Friday, August 12, 2011

Dan Hardy: Statement of intent needed against Chris Lytle for UFC career-saver


danhardypic


The Outlaw needs to return to the fold. Anything less than a victory for Nottingham’s Dan Hardy in the early hours of Monday morning (UK time), in Milwaukee against American Chris Lytle could see the mohawked warrior sidelined from the Octagon and into Strikeforce. Nothing is clear that such a path has been laid for Hardy – either by the UFC hierarchy, or by the fighter himself. But he headlines a main event and one suspects that anything other than a thriller, if he loses, and the straps could be cut loose.


Hardy has surfed a wave of popularity since his defeats of firstly Marcus Davis, and then Mike Swick. He left them both, broken men, in his wake. Then came the five-round title fight with UFC welterweight champion George St Pierre, a bizarre contest last year in Newark, New Jersey, when Hardy was grounded for almost 25 minutes but strangely raised his stock in an unsatisfactory performance by both men.


Two defeats followed. A sudden knockout to Carlos Condit, followed by a wrestling exhibition by Anthony Johnson. Has Hardy been treading water for 12 months ? We’ll find out when he meets Lytle, a battle which on paper had all the ingredients of a barnburner. Lytle, a part-time fireman, is accustomed to putting out such flames, and may take a liking to the flame-red hair Hardy sports for this contest.


Hardy has switched to training in Las Vegas in recent months. Will it have done him any good ? Is his stand-up game now entrenched in his mindset ? It is certainly one of the things on Lytle’s mind. Lytle explained his philosophy behind the contest to The Telegraph this week. “When I fought Matt Hughes and lost by split decision [5 years ago], I went away that night really unhappy about it. Trying to get through fights to just get a win and further your career is not for me. I changed my attitude, and I’ve lost fights since bit have been happy that I have given my all. My attitude has been since then that whatever happens, I’m going out there to finish fights.”


Since that night five years ago against Hughes, Lytle has fought twelve times. He has been involved in fight of the night five times, and has won a knockout of the night and submission of the night twice. He is true to his word. He represents one of Hardy’s toughest opponents all-round. He has a deep respect for Hardy, but has advantages on the ground.


“Hardy is a real dangerous opponent. He has great hands, a very dangerous left hook, and he has fought for the welterweight title, so there are real dangers and I do leave myself open to punches with the way I fight. I’m not saying I would not take this fight to the ground, but if we do end up on the ground, I’ll be looking to finish him. I won’t be lying there fiddling through it,” Lytle told The Telegraph. The scene is set for Hardy, arguably one of the most popular mixed martial artists ever in Britain, to get his UFC career back on track…


Elsewhere on the main event, Jim Miller could put himself in contention for a lightweight title shot if he can beat Ben Henderson, the former WEC champion and Donald Cerrone and Charles Oliviera are matched up in what should be a thriller.


Telegraph main card picks: Lytle, Miller, Cerrone, Sadollah.


HOW TO WATCH THE EVENT:

Prelims are on the UFC Facebook page from 10.45pm on Sunday night.

On television:

Sky customers can watch the main event free from 2am on Premier Sports, Channel 433.

In Ireland, fans can watch the main event free from 2am on Channel 423 Setanta Ireland

The main event is also free to air – and on demand for a week – on UFC.TV online.


Preliminary Card (Facebook)


Bantamweight Bout: US Edwin Figueroa vs. US Jason Reinhardt


Lightweight Bout: US Jacob Volkmann vs. US Danny Castillo


Lightweight Bout: US Cole Miller vs. US T.J. O’Brien


Featherweight bout: US Alex Caceres vs. US Jimy Hettes


Light Heavyweight Bout: Czech Rep Karlos Vemola vs. BRZ Ronny Markes


Middleweight Bout: US Ed Herman vs. Aus Kyle Noke


Bantamweight Bout: US Joseph Benavidez vs. US Eddie Wineland


Middleweight bout: US C.B. Dollaway vs. US Jared Hamman


Main Card


Welterweight Bout: US Amir Sadollah vs. US Duane Ludwig


Lightweight Bout: BRZ Charles Oliveira vs. US Donald Cerrone


Lightweight Bout: US Jim Miller vs. US Ben Henderson


Welterweight Bout: Eng Dan Hardy vs. US Chris Lytle



Chasing history: Tiger Woods vs. Jack Nicklaus

Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods Tiger Woods' flame-out at the PGA Championship this week won't help his chances of catching Jack Nicklaus -- at least in the history books.

Woods has been chasing Nicklaus' celebrated record of 18 major tournament wins (Masters, U.S. Open, British Open, PGA). But Woods missed the cut at the PGA on Friday, meaning he is 0 for 2011 and has failed to add any majors to his collection of 14.

Woods is 35. By that age Nicklaus had also won 14 majors, though the Golden Bear had a much better 35th year, winning the Masters and the PGA.

Woods' life and his golf game have been in a spiral since that car crash in November 2009, as he has tumbled from No. 1 to No. 30 in the world rankings and is winless on the course.

Although Woods and Nicklaus were both golf prodigies, Woods got off to a faster start by winning 10 majors in his twenties to Nicklaus' seven.

Nicklaus, though, was consistently great for a l-o-n-g time, with 24 years between his first major win and his last, at age 46 in the 1986 Masters. He also won eight majors in his thirties (so far Woods has four) and three more in his forties.

Next April, when Woods tees it up at the Masters, he will have gone nearly four years without winning a major. If Woods needs any inspiration, consider that Nicklaus won one more of each of the four major championships after turning 38.

Can Woods still beat Nicklaus’ major record?

Nicklaus was asked that question last spring. His answer: "He's still got to win five more, and that's more than a career for anybody else playing."

ALSO:

Tiger Woods misses his first cut at PGA Championship

Rory McIlroy injures wrist but manages even par

Photos: The 93rd PGA Championship

-- Barry Stavro

Photo: Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods during the Memorial Skins Game in June 2009 in Ohio. Credit: Jay LaPrete / Associated Press

Should Chris Johnson be highest-paid running back in NFL history?

Johnson_640 Writers from around the Tribune Co. discuss the topic. Check back throughout the day for more responses and weigh in with a comment of your own.

Dom Amore, Hartford Courant

Should Chris Johnson be the highest-paid running back ever? Next question: Could he be considered the best in the NFL right now? Sounds like yes to each question.

Salaries don’t go down. They might level off for a time, but the upward spiral is inevitable. Being the “highest paid ever” may carry the implication that that athlete is the greatest of all time in their sport, but that is irrelevant. In a game that now generates $9 billion in revenue, the best get paid in record fashion.

Running backs in the NFL average about 2½ seasons, and any tackle could be, if not the last, one that diminishes the runner for good. Even the great ones, once they lose a step, disappear quickly. Right now, it’s Chris Johnson’s time. His historic 2009 season, in which he rushed for more than 2,000 yards and gained a record-breaking 2,500 from scrimmage, stakes this claim. Last season, he dropped — how could he not? — but still managed 1,300 yards.

The Titans are wise to make him feel wanted, appreciated, and make him the highest-paid runner ever. Now, it’s up to Johnson to accept and get back to work.

Lee Evans traded from Buffalo Bills to Baltimore Ravens

Lee Evans
Lee Evans may actually get a chance to play in the postseason. The veteran wide receiver has been traded from the Buffalo Bills to the Baltimore Ravens for a 2012 draft pick, both teams announced Friday.

A first-round draft pick for the Bills in 2004, Evans had 1,000-yard seasons in 2006 and 2008, but his numbers dropped off the last couple of years as Buffalo's offense struggled. Last season, he caught 37 passes for 578 yards and four touchdowns in 13 games.

Evans had been the subject of trade rumors because the Bills have an abundance of receivers. Meanwhile, the Ravens are looking to add depth after cutting Derrick Mason and tight end Todd Heap.

The Bills never made the playoffs during Evans' seven seasons in Buffalo; the Ravens made the postseason four times during that stretch, including the last three seasons.

ALSO:

Randy Moss, a gifted receiver who cut corners

Tim Tebow looks solid in Broncos' preseason opener

John Elway needs to find a better quarterback than Tim Tebow

-- Chuck Schilken

Photo: Lee Evans. Credit: David Duprey / Associated Press

The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

T.J. Simers: John Elway needs to find a QB better than Tim Tebow

Simers_600
Trent Dilfer is a terrific guy. A terrible quarterback, but great guy.      

He won a Super Bowl, so terrible quarterbacks still have a chance in the NFL, which is the best thing that can be said about Tim Tebow.

He’s a terrible quarterback by NFL standards, and while people love him like they did Doug Flutie, a.k.a. the Mission Bay Shrimp, it’s a tall order to overcome one’s limitations.

Tebow fared well in the Broncos’ exhibition opener, which of course means absolutely nothing. He probably helped sell tickets, or justify the money spent on an exhibition game, but he’s probably looking at a long career as a heady backup who will always look good in exhibition games.

I’m more interested in John Elway’s development as NFL executive.

I was covering the Broncos in Denver when Elway arrived as a player, his first appearance in the second half of an exhibition game electrifying.

Then the season started and he was a mess. Replaced by Steve DeBerg, he struggled but threw himself into the weight room and into getting better. And with that kind of talent and arm, the results should have surprised no one.

He’s off to another struggling start as an NFL executive, mixed messages being sent regarding Tebow and Kyle Orton, and nothing disrupts a team like uncertainty at the quarterback position.

Orton appeared on his way to Miami at one time, the team belonging to Tebow. Once the Broncos realized they had no chance to win, they switched back to Orton.

Six or seven wins are better than two or three.

A few years ago I had hoped to see Elway in Los Angeles working as an executive with an expansion franchise. He bought an Arena League football team to better prepare himself for such an opportunity and spent time with Broncos owner Pat Bowlen.

Los Angeles now will probably play home to the Chargers next season, the Broncos becoming the enemy. No sweat if the Broncos persist in allowing Tebow to muck up their long-range plans.

That will be up to Elway, his development as an executive and his plan for Broncos’ success -- success in the NFL in a large part dictated by who plays the quarterback position.

He has to find a better one.

He already has his Gary Kubiak in Tebow.

ALSO:

Tim Tebow looks solid in Broncos' preseason opener

Bill Plaschke: Hall of shame is more like it for Dennis Rodman

-- T.J. Simers

Left photo: John Elway. Credit: Ron Chenoy / US Presswire

Right photo: Tim Tebow. Credit: LM Otero / Associated Press

Fantasy Football: Stock Watch

Jason and Justin Sablich are here to help you with your fantasy football draft. The Sablich brothers will provide fantasy football advice throughout the season on this blog and on Twitter (@5thDownFantasy).

Thanks to developments at training camp and during preseason action, players are rising and falling in fantasy drafts faster than the Dow Jones. O.K., maybe not, but there is enough movement where you need to pay close attention. Here is the latest on whose stock is rising and whose is falling.

Rising

Running Back

Felix Jones, DAL
 –
Coach Jason Garrett recently said that Jones is having a much better camp this year, citing increased speed and improved pass protection. He certainly looked the part Thursday night against Denver in the first quarter, bursting up the gut for an 18-yard run before taking a screen pass 16 yards. He may still have to deal with DeMarco Murray and Tashard Choice once they get healthy, but we’re starting to warm up to the idea of Jones as a mid-level RB2 in standard leagues. 



Tim Hightower, WAS –

Offensive coordinator Kyle Shanahan recently told SI.com that he believes Hightower can handle the workload of an every-down back. While that remains to be seen, his comments are sure to slow down the Roy Helu sleeper train.



Jerome Harrison, DET
 –
Mikel Leshoure’s season-ending injury has put Harrison back on the radar as the leading handcuff for Best owners. 




Wide Receiver


Calvin Johnson, DET
 –
Johnson continues to impress in camp, earning high praise from his teammates. 



Andre Roberts, ARZ
 – Roberts is currently winning the battle for the number two spot next to Larry Fitzgerald, making him a nice sleeper pick as long as the Cardinals don’t bring in another body like Lee Evans. 



Mario Manningham, NYG
 – Steve Smith jumping ship to Philadelphia left a bitter taste in the mouths of Giants fans, but the move is nothing but positive for Manningham, as he is now the uncontested number two option for Eli Manning.

Tight End

Kevin Boss, OAK
 – Jason Campbell tends to favor the tight end position and the Raiders are short on reliable options in the passing game. Boss is now draftable as a low-end TE2 option in both formats. 



Kellen Winslow, TB
 – He has managed to keep the surgical tools away from his knees this offseason and the results have been nothing but positive. He’s having one of the best camps in his seven year career and is looking like a solid tight end to target once the big names are off the board.



Falling

Quarterback

Joe Flacco, BAL –

The Ravens’ ground game was bolstered with the additions of Vonta Leach and Ricky Williams while Flacco lost the reliable Derek Mason to the Jets. The rookie receiver Torrey Smith is expected to replace Mason in the starting lineup.

Running Back

Ryan Mathews, SD
 – Coach Norv Turner announced that he will use a two-back system this season between Ryan Mathews and Mike Tolbert. In preseason action Thursday night, it was Tolbert who got the start as well as the red zone work, booting his value and making a breakout year from Mathews a stretch at this point. 



Wide Receiver

Johnny Knox, CHI
 – Johnny Knox has officially lost his starting job to Roy Williams and is currently listed behind Devin Hester and Earl Bennett, in that order.



Marques Colston, NO
 – Colston has missed the entire week of practice with swelling in his repaired knee.

Jeremy Maclin, PHI – 
There is still no word on Maclin’s mysterious illness that has kept him from practicing in camp. Early drafters should exercise caution.



Tight End

Jimmy Graham, NO
 – Graham is having a hard time catching the easy balls in camp right now, which is somewhat troubling considering the fantasy world’s exceedingly high expectations of him this year. This is not a major downgrade, but a reminder that the former basketball player is still raw and could experience some growing pains in his first full N.F.L. season. 



Chris Cooley, WAS
 – His inability to shake a sore knee that was worked on back in January has his coach concerned, not to mention the Redskins’ uninspiring options at quarterback. 


Bill Plaschke: Hall of shame is more like it for Dennis Rodman

Plaschke_640 With his garish appearance, freakish statements and outlandish attitude, Dennis Rodman certainly belongs in a museum.

That museum is Ripley’s Believe It Or Not.

It is not the Basketball Hall of Fame.

Yet the Worm will burrow his way into the hallowed grounds of Springfield, Mass., Friday night, entering basketball’s ultimate destination along with the likes of Chris Mullin, Artis Gilmore and Tex Winter.

Seriously. What is Rodman doing there? And he’s entering with Tex? Can you imagine? One guy who tore apart the Lakers enshrined with a guy who helped rescue them?

"I don’t know what’s more shocking," said Chris Winter, Tex’s son, to reporters. "That they didn’t put Tex in 30 years ago, or they didn’t make Dennis wait another 30 years."

London 2012 Olympics: no legacy for equestrian from pre-training camps either


While no-one has ever pretended there will be physical legacy for equestrianism from the £40 million-odd temporary build at Greenwich, prospects for an improvement in existing facilities through secondary Olympic spend have taken a hit.


First, Greenwich council has still not given the green light to the new riding school at nearby Shooters Hill due to have started next year, with opponents saying the site is a protected communal space.


And now, with only 12 months to go, it has emerged that not one of Britain’s 60 Locog-approved Pre-Games Training Camps has been booked by an overseas equestrian team.


Back in 2008 there was optimism that the much-vaunted PGTC scheme might at least lead to an upgrade in facilities at existing venues through lucrative deals with long-stay visitors. Several made capital improvements, such as putting a roof on their outdoor arena. These have benefitted their year-round clientele but would never have been considered but for the Olympic “link” in a niche industry that struggles day-to-day with the high cost of business rates and animal feedstuffs.


Some equestrian venues were components of county council consortium PGTC bids that have spent tens, maybe hundreds of thousands trying to grab a slice of the Olympic action.  But now, it seems, equestrian spend has gone in one, irrecoverable direction – through overtures to overseas teams that were never considering UK PGTCs in the first place.


Bookings are relatively  buoyant in non-equestrian sports, with 93 across 540 PGTCs and Locog are rightly hopeful things will accelerate.


However, as equestrianism is Euro-centric, elite overseas riders have had permanent bases in Britain and the Low Countries for decades. Demand for PGTCs was negligible, even before the application process began.  The International Equestrian Federation readily acknowledged this scenario when I asked them this week.


In fairness Locog warned applicants that they proceeded with any capital improvements at their own risk, by why “approve” so many?  The 60 equestrian PGTCs represent 10% of the total across all  29 Olympic sports, and many were remote from the prep events.


The Paralympics have provided two bookings, though one is to a venue with existing para links and the other to an internationally renowned centre that hardly needed further citation.


All 60 understandably trumpeted their 2012 “endorsements” in spring 2008. Now there is disenchantment. I helped Horse & Hound magazine to research this week’s study.  Kevin Butchart, proprietor of Woodredon Equestrian Centre near Epping Forest, echoed many, saying PGTCs were “primarily a paper exercise to tick boxes, with no plan to achieve.”


Now that another door on physical legacy has shut, there will be all the more pressure on Greenwich to deliver a different sort of boost.  Unfortunately, the international community is about to see two examples of what a mere £15 million could have done for existing equestrian sites – at Rotterdam, which unveils its shiny new grandstand at next week’s European dressage championships , and Luhmuehlen  - Germany’s principal horse trials site – that has enjoyed a state-aided transformation for the European eventing.


The late Douglas Bunn effectively subsidised Britain’s international show jumping venue for 50 years at Hickstead. Now his children are doing the same, last winter finding £750,000 to resurface Hickstead’s main arena and thereby ensure we still have a site competent to host a five-star (top tier) Nations Cup.


If London 2012 does, as is hoped, generate more interest in riding, the obligation to deliver this intangible legacy will still fall on Hickstead and the hundreds of other devoted proprietors that have provided the supporting calendar from their own earned income for generations. They  will forever be taken for granted.



Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger has but a few short weeks to shape the next few years for him and his club


Arsene Wenger is under increasing pressure (REUTERS)

Arsene Wenger is under increasing pressure (REUTERS)


How to create a PR disaster (part one): With your club slipping out of four competitions at the end of a season that had promised so much, thus extending a trophy drought to six years, why now wheel out your chairman to greet unhappy fans with the following statement?


“I simply cannot believe Arsene will react to these stupid comments from these silly people. They are supposed to be supporters, but, in fact, they do quite a lot of damage.”


How to create a PR disaster (part two): Despite the hurt and pain at the aforementioned collapse still hovering over the club like a dark and angry cloud, why not take the decision to raise ticket prices by 6.5 per cent? After all, you already charge some of the highest prices in Europe, so why not charge some more? Easy money.


How to create a PR disaster (part three): Let your manager insist that the club will not countenance the sale of both of your best players in the same summer. Then, a few weeks later, concede defeat and sell both.


How to create a PR disaster (part four): See your manager claim that you only want “super-quality” signings to improve the squad. Then when you balk at the price being asked for his primary defensive target, move on to a much cheaper option. Even if he has just been relegated, and missed the final four months of last season with a hamstring injury. Goodbye Phil Jagielka, hello Scott Dann.


——————————————————————–


So far this summer, Arsenal’s PR department have been having the sort of nightmare experienced on a weekly basis by Sebastian Squillaci. Almost with every passing week, the public image of the club has deteriorated further. This week Cesc Fabregas and Samir Nasri will go. Next summer it could be Robin Van Persie and Theo Walcott. Could even Arsene Wenger join them in the revolving door at the Emirates marked ‘Exit’? It is by no means inconceivable, and the next three weeks will go a long way to defining the next few years for the club.


It is paramount that the club show some real ambition in the transfer market over the next 20 days. They may be rightly proud of the model of self-sufficiency they have adopted, but as has been repeated ad infinitum, football fans do not want a healthy bank balance, they want trophies. For some fans, it is perplexing to see two billionaires with major stakes in the club, yet continue to see Arsenal scratch around for the next bargain.


Never has their place in the upper echelons of the Premier League been so threatened as now.


Manchester United have strengthened significantly, a real show of ambition from a club not prepared to sit back and admire their achievements in winning the league last season. Manchester City have, predictably, spent big to bring the superb Sergio Aguero to Eastlands. Liverpool have spent heavily to immediately improve their midfield, with Jose Enrique set to fill their problem position of left-back. Chelsea have added some much-needed youth to their experienced, powerful squad. Only Tottenham have had a similarly frustrating summer to Arsenal, though at least they have kept hold of Luka Modric so far.


Despite the defensive errors that have come to characterise this Arsenal side, it comes as no real surprise that Wenger’s two major signings this summer are Gervinho – a winger/second striker – and Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, a precocious attacking midfielder acquired for around £12m from Southampton. The only defensive reinforcement to arrive has been Carl Jenkinson, a 19-year-old right-back with less than 10 first-team appearances for League One side Charlton under his belt.


If ever there was a time for Arsenal to spend it is now. They must convince Van Persie and Walcott, whose contracts expire in two years’ time, that they can achieve their ambitions at the Emirates. And they can do that with some positive, morale-boosting dealings in the transfer market. If not, we will come to next summer and – just as the club have been forced to do with Nasri – Arsenal will have to sell both players to avoid losing them for nothing the following year.


But it is perhaps Wenger’s action that will be most closely monitored by the fanbase. Losing Fabregas is a grevious blow for the Frenchman. Fabregas was the emblem of this Arsenal team, the man chosen to lead the club into a brave new world following the departures of Patrick Vieira and Thierry Henry. Now he too is exit-bound. That Nasri has joined the Spaniard in losing patience with the Wenger ‘project’ can only be a slap in the face for a manager who has placed such faith in his two young tyros. What can he do to pick up the pieces and rejuvenate an ailing squad?


When sections of the Emirates support booed their team off two weeks ago following the 1-1 friendly draw with New York Red Bulls, it was not an expression of dismay at missing out on lifting the Emirates Cup. At its root was a deeply-held frustration at the regular capitulations of the team at the first sign of adversity, and also anger at the club’s perceived lack of ambition at a time when it is clear that urgent surgery needs to be undertaken.


This was meant to be the summer that Arsenal were “very active”, to quote Wenger. Instead it has been a summer of anger, upset  and uncertainty, a summer which will be remembered for the departure of two of the brightest talents at the club. Arsenal have been “very active”, but it has been in terms of outgoings, rather than incomings.


Wenger is now under pressure like never before. How sad it would be if the Frenchman, who has done so much for Arsenal in his 15-year tenure, was to leave the club under a hail of anger and abuse. Undoubtedly he is partly responsible for the current situation, but the board have been more than happy to hide behind their manager and let him bear the brunt of the criticism.


Wenger deserves much more than that. But over the next 20 days, it will be up to him to change perceptions and change the fortunes of a club that have experienced a summer that could prove pivotal in its recent history.



 



2011 Buffalo Bills Season Preview

Andy Benoit is previewing all 32 N.F.L. teams. The A.F.C. East is up next, starting with the Bills.

It’d be easy to declare the Buffalo Bills a broken franchise. They won  four games last season and haven’t reached the postseason since the Clinton administration. Their small Western New York market has spilled into Canada, but even that venture and Ralph Wilson Stadium’s healthy attendance figures aren’t enough to slow the rumors about the club’s possible relocation to Los Angeles.

But the Bills are not a broken franchise; owner Ralph Wilson’s staff has not brought all these hardships on itself. General manager Buddy Nix and Coach Chan Gailey have a plan. Is it a save-the-day/Cinderella story-in-the-making plan? Probably not. It’s more like a plan an independent film director would have, where limited resources put extra demands on creativity.

You don’t need to be first class in all categories to win in the N.F.L. A team can compete with a “gritty, scrappy, feisty” quarterback. A Super Bowl is not in the cards, but the team can still compete. And it can compete with a developing, perhaps even makeshift offensive line. And with green receivers and an even greener running back. It can also compete with a piecemealed linebacking corps – even when the powers that be are bent on morphing into a 3-4 defense.

Competing with any of these limitations is difficult, but doable. Now…competing with all of these limitations? Borderline impossible.

Alas, this is what the 2011 Buffalo Bills are trying to disprove. They’re an indie film studio fighting in the same division as Paramount and Disney and looking at the 2011 season as an opportunity to create “Slumdog Millionaire.”Much like how a study of indie film production can offer a more intimate understanding of general motion picture creation, a study of these Bills offers a deeper appreciation for the strategies of pro football. How does a team maximize its strengths while masking its many deficiencies?

As many limitations as there are, the wild card in all this is the chance of one key actor’s breakout performance.

Offense

The Bills genuinely believe in Ryan Fitzpatrick. Coach Chan Gailey openly regrets not naming him the starter ahead of Trent Edwards last preseason. The Bills had a chance to draft a prototypical N.F.L. quarterback – like Blaine Gabbert – but decided they’d rather have the seventh-year pro from Harvard.

Fitzpatrick can be politely described as a “survivor.” Ivy League background aside, he doesn’t seem to be a very cerebral signal-caller. His presnap recognition is average at best, and because he prefers to hold the ball a long time, defenses often try to force him into impetuous decisions. The tendency to  extend the play is a sandlot tactic that can compensate for so-so arm strength. Unable to sidearm the ball into tight windows through the gales at Ralph Wilson Stadium, Fitzpatrick has had to evolve into a scrambler to create passing lanes.

But this is a style he’ll have to outgrow if he’s to flourish this season in  Gailey’s new offense. With the help of second-year offensive coordinator Curtis Modkins, Gailey, a run-oriented traditionalist, is installing more spread formations to take better advantage of speed at wide receiver. Spread formations don’t allow for backs and tight ends to stay in and pass-protect. Given the pass-blocking mediocrity of offensive tackles Demetrius Bell and Erik Pears (and, with the blind side guardian Bell, “mediocrity” is putting it kindly), Fitzpatrick will have to acclimate to three-step drops and quick releases. A better fit for this system might be a more anticipatory thrower like backup Tyler Thigpen.

But Thigpen doesn’t have Fitzpatrick’s chemistry with Buffalo’s wideouts. Fourth-year pro Stevie Johnson enjoyed a 2010 breakout season in part because he has an innate feel for getting open when the play is extended. Sound mechanics and crafty route running make all the difference given that Johnson, like most former seventh-round picks, lacks elite athleticism. Drops can be an issue at times (the overtime blunder against the Steelers was not an isolated incident), but all in all, the Bills have a 25-year-old 1,000-yard receiver they can count on.

They also have a well-rounded veteran in Lee Evans who still might be their No. 1 target. His ability to stretch the field and move the chains underneath makes him a tough matchup. Problem is, Evans has always had a way of disappearing for long stretches.

Lining up inside in the spread formations will be the darting Roscoe Parrish and  David Nelson or Donald Jones, two undrafted second-year pros with decent size (Nelson is 6-5). The Bills’ current brain trust has been cool on Parrish, viewing him primarily as a return specialist, but he has the quickness to get open late in routes and be a creator, while Nelson and Jones, and free-agent pickup Buster Davis, do not.

An ability to create made C.J. Spiller a first-round pick in 2010. It’s early, but so far, the return on that investment has been unsatisfactory. Yes, Spiller can make any defender grasp air in space, but he’s equally adept at turning a would-be five-yard run into a two-yard gain. If he’s to become the featured ballcarrier ahead of Fred Jackson (who can respectfully be described as something of a poor man’s Fred Taylor), Spiller needs to dance less and become more willing to bang it up inside behind fullback Corey McIntyre.

It’s worth noting that poor athleticism along the offensive line has prohibited the Bills from taking full advantage of Spiller’s gifts. Yes, Eric Wood is a very good movement player (which is remarkable considering the gruesome broken leg he suffered late in his ’09 rookie season) who blossomed magnificently once he moved to center last year. (Don’t expect veteran Geoff Hangartner to get that job back anytime soon.) But Wood is a lone star in this sense. Left guard Andy Levitre gets out of his stance quickly and angles blocks well in the run game, but he’s not a dynamic puller.

More damning is that Buffalo’s meager pass-blocking offensive tackles  can’t get to the edges in the ground game. Demetrius Bell doesn’t seem to have a quick-twitch, while Erik Pears is stuck playing next to right guard Kraig Urbik, a well-sized but disappointing former third-round pick of the Steelers who will get just his third career start in Week 1. The Bills would undoubtedly like to see fourth-round rookie Chris Hairston develop into a starter at right tackle, but he’s a project at this point. These front five limitations create issues for executing the tosses and sweeps that are central with a player like Spiller.

Saving the best (or the most exciting) for last, the Bills have a new five-tool weapon in ex-Jet Brad Smith. The former quarterback at Missouri gets an opportunity to be a Wildcat specialist here. Don’t be surprised if Smith sees five or six shotgun snaps a game. The Bills tried to pull this stunt last season with Fred Jackson, but he didn’t present the pure speed or throwing threat that Smith does.

The Bills may also feature Smith in the slot in three-receiver sets, where he’d sub for base formation tight ends David Martin (a solid run-blocker) and Shawn Nelson (a superb athlete but non-contributor last season thanks to suspension, a groin injury and migraine problems).

Defense

General Manager Buddy Nix insists that the mission is to field a 3-4 defense. But watching the Bills run a 3-4 has been like watching an episode of “Survivor … if “Survivor” the same cast as “The Biggest Loser.”

A 3-4 defense requires an edge-rushing presence – something the Bills haven’t had since Aaron Schobel. Their futility here is not for lack of trying. They invested a first-round pick in Aaron Maybin three years ago, not realizing Maybin’s scant lower-body strength would translate into scant general strength at the pro level. Maybin plays hard,  much in the same way William Hung sang hard. He was a healthy scratch in several games last year and may have trouble keeping a roster spot.

The Bills also picked up three-time Pro Bowler Shawne Merriman last season. He was re-signed to a two-year deal in January. But injuries have derailed the 27-year-old; he’s missed 30 games the past three seasons and has posted just four total sacks. Unlike with Maybin, the Bills are counting on Merriman to start – and even set the tone – in 2011. Opposite him will be former defensive end Chris Kelsay, who’s an adequate run-defender but lacks the speed to make plays coming from space.

The inside linebacker position is nearly as tenuous, though at least there’s better depth. The Bills are banking on free-agent pickup Nick Barnett staying healthy. If he can, he’ll provide enough downhill punch to erase the memories of solid but unspectacular Paul Posluszny (now a Jaguar). If Barnett, who missed 12 games with a wrist injury last year and seven games with an ACL tear in ’08, can’t stay on the field, the Bills will call on either Andra Davis (a 3-4 veteran who himself missed 10 games last season with a torn labrum) or Kelvin Sheppard (a third-round rookie with good agility).

Starting next to Barnett will be quick but underwhelming veteran Reggie Torbor. Though before long, it could be Arthur Moats, the guy best known for drilling Brett Favre’s shoulder last December. It’s surprising that defensive coordinator George Edwards and new linebackers coach Dave Wannstedt would move Moats inside; he struggles to shed blocks and is one of the few Bills  with some quickness turning a corner.

But perhaps any personnel change inside is a good thing. After all, this is a defense that gave up over 200 yards rushing in eight different games last season. Much of the blame can be placed on Buffalo’s overmatched defensive ends. One of those ends, Dwan Edwards, is back, but the other, Marcus Stroud, was let go. Wanting to authoritatively right this wrong, the Bills drafted Marcell Dareus, the third overall pick. Obviously, anyone picked this high is expected to be a star in all fashions. The good news is, unlike many rookie 3-4 ends, Dareus actually played the five-technique at Alabama.

His presence should make opponents at least think twice about double-teaming tireless nose tackle Kyle Williams. Neutralizing Williams has been the key for opponents to run down Buffalo’s throat. At 306 pounds, Williams doesn’t have the girth to consistently tie up two gaps, which is why his game is predicated on penetration and lateral movement.

If the Bills need a banger, they can call on 314-pound Torell Troup, whom they spent a second-round pick on a year ago. However, he still needs to learn how to exert his size in N.F.L. trenches.

The Bills have adequate depth in addition to Troup. Alex Carrington (who could see reps at outside linebacker) will get a close look simply for being a 2010 third-round pick, while eighth-year end Spencer Johnson consistently plays hard and can operate on a three-or four-man line.

A respectable pass-rush would make life much easier on what’s actually a solid secondary. Cornerback Terence McGee has the quickness to consistently make a difference. No. 2 corner Drayton Florence is not a stopper but plays physical and can also cover the slot. It was surprising that the team gave Florence a three-year, $15 million contract this summer considering they drafted Texas cornerback Aaron Williams in the second round. Williams can ease into the pro game, as fourth-year pros Leodis McKelvin and Reggie Corner provide excellent cornerbacking depth. McKelvin is actually Buffalo’s most gifted defensive back but must make fewer mistakes if he’s to bring his playmaking prowess to the first unit.

At safety, Jairus Byrd is not quite the star his interception numbers suggest (like a waiter, he makes most of his living off tips). Snagging tipped interceptions still requires an opportunistic nature. And it’s worth noting that offenses don’t challenge this defense deep in Byrd’s centerfield realm very often.

Bryan Scott is more of a coverage-based linebacker than a true strong safety, which is why it wouldn’t be surprising to see the sure-tackling and respected leader George Wilson start in the strong safety slot. Wilson just signed a new three-year, $7.05 million contract, which is the type of deal a team gives a veteran when it’s hoping but not banking on a rookie (like, say, fourth-rounder Da’Norris Searcy?) to one day steal his job.

Special Teams

The Bills will always have strong special teams as long as Rian Lindell is the kicker and Brian Moorman is the punter. Buffalo’s coverage units have been trustworthy over the years, though they tailed off just a bit after the departure of special-teams guru Bobby April last season (Bruce DeHaven is the current special-teams coach). In the return game, take your pick amongst explosive weapons. C.J. Spiller, Roscoe Parris, Terence McGee and Leodis McKelvin are all options.

Bottom Line

If Ryan Fitzpatrick suddenly becomes a top-15 quarterback (like Jake Delhomme for the ’04 Panthers or Derek Anderson for the ’07 Browns), and one or two new forces show up in the defensive front seven, the Bills could suddenly be a breakout team. But all we have to go on is this club’s recent history. And that recent history says don’t count on it.

Andy Benoit is the founder of NFLTouchdown.com and covers the N.F.L. for CBSsports.com. He can be reached at andy.benoit@NFLtouchdown.com.

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