Author: Anthony Stalter (Page 1467 of 1503)

College Game of the Week: (#9) LSU at (#4) Florida

In honor of the 2006 College Football Season, Bullz-Eye.com will preview an up-and-coming game of the week, each week, for the entire length of the NCAA season.

Each week a game will be highlighted and broken down by each teams strengths and weaknesses vs. its opponent. Plus, no preview would be complete without a forecasted score – you’ll find a prediction on the game at Bullz-Eye.com as well.

There are three games on this weekend in college football that have two ranked teams battling head to head. No offense to the other two games, but LSU heading to Gainesville to take on the Gators is the by far the best contest of the weekend.

On tap this week: (#9) LSU at (#4) Florida.

NFL Game of the Week: Dallas Cowboys at Philadelphia Eagles

There are two solid picks for NFL Game of the Week honors for Week 4, but only one game holds the best storyline.

While Baltimore and Denver are Game of the Week worthy – nothing says welcome home like T.O. heading back to Philadelphia.

One contest will be plucked off the schedule every week and broken down by each teams strengths and weaknesses vs. its opponent. Plus, no preview would be complete without a forecasted score – you’ll find a prediction on the game at Bullz-Eye.com as well.

On tap for Week 4: Cowboys (2-1) at Eagles (3-1).

NFL First Quarter Power Rankings

Who doesn’t love power rankings – especially when they involve the NFL?

The NFL First Quarter Power Rankings are up on Bullz-Eye.com, so check out where your favorite team ranks and how they stack up against the rest of the NFL. Passionately disagree with the rankings? Make sure you post your thoughts right here at the Scores Report.

Here’s a sneak peak at the top five:

1. Chicago Bears (4-0)
At this point in the season, I’d have to say that the Bears have the most complete team in football. They’ve had their struggles running the ball, but Rex Grossman is running a vertical passing game the likes of which the city of Chicago hasn’t seen in a very long time. The defense can do it all and Devin Hester is explosive on special teams – if he hangs on to the ball, that is.

2. Indianapolis Colts (4-0)
The Colts won’t survive if they can’t run the ball, but maybe last weekend’s win over the Jets (160 rushing yards) was the beginning of something good for the ground game. It hasn’t hurt much yet because Peyton Manning is putting so many points on the scoreboard that he alone is masking some glaring weaknesses on both sides of the ball.

3. Baltimore Ravens (4-0)
I still think San Diego is the better team, but when Marty Schottenheimer is the coach of said team, they’ll lose tight games against a defense like Baltimore every time. Steve McNair has looked terrible in the past two games…up until the Ravens need a win, of course. Then the defense throws a stranglehold on the opposing offense and McNair turns into Tom Brady and sneaks out a win.

4. Cincinnati Bengals (3-1)
I know the Bengals just got shellacked by the Patriots, but so did 500 other teams in the wake of a New England loss the past couple of years. This is a good team, but at the moment, Cincy is not healthy on defense and off the field issues are clouding Carson Palmer’s remarkable comeback.

5. Atlanta Falcons (3-1)
This team should scare opponents as much as they should scare themselves. The Falcons house the best running game in football, but have shown that if teams can force Michael Vick to pass the entire game (ala New Orleans on MNF), Atlanta is in trouble. However, nobody is talking about how well this defense is playing – only the Bears and Falcons have given up just one touchdown this season. And this is all without arguably their best player in DE John Abraham (out the past three weeks with a groin injury).

Is Dennis Green losing it?

I always find it interesting when coaches verbally bash their team to the media.

Now, I’m not talking about a coach who hammers a squad after they just got waxed 41-0, nor am I referring to the coach who is trying to light a fire under his team at halftime to play better. I am specifically talking about the coach who airs his frustrations out to the public when it’s in the middle of the week and his squad is trying to get ready for a game on Sunday.

Take for example, Dennis Green of the Arizona Cardinals. On his own radio show that airs on Tuesday nights, Green called out his offensive line. He made comments about how they should stop “whining” and how they should “get off their butts and start doing the job.”

Now, of course those comments aren’t really out of bounds coming from a coach who wants his offensive line to stop making the signing for Edgerrin James look like the single worst move by a team this offseason. However, Green went on to say that the reason the offensive line needs stop whining is because they each make an average of over $3 million so, what’s there to whine about?

To me, that comment makes no sense and it doesn’t hold any water as far as trying to motivate your team. The point should be that they should work harder, stop whining and just get the job done – not, they shouldn’t complain because they make a lot of money. If you’re a player in the NFL, how does that motivate you? What, do they not know they make a lot of money? Threaten to take their job away, replace them with their hungrier backup – just don’t make useless comments like that, because to me you come off weak.

These comments come a week after Green did an about-face with his quarterback situation. He virtually led the media to believe that Matt Leinart would start last Sunday against the Falcons early last week, but then changed his mind and went back to Kurt Warner. Green then stated that he “made a decision based off emotion” and didn’t think the decision all the way through.

Personally, I think Green has made a lot of comments recently based off of his emotion and is quickly losing this team. He had all the answers when he was hired in Arizona after several successful years in Minnesota. Now, the Cardinals are off to a 1-3 start with a brand new stadium and Green is out of answers.

Soon he’ll be out of a job too.

ALDS: NY Yankees 8, Detroit 4 (New York leads series 1-0)

All the Tigers fans who were worried about Detroit’s collapse at the tail end of the season saw their nightmare brought to life in the Brox. The feel good season for the Detroit Tigers isn’t over yet, but reality is quickly setting in as far as World Series aspirations for Motown.

What a night for Derek Jeter – 5 for 5, three runs scored, one RBI, two doubles and a solo blast in the bottom of the eighth that put the final nail in the coffin for the Yankees. His 5 for 5 mark tied a postseason record for most hits in a single playoff game. Jeter also made a backhanded play in the hole to turn a key double play in the second inning to keep the Tigers scoreless at the time. You take what Jeter did tonight and compare it to Alex Rodriguez’s numbers (1 for 4, no RBI or runs scored) and people wonder why the Yankees faithful (although sometimes brutal, yes) get all over A-Rod and praise Jeter. Jeter is absolutely clutch in the playoffs. Another Yankee that had a huge night was Bobby Abreu who knocked in four runs and had two hits. New York had a solid lineup before adding Abreu at midseason – now that lineup is just plain deadly.

If I were a Tigers fan, here is my biggest worry: Chien-Ming Wang didn’t even have great stuff Tuesday night. The Tigers get 11 hits, but only manage four runs and now face the task in trying to beat Mike Mussina tomorrow night. Although, Detroit will send its ace in Justin Verlander to the hill to face Mussina, so at least the Tigers will have confidence that Verlander will keep them in the ballgame.

Game 2 Pitching Match up: Justin Verlander (0-0) vs. Mike Mussina (0-0).

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