Day: September 21, 2007

Glazer in hot water over Pats’ spy video?

Anyone who watched FOX’s pregame show last week was treated to the actual video the Patriots used to steal defensive signals from the Jets in Week 1. Reporter Jay Glazer was credited for obtaining the video for FOX, but now he’s apparently in a little hot water with the NFL.

SPORTSbyBROOKS has noted that the league wants to know whom Glazer got the tape from, but he’s apparently willing to lose his job rather than give up his source:

Glazer to the NEW YORK DAILY NEWS today: “I told them (Fox Sports execs) if my source is an issue then let’s not run the video. And if they come to me now and say, ‘Look, you have no job unless you tell us,’ I would tell them: ‘Then I better start looking for a new job.'”

Welcome to the wonderful world of sports broadcasting, where if your employer holds the broadcast rights to the sport you cover, don’t bother scaring up any scoops – they’ll either be spiked before air or get you fired.

What’s ironic about sports reporting, and SbB touched on it, is that to get anywhere in the business, you need creditable sources. Those sources, however, want to remain anonymous. So to move up in a high profile job like sports reporting, you have to have creditable sources. But to retain the job, sometimes you have to give up those very same sources, just like Glazer is finding out. Ironic.

Friday Injury Update

The news that Brian Westbrook was going to have a MRI on his knee was incorrect. It’s not the same knee that has bothered him in the past, but Westbrook has been held out of practice. However, the general feeling is that he’s going to play on Sunday…LaMont Jordan returned for an intense practice on Thursday, which is a good sign, but he’s still listed as questionable, leaving Sunday’s game in doubt. Some believe this is just gamesmanship on the part of Lane Kiffin, but since the Raiders have a late game, those owners with another good option may want to use it…Andre Johnson is going to miss Sunday’s game and he may be out for a while. There are both optimistic and pessimistic reports, so it’s tough to tell which way this is going to go, but you can definitely bench him this week…Plaxico Burress returned to practice today, so he should be good to go for Sunday’s game…Darrell Jackson has sat out of two straight days of practice, but is still expected to start. He faces a tough Steelers defense, so he should be benched if possible. If you don’t have any good options, see if he practices today before inserting him in your lineup…James Jones and Greg Jennings are both iffy for Sunday with bad hamstrings, but Jones seems to be a better bet to start…With Tavaris Jackson still hobbled (and coming off a four-interception game), Kelly Holcomb will likely start at QB for the Vikings. He’s not a good fantasy option at the moment, but he’s someone to keep an eye on…Redskins guard Randy Thomas will not be placed on IR in the hopes that he’ll be able to return in 10-12 weeks. Washington has already lost tackle Jon Jansen, so the Thomas injury is another big blow to Clinton Portis’ prospects for the season. Thomas is considered to be the team’s best run blocker. Portis has nice matchups over the next two games, so after Week 5, it might be a good time to move him…Vernand Morency is going to miss more time, which means DeShawn Wynn should have a shot to take over RB1 duties from rookie Brandon JacksonKevin Jones returned to practice, but has been limited. The Lions are saying that they want to get him in for 15-20 snaps, which means he might see 5-10 touches in Sunday’s game. Keep him on your bench until he’s named the starter…Chad Pennington and Jerricho Cotchery have been limited in practice, but both are expected to play…L.J. Smith had surgery to clean out scar tissue in his groin. Man, that sounds bad. Anyway, he’s listed as “week-to-week” and owners can’t be blamed for cutting him at this point if there are better options at TE on the waiver wire.

Isiah Thomas is a stone cold idiot

The New York Knicks sexual harassment trial is underway and in a videotaped deposition, Isiah Thomas said that it isn’t as bad for a black man to call a black woman a bitch as it is for a white man to do the same thing. [video]

Prosecuting Attorney: Do you also find it offensive for a black male to call a black woman a bitch?

Thomas: Not as much, I’m sorry to say. I do make a distinction.

Regular readers know that I’ve been hard on Thomas in the past, mostly for his amazingly poor general manager skills, but this videotaped answer takes the cake.

Someone needs to tell Isiah that even when he’s under oath, he doesn’t have to say every stupid thing that pops into his head. It’s like he has that same disease as the old lady on “The Golden Girls.”

I’m sure he’s being honest when he says that he finds it more offensive when a white man calls a black woman a bitch, but that’s probably true for any derogatory term. Besides, the question was, “Do you also find it offensive for a black male to call a black woman a bitch?” He wasn’t asked, “Is it as offensive?” In other words, he wasn’t asked to compare the two.

The simple answer is, “Yes, I find it offensive.” Next question.

It’s no wonder the Knicks are in the state they’re in.

Cuban Lemonade

In a small Midwestern town, there are two kids with lemonade stands, across the street from each other. The kid on the northern side of the street wants to sell his stand. He’s had it for a long time, and he’s done well with it, but his lime-aid stand and chutney squishee stands are hemorrhaging money, so he decides to sell the lemonade stand to recoup his losses.

Two streets to the south, there’s a kid that sells grape juice. His stand is wildly successful, and while the kid is a little obnoxious, his customers love him because he wants to give them the best damn grape juice possible. The grape juice kid would love nothing more than to buy the lemonade stand that’s up for sale. He knows that he would be inheriting a loyal fan base that has wanted the lemonade stand owner to sell for years. The grape juice kid approaches the seller and expresses an interest in buying his stand.

Just then, the owner of the stand on the southern side of the street comes over.

“You can’t buy his stand,” he says.
“Why not?” asks the grape juice magnate.
“Because I don’t want you owning a lemonade stand,” he says.
“What do you care?”
“I don’t think it’s in the best interest of the rest of the lemonade stand owners.”
“How do you figure?”
“We owners all get along pretty well, and we don’t take to your kind.”
“My kind?”
“You’re brash, you’re a loudmouth, and you question authority.”
“You say that last part like it’s a bad thing.”
“It is a bad thing. You’ll cause trouble, I just know it.”
“Well, what makes you think you can decide who owns this stand and who doesn’t?”
“I’m tight with the commissioner of lemonade stands.”
“The what?”
“The commissioner. He and I go way back. I recommended him for the job, and now I own him for as long as he holds the title. If I say that I don’t want you to own that stand, then you won’t own that stand.”
“This doesn’t make any sense.”
“Just trust me on this: you’ll never own this stand, we won’t allow it.”
“So who will you permit to buy the stand?”
“Old Man Parsons.”
“WHAT? He doesn’t know a thing about lemonade, and he doesn’t care about it, either!”
“Yeah, but he and I go way back, and he won’t rock the boat like you will.”
“I see. You like him because he’ll do whatever you tell him to do.”
“What are you implying?”
“That it is a colossal conflict of interest that you have any say whatsoever in who owns the stand across the street from you! It is clearly in your best interest for this stand to be as mediocre as it can possibly be, since it means less competition for your stand. But even if this stand does make more money than you, you STILL benefit because you share revenue at year’s end, right? You can talk all you want about how you’re acting in the best interest of the other lemonade stand owners, but let’s be honest here: you’re only looking out for yourself, because you’re cheap and you don’t want to work any harder to make the ridiculous amounts of money that you make with your own stand, which, frankly, is the junkiest stand in the neighborhood.”
“See? I knew that you’d question authority.”
The grape juice kid is fed up. “I’m done with you.” He finally pops the big question to the seller. “So tell me, how much do you want for the stand?”
“I don’t want to sell it to you,” the seller says.
“What?! Why not?”
“You’ll make me look bad. You’ll go out and spend more money to improve the stand in ways that I never did, and I’ll look like a deadbeat owner by comparison.”
“But you WERE a deadbeat owner! Nothing I do is going to change that!”
“Yes, but you’ll just make it that much more obvious. I’d rather the new buyer be someone just like me.”
“So you’d rather doom the lemonade stand to another two or three decades of mediocrity, spitting in the faces of the faithful customers that lined your pockets year in and year out, in the interest of saving face? Even though everyone knows that you’re dead broke and you need as much money as you can get your hands on?”
“That’s right.”
“Come on, what is Old Man Parsons offering for the stand?”
“He hasn’t given me a quote, but I’m sure it will be a fair and reasonable price.”
“Whatever he offers you, I will double it. Double your money. What do you say?”
“No thank you.”
“Are you all insane? How have you managed to make any money running these stands all these years?”
“Dunno. Ask our customers. After all, you’re the only one of us that gives a damn about them! Ahhhhh hahahahahahahaha!”

And with that, the two lemonade stand owners walked away from their stands and shared a cigar that one of them had stolen from his father.