Thursday, February 26, 2009

Home Confinement for Michael Vick

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RICHMOND, Va. -- A government official says imprisoned NFL star Michael Vick has been approved for release to home confinement.


NFL.com Video
The No. 4 mobile quarterback of all time is Michael Vick.Vick's lawyers have said they expected him to be moved any day into a halfway house in Newport News, Va. But the official says there's no bed space, so Vick could be released to his Hampton, Va. home as soon as May 21st.


The official has knowledge of the case but requested anonymity because the individual was not authorized to discuss the matter publicly. The official says Vick will be on electronic monitoring and will only be allowed to leave home for activities approved by his probation officer.

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Buyout frees Marbury for Celtics

http://www.boston.com/sports/basketball/celtics/articles/2009/02/25/buyout_frees_marbury_for_celtics/?p1=Well_MostPop_Emailed1

After months of being embroiled in a soap opera, the Knicks worked out a buyout of Marbury's $21 million contract yesterday. Two NBA sources said that once the two-time All-Star clears waivers - which is expected to be Friday morning - he will sign with the Celtics for a prorated veteran minimum of $1.3 million for the rest of the season.

The Celtics also filled their need for a veteran big man by signing Moore for the rest of the season to undisclosed financial terms.

"I'm blessed to be able to move on with my career," said Marbury via e-mail. "I'm excited about the new beginning."

Marbury and the Knicks also resolved the grievance he had filed against the team over the $400,000 he had been docked for allegedly refusing to play in a game in November. The sides attended an arbitration hearing yesterday, and terms of the settlement were not announced.
Marbury, 32, averaged 13.9 points and 4.7 assists in 24 games for the Knicks last season, but he hasn't played in a regular-season game since Jan. 11, 2008. He needed surgery for bone spurs that ended his 2007-08 season, and with the arrival of president Donnie Walsh and coach Mike D'Antoni during the offseason, the Knicks wanted to move on from the Marbury era and start fresh.

The Celtics became intrigued with Marbury in the preseason when he averaged 8.5 points and 3.1 assists and went to the free throw line regularly in seven games.

He scored 16 points against Boston in an Oct. 21 game, but last played in a pre season game against New Jersey on Oct. 24. He was suspended by the Knicks shortly thereafter.

The Celtics declined comment on Marbury yesterday, but team president Danny Ainge did say he planned on signing a combo-guard or wing player for his final open roster spot. Marbury played with Celtics All-Star forward Kevin Garnett in Minnesota.


"We're looking to get a guard," Ainge said prior to the announcement of Marbury's buyout. "There is no one that we are checking on right now. But we can turn our attention to that now."

Friday, February 20, 2009

Barkley goes to jail

Full text here

Opening Statement from Charles Barkley

Want to start with an apology and a thank you. My bad, my fault.


Getting a DUI is unacceptable in any way, shape or form. I owe an apology to my family, to TNT, to T-Mobile and to my NBA family. I embarrassed all of the above.


Also, I want to say thank you. I've gotten so much support. I've had hundreds of people, total strangers, who have told me to hang in there. You have no idea what that means to me. That means so much to me.


I also want to personally thank some people who took the time to check on me: Adam Silver with the NBA, David Levy, Dick Ebersol, Jeff Behnke, Larry Bird, Quinn Buckner, Mike Pearl, Moses Malone, Billy Cunningham, Herb Sendek, Ric Bucher, Ernie Johnson, Joey Crawford and Red McCombs. If I forget anybody, I apologize. You have no idea what it meant to me for people like that to take time out of their schedule to check on me. I will never forget that.


Ernie Johnson: Where do things stand legally with you right now?


Charles Barkley: My lawyers are currently working on it right now and really can't get into too much detail.

EJ: Will it go to trial?




CB: No, I don't believe it will go to trial.


EJ: What have they told you about going to jail?


CB: I may be looking at potentially some jail time but don't know anything yet.


EJ: Will you have to go out and do anything else?

CB: I will have to go to alcohol counseling.


EJ: Is that something that you need?


CB: Well, I think it's going to be good for me, to be honest. I need to make sure drinking is not a problem for me. I just want some professionals to talk to me about it.


EJ: What if the professionals tell you stop drinking?


CB: Then I'll have to stop drinking.


EJ: Do you think you'll be able to do that?


CB: I feel I can do anything that I put my mind to.


EJ: What was the first thing that went through your mind when you saw the lights behind you when you were pulled over?


CB: I really wasn't thinking anything, to be honest with you. Until they tell you that you're going to jail, you don't even think like that. You don't think anything bad is going to happen. So I was in shock actually.


EJ: Did you think you were over the limit before they took blood?


CB: No and I thought I did well on the sobriety test. But clearly not good enough.


EJ: When you look back at it now and see that you were almost two times over the legal limit and you got behind the wheel, what do you think?

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Griffey chooses Mariners

Full Text

The future Hall of Famer informed the Atlanta Braves on Wednesday that he's returning to the city where he carved out a Hall of Fame career as a perennial All-Star in the 1990s.

"He's coming home. ... I can't begin to tell you how ecstatic we are. He is, too," Seattle general manager Jack Zduriencik confirmed on Wednesday night, calling Griffey "arguably one of the greatest athletes to ever play in the Seattle area."

Two baseball sources said that Griffey made his decision after two days of debating between Atlanta, which is close to his home in Orlando, Fla., and Seattle, where he's been a fan favorite since breaking in with the Mariners as a 19-year-old phenom in 1989.

"Ken is extremely excited to be coming back to Seattle," Zduriencik said.

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Kobe N' Shaq win MVP

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Teamed for probably the last time, playing together for the first time in almost five years, the two former Los Angeles Lakers teammates stole the show in Sunday's 58th NBA All-Star Game.

They were named co-MVPs as the West won 146-119.
The dynamic duo hooked up in the third quarter as O'Neal, coming off the bench, smashed home four power dunks during a four-minute span.

Friday, February 13, 2009

U of L beaten by the Fighting Irish

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Luke Harangody had 32 points and 17 rebounds, and host Notre Dame shot 54 percent in a 90-57 victory over No. 5 Louisville last night that ended a seven-game losing streak

The Fighting Irish (13-10, 4-7 Big East) improved to 3-7 against ranked opponents and beat Louisville for just the second time in their last 11 meetings. The 33-point victory is the largest ever for Notre Dame against a Big East opponent. It was the second loss in three games for the Cardinals (18-5, 9-2).

"This victory, while humiliating to us, can propel them into something good," Louisville Coach Rick Pitino said. "I'm happy for them. I'm really upset at our players. The way we practiced going into this game and the way we played tonight, our five men were just totally dominated."

The Irish were in control from the start as Louisville made just one of its first 13 shots. Notre Dame made eight of its first 15, going ahead 17-4 when Kyle McAlarney scored on a reverse layup.

Farve to finally retire

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Favre had instructed his agent, James "Bus" Cook, to inform the Jets on Wednesday that he is retiring. Favre and the Jets both confirmed the retirement in separate conference calls.
"There are several things that went into decision but most importantly, the most important thing, was that physically, you know with my shoulder the last half of the year it hampered the way I played," Favre said. "I'm 39, I had several options [to have surgery] and to let it heal. How that would affect me in terms of playing I had no idea and it wasn't something I was going to risk." Jets owner Woody Johnson said it was Favre's decision to step aside.

"We had an all-encompassing conversation," Johnson said. "He told me

"Mike and Woody, as well as the entire organization, have been nothing short of outstanding," Favre said in the e-mail. "My teammates -- Thomas and Kerry included -- were a pleasure to play with. Eric [Mangini] could not have been any better. I enjoyed playing for him. My time with the Jets was short, but I'm honored to be given that chance."

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Pac-Man Jones gone from Dallas

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IRVING, Texas -- The Cowboys have released Adam "Pacman" Jones, and a team source told ESPN's Ed Werder that the move was made after the team learned of new allegations against the troubled cornerback from his time with the Titans.

Jones
Jones' release came after "Outside the Lines" reporter John Barr contacted the NFL, the Cowboys and Jones' attorneys about a piece scheduled to air Sunday in which three Atlanta-area men allege that Jones arranged for someone to shoot at them two months after the football player was suspended by NFL commissioner Roger Goodell in 2007.
The June 2007 shooting occurred outside a suburban Atlanta strip club. One of the shooting victims told "Outside the Lines" that he had a dispute with Jones inside the strip club and that not long after he and the two others left the club, a hail of bullets struck their car. The NFL knew about that incident, but charges were never brought against anyone because the victims did not see the shooter.
Mosley: Bad risk
With a two-line press release Wednesday, the Dallas Cowboys ended their relationship with cornerback Adam "Pacman" Jones. The laughter you're hearing is coming from the Tennessee Titans' practice facility, Matt Mosley writes. BlogAtlanta incident

"Outside the Lines" obtained information that police, investigating a separate Atlanta-area case, had been told by an informant that Jones ordered the June 2007 shooting following his dispute with one of the men. Police have said that while the case remains open, they are not actively investigating.

Jones denied the report and told the Dallas Morning News: "It will be a lawsuit in a week against ESPN. That's stupid. It's so stupid I have no more comments."
The Cowboys traded for Jones before the season even though he had been suspended in 2007 because of a series of off-field incidents. Jones, expected to give the Cowboys a boost on defense and special teams, had no interceptions and averaged just 4.6 yards per punt return.

"Surprised? Yeah, I was surprised," Jones said of the release, according to the Dallas Morning News. "All I can do is keep working hard, keep my nose clean and hope for the best."
Jones missed six games this season for violating the league's player conduct policy after an Oct. 7 scuffle with a team bodyguard at a Dallas hotel. He missed a seventh game with an injury.
The 25-year-old Jones spent part of his time away from football taking part in an alcohol rehabilitation program.

"He was surprised, and I think he was obviously somewhat hurt," Worrick Robinson, Jones' agent, said of the decision. "At the same time, he understands the business behind what is happening here."

Robinson said he did not think Jones' suspension was a factor in the Cowboys' decision to release the cornerback.

We don't have any reason to believe at this point that that off-the-field incident had anything to do with the team's decision today," Robinson said. "I know there was certainly a lot of bad that came out of that situation, but there was some good that came out of that situation as well."

Can Tiger Woods' son make him better?

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/golf/tigerwoods/4580904/Son-could-make-Tiger-Woods-even-better.html

Tiger has proved his supernatural abilities to the world. He has very nearly proved them to himself. But Woods hasn't yet proved anything to little Charlie Axel. Do you think Tiger Woods needs more motivation? Well, he now has the biggest inspiration a professional sportsman can get. A son.


You may think that is all psychological mumbo jumbo, but consider for a moment some facts. The last three first-time winners of the Masters had all just become fathers of a son for the first time. Phil Mickelson won his first major in 2003 a year after the birth of Evan. Zach Johnson won in 2007, three months after the birth of Will. Trevor Immelman won in 2008, a year after the birth of Jacob.


There is a name for this phenomenon. It is called the 'nappy factor' and was first identified by the betting guru Keith Elliott more than 10 years ago. To begin with it was nothing more than a hunch.


Then in 2000 the European Association of Labour Economists published statistics showing that fathers' salaries rise nearly five per cent every time they have a child and that the premium was far greater for a son than a daughter. "I'm sure a son will have an amazing effect even on someone as driven as Tiger," Elliott said.


Woods has already said he became a better golfer since the birth of his daughter, Sam. But what effect will a son have? Padraig Harrington won in America for the first time 18 months after the birth of Patrick. Ernie Els won his first major for five years a month after the birth of his son,


Ben, and then finished in the top 10 in seven of his next nine majors.
The way that Woods has always spoken about his own father makes you wonder if the effect could be even more dramatic. Just last month Woods was riffing in Golf Digest about 'pops'.


He said: "Even to this day when I'm out there struggling and I don't have my best stuff I'll go back to: 'You know what, Daddy, I'm going to put the ball right there. Right there. I'm going to put that little two-iron right there, Daddy. No problem. I got it'. Boom, I put it right there. (Pause in silent reverie). Thanks pops."


Tiger, more than any sportsman you can think of, knows the value of fatherhood. He may even take 'paternity leave' and not return to competitive golf until next month. We don't know for sure yet. But the defending Masters champion Immelman knows what to expect when Tiger does return. He said: "I think he'll be better. I know him well and that's his personality."

A-Rod cries that he is sorry

http://www.lohud.com/article/2008902100371

Two days after Sports Illustrated reported that he failed a drug test in 2003, Rodriguez sat for a lengthy interview in his Miami Beach, Fla., home and admitted to breaking baseball's rules, starting in 2001 after he signed with the Rangers.


"I felt an enormous amount of pressure. I felt like I had all the weight of the world on top of me and I needed to perform, and perform at a high level, every day," Rodriguez said.


"It was very loose. I was young. I was stupid. I was naive. And I wanted to prove to everyone that, you know, I was worth being one of the greatest players of all time."


Rodriguez averaged 52 home runs and nearly 132 RBI during those three seasons. In his 10 other full seasons, he has averaged 39 home runs and 119 RBI. Of his 553 home runs, 156 came during those three seasons - 28 percent.


Rodriguez was once considered the player who would erase the name of Barry Bonds from the top of the career home run list. Bonds is scheduled for trial next month on charges that he lied when he told a federal grand jury that he never knowingly used performance-enhancing drugs.


In a 2007 interview with "60 Minutes," Rodriguez denied ever having used performance-enhancing drugs.


Rodriguez has long been a polarizing figure among baseball fans. His admission drew a variety of responses.


"From what it sounds like, he's still not being completely truthful," said John Reilly, a Mets fan from Yonkers. "I think he'd be better off if he came clean and told the whole truth of what he did."


But Ron Walker, a Yankees fan from Pomona, praised Rodriguez.
"It takes a big man to come out and say, 'I did it,' " he said. "I respect him for that."
The Yankees have not been to the World Series since Rodriguez was acquired from the Rangers. Though he has twice been named the Most Valuable Player in the American League since joining the Yankees, he also has performed poorly in the postseason and been regularly featured in gossip columns. He is signed through the end of the 2017 season.

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Manny still greedy

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IMAGINE WALKING DOWN the street and somebody wants to hand you $25 million . . . without asking you to commit a felony or speak on behalf of Bernie Madoff.
All you have to do is continue to do your job for the next 8 months or so. If you can perform better or even as well as you did in 2008, you probably would get a similar offer next year.
Now imagine declining it.

That's basically what Manny Ramirez has done in rejecting the Dodgers' offer to return to Los Angeles. As always, there's no way to know what Manny is thinking in saying no to the 1-year, $25 million deal. Perhaps he's tired and just wants to spend time with his family. According to the Dodgers, agent Scott Boras hasn't accepted this or a previous offer of 2 years at $45 mil.
Using some numbers pried from the Internet then, here is what the Dodgers could do with 25 million clams if Manny isn't interested:

* Pay this year's salaries of 500 LA police officers or 577 LA firefighters.
* Employ 676 teachers for the year.
* Spring for 472 Los Angeles-area trauma nurses.
* Give $3,571.43 to each of the 7,000 employees of Macy's who are about to lose their jobs.
* Put new brakes on my 1999 Dodge pickup truck . . . 83,333 times.

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Full story

U of L's has scored 24, 26 and 25 in its last 60 minutes going back to the second half of West Virginia. The Cards, held to a season-low 51 points, have to find a way to generate more offense. Jerry Smith -- and I'm not just talking about tonight's loss -- has to become a scorer again.

Tonight was the third time this season he was scoreless and he's had 10 games where he's only had four attempts. There could be something more to Preston Knowles starting the second half in place of Smith.UConn coach Jim Calhoun said Stanley Robinson's foul trouble actually helped the Huskies. He said UConn's three-guard lineup did a better job of attacking the Cards pressure.

Calhoun also had the highest praise for Terrence Williams. If the vote for the conference Player of the Year Calhoun would vote Williams or Marquette's Jerel McNeal. Calhoun's philosophy of voting means the top player must come from one of the top teams. In other words, Notre Dame's Luke Harangody would not qualify although he's a top scorer and rebounder.

2nd Highest Superbowl ratings

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NEW YORK -- The Arizona-Pittsburgh matchup wasn't considered ideal for television, but its finish riveted an estimated audience of 95.4 million people, second only to last year's game as the most-watched Super Bowl ever.

Viewership peaked in the fourth quarter, when Arizona took the lead on Larry Fitzgerald's 64-yard catch and sprint to the end zone only to have it snatched back when Santonio Holmes' end zone leap gave Pittsburgh the 27-23 win. More than 100 million Americans were watching between 9:30 p.m. and 10 p.m. EST, according to Nielsen Media Research.

The game was the third most-watched program in American television history, after the 106 million people who watched the "M-A-S-H" series finale in 1983 and the 97.4 million who watched the New York Giants end the New England Patriots' bid for an undefeated season in the 2008 Super Bowl.

"The Super Bowl, once again, proved its ability to capture America," said Dick Ebersol, NBC Universal Sports chairman.

The NFL's championship is traditionally television's biggest event of the year. Yet between 1998 and 2004, none of the games reached the 90 million mark in viewers. Each game for the past four years topped 90 million.

Arizona's first-ever visit to the Super Bowl hadn't drawn much buzz outside of the Southwest. But Pittsburgh, perhaps because of its four Super Bowl wins in six years in the 1970s, has more of a national constituency than the city's size would suggest. Both of its last two Super Bowl trips topped the 90 million mark, with the Steelers' 1996 loss to Dallas the most popular Super Bowl until it was beaten last year.

The Super Bowl, long derided as a game that rarely lives up to its hype, now has two classics in two years.

One measure of how gripping the game was: for the first time in the seven years TiVo Inc. has been measuring, more people watched the game during the second half than watched the commercials. The ads are usually watched more because of people playing them back on digital video recorders, said Todd Juenger, general manager of TiVo's research department.

One of the biggest gambles to pay off was by Go Daddy Group Inc., the Internet domain registrar. It bought time for its "enhancement" ad with Danica Patrick during the last few minutes of the game, risking the loss of millions of people who would drift away from the Super

Bowl if the outcome was decided.

Instead, fans stayed glued to their sets and the company's ad was the most-watched commercial in the Super Bowl, TiVo said.

Eight of the 10 most-watched ads came during the second half, Juenger said.
TiVo makes its rankings by combining the number of actual viewers and its records of people who rewind to watch a particular event. If the commercial is rewound three times, that counts as four views.

The first-half Doritos ad with a well-pitched snowglobe was the commercial viewers most often stopped and rewound to give another look. Last year's E-Trade Financial Corp. ad with the talking baby was the most-watched ad but revisiting the strategy didn't seem to work: the company's ad ranked No. 37 of 143 that were measured.

The game didn't offer much help to NBC's one-hour special edition of "The Office," which aired following the trophy presentation. It had 22 million viewers -- compared to the 29 million who watched "House" after last year's Super Bowl -- but was still NBC entertainment's most-watched show since a May 2004 edition of "ER."

Saturday, January 24, 2009

Serena Williams lookin fly

http://www.sportsnetwork.com/merge/tsnform.aspx?c=sportsnetwork&page=tennis-w/news/news.aspx?id=4206117

Melbourne, Australia (Sports Network) - Serena Williams remained on target for her fourth Australian Open title as the second-seeded American beat China's Peng Shuai, 6-1, 6-4, in third-round action Saturday.

Williams fired 10 aces and won half of her 12 break point chances. Williams was down 3-1 in the second set before rallying and took advantage of four double faults from Peng, who until this year had never advanced past the second round here.

"It was definitely a lot better than my second round," said Williams. "But I'm still trying to work on some things and hoping they'll come together."

The reigning U.S. Open champion and former world No. 1 Williams owns nine major titles, including ones in Melbourne in each odd year since 2003. She has yet to drop a set at this fortnight.

Up next for Williams will be 13th seed Victoria Azarenka of Belarus. Azarenka defeated 20th-seeded Frenchwoman Amelie Mauresmo, the 2006 champion, 6-4, 6-2.

"It's a little bit frustrating to come out with only six games today," said Mauresmo, also the 2006 Wimbledon champion. "But I did not play well enough at the key points, whether it was in the first set or second set. First set I had the lead early on, but then was not able to really keep it up not serving good enough."

Fourth-seeded Elena Dementieva closed out third-round action with a competitive 7-6 (8-6), 6-4 victory over local favorite Samantha Stosur. Dementieva led a Russian resurgence Down

Under, becoming the fifth Russian to make it to the fourth round this year.
Also Saturday, eighth-seeded Russian Svetlana Kuznetsova got past 31st seed Alona Bondarenko of the Ukraine, 7-6 (9-7), 6-4. Kuznetsova's next foe will be 22nd seed Zheng Jie of China. Zheng topped Ukrainian Kateryna Bondarenko, 6-2, 6-2.

In other results Saturday, 18th seed Dominika Cibulkova of Slovakia downed France's Virginie Razzano, 7-5, 7-5, No. 21 seed Anabel Medina Garrigues of Spain downed 12th-seeded Italian Flavia Pennetta, 6-4, 6-1, and Carla Suarez Navarro defeated fellow Spaniard Maria Jose Martinez Sanchez, 6-1, 6-4, in another third-round match. Garrigues and Sanchez will play each other in the fourth round.

The top half of the draw plays fourth-round matches Sunday, led by top-seeded Jelena Jankovic of Serbia as she battle France's Marion Bartoli, the 16th seed and 2007 Wimbledon runner-up.

The U.S. Open runner-up Jankovic has never won a major title, but is still ranked No. 1 in the world among the women.

Third-seeded Russian Dinara Safina tangles with 15th-seeded Frenchwoman Alize Cornet, while Australian Jelena Dokic faces 29th seed Alisa Kleybanova of Russia. The 19-year-old Kleybanova ousted fifth-seeded Serbian Ana Ivanovic, last year's runner-up, in the third round.

The other matchup Sunday will be between a pair of Russians as seventh seed Vera Zvonareva faces No. 10 seed Nadia Petrova.
01/24 08:52:37 ET

No money, Superbowl lives on

http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2009/01/24/sports/FBN-Super-Bowl-Economy.php

TAMPA, Fla.: The sagging economy has put a hit on plans for this year's Super Bowl, not that visitors to Tampa for the game and hundreds of millions watching on TV will be able to tell the difference.

America's bacchanalian bash in honor of football will still roll for the TV cameras with all its over-the-top glitz. Yet there are signs — fewer and smaller parties, maybe not quite so many reporters and traveling fans — that the shine will be a little less bright this year.

The game will still be sold out. The town will be crawling with party-hopping celebrities. Hotels will be busy, fans wearing Pittsburgh Steelers and Arizona Cardinals garb will be ubiquitous on the streets, and hundreds of media members will descend to cover the event, which will still likely be the nation's most-watched TV broadcast this year.The impact of the nation's economic woes on the event are more subtle.

The Super Bowl Host Committee had to lower its fundraising goal by $1 million. Corporations that are sponsoring the game are sending fewer bigwigs to town. A couple of the big Super Bowl parties and other events were bagged, others are downsizing, and some media companies — especially hard hit by the downturn and the changing habits of news consumers — are sending fewer scribes to cover the game.

Friday, January 23, 2009

http://www.ajc.com/services/content/printedition/2009/01/23/nflrdp0123.html


Arizona receiver Anquan Boldin laughed off the negative reaction to his nationally televised run-in with offensive coordinator Todd Haley, calling it “hilarious.”
Boldin’s shouting match with the coach on the sideline came as Arizona drove for the winning touchdown in Sunday’s playoff victory over Philadelphia.
Boldin left quickly after congratulating teammates to avoid questions about the incident. He acknowledged Thursday that his abrupt departure “made it worse.”

“For me it’s hilarious,” Boldin said of the criticism. “Every week, somebody on the sidelines gets into an argument … and once it’s done, it’s dead on all sides.”
Union successor

The NFL players’ union has narrowed its list to five candidates to succeed the late Gene Upshaw as executive director, The Associated Press reported. The list includes former NFLPA presidents Troy Vincent and Trace Armstrong. The other three candidates reportedly are former union executive and former Bears tackle Jim Covert, ex-NFL player Ben Utt and attorney DeMaurice Smith.

Receiver recovering
New York Giants receiver Taye Biddle is recovering from gunshot wounds to his hand and leg after being shot while visiting family in his hometown in Decatur, Ala.

Decatur police said Biddle was shot outside a residence and was treated and released from a hospital. There was no evidence Biddle caused or provoked the shooting
49ers get ex-Falcon
The San Francisco 49ers announced the signing of former Falcons defensive back Jimmy Williams.

In two seasons (2006-07), Williams had 40 tackles, one interception and three passes defensed in 27 games. He didn’t play in 2008.
Rams coaches

St. Louis Rams coach Steve Spagnuolo named Pat Shurmur (formerly Philadelphia’s quarterbacks coach) offensive coordinator and Ken Flajole (formerly Carolina’s linebackers coach) defensive coordinator.
Etc… .

Arizona’s playoff success pushed the Falcons up one spot to No. 24 in the draft. The Cardinals were scheduled to pick at No. 21, but by reaching the Super Bowl, they will pick No. 31 or No. 32. …

New Tampa Bay coach Raheem Morris filled the defensive coordinator post with Jim Bates, who had the same job with the Falcons (1994) and most recently with Denver (2007)… . Carolina defensive coordinator Mike Trgovac turned down an offer to remain on the staff… . Former head coaches Tony Dungy and Mike Holmgren were added to NBC’s Super Bowl pregame show.

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Pacman's going to sue ESPN

http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/blog/shutdown_corner/post/Pacman-s-going-to-sue-ESPN?urn=nfl,133090

Sometime soon, Pacman Jones might get the rare pleasure of meeting a lawyer who is not working 'round the clock to keep him out of jail. It seems that Pacman didn't care for ESPN's report that he had arranged to have a man shot in an Atlanta nightclub in 2007, and he plans to sue.

From the Dallas Morning News:
Adam Jones is denying an ESPN report that he arranged for someone to shoot at three men outside a Atlanta night club.

In fact an angry Jones said he's planning legal action against the network.
"It will be a lawsuit in a week against ESPN," Jones said. "That's stupid. It's so stupid I have no more comments."

I'm getting way ahead of myself here, but my dream outcome for any potential Pacman Jones lawsuit against ESPN would be that ESPN agrees to air a special episode of "Outside the Lines" entitled "ESPN's sincere and heartfelt apology to the noble and kindhearted Adam 'Pacman' J

jones, who has done absolutely nothing wrong."
ESPN's really put itself in a tight spot here. It went public with an accusation with no information on who the accusation comes from, and no reason why the information should be deemed credible, especially when the police investigation found no reason to press any charges against Pacman.

I guess that information's coming on a future edition of "Outside the Lines," and ESPN has put itself in a position now where that show had better deliver.
Related: Adam Jones, Dallas Cowboys, NFL Media

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Jets introduce Rex Ryan as head coach

Enite read here

Florham Park, NJ (Sports Network) - The New York Jets introduced former Baltimore Ravens defensive coordinator Rex Ryan as the team's new head coach on Wednesday.
The hiring comes less than a week after the Ravens lost to Pittsburgh, 23-14, in the AFC Championship Game. He replaces Eric Mangini, who was fired following the season and later became head coach of the Cleveland Browns.

"With all these cameras here, I was expecting the new President to show up," said Ryan."That's OK, though, we will hopefully see him a couple of times over the next few years anyway."

The 46-year-old Ryan, who becomes the 17th overall head coach in Jets' history, has never been the head coach of a team in college or the pros. He was with the Ravens since 1999 on the defensive side of the ball.

"You're gonna see an attack team here, aggressive on both sides of the ball," added Ryan. "The message to the league is clear: Here come the Jets and they will give you everything they got. And that's probably more than you can handle. We want to be known as the most physical team in the league."

Steele career done for

Entire read here

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP) — Alabama point guard Ronald Steele has decided to forego the rest of his senior season.
Crimson Tide coach Mark Gottfried announced the decision Tuesday evening after Steele had missed the past two games with a heel injury. The Tide lost both games.

He returned after missing all of last season following three knee operations. Steele was averaging nearly 13 points and four assists a game. He is one of only two players in Tide history with 1,000 points and 400 assists in his career and was a preseason All-American as a sophomore. Then injuries took their toll.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Super time baby

Entire read here

LAS VEGAS — The guys in the back rooms who make the numbers seem a bit confused by this one, though they're hardly alone. The Arizona Cardinals haven't made it easy for anyone in their improbable run to the Super Bowl.

The Cardinals will be underdogs against the Pittsburgh Steelers, that much is certain in the sports books that line the Las Vegas Strip. No surprise there, because Arizona has been the dog in all three of its playoff games after sputtering badly late in the regular season.

The NFL will have you believe it doesn't matter because there is no such thing as a connection between the league's popularity and the ease with which you can bet on a game. The league and the television talking heads who understand what side their bread is buttered on will pretend that there is no such thing as a point spread on the biggest game of the year.

That's nonsense, of course, because hundreds of millions of dollars will change hands on everything from the opening coin flip to the eventual final score. Millions of Americans will have a financial stake in the game, whether they wager online, in a Vegas sports book or simply buy a square or two in the pool at their local bar.

I don't bet on sports, mostly because I'm lousy at picking winners, but a friend of mine risked five bucks in August on a 50-1 shot that the Cardinals will win the Super Bowl. Those odds weren't bad, but bookies thought so little of Arizona that even when the Cardinals made the playoffs you could still get 35-1 on them winning it all.

Fortunately for the bookies, my friend's bet was about the norm. Bettors didn't wager serious money on the Cardinals, even at longshot odds, because they had no idea going into the playoffs that Kurt Warner would play like he did earlier in the season, Edgerrin James would get a chance to run the ball, and Larry Fitzgerald would stake his claim as the best wide receiver in the league.

That combination, along with an underrated defence, was good enough to win three playoff games and get the Cardinals in the Super Bowl for the first time in their history. And what a miserable history it has been, stretching from the team's formation in 1898 in Chicago to its current location in Phoenix, where before this year the Cardinals had one winning season in 21 years.

There was never any reason to believe Arizona could actually make it to the Super Bowl. History shows that perennially bad teams tend to revert to doing bad things (see Chicago Cubs) when the pressure is on because they don't know how do anything different.

College Football racist against blacks

Entire read here

The Black Coaches Association Hiring Report Card came out this month, and when it comes to hiring black head coaches, big-time college football gets a big-time "F."

There are 117 colleges participating in Division I-A football and there are only three black head coaches. You don't have to be too smart to know how stupid this looks.
Let me lay it out for you:

Fifty percent black athletes leads to 25 percent black assistant coaches leads to 3 percent black head coaches.

Fifty percent white athletes leads to 75 percent white assistant coaches leads to 97 percent white head coaches.

A profession that so desperately seeks a level playing field offers nothing close to one for the black athlete who aspires to rise to the pinnacle of the college coaching profession.

Plainly and simply, folks, this is discrimination. More precisely this is one of the last and greatest bastions of discrimination within all of American sports.

In college football, we are winning games, building programs and making millions of dollars with the sweat and blood of African-American athletes. I should know. In the last dozen years, my family alone has made more than $30 million as Division I-A head football coaches.

Sunday, January 18, 2009

Dwight Howard leads NBA All-Star voting

Entire read here

The NBA released updated All-Star voting figures yesterday, and if the selections were to be made right now, here’s how it would all shake out…

Dwyane Wade (1,229,858) and Allen Iverson (858,469) would be the starting backcourt for the Eastern Conference, alongside LeBron James (1,259,764), Kevin Garnett (905,506) and the leading vote-getter and Dwight Howard (1,421,882).

For the Western Conference, Kobe Bryant (1,280,912) and Tracy McGrady (746,098) would be playing alongside Tim Duncan (903,311), Amare Stoudemire (626,796) and

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Hockey sucks

http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/31915/why_hockey_sucks.html

Ernest Hemingway had some peculiar ideas about what qualified as a sport. He said something to the effect that the only true sports were bullfighting and auto racing. I think there might have been a third one and I forget what it is but it might as well have been shotgun-barrel-eating because that turned out to be the only thing Poppa Bear was ever really and good at. Some might say he could right, but come on, have you read The Sun Also Rises? I have and trust me when I tell you as a writer E.H. was a great big-game hunter. My point is ol’ Ernie had some strange ideas about sports.

A lot of people have some strange ideas about sports. Some people still try to convince us that golf is a sport. I’m sorry but any sport where John Daly can do well is not really a sport. The man is a known alcoholic and weighs roughly 81/2 tons. Sure, I enjoy watching Tiger Woods, but I still don’t think of it as a sport. It involves way too much walking. Does it take skill? Sure, but so does table tennis, Scrabble, Monopoly and Chess. Golf is a game and until they allow either land mines on the greens or tackling of your opponent that is going to remain my opinion thank you very much.

For me the only two real sports are baseball and football. Growing up in Chicago, football is in my very DNA. Honest to God and hands to heaven one of my very first words was “Butkus.” Two teams of large men lining up on either side and smashing into each other? Hell yeah! All just to gain a little bit of ground. It’s gladiatorial. It’s like war without bullets.

For me the best sport is baseball. I love baseball. Lord in heaven I love baseball. I am diehard White Sox fan and I eager look forward to each game. I will watch a baseball game for three plus hours and when it ends I am depressed and want to watch more baseball. Home runs are great but the real game is getting the lead off man on base and then having him steal or bunting him over. Then you get the second guy on or he sacrifices to move the runner and then you put up your big hitter. He then smashes one over the wall and you get multiple runs. It’s a thing of beauty.

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Meeks scores 54; hits 10 dimes

Entire read here

Kentucky guard Jodie Meeks was virtually unstoppable, setting the Wildcats’ and the Thompson-Boling Arena scoring record with 54 points as the Big Blue rolled.
Kentucky (13-4, 2-0 SEC) scored a 90-72 victory over No. 24 Tennessee (10-5, 1-1) Tuesday night to claim early-season SEC East Division superiority.

Former LSU standout Chris Jackson held the previous arena record, scoring 49 points on the Vols on Feb. 10, 1990, two years after UT moved into the spacious facility. Dan Issel had the previous Kentucky scoring record with 53 points on Feb. 7, 1970, against Ole Miss.
Many of the 20,474 in attendance had filed out by the time Meeks put the finishing touches on his masterpiece.

The 6-foot-4 sharpshooter, whose previous career-high was 46 points earlier this season against Appalachian State, was 15-of-22 shooting from the field, 10-of-15 beyond the 3-point arc and a perfect 14 of 14 from the free throw line.

“After I hit four or five threes in the first half, my confidence got bigger,’’ said Meeks, who surpassed his scoring averaged of 24.2 points by halftime with 26. “I was just trying to do everything I could to help us win the game.’’Tyler Smith led UT with 19 points, and Wayn Chism had 18 points and nine rebounds.UT coach Bruce Pearl said he tried a variety of defenders on Meeks.

“He (Meeks) did anything he wanted to do out there,’’ Pearl said. “We wanted to deny him the ball and put so much ball pressure on him that he had to go to the rim. He did that the first play of the game, but he didn’t have to do that after that.

“Defensively we tried to guard him as a team. None of our guards could guard him.’’
UT battled back from 16 down in the second half to close to within 71-64 on Chism’s three-point play with 6:52 left.