Logo of the Oakland Raiders football team, used in their first three seasons of existence in the old American Football League, from 1960 until 1963. The Raiders are a franchise that values continuity and tradition, and both their logo and uniforms have changed very little over the years. The team’s famous silver and black color scheme, however, wasn’t used from the beginning. The Raiders wore gold and black in the early years. The Raiders were a losing club in the years when they used this particular logo, and didn’t turn their fortunes around until they hired Al Davis as coach in 1963. Some notable Raider players from the first 3 years include Tom Flores, Clem Daniels, Jim Otto, Cotton Davidson and Fred “The Hammer” Williamson.
Classic Sports Card of The Day
1977 Topps football card of former Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ defensive lineman Lee Roy Selmon, who passed away at age 56 over the weekend of complications from a stroke. Selmon was the first player drafted by the Bucs’ organization in their inaugural season, and is arguably still the greatest player to ever don a Tampa Bay uniform. He played his entire 9 year career with the franchise, and was the first Buc to be inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame, in 1995. His brother Dewey was a teammate both in college at Oklahoma and with Tampa Bay in the early years.
NFL – 2011 NFC Predictions
The 2011 NFL season, which was threatened by the offseason lockout, will get underway next Thursday evening with the Saints vs. Packers matchup, and it can’t get here soon enough for rabid pro football fans. Here is my take on how the division races in the NFC will shape up this year.
NFC East
The Philadelphia Eagles loaded up with talent in the shortened free agency period following the lockout to the point where their newly-signed backup quarterback to Michael Vick – Vince Young – proclaimed them a “Dream Team”. On paper they are the strongest team in the division, and are the darlings of a lot of media people to win the Super Bowl this year. I personally think they are going to be a force but have too many defensive deficencies, especially in their front seven and in stopping the run. I see the Eagles finishing second in this tough division, and possibly claiming a wild card playoff spot. The New York Giants are another team that is good enough to contend for the division title, but they have been too much of a Jeckyl / Hyde team recently to pick as the NFC frontrunner. It’s not a popular pick, but I think “America’s Team”, the Dallas Cowboys, are poised to finally realize their potential and win the NFC East crown this year. The Washington Redskins will finish in the basement, even though they played a couple of impressive preseason games and won over some media members who think coach Mike Shanahan will lead them out of the wilderness this year. I say any team that is going to rely on either Rex Grossman or John Beck as their quarterback is not going to stay in the race very long. This division is the weakest in the NFL as far as providing impact rookies. The top rookie may be Eagles offensive lineman Danny Watkins, who is a 26-year old that inherits the job of protecting Vick’s blind side.
NFC North
This is one of the NFL’s toughest divisions. The Chicago Bears won the division last year, but the Green Bay Packers won the Super Bowl. This season, I see the Pack riding the momentum of their championship season to the NFC North title this year. Their closest competitors, somewhat surprisingly, will be the young and building Detroit Lions, who are poised for a break-out year. The Bears and Minnesota Vikings, in my opinion, are both quarterback-challenged. The Bears rely on Jay Cutler, and he is never going to be an elite signal-caller. Chicago will go as far as their defense carries them, and that will be third in the division. The Brett Favre experiment in Minnesota is over, and apparently they were ready to turn the offense over to rookie first round draft pick Christian Ponder. Then suddenly they made the move to acquire Donovan McNabb, which looked like a move that could catapault them to the division crown. I feel that McNabb’s best years are behind him, and that the Vikes are destined for the NFC North cellar. My pick for top NFC North rookie is a player who is currently injured – Lions’ defensive lineman Nick Fairley, who should be impressive once he’s ready to team up with last year’s rookie sensation Ndamukong Suh.
NFC South
There’s only one certainty in this division – the Carolina Panthers will finish last. Cam Newton will probably claim the starting QB job and the team still has a decent running game, but the other teams in the division are just too good. The New Orleans Saints, a year removed from a Super Bowl title, will reclaim the division title this year behind Drew Brees. The Tampa Bay Buccaneers have one of the league’s best kept secrets in their rising young QB star, Josh Freeman, and will give the Saints all they can handle. Atlanta won the division last year, but their playoff drubbing against Aaron Rodgers and the Packers was an omen. They will fall to third in the NFC South this year and miss the playoffs. Top rookie in the division will be Newton, even though his team won’t win many games.
NFC West
The Seattle Seahawks won this division in 2010 with a losing record, the first time in NFL history a team with a sub-.500 record made the playoffs. The Hawks made moves in free agency to try to improve and stay atop the division, but lost veteran QB Matt Hasselbeck and won’t repeat. San Francisco hired Jim Harbaugh as coach and should be improved, and Arizona, which crumbled after Kurt Warner retired, acquired Kevin Kolb to try to improve the offense. The Cardinals have possibly the NFL’s best player in Larry Fitzgerald, and will be in the race. The 2011 NFC West division champ will be the St. Louis Rams, a young, improving club that had a chance to win the division in the season’s final week last year. Look for QB Sam Bradford to move up the ladder of elite QBs this year and guide the Rams to the playoffs. The top rookie in the division, by far, will be Cardinals’ cornerback Patrick Peterson.
Classic Team Logo of The Day
Logo of a minor league baseball team, the Iowa Oaks, who existed from 1969 until 1981, when they became affiliated with the Chicago Cubs and were renamed the Iowa Cubs. The Oaks were affiliated with the Chicago White Sox at the time this logo was used, and were a AAA club who played in the defunct American Association. Some notable Oaks alumni are Vida Blue, Pat Tabler, Harold Baines and manager Tony LaRussa.
Classic Sports Card of The Day
1963 Topps baseball card of Los Angeles Angels pitcher Eli Grba, which is another of the classic “error” cards, since the player pictured is actually Grba’s Angel teammate, pitcher Ryne Duren. Grba was an important part of Angels’ history, as he was the first player the Angels picked in the 1960 expansion draft, and in all had a 5 year major league career. Duren was mostly a journeyman, pitching for eight different major league teams, and was known for his blazing fastball and poor vision, which combined to instill fear in opposing hitters.
NFL – First Impressions of The 2011 Buffalo Bills
After the first two preseason games this year, the Buffalo Bills have given their fans mixed messages as to whether they will improve on the 4-12 record of 2010. In the opener against the Chicago Bears, the first team offense moved the ball well and looked sharp even though they only managed a field goal, and the defense was surprisingly strong, generating 9 sacks against a suspect Bear offensive line. The second game in Denver was an outright disaster. Coach Chan Gailey claimed that the team played vanilla schemes on both offense and defense to better evaluate whether young players can play, basically eliminating the chance of too many mental mistakes overshadowing their physical talent. Normally, this type of evaluation would have been done in the off-season minicamps and OTAs. Gailey couldn’t have been very happy with what he saw, as the Bills looked physically overwhelmed. Donald Jones and Johnny White were injured on plays where they took hard hits from the Denver defense. The offensive and defensive lines both played terribly, as Ryan Fitzpatrick was running for his life the whole time he played, while Kyle Orton picked apart the Buffalo defense for the most part. Here are a few first impressions I got from these 2 games on individual players for the Bills:
Shawne Merriman – judging by his performance in the Bears’ game, his signing late last year could be GM Buddy Nix’s best move. He looks ready to give the Bills a force on defense that opponents will have to account for. The only concern with him is durability, since he has battled injuries and already is being held out of practices and games for “rest”.
Tyler Thigpen – he looks like a competent backup QB so far, a vast improvement over Brian Brohm. It was a good move by the team to add a seasoned veteran to back up Fitzpatrick rather than the unproven Brohm.
Brad Smith – adding this versatile playmaker to the offense and special teams was a great move. He has gotten a surprisingly large amount of snaps at quarterback, which makes you wonder what plans the team has for him in the offense.
Nick Barnett – he was signed to replace Paul Posluszny and so far looks like he is more instinctive and far more active than Poz. The amount of times he overruns plays makes a fan wince, so it’d be a good idea if new LB coach Dave Wannstedt could get him to play a little more under control.
Danny Batten – one of the forgotten draft picks of 2010 who sat out all last year with injuries, he looks like he can play in the league once he gets a little more polished. On a team desperate for improved play at the linebacker position he should get ample opportunity to get playing time.
Arthur Moats – he was one of the surprise positive developments as last season wore on, after he was moved from inside LB to the outside. He has been moved back inside and gotten most of his playing time in the preseason this year with the backups, which is a little tough to understand. On a team that traded a quality veteran like Lee Evans to supposedly give their young receivers opportunities, it makes no sense to have a guy like Moats playing behind mediocrities like Reggie Torbor and Andra Davis.
Marcel Dareus – finally, after years of picking busts like John McCargo and Aaron Maybin, the team looks like it has found a quality defensive player who will be a difference-maker. He had a sack in each game and has looked like he’s ready to start from day one.
Ryan Fitzpatrick – his play in the Denver game isn’t going to give too many Bills’ fans a lot of hope that the offense will improve this year. He didn’t get much help from his offensive line, but didn’t look sharp at all. He showed no signs of the player he became last season after becoming the starter, but hopefully the timing will improve as the preseason goes on.
Leodis McKelvin – the Broncos had a ton of long, sustained drives and consistently kept them alive by throwing at McKelvin on third down. For a high first round draft pick, he is the furthest thing from a “shutdown corner” that you can get. Reggie Corner and rookie Aaron Williams have both outplayed him in my opinion, and to me he should be sent packing along with McCargo and Maybin as another draft bust. It will be interesting to see how the coaches evaluate him.
Alex Carrington – he looks much improved and I see him lining up with Dareus and Kyle Williams as third starter on the three-man line when the season starts.
Marcus Easley – like Batten, he was out all year with injuries and this is basically his rookie season. He hasn’t shown much yet, but with both Donald Jones and Namaan Roosevelt slated to miss the last 2 exhibitions due to injuries, he will get a great opportunity to impress the coaches and earn some playing time.
Classic Team Logo of The Day
Logo of the Houston Texans football team, but not the current NFL franchise. These Texans played almost a single season in the old World Football League, in 1974. “Almost” because after going 3-7-1 in their first 11 games of existence in ’74, they were relocated to Shreveport, Louisiana to finish the season. The Texans raided the NFL for a couple of veterans, QB Craig Morton and DT John Matuszak, who was involved in a strange incident. In a game against the New York Stars, he recorded a sack, then was removed from the game because his old NFL team, the Houston Oilers, obtained a restraining order barring him from playing in the WFL.
Classic Sports Card of The Day
In 1950, the Topps card company printed a series of football cards, known as the 1950 Topps Felt Back Series, featuring college players. This card features University of Indiana quarterback and future NFL player Nick Sebek, who also was my high school gymn teacher. After finishing his college career, Sebek was drafted by the Washington Redskins, where he backed up Hall of Famer “Slingin’ ” Sammy Baugh. During World War II he served with the 82nd Airborne Division and quarterbacked the undefeated All Airborne team. Sebek passed away in 2007.
MLB – Indians Still Alive
You can look at where the Cleveland Indians are at this point of the major league baseball season in 2 different ways. A pessimist would say that after being swept by the Detroit Tigers and dropping to 4 1/2 games behind in the AL Central, that this is the point where they come crashing back to earth and settle in their annual spot somewhere near the bottom of the division. An optimist would point out that this is the furthest they’ve gone into a season with a record above .500 (after the sweep it’s barely there at 62-61) and that they still have a half dozen games left against the Tigers, including a huge season-ending series in Detroit, that they still have plenty of chances to right the ship and win the division. Either way, it’ll be interesting to see how manager Manny Acta handles his young team – whether he succeeds in keeping their confidence level up and they stay in the race, or if they implode after being dominated in Detroit and fade away.
For the first time in years, the Indians, instead of trading away Cy Young Award-winning pitchers at the deadline, made some moves to improve and try to stay in the race. The most daring trade was the move to acquire starter Ubaldo Jiminez from the Rockies. Jiminez was dominating the National League last year before fading somewhat late in the year, and if he is right can be the number one starter the Tribe has lacked since they gave away C.C. Sabathia and Cliff Lee. So far the results have been mixed. Jiminez was impressive in beating the Tigers in Cleveland but was rocked in a return start against the Tigers. There has been talk that his velocity is down from early last season and that he might be damaged goods, but if that were the case he should be bad in all his starts. Jiminez was friends with Acta before the trade and the fit seems good for him in Cleveland’s rotation. Hopefully Acta can get the best, and some consistency, out of him.
Ubaldo Jiminez Kosuke Fukodome
There wasn’t as much hoopla involved with Cleveland’s other trade deadline acquisition, outfielder Kosuke Fukodome from the Cubs, but he has done a good job both in the field and at the plate since joining the Tribe. The Indians have also gotten a shot in the arm from a couple of players called up from the minors, infielders Lonnie Chisenhall and Jason Kipnis. You have to hand it to the long-suffering fans in Cleveland for their sense of humor in supporting their teams. When LeBron James was playing for the Cavaliers, the city’s basketball arena had a huge action mural of him on the side of the building with the caption “We Are All Witnesses”. When LeBron “took his talents to South Beach” the mural was quickly removed. Recently at an Indians’ game after Kipnis had gone 5-for-5 the night before against the Tigers, a fan held up a sign that read “We Are All Kipnises”.
Jason Kipnis
Classic Team Logo of The Day
Logo of a minor league baseball team that for one season was the royalty of the sport , the Queens Kings. They played one season, in 2000, as a member of the short-season Class A New York-Penn League, and were affiliated with the Toronto Blue Jays. The team relocated from St. Catharines, Ontario for the 2000 season, but after only one year were sold and moved to Brooklyn, where they became the Cyclones and began an affiliation with the New York Mets. A couple of Kings’ alumni are former AL All Star Alex Rios and Arizona closer Brandon Lyon.









