Showing posts with label Sports. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sports. Show all posts
Thursday, February 14, 2013
Empty Hockey Net
Tuesday, January 15, 2013
Welcome Back, NHL...
Even more so, fans like me of the Minnesota Wild are really wound up about the season after it's off-season acquisitions. In any normal year, adding two players like Torrey Mitchell and Zenon Konopka would be a very nice off-season. Of course, the Wild did not stop there and added a couple of guys named Zach Parise and Ryan Suter. Those last two additions have made the Wild a favorite to play for the Stanley Cup this year. It's been a long time since the State of Hockey has seen playoff hockey, much less a chance to chase for the cup. So, let's play hockey, shell we?
OK, now onto a few changes the league could make to improve things. There is already talk that the league will be changing up the divisions and going with a 4-conference lineup as opposed to the current 6 divisions. I truly love this decision and am very much looking forward to it. If it goes through, each team would play 2 games against the teams not in their conference. That change alone is excellent as right now teams can go years without playing each other, but with this change every team will visit ever arena every season. And as a Wild fan, it also means we don't have to stay up for 9 PM start times 20 times a year as our conference will feature 7 other teams that are in our time-zone as opposed to playing many games in places like Vancouver, Calgary, and San Jose. Now, with this realignment plan, here are the other changes I would make:
Move the Phoenix Coyotes to Seattle.
Move the Florida Panthers to Portland.
And, (drum roll please) move the New York Islanders to Toronto.
I believe these relocated teams will help strengthen the league. No one is going to watch hockey in Phoenix. And yes, Seattle isn't in a hockey hotbed, but it is in a northern climate, and they would make an immediate rival in the Vancouver Canucks. The same reasoning can work for moving Florida to Portland. Portland may be a smaller city, but I don't see any possible way Miami has more hockey fans than Portland would. And it would get another team west in a league where most of the teams are east of Ohio. In the final move, yes, I am stating to move a team out of New York. The Islanders don't draw fans. And while New York is substantially bigger than Toronto, Toronto has enough hockey fans to support two teams. Can you say the same thing as New York? I don't think so.
Those moves could leave the four conferences looking like this:
Conference A: Anaheim, Calgary, Edmonton, Los Angeles, Portland, San Jose, Seattle, Vancouver.
Conference B: Chicago, Colorado, Dallas, Minnesota, Nashville, St. Louis, and Winnipeg.
Conference C: Boston, Buffalo, Columbus, Detroit, Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, Toronto.
Conference D: Carolina, New Jersey, NY Rangers, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Tampa Bay, and Washington.
That's my plan. And I'm sticking to it. Welcome back NHL. I can't wait for Saturday.
Sunday, January 6, 2013
The Vikings Biggest Mistake
That one big error? I think they should have kept Sage Rosenfels as their backup QB and switched Joe Webb to WR. This move would have helped in three ways, and I can't really think of a bad thing it would have brought. Joe Webb is NOT an NFL QB. Granted, he didn't play any meaningful snaps during the season, so the backup QB spot was mostly an afterthought through the season. However, having Rosenfels as the backup QB could have done a few things for the Vikings this year. It could have given Christian Ponder a voice of reason on the sidelines. Yes, the Vikings have a QB coach, but as in any job, while any coach or manager an help someone grow, having a peer that can share their experience is such a positive growth tool, and was something Ponder didn't have in Webb and would have had in Rosenfels. It also could have meant Leslie Fraiser wouldn't have been afraid to pull Ponder during one or two of his horrific games he struggled through. I'm not saying he would have replaced Ponder as the starting QB, but to give Ponder a chance to watch, learn, and find his focus again could have been good for him. And of course, it could have meant the Vikings could have still had an NFL QB ready to start in the playoff game against the Packers. Sure, there is a very good chance it would not have changed the result, but I am very confident that the Vikings chances of winning the game would have been much higher if Rosenfels would have been the backup QB instead of Webb.
The other side of that coin is keeping Rosenfels could have also move Webb to Wide Receiver. Joe Webb is a fantastic athlete. He is not an NFL QB. The Vikings biggest weakness this year was at WR, and this one little move of keeping Rosenfels and moving Webb to WR would have killed two birds with one stone. Yes, Webb would be inexperienced at WR. But putting his athletic abilities on the field, giving him a chance to be the deep threat, to run bubble-screens, to run a few wild-cat plays, to be a red-zone target that can jump through the roof to catch a high pass at the back of the end-zone. I don't see how any of those things wouldn't have helped the Vikings maybe even win one or two more games during the season, and possible still be playing in this years playoffs.
OK, having said that, this year was a FANTASTIC year. There is absolutely no way anyone could have expected a playoff team this year. I think 98% of Vikings fans would have been happy with the improvement if they won 7 games. But they over shot those expectations to win 10 games and make the playoffs. So here are some key players that helped make this a season of beating expectations:
Rick Spielman had a fantastic first season in his General Manager position. The draft was insanely successful and saw many players have huge impacts on the season. Matt Kalil, Harrison Smith, and Blair Walsh are all going to be studs for many years to come. Josh Robinson, Rhett Elison, and Jarius Wright are all going to be the type of roll players playoff teams need to be successful. Yes, Spielman didn't get the results he wanted by signing John Carlson or Jerome Simpson. I don't think those were bad decisions, they were good decisions that just didn't work out. Spielman filled a lot of holes in the roster last off season. If he can find a WR or two, a linebacker, and a backup QB to push Ponder, and have another very successful draft, this Vikings team is going to be tough to beat going forward.
Leslie Fraiser has turned a franchise that is used to being full of "character" moments (love boat, wizzinator) into a franchise that talks about football. His leadership and demeanor have greatly revitalized the franchise. Many in the national media compare him to Tony Dungy. I think a more appropriate comparison would be Bud Grant. And I look forward to Frasier leading this team into the future.
Bill Musgrave and Alan Williams. Bill Musgrave has one major issue he needs to fix. He out-thinks himself too often. I think when Ponder was struggling, he didn't call games in a way to help out. Those last four games of the season though, he was really dialed in and called outstanding games. But then again in that game yesterday, I think since he was stuck with Joe Webb at QB, he should have just kept running QB options instead of having Webb throw the ball as much as he did. The first drive was perfect. The rest of the game he called a different game. But the most overlooked part of Musgrave is that Adrian Peterson owes much of his success this year to the game plans and the running schemes Musgrave put together. Meanwhile, Alan Williams oversaw a defense that kept getting better as the season went on. As he learned on the job, as he learned what his players could do, as his players developed, our defense really started stepping up and kept us in games so the Vikings could win despite not being able to throw the ball. I'm excited about what he can do going forward.
And of course, there is Adrian Peterson. Good gawd, what a season that guy had. To do what he did when everyone knew he was getting the rock is just amazing. Odds are he will never have a season like this again, but I'm going to be the first person on his Drive for 25(00) bus next season.
Every team in the league, even the eventual Super Bowl Champion, will look back and see mistakes they will try to fix. It's my opinion the Vikings biggest one was the moves made with Rosenfels and Webb. Even with that move, the improvement from 3 wins to 10 wins is just incredible. And I have no problems giving this season a standing ovation.
Thursday, December 20, 2012
Adrian Peterson vs. Peyton Manning
First off, let me say that what these two are doing is truly fantastic and worthy of all the talk they are getting. And secondly, I will state that since I am a Minnesotan, a Vikings fan, and an Adrian Peterson fan, this might be a little biased, but I have always been a fan of Manning too, so I will hopefully prove that I am not just your typical rube.
Let's first talk about the Comeback Player of the Year award. So far, through the first 14 games each has played this year, both players are putting up some of the best numbers in their career. Peyton has come back from an injury that sapped the strength out of his throwing arm, yet he is posting numbers that rival his two best seasons with the Indianapolis Colts. 2004 was obviously his best year, with 2005 being easily his 2nd best year, and this year he is performing just as well as he did in back '05. Granted, Peyton's main strength is his mind, and as long as he keeps putting in the film study and game study that he is a legend for, he will always be a phenomenal quarterback in this league. But having lost his arm strength, and to come back after a full season away and perform like his 2nd best season ever is truly remarkable. Now, for Adrian, he only missed 1 full game last year. And like Peyton losing his arm strength, he had his knee blown up, and you'd have to say a running back tearing up his knee is similar to a QB losing his arm strength in how it affects both of them. And where Peyton is putting up numbers that rival his 2nd best season ever, Adrian is throwing down perhaps the best season ever by a running-back. He is currently ahead of the pace Eric Dickerson set in his record breaking season way back in 1984. Now, the medical field in all of it's advancing technologies has made it possible where tearing up a knee usually only takes about 9-months to come back from. However, most athletes say it still takes an additional year to start feeling like their original selves again. Adrian has said screw that additional year and is making his previous seasons (which have been excellent) look pedestrian. Both players have very similar stories here, which is why this is such a highly debated topic in the NFL. With everything said above, I'm going to have to say I'd give the Comeback Player award to Peyton this year, simply for the reason that he had to sit out a full season.
Now lets talk about the MVP award. Peyton went to the Denver Broncos during the off-season. A team that won it's division last season with Tim Tebow at quarterback. Let's let that sink in for a bit. The Broncos were good enough last year to win their division with Tim Tebow at quarterback, a guy that can't even unseat Mark Sanchez. Adrian Peterson is the ONLY option on the Vikings. Every defensive coordinator, every opposing defensive player, every fan at the stadium, every fan with their ass glued to their couch knows Peterson is going to be handed the ball. And he is still putting up the best season in NFL history. You take Manning off the Broncos, they are still the AFC West Division Champs. You take Adrian Peterson off the Vikings, and they are looking for their 3rd win instead of exceeding all expectation laid upon the team heading into the season. As tough as a decision the Comeback Player award is, the MVP award HAS top go to Adrian Peterson this year.
Monday, December 3, 2012
The Evolution of the Forward Pass
Insert migraine headache here.
There are a vast majority of people putting the blame of this on Christian Ponders shoulderpad covered shoulders. And that just isn't fair. I am not saying Christian is doing a good job, by any means. But for this to be going as bad as it is, it takes an entire team to be this bad at throwing a ball down the field. It has become painfully obvious that the Vikings possess both the best WR in the game in Percy Harvin (who has missed the last few games), and the absolute worst collection of WR's the league has seen since, well, maybe ever. The Vikings Wide Receivers constantly get the benefit of one-on-one coverage, and they are unable to ever get open. And the few times they do get open, they manage to drop a pass Ponder puts right in their hands or on their numbers (maybe Ponders tendency to be inaccurate in his other passes catches them off guard when he does hit them in their hands?). Then there is also Bill Musgrave, the offensive coordinator for the Vikings. This guy has got to be able to find a way to be able to get ONE receiver open on a play once or twice a game, no? Send the receivers in motion, run them off picks, something has got to pop into his head to take advantage of our receivers getting to find an open spot when only two defenders are worried about them. And then there is Leslie Frasier. Over-all, I think he has done a very good job at moving the team forward this year. The Vikings are a MUCH better team this year. Yes, there have been a few disappointing losses, games that maybe we could have won if we had done something on one or two plays in the game. But the fact we are competitive a year after winning just 3 games is a fantastic improvement. But Fraiser has to be more willing to sit Ponder down when his passes are obviously not working. I am also not here to say that Joe Webb is the answer. He is even less accurate in his passing than Ponder is. So, even though I wish we'd see Webb on the field once in a while to spice things up with that insane athletic ability Webb has, he is not the answer at QB. But throw him in there once in a while when Ponder is struggling.
I still think Ponder can be a decent QB in this league. Yes, there are QB's that are coming in and doing wonderful things in their first year or two in the league now, but that is not something every QB will do. A couple guys named Eli Manning and Alex Smith struggled mightily their first two-three years and they have proven to be pretty good quarter-backs now (ok, yes, Smith has been replaced as a starter. That wasn't due to him not performing, but to his backups stellar play).
So, yes, the Vikings currently possess the worst passing attack the NFL has seen in a very long time. And the fact they are as inept as they are with entire defensive teams focusing on stopping Adrian Peterson exasperates the problem. I think too many people are putting the problem solely on Ponder. I'm blaming this display of fucktitude on Ponder, the offensive line, the wide receivers, Bill Musgrave, and on Leslie Frasier. The entire group should be embarrased (and thankfully it sounds like they are).
Friday, November 30, 2012
Span-less in Minnesota
Monday, November 5, 2012
No Offence, But Your Offence Is Terrible
There are a lot of people piling onto the "Bench Christian Ponder" bandwagon after he failed to even reach 100 yards passing for the 2nd time in 3 games. But how much of that blame goes to Ponder? We have exactly one wide reciever that can get open, and his name is Percy Harvin. The rest have not been able to do anything other than get pass-interference calls (Thank you Jerome Simpson for all two of those). So who exactly is Ponder supposed to throw to? There is also the issue of the offensive line not being able to block what the opponents are throwing at them, giving Ponder no time to figure out where to throw the ball. And then finally, we have Bill Musgrave and Leslie Frasier. These two guys need to figure out how to get this passing attack going. It has appeared that there has been zero plan of a)How are we going to attack this defense, and b) what is our identity over these last four games. The opening four games of the season, we had good plans, and they worked. Lately? It's like they completely forgot how to game plan. And then that brings us to Ponder. Yes, he has no WR's to throw to, yes, he has no time to even think about throwing it to them, and yes, the coaching staff has failed miserably in how to fix these issues. But there HAS been times where Ponder DID have open receivers and DID have time to throw it. And he missed.
The Vikings right now have possibly the two best offensive players in the league right now in Adrian Peterson and Percy Harvin. Adrian is easily the best runningback in the league. And Percy is the best weapon in the league. Opponents have to defend Peterson, which should be leaving the passing game wide open. Why is that not happening? Even with the defense stacked against Peterson and leaving the WR's alone, we still see AP blowing up and putting up numbers that can only make you shake your head in amazement. And our offence can only put up 44 net yards through the air despite no one defending it. This shouldn't be too difficult to figure out. What is going to be difficult is figuring it out while playing a schedule that has us facing Detroit, Chicago twice, Green Bay twice, Houston, and the Rams.
I'll be very happy if we can sneak 3 more wins out of the season. Anything more than that will be a complete shock, and perhaps a sign Fraiser, Musgrave, and Ponder have figured out that the football does travel through the air.
Monday, October 29, 2012
NHL Cancels More Games
On the other side you have the players, who in their last offers to the league said they wanted to get the players share down to that 50% split, but neither one of their official offers got down that far while giving them sizable raises each year. That sound you just heard was my head slamming against the desk a few times. How on earth can you say you agree with that 50/50 split and turn in two different offers stating that they both get down to 50%, when in fact neither of them do?
These sides are SO close to figuring this out, why can't they see how easy this is? Owners, honor the deals YOU signed. Players, how about accepting slightly smaller raises each year through the deal? If they simply cut 1.5$ off the current 57% salary cap each season, they will get to their beloved 50/50 split in four seasons. With the leagues revenue growing as fast as it had been up until this ridiculous lockout, they players salaries will still be going up even with the lower percentage of revenue going to them. If they sign a seven-year deal, the last three seasons will be played with both sides splitting the revenues 50/50.
Now, someone go knock some sense into these two spoiled babies, show them how simple this is to figure out, and for the love of all things frozen, can we have some NHL hockey?!?
Tuesday, September 25, 2012
Mayhem.
Aaron Rogers should have All State instead of State Farm so he could be protected from mayhem like this.
Monday, September 17, 2012
How To Lose a Football Game
Let me start out by saying I am a fan of Jared Allen, the defensive end for the Minnesota Vikings. But the guy has to get his head screwed on straight if he is going to help his team win some games. In the teams first game of this 2012 season, he was called for being in the neutral zone on a play he got a sack on. He lost the sack, and also lost a spot to stand up as a leader. Instead of saying something like "I need to watch the ball closer and not give the refs the option to giving me a penalty that hurts the team", he goes on to complain that it shouldn't be a penalty. Now, given, it was a VERY close call. I wasn't surprised that it was called, and I wouldn't have been surprised if it wasn't called. But if the guy is going to be the leader of our defense like he should be, he needs to say the right thing regardless of what he actually feels about the refs call.
And then there was another penalty in the Vikings 2nd game, in which Jared hit the QB after he went out of bounds. Now, again, it was kind of a close play, but Andrew Luck was obviously running out of bounds. You NEVER go after a QB like that on the sideline when he is running out of bounds. It's going to be called. And the fact that he made contact, it will always be a penalty. I don't have an issue with Jared going all out trying to make a play, that is what makes him a great player. But, that leadership thing is again the issue. Did Jared fess up and say he let the team down, like a good leader should have said? No, he didn't. Here is his quote: "I still don't think it's a penalty," Allen said. "They can say what they want ... I didn't even hit him with my shoulder pads. I hit him with my arm. This is football, I thought." Yes, Jared, you hit a QB with your arm, while he was out of bounds. That is a penalty. And that was another opportunity for you to pull up your big boy pants and be the leader this defense needs.
And then there was another penalty in the Vikings 2nd game, in which Jared hit the QB after he went out of bounds. Now, again, it was kind of a close play, but Andrew Luck was obviously running out of bounds. You NEVER go after a QB like that on the sideline when he is running out of bounds. It's going to be called. And the fact that he made contact, it will always be a penalty. I don't have an issue with Jared going all out trying to make a play, that is what makes him a great player. But, that leadership thing is again the issue. Did Jared fess up and say he let the team down, like a good leader should have said? No, he didn't. Here is his quote: "I still don't think it's a penalty," Allen said. "They can say what they want ... I didn't even hit him with my shoulder pads. I hit him with my arm. This is football, I thought." Yes, Jared, you hit a QB with your arm, while he was out of bounds. That is a penalty. And that was another opportunity for you to pull up your big boy pants and be the leader this defense needs.
Thursday, May 6, 2010
The Vikings Draft

I'm probably a little tardy with a blog about the Vikings draft, but I wanted to let this settle in for a bit before commenting on it. Most "experts" say it takes three-years to evaluate a draft, but then none of these "experts" never tell us how anyone drafted three years ago. At the end of this blog I'm going to actually do that with the Vikings draft from 2007. Before I get to that, lets look at this 2010 Vikings draft.
Chris Cook, a CB from West Virginia was the Vikings first pick of the draft. I think this was their worst pick of the draft. It's my feeling that they gambled in trading down that one of their top CB's would still be there and they all got gobbled up. I think they could have traded down again and still got Cook if that is who they wanted. The highest pre-draft ranking I saw for Cook was a 46th pick. The Vikings took him 34th. Cook does fill a need since both starting CB's for the Vikings are coming off injuries, but I'm thinking he's going to be strictly a special teams player.
The Vikings next pick was Toby Gerhart, a RB from Stanford. I absolutely LOVE this pick. Taking him at #51 might have been a little bit of a reach, but this pick fits perfectly for the Vikings. Probably the biggest loss the Vikings suffered in the off-season was losing Chester Taylor (including the double impact of losing him to a division rival). No offence to Taylor, but I think Gerhart comes in a does a better job than Chester did this past season. Toby can run, block and catch just as well as Chester did, but Toby will also punish defenders. I can't imagine defensive players being too happy about having to try tackling Adrian Peterson, and then when AP takes a break they then have to face Gerhart.
Everson Griffen, DE, USC was the Vikings 3rd pick in the draft (taken in the 4th round). This is another pick I love. Most people gave him first-round grades, in fact the lowest grade I saw given to him pre-draft was as the 23rd best prospect. The Vikings took him with the 100th pick, which totally makes up for the reach on Cook. He fell to the 4th round mostly from teams doubting his drive and determination. From the looks of it, that could be a legitimate concern, but I find it hard to believe anyone can work with a guy like Jared Allen every day and not have some of Allen's drive rub off on you. When Griffen is on, people have been comparing him to Dwight Freeney. Anytime you can draft someone in the 4th round that is compared to Freeney I'm thinking you got yourself a pretty good pick.
The Vikings next pick was Chris DeGeare, OL, Wake Forrest. Uh... ok. As good as the Griffen pick was, this one makes me scratch my head. I never saw this guy ranked higher than 262nd in anyone pre-draft rankings. The Vikings took him at 161. That is just an incredible reach. And then lets consider how un-intelligent this DeGeare is. He missed a year of football because he couldn't figure out his school work. His scouting report say he has never been able to figure out the twists and stunts defensive linemen pull. Great. Welcome to the NFL DeGeare.
For their 5th selection, the Vikings took Nate Tripplet, LB, Minnesota. This pick right here might have been the worst pick in the entire draft. By any team. I don't think anyone in the world had him ranked in their top 500 players. In fact, in the five places I found that had players ranked at least 500 deep he wasn't listed on any of them. And the Vikings used their #167 pick on him.
Joe Webb was the Vikings next pick, and possibly the most confusing pick they made, at least initially. Most places had Webb listed as a QB. He was listed as a QB on the NFL.coms draft tracker. Ok, the Vikings obviously need a QB. And Webb did something in his last two seasons that no QB had ever done in the history of college football by passing for 2,000 yards and rushing for 1,000 yards two seasons in a row. Most of his scouting report basically made him a Tavarious Jackson clone. Why would the Vikings take a QB that is pretty much exactly like one that has already failed? Then it turns out they took him to play WR, which is where he played his first year in college, and now it's looking like it could be one very nice pick. Just like Randy Moss when the Vikings drafted him, Webb has a freakish combo of size and athleticism. How athletic is he? His college coach was also the college coach of one Bo Jackson. That coach said Joe is in Bo's league. In Webb, the Vikings got a 6'3" 223 pound WR that can run a 4.4 in the 40 yard dash, and a 42-1/2" vertical. He only had 30 receptions that one year he played WR in college so he might be a little raw out there. But getting this kind of potential with a 6th round pick is very much worth the gamble. Not to mention I'm already getting giddy about a possible wild-cat formation with Webb at QB, Percy and AP in the backfield. That could drive some defenses nuts. After the initial confusion, I'm now excited for this pick and hoping he turns out.
The Vikings 7th selection was Mickey Shuler, TE, Penn State. I think this pick was also a bit of a reach. He does fit the blocking TE mold pretty well, and that's a spot the Vikings will need to cover as Jimmy Kliensasser is getting up there in experience. I'm not sure this pick makes the team except for maybe being on the practice squad.
Ryan D'Imperio, LB, Rutgers was the Vikings 8th and final selection in this 2010 NFL draft. This is yet another pick that I'm sure would have not been drafted by anyone else. I think he has the same odds of winning the lottery as making the team.
So, over the past couple of years, the Vikings have done remarkably well in the draft. All seven picks last year started and contributed. This year... I love two of the picks (Gerhart and Griffen). I think those two could possibly turn in performances that overshadow how bad the rest of the draft was. I think two other picks will contribute (Webb and Cook). I'm at a loss for words at how bad the rest of the selections were. But then again, I'm a restaurant manager. Maybe the guys that get paid to do this knew what they were doing again and we'll see all seven do well.
Now, lets look back at the 2007 Vikings draft.
1. Adrian Peterson. All-world stud. Grade A+.
2. Sidney Rice. All-pro WR last year. Grade A.
3. Marcus McCauley. Held his own during his rookie season, has disappeared since then. No longer on the team. Grade D+.
4. Brian Robison. Very solid backup on a very good defensive line. Grade B-
5. Aundrae Allison. Never made it above 4th WR. No longer on the team. Grade D.
6. Rufus Alexander. Failed. Grade F.
7. Tyler Thigpen. Tyler started 14 games in 2008. For the Chiefs. Nice pick, the failure here was trying to sneak him onto the practice squad. Grade C-
8. Chandler Williams. Failed. Grade F.
Adding it all up, for the 2007 draft I'd give the Vikings a final grade of a C+/B-.
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
Where Will Tebow Go?

I can't remember ever seeing anything like this Tim Tebow "phenomenon" that is going on now with the draft just one day away. Most people know the story by now. When it comes to the intangibles (leadership, desire to win, coachability, on/off field personality), every team in the league would take him with the first pick in the draft. But despite having better college numbers than, say, either of the Mannings, no one wants to waste a pick on him as a QB.
So where does that leave us? Let's look at the teams that absolutely do not need a QB right now. New Orleans (Brees), San Diego (Rivers), Dallas (Romo), Green Bay (Rogers), NY Giants (Eli), Atlanta (Ryan), Baltimore (Flacco), NY Jets (Sanchez) and Detroit (Stafford).
I left a couple of teams off that list that might surprise most. Indianapolis and New England. These two teams obviously have two of the best QB's in the game in Peyton Manning and Tom Brady. Peyton is 34, and Brady, while only 32, has been getting beat up recently. Both of these teams have been outstanding at finding and drafting talent in the later rounds of the draft, and both of these teams could afford to draft Tebow and let him learn behind two of the best QB's ever for a few years.
How about some teams that are absolutely horrible in their QB situation that really can't sit around and wait for Tebow to develop? Buffalo (Brian Brohm), Oakland (Gradowski) and San Francisco (Smith).
OK, so that is now 12-teams that I'm pretty sure wouldn't draft Tebow unless he was still sitting there in the 4th round.
As for the other teams in the league, here's how I think they'd play it (listed in order of when they draft, and excluding the teams I've already mentioned).
St. Louis Rams: If they don't take Stafford with their first pick and go with Suh, the Rams would have to take a QB with their 2nd pick, but I'm not sure they'd go with Tebow just based on how they need a QB NOW.
Tampa Bay Bucs: They seem to be pretty set on seeing what Freeman can do, so I don't see them taking Tebow.
Washington Redskins: Now this is an intriguing pick. Again, I don't think they'd do it first round, but could see it happen with their 2nd round pick. They have McNabb to hold down the fort for a few years and then hand over the franchise to Tebow.
Kansas City Chiefs: This team is kind of in no-mans land with their QB situation. There are too many questions around Cassel, and I think in that situation you don't bring in a player like Tebow.
Seattle Seahawks: This is a team that I believe might be aggressive in getting Tebow. I don't have anything to base this on other than a gut feeling. Matt Hasselback is on his last legs and might be able to squeeze one or two more years out. And with Pete Carrol coming in, I could really see this team take Tebow and give Carrol a couple of years to teach this kid the ropes of the position. The fact that they have the 6th AND 14th picks in the first round, I might actually be surprised if they don't take Tebow with that 14 pick.
Cleveland Browns: It's no secret that this team has a pretty shitty QB situation. It's also no secret that Mike Holmgren loves Tebow as a football player. The Browns have Jake Delhomme at QB right now, and just like Seattle, they could let Tebow learn for a year behind Delhomme. Their issue is do you take Tebow with the 7th pick, or hope he is still there for their 2nd round pick? I'd guess here that if the Browns want him, they will try to trade down to the last third of the first round, get another draft pick in the process and take Tebow there.
Oakland Raiders: This team is in such a disarray, I'd hate to see Tebow end up here. The Raiders have so many holes to fill, most people would think they'd focus on players that could help this year. But if any team is a wildcard in all of this, it's Al Davis and his Raiders. After all, when was the last time this team made a good pick in the first round?
Jacksonville Jaguars: With David Garrard as their starting QB, this team very much could use an upgrade at the position. And with the Florida ties, a lot of people are saying this could be a good fit. I'm not so sure with this one though. If you want your young QB to learn the mechanics of the position, do you really want him learning from Garrard?
Denver Broncos: This team does need an upgrade at QB, but with two young guys still trying to prove themselves (Orton and Quinn), adding a 3rd project at QB would be a messy situation.
Miami Dolphins: I might have just missed seeing it, but I have not seen much talk about Tebow and the Dolphins. But I think this is a pretty good fit here. No team excels like the Dolphins do in running the Wildcat, and just think how much better it could be with Tebow, an actual QB taking the snap? He has the rushing skills to just take off with the ball, and his current QB skills would open up the ability to pass out of the formation. The Dolphins currently have a young QB with Chad Henne, but the book is still out on him. I think Parcells is drooling over the chance to add Tebow to his roster. This might be a place where a 1st round pick makes sense.
Pittsburgh Steelers: This teams only QB issue is 'character'. For an owner like Rooney who takes pride in having a 'family' atmosphere in his team, these incidents by Ben Roethlisberger, one would think that he'd love to get someone like Tebow on his team. But Rooney lets his front office guys handle things so I don't see the Steelers taking Tebow just to get a character guy.
Cincinnati Bengals: This is another team I could see going after Tebow. Carson Palmer has been heading in the wrong direction, and the team will probably address the QB position. My thoughts with this team is they will go after Clausen in the first round instead of Tebow.
New England Patriots: As I mentioned above, I could see them taking Tebow, but not with their current first round pick. Watch out for any moves by this team trying to slide up in the 2nd round.
Philadelphia Eagles: This is a team in a transition phase. They have let a lot of big names go this offseason. I'm not saying it's a rebuilding year because they still seem to have a strong team, but I don't see them bringing in a QB in this draft.
Arizona Cardinals: This team needs to let Leinart develop and play this year so they can see what he can do. Adding any QB would be a bad decision for the Cardinals this year.
Dallas Cowboys: The Cowboys have an above average QB in Tony Romo, and the only thing keeping him from being a top-tier QB is consistency. When he is on, it's VERY tough to stop him, so there is no need for Dallas to look at a QB right now.
Minnesota Vikings: This is one spot where taking Tebow actually makes sense. Tebow could watch and learn with Favre for a year, and possibly get some playing time in short-yardage or 'wildcat' formations.
When it comes down to it, this is my top three spots I think Tebow could end up:
1. Minnesota Vikings
2. Miami Dolphins (If they trade down)
3. New England Patriots.
Monday, April 19, 2010
What's In A Name?

The NFL Draft is this week, and it has a new three-day schedule. This year the first round of the draft will be on Thursday during prime-time. Rounds two and three will be on Friday, and rounds 4-7 will finish up on Saturday. This is a GREAT marketing move by the NFL, but we'll have to wait and see how it plays out for us fans.
I was looking through a few different lists of players that will be in the draft this year, and there were a few names that stuck out to me. This has nothing to do with these particular players talents, the positions they play, the school they went to or if I think they'd be a good fit with the home town Minnesota Vikings. What made them stick out is one simple thing.
Their name.
I'm not here to make fun of any of these names, although I'm sure it might come across that way. These names are just purely entertaining to me. It might just be how fun it is to say their name, or how difficult, or maybe a name just might be funny at a purely childish level. And with saying that, below is my list of players who are entered into the 2010 NFL Draft that I find have a purely entertaining name:
Tyson Alualu - DE - Cal: Hello Hello Alualu!
Arrelious Benn - WR - Ill.: Arrelious? Are you serious?
Ciron Black - G - LSU: Ciron? This guy has to have the best break-up line ever. "Every time you hear a siren, you'll think of me."
Selvish Capers - OT - West Virginia: "Selvish! Stop being so selfish and share with your brothers!"
Barry Church - SS - Toledo: I'm guessing Church wants to be on the gridiron and not in church on Sundays?
Michael Hoomanawanui - TE - Ill.: Not only is his last name fun to pronounce... how does someone have Hoomanawanui as a last name, and Mike for a first name?
Brandon LaFell - WR - LSU: A wide-receiver with the last name LaFell? Brilliant.
Rolando McClain - LB - 'Bama: Yippie Ki-yay
Zoltan Mesko - P - Michigam - The Legand of Zoltan is a Punter?
Akwasi Owusu-Ansah - CB - Indiana (Pa): By far the funnest name to say in the draft. And I had no idea there was an Indiana in Pennsylvania.
Alterraun Verner - CB - UCLA: Alterraun? Is there an Actualraun?
Lindsey Witten - DE - UConn: A football player with the first name of Lindsey?
And finally, the name of the draft:
Spud Dick - QB - DePaul
Monday, April 5, 2010
The Crack of the Bat
Ahhh... it's opening day for the Minnesota Twins. This is always a great day, getting to watch that first game of the season (even though it will be interrupted by watching Butler and Duke battle it out for the NCAA Basketball Championship).
There is a much higher than normal energy about these Twins this year. Part of that is obviously the new stadium they get to play in this year. Another part of that is for the first time since I can remember, the front office actually went out and got some good players in free agency.
Baseball is a beautiful and boring game. I LOVE watching the Twins, but can't really bring myself to watch any other games like I can with Football and Hockey. Baseball is also a very maddening game in that despite all of its stats and history, it's just so difficult to know what is going to happen during the season.
In baseball, you have the Yankees (who are supposed to win the World Series or their fans jump off the Brooklyn Bridge in protest), and every one else. Most teams go into the season with hope springing eternal (and teams like Kansas City and Pittsburgh leave that hope in the Spring as any and all hope will be gone long before summer gets here). With the additions the Twins made this off season, and with hope of some improved seasons by players like Francisco Liriano and Delmon Young, the hope here is the Twins move past winning the division and actually win a playoff series or two, or three.
But with every chance of a player like Liriano and Young improving, there is also a chance some players will have off years. Justin Morneau's back might not be as healthy as we would hope. And of course the best closer in the game, Joe Nathan, is already shelved for the entire season.
There are also players with big question marks. J.J. Hardy was an all-star in 2007 and demoted to the minors last year. Which Hardy boy do we get to see this year? Francisco Liriano was back to his dominant self in Winter League, but he's shown signs of his habitual sloppiness in spring training. And both Pat Neshek and Jessie Crain have injured arms they'd like to put in their past.
With all of that said, it's my belief that the Twins will win the Central Division, and I don't believe it will be close. Many people are saying losing Nathan will doom the team, but it's my opinion the closer position is the most overrated position in the game. As good as Joe was at it, he earned a save in 92% of his chances while the league average is 87%. That's what, three games difference? And with this years team having the lineup they do, I just don't think we will see as many save opportunities as prior years.
I believe this team can score pretty close to one more run per game on average. They were at 5.1 runs per game last year and I don't think its a stretch to see 5.9 from this group. I can see Denard Span raising the bar and becoming one of, if not the, best lead off man in the game. The combo of him and Orlando Hudson should be able to get on base pretty often for the power-alley to knock them in for some runs. Joe Mauer should be his normal self, which means he once again could have people shaking their heads in disbelief at how good this kid is. Justin Morneau is my big question mark in the lineup. Michael Cuddyer should be similar to last year. Jason Kubel will most likely improve on last years numbers. Delmon Young, man, if this kid can play like he did at the end of last season, we could have a guy in the 7-hole hitting .330 with 30 home-runs and 110 RBI's. JJ Hardy gives us a guy in the 8th spot that could pop 25-home runs. The 9th spot could be interesting. Punto is the most loved and hated player on the roster. The guy is also amazingly inconsistent. How can one player bounce year-to-year like he has with a .290, .210, .284, .228 batting averages over the last four seasons. With the eight guys ahead of him, I'd be happy with him just having an average season. Then there Punto's platoon mate Jason Harris who could hit .290, which getting that in our 9th spot would be freakin fantastic. But will either of them even get much play time after the all-star break, or will Danny Valencia get his callup and take over third-base and the 9th spot in the lineup?
I also believe our starting rotation should be able to lower their 4.84 ERA from last year to something closer to 4.40. There is a lot of warranted talk about our starting rotation having a bunch of #3 starters and no ace or #2 starter. Having a rotation of #3 guys will make for a good regular season, but you really need that ace and #2 guy for the playoffs. Scott Baker has the 5th best win-percentage in the American League over the past three seasons. I'd like to think he can be a pitcher this year that can border that #1/#2 position. And if Liriano really does have his nasty junk back, he can easily be a staff ace.
I believe our defense should improve, with the addition of Hardy and Hudson up the middle, and Span sticking to Center Field instead of moving all over the outfield. I'd say you could argue the Twins could have the best middle of the field defense in the league with Mauer behind he plate added to Hudson, Hardy and Span.
The bullpen is a question mark, but in today's MLB, what team doesn't have bullpen questions? Relief pitchers seem to be the type that can dominate one year, and have no control the next. And I'd be willing to bet every single team in the league will change over at least 50% of their bullpen during the season. Losing Nathan right off the bat obviously hurts, and I don't believe Rauch will be the closer when we get to the dog-days of summer (Pedro Martinez perhaps?). But one thing is certain, the Twins have a history of finding closers, from Jeff Reardon to Rick Aquilara to Every Day Eddie to Nathan. That's been a pretty remarkable run. Maybe they are due a bad year from a closer? Maybe Rauch comes on and doesn't let anyone doubt the decision to put him there? It will be fun to watch it unfold as the season goes along.
To wrap this up, I think this Twins team has the chance at hitting 95-97 wins. Maybe with Nathan out, they get 93. Any of those should win the division. As easily as I can see the team getting those numbers, the ball might bounce the wrong way too often and we could see Detroit or Chicago taking the division. That's one of the fun things about being in the Central. It seems like every season the team that is supposed to win it falters and teams picked to struggle around .500 end up catching lightning and winning the division. For now though, I'll stick with my 95-97 win prediction.
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
Fixing Joe Nathan

The Minnesota Twins came into this years Spring Training sessions looking like a lock for the Central Division title and a possible long playoff run. They have the best line-up they've had in decades. They have the guy that has been statistically the best closer in the game the past six years. And they have a young and hopefully improving pitching staff.
On Saturday a big chunk of their team fell apart. Joe Nathan (the guy I mentioned above as being the best closer in the game) tore a ligament in his pitching elbow during a spring training game. The typical procedure for this is to watch and treat the injury for two weeks and then see if surgery is needed. This is the path the Twins are apparently taking with most people saying Joe will almost certainly need surgery. This route would keep Joe from playing this year, and with his age being 36, it might be a career ending injury.
I've always been one who thinks the closing position in baseball is very much over-rated. But you simply can't take someone who has dominated the position off your roster and not suffer a loss. If Joe is out for the year, it wouldn't be difficult to see an extra 5-8 losses this year as you couldn't expect anyone else to do as well as he has. And with how close the Central Division has been the last few years, those 5-8 games are beyond important.
But what if the Twins could have Joe back, say, in the middle of May? There is a new procedure that doctors are using that could have Joe closing games again that early in the season. The procedure is called Platelet-Rich Plasma therapy. This procedure is so cutting-edge that there still needs to be much more research done before it becomes mainstream.
The procedure centers around using the patients own blood. Their blood is drawn and spun to isolate the platelets. I'll state here that I have absolutely no idea what that means, but the platelets are 10 times more concentrated than in normal blood which helps them clot and promote healing. The method, which is strikingly straightforward and easy to perform, centers on injecting portions of a patient’s blood directly into the injured area, which catalyzes the body’s instincts to repair muscle, bone and other tissue. Most enticing is that the technique appears to help regenerate ligament and tendon fibers, which could shorten rehabilitation time and possibly obviate surgery.
To date, there is been just one other MLB relief pitcher that has had this procedure done, and this pitcher was back throwing in two months. The pitchers name is Takashi Saito. He was the Los Angeles Dodgers closer during the 2008 season and suffered his injury in the middle of July. He was the Dodgers closer again during that seasons playoffs. Not only is Saito a relief pitcher like Joe is, but he was 38 years old when the procedure was done. Joe Nathan is 36. Having elbow surgery might not just put Joe out for the season, at his age it might end his career.
As I mentioned, this is still a very new procedure, and the procedure as it is now performed fails over 20% of the time. The only downside of it failing is Joe would then get the Tommy John surgery and be shelved for a season.
To wrap up, I don't see why they wouldn't look into this procedure. If Joe was 26 instead of 36, yeah, you do the surgery. But if the elbow hasn't healed at the end of this two weeks of rest, I think this option is too good to pass up. At that point you're looking at surgery where he'd be out for the season. Or you could try something new and possibly be back in two months, and helping what looks like an exciting season for the Twins close out on a good note.
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
The Darko Initiative

I'm a few days late with this, but I should comment on the Minnesota Timberwolves trade that happened before the NBA's trade deadline last week.
On Wednesday February 17th the Timberwolves made a trade with the New York Knicks, sending them seldom used Brian Cardinal for seldom used Darko Milicic. This is a trade that shows why David Kahn is doing a much better job than Kevin McHale did. I'm not one of those people that bashes McHale. He did a very good job of building the franchise up from being a laughingstock to a team that made it to the Western Conference Finals. Of course it then headed straight back to being a laughingstock before Kevin left not of his own accord.
There is a chance this trade will end up just being a wash for the Timberwolves. Brian Cardinal was not going to be on the team next year and he wasn't playing this year. Darko has been on record saying he is done with the NBA and will head home to Europe and play there next season. So, if Darko does stay in Europe next year, the T-Wolves are no better or no worse than they were without the trade. And that is the absolute worse this trade can be.
The good side of this deal? Milicic was taken #2 in a very deep and talented draft. He probably should not have been taken then, and hind-site says that was an absolutely horrible pick by the Detroit Pistons. But the fact remains that he does have some undeniable skill and for whatever reason has not been able to put that skill to use in his NBA career. He is also only 24 years old which means he should just now be entering the prime of his career. A time that his physical skills should start to flourish. He has been in the league for seven years already, and has mostly been an afterthought through those seven years. He's shown flashes of the brilliance that made him become the #2 pick in that draft, and he's also shown why he finds himself at the end of the bench on most of the teams he's played for.
He is exactly the type of player the Timberwolves need to compliment Al Jefferson and Kevin Love, and if Milicic can figure out how to use his skills here, this will be one of the best trades this team could ever make.
As I'm writing this, Darko has played exactly one game with the Timberwolves. He has stated he flat-out is not in game shape because of his lack of playing time in New York. So we should be expecting some growing pains here in what will amount to a 27-game tryout that will let each side know if Milicic will be a good fit with us or be better off going back over-seas. In that one game he played... WOW. Who would have seen this coming? He played 19-minutes, which is more than anyone could have expected him to play. But the thing is he earned those minutes. He scored 8 points, grabbed 8 rebounds, blocked 1 shot and had two assists, one of which was a beautiful back door pass to Damian Wilkins. But the big stat of the night? He was a +35, which means the Timberwolves outscored Oklahoma by 35-points while he was in the game. That's an insane number especially considering a)it was a close game decided by two-points and b)we lost. It would be easy to see someone be +35 in a blow-out win. It would be easy to see a +35 with someone playing garbage-time minutes. But this was a +35 where he found himself playing meaningful minutes and he found himself on the court for the last 4-minutes of a game decided by just two points.
It was only one game, and maybe that will be the peak of his career with us. But if he can build on that, and enjoy himself and comeback to play next year and years to come, wow, this trade would just be brilliant for the Timberwolves. The T-Wolves don't need a center that needs to score. They need a center that can play defense, block some shots, grab some rebounds, and score when needed and that is exactly what Milicic can bring.
Here's looking to some positive days with Milicic as the starting center for years to come.
Friday, January 15, 2010
My Futile 2009 NFL Divisional Round Playoffs Prediction

Before I start rambling on about my thoughts on these games, I have something I need to get off my chest. And that something is this: Why the HELL do people bet money on these games? I mean, would these people also drop a few Benjamin's on a coin flip? I'm looking at all four of these games and its very easy to make a case for all eight teams winning this weekend. But yet billions of dollars are changing hands betting on these games. I know I'm here making an attempt at predicting these games but trust me, in no way would I even bet $1 on these games.
Especially after my prediction last week that New England would make it to the Super Bowl.
(That sound you just heard was a rush of people leaving this blog)
All four games this weekend are outstanding match ups. It's not just eight good teams playing football this weekend. The way those eight teams match up with their opponents are absolutely perfect.
Case in point, lets discuss the New York Jets at San Diego Chargers game. This game has by far the best defense in the AFC against by far the best offence in the AFC. These two teams also have the top two W/L records over the last five weeks of the season. The Jets 'D' is just sick. Darrelle Revis is by far the best cover corner in the league. Unfortunately for the Jets, San Diego doesn't have a #1 WR for him to shut down. San Diego simply has too many weapons on offence, and Philip Rivers uses them all. Everyone is all over San Diego this week. They did close out the year on that amazing 11-game win streak. Despite that I really want to pick the Jets. But I won't. Wait... yes I will. New York wins by 3. 27-24.
The next game I'll talk about is the Arizona Cardinals at the New Orleans Saints. I'll start off by saying this: As a Vikings fan, I would LOVE to have Ken Whisenhunt as our coach. I think he's fast becoming one of the best coaches in the league. But, in saying that, he's coaching by far the most unpredictable team in the league. When he has his team on top of their game, they can beat anybody. But when they are not on top of their game... phew, they stink. Kind of the same thing as New Orleans. They looked outstanding starting off the season 13-0. And then... man, did they stink those last three games. Here's my take on the Saints. If Drew Brees takes their offense and puts up a couple of quick scores, forget about it. That puts their defense in position to do what they do best, which is create havoc for the opponents QB's. But outside of that, if they are in a close game, I don't think their D can stop any of the teams left in the playoffs. Which also leads me to say I believe these are the two worst teams left in the playoffs. Not that that's a bad thing, but they are. The winner of this one? If Arizona couldn't stop Aaron Rogers last week, no way can they stop Drew Brees. New Orleans wins 38-23.
Now lets talk about the Baltimore Ravens at Indianapolis Colts game. Are the fans in Baltimore over the Colts leaving them yet, or is this game festering in all of their hearts? OK, just like the other AFC game, we have one team with a shut-down defense (Baltimore) playing on the road against a team that can light it up (Indy). Up until their coach pulled the starters in week #15, Indy was unbeatable. Not only were they looking unbeatable, but they were also winning close games, which is a good lesson to learn come playoff time. Despite the turnover in coaches and players the Colts went through, Peyton Manning just knows how to make his team win. Baltimore looked outstanding in knocking the Patriots out of the playoffs last week. But outside of that huge victory last week, take a look at Baltimore's record against this years playoff teams: 1-7. That's why I'm going with the Colts this week. Baltimore played out of their minds last week and I don't think they can do it again. Indy wins 23-21.
And finally, lets talk about not only the game I'm most looking forward to, but the game that I believe features the two best teams playing this weekend. The Dallas Cowboys at the Minnesota Vikings. This game might be one of the best playoff games we've seen in a long time. Being a Viking fan that hates the Cowboys WAY more than the arch-rival Packers (dating back to the Drew Person out of bounds catch and push-off game), it pains me to say that the Cowboys are the only team left in the playoffs that scare me. I'm not saying any of the other teams left couldn't beat the Vikings, the other teams just don't scare me. The thing that makes this match up so good is how evenly matched these two teams are. Two teams that can dominate the physical game. Two teams that have enough skill players to score at a moments notice. Two teams that can stuff the run as good as anyone in the league. And two teams that have fans wishing for better coaches despite their successes this year. For all the national talk about how DeMarcus Ware will eat up Bryant McKinnie, it's laughable that no one is talking about the other side of the ball. Jared Allen gets to tee off on Flozell Adams, the most penalized tackle in the game, and a player that has obviously lost a step or two. I obviously hope the Vikings win, but nothing will surprise me with this game except for it not going down to the last play of the game. Since this is my prediction report, I have to call it, and I'm going to say Brett Favre carries the Vikings to a victory. Vikings 23, Dallas 21.
Enjoy the games. This should be a great weekend of watching football.
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