Thursday, December 30, 2010

Weekend Pickoff

Atlanta
Pittsburgh
Minnesota
Kansas City
New England
New Orleans
Buffalo
Baltimore
Houston
NY Giants
Dallas
Arizona
Green Bay
Indianapolis
San Diego
Seattle

FDR:

Atlanta
Pitt
Detroit
KC
NE
TB
NYJ
Balti
SD
GB
Indy
Dallas
SF
Wash
Jax
STL

Smuckers
Atlanta
Pitt
Minn
KC
Miami
NO
Buff
Balt
Denver
GB
Indy
Phi
San Fran
NYG
Jacksonville
Rams

Bob Cobb: 146-93 (7-9 last week)
Smuckers: 139-100 (8-8 last week)
FDR: 132-107 (8-8 last week)

Sunday, December 26, 2010

Contraction

Recently, LBJ created a stir by stating that sports would be better off if leagues would contradict a few teams to increase the quality of the remaining teams. While he was clearly talking about the NBA, he really should have directed his comments at the NFL.

Having sat down and watch a 49er game for the first time this year, I cannot argue with anyone who wants to strip the NFC West of a playoff spot, let alone a home playoff game. In a game that could potential save their coach's job and lead to a playoff birth, here's what the first 15 or so minutes produced:

Really? Moment 1:On the first drive of the game, the 49ers had the Rams in a 3rd and 8. Instead of trying to put some pressure a rookie QB who has struggled recently, the 49ers conceded by rushing only 3 and let the Rams complete a easy crossing route for the first down. Apparently Big Mike read the clock as if he was watching soccer and assumed the game was almost over and put in the prevent defense.

Really? Moment 2:On a reverse pass that looked like it was thrown by a 12 year old, Nate Clements, the $80 million corner who enjoys getting abused by Vincent Jackson on national television, pass interfered to give the Rams the ball at the 49ers 2. While PI isn't always a bad play, Clements actually had good coverage, not to mention the actual interpretation by safety Reggie Smith who read the play the entire way. Instead, Clements thought it was be smart to mindlessly jump into the receiver, despite Smith making a play on the ball 5 yards in front.


Really? Moment 3:On a punt by the Rams, clearly designed to just pin the 49ers inside their own 10, reserve linebacker Navarre Bowman (PSU) somehow get penalized for an illegal block in the back. How someone gets penalized for an illegal block when there is no return and the ball actually rolls back to the kicking team is a mystery, but then again, so are the 2010 49ers.

Somehow, by a fluke touchdown pass (intended for Vernon Davis but went to Michael Crabtree) and a punt return, the 49ers are currently winning (though T. Smith just throw a Eli Manning-like interception by floating one too high over the middle). I wonder if it's too early to bet on the Saints in the wild card game.

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Week 16 Picks

Pittsburgh
Dallas
Jacksonville
Miami
San Francisco
Kansas City
Chicago
New England
Baltimore
Houston
San Diego
Indianapolis
NY Giants
Tampa Bay
Philadelphia
Atlanta

Smuckers
Pitt
Dallas
New England
NYJ
Balt
KC
Rams
Miami
Jags
SD
Houston
Indy
NYG
TB
Phi
NO


Bob Cobb: 139-84 (7-9 last week)
Smuckers 131-92 (8-8 last week)
FDR: 124-99 (7-9 last week)

Stadium Review - New Meadowlands Stadium

FDR and I hit up the New Meadowlands Stadium ("NMS") in beautiful East Rutherford, NJ December 5th for the Giants/Redskins game. We all know how the football portion of the day went, so I thought I could give a quick review on the new confines that the Giants and Jets share.

NMS is located within the Meadowlands Sports Complex, which is owned by the New Jersey Sports and Exposition Authority ("NJSEA"). The Jets and Giants financed the project via New Meadowlands Stadium Company, LLC, which is presumably a bankruptcy remote entity that is owned by the Jets/Giants 50/50. While the land is owned by the NJSEA, the improvements are owned by the Jets/Giants entity through a long-term leasehold. Apparently the lease is 25 years with extension options that could carry the term out to 97 years. After year 15 and every 5 years thereafter, each team can opt out of the lease with 12 months notice.

NMS is about 2.2 million square feet - about twice the size of the now demolished Giants Stadium - 30 feet higher and has about 2,500 more seats (capacity of 82,500). The price tag was just as robust at a cost of $1.6 billion (compared to the $78 million it cost to build Giants Stadium). Most days the stadium will look sterile with its razor blade facade and gray seats, but on Sundays it is lit up in blue or green depending on who the home team is.

Obviously the owners of the Giants and Jets decided to build this palace to make more money. The old stadium had 142 club seats while the new one has 9,300 club seats (and 130,000 square feet of club lounges). Per the NFL's current revenue sharing agreement, luxury box revenues are of course exempted. So the Mara and Tisch families saw piles of money vanish when the Giants choked to the Eagles on Sunday.

To the common fan, the experience is marginally better than the old Giants Stadium. The high definition video boards in the four corners of the stadium are a nice amenity. Yes, there are more bathrooms, but they are poorly designed and get filled up quickly. Concessions are not important for football fans as most tailgate prior to kickoff, so I cannot comment on food options - besides, I didn't eat anything. The new seats are rather cramped and the upper deck seats are much farther from the action than before. I found the crowd noise was average, but the game wasn't exactly competitive.

I find the New Meadowlands Stadium to be a tremendous waste of money for the typical fan. I'm sure the players have significantly improved facilities and the club seat holders must enjoy the wood paneling, fire places, and plasma televisions, but this was an unnecessary project. Non-club section PSL's cost $1,000 to $20,000 per ticket (game tickets range from $85 to $160). That's a lot of cash to spend on watching football live; club seats cost significantly more. PSL holders committed to buying tickets through the 2011 season. If there is a lockout next year, I bet lots of fans try to dump their PSL's. Fortunately this project was privately financed, but the infrastructure improvements (train service from Secaucus, improved roads, etc) were paid by tax payers.

All I care about now is a win at Lambeau Field on Sunday.

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

One for the Next Thumb

While the last two days have seen ESPN showing a certain punt return on endless replay, an equally worthy story line has gone unnoticed. The 2010 San Francisco 49ers still have a strong to quite strong chance to make the playoffs. If you're surprised that an 0-5 team that recently got embarrassed on national television could still basically control their own destiny, you're not alone (this blog was going to be a breakdown of coaching candidates until I actually realized a 5-9 team without a clear starting QB could host a playoff game). Anyway, here's the breakdown of how things could shake out and who will have the honor of getting trashed by the Saints in wild card round.

St. Louis Rams (6-8): Games: Home vs. SF, Away at Seattle.

The Rams have the clearest and probably best chance to get in. If they win both remaining games, they are in (the Rams would be the only team with 8 wins). Even if the Rams lose at home on Sunday, they could still make the playoffs by beating Seattle at home next week and having the Cardinals beating the 49ers in San Francisco (and if you don't think that's possible, you clearly haven't seen the NFC West).

If I am the Saints/Giants/Bucs/Packers, the Rams are the team I don't know to see in the playoffs. They have a coach who knows defense, a veteran but still productive RB, and a rookie QB who has done enough to make you concerned. Essentially, they are a coordinated tripping plan and a sexual harassment claim away from being the Jets, except no one cares because they aren't in New York. While I'm sure the Giants might not want another crack at Mr. Vick in a 3-6 opening game, I don't think Eli wants to see a Spagnuolo led defense either.

Seatlle (6-8): Games: Away at Tampa Bay, Home at St. Louis

While the Seahawks also control their own destiny (2 wins and they also would be in the only team with 8 wins), their road is much harder since they have to go to Tampa Bay this week and play a Bucs team still in the playoff race (the Giants-Packers game is also at 4:15, so Seattle won't get the benefit of playing a Bucs team who knows they are out of it). Beside having to cross the continental United Stated diagonally to play this game (maybe the karma police finally caught Pete Carroll), the Seahawks are 5-18 the last three years on the road.

If the Hawks lose as expected, things get much messier for them. A Niners win on Sunday would leave Seattle at the mercy of the Cardinals, since the Niners would own the tiebreaker over Seattle with a better division record. A Rams win Sunday, however, would make the Rams-Seahawks game a play-in, since the Seahawks could tie the Rams with a win at 7-9 and still own the tiebreaker with a better division record. Of course, that means a team that has openly debated starting Charlie Whitehurst would have to win a big game, but again, this is the NFC West.

San Francisco (5-9): Games: Away at St. Louis, Home at Arizona.

The breakdown for the Niners is much simpler. First, they must win out, as a loss would keep them at 6 wins while the Rams or the Seahawks, by playing each other, is assured 7 wins. Second, Seattle must lose at least once. Two wins by Seattle would give them 8 wins, but one loss Seattle would lead to either a two or three way tie at 7-9, with the Niners winning out because a 5-1 division record.

Thus, even though they will be only shown in about 12% of the country, the Niners-Rams and Rams-Seahawks games the next two weeks will have as much impact as any other pair of games going forward in determining the NFC playoff picture. Given the stakes of this Sunday's game, the question becomes who will Mike Singletary start at quarterback: the former Heisman winner who lacks accuracy but provided a brief mid-season spark or the former #1 pick who has constantly haunted the franchise for 6 years. While no one knows for sure right now, this content of this video may hold the key not just to #50's choice but the entire NFC first round set up.

Thursday, December 16, 2010

WEEK 15

San Diego
Cincinnati
Dallas
Jacksonville
St. Louis
Miami
Tampa Bay
Arizona
Baltimore
NY Giants
Hotlanta
NY Jets
Oakland
New England
Chicago

Smuckers
San Diego
Cinci
Dallas
Houston
Indy
St. Louis
Buffalo
NYG
TB
Zona
NO
ATL
Denver
Pitt
NE
CHI

FDR:

San Diego
Cleveland
Washington
Houston
Indy
St. Louis
Miami
NYG
TB
Carolina
NO
Atl
Oak
Pitt
NE
Chicago

Week 15 Picks

San Diego
Cleveland
Dallas
Houston
Indianapolis
St. Louis
Miami
Tampa Bay
Arizona
New Orleans
NY Giants
Atlanta
Pittsburgh
Oakland
New England
Chicago

Bob Cobb: 132-75 (10-5 last week)
Smuckers: 123-84 (8-7 last week)
Bob Cobb: 117-90 (8-7 last week)

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

#34

Below is a partial posting I started to write in June (when I was convinced the Mets were going to make a push for a certain pitcher). I never finished it, as I intended to write a trilogy and frankly just got too lazy to do so, but nevertheless, I think it serves as a good time capsule for how Phillies fan still viewed Mr. Lee after several months into the 2010 season and the lingering frustration over maybe the worst trade since Larry Andersen for Jeff Bagwell.

The signing certainly doesn't fix their lack of both clutch and right handed hitting, and it could look terrible in a few years if Lee loses just a small bit of command or has back issues (which he has had before).

However, it does make you feel special to be a Phillies fan right now. The man turned down $30 million more dollars from the preeminent franchise in baseball and an equally good deal from a team with a younger, better talent base to come back to city where he has no connection besides a 3 month run in 2009. It defies logic, Scott Rolen, Curt Schilling, Jayson Werth and everything else Phillies fans have learned to known about the franchise and frankly, being from Philadelphia in general.

Last September, in the midst of Cliff Lee fever, my mom offered to buy me a 34 "Lee" T-Shirt. While I certainly didn't need another T-shirt (having raided the StreetSquash closet before leaving) I didn't want to damper her enthusiasm, so I accepted her offer. During the playoff run, the shirt served me well. Like a cornball, I wore it on days he pitched, and Cliff never disappointed. Once the World Series came, my friends in Boston appreciated the shirt as they rallied against Yankees. I was pretty proud of myself after Game 1. Despite the end result, I was looking forward to getting another good year.

Then December came. I talked to my mom a few days before the trades (and that's trades with an "s"), and she told me there were rumors the Phils were making another push toward Doc Halladay. I immediately dismissed the rumors, telling her the Phils were too cheap and conservative to make another big move, but she insisted the stories were out there. In the end, we were both partially right. At the time, the Phils tried to play Lee deal off as necessary to building back the farm system. The explanation made initial sense, since they had trade 7 of their top 10 prospects in 4 months, but it doesn't hold up.

If they were so concern over their system, why make the trade to begin with? If Drabek wasn't untouchable after all, why didn't they just trade for Halladay to begin with? If Lee left as a free agent, would the 2 compensatory first round picks be better than mid level prospects from the Mariners? (yes) Why was this trade made so fast, preventing a bidding war among other AL teams (Angels, Rangers, Twins)?

Like most things, the Lee deal was really about money. The team's payroll has exploded with revenues from the new stadium and winning teams , but at end of the day, ownership is still the same asset rich, cash poor Main Line families that have owned the team for 30 years. And someone's still got pay for the house and the elitist country club when Dad goes .

Dewey Beats Truman

http://www.philly.com/philly/sports/phillies/20101213_Lee-to-Phillies_speculation_is_interesting__but_probably_not_more.html

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Week 14 Picks

Indianapolis
Cleveland
Pittsburgh
Green Bay
NY Giants
Tampa Bay
Atlanta
Jacksonville
San Francisco
New Orleans
NY Jets
Denver
San Diego
New England
Dallas
Baltimore

Smuckers

Indy
Cleveland
Green Bay
Pittsburg
Tampa Bay
Atlanta
Oakland
New Orleans
Seattle
New England
NYJ
Denver
KC
Phi
NYJ
Balt

FDR:

Indy
Cleveland
GB
Pitt
Washington
Atlanta
Jax -- this might be the worst 8-5 team of all time
NO
Seattle
NE
NYJ
Denver
San Diego
Dallas
Minny
Baltimore



Bob Cobb: 122-70 (11-5 last week)
Smuckers: 115-77 (12-4 last week)
FDR: 109-83 (11-5 last week)

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Week 13 Picks

Philadelphia
New Orleans
Chicago
Green Bay
Jacksonville
Kansas City
Miami
Minnesota
NY Giants (Bob Cobb and FDR will be attending)
San Diego
Seattle
Atlanta
Arizona
Indianapolis
Baltimore
New England

FDR:
Houston
New Orleans
Detroit
Green Bay
Jacksonville
Kansas City
Cleveland
Minny
Washington
San Diego
Indy
St. Louis
Seattle
Atlanta
Pitt
New England

Smuckers
Phi
New Orleans
Chicago
Green Bay
Jacksonville
KC
Cleveland
Minnesota
NYG
SD
Indy
St. Louis
Seattle
Tampa Bay
Baltimore
New England