Month: March 2006 (Page 13 of 18)

Culpepper wants out

Following Daunte Culpepper’s worst season as a pro, which ended with a brutal knee injury, he did an odd thing – he asked for a raise. The Vikings, like most sane people around the country, just shrugged their shoulders. They said the right things – that he’s a good player and that he’s in their future plans – but according to Daunte the team is trying to trade him and he wants out.

“Two days ago I got an e-mail from management that confirmed for me that they did not see me as the player or person that I see myself,” Culpepper told ESPN’s Andrea Kremer. “I was shocked. It pushed me to this point [seeking a trade]. The e-mail made no mention of trying to trade me, but I confirmed from an outside source that they were attempting to trade me. While I have not yet told the Vikings, if they do not trade me, I intend to ask the Vikings to terminate my contract.”

Minnesota won’t confirm Culpepper’s comments, but if they’re smart, they’re trying to unload him. Culpepper still has some value around the league and there’s a chance that a team like the Raiders or Cardinals would be willing to give the Vikings a good draft pick for the quarterback.

If I were a GM, I wouldn’t touch this guy with a ten-foot pole. Last season, he wasn’t able to prove that he could play without Randy Moss and if that knee injury negatively affects his mobility, then his game is in serious trouble.

Are the Clippers for real?

As the longtime model for a poorly-run NBA franchise, the Los Angeles Clippers are having a breakout season, advancing to a 34-25 record after a 98-85 win yesterday over the San Antonio Spurs.

The turnaround started when the notoriously cheap (unless, of course, it’s for sex) owner of the Clippers, Donald Sterling, decided to match the Miami Heat’s offer to Elton Brand in 2003. Brand has turned into one of the league’s very best players and his steady, efficient game has served as an anchor for the entire franchise.

HC Mike Dunleavy has preached defense from the beginning and it’s starting to pay dividends. They are third in the league in opponent’s FG%, second in defensive rebounding and first in blocks. The offseason additions of Sam Cassell and Cuttino Mobley, while risky, have worked out great. Now Dunleavy has the nice problem of trying to work Corey Maggette back into the rotation.

Unfortunately, if the Clippers stay in the #5 spot in the West, they’ll likely be rewarded with a first round matchup with the Spurs or Mavericks, which will make it difficult to advance. Still, it’s nice to see the other team in Los Angeles winning with teamwork and defense. Maybe the Lakers should take notice.

The downside of HD

While watching North Carolina and Duke battle this weekend, a couple of moments prove that high definition television is not all puppy dogs and ice cream.

1. A few shots of Duke assistant coach Johnny Dawkins clearly showed a man with a moose knuckle seated behind him. (For those that don’t know what a ‘moose knuckle’ is, it’s the male version of a ‘camel toe.’) This is an example of how the clarity of HD can get you into trouble.

2. In the second half, after North Carolina’s Bobby Frasor hit back to back three-point shots, there was a widescreen shot of the Tar Heel bench, where reserve guard Wes Miller was saying, “Yeahhhhh, boyyyyy!” in full Flavor Flav fashion. The moment was reminiscent of “The Karate Kid” when one of the Cobra Kai yelled from the sideline, “Give him a body bang!” as Daniel LaRusso was getting his ass kicked in the ring.

There’s a lot to like about HD, but there is a downside.

Barry Bonds is a drug whore

Well, if authors Mark Fainaru-Wada and Lance Williams are to be believed.

Sports Illustrated is reporting that the men’s upcoming book, “Game of Shadows,” goes into painstaking detail of Bonds’ intricate, and lengthy, use of steroids. Bonds, they claim, began using them in 1998 – not coincidentally, the year that Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa were co-MVP’s and SI’s Men of the Year thanks to their home run onslaught – and took every type of steroid you can imagine. Pills, drops, cream, injections, you name it. He was even taking insulin. And they claimed that he screamed for his juice like a junkie jonesing for a fix.

The authors write that [Greg] Anderson started Bonds on Winstrol, also known as stanozolol, the longtime favorite steroid of bodybuilders, disgraced sprinter Ben Johnson and baseball player Rafael Palmeiro. In 100 days, Bonds packed on 15 pounds of muscle, and at age 35 hit home runs at the best rate of his career, once every 10.4 at bats. But he also grew too big, too fast. He tore his triceps tendon, telling [mistress Kimberly] Bell that the steroids “makes me grow faster, but if you’re not careful, you can blow it out.”

The book said Anderson and Bonds subsequently tweaked the program, adding such drugs as the steroid Deca-Durabolin and growth hormone, which allowed Bonds to retain his energy and physique without rigorous training. Not only did the growth hormone keep him fresh, but after complaining in 1999 about difficulty tracking pitches, he noticed it improved his eyesight as well.

Bonds added more drugs after the 2000 season, when Anderson hooked up Bonds with BALCO and its founder, [Stan] Conte, according to the authors. In addition to the Cream and the Clear, the steroids designed to be undetectable, Bonds took such drugs as Clomid, a women’s infertility drug thought to help a steroid user recover his natural testosterone production, and Modafinil, a narcolepsy drug used as a powerful stimulant.

Whereas Anderson’s drug acumen had been forged in the gym culture, Conte and his chemists brought Bonds to another level of sophistication, by prescribing him elaborate cocktails of drugs designed to be even more effective and undetectable. For instance, the authors write that in 2002, when Bonds won his fifth MVP Award and had a .700 on-base percentage in the World Series, he was fueled by meticulous three-week cycles in which he injected growth hormone every other day, took the Cream and the Clear in the days in between, and capped the cycle with Clomid. The cycle was followed by one week off. The authors write that Anderson usually administered the drugs to Bonds at Bonds’ home, using a needle to inject the growth hormone and a syringe without a needle to squirt the Clear under his tongue.

It was bad enough that no one believed Bonds when he claimed that he unknowingly took the cream and the clear after the BALCO investigation report leaked. But he’s toast now. Even if the whole thing is bunk – and given the detail of Bonds’ alleged regimen, this can’t all be bunk – everyone knows that the words of the accuser are always more powerful than the denial of the person accused. Bonds, of course, is going to deny that any of this is true; indeed, he walked away from a bunch of reporters that asked him about it, saying, “I won’t even look at (the book). There’s no need to.” But in his heart of hearts, he has to know that this story is not only going to hound him all year, but for the rest of his life.

Couch Potato Alert

The World Baseball Classic is going on right now and here are the games the U.S. team are playing this week. You can find the complete television schedule here. (All times Eastern.)

Tues, 4pm: Mexico vs USA – ESPN2
Wed, 4pm: Canada vs USA – ESPN2

« Older posts Newer posts »