Thursday, November 29, 2007

Gameday



- Hate that it's on Thursday, and sick of all the hype, but it is gameday. By the way, take Green Bay +7 and Over 51.

- Scouts, Inc.


Which team will establish the running game?
Both offenses would love to control the clock on the ground and keep the opposing offense on the sidelines, but they go about it very differently. The Cowboys are massive up front and pound opposing defenses into submission throughout the course of the game with two very good running backs. Marion Barber and Julius Jones combined for 167 rushing yards on 32 carries against the Jets on Thanksgiving. On the other hand, Green Bay controls the clock with a short precise passing game and now a developing zone-rushing attack with Ryan Grant carrying the ball. Grant is still battling an ankle injury, but looked great Thursday when he was called on to finish off the Lions in the fourth quarter. He runs behind a smaller, more athletic line that is very technically sound. Jones is the most elusive of these three runners and Barber is the most physical, but Grant is a big, strong runner who is quick to get downhill and deliver a blow to opposing tacklers. The defensive fronts that both rushing attacks will be facing are very athletic, but not particularly massive. Both the Cowboys' and Packers' defensive lines have good depth and do a nice job of rotating players in to stay fresh, while the linebackers are loaded with playmakers on both squads. Like just about everything else in this great matchup, choosing a winner in this facet of the game is very difficult, but we give the slight edge to Dallas due to it having two quality runners and a powerful offensive line. The Cowboys controlled the football for nearly 38 minutes against New York while Green Bay held it for under 26 minutes in Detroit.

Will the Packers be able to get to Tony Romo?
Romo is very difficult to sack for numerous reasons. He is a very good athlete who can avoid the rush while keeping his eyes downfield to scan for open receivers. He uses his light feet to set up passing plays and isn't looking to run. He also has a very good pocket presence and quick release, getting rid of the ball on time and with great confidence in his throw. Dallas' pass protection is top notch as well and the Cowboys offensive line features several very good pass blockers. However, Dallas did allow the Jets' sub-standard pass rush to put Romo on the ground three times. LDE Aaron Kampman had two of the Packers' four sacks against Detroit and is a Defensive Player of the Year candidate. His matchup against RT Marc Colombo might be the Packers' best one-on-one matchup in this any area of this game. A former washout first round pick, Colombo has resurrected his career in Dallas but he is overmatched against Kampman. Kampman is quick off the ball and simply relentless. His technique and hand usage is exceptional and he has the ability to bend his knees, get his pads down and drive through opposing right tackles. Colombo can play too high and demonstrates noticeable stiffness. The Cowboys will have to roll their protection schemes in Kampman's direction, but he isn't the only Packer who is capable of getting to and disrupting Romo. On throwing downs, Green Bay usually moves RDE Cullen Jenkins inside and Kabeer Gbaja-Biamila replaces him on the edge. Both are excellent pass rushers in their own right.

In what should be a close game, which QB steps up and wins the game in the clutch?
Wow. This is a tough one. Brett Favre's track record is impeccable, but Romo is 16-5 as the Cowboys' starting quarterback. Neither quarterback ever flinches in the face of pressure and their teammates have all the faith in the world in their respective signal caller for very good reason. Favre's and Romo's pure passing numbers are exceptional and it has become clear that these are the best two quarterbacks that the NFC has to offer. Both offenses seem to get better as the game goes along and these quarterbacks are a major reason why. They thrive in the clutch. If this game turns into a back and forth battle between both offenses, we give a very slight advantage to Favre as he has been performing his heroics much longer than Romo. However, the best bet if that scenario comes into play would be to bet on the man who has the ball last. It is that even.

Scouts' Edge

Choosing the Scouts, Inc. Advantage was a difficult chore. How do you choose between Romo and Favre? We chose Favre just based on his pedigree, but both quarterbacks are playing at an extremely high level and are clearly the top two signal callers in the NFC. The winner of this game is likely to have home field advantage throughout the NFC playoffs and neither team wants to play in the other's building for the right to advance to the Super Bowl, which is the likely scenario. Both teams have impressive winning streaks and are getting better as the season goes along. This has all the makings of being an exceptional football game that could easily go either way, but we are giving the nod to the Cowboys because the Packers sustained a few potentially substantial injuries and the game is being played in Dallas. Still, do not be surprised if Green Bay spreads the field and attacks the Cowboys successfully much the same way as the Patriots did when they handed Dallas its only loss. Expect these powerhouses to meet again with the honor of advancing to Super Bowl XLII on the line.


Prediction: Cowboys 27, Packers 24




- Mavericks get another ho-hum victory against a weak opponent.



Dallas Mavericks hold off Minnesota

02:29 AM CST on Thursday, November 29, 2007
By EDDIE SEFKO / The Dallas Morning News
esefko@dallasnews.com

The Dallas Mavericks played half a game Wednesday night.

They will get credit for a whole win, even if it wasn't a thing of beauty.

To break their three-game losing streak, they followed a proven formula. They tweaked the starting lineup. They made sure they got off to a rare, rapid start. They played with passion – for a while.

Mostly, they were facing the Minnesota Timberwolves, who dragged a 2-10 record into American Airlines Center.

Even then, it was a struggle.

Reverting to the starting lineup that served them so well during the last few regular seasons – if not in the playoffs – the Mavericks rolled up a nice first-half lead, stretched it to 20, then held on for a 109-103 victory.

"We got the win," Jason Terry said. "It was an ugly one. But we got it. That's what matters."

At this point, he's right. But the second half was clear evidence that the problems the Mavericks have will not be magically erased with a lineup change. Terry started in the backcourt with Devin Harris, and Erick Dampier, free from any minutes restrictions on his rebuilt right shoulder, was in at center.

Avery Johnson emphasized that this is not the end of Terry's sixth-man role. It's merely a temporary change.

"That first half kind of looked like old times," Johnson said. "Jet and Devin were pushing the ball, but we left it in the locker room in the third quarter."

And Terry's future remains as a sixth man. At least, that's the game plan.

"We want to get back to it," Johnson said. "But in the short term, none of our other solutions worked. So we had to go back with our normal five. We still think to win a championship you've got to be bigger at the two spot, especially against some of the teams we have to beat. But over the next 10 days or two weeks, we've just got to go back to our familiar lineup."

During that time, Eddie Jones, Devean George and Trenton Hassell will get time to improve their conditioning and get healthy.

And Terry and Harris will start.

"Hopefully we won't have to use it the rest of the season, because then we'll get back in the same situation we were in last season," Johnson said, referencing a fatigued team in the playoffs. "That's why it's important for Eddie Jones and Devean George to get in top-notch condition."

Johnson was adamant earlier in the day that the Mavericks are not good enough right now to take any team for granted, so they focused just long enough to keep the Timberwolves under wraps. Coming off a win Monday in New Orleans, the Wolves looked in the first half like they'd reached their quota for the week.

The Mavericks raced up by 15 in the second quarter and were up by 20 midway through the third quarter.

That's when they hit the wall. But the youthful Wolves didn't have enough artillery to make up the difference, although they got as close as 86-83 in the fourth quarter.

Dirk Nowitzki, who had 27 points and 11 rebounds, scored eight of his points in the final 5:41, and Harris, who hit nine of 10 shots for the night, converted two late buckets to protect the lead.

Harris and Terry were on the court together most of the night. And familiarity finally bred a victory.

"It gives us more options, not taking anything away from guys that were starting before this change," Josh Howard said. "But these guys have been starting together for the past three years. I guess guys are comfortable."

Dampier – like Terry, in the starting lineup for the first time this season – had 10 rebounds to go with eight points. Sent to the bench was DeSagana Diop, whom Johnson said may be "thinking too much" at this point in the season. Diop played less than 10 minutes and only one minute after halftime.




- Stars start hot, lose 2 goal lead, and end 6 game winning streak.



Devils take down Dallas Stars, 4-2

11:59 PM CST on Wednesday, November 28, 2007
By MIKE HEIKA / The Dallas Morning News
mheika@dallasnews.com

NEWARK, N.J. -- The Dallas Stars' winning streak ground to a halt at six games Wednesday night when the New Jersey Devils found a way to grind out a 4-2 win at the Prudential Center.

It was a lesson in the balance of the NHL for the Stars, and also a wakeup call to just how shaky the tightrope of winning can be in a league that has found parity.

"You can find a way to win or you can find a way to lose," Stars coach Dave Tippett said. "And we found a way to lose tonight."

The Stars frittered away a two-goal first period lead in which they received two gifts from shaky Devils goalie Martin Brodeur. They then couldn't cash in late when they were trying to forge the go-ahead goal in a 2-2 game.

Stars center Mike Modano tried to force a pass into the slot on one offensive rush, and that allowed the Devils to mount a counter-attack that resulted in a two-on-one.

Former Stars winger Jamie Langenbrunner threaded a pass across the ice to Dainius Zubrus, and Zubrus flicked a shot over Stars goalie Marty Turco for the game-winning goal at the 10:57 mark of the third period.

"In a tight game, you can't try to force things, and we were trying to force things," Tippett said. "When you force things, you're going to give away too much on the other side."

The Stars have discovered a patient aggression in recent games, and that helped bring about the winning streak that fell one game short of tying the franchise record of seven (set three times, most recently in 1997).

However, they met a team in the Devils that played with more intensity and more poise, running their own winning streak to five games.

The Stars' loss drops them to 13-8-4 (30 points, second place in the West). Wins by St. Louis and Colorado on Wednesday mean there are three teams within three points of second place and eight teams within four points.

"Every night is a tough night and every night seems to change the standings," said forward Stu Barnes, who scored his first goal of the season. "We've been finding ways to win lately, and good teams do that. If you want to be a good team, you have to find a little bounce here or a little bounce there or a blocked shot here or there. You have to make the little plays."

The Stars couldn't get that bounce on a crucial 5-on-3 power play in the second period as Brodeur came up strong and simply wouldn't allow the puck to get past him.

"To me, that was the game," center Mike Ribeiro said. "If we scored there, it would have been a different game."

Instead, the power play now has been held scoreless in two consecutive games.

But the Stars say that along with addressing concerns, they still have to remember the good things they are doing.

"It's just a little bounce, a little sticking with it," said goalie Marty Turco, who fell to 7-5-3 with the loss. "It's creating your bounces and not just expecting them. When you believe and you have a strong group mentality, good things do happen.

"Those are things that are in your control."

The Stars, in the middle of a six-game road trip, play at Pittsburgh on Friday and at Philadelphia on Saturday.

"We have to do what we can to win the next game and go from there," Ribeiro said. "We can't go on a losing streak now. It's really about focusing on the next game.





- I guess the City of Stephenville Cult will have to tear down their University of Houston statue, rip off those Cougar bumper stickers, and cancel the Houston radio contract. Art Briles is going to Waco. Expect 20,000 new season ticket holders.

In all seriousness, this is a great hire for them and Briles. He's back where he belongs, in Central Texas. He knows the area and will be able to recruit to that school about as well anyone could. He's got an offense that he can sell to recruits. He's fine tuned that offense over the years and will be able to implement it fast. He'll get athletes, he'll have a kick ass offense, will get Baylor to a bowl game, and you watch - he'll be at a major school in no time.

In fact, I think he's far and away a better coach than Todd Dodge, another guy who ran a spread offense to perfection in high school, and who is getting a chance at the next level. Briles had just as much success at the Ville, and was an immediate success at the next level, and in a better conference than the Sun Belt. He just isn't a pretty boy Texas-Ex, so no one gets the knee pads out for him like they do for Dodge. Of course, he did all this before ESPN turned into the Coverage whores that they are, so it went unnoticed. He'll have a better college coaching career than Dodge will ever dream about.

Look at what he did in Houston, with bad facilities, a horrible program overall, low support, and in a bad conference.

Quick thought - I think Briles is the one who invented the QB zone read. Think back to when you first saw it, and where you first saw it. In Oklahoma in the early 2000s. Well, if you would have looked south of Norman in the mid-90s, Briles was kicking the 4A's ass with it. Brandon Stewart, Kendal Briles, Kevin Kolb, Kelan Luker, Jevan Snead, etc. I think it's very possible the roots of the zone read were born in Stephenville. And those colleges coaches caught on after some recruiting trips, or watching film. Have you ever thought about it?




Briles the choice to bring Baylor football back

02:12 AM CST on Thursday, November 29, 2007
By BRIAN DAVIS / The Dallas Morning News
brdavis@dallasnews.com

WACO – It's going to take a special coach to end Baylor's long string of football futility. Dave Roberts and Kevin Steele failed. Guy Morriss made a small dent, but nothing more.

Art Briles turned Houston into a winner in Conference USA. Baylor fans hope he has the magic touch in Waco.

Briles was introduced as the Bears' head coach Wednesday night in the Galloway Executive Suite at Floyd Casey Stadium. If Briles can dazzle on the field like he did during a 30-minute news conference, the Bears may already be on the right track.

"I can do all these things and say all these things, but we need to win football games," Briles said. "Y'all are winning in basketball, and you're outstanding in track and field, and baseball has been to the World Series. We need to win football games.

"That's our mission, that's our goal and that's our job."

Baylor officials are giving Briles a chance to complete the job, too.

Briles agreed to a seven-year contract worth slightly more than $1.2 million per year. If Briles reaches his incentives, the contract could be worth $1.8 million, two high-ranking university sources said. Briles made $900,000 at UH. With incentives, he could have made $1 million.

"When you feel you have a special coach, you want to make a commitment to that coach," Baylor athletic director Ian McCaw said. "And, in turn, he wanted to make a commitment to Baylor."

Briles, who has spent his entire life in Texas, was a wildly successful high school coach in Stephenville, where he won four state titles in 12 years. Briles became an assistant coach at Texas Tech and then took over at Houston.

With a high-flying spread offense, Briles went 18-8 the last two seasons with the Cougars and 34-28 overall. He led the program to the 2006 C-USA championship. This year's team is headed to the Texas Bowl, and will be coached by UH assistant Chris Thurmond.

Briles said he plans on being in his Baylor office Monday, the same day he turns 52.

Briles is known for having strong relationships with Texas high school coaches. With all those Texas ties and his track record, Briles easily earned the blessing of Grant Teaff, the most successful coach in Baylor history.

Teaff believes Briles is the right man for Baylor right now.

"You can't do what he did at Houston without knowing what you're doing," Teaff said. "I'm very happy because he also knows the importance of running the football. Throw it, fine. But brother, if you're going to win, you're going to have to run the football."

The Bears have endured 12 straight losing seasons, the last five under Morriss, who was fired on Nov. 18 after a 3-9 season. The team also has a 12-game losing streak in Big 12 play.

Briles immediately embraced Baylor's culture. He talked about recruiting players who had "strong Christian faith." He thanked Teaff for being a great influence on his coaching career.

"I feel kind of funny with Coach Teaff sitting here and I'm answering questions, and he's the guy with all the knowledge," Briles said. "Coach, if I say something wrong, you let me know. Don't let me get in trouble."

Briles also acknowledged Dave Campbell, the Texas journalism icon best known for his annual Dave Campbell's Texas Football magazine – a Texas football bible of sorts.

"Dave, will I get a free magazine now?" Briles said. "I mean, $8.95 is getting a little stiff."

Briles' straight-forward philosophy and down-home charm wowed Baylor officials during Tuesday's interview in the Plano offices of Eastman & Beaudine, the search firm hired by McCaw.

McCaw, senior associate AD Todd Patulski and Bob Beaudine sat and talked with Briles for three hours. Briles went back home to Houston that afternoon without an offer, but a deal was hammered out around 11 a.m. Wednesday.

"After the interview, we always try to gauge each other so we're not all influenced by each other, and we all said home run," Patulski said. "The guy just hit a home run."

Mike Singletary, Baylor's former three-time All-American and the only other coach interviewed, wished "best of luck" to the program.

"I do think the Baylor folks got the kind of person they were looking for," Singletary said. "If that's the case, I'm happy for them and I hope it works out for the better."

Baylor players felt good after Briles introduced himself during a team meeting.

"I was already fired up after the team meeting," said safety Jordan Lake, who will be a junior next season. "We want to win now. That's what this team wants, that's what this school wants and the alumni. We just want to win."

ART BRILES
Age: 51 (Dec. 3, 1955)

High school: Rule

Education: Earned bachelor's degree from Texas Tech in 1979 and master's degree from Abilene Christian in 1984

Family: Wife, Jan; two daughters, Jancy and Staley; and one son, Kendal


COACHING EXPERIENCE
1979: Sundown HS, asst. coach

1980-83: Sweetwater HS, asst. coach

1984-85: Hamlin HS, head coach/AD

1986-87: Georgetown HS, head coach/AD

1988-99: Stephenville HS, head coach/AD

2000-02: Texas Tech, running backs coach

2003-07: Univ. of Houston, head coach

Nov. 28, 2007: Named Baylor's 25th head football coach


AT HOUSTON
Year Record Conf. Bowl
2003 7-6 4-4 Hawaii
2004 3-8 3-5 N/A
2005 6-6 4-4 Fort Worth
2006 10-4 7-1 Liberty
2007 8-4 6-2 Texas*





- Doesn't seem to matter what sport it is, Tom Hicks always proves to be an idiot when he gets involved with it. His goal to be this generation's Lamar Hunt is failing miserably, and I love it.



'I don't have any personal problems with Hicks and Gillett'

Andy Hunter at Anfield
Thursday November 29, 2007

Guardian

Belated recoveries were not limited to Liverpool's Champions League campaign last night as Rafael Benítez took his first genuine steps towards repairing relations with the club's owners, Tom Hicks and George Gillett.
A fractious week inside Anfield ended with Benítez savouring the most emotional night of his Liverpool reign as supporters marched in support of the manager before kick-off and his players produced an ultimately impressive victory over Porto.

From a renewed position of strength it would not have been difficult for the Spaniard to reinforce his opposition to the transfer restrictions which had cast serious doubt on his future at the club. Instead, he made his clearest peace offering to the Americans, reluctantly accepting their revised work structure and insisting their relationship has not been irrevocably destroyed by his previous outbursts.

"I want to make it clear that I don't have any personal problems with the owners," said Benítez. "We were talking about some issues but it was nothing personal. I was not angry with them, just surprised. I was surprised with the situation in the end because I was trying to improve my club.

"OK, now I know I may have to wait but it was a strange situation. I was just trying to do my best for my club but I don't have any personal problems with Tom Hicks or George Gillett."

The Liverpool manager had suggested a thawing in the damaging dispute on the eve of the game but that merely extended to not aggravating his American employers any further.

He had previously infuriated the pair, and courted the sack, with two petulant public displays after their instructions to freeze his January transfer plans - an order that Benítez took as a lack of faith in his ability to bring the Premier League title to Anfield.

But last night he continued: "We need to talk in the future and we will see what happens then about transfers. This has never been about my ego, but it is my responsibility. I need to take care of my team, my squad and my club.

"It would be a lot easier for me to stay and do nothing, just pick up my wages at the end of each month but I want to be involved. We all want what is best for the club and I think the owners understand that."

Benítez's conciliatory tone was in marked contrast to his stinging criticism of the Americans following Liverpool's win at Newcastle last Saturday, and his insistence that he wants to remain involved in transfer policy, a requirement now handed over to the chief executive, Rick Parry, may yet prove a problem when the manager meets his employers on December 16.

Foster Gillett, George's son and appointed representative on the Liverpool board, was at Anfield last night to witness a fervent show of support for Benítez and his report home will certainly ease tensions with the co-chairmen. "This is not about me being in a stronger position at the club," added Benítez. "I think I am in the same position as before and we need to talk about the future and our ideas."

The possibility of qualifying for the knockout phase of the Champions League with victory over Marseille in France on December 11 will aid Benítez's reconciliation process as much as his post-match words. And the Liverpool manager was also keen to show his appreciation for those supporters who marched in his support before kick-off.

Benítez said: "I think this was the most emotional night I have had here because it is important to get through in the Champions League and because of what has happened in the last few days.

"It was not the most difficult time I have ever experienced, but it was strange. I was just trying to do my job properly and, at the end of the game, I enjoyed it a little bit. I want to say thank you to the supporters."





- Jason Whitlock from the KC Star, always a lightning rod in sports reporting, and especially in relation to black athletes, weighs in on Sean Taylor.



Taylor's death a grim reminder for us all
Jason Whitlock

There's a reason I call them the Black KKK. The pain, the fear and the destruction are all the same.

Someone who loved Sean Taylor is crying right now. The life they knew has been destroyed, an 18-month-old baby lost her father, and, if you're a black man living in America, you've been reminded once again that your life is in constant jeopardy of violent death.
The Black KKK claimed another victim, a high-profile professional football player with a checkered past this time.

No, we don't know for certain the circumstances surrounding Taylor's death. I could very well be proven wrong for engaging in this sort of aggressive speculation. But it's no different than if you saw a fat man fall to the ground clutching his chest. You'd assume a heart attack, and you'd know, no matter the cause, the man needed to lose weight.

Well, when shots are fired and a black man hits the pavement, there's every statistical reason to believe another black man pulled the trigger. That's not some negative, unfair stereotype. It's a reality we've been living with, tolerating and rationalizing for far too long.

When the traditional, white KKK lynched, terrorized and intimidated black folks at a slower rate than its modern-day dark-skinned replacement, at least we had the good sense to be outraged and in no mood to contemplate rationalizations or be fooled by distractions.

Our new millennium strategy is to pray the Black KKK goes away or ignores us. How's that working?

About as well as the attempt to shift attention away from this uniquely African-American crisis by focusing on an alleged injustice the white media allegedly perpetrated against Sean Taylor.

Within hours of his death, there was a story circulating that members of the black press were complaining that news outlets were disrespecting Taylor's victimhood by reporting on his troubled past

No disrespect to Taylor, but he controlled the way he would be remembered by the way he lived. His immature, undisciplined behavior with his employer, his run-ins with law enforcement, which included allegedly threatening a man with a loaded gun, and the fact a vehicle he owned was once sprayed with bullets are all pertinent details when you've been murdered.

Marcellus Wiley, a former NFL player, made the radio circuit Wednesday, singing the tune that athletes are targets. That was his explanation for the murders of Taylor and Broncos cornerback Darrent Williams and the armed robberies of NBA players Antoine Walker and Eddy Curry.

Really?

Let's cut through the bull(manure) and deal with reality. Black men are targets of black men. Period. Go check the coroner's office and talk with a police detective. These bullets aren't checking W-2s.

Rather than whine about white folks' insensitivity or reserve a special place of sorrow for rich athletes, we'd be better served mustering the kind of outrage and courage it took in the 1950s and 1960s to stop the white KKK from hanging black men from trees.

But we don't want to deal with ourselves. We take great joy in prescribing medicine to cure the hate in other people's hearts. Meanwhile, our self-hatred, on full display for the world to see, remains untreated, undiagnosed and unrepentant.

Our self-hatred has been set to music and reinforced by a pervasive culture that promotes a crab-in-barrel mentality.

You're damn straight I blame hip hop for playing a role in the genocide of American black men. When your leading causes of death and dysfunction are murder, ignorance and incarceration, there's no reason to give a free pass to a culture that celebrates murder, ignorance and incarceration.

Of course there are other catalysts, but until we recapture the minds of black youth, convince them that it's not OK to "super man dat ho" and end any and every dispute by "cocking on your bitch," nothing will change.

Does a Soulja Boy want an education?

HBO did a fascinating documentary on Little Rock Central High School, the Arkansas school that required the National Guard so that nine black kids could attend in the 1950s. Fifty years later, the school is one of the nation's best in terms of funding and educational opportunities. It's 60 percent black and located in a poor black community.

Watch the documentary and ask yourself why nine poor kids in the '50s risked their lives to get a good education and a thousand poor black kids today ignore the opportunity that is served to them on a platter.

Blame drugs, blame Ronald Reagan, blame George Bush, blame it on the rain or whatever. There's only one group of people who can change the rotten, anti-education, pro-violence culture our kids have adopted. We have to do it.

According to reports, Sean Taylor had difficulty breaking free from the unsavory characters he associated with during his youth.

The "keepin' it real" mantra of hip hop is in direct defiance to evolution. There's always someone ready to tell you you're selling out if you move away from the immature and dangerous activities you used to do, you're selling out if you speak proper English, embrace education, dress like a grown man, do anything mainstream.

The Black KKK is enforcing the same crippling standards as its parent organization. It wants to keep black men in their place — uneducated, outside the mainstream and six feet deep.

In all likelihood, the Black Klan and its mentality buried Sean Taylor, and any black man or boy reading this could be next.



- Kige analyzes Dancing with the Stars. Has to be a bit now. He can't keep from smirking during these videos.


- College coaching hires....

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Bo knows football



- The Nebraska football coach search continues. Here's the short list.

Bo Pelini - D-Coordinator at LSU The people's choice, my choice, and apparently the person Tom Osborne has targeted as his choice.

Pros -
- Great teacher of fundamentals.
- Inspires players.
- Intense, and it's not fake.
- Has players running through walls for him.
- Can relate to 18 year old kids.
- Will not be intimidated by anyone and will not have a team that will lay down.
- Has been at Nebraska and knows the culture and expectations, and will not back down from the ultra-high expectations.
- Regarded as one of the best defensive minds in the country.
- Is young and is ready for the big time.
- Has learned from everyone due to his many stops. From San Francisco to Green Bay to Oklahoma to Nebraska to LSU, this guy has coached with everyone. He said his SF days molded him to what he is today due to his time with the Bill Walsh coaching tree of Assistants.
- Is rumored to really covet the job due to his childhood friendship with Bob Stoops. Is ultra-competitive with the Stoops brothers and wants the chance to battle them year in, year out.

Cons -
- Lets emotions get best of him at times.
- Questionable recruiter, comes off as crude and rough around the edges to some recruit's parents.
- Never been a head coach, could be what he is, a great coordinator, but not head coach.
- Very confident and brash, which turns people off of him and could be the reason he doesn't have a head coaching job yet.


Turner Gill - HC at Buffalo

Pros -

- Is a Nebraska legend, and will know exactly what it takes to be a Nebraska coach.
- Can implement a diverse, power running based offense.
- Has turned around a bottom 5 program in D-1.
- Osborne is comfortable with him.
- Embraces the culture, and knows the expectations more than Pelini does. Can return the Nebraska football family environment to the program.

Cons -
- Him and Osborne could be stuck in the past too much.
- Only head coaching job in Buffalo, and only for a few years.
- Not considered a good recruiter.
- Could be overrated due to his Nebraska roots.


Jim Grobe - HC at Wake Forest
Pros -

- Runs the spread offense Osbornes wants.
- Has built programs in less than desirable places. Imagine what he could do with better facilities and more money.
- Fits in good with Osborne. A laid back, easy going guy.

Cons -
- Would cost a lot to get him out of his current contract ($2 mil).
- Is notorious for staff continuity (like Osborne), which limits the chance of bringing in Nebraska-tied assistants.
- Is he ready for the big stage?


Brian Kelly - HC at Cincinnati
Pros -

- Another guy who runs the offense that Osborne covets. A no huddle version of Mizzou's spread offense.
- Has built programs everywhere. Was dominant at D-2 Grand Valley State. Built Central Michigan into a MAC power. And has made Cincinnati relevant for the first time maybe ever.
- Is young and could really be here a while. 46 years old.

Cons -
- Is going to cost a lot. Michigan also after him.
- May be a little too brash for Osborne's liking.
- Doesn't worry much at all about defense. And Nebraska needs this badly right now. (Hence the reason Pelini is the frontrunner.)



- Yahoo looks at the maniacal Nebraska fan. It is ridiculous.



Nebraska coach search becomes state obsession, with media working overtime and fans engrossed
By ERIC OLSON, AP Sports Writer
November 27, 2007

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) -- Nebraska's search for a new football coach has fans obsessed and the media tracking airplanes.

The rumor mill is churning full speed and reporters are working overtime, staking out airports and using software to monitor the comings and goings of interim athletic director Tom Osborne.

"It's absolutely crazy right now with people tracking airplanes and everybody having a source telling them exactly what's happening," Omaha radio show host Kevin Kugler said. "But unless you're the 70-year-old former football coach who's conducting this search, you really don't know."

After leaving a Tuesday afternoon meeting with the team, Osborne said he had not offered the job to anyone. Asked when he would name a coach, he said, "Hopefully sooner than later."

He declined to say how many candidates he's interviewed.

Osborne said he didn't address the specifics of the coaching search with the players.

"I told them to go to class," he said.

All that's known for sure is Buffalo coach Turner Gill is a candidate. His athletic director, Warde Manuel, has said so.

LSU defensive coordinator Bo Pelini has been interviewed, according to media reports that all cite unidentified sources.

Then there's Wake Forest coach Jim Grobe. According to The Sporting News and its unidentified source, Grobe spoke informally with Osborne.

Gill, Pelini and Grobe have not returned phone messages from The Associated Press.

Another potential candidate, Navy's Paul Johnson, didn't say yes or no Tuesday when asked whether he's been contacted by Nebraska. He said no comment, adding he wouldn't be answering questions about anything other than Saturday's showdown with Army.

In the three days since Osborne fired Bill Callahan, speculation about the next coach has been rampant.

Radio talk shows and Internet message boards have, ad nauseam, addressed the merits of Gill and Pelini. Fans have taken particular interest in those two because of their ties to the school.

The media, using information available on the Web, have had their eyes on the skies. Using Federal Aviation Administration owner registration records and flight tracking software, outlets were able to report that a booster's plane flew Osborne and Chancellor Harvey Perlman to Baton Rouge, La., apparently to interview Pelini.

They also were able to report the same plane then flew to Atlanta, where more work on the search apparently was done.

And when that plane flew back to Lincoln on Monday, a horde was on hand to capture video of Osborne and Perlman deplaning.

Osborne jokingly thanked the group of 15 reporters for coming out and greeting him.

"I know you had nothing better to do," he said.





- The Stars and Mavericks are both on streaks right now. I'm not sure I quite agree with Cowlishaw on the Stars side of his column.

With the goaltending rotation keeping each guy fresh and effective, and with the power play continuing to stay in the top 5, I think this team even with injuries will be a top 3 or 4 seed come playoff time. Now, if either one of these factors starts to fail, Dallas returns to what they are, an average team.

The Mavericks I will not start to worry about until February or March, if they're losing games like they are at that point. Avery is doing nothing more than tinkering with rotations, saving minutes on key guys, and figuring out how certain guys react to certain situations. I see this first half of the season as nothing more than Avery being a mad scientist.

He has been burned before by his faux depth, and I think he's now using the regular season as a gauge to how good his depth really is, so he doesn't get burned in May by guys on his bench he thought he could count on.

Keep tinkering, get certain unknown guys minutes in key situations, save some starter's legs by limiting their minutes, and by March he'll have his rotation set, he'll know what guys are good in what situations, and then crank it up for that stretch drive.




Streaks by Dallas Mavericks, Dallas Stars are deceiving

Clubs will eventually end up going in opposite directions


They say seeing is believing, and by "they" I mean Terence Newman on a radio ad I heard Tuesday morning.

But, sorry, T-New, I am not believing what I am seeing, and it has nothing to do with the Cowboys.

The Stars the hottest team in the NHL? Six straight wins? Is everything A-OK now that Doug Armstrong has been tossed overboard?

I don't think so.

The Mavericks, losers of three straight to (gulp) Eastern Conference teams? Not even competitive with Washington on their home floor Monday? Panic time already?

Again, I don't think so. It's early although in the Mavericks' case it's never too early to start worrying about San Antonio pulling away.

Let's start with the Mavs. A loss in Indiana? That's going to happen sometimes. Followed up with a loss to Milwaukee?

Well, the Bucks have drafted No. 1 long enough that it's paying off with a division lead.

But Monday's loss to the Wizards featured more layups and easy drives to the hoop by the visitors than we have seen around here since the Sacramento series three years ago. That wasn't supposed to happen on Avery's watch.

The Mavericks are no better than 19th in field goal percentage defense. That number has to improve, and they have played only 14 games so it probably will improve. But we're not seeing a lot of defense on the perimeter, and we're not seeing much other than old age from Eddie Jones and Juwan Howard.

Now this is a team that has a mental problem because everyone is telling them that the regular season means nothing, based on last year's Golden State disaster. And that's a very hard thing to keep hearing when you've got to endure an 82-game season.

I think Avery Johnson can eventually get through to them that lackadaisical play isn't going to cut it. There is a theory that he has reduced their minutes in order to have them more rested for the playoffs, but that's not really true.

Don Nelson played Dirk Nowitzki 38 to 39 minutes a game for five years here, but Johnson cut his minutes back to 36 last season, and it got him an MVP. He's still playing 36.

Josh Howard is averaging 34, one minute down from his career high. Jason Terry has seen his minutes drop from 35 to 30, but his scoring average is up. He's still getting his 13 shots a night, he's just firing them up at a faster rate.

I don't see this streak as anything more than the 0-4 start a year ago which proved completely inconsequential when the team won 67 games.

But Johnson does have to get through to his team that waiting until April to play your best doesn't cut it.

The Stars' tale is of the opposite sort.

They were trudging along at 7-7-3 and had just suffered a terrible loss in Los Angeles when owner Tom Hicks fired Armstrong. It was an unusual move to ignite a team, replacing a general manager instead of a coach.

The team picked up a point in an overtime loss to San Jose, then reeled off six straight wins. Suddenly, this team is scoring.

Suddenly, Mike Modano is unburdened by the pursuit of a scoring mark and is playing more like he is 27 than 37.

And, suddenly, the Stars own the third most points in the NHL, right behind Detroit and Ottawa.

Is another Pacific Division title just around the corner with long overdue playoff success to follow?

I still don't see it.

Much of the Stars' success is attributable to increased scoring, the product of a power play clicking along at 24 percent. We know that doesn't last.

And the fact that Mike Smith has outplayed Marty Turco remains a disturbing sign.

We know Turco is the goalie come playoff time. He has earned that through the years and put a stamp on it with three shutouts of Vancouver in last year's playoff.

But his 2.59 goals against average is the highest of his career. Like the power play, we know that shouldn't last, either.

I think whatever energy the club has derived from the management change will wear out along the way. It's hard to see this roster outplaying Anaheim or San Jose over 82 games though the Ducks lost a lot when Scott Niedermayer didn't come back (at least he hasn't yet) and the Sharks have been inexplicably awful at home.

But in hockey, you take a good run whenver you can get it. The opportunities to pile up points and build up a lead on your division rivals doesn't come often enough.

I still think that if one of these teams is playing deep into May or June it's going to be the Mavericks.

But if either of these stretches of success or failure continue, I do reserve the right at some point to start believing what I'm seeing.





- The team not panicking either.



No panic yet for faltering Dallas Mavericks

Losing streak has team looking for answers on offense, defense

Growing pains are not the private domain of young teams on the rise who have to pay dues and learn from mistakes.

The Dallas Mavericks are neither young nor on the rise at the moment.

But they are paying some dues in the form of a three-game losing streak and a disjointed look on offense.

And that's the good part of their game. Their defense has been deplorable.

But hold off on the gloom and doom, coach Avery Johnson said Tuesday. The season isn't even past November yet, so it's a little early to overreact to the Mavericks' problems.

"When there are some growing pains, sometimes there's a tendency to want to panic," Johnson said. "And I don't think we're anywhere close to anything like that. We haven't been able to accomplish hardly any of the goals overall that we set out to. That's OK. But it's not a panic. We're going to keep working on it."

There's no shortage of things that need attention.

If it's not an offense that doesn't move the ball enough, settles for too many jump shots and doesn't have enough players on their game, it's a defense that has failed to stop penetration and lacks communication, the coach said.

But the growing pains might pay dividends down the line. Last season, the Mavericks were 0-4 after a week, and all they did was go 67-11 the rest of the way. That didn't translate into playoff success, but it shows the value of not getting too disgusted or disappointed with current affairs.

"We see that we're not good enough to coast," Dirk Nowitzki said. "That's what we can learn from this. We need to play hard on both ends for 48 minutes. If we don't, we can lose to anybody, road or home. It doesn't matter who you play."

A home loss to Washington sans Gilbert Arenas showed that Monday.

"A three-game losing streak is never fun," Nowitzki said. "You never want to go through it. We've just got to find a way to stop the bleeding. We're not very good on both ends of the floor right now. We're not getting the stops down the stretch."

The Mavericks are having to deal with something else, too – the Golden State rules.

Those are the defensive and offensive standards established by Don Nelson and the Warriors in their playoff upset of the Mavericks last season. The rules were used by all the Mavericks' opponents during this losing streak, even Milwaukee, which doesn't have the sort of quick, athletic team to make the scheme work.

"I've seen them double-team me to get the ball out of my hands some," Nowitzki said. "That's something we've seen before. We've just got to make them pay and find guys on the weak side and make some shots. Shooting 39 percent at home, that's not going to cut it."

Changes on the way? When a team loses three in a row, changes can't be far behind. So don't be surprised to see a few new wrinkles tonight against Minnesota.

The Mavericks have gotten little out of DeSagana Diop the last few games and could give Erick Dampier or Brandon Bass a look as the starting center.

In addition, the revolving door at shooting guard might be ready to spin again.

"The main thing is, we are in the lab right now," Johnson said. "We know what we can do when we play the right way. But we haven't played the right way consistently."

Not good enough: The Mavericks fielded a lot of questions Tuesday about perhaps playing down to the level of their competition. They have played well against Houston and San Antonio, but were woeful against Indiana, Milwaukee and Washington, whose victories dropped the Mavericks' record against the Eastern Conference to 3-4.

"I don't think we're that good to play down," Johnson said. "The Spurs are on a certain level. And we feel that ... we're not light years behind."

They're just not playing like it right now.

"There are a lot less big games than there are other games," Nowitzki said, "so you've got to find a way to get motivated to win those other games, too. The great teams establish themselves every night. They can't just show up every two weeks and win a big game."

Inching closer: Devean George went through his first full practice of the season and could be in uniform before the end of the week.

Johnson said George had a good practice, though his work was cut short. George will practice again Thursday, then he'll be evaluated. He could play Saturday at New Orleans.

"My focus, when I come back, is to bring some energy," George said. "It looks like we're lacking in that area, really on the defensive end. We're not really trusting each other. And our rotations are a split-second slower."

Eddie Jones, meanwhile, continued running and may practice this week.

Briefly: Nowitzki on Johnson's more relaxed attitude this season: "Avery's goal is to get more players' leadership out of it. He can't be on our case all season long, that kind of wears on you." ... Johnson on the Mavericks gaining something during this funk: "The positives are being gobbled up by quite a few negatives and miscues. But we've seen those sort of miscues before. It's just a matter of how long we want to continue to miscue and misfire. We'd better start doing it here pretty soon."



- Always funny bit of live mascots attacking opponents.






- Rhyner stalking his leader Chris Berman



- Talladega Nights