Tuesday, February 1, 2011

The five most valuable players of Wild Card Weekend

Matt Hasselbeck, QB, Seattle Seahawks.

I did not see that coming. It wasn't until Wednesday that Pete Carroll had even decided that Hasselbeck was a better option than Charlie flippin' Whitehurst. Hasselbeck hit us with the old stuff on Saturday, though: 272 yards, four touchdowns, and a 113.0 passer rating.

My favorite throw was this one. Hasselbeck wanted a hitch-and-go to Cameron Morrah, saw that it was going to be open (courtesy of Roman Harper), but also had pressure in his grill and had to throw it before he wanted to. Since he couldn't wait, he had to make the ball do the waiting for him, and he hung it up in the air like a beach ball.

It took an extra beat to get where it was headed, landed perfectly in Morrah's arms and got the Seahawks into scoring range. Tremendous throw.

Chris Carr, CB, Baltimore Ravens.

I really thought the Ravens would struggle to cover Dwayne Bowe. Struggle, they did not. Bowe's numbers, in fact, made Reggie Wayne's look Herculean by comparison. Chris Carr, along with Josh Wilson, had Bowe on lockdown all day.

While we're here, I offer my applause to Ravens defensive coordinator Greg Mattison, too. The difference between the defensive effort in the first half and second half was remarkable. They went from good to impenetrable. Jamaal Charles carried seven times for 87 yards in the first half; two times for minus-5 yards in the second. The Chiefs had 136 total yards in the first half; 25 in the second half.

Marshawn Lynch, RB, Seattle Seahawks.

That happened. That was real.

James Starks, RB, Green Bay Packers.

If the Packers can put a legitimate running game next to Aaron Rodgers, their offense becomes very difficult to contain. I don't know if this is something that James Starks can do consistently, but if he can, I believe it makes the Packers the best team in the NFC.

Darrelle Revis, CB, New York Jets.

I know Reggie Wayne thinks he should have gotten the ball more, but when you're covered, you're covered. Don't think it was insignificant, either. On the big third-and-6 right before Adam Vinatieri kicked the field goal with too much time left, Manning found himself going to Blair White. The throw ended up incomplete, with Manning expressing some displeasure with White on the sidelines afterwards.

Honorable mention:

• Mike Mayock, color analyst, NBC.

Mayock's commentary during the Seattle/New Orleans game was some of the best I've heard all year. He's straightforward, honest, insightful, unafraid to criticize, and entertaining on top of it all. That the NFL Network has Mayock under its noses, and instead chooses to let Matt Millen call Thursday night games is infuriating.

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Carson Palmer threatens to retire if not traded; Bengals say he won't be traded

Chris Mortensen of ESPN reported Sunday that Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Carson Palmer asked for a trade and said he'd consider retiring if he didn't get it. Here's Mort:

Palmer has become the object of fan frustration in the past two years and sources said he has grown frustrated with the team's inconsistencies. The Bengals finished 4-12 in 2010.

Sources familiar with Palmer's plan and mindset said he is financially secure for the rest of his life and willing to follow through and retire.

Today, Bengals owner Mike Brown pretty much dared him to go ahead and retire. He said, through the Bengals feed on Twitter, that they had no plans to trade Palmer.

It's tough to know who to side with here. On one hand, I feel like anyone who's been a Bengal for eight years has served their time, and probably should get an opportunity to play somewhere else.

But at the same time, Palmer hasn't been holding up his part of the deal, either. He didn't exactly set the world on fire in 2010, with 20 interceptions to go along with his 26 touchdowns. His season passer rating of 82.4 puts him in the lower half of the league among starters. Usually, someone has to be good before they demand a trade.

The contention from the Palmer camp is probably that he is good, but being a Bengal is dragging him down. It's not an unreasonable claim. The Bengals organization is not known for its long history of competence and efficiency.

I wouldn't bet on Palmer retiring, though. It seems like the retirement threat rarely ends with a man actually retiring. It's not that he's fibbing, necessarily, it's just that when it comes time for the decision to be made, competitors want to play. People also like money.

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2010 Totals Contest Update: August 23

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Scottie Reynolds Reinvents Himself as Pass-First Point Guard

Filed under: ,

Scottie ReynoldsFor a lot of players, the NBA D-League is more of an exposure league, a place where someone goes to put up big statistics while trying to get noticed by an NBA team.

Scottie Reynolds, the first NCAA All-American since the NBA-ABA merger in 1976 not be taken in the NBA Draft, has a different outlook on what he's trying to do while playing for the D-League's Springfield Armor.

Instead of scoring the basketball -- something he showed every NBA scout he can do during his four-year career at Villanova -- Reynolds has recently decided to focus more on getting his teammates involved in hopes of showing talent evaluators he can be counted on to play the point guard position at the next level.

"I've scored enough points," Reynolds told the Philadelphia Inquirer. "In fact, I'm sick of scoring."

That certainly wasn't the case early on this season when Reynolds averaged 23.2 points and just 3.8 assists in the month of November, but Armor coach -- and former NBA player -- Dee Brown has challenged Reynolds to be more of a facilitator of the offense. To his credit, the smooth-scoring guard responded well.

 

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Roethlisberger in the Super Bowl: a bad thing for the NFL?

On TMZ Monday, actor Jeremy Piven can be seen griping about the Super Bowl XLV matchup. He would have preferred Jets vs. Bears, and goes on to lament a matchup he labels as "Rapist-berger vs. Cheeseheads."

Now, I don't care what Jeremy Piven thinks about the Super Bowl. Nothing personal, but he's got his reasons for watching or not watching the game, and I've got mine. We probably don't have a lot in common as football fans.

But the sentiment he's expressing, I don't believe is an uncommon one. The Super Bowl is for casual viewers -- the people who watch because watching is what people do. Like Jeremy Piven, probably.

Most viewers don't care that the actual football itself promises to be epic. The general public isn't moved by Ben Roethlisberger's ability to keep a play alive vs. Green Bay's ability to hack down a quarterback. Most casual viewers don't care that Aaron Rodgers has the hottest arm in the game and now has to overcome Troy Polamalu and James Harrison.

What casual viewers do care about, though, is Roethlisberger's history of being accused of (but never charged with) sexual assault.

Here we are, at the beginning of Super Bowl week, and the words "rape," "rapist" and a host of other terms just as unimaginative as Piven's are seeing some heavy mileage.

At least, that's been my experience, and apparently that of Jeremy Piven's pals, too. I'm guessing it's been the same for a lot of people.

How big of a concern is that for the NFL? Does it worry about the negative publicity inspired by Roethlisberger's presence? Is this a bad thing for the sport of football?

The one thing we know the NFL loves is a non-controversial, sterilized, tame atmosphere. If you celebrate a touchdown by pretending the football is a pillow, you get hit with a fine. If your socks are the wrong color or worn at an unacceptable height, you get hit with a fine. Everyone falls in line. Everyone has to be the perfect little Stepford football player. There is no room for individuality.

Things about the Super Bowl that it can control, the NFL makes as bland as it can. Commercials that take even a moderately controversial stance get rejected. The meetings to decide who gets to play the halftime show, I picture being run by Lieutenant Steven Hauk.

Discussion of a social issue or even cheap jokes about it are not what the NFL wants on its Super Sunday agenda. But they are very likely to happen at your Super Bowl party.

If the public is upset about it, it's apparently not planning on showing it by withholding its viewership. Adweek expects the game to be the most-watched television program of all-time (currently, the record is held by last year's Super Bowl, which narrowly beat out the 1983 final episode of M*A*S*H*). About 110 million people are expected to watch.

Advertisers aren't afraid, either. They're still putting down $3 million for 30-second spots.

Ultimately, those are the things that count, because that's where the money comes from -- television ratings and corporate advertisers. The television audience is still growing.

I don't think the NFL would want to make a habit of having sexual assault be a common topic among Super Bowl viewers, but it's not going to hurt it financially. If it's detrimental to the league's image at all, it's no worse than any other recent off-the-field scandal through which the league has thrived.

By anything measurable, Roethlisberger's off-field problems seem to affect nothing. I don't think anyone would argue that it's good for the game, but is it bad? It's nothing the NFL can't handle.

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NBA's New Jersey Nets to play Toronto Raptors in London

? Regular-season games will be played on 4 and 5 March
? NBA looking to expand ahead of 2012 London Games

The NBA announced plans today for its first competitive matches in England when the New Jersey Nets will play Toronto Raptors on 4 and 5 March as the league seeks to expand professional basketball globally ahead of the London 2012 Olympics.

David Stern, the NBA commissioner, said: "To me this is the next step in the progression leading up to the London Olympics, which for us presents an extraordinary opportunity for the continued growth of basketball in Europe and in the UK.

"We consider the UK to be an important market in the NBA's global development. By bringing these two exciting teams to London we are fulfilling our commitment to schedule a regular-season game in the UK prior to the 2012 Olympics ? a natural progression given the overwhelming response to the many [exhibition matches] we have played to sold-out crowds over the years."

Stern also claimed that basketball could yet grow markedly in popularity here. "I think that there's a good possibility that basketball will assume a role that folks in the United Kingdom might never have anticipated. With the Raptors and the Nets [they] are going to have players who might possibly, not certainly, be playing for France, Italy, Spain, Brazil and Lithuania. This is going to demonstrate to us ? based upon the rosters of these two teams as they may even be modified further going into these [Olympic] Games ? the global representation in the sport."

Stern was less clear about whether competitive matches would be played annually in the capital. "Right now I'm not looking much further than March."


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Small Talk: Luol Deng

The Chicago Bulls and Great Britain forward on Cesc F�bregas's future and why he'd like to live in the film Avatar

Hi Luol how are you? Good. How you doin?

How confident are you feeling about this summer's Eurobasket qualifiers? I'm excited, we've got a young team, a very athletic team. We lack some experience but I'd say it will be fun.

Is there more pressure on you with Great Britain than when you're playing with Chicago ? with you being the man and having to carry the team? Yeah, definitely. The other difference is that in Chicago it's 82 games, here it's eight games and you've got to qualify. These are really like play-off games. Every game if you lose, it really hurts you.

You personally are one of the big reasons to be hopeful about this GB basketball team's prospects at the 2012 Olympics, but we hear you're also pretty good at football. Clearly we need some help there too, so do you think you could be persuaded to switch codes? [Chortling] I think I've got to find out exactly where my skill level is. I haven't played since I was 14. Back then when I played I was really good at it. But it's been a while so I'd really have to test where I'm at.

Small Talk envisages a role for you as a big target man to replace Emile Heskey ... I played midfield and I played striker. I kinda played a little similar to [Patrick] Vieira but a lot of times I ended up playing striker.

You're known to be a big Arsenal fan. Do you think they should sell Cesc F�bregas? I think he's going to stay. I hope he does.

You must move in the same circles ? do you ever hang out with the guys on the team? I used to but I haven't in a while. Back when [Thierry] Henry was there I knew a lot of guys on the team then, I was going to practice and stuff. But the last person I really kept in touch with was Philippe Senderos. But I haven't spoken to him in a while.

What's the worst film you've ever seen? The worst? Nobody ever remembers the worst film they ever saw.

On the contrary, in Small Talk's experience everyone does. Nobody. I remember the best, I don't remember the worst. Damn, what's the worst movie I ever saw? See ? I don't remember the name.

What's the best, then? Recently Avatar was the best I've ever seen. I wanted to go and live there. If I could find Avatar I would leave right away and go live there.

Really? Not put off by the enormous dragons, shiny panthers and hamfisted scripting? I like all that though! If I go to Avatar, I'd have some long hair, I'd connect it to the horse, I'd get on the dragon. I wouldn't need gas. Gas costs a lot of money.

Small Talk likes to hope they're paying you enough in Chicago that you don't have to worry too much about gas money. [Laughs] Yeah, but still. If I'm in Avatar I won't need no money, I won't need no credit cards.

Do you believe in aliens then? I definitely do. I believe it's a big universe, there's something out there somewhere. I think whoever reaches the other one first will probably have the better technology.

Yeah, if they get here first we're probably toast, right? Well if they get here first they'll be able to go away and come back. We won't be able to chase them.

What would you do if you were invisible for a day? Wow. I wouldn't like to be invisible for a day. But if I was ? I'd probably be up to no good. I don't know if I can even say that, but I'd be up to no good.

Spying on people? I wouldn't spy on people but ? uh ? I don't know. You know I wouldn't want to be invisible I don't think. I don't like sneaking up on people.

OK, so you don't want to be invisible, but if you could have one super-power what would it be? I always used to say when I was younger that if I had one super-power I would want to read minds. But the older I got, now I really don't want to read minds because I don't want to know what the other person is thinking.

People think a lot of bad stuff ? Maybe I'd travel through time. I would go back all the way to my ancestors and see how it really was back then. I think I would love it ? it would just show you how they had no worries back then.

What's your favourite vegetable? Man, I hate vegetables.

But you're an athlete Luol, you have to eat a lot of vegetables. No, trust me, I eat a lot of vegetables, but I hate them. It's one of those things, it's like doing sit-ups. I hate to do sit-ups, but you know you're going to look good. So my favourite vegetable ? maybe carrot? Is carrot even a vegetable.

It certainly is. Cheese or chocolate. Chocolate, for sure.

Steak or cake? Cake.

Jam or jelly? Jam or jelly? Jam and jelly are the same thing.

Bah ? Small Talk was attempting to test your British credentials after so long in the States. Nah, I go for jam innit.

Good man. Lastly, can you tell us a joke? Can I tell you a joke? Nah, I can't think of one. I really can't ? you've put me on the spot. Even though I joke a lot, I can't think of one.

How about you tell us about the best locker room prank you've seen in your time as a player? One time a rookie ? I'm not going to tell you his name ? was trying to be smart so what the vets did was they took his clothes from the locker room while he showered after the game. And you know after the game you have nothing there. The equipment guy takes everything away and you have to go out because your family's waiting. But he just stayed there for hours. Eventually the equipment guy, who had gone home, had to come back to the stadium because he just wouldn't leave.

A classic manoeuvre. Thanks for all your time Luol, good luck with the qualifiers. Appreciate it, thanks.

British Basketball and the GB Men's and Women's team are sponsored by Standard Life, the leading long term savings and investments company. Standard Life has over 6 million customers worldwide and provides an extensive range of products and services, aimed at meeting the financial requirements of customers throughout their lives.


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