Friday, August 26, 2011

Rangers cruise past the Angels, 11-7

Angels1_600

The Angels rode into Texas on Friday hotter than a summer's day, having won a season-high six games in a row and with a chance to move back atop the American League West standings during their three-game series with the Rangers.

But if the Rangers were worried they sure didn't show it, setting their offense on Cruz control and rolling to an 11-7 victory behind two home runs, a double and six runs batted in from right fielder Nelson Cruz.

Cruz also had an infield single, matching career highs with four hits and three runs scored while finishing a triple short of the cycle as Texas increased its division lead to three games over the second-place Angels.

Cruz, dropped to seventh in the batting order for the first time this season, opened the scoring in the second inning, following a Mike Napoli single and Mitch Moreland's double with a two-run double of his own. He then led off the fourth inning with a mammoth 452-foot home run to dead center on an 0-2 pitch.

It was the 10th-longest home run in the 17-year history of Rangers Ballpark in Arlington.

And inning later Cruz rolled a one-out dribbler about 50 feet up the third-base line for a single, loading the bases for David Murphy, who unloaded them with a line drive just inside the right-field foul pole for a grand slam.

That chased Angels starter Dan Haren, who gave up a season-high 11 hits and matched a season-high with seven runs allowed. Haren (13-7), who lost for just the second time since mid June, has a 5.76 ERA In his last four starts, having given up 31 hits in 25 innings.

Cruz hit his second homer of the game and 28th of the season off Jerome Williams in a four-run sixth that gave him six RBIs in a game for the third time this season -- no other major leaguer has done it more than once this year -- while giving the Rangers an 11-0 lead.

Every starter except center fielder Endy Chavez contributed at least one hit in the Rangers' 18-hit attack, with seven of them going for extra bases.

The Angels, who pounded out 14 hits, showed some life late, scoring once in the seventh on Bobby Wilson's two-out bloop single, four more times in the eighth -- three of those coming on Russell Branyan's home run into the second deck in right field -- and twice more in the ninth on a two-out, two-run homer by Howie Kendrick.

Every Angel who batted had at least one hit.

MORE:

Angels-Rangers box score

These players are making themselves right at home

Angels feeling a big momentum swing heading into Texas

-- Kevin Baxter reporting from Arlington, Texas

Photo: Rangers right fielder Nelson Cruz is congratulated by third base coach Dave Anderson after hitting a three-run home run against the Angels in the sixth inning Friday night. Credit: Jim Cowsert / US Presswire

Commentary: College football turns itself in to authorities

Lsu

Arrest warrants were issued Friday for two Louisiana State players, but these days, really, it could have been any school or anybody. Why pick on LSU?

The hope now, according to sources, is that there will be enough eligible coaches and players to kick off the season, which actually can't get here soon enough Thursday.

The Generic Campus Glee Club has deemed this year's theme "College Football's Lost Summer (and Spring)."

The Sept. 3 marquee match-up, LSU vs. Oregon in Arlington, Texas, has become a microcosm for a sad state of recent affairs.

LSU quarterback Jordan Jefferson and linebacker Joshua Johns turned themselves in to Baton Rouge, La., authorities Friday and are facing second-degree battery charges, a felony, stemming from an Aug. 19 bar fight that reportedly involved several players.

The players' status for next week's big opener has yet to be determined. Some LSU fans long disgruntled with Jefferson's erratic play might welcome a six-game suspension.

LSU, though, is already playing without star receiver Russell Shepard while the school and NCAA sort out his possible relationship with Willie Lyles. He's the scouting service provider also under scrutiny for his involvement with Oregon, which has hired outside counsel to battle its own NCAA inquiry.

Oregon can be relieved Shepard is not playing because the Ducks will be without top cornerback Cliff Harris, suspended after a DUI charge that involved Harris and his car allegedly being clocked at 118 mph. Oregon quarterback Darren Thomas was in the car, but said he basically slept through the entire incident.

LSU vs. Oregon could be called "The Embarrassment Bowl." Updates in The Great LSU Bar Fight came the same day Miami ruled several players, including starting quarterback Jacory Harris, ineligible while the school sorts out their connections to Ponzi-schemer Nathan Shapiro.

When will it ever end? USC announced it wouldn't fight the NCAA appeal it lost over rules it admitted to violating. Even though the chair of the infractions committee that presided over the Trojans' case was the former athletic director at ... Miami.

It's also, apparently, cause for celebration these days when a coach, Lane Kiffin of USC, won't face major NCAA sanctions for his misdeeds at Tennessee.

Should you get "Employee of the Month" for that?

Texas A&M this week also formally notified the Big 12 it is exploring options pertaining to conference affiliation. Gee, what conference might A&M being interested in joining? We're going to guess Southeastern, fully prepared to issue a retraction. What happens after Texas A&M bolts to the SEC is anyone's guess, but hold onto your thigh pads.   

Southern Methodist, the only major school to receive the NCAA's "Death Penalty" in football, is petitioning to replace Texas A&M in the Big 12.

SMU's argument: "Hey, we've done our time and it's about half the time Miami should do. Aren't we now mainstream?"

And the answer is, well, yeah. In fact, held in today's light, SMU is now a model program.

--Chris Dufresne

Photo: Louisiana State University football players Jordan Jefferson, right, and Jarvis Landry leave State Police headquarters in Baton Rouge on Tuesday after meeting with Baton Rouge Police. Credit: Arthur D. Lauck / Associated Press.

First place at stake for Angels, Rangers

Angels Manager Mike Scioscia hesitates to call this weekend's showdown with the Texas Rangers "crucial." But with his team coming into the three-game set trailing Texas by just two games in the American League West standings, it's hard to call it "just another series."

"We're too early to talk about meaningful games or a must-win series," Scioscia said Friday. "But any time you see a goal ahead of you that's attainable and you're playing games that are obviously going to impact you getting your goal ... the fun stays in the game."

That's a departure from last year when the Angels entered the final weekend in August under .500 and in third place in division, 9 1/2 games off the lead.

"Games take on a little different feel," Scioscia says of late-season games that have little impact on the playoff field. "The fact that you're in a pennant race and you have an objective, you have a goal, and you're trying to reach that goal, keeps those juicing flowing."

The Angels are certainly going with a playoff-worthy rotation against the Rangers with Dan Haren pitching Friday's opener to be followed by Ervin Santana and Jered Weaver, who will both be pitching on three days' rest for the first times in their careers.

Scioscia also said reliever Scott Downs, who hasn't pitched in more than a week because of tightness in his left hamstring, will be available this weekend.

The lineups:

Angels

CF -- Peter Bourjos

DH -- Bobby Abreu

2B -- Howie Kendrick

RF -- Torii Hunter

1B -- Mark Trumbo

LF -- Vernon Wells

3B -- Alberto Callaspo

SS -- Erick Aybar

C -- Bobby Wilson

P -- Dan Haren

Texas Rangers

2B -- Ian Kinsler

SS -- Elvis Andrus

LF -- Josh Hamilton

3B -- Michael Young

C -- Mike Napoli

1B -- Mitch Moreland

RF -- Nelson Cruz

DH -- David Murphy

CF -- Endy Chavez

P -- Derek Holland

-- Kevin Baxter in Arlington, Texas

Minka Kelly, Derek Jeter: Another athlete-entertainer couple is kaput

Minka
Derek Jeter and Minka Kelly are splitting up, proving once again that there are certain sure bets in sports. You can bet Kobe Bryant will snarl when his team plays poorly, Ron Artest will continue to make non-basketball headlines, and athlete-entertainer relationships will almost always crash and burn.

The Yankee and his former actress girlfriend join the likes of  Andy Roddick and Mandy Moore, Alex Rodriguez and Kate Hudson, Halle Berry and David Justice, Kim Kardashian and Reggie Bush, Chris Webber and Tyra Banks, Lance Armstrong and Sheryl Crow, Kobe Bryant and Brandy, Madonna and Dennis Rodman, Tony Romo and Jessica Simpson, Eva Longoria and Tony Parker, and Andre Agassi and Brooke Shields.

Last month, when Jeter became the first Yankee to reach 3,000 hits, Kelly was in a luxury suite, clapping and smiling. Now, according to People, they're amicably calling it quits. The 31-year-old Kelly is one of the stars of the upcoming "Charlie's Angels" TV revival.

PHOTOS: Former athlete-entertainer couples

"They care about each other," an unnamed source told the magazine. "They're still friends."

Minka appeared in the HBO documentary "Derek Jeter 3K," which premiered last month.

ALSO:

Kelly, Jeter say no hard feelings

T.J. Simers: He really hopes Vin Scully works out

Dodgers need to do right by Jamey Carroll and trade him

-- Melissa Rohlin

Photo: Minka Kelly, center, cheers for Derek Jeter. Credit: Nick Laham / Getty Images

Former Lakers coach Phil Jackson is into LLWS, Brent Musburger says

Brent Musburger isn't trying to hide his affection for the Billings, Mont., Little League team that will play Ocean View of Huntington Beach in Saturday's Little League World Series U.S. division championship game.

Musburger grew up in Billings and his father founded the Little League program there.

"Never in my wildest dreams did I expect this to be happening," Musburger said Friday. Musburger is on the ESPN/ABC broadcast team that will call Saturday's U.S. title game and the International division championship game between Mexico and Japan, as well as Sunday's championship.

Musburger said the entire state of Montana is buzzing about the state's first representative in the LLWS. He said his brother, Todd, even got a text message from former Lakers coach Phil Jackson, who has a home in Montana. "He texted my brother during the game when Montana beat Ocean View," Musburger said.

Musburger said his father coached the first Montana team that won a state championship. "They went to Richland, Washington, for the regionals," Musburger said, "and lost to a team from Santa Monica. That was the first of 21 times that Montana was knocked out of regional play."

When he's on television Saturday, he said, "I'm not going to hide from the fact I'm from Billings. I'm amazed at what's happening but I don't have a stake in the outcome. Whatever happens happens and now it's just frosting on the cake.

"I think California should be favored. They're going to come back with that pitcher [Nick] Pratto who dominated Montana until he left the game. The Montana team goes about its business and if you make a mistake, Montana takes advantage. I think California will press hard and try to score early because as long as you let an underdog stay close, in any sport, the better off it is for the underdog."

-- Diane Pucin

 





 

 

Video: Gary Klein on USC football



 

The Times' USC football beat reporter Gary Klein talks with CineSport's Noah Coslov about the team's wide receiver situation, Marc Tyler and game week preparation. For more on USC, check out The Times' college football page.

ALSO:

USC remains undecided on starting tailback

UCLA Coach Rick Neuheisel's hot seat is well worn

Lane Kiffin gets no NCAA penalty for year at Tennessee

 

 

Would you have picked Tiger Woods for Presidents Cup team?

Tig 

Writers from around the Tribune Co. discuss the topic. Weigh in with a comment of your own.

Tom Yantz, Hartford Courant

Absolutely not.

U.S. captain Fred Couples says Woods “is the best player in the world forever.”

In the past, yes, but no way today. Woods has plummeted from No. 2 in the world to No. 36. He didn’t even crack the top 125 in PGA Tour earnings to play in the FedEx Cup postseason.

Woods is 28th in the Presidents Cup standings. That’s right between Kevin Na and D.A. Points –- not exactly Rory McIlroy and Steve Stricker.

Couples had until Sept. 26 to make his two captain’s picks. Why didn’t he wait to see if Woods could play himself onto the team?

With Woods’ selection, how does a Jim Furyk (11th in the U.S. Presidents Cup standings) or a PGA champion Keegan Bradley (18th) stay motivated to try to earn a captain’s choice? 

No one deserves a spot. You have to earn it.

Bill Kline, The Morning Call

Sure, the field has caught and even trampled Tiger Woods at stroke-play tournaments. But Woods still has more talent than the bottom third of the U.S. Presidents Cup team combined. In match play, particularly one-on-one, he has as much resolve as a freedom fighter. And when Woods is inspired –- as he will be after his selection is maligned by some – his engine gets fired up more than Dick Vitale preaching at a motivation seminar.

Forget the slump and the injuries and the personal meltdown. Head-to-head, Woods still can stare you down like Jack and rip out your heart like MJ. And come Sunday’s singles play, when every cup point is precious, Woods will make us proud.

MORE:

Tiger Woods misses the cut at the PGA Championship

Tiger Woods falls apart with a 77 at PGA Championship

Photo: Tiger Woods. Credit: Hunter Martin / Getty Images.

Minka Kelly, Derek Jeter: Another athlete-entertainment couple kaput

Minka
Derek Jeter and Minka Kelly are splitting up, proving once again that there are certain sure bets in sports. You can bet Kobe Bryant will snarl when his team plays poorly, Ron Artest will continue to make non-basketball headlines, and athlete-entertainer relationships will almost always crash and burn.

The Yankee and his former actress girlfriend join the likes of  Andy Roddick and Mandy Moore, Alex Rodriguez and Kate Hudson, Halle Berry and David Justice, Kim Kardashian and Reggie Bush, Chris Webber and Tyra Banks, Lance Armstrong and Sheryl Crow, Kobe Bryant and Brandy, Madonna and Dennis Rodman, Tony Romo and Jessica Simpson, Eva Longoria and Tony Parker, and Andre Agassi and Brooke Shields.

Last month, when Jeter became the first Yankee to reach 3,000 hits, Kelly was in a luxury suite, clapping and smiling. Now, according to People, they're amicably calling it quits. The 31-year-old Kelly is one of the stars of the upcoming "Charlie's Angels" TV revival.

"They care about each other," an unnamed source told the magazine. "They're still friends."

Minka appeared in the HBO documentary "Derek Jeter 3K," which premiered last month.

MORE:

T.J. Simers: He really hopes Vin Scully works out

Dodgers need to do right by Jamey Carroll and trade him

-- Melissa Rohlin

Photo: Minka Kelly, center, cheers for Derek Jeter. Credit: Nick Laham / Getty Images

Commentary: College Football turns itself in to authorities

Lsu

Arrest warrants were issued Friday for two Louisiana State players, but these days, really, it could have been any school or anybody. Why pick on LSU?

The hope now, according to sources, is that there will be enough eligible coaches and players to kick off the season, which actually can't get here soon enough Thursday.

The Generic Campus Glee Club has deemed this year's theme "College Football's Lost Summer (and Spring)."

The Sept. 3 marquee match-up, LSU vs. Oregon in Arlington, Texas, has become a microcosm for a sad state of recent affairs.

LSU quarterback Jordan Jefferson and linebacker Joshua Johns turned themselves in to Baton Rouge, La., authorities Friday and are facing second-degree battery charges, a felony, stemming from an Aug. 19 bar fight that reportedly involved several players.

The players' status for next week's big opener has yet to be determined. Some LSU fans long disgruntled with Jefferson's erratic play might welcome a six-game suspension.

LSU, though, is already playing without star receiver Russell Shepard while the school and NCAA sort out his possible relationship with Willie Lyles. He's the scouting service provider also under scrutiny for his involvement with Oregon, which has hired outside counsel to battle its own NCAA inquiry.

Oregon can be relieved Shepard is not playing because the Ducks will be without top cornerback Cliff Harris, suspended after a DUI charge that involved Harris and his car allegedly being clocked at 118 mph. Oregon quarterback Darren Thomas was in the car, but said he basically slept through the entire incident.

LSU vs. Oregon could be called "The Embarrassment Bowl." Updates in The Great LSU Bar Fight came the same day Miami ruled several players, including starting quarterback Jacory Harris, ineligible while the school sorts out their connections to Ponzi-schemer Nathan Shapiro.

When will it ever end? USC announced it wouldn't fight the NCAA appeal it lost over rules it admitted to violating. Even though the chair of the infractions committee that presided over the Trojans' case was the former athletic director at ... Miami.

It's also, apparently, cause for celebration these days when a coach, Lane Kiffin of USC, won't face major NCAA sanctions for his misdeeds at Tennessee.

Should you get "Employee of the Month" for that?

Texas A&M this week also formally notified the Big 12 it is exploring options pertaining to conference affiliation. Gee, what conference might A&M being interested in joining? We're going to guess Southeastern, fully prepared to issue a retraction. What happens after Texas A&M bolts to the SEC is anyone's guess, but hold onto your thigh pads.   

Southern Methodist, the only major school to receive the NCAA's "Death Penalty" in football, is petitioning to replace Texas A&M in the Big 12.

SMU's argument: "Hey, we've done our time and it's about half the time Miami should do. Aren't we now mainstream?"

And the answer is, well, yeah. In fact, held in today's light, SMU is now a model program.

--Chris Dufresne

Photo: Louisiana State University football players Jordan Jefferson, right, and Jarvis Landry leave State Police headquarters in Baton Rouge on Tuesday after meeting with Baton Rouge Police. Credit: Arthur D. Lauck / Associated Press.

Joey Barton is a fine footballer but is he really worth the hassle?


It is difficult to know where to start with Joey Barton and even harder to know where to finish.


Newcastle have lost a talented player and Queens Park Rangers have signed one, but it is still difficult to decide who has made the better decision given the circus he brings with him.


I doubt it is possible to sum Barton up in 15 words, but I’ll give it a go. Volatile, intriguing, articulate, arrogant, stupid, rash, bold, talented, competitive, disruptive, angry, difficult, inspirational, bright and deluded.


There are several contradictions there, but then Barton is a contradiction. On one hand he is a hugely talented footballer who played a big part in Newcastle’s return to the Premier League. On the other he is a hugely disruptive influence, divisive in the dressing room, difficult to manage and difficult to control.


In four years on Tyneside he fell out with four managers, Sam Allardyce, Alan Shearer, Chris Hughton and Alan Pardew. Some made up with him, others didn’t.


On the one hand he is seen as a hero at Newcastle United, one of their best players and a vital member of a side which stayed up with relative ease last term. On the other he is a player who had one good season out of four at St James’ Park and who has been, at various times, hated by large sections of Newcastle’s ever-loyal support.


On the one hand he is a humble working class lad, with a leaning towards socialist politics, generous with his time and committed to helping good causes. On the other he is conceited and arrogant, referring to people he doesn’t like as peasants while crowing about how rich he is.


On the one hand he is a footballer who refuses to be pigeon-holed, a reader of philosophy, a player who pledged his loyalty to Newcastle United even when they withdrew a contract offer at the start of the summer. On the other he is merely predictable in his desire to be different, ultimately leaving for more money elsewhere as soon as someone offered him the chance.


Barton, who last season claimed he was the best English midfielder in the country, said he would only leave Newcastle for a team in the Champions League and has, instead, signed for one who, with the best will in the world, will be battling against relegation all season.


He may not have felt loved by Newcastle’s owner Mike Ashley and managing director Derek Llambias – the feeling was most certainly mutual – but Alan Pardew fought long and hard to keep him. Even while those above him refused to forgive and forget his Twitter rants and misdemeanours, Pardew did.


Barton only started the season in the side because he told his manager he would stay for the rest of the season, regardless of contract issues, but left, using the lack of a contract as his excuse.


Barton is always keen to paint himself as victim at Newcastle and, yes, he should have been retained if the manager wanted to keep him. He has been a big presence over the last 18 months and his loss is a blow to the team on the pitch, but I suspect it may be a relief in the dressing room.


When Kevin Nolan left – also in acrimonious circumstances – for more money and a five year contract at West Ham – earlier this summer, Barton lost more than just a friend, he lost the one person who could keep him in check.


Barton’s performances last season justified his £56,000-a-week wage packet, but the previous three years were soured by injuries, jail terms and even a bust up with Alan Shearer during his short spell as manager in 2009.


Even in the successful Championship promotion campaign, Barton was injured for most of it and was dropped by Hughton at the start of the season after he questioned his authority as caretaker manager.


Barton complained he deserved to be rewarded financially, yet he conveniently forgets most people would not have had a job to come back to after he was jailed for assault three years ago, just as you and I wouldn’t if we used a public forum like Twitter to slag off our employers in a bid to incite customers/fans to turn against them. Yet this is precisely what Barton did last month.


It is also worth pointing out that a new contract was offered to him on the same terms, minus image rights, earlier this year. Barton shook hands on that deal, but returned on the day it was due to be signed and asked for more money.


It was a move that infuriated the Newcastle hierarchy – it does not take much it has to be said – and the bad feeling lingered until the offer of a new deal was completely withdrawn back in May.


In my first blog for the Telegraph I praised Barton for being a footballer who was thoroughly enjoyable to interview. Lively, challenging and far more intelligent than your average Premier League star.


The problem is, being intelligent in the dressing room does not make you an intellectual and it does not make you a genius.


Sometimes I think Barton’s problems are due to the fact he thinks he is not just a better player than he is, but also far cleverer.


Some of his comments on Twitter have been brilliant, insightful and thought-provoking, some of have just been plain stupid, vicious and hypocritical.


At times this summer, it feels as though I have written about nothing but Barton. He has been centre stage in another dramatic summer on Tyneside. Newcastle will miss him as a footballer and they must replace him in the transfer market, but I’m not sure they will miss everything that comes with him.


Now he is Neil Warnock problem and you can be certain of one thing, it won’t be long until he is making headlines in west London, for all the right or wrong reasons.



2011 Cincinnati Bengals Season Preview

Andy Benoit is previewing all 32 N.F.L. teams. He kicks off a look at the A.F.C. North with the Bengals.

Carson Palmer told us everything there is to know about the state of the Bengal organization. Given a choice between making over $45 million to play a game he loves in front of tens of thousands of adoring fans each week as a member of the Bengals or making $0 to do nothing, Palmer chose nothing. No need to delve deep into the reasons  – we all know about stingy owner Mike Brown, who spends peanuts on staff and amenities, who cares as much about team chemistry and players’ character as your local D.M.V. cares about customer service and who regularly makes the kind of business decisions that would cause even M.C. Hammer to cringe. As ESPN’s Rick Reilly so cleverly put it, the son of the legendary Paul Brown has had a career in football that “peaked upon birth.” The Bengals are quite simply the most dysfunctional franchise in the N.F.L. (and that’s with the Raiders as competition).

It’d be interesting to find out if Palmer would have still drawn a line in the sand if he’d known that Chad Ochocinco would be shipped to New England. Ochocinco was the symbol of the chaos in Cincinnati – not because of his touchdown celebrations or off-field shenanigans, but because of his constant whining. That he went so many years without a teammate bloodying his nose speaks to the distinct lack of leadership within this organization.

That leadership onus fell on Palmer, though obviously, he didn’t feel as if he had a fighter’s chance to answer it. Marvin Lewis can probably relate. Multiple reports said he was also ready to walk away after his contract expired at the end of the 2010 season. Only because Brown reportedly agreed to improve some of the facilities and make alterations to the way personnel decisions are handled did Lewis sign a two-year, $13 million extension.

It’s more than a little odd that a coach with an 0-2 playoff record over eight years would be the one negotiating from the high ground, but few blame Lewis for this team’s woes. Whether there indeed were changes to the handling of personnel decisions is unknown to all but perhaps Lewis and Brown. What is known is the Bengals had no qualms about replacing the two long-term faces of their franchise. They used their first-round pick (No. 4 over all) on a new wide receiver (Georgia’s A.J. Green) and their second-rounder on a new quarterback (T.C.U.’s Andy Dalton).

Both rookies will start in Week 1. As rebounds go, it doesn’t get much quicker than this. Still, the rebound’s success is TBD, and the effort wasn’t without a cost. Because top draft picks were spent on replacing Palmer and Ochocinco, Cincy was not able to address its feeble pass-rush or mediocre offensive line.

But neither of those weaknesses is a deal-breaker in 2011 (though as we’ll cover eventually, the pass-rush might be close). And it’s not as if the Bengals have absolutely no shot at competing. Downtrodden as this franchise may be, it was just two years ago that it won the A.F.C. North.

Offense

Of course, two years ago, the Bengals had a strong-armed veteran quarterback operating in a bruising run-first system. Now, they have (according to most draft experts) a meager-armed rookie quarterback working in first-time offensive coordinator Jay Gruden’s unfamiliar West Coast system. That meager-armed rookie ran a fairly simplistic spread in college and, because of the lockout, has not had much time to practice from his new pro playbook.

The fact that Andy Dalton was “a winner” in college has little to nothing to do with his outlook as a pro. Quarterbacks who become “winners” in the big leagues don’t do so solely by having “moxie” or “heart” or “wanting it more” – they do so by being smart enough to exploit a defense’s weaknesses and skilled enough to maximize the resources around them. For Dalton, this means developing laser accuracy (since he doesn’t have a cannon) and working through his progressions with better quickness and decisiveness than he did at T.C.U. He must learn to be an anticipation passer. Otherwise, the Bengals might as well take their chances with Bruce Gradkowski (a k a The Poor Man’s Jeff Garcia).

Most of Dalton’s progressions will begin with A.J. Green, whom some feel is the most explosive and complete receiver to enter the league since Calvin Johnson. Green could be looking at regular double coverage right out of the gate given the Bengals’ modest receiving corps. Presumed No. 2 wideout Jerome Simpson was on the brink of unemployment before his two-game eruption to end last season. In three years, the former second-round pick has played just 13 games and caught 21 passes (18 of them came coming in that eruption).

Second-year slot receiver Jordan Shipley shows the courage to go over the middle and is effective sitting down in the holes of zones. In Gruden’s West Coast system, he’ll be asked to snag more balls on the move; he has the swiftness to pull it off, though he’s not technically proven in this realm. Before disappearing in 2010, Andre Caldwell was effective working between the numbers from the slot. He should easily beat out sixth-round rookie Ryan Whalen for the No. 4 job and may even challenge Simpson and Shipley for reps.

Gruden has the personnel to diversify his formations (to a certain extent), as second-year tight end Jermaine Gresham is soft-handed and athletic enough to split out as a receiver. There’s a certain measured approach to Gresham’s game that should continue to get ironed out as he becomes more comfortable reading N.F.L. coverages. In the meantime, he also needs to develop more of a mean streak as a blocker. New backup Bo Scaife is a better option in this sense, though like fellow backup Chase Coffman (a non-contributor through two seasons) Scaife’s best asset is his receiving.

The bright side of Dalton’s inexperience is it will spawn more carries for Cedric Benson. This offense is built to be run-first anyway. Benson has the sturdiness and downhill style to get stronger throughout the game. He also has vastly underrated initial quickness and the ability to change tempo based on the action around him. On passing downs he’ll be replaced by Brian Leonhard, a solid blocker and screen pass receiver, though if the Bengals were wise, they’d give more touches to the speedy, space-creating Bernard Scott.

Benson’s not actually the main reason this offense is better suited for the ground than air – the front five is. It’s an unathletic but good-sized group that drives in run-blocking but plods in pass protection. This is partly why Cincinnati ran so many six-man fronts last season. In these scenarios, Andrew Whitworth, who overachieved as a stellar left tackle, moved to the right tight end position. If he’s asked to do this again, the Bengals pray that he’ll find himself next to massive former first-rounder Andre Smith and not slapdash try-hard guy Dennis Roland. Smith has once-in-a-generation-type natural ability (light feet, incredible get-off), but poor habits, bad endurance and recurring foot injuries that have left him on the brink of being a bust.

There’s been some talk of moving Smith to guard, which wouldn’t be all bad. The Bengals’ interior line consists of three adequate individuals who, collectively, are inadequate. Right guard Bobbie Williams is an emotional hard worker but slowing down. Left guard Nate Livings tends to thrive only when he can be the aggressor; in reaction situations, his only-average athleticism shows. The Bengals passively addressed their iffy guard situation by signing oversized free agent Max Jean-Gilles and drafting Clint Boling in the fourth round; neither figures to push for serious playing time in 2011. At center, Kyle Cook is more like Nate Livings than even Nate Livings. This is to say he’s decent as the aggressor but too limited to thrive as a reactor.

Defense

There’s a lot riding on ex-49er Nate Clements. He’s replacing Johnathan Joseph, a star cornerback whom the Bengals did not want to lose. After Joseph signed for a guaranteed $23.5 million in Houston, Cincinnati signed Clements for $6 million and presumably told him that defensive coordinator Mike Zimmer’s scheme hinges on his ability to handle receivers man-to-man. Zimmer has never been shy about playing man-free coverage (man-to-man with just one free-ranging safety over the top) or even Cover 0 (as you might guess, man-to-man with zero safeties over the top) in order to create more aggressive attacks up front.

No. 1 corner Leon Hall has the well-honed technique to meet these high demands. He’s not a burner but still has minimal trouble against top-notch receivers. As for Clements, he was cut by San Francisco, but given his contract, that was a business decision as much as a football decision. At 31, he still has the athleticism to shadow receivers outside or in the slot. If not for some displays of inconsistent ball skills in recent years, no one would have uttered a negative peep about him.

The Bengals are counting on Pacman Jones to be a playmaker in nickel. He’s missed all of training camp dealing with the neck injury that truncated his ’10 season. He went under the knife in early July but is expected to be ready for the opener. If he’s not, Morgan Trent showed very good cover skills in the slot before his season-ending knee injury last November. Another option could be Jonathan Wade, a bust in St. Louis and Detroit but an impressive-looking outside corner in limited action here last year.

Life will be much easier if free safety Reggie Nelson exhibits the kind of range that inspired the Jaguars to draft him 21st overall in 2007. But that’s a big if. Zimmer is counting on it, as he’d presumably like strong safety Chris Crocker to be an added run defender in the box. Crocker has superb closing quickness. He’s also an inconsistent but nevertheless capable cover artist, both in centerfield and against the slot. This is noteworthy because it gives Zimmer disguise options that he didn’t have when pass defending dud Roy Williams was in this spot. Of course, Zimmer may simply prefer big hitters regardless of coverage ability. Why else would the Bengals trade for talented but unrefined safety Taylor Mays late in August?

Crocker is considered the elder statesman of this defense, but those with close ties to the organization whisper that the ninth-year veteran is one of an unsettling large number of players who were viewed as lazy last season. Another one of those players is Rey Maualuga, who is moving from outside linebacker to middle linebacker in 2011. This move is a result of attrition, as the Bengals afforded themselves no options when they chose not to re-sign Dhani Jones. Maualuga is a fervid hitter, but he doesn’t have the key-and-diagnose ability to spearhead the front seven’s run-defending efforts.

His limitations could prove costly given that neither of the new outside linebackers, Manny Lawson or Thomas Howard, has the physicality to stick his nose in pile against the run. Both are space-oriented players operating in a scheme that’s built around attacking blockers. Perhaps Howard will be demoted to more fitting nickel linebacker duties once Keith Rivers recovers from his wrist injury. But that won’t spark this group; Rivers, a 2008 first-round pick, has turned out to be nothing special. The Bengals basically admitted this by drafting Dontay Moch in the third-round. Moch plays with a burst but is said to have stiff hips and will need time to get acclimated to this system.

The Bengals once had an outside linebacker like Moch in Michael Johnson. He showed unusual athleticism playing downhill. But recently the Bengals decided these traits translated better to Johnson’s original defensive end position. He is now a starter there, though a raw one who often plays too tall and without deliberate technique. Don’t be surprised if run-defending specialist Jonathan Fanene or perpetually “developing” Frostee Rucker rotate with Johnson on the right side.

Robert Geathers remains the starting left end, which is problematic because he’s built like a pass-rushing specialist but has just 10.5 sacks over the last four years. Second-year ex-Gator Carlos Dunlap is clearly Cincy’s most talented defensive end. Whether that talent can be corralled on a down-by-down basis remains to be seen. But even if it can’t, Dunlap is still valuable as a splash playmaker. He led the team with 9.5 sacks in limited action last season.

Inside, Domata Peko has the power and lateral strength to draw double teams and plug the run. He’ll play the nose, with Pat Sims and Geno Atkins sharing time at the under tackle spot. Sims has good size and gets off blocks with quickness; Atkins, a fourth-round pick a year ago, must learn to avoid getting caught in the wash.

Special Teams

Mike Nugent has been a fringe kicker for most of his six-year career. Hard to believe considering the Jets drafted him in the second round. Statistically speaking, Kevin Huber is a middle of the road punter. Quan Crosby lacks explosiveness as a punt returner and could be challenged by a number of players (the depth chart says Jordan Shipley, but you have to think Pacman Jones will get a look). Bernard Scott is a fairly consistent kick returner.

Bottom Line

It’s unlikely that a mildly skilled rookie quarterback can fix the mess that a veteran like Palmer deemed unfixable. Equally as troubling as the locker room are the issues with the defensive front seven.

Predicted Finish: 4th A.F.C. North

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.

Tom Cruise test drives Red Bull Racing F1 car


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Tom Cruise, sporting a hint of purple in his locks, takes a break from filming Mission: Impossible Ghost Protocol, to pilot a 850hp Red Bull F1 car through California’s 2.5-mile Willow Springs circuit under the guidance of David Coulthard. Clearly still feeling the need for speed even after an unscheduled excursion off-road (during which time Cruise rather impressively cracks a joke, keeps the engine running and returns to the track unaided by flick-spinning the car around), the maverick actor then performs loop-the-loops in a helicopter. Get that man back to Miramar…





Dick Stanfel and Jack Butler for the Hall

The Hall of Fame seniors committee named Dick Stanfel and Jack Butler on Wednesday as finalists for election in the class of 2012. To be elected, they need the same 80 percent support as the modern era finalists when the full selection committee meets in Indianapolis on Feb. 4, the day before Super Bowl 46. A few thoughts about the nominees:

Although his playing career lasted only seven seasons, Dick Stanfel left his mark as one of the finest and most consistent offensive linemen of his time. In an era that valued technique over brute strength, Stanfel was fundamentally sound enough to be elected first team All-Pro five times and to be named to the N.F.L.’s all-decade team of the 1950s.

Stanfel was selected by the Detroit Lions in the second round of the 1951 draft (19th over all) from the University of San Francisco. There, he played for Coach Joe Kuharich and with the future Hall of Famers Gino Marchetti, Bob St. Clair and Ollie Matson. After missing his rookie year because of a knee injury, Stanfel stepped right in as a starter in 1952.

At 6-3 and about 235 pounds, Stanfel became an anchor at right guard for the next four seasons. He joined the Hall of Fame left tackle Lou Creekmur to form the core of Detroit’s offensive line on the championship teams of 1952 and 1953. “Joe Schmidt and Jim David were my roommates,” Stanfel later said of his years with the Lions, “and I had so many other great teammates… Bobby Layne, Doak Walker, Leon Hart, Pat Harder, Bob Hoernschemeyer.” ( Dwight Chapin, “Where Are They Now: Dick Stanfel”, San Francisco Chronicle, Jan. 27, 2002)

In those years, the offensive linemen had to keep their elbows bent and their hands close to their body for both run and pass blocking. They couldn’t extend their arms and push, as they do today. The best of them, like Stanfel, had to make up for it with smooth footwork and good balance. They needed to be able to move laterally just to stay in front of the pass rushers. Stanfel also had very good pulling speed in either direction.

Stanfel was reunited with Kuharich, now the coach of the Redskins, in 1956. He made first team All-Pro and was elected to the Pro Bowl in each of his three years in Washington. But when Kuharich was fired after the 1958 season, Stanfel retired at 31 to pursue what would be a long career in coaching.

Stanfel started as Kuharich’s offensive line coach at Notre Dame in 1959, joined Marv Levy’s staff at Cal in 1963, and entered the N.F.L. when Kuharich became the coach of the Philadelphia Eagles in 1964. He later coached the linemen with the 49ers, the Saints and the Bears. He summed up his coaching philosophy: “I told every player, ‘If you can get it done, I don’t care if you stand on your head. But if you can’t get it done, you better damn well do it my way.’ ” (Chapin)

Jack Butler is also a member of the N.F.L.’s all-decade team of the 1950s. He was a bright spot in an era when the Steelers had few winning seasons.

Butler, a Pittsburgh native, played his college football at St. Bonaventure. In 1951, the Steelers invited him in for a tryout. “I thought, ‘Hey, this is a terrific way to spend my summer,’ ” Butler recalled, many years later. ” ‘I won’t make the team but it will be a great way to pass the time.’ I never went back to school.” (Lew Freedman, “Pittsburgh Steelers: The Complete Illustrated History,” 2nd ed., MVP Books, 2011)

The Steelers initially intended to use Butler as an undersize defensive end, but injuries in their secondary led them to try him at cornerback. At a rangy 6-1 and about 200 pounds, he was a natural at his new position. He was even better later in his career at safety.

Butler finished his nine-year career in Pittsburgh (1951-1959) with 52 interceptions and 10 fumble recoveries in 103 games. That interception total was the second highest in league history when he retired. He scored 9 touchdowns: 4 by interception return, 4 by pass reception and 1 by the return of a recovered fumble. Butler was a three-time first team All-Pro (1957-1959) and was elected to four Pro Bowls (1955-1958).

Butler was an all-around defensive back. He excelled against both the run and the pass. He read the play well, had a good nose for the ball, and he had excellent hands. Butler was also a punishing tackler. When he played safety, the wide receivers weren’t too eager to meet him in the middle of the field. “Jack was one player that could have played with the great Steeler teams of the ’70s”, Dan Rooney said. “He was fast, smart, and tough.” (Freedman)

In the final game of the 1953 season, Butler intercepted Redskins quarterback Eddie LeBaron four times, tying an N.F.L. record that still stands. In the fourth quarter, he returned the last one 5 yards for the winning touchdown in a 14-13 victory. On the film, you see Butler, at right cornerback, jump the quick-out route after reading LeBaron’s eyes and the opening of the quarterback’s hips and shoulders. Excellent anticipation.

Butler’s career was cut short by a terrible knee injury in 1959. He tried to go into coaching but that knee was so badly damaged that he couldn’t get around on the practice field. In 1961, he began the second part of his football career as a scout for the Steelers.

In 1963, Butler joined LESTO (Lions, Eagles, Steelers Talent Organization), one of the early scouting services. By compiling reports on thousands of prospects from all over the country, these services saved the teams time, money and a lot of frustration. The name was changed to BLESTO when the Bears joined and BLESTO-V when the Vikings were added in the late ’60s. Butler ran BLESTO for over 40 years, retiring in 2007. “Pro football has been very good to me”, he once said. “It’s kept me from having to go to work.” (Freedman)

Dick Stanfel and Jack Butler will be considered by the selection committee for their accomplishments on the field, but they also stayed in the game and had distinguished careers after their playing days were over. They’re both football lifers and, early next year, will probably be called Hall of Famers.

Andy Barall writes about pro football history for The Fifth Down.

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