Day: July 23, 2007

Goodell makes first move

Jay Glazer of FOX Sports is reporting NFL commissioner Roger Goodell has ordered Michael Vick not to attend Atlanta Falcons’ training camp this year.

“While it is for the criminal justice system to determine your guilt or innocence, it is my responsibility as commissioner of the National Football League to determine whether your conduct, even if not criminal, nonetheless violated league policies, including the Personal Conduct Policy,” Goodell said in a letter to the quarterback.

This was hands down the right decision by Goodell and the rest of the Falcons players should be grateful. Protesters already showed up at the Falcons’ training facilities in Flowery Branch today, with more likely to come when camp officially opens on Thursday. Owner Arthur Blank and the rest of the Atlanta organization couldn’t guarantee the right amount of security to protect all of its players, so there was no other decision to be made. With Vick absent, the media circus is still going to be horrendous, but it will pail in comparison to if the quarterback attended.

Warning to Michael: this is just Goodell’s warm up – plenty more is to come.

Falcons doing their best Bengals impersonation

With all the trouble Michael Vick is getting into these days, apparently Falcons’ safety Jimmy Williams felt left out. Williams was reportedly charged with misdemeanor marijuana possession in early June according to a report from CBS 46 in Atlanta. He has of course stated his innocence.

On top of Vick and Williams’ issues, don’t forget that defensive tackle Jonathan Babineaux was accused of killing his girlfriends’ dog (what’s with this team and cruelty to dogs?) in mid-February and may face a suspension himself. Throw in Rod Coleman and Demorrio Williams’ freak injuries, and I don’t think an NFL franchise has seen a more tumultuous offseason than the Falcons have. This was a team in the NFC Championship just three years ago, now it’s completely self destructing.

Cowher carousel starts

Let the Bill Cowher rumor brigade officially start. The first two 2007 Cowher rumors involve the New York Giants and the Carolina Panthers.

Former Steelers running back Jerome Bettis recently predicted Cowher would wind up in New York next year coaching the Giants:

Appearing on the NFL Network’s “Total Access,” Bettis said, “I really think he’ll be coaching next year, and I think he’ll be coaching in New York… That’s my take on it and just thinking about the type of team he fits in good with, the Giants are definitely one.”

Although a little animosity eventually came out of the deal between player and coach, don’t forget Bettis was the one who officially predicted on a TV pregame show last year that Cowher would leave Pittsburgh at the conclusion of the 2006 season. So maybe Bettis knows something nobody else does.

The other rumors subject around a secret headshake involving Cowher and the Panthers, but these seem far-fetched at this point. Although Cowher lives in Raleigh, Carolina has a damn good – although overrated at times in my opinion – coach in John Fox. Unless the Panthers completely botch the upcoming season and the organization feels that Fox was a main reason, Cowher probably won’t be donning black and light blue next season.

Bill Simmons on the referee scandal

In his latest column, ESPN’s Bill Simmons gives his take on the NBA referee scandal. He starts off with a humorous movie pitch:

On Friday afternoon in southern California, you could hear the cacophony of frustrated screenwriters pounding their desks in disgust. The Tim Donaghy scandal doubled as the easiest movie pitch ever.

Imagine how simple it would have been to sell that script. A white NBA referee with a gambling problem (Matt Damon) loses too much money to a bookie (Timothy Olyphant) who’s connected with a dangerous family of mobsters (led by head boss Alec Baldwin). One of their muscle guys (Turtle from “Entourage”) threatens to beat up the ref unless he gives them inside information. Which he does. Now they have him. They tell him to start throwing a couple of games or they’ll go after his wife (Evangeline Lilly) and daughter (the little girl from “Little Miss Sunshine”). He agrees to affect the over/under of games by whistling more fouls than usual, which should drive the scores above the over/under because everyone will be shooting more free throws. For a couple of games, it works. Eventually, they want more. Fearing for his life, he crosses the line and helps fix a few outcomes without realizing the mobsters will never say, “All right, we’re good, nice working with you.”

Meanwhile, a renegade FBI agent (Ryan Gosling) overhears the ref discussing one of the games on a tapped phone line, then gets tipped off by a mob informant (Joe Pantoliano) that they turned an NBA referee. They track the weasel for a solid year, gather all the evidence they need, then break the news to the NBA commissioner (Ron Silver) and his staff that their league has been compromised. It’s too late. Too much damage has been done. The referee resigns, the feds swoop in and that’s that. The movie ends with a sobbing Damon going to jail, Gosling getting promoted and Silver glumly watching the tape of a pivotal playoff game from the previous spring, a horribly officiated game that could have potentially affected the championship … and the sight of that same compromised referee jogging down the court, ready to blow the whistle at a key moment.

The end.

You wouldn’t know it by the smug attitude of David Stern, but the NBA has taken several big hits lately. Aside from a couple of series (Dallas/Golden State, San Antonio/Phoenix) the playoffs were a joke, ratings are down, and now the FBI is investigating a referee (with apparent mob ties) who is involved in a major gambling scandal.

Stern has a lot of work to do.