Month: March 2006 (Page 12 of 18)

Walker wants to be traded

Green Bay WR Javon Walker’s contract dispute with the franchise resurfaced Thursday when he told ESPN that he doesn’t want to play for the Packers any longer.

“I just don’t feel like this is the best place for me to be right now,” said Walker, whose relationship with the organization remains fractured following the team’s refusal last summer to renegotiate his contract and public criticism at his expense by Favre. “I really have no interest in being in a Green Bay Packers uniform or playing for Green Bay again.”

Walker added, “I just don’t like the way the organization runs itself. They want players to come up there and play hard and work hard, but when it comes time to be compensated, it’s like, ‘We forgot what you’ve done.'”

Walker is the team’s best receiver and is probably the best WR in the division, so this is a big blow to the franchise. When disgruntled players demand a trade, it is rare that the team gets equal value in return. They could have reworked his contract before the knee injury, but other than keeping him happy, they had no incentive to do so.

Couch Potato Alert

The conference tournaments are starting to heat up. Remarkably, there is only one Top 25 matchup today – Villanova/Pitt. For a full Top 25 scoreboard go here. (All times ET.)

College Hoops
Fri, 2:30pm: Indiana vs. Wisconsin – ESPN (HD)
Fri, 7pm: Syracuse vs. Georgetown – ESPN (HD)
Fri, 9pm: (16) Pittsburgh vs. (2) Villanova – ESPN (HD)
Fri, 9:10pm: Michigan St. vs. Illinois – ESPN Full Court

The Big Bounce?

After losing 8-6 to Canada yesterday, Team USA actually put itself in the position to be bounced out of the World Baseball Classic in the first round. They are tied with Mexico for second place – Canada, which sports such legends as Matt Stairs and Stubby Clapp, is 2-0 – in a four-team division where only the top two teams advance. Yikes.

The easiest way for Team USA to get into the next round is for Canada to beat Mexico today, while Team USA beats South Africa tomorrow (which doesn’t seem to be a problem, since both Canada and Mexico have already done so). But if both Mexico and Team USA win, the team who allows the fewest runs will advance. At the moment, Mexico has allowed six runs. Team USA has allowed eight, which means no one loves Jason Bay right now more than Team USA’s pitching staff. If Mexico wins 1-0, Team USA is done.

Let’s think about this for a second: Team USA actually needs help to advance to the second round of the World Baseball Classic. Team freaking USA, the team that, despite the laundry list of defections and last minute replacements, still has a murderer’s row of hitters and ridiculous pitching. But even the Devil Rays beat the Yankees from time to time – actually, the Rays are Yankee killers, go figure – as evidenced by Derrek Lee and Alex Rodriguez getting schooled by a AA pitcher in the Orioles organization yesterday. If they, God help them, lose to South Africa tomorrow, it might go down as one of the biggest flops in American sports history.

Now, you would think that by saying this, it means that I think the whole WBC idea was a bad one, which couldn’t be further from the truth. That game between Venezuela and the Dominican Republic was one of the greatest games I’ve ever seen. The joint was jumping, like a soccer match during the World Cup. No American baseball game has ever looked like that, and it was fascinating to watch. Plus, even with the number of American players who are not contributing, the team is still stacked. They should be beating everyone in the first round, period. If they fail to advance to the next round, Bud Selig’s head just might explode like the weightlifter in “Final Destination 3.”

Shocking to think that the three games into the World Baseball Classic, Team USA could already have nothing to play for. Critics will surely jump in to say, “See, I told you it was a bad idea.” But it’s not a bad idea: it’s a great idea that’s taking place at a bad time. Do this in the fall, and see how many more players sign up to represent their country.

Owners agree to share

The NFL owners approved a revenue-sharing deal and agreed to a six-year extension of the Collective Bargaining Agreement, which means the salary cap isn’t going anywhere anytime soon.

This much was known: The cap in 2006 will be $102 million, an increase of $7.5 million over the projected $94.5 million cap for 2006. That’s a $16.5 million increase from the $85.5 million cap of 2005. The 2007 cap will be $109 million.

What all this means for the league, the owners and the players is labor peace. For fans, it means roster peace.

The owners voted 30-2 in favor of the agreement. The two lone holdouts were the Bengals and Bills, which leads me to believe that the deal wasn’t exactly what the low-revenue teams wanted in terms of revenue sharing.

With the extra cap space, some of the roster cuts that we saw last week may be rescinded. Free agency will probably start on Saturday and it shouldn’t be as chaotic as we thought it might be.

If you like parity in the NFL, this is very good news.

Couch Potato Alert

There are a couple of promising matchups in the Big East tourney today, with the highlight being the Pitt/WVU matchup this evening.

NCAA Hoops
Thurs, 12pm: Syracuse vs. (1) UConn – ESPN (HD)
Thurs, 9pm: (16) Pittsburgh vs. (21) West Virginia – ESPN

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