Month: May 2008 (Page 22 of 28)

Annual Strahan-to-retire talk heating up

According to ESPN.com’s John Clayton, Giants’ defensive end Michael Strahan is “60-40” on retiring before the season starts.

Officially, Michael Strahan is undecided about his future. But he looks and sounds like a player who is going to retire before training camp.

Giants linebacker Antonio Pierce went on the radio and said he thought Strahan was gong to retire. Last summer, he almost did retire. Clearly he doesn’t want to come to training camp, and Tom Coughlin isn’t going to give him a pass that will allow him to take the summer off.

Put the odds at 60-40 for a retirement announcement before training camp.

The key here is that Strahan doesn’t want to go to training camp. He never wants to go to training camp, so take all the retirement talk with a grain of salt. He pulls this crap every year around the same time.

Was Benson mistreated by police?

A woman who was a passenger the night Bears’ running back Cedric Benson was charged with boating while intoxicated and resisting arrest is claiming that Benson was mistreated by police.

“I called my dad and told him, ‘Call 911, my black friend is getting beaten up by police on Lake Travis,’ ” Elizabeth Cartwright told the Chicago Tribune.

“It’s more what I heard than what I saw,” said Cartwright, 22, who said she’s a friend of Benson’s from the University of Texas.

Cartwright said she and her fiance had been boating with Benson about six times this spring, and each time a Lower Colorado River Authority boat pulled them over for a safety check. Saturday, she said, after Benson’s boat passed examination he was taken to a LCRA boat for a sobriety test.

“We were all like, ‘Why?’ ” said Cartwright, adding that Benson had had two drinks. “I know Cedric and I don’t think he was drunk.”

A few minutes later, Cartwright said, she heard Benson scream after an officer pepper-sprayed him in the eye.

An affidavit the LCRA filed described Benson as cocky, smelling strongly of alcohol and needing to be removed forcibly from the boat and eventually falling to the ground. Benson claimed police kicked his feet out from under him, causing him to fall awkwardly.

Something doesn’t smell right here – for either Benson’s party and the police. It’s hard to believe that the police go around pepper spraying people for the hell of it, but there doesn’t seem to be a clear cut reason why they pulled Benson over in the first place. Then again, I don’t know the boating laws in Texas, either.

Top 10 Football Video Games

The Love of Sports has a beat on the top 10 football video games of all time. No surprise that John Madden’s name came up multiple times.

2. Tecmo Bowl and Tecmo Super Bowl
Released in 1989, Tecmo Bowl included the NFLPA license, which gave fans across the globe a chance to play with the likes of Joe Montana, Dan Marino, Marcus Allen and Walter Payton, to name but a few. And as limited as play selection and graphics were at the time, has anyone forgotten that muzzled voice shouting “Down!” and then proceeding to say “Hut!” over and over until the ball was finally snapped? That was followed by Tecmo Super Bowl in 1991. There’s no doubting how technologically advanced the sequel was in comparison to its predecessor or anything else released at the time. It featured league play that included a standard regular and postseason, as well as practically perfect NFL rosters and player ratings that were actual quite realistic. Simply put, while Madden takes the No. 1 spot for being so dominant for so many years, I can’t help but remember Tecmo Super Bowl for being the single most memorable sports game ever. To this day, almost 20 years later, legions of fans maintain updated versions of this game for online league play, which pretty much says it all. If nothing else, Tecmo Bowl certainly made legends out of Bo Jackson, Christian “The Nigerian Nightmare” Okoye, Randall Cunningham, Lawrence Taylor and Ronnie Lott, amongst others.

Some days I wish I could go back to a time when all that was important in my life was winning a Tecmo Bowl Championship. That music still gets me fired up.

Hornets’ speed is killing the Spurs

It’s still way too early in the series to write the defending champs off, but I think that even the most ardent San Antonio supporter would admit that things aren’t looking too good. The Spurs entered the series with a serious advantage in playoff experience, but all that’s got them thus far is a pair of 18+ point defeats.

It looks like the Hornets are a horrible matchup for the Spurs. San Antonio’s offense starts with Tony Parker, who is typically able to use his quickness to get into the lane at will. But with the speedy Chris Paul and even speedier Jannero Pargo splitting defensive duties, those driving lanes aren’t nearly as open as they usually are. If Parker’s jumper isn’t falling – and at the moment it isn’t – his effectiveness is severely limited.

Inside, the Hornets are trapping Tim Duncan just about every time he gets the ball. Tyson Chandler is the type of player that can give Duncan problems down low. He’s long and very athletic, and he has enough strength to keep Duncan from getting deep post position. They aren’t trapping every time he gets the ball, and that’s playing mind games with Duncan, who doesn’t know for sure if the double-team is coming. The Hornets’ plan is to get the ball out of Duncan’s hands and force some of these other players – Bruce Bowen, Michael Finley, Kurt Thomas, Ime Udoka, etc. – to beat them. The neat thing is that the Hornets have enough team speed to rotate (or recover) to those perimeter shooters, so those open shots aren’t so open.

In my preview, I suggested that the Hornets might use Julian Wright, the very athletic rookie out of Kansas, to cover Manu Ginobili, and they have. He has long arms and a great motor, and he’s been able to keep Ginobili from getting a good offensive rhythym. They are also surprising Ginobili with the occasional double-team when he’s near the sideline, which contributed to three straight first half turnovers by the reigning Sixth Man of the Year.

Offensively, the Hornets can hurt you in so many ways. Chris Paul looks like he’s toying with Bruce Bowen, and the Spurs simply don’t have a matchup with David West, who is displaying a serious mean streak. Throw in some terrific shooting from Wright, Peja Stojakovic and Morris Peterson, and the Spurs have their hands full.

Game 3 is an obvious must-win for the Spurs, and I expect them to give it everything they’ve got. There’s still a chance that Pop will make the necessary adjustments and turn the tide of the series, but Byron Scott is no pushover when it comes to strategy.

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