Month: August 2008 (Page 18 of 50)

NFLPA Director Gene Upshaw Dies

NFL Players Association Director Gene Upshaw died early Monday morning at the age of 63. Upshaw apparently had been fighting pancreatic cancer.

Upshaw played for the Oakland and Los Angeles Raiders from 1967 through 1981. He was a seven-time Pro Bowl selection and an 11-time All-Pro, playing on two Super Bowl-winning teams with the Raiders. He was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1987, but has been better known for the past 25 years as the executive director of the NFL Players Association.

From his involvement with the NFLPA as a player through his tenure as executive director, Upshaw took part in negotiations of the 1977, 1982 and 1993 Collective Bargaining Agreements between the NFL and NFLPA, and extensions of the CBA in 1998, 2002 and 2006.

Rotoworld notes the leading candidate to replace Upshaw with the NFLPA might be former cornerback Troy Vincent, who is well liked and respected by the players.

Wet and Wild: May-Treanor/Walsh capture the gold

Facing a good team in front of a (semi-)partisan hometown crowd in a pretty heavy rainstorm, Misty May-Treanor and Kerri Walsh completed their gold medal run (without losing a single game during the entire Olympics) by defeating the Chinese combo of Wang Jie and Tian Jia, 21-18 and 21-18.

They have now won 108 straight matches and have won back-to-back Olympic gold medals. Expect big changes for the duo now that this competition is over, as both players have said that they’d like to start a family. May-Treanor is 31 and Walsh is 30, so it’s conceivable (no pun intended) that they could take a year or two off to start a family and then join forces again in a couple of years to try to make a run at the 2012 Olympics in London. At 35 and 34, it wouldn’t be easy, but the way that these two compete, you never know. I guess it could depend on how many kids they want to have. One, maybe… two would be tough.

Regardless, if they do indeed take a break, the time is now for another American team to grab the mantle. The best beach volleyball team ever to take the sand now sounds like they may be done competing, at least for now.

Thursday morning update: The World of Isaac posted these photos of the match.

NBC is on my sh*t list right now

The women’s beach volleyball gold medal match was at 11 AM Bejing time, or 11 PM Eastern/8 PM Pacific. Does NBC show the match live on the West Coast? No, they make everyone in May and Walsh’s home state (California) wait until 11 PM Pacific to see the match.

You wouldn’t think it would be that hard to show it live on both coasts. On the East Coast, you have your normal programming, starting with all the diving and recorded track and field. Then, when the match is about to start, you air it live (as normal). On the West Coast, you start the night with the live match at 8 PM PT, and when it’s over, you go back to the diving and the track and field. The only downside for NBC is Bob Costas has to record a few more transitions in between events so that the West Coast feed makes sense. Since the match would reach a wider audience if it aired earlier on the West Coast, you’d think that it would be worth NBC’s time and trouble if it generated higher ratings.

This whole unnecessary three-hour Pacific Coast delay becomes even more troublesome for those that spend any time on the internet while they’re waiting for the match. I’m halfway through the first game of the gold medal match right now, but I already know the outcome because the news is splashed all over the internet, which includes my MSN.com home page.

(By the way, we here at The Scores Report have made a concerted effort not to post results of these Olympic Games until the event has aired in the U.S. Here’s an idea – maybe I should make The Scores Report my home page. Hmmm…)

All right, I’m going to quit my bitch session now. Misty May and Kerri Walsh are running around in wet, white bikinis (it’s raining in Bejing) trying to win a gold medal. And they’re in high definition. I really need to focus.

Have the Browns already turned into a pumpkin?

On the heels of a 10-6 season and following trades for Shaun Rogers and Corey Williams, many people were expecting big things from the Cleveland Browns this year. In fact, not only have many fans, prognosticators and other media folk predicted an AFC North title for Cleveland, but some truly brave souls even touted the possibility of a Super Bowl appearance for a team that hasn’t won a playoff game since 1995. Following Monday night’s embarrassing (for the team and its fans, anyway) 37-34 preseason loss to the Giants — a game that saw the defending champs dominate Cleveland’s starters on their way to a 30-3 lead early in the second quarter before the benches tightened up the final score — those calling for greatness from the 2008 Browns may need to rethink their stance.

In fact, we don’t need to dig too far into the archives to find a prime example of a chic preseason pick that proved it wasn’t ready for prime time. One year after finishing 3-13, the New Orleans Saints won 10 games in 2006 and advanced all the way to the NFC Championship Game. They featured an explosive offense led by a prolific quarterback (Drew Brees) who took advantage of a slew of top-notch weapons (Reggie Bush, Marques Colston, Deuce McAllister) en route to a Pro Bowl season and a shiny glass slipper heading into the 2007 campaign.

But the Saints’ Cinderella story went belly up from the get-go, losing 41-10 to the champion Colts on the season’s opening night and then dropping their next three games to start 0-4. New Orleans finally got into the win column in Week 6 against the Seahawks and then won their next three games to pull back to .500 at 4-4, but that would be the highlight of their uneven season, finishing out of the playoffs at 7-9. A season-ending knee injury to McAllister certainly didn’t help matters, but the biggest problem for the Saints was a defense that allowed more points (388) than the offense scored (379).

A closer look at New Orleans’ schedules for 2006 and 2007 reveals a troubling similarity: the 10 teams the Saints beat in 2006 had a combined .425 winning percentage (68-92), and the six teams they lost to owned a .520 winning percentage (50-46). In 2007, the seven teams they beat had a .437 winning percentage (49-63) while the nine teams that beat the Saints again owned a .520 winning percentage (75-69). What does that mean? For the most part, the Saints beat the teams they were supposed to beat in 2006 but couldn’t hold their own against the league’s better teams during the regular season. And while a 10-win season and an NFC Championship Game appearance were legitimate reasons for optimism heading into 2007, the trend held true last year, only this time it produced three fewer wins. In other words, the Saints weren’t a decidedly worse team in 2007 than they were in 2006, but they weren’t any better either, and they also weren’t as lucky.

So what does this tell us about the 2008 Browns? Maybe nothing, maybe everything. Cleveland beat 10 teams last year with a dreadful combined winning percentage of .343 (55-105), while the six teams they lost to sported a .572 percentage (55-41), a group that included the 16-0 Patriots. So just like the Saints before them, the Browns beat the teams they were supposed to beat but fell short against better competition. And just like the Saints, the Browns stuffed the stat sheet with breakout QB Derek Anderson taking full advantage of weapons like Braylon Edwards, Kellen Winslow and a revitalized Jamal Lewis while the defense was routinely gashed for big plays and big points.

Simply put, if the Browns want to prove their backers right and avoid the letdown that plagued the Saints last year, they’ll need to play better against better competition, especially on the defensive side of the ball. And they’ll need to do it on a much bigger stage, with the team scheduled for five primetime games throughout the season, including three on Monday night against the Bills, the Eagles and, ominously, the Giants. Beyond that, there are precious few gimmes on the schedule, with games against the Cowboys and Steelers to open the season, and matchups with the Jaguars, Redskins, Titans and Colts as well.

Cleveland is certainly talented enough to challenge for the AFC North crown and make a run in the playoffs, but so were the Saints last year. If this is going to be the kind of magical season that fans on the Erie shores have been waiting on for ages, the Browns will have to show more than they did Monday night.

Olympic Roundup: Recent Winners and Developments

With the Olympics winding down, there are more and more medals given out each day as many events come to a close. Here’s a breakdown on the notable achievements in the last day or so:

American Lolo Jones stumbles over second-to-last hurdle in 100-meter event. Teammate Dawn Harper takes the gold.

Lolo Jones was the favorite to take this race. Her time of 12.43 seconds in the semifinal was the best recorded by any female hurdler in this event this year. If you watched this semifinal race, you would have witnessed Swedish runner Susanna Kullur clip the first hurdle, brutally tumbling to the surface, and failing to finish. Unfortunately, this poisonous energy followed Jones, who fell in the final, so close to nabbing the gold she deserved. To put her disappointment in perspective, Dawn Harper, who captured the gold, clocked in at a personal best 12.54 seconds. That’s 0.11 seconds slower than what we’ve seen Jones do. In terms of tragedy, Jones’ mishap is in not unlike Alicia Sacramone’s mistake on the vault. After four years of rigorous training and their uncertainty of being able to compete in another Olympics, watching replays of their misfortune is tough to stomach.

American Henry Cejudo wins the gold medal in men’s freestyle 55-kilogram wrestling.

The 21 year-old from Los Angeles beat Japan’s Tomohiro Matsunaga in each of the first two rounds in the best-of-three format. One of six children born to Mexican immigrants, his “rags to riches” story is one of the most heart-warming of these Games.

Shawn Johnson wins gold on the balance beam.

The perpetually smiling Shawn Johnson finally got her first gold medal, narrowly edging out teammate Nastia Liukin, who received the silver. China’s Cheng Fei grabbed the bronze. Although the undeniable star in these events has been Liukin—her five medals tying her with Mary Lou Retton and Shannon Miller as having the most for a U.S. woman in a single Olympics—it was nice to have the women’s competition finish with a Johnson gold. Amidst the dismay of nonsensical tiebreakers, inexperienced judges, and seemingly latent favoritism for the sometimes-sloppy Chinese women, watching Johnson listen to our country’s anthem with a gold medal around her neck was enough to ease the frustration.

Jonathan Horton’s daredevil horizontal bar performance earns him the silver.

Sure, the Chinese men won seven of the eight gold medals available. Sure, Zou Kai’s routine was a tad cleaner and warranted the gold medal. But Horton was much more exciting and on more than one occasion it looked as if his sheer momentum would launch him, bar in hand, straight into the fully occupied Bird’s Nest. This was the last gymnastics event of these Olympics, and perhaps the most entertaining.

U.S. women’s soccer team advances to gold medal match.

But I doubt you knew. They will play Brazil today (broadcast late at night in the United States), the country that beat them in the World Cup semi-finals. However, this is a very different U.S. team; they don’t have Mia Hamm, Julie Foudy, and Brandi Chastain. The team’s best player, Abby Wambach has been sidelined because of a broken leg. A gold medal win should turn a few of these unknowns into household names.

U.S. women’s water polo team will battle the Netherlands today for gold.

The United States edged Australia in a 9-8 semifinal victory. That was the 15th meeting between the two teams in what has become the Yankees-Red Sox equivalent of a rivalry in water polo. The U.S. is still sore about their controversial loss to the Aussies with 1.3 seconds remaining in their gold medal match in Sydney eight years ago. A win versus the Netherlands represents American redemption.

U.S. softball team will compete in the sport’s final Olympic game.

With the American’s 19th straight victory, they have now outscored their competition 57-2 in Beijing. Their recent win against Japan put them in the gold medal game. Both baseball and softball have not been renewed for the 2012 Olympics in London, so imagine what these American women are feeling.

Both U.S duos will have a shot at gold in beach volleyball.

Todd Rodgers and Phil Dalhausser quickly dismantled Georgia in 41 minutes. They play Brazilians Marcio Araujo and Fabio Magalhaes for the gold on Friday. Misty May-Treanor and Kerri Walsh hope to continue their flawless Olympic performance in the gold medal match against China, broadcast as a part of NBC’s primetime coverage tonight.

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