Category: News (Page 51 of 199)

Report: Chargers asking for a second and a third for Vincent Jackson — is that too much?

SAN DIEGO - JANUARY 17: Wide receiver Vincent Jackson #83 of the San Diego Chargers runs after a catch against the New York Jets during AFC Divisional Playoff Game at Qualcomm Stadium on January 17, 2010 in San Diego, California. A flag on the play negated the catch. (Photo by Donald Miralle/Getty Images)

Buried in his recent Yahoo! Sports column about the Vikings’ prospects of trading for V-Jax, Michael Silver writes…

I’m told Smith has been asking for a second-round pick in 2011 and a third-round pick in 2012.

All right, so who knows whether or not the guy who’s telling Silver about the Chargers’ trade demands even knows his ass from his elbow, it’s still an interesting question — just what is Vincent Jackson worth in terms of draft picks?

To me, for a playoff-caliber team with few other holes to fill but one at wide receiver, Jackson is definitely worth it.

Sure, second and third round picks are great, and teams often find starters and sometimes even stars in those rounds, but Jackson is a known quantity. Draft picks aren’t. Jackson caught 68 passes for 1,167 yards and nine touchdowns last season. Lest anyone think he’s just a one-year wonder, he caught 59 passes for 1,098 yards and seven scores in 2008.

Moreover, he’s a complete player. At 6’5″, he has prototypical size and is an exceptional blocker in the running game — “maybe the best in the league,” according to our NFL guru, Anthony Stalter.

Last season, there were ten wideouts to average more than 15.0 yards per catch and rack up more than 1,000 receiving yards — DeSean Jackson, Greg Jennings, Miles Austin, Santonio Holmes, Sidney Rice, Andre Johnson, Randy Moss, Marques Colston, Donald Driver and V-Jax — and the (former?) Charger had the fourth-highest receiving percentage (catches/targets) of the bunch, so he has good hands too.

There is the matter of his two DUIs, but I suspect that his camp would be agreeable to putting some sort of stipulation in his contract that would reduce the guarantee if he got pulled over a third time. That should be enough incentive to convince him to HIRE A FREAKING PERSONAL DRIVER. His rumored asking price (reportedly dismissed by his agent) is $50 million over five years with $30 million guaranteed. Brandon Marshall signed a four-year deal worth $48 million with $12.5 million guaranteed, and he’s batshit crazy.

Jackson is an elite receiver in his prime and he’s arguably the best run-blocking WR in the league. Would you rather have Jackson or a second and a third?

To me, the answer is simple: Give me Jackson.

Stein: Carmelo isn’t on the trading block

Denver Nuggets forward Carmelo Anthony scores against the Utah Jazz during the fourth quarter of the first round playoffs game two at the Pepsi Center on April 19, 2010 in Denver. Utah beat Denver 114-111 to even the series at 1-1.  UPI/Gary C. Caskey Photo via Newscom

According to Marc Stein, the Nuggets are telling interested teams thanks but no thanks.

Yet sources tied to five potential Anthony suitors, reached in recent days by ESPN.com, all relayed the same story about the Nuggets’ response: They’re pretty much ending these conversations before they even start by saying that they don’t want to engage in Melo talks.

Ujiri’s Denver superiors instead want him to lead the club’s mountain climb of a bid to try to reconnect with the 26-year-old scoring machine before they even consider trading him, hoping that some sort of positive karma exists in the reunion of Ujiri, a former Nuggets scout, and Anthony, who both arrived in Denver in 2003 and spent several formative seasons together in the organization.

I explored the various trade scenarios last week, and the main issue is that whatever team that trades for Anthony will want a long term commitment. Carmelo wants the three-year extension, so an extend-and-trade is the best way to go for all parties involved. So why he technically doesn’t need to sign off on a new trade destination, the still-unsigned extension gives him the power to do exactly that.

Ujiri has been described as a very positive person, so he’s doing his due diligence here in the hopes of convince Anthony to stay while he tries to reshape the roster. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: If Carmelo starts the season as a Nugget, he’ll likely finish it as a Nugget. It will be very difficult to trade him in February if the Nuggets are in the middle of the playoff pack in the West. (Just look at what happened to the Raptors.)

Should the NFL expand the regular season to 18 games?

Aug 15, 2010; Oxnard, CA, USA; Dallas Cowboys fans wait for autographs at training camp at River Ridge field. Photo by Image of Sport Photo via Newscom

The league is considering shortening the preseason by two games, and this means the owners would only be selling nine home games instead of ten, so the fix is to tack on two games to the regular season schedule, for a total of 18 regular games plus two preseason games. The owners fully support this idea, but the players aren’t so sure, since it would increase the risk of injury and not necessarily change the amount of money they take home each week.

Tim Cowlishaw, Dallas Morning News:
…an 18-game season will do little more than increase the threat of injuries that shorten players’ seasons and careers. Beyond that, it will spoil the symmetry and balance of the 16-game season, dismissing the significance of the league’s record book and creating less, not more, drama as the regular season winds to conclusion. The owners’ problem starts with this. They have grown accustomed to 20 games (16 regular, four preseason), which means a 10-game season ticket package. Customers have willingly gone along with paying full price for these exhibitions, even though the stars of the league tend to make only cameo appearances in certain games. The 16-game season, adopted in 1978, breaks up neatly into four quarters. It’s just the right length for sustained drama from start to finish. There is something to be said for not overexposing your product, even one with the appeal of the NFL. Even if the format has been around only 32 years, at least you can compare the play of today’s young quarterbacks and running backs to what Dan Marino was doing in the ’80s or Emmitt Smith and Barry Sanders were achieving in the ’90s. And if you’re not worried about losing that, then consider this. Each season, the subject of whether or not the league’s best teams should rest their starters the last game or two before the playoffs is debated. Goodell even said last year he would consider forcing teams to play starters in these situations. Now picture the 18-game season. See the Colts sitting there at 12-2 with a month to go and no team in their division better than 7-7? You think that won’t happen, whether it’s the Colts or someone else?

Anthony Stalter, The Scores Report: The owners can’t get their way across the board – they have to compromise. They can’t generate an annual profit, force the players to take a pay cut, add two more games to the regular season (which increases the players’ risk of injuries and future health problems) and then keep the additional revenue that they make off the new schedule. That’s ridiculous. I could see if the owners were taking a bath while players’ salaries continue to go up, but it stands to reason that the owners are making plenty of money when they’re charging upwards for $100 per ticket, $30 to park and $8.50 for a beer. Trust me, I’m not losing sleep at night thinking about how these million dollar athletes are getting screwed. But keeping things in context, the players would be getting a raw deal if the league expanded the schedule and the owners didn’t share the revenue. Everybody is making money in the NFL – this is no time for the owners to be greedy. Plus, the players are the ones putting themselves at risk of injury – shouldn’t they be compensated?

Andrew Brandt, CNN: Players are now paid in weekly installments through the 16-game season. For example, a player making $1.6 million receives a $100,000 check for every game. With the enhanced season, players and their union want prorated checks for the extra two games. But the owners say it’s not as simple as that. They say that the revenue from the two added games would be part of overall league revenue, from which the players already receive a negotiated share. That share is used to compute the salary cap, which teams use, in turn, to negotiate individual player contracts. And those contract numbers don’t change, no matter how many games are played. Presumably, the added revenue would work out to the players’ benefit, in the form of a higher salary cap and more negotiable dollars for each team to use. But it would not be as clear-cut as two extra game checks.

Patrick Hruby, ESPN.com: Indeed, the 16-game regular season already is a matter of attrition and survival: a league-wide study pegged the average per game, per team injury rate at 2.7 players. Two additional games wouldn’t increase that number; it only would transfer some of the existing injury risk from preseason backups and warm bodies to starters and top subs. That’s a small price to pay for more games, given that the union figures to negotiate a congruent salary bump, and that its public position on the matter smells an awful lot like CBA posturing. Others worry about the sanctity of the NFL record book. Lengthen the season, they argue, and pretty soon records such as Dan Marino’s 5,084 single-season passing yards will fall by the wayside. True enough. But really, who cares? League records have scant sanctity to begin with, largely because the NFL previously expanded from 12 to 14 games, then from 14 to 16. Does anyone believe that Jim Brown’s single-season rushing high of 1,863 yards — set in the 14-game 1963 season — is less impressive than Ahman Green’s 1,883 yards in 2003? Does anyone think Brown wasn’t as good as LaDainian Tomlinson, who has three seasons with more than 1,600 rushing yards to Brown’s one?

Celtics about to sign Delonte West

Apr. 14, 2010 - Atlanta, GEORGIA, UNITED STATES - epa02117196 Cleveland Cavaliers forward LeBron James (R), Mo Williams (C) and Delonte West share a laugh on the bench as James and Williams take a rest against the Atlanta Hawks in the first half of their NBA basketball game at Philips Arena in Atlanta, Georgia, USA on 14 April 2010.

The Boston Herald has the details of West’s pending return to Beantown.

From a pure basketball standpoint, West is a great player to get for the league minimum, but the reason that his market value is so low is because he’s a little crazy and he may or may not have caused the Cavs’ playoff implosion earlier this summer. The signing would definitely add a little extra umph to a potential Heat/Celtics playoff series.

Nevertheless, he’ll bring shooting, defense and versatility off the C’s bench.

Nuggets: Talks with Carmelo have been ‘cordial’

Injured Denver Nuggets forward Carmelo Anthony watches the scoreboard against the Philadelphia 76ers during the second half at the Pepsi Center in Denver on December 26, 2008. Anthony has missed three straight games with an injured right elbow. Denver rallied to beat Philadelphia 105-101. (UPI Photo/Gary C. Caskey) Photo via Newscom Photo via Newscom

At a press conference to introduce his new GM, Masai Ujiri, the Nuggets’ soon-to-be owner Josh Kroenke said that the recent meeting with Carmelo Anthony went rather well.

Ujiri and Josh Kroenke, recently elevated to team president and awaiting the “owner” title, have good relationships with Anthony. They both spoke Tuesday at a news conference at the Pepsi Center to officially announce Ujiri’s hiring.

Kroenke took aim at a recent column on Yahoo.com that cited sources who detailed a deteriorating relationship between team executives and Anthony’s representation, headed by agent Leon Rose.

“Anything that has been said is either someone trying to manipulate the situation behind the scenes or other motives that are unknown at this point,” Kroenke said. “But Melo and his representation have been great to us.

“I think he knows he can come to me as an individual. We have that amount of respect that we can talk about things openly in a noncombative way. So anything that has been stated from sources behind sources . . . All of our talks have been extremely cordial. I haven’t had a negative conversation with Carmelo Anthony since I’ve known him, and that goes back to my time as a college basketball player. I don’t have a bad word to say about Melo as a person.”

The aforementioned column was written by Adrian Wojnarowski and he paints a very different picture of how the meeting went:

Denver was furnished with a short list of teams and told to get to work. Yes, this is how William Wesley and Leon Rose of CAA work now, thick with threats and ultimatums and a swagger suggesting that the sport belongs to them. After Anthony told owner-in-waiting Josh Kroenke that he still wanted out of Denver during a Sunday meeting, the Nuggets appear done trying to sell their All-Star forward on a contract extension.

This wasn’t a productive, nor particularly pleasant, meeting and multiple sources said it could turn out to be the point of no return for Anthony and the organization. Sources insist it’s no longer a matter of if the Nuggets trade Anthony, but when, where and for whom he’s traded for.

So what’s the disconnect? Well, one of four things may be happening: 1) Wojnarowski is getting bad information from his sources, 2) Wojnarowski has an axe to grind and is fabricating the story, 3) the Nuggets are spinning the situation, or 4) the Nuggets are clueless.

Wojnarowski is a pro, so I think we can cross #2 off of his list, despite the fact that he infuses some commentary into his stories. The Nuggets insist there are sources that are trying to manipulate the situation, though Wojnarowski cites ‘multiple sources’ in his story. At least two people told him that the meeting could represent the ‘point of no return’ for the two parties.

The Nuggets would benefit if they paint a pretty picture of their relationship with Carmelo, as it would help them get a better deal if other teams aren’t sure if Anthony is trying to force his way out of Denver. I suspect that the real issue here is some combination of #1, #3 and #4. It’s entirely possible that Wojnarowski has sources that are trying to create a media dialogue, and that the Nuggets didn’t think the meeting went all that poorly, and are just trying to put lipstick on a pig.

But the crux of Wojnarowski’s story is that the Nuggets were given a list of teams that he’d like to be traded to — did that actually happen? If so, I don’t see how Denver can’t see the writing on the wall, or feel like they have a good chance of keeping Anthony in town. There’s a reason that he hasn’t signed the extension yet, even with a lockout looming next summer.

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