Month: January 2008 (Page 22 of 25)

KNIGHT DOES IT AGAIN

Bob Knight’s precociousness (or should I say disdain) with the media took a new turn after yesterday’s game with UTEP. Following a game in which he received a technical for losing his shoe while kicking the scorer’s table, he entered the media room to hold his post game press conference carrying his grandson. I thought it was a great touch of him showing his sensitive side. Boy, was I wrong. The first line that came out of his mouth was sarcasm towards the writers. He instructed his grandson to answer all of the intelligent questions. His poor grandson (couldn’t have been more than 2 or 3) stood there with a pacifier in his mouth and looked as frightened as could be.

Then following his open sentence he spiced up his first answer with a lottle bit of vulgarity (bull shit to be exact). I was greatly disappointed that he didn’t tell his grandson to put on earmuffs. (That famous line used by Vince Vaughn in Old School to insctruct his son to cover his ears with his hands so that he could cuss freely). After a few minutes of innane banter, Knight picked up his grandson and left.

I have got to give it to Knight. A week after he was reprimanded by the conference for calling an officials’ call horrendous (which by the way, I saw the tape and the call was horrendous–another official getting off scott free) Knight was able to pull another trick out of his sleeve.

He truly is a master of the media!!!

Water Cooler Recap: Wildcard Playoff Edition

Jaguars 31, Steelers 29
My defensive back days ended when I was a senior in high school, so I’m not one to talk about a professional athlete not making a play. However, on David Garrard’s fourth quarter scramble that eventually led to Josh Scobee’s game-winning field goal, Steelers’ defensive back Tyrone Carter should have charged the line of scrimmage instead of waiting back. Garrard was going to pick up the first down no matter what, but if Carter is more aggressive, maybe he limits Garrard to only a seven or eight yard gain instead of 32…Pittsburgh really missed Willie Parker’s outside running in this game and it was clear that Big Ben was trying to do too much in the first half. The Steelers lost their swagger after losing to the Jets in Week 11…I love the potential of a Jaguars-Patriots matchup. Besides the Colts, I think Jacksonville is the only other AFC team that could possibly knock off New England (and no, I’m not overlooking the Chargers).

Seahawks 35, Redskins 14
This was a snooze-fest until the fourth quarter. Neither offense was very impressive throughout the entire game, but both defenses had their share of big plays, including two Seahawk interceptions that were returned for touchdowns. In the end, was Todd Collins really going to lead the Skins deep into the playoffs? He was a nice story, but Patrick Kerney and the rest of Seattle’s defense befuddled him (although he didn’t get much help from his receivers in the first half). At least Washington made a great run for Sean Taylor…The Seahawks are in trouble. Matt Hasselbeck’s hand is clearly affecting his decision-making and Shaun Alexander has been a shell of his former self this year. I love their aggressive defense, but they live and die by the turnover and that’s going to eventually cost them. Green Bay has a nice matchup next week.

Giants 24, Bucs 14
Other than the first quarter, the Giants were very impressive. Eli Manning had two great drives in the second quarter to help put NY up 14-7 and Ahmad Bradshaw provided a great spark in the third quarter to put the Bucs away. The G-Men aren’t overly impressive, but they know Dallas well and they might just give the ‘Boys a game next week…Not to take away what he did for Tampa in the regular season, but this game was a perfect example of how Jeff Garica will only take a team so far. He’s limited and when his team gets down by more than two scores, he’s really limited. Obviously this loss wasn’t all on him, however. The defense wore down in the second and third quarters and Michael Spurlock fumbled the opening kickoff in the second half that led to a Giants field goal. Since waxing the Falcons at home to win the NFC South in Week 15, the Bucs were a completely different team.

Chargers 17, Titans 6
There won’t be many times when someone says the San Diego Chargers’ offense was more productive without prolific tight end Antonio Gates, but that was the case Sunday. The Chargers were blanked 6-0 in the first half and lost Gates to a toe injury, but they managed 17 unanswered points in the second half to pull off the sloppy victory…The Titans dominated this game defensively in the first half, but they started to ware down when Vince Young and the offense couldn’t muster any scoring drives. That’s been the case for Tennessee all season…Not sure how good San Diego is going to be without Gates in Indianapolis next weekend, but at least they finally got over their 13-year playoff-win drought.

San Francisco Situation Smells

Coaching college basketball is a tough enough job, but when you have third parties involved and incompetent athletic directors it becomes even tougher. Let me just say that I like and respect Eddie Sutton. I even hope he gets his last two wins so that he can reach 800 as a head coach.

However, what Debra Gore Mann, the athletic director at USF, has done is reprehensible. A Jesuit institution that preaches education and the core values of loyalty, honesty and integrity has sadly missed the mark in this situation. I realize that Jessie Evans was having a tough season and may have even had a losing one if he was allowed to finish it off, but to remove him at mid year is not holding true to your core values. Now, it has surfaced that Dana and David Pump, acted as intermiediaries to get the change pushed along. How much did they get paid? What is their connection to Gore-Mann? More importantly, why are they involved at all?

When an athletic director has to operate outside it’s own athletic department than you can bet that is the first sign of losing control. Bringing Sutton in at mid year is no different than what an NBA team would do. The difference is that one is a professional organization and another is an institution of higher learning.

Right now, I can’t tell which is which. Here’s hoping the Dons get two more wins and allow Coach Sutton to ride off into the sunset. Soon after that you can bet that the Pump Brothers will he hired to help Gore-Mann find another coach. Follow the money trail and you will find something that does not belong in college athletics.

Jayhawks and Tigers Roll

The Kansas Jayhawks showed that they can be every bit as good on the road as they are at home. Blitzing through a non-conference schedule at home against the likes of Yale, UMKC and Washburn is one thing, but when you go on the road and play an ACC opponent that is when you find out what you are made of as a team. Well, Kansas is pretty dam good. With the emergence of Darnell Jackson and the continued scoring of Darrell Arthur the only supposed Jayhawk weekness has been eliminated. In beating Boston College 85-60 today they proved that they just might be the best team in the country. Darnell Jackson dropped 25 on the Eagles in a game that the outcome was decided by halftime. Kansas jumped out to a 47-29 lead at the break and never looked back.

Bill Self has the Jayhawks clicking on all cylinders. With the depth in the backcourt provided by two lottery picks (Mario Chalmers and Brandon Rush) and the leadership of senior Russell Robinson the Jayhawks looked poised to take a shot at the national championship. Overcoming ealry season injuries to Rush and Colins made this team deeper and better. And while other teams seem to be experiencing the injury bug (Pittsburgh and North Carolina, most notably), the Jayhawks are getting stronger as they head into conference play.

Leave it to John Calipari to give the ultimate compliment in his team’s victory over Pepperdine. Coach Cal gave Pepperdine coach Vance Walberg much credit for the offense that the Tigers run. That’s great. But when you have three lottery picks in your lineup I don’t think it really matters what type of offense you run. Memphis routed the Waves 90-53 thus proving that it isn’t the offense, but the personnel that is most important. This is one of the deepest teams in the country and certainly has an opportunity to run the table in Conference USA.

Hold your horses Michigan State and Indiana fans. Before you start thinking that it is a two horse race, you better keep an eye on the Badgers of Wisconsin. Coach Bo Ryan has the restocked Badgers on a roll. After beating Iowa today by double digits and collecting their sixth straight win, Wisconsin is starting to feel it oats. Senior Brian Butch has come back healthy and provided a spark to the Badgers. Next weeks game against Indiana should be a dandy. Both teams seem to be hitting their peaks at the right time.

Who is the better rookie?

Adrian Peterson ran away (pun intended) with Rookie of the Year honors, garnering 46.5 of the panel’s 50 votes. Joe Thomas was the only other rookie to get a vote. (He actually got 3.5.)

Where is Ryan Grant?

All right, hear me out.

Much is made of the numbers Peterson put up even though he didn’t crack the starting lineup until the sixth game. In the first five games, he averaged 19.2 carries, which are hardly backup numbers. Grant got all of six carries in the five games he appeared in before taking over as the Packers’ starter in week 8. Here are a few per game stats for each player, which compare Peterson’s 14-game performance to Grant’s 10-game stint as Green Bay’s starter:

Peterson: 115 total yards, 5.6 ypc, 0.9 TD
Grant: 105 total yards, 5.1 ypc, 0.8 TD

Here are their numbers over the last four games:

Peterson: 46 total yards, 2.7 ypc, 0.5 TD
Grant: 97 total yards, 5.5 ypc, 1.0 TD

By most accounts, Peterson played behind a much better offensive line and the 8-8 Vikings didn’t even make the playoffs. So much is made of the team’s record when the balloting is done for the MVP award, but it doesn’t seem to play a role in the voting for ROY. The Packers finished the season 13-3 and Grant was a major reason why defenses weren’t able to key on Brett Favre and Co. in the passing game.

I’m not saying that the wrong guy won the award – Peterson had a wonderful year and deserved the honor – but I think there’s enough of an argument for Grant that at least one panel member would have voted for him or at least split a vote between the two players.

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