« April 2008 |

May 12, 2008

Greg Spires Finds Work

Greg Spires finally found work. He signed with the Raiders over the weekend.

The Raiders have wanted to acquire a proven edge rusher since they lost free agent Chris Clemons to Philadelphia. Spires fits the description as a 10th-year veteran with 39.5 career sacks, including a career-high eight in 2004.

That sound you heard is Rod Marinelli pounding his fist on his desk because he missed out on getting another ex-Buccaneer defensive guy.

Rich Gannon tells Santa Spires what he wants for Christmas.  'A right tackle... no, wait.  A pony!  Definitely a pony!'

Posted by Scott at 9:10 AM | Comments (0)
Tags for this article: greg spires, raiders

Warren Sapp Has An Opinion Or Two

I got an email the other day about Warren Sapp being on the radio with Dan Patrick for a 20 minute interview. I hadn't heard about it since I don't listen to Patrick, but was happy to learn that he archives his shows as mp3 podcasts so that I can go through them and listen to as little of his voice as possible. Here's the one with Sapp on it. There's other non-football stuff on there, too, but you can skip over that. Sapp's segment starts at 14:23. If you don't feel like downloading the whole thing, here's a very abbreviated and summarized version of it. But you really have to hear Sapp's voice to get the full experience.

Will Sapp come back?
No, not for Tony Dungy, Jon Gruden, Rod Marinelli... no one. Not even as just a third down pass rusher. "Thank you but no thank you."

Funniest thing that happened between him and Brett Favre?
Favre used the number 99 as part of a play call last year against the Raiders. Sapp could read his lips in the huddle and couldn't believe Favre was so brazen as to actually name the play after him, knowing he was going to run it to his side. Sapp called out that the play was going left before the ball was snapped and Favre busted out laughing.

Spygate:
"If you ain't cheating, you ain't trying." Sounds like he spent one too many seasons in the Raider locker room.

Then Patrick starts in on Sapp about him falling in the draft because of cocaine and Sapp lays into him hard. This is such old news; I can't believe Patrick even brought the subject up. "And if it wasn't for Brady Quinn and Aaron Rodgers ... I'd still be the poster child for a draft day fall." This is a fascinating part of the interview because despite Sapp's assertion that he doesn't mind talking about it, it's obviously a sore spot with him.

Then he backhandedly threatens Chris Mortensen.

On whether Al Davis is still really in charge of the Raiders:
"Don't kid yourself because you see the man with a walker; it's just his legs. There's nothing wrong with his brain."

On why Randy Moss is no longer a Raider:
The game had passed Art Shell and Tom Walsh by (the Raiders did not even have a three step drop in their playbook that year.) Tom Walsh is the reason Randy Moss is not with the Raiders anymore.

On Chad Johnson:
He disagrees with what Chad is doing but he understands why he feels like he has to do it. "At some point you have to realize that you're just an empty red wagon making a lot of noise and you did sign a legally binding contract. So either go to work or shut up."

Biggest career regrets:
"Didn't finish it in Tampa, didn't get 100, didn't catch Lee Roy."

Does he like Jon Gruden?
"Love him."

Why didn't he finish in Tampa?
"Monte Kiffin made a decision that he and Rod Marinelli picked McFarland and Gruden asked if they were sure and they said yeah, so they signed him."

Did he ever feel bad after a sack?
One time he and Steve White sacked Chris Chandler and he accidentally kicked Chandler in the head while standing back up.

They covered a couple other topics that I didn't touch on here, so when you have a few free minutes, listen to the whole thing. I especially like Sapp's answer to whether or not he liked Gruden. Members of the Tampa media (you know who you are) love portraying Gruden as a guy who can't get along with players and that the players secretly hate. And time and again, they keep coming back saying Gruden is a good guy.

Anyway, Sapp sounds happy with his decision and really needs to pursue a career in television somewhere. Maybe ESPN. That way he'd get to share an elevator with Chris Mortensen, who very likely would have to start carrying a change of underwear in his briefcase.

Sapp conducts the 'Guys Who Talk Like They Have A Mouth Full Of Buffalo Balls' Chorus.

Posted by Scott at 6:08 AM | Comments (0)
Tags for this article: art shell, brett favre, buccaneer history, chris chandler, chris mortensen, jon gruden, tom walsh, warren sapp

May 9, 2008

Tony Dungy Really Hates The Patriots

One of the things I have enjoyed about Tony Dungy this past year is how he takes any available opportunity to dig the Patriots about their whole signal-stealing scandal. Sometimes it's sarcastic, sometimes it's serious, sometimes it's funny, but it's always on the tip of his tongue, ready to again poke at Bill Belichick's scab like Bart Simpson ("Ow! Quit it.")

For example, Dungy was in Tampa speaking to some high school kids about his book. One student asked him if anything happened last season that he wished he could have put in the book. What oh what could it have been?

"We talk about how important it is to do things the right way and have integrity so that when you do win, people can never ask that question," he said. "That's the great thing that I'm happy about with our team.

"Yes, we won. But no one is really going to ask, 'Did they cheat? Did they do things the right way?' I think our record speaks for itself and if you're a true champion, that's the way you'd like it to be."

Dungy may lament not being able to put that chapter in his book, but he'll have another chance to devote some ink to it soon enough.

Sales have topped 900,000 and co-author Nathan Whitaker said there might be a sequel on the way.

Yeah, "might". The book was wildly popular, exceeded all expectations and sold tons of copies, the author is on the verge of retirement from his day job and he'll have nothing but time on his hands to devote to preaching and ministering. And even without all those factors, you know he'd put another book out just to get the Patriots off his chest.

I still haven't read Dungy's book. I keep meaning to, but I feel like I'm just going to get preached at when I do. I live in Georgia, so if I'm really in the mood for a sermon, they're not hard to find and it will only take an hour to get through as opposed to reading Dungy's book, which will take days. Don't judge me. Why can't publishers just spell out the big words phonetically?

I am, however, just finishing up the Vince Lombardi biography, "When Pride Still Mattered". As opposed to Dungy's quiet strength, this is all about loud, boisterous, angry strength, which I have to believe makes for much more interesting reading. I recommend it.

So, for the record, playing straight gets you one of these and cheating gets you three.  Got it.

Posted by Scott at 8:46 AM | Comments (0)
Tags for this article: bill belichick, tony dungy, vince lombardi

May 8, 2008

The Bucs Need To Sign Adam Archuleta Today

Look, I'm not saying that the Buccaneers need Adam Archuleta on their team. I'm not even advocating keeping him around when the roster is cut to 53. The Bucs have enough safeties and they're all better than Archuleta. But his wife is August 2001 Playmate of the Month Jennifer Walcott.

No, she's not as hot as Carmella, but it's better than posting a picture of her husband, isn't it?  Female readers aren't allowed to answer that question.  Neither are gay dudes.

See, signing Archuleta will inevitably lead to the occasional mention of Jennifer, which means I'll have to go hunting for pictures of her to post here, which makes everyone who is reading this a winner. And do you know the kinds of pictures out there of Playmates? Good ones. If I just go posting photos of Jennifer for no good reason, then I'm a hack who is trying anything to get you to read. But if Archuleta is on the team, I can post the same pictures and be considered relevant! The Jeff Garcia thing has worked out pretty well so far, right? So join me in the campaign for the Bucs to sign Archuleta through training camp and let's spend the summer enjoying ourselves with gratuitous bikini pics and intensive stretching.

Jennifer is working toward her piloting license.  There's a cockpit joke in there somewhere, but I'm too tired to figure it out now.

Posted by Scott at 12:01 PM | Comments (1)
Tags for this article: adam archuleta, jennifer walcott, things i am wishing for

John Lynch Has A Chip On His Shoulder

Sorry for all the stories about former Bucs. The current ones aren't doing anything interesting, though. I promise my next irrelevant post will at least have some tits in it.

For the first time in a long time, John Lynch feels like he has something to prove. Mostly because some of his teammates think he should have retired this year and make way for some younger guys.

"I think there's a split among the staff," Lynch said Wednesday after recognizing the academic, athletic and community achievements of young student leaders at his "Salute the Stars" program's annual banquet. "Some were happy for me to come back and some didn't say anything -- which tells you something."

Lynch believes coach Mike Shanahan is in his corner, "but there were some people who probably felt they were better without me" or, more succinctly, that he had become a "situational player."

In an effort to keep his job and also to beat the shit out of anyone who doubts him, Lynch is working out in some fashion three times a day, seven days a week. Hasn't anyone told him about the magic of steroids? Here's some of what he does:

John Lynch has worked with former Marine Pete Egoscue as his trainer for more than 20 years and they've resumed their partnership this offseason. Core fitness and postural alignment are chief principles toward delivering total-body health under Egoscue's regimen. Among the items on Lynch's to-do list:

* Daily workouts at 5 a.m., 11 a.m. and after dinner.

* A varied approach to fitness, including items such as bear crawls on the beach, running hills, yoga, intensive stretching, obstacle course and barefoot drops in the sand.

* More pull-ups than perhaps he has done in his basement, Rocky-style.

I didn't even know there was a 5 a.m., and that's when Lynch has already woken up, brushed his teeth, had some kind of nourishment and started working out? Wow, that's impressive. In fact, that whole list looks like it's got... wait a second.

"Intensive stretching"? What the fuck is intensive stretching? British Catholics in the sixteenth century were subjected to intensive stretching. I don't think whatever Lynch is doing qualifies. Unless it's a new euphemism for masturbation that I'm not aware of. In which case, it's brilliant. I wish I'd thought of it when my parents were knocking on the bathroom door wondering what was taking me so long. "I'm just doing some intensive stretching! Repeatedly!"

Derrick Brooks is excited when John Lynch tells him the secrets of his new intensive stretching techniques.  And see how relaxed Lynch looks?  That's some quality stretching, my friend.

Posted by Scott at 10:17 AM | Comments (1)
Tags for this article: broncos, john lynch

Shaun King Is Happy But Not Really

The Tribune did a brief interview with Shaun King and it's exactly as exciting as it sounds. King is currently doing color commentary for Arena League games and he's not bitter at all about the way his football career turned out.

Well, I mean it's one of those things that sometimes in life you give everything you have to something and you don't necessarily get back what you feel like you deserve from it.

I would like to quote Denis Leary here: "Life sucks, get a fucking helmet." Oh wait, that quote doesn't really work for King.

Actually, it's hard to rip King for his football since his career passer rating is better than two of the quarterbacks currently on the roster (Bruce Gradkowski and Chris Simms) and only slightly worse than two of the others (Luke McCown and Brian Griese). A decent running game and an unbelievable defense make his numbers during his first couple years look better than they really are, but he did make his share of plays. But it seems like after that Pittsburgh game in 2002, he just lost whatever he might have been able to give to a team. Even Tony Dungy couldn't find a spot for him on the Colts roster.

Which leads me to another weird point. Dungy's track record with former Buccaneers really sucks. King, Joe Hamilton, Anthony McFarland, Simeon Rice... they all came into Indianapolis and fell right on their faces, except for McFarland who did actually play for half a year before spending another season on IR. It makes you wonder how Rod Marinelli will do with all his old Bucs in Detroit. If Brian Kelly, Dwight Smith, Dewayne White and Chartric Darby contribute in any meaningful way for the Lions this year, Marinelli will be doing significantly better with his former Bucs than Dungy ever did. I don't know if this makes Marinelli a better coach or not, but it does indicate something.

Wait, where was I going with this? Oh, right, King.

So if the opportunity presents itself to go to the NFL I would surely go, but I'm content.

It's funny because I was just thinking the same thing about myself. I'm ok where I am, but yes, if an NFL team did call me in to play, I would surely go also. Me and King have a lot in common, except I wasn't cut by the two worst teams in the NFL and an AFL team inside of two years.

Huh, I guess it's not as hard to rip him as I thought.

King was cut from this team, too.  When you are no longer wanted by a team that practices in a parking lot, it's time to hang up your cleats.

Posted by Scott at 8:58 AM | Comments (0)
Tags for this article: buccaneer history, rod marinelli, shaun king, tony dungy

Justin Case He Forgot

I was contacted pretty promptly by the first place winner of the draft contest and he should have his prize by now. However, the second place winner is still MIA. So, "Justin", you have one week from right now to contact me with your street address so I can send you a $25 Bucgear.com gift card. After that, I'm moving to the next runner-up. It's kind of like when Miss America gets busted for posing in a skin rag and has to give up her crown to the next chick down the line. Except my contest was infinitely more meaningful than the Miss America pageant.

Posted by Scott at 8:30 AM | Comments (0)
Tags for this article: draft talk

May 7, 2008

Joe Hamilton Got Drunk And Rear Ended A Dude

I remember when Rich McKay drafted Joe Hamilton out of Georgia Tech in the seventh round of the 2000 draft; I thought he would be the biggest steal of the year. I had followed him at Tech and saw him make plays that made everyone else look like they were running on ice. He didn't get much of a chance behind Brad Johnson, and when he was allocated to the Frankfurt Galaxy, he torn his ACL. I followed him to the Colts and through the AFL, and then heard just a couple days ago that Tech had re-hired him in their personnel department. Not what he wanted out of his career, but at least he was still in football and working for the school he loves.

Then he slammed into the back of a car stopped at a red light while he was drunk and high and then took off.

The officer smelled alcohol on Hamilton, who acknowledged he hit another car from behind, according to the police report. Hamilton failed a series of field sobriety tests, and the officer reported that he found the open bottle of beer and a marijuana cigarette in the vehicle's ash tray.

Hamilton recorded blood-alcohol contents of 0.193 and 0.199 in two tests, according to the police report. The legal limit in Georgia is 0.08.

Ok, so maybe he's not the steal of the 2000 draft. I guess you could make an argument that Tom Brady turned out a little better than Hamilton. I'm big enough to admit when I'm wrong. If you've got $3,500 you can loan him, you can bail Hamilton out of the Fulton County Jail. But take a different route home than him because he'll totally run you over.

Can you believe he actually owns a Super Bowl ring?  I did more for that team than he did that year.

Posted by Scott at 1:53 PM | Comments (1)
Tags for this article: buccaneer history, dee wee, hello officer, joe hamilton

Buccaneer Cheerleaders Go Down Under

... my pants! No, not really. That headline would have read "Buccaneer Cheerleaders Exhausted And In Need Of Electrolytes" and would have been followed by about a billion emoticon smilies. Or, you know, at least a headline that didn't indicate the looks of simultaneous amusement and disappointment on the cheerleaders' faces. I do have a reputation to uphold, after all.

No, the truth is that the Bucs cheerleading squad went to visit American troops in the battle-ravaged, umm, Australia. The video is a little confusing and, not surprisingly, short on details, although they do reveal that they're in the town of Alice Springs. I looked it up and it seems that Pine Gap in the Northern Territory, just a few miles from Alice Springs, is where the Joint Defence Space Research Facility is located, housing about 900 or so US government personnel. I sat here wondering why, of all the US military installations in the world, the cheerleaders would be sent to this one. Then I read who those personnel are.

U.S. government personnel at Pine Gap are believed to be mostly from the National Security Agency and subordinate service-associated agencies, and the Central Intelligence Agency.

So it's obvious that the NSA and the CIA were able to put their differences aside long enough to fly some hot American ass 8,000 miles across the Pacific to visit them. If anyone can get it done, it's those guys. At this base, it looks like their primary job is to steal satellite signals and codebreak, although the word "missile" appears more than once in the Wikipedia description. So, yeah, these are guys you want to keep happy. Are you sure you only need one squad? Take the Eagles cheerleaders, too, guys. They're patriotic and freaky.

The cheerleaders didn't spend all their time there on offical duty. They had time to see kangaroos, wallabies, dingos, and take in some national landmarks.

We're in Darling Harbour, and for all the MTV fans, this is where they shot Real World. So we're all freaking out; we love the show. So, here's the house they stayed in.

The video itself is disappointingly light on the sexy. They have, like, clothes on and stuff. Although during their variety show for the military, they were all dressed in fatigues from the waist up and tiny shorts on the bottom half. Then they all dropped and did a couple pushups in those outfits. Seriously.

All the highest ranking officers got to sit in the seats underneath the transparent part of the stage.

So there's that. It's an interesting video to watch once, but probably not one you'll go back to regularly when everyone else is out. Unless you're into sleeping kangaroos. Weirdo.

Posted by Scott at 9:41 AM | Comments (0)
Tags for this article: cheerleaders

May 6, 2008

Bucs Sign More Camp Meat

The Buccaneers signed four of their tryout players from last weekend to free agent contracts.

Amarri Jackson (WR, South Florida)
Chris Bradwell (DT, Troy)
John Rochford (C, Miami)
Clifton Smith (RB, Fresno)

The focus of the article is Jackson, who has been getting a lot of attention on Buccaneer message boards because he's a USF product. He's also the only one I've heard of. Of course, when you change colleges every year, you're probably not going to get a lot of recognition.

Bradwell's path to the NFL has taken him through Hargrave Military Academy, Florida State, Northeast Mississippi Community College and Troy.

Unless Bradwell absolutely unleashes some talent that no one knew he had before, he really doesn't have a shot. Rochford will probably compete with Andrew Economos for the designated long-snapper position. Smith will have to prove he's better than seventh round pick Cory Boyd in order to make it past the first round of cuts. The fact that Boyd was injured and unable to participate in the last day of minicamp may have had a part in the decision to sign Smith.

Who is Amarri Jackson cheering to?  Look at those stands.  Unless he waited an hour after the game to wave this towel, no one was at the Papa John's Bowl.

Posted by Scott at 8:27 AM | Comments (1)
Tags for this article: amarri jackson, camp meat, chris bradwell, clifton smith, john rochford

May 5, 2008

Making Up Facts For Fun And Profit

Roy Cummings speculates on the reasons why Jon Gruden hates Chris Simms:

For reasons that aren't completely clear, Gruden has little or no use for Simms. Maybe it's Simms' lack of mobility or the fact he's left-handed, which forces Gruden to flip-flop his offense whenever Simms is in the lineup.

Or maybe it's the fact Gruden was never really on board with the Rich McKay-generated decision to draft Simms. It doesn't matter, really. The facts are the facts, and it's time for the internal squabble about Simms to end.

Or, you know, it could be that Simms is 12/17 TD/INT for his career with his most recent action producing one touchdown to seven interceptions. Or it could be the nine balls batted at the line of scrimmage in 2006. Or it could be that every time he gets a shot to start, he gets injured. I don't think the reasons are unclear.

And yes, it has been an internal squabble that has kept Simms in Tampa and thus in limbo. Do you really think it was Gruden and General Manager Bruce Allen who decided to keep Simms around as an injured fourth quarterback last year?

That call came from above, from a family of owners that seldom gets involved in the on-field management of their team. In this case, though, the Glazers saw Simms as an asset they feared they would take a huge loss on if he was let go.

You know what this part of the story could use? A source; possibly a quote. That might lend some credibility to the idea that the Glazers, who never take an active role in the management of the team, decided that a third-string quarterback is the player worth breaking their silence over. They kept quiet and took the PR hit when it came time to part ways with John Lynch and Warren Sapp, but the quarterback who has still not started a season's worth of games needs to be retained at all costs? Cite a source for this information, Cummings!

Oh God, I really want to be a reporter. It just seems so fucking easy. I could just make shit up that I think happened, and print it like it's fact. It's just like I do now, except it would be legitimized because I would be writing for an established publication and I'd be getting paid an actual salary! Real sportswriters are taking all kinds of shots at bloggers these days for being dogmatic and petty. When are they going to expose the members of their own clan to the same scrutiny?

Last night I watched the first Bucs/Panthers game from 2006 again. It's Simms's last game where he ruptures his spleen and continues playing through it even though he can hardly get his breath and he's in obvious pain. Simms really took a lot of punishment during that game, most of which can be laid at the feet of his offensive line which failed to protect him adequately all day. Some more of the blame can be shouldered by Gruden who, for some reason I still don't quite understand, rolled Simms out on a bootleg in the fourth quarter only to get leveled by Al Wallace. Both Simms and Wallace were horizontal in mid-air when Simms released the ball and completed a pass to Mike Alstott, making for one of the best courage-under-fire moments I've seen. My point here is that I've been a Simms fan and I appreciate his talents and his grit. That said, I also understand why Gruden is done with him.

After five years, you expect a third round quarterback to have produced something, especially when the competition has been as weak as it has. Maybe if Edell Shepherd catches that perfectly thrown ball in the endzone a few years ago, we're not having this conversation. But you can't bank the future of your team on what-ifs and speculation. You need facts, and the facts are that Simms has not been a good and reliable quarterback, regardless of his athleticism or how likable he is. And, look, I'll even link to an official source for my facts.

Posted by Scott at 11:40 AM | Comments (9)
Tags for this article: bruce allen, chris simms, jon gruden, someone actually paid this person to write this shit, tampa media

Florida Is Hot

I'll bet when Dre Moore was drafted by the Buccaneers, he thought about how cool it will be to live in Florida with the sun and the beaches and the chicks in bikinis. Florida's Department of Tourism and Recreation doesn't usually put the ten million percent humidity on their brochures. So the 300 pound guy whose job it was to run around and hit things all weekend got a little tired.

"He's 6-foot-4, about 315 and he's running a 4.85," [Monte] Kiffin said. "But it's hot down here and he has to get in better shape. That happens to all these guys when they come down here. That's what is nice about having rookie mini-camp. They go back home and realize that as hot as it is, it's going to be hotter. This is cool."

I'm psyched about the guy. Aside from his stamina, he performed very well all weekend long and the coaches all seem to agree that he has the physical ability to be a fixture at under tackle.

"He really flashed some things out here that are uncommon for a big man," [Larry] Coyer said. "He's very quick. He really has a chance, and he has the skills."

He'll have to compete with Jovan Haye and, depending on how many defensive ends the team keeps, possibly Kevin Carter as well. But he'll be given every opportunity to at least be part of the rotation and maybe by midseason see some real playing time.

Don't worry about your stamina, Dre.  I've been told lots of times that it happens to all guys and it's nothing to be embarrassed about.

Posted by Scott at 9:30 AM | Comments (1)
Tags for this article: dre moore

Doug Williams Doesn't Give A Shit About That Film

You know, I understand why people hate celebrities like Paris Hilton or Lindsey Lohan or any other Hollywood-type who evidently live above the law and have no appreciation for what they have. I get it. But Doug Williams doesn't qualify. He's not even close.

Here's a video of a couple genepool catfish trying to antagonize Williams into saying something controversial and, I guess, get him in trouble? I'm not sure really what the goal is here unless these are Broncos fans who are still holding a grudge for the second quarter of Super Bowl XXII, although they don't look old enough to remember the game. Williams says something that you can't quite understand from the video, starts walking away, then swears at them a little bit when they say they've got it all on film. Actually, douchebag, no, you don't have it all on film. You conveniently forgot to record the part where you bait Williams into his little outburst.

Williams could have taken that camera and rammed it up the dude's ass and I still would have taken his side. Plenty of others probably would have, but it takes an awful lot to get under Doug Williams's skin. This is the same guy who was sent a rotten watermelon in the mail after a playoff loss. You think you're going to rattle him with a camera? By all accounts, Williams is a very personable and likable guy who doesn't mind taking a minute out to talk to fans if he can. But these weren't fans; they were a couple asshats looking to get a rise out of a semi-famous person and they deserved a lot more than Williams dished out.

Posted by Scott at 8:51 AM | Comments (1)
Tags for this article: douchebags, doug williams

May 3, 2008

Rookie Minicamp Summary

Dexter Jackson was held out of the rookie minicamp on Saturday after showing very little on Friday. From what I understand, Jackson looked relatively slow compared to his reputation and was in obvious poor condition. Did I mention that Jackson was the only receiver the Bucs drafted? Jon Gruden implied he was held out for a medical reason. Then he got grouchy.

"I don't want to talk about it. It's nothing serious. He's kind of embarrassed about it and I'm going to leave it at that."

In other rookie news, Aqib Talib is getting a lot of work and is impressing everyone not only with his physical ability but with his knowledge. He's ready to learn.

"I want to get the plays down. I want to come back here and know the base coverages. Mainly that's what I want to get out of [the rookie mini-camp]."

Quarterback Josh Johnson is, so far, as advertised: accurate arm, good mobility, experienced in the West Coast Offense. Johnson doesn't have a cannon, but he gets good speed on his short and medium throws.

Jeremy Zuttah did a lot of work at center on Friday. From the quotes I read about him, he seems likeable and eager to learn.

"If you saw the film I landed on my butt a little bit and it's not a great feeling, so I'm done with that," Zuttah said laughing.

I have also been told that I was completely wrong about Jonathan Hefney not being NFL-ready. He's short, but he's said to be in excellent shape. Raheem Morris praised him on more than one occasion. I'm quite happy to be wrong on this one.

I don't have a lot of news yet on many of the tryout players, just an overall sense that most of them are performing like tryout players. Dropped balls, missed assignments, and forgotten plays have been plentiful with those guys.

Jon Gruden has a paper boner over his new quarterback.  And it's mighty impressive, too.

Posted by Scott at 5:49 PM | Comments (2)
Tags for this article: aqib talib, dexter jackson, jeremy zuttah, jonathan hefney, josh johnson

May 2, 2008

Official Rookie Free Agent List

In addition to the two players I mentioned the other day, the Bucs signed another three players to rookie free agent deals: Chris Clark (T, Southern Miss), Elbert Mack (CB, Troy), and Tyrice Thompson (TE, Arizona State). I'll be honest with you, I consider myself relatively knowledgeable about upcoming NFL-eligible players coming out of college, but I have no idea who any of these guys are. You'd think Mack might have made an impression on me since he played with Leodis McKelvin at Troy, but nope. Sorry.

The Bucs also signed a whole bunch of dudes to "tryout" contracts for this weekend's rookie minicamp. The Times has some of their stories here, here and here. Unlike the five guys mentioned above, the tryouts aren't actually part of the roster. Almost all of them are guaranteed to go home with nothing Sunday night. Sometimes one or two of those guys are signed to free agent deals so the real players have a few extra torsos to beat the shit out of during training camp, but I can't think of a single tryout player who made it onto a gameday roster. Can you?

Proof that Elbert mack really exists.

Posted by Scott at 9:12 AM | Comments (0)
Tags for this article: camp meat, chris clark, elbert mack, tyrice thompson

Charles Lee Is Getting A New Uniform

Specifically, it's an orange jumpsuit with a ten-digit number across the front.

Former Buccaneer receiver Charles Lee pled no contest to armed robbery charges and was sentenced to five years in prison. Although, it's prison in Orlando, so how bad can it really be? I mean, Disney owns that whole town at this point; they probably own the prison, too. Every cell probably has a magic teacup in it and all the food workers sing "It's a Small World" as you work your way down the chow line. I could probably live with that. Although getting shower-raped by a guy in a big-head Goofy costume has to be a little extra insulting. I'm guessing here.

The sad part is that he stole that Gatorade from another player even though there was a whole table full of them for free.

Posted by Scott at 8:21 AM | Comments (1)
Tags for this article: buccaneer history, charles lee, hello officer

May 1, 2008

Marcus Jones Is Getting Better

Every month I get several people searching for information on former Buccaneer Marcus Jones and his MMA career. He started off not knowing anything about the sport, but now he's apparently working his way up the ladder.

An exceptional athlete, Jones picked up the sport quickly and made his professional MMA debut at World Fighting Championships 5 in Tampa during October of last year. He steamrolled Will Mora, submitting him with a Kimura at 1:02 of round 1.

Competing for the Real Fighting Championships less than a month later, Jones needed just 2:32 of round 1 to record a TKO victory over Eduardo Boza.

I remember in college a friend of mine who was into Jiu-Jitsu demonstrated a Kimura lock on me. Man, it hurt and I submitted in about a second and a half and was sore for a couple days after. Many years later, I found out that my friend had come out of the closet and that it wasn't really necessary for us to get undressed for him to demonstrate this move to me. I won't elaborate on where I was sore.

Oh yeah, back to Jones. Good luck to him with his career. I kind of poked fun at it in October when he first debuted, but it's obvious that he's serious about it and he seems to be doing well. Also, I have to thank him for making me actually laugh out loud this morning after reading this sentence about MMA injuries:

"In my second fight I broke my hand on the guy's face."

I envisioned him coming home to his wife after the fight, holding his broken hand. She asks what happened and he says in a frustrated tone, "I broke my hand on this guy's face," kind of like the rest of us would complain about forgetting to file a report on time or something. Awesome.

I can't tell if he's smiling or eating a human heart.  Both, maybe?

Posted by Scott at 10:05 AM | Comments (0)
Tags for this article: buccaneer history, marcus jones

Thank God We Have More Bowl Games

I know what you were hoping for when you heard that NCAA meetings were going on. It's the same topic that comes up every football season. Just about every fan talks about it, is disgusted with the current condition of things, and wants desperately for some progress... any progress to be made for improvement. Well, folks, wait no longer. The NCAA has heard your pleas and now, after waiting for so many years, you will finally have... a bowl game that pits the seventh-best teams from the Big East and Conference USA against each other! And it's happening in St. Pete! This game is so important, they're going to put it before Christmas.

The only redeeming part of this news is that, at least for now, it's called the St. Petersburg Bowl. But that's likely to change soon because people have no shame or pride.

Organizers will seek a corporate title sponsor who likely will pay between $350,000 and $500,000 a year for the exposure that comes with the bowl.

No one nationally is going to care about this game, so they'll probably get a local sponsor to put up the cash. But unless it's ultimately called the Mons Venus Bowl, color me unimpressed.

The NCAA also approved the Congressional Bowl, which as I understand it, matches elderly Senators against each other to see who can filibuster the longest before stroking out.

Oh, and that thing I teased at the beginning of this article? Yeah, no dice. The only conference that supported a playoff system was the SEC, the conference that benefits the most from the current system. The proposal was only for a 4-team playoff; three games to determine the national champion. But even that was too much for everyone else at the meeting who said the current BCS system was in an "unprecedented state of health." By the way, AIDS patients are also in an unprecedented state of health. Bad health. Think before you speak, dumbasses.

So, no BCS playoffs until at least 2014, which is when they'll talk about it again. It's a shame, but I guess I understand. I mean, who knows if something crazy like a bracketed playoff series for a national championship would actually work at the college level. If only there were a model to base it on that had proven successful.

Without a playoff system, this is still the best way to determine who goes to a bowl game.

Posted by Scott at 8:40 AM | Comments (2)
Tags for this article: things i am wishing for