Monday, February 28, 2011

The Wizards have bought Mike Bibby out

In yet another sign that player agents either really believe that the NBA will lose games to a lockout next season, or that player agents are at the very least hedging their bets on a shortened schedule next season, ex-Grizzlies/Kings/Hawks/Wizards guard Mike Bibby has reached a buyout agreement with the Washington team that traded for him last week.

This early in the game, we don't have any details as to the specs of the buyout, exactly how much of the remainder of Bibby's salary he gave back, but NBC Washington's Dan Helie is reporting that the buyout has been completed.

Bibby was due to make $6.4 million next season, and he's in the midst of earning $5.7 million this year. The veteran guard clearly believes the up-front cash handed to him by the Wizards to forfeit the remainder of that deal, coupled with any money that he'd earn by signing with a new team for the rest of 2010-11, and whatever he earns in 2011-12, are enough to risk giving up guaranteed cash coming from the since-bought out contract he signed in 2009.

And what would any prospective NBA team pick up, should it sign Mike Bibby for a playoff run? A great shooter, as Bibby is hitting over 44 percent of his 3-pointers this year, but little else. Bibby is a terrible defender at this point in his career, he doesn't penetrate or create much, and he's a terrible finisher in the lane.

But in an offense where a wing player does most of the ball-handling, as is the case with Kobe Bryant in Los Angeles or LeBron James in Miami, Bibby's spot-up talents could help a team. For spot minutes, of course.

Just don't bank on him to pick up the tab for lunch anytime soon.

UPDATE: Wow. According to Yahoo! Sports' Marc Spears, Bibby gave back every penny of his 2011-12 salary to play for a winner. That is astonishing news, and don't think Bibby and his representatives aren't aware that the best he'll possibly make next season with a new team is half of the $6.4 million (or $6.2 million, reports vary) he was due to earn.

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NEW UGA BUILDING HAS THAT WOW FACTOR

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Spring Practice Stock Characters: Meet the Dueling Quarterbacks

Renewing the annual templates of spring. Today: The most engaging quarterback battles.

ALABAMA: A.J. McCarron vs. Phillip Sims.
Relevant Dynamic: The Heir Apparent vs. The Young Gun.
A.J. McCarron looks exactly like every Crimson Tide quarterback ever: Sturdy, unassuming and unspectacular, expected mainly to keep a stiff upper lip in the huddle, the 'Bama Bangs out of his eyes and the defense and running game out of trouble. The best comparison, given his 6-foot-4 frame, four-star hype and instate roots, is probably to pre-Sabanite starter Brodie Croyle, but his profile is interchangeable with predecessors Tyler Watts, John Parker Wilson and, most recently, Greg McElroy.

Sims, on the other hand, arrived last year from Virginia with considerably more hype as the No. 2 "pro style" slinger in the 2010 recruiting class, according to Rivals, and offers a bigger body and bigger arm – as well as much better odds, as a third or fourth-year starter down the line, to be more than another within-the-offense "manager."

Advantage: McCarron. You have to go way, way back to find the last 'Bama quarterback who jumped the floppy-haired line of succession, which is clearly in McCarron's favor here: He has two years in Jim McElwain's offense to Sims' one, and Nick Saban – like all Crimson Tide coaches before him – has never shown any hesitation to defer to the guy who's going to make the fewest mistakes. With a vicious, veteran defense fueling serious championship ambitions again this fall, that's all they're asking for.

LSU: Jordan Jefferson vs. Jarrett Lee vs. Zach Mettenberger.
Relevant Dynamic: There are no incumbents here.
All incoming coaches are obligated to tell the media "Every position is up for grabs," to instill a sense of competition, combat complacency, etc. But new offensive coordinator Steve Kragthorpe's insistence that Jordan Jefferson, starter for 27 of the Tigers' last 28 games since the end of his freshman season in 2008, isn't a shoo-in for the job carries a little added credibility – namely, because Jefferson struggled to stay on the field as a seemingly entrenched starter in 2010, regularly yielding to former pick-six king Jarrett Lee and finishing near the bottom of the SEC in pass efficiency. Lee clearly outshone Jefferson in the wins over Tennessee and Florida in early October, the depths of Jefferson's two-month, 32-quarter drought without a touchdown pass.

If LSU knows it can win with modest efforts from Jefferson and Lee – or in spite of them – Mettenberger, a Georgia transfer by way of junior college, offers the big-play potential that's been so sorely lacking: At 6-foot-5, 240 pounds, he looks every bit the part of an NFL-bound fireballer in the pocket, and he only needs to reproduce a fraction of the Cam Newton Effect to ensure the Tigers are in the thick of the SEC and BCS championship races.

Advantage: Jefferson. Jefferson pulled away from Lee with hyper-efficient efforts against Alabama and Ole Miss in November and went out with a three-touchdown effort against Texas A&M in the Cotton Bowl, after throwing four touchdowns in the entire regular season. Mettenberger may be the second coming of Ben Roethlisberger (in more ways than one), but it's going to take another significant regression from the incumbent to get him on the field.

MIAMI: Jacory Harris vs. Stephen Morris.
Relevant Dynamic: The Veteran vs. The Clean Slate.
Harris, like Jefferson, enters his senior season as a symbol of inconsistency and mediocrity after two full seasons as an entrenched starter, also under a new offensive coordinator who insists the job is anyone's to win. That's a hard fall for Harris, who opened his junior season as a rising star on a rising team. Instead, the Hurricanes were blown out of there biggest games against Ohio State and Florida State, Harris was knocked out of the lineup for almost a month in a sobering loss at Virginia, attendance dwindled, the turnover margin soared and coach Randy Shannon was fired immediately following a season-ending flop with Harris back in the saddle against South Florida. In his last start, Harris looked like he'd rather be anywhere but the Sun Bowl, where he served up three interceptions in 13 snaps in an embarrassing rout at the hands of Notre Dame, pushing his career total to a staggering 39 picks in three years.

Stephen Morris wasn't appreciably better in relief, putting up nine INTs himself in five-and-a-half games, but he was a) A true freshman who fully expected to redshirt until Harris' injury, and b) The closest the 'Canes had to a spark as the season unraveled, leading an impressive win over Georgia Tech and a late comeback to beat Maryland in his first two starts.

Advantage: Morris. Most importantly, Morris offers a clear demarcation between the Shannon era and the new rebuilding campaign under coach Al Golden. Faced with two interception-prone QBs learning a new system, there's no reason not to hand the reins to the long-term solution unless Harris clearly outplays him.

NOTRE DAME: Dayne Crist vs. Tommy Rees.
Relevant Dynamic: The Prototype vs. The Winner.
On paper, Dayne Crist still has the NFL size, golden arm, five-star recruiting hype and clean-cut reputation of a can't-miss star-in-waiting. But how long are the Irish willing to wait? Three full years into his career, they barely have a better grasp of the program's would-be savior than they did at this time last year – before his first season as a starter was cut short by his second major knee injury in as many years.

They do that his departure from the lineup heralded an immediate reversal in the team's fortune: In Crist's nine starts, Notre Dame was foundering at 4-5 with back-to-back humiliations at the hands of Navy and Tulsa. After his injury, the Irish reversed their typical November fade to win four straight under true freshman Tommy Rees, including their first win over a ranked team (Utah) since early 2006, their first win over USC since 2002 and a convincing bowl rout over Miami.

Advantage: Crist. Most of the credit for the late turnaround went to the surging defense, not Rees, and coach Brian Kelly's history suggests he's not inclined to defer to the "hot hand" over his designated starter: Faced with a similar situation in Cincinnati in 2009, he readily yanked successful backup Zach Collaros for starter Tony Pike as soon as Pike was ready to resume the job after a four-week absence. In the same vein, Crist's obvious upside should put him back in the driver's seat, unless his rehab unexpectedly extends through the spring.

PENN STATE: Robert Bolden vs. Matt McGloin.
Relevant Dynamic: The Athlete vs. The Game Manager.
Yes, this is a rubber match: Bolden took Round One, surprisingly emerging from a quartet of contenders to become the first true freshman QB to start a season opener in Penn State history. Round Two belonged to McGloin, who started the last six after stepping in for a concussed (and predictably struggling) Bolden in October – a streak that ended with McGloin's 17-of-41, five-interception debacle against Florida in the Outback Bowl, effectively reopening the competition.

Advantage: Bolden. Coaches were determined enough to keep Bolden around that they successfully blocked his attempt to transfer in the immediate aftermath of the bowl game – he didn't see the field at all during McGloin's collapse, which even Joe Paterno admitted was a mistake – and convinced him to stay through the spring. Bolden made it pretty clear over the weekend that he's on the first bus out if he doesn't win the job, and the same potential that carried him into the starting job last August should give him the edge with a season under his belt.

WASHINGTON: Nick Montana vs. Keith Price.
Relevant Dynamic: The Pedigree vs. The Dual Threat.
The Huskies' battle could be alternately labeled "Blank Slate vs. Blank Slate." Price took snaps in eight games last year as a redshirt freshman, but only saw significant action in one, a predictably grisly, 53-16 loss at Oregon with senior hero Jake Locker rehabbing a cracked rib. Nick "Yes That Montana" Montana, spawn of Joe, spent a redshirt season working with the scout team. Neither has particularly notable size or recruiting hype (Montana had a much better list of offers than you'd expect for a relatively spindly three-star recruit, but his last name is also "Montana"), and coach Steve Sarkisian has downplayed the alleged differences in their arms and legs, respectively, claiming Price is a better passer and Montana a better runner than either gets credit for.

Advantage: Price. The local assumption is that Price's scanty game experience gives him a slight edge, though the position is wide open enough that the competition is expected to continue well into the fall, when oversized true freshman Derrick Brown (6-3/225) and JUCO transfer Antavius Sims are also expected to get long looks, the latter as a "Wildcat" option. Either way, running back Chris Polk can probably expect to carry a heavier share of the offense.

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Matt Hinton is on Twitter: Follow him @DrSaturday.

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Janzen Jackson sends Tennessee's 'Kiffin class' up in smoke

Safety Janzen Jackson is withdrawing from Tennessee for "personal issues," per coach Derek Dooley, which is enough of a blow for the Volunteers in itself: Jackson is a former five-star recruit just hitting the prime of his college career as a rising junior, and was the only Vol voted All-SEC in 2010 – first or second team – by league coaches. He's the best player on the team, and he could be gone for good.

Even if Jackson makes it back in time to play this fall, though, his departure (along with that of former classmate Jerod Askew, formally dismissed Monday for a violation of team rules) throws the utter failure of the Vols' 2009 recruiting class – the only class inked by Lane Kiffin as Tennessee's head coach – into sharp relief. At the time, Kiffin's haul was hailed as a triumph in the wake of a sagging effort by his deposed predecessor, Phil Fulmer, a late rally that Rivals ultimately ranked as the tenth-best incoming class the country. The other major services were equally enthusiastic.

Barely two years later, all references to the "Kiffin Class" in Knoxville should come with a warning label: May spontaneously combust at any moment. And the flames start at the very top – of the five Tennessee signees that ranked among Rivals' top 100 overall prospects in '09, Jackson's exit brings the score to oh-for-five:

Bryce Brown: Nation's No. 1 prospect quietly rushed for 460 yards as a true freshman, went AWOL from the team following Kiffin's departure and finally transferred home to Kansas State.

Janzen Jackson: Longtime LSU commit quickly worked his way into the starting rotation as a true freshman, until he was mixed up in a wrong place/wrong time arrest for armed robbery (see below); with that incident apparently behind him, Jackson returned the lineup to earn second-team All-SEC honors from league coaches as a sophomore. With Monday's news, his future in Knoxville is again in serious doubt.

Nu'Keese Richardson: Longtime Florida commit – and inspiration for Kiffin's infamous "Urban had to cheat" dig against Urban Meyer – caught eight garbage-time passes as a true freshman before a swift, ignominious exit for allegedly sticking up a gas station customer along with Jackson and another classmate. While decked out in Tennessee gear.

Jerod Askew: Fulmer's only high-profile commit redshirted in 2009, failed to log a tackle last year on defense or special teams and was just booted from the team.

David Oku: Nation's No. 1 "all-purpose" back saw the field as a return man, but made little impact there and was a nonentity on offense, rushing for a grand total of 75 yards against SEC defenses over two years; announced last month he plans to transfer at the end of the spring semester.

Not only are zero of his most touted signees on track to make it to their junior season in Knoxville, but at the time, they were almost unanimously regarded as Kiffin's kids: Aside from Askew, all of the above were surprising, eleventh-hour coups thought to be heading elsewhere almost up to the moment they signed with the Volunteers. So was four-star defensive back Darren Myles, another signing day victory who made no significant contributions before being dismissed by Dooley as a repeat offender last year.

In all, of the eight 4/5-star players who committed to Kiffin from December 2008 forward, only two – cornerbacks Eric Gordon and Marsalis Teague – are currently listed on the 2011 roster. When you pull up this page on Rivals.com, it should be slowly engulfed in flames.

The bigger problem for Dooley – both last year, when the Vols were barely competitive against the top half of the SEC en route to a 6-6 finish, and going forward – is that the '09 class is only one of a progression of flops that leaves his team bereft of veteran talent, depth and leadership. The hyped, bust-filled 2007 crop already deserves to go down as one of the most underachieving classes in recent memory. The far less-hyped 2008 class hasn't fared much better in terms of producing reliable starters. And 2009, well, see above. As far as the young guns came over the last month of 2010, the hole they're climbing out of is still several miles deep.

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Matt Hinton is on Twitter: Follow him @DrSaturday.

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The NBPA supports the Wisconsin teachers' union

It's sometimes hard to believe, but there's an entire world outside of the NBA. For instance, did you know that Libya is in the midst of a revolution? I thought that place was just a genus of crabs!

On the domestic front, the whole of Wisconsin is up in arms about Governor Scott Walker's attempt to strip the state's teachers' union of its collective bargaining rights, ostensibly to get the state out of debt. It's an important fight for not just Wisconsin teachers, but the entire cause of American labor.

So it shouldn't come as much of a surprise that the National Basketball Players Association has come out in support of the teachers' struggle in Wisconsin. Here is the entirety of Friday's press release:

"Last night's vote by the Wisconsin Assembly was an attempt to undermine organized labor and the men and women across the country who depend on their unions for a voice in the workplace. The NBPA proudly supports our brothers and sisters in Wisconsin and their stand for unequivocal collective bargaining rights." -- Billy Hunter, NBPA Executive Director

"Wisconsin public-sector workers tirelessly deliver services on a daily basis to millions of Wisconsin residents. The right of these hard-working men and women to organize and bargain collectively is fundamental. Wisconsin's workers deserve better than last night's vote. Today, our union stands proudly with our fellow union members throughout the state as they continue their fight." -- Keyon Dooling, NBPA First Vice President, Milwaukee Bucks

At first glance, this show of solidarity might seem pretty ridiculous. After all, NBA players will fight the owners this summer to make many millions of dollars rather than many millions of dollars, whereas the loss of the Wisconsin teachers' collective bargaining rights effectively puts them at the mercy of the state. If a state-employed educator ever made the NBA's veteran minimum, then that person would soon after have to go back to the land of magical make-believe, because they would not exist.

But that doesn't mean that the NBA's union battle is somehow not serious. At any level of pay, employees gain more rights when unionized. That goes for millionaires as well as teachers who make $50k per year. When high-profile athletes support those in a much bigger union fight, it shows that all workers are in this fight together. That helps Mrs. Holstein in third-grade homeroom as well as Kobe Bryant.

Maybe the Wisconsin teachers will return the favor in July. If David Stern starts hanging out with Gov. Walker, you'll know something is up.

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The Wizards have bought Mike Bibby out

In yet another sign that player agents either really believe that the NBA will lose games to a lockout next season, or that player agents are at the very least hedging their bets on a shortened schedule next season, ex-Grizzlies/Kings/Hawks/Wizards guard Mike Bibby has reached a buyout agreement with the Washington team that traded for him last week.

This early in the game, we don't have any details as to the specs of the buyout, exactly how much of the remainder of Bibby's salary he gave back, but NBC Washington's Dan Helie is reporting that the buyout has been completed.

Bibby was due to make $6.4 million next season, and he's in the midst of earning $5.7 million this year. The veteran guard clearly believes the up-front cash handed to him by the Wizards to forfeit the remainder of that deal, coupled with any money that he'd earn by signing with a new team for the rest of 2010-11, and whatever he earns in 2011-12, are enough to risk giving up guaranteed cash coming from the since-bought out contract he signed in 2009.

And what would any prospective NBA team pick up, should they sign Mike Bibby for a playoff run? A great shooter, as Bibby is hitting over 44 percent of his three-pointers this year, but little else. Bibby is a terrible defender at this point in his career, he doesn't penetrate or create much, and he's a terrible finisher in the lane.

But in an offense where a wing player does most of the ball-handling, as is the case with Kobe Bryant in Los Angeles or LeBron James in Miami, Bibby's spot-up talents could help a team. For spot minutes, of course.

Just don't bank on him to pick up the tab for lunch anytime soon.

UPDATE: Wow. According to Yahoo! Sports' Marc Spears, Bibby gave back every penny of his 2011-12 salary to play for a winner. That is astonishing news, and don't think Bibby and his representatives aren't aware that the best he'll possibly make next season with a new team is half of the $6.4 million (or $6.2 million, reports vary) he was due to earn.

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Capitals acquire Dennis Wideman, add more scoring to blueline

Leave it to the Washington Capitals, those new media vanguards, to break their own trade on their own blog. From Dump and Chase's Mike Vogel:

The Caps sent minor league forward Jake Hauswirth and their third-round pick in the 2011 NHL Entry Draft to the Florida Panthers in exchange for puck-moving defenseman Dennis Wideman.

Wideman, a right-handed shooting offensive defenseman, gives the Caps more balance on the backline, another power play point option and depth in the event that injuries to current Caps defensemen Tom Poti and Mike Green linger into the post-season.

Wideman has 33 points in 61 games, with 19 on the power play; which is key considering how that unit has been inconstant this year. It's a trade that speaks volumes about the health of the veteran puck-moving defensemen on this team, as Wideman is another right-handed shot on the blueline with Green and John Carlson.

But here's the thing on Wideman: He's got another year left on his deal at $4.5 million base salary (and a $3,937,500 cap hit). They'll clear Scott Hannan, who's an unrestricted free agent in the summer, but now have Green, Carlson, Tom Poti, Karl Alzner and Wideman on the same blueline next season. At least, at the moment. This does feel like the first step to something else. 

The Panthers get a third and a big body (6-5) in Hauswirth, who had a good camp two seasons ago for the Caps. But we're going to give this one Two Milburys, as Wideman's not been the same player as he was in his breakout year in Boston and could be an object of scorn if he's a liability next season with that contract.

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Coming Attractions: Keenan Allen, Cal's latest ticking time bomb

Assessing 2011's most intriguing players, in no particular order. Today: Sophomore Cal receiver/return man Keenan Allen.

Typecasting. There was never any doubt after Allen snubbed Alabama for Cal on signing day that he would see the field in Berkeley right away. The only question was where. He was coveted by just about everyone who thought they had a chance last winter as a five-star, can't-miss safety prospect in the rangy mold of former Tennessee All-American Deon Grant. His Rivals scouting report described Allen as "like a smooth jungle cat" deftly prowling across "a ton of acreage in the secondary." Even his official Cal bio, written just before the start of the season, expected Allen to play both ways.

From the beginning, though, Allen was focused on making plays with the ball in his hands: The only significant time he saw as a defender was tracking down opponents after a turnover. He was credited with three tackles in the course of that duty, but otherwise spent his debut campaign as one of the Bears' two front-line receivers, generally trying to make something out of short, safe throws with his quickness or create mismatches against smaller cornerbacks with his 6-3, 200-pound frame.

Best-Case. If the recruiting hype wasn't enough to get Cal fans a little overheated about his potential in an offense sorely missing consistent playmakers, Allen's first game, against overmatched whipping boy UC-Davis, left the entire football-conscious population of the Bay Area panting for more:

Considering the opponent, the total production (176 yards, two touchdowns on eight touches) was less enticing than the all-purpose fashion in which he accumulated it, via short passes, intermediate passes, screens, an end-around, a chaotic broken play that he turned into his first touchdown; he even came within a hair of hauling in a deep ball he'd gone horizontal for behind the coverage. He was fully integrated into the offense from day one, and already on the verge of becoming its brightest star.

Allen also proved reliable enough to finish second on the team in total receptions, touchdowns and all-purpose yards, most of them accumulated after a few minor injuries began to crop up early in the year, and didn't let up. At full speed, with a year in the system, Allen should settle in as the Bears' new go-to- receiver and begin the progression toward becoming one of the most feared targets in the conference.

    More Coming Attractions
  • Feb. 21: SHAYNE SKOV, Stanford

Worst-Case. The overall production was sparse: After averaging 30 yards on four catches in the warm-up game, Allen was only able to wring 376 yards out of a respectable 43 receptions over the last eleven, good for a paltry 8.7 yards per catch. Only two of those grabs, a 29-yarder against Colorado and a 32-yarder at USC – the latter with the game already well in hand for the Trojans – covered at least 25 yards, and fewer than half went for first downs. In the last four games in which Allen appeared (he sat out the Nov. 6 win over Washington State after injuring his knee in warmups), he averaged just 8.4 per catch with no touchdowns while the offense in general failed to top 14 points in any of four losses.

That distinct lack of big-play pop could be chalked up to quarterbacks (Kevin Riley and Brock Mansion) who struggled to get the ball downfield, and/or the injuries that limited Allen's ability to run after the catch on the endless succession of quick hitches and screens designed to protect the quarterback. It could also mean that Allen isn't quite as explosive as advertised against competent defenses, and is bound for the dreaded "possession receiver" tag – or worse, if he struggles to remain healthy for more than a few games at a stretch.

Fun Fact. The highlight of Allen's freshman campaign may have been the wild, totem-like tattoo he added to his right shoulder and bicep over his first few months on campus – his arm was entirely clean when he arrived – featuring an indian chief and snarling wolf. Wolf tats are cool, just as long as you don't get them on your shirt or your car.

What to expect in the fall. The bar is set tantalizingly high by Allen's outsized recruiting hype and flashes of corroborating skill. He remains the Bears' best hope of finding the legitimate, All-Pac-12-caliber home run threat they sorely missed last year in the absence of Jahvid Best, and haven't had at receiver since DeSean Jackson burned a path out of Berkeley in 2007. Only UCLA had a more anemic passing attack last year, and whether that was a result of the chicken (the lackluster quarterbacks) or the egg (the lackluster surrounding cast) or both, it's not going to change unless Allen leads the charge out of the mire.

With his size and slightly less-than-Jacksonian speed, progress for Allen may be a product of consistency and reliability rather than highlight-reel flash. At this point, Jeff Tedford will take itbecause off his first losing season, he and his quarterbacks will take all the help they can get.

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Matt Hinton is on Twitter: Follow him @DrSaturday.

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Meet the New Boss: Grading the class-hopping coaching hires

A weeklong grade book for the offseason coaching hires. Today: Established head coaches moving up the career ladder at more prominent jobs.

Jerry Kill (Minnesota)
Coming from: Northern Illinois, fresh off matching the school record for wins in a season (10), broken in Kill's absence with the Huskies' blowout win over Fresno State in the Humanitarian Bowl.
Replacing: Tim Brewster, who became first coaching casualty of 2010 in the midst of a 1-6 start that brought his record in Minneapolis to 15-30 in three-and-a-half years, with losses along the way at the hands of Bowling Green, Florida Atlantic, North Dakota, South Dakota and, yes, Northern Illinois.
Most Impressive Resumé Line: Besides being named "Kill," he's been a consistent winner at all four stops in 17 seasons as a head coach: Only one of Kill's teams in that span (Southern Illinois in 2005) failed to at least match the record of the team before it, and even the '05 Salukis earned a share of the Gateway Conference championship and the third of five straight trips to the I-AA/FCS playoffs.
Biggest Drawback: Kill's three-year stint at NIU was his first foray onto the I-A/FBS stage after more than 25 years winding throughout the lower levels, but at 50, he's hardly an up-and-comer. He's also faced some persistent health issues over the last five years, .
Key Intangible(s): Sets a new, daunting standard for head coaches who closely resemble the school mascot.
Grade: A–. There aren't many coaches on the market with a career record (127-73) more than 50 games over .500, even if the vast majority of the wins came in small-college obscurity. Assuming the Gophers aren't going to be challenging for Big Ten titles under pretty much any circumstances (last Rose Bowl: 1961, the longest drought in the conference), Kill is a steady presence that can give them a solid string of bowl games and the occasional run at something bigger, without the wholesale collapses that bookended the Brewster era.

TODD GRAHAM (Pittsburgh)
Coming from: Tulsa, where the Golden Hurricane won at least 10 games and a share of the Conference USA West title in three of Graham's four seasons.
Replacing: Mike Haywood, who lasted 17 days on the job before being fired over a felony domestic assault charge on New Year's Eve. On the heels of five lackluster years under Dave Wannstedt, the bar couldn't be much lower.
Most Impressive Resumé Line: In addition to the division titles, Graham's winning teams at Tulsa also led the nation in total offense twice (2007-08) and finished in the top six in both total and scoring offense three times, in 2007-08 and 2010.
Biggest Drawback: Graham's background is on defense – Tulsa's outsized success on offense in 2007-08 was largely attributed to his co-offensive coordinators, Gus Malzahn and Herb Hand. The Hurricane defense never finished higher than 74th nationally in Graham's four seasons, and twice finished in the bottom twenty.
Key Intangible(s): Has never been arrested.
Grade: B+. Graham's record speaks for itself: His only team at Rice rebounded from a 1-10 flop to end a 45-year bowl drought in 2006; his first two teams at Tulsa both played for the C-USA championship in 2007-08; after a 5-6 mulligan in 2009, his last team at UT upset Notre Dame to kickstart a seven-game winning streak to close the season, and averaged upwards of 500 yards and 40 points per game without Malzahn or Hand on staff. Under the circumstances, the Panthers weren't going to do much better in a search that began abruptly in January.

PETE LEMBO (Ball State)
Coming from: Elon, a small, church-affiliated school in North Carolina, where Lembo led seven wins over ranked FCS teams in five seasons and took the Phoenix to the I-AA/FCS playoffs for the first time.
Replacing: Stan Parrish, who went 6-19 over two seasons in his first head coaching gig since leading Kansas State into infamy as the nation's most hopeless program in the late eighties.
Most Impressive Resumé Line: Before raising Elon from the ashes, Lembo earned a national coach of the year nod in 2001, his first year as a head coach, for leading Lehigh to a perfect regular season and the quarterfinals of the national playoffs. He took the Mountain Hawks back to the playoffs in 2004.
Biggest Drawback: Has no experience in any capacity above the I-AA/FCS level.
Key Intangible(s): Considers Ball State a significant step up.
Grade: B+. Even Ball State fans aren't that jazzed about a balding, bespectacled guy they'd never heard of before he was handed the keys to their ailing program. But Lembo only has one losing season in nine years as a head coach (his first season at Elon, in which the Phoenix improved from 3-8 in 2005 to 5-6) and has the best career winning percentage (.687) by a mile of any new coach with previous experience hired this offseason.

AL GOLDEN (Miami)
Coming from: Temple, black hole in which Golden was able to bring some light in the form of the school's first back-to-back winning seasons in 30 years.
Replacing: Randy Shannon, whose substantial improvements to the Hurricanes' academic and criminal records were easily overshadowed by his team's clear step back last year in a make-or-break campaign.
Most Impressive Resumé Line: Did we mention back-to-back winning seasons at Temple? The year before Golden's arrival, the Owls were 0-11 in 2005 and had just been booted from the Big East for a solid decade of all-purpose futility. Golden won almost as many games (17) in his last two seasons in Philly as his predecessor, Bobby Wallace, won in eight (19).
Biggest Drawback: Has a losing record in limited experience as a head coach (27-34 over five years), and only two of those wins came against teams that finished with a winning record – Navy in 2009 and BCS-bound UConn last September.
Key Intangible(s): Comes from square-jawed roots under mentors Tom O'Brien, Joe Paterno (as a player and coach) and Al Groh, and reportedly has players "fired up" by Golden's hands-on emphasis on discipline.
Grade: B. Considering he was perpetually floated as a possible replacement for Joe Paterno at his alma mater, it's not like Miami went out on a limb for a neophyte – at least Golden comes with experience as a head coach, unlike the 'Canes' last two hires, Shannon and Larry Coker. But they're clearly more interested in striking, uh, gold with an up-and-comer hitting the prime of his career than in a more accomplished resumé.

BRADY HOKE (Michigan)
Coming from: San Diego State, fresh from the Aztecs' first winning season in more than a decade in Hoke's second year.
Replacing: Rich Rodriguez, a competent profession who found himself in a wrong place/wrong time situation with the deck stacked against him from day one or a ham-fisted sadist who systematically detonated the century-old pillars of Michigan Football, depending on your perspective. Whatever the baby steps the Wolverines were taking over the course of Rich Rod's tenure, they were effectively negated by the catastrophic ending.
Most Impressive Resumé Line: It took a while, but Hoke finally broke through at Ball State with a 12-0 regular season in 2008, his sixth season in Muncie, and quickly raised SDSU from the embarrassment of the Chuck Long era. But his advocates in Michigan seem at least as impressed by his stint as defensive line coach on Lloyd Carr's staff from 1995-2002, and on the Wolverines' 1997 national championship team, in particular.
Biggest Drawback: Also has a losing record as a head coach: 47-50 over eight years, with three winning seasons to five that finished sub-.500.
Key Intangible(s): Has a connection to the pre-Rodriguez era, is known and liked in Michigan circles, more or less openly lobbied for the job and said he'd walk from San Diego to Ann Arbor if necessary. Says all the right things to establish himself as the anti-Rodriguez.
Grade: B–. The Wolverines should be significantly better this fall, regardless of the coach: They get back a huge number of starters. a star quarterback and a defense that must improve as a matter of statistical inevitability. But (successes notwithstanding) Hoke doesn't have many skins on the wall for a job of this caliber and comes across as something of a sentimental, "family" hire, which will only sustain warm feelings among the faithful until the ball is snapped.

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Matt Hinton is on Twitter: Follow him @DrSaturday.

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02/26 (Very) Quickie

The Pussycat Dolls Isla Fisher Sophia Bush Megan Fox Michelle Malkin

Headlinin': Concussions force ASU's Threet to call it a career

Making the morning rounds.

Take the functioning brain cells and run. Arizona State quarterback Steven Threet, a full-time starter last year and owner of the most improbable 58-yard run in Michigan history as the Wolverines' top signal-caller in 2008, is giving up football for good after suffering four concussions in five years – including two in a little more than a month last fall, against Cal (Oct. 23) and UCLA (Nov. 26), that he says continue to cause headaches and insomnia. Threet has a year of eligibility remaining and a decent shot of keeping his job from junior Brock Osweiler, but the disturbing suicide of former Notre Dame and Chicago Bears star Dave Duerson last week is the latest in a long, long list of reasons for concussion victims to get their brains out of harm's way while they can. [Arizona Republic]

Fight the power. The owner of the domain "pac12.com" has filed a lawsuit against the Pac-10 in an effort to keep the domain, which he apparently registered a good five years before the conference finalized expansion plans – and the transition from the Pac-10 to the Pac-12 – last summer. The Pac-10 sent the owner, Allen Linford, a cease-and-desist letter in January, and filed a complaint with the World Intellectual Property Organization earlier this month when Linford responded to the letter by adorning the empty site with an Amazon widget for downloading Tupac Shakur albums. According to his suit, filed in Utah, Linford also registered Pacific12.com and PACtwelve.com. [Domain Name Wire, via Cap'n Ken]

We're all equals here. Former Colorado teammates Jon Embree and Eric Bieniemy were both rumored as finalists for the vacant head-coaching job at their alma mater last December, and they're getting paid like it: Embree, CU's new head coach, and Bieniemy, his offensive coordinator, will earn the same base salary this year, $250,000, making Bieniemy the only assistant in the country whose paycheck can stand toe-to-toe with his boss'. Well, almost – Embree comes out ahead when you consider supplements (he'll make nearly twice his base salary for media appearances, sponsorships and conducting summer camps), but Bieniemy's own add-ons for sponsorships and "community outreach" will keep him very much in the ballpark unless the Buffs trigger big incentives for Embree by making a BCS bowl ($200,000) and/or winning a national championship ($750,000). [Boulder Daily Camera]

In other words, get hired by Oklahoma. Whatever they amount to in the end, Embree and Bieniemy's salaries put together are still chump change to Bob Stoops, whose seventh Big 12 championships was rewarded with a $1 million raise from Oklahoma regents, bringing Stoops' 2011 salary to a whopping $4.875 million. Only two coaches, Nick Saban ($5.16 million) and Mack Brown ($5.1 million), will make more, and only one member of Oklahoma's staff will make less than the $250,000 base salary Colorado's paying to its top dogs: First-year tight end/tackles coach Bruce Kittle, who stands to make $240,000. [Tulsa World]

Hello again, old sanctioning body friend. USC isn't a party in the NCAA's case against Tennessee for multiple violations that occurred under current Trojan coach Lane Kiffin's watch in 2009 and early 2010, but any action taken against Kiffin could still put SC on thin ice given its own probation in the Reggie Bush Affair, according to an attorney with direct experience defending schools against the NCAA. "Specifically, if the COI (Committee on Infractions) places limitations on Kiffin, then USC will have to monitor his compliance with the committee penalties," Michael L. Buckner told the Orange County Register, drawing a direct comparison to basketball coach Kelvin Sampson's serial infractions at Oklahoma and Indiana. "If Kiffin fails to comply with the penalties, then USC could be held partially responsible, per the IU case." [Orange County Register]

Quickly… Jack Cristil, 85, retires after 58 years as Mississippi State's radio play-by-play man, due to a "deteriorating health situation." … Former Washington quarterback Marques Tuiasosopo leaves his alma mater to join his old coach in UCLA. … Former San Diego State coach Chuck Long, runner-up for the 1985 Heisman Trophy as an All-American quarterback at Iowa, is facing foreclosure on his home in San Diego. … Georgia's rare losing season hasn't affected the coffers. … Steve Kragthorpe says obvious things about his offensive philosophy. … And a double dose of Randy Edsall: The official Edsall recruiting pitch to local players, and the Edsall Pyramid of Success. (The latter obviously swiped from noted motivator Ron Swanson.)

- - -
Matt Hinton is on Twitter: Follow him @DrSaturday.

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Sunday, February 27, 2011

Spring Snapshot: Gibson will have D-backs hustling all over

Every day in spring training until we finish the entire league, Big League Stew takes a brief capsule look at each team we visit in the Grapefruit and Cactus leagues. Next stop is Salt River Fields, new spring home of the Diamondbacks. Sure, the house is nice — but how is the furniture?

ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS

2010 RECORD: 65-97, fifth in NL West.

BIGGEST ACQUISITIONS: He set up with the White Sox, but J.J. Putz presumably gives the D-backs a capable closer. And a trading chip at the deadline. Right-hander David Hernandez, coming from the Orioles in the Mark Reynolds deal, is a solid prospect. 

BIGGEST DEPARTURES: Reynolds and Adam LaRoche, though productive, seemed to represent something manager Kirk Gibson didn't seem to like about his offense: The feeling that all it could do was hit home runs.

FIVE QUESTIONS ABOUT THE D-BACKS

1. So, how's the rebuilding going? Kevin Goldstein, who knows about these things, doesn't rank the farm system particularly high. Actually, 29th of 30."Nowhere to go but up," Goldstein says. So, considering Kevin Towers only took over as general manager in September, we are years away from having any kind of vision come to fruition. But he did a great job in San Diego, so if past performance is an indication, the D-backs should start to look better in 2013 or 2014. 

2. What is Gibson like as a manager? Says reliever Clay Zavada: "Gibby? He talks to you, he cares about you. He's the type of guy that would throw fists with you if he had to. Not at you. ... Well, he'll throw them at you, but he'll throw them with you, too." For that matter, Gibson says: "We won't be well liked" by other teams. Gibson also wants to have his team do the little things — bunting, stealing, running hard into second base, etc. Hustling. While it's not terribly sabermetric, for where the D-backs are right now, an intense and disciplinary style seems OK. It's kind of like some of the players Towers added: Willie Bloomquist, Geoff Blum, Melvin Mora. They're not strong run producers, they may not even be very good players, but they fit an image and give other players certain example to follow, one Gibson wants. The D-backs weren't going to be made over in an offseason. So why not?

3. Is Justin Upton ready for beast mode? You will find no better analysis of the D-backs' slugger than here, in Alex Remington's report. The short answer is: Maybe. Not many players his age (23) have already accumulated 1,728 plate appearances and a batting line of: .272/.352/.471. But nagging indicators, like Upton's tendency to strike out too much (447 times so far), give analysts pause when considering if he projects into a great hitter.

4. Do we need to put the word out to free Brandon Allen? The young slugger came over from the White Sox organization for reliever Tony Peña in 2009, and at age 25 he seems on the verge of ... not stardom, but goodness. But he was blocked last season by LaRoche, and the D-backs also have Juan Miranda and Russell Branyan in camp to clutter the first base bag. He swings left-handed, is also getting time in the outfield and had a .264/.347/.477 line in the minors.

5. Can Micah Owings make the team as a reliever/pitcher? He'd be cooler if he did. A deadly hitter at Georgia Tech and Tulane, Owings has a .293/.323/.538 batting line in 198 career plate major league appearances. But he has swung it better than he has flung it: He has a 5.11 ERA in 410 1-3 innings. Gibson says he is leaving every spot on the 25-man roster up for grabs, which isn't literally true but it does leave the possibility for Owings to make it as the ultimate swingman, a la Brooks Kieschnick a few years back. His first spring outing on the mound was rough, and Gibson seemed a little bothered by it, though results aren't nearly as important in spring training. At 28 and back with the team that drafted him, Owings' career is at a crossroads. But it's one of those six-way intersections, with the angled street. He could remain a pitcher, he could dabble in both, or he could just try to slug his way to a career.

Follow Dave throughout spring training on Twitter — @AnswerDave — and check out the Stew on Facebook for more coverage.

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Texas Tech News, Notes and Links | 2011-02-27

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Google Changes Search Algorithm to Combat Content Farms

You may notice that Google is functioning a little differently today. The search engine recently made a major change to their search algorithms in order to strike back at so-called “content farms”. These sites, which feature large amounts of mass-produced content angled to rank high on Google, have been accused of reducing the overall quality of search results. Demand Media, owners of eHow, are perhaps the best-known content farm.

Google expects these changes to affect roughly 12% of search results. 84% of the top dozen blocked domains on Google Chrome were included in the sweep. Since this is a blanket change, there is some fear that it could cause issues for legitimate sites. Sorting the good sites from the bad ones is complicated by the fact that many content farms also have legitimate arms. For example, Demand Media also owns Cracked.com, which is very definitely not a ‘farmed’ site.

Demand responded to these changes earlier today. Their EVP of Media and Operations noted that some of their properties rose and some fell due to the move. He did state that “at this time” Demand has not seen a material impact on their business from the change.

While every piece of analysis you’ll find on this change will mention the phrase “content farms”, Google has avoided using that term. Matt Cutts, of Google’s spam fighting team, told Search Engine Land that “I think people will get the idea of the types of sites we’re talking about.”

[Via Google Blog]


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HTC Merge gets official: QWERTY Android World Phone due spring

HTC has officially announced the HTC Merge, a phone we first heard rumors of so long ago we were beginning to think it had been cancelled. Headed to “multiple North American carriers” in Spring 2011, the Merge has a 3.8-inch WVGA touchscreen, 5-megapixel camera and slide-out QWERTY keyboard.

There’s WiFi, GPS and 720p HD video capture, along with HTC Sense running on top of Android 2.2 Froyo. Although HTC isn’t saying which exact carriers will be picking the Merge up, the fact that it’s a CDMA World Phone – i.e. will operate on EVDO Rev.A networks in the US, and GSM HSPA networks while abroad – does imply that Verizon and Sprint are the likely candidates.

No word on pricing, nor specific availability, but we should find out for sure in a few months time.

Press Release:

HTC Introduces the Powerful, Feature-Rich HTC Merge

The HTC Merge? Smartphone Brings Android? and HTC Sense? to HTC’s First CDMA Android World Phone

BELLEVUE, Wash., Feb. 25, 2011 /PRNewswire/ — HTC Corp., a global designer of smartphones, today announced that the new HTC Merge smartphone will be made available through multiple North American carriers beginning in spring 2011. The HTC Merge smartphone combines a full QWERTY slide-out keyboard with the power of Android 2.2, the HTC Sense experience, a large 3.8-inch touch-screen display and a 5 megapixel camera to create a complete mobile experience for those looking for a truly complete smartphone. The HTC Merge is also HTC’s first Android-based CDMA world phone.

“HTC prides itself on creating unique solutions that meet the needs of different customers, and with features like a full keyboard and global 3G roaming, the HTC Merge smartphone is the perfect example of this commitment,” said Jason Mackenzie, president, HTC Americas. “Combining the functionality of Android with the HTC Sense experience, the HTC Merge is the perfect device for those customers who are looking for a reliable mobile experience with the features and functionality of a smartphone, whether it’s at home or travelling around the world.”

Customers will appreciate seamless integration with Exchange ActiveSync, enjoy quick and easy access to Flickr� for sharing and viewing pictures, and find new ways to customize their experience with the Android Market? with more than 100,000 applications. With a full slide-out QWERTY keyboard, customers will be able to keep in touch with friends and family no matter where they are, as well as stay in the loop with Flickr, Facebook� and Twitter? updates through HTC FriendStream?.

In addition, the HTC Merge smartphone has a 5 megapixel camera with auto-focus and flash that captures outstanding images, while 3G connectivity makes sharing those special moments with friends and family quick and easy. The HTC Merge smartphone also comes with integrated GPS, Wi-Fi connectivity and even the ability to capture high-definition 720p video.

Availability

HTC Merge is slated to be available from multiple North American operators beginning in spring 2011.


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Capitals Deficiencies Exposed by Rangers Once Again

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WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Good thing Washington Capitals general manager George McPhee is one of the most deliberate executives in the NHL.

If not, Friday's 6-0 loss to the New York Ranges -- Washington's worst loss at home since November 2006 -- could mean plenty of changes ahead of Monday's trade deadline.

"George is not a knee-jerk guy at all," said Capitals forward Mike Knuble, one of four players available to the media after the game. "Whether we won 5-0 or lost 6-0 like tonight, it probably wouldn't have changed his approach to the deadline. He's had last summer to think about it and a lot of this season. He's probably already formulated his plans."

And this game for the fifth-place Caps exposed the same sorts of elements that were absent when they were bounced in the first round of the playoffs last season despite winning the Presidents' Trophy for the league's best regular season record.

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Saturday, February 26, 2011

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The week that was @ Devil Ball

Did you miss a story or two from the first week of the season here at Devil Ball? No sweat, we've got you covered. Here's what graced our (web)pages this week:

• It's match play week, and we think there should be much, much more match play.

• On this week's podcast: Bracketology! Plus free candy for everyone who listens! Maybe.

• Thanks for playing, Ian Poulter

• Could Vijay Singh come back after all? Signs point to...maybe.

• What were you doing when you were a 16-year-old girl? If you can't answer "winning a men's tournament," Lexi Thompson has you beat.

Robert Coles had a chance at winning his first European Tour event, but five-putted from 25 feet to give it away. Agh.

• The PGA Tour's Ty Votaw stopped by for a little promotion of the FedEx Cup.

• Which of the non-majors is the best non-major? We debate, we discuss, we disagree.

• Yes, Tiger Woods lost again. And we're pretty much done with reporting that every week. At least until next week. Drives ya nuts, doesn't it?

• And finally, David Feherty gives it up for the kids ... and gets it back, right in the jewels.

Keep up with Devil Ball Golf via Facebook right here and via Twitter at @jaybusbee. Get to it!

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For Super Bowl champs, the draft is where it starts

INDIANAPOLIS -- The scouting combine is all about assessing draft-eligible talent, and there are few NFL executives who have displayed the magic touch when it comes to team-building through the draft process in recent years better than Green Bay Packers general manager Ted Thompson. The Packers and Pittsburgh Steelers are often held up as the primary examples of the importance of using free agency as the frosting on the cake, while setting the foundation through the draft is key. It's no coincidence that those two teams faced off in Super Bowl XLV.

Aaron Rodgers is the most famous draft choice under Thompson, but a quick trip up and down the roster reveals several later-pick success stories. Guard Josh Sitton, categorized by Ndamukong Suh as the most challenging offensive lineman he's faced, was taken in the fourth round of the 2008 draft. Running back James Starks, who set the team's running game right in the nick of time for the playoff run that ended in the ultimate victory, was picked up in the sixth round last year.

That's always been the way for Thompson, and he learned it a long time ago when he worked under the legendary Ron Wolf in Green Bay in the early 1990s. Thompson later followed Mike Holmgren to Seattle and helped build the team that went to Super Bowl XL, but the Packers got him back in the subsequent regime change. "He's who I went to work for in '92, and he was a strong believer that you build the core of your team around the draft," Thompson said of Wolf on Friday at the scouting combine. "Certainly free agency is another avenue, but you do that a little bit more selectively. That's just the way we were taught."

According to Thompson, one of the secrets is to avoid getting caught up in which position groups look the strongest in any particular year -- stick to your board and your beliefs on a "no-matter-what" basis.

"I never, never go down that route," Thompson said. "I think at the end of the day, this draft will be like all the other drafts. There will be some areas that they'll be some strength, there will be some other areas that are not quite as strong. But at the end of the day, there's going to be 'X' number of players that come into the league that are going to play. Sometimes there are going to be college free agents like a couple we had this year. Sometimes there are going to be first-round picks."

Another key, as we found out when Thompson took Rodgers in 2005 despite the fact that Brett Favre was still going strong, is to make sure that you're built up at key positions before the need makes you do silly things. That's why young players like cornerback Sam Shields and guard Marshall Newhouse are being groomed now, behind starters in positions that are still relative strengths.

"With offensive linemen, we very much like to have young people on our team, but they have to be prepared to play, just like a lot of guys on our team this year," Thompson said. "But certainly, we think we have some capability, as most teams do, of developing offensive linemen. Sometimes it's a smaller school, sometimes guys that maybe got a late start in college, that sort of thing.

"Sam stepped in and did a very fine job for us. And there are a number of guys I can say this about, it's almost to a man, we wouldn't have gotten [to the Super Bowl] without almost every one of the contributions we had this year."

Even when you don't draft a player, you keep your evaluation database together. That way, a gift from the gods can fall in your lap, as elite cornerback Tramon Williams did when he was signed as an undrafted free agent in 2007. Cut at one time by the Houston Texans, Williams eventually flourished in Green Bay's pressure-heavy scheme. Former Houston Oilers running back Alonzo Highsmith, who discovered Williams and talked him up enough for Thompson to pull the trigger, won the NFL Scout of the Year award as a result of that and many other discoveries.

"Well, we watched some tape and we'd been at a workout at Louisiana Tech," Thompson said of the process. "He had pretty good numbers on the original workout, signed with Houston, and then was released. I think he was out there on the streets for two months. Then there was a time we brought in some cornerbacks to work out, and he ran really fast, even better than he did at his pro day, and we put him on our practice squad. At the end of the season we signed him as a reserve/future guy. There's nothing unusual about that, but the fact he's a Pro Bowl caliber corner is unusual. He's worked very hard, he's been coached well -- he thinks he's a player and he is a player."

The draft is the very definition of an inexact science, but success starts with the fundamentals -- you have to know what your ideals are, and you have to know that they work well enough to stake your reputation on them.

"We feel very strongly that our best policy is to try and draft the best player, because you never know," Thompson concluded. "This whole drafting for need, this isn't fantasy football. As you can tell from our team this year, what you think you have at a position could go away with one sprained ankle or one bad knee or something like that. You think you're all set, but you lose them all in one play in the first quarter of a game. So it just makes more sense to us if we stick with the best possible player we can put on our team, regardless of the position, that's the best policy."

That's what the Packers have done over time, and that's why the title is back in Titletown.

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