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Archive for March, 2014

NFL – Post-Super Bowl Thoughts, Rating the Bills’ Free Agency Moves

15 Mar

It’s been a little over a month since the Super Bowl, and I figure it’s about time to post some thoughts that came to mind after watching the game:

* It was unfortunate that the main story leading up to the game was Richard Sherman’s post-game rant at San Francisco’s Michael Crabtree following the NFC Championship game. Sherman is a terrific player, and it’s a shame he had to ruin what should have been a positive spotlight moment for his team after a hard-fought win by putting on a classless display of selfishness. Poor sportsmanship has been slowly creeping into the NFL in recent years and is becoming the norm, and hopefully the league hierarchy will do something to curb it before next season.

* Marshawn Lynch is now the latest example of a problem player leaving Buffalo and coming out smelling like roses with his new team. Lynch has been a huge weapon for Seattle, was a major contributor to their success with his hard-running style , and definitely deserves his Super Bowl ring. However, I still prefer the Bills’ current backs, C.J. Spiller and Fred Jackson, over him.

* Peyton Manning and the Broncos were favored to win the Super Bowl, and they laid a major egg with their effort, starting with the game’s first play that resulted in a safety. The loss was the fifth for the Denver franchise in their history, so they now have one more than any other NFL team, surpassing Minnesota and Buffalo, who have four.

* I really hope that the performance of Seattle’s defense in totally smothering the potent Denver attack will be a pre-cursor to the 2014 season. The NFL is a ‘copycat’ league, so hopefully coaches will now concentrate on strengthening their defensive units. It would be nice if the NFL started to move away from the Madden video game style of all-passing, all-the-time games and back toward an era of dominating defenses, or at least swing the pendulum back somewhat.

The first week of the NFL’s free agency period is now history, and the Buffalo Bills were pretty active in getting players signed, although there weren’t any big names among the signees. There WAS a big name lost, however, as Pro Bowl safety Jairus Byrd left for New Orleans. I have mixed feelings about Byrd leaving. On the one hand, the Bills regularly let good players walk away to go on to bigger and better things elsewhere, and this is just another example of that. On the other hand, you can make an argument that the team never won with him here, so they certainly can’t do worse without him.  Buffalo made positive moves by hanging on to a pair of their own free agents, kicker Dan Carpenter and tight end Scott Chandler.

Here’s the assessment of the team’s other signees:

G Chris Williams – signed away from the St. Louis Rams, Williams is viewed as anywhere from a decent player to a major bust. He was a first round draft pick of the Bears at one time and was considered a major disappointment. With the Rams, he was a two-year starter who was unspectacular but held his own. He will compete with Doug Legursky at left guard in training camp.

LB Keith Rivers – Buffalo has big shortcomings at the linebacker position on the current roster, so any help there is a positive. He started his career in Cincinnati and played last year with the Giants, who opted not to re-sign him. He has never lived up to the billing he had coming out of college, so  there shouldn’t be any expectations that he’s going to be a big difference-maker.

LB Brandon Spikes – a hard-hitting run stuffer at New England who as of now is the team’s starting middle linebacker, allowing young star Kiko Alonso to move outside. He has a reputation for being a dirty player (Ryan Fitzpatrick called him a “punk” when he hit him late and knocked off his helmet a couple years ago). Buffalo needs to be more physical on defense next year, so this is a good signing, as long as he isn’t hurting the team with unnecessary roughness penalties all season.

CB Corey Graham –  a Buffalo native, he isn’t the best player of the bunch, but this is the best signing. Graham is an outstanding special teams gunner, the closest thing the Bills have had to Steve Tasker since Tasker himself. He also has developed himself into a competent cornerback, and in the 2012 AFC title game he made the two biggest plays of the game, intercepting Peyton Manning twice, returning one for a touchdown and setting up the game-winning field goal with the other. Every team Graham has played on – the Bears and Ravens – have been winners, and he is one of those unselfish guys every winning club needs.

RB Anthony Dixon – joining the Bills from the 49ers, he is slated to fill the role as the third back, behind Spiller and Jackson, that Tashard Choice used to fill. Buffalo had trouble in short yardage downs last year, and Dixon is a short yardage specialist, one advantage he has over Choice. He is also a great special teamer and an unselfish guy. The signings of Graham and Dixon aren’t big headline grabbers, but they are an indication that new GM Doug Whaley is trying to change the losing culture by adding unselfish players with great attitudes who’ve been with, and contributed to, winning organizations.

 
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Posted in Football

 

Classic Team Logo of The Day

15 Mar

Shamrock_Rovers_FC_logo_svg

In honor of St. Patrick’s Day, this is a logo of the Shamrock Rovers Football Club, a “football” team that is the most successful soccer team in the Premier Division of the League of Ireland. Founded in 1901 in Dublin, the club has won the League of Ireland title a record 17 times and the FAI Cup a record 24 times.

 

Classic Sports Card of The Day

15 Mar

89prosetbojackson      87donrussbojackson

A pair of classic sports cards of one of the greatest two-sport stars of all time, Bo Jackson. On the left is a 1989 ProSet football card of Jackson as a Los Angeles Raider, on the right a 1987 Donruss baseball card of Jackson during his days as an outfielder for the Kansas City Royals. Jackson is the only pro athlete to be named an All Star in two major sports. He won the Heisman Trophy at Auburn and then focused on playing both sports in the pros, starring for the Royals, and the Raiders for four years before a major hip injury ended his football playing days. He then turned full time to baseball, although the Royals released him rather than pay him while he rehabbed his football injury. He played two more years for the Chicago White Sox.

 

Buffalo Is “Hockey Heaven”?

02 Mar

ted-nolan

Sabres’ interim coach Ted Nolan at the Olympics

So this is what “Hockey Heaven” is supposed to look like? That’s a question loyal Buffalo Sabres’ fans have to be asking after a crazy weekend of turmoil surrounding the team. It’s been quite awhile since I posted anything regarding the local NHL team, in fact, the last was a 2012-13 season review of the team published last May. Since then, the creator of that “Hockey Heaven” title, owner Terry Pegula, finally came to his senses and got rid of both GM Darcy Regier and coach Ron Roulston, and made what looked like a brilliant move by hiring Pat Lafontaine to guide the franchise back to respectability. Dumping the previous regime amounted to lifting the Sabres out of a “Night of The Living Dead” era with the placid Regier and Roulston, and reviving them behind a well-respected figure from the team’s past in Lafontaine. It was a terrific PR move, made even better when Lafontaine brought in Ted Nolan along with him to become interim coach. Then a veteran Hall of Fame front office man, Craig Patrick, was added to the mix as an advisor. Lafontaine, after a careful search, hired Tim Murray from Ottawa as the team’s new general manager, and an impressive executive team was complete. Everything looked rosy, until a whirlwind weekend of events shook the team to its’ core. Those events were a blockbuster trade that sent the face of the franchise, goaltender Ryan Miller, and team captain Steve Ott to the St. Louis Blues for what appears to be an impressive haul in return – goalie Jaroslav Halak, young forward Chris Stewart, junior prospect William Carrier, a 2015 first round draft pick and a conditional 2014 pick – and the abrupt resignation of Lafontaine.

The two events sent shock waves through the Sabres’ fan base. The trade was something that was mostly expected, so the reactions were mixed between negative and positive. Lafontaine’s departure, however, was stunning and drew complete negative reaction. Where does the team go from here? To me, once the dust settles and the trade deadline passes, there are two people who will be the most important in shaping the future success of the team, Murray and Nolan. Here’s my take on both of them: Murray deserves credit for pulling off the blockbuster trade in his first major move as GM.  There are rumors that both Halak and Stewart may  still be traded, but if Buffalo decides to keep them, they have a goalie who has been inconsistent, but who also was a star in a deep playoff run with Montreal a few years ago. Stewart is a power forward who is only 26 and can score, in addition to being a physical force. Carrier and the draft picks are bonuses, and who knows what other assets could be coming here if either Halak and/or Stewart are traded. Minnesota is rumored to be interested in Halak and Murray’s old team, the Ottawa Senators, are supposedly salivating at the chance to get Stewart. The bottom line is this – Murray made a bold move that Regier wouldn’t have had the guts to pull the trigger on in a million years, and did it without spending a lot of time being sentimental about the departing players. I see that as a positive, since the Sabres, Pegula included, have been mired in a sentimental journey into the team’s legacy, honoring past players by erecting statues. Even bringing back Lafontaine, to a degree, fed into that. The team has been a great part of the community throughout its’ history and had plenty of memorable moments, but they’ve never won anything, unless Presidents’ Trophies and Prince of Wales Conference titles are good enough. Murray is a fresh set of eyes for this organization, with no ties and no sentimental attachment to the past, and that’s a good thing. I’m excited to see what he can accomplish as a GM.

The one concern I do have with Murray is what he will decide is the future of the other person I consider important to the team – Nolan. There are stories that claim Murray will want to bring in his own coach, and I suppose he has a right to do that. However, Nolan was asked to come here and attempt to right the ship, and he has more than answered the call. He inherited basically the same team as Roulston, and the difference in the play of that team between the beginning of the year under Roulston and now is like night and day. The three games since the Olympics have been amazing. Three wins under the cloud of the trade deadline engineered by a guy still holding the “interim” tag. The most impressive was Friday night’s win over San Jose. It was a bizarre game, with Miller and Ott pulled from the lineup less than an hour before the drop of the puck. The game telecast included an unreal scene where the intermission show between the first and second periods included a farewell press conference for the traded players. The Sabres, for the foreseeable future, are going to be a rebuilding project of trying to piece together young players into some semblance of a competitive NHL team. After watching the Latvian team in Sochi, is there any coach out there with better credentials to accomplish this job than Ted Nolan? It would be a crying shame if he is denied, for a second time in his career, the opportunity to finish a job he started.

 
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Posted in Hockey

 

Classic Team Logo of The Day

02 Mar

erieotters96now

Logo of a major junior hockey team that plays in the Ontario Hockey League, the Erie Otters. Based in Erie, PA, they are one of only three American teams in the league. The franchise has existed since 1943, when they were the Windsor Spitfires, and has played in Erie since 1996. They won the Robertson Cup as OHL champs in 2001/02, and Otter players who’ve gone on to play in the NHL include Brad Boyes, Ryan O’Reilly, Tim Connolly and Steve Montador. A player considered to be a top NHL future prospect, Connor McDavid, currently plays for the Otters.

 

Classic Sports Card of The Day

02 Mar

84toppsbarrasso

1984 Topps hockey card of former National Hockey League goaltender Tom Barrasso. Drafted as a teenager  in 1983, he became the first player in history to go directly from high school into the NHL. Amazingly, he won both the Calder Trophy as rookie of the year and the Vezina Trophy as top goaltender in his first year. Barrasso wound up playing a total of 18 seasons in the league for six different teams, with his most successful years coming in the early 1990s while playing for the Pittsburgh Penguins, where he won a pair of Stanley Cups.