Month: November 2005 (Page 2 of 11)

Mooch fired, Harrington tossed under the bus

Coming off an embarrassing Turkey Day loss to the Falcons, the Detroit Lions canned head coach Steve Mariucci Monday, naming defensive coordinator and former Bears HC Dick Jauron as the interim head coach.

So did Mooch deserve to get fired? Well, the Lions were 15-28 under Mariucci, including 4-7 this season, which doesn’t exactly help you establish job security. Of course, if I’m pointing fingers, I’m looking for president Matt Millen, who put together a team that’s gone an NFL-worst 20-55 since 2001. Unexplicably, Millen was given a five-year extension before this season.

Pro Bowl cornerback Dre Bly, in an interview on the NFL Network, pointed his finger at someone else, though:

“They should have fired guys on this team a long time ago… I feel like there is one guy in particular who I felt like is the cause of this whole thing. That’s just how it is.”

Who?

“It’s not hard to figure out. The quarterback (Joey Harrington) here has been bad. He hasn’t gotten the job done since I got here. Y’all just see Sundays, but I’ve been a part of this every day for three years… practices. You see how the guys practice and the practices have been bad… I really don’t believe coach would have gotten fired if Jeff (Garcia) didn’t get hurt.”

Things have been ugly in Detroit for a long time, yet somehow, they just got even uglier.

“That’s not my pipe, officer.”

Former Cowboys WR Michael Irvin was charged with misdemeanor possession of drug paraphernalia in Plano, TX.

Irvin, an ESPN analyst and semifinalist for the Pro Football Hall of Fame, told The Associated Press late Sunday that the drug pipe found in his car belonged to a friend of 17 years who left a Houston rehab center and came to Irvin’s house in Carrollton for Thanksgiving. Irvin wouldn’t reveal his friend’s name.

Irvin said he put the pipe in his car because he didn’t want it in his house where his children might find it. He said he planned to drive somewhere the next day, like a grocery trash bin, and throw the pipe away but forgot.

The article doesn’t say what kind of pipe Irvin had in his car, but the former wideout has had a history of using cocaine. If his story is true, one wonders how he could “forget” to throw the pipe away. If I were in his position, I would have immediately taken the pipe down to the nearest 7-11 and thrown it in the Dumpster out back. That’s assuming, of course, that I was still inviting my crack addict friends over for Thanksgiving.

Vitale losing his mind

Time winding down in the Duke/Memphis game, tied 67-67. Duke has the ball with about 40 seconds left. A shot is taken and, as it is coming off the rim, Shelden Williams tips it in. I’m a big Duke fan, but it looks like a goaltend to me. Memphis brings the ball up with about 20 seconds to go, forces a shot, Duke grabs the rebound and gets fouled.

During the free throws, they show the “above the rim” replay which clearly shows that the ball was still in the cylinder (in fact, it was on the rim) when Williams tipped it in. What does Vitale say?

“Good tip. Not on the cylinder.”

He needs to get the vision checked in his one good eye.

Who’s hot

A great way to determine a player’s fantasy performance is his efficiency performance. For those not familiar, here is the NBA’s efficiency equation:

EFF = ((Points + Rebounds + Assists + Steals + Blocks) – ((Field Goals Att. – Field Goals Made) + (Free Throws Att. – Free Throws Made) + Turnovers))

The rating takes into account all of the stats that are used to calculate the 9 major fantasy basketball categories.

Here are the Top 20 players, based on their average efficiency ratings for their last 10 games:

1. Elton Brand 29.9
2. Kevin Garnett 29.4
3. Tim Duncan 28.8
4. Marcus Camby 28.4
5. Shawn Marion 28.4
6. Allen Iverson 28.3
7. Lebron James 27
8. Paul Pierce 26.7
9. Dwyane Wade 26.5
10. Dirk Nowitzki 25
11. Chris Bosh 24.9
12. Kobe Bryant 23.7
13. Richard Jefferson 23.4
14. Jermaine O’Neal 23.3
15. Peja Stojakovic 23.1
16. Chris Webber 22.2
17. Antawn Jamison 22
18. Gilbert Arenas 21.3
19. Ricky Davis 21.2
20. Dwight Howard 20.8

Dallas / Denver observations

A few things jumped out at me as I watched the Cowboys and Broncos today (which Denver won in OT, 24-21 after Ron Dayne’s long run set up a Jason Elam FG):

1. In the first half, Denver punted and the ball bounced around at the 1 yard line. The initial call was a touchback, but after a few commercials, we found out that Shanahan wanted to challenge the call. So we go to ANOTHER set of commercials and come back to find out that the call was overturned. A couple of years ago, the NFL changed the rules so that the clock would run, even if players went out of bounds, for a good portion of each half. This rule was designed to make the games shorter, but as I’m sure you’ve noticed, the games aren’t any shorter. They are still running 3+ hours. What we get are more commercials, and no one needs that.

2. Denver MLB Al Wilson stops Dallas RB Marion Barber on a 3rd and 1 at midfield and begins to celebrate. Only he didn’t stop him. Barber keeps his feet moving and neither of his knees touch the ground. His second effort gets the Cowboys a first down and Wilson looks like a fool.

3. In the 4th quarter, Dallas safety Roy Williams covers Denver TE Jeb Putzier on a pass play. Putzier makes the catch and Williams sort of runs past him, waving his hands to indicate that the pass is incomplete. As the replay eventually shows, the catch was clearly made and Putzier is able to get up and gain another six yards while Williams, who should know better, looks like a fool.

4. The Cowgirls’ short shorts are getting shorter. This one is not a complaint.

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