Month: April 2008 (Page 10 of 30)

Miami to shop Taylor

According to CBSSports.com, the Dolphins have turned their attention to shopping defensive end Jason Taylor after signing Jake Long to a contract.

Two clubs whom the Dolphins contacted confirmed Tuesday that Miami is shopping Taylor, looking for a mid-to-low first-round draft pick in return.

While that’s not surprising it does contradict statements made by team vice president of football operations Bill Parcells, who insisted last month that Taylor would not be dealt.

“The only way Jason Taylor doesn’t play for the Dolphins in 2008,” Parcells said last month, “is if he retires. The team is not going to trade him.”

And maybe that’s true. But Miami is reaching out to others to gauge interest in the 2006 NFL Defensive Player of the Year. According to someone close to the situation, that’s consistent with Parcells’ approach to building football teams.

Kind of interesting that the Dolphins committed to Long and now a day later are ready to ship Taylor out of town. One would have thought that they would only try to trade Taylor after deciding on which defensive end (either Chris Long or Vernon Gholston) would replace him at defensive end. It’ll be interesting to see if any teams bite on the 33-year old Taylor.

Allen to Vikes – draft ramifications?

The Vikings landed former Chiefs’ defensive end Jared Allen for their first round pick (No. 17) and two third round picks (No. 73 and No. 82). Allen will receive a new contract worth $74 million over six years.

Unsuccessful in landing an edge pass-rusher early in free agency, Minnesota acquired one of the best in the business at an extremely steep price Tuesday night when it agreed to terms on a trade with Kansas City for Jared Allen.

This obviously weakens the Vikings’ draft, but Allen is a stud. With the addition, Minny might have the best defensive line in all of football, equipped to stop the run and rush the passer. This move might help mask some of the Vikings’ deficiencies in the secondary.

In looking at this weekend’s draft, the departure of Allen might mean the Chiefs (who have the fifth overall pick) will look at a defensive end like Chris Long or Vernon Gholston. That could cause a ripple effect for teams like the Jets and Patriots, two teams reportedly looking to beef up their defensive front seven. A quality offensive tackle like Ryan Clady could now fall, as well, seeing as how most mock draft publications had the Chiefs taking an OT at No. 5. Having the No. 17 pick also means that KC can still get a quality cornerback if they don’t chose one with the No. 5 pick.

Isiah not allowed to talk to team

It looks like the Knicks have finally realized what everyone else knew all along – Isiah Thomas is not a very good GM. In fact, a year ago I mathematically proved that he was the worst GM in the league. Anyway, new team president Donnie Walsh has barred Thomas from talking to any of the Knicks.

Former New York Knicks coach Isiah Thomas has been banned from having any contact with members of the team as part of his reassignment agreement with team president Donnie Walsh, the New York Daily News reported, citing a team source.

According to the report, there is concern that Thomas, if allowed to have any contact with the team, could either willingly or unwillingly undermine its new coach. Thomas acquired all the players on the current Knicks roster as team president.

Thomas does not have an official title. He reports directly to Walsh, who said no player brought up Thomas’ name during last week’s exit meetings Thursday.

“I don’t want there to be some kind of double-voice here, so he’s answering to me and nobody’s reporting to him,” Walsh said on 1050 ESPN Radio in New York on Tuesday. “… He’s not going to be here on a full-time basis anymore. I’ll be calling the shots, I’m in charge of the franchise. It’s my responsibility where it was his.”

The only thing keeping Thomas on the payroll is his ability to identify good players in the draft. He has always drafted pretty well, and that’s a valuable skill in the NBA. If the Knicks can contain his influence to that arena, it’s possible that this new relationship could work. However, if he has a bad draft, all bets are off.

Now, if the Timberwolves would just fire Kevin McHale.

Kevin Garnett wins DPOY

No surprise here – KG won the NBA Defensive Player of the Year award.

Garnett received 493 points, including 90 first-place votes. Camby, who won the award last season, finished second with 178 points and Battier had 175 points.

Garnett changed the culture in Boston, especially on the defensive end. The Celtics went from being one of the worst defensive teams in the league to one of the (if not the) stingiest.

I’m now two for two in my year-end award predictions, though this and the Sixth Man award were no-brainers.

Report: Former MVP on his way out of Seattle

The Seattle Post-Intelligencer (via KJR-AM) is reporting that the Seahawks plan to release running back Shaun Alexander as soon as today.

No one with the team has confirmed this yet, but the move would not be surprising. Alexander’s fate with the team was pretty much sealed when running backs Julius Jones and T.J. Duckett were signed in free agency.

There was a report last month that Alexander was being released. But he was still recovering from the sugery on the left wrist that bothered him all last season, so he could not be released until the wrist healed.

As noted above – this isn’t any surprise and it was only a matter of time. The real question is if or where he’ll play next. He’s hit the dreaded age of 30 and he didn’t look good last year while batting various injuries. Surely some team will take a flyer on him, but it’ll be interesting to see if he’ll get more than a one year deal.

Photo Courtesy of Flickr

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