Author: Anthony Stalter (Page 1285 of 1503)

Teams making it easier to get fat at the ballpark

According to the USA Today, at least 13 MLB teams are offering all-you-can-eat seats for part of the 2008 season.

Ticket prices for these seats range from $30 at the low end with the Atlanta Braves to $200 at the high end with the St. Louis Cardinals. The majority fall within the $30-$55 range. Most teams include pre-cooked, easy-to-prepare ballpark fare such as hot dogs, nachos, peanuts and soft drinks but don’t include beer, burgers, pizzas and desserts.

The Padres, meanwhile, will offer an All-You-Can-Eat buffet, including burgers, hot dogs and soft drinks, with 180-250 seats on top of the Western Metal Supply Co. building in PETCO Park’s left field corner. The section will feature bleacher seats with an adjoining buffet/eating area.

Leave it to America to figure out a way to shove more food in your face at sporting events. And let me say for the record, that I personally love the idea.

Sure we sucked, but at least we were paid well

The East Coast Bias ranked the most overpaid MLB teams of 2007.

Here are a couple teams that made the list:

SF Giants ($90 Million , 71-91) – Behind huge contracts to Zito and Bonds (neither of whom performed at a high level consistently), the Giants floundered to a last place finish and the 2nd worst record in the NL (Pirates, tied with Marlins). Good thing they let Schmidt go so they could sign Zito.

Baltimore Orioles ($93 Million, 69-93) – An increase of $20 Million over 2006 netted the Orioles absolutely no benefit, leaving them still the second-best team in the Baltimore-Washington area. As a point of pride, the O’s finished ahead of the Rays. On the other hand, the Rays only paid $24 Million to finish 3 games worse.

Chicago White Sox ($108 Million, 72-90) – The White Sox appear to have overpaid to keep an aging team together following their World Series victory, and it really cost them last year. 4th place behind medium market teams is not worth the 5th highest paid team in the league.

Somebody cap that league so these teams can stop embarrassing themselves.

Banks weighs in on NFL moves thus far

Don Banks of SI.com gives his thumbs up and down to those NFL teams that have made moves in free agency thus far.

Thumbs down:
Oakland Raiders — Where to begin? The Raiders gave defensive end-turned-tackle Tommy Kelly more than $18 million guaranteed despite the fact that the onetime undrafted collegiate free agent played just seven games last season and is coming off ACL surgery. They paid a steep price as well for receiver Javon Walker, who has had three knee surgeries and is said to be playing with a bone-on-bone situation in one of his knees. And they added ex-49ers offensive tackle Kwame Harris, a former first-round pick who couldn’t even stay in the lineup for San Francisco’s less-than-dominating offensive line last season.

Couldn’t agree more. Kelly and Walker are good players, but they’ve got GIGANTIC injury concerns. Plus, in an offseason where teams have been reluctant to overpay for free agents (unlike last year), the Raiders have handed out money like the Olive Garden hands out breadsticks.

Following Favre: The Game’s Next Iconic QBs

Whenever a player of Brett Favre’s stature retires, it sends shockwaves through the league. For much of his career, Favre was one of the most (if not the most) widely liked and respected players in the league. Simply put, #4 is a legend; an icon, if you will. Of course, Favre wasn’t the NFL’s first iconic quarterback — far from it, actually — and he won’t be the last. But which current signal callers could follow in Favre’s footsteps and become iconic figures themselves? Ah, excellent question.

Bullz-Eye.com gathered two quarterbacks that are already icons, two that are on their way and one wild card that definitely has the potential to be one someday. BE also lists four signal callers that just missed the cut and reasons why they were omitted.

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