Saturday, August 27, 2011
Redskins Rehash-- dress rehearsal needs a new final curtain...
Big Play Bang-- all three first half touchdowns came from more than 20 yards out. One running (nice cutback from Tim Hightower)... one passing (a sweet throw by Rex Grossman) and one on defense (DeAngelo Hall getting the Skins on the board with an exclamation point). It seems as though the last couple years have been devoid of the home run ball-- and it's always nice to shorten the field.
Rex & Beck's Battle Royale-- Mr. Grossman completed 8 of 15 passes for 112 yards and a touchdown while John connected on 6 of 10 throws for 108 yards and a score. The duo's difference-- Beck threw an INT. The key stretch for Grossman was late in the first half when he went 6 of 8 for 85 yards and the go-ahead score just before intermission. That drive didn't save his job-- but it keeps #8 in the conversation. Beck's interception may keep the contest alive a little longer... but conventional wisdom has #12 with the upper hand; not only is he going to have to lose the job- Grossman has to emphatically win it.
Ground game keeps lifting me Hightower-- after a 37 yard scamper for a score, Tim Hightower continued to lay claim to the starting runningback job by leading the Skins in rushing (9 carries for 56 yards). And although the Skins were held to just 103 yards rushing, they averaged a robust 4.5 yards a carry. Can Ryan Torrain return before Labor Day to provide a legitimate challenge to the ex-Cardinal?
Ask and Ye Shall Receive-- Terrence Austin caught 5 passes for 71 yards and a touchdown while Santana Moss added 3 grabs for 51 yards and a score. Anthony Armstrong and Jabar Gaffney also got into the act; potentially providing whomever plays at quarterback this fall with more than a few options. Leonard Hankerson remains a peripheral project.
Walking Wounded-- Big blow for the Skins growth into a 3-4 defense as Jarvis Jenkins left the game with a torn ACL-- the rookie defensive lineman is done for the year. Tight end Chris Cooley remains in the land of limbo with a sore knee... how important will his absence be once the games are for real?
Third and Forever-- Despite moving the football again, the offense had issues moving the chains... 3 of 11 not the most inspiring.
Grading the D-- four sacks... two interceptions and a fumble recovery give one reason for optimism. And allowing 13 fourth quarter points doesn't have the ultimate sting because a lot of the players on the field at the end of a preseason game aren't going to be around much longer.
Flying the flag-- eight penalties is not ideal-- although only two resulted in a first down for the Ravens.
Gano gets it done-- the Redskins kicker continues to stay safe by making a 48 yard kick and converting on all four extra points.
Saturday, August 20, 2011
Redskins Rehash-- Sizzle and Steak both shine...
Rex & Beck's Battle Royale-- Friday's 16-3 victory over Indianapolis saw a tale of two halves; John Beck completed 14 of 17 passes for 140 yards and directed the Skins to four scoring drives- while Rex Grossman had less success: 7-12 with an interception... and no points (Skins gained just 122 of their 415 yards after halftime). Advantage-Beck.
Setting the bar Hightower-- the Skins ran for 215 yards against the Colts... on a clip of 6.1 yards per attempt. Tim Hightower set the early tone again with a 58 yard scamper on the team's first possession and scored the games lone touchdown to wrap up that drive. Tim's tally through two preseason tilts: 114 yards on 16 carries.
Youth served again-- Just like week one against Pittsburgh... Hightower's rookie replacement outgained him. This time it was Roy Helu's turn: 14 carries for 101 yards-- with a 51 yard run setting up a second quarter field goal. He also paced the team with 4 catches. After 2010's ground game ran aground-- it's always nice to have multiple options in the backfield.
Catch as catch can-- does one focus on what was or what wasn't? Leonard Hankerson tallied 3 catches for 46 yards but had a drop. That's been an issue this preseason. Meanwhile, Mike Sellars continues his adjustment to the tight end position with a pair of catches.
D earns an A-- Okay... Peyton Manning didn't suit up. Austin Collie did not play. But the Skins defense went out and shut down the opposition for the second straight week- limiting the Colts to 1 yard rushing in the first half and 12 of 27 passing (one week after holding Pittsburgh to 11 of 27) with an interception for the game. Darrion Scott notched two tackles, three assists and a sack. Kedrick Golston added two tackles plus two assists. On the night the defense allowed just 150 yards- and with a unit that ranked 31st in the league last year, back to back outings of under 200 yards allowed has to be somewhat encouraging.
Friday, August 19, 2011
College Football Corner-- Malibu Stacy has a NEW HAT!
August is all about optimism in college football. Everybody's unbeaten and with 35 bowl games, everyone thinks they have a legitimate shot at a bowl game (sadly, that's true-- 70 of 119, aka 59% of schools make the postseason). While most schools are either trumpeting a new regime (24 FBS schools in such a situation) or building off a successful season, Maryland gets to do both- with the added wrinkle of new uniforms.
Randy Edsall begins his first season at the helm having revamped the culture and structure of the program. Which has been interesting because under coach Ralph Friedgen the Terps definitely didn't have the reputation as a collection of renegade. Additional discipline in short hair, no names on the uniforms and no jewelry has given the squad a clean-cut look.
Offensively the Terps return 2011's ACC Rookie of the Year at quarterback; Danny O'Brien has a new coordinator in the form of ex-BYU and Louisiana Tech coach Gary Crowton. They've been working on the sophomore's form-- footwork, coming quicker out of center, release points, etc... Davin Meggett was part of last year's triple tailback attack and is expected to carry the bulk of the workload while DJ Adams continues to be the short yardage/goal line specialist. Will a wide receiver step up to fill the void of Torrey Smith? It seems as though every year somebody makes the leap from contributor to top target.
Defensively the team will be playing under its third system in four years. Todd Bradford looks to install an aggressive mindset and places All-ACC safety Kenny Tate closer to the line by moving the senior to outside linebacker; even as a defensive back in 2010 Tate lined up an awful lot in the box. How much will they miss the leadership of Alex Wujciak?
The team begins the 2011 campaign against Miami-- and that matchup has taken a different turn in the last week with the allegations of 72 players taking improper benefits over the last decade. What happens next? The term "death penalty" has been thrown out there-- and if that doesn't happen one would think the Hurricane program will be brought within an inch of its life. NCAA sanctions take a different feel at a private university (walk-ons can more easily afford in-state tuition at a public school). Virginia Tech's path to a Coastal Division title gets a little easier (especially with North Carolina also in the land of limbo). Moving forward-- there should be legislation attacking overzealous boosters. If you go after the money source, it'll be more likely to dry up.
Monday, August 15, 2011
College Football Corner-- the Conference Carousel...
Texas A&M apparently was packing its bags to leave the Big XII (a league with twelve in its title but ten in its membership) for the Southeastern Conference. Problem was the SEC met Sunday and decided not to expand-- leaving the Aggies in the land of AWKWARD as the school deals with its conference brethren. But the chance of expansion is the elephant in the room that's not going anyhere soon.
Does the Big XII need to get back to a full dozen to be viable? And which schools should they target? Memphis may be in Tennessee, but is popularly known as the capital of both Arkansas and Mississippi-- and with Fed Ex money the Tigers would be a decent addition to the Big XII North. Maybe take Houston as well from Conference USA? The Cougars have a history with the Texas schools having competed in the Southwest Conference from 1976-94.
As for the SEC expanding further, why mess with the perfect product? It's not like you're the NCAA looking to ruin my precious basketball tournament. Twelve seems to be the maximum workable number for an FBS conference... setting up interdivisional play better than 7 or 8 team divisions would. Bigger isn't better in college athletics. Ask the ACC going to a dozen so it could have a championship game nobody attends. Look at misguided attempts by the WAC and MAC in the '90s. Although the SEC could do just about anything and still make a lot of money.
Saturday, August 13, 2011
Redskins Rehash-- make your reservations for Indy!
Rex & Beck's Battle Royale-- with a groin injury sidelining John Beck... Rex Grossman completed 19 of 26 passes for 207 yards and a touchdown. Lost in the shuffle was a drive from the Skins 1 to the Steeler 10 in the first quarter that ended with a missed field goal. The job wasn't necessarily won Friday night-- but against a Steeler defense that won the AFC last year Grossman definitely had a chance to lose it. The longer Beck's on the bench-- the more established with the first team Rex becomes.
Ground Control to Major Tim? The Skins were able to pound out 140 yards on the ground and control the clock for 39 minutes... with recent acquisition Tim Hightower tallying 44 yards on 10 first half carries. With an offensive line stronger and better built for the Shanahan running game-- Hightower may be more than a preseason mirage.
Rise of the Rookies-- not unnoticed in the rersurgence of the running game was the debut of Evan Royster; the Penn State product provided 15 carries for 66 yards. Also making fine first impressions: linebacker Ryan Kerrigan tallied three tackles... while wide receivers Niles Paul and Leonard Hankerson each caught a pass.
Grading the D-- last year's unit ranked near the bottom of the league... and the first stringers came out strong against the Steelers starting unit-- notching two first quarter sacks and holding Pittsburgh to 32 yards on 12 first quarter plays. For the game they held the Steelers to 2 of 11 on third down... 41% passing on the night and 186 total yards of offense. Granted, Ben Roethlisberger only played one series-- but after being rated in the 31st last season, allowing under 200 yards is a little encouraging.
Father Flanagan in Foxborough? Absent from the defensive discussion was Albert Haynesworth-- and the former Skins malcontent didn't play in New England's preseason win over Jacksonville. Neither did Chad Ochocinco. Brandon Merriweather has been accused of shooting two former high school classmates. I'm waiting for Mickey Rooney to be signed up.
Kicking the Competition-- Graham Gano connected on attempts from 32, 34 and 45 yards while Shane Graham missed from 29 and 49 yards. Advantage Gano-- although they don't have to make a move at this moment.
Monday, August 8, 2011
Hall Passes... Skinsationalism... and other forgettable musings.
Traffic torment-- this Friday the Skins play Pittsburgh at Fed Ex Field... 7:30 kickoff. This only happens once a year-- the perfect storm of late afternoon traffic, Ocean City travelers, Redskins pre-gamers... be prepared for a hot mess of a stretch of I-495. If you're planning on going to Landover, leave now.
College Football Corner-- Maryland and the rest of the ACC begin practice... with North Carolina firing coach Butch Davis right before the start of practice. The former Miami mentor tried to bring the Hurricanes' culture to Chapel Hill; unfortunately he brought more U baggage than wins. Good luck, UNC... as your sleeping giant tenure continues to slumber. Virginia Tech, your road to the BCS just got a little easier. Virginia-- never mind.
Baseball beat-- the Nationals traded Jason Marquis to Arizona and Jerry Hairston for prospects... as the future is still not quite now. Best August news? The road to rehabilitation for Stephen Strasburg... started in Class A Harrisburg yesterday.
Sayonara, Cha-Cha... recently Annette Charles... the woman who portrayed "Cha Cha Degregorio" passed away at the age of 63. Just two months after Jeff Conaway (Kenickie) left us. All I'm saying is if I'm Didi Conn (Frenchie)... I'm not going sky-diving anytime soon.
Thursday, July 28, 2011
Beginning with a Bang!
Donovan McNabb's days were numbered the moment he was lifted against Detroit last October... can you believe the Skins were 4-3 (already equalling 2009's win total), 2-0 in the division and had beaten the two teams that would advance to the NFC Championship Game? After that Halloween afternoon- McNabb's conditioning and intelligence were called into question... but his future was secure as a former Redskin. After giving up a 2nd and 3rd/4th rounder (conditional) to get #5, the team receives a #6 and conditional 6th. Talk about depreciation. For whatever reason, McNabb didn't fit in with Kyle Shanahan's offense-- and it's a good thing he's off to an offense more attuned to his skill set and he's not lurking in the shadows around Ashburn.
The McNabb drama was the TV show that you like because you know the lead actor... but somehow never clicks with an audience and gets shuffled around the schedule and cancelled after one season (think REUNION). Meanwhile, the Albert Haynesworth comedy was the program some were wary about from the start... was funny for the wrong reasons and a disaster on many levels... yet somehow avoided cancellation for much longer than it should have (think JOEY). From the "fitness test" to "lying down against the Eagles"... Haynesworth gave the DC area more material than anyone since Dan Quayle. While McNabb represented a missed opportunity for the future, Haynesworth was an exhibit from the past-- and how the team conducted business. The fact he stayed and somewhat played an entire season under a new regime is amazing in and of itself.
Now the offense can take shape with John Beck (still figuring out that one) at the controls... with Jabar Gaffney and Donte Stallworth added to a crowded receiving corps (is there a 7-wideout set that I don't know about?). The defense prepares in earnest as a 3-4 unit with Stephen Bowen and Barry Cofield the newly acquired building blocks (from division rivals, no less) and Josh Wilson an impact corner (4 INT returns for TDs in 3 years).
Bring on the preseason.
Tuesday, July 26, 2011
Unlocked! The NFL takes a page from Friday Night Lights and gets it done on the last play...
Owners get more money. Isn't that what they were looking for in the first place? They also get another safeguard against being stupid: the rookie salary cap will eliminate the type of albatross we saw in the person of Jamarcus Russell. The get their "soda" in full: because owners charge regular season prices for preseason games, preseason parking and preseason concessions yet only have to pay players their preseason rate, their margin is ridiculous for the two August home games (like soda at a fast food restaurant: you don't want to know how much profit's in a medium sprite). They also get a team option on a fifth year for first round picks-- a semi-franchise tag if you will.
Players get a better quality of life. Lightening the offseason workload will allow the body to heal better and not be subjected to the constant pounding that makes players more susceptible to wear and tear injuries. Veterans will get the mad money that was thrown at rookies (thanks to the salary floor). And health care benefits will be a little more appropriate for players this time out.
Fans get a full season of football-- although let's take a moment of silence to mourn the loss of this year's Hall of Fame Game in Canton, Ohio. Fans can plan training camp trips, fantasy leagues, and weekend journeys to see their team play. And ten years of labor peace. The NFL's streak of not missing any regular season play since 1987 continues.
Who loses? New coaches, coordinators and quarterbacks. Six new head coaches haven't had the benefit of a fully productive offseason and will find it challenging to put their stamp on the team. Offensive coordinators have to fit three months of studying into three weeks of cramming. And unlike years where we saw a Marc Sanchez, Matt Ryan or Joe Flacco guide a team to the postseason-- there will probably be a steeper learning curve.
Whither the Redskins? Can a team with a less than awesome track record of procuring talent make the right moves? Will a non-offseason of working out the kinks of the 3-4 haunt a unit still not built for the new defense? How long will Donovan McNabb remain a Redskin-- and will John Beck justify the Shanahan's optimism? And what about Albert Haynesworth's progressive infection of a locker room and organization trying to move on? Thank goodness we're no longer worrying about transition tags, rookie caps and percentages of the gross.
Friday, July 15, 2011
Summer Bloggin- had me a blast...
Football frenzy-- so I guess after four months of the non-story story... there actually is NFL Labor progress. I'm looking forward to seeing which teams are able to make better snap free agent judgements once the lockout ends. Back in the 70's, the NFL held its draft in late January and the front offices that had their act together (Dallas, Pittsburgh, Oakland) were able to take and maintain their personnel lead over the rest of the sad sacks that couldn't get out of their own way (New Orleans, New York Jets, Kansas City). Let's see if the Redskins make smart or silly moves this July-- Bruce Allen will earn his paycheck this month.
College Corner-- Kudos to Maryland for getting games in Baltimore again-- especially with 7 home games a year now the Terps can play one of their games in their home state's largest city. Sad thing-- it's probably easier for me to get from my home in Arlington, Virginia to M & T than Fed Ex Field... can't wait for Terps-Notre Dame this November. Meanwhile, the ACC has long tried to become "bigtime" in football... as the purging of the Big East last decade brought the conference to 12 schools and an anti-climactic championship game. Another move to bridge the gap between the ACC and the SEC: PROBATION. Because you know, if you aren't cheatin' you aren't tryin'. I'm not saying Georgia Tech's the SMU of 2011... but the Yellowjacket sanctions mean a vacated championship in a league that's always held itself above others when it comes to running clean programs (Clemson football in the 80's and North Carolina State basketball in the 70's notwithstanding).
British Open-- Youth and age were served in round one with 20-year old amateur Tom Lewis and 40-year old Thomas Bjorn capturing the Thursday headlines... followed by Lucas Glover and Darren Clarke surging on Friday. So much for the Rory McIlroy era of extreme dominance(the curly-haired one is 6 shots off the pace entering the weekend). I've always likened the British Open to tennis' French Open-- odd conditions that often steal the headlines from the actual competition... and a slew of clay court/links specialists like Gustavo Kuerten and Paul Lawrie outshine the mainstream elite.
Swing and a miss-- by the prosecution. For twenty-plus years, Roger Clemens intimidated hitters with a blow-by fastball and often caught them swinging while looking for the heater. Yesterday federal prosecutors pulled a hamstring in the first inning while swinging for the fences-- as the ignorance of an evidence ban set in motion the mistrial of Clemens' perjury case. Really? You messed this thing up on day two? Hopefully they'll send those attorneys down to AA Traffic Court in Anchorage.
All Star Blah Blah-- The buzz coming out of Phoenix was as lukewarm as you could get. Lower TV ratings than last year. And the impression that more than a few players would have liked to have been anywhere else. How do you fix this potential July juggernaut? Make the starting position players go at least six innings. Pitchers toss two innings each through the sixth and no dugout dumping of reserves onto the field. Remember how Oscar nominees say just being nominated is an honor? Well just being an All Star reserve should be honor enough. Unless you're Timmy Lupus, as a reserve you don't have an unalienable right to appear in the game. Sorry-- that's what you get when the game is for home field advantage in the World Series. And as far as players skipping the event-- if you have an all star incentive clause and don't show up to the game, you shouldn't pick up the check. Ninety percent of success is just showing up-- and if you can't make it to the All Star Game-- you shouldn't get your All Star Bonus.
Turning off Friday Night Lights-- I don't watch much television... and haven't tuned into NBC's red-haired stepchild since the season two murder plot (coupled with the musician turning into a game-winning wide receiver after 3 weeks of practices) led me astray. But one of TV's best network programs in the last ten years leaves without the mass over celebration that marked Lost's overrated final season. Friday Night Lights had a certain groove and feel that felt genuine-- more so than the three-camera sitcoms and flashy dramas where they actually clean the sets in between takes. From lunatic booster Buddy Garrity (unintentionally funny fake TV ads for his dealership make one scream) to consistent foul-up Tim Riggins (ironically the onetime onscreen boyfriend of Minka Kelly's character racked up the most impressive run of hookups since, um, Derek Jeter), not everybody comes out a winner-- just like the actual games. Well done TV is hard to find-- and the network didn't make it easy for Friday Night Lights to find the audience it deserved. Now there were blemishes... from all the last-second game-winning touchdowns to the coaching carousel (West Dillon had 5 coaching regimes over 4 fictional seasons)... but for the most part like a quality football program this one delivered and leaves the airwaves a winner-- making room for more repeats of "The Marriage Ref". Thanks, NBC...I'm buying another David Mitchell book today.
Thursday, June 23, 2011
Riggleman resigns-- drafting and dominance-- plus the Wiener role...
But nothing interrupts a lazy day other than a surprise resignation-- Jim Riggleman leaving the Nationals after a 38-37 start is somewhat of a surprise; evidently he wasn't pleased with his 2012 option status and threatened to walk if it wasn't resolved. This comes as the team wraps up an 8-1 homestand and is over .500 this deep in the season for the first time in six years. Zimmerman's back... and hitting well. Michael Morse continues to camouflage Jayson Werth's underachieving with a breakout season of his own. And the pitching isn't porous (although they still have their moments). Right now, it's a great time to be a Nationals fan... as for the first time since their arrival-- the upside is here! But then Riggleman bluffs and is called on it and walks off into the sunset. Did he at least wave the victory sign before he boarded the helicopter?
The NBA Draft is front and center this week; most media outlets try to pattern their coverage around the blueprint of the golden goose that is the NFL. Unfortunately, while most pro football fans dabble in following the college game- there's a bigger disconnect with the NBA and NCAA. Plus the European factor-- imagine if the Redskins picked a defensive lineman from Turkey (truth be told you could make the case for the Skins signing a defensive lineman who was a turkey), followed by a cornerback from Italy. And with just two picks for each team and 60 overall selections, the draft is over before you know it. Sixty players doesn't even get you 30% of the way through the NFL draft.
Will the Wizards pick the right player? This is the team that picked Kwame Brown. So things have a way of happening. In a draft as shallow as my swimming pool (3 feet-- NO DIVING) they might get some pieces who can help them win in the future. With the 6th, 18th and 34th selections the perfect world would yield an impact player at 6... a contributor at 18 and a 12th man at 34. Many of the mock drafts (and there are a multitude of them) have the Wizards grabbing a pair of foreign players (Czech forward Jan Vesely and Lithuanian big man Donatas Motiejunas) with your guess in the second round (as things often are). One of the websites has Jordan Williams lasting until the 42nd pick... not ideal for skipping your last year at Maryland, especially with a lockout looming.
If you watched any of the U.S. Open over the weekend, you'd think that Rory McIlroy is going to win the next 25 majors in a row. The Irishman did lap the field and led wire to wire after making Congressional his little playground, but let's allow him to win a few before we jump all over ourselves. Ernie Els won three majors in his 20's... and I thought he'd be good for three more-- but no dice. David Duval hasn't added to his total. McIlroy has been anointed the future, and as the window closes on the generation of Phil/Ernie/Vijay (I would have bet the world Els or Singh would have been the one to get to 4 majors instead of Lefty)... the new breed of golfer that grew up during Tiger's reign is here. And winning.
Whither Tiger Woods? As he recovers from leg injuries, golf's number one lightning rod stands four majors shy of Jack Nicklaus' record. Four years ago as he was winning back to back PGA's after taking consecutive British Opens the year before (he also has repeated at Masters champ and won consecutive PGA's earlier in his career)... I thought he had a true grandslam in the future with a few other wins-giving Tiger eventually 20-21 majors. Now he's got a 10-15 year window to get four... and while I still think he can get there... I thought Tom Watson had 3 majors in him after age 33. Woods' career somewhat parallels Jacks in that each had an early dominant streak (Jack won 7 from 1962-67, Tiger won 8 from 1997-2002) followed by a mid-career peak (Jack took 7 from 1970-75, Tiger took 6 from 2005-08). Nicklaus added four more in his 1978-86 twilight... and you'd think Tiger could do the same if not better- once his knee works.
Last but not least, who plays Anthony Wiener in the TV movie? Keep in mind Alyssa Milano and Drew Barrymore both took shots at Amy Fisher on competing networks. I threw the question out on Facebook and some responded with Adrian Brody-- he seems a little too high-class for a quickie TV movie. Fisher Stevens is an inspired choice... as is Dustin Diamond (he would be on the CW version). Johnathon Schaetch, meanwhile, is still building off his role as Jimmy Mattingly in "That Thing You Do!"... and although I can't recall anything of note he's done since, would be a good fit in the creepy Congressman role. Now to cast his wife, interns and the porn star...