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John Childress -> RE:NFL News (10/30/2007 3:16:37 PM)

Dwight Clark was an average WR. Montana won the first Super Bowl with a good defense and with him making smart passes. Their running game stunk and Clark and Solomon were average WRs. Clark played 9 years in the NFL, many in a passing offense, and only once did he get 1,000 yards and only once did he catch 10 TD passes in a year. Solomon was a very good deep threat who never reached 1,000 yards and also only once cauthg 10 TD passes in a year. AS FOR THE PATS You better believe that if Brady is going to keep passing up 45-0 I am going to blitz him and tell my players to blow his chest out. I would never try and end someone's career but a shot to the ribs to get him out of the game is certainly warranted. I never want my team to sit there and take a beating while the other team is rubbing it in our face. You will play me with respect or face the consequences of your actions.




Tim Cady -> RE:NFL News (10/30/2007 3:17:30 PM)

[quote="John Childress"]Yup, and I would have my LBs lay another horrific beating on Tom Brady - even if they got an occassional 15 yarder. There is a price to be paid - and we intend on collecting on that price![/quote] That's just wrong! To me that is a 100 times worse then beating the crap out of the other team. If teams want to forfiet once the Pats are up by 4 touchdowns fine. Either walk off the field or pull your starters. If you want to continue with your starters then we will continue on course. Did someone steal your id JC? Because to me this is killer instinct. Something that the Vikings have lacked, that you in the past, believed was important.




John Childress -> RE:NFL News (10/30/2007 3:20:32 PM)

Come on, 45-0 is not killer instinct.' Killer instinct is being up 2 or 3 TDs and not keeping the throttle down. If you can't see the difference between a 3 TD lead and a 7 TD lead then I can't help you.




Tim Cady -> RE:NFL News (10/30/2007 3:27:56 PM)

I just had this scary vision. Super Bowl - Green Bay/New England the rematch. 1st play of Game Brady to Moss 80 yards Touchdown!!! Oh wait there is flag, pushoff, Offense. Replay shows Moss burned Harris clean and they never even made contact with each as Harris was 20 yards behind. Meanwhile the Farve led Packers can do no wrong, committ no penalties. If you think people felt the sway in Detroit, in the get the Bus a ring Super Bowl. You ain't seen nothing yet. This vision has been brought to you, by a true conspiracy theorist. I know that I am paranoid and delusional, yet bookmark this if it happens.




Tim Cady -> RE:NFL News (10/30/2007 3:29:18 PM)

I just heard Jeff George is intrigue to come back. Yeah Baby!Bring him in he is still better than 20 guys starting in this league.




Guest -> RE:NFL News (10/30/2007 3:46:55 PM)

[quote="John Childress"] AS FOR THE PATS You better believe that if Brady is going to keep passing up 45-0 I am going to blitz him and tell my players to blow his chest out. I would never try and end someone's career but a shot to the ribs to get him out of the game is certainly warranted. I never want my team to sit there and take a beating while the other team is rubbing it in our face. You will play me with respect or face the consequences of your actions.[/quote] ************************************************************* And there is nothing wrong with that, but trying to intentionally and illegally injure another player is beyond despicable. I have no problem with what the Pats did, they continue to work their game. I have more of a problem with what the Redskins did. Why lay down and take it? They should have sold out and blitzed everybody. That would have been the way to send the message to Belichick.




Guest -> RE:NFL News (10/30/2007 3:49:30 PM)

Why in the world doesn't the NFL spring for having an extra official on hand, especially for nationally televised games?




David Moufang -> RE:NFL News (10/30/2007 4:09:13 PM)

[quote="Pete C"]Why in the world doesn't the NFL spring for having an extra official on hand, especially for nationally televised games?[/quote] Good question. Were there extra flags thrown because of the missing official? Knock out our guy, will you?! I'd also like to see a rule about players making referee signals. Every time there's a close play, a bunch of players are faking the signals (fumble recovery, holding, etc.). Next guy who does that should be flagged himself. I hate that.




Tim Cady -> RE:NFL News (10/30/2007 4:41:21 PM)

[quote="John Childress"]Come on, 45-0 is not killer instinct.' Killer instinct is being up 2 or 3 TDs and not keeping the throttle down. If you can't see the difference between a 3 TD lead and a 7 TD lead then I can't help you.[/quote] I am loving the thought of Brady breaking Mannings single season record. I am also hoping Moss breaks Rice's record of 22 tds in a season. JC, we just don't agree on this and that is ok, I still love you like a brother. Answer me this and I will then leave it alone. Why is passing, with a banged up rushing corp in 2007 more insulting than running all over someone in the 1970's?




Trekgeekscott -> RE:NFL News (10/30/2007 5:30:28 PM)

[quote="Tim Cady"][quote="John Childress"]Come on, 45-0 is not killer instinct.' Killer instinct is being up 2 or 3 TDs and not keeping the throttle down. If you can't see the difference between a 3 TD lead and a 7 TD lead then I can't help you.[/quote] I am loving the thought of Brady breaking Mannings single season record. I am also hoping Moss breaks Rice's record of 22 tds in a season. JC, we just don't agree on this and that is ok, I still love you like a brother. Answer me this and I will then leave it alone. Why is passing, with a banged up rushing corp in 2007 more insulting than running all over someone in the 1970's?[/quote] It wasn't just passing...it was going for it on 4th down up 38-0 and 45-0. Why would any team need to go for it with leads like that? Was their punter hurt? No? Was their FG kicker hurt? No? Other than to run up the score and rub it in to your opponents, showing just how classless you are...I just can't think of any reason for it.




Jim Frenette -> RE:NFL News (10/30/2007 5:44:09 PM)

I wish I could just mute Kornhiser. Last night when Favre threw the first TD pass he said that is why people buy TV's and watch MNF. I about puked. The shit that comes out of his mouth is toxic.




David Moufang -> RE:NFL News (10/30/2007 6:44:11 PM)

[quote="Jim Frenette"]I wish I could just mute Kornhiser. Last night when Favre threw the first TD pass he said that is why people buy TV's and watch MNF. I about puked. The shit that comes out of his mouth is toxic.[/quote] You're not alone. Packers fans (including myself) are weary of the endless Favre lovefests. I also think the Deanna Favre worship is overdone. I take issue with her constant media presence, and to a lesser degree, the cancer. Obviously I'm glad she survived. And treading as lightly as possible (my grandmother is a breast cancer survivor), the whole "breast cancer awareness" thing with pink crap everywhere is getting tiring. There are more aggressive cancers, and as a killer, breast cancer is lower on the list than, say, pancreas cancer. Yet there isn't any cute stuff to sell to raise awareness of that. And no hot athlete spouses to endorse it either. It's almost as sickening as SportsCenter devoting at least half of last night's edition to the Yankees' woes. Honestly, who gives a shit?




John Childress -> RE:NFL News (10/30/2007 6:49:24 PM)

[quote="Tim Cady"][quote="John Childress"]Come on, 45-0 is not killer instinct.' Killer instinct is being up 2 or 3 TDs and not keeping the throttle down. If you can't see the difference between a 3 TD lead and a 7 TD lead then I can't help you.[/quote] I am loving the thought of Brady breaking Mannings single season record. I am also hoping Moss breaks Rice's record of 22 tds in a season. JC, we just don't agree on this and that is ok, I still love you like a brother. Answer me this and I will then leave it alone. Why is passing, with a banged up rushing corp in 2007 more insulting than running all over someone in the 1970's?[/quote]There have always been some unwritten rules to every sport and BB is ignoring them. Now you raise a good point about times have changed and perhaps those rules should change as well. But going for it on 4th down up 45-0? Do you have a problem with Dungy sending Sanders on a blind side blitz to level Brady (assuming it is a legal play)? I love Moss and I loved watching Rice play so I would have mixed feelings about that one. People forget Rice has 22 TD catches in 12 games!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I don't think Moss can touch that one.




John Childress -> RE:NFL News (10/30/2007 7:01:14 PM)

[quote="David Moufang"][quote="Jim Frenette"]I wish I could just mute Kornhiser. Last night when Favre threw the first TD pass he said that is why people buy TV's and watch MNF. I about puked. The shit that comes out of his mouth is toxic.[/quote] You're not alone. Packers fans (including myself) are weary of the endless Favre lovefests. I also think the Deanna Favre worship is overdone. I take issue with her constant media presence, and to a lesser degree, the cancer. Obviously I'm glad she survived. And treading as lightly as possible (my grandmother is a breast cancer survivor), the whole "breast cancer awareness" thing with pink crap everywhere is getting tiring. There are more aggressive cancers, and as a killer, breast cancer is lower on the list than, say, pancreas cancer. Yet there isn't any cute stuff to sell to raise awareness of that. And no hot athlete spouses to endorse it either. It's almost as sickening as SportsCenter devoting at least half of last night's edition to the Yankees' woes. Honestly, who gives a shit?[/quote] Great points David 1. Laziness 2. hype bandwagon The media has gotten so bad at finding new stories they just keep running the same stuff out there every week. I don't want to hear 1 hour on Favre but I would like to know how MM took a 4-12 team and made them into a 6-1 team. I am sick of everyone discounting the good work of all teams not named Colts or Pats and I would love to see someone else win the SB - even Favre - over those two. The NFL is more than 2 teams. MLB is more than Yankees-Red Sox. Breast Cancer has become the latest hyped up cause. Everyone agrees that it is terrible and we need to address it but, as you point out, there are other deadlier versions like pancreatic cancer that killed my father 5 years ago. BUt no one will bring this up because they don't want to painted as anti-woman. Chronic lower respiratory disease kills 50% more women than breast cancer but you never hear about it. Lung cancer kills even more.




Lynn G. -> RE:NFL News (10/30/2007 7:06:57 PM)

[quote="David Moufang"][quote="Jim Frenette"]I wish I could just mute Kornhiser. Last night when Favre threw the first TD pass he said that is why people buy TV's and watch MNF. I about puked. The shit that comes out of his mouth is toxic.[/quote] You're not alone. Packers fans (including myself) are weary of the endless Favre lovefests. I also think the Deanna Favre worship is overdone. I take issue with her constant media presence, and to a lesser degree, the cancer. Obviously I'm glad she survived. And treading as lightly as possible (my grandmother is a breast cancer survivor), the whole "breast cancer awareness" thing with pink crap everywhere is getting tiring. There are more aggressive cancers, and as a killer, breast cancer is lower on the list than, say, pancreas cancer. Yet there isn't any cute stuff to sell to raise awareness of that. And no hot athlete spouses to endorse it either. It's almost as sickening as SportsCenter devoting at least half of last night's edition to the Yankees' woes. Honestly, who gives a shit?[/quote] Thanks for saying the above David. Two weeks ago, Viking fans got a little taste of the love fest when Adrian Peterson was leading every sports center show after the game against the Bears. The first couple of days it was fun, and I remember commenting on how nice it was to see a Viking player getting a little love like that. By the third day it was already getting old and, to be honest, a little embarrassing. When these sports shows decide to pick on a topic or a player, they go WAY overboard. If I was already getting a little embarrassed after three DAYS, I can imagine how you feel after three plus YEARS. My husband, a Packer fan, pretty much rolls his eyes about the excessive coverage, but specifically he's very, very, very sick of the talk about Favre's father's death which was now four years ago. The media sometimes has such little imagination that they pull up all the retreads as if it just happened. As for the breast cancer awareness and endorsements - that was brave of you to say - and I agree with you. Again, the hot button issue, or topic, and right now we're in the midst of breast cancer awareness. Don't get me wrong - it's fantastic that bringing something like that to the forefront results in more money for research, etc., but fundraising and overselling are two different things, and we're getting saturated with the pink ribbons. I don't need Deanna Favre to remind me to do a self-exam every month.




Tim Cady -> RE:NFL News (10/30/2007 7:17:46 PM)

It wasn't just passing...it was going for it on 4th down up 38-0 and 45-0. Why would any team need to go for it with leads like that? Was their punter hurt? No? Was their FG kicker hurt? No? Other than to run up the score and rub it in to your opponents, showing just how classless you are...I just can't think of any reason for it. -TGscott Being up 38-0 and 45-0 is such a losing propisition, I think a field goal would be tasteless. It was really to close to punt, although that guy does need the practice, maybe he should have tried to pin them inside the one and celebrate that. I guess they could have taken a knee. Although that might have been sarcastic and insulting. Here is an idea - Washington could have put their goal line defense in and stopped them. I don't like BB very much. I think he is a pompous ars as much as the next guy. But this is the closest that I have seen to a dominate team since the dynasty teams of the 70s and 49ers of the 80s. I love execution of the game. The Patriots execute better than anyone in all 3 phases of the game. Since they have my all time favorite player Moss, who I have stuck up for for years, I am enjoying the crap out of this. I am also biased about Tom Brady, being friends(more casual bus acquatenence but I like the guy just the same) with his first cousin in Browerville, mn.




djskillz -> RE:NFL News (10/30/2007 7:40:14 PM)

Excellent posts Cady, as usual. As Larry David would say, "you my caucasian brotha, you my caucasian." haha




Cheesehead Craig -> RE:NFL News (10/30/2007 8:51:06 PM)

I just saw Ditka on ESPN during lunch and he was asked about if the Pats are running up the score. At first, he didn't answer the question, he just said, what's the problem? The host kept pushing him and he said that they weren't. He said that if the other teams have a problem with it, do something about it. When asked more about it he just said, do something about it. The implication of going after Brady was there, IMO. Mike's old school too, if he was a coach still I have no doubt he'd send a backup LB in just to late hit Brady and not just once.




David Levine -> RE:NFL News (10/30/2007 9:44:33 PM)

[quote="John Childress"] Do you have a problem with Dungy sending Sanders on a blind side blitz to level Brady (assuming it is a legal play)?[/quote] Nope. No problem that's part of the game. BUT if Sanders gets to him obviously late and hits him for the 15 yarder. Then I have a problem. And if Dungy told him to hit him no matter if he had the ball or not, then I have a BIG problem.




David Moufang -> RE:NFL News (10/30/2007 10:30:40 PM)

[quote="djskilbr"]Excellent posts Cady, as usual. As Larry David would say, "you my caucasian brotha, you my caucasian." haha[/quote] I thought we were coo-de-la!




djskillz -> RE:NFL News (10/30/2007 10:35:20 PM)

[quote="David Moufang"][quote="djskilbr"]Excellent posts Cady, as usual. As Larry David would say, "you my caucasian brotha, you my caucasian." haha[/quote] I thought we were coo-de-la![/quote] hehe LOVE Larry David. Comic genius! Something even Packer/Viking fans can come together over! :itsgood:




Duane Sampson -> RE:NFL News (10/30/2007 11:44:09 PM)

Midterm evaluations for all 32 teams Adam Schein FOXSports.com, Updated 3 hours ago The NFL season is heading into November, so let's look at the grades for the first two months of the season. Remember — this is not a power ranking. I don't believe the Lions are better than the Chargers. It's not a look into the crystal ball. I don't think the Eagles are done. It's a grade report based on play in the first half. Now for the grades — the good, the bad, and the New York Jets. A+ New England: Bill Belichick's team is just drubbing the opposition. It's almost unfair how amazing they are. Tom Brady is enjoying a season for the ages and clearly the leader for league MVP. The dominance of the passing attack, including the magic of Randy Moss, the skill of Wes Welker, the speed of Donte' Stallworth, and the power and cohesiveness of the offensive line, was on display against Cleveland, Dallas, Miami and especially Washington in the second quarter of the season. Oh yeah — if you have a problem with the Patriots scoring so much in the fourth quarter, why don't you play some defense? Indianapolis: Center Jeff Saturday summed it up best when he told us, "We are more complete than at any point during the Super Bowl run." Peyton Manning's accuracy and decision making is pinpoint. Bob Sanders is the leading candidate for defensive player of the year. And how about the role players? Dallas Clark is a touchdown machine. Kenton Keith has emerged as a legit No. 2 back. Undrafted rookie Ed Johnson changed the Week 7 statement win in Jacksonville when he sacked David Garrard. Marlin Jackson has become an impact corner. Tony Dungy's bunch won at Tennessee, Houston and Jacksonville in the first half after losing every game on the road in the division last year. And the Colts still face all three teams in Indy. This is highly impressive. A Dallas: A sign of great teams is winning when you don't play your best. This was certainly the case for 6-1 Dallas on Monday Night Football against the Bills in the game of the year so far. The Cowboys hung with New England for three quarters in their only loss. Dallas, propelled by Tony Romo, Terrell Owens and Jason Witten, is clearly the best team in the NFC in this first half of the season. The Cowboys also secured their future by giving Romo a hefty extension. Packers: Is there a better way to end a first half? Brett Favre throws a game-winning bomb to Greg Jennings on the first play from scrimmage in overtime to beat the Broncos in majestic fashion. It was simply classic. Mike McCarthy's Packers are a highly impressive 6-1, fueled by great play from the defense all season long. Tennessee: Jeff Fisher's Titans are so supremely coached and poised. It's why they survived sweaty games against the Texans in Week 7 and Raiders in Week 8. Tennessee is simply dominant up front on both offense and defense, fueled by Kevin Mawae and the underrated offensive line, while Albert Haynesworth leads a reborn defensive line. Behind Mawae and Co., and with an improved work ethic, LenDale White has strung together back-to-back 100 yard rushing games in dominant fashion. New York Giants: Tom Coughlin's outfit is enjoying a six-game win streak. They have been extraordinary in the trenches on both sides of the ball. Osi Umenyiora has been one of the best players in the league. Please don't over analyze the strength of schedule for New York. In the past, the Giants would've lost some of the games against Philadelphia, Atlanta, San Francisco and Miami. A perfect second quarter is a perfect quarter. Detroit: The Lions are 5-2. Rod Marinelli's opportunistic bunch made game-changing defensive plays in statement wins against the Bucs at home and in Chicago. End Dewayne White is thriving. Mike Martz has made the proper adjustments by using Kevin Jones to pound the rock. Jon Kitna is the classic leader who keeps it all together. Who knows? Maybe we shouldn't have laughed at Kitna's 10 win prediction! So far the joke is on the critics, like your's truly. Pittsburgh: Just like I didn't fault Pittsburgh for losing in Arizona in the first quarter of the season, I won't criticize Mike Tomlin's 5-2 Steelers for dropping a road game in Denver by three points in Week 7. Pittsburgh, propelled by Ben Roethlisberger, Willie Parker and Hines Ward, bounced back nicely with a huge division road win in Cincy in Week 8. Jacksonville: They bounced back from the Week 7 disaster on national TV against the Colts to go on the road and beat the Bucs with Quinn Gray, starting for an injured Dave Garrard. Jack Del Rio's defense frustrated Jeff Garcia, forcing the quarterback into his only picks of the season. It was a classic Jaguar effort. Second quarter wins in Kansas City and the pounding of rival Houston were impressive. Rashean Mathis, Paul Spicer, and Mike Peterson are big reasons why this team is 5-2. A- Cleveland: Here's the beauty of this unpredictable 4-3 start; you now expect consistent excellent play from Rob Chudzinski's offense. Derek Anderson is enjoying success behind Joe Thomas, Eric Steinbach and this vastly improved offensive line. As a result of all of the above, Kellen Winslow and Braylon Edwards have become difference makers. B+ Kansas City: The 4-3 Chiefs are one of the true pleasant surprises of the first half. Whenever you can register division road wins in both San Diego and Oakland, that's impressive. A different defensive hero continuously emerges for Herm Edwards' outfit. And despite their offensive inconsistencies, Damon Huard, Larry Johnson, Tony Gonzalez and rookie Dwayne Bowe have done just enough in the wins against the Chargers, Raiders, Bengals and Vikings. B San Diego: This team has rebounded brilliantly from its 1-3 start to sweep the competition in the second quarter. And San Diego won all three games this quarter by double digits. The Chargers' shellacking of the Broncos in Denver in Week 5 before the bye week was the biggest win of the season. Previously maligned Norv Turner deserves credit for keeping this 4-3 ball club together after the 1-3 start. Carolina: The Panthers have dealt with adversity well, losing Jake Delhomme for the season. John Fox's 4-3 team won games in the second quarter it had no business winning in New Orleans and Arizona. C+ Tampa: Sure, Jon Gruden's team has awful luck with injuries at the running back position. But the last two weeks were blown opportunities to take the next step in should-win spots in Detroit and at home against Quinn Gray and the Jaguars. The Bucs left a lot of plays on the field in both games. The 4-4 record might ok for the Bucs if you base it on preseason expectations, but not good enough during the ebb and flow of the season. Washington: Trust me. This grade isn't a reaction to 52-7 against the Pats. It's a reaction to 52-7 after looking bad against Green Bay in a game Santana Moss threw away. It's a reaction to 52-7, the Packers debacle and Washington nearly squandering a game at home against the Cardinals. The run game and the defense have been flat out bad in the second quarter of the season. Washington, at 4-3, just hasn't looked the part the last 3 weeks. New Orleans: The Saints lost their first four, followed immediately by a three- game win streak. And at no point did you see or hear dissention or criticism from anyone on Sean Payton's ball club. Reggie Bush and Scott Fujita have both cited that as a major reason for the turnaround. In blowout road wins against Seattle and San Francisco, we've seen the Saints team we expected all season. The comeback in the second quarter has been pronounced. Drew Brees is finally getting pass protection and was phenomenal against the Niners in Week 8. Seattle: How do you figure out the Seahawks? They got totally smoked in Pittsburgh in Week 5 and bombed by a then-winless Saints team at home in Week 6 on national television. They salvaged the second quarter with a win against the Rams to improve to 4-3. Shaun Alexander has been stuck in the mud and totally ineffective. The defense was much better in the first quarter. Matt Hasselbeck misses Deion Branch. C Buffalo: Dick Jauron consistently gets his team to play hard. And with all of the bad luck, injuries and blowing the Dallas game, somehow Buffalo is 3-4. The wins against the Ravens and Jets were gutsy, sparked by clutch play from the defense. Marshawn Lynch is enjoying a very productive rookie season. And Jauron handled the Trent Edwards appointment to the starting quarterback job with aplomb, keeping the team together. And credit Losman for not giving up as he stepped in late for an injured Edwards and threw a game-sealing bomb to Lee Evans against the Jets in Week 8. Baltimore: The 4-3 Ravens have yet to look the part. The offense, ravaged by injuries at quarterback, tight end, and all over the offensive line, has been a major disappointment. The defense has been good, but not dominant. Matt Stover is arguably the team MVP. The Week 7 loss to the Bills, where Brian Billick's play selection was horrible and the team committed 11 penalties, was an eye sore and can come back to haunt Baltimore. Arizona: Injuries to both Matt Leinart, who's out for the year, and Kurt Warner have been a factor for Ken Whisenhunt's 3-4 squad. Tim Rattay was wretched replacing Warner and it resulted in a Week 6 loss for the Panthers in Arizona. But my Whisenhunt didn't help himself with the Anquan Boldin two-point conversion try to tie the game in the loss to Washington in Week 7. Darnell Dockett and Adrian Wilson are playing brilliant ball for the vastly improved Cards D. Broncos: Denver's second quarter highlight was a win on Sunday Night Football against the Steelers. But Mike Shanahan's 3-4 team couldn't follow it up with a win against Green Bay, with the two outstanding corners getting beat for long touchdowns. The second quarter of the season was marred by a lopsided home loss to the Chargers. C- Philadelphia: It's been a roller coaster first half for Andy Reid's 3-4 Eagles in every possible way, from false reports Reid was going to quit, to foolish newspaper columns telling him to take a hike, to the laundry list of injuries, to Donovan McNabb recovering on the fly from major knee surgery. Look at the last 2 weeks. The quarterback looks rusty and club gives up a game-winning drive in the two-minute drill to Brian Griese in Week 7. Then this weekend, McNabb looked healthy and more effective in Week 8 win against the Vikings. Every week is a grab bag. Oakland: The Raiders didn't win a game in the second quarter of the season. While the defense showed improvement in losses against Kansas City and Tennessee, Lane Kiffin's 2-5 squad can't seem to put together a complete game. Houston: Sure, Andre Johnson is hurt. But that's no excuse to fall behind 32-7 in a loss to the Titans. That's no excuse to miss possible plays in a road loss to Jags. That's no excuse to let the coin toss prove to be the turning point in San Diego. Gary Kubiak's Texans are 3-5 and should be at least 4-4, if not 5-3. D Minnesota: The 2-5 Vikings are a tough watch. They cannot complete the forward pass. They cannot stop the forward pass. These are problems. San Francisco: Nothing is working for Mike Nolan. Or more specifically, offensive coordinator Jim Hostler. His play selection has been peculiar. Holding for a long Joe Nedney field goal and not throwing the ball killed the Niners in a Week 5 loss to the Ravens. And if you don't believe me, ask Frank Gore, who's been vocal. Trent Dilfer didn't help matters filling in for an injured Alex Smith. The Niners just got humiliated the last two weeks against the Giants and the Saints. F Chicago: The Bears are 3-5. Losing at home to the Lions in Week 8 after beating the Eagles in Week 7 is totally unacceptable, and yet typifies the 2007 season. Losing at home to the Vikings is unacceptable. There is no consistency for this team in any phase (other than the brilliance of Devin Hester). Cedric Benson has been a bust. The passing attack is spotty. The defense, stunningly, is ordinary and beatable. Just ask the Lions, who swept the season series. Cincinnati: Marvin Lewis doesn't go for a 4th-and-1 against the Steelers down 14-3 in the second quarter? This team has lost its bite. It's always something. And right now, from the state of the linebackers, to Levi Jones getting abused by Jared Allen in Week 6, to Chad Johnson telling us it is fishy that the organization leaked stories to reporters he might be traded, it all stinks in Cincy for the 2-5 Bengals. St. Louis: Just for good measure, to end an atrocious first half, the winless Rams blew a double-digit lead to the Browns. And they did it at home. Just when you thought you couldn't find anything worse on TV than "Cavemen," you sit through a Rams game. Start working on a short list to replace Scott Linehan. New York Jets: "The Mangenius" has rapidly shifted from nickname to punchline. The Jets should've put in Kellen Clemens after the first Buffalo loss. Thomas Jones rarely gets the appropriate number of carries. I expected a fall off from 10 wins last year, but not a plummet to this horrible 1-7 start. Eric Mangini is very lucky the Yanks need a new manager and A-Rod opted out or else he would be getting blistered on the back pages of the New York tabloids. Miami: Ronnie Brown is out for the year. He was the lone bright spot for Cam Cameron's outmatched, winless wreck. The Chris Chambers trade makes it official that the Dolphins are playing for 2008. Atlanta: The starting quarterback was pulled. The No. 2 had surgery. The club cut a productive defensive tackle for no reason. The star cornerback and star tight end have called out the coach. The offensive line is beat up. The receivers can't catch with consistency. The defense is weak. Other than that it has been a good first half of 2007 for Bob Petrino and the Falcons.




Duane Sampson -> RE:NFL News (10/30/2007 11:52:16 PM)

Belichick Not Affected by Criticism Tue Oct 30, 2007 The Boston Globe reports New England Patriots HC Bill Belichick had little response to the comments of Redskins LB Randall Godfrey, who criticized the coach for going for it on fourth down twice in the fourth quarter of New England's 52-7 victory. At 38-0, the Patriots converted a fourth and 1 early in the quarter, then threw out of the shotgun on fourth and 2 from the Washington 37 with a 45-0 lead and 7:16 left. Godfrey told NBCSports.com that he approached Belichick after the game and told him he needed to "show some respect for the game." "You look at all the great head coaches . . . I'm just disappointed," Godfrey said. "You got to show some class, show some respect. Joe Gibbs? We wouldn't have done that. Bill Walsh? You wouldn't see those types of guys doing that stuff. I've never seen nothing like that. Most teams, you get up like that you sit on the ball and try to run the time out. They're up 30-some points and they're throwing deep. That was blatant disrespect. . . . This isn't like college going for power rankings. This is the pros, you show some respect, show some class." When asked about possibly piling on, Belichick said, "Well, Randall is entitled to his opinion. You can talk to him about that. I'm sure he'll give it to you." Belichick said the alternative was kicking a field goal to make it 41-0 on the first fourth down or attempting a 55-yard field goal on the second.




John Childress -> RE:NFL News (10/31/2007 12:54:17 PM)

Cedric Benson has been a bust. I was so glad that we didn't draft that stiff




Duane Sampson -> RE:NFL News (10/31/2007 1:48:57 PM)

Bush Faces Lawsuit Tue Oct 30, 2007 Yahoo Sports' Jason Cole reports former USC and Heisman Trophy-winning RB Reggie Bush and his family are being sued by the co-founder of a failed sports marketing agency, according to a filing Tuesday in San Diego County Court. The lawsuit, filed by attorneys for New Era Sports & Entertainment co-founder Lloyd Lake, alleges Bush and his family failed to repay a wide array of benefits they received from New Era while Bush played for the Trojans. One of Lake's attorney's, Paul Wong, said that in addition to filing the suit, Lake has agreed to meet with NCAA investigators this week to discuss Bush's involvement with New Era Sports. "I believe the complaint speaks for itself," Wong said. "We're looking forward to meeting with the NCAA on Friday. Beyond that, I'm not at liberty to discuss any details." Tuesday's filing purports that from November 2004 through January 2006, Bush and his family received cash, a vehicle and shelter as well as labor, material and services tied to New Era Sports – the agency that expected to represent the USC star when he declared for the NFL draft. The suit places the total value of the benefits extended to Bush, now in his second season with the New Orleans Saints, and his family at just over $291,000. The suit also claims to have written communication from Bush that promises to repay some of the benefits, stating "On January 14, 2006, Defendant Reginald Bush – reaffirmed his commitment to repay (Lake) in a written communication." If it is determined by the NCAA and Pac-10 Conference that Bush or his family received extra benefits, he would be in violation of NCAA rules. In accordance to NCAA bylaws, Bush's amateur status could be retroactively voided, prompting USC to forfeit games from the 2004 and 2005 seasons, including its latest national championship. Bush's 2005 Heisman Trophy could also be in jeopardy. Per the language on the Heisman ballot, any winner of the award "must be in compliance with the bylaws defining an NCAA student-athlete."




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