Author: Anthony Stalter (Page 1362 of 1503)

Big East does it again

It didn’t fail last year and it won’t this year – the Big East teams will fall again. People cried last year that West Virginia, Louisville and Rutgers were ranked too high. Well what happened? Louisville knocked off West Virginia, Rutgers upset Louisville and Cincinnati beat Rutgers. End of national championship discussion.

Without failure, the first Big East team fell Saturday, as the #9 Cardinals were upset in a thrilling 40-34 battle in Kentucky. Brian Brohm (28 of 43 for 366, 1 TD) was fantastic once again, but unfortunately the future No. 1 pick won’t be playing for a national title this year.

And as much as I love to watch Ray Rice, Steve Slaton and Pat White play, West Virginia and Rutgers won’t be playing for a NC either. The theory that Big East teams will knock each other off is just too sound.

Yeah, they cheated us too!

Members of the Steelers and Eagles are starting to wonder aloud if the Patriots cheated to gain an advantage over them too. In a recent article posted on YAHOO! Sports, Eagles defensive backs Sheldon Brown and Brian Dawkins noted that the Patriots seemed to know every time they were going to blitz in the 2005 Super Bowl.

Brown said he noticed a difference in New England’s playcalling in the second quarter. After the Patriots gained only 45 yards in the first quarter, they had 286 over the next three.

My first reaction to this was that the Eagles are making another excuse why they lost (i.e. Donovan McNabb was sick). However, do they have a legitimate gripe? Isn’t Bill Belicheat and New England often hailed as making the best halftime adjustments? Maybe they have been cheating and the three Super Bowl victories are nothing more than a farce. It would help explain why the Pats seem to be the only team that gets away with an obvious lack of superior talent, yet still consistently win.

There are two things that stop me from wanting NE stripped of all its successes over the decade, however. One, is like McNabb said in the article, just because you have the answers to the test, doesn’t mean that translates into execution. And two, I want to believe that a team like the Patriots can win the way they do – by first building the perfect system and then implementing the players. I want to believe that Belicheat really is a genus and this is the way it’s supposed to be done (not the cheating of course, but the winning without high draft picks and what not).

Goodell sticks it to Belicheat

NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell punished the Patriots and head coach Bill Belichick for using a spy to steal defensive signals agaisnt the Jets last Sunday, fining the coach $500,000 and plucking at least one of the teams’ 2008 draft picks. If the Pats make the playoffs this season, they’ll lose a first round pick next year and if they don’t quality for the postseason, they’ll lose a second and a third. The team was also fined $250,000.

“Part of my job as head coach is to ensure that our football operations are conducted in compliance of the league rules and all accepted interpretations of them. My interpretation of a rule in the Constitution and Bylaws was incorrect.”

This is just another classic Belichick-spin. Instead of completely owning up to the fact that he cheated, he sidestepped the situation, which is arrogant and irresponsible on his part. It was also arrogant to use a sideline spy against the Jets of all teams, knowing Eric Mangini would be looking for it. It was almost like he was trying to bully Mangini as in, “I’m going to get your signals and there’s not a damn thing you can do about it because the NFL can’t touch me.” It all goes back to last year when Belicheat didn’t want Mangini to take the Jets job and he’s been pissed off ever since.

Not that losing a draft pick will hurt New England that much, but at least Goodell continues to not be a pushover.

MLB to test for HGH and Santa Claus might not be real

Major League Baseball has announced it might be able to test players for Human Growth Hormone as early as next season.

The blood test, developed under the oversight of the World Anti-Doping Agency, was used on a limited basis in the 2004 and ’06 Olympics. Now it will be available for mass use within months, said Olivier Rabin, WADA director of science. “This is great news,” he said, “because we strongly believe that human growth hormone is abused in sports.”

No kidding Mr. Rabin, so you strongly believe that human growth hormone is abused in sports? You’re telling me that Barry Bonds’s doesn’t have acromegaly and he possibly could have been on HGH this entire time?

In other news, Mr. Director of Science Oliver Rabin has reason to believe the moon isn’t made of green cheese and also has hard data that Kris Kringle isn’t really who he says he is…but seriously MLB, good work on the possible HGH testing.

FOX a little too optimistic with Everett

SPORTSbyBROOKS noticed that FOX Sports.com was a bit too optimistic with the injury status of Bills tight end Kevin Everett, listing him as “DAY-TO-DAY for Week (spine)”.

According to FoxSports.com, the Bills Tight End, who suffered a sadly catastrophic spine injury last Sunday in a game against the Broncos (and is recovering nicely), is “DAY-TO-DAY for Week (spine)” in the injury department.

Yes, his recovery is ahead of schedule, but special teams wedge-busting against the Steelers this Sunday might be a tad much to ask.

BREAKING NEWS UPDATE: WITH LEATHER commenters note that FoxSports.com also reports “Dennis Byrd is listed as questionable … Derrick Thomas however is still out … and … Payton is still on the PUP list.”

Yikes.

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