Author: Anthony Stalter (Page 1257 of 1503)

Joe Horn and T.O. together? Somebody get the popcorn

Tim MacMahon of the Dallas Morning News is suggesting that since the Falcons’ Joe Horn has asked for a trade, that the Cowboys should make a play for the aging wide receiver and stick him opposite Terrell Owens.

The Cowboys have made no secret of the fact that they’re in the market for a playmaking WR to put opposite T.O. Joe Horn has made no secret of the fact that he wants the heck out of Atlanta.

Do we have a match or what?

If the Cowboys add Horn to the Valley Ranch Circus, they would probably have the most quotable receiver corps in NFL history. Horn could definitely help T.O. come up with a few more creative end zone dances, and he’d be pure gold on Hard Knocks.

Pretty much the only negative I can come up with is the strong possibility that Horn, a former Pro Bowler, is washed up (27 catches, 243 yards, 1 TD last season).

Horn was on his last legs two years ago. The fact that he got over $4 million a year from the Falcons last offseason was a joke. However, he’s always been a warrior and might have a little left in the tank for a competitor like Dallas. The Cowboys could do worse than to have Horn in the slot, but I doubt he’s a better option at this point than Patrick Crayton (seven touchdowns last year).

Coma what? Jeff Garcia is talking holdout

Here’s something laughable: Jeff Garcia is threatening to hold out if the Bucs don’t show him some more love (i.e. $).

“There might come a time when I might have to stand up,’’ Garcia said. “I hate to do that to jeopardize my teammates because they’re out here, and I don’t want to let them down in any sort of way. But at some point you just want to see the respect from up top.’’

Garcia first made it clear he was unhappy with the status of contract negotiations last month. He is entering the final year of a two-year deal worth $7 million and is believed to be seeking an extension that will bring his total payout to the league average for starters, which is roughly $7 million.

What? He’s 37-years old and the only reason he got a $7 million contract last offseason was because he played well in seven games with the Eagles the year before. Considering his talents are limited to say the least, he should be happy that he’s still starting in the league and understand that Jon Gruden’s offense is a damn good fit. He was great for the Bucs last year (and the Eagles the year before), but I just don’t understand complaining about your contract when you just signed it a year ago.

No surprise: No further punishment coming against Patriots

It appears that NFL commissioner Roger Goodell and the league is done handing out punishment to Bill Belichick and the New England Patriots regarding Spygate.

After meeting with ex-Patriots video assistant Matt Walsh for three and a half hours Tuesday and reviewing the tapes Walsh presented, the NFL will not further penalize the Patriots regarding the SpyGate affair.

According to commissioner Roger Goodell, Walsh claimed there was no Rams Super Bowl walkthrough tape, he never saw such a tape, and that Walsh was on the sidelines during the practice in full Patriots gear. Other than filming signals, Walsh said he knew of no other cheating by New England. Walsh did say the Pats allowed players on injured reserve to practice, which is against league rules, and that players scalped Super Bowl tickets. Goodell says the NFL will look into those issues, but has no plans to take action. This appears to be the end of SpyGate, finally.

So the question becomes – was Goodell too soft on Belicheat and the Pats? With the top 10 pick they got from San Francisco in a draft day trade last year, the Pats still made out pretty well despite Goodell stripping them of their first round pick (No. 31 overall). I’m not the right person to determine what the best form of punishment should have been, but from an outsiders perspective, it definitely looks like the Pats got off easy for being caught red handed.

HOF Gossage not a fan of Joba’s celebrations

Hall of Fame pitcher and former Yankee Goose Gossage has taken issue with current Bronx Bomber reliever Joba Chamberlain’s excessive celebration tactics.

“There’s no place for it in the game,” Gossage told reporters Monday during a tour of the Hall of Fame, according to MLB.com. “I will stand by that and I love Joba Chamberlain. I’m with him down in spring training. He’s a great kid, but no one is passing the torch today. Nobody talks to them. When I broke into the big leagues, I didn’t say two words all year.”

“That’s just not the Yankee way, what Joba did. Let everyone else do that stuff, but not a Yankee,” Gossage told The Record on Saturday. “What I don’t understand is, the kid’s got the greatest mentor in the world in Mariano [Rivera]. He’s one of the leaders of the team, so you’d think it wouldn’t happen on that team.

“I’m trying to think of what would’ve happened if I did what Joba did, especially if I was a rookie,” he told The Record. “The veterans would’ve sat me down so fast, it would’ve never happened a second time. Truthfully, there would’ve never been a first time.”

Excessive celebration will always be an issue in MLB. Every player is just foaming at the mouth, ready to get pissed off when someone “shows them up.” I like a little emotion in the game (after all, it is still a game isn’t it?), but I also agree with Gossage in that it’s more professional to go out there, do your job and act like you’ve been there before. I don’t think it will get this far, but baseball doesn’t need any Terrell Owens-type show boaters to take away from the game like the NFL has. I like Joba’s fire, but maybe Gossage is right and the kid needs to turn it down a notch.

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