Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Daily Presidential Tracking Poll

Daily Presidential Tracking Poll

Posted on Twitter @glencumbie
 
Daily Presidential Tracking Poll. Only once, on August 31 of this year, has had a lower Approval Index rating.

Saturday, July 30, 2011

Former Boise State star Hall to join New Orleans Saints - IdahoStatesman.com

Former Boise State and Glenns Ferry High star Korey Hall is moving from one Super Bowl champion to another.

Hall on Friday signed with the New Orleans Saints, who won the Super Bowl at the end of the 2009 season. He leaves the Green Bay Packers, where Hall earned a Super Bowl ring at the end of the 2010 season.

Hall, who was a three-time All-WAC linebacker at Boise State, spent the past four seasons as a fullback and special-teamer for the Packers. He was a sixth-round pick in 2007.

The Saints' veteran fullback, Heath Evans, isn't expected to return, Hall said.

"The fullback is a pretty big part of their offense and in a lot of pass plays," Hall said of the Saints. "They get him the ball quite a bit. Overall, it will be a real fun place."

Hall agreed to terms with the Saints earlier this week but signings weren't official until 4 p.m. Friday. The Saints needed a quick decision, he said, and the Packers' interest was dependent on what happened with another free-agent fullback, John Kuhn.

"We just couldn't wait around too long," Hall said. "When we talked to New Orleans, they had to fill the position and we didn't want to miss out. … They were one of the first (teams) to send us an offer."

Hall is the second former Boise State player to leave the Packers this week, as offensive lineman Daryn Colledge agreed to a five-year deal with the Arizona Cardinals.

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Friday, July 29, 2011

Dimitroff propels his Falcons one step closer to a Super Bowl - Atlanta Journal Constitution (blog)

Bill Belichick asks his former employee for managerial tips. (AJC photo by Curtis Compton)

Bill Belichick seeks managerial tips from a former employee. (AJC photo by Curtis Compton)

Flowery Branch — Assuming he hasn't done so already, Thomas Dimitroff should take several moments to prop his feet on the nearest ottoman, pour himself a tall glass of cabernet and crank his main man Bob Seger to 11 on the hi-fi. Dimitroff has it coming.

The great general manager aced his greatest test. Half his offseason business had been left undone. He'd traded 21 spots upward to draft Julio Jones, the wide receiver of vast promise, but the still-sought pass rusher would have to come via free agency, which owing to the NFL lockout would be rendered a frenzy.

Speaking in his office shortly after noon Friday, Dimitroff said, "I feel calm amid this ostensible disarray." An hour later, he felt positively serene. An hour later, the Falcons had their pass rusher.

They'd landed the free agent Ray Edwards, formerly of Minnesota. And here we stand back to assess what the Falcons have done over an offseason complicated by a work stoppage: Upgraded at receiver, upgraded at defensive end and retained right tackle Tyson Clabo, a free agent himself. If they do nothing else, they look to be a better team than they were last season, and last season they were 13-3. They look to be better because their master planner had, yet again, planned masterfully.

"When we're called on to adapt," Dimitroff said, "we want to be adaptable. This league is about being adaptable. The best teams are."

There was a time — decades of it, actually — when the Falcons were among the NFL's klutzes. That time ended when Arthur Blank found this GM by way of a webcam interview. Since January 2008 this has been a model organization, smart and assertive and prescient. These Falcons had a plan to handle the lockout. These Falcons have a plan for everything.

"Nothing has surprised me as yet," Dimitroff said, meaning about the post-lockout process Blank had called "free agency on steroids." The Falcons made a quick pitch to Charles Johnson, but that defensive end chose to re-up with Carolina for the stunning sum of $72 million ($30 million guaranteed) over six seasons.

Dimitroff again: "This is a puzzle, and it all has to fit together from a skill standpoint and a character standpoint, but it also has to fit financially."

The Falcons landed Edwards for $30 million ($11.5 guaranteed) over five seasons. That's a fit cut from regal cloth.

The day had begun with the Falcons shedding Jamaal Anderson and Michael Jenkins, first-round draftees from a previous regime. That was done to clear money for Edwards, who would come aboard not long after the first practice of Training Camp 2011 — a short and sedate walkthrough –  ended. (There would be another session, this one with helmets, in the afternoon.)

"As a staff, we were so prepared going into this," Dimitroff said. "We've done a good job of being patient, and we'd said that going in: 'We have to be patient when things go awry a little bit.' "

Nothing really did. The Falcons took a run at Johnson but wound up with Edwards, who's likewise a left end and who has had 29 1/2 sacks over five NFL seasons to Johnson's 21 1/2 over four. And they did it at less than half the price.

Not to put too fine a point on it, but these aren't your father's Dumb Ol' Falcons. Dimitroff is shrewd enough to know what to do, bold enough to do it.  "When we started, we said we didn't want to get to the point where we were over-analyzing things," he said. "There can be a tendency to second-guess and to hesitate, and when you do that you don't get the person and you're left holding your backside wondering, 'What happened?' "

What happened Friday was this: The Falcons reported to camp and were given an immediate jolt by news that their GM had delivered. The first day of on-field work ended with this franchise closer to holding the Lombardi Trophy than at any time since Rod Smith beat Eugene Robinson deep in the second quarter of Super Bowl XXXIII.

It's traditional on the first day of camp to guzzle Gatorade by the jug. On this Friday, an exception needed to be made: The Falcons should have raised a glass of the grape to their snowboarding architect. He'd done his part. The rest is up to them.

By Mark Bradley

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Thursday, July 28, 2011

3 tasks for the Jets at training camp - Metro.us

Gang Green has already re-signed some big talent but they still have plenty of holes to fill thanks to cuts.

1. The defense will Go West-erman

With holes at defensive end and outside linebacker, the Jets will need to plug some positions with talent already on their roster.

Given the lavish contract already handed out to Santonio Holmes, they might need to find some bargains.

Third-year defensive end/linebacker Jamaal Westerman could be that player to plug in a couple different slots in the two-deep. The Rutgers product had a tremendous offseason in terms of strength building. 

“I’m excited to see Westerman, we need to give him an opportunity,” head coach Rex Ryan said.

2. Find a big target wide receiver

Now that the Jets have re-signed Holmes — a move that brings back their biggest offensive playmaker — other wideout needs exist.

But after spending big bucks to keep Holmes from testing the free agent market, the Jets still need to partner him with a possession-type wide receiver since Braylon Edwards is likely out of their price range now.

Can a practice squad player like Patrick Turner step up or would Randy Moss take a pay cut to play for a Super Bowl contender?

Identifying that big-body wide receiver is a must this training camp.

3. Do the offensive line shuffle

 A player to watch in training camp is right tackle Vlad Ducasse, the team’s second round pick last season.

He saw spot duty in his rookie season after showing up to camp in less than ideal shape and after months of dedicated workouts, Ducasse is much more physically ready for the NFL grind.The Jets just resigned the versatile Wayne Hunter to a long-term deal, meaning that the two will battle it out for the position vacated by Damien Woody’s recent retirement.

Sanchez steps up as leader

Sometimes, it is easy to forget that Mark Sanchez is in his third year as a starting quarterback.

Jets fans, meet one of your captains for the 2011 season.

Head coach Rex Ryan named the 24-year-old quarterback his offensive captain on Wednesday during a conference call.

It was a bit of a surprise move to name a quarterback so young and still learning to take a leadership role on a team with Super Bowl ambitions.

The Jets are a veteran team with plenty of proven leaders, but Ryan said the players’ response to Sanchez the last two seasons made it a natural move.

“I see the way the guys are around him. This is really going to be his team,” Ryan said. “I’m not big on giving out those captain [titles], but we will put the “C” on his jersey this year because he truly is our captain.”

From the moment he was taken with the No. 5 pick in the 2009 NFL Draft, Sanchez has become the face of this franchise, to the point that during his rookie season his teammates tagged him with the nickname “The Sanchise.” Orchestrating a playoff run with some gutsy performances due to a knee injury his rookie season, a series of late-game heroics in his second year and then this past January’s postseason push to a second consecutive AFC Championship Game ensures that Sanchez is more than just a marketing face to plaster on billboards.

He is in fact, the leader of this team’s offense despite being a little more than three months shy of turning 25 years old.

His leadership style can be flamboyant but is also quietly subtle. In the spring, Sanchez held a “Jets West” camp with the offensive skill position players in an effort to keep them sharp during the lockout. Then in June, over 40 players convened in Madison, N.J. at a local college as part of involuntary workouts put together in part by Sanchez.

“It can’t hurt, just those extra reps, throwing the ball around. Getting guys together just to see each other and hang out on-and off-the-field, is important,” Sanchez said. “Whether it’s from an X’s and O’s standpoint or a morale standpoint, and just a friendship/teammate standpoint, I think all of that stuff helps.”

Sanchez might still be that kid at heart, who pulls down the shorts of his offensive coordinator or jumps on the back of teammate Bart Scott and rides him around during offseason workouts, but underneath the “Dennis the Menace” grin of mischief lays a player who has earned his dues in three short years with the Jets. It might be easy to see Sanchez, wearing shorts and mismatched socks in December racing out of the locker room, late to an offense team meeting, as just a goofball and perhaps a player not yet seasoned enough to take on the role of being a captain.

Ryan and the coaching staff would disagree with that assessment.

“I’m really comfortable doing this now. Am I trying to drive up the jersey sales for Sanchez? Maybe that’s true,” Ryan said. “But I think seriously that he’s earned that and I’m excited to watch this young man grow.”

Follow Kristian Dyer on Twitter @KristianRDyer.

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Haley Reinhart Signs with 19 Recordings/Interscope Records

Interscope Records is pleased to announce that it has signed Season 10 American Idol contestant Haley Reinhart to a recording contract. Haley is currently on the road for the American Idols Live! 2011 Tour, which kicked off July 6th in Salt Lake City, UT, and continues through the summer before concluding on September 10th in Rochester, NY.

Haley commented, "I've always dreamed of getting this kind of recognition. I am very thankful to 19 and Interscope for giving me this opportunity to create my own music."

Haley auditioned for Season 10 of American Idol in Milwaukee, Wisconsin last summer. She made it all the way through to the top 4 when she was voted off the show. She received notable musician and celebrity support from Robert Plant, Lady Gaga, Jimmy Page, Adam Lambert, Tom Hanks and others who picked Haley as their favorite.

Haley mixed things up musically during her time on Idol. Her renditions of Adele's "Rolling In The Deep," Elton John's "Bennie and the Jets" and Ben E. King's "I (Who Have Nothing)' are just a few fan favorite performances. Haley also got to showcase her unique, jazzy voice on an adorable duet with music legend, Tony Bennett, as the two performed "Steppin' Out with My Baby" on the American Idol finale.

See photos and watch videos of Haley's performances here.

Congratulations Haley!

Source: "American Idol 10 Live Feed" via Glen in Google Reader

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Giants coach Coughlin signs contract extension through 2012 - Reuters

New York Giants head coach Tom Coughlin reacts on the sidelines during the second half of their NFL football game against the Washington Redskins in Landover, Maryland January 2, 2011. REUTERS/Molly Riley

New York Giants head coach Tom Coughlin reacts on the sidelines during the second half of their NFL football game against the Washington Redskins in Landover, Maryland January 2, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Molly Riley

NEW YORK | Wed Jul 27, 2011 3:40pm EDT

(Reuters) - Tom Coughlin, who coached the New York Giants to a Super Bowl victory in 2008, agreed to a one-year contract extension through the 2012 National Football League season, the team said Wednesday.

Financial terms of the contract were not disclosed.

Coughlin, who has a 65-47 record during the regular season since taking the reins as Giants coach in 2004, had one year remaining on his previous four-year deal.

"We believe in the job he has done, and we believe in his ability to lead our team in the future," Giants President John Mara said in a statement.

Coughlin also spent eight seasons (1995-2002) as head coach of the expansion Jacksonville Jaguars, where he went 68-60 in eight seasons and twice came within one victory of reaching the Super Bowl.

He led the Giants to a surprise Super Bowl victory in 2008 when his team edged a New England Patriots team that entered the game having not lost a game all season.

(Reporting by Gene Cherry in Raleigh, North Carolina; Editing by Frank Pingue)

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Lee DeWyze Is Engaged!

Congratulations to Season 9 Idol winner Lee DeWyze and fiance Joanna Walsh. People.com is reporting that the couple got engaged July 16.

"I'm excited," says DeWyze, who popped the question July 16 over champagne on a private yacht under a fireworks-filled sky at Disney World in Orlando. The couple are planning to wed in the fall of 2012.

DeWyze met Walsh, 26, last October while shooting a video for his single "Sweet Serendipity." "We were casting and I saw her and said, 'Let's go with her.' I thought she was cute."

"We hung out and we went to a Lakers game on our first date. She's a Lakers fan and I'm a Chicago Bulls fan and we just clicked out of the gate." As for Walsh supporting another team, "We're seeing a counselor about that," he joked.

"We do all kinds of stuff together," the singer says of life in Southern California with his fiance. "We go to plays and exhibits and Jonna is really into the planning for the wedding."

Though they have been dating for only eight months, DeWyze had no hesitation before popping the question. "When you know, you know," he says. "We both feel that way. We don't need to be together 20 years before we figure it out."

Lee performed his single "Beautiful Like You" on Idol in March. Before the show, we had the chance to catch up with the former winner. Watch the video now.

Source: "American Idol 10 Live Feed" via Glen in Google Reader

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

2011 NFL Season Win Totals - Bet Republic

Posted by: BetRepublic

Tuesday, 26th Jul 2011145 views

The first edition of 2011 NFL Season Win Totals were released Tuesday by the MGM Grand Casino and as online sportsbooks cross the T’s and dot all the I’s on their own copies, we sorted through the odds.

SUPER BOWL CHAMPS

The Green Bay Packers (11.5) are favored to repeat as Super Bowl champs in 2011-12 so it only stands to reason that books are posting the Pack 1.5 wins higher than the team’s 10-6 straight-up (SU) mark from 2010.

BR Says: New Orleans (11-5 SU) cleared its win total by a half-game as the defending champ in 2010, making the Saints the fifth team in the past decade to go "Over" its win total immediately following a Super Bowl victory

New Orleans opened at 10.5 UN (-125) this season, second in the NFC South to the Atlanta Falcons (10.5 UN -115)

Pittsburgh (11 UN -120) is listed at 10 cents less than Baltimore, making the Ravens (11 OV -110) the leader out of the AFC North.

SEEING DOUBLE

Along with the teams listed above, New England (11.5 UN -120), the New York Jets (10 UN -120), San Diego (10 OV -110) and Indianapolis (10 UN -120) make up the AFC six-pack of teams ranked in the double-digits.

Philadelphia (10 OV -120) is the fourth NFC team with a win total of 10 or greater (Packers, Saints, Falcons).

Need to Know: Betting "Over" double-digit win totals the past three seasons produced a record of just 4 overs compared with 10 unders and 1 push

In 2010, bettors hit with the Ravens (12-4 SU) and Saints (11-5 SU) but missed with Dallas (6-10 SU), Indianapolis (10-6 SU) and San Diego (9-7 SU) costing a $100 dollar bettor -$115. Green Bay (10-6 SU) pushed on its closing number of 10 OV (-120).

BetRepublic.com was 3-1 with our SWT predictions in 2010 after a 6-1 finish in 2009. We cleared our three winners last season by an average of 3.3 wins per team but missed with Tennessee (6-10 SU).

Follow all our NFL picks throughout the season and for a look back at the 2010 SWT feature click here

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Packers 2011: Wide Receivers - WISC Madison

Third in a series.GREEN BAY, Wis. – For the last several years, the members of the Green Bay Packers wide receiver corps – Donald Driver, Greg Jennings, James Jones, Jordy Nelson and Brett Swain or Ruvell Martin – have purported themselves to be the NFL’s best group of wideouts.While other teams’ units might have quibbled with how deserving they were of the top spot, there was no denying that the group was among the best in the league.“My receivers make me look really good. I’ve got five really talented guys who I’d match up against any guy in the league,” quarterback Aaron Rodgers said in the days leading up to Super Bowl XLV. “Greg Jennings is as good as any receiver (in the league). Donald, Jordy, James and Brett all have a lot of talent and different things that they can do for us. It’s tough for us to get them all on the field at the same time, but we try to draw plays for each of those guys every week.”Now, the band is almost certain to break up.With Jones officially becoming an unrestricted free agent Tuesday and eligible to negotiate with other teams – although prohibited from signing with anyone, including the Packers, until 5 p.m. Wisconsin time on Friday – he is expected to depart after four seasons with the Packers.A 2007 third-round pick who has had his share of ups and downs in his time in Green Bay, a receiver-poor team likely will pay him starter’s money, and the Packers – with Nelson entering the final year of his deal and Jennings set to be a free agent after the 2012 season – are unlikely to compete hard for Jones’ services.“I definitely feel like I’m ready (to be a full-time starter),” Jones said. “I work hard. I’m just hoping for the opportunity, whether it’s in Green Bay or somewhere else. I feel like I have the ability to be one of those guys, to be a starter. I’m just excited about the opportunity, wherever it might be.“I’m glad we were able to do it together, win a Super Bowl, if I was to go (elsewhere). We were able to share that together. But it would be hard (to leave). But we all understand it’s a business, we all have families we have to take care of. If I’m blessed to stay in Green Bay, I’m blessed to stay there. And if I’m blessed to go somewhere else, I’m just happy to play football.”In 65 career games and 18 starts (including playoffs), Jones has caught 166 passes for 2,305 yards and 16 touchdowns. Last season was his most productive, with 50 catches for 679 yards and five touchdowns in 16 regular-season games and 11 catches for 144 yards and two touchdowns in the Packers’ four postseason games, including Super Bowl XLV.But he also dropped what may have been four long touchdowns during the season: a potential 72-yard touchdown in the Packers’ 9-0 win over the New York Jets on Oct. 31; a possible 29-yard touchdown in the Packers’ 45-17 victory over the New York Giants on Dec. 26; a likely 63-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Aaron Rodgers the Packers’ 21-16 NFC Wild Card victory at Philadelphia; and a potential 75-yard touchdown in the Packers’ victory over Pittsburgh in Super Bowl XLV.“Let me just say this: I have a ton of confidence in James and his abilities,” Rodgers said late last season. “He’s a guy I think we need to keep around. We need to find a way to get him the ball more often. He’s as talented and as good as any receiver we’ve got when the ball’s in the air, using his body. Obviously I know he’d like to come up with a couple more plays here and there, but I have absolutely no reservations throwing him the ball.”But Jones impending departure isn’t the only uncertainty at receiver as the Packers prepare for Saturday’s first practice of training camp. Driver, after six consecutive 1,000-yard seasons, turned 36 years old just before the Super Bowl, was slowed by a leg injury for part of the season and could be on the verge of major decline, even though he intends to play two more seasons. That might mean that Nelson, who had a career game in the Super Bowl (nine catches for 140 yards but also three drops) could wind up playing more snaps than Driver and force the Packers to spend big money to keep him after the season.Jennings, meanwhile, is coming off his first Pro Bowl selection and is solidifying himself as an elite receiver. But by choosing to sign only a three-year extension, he’ll be a free agent after the 2012 season and still very much in his prime – meaning keeping the remaining band members together may not be easy, either.QUICK READ: WIDE RECEIVERSDepth Chart No. Name Ht. Wt. Age Exp. College 85 Greg Jennings 5-11 198 27 6 Western Michigan 80 Donald Driver 6-0 194 36 13 Alcorn State 87 Jordy Nelson 6-3 217 26 4 Kansas State 89 James Jones* 6-1 208 27 5 San Jose State 18 Randall Cobb 5-10 191 20 R Kentucky 16 Brett Swain 6-0 200 26 3 San Diego State 11 Chastin West 6-1 216 24 1 Fresno State 17 Antonio Robinson 6-1 195 25 1 Nicholls State * -- Free agentBurning Question What’s next for Jennings?There’s no question that Jennings became the focal point of the Packers’ offense after tight end Jermichael Finley landed on injured reserve with a knee injury suffered in Week 5. After catching just 14 passes for 183 yards and three touchdowns in the Packers’ first five games, Jennings was downright unstoppable thereafter, catching 62 passes for 1,082 yards and nine TDs the rest of the way – making him the most productive receiver in the league over the season’s final 11 games. Jennings carried it over into the postseason, when he had 21 catches for 303 yards, including two touchdowns in Super Bowl XLV, when his late third-down catch-and-run essentially clinched the victory. Now, with Finley returning to action, quarterback Aaron Rodgers must find a way to keep Jennings top of mind.On the rise Nelson.Nelson’s productivity in the Super Bowl may have just been a preview of what lies ahead this season. But as impressive as his nine-catch, 140-yard, one-touchdown effort was, he could have been even better if not for three dropped passes – and he’ll have to be much more consistent with his hands if he moves up the pecking order assuming Jones departs as a free agent. After catching 45 passes for 582 yards and two touchdowns in the regular season, Nelson shared the team lead for playoff receptions with Jennings (21) for 286 yards and two TDs in four playoff games. His route-running has improved on an annual basis.Stock falling Driver.Driver thrives on naysayers and doubters, and while he remains an excellent leader in the locker room and ambassador in the community, but age catches up to everyone, even the great ones. Just 42 yards away from breaking James Lofton's franchise record for career receiving yards (9,656), According to STATS LLC, Driver’s yards-after-the-catch were way down (180, the least among the top four receivers) and he was credited with seven regular-season dropped passes. But he also flashed his determination and drive on a 61-yard touchdown against San Francisco, and anyone who chooses to bet against Driver does so at their own risk.The most interesting man (not in the world, but at the position) Cobb.Conventional wisdom says that because the entire offseason was wiped out by the lockout – no rookie orientation camp, no organized team activity practices, no mandatory minicamp – the odds are against Cobb, a second-round pick from Kentucky, contributing significantly at receiver this season. But as an ex-quarterback, Cobb may have the football IQ to pick up the Packers’ complex offense quickly, despite the missed time. Even if his snaps at receiver are limited, he figures to see action on returns and gives coach Mike McCarthy a Wildcat quarterback if he wants to explore that formation.Key competition No. 2 receiver.While Driver’s career accomplishments and standing in the locker room demand respect, meaning he will likely be playing the first offensive snap of games, don’t be surprises if Nelson ends up playing more plays than Driver. While all the receivers figure to see plenty of playing time given McCarthy’s love of three- and four-receiver sets, Nelson is in line to see his role expand significantly in a contract year. He opened last year as the No. 4 receiver but actually played more snaps than Jones, and the same thing could happen this year with him as the No. 3 receiver while Driver holds onto the No. 2 job in name only.NoteworthyJennings enters the season with 40 career touchdown catches (in five seasons), and 16 of those TDs have covered 40 yards or more. His touchdowns have averaged 31.5 yards, which ranks second among active receivers with at least 20 TD receptions. And, since 2007, Jennings’ 27 catches of 40 yards or more are the most in the league, ahead of Philadelphia’s DeSean Jackson, Houston’s Andre Johnson and Terrell Owens, all of whom have 20. Remarkable, then that the guy was ranked No. 74 in the NFL Network’s Top 100 list of players and only the 15th-best wide receiver.Quoteworthy“I'm excited to get an opportunity to work with all of those guys. I think we all have an opportunity to continue to grow and continue to learn. As far as veteran guys, certainly it's more about holding each other accountable and making the most of our opportunities in doing the little things. It's always about let's get better and let's improve and I think moving forward I think all of those guys, they have an understanding of my approach to things and I certainly have a feel for those guys as well, having been around them the last few years. I'm looking forward to the opportunity.” – Edgar Bennett, on shifting to coaching wide receivers after coaching running backs, his old position.Next: Tight ends.

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Sunday, July 24, 2011

Ben Roethlisberger & Ashley Harlan's Wedding (PHOTOS) - Huffington Post


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Saturday, July 23, 2011

Chicago Bears: What It Will Take to Return to the Super Bowl in 2011 - Bleacher Report

Chicago fans have a tendency to make years feel much more like decades when it comes to the city’s sporting achievements. Hell, it’s felt like two years since the Bears fell to Green Bay in the NFC Championship game.

All kidding aside, it has been some time though since the Bears made the franchise’s most recent Super Bowl appearance in 2007 when they lost to Indianapolis.

Remember how Rex Grossman and Muhsin Muhammad struck fear into the Colts secondary? Me neither.

Chicago came within a game of making it back to Super Bowl Sunday in 2010 finishing with an 11-5 mark and division championship, much to the surprise of skeptical fans and critics. With the bar set higher coming into this upcoming season, the Bears will once again look to turn heads and impress with another run at the Lombardi Trophy.

Certain elements of the traditional NFL offseason have yet to begin due to the lockout. Once the owners and players settle their differences on a new collective bargaining agreement, a new league year will begin.

What must the Bears do in 2011 to make it back atop the National Football League’s elite?

5. Solidify Linebackers

Chicago has just two linebackers currently under contract in Brian Urlacher and Lance Briggs. While those may be the two best on the team, they can’t do it all by themselves.

Expect the Bears to re-sign Nick Roach and Pisa Tinoisamoa to give depth at the position. If money becomes a concern, Bears fans might see rookie J.T. Thomas get some playing time.

In the Cover 2 defense Lovie Smith operates, the linebackers play a large role in defending the underneath game. Not being able to attack in the box with poor linebacker play defeats the purpose of this defense.

4. Get Hester More Involved on Offense

How to use Devin Hester the most effectively is something Chicago has been trying to solve for the better part of the last decade.

Of course, his return skills are what separate him from the rest of the pack, but he only gets that opportunity a handful of times any given Sunday.

One thing the offense hasn’t played around with yet is the idea of making Hester the slot Y-receiver. Hester’s 5’11” frame doesn’t necessarily make him the primary receiver in a Mike Martz offense. If the Bears moved him to the slot, he could become very effective running short routes in wide open spaces.

If Hester plays the slot, Earl Bennett can take over the primary X-receiver and Johnny Knox can man the Z.

3. Increase the Turnover Ratio

It’s no mystery the key to the Bears success rests in the defense. The Cover 2 defense is one that doesn’t necessarily focus on takeaways but forcing offenses into making poor decisions.

Chicago had a plus-four rating on turnover differential last season. While it’s always a good thing to finish on the positive side of the takeaway battle, the Bears could certainly improve this statistic thus giving the team better chances to win contests.

Quarterback Jay Cutler’s 16 interceptions in 2010 are drastically improved from the 26 picks he threw the year prior. Interceptions are sometimes a deceiving number. Remember that for the first part of 2010, the Bears were a pass first team until the bye week arrived.

Cutler’s 26 interceptions came in a season where he attempted 555 passes. The fewer times he tries to throw, obviously the chance for an interception decreases. For the record, Cutler threw 432 passes in 2010, down 22 percent from 2009.

2. Find a Compliment to Matt Forte

Matt Forte has been the most valuable offensive weapon Chicago has featured in the last few seasons. Forte, in 2010, became the first Bear since Walter Payton in 1983 to rush for over 1,000 yards and catch 500 or more yards in a single season. Not a bad Hall of Famer to be compared to by any means.

The problem herein lies with the depth chart. Forte’s heavy workload will cause him to be injured or break down eventually. Should he have to miss any part of a season, Chester Taylor would become the featured back.

Former Minnesota Viking Chester Taylor came into Chicago last season as a free agent but left his football skills up north. Taylor rushed for only 267 yards and three scores, averaging 2.4 yards a touch. He was used mostly as a goal line back, so the opportunity to collect large chunks of yards became difficult.

Taylor has shown in the past he is capable of making a living by catching balls out of the backfield. Should Forte need to be relieved on the field, it will be interesting to see if Taylor, 31, can make up for the loss of production.

1. Protect Jay Cutler

Without a doubt, the biggest hurdle to clear for the Bears to make another postseason run will be to keep Cutler upright and unharmed.

Many different elements can be involved in protecting Cutler. Previously discussed, the amount of times Cutler throws versus the number of runs called not only keeps the offense two-dimensional but takes more pressure off of the man under center. Starting field position plays a role in how effective a quarterback does as well.

The largest concern would however be the offensive line. Chicago spent its first-round draft pick on Wisconsin tackle Gabe Carimi wisely. It has not yet been announced whether Carimi will be the right or left tackle to compliment J’Marcus Webb.

Chris Williams, a first-round draft pick from a handful of years ago, also remains in the mix but has shown issues with adjustment and health.

Roberto Garza and Frank Omiyale look anchored into their respective positions as guards. That leaves just one offensive line position left—center.

Olin Kreutz is a free agent once the lockout if lifted and the Bears could not have a more valuable piece to the puzzle to bring back than him. Kreutz has spent his entire professional career with the Bears and is the anchor to the offensive line. Without him, the franchise has a huge hole to fill in the roster. Kreutz may be getting up there in age, but still has value. Re-signing him to keep Cutler safe is a must.

Thoughts? Comments? Follow Brett Lyons on Twitter @BrettLyons670.

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Friday, July 22, 2011

Superbowl Ad Star, 'Mini Darth Vader' Sheds Spotlight on Heart - TIME

One of the more endearing commercials to emerge from the slate of Superbowl ads earlier this year featured a  pint-sized Darth Vader who surprised himself by starting up a Volkswagon with a wave of his hand. Now the boy behind the mask is taking on a different kind of role: health care activist.

As Sanjay Gupta reported last night on CNN, 6-year-old actor Max Page has a rare congenital heart defect called Tetralogy of Fallot that has required him to receive three different pacemakers in his young life, as well as eight major operations to correct other complications.

And while Page has been able to lead a fairly typical lifestyle for a child his age (medical appointments and national ad campaigns notwithstanding), he and his family know how lucky they are to receive the kind of highly sub-specialized medical attention he requires. Not just any hospital — not even any children's hospital — can provide the care. In fact, his doctor, a pediatric electro-physiologist is one of only 100 such sub-specialists in the country.

And that's the problem: there are just 56 children's hospitals in the United States. "We represent just 1% of all the hospitals in the United States, but we are responsible for training over 40% of all the pediatricians and 45% of all the pediatric specialists who take care of the kids," says Robert Adler, vice chair of pediatrics for the Children's Hospital of Los Angeles in the video. His graduate program may be a casualty of budget cuts and because of this, the Pages are headed to Washington to plead for continued funding.

Watch the full story below, or read an accompanying piece from Page's mother Jennifer on how she and her husband first learned about their son's condition and the way they cope.

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Source: "Super Bowl 2011" via Glen in Google Reader

Lockout yields perfect scenario for Green Bay - Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

July 21, 2011 |

How much does the lockout help the Packers in looking to repeat as champions?

Hurt them: 4%

Not at all: 25%

A little: 48%

A lot: 16%

Now a virtual lock: 7%

Total Responses: 153

Green Bay - The Green Bay Packers didn't need any favors in their attempt to repeat as Super Bowl champions.

Then along came an off-season without football, which provided the Packers with a subtle but almost unfair advantage entering 2011.

Each day that the National Football League lockout persists represents one fewer day for 31 teams to catch Green Bay. If the labor dispute had dragged on until September, as I guessed all along that it would, the Packers might have been almost impossible to beat.

One day last month, Mike McCarthy was trying to stay sharp as a football coach without a team. When it was suggested to McCarthy that every day without football only benefited the Packers, he blanched.

"We always get a lot better during the OTAs," insisted McCarthy. "We needed them."

McCarthy's three-month off-season program (mid-March to mid-June) was run as well if not better than most other programs around the NFL. He swore by the results. So did many of his players.

It isn't that the Packers didn't need their off-season. It's that every other team needed it more.

No off-season programs basically meant every team stayed right where it was. That's precisely where the team at the top, in this case the Packers, would want everyone else to remain.

Twenty teams haven't been on a football field since Jan. 2. Of the 12 playoff teams, only Super Bowl participants Green Bay and Pittsburgh had the benefit of 15 practices after the 20 non-playoff teams were finished.

McCarthy already had planned to delay the start of the off-season program by two or three weeks so his players, coaches and support staff could catch their breath. More than any other team, the Packers will have benefited simply by getting away from football and just resting.

In the first 44 years of the Super Bowl era, eight teams have been able to win championships back-to-back but no team has ever won three in a row. The Super Bowl hangover is real. Just seven of the last 15 champions so much as won their division the following season.

Super Bowl champions face a variety of obstacles. Friends and family tell every player on the roster how great they are. And, having accomplished the ultimate goal, some players lose their desire for the punishing workouts that are at the core of their job livelihood.

In the case of the Packers, they played 24 games last season and ended up with one of the most magnificent seasons in franchise history. It would have been difficult for some players to be right back in town nine or 10 weeks later sitting in meeting rooms listening to the same stuff that they had mastered during the season.

Let's assume the Packers won't practice for the first time until the weekend of July 30-31. That's 25 weeks, almost half a year, since they beat the Steelers in Dallas.

Listen to and read the words of players in the last few weeks. There's a sense of eagerness among the Packers that simply wouldn't have been there had it been a normal off-season.

This is the perfect scenario for a team trying to recapture its esprit de corps of six months ago.

The last time the Packers were in this situation was 1997. That team overcame early season-ending injuries to Edgar Bennett and Craig Newsome, duplicated the 13-3 mark of the '96 titlists and made it back to the Super Bowl before falling to Denver.

On the eve of the '97 season, I wrote that the Packers should be favored for five reasons: the quarterback, the coach, the general manager and his scouts, the corporate structure and the continuity within the organization.

The principals are different now in each of the five categories, but the level of excellence is similar.

Not only does Aaron Rodgers have the best regular-season passer rating in history, he has the best postseason mark in history. Upon careful study, and multiple interviews with Packers and Steelers alike, Rodgers' performance in Dallas should rank among the half-dozen finest in Super Bowl history.

McCarthy became more than just a top-flight offensive coach a year ago. He grew into the leader that the organization sorely needed.

Ted Thompson will never change. He outworks many of his peers, listens to his people and keeps demonstrating the knack for picking the best of closely rated players. What shouldn't be overlooked about Thompson is the understated, professional workplace that he creates.

Mark Murphy recognized early that Thompson and McCarthy were worthy of his support and that of the board of directors.

After camp opens, the Packers should be ready to play a game in no time.

On offense, McCarthy starts his sixth season with the same scheme, the same coordinator (Joe Philbin) and five position coaches that have been with him throughout his tenure. Jimmy Robinson, the premier wide receivers coach, departed for Dallas.

On defense, the coordinator (Dom Capers) and his entire staff remain intact for a third year in a row.

It isn't only that these coaches know exactly what McCarthy wants. The collective level of expertise on this staff might match favorably against any in club annals.

In the personnel department, the Packers have been as stable as just about any group in the NFL over the last 10 years. When the Eagles and coach Andy Reid pursued Eliot Wolf hard after the draft, the Packers promoted Wolf to a position akin to what John Schneider had and retained his services

Compare that checklist to what's going on around the league.

Eight franchises will have new coaches with, for the most part, entirely new schemes. Minus an off-season, none of them really has a chance in 2011.

Depending on your definition of "set," 14 of the 32 coaches either don't know who will be their starting quarterback or, if they were honest, recognize that their starter isn't good enough to win the Super Bowl. Six quarterbacks were drafted in the first round, but in the wake of the lockout there just aren't enough hours of preparation for them to stand out as rookies.

Six of Green Bay's 16 games are against teams with new coaches or teams unsettled at quarterback, or both.

When the gong sounds for the start of free agency, the Packers won't be signing anyone. They'll try to re-sign some of their own veterans before they hit the market, add a dozen or so undrafted rookies and take the practice field with all but a handful of players from their Super Bowl 53 supplemented by eight to 10 of the 15 players that ended the season on injured reserve.

No one in their right mind should ever think that the Packers would even entertain lavishing $18 million or more this year alone on Raiders cornerback Nnamdi Asomugha. They'll continue developing Sam Shields, hope for another good year or two from Charles Woodson and see what fourth-round pick Davon House has to offer.

The Packers have more than enough players. Even if they didn't, a blockbuster deal in free agency might be hard to handle given their cap situation.

In late February, the players under contract to Green Bay for 2011 totaled $128.6 million against the salary cap that was in effect through 2009. Only the Cowboys ($134.2 million) had more cap commitments, although A.J. Hawk's new deal on March 3 did reduce the Packers' charge by about $8 million.

The proposed collective bargaining agreement approved by the owners Thursday includes a salary cap of $120.375 million for 2011.

Cullen Jenkins will be leaving for what should be a huge contract in free agency. Jenkins was the team's second-best pass rusher, but he's 30 and Mike Neal was drafted high a year ago to replace him.

The decision to pay Hawk enormous money means he'll keep starting alongside Desmond Bishop, Brandon Chillar will back up at inside linebacker and Nick Barnett will become a cap casualty.

McCarthy still thinks James Jones can become consistent even though he has dropped 30 of 285 targeted passes (10.5%) in four seasons. Now it's up to Jones.

The Packers are expected to offer him a reasonable contract even though Randall Cobb was drafted to do more than return kicks as a rookie. The market, however, likely will provide other opportunities for Jones.

Mason Crosby's next contract will be with Green Bay. So will John Kuhn's. I wouldn't offer Daryn Colledge a representative multiyear deal, but someone might because players from Super Bowl teams often are overvalued in free agency.

The flurry of developments that transpire over the next few weeks will be newsy. Still, they'll be merely window dressing in comparison to the arresting level of talent residing on the depth chart.

Jermichael Finley, one of six key Packers sure to be inspired by a contract year in 2011, heads the list of five tight ends, four of whom can get downfield. Drafting Derek Sherrod all the way down at No. 32 in the first round gives McCarthy the luxury of having three tackles. And then there are three or four respectable candidates to succeed the mediocre Colledge at left guard.

Few teams can match the Packers' collection of three running backs, all of whom at least have the size and ability to be every-down players.

Wide bodies B.J. Raji, Ryan Pickett and Howard Green, a stubborn three-man front down the stretch, have had weight issues and will be monitored closely next month. Defensive end C.J. Wilson might not have Neal's ability but he is no slug, either.

The Packers won a Super Bowl with Frank Zombo, Erik Walden and Brad Jones playing opposite Clay Matthews. The return of Morgan Burnett and the re-signing of Charlie Peprah give Capers three safeties.

Perhaps Cobb will help improve the special teams that haunted McCarthy in four of the six defeats.

McCarthy's enemies are selfishness and greed in the locker room. Everything else, at least when compared to the competition, couldn't be more to his liking.

The lockout locked in the Packers as the team to beat. Pick against them at your peril.

Send email to bmcginn@journalsentinel.com

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Source: "Super Bowl 2011" via Glen in Google Reader

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Happy Birthday, Elliott Yamin!

Season 5's Elliott Yamin celebrates his birthday today. It's hard to believe it was six years ago that Elliott made a name for himself on American Idol. His warm personality, smooth vocals, and his doting mother Claudette made him one of the most beloved contestants ever on the show. Since his time on Idol, Elliott has had a lot of success in the music industry, but he always makes time to help those in need.

Elliott has released the albums Elliott Yamin, Fight for Love, and the holiday records Sounds of the Season: The Elliott Yamin Holiday Collection and My Kind of Holiday. His first album, Elliott Yamin, debuted at #3 on the Billboard 200 chart. The album was the highest new artist debut on an independent label in SoundScan history. On October 12, 2007, the album was certified gold. His hit single "Wait for You" was certified Platinum in digital sales on October 16, 2008. In total, Elliott has had four #1 hits on the Billboard charts.

In February, Elliott released his third studio album, Gather 'Round, but it was made available exclusively for the Japanese market. On Saturday, July 9, Elliott performed in Sparks, Nevada at the Legends at the Sparks Marina concert.

The charitable Idol has worked with the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation, the Promise to Remember Me Campaign, the Inspired by Diabetes Creative Expression Competition, the Life for a Child Program, World Diabetes Day, Malaria No More, and Africare. He's traveled to Africa twice for Idol Gives Back to raise awareness about malaria prevention with Malaria No More. Read moreread more

Source: "American Idol 10 Live Feed" via Glen in Google Reader

Do Something Award Nominees Adam Lambert and Randy Jackson

Congratulations to Idol's Adam Lambert and Randy Jackson! They've both been nominated for 2011 Do Something Awards. Adam in the category Do Something Music Artist and Randy in the category Do Something TV Star. Good going guys!

The official voting period for the 2011 Do Something Awards is open at DoSomething.VH1.com and extends through August 14, 2011 9 AM EST. Fans now have the opportunity to vote for their favorite celebrities who do great work and who inspire young people to do great work too.

In addition to announcing the celebrity winners, one young "do-er" (age 25 and under) will be receiving a grand prize of $100,000 for their cause. This is the largest and most prestigious prize in the world for young people and social change. "This is not your grandma's award show," says Nancy Lublin, the CEO and Chief Old Person of DoSomething.org. "There will be no violins and no ballgowns."

The 2011 Do Something Awards will be hosted by Jane Lynch (Glee) at the Hollywood Palladium in Los Angeles and will air on Thursday, August 18th 2011 where the winners will be announced. Check local listings for time and channel.

Don't forget to vote for our Idol guys!

Watch an interview with Adam when he appeared on Idol in Season 10.

Source: "American Idol 10 Live Feed" via Glen in Google Reader

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Lockout will help Packers, favorites stay ahead - The State

A DAY AFTER the Green Bay Packers won the Lombardi Trophy in February, I felt they had a strong chance to repeat as NFL champions in 2011.

The 2010 Packers were one of the youngest, deepest teams in the NFL, and they figure to become deeper with the return of six starters off injured reserve. Green Bay also returns a franchise quarterback and a top-five defense.

Five months later, I feel the Pack’s chances for back-to-back titles are even stronger.

Since the NFL went to the eight-division format in 2002, life has not been good for incumbents. An average of 4.9 of the eight division champions each season have failed to repeat. Three of the past eight Super Bowl winners failed to qualify for the playoffs the following season.

But I love the incumbents in 2011. I like the Packers to play for another championship next February in Indianapolis. I like the Patriots and Steelers in their divisions. I like the Saints to extend their season into January. Status quo looms as a major plus this season.

That’s because there wasn’t an offseason. The NFL lockout shut down all 32 buildings, slowing down the rebuilding and reloading process for the 31 non-winners.

The offseason is an important time in the NFL. Teams are allowed up to 14 organized team activity sessions, plus two minicamps, one for rookies and another for veterans. Teams with new coaching staffs are allowed an extra minicamp.

Add it all up, and that is 24 to 29 practice sessions a team is allowed to conduct during the offseason. But those practice sessions did not take place this offseason because of the labor stalemate.

So, there are six new coaches in 2011 who have not handed out their playbooks. Those coaches must start from scratch in training camp, indoctrinating unfamiliar players to unfamiliar coaches with unfamiliar schemes.

Thirteen other teams have new defensive coordinators, and 11 have new offensive coordinators. They don’t know the players, and the players don’t know them or their coaching styles.

If teams report to training camp by Aug. 1, that leaves six weeks to prepare for the season opener. When you factor in the four preseason games each team plays, practice time will be at a premium. There will not be enough hours in training camp to achieve all that a team needs to achieve next month. So expect some ragged play in September.

This brings us back to Green Bay and its fellow incumbents.

Five of the eight division champions — Atlanta, Chicago, Indianapolis, New England and Pittsburgh — return with the coach and coordinators intact. In addition to the Packers, two of the other three wild-card teams from a year ago — the Jets and Saints — also return with the same coaching brain trust.

So those teams will not spend camp teaching something new. They will spend it refining and polishing an already proven, successful product. That will give them a huge edge heading into the 2011 season.

I’ve always been a sucker for the underdogs. But this is one year to bet the favorites.

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Monday, July 18, 2011

Drew Brees Partners with Fantapper to Launch #ifiwereaQB Social Media Contest - PR Newswire (press release)

IRVINE, Calif., July 18, 2011 /PRNewswire/ -- Football star Drew Brees, MVP of Super Bowl XLIV and quarterback for the New Orleans Saints, has launched a new social media campaign that lets fans imagine themselves as QBs while earning a shot at a signed jersey and an iPad 2.  Brees has invited fans to submit photos to drew@fantapper.com for a special enhancement which they can share with their friends online through his free, interactive Fantapper service. Two winners will be determined based on the number of views that each photo receives.

The #ifiwereaQB social media campaign is one of many ways Drew is connecting with his fans through Fantapper.  Drew has already been posting exclusive content including videos and pictures to his Fantapper service, providing his fans with a closer connection to the Super Bowl MVP.  Check out Drew's Fantapper page at www.fantapper.com/celebs/drew_brees.

"Fantapper allows me and other celebrities and athletes to engage with fans in a meaningful way by giving them access to exclusive content, media, and applications they can't find anywhere else," said Brees. "I hope the contest will encourage people to check it out, and I can't wait to share pics of the 'QB squad' that we assemble."

Fantapper combines all the latest news, content, and social media posts about fans' favorite celebrities and athletes into a single online offering.  Also available as a free desktop plug-in, Fantapper provides fans with a 24/7 connection to their favorite celebrities and athletes, dynamically enhancing photos and text wherever they surf the web.  

The #ifiwereaQB campaign is currently live and will run through Sunday, July 24; details are available at: www.ifiwereaQB.net.

About Brand Affinity Technologies, Inc.  (BAT)

Founded in 2007, BAT (http://brandaffinity.net) unlocks the marketing power of celebrity through research, endorsements, and interactive experiences. Advertisers such as AT&T, Comcast, IHG, Intuit, Ford, Samsung and Sony use BAT's Endorsement Platform, which provides daily analysis of more than 45,000 celebrities and athletes, along with the ability to identify, license, and activate talent for cross-media advertising campaigns.  BAT has exclusive representation agreements with more than 4,000 athletes and celebrities. BAT also leverages its research and technology engine to engage consumers directly through Fantapper (www.fantapper.com), which brings interactive apps to celebrity content across the web. Connect with BAT on Twitter:@BAT and Facebook: www.facebook.com/BrandAffinityTech.

About Fantapper by Brand Affinity Technologies

Fantapper (www.fantapper.com) helps actors, musicians, athletes and other personalities influence, control and monetize their social media content and the skyrocketing amount of online content in which they are featured. When a consumer clicks on a photo or text reference of any celebrity, Fantapper automatically populates an expanded media window with dynamic apps, including original pictures and videos, games, popularity metrics, YouTube videos, Twitter and Facebook feeds – all specific to the featured celebrity.  Fantapper is available as a free desktop plug-in, runs on select news, entertainment and sports sites, and can also be accessed via popular mobile devices. Celebrities and athletes with custom Fantapper apps include Drew Brees, Nick Cannon, Peter Facinelli, Ashlee Simpson and Pete Yorn. Connect with Fantapper on Twitter: @Fantapper and Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/Fantapper.

SOURCE Brand Affinity Technologies, Inc.

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Source: "Super Bowl 2011" via Glen in Google Reader

Sunday, July 17, 2011

Let's get this NFL lockout over with - Chicago Sun-Times

By Rick Morrissey rmorrissey@suntimes.com July 18, 2011 12:30AM

Story Image

Pittsburgh Steelers' Troy Polamalu (43) delivers a blow to Green Bay Packers' Greg Jennings, right, as Jennings grabs a reception for a touchdown during the first half of the NFL Super Bowl XLV football game Sunday, Feb. 6, 2011, in Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)

Updated: July 18, 2011 12:30AM

Years from now, people will remember what they were doing when the United States played Japan in the 2011 Women’s World Cup final: celebrating the imminent end of the NFL lockout.

Kudos to the owners and players for what appears to be a near-settlement to their four-month disagreement. As dull and as painful as the lockout has been, the absence of games would be infinitely duller and more painful. With labor peace now within reach, fantasy-league players see a reason to live, gamblers are crying tears of joy and husbands who had envisioned a football-free world of antiquing and scrapbooking with their spouses are smiling contentedly.

The NFL is not bulletproof, but it’s the closest thing to it in sports. The owners and players know they’ll pile up loads of ill will if games are lost this season. In a poor economy, the last thing people want to see is rich owners and rich players arguing about a mountain of cash.

It’s obvious both sides get that part of it. There’s enough money to go around for everyone.

But it’s hard to picture the league’s fan base ever walking away from the game in disgust because of a labor stoppage, no matter how long and bitter. The NFL is too ingrained in our culture. You can attribute that to our love of the game, to the billions of dollars wagered weekly or to our bloodlust as a society.

The TV ratings don’t lie. Super Bowl XLV between Green Bay and Pittsburgh earlier this year drew an audience of 111 million, the biggest for a U.S. TV program. Of the top-20 prime-time telecasts of all time, 11 are Super Bowls.

Over the years, labor problems have hurt baseball. Disgusted fans stayed away after the 1994-95 strike. We’ve seen the same thing happen after NBA and NHL work stoppages. If the current NBA lockout is as lengthy as analysts are predicting, the league will lose part of its fan base. It simply doesn’t have the magnetic draw of the NFL.

We, the viewing public, can be used and abused, but don’t take away our football. The key word there is “our.’’ It’s how the country looks at the game. It’s ours. We can’t do without it.

Provided negotiations between the owners and players don’t break down this week, we’ll soon be able to get back to the rhythm of life. Free-agent signings. Training camp in the heat and humidity. Games on Sundays, forever and ever, amen. Or until the next lockout or strike.

We’ll soon get answers to whether Jay Cutler is healthy, whether Olin Kreutz is coming back and whether the Bears’ wide-receiver position will get an upgrade.

We’ll see how serious the NFL is about the concussion issue in its sport and whether it plans to take meaningful steps to improve player safety. We’ll find out whether James Harrison can coexist with Steelers teammate Ben Roethlisberger, whom he ripped in a recent Men’s Journal article.

We’ll waste all sorts of time on questions that, in the grand scheme of things, don’t mean much, but it’s a lot better than wasting time wondering whether there’s going to be a football season.

Last week, the owners and players reportedly reached agreement on two of the biggest issues — the salary cap, which will be set at $120 million, and a rookie wage scale. For anyone who has wondered why a high draft pick who has accomplished nothing in the NFL makes more than a proven starter, the rookie scale is the answer: He shouldn’t. A high draft pick should have to prove himself before he makes megabucks.

More good will come out of this lockout. The collective-bargaining agreement is expected to last 10 years. Ten years of peace. Ten years without the hourly torture of watching ESPN attempt to update stalled negotiations. I think I might cry.

The NFL is disputing a Sun-Times report that the Aug. 7 Bears-Rams Hall of Fame Game likely will be a casualty of the lengthy lockout. If that’s the extent of the damage — the cancellation of a meaningless game in which Cutler will play a series or two — then there’s really no damage.

Whatever the case, it looks as if most of the preseason will go on as planned. It means fans will not have felt the real pain of a lockout. Amazing, really. But if owners believe they sacrificed too much in a new CBA, they’ll raise ticket prices. It’s what they do. They’re owners.

But that’s for later. For now, let’s take a deep breath and hope that labor peace will settle over the NFL before the end of the week.

Congratulations to Japan for winning the Women’s World Cup on Sunday. Now let’s play some football.

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Pittsburgh Steelers: 5 Keys To Return to the Super Bowl - Bleacher Report

By (Contributor) on July 17, 2011

The Pittsburgh Steelers shocked most people by returning to the Super Bowl in 2010.

Despite quarterback Ben Roethlisberger's four-game suspension to start the year, the Steelers managed to finish the year 12-4.

Heading into 2011, the Steelers are looking to return to the Super Bowl and win their coveted seventh championship.

In order for that to happen, several key elements will need to fall into place.

Here are five keys surrounding another Steelers Super Bowl appearance:

Improve Pass Coverage

The Pittsburgh Steelers' defense was one of the best in the league in 2010.

However, if the Steelers' defense has one weakness, it lies at cornerback.

In 2011 that situation could potentially be worse. Ike Taylor and William Gay are both set to be free agents. Whether they are elite corners or not, losing two corners who earned substantial playing time last season will hurt an already maligned position.

If the Steelers wish to contend again, it would be in their best interest to make an upgrade through free agency—or hope rookie Curtis Brown is up to the challenge early in his career.

The Steelers' defense is excellent based on its pass rush and discipline. Imagine how much better it could be with improved coverage.

Better Protection Up Front

The Pittsburgh Steelers' offensive line is probably the most criticized unit on the team.

The addition of center Maurkice Pouncey into the fold last season helped tremendously, but the unit as a whole still has work to do.

Protecting Ben Roethlisberger, along with opening holes for Rashard Mendenhall, is as important as anything for the Steelers to be successful.

The Steelers' offensive efficiency will ride on the big backs of the men up front in 2011.

Troy Polamalu's Health

Troy Polamalu is the life-blood of the Pittsburgh Steelers' defense. He is also prone to injuries.

Polamalu has had lingering injuries over the last four seasons, and the Steelers need that to change in 2011.

The Steelers' defense is at their best when Polamalu and his hair are flying around the field and making plays. He is one of the most complete defensive players in the entire league, and the Steelers sorely miss his playmaking ability when he is sidelined.

Polamalu's playing style along with his smaller stature lend themselves to injuries. That will need to change in 2011, or the Steelers may need to find a way to address his strong safety position for the future.

Maintain Unity in the Locker Room

James Harrison has made waves in the media yet again with this article in Men's Journal.

In the article, Harrison blasts not only NFL commissioner Roger Goodell, but also teammates Ben Roethlisberger and Rashard Mendenhall.

Whether you think the football world is overreacting to these comments or not, that does not mean the Steelers' locker room will not be affected.

The Steelers will need to be focused all season. They do not need any distractions if they wish to make it back to the Super Bowl again this season. Harrison's comments, despite being taken out of context to an extent, could provide an unnecessary distraction.

Focus on the Ground Game

The Pittsburgh Steelers' faithful have Rashard Mendenhall's Super Bowl fumble lodged in their brains.

However, that should not cloud the fact that Mendenhall has emerged as one of the most dangerous running backs in the league.

He has the ability to break tackles in order to reach the secondary, and also has the speed to outrun those secondary players.

Mendenhall may have issues holding onto the ball sometimes, but that does not take away from his raw talent on the football field.

In the rounds leading up to the Super Bowl, Mendenhall seemed to take his running game to a new level.

The Steelers need to lean on him in 2011.

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Source: "Super Bowl 2011" via Glen in Google Reader

Complete coverage of 2011 Hall of Fame Enshrinement - WNDU-TV

No one knows for sure when the College Football Hall of Fame will leave South Bend, but for now it's still going strong.

The 2011 Enshrinement Festival concluded Saturday night with 20 all-time greats joining the ranks of the best to ever play college football.

With Super Bowl winning coach Jon Gruden serving as the host and emcee along with Charles Davis and NewsCenter 16's Jeff Jeffers, the event wrapped up with the Dinner and Show at the Century Center.

The busy Saturday started with the Grand Parade and continued on the gridiron with the Pep Rally where all the enshrinees received their Hall of Fame Blazers for the first time.

No one had a bigger ovation on Saturday at the pep rally than 1991 Heisman winner Desmond Howard. With the maize and blue flooding the scene, Howard's eyes were fixed on his twin sons--as he saw them cheering on dad.

"Maybe not now but years from now, our kids will definitely appreciate this," said the former Michigan standout wide receiver. "It's nice to have them here and be a part of it."

Howard's famously showed off the Heisman pose after a touchdown against Ohio State in 1991. When asked for a repeat performance on Saturday by Davis and Gruden in front of the big crowd, Howard politely refused.

"That was done at a special time and a special place," Howard explained. "We'll leave that for where it happened and where it was."

That did not stop his sons from flashing the Heisman.

"Of all my trophies at home that's their favorite," Howard said with a big smile and laugh. "They like to imitate that trophy. You ask them, 'What's your favorite statue.' They'll do that pose."

Charles Haley was all about the poses throughout the day. And he knows all about trophies and rings as the only five-time Super Bowl winner. He was proud to represent James Madison, which he called a powerhouse that he felt could beat the likes of Michigan and Notre Dame.

Former Wisconsin coach Barry Alvarez also had a large following. Before he coached the Badgers, Alvarez served as an assistant coach under Lou Holtz at Notre Dame.

Alvarez joined us live on NewsCenter 16 at 6. You can watch his interview in the video above.

Former Purdue quarterback Mark Herrmann was also one among the headliners. Hermann is an all Indiana guy as he played at Carmel High School, Purdue and then the Colts in the NFL.

"Being able to play in front of the home fans, it's been a great opportunity for me," said Hermann. "To see them out here today supporting me and congratulating me, it's been very well worth it."

Gruden, a South Bend Clay product and now ESPN broadcaster, was pumped up to be the host. The man, who at 38 was then the youngest coach to win a Super Bowl, had plenty of reasons. He was back in town for the first time in a long time and his college coach---Mike Kelly was among the enshrinees.

Gruden and Kelly shared some great moments throughout the day. Gruden also joined us live on NewsCenter 16 at 6. You can watch his interview at the link above as well.

Complete listing of HOF enshrinees:

  • Players
  • Dennis Byrd (deceased) – North Carolina State, Defensive Tackle (1965-67)

  • Ronnie Caveness – Arkansas, Linebacker (1962-64)

  • Ray Childress – Texas A&M, Defensive Lineman (1981-84)

  • Dexter Coakley – Appalachian State University, Linebacker (1993-96)

  • Randy Cross – UCLA, Offensive Guard (1973-75)

  • Sam Cunningham – Southern California, Running Back (1970-72)

  • Michael Favor – North Dakota State University, Center (1985-88)

  • Charles Haley – James Madison University, Defensive End (1982-85)

  • Mark Herrmann – Purdue, Quarterback (1977-80)

  • Clarkston Hines – Duke, Wide Receiver (1986-89)

  • Desmond Howard – Michigan, Wide Receiver (1989-91)

  • Mickey Kobrosky (deceased) – Trinity College (Conn.), Back (1933-36)

  • Chet Moeller – Navy, Defensive Back (1973-75)

  • Jerry Stovall – LSU, Halfback (1960-62)

  • Pat Tillman (deceased) – Arizona State, Linebacker (1994-97)

  • Alfred Williams – Colorado, Linebacker (1987-90)
  • Coaches
  • Barry Alvarez – Wisconsin (1990-2005), 118-73-4 (.615)

  • Mike Kelly - University of Dayton, Head Coach, 246-54-1

  • Bill Manlove - Widener University (Pa.), Delaware Valley College (Pa.), La Salle University, Head Coach, 212-110-1

  • Gene stallings – Texas A&M (1965-71), Alabama (1990-96), 89-70-1 (.559)

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service — if this is your content and you're reading it on someone else's site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers. Five Filters featured article: Ten Years Of Media Lens - Our Problem With Mainstream Dissidents.

Source: "Super Bowl 2011" via Glen in Google Reader

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