Month: May 2008 (Page 5 of 28)

5 NFL teams that could surprise

In his latest edition of Hashmarks, Pat Yasinskas of ESPN.com mentions five NFL teams that could surprise this season.

CAROLINA PANTHERS
Coach John Fox spent much of last year saying he didn’t like to make excuses and then turning right around and telling anyone who would listen how tough it is to win without your starting quarterback. That part was painfully true as David Carr flopped and Vinny Testaverde fossilized after Delhomme went down in Week 3. The bright spot was the play of undrafted rookie quarterback Matt Moore late in the season, but he remains a project.

Yasinskas also lists the Eagles, Jets, Cardinals and Raiders.

Aren’t the Panthers always listed in these types of write-ups? Ever since they went to the Super Bowl in 2003, the Panthers have been everyone’s “sleeper” damn near every year. SI.com is absolutely infatuated with them and rarely has them missing the playoffs. This team gets more love than Hugh Hefner.

McHale wants Love?

DraftExpress is reporting that multiple sources within the Minnesota organization are saying that GM Kevin McHale has locked onto Kevin Love as his favorite prospect in the draft.

McHale reportedly likes the skill-level and all-around feel for the game that Love brings to the table, as well as his winning mentality, and sees him as an excellent potential compliment to Al Jefferson in Minnesota’s front-court.

Picking 3rd in this draft, many would consider it a reach to take Love, although numerous advanced statistical formulas have identified him as being the 2nd most productive player in this draft, behind Michael Beasley.

There is already some talk that Minnesota will look to make a trade with Memphis GM Chris Wallace, who would then have the option of fortifying his front-court by drafting Brook Lopez at #3, or swinging for the fences and taking O.J. Mayo. Memphis could offer Minnesota the young prospect of their choice in Kyle Lowry, Hakim Warrick or Javaris Crittenton to help facilitate the deal.

A couple of weeks ago, I posted a video of Love in training and commented how he looked leaner and more athletic. It looks like McHale sees the same things.

Minnesota’s backcourt features Randy Foye and Rashad McCants, and they have Al Jefferson manning the middle, so Kevin Love would seem to be a nice addition to that core group of guys. Ryan Gomes is decent, but he’s probably better suited to be a combo forward off the bench. Last year’s first round pick, Corey Brewer, had an awful season (37.4% from the field, 5.8 ppg) so small forward is an option as well. Going with Love would allow Brewer to develop for another season or two before giving up on him.

Another school of thought would have the Wolves take Brook Lopez with the pick, which would allow Jefferson to play his “natural” position of power forward. But the league is getting smaller and quicker and Jefferson is best when his back is to the basket, so maybe his best position is center.

Are there any Minnesota fans that want to chime in?

ESPN, you’re better than that.

I was surfing ESPN this morning, and when I hit the NBA page, I saw the following headline:

Yao still shaken by China’s earthquake tragedy

Journalists love to write clever headlines that use puns or wordplay to grab the reader. But when there are more than 62,000 confirmed dead in one of the world’s biggest disasters in recent memory, there’s no need to use the term “shaken” when describing Yao Ming’s feelings about the earthquake. To put things in perspective, about 2,541 people died (or are missing) as a result of Hurricane Katrina. You do the math.

This is no time to be clever.

Instant replay to strip baseball of its soul?

Terence Moore of the Atlanta Journal Constitution doesn’t want to see instant replay in baseball because he thinks it would take away from the essence of the game.

No instant replay, please. Not in baseball, where breath-to-breath squabbles between umpires, managers, coaches and players are as much of the game’s soul as the seventh-inning stretch, the national anthem and a box of Cracker Jack.

Quick. How many blatantly wrong calls do you recall in baseball history? Before you answer, the last few days don’t count, because they were a fluke.

For good reason. With instant replay, there aren’t highlights for the ages of Ralph Houk, Billy Martin and Earl Weaver kicking dirt and slinging caps. With instant replay, there isn’t Bobby Cox adding to his record each week for ejections from a game. With instant replay, there aren’t blown-calls legends, ranging from Don Denkinger to Jeffrey Maier to Ken Burkhart.

So baseball shouldn’t adopt instant replay because we wouldn’t get to see managers scream at the umpires? That’s a pretty ridiculous take on this whole debate.

Offseason Blueprint: Chicago Bulls

And the #1 pick goes to… the Chicago Bulls?

The Bulls defied the odds (1.7%) by winning the top pick in the lottery and now, with a good offseason, the team is poised for a big turnaround. The decisions start with Ben Gordon and Luol Deng, who are both restricted free agents this summer. It’s pretty clear that the team wants to keep Deng as he was seemingly the only player deemed “untouchable” in all the trade talks the past few seasons. Both players turned down extensions worth in excess of $10 million per year, so neither guy is going to be cheap.

So which direction should the team go with the #1 pick? They could take Chicago-native Derrick Rose, but that would mean fewer minutes for either Gordon or Kirk Hinrich, and a serious change in the direction of the franchise. It seemed like the Bulls were content with Hinrich and Gordon in the backcourt, but Rose has the potential to be a franchise-changing player like Chris Paul or Deron Williams. Do you really pass on that for a duo that didn’t play all that well last season? I say no. I would take Rose and eventually start him alongside Gordon, moving Hinrich to the bench or trading him altogether. Rose is 6’4” and is strong, so he could cover most opposing shooting guards, though his college coach John Calipari said that he’s going to have to work on his defense. Hinrich’s salary actually decreases over the next four years, so another option is to sign-and-trade Gordon for help elsewhere. The safe play is to draft Rose, sign Gordon and see how the trio plays as unit.

Another option is to draft Michael Beasley, which would give the Bulls the low post presence it has been lacking since their boneheaded move to trade Elton Brand for Tyson Chandler. A starting lineup of Hinrich, Gordon, Deng, Beasley and Joakim Noah, along with a bench of Larry Hughes, Andres Nocioni and Drew Gooden, should be pretty formidable in another year or two, especially on the offensive end.

I think Chicago’s decision will depend on how the franchise feels about its current backcourt. The once promising Hinrich/Gordon duo had a disappointing season, so there’s no guarantee that either player will be on the roster come November. Both players hold significant trade value, so the Bulls’ best move may be to draft Rose and build around the Rose/Deng combo. I’d draft Rose, lock up Deng, and let Gordon test the restricted free agent market if he doesn’t want to sign a deal averaging somewhere in the $8-$10 million range.

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