Oct 20 2008

Cowboys Owner Jerry Jones Says Adam “Pacman” Jones is in Rehab

Category: Pro Sports,SportsTim @ 2:58 pm

More news from the Dallas Cowboys today. Cowboys owner Jerry Jones says Pacman is in rehab:

NEW YORK (AP) — Suspended Dallas Cowboys cornerback Adam “Pacman” Jones has entered an alcohol treatment center.

Cowboys owner Jerry Jones says the player checked into a facility “in another part of the country.” The treatment plan is overseen by the NFL.

I think that is very good news for the younger Mr. Jones, but I think the NFL may be finished with this troubled young man. It seems NFL rules have changed and now the Cowboys are owing some money to the NFL:

The Dallas Cowboys are being “fined” for the suspension of Adam “Pacman” Jones under NFL policy, the league confirmed Friday.

As of Aug. 1, teams are required to submit to the league a portion of the salary forfeited by players who are suspended without pay under the personal conduct, substance abuse, or steroids policy, beginning with a team’s second such suspension in a league year.

[...]

Under this policy, the Cowboys will pay to the league office $20,588 for each game that Jones remains suspended, up to maximum of $200,000 for this suspension.

So, the Cowboys are out a player and have to pay a fine. I doubt anyone else would take a flyer on a player like Pacman Jones again. He has proven to be both a distraction and a liability to his team and there is just not room for that in the NFL. Of course, if the player is good enough, we can sell our morals for a victory.

Tags:


More misunderestimation


Oct 15 2008

Adam “Pacman” Jones – Game Over

Category: Pro Sports,SportsTim @ 8:45 am

Those of you who could not see this one coming (Jerry Jones/Dallas Cowboy Fans), you should be ashamed of yourselves. Adam “Don’t Call Me Pacman Anymore” Jones has been suspended again by the NFL.

Adam Pacman Jones

Dallas Cowboys cornerback Adam “Pacman” Jones has been suspended indefinitely without pay by NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell for his latest violation of the league’s personal-conduct policy.

Jones, who was suspended for the entire 2007 season, was involved in an alcohol-related altercation last week with a bodyguard who had been hired by the Cowboys to keep him out of trouble.

Really? I though he had turned a corner and that long history of legal problems were behind him. I was just reading on a Dallas Cowboy fan blog about the expected impact Jones would have on the team:

Pacman Jones could be the player to push the Cowboys to the next level or he could be the man to rip them apart.

Hmmm. I wonder which it will be.

My son asked me last night why the Cowboys insist on bringing in players that have “interesting” pasts. I frankly did not have a good answer. Are the only good players in the NFL so spoiled and selfish that they can ONLY behave badly? Are the players like TO, Chad Johnson, Dieon Sanders, etc. a necessary evil in this sport? Is Jerry Jones a genius or a fool? The bad behavior problem is a growing concern for the NFL and it seems that Rodger Goodell is trying to make improvements, it’s just taking time.

The only thing I can say for sure is I don’t want my children idolizing spoild athletes. While they may be amazing to watch, they are not to be emulated. My son finished our discussioin last night with, “I could never root for the Cowboys. All they do is bring in criminals.”

I’ve never been prouder.

Tags:


More misunderestimation


May 19 2008

Right or Wrong, Roger Clemens Equals Trash

Category: Pro Sports,SportsTim @ 2:17 am

I admit it, I like Roger Clemens. I like the results he brought to the field and the attitude he produced in to the Astros; an attitude that took them all the way to the World Series. I would be a hypocrite if I said I was not thrilled when he came “home” to Houston with the promise of doing something special. Yea sure, I heard the stories about how he wasn’t always the nicest of guys and that the public Roger could be different than the private Roger, but who could blame the man? After all, 5 days in New York can make someone crazy, imagine living in that spotlight day after day after day…

In 2006, we all held our breath and watched Roger play the fans the media and the Astros to get his magical contract, $22,000,022. He even started back with the team on June 22 after propping-up the minor league teams and playing a game with Kody. How perfect was that? To celebrate the event, the Astros produced a movie-size poster called, “The Return of the Rocket” and gave it to all the fans who attended his first game back. The poster was very cool so I framed it and hung it in my office.

Then it started. Roger went back to New York. OK, could we really expect him to stay on a team that couldn’t produce any runs? No worries, my poster stays as a reminder of our glory years.

Next came the Mitchell Report. Roger and HGH, Roger and steroids, Roger and Andy injecting each other! Hmmm, that’s not good, but you are innocent until proven guilty in the country. Since this is America, I leave my poster right where it is.

Then the biggie, multiple affairs and the possibility of relations with a minor. The accusations are from less then trustworthy sources and celebrity affairs are as common as traffic in Houston, but the cumulative total has finally reached the point of no-return. Roger Clemens, meet the trash can.

garbage-can.jpg

I can’t help but feel a bit sad at the falling of a star. In the end, Roger could be the most wrongly-accused individual in sports or be proven to be a major scum-bag. Either way, as a responsible professional, I cannot have his picture displayed on my wall anymore. He has just become too big of a liability for me and the association is not a good one.

I guess that is the message in all of this mess. When you create the persona of the athlete “good guy,” you create the image of the ideal person. When reality creeps in, that image can be shattered and leave you feeling betrayed and angry. When will we learn, even athletes are human.


More misunderestimation


    Sep 03 2007

    Davidson vs. Darby – Best Prank Ever!

    Category: Humor,SportsTim @ 1:44 am

    This will go down as one of the best high school pranks ever:

    Kyle Garchar, a senior at Hilliard Davidson High School in suburban Columbus, said he spent about 20 hours over three days plotting the trick, which was captured on video and posted on the video-sharing Web site YouTube. He said he was inspired by a similar prank pulled by Yale students in 2004, when Harvard fans were duped into holding up cards with the same message.

    These kids received three days of in-school suspension for their troubles, but I’m sure they have reached legendary status on campus.


    More misunderestimation


      Jun 08 2007

      London Olympic 2012 Log Causing Fits – Literally

      Category: Humor,SportsTim @ 1:26 pm

      What happens when you let the marketing department run wild? You get the London 2012 Olympic logo!

      Within two days of the bright, geometric design’s unveiling this week, there were 48,000 signatures on a petition to dump the logo immediately. A motion floating in Parliament called it a “childish, ridiculous and pathetic attempt to appear trendy.” And London Mayor Ken Livingstone piled on by midweek, pronouncing the new symbol a “catastrophic mistake.”

      Then there was the video designed to showcase the new logo, which did make a splash, all right. It featured an animated image of a diver whose entry into the water sent out ripples of sparkling, flashing lights. The image triggered epileptic seizures in at least 23 people across Britain who watched the video on television.

      London 2012 Olympic Logo

      Ouch! It comes in many colors, but this was the coolest there. I mean really, it is causing epileptic seizures! Who in their right mind would put something like this out there without doing a little research, market testing, and at least provide helmets for those viewing it!

      The clip’s removal follows comments by Professor Graham Harding, an expert in clinical neuro-physiology who developed a test used to measure photo-sensitivity levels in animated TV material.

      “The logo should not be shown on TV at all at the moment,” Harding told the BBC. “It fails Harding FPA machine test which is the machine the television industry uses to test images.”

      He said the footage did not comply with regulatory guidelines.

      Wow. One class of children has taken on the task of designing a better logo:

      Now, children at Sprites Primary School, in the Chantry area, jumped at the chance to create what a top design firm appears to have failed at.

      The year five students had just hours to produce bright logos combining the word London, the Olympic rings, and the year 2012.

      And the whole class pronounced the official version “rubbish” with some pupils adding that it was confusing, like graffiti and failed to capture the Olympic spirit.

      Ten-year-old Erin Allen, of Hawthorn Drive, said: “It’s horrid. It doesn’t link to anything athletic or sporty. The games are supposed to be inspiring children into sport but it isn’t inspiring at all.

      Out of the mouths of babes…Well, the London 2012 web site is proud of their logo. They are encouraging people to use their logo creatively and upload the results:

      Download the design templates, do something creative with them and upload the results to our online gallery. Please note London 2012 reserves the right not to display all designs submitted. We are enjoying seeing your emblem ideas, but we will only publish designs that make creative use of the templates.

      “We will only publish designs that make creative use of the templates.” Am I the only one who is terrified by that statement!

      Several alternative designs have been submitted to the Telegraph.co.uk web site, but here are two of my favorites:

      logo6.jpg
      Submitted by Charles Pope in Beijing

      logo8.gif
      Submitted by Frank Donovan

      I couldn’t have said it better myself.


      More misunderestimation


        Apr 03 2007

        Astros Opening Day 2007 – The Day After

        Category: Houston,SportsTim @ 12:59 pm

        Ah the sites, sounds and smells of baseball’s Opening Day.

        I admit, I’m addicted. The bunting, the local high school baseball champions holding the American flag, Clay Walker performing the anthem and a mini-concert, the fly-overs and Golden Knights team (when the roof is open), the sound of Milo Hamilton inventing new names for players, the introduction of coaches you’ve never seen before, the 47 ceremonial first pitches, and the promise that this will be “our year!”

        I love going to Opening Day. My boys and I have made it a tradition to attend this special game every year and we have a good string going.

        Astros Opening Day 2007

        Yesterday was no exception.

        The game featured a lot of great baseball; Roy Oswalt pitching well, Luke Scot crushing a home run to center, great defense by Adam Everett and Chris Burke, and Adam LaRoche striking-out 4 times in a row (I don’t like that guy). Add to that a record crowd and you have makings of a very enjoyable Opening Day.

        And so we come to the 9th inning with a one-run lead and the Pirates are down to their last out. The Minute Maid crowd is on their feet and screaming their lungs out. This is the moment we waited all off-season for; a chance to celebrate the beginning of the 2007 season in perfect fashion.

        Then it happens, the bomb to left and the game is tied. The sound of 43,000 people gasping in horror is a very memorable noise. Morally wounded, the Astros go down in 10 innings 4-2 and the 2007 campaign is off with a thud.

        Now what? Well, it’s only one game and for those of you who think the season is over, think of Yogi.

        Here is what I saw yesterday. Great pitching from Oswalt. We take if for granted, but that guy can pitch. He had one sequence where he threw a 94 mph fastball and then a 66 mph curve that frankly is just evil.

        The hitting was much better than last year. There were not a lot of strikeouts and a number of well-hit balls. I think this lineup is going to be interesting.

        The fielding was better than I expected. Chris Burke made a couple of very nice catches and almost made a spectatular catch. Adam Everett showed his range by making a catch half-way into left field. That guy is amazing.

        In the end, it’s only one game. I just wish we could have had the storybook ending to complete the picture. Even though we didn’t, I’ll be there with my boys next year ready to celebrate or lament again!


        More misunderestimation


          Jan 23 2007

          Cowboys Coach Bill Parcells Retires…Again

          Category: SportsTim @ 8:24 am

          The Dallas Cowboys are looking for a new head coach this morning thanks to the announced retirement of Bill Parcells:

          Bill Parcells resigned as coach of the Dallas Cowboys Monday after a bitterly disappointing playoff loss to the Seattle Seahawks.

          Parcells, 65, compiled a 34-30 regular season record with the Cowboys over his four years but was 0-2 in the playoffs.

          “I am in good health and feel lucky to have been able to coach in the NFL for an extended period of time,” Parcells said in a statement on the team’s Web site (www.dallascowboys.com).

          “I leave the game and the NFL with nothing but good feelings and gratitude to all the players, coaches and other people that have assisted me in that regard.”

          Parcells.jpg

          Why stop now when you were on the verge of playoff success, you have a new Pro Bowl quarterback in Tony Romo, and you have the loudest mouth in the league in TO?

          Parcells is at the point in his life where six weeks off a year just isn’t enough, particularly when he lives 1,400 miles from the part of the world he loves the most — the New Jersey/New England/Upstate New York area. The football demands on his time are too great.

          “It’s time,” he said Monday afternoon from his office at Valley Ranch. “It’s a young man’s game. I’m in good health, but it’s time to give someone else a chance. I’m looking forward to whatever life has in store for me, and right now I have no idea what that is.”

          OK. You’ve earned it.

          How long will it be before Jerry Jones names himself has head coach? Anyone taking bets on that?

          Texas Fred’s: Well, if Jerry Jones would step down, sell the team, pass away or whatever and Terrell Owens was canned for the asshat troublemaker he IS, I might consider being a Cowboys fan again…

          Best Week Ever: Today, Bill Parcells retired, making Romo’s botched snap the final play he’ll ever see from the sidelines.

          A Blog for All: His legacy with the Cowboys isn’t nearly as good as his tenure with the Patriots or Giants. Expect questions to swirl over whether Terrell Owens had anything to do with his decision to resign and other coaching candidates will have to deal with an overbearing owner who styles himself as general manager as well.

          Ed Driscol.com: Parcells’ four years with the Cowboys produced three out of four winning seasons, but during each of those years, his teams tended to fade in December, unlike his best Giants teams, which surged into the last month of the regular season–and beyond.


          More misunderestimation


            Jan 23 2007

            New Raiders Head Coach: Lane Kiffin

            Category: SportsTim @ 8:05 am

            The Raiders made a very interesting announcement on Monday naming 31-year-old USC offensive coordinator, Lane Kiffin, as their new head coach.

            Kiffin, the son of Tampa Bay defensive coordinator Monte Kiffin, earned the job with a strong interview Monday after the Raiders failed to reach a deal last week with 32-year-old Steve Sarkisian, Kiffin’s fellow assistant to Pete Carroll at USC.

            Kiffin.jpg

            One has to ask, what was Al Davis thinking?

            Davis got exactly the type of coach he’d been seeking since firing Art Shell on Jan. 4: a young prospect with more upswing than experience, and a flair for offense.

            Davis tried to hire one of Kiffin’s colleagues first, but USC assistant head coach Steve Sarkisian, 32, turned down the job offer Friday. One day earlier, Kiffin interviewed for Oakland’s offensive-coordinator opening, only to turn down the team’s job offer for that position.

            When Sarkisian stunned the Raiders by withdrawing himself from consideration in the head-coaching race, they focused their attention on Kiffin, who has no head-coaching experience.

            OK, Kiffin may have been a “rebound” hire, but there is a precedent in Raider’s history for hiring young coaches:

            But Davis has ample reason to trust in young minds: Jon Gruden, Mike Shanahan and John Madden all succeeded as Raiders head coaches in their 30s — as did Davis.

            Kiffin is 14 months younger than Madden was when the Hall of Fame coach took over the Raiders in 1969. Davis was 33 years, 6 months when he took charge of the Raiders in 1963.

            Kiffin, a former Fresno State quarterback, is younger than at least nine players who finished the season with Oakland during its NFL-worst 2-14 campaign, including defensive tackle Warren Sapp, fullback Zack Crockett and receiver Alvis Whitted.

            When you consider the challenges facing the Raiders, a young energetic coach may just be the ticket.


            More misunderestimation


              Jan 12 2007

              Barry Bonds, The Saga Continues

              Category: SportsTim @ 11:13 am

              Barry Bonds, a name that immediately conjures-up emotions in anyone with baseball knowledge.

              Barry Bonds the incredible 5-tool player for the Pittsburgh Pirates who was well on his way to being one of the greatest players to ever play the game.

              Barry Bonds, the Giants media-hating superstar who has been know to eat sports writers for lunch.

              Barry Bonds, the egomaniac who, according to the book Game of Shadows, became obsessed with McGwire and Sosa and decided that a little chemical enhancement just might get him the attention he deserved.

              Barry Bonds, the home run record-holder who averaged 33 home runs a season over 15 seasons until he hit 73 in 2001.

              Barry Bonds, the poster child for steroids in baseball and a central figure in the Balco Investigation.

              Barry Bonds, the broken-down masher trying desperately to cling to the game long enough to be the all-time home run champ.

              And now possibly, Barry Bonds, the unemployed.

              On Thursday, news came out about Barry failing another drug test, this time for amphetamines:

              Giants outfielder Barry Bonds tested positive for amphetamines in the middle of last season and told several people on the team about it at the time, a major-league source told the San Francisco Chronicle on Thursday.

              The positive test was first reported by the New York Daily News, which said Bonds initially blamed it on a substance he had taken from the locker of teammate Mark Sweeney. The Chronicle’s source confirmed the accuracy of the report and then stated Bonds’ amphetamine test was known on the team because Bonds himself talked about it.

              Many yesterday were wondering just what was Barry doing grabbing drugs out of teammates lockers? Is he just too busy to go to a store or what? Secondly, why is he throwing yet another teammate under the bus? Later yesterday, Barry came to his senses and appoligized to Mark Sweeney:

              “He is both my teammate and my friend,” Bonds said in a statement Thursday. “He did not give me anything whatsoever and has nothing to do with this matter, contrary to recent reports.

              “I want to express my deepest apologies especially to Mark and his family as well as my other teammates, the San Francisco Giants organization and the fans.”

              It turns out that Barry has a verbal agreement with the Giants for 2007, but not a signed contract. Will this latest round of issues be enough to tip the scale and end Barry’s career with the Giants?

              If the team somehow wriggles out of its as-yet-unsigned contract with Bonds, the prospect of mayhem, like the heist of Hank Aaron’s home run record, might not come to pass.

              Assuming that the deal gets done, though, the Giants’ clubhouse should be a miserable place, filled with denial and forced camaraderie that eventually will become genuine camaraderie built on shared exasperation with the media.

              Barry will likely work things out with the Giants and will literally continue limping toward the magical 755. Only 21 more to tie Hank Aaron; then we will have Barry Bonds, the undisputed home run king*.

              (* Records established in the late 1900s and early 2000s were potentially influenced by steroids and other performance enhancing substances and should be consider tainted.)


              More misunderestimation


                Jan 10 2007

                Cooperstown Calls Tony Gwynn & Cal Ripken

                Category: SportsTim @ 7:48 am

                Congratulations to the two new inductees for Baseball’s Hall of Fame, Tony Gwynn and Cal Ripken.

                Tony Gwynn and Cal Ripken

                Ripken, a 19-time All-Star and two-time AL MVP, played in a major league-record 2,632 consecutive games to break Lou Gehrig’s mark of 2,130. He also set a new standard for power-hitting shortstops with 431 home runs and 3,184 hits.

                His hot-water heater didn’t work Tuesday morning, making him laugh and recall starting his pro career at Bluefield in 1978.

                “I was sitting there remembering the cold-shower days,” Ripken said.

                Gwynn, a 15-time All-Star, compiled 3,141 hits and a .338 batting average during his 20-year career with the San Diego Padres. He woke up at 4 a.m. on Tuesday, couldn’t get back to sleep and was fidgety and nervous before he received the call from Jack O’Connell, the BBWAA secretary-treasurer.

                “I broke down right away,” Gwynn said. “My wife came over and put an arm around me.”

                Congratulations to two of the game’s best on this well-deserved honor.


                More misunderestimation


                  « Previous PageNext Page »