Author: Anthony Stalter (Page 1136 of 1503)

Warren Sapp blasts Al Davis, organization

Former Raider Warren Sapp spoke out about the current state of the Oakland franchise, as well as how the organization will continue to be a mess as long as owner Al Davis is in charge.

Al Davis“[Davis] is the common equation,” Sapp said on “Inside the NFL.” “You take him out, put him at home watching film or whatever he is doing — you have a functioning football organization. But once he comes over the top, he goes and starts moving it around.

“Al Davis knows football — it’s just ’60s and ’70s football. That’s what it is. He’s thinking that Cliff Branch is outside and [Jim] Plunkett is dropping back and you can throw it 80 yards down the field — deep ball, deep ball, deep ball.”

Sapp even said that Davis would call in plays when Sapp was playing for the Raiders.

“I remember the first two weeks I was there, we played a preseason game. Somebody came up one time and said, ‘We’re going deep right here, dog.’ I said, how do you know? He said, ‘The phone just rang.’

“All the preparation that goes into a week of work is there, the practicing that you have to put in order to do these things, sometimes [Al Davis] messed with that part of it and that’s what kills you,” Sapp said on “Inside the NFL.”

“Al Davis is the total bottom line, buck stops right there,” said Sapp. “I remember one time we had a defensive game plan because we were struggling against the run. We were going to get our safeties and put them up in the box and almost have a nine-man front. We practiced this thing 80 percent of the time on Wednesday and Thursday. We showed up that Friday morning, [defensive coordinator] Rob Ryan came in and he looked like someone had just shot his dog. He said he [Davis] pulled it on us … He snatched the teeth out of our defense.”

And people want to hammer Cowboys’ owner Jerry Jones and Falcons’ owner Arthur Blank for standing on the sidelines at the conclusion of games? Last I checked, neither of them has been telling coordinators what plays to run or how to scheme for their next opponent.

What a joke. Sapp’s comments just play into the notion that Kiffin was fired because he wasn’t a servant to Al Davis. That organization is long overdue for a culture change.

Dodgers proving playoffs truly are MLB’s second season

Alfonso SorianoThe Dodgers lost 14 more regular season games, won their division by a significantly less margin, and finished with a team batting average 14 points lower. And yet it’s the Cubs that are one more loss away from playoff elimination, and not the boys in blue.

You hear players and coaches say how the regular season truly doesn’t matter when the playoffs start. But the Dodgers-Cubs series is actual proof. L.A. is making Chicago look like a completely different team. Granted the Cubs have a large hand in that, but Joe Torre’s bunch is beating their opponent in every phase of the game and their dominance was once again on display in a 10-3 rout in Game 2 Thursday night.

The NL West was largely a laughing stock this year. Not only did the division champion Dodgers finish with only 84 wins, but only two clubs (L.A. and Arizona) finished above .500. Meanwhile, the NL Central had four teams finish above .500 (Chicago, Milwaukee, Houston, St. Louis), and yet two of those clubs are about to get swept right out of their respective divisional series.

The Cubs are proving that a league-best record in the regular season means nothing in October. A team’s level of play has to rise in the playoffs and clearly Chicago’s hasn’t. In fact, the Cubs’ production has once again dipped below even respectability. And unless they have a miracle up their sleeves, the Dodgers are moving on to the NLCS.

Did Brewers ask too much of CC Sabathia?

CC SabathiaSince being acquired from the Cleveland Indians in late June, there haven’t been many starting pitchers better than Brewers’ ace CC Sabathia in the National League. But after only lasting 3 2/3 innings Thursday in the Phillies’ 5-2 win in Game 2 of the NLDS, maybe Milwaukee asked too much out of Sabathia just to get into the playoffs.

Sabathia (2-3, 7.92 earned run average in five career post-season starts) fought his command from the outset and exited after 3 2/3 innings, by far his shortest outing with the Brewers. The big lefty allowed six hits and four walks, throwing only 55 of 98 pitches for strikes.

But nobody in the visiting clubhouse was about to pin the discouraging defeat on Sabathia, not after what he did to get the Brewers to October baseball. Beyond going 11-2 with a 1.65 ERA in 17 outings, he pitched on short rest in his last three regular-season starts, including a four-hitter Sunday against Chicago that sealed the deal.

“The man left everything out there on the field,” said reliever Seth McClung, who tossed two scoreless innings. “I don’t think he ran out of gas. You can’t question anything he has done. He’s the man we needed out there today.”

Some will be quick to note that Sabathia once again continues to struggle in the postseason. But the guy was making his fourth consecutive start on only three days of rest. Without Sabathia’s phenomenal pitching in the second half of the regular season, the Brewers wouldn’t even be playing right now. Milwaukee’s players have it right – they need more offense or else Philadelphia is going to cruise into the NLCS. (And probably face the Dodgers with the way the Cubs are playing right now.)

Rays fans have a fever. And the only prescription is more cowbell.

Grant BalfourFor the past couple years, no prop has ever been more annoying than those obnoxious “thunder sticks” that Los Angeles Angels fans used during the 2002 World Series.

Until now.

During Game 1 of the Rays-White Sox ALDS (a 6-4 TB win), the home crowd in Tampa actually broke out cowbells…and used them the entire game. Nothing is more soothing during exciting MLB playoff game than to hear the constant ding of a freaking cowbell. Glad to see Rays fans actually knew where Tropicana Field was after leaving the place largely deserted during the regular season as the club won its first ever AL East Division title.

Regardless of how annoying the cowbells were, the game was exciting and it’s nice to see a young franchise win their first postseason game. Rookie Evan Longoria (3-3, 2 HRs, 3 runs, 3 RBI) is a stud and James Shields deserves a lot of credit for going almost seven innings after it appeared that he wasn’t going to make it past the third or fourth. The two teams even provided a little fireworks when Rays’ relief pitcher Grant Balfour and Sox infielder Orlando Cabrera started throwing profanities at each other during a heated at bat in the seventh inning. Balfour eventually got the best of the matchup, striking out Cabrera to end the inning with the bases loaded.

Tampa has a built a nice team over the years and true Rays fans deserve to finally see a winner. They also apparently have a fever. And the only prescription is…

Willis McGahee upset with Suzy Kolber

SPORTSbyBROOKS.com notes that Baltimore’s Willis McGahee isn’t too fond of NFL sideline reporter Suzy Kolber’s latest work, which had her stating on Monday Night Football that maybe part of the reason why he got hurt against the Steelers was because he missed OTAs this summer.

Willis McGaheeThe CARROLL COUNTY TIMES reports that Willis McGahee didn’t take too kindly to Kolber’s suggestion of why the RB got hurt in the Ravens’ 23-20 loss to the Steelers. McGahee went down in the first half after suffering a bruised rib, and his status is still uncertain for this Sunday’s game against the Titans.

Kolber had reported that McGahee skipped out on almost all of the Ravens’ voluntary organized team actvities, or “OTA’s”, during the offseason – and such an absence may have been to blame for Willis’ wounds.

But McGahee didn’t like hearing that:

“Yeah, that bothers me,” McGahee said. “I’m not here for OTAs, so I get hurt? If I was at OTAs and I got hurt, then it would be, ‘He worked so hard. It’s a shame.’ No, it doesn’t work like that. Things happen in football.

“I got hit in the ribs. Would my ribs have been stronger if I had been at OTAs? I guess I’m not drinking enough milk. I’m very disappointed that once again the reason I got hurt is because of OTAs. That was garbage.”

Hey, watch what you say, Willis – Joe doesn’t like it when you mess with his women. Then again, if McGahee had bothered to practice with his teammates in Baltimore instead of by himself down in South Florida, the subject never would have been brought up in the first place. Don’t blame Suzy for your poor judgment.

I agree with Brooks in that the subject wouldn’t be open for debate had he been with his teammates this summer, but McGahee does have a point. What does a rib injury have to do with him missing OTAs while trying to recover from a knee procedure? And his comment about not drinking enough milk was pretty funny.

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