Monday, September 22, 2008

Cowboys roll




The Dallas Cowboys defeated the Green Bay Packers 27-16. Winning on the road in a short week, against a team that many consider a contender, in a place that they had never won......well, it was a solid performance. The Cowboys are fortunate in that after playing a Monday night game, they had a Sunday night game, then a 3pm game next week. Having those precious extra hours are certainly a benefit. How would they like a Monday nighter followed by a Sunday noon game or even 3pm? For a short week, they received the best schedule possible.

Defense - Best game in quite a while. They were able to get consistent pressure on Aaron Rogers. Plus, the secondary covered pretty well and that forced Rogers into making poor throws or taking sacks. They did allow some yardage but really gutted up in the red zone.

The Pack was only 28% on third down and held to 84 yards rushing.

DeMarcus Ware might be the best Cowboys defensive players in a very long time.

Nice to see Adam Jones making plays in the running game - forcing a fumble and making 6 tackles and assisting on 2 others.

Romo - we will see this 1 or 2 more times this season. Mostly, just a stinker. 2 intentional groundings (he had 0 prior to last night). He was able to make a couple of big plays to Miles Austin but Romo was never comfortable.

The running game was fantastic. MBIII absolutely pounded the Packers defense and Felix Jones came in and torched them for a 60 yard TD run. Barber had 142 on 28 carries. I imagine that the Packers defense was demoralized at seeing Barber coming at them over and over. He punishes defenders. Then, you throw out the explosive Jones. Scary.

Smart move by Jason Garrett to quickly assess that Romo was off and switch to the running game. How many times did we see the delayed handoff to Barber. It felt like Groundhog Day.

TO - only 2 catches but make several key blocks and attracted 2 of the better Packer defenders. He ran down Nick Collins, from behind, after his INT. He also ran down Felix Jones on his 60 yard run to screen a defender. Kind of like in basketball when your shot is not falling, you can still have a great "floor" game.

You knew that all those FG's by the Packers would come back to haunt them. You cannot beat the Cowboys by kicking field goals.

Every other division leader must be ecstatic that they are not in the NFC East, easily the best division in football.

Worries - another 7 penalties, Barber and his difficulty in holding on the the ball, red zone efficiency (1/5).

For some reason, I never felt truly comfortable until the last minute or so. I guess the Philly game was still on my mind.




NFL re-cap

Green Bay's take

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

MNF



Cowboys win
Wow, what a game. I was saying that after the first quarter. We don't get too many shootouts in the NFC East. Although, the second half turned into a pseudo grind-it-out game. The QB's put were awesome. Big time players made big time plays.

Tony Romo - the comparisons to Brett Favre are nice, but I hope he can be better than that. And by that, I mean leading his team to multiple Super Bowls. He has to eliminate the mistakes and make smart plays. As much as I like his style, he has to manage his wildness (which is part of what makes him so good).

TO - absolutely abused the secondary. Why did he not get any looks in the second half?

Jason Whitten - what a stud. This guy plays his heart out even after sustaining a painful shoulder injury.

Felix Jones - This guy is scary. I bet we will continue to see great things from this guy.

MB III - Typical grinding performance that eventually wore down the Eagles defense. GREAT job by the offensive line throughout the game.

Defense - unfortunately, the injury to Roy might actually help this team. The offenses were so good in the first half, that it is hard to blame them. In the second half, the Eagles only scored 1 TD. McNabb held the ball too long on a few plays and was indecisive on the Westbrook fumble. But, the last sacks were a result of good coverage by the Cowboy secondary.

The refs missed a few calls in the one - Jason Hatcher facemask, Greg Lewis interference, late hit on Patrick Watkins tackling Westbrook out of bounds.

Brian Westbrook is simply amazing. This guy scares me every time he is on the field.

DeSean Jackson - wow, incredible talent with a peanut brain.


This is a game that will be discussed for a long time. Next week should be another dandy. Sunday night at Green Bay.


Thursday, September 11, 2008

9/11



9/11



Tony Romo also saved a cat stuck in a tree and helped an old lady across the street
But a couple of miles from the house, while driving on MacArthur Boulevard, the Whites had their own mini-disaster. A tire blew on the Mercury. Bill, luckily, managed to nurse his wounded ride off the street and into the lighted parking lot of a strip mall.

For troubling news on a Sunday, it didn't rank up there with taking a direct hit to the chin from the helmet of linebacker Willie McGinest, but Bill became a bit woozy himself when he discovered his jack was malfunctioning. Never a good thing at midnight.

Plan B kicked in, however. One of those cigarette-lighter-plug-in air compressors was available. Except it was leaking more air than it was pumping.

"I don't know, a hundred cars, probably more, had to go by. Nobody was stopping," said Bill. "That's just kind of the way it is in today's world."

And then ...

"Bill was fooling with that tire, and I was standing beside the car watching him," Sharon said. "The next thing I know, a nice-looking young man, very well-dressed, but with something strange on his chin, he walked up, smiled, and said, 'Hey, you need some help?' "

Sharon hadn't even noticed a car pull up.

So now it's Bill and the well-dressed young man both bent over a flat tire at midnight on a Sunday, trying to figure out why a faulty air compressor plugged into the cigarette lighter was leaking more than pumping.

"I didn't get a good look at him at that point," Bill said. "We were both trying to get the tire pumped up."

Sharon, however, took a second look. "You are Tony Romo," she said. No reply, just a smile, and then it was back to work on the compressor.

Finally, they got the tire aired up. Enough, anyway, to make a slow drive home.

"I didn't want to bother him," Sharon said, "but I asked again, 'You're Tony Romo, right?' " I knew it was him by then. But he smiled and said, 'Yes, ma'am.' "

Sharon: "I did something no 50-year-old woman should be doing, but I screamed real loud, and then jumped up and hugged him."

Bill's immediate response was "Don't tell me how you guys did. I'm going home to watch it."

By the next day, after seeing what the "something strange on his chin" was about, that made the Whites appreciate Romo's gesture even more.

"He gets almost knocked cold in that game, and I read it took 13 stitches to close the cut, and then there's a long flight home [the Cowboys charter arrived at around 11 p.m.] and Tony's got to be dog tired, but he still was a good enough person to stop and help us," Bill said.


Does Philly miss TO?
While everyone's having a conniption about how competent, how confident, how cocky that little rookie wide receiver is, think about this:
It didn't have to be this way. It didn't have to come down to falling in love with a 21-year-old out of California who has blistering speed and a monster ego, two valued commodities among football fans in this town. There's a lot to love about DeSean Jackson - the 40-yard dash time, the hands, the bravado, the instincts - but the Eagles shouldn't have to rely on a rookie to be their playmaker at wide receiver.

They had one. For a brief moment, they had it all. It could have worked. It should have worked. Had there been better communication from all involved, the Eagles might have a Lombardi Trophy by now. But as we all know, the Eagles' relationship with Terrell Owens ended in the nastiest of divorces, all because the parties involved - including Andy Reid, Owens, Donovan McNabb, and, yes, even the loquacious Hugh Douglas - failed to talk, air their grievances like men, and, ultimately, put in the work to save the marriage.

Shame on them all.

Well, if you're McNabb, you can hope and pray that Jackson is the next great receiver. They don't come around often, and certainly not at 5-foot-10. McNabb is closer to the end of his career than the beginning, and Jackson might be his last chance.

If you're Reid, you hope that in the next 15 years, another Owens will come around and you'll have a chance to get him. It's unlikely, though. Look at the NFL now. There's the old guard of Randy Moss, Marvin Harrison, Owens, Torry Holt and Chad Ocho Cinco (or whatever his name is now), and the new guard, players who are still developing such as Braylon Edwards, Andre Johnson, Larry Fitzgerald and Anquan Boldin.



Cowboy$ #1

The New York Giants and New York Jets had the biggest increase in value in Forbes Magazine's annual ranking of NFL franchises, each jumping 21 percent because of their new stadium.

And the stadium where they'll both play isn't scheduled to open until the 2010 season.

The Giants moved from eighth to fourth in the rankings released Wednesday, valued at $1.178 billion, behind Dallas ($1.612 billion), Washington ($1.538 billion) and New England ($1.324 billion), the perennial leaders. The Jets are right behind them in fifth with a value of $1.178 billion.

Indianapolis made the biggest jump in the rankings, going from 21st to eighth because their new stadium is opening this year. The Colts are valued at $1.076 billion.

The magazine also found that for the first time in any sport, team values averaged $1 billion. Ten years ago, when it first started keeping track, the average value of an NFL team was $288 million.

Forbes attributes the increase primarily to new stadiums as well as increased sponsorship deals.

In all, 19 teams were valued at more than $1 billion.



Dr Z must not think very much of Tom Brady

Monday, August 25, 2008

Sweet, Sweet Olympics



What a run. The coverage, competition, and stories were as good as ever. Perhaps part of the allure is that the games were held in China, a place that has become a dominant force in the world but one that we really do not fully understand.

Did China ever gear up for these games. Somehow, I doubt that the UK will expend this type of effort in 2012.

The closing ceremony was kind of boring, at least after the flame was extinguished. I kept waiting for the long range camera shots of the human "flame" as it defeats the purpose to continually show closeups. Also, was the London skyline in the double decker bus made of grass? That looked terrible.

Speaking of terrible, how about the 2012 logo

Poor Bryan Clay - does anyone even know that he won the decathlon? Along with the title of World's Greatest Athlete?

The US mens volleyball team pulled off an incredible victory over Brazil. Those guys were as proud and appreciative as anyone, especially Hugh McCutcheon.

By the way, had the women's indoor team won, the US would have swept volleyball - 2 outdoor and 2 indoor. As it turned out, they won 3 gold and 1 silver.

I turned on the Olympics the other day and had no idea what sport I was watching. Team handball.....kind of interesting.

USA basketball did us proud. Those guys desperately wanted to win. Total class act.

My back hurts from watching field hockey. What a beating.

I can do without synchronized swimming and rhythmic gymnastics


Olympic commercials



Very interesting article on the Olympics, tv, and Michael Phelps



Olympic ratings
Who knew 3,600 hours of broadcast television and video streaming could fly by so quickly? Seems like it was only 17 days ago that the Summer Olympics began. But now Beijing is in the books.

NBC broke the U.S. event record Saturday when it surpassed 211 million viewers served. That topped the mark of 209 million set at Atlanta's Olympics. Of course, the Super Bowl does spot the Olympics 16 days.



Kosier out for 6 weeks

The Cowboys have not needed to re-shuffle their starting offensive line because of injury in three seasons, but that will change.

Left guard Kyle Kosier could miss up to six weeks because of sprained right foot and hairline fracture. He left Texas Stadium on Friday night in a walking boot and had an MRI on Saturday.

Kosier, who hasn't missed a game since his rookie season in 2002, suffered the injury in the fourth quarter of the Cowboys' 23-22 win against Houston.

With Kosier out, Joe Berger will probably start for the first time in his career. Berger, who joined the Cowboys late in 2006 off waivers from Miami, was active for three games last season and saw his only extended playing time in the season finale at Washington.



Funney!

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

HBM



So glad that China set-up all of those protest areas

Chinese authorities have not approved any of the 77 applications they received from people who wanted to hold protests during the Beijing Olympics, state media reported Monday.

The official Xinhua News Agency said all the applications were withdrawn, suspended or rejected. Rights groups and relatives have said some applicants were immediately taken away by security agents after applying to hold a rally, prompting critics to accuse officials of using the plan as a trap to draw potential protesters to their attention.




Meet Emily

Extraordinarily lifelike characters are to begin appearing in films and computer games thanks to a new type of animation technology.

Emily - the woman in the above animation - was produced using a new modelling technology that enables the most minute details of a facial expression to be captured and recreated.

She is considered to be one of the first animations to have overleapt a long-standing barrier known as 'uncanny valley' - which refers to the perception that animation looks less realistic as it approaches human likeness.

Researchers at a Californian company which makes computer-generated imagery for Hollywood films started with a video of an employee talking. They then broke down down the facial movements down into dozens of smaller movements, each of which was given a 'control system'.




James Bond meets google maps


Thursday, August 14, 2008

Another Step



Redeem Team takes another step

BEIJING (AP) The U.S. Olympic team stopped the pick-and-rolls - and just about everything else Greece tried.

These Americans that looked so lost two years at the world championship when this team was being formed appear to have found their Olympic defensive way.

Batting away balls or swatting shots on seemingly every possession late in the second quarter, the Americans broke open a close game and went on to a 92-69 victory Thursday night to clinch a spot in the medal round.

Their offense wasn't too shabby either as the Americans were able to find the range on jump shots when the Greeks went to a zone defense to slow them down.





Rangers are toast

BOSTON – The playoff race is now just a faint memory, like a sleep-away camp from a summer long ago. It allows the Rangers to refocus on the original and more tangible goal for this season: developing young players, particularly young pitchers.

And after another night when the ERA shot up and another young pitcher (Luis Mendoza) had to hand the ball to manager Ron Washington before the game was even halfway over, and an 8-4 loss in Boston dropped them to just one game above .500, the Rangers are forced to consider the season's most important questions:

Are the young pitchers gaining the kind of experience from which they will grow or are they simply getting hammered?

"The question isn't whether they are making progress," assistant general manager Thad Levine said, choosing his words delicately, "it's whether they are making enough progress."

For the seventh time in 11 starts this year, Mendoza failed to make it through five innings. Washington came to get him after he allowed the first four batters of the fifth to reach base. The last batter he faced, rookie Jed Lowrie, lined a two-run double to give Boston an 8-0 lead.

It also pushed the starting rotation ERA to 5.69. The ERA has pushed higher on each day of the current road trip, during which the Rangers have won just once in five games and have seen their deficit in the wild-card standings bulge to nine games back of Boston



Federer shocker

BEIJING -- Roger Federer's bid for his first Olympic singles medal ended Thursday night when he lost to American James Blake.

With the sort of lackluster performance once unthinkable for Federer, he was eliminated in the quarterfinals 6-4, 7-6 (2).

The upset was a stunner in that Blake had won only a single set in their previous eight matches. But the top-seeded Federer is battling a year-long slump that has left him stalled at 12 major titles, two shy of Pete Sampras' record.



Julia Child the female James Bond?

Famed chef Julia Child shared a secret with Supreme Court Justice Arthur Goldberg and Chicago White Sox catcher Moe Berg at a time when the Nazis threatened the world.

While Julia Child was cooking pheasants, she was also part of an international spy ring during World War II.

They served in an international spy ring managed by the Office of Strategic Services, an early version of the CIA created in World War II by President Franklin Roosevelt.

The full secret comes out Thursday, all of the names and previously classified files identifying nearly 24,000 spies who formed the first centralized intelligence effort by the United States. The National Archives, which this week released a list of the names found in the records, will make available for the first time all 750,000 pages identifying the vast spy network of military and civilian operatives.

Among the more than 35,000 OSS personnel files are applications, commendations and handwritten notes identifying young recruits who, like Child, Goldberg and Berg, earned greater acclaim in other fields -- Arthur Schlesinger Jr., a historian and special assistant to President Kennedy; Sterling Hayden, a film and television actor whose work included a role in "The Godfather"; and Thomas Braden, an author whose "Eight Is Enough" book inspired the 1970s television series.

Other notables identified in the files include John Hemingway, son of author Ernest Hemingway; Quentin and Kermit Roosevelt, sons of President Theodore Roosevelt, and Miles Copeland, father of Stewart Copeland, drummer for the band The Police.

Monday, August 11, 2008

The Big O


This was the amazing race

How ridiculous is it that 5 teams broke the world record in this race, which means 2 countries broke the WR and did not even medal. I know virtually nothing about competitive swimming but that has to be the greatest relay race....ever.

What transpired during the final 50 meters was the stuff of Disney movies. It was the kind of thing that should land Lezak a co-starring role with Phelps on cereal boxes and network morning shows. And if Phelps does complete the great eight and pocket a $1 million Speedo bonus, he should cut a check for one-eighth of that total to the guy who kept the quest alive, Jason Lezak.

Cullen Jones, Jason Lezak, Michael Phelps and Garrett Weber-Gale set a world record (3:08.24) on their way to winning the 4x100 free relay.

"His last 50 meters were absolutely unbelievable," Phelps said.

The 32-year-old Lezak, a three-time Olympian who has been an American anchorman nearly as long as Ted Koppel, steadily closed in on Bernard. Lezak hugged the lane line, drafting off Bernard like a NASCAR driver. It was a welcome change of tactics for a guy who is accustomed to being drafted upon by trailing swimmers.

"It was an amazing thing to watch. I was saying to myself, 'If anybody in the world can pull this off, it's Jason.'"

In the final stroke, Lezak pulled it off. He thrust his right arm for the wall, desperation and determination meeting perfect timing. The lunge beat Bernard by an eye blink. Lezak somehow touched first, as the fans and his relay teammates both exploded.




Cowboys struggle

"Overall, we obviously didn't play well enough as a team," coach Wade Philips said. "But any time you have turnovers and penalties, those things are really going to hurt you.

"We're not happy with losing, but I think we can learn a lot."

The lowlights included:

■ Three pass interference penalties that contributed to three San Diego touchdowns.

■ A series of special teams miscues on returns and coverage that created field position troubles.

■ A miscommunication between Brad Johnson and Patrick Crayton that led to an interception San Diego turned into another score.




Oh yeah, there was a Major in golf this past weekend

Three weeks after playing what many believed to be the back nine of his life to win at Royal Birkdale, an exhausted Padraig Harrington was hoisting the Wanamaker Trophy and becoming the first European-born golfer since 1930 to win the PGA Championship.

That the Irishman did so while basically on fumes is the amazing thing.

Harrington was despondent on Friday after shooting 74, saying, "I'd just run out of steam. I did my best to be ready for the week, but clearly I'm not." On Sunday, he recalled, "I just couldn't get off the golf course fast enough. I was probably the only guy who finished bogey-bogey and thought he was doing pretty well.

"I was probably thinking of putting my clubs away for a week, which is something I almost never do."

Padraig Harrington shot a pair of 66s over the weekend to clinch his third major championship victory.And yet if we have learned anything about Harrington, 36, it is that he is one of the most resilient players in the game today. He is not as gifted, nor does he possess the same skills as a Tiger Woods or a Phil Mickelson or even a Sergio Garcia, who was the tough-luck loser again on Sunday.






Greatness is gone

For all the great things that he did over his career, I will always remember Isaac Hayes as "The Duke" in Escape from New York and as the voice of South Parks "Chef".

Isaac Hayes, the musician, composer and producer whose innovative sound changed the shape of pop music and whose shaved head, bejeweled outfits and regal demeanor embodied African American masculinity in the 1970s, has died. He was 65.

Family members found Hayes unresponsive Sunday afternoon next to a treadmill in a downstairs bedroom in his home just east of Memphis, Tenn., said Steve Shular, a spokesman for the Shelby County Sheriff's Office.