rice recognize his full potential. Manning did the same with youngsters Pierre Garcon and Austin Collie last year. Think either of those guys could register 100 yards in a playoff game if they had a typical quarterback throwing them the ball?

**You give credit to Manning’s offensive line. Don’t. All the credit goes to Manning. The Colts offensive line is, at best, average. Left tackle Charlie Johnson is a plodder and both guards are undersized. Manning’s awareness and pocket presence explain the low sack totals. It’s the same case with Brees and the Saints’ line, by the way. Left tackle Jermon Bushrod is awful, and you know how I feel about Jon Stinchcomb. But even with iffy tackles, Brees almost never takes sacks.

**Like you, I put Manning ahead of Brees. My reasoning is that Manning has been playing at the highest of levels for about eight years. Brees, only three or four. That said, I have trouble following your logic when you write, “I’d feel safer with Manning with the game on the line, but not much.” Wasn’t Brees’s Super Bowl title clinched by Manning’s late fourth quarter pick-six?
Josh’s rebuttal
So, you’re going to choose one play to illustrate that Manning isn’t clutch at the end of games? Well, what about the 2006 season AFC Championship game when he led the Colts back from an 18-point deficit, including that game-winning 80-yard TD drive, to beat Brady and the Patriots? Can we count that? Manning’s been clutch for longer than Brees in this league. That’s why I went with Manning as No. 1. Which you agree with, anyway.

When I mentioned there were seven quarterbacks who could have made the top seven, I obviously was also talking about Brady and Roethlisberger. I’ve seen Roethlisberger play numerous times live, and, to me, he’s simply a notch below the guys I’ve listed. I didn’t factor the recent legal issues or the suspension into my equation, but the leadership issues I did. It’s just the way he’s perceived by his teammates and the fact that they’ve questioned his character on a number of occasions. It’s not a good thing. I don’t mind him taking sacks because, I agree, he makes so many plays off his freelancing that it tends to balance out. But I point you to his 2008 stats: 59.9 percent completions; 3,301 yards, 17 touchdowns, 15 interceptions. Those are not elite numbers. Hell, Chad Pennington had better numbers than that in 2008.

And you know what? I don’t have a great argument for excluding Brady, other than he didn’t seem like the same player last year after the knee injury. Plus, Matt Cassel had a pretty good year in Brady’s place, so in my mind, that diminishes Brady just a tad.

But if I had a mulligan, I think I’d replace Rodgers with Brady at No. 5.

Andy’s final word

Can’t let you off that easy, Josh – especially since this is our last position rankings debate. Putting Brady at No. 5 is inadequate. He’s at least 2 or 3. I will say, though, your point about Cassel is not a bad one. The Patriots went 11-5 under him and were hot down the stretch (they got screwed out of a postseason berth by the NFL’s flawed playoffs rules that put the 8-8 Chargers in the tournament that year). During that ’08 season, an immensely respected NFL analyst privately told me that you could argue Brady is simply the greatest system quarterback of all time. This analyst wasn’t saying he believed this, he was merely explaining that the discussion was worth having. We’ll save that discussion for another time. For now, I’ll keep it simple by honoring a Three-Time Champ.

Roethlisberger’s ’08 numbers are poor. And, from afar, he doesn’t appear to be highly respected by teammates. I get that. But again, this is a multi-time World Champion we’re talking about. If we had more Super Bowl winners in the league, you could leave the guy off. But it’s hard to go with Rodgers or Rivers when those guys have yet to build rich playoff résumés.

Final follow up on Manning: I’m not saying he isn’t clutch. He is. I’m just anticipating all the comments we’ll get from people griping that Brees should be No. 1 based on recent history.


From: www.cbssports.com/

Accomplishments of the past two seasons gives Ravens confidence

By this point in July, there's a palpable sense of anticipation for the upcoming season in every NFL city. Hope is in full bloom across the landscape of the league as we creep within days of the opening of training camps. A touch of football fever is definitely in the air.
But with the possible exception of the singular hype-fest that has engulfed the New York Jets this offseason, perhaps nowhere are expectations as sky high as they are in Baltimore, where a bigger and bolder statement of 2010 intentions seems to get tossed out every few days or so.
And not just by fans who obsess over the Ravens every move. Some key Ravens themselves are doing the talking, and it's hard not to notice the building drumbeat of belief in Baltimore.
"Anything less than a Super Bowl win, really, is a disappointment for us,'' veteran Ravens receiver Derrick Mason said in a recent radio interview. "I think we've done more than enough over the last three years to put ourselves in position to win a championship. To do all we've done and not come out of this thing with a championship would be disheartening, especially for me because I'm looking at one, two years tops before I leave.
"I know a lot of the older guys on this team want to win a championship before they hang their cleats up. I just feel we are primed, and put together a great team. This is our opportunity to win a championship.''
And then last weekend there was this from Baltimore quarterback Joe Flacco, arguably the most pivotal piece in the equation if the 2010 Ravens are to take a step up in weight class and win themselves a trip to Dallas in early February.
"I'm pretty excited, and I want to say it's the best team I've been on,'' Flacco told the Baltimore Sun. "We've got the talent to go as far as we want to.''
OK, so the "best team I've been on'' stuff sounds a little silly coming out of the mouth of a mere third-year player, but that doesn't mean I happen to think he's wrong. I believe this will be the best of head coach John Harbaugh's three Ravens teams, and that's no small accomplishment when you consider the following:
-- Only two teams in the NFL have won playoff games in each of the past two postseasons, Baltimore in the AFC and Arizona in the NFC.
-- All three of the Ravens' playoff wins under Harbaugh have come the hard way, on the road -- at Miami and Tennessee in the 2008 season, and at New England in 2009. No other team in the league owns more than two road playoff wins over that span (Philadelphia and the Jets).
-- Baltimore won 20 games the past two regular seasons, but both times it was forced to go the wild-card route of the sixth and final seed in the AFC playoff field, eventually losing to the conference champion each time (at Pittsburgh in 2008 and at Indianapolis in 2009). Let the Ravens improve their standing in the AFC North just a tad, and watch out come the postseason.
The rest of the AFC isn't about to step aside and make way for the coronation of the Ravens, of course. The Colts, Chargers, Jets, Bengals, Steelers and Patriots and Titans will be heard from. But there are a couple things that really make me believe some of the hype surrounding Baltimore is legit. First off, there are those three road playoff wins the past two Januarys.
Is there anything tougher in sports than going on the road in the NFL playoffs and winning? For my money, maybe not. The Ravens have done a lot of growing up and gained a host of valuable experience in the past two postseasons, and I think there's a payoff to come for the accomplishment of playing those five tough playoff road games in such a short span, winning three times.
The victory at Miami got your attention. Upsetting the No. 1-ranked Titans in Nashville was a stunner. But that utter domination of New England in Foxboro, where the Ravens simply imposed their will on the vaunted Patriots all day long, that was the kind of the win that told you something about how this Baltimore team was made. It's tough, resilient and won't shrink from playing a big game on the big stage because of the out-sized expectations that come along with it.
Granted, the Ravens did not play their best ball in losing the 2008 AFC title game at Pittsburgh, or that 2009 AFC divisional round game at Indianapolis. More than anything in those games, they looked like a spent road team that had exhausted itself just getting there. And don't forget Baltimore had to win in Week 17 at Oakland just to squeak into the postseason last year, meaning it was playing what amounted to back-to-back-to-back road playoff games at Oakland, at New England and at Indy in a three-week span.
I can't really say if the Ravens are a cocky bunch heading into this season, but I do perceive a deep sense of confidence has been born out of where they've been and what they've done the past two seasons. They know they haven't yet accomplished anything truly significant, but they've laid some important groundwork for chasing the game's ultimate prize. They've learned how to win games under pressure late in the season, against any opponent, no matter where they're played. Those type of skills usually come in very handy and steel a team during some future title run.
Another reason to be bully on Baltimore this season is the blend of promising youth and veteran star power that the roster features. Check the makeup of almost every championship club and you'll see a mix of ascending players who are just entering or are in their prime and a healthy dose of still-productive veterans who know how to get the job done. That's usually the ingredients for winning, and the emergence of the younger stars is nicely balanced by the sense of urgency that the veterans feel in the pursuit of a ring. As the 14th-year veteran Mason so succinctly put it, the time is now for a good portion of the Ravens roster. And everybody wearing purple and white knows it.
So on one side of the locker room you have the likes of Flacco, the 25-year-old franchise QB who's just approaching his best years, multi-faceted third-year running back Ray Rice, second-year offensive left tackle Michael Oher, fourth-year standout guard Ben Grubbs, and key young defensive stalwarts like defensive tackle Haloti Ngata and linebacker-defensive end Terrell Suggs (who's still only 27). And at the proverbial other end of the spectrum are future Hall of Fame middle linebacker Ray Lewis (35), Mason (36), center Matt Birk (34 this week), defensive end Trevor Pryce (35 next month), safety Ed Reed (31), and 33-year-old defensive tackle Kelly Gregg. They know the years are numbered and this is probably their last best shot.
That's the perfect match in the NFL. Young talent still on the rise and older pros who can still play and play at a high level. The young players in Baltimore seem to know how important it is for the older guys to take one more run at a Super Bowl and they want to hold up their end of the bargain. As for the veterans, they're smart enough to know that it's the Ravens young stars like Flacco, Rice and Ngata who will likely help carry them across the finish line.
If you remember, something along the lines of that same formula worked pretty well for Baltimore in 2000, when the franchise won its only Super Bowl title. Back then, Lewis, running back Jamal Lewis, tackle Jonathan Ogden, cornerbacks Chris McAlister and Duane Starks, and linebackers Jamie Sharper and Peter Boulware were the team's young stars. But the Ravens roster was infused with key veteran leaders like Rod WoodsonShannon SharpeTony SiragusaTrent Dilfer and Michael McCrary.
This year, with the high-profile addition of receiver Anquan Boldin, 29, as well as other useful veterans like Donte' Stallworth, defensive end Cory Redding, quarterback Marc Bulger, kicker Shayne Graham and second-round picks Sergio Kindle and Terrence Cody, the Ravens roster looks deeper and more well-balanced between youth and experience than any in recent memory. But the value of having so many key young players with a significant dose of playoff history already under their belts can't be overstated. That's the stuff championships are made of.
Baltimore's path to bigger things starts within its own division. The Ravens lost three times to the Steelers (including the playoffs) in 2008, and twice to the Bengals last year. Both years they finished a game out of the AFC North lead and had to take the much tougher wild-card road through January. A division title, a higher seed and maybe even a first-round bye should make for easier playoff sledding for Harbaugh's club, and that means taking care of business against the Bengals and Steelers in the regular season.
That's job one for Baltimore this year, and really the only thing the Ravens should be focused on between now and New Year's Day. But you have to like what you see coming together so far in Baltimore. And hearing the Ravens themselves do most of the big talking only tells me there's good reason for all that hope in the air.


From: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/

Monday, July 19, 2010

Fraternization among foes have made sports way too chummy

Among the nauseating aspects of the LeBron James "Decision" (and there were too many to count) is the old and ongoing cozy relationship that exists between LeBron, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh.
You heard all the details. 'Bron, D-Wade and Bosh got together years ago and made a pact to one day join forces. They signed contracts designed to expire simultaneously. They held Cartel meetings during the offseason, and sometimes during the regular season.
Gag me. Whatever happened to good old-fashioned disdain for the opposition? How good can the competition be when the alleged "rivals" are in business together or planning to join forces at a later date?
At the risk of sounding like a curmudgeon who covered the 1918 World Series (Ruth really dominated the Cubs in that 1-0 game, didn't he?), sports was better in the days before the players all loved one another.
There's a great old tale about an exchange between Ted Williams and a kid pitcher from the Washington Senators named Pedro Ramos. In one of his first games in the bigs, Ramos stuck out Williams. Ramos saved the baseball, and a few days later went over to the Sox dugout to ask Williams if he would sign the ball for him. The Splendid Splinter unloaded on Ramos with both barrels, signed the ball, and told him to take a hike. A few weeks later, Williams hit a prodigious homer off Ramos, and as he was rounding first base hollered, "I'll sign that sonofabitch, too, if you can ever find it!''
The story reminds me of an encounter I had with Bob Gibson in a hotel elevator in the 1990s. We were talking about then-Sox ace Roger Clemens and I told Gibson about a young hitter who had homered off Clemens, then asked the Rocket to sign the baseball. I could see steam coming off Gibson's head as he listened. I asked him what he would have done in the same situation and Gibson said, "I've have hit him in the head next time up, then offered to sign his head!''
Gibson probably would have done that. The legend on Gibson was that he did not speak with his non-Cardinal teammates when he played for the National League in the All-Star game. He didn't want to compromise the competition when everybody got back to work after the mid-summer break.
Frank Robinson was the same way. After his tremendous career was over, Robinson stayed in the game as a manager and coach and he seethed when he saw opponents standing around the batting cage chatting before games.
In Boston we've seen the change in the Red Sox-Yankee rivalry.
Back in the 1970s, the Sox and Pinstripes truly hated one another. You'd never see Carlton Fisk and Thurman Munson speak. There were several brawls and one of them cost the Sox Bill Lee for a season. The Sox and Yankees continue to joust in this century, but the new rivalry is sometimes best-remembered for the night that Manny Ramirez said he could not play and instead went to the bar at the Boston Ritz-Carlton with Yankee Enrique Wilson.
LeBron and friends certainly didn't invent coziness in the NBA.
Remember when Isiah Thomas and Magic Johnson would kiss one another before games in the Pistons-Lakers Finals? Yeesh.
Fraternization sometimes impacts the outcome of games. For instance, when is the last time you saw a runner plow through a catcher en route to home plate? Hardly anyone does this anymore because players are part of a very profitable union and no one wants to do anything to harm a fellow union member. As a result, catchers of this generation have learned to stick their left leg across the base path while they are waiting for a relay throw. There are no more Frank Robinsons to remind the catchers that the path belongs to the baserunner and a catcher risks injury if he puts his body in the path. Today's polite baserunners simply go around, sometimes costing their teams ballgames.
It's the same with the old-time brushback pitch. Back in the day, before Marvin Miller and Donald Fehr convinced the players that they were all part of something larger than team affiliations, there was payback for certain infractions. If you hit my cleanup batter with a pitch, I hit your cleanup guy. And if you stood at home plate admiring your home run for too long, I put you on your back next time you step up to the plate.
That's all gone now. Players love one another more than they love the teams they represent. The whole sports world has gone the way of LeBron, D-Wade and Bosh. We are not better for it.

From: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/

Puck Podcast: Weekly puck talk

This week on the Puck Podcast, our guys update you on the Ilya Kovalchuk sweepstakes by discussing why NHL teams may be colluding against him, where he may end up and why he’s still unsigned. They also talk about a couple of big-name goalies getting new deals, an NHL star getting a body of water named after him and another player getting married to a star singer. They’ll also talk about the tragic death of Bob Probert and replay their conversation with him from back in 2007 and more.

Puck Podcast is a weekly podcast that talks about nothing but the NHL with analysis, interviews, opinions and information you won't get anywhere else.

About the hosts:

Doug Stolhand is a former color commentator for the ECHL's Fresno Falcons who has covered the NHL as a member of the media since 1995.
Eddie Garcia was born in Honolulu, Hawaii and raised in Central California. He is currently an update anchor for the Fox Sports Radio Network and is part of the morning show "Out of Bounds." He is also the hockey insider for Fox Sports Radio and is known for his "Hockey Minute" segment during the NHL season.