Friday, November 18, 2011

UCLA, Lakers standout Walt Hazzard dies

Walt-hazzard1

Former UCLA standout and Lakers guard Walt Hazzard died Friday from complications following heart surgery. He was 69.

Hazzard, who was part of UCLA's first NCAA championship team in 1964 under Coach John Wooden, is considered one of the best point guards in the Bruins' history. He averaged 18.6 points a game as senior, leading the Bruins to a 30-0 record and the national title.

Walt-hazzard2Hazzard was selected college basketball's player of the year in 1964, averaging 19.8 points a game in the postseason.

Photos: Walt Hazzard | 1942-2011

“Walt was one of the pillars of UCLA's first championship team in men's basketball,” current UCLA Coach Ben Howland said. “He was a great player and an outstanding coach at UCLA. He is a huge part of the Bruin legacy, and he left life-long memories for the Bruin faithful.”

Hazzard went on to help the U.S. win a gold medal at the 1964 Olympics in Tokyo before being selected first overall in the NBA draft that year by the Lakers. He played 10 years in the NBA, averaging 12.6 points and 4.9 assists during his career.

After retiring he returned to UCLA and coached the men's basketball team for four seasons, posting a 77-74 record. He was replaced by Jim Harrick for the 1988-89 season.

Hazzard, who had his jersey retired by the Bruins in 1996, also suffered a stroke that same year.

"This is a sad day for the UCLA basketball family," Bruins Athletic Director Dan Guerrero said.

We'll have more on Hazzard's passing soon at latimes.com/sports.

ALSO:

Photos: Walt Hazzard through the years

T.J. Simers: It could be happy holidays for NBA fans

UCLA is in control of its Pac-12 football destiny

Matt Kemp signs $160-million deal with Dodgers

-- Austin Knoblauch

Photos: (Top) Walt Hazzard, right, accepts the AP All-America award presented by Sports Editor Robert Myers at a banquet on April 11, 1964 in Westwood. Credit: Ed Widdis / Associated Press. (Bottom) Bruins guard Walt Hazzard in action during a game in 1962. Credit: Associated Press.

NCAA begins inquiry into Penn State child sexual abuse scandal

Emmert3
After weeks of sitting on the sideline, it appears the NCAA is ready to dive headlong into the Penn State child sexual abuse scandal.

NCAA President Mark Emmert sent a letter to newly appointed Penn State President Rod Erickson informing him that the governing body for college sports is looking into whether the school broke any rules during its handling of the case, which cost coach Joe Paterno his job.

Emmert wrote that the NCAA will examine how Penn State operates its athletics program and what role that played in the case of former assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky, who has been arrested and charged with 40 counts of child sex abuse.

Emmert told the Associated Press this is not a formal investigation, but there is a chance it could develop into one. He has given the university until Dec. 16 to respond to several of his questions.

"We have to examine those facts and make a thoughtful determination of what is covered by our bylaws and what is not," Emmert said.

Rate This Jets Loss

A little free therapy for Jets fans … (It’s best to let it all out.)

What one play infuriated you the most from Thursday night’s loss at Denver?
(Non-Jets fans can play along, especially if you felt that the better team didn’t win.)

Mac from Atlanta, a Jets fan and Fifth Down commenting stalwart, gets us started. In another post, he pointed out two plays – the Mark Sanchez interception-turns-into-touchdown and this one:

The Jets’ second-to-last drive, where they had the ball at midfield and had a chance to run out most of the clock. After a short run and an incompletion: on 3rd and long as the Jets lined up, Brandon Moore pointed out an overload blitz from the right. Sanchez did not recognize it and adjust, rushed the throw and it went incomplete. Poor awareness and lack of adjustment meant a quick 3 and out. Granted those were only two plays, but to me they symbolize the problems with the offense this season.

Extra point Were does this game rank among the worst regular-season losses of the Rex Ryan era? It seems to be fairly competitive in that category with the blowout loss at New England last season (humiliating but the Jets were on their way to an 11-5 record) and the defeat at home to Atlanta the year before (after which Ryan incorrectly declared the Jets’  season over).

Week 11 Matchups: Ugly but Effective

Chargers (4-5) at Bears (6-3)
Sunday, 4:15 p.m.
Line: Bears by 3.5.

Lovie Smith does not get the credit he deserves. His coaching staff is filled with temperamental geniuses who have impulse control issues. The offense is loaded with divas: when Roy Williams comes across as normal, you know you are dealing with some Timothy Leary-level team chemistry. On paper, Smith’s blitzed-up take on the stodgy Cover-2 defense, built around the talents of 30-something linebackers, looks about as dangerous as a Toyota Celica with mag wheels. This is a team that strives to beat opponents with punt returns, for heaven’s sake. Yet Smith has coaxed winning records out of this collection of disparate parts and quarrelsome personalities four times in the last six years, and he currently has a team that was universally overlooked in the preseason in the thick of the wild-card race.
Norv Turner has also mixed playoff runs with .500 seasons during his Chargers tenure, but he has done so under much more favorable conditions: his division is much softer, he has an indisputable franchise quarterback and he does not have to hold the reins on assistants like Mike Martz. Turner needs everything to break right to win, and this year nothing has. The Chargers’ offensive line has been torn apart by injuries, with Marcus McNeill (neck) and Louis Vasquez (foot) unlikely to play Sunday and the All-Pro Kris Dielman (concussion) out for the year. Philip Rivers’ mysterious slump is not so mysterious when his blockers are Brandyn Dombrowski and Scott Mruczkowski and his receivers include castoffs like Patrick Crayton. Turner cannot win when his quarterback is throwing interceptions, whereas Smith is only now learning what it is like to win otherwise: that is as clear a contrast as you need between these two teams. Pick: Bears.

Eagles (3-6) at Giants (6-3)
Sunday, 8:20 p.m.
Line: Giants by 4.5.

Andy Reid’s Traveling Cautionary Tale Tent Revival has arrived in town, and we are celebrating with a trivia quiz! Match the following Eagles Dream Teamers — a.) Nnamdi Asomugha, b.) Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie, c.) Steve Smith, d.) Ronnie Brown, e.) Vince Young, f.) Jason Babin — with their unique accomplishments this season:
1.) I chase receivers with the enthusiasm of a teenager walking to the principal’s office after a food fight. 2.) My quarterback rating of 0.0 is lower than the punter’s, and I may be starting on Sunday! 3.) I line up offsides when not inexplicably covering Cardinals receivers not named Larry Fitzgerald. 4.) I am among the league leaders with nine penalties this season. 5.) I crumple untouched after catches in the open field as if the yellow television first-down line is real and made of plutonium. 6.) I throw the ball straight into the air while being tackled at the goal line.
There is also an essay: Explain how Andy Reid can simultaneously justify a 42-16 pass-run ratio when Michael Vick (questionable) has broken ribs, and grow testy when his reasoning is questioned.
The answers: 1-b, 2-e, 3-a, 4-f, 5-c, 6-d. If you need reasons why Giants General Manager Jerry Reese did not dive headfirst into the free-agent pool this off-season, here are six of them. The Reid essay has no right answer.
Standard warning: the Eagles, like poorly-constructed playground equipment, can still be dangerous. Pick: Giants.

Buccaneers (4-5) at Packers (9-0)
Sunday, 1 p.m.
Line: Packers by 14.

Like a flabby Hope Diamond, Albert Haynesworth is a fascinating, oversized trinket that brings nothing but misery to anyone foolish enough to acquire him. The Buccaneers signed Haynesworth and immediately inserted him into their defensive line; the results were 185 yards rushing allowed and a 37-9 loss. The Patriots, meanwhile, improved as soon as they rid themselves of Haynesworth. That is not scientific proof that Haynesworth is cursed, but perhaps he should be placed in the Smithsonian until there are further studies.
Aaron Rodgers has thrown just 18 incomplete passes in the last three games. One of those passes was a spike to stop the clock, three were throws out of bounds and four were dropped by open receivers. Count the drops as completions and take away the spike, and Rodgers’ completion percentage in the last three weeks is 84.7 percent. Some football stat-heads will tell you that completion percentage is a meaningless metric. That is true about 84.7 percent of the time. Pick: Packers.

Titans (5-4) at Falcons (5-4)
Sunday, 4:15 p.m.
Line: Falcons by 6.

Advanced statistical analysis reveals that going for it on fourth-and-1 from your own 29-yard line in overtime results in a 99.9 percent chance of a full week of second guessing. Mike Smith had probability on his side when he made his doomed decision against the Saints. He also had the league’s worst punter (Matt Bosher) facing one of the league’s best return men (Darren Sproles), so he may have feared a rare-but-traumatizing Dodge-to-DeSean punting gaffe when he made the call. Mathematicians call it the Black Swan Theory, because rookie punters can make experienced coaches wish they were watching Natalie Portman movies instead of football games.
The Titans and the Falcons are now second-place teams behind flawed, injury-plagued divisional front-runners who have byes. As compelling as this game may be, the real action is in the training and meeting rooms of the Saints and the Texans, where Sean Payton tries to cope with injuries to himself and others, and Matt Leinart acquaints himself with the children’s menu of the Texans’ playbook (“I can’t decide between the Donald Duck Zone Stretch to Arian Foster and the Andy Panda iso to Ben Tate!”) Pick: Falcons.

Bills (5-4) at Dolphins (2-7)
Sunday, 1 p.m.
Line: Dolphins by 2.

Having unsuccessfully game-planned for one opponent per week for most of the season, Dolphins coaches are preparing for two: the Bills on Sunday, and the Cowboys on Thanksgiving. “It’s tough because coaches can’t keep it to one game at a time,” Coach Tony Sparano said. “You can shrink it to the players. The only thing they’ll know is Buffalo and getting ready for Buffalo.” Shrink the Dolphins’ game plan too far, and it collapses into a Brandon Marshall Singularity from which only dropped passes can escape.
The Dolphins have gotten help in their back-to-back victories from an unlikely source: Reggie Bush, perpetual disappointment and current front-runner for Best Supporting Actor in a Reality Television Divorce Fiasco. “Something’s gotten into him,” tackle Vernon Carey said of Bush, who has run for 242 yards and 3 touchdowns in three weeks. Work ethic? Dignity? The realization that his name comes up more often on E! than ESPN has probably put a little spring in his step. Pick: Bills.

Cowboys (5-4) at Redskins (3-6)
Sunday, 1 p.m.
Line: Cowboys by 7.5.

The rookie sensation DeMarco Murray has rushed for 601 yards in the last four games, but that does not mean he has earned a starting job. Felix Jones may soon return from an ankle injury, and Cowboys Coach Jerry Jones (if he is not going to pretend otherwise then neither are we) gave conflicting reports during the week about how the carries will be divided when Felix Jones returns. “I haven’t seen enough of DeMarco,” Jones said, though he later explained that Murray would still get the bulk of the carries. That makes Felix Jones the nominal starter, an important position held by his predecessors, Julius Jones and Marion Barber. The nominal starter’s job is to not be as good as the backup, yet still lay claim to the starting role, allowing Jerry Jones to sound sagacious and quasi-mysterious when discussing his roster decisions during news conferences.
The twice-annual Cowboys-Redskins games serve the important purpose of making the Cowboys organization appear functional and sane by comparison. Pick: Cowboys.

Raiders (5-4) at Vikings (2-7)
Sunday, 1 p.m.
Line: Raiders by 1.

Both the Raiders rookie receiver Denarius Moore and the Vikings rookie tight end Kyle Rudolph made spectacular one-handed catches in prime-time games last week. While Rudolph has been a bright spot for the Vikings, Moore has kept the Raiders in the playoff picture by giving Carson Palmer exactly what he needs, on and off the field. “Denarius Moore doesn’t say anything,” Palmer told The San Francisco Chronicle. Having spent a year living through “The T.Ocho Show,” Palmer deserves a little therapeutic silence. Pick: Raiders.

Panthers (2-7) at Lions (6-3)
Sunday, 1 p.m.
Line: Lions by 7.

Lions Coach Jim Schwartz said that the 22-m.p.h. winds at Soldier Field, not a finger injury, hampered quarterback Matthew Stafford in the Lions’ 37-13 loss to the Bears. “The wind affected his actual throwing,” Schwartz said. “I don’t think it had anything to do with the actual finger.” Stafford’s virtual throwing and hypothetical finger were not affected. Schwartz also said that his team “didn’t respond well” to turnovers. Considering how often their games end in brawls, it is not clear if the Lions respond well to anything. Pick: Lions.

Jaguars (3-6) at Browns (3-6)
Sunday, 1 p.m.
Line: Even.

Two of the people on the following list are not on the Jaguars’ active roster. Can you spot them? The list: Guy Whimper, Leger Douzable, Julius Strangepork, John Chick, Cecil Shorts, Danny Rebus. Give up? Whimper, Douzable, Chick and Shorts are all real-life Jaguars. Rebus is a character on the new “Electric Company,” and Strangepork was the medical officer on “Pigs in Space.” Give the Jaguars credit for at least adding a little flair to their anonymity. Pick: Browns.

Bengals (6-3) at Ravens (6-3)
Sunday, 1 p.m.
Line: Ravens by 7.

Ray Rice carried the ball just five times in last Sunday’s loss to the Seahawks, which can only mean one thing: Andy Reid sneaked into John Harbaugh’s briefcase and fiddled with his game plans. Rice was steamed, and he did not talk to reporters after the game, explaining later that locker-room frustration “leads to disaster, leads to trouble, leads to people pointing fingers,” And disaster, trouble, and finger-pointing lead to extra-awesome game capsules! C’mon, Ray, some of us are trying to earn a living here. Pick: Ravens.

Seahawks (3-6) at Rams (2-7)
Sunday, 4:05 p.m.
Line: Rams by 1.5.

All four N.F.C. West teams won last week, the kind of cosmic convergence that makes you want to climb into a teepee and listen to old Yes albums until the lyrics make sense. The schedulers knew we could only take so much, so the N.F.C. West teams all face each other this week in a kind of toddler swim meet. The Rams have scored 13 points in back-to-back games, so it can be argued that their offense has found consistency, though 4 of those points came from their defense. The Seahawks are nearly unbeatable when you turn the ball over to them in the red zone three times. Pick: Rams.

Cardinals (3-6) at 49ers (8-1)
Sunday, 4:05 p.m.
Line: 49ers by 9.5.

A predictable, rather sad quarterback controversy is brewing in Arizona after John Skelton’s back-to-back wins over the Rams and the Eagles. It is hard not to go through the motions on the Skelton vs. Kevin Kolb debate. Fordham bona-fides aside, Skelton is an adequate backup at best, his performance against the Rams (two safeties!) was dreadful, and the Cardinals are terrible. This is controversy as reflex, the automatic need to yell, “He provided a spark!” after even the least convincing victory by the guy off the bench. Skelton can only be successful if he faces a Juan Castillo-coached defense every week, with Larry Fitzgerald covered by linebackers and All-Pro pass rushers lined up a quarter-mile away from the quarterback. The 49ers, who actually know how to use their defensive talent, will not be as obliging as the Eagles. Pick: 49ers.

Chiefs (4-5) at Patriots (6-3)
Monday, 8:30 p.m.
Line: Patriots by 15.

With Matt Cassel (hand) out indefinitely, the left-hander Tyler Palko takes over a Chiefs offense that has scored 13 points in the past two weeks. Todd Haley has reinstated his rotate-the-backfield lunacy, limiting the playing time of Jackie Battle (4.6 yards per carry) so he can find a role for Thomas Jones (2.9 yards per carry). So things are not going well for the Chiefs president, Scott Pioli, who may feel the urge to barricade himself inside his old office in Foxborough, Mass., and refuse to come out. Pick: Patriots.

Can the Packers Go Undefeated? (And Other Questions from Readers)

Judy Battista, who covers the N.F.L. for The Times, answers readers’ questions:

Six best teams in the A.F.C. right now?–zb, New York, N.Y.

Do I really have to commit to this in print (or the Internet)? I feel like this answer changes every week. Every team in the A.F.C. has at least three losses already, which means we don’t know much about who the dominant teams will be. But my six right now, in no particular order (and my answers could be different by the end of Sunday): Patriots, Steelers, Ravens, Texans, Oakland, and probably Bengals. The Jets would have been in that spot before Thursday night’s disaster.

Can the Texans retain their dominance in the A.F.C. South (and A.F.C. as a whole) without their starting quarterback at the helm?–bearTrapster, San Antonio

I don’t think we can answer this until next week, when we see how Matt Leinart looks. But certainly the Texans a few things going for them: a really good running game and a really good defense. That should help take the pressure off Leinart. They can certainly win the A.F.C. South – that’s a two-team race and the Titans have been erratic. Can they be dominant in the A.F.C.? That, I’m not sure of. If they get into high-scoring games with the Patriots or Steelers in the playoffs, for example, could Leinart keep up? Let’s wait and see. This is a tremendous opportunity for Leinart to resurrect his career.

Judy, do you think that the Jets will start looking at other possible candidates for QB as a possible alternative to Sanchez? Or are they going to keep all their eggs in his basket?–bigstevef, Grahamsville, N.Y.

No, I do not think they will look elsewhere. I think his recent play is a big, big concern – to my eye, he seems to be, at best, not improving and possibly regressing. Thursday’s performance was troubling, to say the least. He has no confidence, the coaches seem to have no confidence in him. But he has won four playoff games on the road in his first two years and they have gone to the A.F.C. Championship game twice. Yes, I know he had the benefit of a great defense and a good running game then. But to be fair, the troubles right now are not all Sanchez’s doing (although the pass that was intercepted and returned for a touchdown Thursday night – yikes!). The offensive line is definitely diminished, as is the running game.

Most of all, they have a lot invested in Sanchez. They traded up to draft him. They have paid him a lot of money. They have made him the face of the franchise – if anybody other than Rex can truly be the face of the franchise. And those playoff runs go a long way for team executives, even if Sanchez is now a significant concern. I can’t see them abandoning that after just three years.

The Packers are looking like the favorite to take the N.F.C. championship this year. Are there any other teams that look like they may be able to dethrone them?–Andrew S., NW Florida

Of course. First of all, one bad shot to Aaron Rodgers and the whole equation changes. But teams that could beat them: the Saints, because of their scoring ability; the Niners, because of their defense; the Giants, because of their pass rush. Let’s not forget, nobody thought the Patriots could be beaten in the Super Bowl three years ago.

The Eagles have landed.–Technic Ally, Toronto

With a thud.

Do you see the Jets holding onto Sanchez as their franchise quarterback? How bad would he have to be before they start searching for other options? He’s in this third season already, when can we expect to see some serious progress? Eli has improved every season and now he’s at the peak of his game, can we look at Sanchez in the same light?–Dan, Irkutsk, Russia

As I said above, I don’t see them giving up on him, considering they’ve won four playoff games on the road with him. I’m not sure you can say Eli improved every season – last year was a pretty bad year for interceptions, even though a bunch came on tipped passes. He is having an exceptional year this year, though. I’m not sure Sanchez will ever become the dominant kind of passer that Brady, Peyton Manning, Rodgers, Brees are, but he has elevated his game in the post-season the last two years and that’s a good sign. He has shown he can be a functional quarterback and when the Jets surround him with a good running game and a good defense they have proven they can go far with him.

Why the inflexibility of having flex scheduling for Sunday and Tuesday night? Can’t the league let the networks have their choice on Sunday and then allow NBC and ESPN choose from the rest for Sunday and Monday?–Waffle, Lincoln City, Ore.

I’m not sure I understand the question because there is no Tuesday night game. The idea of flex scheduling is to have the most critical games in prime time late in the season and to keep unimportant games out of prime time (for example, the Colts-Patriots game has already been moved out of prime time), while also allowing CBS and Fox to “protect” some games they don’t want to give up (like when the Giants play the Packers – that game would have been a no-brainer for NBC to take for Sunday night, but Fox “protected” it for itself). There are limits to the flexibility for a few reasons. Moving the game causes inconvenience for fans, who purchase tickets assuming they will be going to a game at the designated time, only to find out 10 days before that the time has changed. And I can’t imagine you could have games changing from Sunday to Monday or vice versa, because that creates travel chaos for teams, fans and the networks themselves on very short notice.

What’s your take on the Colts? It’s hard to believe Manning was solely responsible for lifting an otherwise atrocious team to elite status.–Mario, Brooklyn

Not that hard to believe that Manning elevated the whole enterprise, actually. Manning is an extraordinary player who has complete command of the offense and is intimately involved in putting the game plan together. The entire Colts roster was structured to enhance and exploit Manning and the passing game. They spent big on receivers, not on running backs. They didn’t have a big-time backup quarterback in place because Manning was an ironman until this season. They didn’t need a great running back, or a great run-blocking offensive line. They built a small, fast defense with the idea that they would most often be playing with a lead, so rushing the opposing passer would be paramount.

What really sent the Colts into a tailspin is that they realized very late that Manning was going to be unavailable. For most of the off-season, even when training camp started, they thought – at worst – that he might miss the first few weeks. But they only realized that he needed the third surgery a few days before the season started – not much time to find an experienced backup, nor get him ready, not make changes to the rest of the roster that could allow them to change styles of offense. They have some other talented players on the team – Reggie Wayne, Dallas Clark, Dwight Freeney, etc. – but all of what those guys do is set up by what Manning does.

Having said all that, did I expect the Colts to be winless? No way. Worse, they have started to look non-competitive, which to me is a sign that guys who have had very little experience with losing have started to give up and are now convinced they CAN’T win.

What’s the team to beat in the A.F.C.?–Justin, Quad Cities

Honestly, who knows? Just when you think we’ve established the best team in the conference, they lose – sometimes in confounding fashion. The Steelers looked dominant when they beat the Patriots, then they gave up a last-second touchdown to the Ravens at home and the Ravens look unstoppable. Until the Ravens lose to Seattle, one of the worst teams in the entire league. And then the Patriots dominated the Jets. That would have led me to believe that the Texans were the team to beat – they have been the most consistent, have a good running game, good passing game, very good defense. Except that now their starting quarterback, Matt Schaub, is done for the season. If I had to say right now, I’d probably pick the Steelers, because they seem most balanced, have an excellent quarterback and have proven they can win close games in the playoffs. But don’t hold me to that.

Do the 49ers re-sign Alex Smith after this season?–Gopal, San Francisco

Yes, I think definitely so. Harbaugh has worked wonders for Smith and the team likes the leadership role he took during the lockout when, as a free agent, he took it upon himself to learn the offense and lead workouts with players. They have to be considered a favorite to at least make the N.F.C. Championship game right now – how do you not re-sign the quarterback, who will come a lot cheaper than most, who gets you there, and give him a regular off-season under Harbaugh’s tutelage?

Where does Matt Flynn end up next season?–Cottsb, MN

Wow. It’s early for these kinds of questions. First we have to figure out at the end of the season how many teams need quarterbacks and then you have to gauge if those teams think he is better than what they can get out of the draft. If he gets no significant playing time this season, it’s awfully hard to judge his potential beyond being a backup.

Eli Manning has always shown consistent ability in executing the no-huddle, hurry-up, two minute offense. Why don’t the Giants use this attack more often, especially when they appear flat during extended periods in games?–Vincent, New York, N.Y.

Because that is not the team the Giants want to be. In the past, when they have gone to a more pass-heavy offense, it has not worked and they knew they had to go back to running more regularly. This is part of their overall philosophy of physical football, highlighted by a stout defense. The no-huddle is a great change-up for them and Eli does seem to execute it well and I agree that I’d like to see more of it when they look flat. But the Giants have their style and they’re sticking with it.

Despite all the talk that has started about the Packers going undefeated, I think back to the Patriots’ recent undefeated season and worry that the same thing could happen to the Packers, assuming they aren’t upset earlier in the playoffs.

What do you think are their chances for going 16-0? The game I’m most concerned about is Thanksgiving Day in Detroit. Wasn’t that their only loss in 1962? And wasn’t Lombardi so mad about it that he ended the Packers’ participation in the Thanksgiving Day game?–Art Kraus, Princeton, N.J.

I certainly agree that the Lions game seems like an obvious time for a loss, but the Packers also play the Giants in December in New York, plus have another game against the Bears, although it is at Lambeau. But I think their chances are pretty good that they go 16-0 as long as Aaron Rodgers does not get hurt. The Packers have a few advantages over the Patriots if they go undefeated – first of all, since the Patriots already completed an undefeated regular season, the Packers’ run at it won’t draw as much attention. And the Patriots’ made their run at perfection in the season that began with Spygate, which really ramped up the focus and pressure on the team. By this time in 2007, many national writers – myself included – were covering every Patriots game. That won’t happen for the Packers until very late. One more thing about the playoffs: We saw what happens when a team purposely loses a game in the regular season – the Colts did that and then made it to the Super Bowl and then lost. So there is no formula yet to finish a perfect season except the one by the 1972 Dolphins.

What’s your take on the Jets’ offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer? I feel that if they replaced him and allowed Mark Sanchez to pass more their offense would be more dynamic and he would progress further than he has already. It would give him more confidence and they could then beat teams like New England. Plus their running back Greene doesn’t seem to be the answer. And how about adding Randy Moss to the mix?–smolderingbrute, New York, N.Y.

After last night, I fear that you are curled up somewhere in the fetal position. Let’s get one thing out of the mix: Randy Moss? No. You already have combustible personalities in Plaxico Burress and Santonio Holmes and you want to add Randy Moss? No, no, no. And there is a reason Moss is not on a team now – teams think he is either done, or more trouble than he’s worth at this point in his career.

Moving on: I wonder if you think they should put the ball more in Sanchez’s hands after seeing how he played last night – that interception he threw was a killer, and a terrible decision on his part. It’s pretty clear the Jets coaches don’t have much confidence in Sanchez right now, and he’s giving them plenty of reason to feel that way. Don’t forget, they went with more passing earlier in the season and that didn’t work, so they went back to Ground and Pound. I’m not defending Schottenheimer – I don’t think the Jets’ offense has shown much rhythm this season no matter what they tried. But his play-calling is also a product of a quarterback who is not progressing, and an offensive line and running game that are not anywhere near the quality of last year’s.

The basic questions: What is the take on the Q.B.R. in the football world outside of ESPN? Have there been many instances of ratings which seem wildly off base to many observers?

The Back Story:

I stumbled upon an odd contrast in the course of discussing Tim Tebow’s Q.B.R. with some other bloggers. Tebow’s Q.B.R. ranking for the Week 9 Raiders game was 21 near the bottom of active QBs, and in the Chiefs game the following week he bounced up into elite company at number 7.

In the big picture Tebow’s performance looks roughly the same in these two Broncos victories. No turnovers and a low pass completion percentage combined with some impact plays in both phases of the offense. In two games that were controlled on the ground by the Broncos offense, Tebow’s rushing in the Raiders game (13 runs for 118 yards) was approximately double what he produced the following week in Kansas City. He had one bad sack (11 yds) and more penalties (delay of game) against the Raiders.

Basically you’ve got a QB who is making a major contribution to controlling the game, directly producing over 240 yards of offense with 2 TDs and zero turnovers. He is rated near the bottom of the league with guys who are destroying their teams with picks. The next week he plays the same type of game, weaker in some respects, and he’s near the top of the league.

The more you dig into a comparison between these two games the less convincing the Q.B.R. scores become. The relative weighting of rush versus pass and big plays versus small plays all might play a role in producing some odd results. I can’t help but wonder what questionable assumptions are built into ESPN’s breakdown of plays and their probability models. Penalties played an unusually large role in the Raiders game, and that might be an interesting anomaly. Shouldn’t a QB get some credit for defensive penalties directly related to attacking the QB or the passing game?–ianicol, Colorado

I haven’t studied ESPN’s formula enough to know how they arrive at their figures, but most players dismiss quarterback ratings of all kinds – even the traditional one used by the league raise eyebrows because of its skewed results — and I’m pretty certain the Broncos wouldn’t care what his rating is. The Broncos are 4-1 since Tebow became the starter and are, incredibly, in the A.F.C. playoff mix. That’s the only ranking that matters.

Why is “spiking” the ball not considered “intentional grounding?”–SL, Saratoga Springs, N.Y.

Because of the intent, which is usually pretty clear in both cases. Spiking is meant to stop the clock in a hurry-up situation. Intentional grounding is obviously an effort to avoid losing yardage by throwing the ball away to avoid a sack.

What records do you anticipate that Aaron Rodgers will break this season? Whichever ones he wants?–95711, Appleton, Wis.

I think it depends what kinds of games the Packers are in at the end of the season and if the Packers make the decision to give him some rest before the start of the playoffs. Marino’s record for single-season passing yards (5,084) is in reach, so is Drew Brees’s record for completion percentage (70.6), and so is Tom Brady’s passing touchdowns record (50), and Peyton Manning’s for passer rating (130.7). But again, the Packers are going to clinch early and depending on whether they are motivated to try for an undefeated season (or whether that is still in play late in December), they may opt to let Rodgers rest.

If the playoffs started today, the two wildcard teams would each come from the same division, in both conferences: Baltimore and Cincinnati in the A.F.C., Detroit and Chicago in the N.F.C. What is the likelihood of three teams from the same division (the division winner and two wildcards) all making the playoffs, and has that ever happened before?–zb, New York, N.Y.

It’s not quite as rare as you’d think. According to the Elias Sports Bureau, since 2002, when the division and playoff format changes, it’s happened three times. In 2007, the N.F.C. East and the A.F.C. South both produced three playoff teams. And in 2006, the N.F.C. East did it. Not surprisingly, it happened more frequently when the NFL had five-team divisions.

What do you think the Colts should do to rebound from this year’s disaster?–LM, Elgin, S.C.

One good thing about seasons like this: they remove all the varnish from a team. I don’t expect owner Jim Irsay to remove the Polians as the top decision-makers. Jim Caldwell and the entire coaching staff might pay the price, though. Then, assuming the team has the first pick, they have to take Andrew Luck. They will then have to decide what to do about Manning. Keep him and let him mentor Luck? Trade him? Let him go completely? But aside from the massive quarterback decision, there are many, many needs that haven’t been met over the years and which have been covered up by Manning’s brilliance. The offensive line, the defense as a whole, the running game. To prepare for life after Manning, whenever that moment arrives, the Colts have to become a more balanced team. Certainly if they have Luck, they will always be pass-first, but the Colts have proven the risk of leaning too heavily on just one person.

The Colts’ off-season will be one of the most fascinating in years, from the first decision about whether to keep Caldwell and the Polians, to the quarterback quandary to the moves they make in the draft and free agency.

Redefining Excellence, One Handoff at a Time

“He’s a winner.”

For many fans, that is the trump card in any discussion about N.F.L. quarterbacks, the kill shot that negates contrary arguments based on statistics, scouting reports or other empirical evidence. “So what if he generated only 225 yards of offense, scored just 10 points, and needs the entire playbook turned inside out to achieve even minimal success. He’s a winner. Case closed.”

The “he’s a winner” mantle is not new. It has been passed around for decades, from young quarterbacks to career backups on hot streaks. Now that Tim Tebow is wearing it, however, it has attained an almost hypnotic ability to overwhelm reason. The conscious mind cannot reconcile his 4-1 record as quarterback of the Broncos with his ineptitude as a passer, so the mind snaps and creates a narrative in which scoring 27 offensive points in two weeks is somehow a hallmark of excellence.

Tebow appears to be redefining the quarterback position in a way that renders passing, regularly sustaining drives and consistently scoring points irrelevant. He runs keepers and read-option plays. He hands off. He throws the occasional screen pass, often for minimal gain, and sometimes looks downfield in confusion before galloping out of the pocket. The Broncos shrug their shoulders and punt on most drives, typically trail at halftime, and remain in games only because their defense manages to hold opposing offenses well below 20 points.

Nothing that happens in a Broncos game is relevant until the fourth-quarter magic, some of which tangentially involves Tebow’s doing something good. Against the Dolphins, the Broncos recovered an onside kick, then an overtime fumble, then kicked a 52-yard field goal. The victory over the Raiders featured a punt return for a score and a 24-yard touchdown by running back Willis McGahee. The Chiefs game featured one long pass in the fourth quarter (Tebow’s second completion of the game) and an injury to Matt Cassel, which eliminated the threat of a Kansas City comeback. Denver’s final 95-yard drive against the Jets started with a receiver wriggling out of a tackle at his own 1. Tebow metes out two or three fine plays during these late victories, but they are the types of plays a good quarterback should routinely execute.

The Broncos’ victories are the obvious result of a great defense playing some terrible teams (Chiefs, Dolphins) or unprepared opponents (Jets, Raiders). But that is not how they are perceived. Instead, the familiar platitudes are marshaled.

“He makes plays when he has to,” except that in the N.F.L. you always have to, not just when there are 5 minutes 54 seconds to play. “He’s an incredible competitor,” but with the exception of Albert Haynesworth everyone who reaches the N.F.L. is an incredible competitor. Even if Tebow’s competitiveness goes up to 11 like Nigel Tufnel’s amplifier, it is minor compensation for the fact that even his own coach has said the Broncos cannot really throw the ball and hope to win. And of course, “he’s a winner,” which is solipsistic and inarguable.

Thursday was an ugly night for the Broncos’ offense. Denver converted exactly one first down before the final drive. Five times, the Broncos started drives in Jets territory, yet they entered the fourth quarter with 3 offensive points. Eight of the Broncos’ 12 possessions consisted of three or fewer plays. The Jets, meanwhile, could do nothing offensively, which is why they kept handing Tebow the ball around midfield. The question at the end of the game should not have been, “How did Tebow do it?” but “Why on earth did he have to?”

Watching Tebow play quarterback is like watching a television psychic perform a cold reading. He flails about, trying this strategy and that, looking lost and a little silly. Then suddenly, someone shouts, “That voice from the spirit world you are hearing whose first name begins with a J is my great-uncle Jasper!” Everyone gasps in awe and cheers wildly as Jasper delivers his otherworldly message of vagueness, and any skeptic who dares to point out the absurdity of it all is branded a hateful killjoy.

But quarterbacks with the “winner” label always cause headaches for the rational people among us. Fans eager to embrace a new hero apply the post hoc fallacy: the team won, therefore the quarterback must have done something wonderful. They mix in a little confirmation bias: those three good plays are a sign of greatness, so we can ignore the 53 bad ones. Communal reinforcement — even the guys on the talk radio show agree! — serves as a chaser. There is nothing wrong with any of this because fandom is about hope and emotional connections to players and teams, not rational thought. But to cut through the rhetoric and analyze and evaluate these quarterbacks, you are better off consulting the noted skeptics James Randi and Michael Shermer than the gang at ESPN.

If you need further proof that Tebow mania is just a new face on an old phenomenon, simply look at the quarterback who lost Thursday night’s game. Mark Sanchez was a “winner,” too, as recently as last year.

Remember the come-from-behind victories against the Lions and the Browns? The Sanchez bandwagon was in third gear after those games, explaining away three-plus quarters of inaccuracy and mediocrity. Many of the same experts who lauded Sanchez for his toughness, poise, leadership, courage and intangibles last year have been busily burying him in the last two weeks. Did Sanchez suddenly become less courageous and poised over the last 12 months? More likely, everyone saw, or pretended to see, something that was never there.

New York orders eye exam for Margarito, endangering Cotto rematch

MargaritobloodThe New York State Athletic Commission on Friday ordered a commission-authorized eye doctor to examen Antonio Margarito's right eye, raising doubts whether the Tijuana fighter would be issued a boxing license for his scheduled rematch against Miguel Cotto Dec. 3 at Madison Square Garden.

Margarito, who is training in Mexico for his bout against world super-welterweight champion  Cotto, will appear for the exam, his promoter Bob Arum said.

"We don't know when yet," Arum said Friday, shortly after the decision was announced by commission chairwoman Melvina Lathan. "Obviously, we'll go through the exam.

"We now have to work out the parameters of who the doctor is, how he'll be picked. We want him to be picked mutually."

Former world welterweight champion Margarito suffered a fractured orbital bone and developed a large cataract from his punishing loss to Manny Pacquiao in November, 2010. For months, there was talk that Margarito's career was over.

Arum, however, sent Margarito to an eye specialist at the prestigious Moran Eye Center in Utah, where a surgeon removed the cataract and said the fighter's vision would be strong enough to return to the ring.

"There's no longer an automatic rejection for cataract replacement surgery," Arum said. "We're confident [Margarito] is fine. [He was treated by ] the best eye doctor in the world."

Yet, Arum and others close to the fight were braced for New York to reject Margarito's bid for a license. And the promoter has discussed moving the HBO pay-per-view bout from New York -- where Cotto is an enormous draw -- to Texas, Denver or Mississippi.

The New York commission is also facing intense scrutiny over its decision, in part because Madison Square Garden is empty many nights because of the NBA lockout and the Cotto-Margarito bout is expected to be a sellout.

Margarito has said he's experienced no problems with his eye in training, and his surgeon from Utah, along with another expert, told the commission at a Wednesday hearing that he was fit to fight.

--Lance Pugmire   

Photo: Antonio Margarito suffers a beating in a loss to Manny Pacquiao in November, 2010. Credit:  Richard W. Rodriguez/Fort Worth Star-Telegram/MCT.

 

Syracuse assistant accused of molestation by ex-team ball boys

Bernie
Two former Syracuse ball boys allege that associate head basketball coach Bernie Fine molested them.

Syracuse placed Fine on administrative leave Thursday evening.

Bobby Davis, now 39, and Mike Lang, now 45, told ESPN that Fine used to reach into their shorts and grope them.

Davis says the abuse began when he began working for the team in 1984, while in seventh grade. Lang, who is Davis' stepbrother, said that Fine started molesting him when he was in fifth or sixth grade.

Police told ESPN that they are in the early stages of an investigation and that they plan to interview the alleged victims.

Syracuse Coach Jim Boeheim defended Fine in a telephone interview with the New York Times on Thursday evening.

“I’ve known Bernie Fine for 45 years, and there’s absolutely no way that I believe any of this could possibly have happened,” Boeheim said. “That’s the bottom line.”

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Judge in Jerry Sandusky case may have benefited from Second Mile

-- Melissa Rohlin

 Photo: Bernie Fine, right, with Syracuse player Fab Melo. Credit: Dennis Nett / Associated Press

GB Olympic boxing: Selby should have been auto qualifier after world silver; Yafai to join pro ranks ?



It remains a mystery why Andrew Selby, the European champion and silver medallist from the world championships in Baku, Azerbaijan, was forced into a box-off for the Olympic with Khalid Yafai. Bonkers decision. No logic. And why, even, a box-off over three matches ? Isn't the world, and indeed, Olympic tournament quite clearly on a knock out basis. The British Amateur Boxing Association needs to not fall into the trap of doing what AIBA, the world amateur governing body for the sport have done (or got away with) for far too long, in making the rules up as they go along.

From this perspective, it was just that Selby won the first bout at the York Hall, Bethnal Green, by a princely margin, and that Yafai then struggled to make the weight for Saturday. It meant the Olympic placed passed automatically to the Welshman. The third of their bouts would have taken place at the test event at the ExCeL Arena early in December.

They are both flyweights, and the ruling for the Olympic Games is that one boxer per country per weight division is allowable. Yafai had already represented GB in Beijing in 2008. The underlying issue, after he had qualified a place in London with a quarter-final berth at the world championships, was that he had beaten Selby twice in prior bouts. The agreement with the GB team set-up was that if Selby took gold in Baku, he would not have to go through a box-off. In essence, a mess. The highest qualifier at a tournament should go to the Games. If they had both reached the semi-final, and won a bronze medal as losers at that stage, their equal standing might have merited it.



Oklahoma State coaches die in plane crash in mountainous terrain

Kurt Budke, coaching an OSU player, has died in a plane crash

Oklahoma State women's basketball coach Kurt Budke and assistant Miranda Serna were on a recruiting trip for the OSU Cowgirls on when their single-engine plane crashed Thursday evening in mountainous terrain in Arkansas.

Budke and Serna died along with the pilot and another individual, who was not affiliated with the university. There were no survivors in the crash of the plane in the eastern Ouachita Mountains in Perry County, Ark.

The cause of the crash has not been announced, and, according to the Associated Press, the National Transportation Safety Board said it could take nine months for its investigators to determine the reason the plane went down.

Budke, 50, had been the Cowgirls' coach since 2005. He helped transform a team that had been winless in the Big 12 in his first season to a perennial conference contender.

Serna had been an assistant for Budke for seven seasons, including a stint at Louisiana Tech.

The Cowgirls opened the season Sunday with a 96-60 win over Rice in Stillwater.

OSU President Burns Hargis said Friday in a statement that the school  was "devastated by this tragedy."

Associate head coach Jim Littell will take over as head interim head coach. The team's weekend games against Grambling State and Texas-Arlington have been canceled.

Budke is survived by his wife, Shelly, and three children, Sara, Alex and Brett. Sara is a student at Oklahoma State.

Mens' basketball Coach Travis Ford told reporters that he went to Budke's house as soon as he heard about the crash.

"I just found out and there are so many unanswered questions," Ford said. "I just saw him. We talked every single day. He came to my shootarounds. It just doesn't seem real. It doesn't seem real. It doesn't seem real."

RELATED:

2 Oklahoma State coaches killed, recalls earlier tragedy

NBA lockout: Billy Hunter tells players to start their own league

Files from Jerry Sandusky's charity are missing, according to officials

-- Melissa Rohlin

Photo: In January, Oklahoma State head coach Kurt Budke talks with guard Tiffany Bias in the first half of a game against Oklahoma in Stillwater, Okla. Credit: Sue Ogrocki / Associated Press

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