Sunday, September 4, 2011

Remembering Lee Roy Selmon, Hall of Famer



Lee Roy Selmon was one of the best all-around defensive ends in N.F.L. history. He excelled against the run and the pass, and did it modestly, without bringing attention to himself. Selmon died two days after a stroke on Friday at his home in Tampa, Fla. He was 56.

“At halftime I told the coach my deepest secrets. I said I never wanted to be buried at sea. I never wanted to get hit in the mouth with a hockey puck, and I didn’t want to go out and play that second half against Lee Roy Selmon.”

Ted Albrecht, offensive tackle, Chicago Bears (from Paul Zimmerman, “The New Thinking Man’s Guide to Pro Football”, Simon and Schuster, 1984)

In the spring of 1976, one of the N.F.L.’s new franchises, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, had the first pick in the coming college draft. Their general manager, Ron Wolf, and the coach, John McKay, knew that a quality quarterback would provide the necessary foundation for long-term success. That year, however, the Bucs couldn’t pass on a rare opportunity. They had a chance to draft Lee Roy Selmon.

From 1971 to 1975, Selmon and his brothers, Lucious and Dewey, played a key part in a dominant era of Oklahoma football. The Sooners went 54-3-1 over that period, and won the national championship in 1974 and 1975. All three Selmons played together in 1973 as Oklahoma finished 10-0-1.

After his senior season, Selmon won the Lombardi Award and the Outland Trophy as the nation’s outstanding lineman. His college coach, Barry Switzer, called Selmon “the greatest player I ever had play,” and said he never had a bad game.


For the Buccaneers, the decision was obvious. “You get a chance for one of those guys like Lee Roy Selmon,” Wolf said recently, “you better get that guy.” (NFL Films, “The Top 100: The NFL’s Greatest Players”, 2010)

In his nine years in Tampa (1976-1984), Selmon was unofficially credited with 78.5 sacks in 121 games, 28.5 fumbles caused and 380 quarterback pressures. (The N.F.L. didn’t begin to keep sacks by defensive players as an official statistic until 1982, Selmon’s seventh season.) He recovered 10 fumbles, returning one 29 yards against the Lions in 1979 for the only touchdown of his career.

Selmon was named first team All-Pro in 1979 and played in six consecutive Pro Bowls, from 1979 to 1984. In 1995 he became the first Buccaneer to be elected to the Hall of Fame.

Those sack and pressure totals are exceptional considering that, as a 3-4 defensive end, Selmon’s first responsibility was as a 2-gap run defender. Unlike the 4-3 ends, especially today, Selmon lined up tight over the offensive tackle. He still had enough explosiveness and speed to beat that tackle to the outside and get to the quarterback. Then, after jetting upfield a few times, he would fake a move to the outside and defeat the tackle with a quick step to the inside. At that point, the tackle was looking for help.

At 6-foot-3 and about 255 pounds, Selmon had the strength and power to hold the point of attack and to defeat the double teams. And, like so many of the great defensive players, he was relentless. On the tape, you see him playing with good leverage and using his hands well to keep the offensive linemen away from his legs. Selmon didn’t spend a lot of time on the ground.

Selmon’s teammates didn’t have to cover for him while he was off chasing personal glory. He did his job within the context of the defense. Selmon was consistent and reliable. He wasn’t shy about delivering a blow, either. Steve DeBerg remembered one particular hit from 1979:

Lee Roy squared up on me. The first thing that hit the ground was the back of my head. I was blind in my left eye for more than a half hour – and I didn’t even know it. I went to see the team doctor and he held up two fingers. I couldn’t see the left side of the fingers – the side Selmon had come from. I sat on the bench for a quarter. (“Making a List”, Sports Illustrated, Sept. 23, 1991)

The Bucs didn’t win a game that first year on their way to 26 consecutive losses. In 1976 their defense, playing a 4-3 with Selmon at right tackle, gave up 412 points in 14 games. The next year, Tampa switched to the 3-4 with Selmon at right defensive end and their points allowed dropped to 223.

In 1979 the Bucs had their first winning season. They finished 10-6, tied with the Bears for first place in the N.F.C. Central and won the division on a tie breaker. Tampa Bay beat the Eagles in the divisional playoffs but lost the N.F.C. championship game to the Rams a week later. The Bucs defense allowed 237 points that year, the fewest in the N.F.L. After the season, Selmon was named the A.P. Defensive Player of the Year.

Selmon was genuinely modest and humble. In accepting his many honors and awards, he always shared the credit with others. At his Hall of Fame induction ceremony, where he was presented by his brother Dewey, Selmon looked out at his former teammates and said: “I know it’s not me. It’s an us and a we.”

For Lee Roy Selmon, it all goes back to Eufaula, Okla., and his mother and father, Jessie and Lucious Sr. “People have said, ‘Your parents must be proud of you,’ ” he said that day at Canton in 1995, “but I’m more proud of them. I was the youngest of nine children. I always wondered with Dewey being the eighth child and just 11 months older than me, if I was a planned child. I never asked. I’m just glad I’m here.” (NewsOk.com)

School Games mountain bike ace Alice Barnes typifies Olympic Games legacy generation


Alice Barnes


Alice Barnes pointed down at her legs below her lycra mountain bike

racing shorts. The bruises and scars were pock-marked across her knees

and shins. The 16-year-old from Northamptonshire showed the tenacity

which makes great champions last weekend. She had come to Sheffield to

prove a point.


The younger sister of Hannah Barnes, 18, who has won a hatful of

junior UK titles in road and track cycling as well as mountain bike

racing, young Alice was the only competitor for central England among

thirteen regional teams at the UK School Games mountain biking event

in Wharncliffe Woods, a gem of a hillside course, six miles north of

Sheffield.


Barnes took part in the individual event, winning gold, but had

decided to compete alone in the relay, too, tearing uphill and roaring

downhill four times around the course and still outstripping all

opposition.


She won by several seconds. Competing alone in the four-person relay

meant her final time was discounted by officials, but Barnes had made

her point.


“The cuts and bruises are just what happens in mountain biking,”

explained the whizz kid in the woods having shown herself to be one of

the athletes to watch for in the future at the first-ever staging of a

mountain biking event at the UK School Games.


Barnes is one of 1600 elite junior athletes from the home countries

who have been competing in 12 sports in venues across Sheffield in the

past four days in an event designed to emulate a senior multi-sport

Games event.


Young cyclists, just as the brilliant Nicole Cooke did before taking

up road racing, tend to compete at all five disciplines.

Barnes is no different. “It’s completely flat where I live in

Northamptonshire, but I’m slowly moving towards mountain biking as my

favourite discipline,” she explained.


A fine weekend in the sun-dappled woods above Sheffield, accruing

plaudits, will have helped. There is no disappointment, either, that

she will miss out on the grand show in London next year, when the

Olympic and Paralympic Games come to town. “I’m over that…I’m

looking forward to going abroad to compete. Where could be better than

Rio…?”


The UK School Games has been funded since 2008 with a £6million grant

from Legacy Trust UK, an independent charity set up to help build a

lasting cultural and sporting legacy from the London 2012 Olympic and

Paralympic Games.


As revealed in Telegraph Sport yesterday, the seventh annual UK School

Games will be hosted in four Olympic Games venues next year giving

junior elite school-age athletes their first experience of the

atmosphere at ‘the Greatest Show on Earth’.


The plans are for three sports – swimming, athletics and cycling – to

take place in the Olympic venues proper next spring, while nine other

sports from the school games will be housed in the ExCeL Arena, an

exposition hall in London’s Docklands, which will house four combat

sports at the Olympic Games.


For the athletics event, it is thought the lower tier of the Olympic

stadium will be used, allowing around 30,000 spectators into the

event.

Through £750,000 of additional National Lottery funding provided this

year by Sport England, wheelchair basketball and rugby sevens were

included in the 2011 Sainsbury’s UK School Games, with the programme

now including cycling (mountain biking), athletics, badminton,

fencing, gymnastics, hockey, judo, swimming, table tennis and

volleyball with disability events in swimming, athletics, fencing and

table tennis.


Several Games records were broken on the third day of competition at

the 2011 Sainsbury’s UK School Games, yet the most notable was a new

world record mark at Ponds Forge International Sports Centre as

paralympic swimmer Jessica Applegate, an England East swimmer won the

MD 50m freestyle in 28.90 seconds, breaking the previous world leading

mark by 0.05 seconds.


Applegate, 15, from Great Yarmouth, said: ““That was a great race and

the highlight of my time here at the UK School Games having set a new

world record, I’m thrilled. The race just went to plan and I’ve

trained hard for this and to set such a fast time is great.”

The swimming event also saw Caleb Hughes set a new championship record

in winning the 1,500m freestyle in 15:54.19 minutes, while Nicole

Lough followed suit in the MD 100m breaststroke. There were also new

Games records for Danielle Lowe in the 100m butterfly, Alex Dunk in

the 200m freestyle and Camilla Hattersley in the 400m IM.


At Don Valley Stadium, Kelvin Tairou, 16, was the star of the show as

the Londoner re-wrote the School Games record books as he stormed to

100m gold. Having lowered his personal best to 10.70 seconds claiming

the English Under-17 title last month in Bedford, the teenager smashed

the championship record in 10.54 seconds. London claimed gold in the

4×300m girls before Birmingham stormed to victory in the 4×100m boys

to round off the first day of action at Don Valley Stadium. Elsewhere,

Gabby Down claimed gold in the wheelchair foil fencing and Joe Fraser

claimed the all-around boys title in the gymnastics.


UK SCHOOL GAMES: http://www.ukschoolgames.com/



Angels beat Twins, 4-1, to keep pace with Rangers in AL West

Joel Pineiro, demoted to the bullpen in early August, allowed one run and five hits in seven strong innings Sunday to lead the Angels to a 4-1 victory over the Minnesota Twins in Angel Stadium.

Scott Downs retired the side in order in the eighth, lowering his earned-run average to 1.37 in 52 appearances, and Jordan Walden struck out two in a scoreless ninth for his 28th save as the Angels remained 3 1/2 games behind Texas in the American League West. The Rangers beat the Boston Red Sox, 11-4, on Sunday.

Rookie catcher Hank Conger, whose erratic throws to second base contributed to his demotion to triple-A Salt Lake on July 19, threw out two runners attempting to steal second for the first time in his career.

Opponents were successful on 50 of 58 stolen-base attempts against Conger entering the game.

The Angels broke open a 2-1 game with two runs in the eighth, a rally Twins reliever Alex Burnett set up by hitting Howie Kendrick with a pitch and walking Bobby Abreu to open the inning. Torii Hunter and Vernon Wells each knocked in runs with singles.

The Angels took a 1-0 lead in the first when Abreu, reduced to a platoon role because of his .252 average and minimal power, lined a solo home run to right off Twins starter Kevin Slowey. It was Abreu’s seventh homer of the season and first since Aug. 9.

The Angels made it 2-0 in the third with the help of a Minnesota mental miscue. Conger hit a one-out single to right and took third when Erick Aybar extended his hitting streak to 14 games with a single to right.

Kendrick followed with a potential inning-ending double-play grounder to third baseman Danny Valencia, who threw to second for the force-out.

But second baseman Trevor Plouffe, thinking it was the third out of the inning, put his head down and started jogging toward the dugout without relaying a throw to first, as Conger scored.

The Twins cut the deficit to 2-1 in the fourth when Joe Mauer, who entered with a .682 career average (15 for 22) against Pineiro, drove a full-count pitch into the right center field seats for a solo homer, only his second in an injury-plagued season.

-- Mike DiGiovanna

Jets Put McElroy on Injured Reserve; Juggle Roster

Greg McElroy’s rookie season ended Sunday when the Jets placed him on injured reserve as part of a series of roster-sculpturing moves.

They ostensibly kept McElroy, who underwent right thumb surgery Friday after dislocating it in the team’s preseason finale, on their original 53-man roster to maintain flexibility if another quarterback who appealed to them became available.

It was difficult to take seriously Coach Rex Ryan’s assertion Saturday that Jeremy Kerley, a rookie receiver who played quarterback in high school, would back up Mark Brunell. On Sunday the Jets added Kevin O’Connell, who played for them the previous two seasons and participated in Mark Sanchez’s Jets West camp in May in California. O’Connell had been released by Miami.

The Jets also signed wide receiver Mardy Gilyard (St. Louis), safety Andrew Sendejo (Dallas) and offensive lineman Colin Baxter (San Diego), who replaces Robby Felix as the backup center. To clear space, the Jets released defensive back Isaiah Trufant, defensive tackle Martin Tevaseu and linebacker Aaron Maybin, a former first-round pick by Buffalo who on Saturday grabbed what Ryan characterized as one of three open roster spots.

The Jets’ practice squad also started taking shape, with tight end Josh Baker, linebacker Matt Berning, guard Trevor Canfield, defensive tackle Jarron Gilbert, guard Matt Kroul, cornerback Julian Posey and receiver Patrick Turner all re-signing.

U.S. Open: Rafael Nadal wins; queasy Flavia Pennetta into quarterfinals

Flavia-pennetta_600

Flavia Pennetta, a 29-year-old Italian who was vomiting on court and was searching for shady spots the longer her fourth-round match went against 13th-seeded Peng Shuai of China on Sunday at the U.S. Open, overcame a 5-0 deficit in the second-set tiebreak and moved into the quarterfinals for the third time with a 6-4, 7-6 (6) win.

Peng, who is 25, converted only 31% of the break points she earned (five of 16) in the 2 hour and 31 minute match, and that wasn't good enough. Pennetta, the aggressor, had 41 winners but 34 unforced errors and for much of the second set she staggered between points and would drop into her chair during changeovers as if she was hoping there would be a seat beneath her weary body.

Pennetta might be familiar to Los Angeles fans. She won the last WTA event held at the Home Depot Center in 2009 and shortly after she became the first Italian woman ever ranked in the top 10. Her two U.S. Open quarterfinals are her best Grand Slam-level finishes. She played three sets and nearly three hours in the third round to upset third-seeded Maria Sharapova.

Defending men's champion Rafael Nadal, who called for the trainer once for treatment on his foot, beat unseeded David Nalbandian  of Argentina, 7-6 (5), 6-1, 7-5, in 2 hours and 39 minutes.

Nadal, seeded second, has won 10 career Grand Slam titles and is the fourth man in history who owns at least one title in each of the four majors.

"It was a tough day," Nadal said, referring to the wind and humidity that caused Nadal to change shirts at least five times during the match. Nadal said the key to the match was in the first set. "Coming back when he was serving for the set 5-4," Nadal said, "Coming back from that."

He said the trainer came out at the start of the third set to work on a blister on his right foot. "It was a very hot day," Nadal said. "Just a little blister, nothing important. I am lucky."

RELATED:

Serena Williams beats Victoria Azarenka at U.S. Open

Top players dominate at U.S. Open

Andy Roddick beats Jack Sock at U.S. Open

-- Diane Pucin, reporting from New York

Photo: Flavia Pennetta breathes a sigh of relief after defeating Peng Shuai on Sunday at the U.S. Open. Credit: Timothy A. Clary / AFP / Getty Images

Weaver OK, Bell recalled, Angels set rotation

Jered-weaver_600

Jered Weaver, a leading American League Cy Young Award candidate entering August, has given up six earned runs or more in three of his last five starts, including Saturday night's shaky five-inning, six-run, eight-hit effort in a 10-6 win over the Twins.

But the Angels right-hander has assured Manager Mike Scioscia he is physically OK -- he did land awkwardly on his left ankle on a first-inning pitch Saturday -- and is not suffering from fatigue.

"In talking with him, his arm feels good," Scioscia said Sunday. "Sometimes you're going to be out of sorts, and there's no doubt he was Saturday night."

Weaver, who made his previous start on three days' rest and Saturday night's start on five days' rest, will get an extra day again before his next start Friday night against the Yankees.

Scioscia confirmed that Dan Haren and Ervin Santana will remain on regular rest to start Monday and Tuesday night against Seattle. Jerome Williams will start Wednesday night against the Mariners, and Weaver, Haren and Santana will pitch against the Yankees next weekend.

Trevor Bell was recalled from triple-A Salt Lake Sunday and will be in the bullpen for Sunday's series finale against the Twins.

The Angels lineup: SS Erick Aybar, 2B Howie Kendrick, DH Bobby Abreu, RF Torii Hunter, 1B Mark Trumbo, LF Vernon Wells, 3B Alberto Callaspo, CF Mike Trout, C Hank Conger, P Joel Pineiro.

The Twins lineup: CF Ben Revere, 2B Trevor Plouffe, DH Joe Mauer, RF Michael Cuddyer, LF Jason Kubel, 3B Danny Valencia, 1B Luke Hughes, SS Tsuyoshi Nishioka, C Drew Butera, P Kevin Slowey.

--Mike DiGiovanna

Photo: Angels ace Jered Weaver unleashes a pitch against the Texas Rangers last month. Credit: Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times

US Open 2011 Diary: Back to her best?


Serena Williams was at her best level for quite some time

Serena Williams was at her best level for quite some time


Saturday in New York

Order is restored, but more players withdraw…


Float like a butterfly…

There was a moment yesterday when Serena Williams looked like she was on the ropes. Breathing heavily, walking slowly, she had just seen four match points come and go against Victoria Azarenka, and then surrendered her serve for the first time all tournament.


But Serena, who one tennis pundit remarked as back to being just as quick around the court as she was in her Serena Slam pomp 11 years ago, merely soaked it all up. Absorbing Azarenka’s aggression like a sponge, she sent it straight back during an extraordinary knife-edge tie-break.


It wasn’t just that she was hitting it gob-smackingly hard. She was hitting it so deep, and with such angles. And all the while sprinting to the net too. She even did the splits.


There is one word for Serena so far – awesome. Huge credit to Vika too. She tried.


Serena plays Ana Ivanovic next in the fourth round, who clutched her way to a straight-sets win over Sloane Stephens.


Unsung hero

Louise Engzell. The umpire over-ruled a call on one of Serena’s three match points, when the security guards had already begun to make their way onto the court. Keen eyes.


Props also to Jack Sock and Melanie Oudin, who knocked out top seeds Bob Bryan and Liezel Huber.


Cruising

Roger Federer may have dropped a set against Marin Cilic, but it didn’t seem to bother him unduly. The mighty Swiss moved within one win of extending his record streak of Grand Slam quarter-finals to 29, and also, on 226, an inch closer to Jimmy Connors’ record of 233 Grand Slam match wins.


Novak Djokovic had not the merest whiff of trouble against Nikolay Davydenko, romping his way to a 60th win this year. Just two losses, remember.


Mardy Fish also made it through very easily, as did Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, Svetlana Kuznetsova and Francesca Schiavone (albeit not so easily, but in true Fran style). It’s hotting up.


More wounded

The retired/withdrawn list rose again yesterday, prompting some reaction from the players…

@andy_murray is the 18th pull out in the us open telling the tennis authorities anything?? No?? Thought not….


Of course, pundits were quick to say that players shouldn’t overload their schedules so much. Let the blame-game begin.


New knowledge

John McEnroe provided yesterday’s ‘learn something new every day’ – apparently the nets at the US Open are tighter than they are at Wimbledon. Hence, more net cords?


Chest-bump of the day

Team Auf Geht’s - Andrea Petkovic and Julia Goerges. It’s a miracle they were still standing, they laughed so much.


Hitting partners

While Peter Fleming was spotted on the practice courts yesterday, unorthodox forehand and all, British youngster Liam Broady had the chance to have a hit with Andy Murray. Nadal at Wimbledon, Murray in New York. Not at all bad…



Coming up tonight…

Andy Murray v Feliciano Lopez


A re-match of their Wimbledon quarter-final, and one hopefully free of silly jokes about Judy, Murray should relish the prospect to face his good friend in his first night match of the tournament.


Lopez had no answer to Murray’s versatility and power at Wimbledon. But that will be different on hard courts. As ever though, Murray will need to execute well from the start, and not take himself on as well as the Spaniard.


Sabine Lisicki v Vera Zvonareva

Aside from Serena, Miss Lisicki is probably one of the most eagerly anticipated prospects  in the women’s game, so people will be expecting her to cause serious problems for Zvonareva, who withdrew from the doubles yesterday.


That said, the Russian and her phenomenal defence have a 3-0 record over Lisicki, so the German will need to make sure she is not missing.


Juan Martin Del Potro v Gilles Simon

The first big test for DelPo? The BFG hasn’t played on these courts since winning the title here two years ago, remember, and has so far been a rather silent mover through the draw. But Gilou, who takes an Andy Murray approach to hard court tennis, is not a straightforward customer. Del Potro’s power should be too much though.


Rafael Nadal v David Nalbandian

The fifth career meeting between these two, Rafa has two, Nalby has two. Nalbandian’s power will always present problems for Nadal, especially if he hits it flat to Nadal’s toes, but the question remains over whether he is physically fit enough to keep up with Nadal over five sets.


Nalbandian showed glimpses of his old form against Andy Murray in Cincinnati, but in reality, could only sustain it for a set.


The daily click

Jon Wertheim’s mid-term grades. Who’s ranked where so far in New York?


Keep an eye on

The weather. Rain is on the way. The doom-mongering has begun.



First Impressions of NZ 2011


Just arrived in Dunedin, 36 hours after leaving home in Brighton…


First impressions…


1 ) It’s a long way.. and will that put off the supposed thousands of overseas fans headed this way? I don’t know a single person bar colleagues coming to RWC.


2 ) It’s expensive. Three quid for a bottle of water.. five quid for a sandwich.. $90 dollars ( c £55 ) for airport to Dunedin city centre.. see above, perhaps another deterrent.


3 ) It’s not as brass monkeys as feared. In fact, it was a lovely day. Stunning scenery as ever on flight Auckland to Dunedin via poor old Christchurch.


4 ) RWC stuff everywhere so there’s a sense of a buzz building which is to the good.


5 ) But not if it’s all focussed on how well the All Blacks do. This is about the World Cup not about the All Blacks.


6) People as laid-back and friendly as ever.


7 ) But they’re edgy about the ABs doing well. And that could be the best thing for the Blacks. There will be no complacency this time around. They’re going to have to win it.


8) Five days and counting. I had my reservations about this tournament. I no longer do.



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