Friday, September 30, 2011

As usual, Anze Kopitar excels in the middle

Anze3
Through all the negotiations between the Kings and Drew Doughty’s representatives, through the tense moments and final happy moments when Doughty agreed to an eight-year, $56-million deal  Thursday, one person remained above the fray.

That was center Anze Kopitar, who was thrust into the middle of an uncomfortable situation after Kings General Manager Dean Lombardi declared he would not pay Doughty more than the $6.8-million average annual value of Kopitar’s contract, then the highest on the team.

Kopitar became a benchmark in the talks, a role he didn’t want and didn’t enjoy. He also became part of the back story because he used to employ Doughty’s agent, Don Meehan, before switching to another high-powered agent, Pat Brisson.

Meehan seemed determined in these negotiations to get more money for Doughty, his current client, than the amount earned by his former client, Kopitar. To complicate matters even more, Meehan and Lombardi had a history of battles while Lombardi was general manager of the San Jose Sharks.

Stokley Is Both Out and Mum

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Giants receiver Brandon Stokley left practice on Wednesday with what was described as a strained quadriceps, which will sideline him for at least Sunday’s game against the Cardinals in Arizona.

Now the question is whether Stokley, who was signed Sept. 15 to shore up the receiving corps, will be out for longer than that.

Like most N.F.L. coaches, Tom Coughlin is not forthcoming about his players’ injuries, but he has been particularly circumspect in relaying information to reporters about the nature of Stokley’s injury. He said the injury happened while Stokley was running a route.

As for Stokley, he spoke cryptically about the injury when he met with reporters on Friday, saying he did not know if he was allow to publicly discuss his injury. Stokley declined to describe the play on which it occurred, to address whether he went to the hospital to have his leg examined or to speculate about when he might be able to return.

“I’ve had a bunch of things before; I’ve had pretty much everything before,” the veteran Stokley said of his injury history. “Not exactly like this. I’ve had a hamstring. But nothing quite like this.”

There was perhaps a small sign of promise: Stokley rode on a stationary bicycle during the portion of practice open to reporters on Friday.

The Giants added Stokley to fill the void in the slot left by the departed Steve Smith. Another candidate, Victor Cruz, had a breakout game in a win over the Philadelphia Eagles last Sunday, when he caught two touchdowns.

NBA, players end lengthy session, to resume labor talks Saturday

James3 A nearly five-hour-long labor meeting between NBA owners and players, including superstars LeBron James, Dwyane Wade, Kevin Durant and Carmelo Anthony, ended Friday without a breakthrough and uncertainty remained about whether the regular season will start on time.

Union president and Lakers point guard Derek Fisher told reporters at a New York hotel that no new proposals were exchanged during a sometimes contentious but “engaging” session that included NBA Commissioner David Stern. Talks are set to resume at 7 a.m. Pacific time Saturday.

"Today was about expressing ourselves," Fisher said.

Stern had warned earlier this week that “enormous consequences” would follow if the sides failed to make significant progress in talks this weekend. At the end of Friday’s session, Stern slightly softened, saying: “There’s no bad news. … Both sides expressed a willingness to make a deal.”

Asked if a deal to end the three-month-old lockout of players can be completed by the end of this weekend -- Fisher told reporters, “I can’t answer that.”

The NBA's regular season is scheduled to begin Nov. 1.

Bruce Bowen, Brent Mayne to be honored by Cal State Fullerton

Cal State Fullerton will induct six people into the Titan Hall of Fame Saturday night, including former NBA guard Bruce Bowen and former major league catcher Brent Mayne.

Fullertonlogo Bowen played at Fullerton from 1989 to 1993. He spent 13 seasons in the NBA, eight with the San Antonio Spurs, where he was part of three NBA championship teams. Bowen was named to the NBA’s all-defensive team eight times.

During his NBA career, Bowen was known for this and for that.

Mayne played 15 major league seasons with eight teams, including the Dodgers in 2004. He played at Fullerton in 1988 and 1989, where he was named an All-American. Mayne was taken by the Kansas City Royals as the 13th player overall in the major league draft.

Also being inducted:

Sue Lewis-Newton, who played softball at Fullerton from 1981 to 1984 and was a three-time All-American. Fullerton finished second nationally once and third twice during her career.

Lynn Rogers, who was the women’s gymnastics coach from 1976 to 2000. Fullerton won the 1979 national title and finished second three times and third five times.

Boosters Jerry and Merilyn Goodwin, who donated the lead gift to expand Fullerton’s baseball stadium, now named Goodwin Field.

-- Chris Foster

Tony Reagins resigns as Angels general manager

Fabforum 

A day after saying the Angels would have to be creative this off-season to address their roster deficiencies, General Manager Tony Reagins abruptly resigned Friday.

He will remain with the ballclub as a special assistant to club chairman Dennis Kuhl.

“In moving forward, we felt a change was needed," said owner Arte Moreno, whose team has missed the playoffs in consecutive seasons for the first time since 2000-2001.

Reagins, a 20-year Angel employee, was named the 10th general manager in club history following the 2007 season. In his four years as GM the Angels won two American League West titles and compiled a record of 363-285 (.560). But the Angels finished two games under .500 last year and missed the postseason again this fall, going 86-76 and finishing 10 games behind the Texas Rangers in the American League West.

Before being named general manager, Reagins served in a variety of roles, including six seasons as director of player development from 2002-2007. Under his guidance, the Angels’ affiliates reached the playoffs 18 times while capturing 15 division titles and three league championships.

RELATED:

Kendrys Morales making big progress toward returning to Angels

Mike Napoli's success in Texas makes Angels fans fume

Bill Dwyre: Angels' hopes end, despite Boston's help

-- Kevin Baxter

Photo: Tony Reagins. Credit: Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times.

Boxing notes: Lou DiBella defends Sergio Martinez, Andre Berto

Sergio Lou DiBella is a tough talker, and when boxing's giant promoters backed him into a corner Friday, the former architect of HBO boxing matches came out swinging.

First, DiBella heard that veteran promoter Bob Arum was telling people in the sport's inner circle that DiBella's star fighter, world middleweight champion Sergio Martinez, was having trouble gathering a crowd at Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City for Saturday's title defense against England's Darren Barker (23-0, 14 knockouts).

"I got a thousand people here at the weigh-in, and that's with the [nearby Philadelphia] Phillies in the playoffs," DiBella said. "I don't need to hear what this bitter old man [Arum] thinks."

The grapevine also reached DiBella with Arum allegedly saying that if Arum fighter Antonio Margarito defeats super-welterweight champion Miguel Cotto Dec. 3, Margarito would only fight Martinez if he was paid 60% of the purse compared to Martinez's 40%.

"You have to be kidding me," DiBella said. "Why even say that? My fighter's the better fighter."

While he was at it, DiBella blew off an offer by Golden Boy Promotions Chief Executive Richard Schaefer to have his former welterweight champion Andre Berto participate in a welterweight tournament Schaefer is shopping to HBO and Showtime.

Schaefer said he plans to consider former champion Victor Ortiz, ex-junior welterweight champ Devon Alexander, Marcos Maidana, Paulie Malignaggi, Kermit Cintron and Luis Colazzo as participants, hopeful that "the winner will emerge by the second half of next year as a challenger to the biggest names in the division."

Berto lost a decision to Ortiz in April, but DiBella scoffed at the list.

"You think people are clamoring to see Victor Ortiz again? Or Devon Alexander?" DiBella said. "I'm not interested in Maidana or the other various losers. If they want to offer Bert [Amir] Khan, we'll take it. Or a straight rematch with Ortiz."

Said Schaefer, who promotes Khan: "We don't need Berto. He doesn't want to be in the tournament, let him go do other stuff."

OTHER DATES: Schaefer has finalized a Khan junior-welterweight title defense against Lamont Peterson Dec. 10 in Washington, D.C., but he's waiting for a site to open after Georgetown's basketball team failed to reschedule its game that day at the Verizon Center. Now Schaefer's exploring the capital's Convention Center.

A week earlier, on Dec. 3 at Anaheim's Honda Center, Golden Boy's bantamweight champion Abner Mares will defend his new belt in a mandatory rematch against Joseph "King Kong" Agbeko.

Agbeko was deprived of points by referee Russell Mora in his August fight against Mares when Agbeko was struck by a low blow and Mora scored it a 12th-round knockdown for Hawaiian Gardens' Mares.

MORE:

Photos: Floyd Mayweather Jr.-Victor Ortiz

Bill Dwyre: Jeers justified for outcome of Mayweather-Ortiz

Manny Pacquiao, Floyd Mayweather Jr. and boxing's age-old issue

-- Lance Pugmire  

Photo: Sergio Martinez. Credit: Al Bello / Getty Images.

Report: Terry Francona is out as Boston Red Sox manager

Terry Francona met with Boston Red Sox management on Friday to discuss his future as manager, but the team said a decision has not been reached.

Fabforum Despite the statement, Francona told staff members on Thursday that he will not be returning as manager, a club source told ESPNBoston.com's Gordon Edes on Friday.

Several other media outlets reported Friday that Francona would not return for a ninth season. He led the Red Sox to World Series titles in 2004 and 2007.

Red Sox General Manager Theo Epstein released a statement Friday afternoon.

"John Henry, Tom Werner, Larry Lucchino, Ben Cherington and I met with Terry Francona this morning at Fenway Park to exchange thoughts and information on the 2011 season and discuss areas for improvement going forward," he said. "We all plan on taking some time to process the thoughts expressed in the meeting. There are no immediate plans for an announcement."

The team has 10 days from the end of the season to decide whether to keep Francona, whose contract has two option years. Boston missed the playoffs despite leading the AL wild-card race by nine games on Sept. 4.

Red Sox slugger David Ortiz said Friday he was "fine with Tito," meaning Francona, but he did hint that the clubhouse had issues, something Francona acknowledged on Thursday.

"I worry about playing baseball more than anything else," Ortiz said. "I know we have some players that [the organization thought were] worried about some other [things] and sometimes there were certain things that no one in the clubhouse can control. I was trying and I have no issues. My only problem was when I started being benched [in 2010] and that was my only issue with Tito. Other than that we're cool."

Ortiz wasn't expecting Francona to leave. "I am surprised," he said. "I'm surprised because I'm hearing things right now that I didn't know were going on."

MORE:

Bill Dwyre: Angels' hopes end, despite Boston's help

Bill Plaschke: Baseball has its greatest regular-season finish

Rays, Cardinals are up, Red Sox, Braves down in wild wild-card

-- Houston Mitchell

Photo: Boston Red Sox manager Terry Francona departs Fenway Park on Friday after meeting with Red Sox management. Credit: Steven Senne / Associated Press

Kings morning skate: All-Drew Doughty edition

If there was any doubt the Kings would be taking a slow approach with Drew Doughty, their $56-million defenseman, that notion was immediately dismissed by Coach Terry Murray.

“Gas pedal right to the floorboards out there in practice,” Murray said on Friday in El Segundo after the Kings’ morning skate.

Sound like a sports car approach?

“Lamborghini approach,’’ Murray said, smiling.

It was duly noted that the kid could afford one. Several, in fact, after reaching an eight-year agreement with the team on Thursday night.

“I’m sure he can,” Murray said. “I’m sure he’ll be paying for the first team dinner whenever the guys get out together.”

Times colleague Helene Elliott reported that the Doughty deal does not have a no-trade clause, and the breakdown of the agreement is $6 million, $6.5 million, $6.7 million, $7.0 million, $7.1 million, $7.45 million, $7.6 million and $7.65 million.

“He’s a young man, a very gifted young man,” Murray said. “He’s blessed with a lot of skill, a lot of talent. A critical part of our organization. We’re all very happy he’s back on board with an extended contract. To me that shows the commitment that [owner] Mr. [Philip] Anschutz  is making to this team.

“…Now it’s our job as a coaching staff and a team to say, ‘Thank you’ by being a good team.”

Doughty will not play for the Kings in their exhibition on Saturday in Las Vegas but could get a few minutes of playing time in their final preseason game, on Tuesday in Hamburg, Germany.

He became the NHL’s third-highest-paid defenseman –- in terms of average salary -– and Murray did not think there would be any lingering animosity from the fans because of Doughty’s holdout.

“There shouldn’t be any animosity whatsoever,” Murray said. “This is just business in pro sports today. Players and the agent doing what they feel they feel they need to do in order to get a contract resolved. It happens. He was not [saying,] ‘I don’t want to play.’ He wants to be an L.A. King. That was always his priority to stay here and be a player for this hockey team. He didn’t miss time or any games.”

 -- Lisa Dillman

Tailgating Recipes: Crab Gumbo

The Quad, the Times’s college sports blog, is running recipes submitted by readers for football tailgating parties. So far this season, we’ve offered up a Brat Stew and a Cheddar, Bacon and Ranch appetizer from college fans. This week, it’s an N.F.L. fan who submitted a southern crab gumbo. It’s not too late to submit your own recipe for barbecue or chowder, or whatever makes your pregame feast tasty.

NBA lockout: Delonte West gets another job

Photo: Delonte West, right, dives for the ball. Credit: Mark Duncan / Associated Press.
During the NBA lockout, Delonte West is taking a different route than many of his co-workers. He's decided to sell furniture.

The extended respite from the game has inspired various reactions from the tall, highly athletic men of the NBA. Metta World Peace is attempting to sing, dance and make people laugh -- this time purposely. Kobe Bryant is continually embroiled in rumors about playing abroad for copious amounts of money. West is going another way.

The guard, who played for the Boston Celtics last season, tweeted Wednesday that he had been hired by Regency Furniture Showrooms, a furniture chain with stores in Maryland, Virginia and Washington, D.C. He even tweeted pictures of his first day at work, though if you try and click on one you might see a floating astronaut and a bubble that says "Epic fail! Our servers are experiencing critical mass."

According to Regency's official website, the store sells "living room, dining room, kitchen, office and bedroom furniture," along with mattresses and accessories.

While applying for the gig, West had to check "Yes" when asked if he's ever been committed of a crime. He was arrested in 2009 after police found guns in a guitar case on his motorcycle.

The seven-year NBA veteran has career averages of 9.7 points and 3.7 assists per game. West appeared in 24 games for the Celtics last season.

He's not the first NBA player to take a retail job. World Peace applied for a job at Circuit City during his rookie season with Chicago so he could get a discount on home electronics. On the application, he wrote "NBA player" and he used Bulls president Jerry Krause as a reference.

MORE:

Bryant reportedly to play for Virtus Bologna

Kobe Bryant on playing in Italy: It's 'very possible'

Kobe Bryant criticizes Shaquille O'Neal's work ethic again

-- Melissa Rohlin

Photo: Delonte West, right, dives for the ball during a game when he was with the Cleveland Cavaliers. Credit: Mark Duncan / Associated Press

Mercedes GP add some more big names as they scrabble to catch up


Interesting news this morning that Mercedes GP have signed two of Formula One's technical big-hitters in Geoff Willis and Aldo Costa.


Big hitters, yes, but also with major points to prove. Costa, formerly Ferrari's technical director, left Maranello in May following their poor start to the season. Willis, meanwhile, has most recently been working with the struggling HRT team as a consultant.


Both will want to remind their old teams as well as their new bosses at Brackley that they are still at the top of their game.


Costa, remember, was a key member of the Ferrari design office under technical director Ross Brawn and chief designer Rory Byrne when they were dominating F1 in the early 2000s. So he is rejoining both Brawn and Michael Schumacher at Mercedes.


Willis is one of the sport's most respected aerodynamicists having worked under Adrian Newey at Red Bull and also at Williams during their successful years in the mid-1990s. Willis was also technical director of the BAR and Honda teams in the early 2000s.


It all adds up to some major restructuring at Mercedes GP where Brawn is adamant that – with Bob Bell having arrived from Renault as technical director – he now has the correct team in place and can begin to add to the head count to bring it up to the RRA limit. The Brackley team had shrunk massively in the wake of Honda's departure from F1.


The big teams, Brawn has pointed out, are still on a glide path  of reduction in line with the RRA so his hope is that they will soon be on an even keel. After a second disappointing season in a row in 2011, Mercedes' bosses at Daimler and the team's backers in the Middle East will hope likewise.



Week 4 N.F.L. Matchups

Jets (2-1) at Ravens (2-1)
Sunday, 8:20 p.m.
Line: Ravens by 3.5.

Any team coached by a member of the Ryan family does not so much play a 16-game schedule as careen from bitter rivalry to bitter rivalry, each game becoming the kind of over-boiled grudge match usually settled with suplexes and folding chairs at ringside. It happened to Buddy Ryan’s Eagles, and it has happened to Rex Ryan’s Jets.
Jets-Cowboys becomes Rex Ryan against Rob Ryan. Jets-Patriots becomes Rex Ryan against Bill Belichick. Jets-Ravens devolves into Rex Ryan against the team that declined to promote him to head coach when he was its defensive coordinator. Next time the Jets face the Raiders, it will be Rex Ryan against the team that broke his quarterback’s nose. Even Rex Ryan could not muster a feud with the Jaguars, but Joe Namath got into the act this week, so if you play the current Jets against the 1968 version in a video game, that is now a grudge match, too.
Granted, the presence of the ex-Ravens Bart Scott, Jim Leonhard and Derrick Mason on the Jets roster does give the game a familiarity-breeds-contempt angle. “This is a family game, but it’s also a heated rivalry,” said Ravens defensive end Terrell Suggs, perhaps not realizing that Jets charity softball tournaments are also heated rivalries. “You’ve got to go beat up on the ones you love.” In other words, this time it’s personal. Just like all the other times. Pick: Jets.

Steelers (2-1) at Texans (2-1)
Sunday, 1 p.m.
Line: Texans by 4.

The season often starts this way for the Steelers. They grind out a couple of seemingly difficult wins against bad teams. They lose to the Ravens, or someone Ravens-like. We question their offensive line and remark that the team is not deploying the classic Steelers running game, because in Pittsburgh it is always 1978 and the only way to win is to hand off 40 times.
The Steelers have had a suspect offensive line for the entire Ben Roethlisberger era, made worse by Roethlisberger’s belief that getting rid of the ball on time causes back pimples. Bruce Arians has been the offensive coordinator for five years, and he has always been more pass-oriented than the guys with Franco Harris collector’s edition beer steins would like. The Steelers have reached two Super Bowls in four years through a succession of ugly wins. It is time to stop being surprised. Pick: Steelers.

Lions (3-0)  at Cowboys (2-1)
Sunday, 1 p.m.
Line: Cowboys by 1.

The Cowboys botched several center snaps on Monday night, and Tony Romo knows why: the Redskins were imitating his pre-snap cadence. That’s right: there is a Romo voice impersonator on the Redskins, or perhaps the team purchased one of those “Romo Calls” from a sporting goods store (“Blow into it, and American Idol runners-up flock to your position!”) The Romo Karaoke did not stop the Cowboys’ six field goals because no one knows what kicker Dan Bailey sounds like. (The holder Mat McBriar actually calls for the snap, but his voice was a mystery, too.)
Lions wide receiver Calvin Johnson scored two touchdowns in each of his first three games, in part because opponents have an illogical impulse to leave him single-covered in clutch situations. The Cowboys will not make that mistake. “You always have to account for Calvin,” safety Gerald Sensabaugh said. Maybe he should tell the Vikings and the Chiefs. Pick: Cowboys.

Panthers (1-2) at Bears (1-2)
Sunday, 1 p.m.
Line: Bears by 6.5.

It’s time for advanced algebra with Mike Martz. Let x represent the amount of control Martz has over an offensive gameplan. Let f(x) represent running plays and g(x) represent passing plays. As x increases, the ratio of f(x) to g(x) is an asymptote approaching zero. Meanwhile, h(x), Lovie Smith’s blood pressure, and p(x), Jay Cutler’s health insurance premiums, increase exponentially. We would compute the rate of change in the Bears’ playoff hopes as Martz’s influence increases, but this is no place for derivative humor. For the Bears, Martz and his 4-to-1 pass-run ratios will always be an x-factor. Pick: Panthers.

Bills (3-0) at Bengals (1-2)
Sunday, 1 p.m.
Line: Bills by 3.

“The fandemonium is running high in Buffalo,” began a WIVB television segment about the Bills early last week. The nearly three-minute segment revealed that Bills merchandise is flying off the shelves, that Ryan Fitzgerald jerseys are on back order, that Bills fans are hanging out at the bar more but drinking less (“They don’t have to drink away their sorrows,” said the tavern manager Jill Vecchio, after wiping a bar top that looked perfectly clean in the first place) and that there is precious little else to talk about in greater Buffalo besides a three-game winning streak. One fan was said to be heading to an “exclusive Bills-only watering hole in Florida,” which makes you wonder how some business models survive the recession while other, saner ones fail. Pick: Bills.

Patriots (2-1) at Raiders (2-1)
Sunday, 4:15 p.m.
Line: Patriots by 4.

Raiders linebacker Rolando McClain said during the week that the Patriots were “just a finesse team.” Tom Brady, perhaps realizing that the criticism hit too close to home, immediately consented to the most famous buzzcut since Elvis Presley was drafted in 1957. The high ‘n’ tight Brady can take solace in the fact that only successful teams are accused of being “finesse,” often by grumbling opponents who fail to notice that their own offenses consist largely of end-arounds and cutesy option plays. Pick: Patriots.

Redskins (2-1) at Rams (0-3)
Sunday, 1 p.m.
Line: Redskins by 1.5.

Like the first frost of autumn, the first unhinged DeAngelo Hall rant was late to arrive this year. But once it came, it delivered everything we have come to expect in a Redskins player interview: frustration, profanity and more than a hint of insubordination. Hall criticized the coordinator Jim Haslett’s blitz packages, saying “you don’t have to be a rocket scientist to figure it out after a while.” Rocket scientists could not track a 6.5-ton satellite as it crashed to the earth last week, so they might find Haslett’s defense rather befuddling. Rams quarterback Sam Bradford has a degree in that most reliably predictive of all disciplines (finance), which may explain why he so often looks surprised. Pick: Redskins

49ers (2-1) at Eagles (1-2)
Sunday, 1 p.m.
Line: Eagles by 8.5.

X-rays on Michael Vick’s right hand revealed that the Eagles’ linebackers are terrible. The Eagles took eventual action, benching Casey Matthews in favor of Brian Rolle in a panic-scented move. Vick says that there is a “100 percent chance” he will play despite a tender nonthrowing hand. Speaking of percentages, the folks at FootballOutsiders.com have determined that the 49ers have a 74.7 percent chance of reaching the postseason; only the Packers and the Lions have better odds. The percentages are determined by feeding statistics and schedules to a computer, watching as the computer gains sentience and weeps at the fate of the Seahawks, the Cardinals and the Rams, then drawing the obvious conclusion. Pick: Eagles.

Vikings (0-3) at Chiefs (0-3)
Sunday, 1 p.m.
Line: Vikings by 1.5.

The Vikings have now blown halftime leads of 17-7, 17-0, and 20-0, and have been outscored, 67-6, in second halves and overtime. Coach Leslie Frazier and the offensive coordinator Bill Musgrave have made plenty of questionable decisions late in games. Why leave Calvin Johnson single-covered in overtime? Why work Adrian Peterson into the ground, then hand off to Toby Gerhart on fourth-and-1? The Vikings can defeat the Chiefs without solving these riddles. After that, their fans are advised to tape the games and watch them backward so they can enjoy the spirited comebacks. Pick: Vikings.

Saints (2-1) at Jaguars (1-2)
Sunday, 1 p.m.
Line: Saints by 7.

The Jaguars defensive coordinator Mel Tucker tore a quadriceps muscle while goofing off with other coaches after practice. Coach Jack Del Rio talked Tucker and the offensive coordinator Dirk Koetter into fielding punts from a JUGS machine, and things went horribly awry. Thank heavens they did not opt for skeet shooting instead. Del Rio was later seen grabbing the JUGS machine by the collar, getting up in its grill and shouting “You fool! That ball was meant for Koetter!” Tucker will miss this week’s game, but defensive coordinators do not do much against the Saints anyway, except stand around and contemplate futility. Pick: Saints.

Titans (2-1) at Browns (2-1)
Sunday, 1 p.m.
Line: Browns by 1.

The Titans’ passing attack has been surprisingly efficient in the early weeks, but that may change now that Kenny Britt has torn an anterior cruciate ligament. Britt had 17 receptions for 289 yards and 3 touchdowns, picking up much of the offensive slack left by Chris Johnson, who is still struggling to average more than one body length per carry. “It’s not like we can magically create another Kenny Britt,” quarterback Matt Hasselbeck said during the week. If they could, the Titans would win the first-ever Nobel Prize in Traffic Violations. Pick: Browns.

Falcons (1-2) at Seahawks (1-2)
Sunday, 4:05 p.m.
Line: Falcons by 4.5.

The Falcons have surrendered 13 sacks in three games, prompting Coach Mike Smith to consider personnel changes: left tackle Sam Baker is a leading candidate to be benched if there is trouble Sunday. Meanwhile, on the police blotter, kicker Matt Bryant got his stolen golf clubs back. A Chinese food deliveryman swiped the clubs from Bryant’s garage, then traded the clubs for drugs — who knew there was even an exchange rate? The police eventually tracked the stolen clubs by their serial numbers on the Internet, untangling one of the most pathetic webs of crime ever spun. Bryant’s prized Scotty Cameron putter, like the Falcons’ pass protection, was still missing at press time. Pick: Falcons.

Giants (2-1) at Cardinals (1-2)
Sunday, 4:05 p.m.
Line: Giants by 1.

The Giants’ injury report arrived in the in-box this week, and it did not crash the server, there was no “low memory” error and there was no need to change toner cartridges twice while printing it up. Those are positive signs: Mario Manningham and Osi Umenyiora are back at practice, and additions are finally starting to outnumber subtractions. Eli Manning is fifth in the league in quarterback rating, and the Giants host the Seahawks after Sunday’s journey to Arizona, where Kevin Kolb is fading a little every week, running back Beanie Wells is banged up and the local fans are distracted by the Diamondbacks. At this rate, Tom Coughlin may be almost cheerful by November. Pick: Giants.

Dolphins (0-3) at Chargers (2-1)
Sunday, 4:15 p.m.
Line: Chargers by 7.

Reggie Bush Rationalization Season is upon us, a time to examine all of the underlying reasons for Bush’s slow start while missing the main reason: he simply is not very good. “This last game, I got caught pressing. I’ve got to be patient,” Bush said Wednesday. And the Wednesday before that. And most Wednesdays in 2009 and 2010. Tony Sparano wants his staff to “do a better job of getting Reggie in space, try to get Reggie touches early.” Bush fumbled twice in the first half against the Browns, once on a pitch to the outside that gave him plenty of space in which to bobble. The Dolphins signed running back Steve Slaton this week. He’s a small, shifty back who has had some brushes with greatness but has reliability issues. They must be trying to complete the set. Pick: Chargers.

Broncos (1-2) at Packers (3-0)
Sunday, 4:15 p.m.
Line: Packers by 12.5.

The Packers’ midweek injury list was long. Running back Ryan Grant (kidneys) and tackle Bryan Bulaga (knee) are unlikely to play. Tight end Jermichael Finley and three key players in the secondary (Nick Collins, Charles Woodson and Tramon Williams) were all either out or limited in practice as of Wednesday. The Packers had a similar injury rash last season, and they won the Super Bowl by replacing their starters with other team’s castoffs. Any general manager who releases a practice squad player right now is simply playing into Ted Thompson’s hands. Pick: Packers.

Colts (0-3) at Buccaneers (2-1)
Monday, 8:30 p.m.
Line: Buccaneers by 10.

The two franchises that Tony Dungy helped to build are going in different directions. The Buccaneers are an up-and-coming team with lots of quality players but few superstars. The Colts are scotch-taping Kerry Collins together in what is becoming an increasingly depressing farce of an effort to survive without Peyton Manning. Dungy has become a best-selling author since leaving the Colts back when Manning was healthy and the supporting cast was capable. Dungy’s next inspirational book should be titled “Distancing Yourself from Disaster.” Pick: Buccaneers.

Rangers Set Lines in Prague; Staal Resumes Skating

In a game far, far away from Manhattan, and not even available to the faithful via Web stream in North America, Rangers Coach John Tortorella decided to play his projected top forward lines together for the first time in training camp. Well, almost.

The Rangers defeated Sparta Prague HC, 2-0, on Thursday at Tesla Arena in the Czech Republic. They did so playing three and two-thirds of the four lines Tortorella would like to have when the regular season opens Oct. 7 with a game against the Los Angeles Kings in Stockholm. The trios:

Wojtek Wolski – Brad Richards – Marian Gaborik

Brandon Dubinsky – Artem Anisimov – Ryan Callahan

Ruslan Fedotenko – Derek Stepan – Mats Zuccarello

Mike Rupp – Erik Christensen – Brandon Prust

Eleven of the 12 forwards in Prague figure to be the Rangers’ regulars at forward. The lone exception is Christensen, a slippery puck-handler who is money in the shootout but not as consistent when six players from each team are on the ice. The 6-foot-7 center Brian Boyle, who scored 21 goals in a breakthrough season in 2010-11, is much more likely to be in Christensen’s place.

In the victory over Sparta Prague, Anisimov and Fedotenko scored second-period goals and Martin Biron stopped 23 shots for the shutout.

Progress for Staal: The Rangers said that defenseman Marc Staal (concussion symptoms) would practice on Friday with the Connecticut Whale, the club’s American Hockey League affiliate in Hartford. The Rangers hope Staal can rejoin them in Europe for the start of the regular season. “We’ll see how he reacts,” Tortorella said. “If it’s positive results, we’ll get him here.”

THE GAMES

The Rangers will play Friday against Frolunda, Henrik Lundqvist’s former Swedish Elite League team. The goalie is expected to start the game, which will be broadcast live at 1 p.m. Eastern on MSG Network. The Rangers will complete their preseason schedule with games Sunday in Slovakia against HC Slovan and Monday in Switzerland against EV Zug.

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The Devils lost, 2-1, in Philadelphia on Thursday on a game-winning power-play goal by Jaromir Jagr with just over 7 minutes left in the third period. The good news for the Devils was the strong play of Martin Brodeur, the 39-year-old goaltender for three Stanley Cup champions in New Jersey. Watch Brodeur slide post-to-post on this save on Jagr off a feed from Braydon Coburn.

New Jersey closes out its exhibition schedule this weekend with a pair of games at the Prudential Center in Newark, Friday against the Islanders and Saturday against the Flyers. Coach Pete DeBoer will likely make his final roster decisions on Monday so he can put the chosen 22 players through a full week of practice. The Devils open the regular season Oct. 8 at home against Philadelphia.

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After the matchup in New Jersey on Friday, the Islanders play their final exhibition game on Saturday in Bridgeport, Conn., against the Boston Bruins. Coach Jack Capuano has his top two lines virtually set:

Matt Moulson – John Tavares – P.A. Parenteau

Michael Grabner – Frans Nielsen – Kyle Okposo

Capuano is still giving 19-year-old Nino Niederreiter a look in Parenteau’s place on the third line. With the exceptional puck-moving defenseman Mark Streit back after missing all of last season with a shoulder injury, the Islanders should have no problem scoring goals at even strength and on the power play. The challenge will be keeping opponents from scoring. Veteran defenseman Milan Jurcina, a 6-4 stalwart in his team’s end who played only 46 games last season because of an assortment of ailments, is sidelined with a groin strain suffered in the Islanders’ 2-0 loss in Calgary on Tuesday.

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