Month: September 2005 (Page 3 of 9)

Week 3 Preview

Last week’s picks:

START

Carson Palmer – 337 yards passing, 3 TDs, 1 INT
Ahman Green – 99 total yards
Eddie Kennison – 4 rec., 52 yards

BENCH

Chad Pennington – 190 yards passing, 2 TDs
Carnell Williams – 128 yards, 1 TD
Eric Moulds – 1 catch, 8 yards
Lee Evans – 2 catches, 12 yards

Palmer and Williams are looking like every week starters, unless you have tremendous QB or RB depth. Kennison seems like a questionable start (in a 2 WR lineup) until the KC passing game gets back on track. Moulds and Evans should be benched when they face a strong defense.

On to this week’s picks:

START

QB – Brian Griese
Unless you have a stud at this position, Griese should be a nice play this week. He faces a weak Green Bay pass defense that yielded 336 yards and 3 TDs to the Browns.

RB – Willis McGahee
Owners may be shying away from starting McGahee, who had awful numbers against a stout Tampa Bay defense last week. This week, he faces a looser Atlanta defense that gave up 144 yards rushing to Shaun Alexander last week.

WR – Donte Stallworth
Stallworth had an excellent game against the Giants on Monday night and this week he faces a porous Vikings defense. The questionable Saints defense is just what the doctor ordered for Culpepper, so this one should be a high scoring affair, leading to more opportunities for Stallworth.

BENCH

QB – Michael Vick
He’s already listed as questionable, but Vick should be benched this week if you have any other decent options at QB. Atlanta plays Buffalo, so it should be a tough game for the Atlanta offense.

RB – Ahman Green
The Packer offense looks bad and Green, while running pretty well, hasn’t been a huge part of the team’s game plan. This week, the Packers face the Buccaneers, who are playing some of the best defense in the league.

WR – Robert Ferguson
Over the course of a season, Ferguson should step into the #2 WR role in GB and put up solid fantasy numbers, but it would be a good idea to bench him this week against Tampa Bay.

KEY INJURIES

Brandon Lloyd – P
Bubba Franks – Q
Byron Leftwich – Q
Chris Brown – Q
Curtis Martin – Q
David Akers – Q
Donovan McNabb – Q
Drew Bennett – Q
Duce Staley – Q
Eric Johnson – D
Greg Lewis – P
Jay Feely – Q
Jerome Bettis – D
Lee Suggs – Q
Michael Vick – Q
Mike Anderson – P
Nate Burleson – D
Ronald Curry – O
Stephen Davis – Q
Tatum Bell – Q
Terrell Owens – P
Tom Brady – P

Raffy the Rat

Rafael Palmeiro doesn’t know it, but he just ended his baseball career.

During a conversation with an arbitration panel, Palmeiro fingered a teammate as the source of a substance that may have triggered his positive test for steroids. I can’t even begin to explain what a bad idea this was. If this were the Mafia, Raffy the Rat would get whacked.

There is no question that Palmeiro is embarrassed, and likely harbors resentment for the teammate who let him down. But you don’t break the code, man. If you get caught cheating, you do your time and keep your mouth shut. Raffy, of all people, should know this. After all, his Cub teammates kept their mouths shut while he was banging Ryne Sandberg’s wife, so the story goes.

While he didn’t go out and say that the substance he obtained is directly responsible for his positive steroid test, he’s clearly trying to lay the groundwork for his defense that he’s an honest guy who trusted a dishonest person. But it’s a little late for that story. Had he kept his mouth shut, and taken his lumps, he would still have been accepted by the other players in the clubhouse, if not by the fans. By ratting out one of his teammates, he guaranteed that no one will ever want to play with him again.

Perhaps the most curious part of all is: who is this mysterious teammate? Conventional wisdom would suggest Sammy Sosa, but I honestly can’t imagine that Sosa would ever risk getting caught with any of that stuff, not after already suffering through a corked bat scandal, which many speculate was a result of no longer using steroids. So who is it, then? Is it a starter? What would the ramifications be if it turned out to be a stud like Miguel Tejada? Just how deep, and how widespread, is the steroids issue?

There was talk that Palmeiro planned to play the final week of the season. To that I say, Raffy, do yourself and the rest of the Orioles organization a huge favor and stay home. You don’t even want to know what’s waiting for you, and quite frankly, your teammates, even the one who gave you the juice, deserve better than that. And based on recent developments, the interim skipper for the O’s agrees. It’s sage advice, Raffy. I’d consider it.

San Diego fans ready for Eli Manning

I wrote a column for Bullz-Eye.com in April of 2004 defending Archie Manning’s decision to tell the San Diego Chargers to not draft his son Eli with the first overall pick in the draft:

“Coming out of Ole Miss, Archie Manning was destined for superstardom. But because the Saints failed to surround him with quality talent, he fell well short of those early expectations. Playing in the NFL is a dream come true for anybody who actually makes it, but looking back on his career you can bet Manning recognizes everything that those years in New Orleans cost him.

So why wouldn’t Archie want to spare Eli that same fate with another abysmal franchise like the Chargers? As a parent, don’t we want our children to benefit from our own mistakes and misfortunes rather than repeat them?

It’s simple: In San Diego, Eli could’ve become the next Archie Manning; in New York, he could be the next Peyton Manning.”

Man, did I take a beating from Chargers fans. Not right after I wrote the column, though. No, San Diego fans decided to bombard my inbox with hate mail after the Chargers made the playoffs. They cleverly called Manning “She-li” and asked if I thought Archie would rather have his son playing in San Diego now. And then they called me names. A whole bunch of names. None of them as witty as She-li, but they came up with some doosies.

My response at the time was, let’s see where the Chargers and Giants are in a couple of years. The Bolts were coming off a Cinderella season that ended with them making a surprise appearance in the playoffs. Of course, the way these San Diego fans made it sound, they all expected Drew Brees to lead their team to the postseason whereas everyone else expected a repeat of 2003’s 4-12 performance. And obviously, they expected continued success for their team and sustained failure for Eli and the Giants.

I originally said to wait a couple of years before comparing the progress of Eli to that of the Chargers franchise, but maybe we only had to wait a few months. The Giants travel to San Diego this Sunday, a game that’ll be televised nationwide on ESPN at 8:30. Chargers fans are going to be all over Eli. It’s gonna be ugly. And he, rightfully so, expects it to be. This is the moment Bolts fans have been waiting for since last year’s draft, the chance to prove to the prima-donna She-li and his cry-baby daddy that they made a mistake.

The only problem is, the Giants are 2-0 and the Chargers are 0-2.

Plus, while Manning is still developing as a QB, the Giants look to have one of the better teams in the NFC. Tiki Barber has picked up right where he left off last year, the defense looks solid, Manning has been finding Jeremy Shockey and newcomer Plaxico Burress downfield, and they’re well-coached by Tom Coughlin. As for the Chargers, they lost two tough games to the Cowboys and Broncos by a total of seven points, they haven’t found a groove offensively, and you can bet they liked their 4-12 schedule more than their 12-4 schedule — the Patriots, Steelers, Raiders, Eagles, Chiefs, Jets and Bills await in the seven games following Sunday’s match-up with the G-men.

It still may be too early to predict how this one will end up, but from the looks of things right now, I’d say I won’t be getting any hate mail from Chargers fans anytime soon.

Griffey done for the year

Well, it was good while it lasted, wasn’t it? Great, actually.

.301 – 35 HR – 92 RBI

And with that, in just 128 games, 491 at-bats, Ken Griffey Jr. proved to the baseball world that he still matters. The Reds may not, but Junior certainly does. Griffey’s rejuvenation came to an end on September 4, when he sprained his foot while running the bases against Atlanta. The injury wasn’t believed to be serious, and in truth it may not be, but with the Reds out of contention (were they really ever in contention?), the team decided to let Junior rest for the remainder of the season while also sending him in for surgery to clean out his left knee and the scar tissue surrounding his right hamstring.

The 128 games are the most Griffey’s played since 2000, his first season with the Reds. Not so coincindentally, the 35 homers and 92 RBI also mark his highest end-of-year totals since 2000, while Junior hadn’t hit above .300 since his MVP campaign in 1997.

Of course, just because Griffey was healthy for the majority of the season doesn’t mean he’ll be healthy next year or the year after that. But his production this year does prove that, as long as he’s out there, he’s still dangerous. His .576 slugging percentage ranked fifth in the NL, behind Carlos Delgado and MVP candidates Derrek Lee, Albert Pujols and Andruw Jones, and his .946 OPS (on-base + slugging) ranked seventh in the league. He may not run anymore (0-1 in stolen base attempts) and he’s certainly not the picture of health, but he’s still got that picture-perfect swing and when he’s out there, he can still mash.

Let’s also not forget that now Junior is tied with Mickey Mantle for 12th on the all-time home run list with 536 career dingers. Two more seasons like this one (he’s still just 34), and Junior would sit behind just Hank Aaron (755), Babe Ruth (714), Barry Bonds (707, as of today) and Willie Mays (660) on the sport’s most revered list. Take into account his 12 All-Star games, 10 Gold Gloves (might another be on its way?) and his MVP award, and you wonder how anybody can argue that Ken Griffey Jr. is not a first-ballot Hall of Famer.

Important Lance Armstrong update!

Lance Armstrong made an emergency trip to a Colorado-area hospital recently.

Oh wait, it was Colorado State University’s veterinary hospital, and the patient was Armstrong’s nine-month-old puppy, Rex, who needed open-heart surgery to replace a defective valve.

Whew…glad that crisis is over.

Is this really what it’s come to? Do we really need to see stories on ESPN about athletes’ pets? Better yet, does Lance Armstrong really need to have a story like this show up on newswires across the country? What a joke. Why does this have to be reported? Who gives a crap? Are we really so star-struck that we need to be fed stories about celebrity pets?

This may seem like a petty, pointless rant, but I’m so fed up with the outrageous attention devoted to celebrities these days. Lance proposes to Sheryl Crow and it’s all over the news. Lance goes on a bike ride and everyone’s writing about a possible return at next year’s Tour. And now, Lance takes his dog to the vet and some hack from the AP writes about it. Even worse, ESPN picks up the damn story.

Oh, and I know you’re worried about Rex’s condition. I was too. But the surgery was a success, and thank God ESPN and the AP were there to give us the story.

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