tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5265353620537740092024-03-19T02:42:56.774-07:00brick in the BoxOakland Raiders, Skoal and Jack Daniels... Oh and beer toobrick.http://www.blogger.com/profile/04983353803798594796noreply@blogger.comBlogger139125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-526535362053774009.post-20954546010490323642010-11-17T18:37:00.000-08:002010-11-17T18:39:22.564-08:00Catching UpUntil someone decides to pay me, blog posts will continue to lose out to other things in my life when I don’t have time for both. <br /><br />That is why I haven’t posted an update on my CrossFit experience the last couple weeks, not because I have given up. <br /><br />So just a few quick hits on how things are going. <br /><br />1 – My shoulder seems to be improving<br /><br />I can’t recommend MobilityWOD.blogspot.com enough. I have made a couple of the shoulder impingement movements part of my daily routine, and I went through a shoulder heavy progression last night with little residual pain. Something that I couldn’t have done a few short weeks ago. <br />(Post workout Edit: Fuck, 100 Burpees killed that idea) <br /><br />2 – My knee is a problem<br /><br />I now have a new part of my CrossFit routine. After a workout I have to Ice my knee down. If I fail to do so, my next day is agony, and as a result I have missed some workouts. I took Friday, Saturday and Sunday off this past weekend, and while things were sore for last nights workout, some ice and elevation last night seem to have me ready for tonight. I am genuinely afraid I will have to see a doctor about this if it persists. <br /><br />3 – Golf was great<br /><br />In a past post I wrote about how CrossFit had me pushing aside my ego and letting myself look foolish. Well I am thankful that fear of looking foolish didn’t keep me from getting out on the Golf course for the 1st time in years. I was by no means the worst player in our foursome, hell we used 2 of my balls on the 1st hole (best ball format). Plus it got me out of the office for a day. There was no downside. <br /><br />4 – I still have bad days at the box<br /><br />But I also have some great ones. Last night wasn’t much fun, as there were plenty of sit-ups (I’m still fat, but it is improving) and lunges (that whole knee issue). But then there are days like last Thursday. <br /><br />In honor of Veterans’ day we did a team workout with one rep for every soldier lost in Iraq and Afganistan (5700+). <br /><br />We split the class into teams and each team took a portion of the reps. Fred and I had a little over 1400 reps to knock out, and we killed it, with over 10 minutes left out of 40 we were done. A few minutes of rest later, we were both feeling good enough to help out a group that was struggling with their rep count. <br /><br />The class ended up 12 reps short of our goal, which was disappointing. But it is days like that that keep me pumped about getting back to the box.brickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01112765933861191439noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-526535362053774009.post-90718785146236582812010-10-21T17:23:00.000-07:002010-10-21T17:24:18.189-07:00Mr. NegativeThis has not been a good week; either for work or for me at CrossFit. This has been one of those weeks at work where everything seems to go wrong, all while pulling me in 20 different directions. Then you throw in a couple frustrating days in the gym, and I was more than happy to say Fuck it all, eat a big plate of pasta and pass out on the couch last night. <br /><br />I was thinking about detailing my struggles with Tuesday’s WOD. But looking at my last few posts; it seems like I do a lot of bitching. So instead, I figured maybe I should spend a little time on a couple of the small victories, the things that keep me coming back to the box. <br /><br />One month down, and I am 10lbs lighter. This is with no appreciable change in diet. Well, on 2nd thought, maybe there has been a bit of a change. <br /><br />My diet has always (well since college) been relatively healthy. The problem areas were:<br /><br />1 – Portion Size, especially at dinner. Sure I was eating healthy food, but I was eating a lot of it. <br /><br />2 – Ice Cream, I don’t have a weakness for many sweets. But I would have no problem downing a pint of Ben & Jerry’s every damn night given the chance. I may not have actually done this, but I sure did think about it. <br /><br />3 – Fast Food on the Weekends, This has to be the one that bugged me the most. For about the 1st 5 years after college, I didn’t touch the stuff. But the past couple years in Pittsburgh, it seemed like just about every weekend I hit 1 or more fast food joints. This only got worse this past summer, with me splitting time between Pittsburgh and Raleigh. <br /><br />So what changed (without any conscious effort). <br /><br />1 – Portion size decreased. I have been doing the down a glass of water thing to curb your appetite for years. But now, when I finish a workout I am downing water like a camel. There just isn’t room in my stomach for a 2nd helping of dinner. <br /><br />2 – I’ve had ice cream twice. Both times were nights when the wife and I went out to dinner and stopped for desert. <br /><br />3 – Well, 2 out of 3 ain’t bad. <br /><br />Throw in the conscious effort that I have made to eat more vegetables with my lunch, and snack on nuts rather than peanut butter crackers, and I’m doing alright. <br /><br />I wasn’t last to finish, or have the worst time on a couple of WOD’s<br /><br />This happened a couple of times last week. But the one that really sticks out in my mind was Friday’s workout. <br />Friday we did a team workout. We paired up in teams of 2 to go through a workout consisting of rope climb (pull up mod for a couple of us), push ups, medicine ball cleans and 100m ball run, as many rounds as possible in 20 minutes, alternating partners every round. <br /><br />Looking at the teams, one stood out to me as the one to watch. Lori and Shaunie are two of the ladies at CrossFit coastal who seem to kick ass every day that I work out with them. I was teamed up with Tyson, another relative newcomer, who I only knew from the results of the Warrior dash, where he kicked some serious ass. <br /><br />I figured that the two of us would come in a distant 2nd to the ladies. But when Tyson came running in on the 1st round with a 25m lead over Lori I was bound and determined not to let Shaunie pass me. <br /><br />I have to admit that the mod on the rope climb probably gave me a sizable advantage over Shaunie. And carrying around an extra 20lbs when you are my size isn’t that big of a deal compared to someone who looks like they weigh 110lbs (disclaimer, I am horrible at guestimating weights of people).<br /><br />All that said, I was feeling a real adrenalin rush when I maintained that initial lead through my 1st round. I had a slight hick-up in the 2nd as Will stopped me to correct my form in the medicine ball cleans, negating any gains that Tyson had accrued in his 2nd round, but not enough to give up the lead.<br /><br />Round 3 was uneventful, by round 4 Tyson had stretched the lead to 50m, but I was fading. With my biggest problem being my push-ups as my shoulder was burning. <br /><br />As Tyson hit the push-ups in round 5, I looked at the clock, and just under 4 minutes remained. I was completely gassed, and was hoping that he would stretch out the last few exercises to eat up the time. But being the endurance athlete he is, he wrapped things up with well over 2 minutes left. <br /><br />Somehow I dug deep and found the energy to blast through 3 more rope pull ups. Then I hit the push-ups and 5 reps in my shoulder gave (remember I mentioned that I couldn’t sleep Friday and Saturday night thanks to my shoulder). I hit the mat, and almost gave. But with Tyson and will shouting encouragement, I muscled through some sissy push-ups to just keep moving. <br /><br />I finished up the round with a little under 30 seconds left on the clock, and Tyson, being the freak that he is, flew through a rope climb and the push-ups as the rest of us gasped for air. <br /><br />We may have tied for most rounds completed in our class, but in my mind we were the winners. It was a great feeling after being the guy to lower the curve for the whole class for the previous month. <br /><br />It was just a small victory, but god damn, if typing this up hasn’t gotten me pumped up for tonight’s class. Maybe I should be concentrating on the small victories more, than the failures (even if the stories aren’t as funny).brickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01112765933861191439noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-526535362053774009.post-61573493866729263822010-10-19T17:22:00.000-07:002010-10-19T17:24:14.131-07:00Knowing is half the battle“Today’s classes will be going over the Bear Complex, Wendler Strength Progressions, & Push Press/Run. Bring your weightlifting and running shoes.”<br /><br />And with that, Zeke signed off of CrossFit Coastal’s daily blog post for Monday. <br />My last post detailed some of the mental anguish I put myself through, psyching myself out on the way home prior to hitting the box. As of Monday, Zeke added a new element to that internal dialog. <br /><br />I wouldn’t have been overly pumped going in Monday as it was. Friday and Saturday night were torture, as every time I moved in the bed, my shoulder woke me up. Sunday night was better, but I still would have been fighting my internal battle of:<br />I hope there is no shoulder work today; I hate my shoulder. <br /><br />However, now I had a whole new demon to face. I knew what awaited me, so it wasn’t just the drive home, but the drive to and from the jobsite, lunch, and any free minute that I found during the day. What is a bear complex? Shoulder press and run; I hate both of those things. My inner voice is a whiny little bitch. <br /><br />So of course I Googled bear complex; Hoping that it wouldn’t lead me to some kind of gay porn site that I would get questioned about by our IT department. Instead I found out that it was a compound movement combining (in order) power clean, front squat, shoulder press, back squat and another shoulder press. I think I would have been happier to find gay porn on the screen. <br /><br />So for the rest of my day, when I wasn’t stressing about job related activities, I bugged out regarding what I was about to do to my body that evening. <br /><br />I joked with Zeke when I got in that he had almost scared me away by posting the workout on the blog ahead of time. He responded that he had stopped doing that for awhile because people were showing up stressed out about the workout before even breaking a sweat. <br /><br />I held in my reply of “No shit, asshole, why do you think I brought it up”, instead just saying that I think that I like to be surprise when I come in better than knowing ahead of time. <br /><br />I got through the workout, and ran/jogged a mile and a quarter without stopping (since Will threatened us with Burpees should anyone walk, and the rest of the class seemed just fine with running, not letting the team down is still a great motivator for me). My shoulder felt like it was about to fall off following the workout. So I stuck around for extra stretching, then went home and hit:<br /><br />Mobilitywod.blogspot.com<br /><br />This is a great resource for finding ways to twist yourself into a pretzel in order to alleviate some sort of pain or gain some flexibility. A shoulder impingement stretch and a 10-minute squat (I have no Idea why I thought I should try this) later and my shoulder almost felt normal, although now my knees and shins felt like shit. <br /><br />Which brings us to today; Apparently Zeke is a sick and twisted individual (I should really stop writing bad things about him, just incase he ever finds this blog) because he noted that some people don’t like knowing what is in store for them ahead of time in today’s blog, before posting this:<br /><br />Skills<br />Back Squat – 3 Sets of 8 Reps at tempo. High Bar vs Low Bar.<br />Workout of the Day<br />3 Rounds/Time<br />15 Back Squats – 255m/175f<br />25 CrossFit Games Pushups<br />35 Kettlebell Swings 1.5/1.0<br />45 Situps<br />55 Double-Unders (3:1 sub singles to doubles)<br /><br />I missed the 3 rounds the 1st time I glanced at this, or maybe I just had a nice case of selective reading, but the result is the same as yesterday. I am checking to make sure that my affairs are in order, should I not survive, and have had little else on my mind in the moments where I find myself thinking of something other than work. <br /><br />At least there are no shoulder presses today, I guess I have that going for me.brickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01112765933861191439noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-526535362053774009.post-85176939585162376022010-10-15T15:39:00.000-07:002010-10-16T15:41:10.055-07:00Failing can be funMy apologies to those of you who used to come here for my Raiders posts, But the thing is, I only have time for one or two posts a week. Nothing seems to have changed with the Raiders (Offense is only as good as the line, which sucks; Defense is too undisciplined to be consistent). Sure getting the win vs. San Diego was huge, and I even started a post on it Monday. But it wasn’t up to my low standards, so it sits on my desktop unfinished.<br /><br />So the majority of my writing is focusing on what is getting the majority of my free time focus. And that happens to be my struggle to get myself back in shape, and what I am learning about myself. <br /><br />The great thing about CrossFit, is that I am already applying lessons from my workouts into my daily life. <br /><br />One thing about me, I hate looking foolish. I joke about it when something does happen to me that makes me the butt of a joke. But god damn, it burns me inside. If I were to play armature psychologist, I’d say it comes from being a “Husky” kid. Who was teased constantly about his weight throughout my formative years, and learned to cope through a self depreciating sense of humor. <br /><br />So how does this relate to CrossFit? Well if you have read any of the posts, you will find the constant refrain of me being put into situations where I know I will fail, know I will look foolish and being forced to push through despite my insecurities. <br /><br />A month ago, when I started this journey, I used my anger at how far gone I was as my motivation to get into the gym. I knew I wasn’t ready, but I didn’t care. But, truth be told, there was still an internal battle every day on the way to the gym. <br /><br />Everyone there runs better than me, I hope we aren’t running<br />Everyone there can do unassisted pull ups, I hope we aren’t doing those<br />Everyone there has better endurance; I hope it is a short workout<br />I’m going to look dumb because my form on (insert exercise here) sucks<br /><br />By the time I had finished my 45 minute drive home, I had almost talked myself out of going. I was going to go make a fool out of myself, and these people were quickly becoming “non-strangers”, and if they know me and I look like an idiot, that is even worse. But that driving anger at myself pushed me to get off my couch and to the box. <br /><br />That’s not to say that my inner fear of embarrassment hasn’t gotten the better of me at times. <br /><br />Fight Gone Bad was the Saturday after my 1st workout. It also happened to be my wife’s birthday. I would have had to significantly mod the workout to get through it, and hence look foolish. So I was more than happy to use the excuse of my wife’s birthday to wimp out. <br /><br />Tuesday’s handstands against the wall may very well have gone better, had I not had the underlying fear of looking uncoordinated as I collapsed to the ground following a failed attempt, or even worse, had put a portion of my body through the wall (have I mentioned I am fat). <br /><br />But I am finding more and more that I am no longer letting this drive me.<br /><br /> Since I can’t do a handstand push-up yet, I found myself with my knees on a box, ass in the air, hands on the ground working those lacking muscles last night. The thought of how foolish I must look the furthest thing from my mind (pain and exhaustion were there instead, which is fine by me). <br /><br />When I see a workout with multiple runs in it, I no longer swear under my breath. I look forward to seeing how much further I can go, before my stumbling jog turns into a gasping walk. <br /><br />I may still joke with Will to go get a cot, since we will be here all night waiting for me to finish. But it isn’t so much a self defense to hide my shame, because I feel no shame in pushing myself to get better. <br /><br />And that is the thing I am finding about CrossFit, there doesn’t seem to be anyone who doesn’t look foolish, or if they don’t they didn’t push themselves hard enough that day. <br /><br />Just last night I noticed that I wasn’t the only one struggling through the WOD. A couple of the people who seem to make everything look easy to me, were getting their asses kicked, and the one who didn’t get her ass kicked sheepishly admitted that she should have scaled the workout up some. <br /><br />Following the WOD, while I was doing some stretching and work on my shoulder, those same people who make everything look easy. They were working on an advanced movement, and struggling and maybe looking a little foolish. <br /><br />As Danielle told me just three workouts in, this isn’t just hard for me; it is hard for everyone. We all look foolish, we all fail. That is part of pushing yourself. And, well to be honest, failing can be fun. <br /><br />Anyway, this is getting long and I should wrap this up, and point out how this is changing things for me outside the gym. Today I was invited to take part in a golf tournament. I think I have played once in the last two years, and I wasn’t very good to begin with. There will be plenty of people I know there many of them who hold positions well above me. <br /><br />Instead of declining so as to avoid embarrassment, I let the inviter know that I’m not very good, so if he is looking to field a competitive team, he might want to look elsewhere, but otherwise I’m in. Hell, I always liked getting out to golf, so if they don’t care if I suck, why should I. I’m going to fail, and I’m going to have fun doing it.brickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01112765933861191439noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-526535362053774009.post-45348157439525204722010-10-13T15:38:00.000-07:002010-10-16T15:39:31.403-07:00Hands on the ground, hands on the groundNewsflash: I cannot do a handstand<br /><br />Its not that I thought that I could, and I’m pretty sure that no one would take one look at me and say “now there is a guy capable of standing on his hands”, some may <br />say “there is a guy who spends most of his day with his head up his ass” but that is a different matter. <br /><br />But a handstand was on the menu last night at CrossFit, well at least something approximating me putting my hands on the ground, and my feet in the air. Needless to say, this did not go well. <br /><br />Well, maybe I should backtrack a little. Handstands were not on the menu when I got there, no mention of a handstand was on the board when I got there. There was a warm-up, and a WOD (Helena, 20 minutes of 400m runs and pull ups to failure). Then Zeke called the 6:30 class to order, and started adding items to the board. <br /><br />3 sets of <br /><br />30 second handstand<br />30 second frog stance<br /><br />Followed by<br /><br />3 sets of <br /><br />3 reps handstand pushups<br /><br />I’m pretty sure when Zeke turned around he quickly noted the glazed over look on 3 of our faces and knew that some remedial education was in order. Sure 2 of us were Crossfit vets, but the rest of us “didn’t have” (Crossfit’s polite way of saying you can’t do something yet) our Handstand. <br /><br />So we started off with tripods. A movement that looks simple enough. To start you put your head down on an ab-mat. Then you attempt to walk you feet up until you place your knees on your elbows and either hold the pose, or go advanced and lift your legs up into the air. <br /><br />Like I said, looks simple enough, but having just ran a half-mile, and done other assorted warm-up activities, I was already dripping with sweat. My knees kept slipping off of my elbows, causing my legs to crash to the ground. <br /><br />After I bumbled through this movement for a couple minutes, Zeke introduced us to the Frog stance. This one didn’t look simple, and made me look even more foolish. Start in a squatting position, like you are stretching your groin. Proceed to move your weight forward onto your hands, and rest your knees on your elbows again, or in the air if you are actually in shape. <br /><br />One again, an embarrassing display on my part. The mats were a sweaty mess from a combination of the moisture dripping off my head, and where various body parts crashed to the ground. <br /><br />I spent the next few minutes going through the motions of trying to get our 30 second sets in each pose, but my bad shoulder was starting to act up, and I can’t say that my heart was in it. <br /><br />We then went over to do some handstand push-ups. Full range of motion was stressed, and ways to advance the movement, or use the bands to help were discussed. Then those of us who “didn’t have our handstand” were taken over to a wall and instructed on how to “get our handstand”. <br /><br />This pretty much meant flipping yourself ass over head and using the wall to help with balance. Or at least this is what you were supposed to do. <br /><br />I quickly found that it takes a lot of momentum to get my substantial mid section over my head. After a couple of failed attempts, I manage to get them up there. Only to crash head 1st into the wall once I got suitable momentum. At this point my shoulder went from balking to screaming, and I excused myself to do some range of motion work on my shoulder as I waited for the workout of the day to start. <br /><br />Things went better for me in the WOD. I ran further than I thought I could before breaking from a jog to a walk only for portions of the last three 400’s. The pull-ups weren’t impressive, as I was using an elastic band for assistance, and gasping for air from the runs. But I got more rounds in than I thought I would and did not allow myself to quit, despite my shoulder airing its grievances throughout the run, and a minor cramp in my side about half-way through. <br /><br />About a month in, and I am already seeing some results from this workout regimen. I am running further than I have in years. My strength is slowly coming back. (Monday we maxed out in shoulder press, front squat and dead lift, and while I didn’t set all time bests for myself, I did substantially better than I could have a month ago). My mindset is improved, as I am pushing through physical discomfort in the workouts and not quitting on myself. <br /><br />Other than the return of my aching shoulder, things are looking up.brickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01112765933861191439noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-526535362053774009.post-2136579694802443712010-10-06T17:26:00.000-07:002010-10-09T17:28:33.360-07:00Standing up to the BullyPro-Tip: do not do dead lifts, followed by a “chipper” workout featuring walking lunges, back extensions and about 10 other exercises that tax your core the night prior to a 10 hour drive. <br /><br />I learned this the hard way last Thursday. As I walked into Crossfit my standard 15 minutes early to start stretching, I noticed that the 5:30 class was dropping like flies as they wrapped up the marathon workout that was on the board. <br /><br />The warm-up had me gasping for air, a feeling I am growing all to accustom to. Unfortunately, it was just a quick 5 reps of each of the movements that we would be expected to do that night, with plenty of rest in between. There would be no rest during the workout that Will termed a “Chipper” workout, as in just keep chipping away at it. <br /><br />Then I made my big mistake, since I wouldn’t be around Friday or Saturday, I asked if I should work one of the strength movements prior to the workout, thinking that this would result in a scaled down workout to compensate. <br /><br />Will seemed to think this was a good idea (the strength work, not modding the WOD), and had me proceed to work on my dead lifts. Initially I was mortified at how little weight I was able to move, but a couple of form tips later, I was banging out some quality reps (well quality for me). <br /><br />Then it was time to start the workout that the rest of the class was about half way through. “Just keep moving” was the only advice give, not the “cut back by 25%” I had been hoping for. <br /><br />So I proceeded to begin the Bataan death march of a workout that was laid out before me. My back and hamstrings screamed for mercy. Sweat dripped into my eyes, blurring my vision at times. This was not fun. <br /><br />With 3 exercises left, I found myself set up for a set of 25 back extensions. I have done these for years, and never before have I found myself jackknifed with my hands on the floor, wondering how I was going to get myself back to horizontal as my lower back and hamstrings burned the way your eyes burn if you take out your contacts after dicing jalapeños (pro-tip #2, wash your hands at least 30 times between these 2 activities). <br /><br />I then stumbled over to wall-ball, and I can truthfully tell you that I have no idea how many reps I did. I’m pretty sure I didn’t get the prescribed amount, but with Hanna and Will rooting me on, I got myself together enough to string together 5 more reps, before doing 9 pitiful floor to standing pull ups. <br /><br />I was laid out on the floor for what seemed like 5 minutes before composing myself enough to shakily get to my feet. Every fiber of my body hurt, but I had pushed myself farther than I thought I could. But still not as far as I probably should be able to. <br /><br />The next morning I struggled to get through my shower, and to get into the truck to drive to Upstate NY. There was not one minute of that drive, or the 40 minute drive to or from the game the next day, or the 20 minutes in the car going to dinner, or the 12 hours back where I was comfortable. It wasn’t until Tuesday around noon that I stood up from a chair without needing 3-5 steps to straighten my back (which included another workout Monday night). <br /><br />There is a positive end to all of this. After a lackluster workout on Monday, Tuesday’s workout was without a doubt my best so far at CrossFit. <br /><br />Sure I was still gassed after warm-ups, but I felt good working on both my shoulder presses and front squats, pushing myself in both. Then I felt like I didn’t completely embarrass myself in the WOD. I may have only gotten my knees to chest (or more likely waist) instead of to my elbows for that part of the workout. But I was able to keep a respectable pace throughout. <br /><br />Sure, for the 6:30 class, I came in a distant 3rd out of 3 participants in the WOD, but I have to remember that I am not competing with the others in the class. I am competing against myself, and my preconceived notions of what I can accomplish. <br /><br />Not completely embarrassing myself, and keeping a respectable pace, may not sound like a huge accomplishment. But for me there was a world of difference between the way that I have felt walking out of Crossfit last night compared to end of the previous workouts. The bully still had still kicked my ass, but he left with a bloody lip to show for it. <br /><br />My legs may fell rubbery today, and I am damn glad that tonight I will be having a date night with my wife rather than hitting the gym. But I feel like I may be clearing the 1st hurdle. I still need a lot of work on my endurance, flexibility and mindset, but the way I felt leaving the box last night was awesome. And I can’t wait to hit it hard tomorrow... after resting tonight.brickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01112765933861191439noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-526535362053774009.post-82642787429990763482010-09-30T18:47:00.001-07:002010-09-30T18:47:44.186-07:00Meeting Murph“Are you new here?” She said as she overtook me in the warm-up run. <br /><br />“Yeah, this is my 3rd workout.”<br /><br />“Well don’t worry, it doesn’t get any easier, we are all dead by the end of the workout.” <br /><br />And with those words of encouragement, Danielle blew by me and went on with her run. <br /><br />I am quickly finding that the words “check your ego at the door” are a requirement of my trips to the CrossFit box. <br /><br />Be it a 5 foot nothing, 100 and nothing pound girl, or a 6’7” guy, I have found that most anyone can run circles around me or just make me look foolish in any endeavor. <br /><br />But, here we are, a week and a half into it, and I am finding that I look forward to getting to the box everyday after work. Last night I cursed myself as I was driving home, since I had agreed to take my wife out to a movie, and I hadn’t gotten out of work in time to get a work out in 1st. <br /><br />And while we are on the subject of discoveries. I have found that Crossfit has a funny way of paying tribute to our fallen soldiers. <br /><br />Tuesday was my 1st “Hero” workout. These are torture devices named for a brave member of our armed Services who has lost his or her life defending our country.<br /><br />My introduction to the Hero workout was “Murph” named after a Navy Seal who lost his life in Afghanistan. Later I found out that the mission that he lost his life on has a book written about it call “Sole Survivor”, it has been added to my reading list. <br /><br />But back to Murph, I’m not sure how they go about picking the workout that is dedicated to the individual, but If it was a favorite workout of the individual for whom it is named, than Murph was a sick fuck. Start with a mile run, then 100 pull-ups, 200 push-ups and 300 squats, oh and tack on another mile run just for fun. <br /><br />Fortunately they let you break up the pull-ups, push-ups and squats however you want. Unfortunately I only made it through about a 1/3 of the prescribed workout before the trainer came over to me and let me know I should start stumbling through my 2nd mile if we ever wanted to get home that night. <br /><br />So while it may not have been CrossFit’s intention, the result was me cursing the name of a fallen soldier as I jogged around the parking lot in the rain Tuesday night. Actually, it was more me cursing myself for thinking that any workout involving 2-miles of running was a good idea, seeing as it had probably been 10 years since I had run 2-miles in a day, let alone in a workout. <br /><br />That said, I will be back at the box tonight, hopefully for an indoor workout, since I have been soaked to the bone everyday so far this week, and am quite sick of it. I thought I was moving to Wilmington for the beach and sun, not 20+ inches of rain in 4 days.brickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01112765933861191439noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-526535362053774009.post-27024637272389428472010-09-21T17:38:00.001-07:002010-09-21T17:38:27.470-07:00I have met the enemyThe battle to win back my health will not be easy, it will not be fun and it will not be pretty. <br /><br />Day 2 at CrossFit started off relatively easy. It was a personal workout day, to make sure I knew the basics necessary to join the group workouts. And I started off strong. <br /><br />A 400m warm-up run/jog to start, and there was no mistaking me for a hero today. I jogged it out, working up a nice base sweat but not gassing myself. Then it was on to a progression of body weight squats (standard, front and overhead) presses (standing, push and jerk) kettle ball swings, sit-ups and back extensions. <br /><br />I was genuinely surprised when my squat form was corrected. I wasn’t surprised that I needed correction, but was surprised at the correction made. I have never been good at going deep enough, but that wasn’t the issue. It was my foot placement. All my years of training for football, you set up to squat with a football related base, so that you worked the muscles the way you would when firing out of your stance. <br /><br />Zeke, the owner/head trainer, had me widen my base, and point my toes out. Years of muscle memory screamed in protest, but I was immediately going deeper, but still not below parallel. This will take some getting used to. <br /><br />From there it was on to my private session; A brief introduction to the Olympic movements. Cleans and Jerks are nothing new to me. These along with squats and bench presses formed the basis of the explosive training that I went through years ago, so I was feeling pretty confident. The snatch would be something new for me, but the start of the movement was familiar, so I guessed I’d be able to figure it out. <br /><br />I have to say, my trainer, Chris, was excellent. There was quite a bit of rust to be knocked off to begin with, but he broke down the movements in a way that had never been done for me before. The coaches I have worked with in the past would be well served to spend a day with him, and learn how to teach the movements. I am confident that had I ever been instructed in this manner, I would have been putting up a hell of a lot more weight. I’m looking forward to getting my strength back and putting up personal bests 10 years past my playing days. <br /><br />And while I quickly picked up on the corrections being made to my rusty form, I was shocked at how I was already tiring just moving a wooden dowel and a 45lb bar. I knew coming in that getting my wind back would be one of the hardest parts of the process, but this was nuts. <br /><br />Then things went wrong. While I put the dowels back, and grabbed some water, Chris consulted with Zeke on what workout I would be doing today. Apparently Zeke hates me already, because his answer was “Fight Gone Bad”.<br /><br />Yeah, this was the workout that had originally peaked my interest in CrossFit, but my mind screamed “I’m not ready”. Chris reassured me that it would only be 2 rounds, not the prescribed 5. But the damage was done. I tried to put on a good face, and aggressively attack the workout, but it had already defeated me mentally. <br /><br />Wall Ball was 1st, and I did fairly well, but I was pushing too much with my arms, wasn’t using proper squat form (still need to get that base wider) and I think I was set up too far from the wall (based on watching a video of FGB online to explain to my wife why I was swimming in sweat when I got home). <br /><br />That was the only positive of the 12 minute workout. Sumo high-pulls were just a sad excuse of going through the motions. My confidence and wind were shot by the time I addressed the box jumps, and only managed some half hearted step-ups. Push press would have been adequate, had it been the 5th round of FGB, not the 1st. And rowing was yet another example of me going through the motions as I gasped for air.<br /><br />Round 2 made round 1 look inspired. This would have be bad enough, but then came the last 30 seconds of the workout when I went back on the attack on the rows. I put more heart and effort into that last 30 seconds than I had the previous 11 ½ minutes. Prompting Chris to exclaim “where did that come from?”<br /><br />I was too winded to reply, but deep down I knew. It came from me getting pissed off at myself. Not because I had failed to do the workout, but because I had failed to give it everything I had. There had been plenty of times during the workout that I felt that I could puke, but rather than pushing through that feeling, or puking and rallying (a gift of mine according to my old drinking buddies) I had caved. <br /><br />If there is one thing that I can take from day 2, it is that I completely overlooked one area that needed serious work. I knew that when it came to endurance and flexibility I was woefully unprepared. I knew that my strength had waned, but had faith in muscle memory helping me through. I had no idea the depths that my mind had slipped. <br /><br />Looking back at the years of excuses, and the way I quickly faltered in workout #1, I can’t believe I missed this. I have been losing the mental game for years. Pushing through has been getting it’s ass handed to it by rolling over. <br /><br />I have met the enemy, and it is me.brickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01112765933861191439noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-526535362053774009.post-11962083102066708272010-09-20T17:51:00.000-07:002010-09-20T17:54:29.282-07:00Fat Drunk and Stupid is no way to go through life, So I'm trying to lose weightI am fat and out of shape. I know this, anyone who knows me knows this. It was only Seven short years ago that I was a gym rat and working my body fat down towards 10%. I was in the gym up to 6 days a week, and loved every minute of it. <br /><br />I moved, I got married, my gym partner relocated to Texas and I started finding excuses not to hit the gym, rather than finding excuses to get there. <br /><br />It has gotten bad. My brother has expressed to me his concern about my health. My wife noted how I physically looked like my Father, almost 30 years my senior, in a recent photo. At least once a month my mother asks if I had started to work out again…yet. <br /><br />So here it goes. I am going to document my attempts to get back into some sort of shape. <br /><br />I am 6’2”, 250 lbs, the majority of which resides around my midsection. If I had to guess I would peg my bodyfat at close to 28% (I will find a way to get this measured to make this more accurate). <br /><br />About a year ago I first heard of CrossFit. I saw a post about their yearly fundraiser called Fight Gone Bad and was intrigued. Where most people I know looked at the combination of box jumps, rowing, wall ball, sumo high pulls and push press and want to vomit, I looked at them and said, Damn, those are the things I used to love to do, because they make me want to vomit. <br /><br />Of course I quickly fell into my excuse making habits. I wasn’t in good enough shape to do that program, so I did start going to the gym for a little while. Until I found my next excuse, the nearest Crossfit gym would require me to double my daily commute. And so I slowly stopped going to the gym. <br /><br />Well last week I finally had enough. I had told myself that I would start running, doing push-ups and sit-ups and using the chin-up bar in the garage once I moved to Wilmington to get ready to go to the CrossFit gym that is less than a mile from my house. And after a month, none of that had happened. <br /><br />So, pissed at myself, I made the call to CrossFit Coastal and signed up for their Saturday open gym. And I got my ass kicked. <br /><br />Sure I was pleasantly surprised that I could put together 2 pull-ups in a row. Too bad the warm-up called for 3 sets of 5. Forget the sit-ups, my gut just gets in the way. Run 200 yards once, OK, three times. I am a pathetic excuse for a man. <br /><br />Then there was the actual workout. I felt pretty good about my chances with the push press, some modified pull-ups might get me through that, then a 200 yard run/jog. Well there was a rest period while my teammate went through the same progression. I can do this.<br /><br />No I couldn’t, the press was fine, the pull ups, not so great, then I set out at a run and completely gassed myself within the 1st 100 yards. There was no coming back for me. I dropped the weight on the press and did my best not to puke for the next 15 minutes. <br /><br />I knew I was in bad shape, but I had no idea how bad. Everything from the stretching to the breaking down of the weights at the end was torture. But a funny thing happened.<br /><br />Others doing the workout, who had never met me before encouraged me as they ran past my stumbling mass. My workout partner cheered me through each transition (sorry about truncating your workout Gabs.) And once I finally caught my breath I felt good about myself. <br /><br />Not in a, yeah you are in shape way, but in a you finally are addressing the problem way. My entire body was trashed, I felt like I had just gone through the 1st padded practice of 2-a-days. And I found that I had missed that feeling. <br /><br />So, despite the fact that I am still sore from what is called a light workout on Saturday, I am headed back tonight. And I am looking forward to getting my ass kicked again.brickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01112765933861191439noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-526535362053774009.post-18401645382972263412010-09-20T17:48:00.000-07:002010-09-20T17:50:43.842-07:00Week 2 ThoughtsI keep meaning to write posts for this damn blog. But life gets busy. I mean I started a series of posts on why the Raiders would go 16-0. And it would have had me looking like Nostradamus, had Vince Young imploded and been benched one week earlier. But the series remains on my flash drive, seen only by me. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"><br /></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">So lets keep things short and simple. I want to write about 2 things, the Raiders and my attempts to get back into shape. So this post will concentrate on the former, and hopefully my next post will be on the later. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"><br /></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">The win vs. St. Louis. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"><br /></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">1 – Thank god for Jason Campbell</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"><br /></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">I know this goes squarely against the grain of the general consensus of Raider fans right now. But, had the Raiders not swung the trade for Campbell, I have to believe that JaMarcus would have been the Raiders starter going into week 2. (Remember Grads missed most of the offseason and the start of camp with a torn pec). Even if Grads had started against the Titans, I have trouble believing he would have made it out of that game healthy. Meaning that we would have been treated to the return of JaMarcus to Oakland yesterday. Thanks for the win Jason.</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"><br /></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">2 – Tom Cable is ahead of the curve on the Oline</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"><br /></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Once again, this will be greeted with a collective WTF by the majority of Raider fans. But hear me out. There are two areas of an NFL team where the players have not become specialized. The quarterback (with the exception of teams running a Wildcat) and the offensive line. I believe that within the next 5 years, we will see specialist on the offensive line. Long yardage tackles, who specialize at pass blocking, but suck at run blocking. And their short yardage counterparts. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"><br /></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Lets face it, Mario Henderson is truly lacking when it comes to pass blocking, but has shown beastly flashes in the run game. If Veldheer can come into his own as a pass blocker, the platoon at LT could be a reality in Oakland. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"><br /></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Would it be better to have an Ogden or Jones at LT who can do it all, sure, but those guys are so rare, I think that the reality of the NFL will soon require platoons where possible on the line. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"><br /></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Veldehere is an intriguing prospect to start this movement with in Oakland. He represents a signifigant upgrade at center in run blocking, but has trouble with the blitz pick-up, especially in pass-pro. He is at least Henderson’s equal at pass blocking right now, at that is with three years less experience and a DII background. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"><br /></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Bruce Cambell is equally intriguing in this manner. He could be a great pulling guard, but his body says OT. Right now he is backing up at RG, but the day could soon come that he is a part of the right side rotation. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">The key is getting both of these players up to par at multiple positions. Which is at least a season away. But looking forward to next season:</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"><br /></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Base/Run downs:</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"><br /></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Henderson, Gallery, Veldheer, Campbell, Walker</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"><br /></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Pass Situations</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"><br /></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Veldheer, Gallery, Satele, TBD, Campbell</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"><br /></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Not a complete picture, but don’t be surprised when you start seeing specialists on the line. And don’t be surprised if the substitutions become more frequent in Oakland as the season progresses. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"><br /></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">3 – Raiders Busting out all over</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"><br /></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Some Raiders that have had the bust lable attached to them seem to be coming into their own. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"><br /></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Darren McFadden has looked like an NFL running back two weeks in a row. His vision is still questionable, and he takes too long to get up to top speed. But he is finally running hard and not falling at 1<sup>st</sup> contact. A huge improvement. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"><br /></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Darrius Hayward-Bey is catching balls, not the deep home-run ball we all hoped for. But he seems to be running better routs and getting open. And when the quarterback hits him in stride, the next hit isn’t the ball meeting the ground. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"><br /></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Stanford Routt only took five seasons, but he is playing well at the target corner across from Asomugha. Sure he isn’t perfect, but he looks like a player (and ignore those who claim he got burnt on that long Tennessee TD, that was a zone and he was the only one who recognized the coverage bust, that is why he was the only guy near the ball). </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"><br /></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Michael Huff has looked like a decent safety so far this season. The preseason looked like more of the same, but I can’t fault a safety who is repeatedly the 1<sup>st</sup> guy to the running back after the front 7 falls flat on their face. Decent isn’t all-pro, but if the front 7 can continue to apply pressure, he could shed the Fluff label. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"><br /></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">4 – Gradkowski just gets it done</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"><br /></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">But there is more to it than the team getting a spark from Grads. The playcalling was appreciably different with Grads, shorter routs, more timing, more taking what was there than trying to force things. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"><br /></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">So what is the difference, I think it is the coaches putting too much stock into what they see in practice. I think Campbell is much more confident with that Red Jersey on, and who wouldn’t be behind Oakland’s O-line. That goes to shit once the real bullets start flying. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"><br /></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Gradkowski is equally limited in practice and in the game. Meaning that the gameplan based on what he shows in practice matches what he produces Sunday. It isn’t pretty, but it is effective. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"><br /></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">5 – Get healthy soon</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"><br /></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Gallery, Bush, Seymore and Schilens all should be major contributors to this team. And if the Raiders want to have any hope of 8-8 they need to be on the field. The Raiders stand a chance without them against a pathetic Arizona squad this week. But need at least Gallery and Seymore back to have a prayer against Houston. </p>brickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01112765933861191439noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-526535362053774009.post-39200618151990052372010-07-12T15:03:00.000-07:002010-07-12T15:18:02.995-07:00Hall of ShameYou have got to be kidding me. The Pro Football Hall of Fame is becoming a bad joke.<br /><br />Today it was announced that Chris Berman would be inducted as the recipient of the Pro Football Hall of Fame's Pete Rozelle Radio-Television Award.<br /><br />This would not be that egregious of an issue if 1 – if the award weren’t given such a prominent place in the building, 2 – so many deserving players and coaches weren’t on the outside looking in 3 – if Berman had done anything of substance other than stupid nicknames for the past 20 years.<br /><br />I was pretty much unaware of the award up until my visit to the Hall last season. And chances were would have missed the plaque entirely if it were anywhere else in the building with is overflowing with NFL history.<br /><br />But there it is, right on the 1st floor as you enter the building, before you start to ascend the spiral ramp to the main museum area. Before you get to the greats of the game, you pay your respects to the media? How is that right. But there it is, with such luminaries as Peter King and Dr. Z listed before the Lombardis, Paytons and Montanas.<br /><br />To me this is a problem. When a writer such as Peter King can proclaim that a player such as Ray Guy didn’t have enough of an impact on the game to deserve enshrinement, how can he in good conscience accept a prominent place in the hall? Is writing about Mary Beth’s softball exploits or Starbucks coffee more impactful that ensuring your defense great field position?<br /><br />The roster of deserving players and coaches who are on the outside looking in would field a team that would run roughshod over the league. Ken Stabler throwing to Tim Brown, Chris Carter and Sterling Sharpe in a Don Coryall offense. Dermonti Dawson, Steve Wisnewski, Howard Mudd, Jerry Kramer opening holes for Bo Jackson and Terrel Davis following Alan Ameche. Alex Karras, Jim Marshall, Richard Dent up front on defense. Steve Tasker flying down the field under Ray Guy punts and any kicker you may want (as there are none in the hall) kick offs. I could go on and on.<br /><br /><br />Instead Brett Favre’s official jock cleaner, Peter King, gets a place of prominence.<br /><br />Now joining King is none other than Chris Berman, who’s act got tired 2 seasons after it started. A guy who’s most notable contribution to the game is bad nicknames and “HE..COULD..GO..ALL..THE..WAY”, pathetic. Would the NFL be any less popular now had we never been introduced to Natrone Means “Business”, rather than just plain of Natrone Means? Would the Bills failures been any less heartbreaking/hilarious had we never learned of their proficiency in circling the wagons?<br /><br />I would argue that the league would be in better shape had Berman not done so much to dumb down the discussion of the game. His buffoonery overshadowed otherwise great play, turning the sportscaster into a celebrity, rather than a conduit for information.<br /><br />If the Hall of Fame is going to display the names of men like Berman and King, it should be reserved for a wing where others of their ilk could reside. Others like the Raiderettes and Cowgirls. Those who appease the casual fan while waving pom-poms for their favorite quarterback the way King has for Favre and Berman for Kelly.brickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01112765933861191439noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-526535362053774009.post-27371996220934540792010-07-08T18:21:00.000-07:002010-07-08T20:03:07.580-07:00Soccer is now America's Game? Don't fool yourselfI know I’m a week late on this, but I’ve been looking for a new house and traveling for the 4th of July weekend. But lost in all the hoopla over Landon Donovan’s incredible goal to send the US to the knock out round of the world cup is one simple thing. Nothing has changed.<br /><br />Before I get labeled as a Soccer hater, let me say that I enjoy watching an occasional game. When it comes right down to it, I follow football religiously, love hockey and will seek out games to watch and that’s just about it. No baseball on TV, I go to a game about once a year with friends or family, no basketball at all and will put a NASCAR race on to help me nap on a lazy Sunday afternoon. So you could almost say I like Soccer since I’ll watch the world cup and enjoy it.<br /><br />Perhaps some of my reluctance to accept the proclamation that the US finally has it’s defining soccer moment that will change the way the sport is viewed in this country has to do with my experience with the sport. I went to High School in a soccer mad town. The Soccer team was regularly one of the best in the state, and up until my Sophomore year the football team was a joke.<br /><br />Despite that, I felt that the Soccer jocks still harbored an inferiority complex. Actively seeking any chance to point out how they played the “worlds” sport, that real “football” players didn’t wear pads, how there was so much more skill involved in soccer. It was tiresome at best, and served to only reinforce the negative soccer stereotypes.<br /><br />I still enjoyed going to the games to support my friends on the team, or to ogle the girls team (all the best looking girls at our school played). And having played youth soccer up until 7th grade, always had a favorable opinion of the game.<br /><br />So all that said, I would actually like to think that the goal in extra time would actually increase America’s awareness and appreciation for the sport. That maybe it could move up the American sport’s pantheon to the level of basketball. But sadly, beating Algeria inextra time won’t change that.<br />See here are the problems with this line of thinking as I see them:<br /><br />The generally accepted fact that American’s love an underdog is false under most circumstances. America loves winners and seeing those on high being knocked from their perch.<br /><br />Look at the most popular teams in American sports; they all have longstanding winning traditions. The Yankees, Steelers and Cowboys all are at the top of their respective sports in terms of number of championships and have won constantly over the years and have the largest fan bases to show for it. When people root for the teams playing them, it is as much from a desire to see them lose, as to see them win.<br /><br />America doesn’t want to be the underdog; they want to be the juggernaut. That is why when the world caught up to us in basketball we put together the dream team. It was no fun rooting for our college players as the underdog; it was fun to watch our best destroy all comers.<br /><br />Plus, it is hard for America to accept the concept that we could be the underdog against a country we see as inferior to us. The lake placid hockey team could be seen as underdogs against the USSR. They were the boogieman from that huge red country across the ocean with their missiles pointed at us. In the minds of Americans, a third world nation the size of the state of Pennsylvania should not be favored over us in soccer, even if the Soccer loving world knows otherwise.<br /><br />The Internet is doing as much harm as good.<br /><br />Donovan’s goal became an internet sensation. YouTube tributes spread like wildfire. Bloggers spent days celebrating the goal with flowery prose. Surely more people were exposed to the goal through the internet than would have been in the days of the newpaper.<br /><br />But soccer also suffered due to the internet and instant scores. When the US upset the USSR in hockey there weren’t tweets and live blogs covering the event so that everyone knew in real time. Sports fans were forced to tune in at night to watch the game on tape delay to learn the result, spoilers were hard to come by. Everyone tuned into that Hockey game got the full range of emotions that occur in a game of that magnitude. The growing hope that the underdog could come through and the exultation when they did was shared by all.<br /><br />Unless you were one of those who took the day off (more on them later) to watch the game, chances are you knew the result without seeing the game. There was no tension, no overwhelming disappointment as it seemed that the game was slipping away only to be replace with joy as those American persevered to win in the end. The emotion that is so critical to sport was lost.<br /><br />The hype leading up to the World Cup in America was false.<br /><br />For the months leading up to the World Cup ESPN had their powerful hype machine on full blast. U2 was brought in to do a theme song. Soccer story after soccer story was pushed. The problem is, Sportcenter is no longer truly a sports highlight show. It is ESPN/ABC’s marketing arm.<br /><br />One need only look at the way the coverage of the NBA vs. NHL has changed since ESPN dropped the NHL to pick up the NBA. No more NHL tonight, it is a slow day when all of the NHL games get highlight packages. The NBA gets primetime shows and prime coverage year round. The disparity in coverage far outweighs the disparity in popularity.<br /><br />When ESPN/ABC showed the shots of the fans packed into bars showing the game they tried to sell it as American’s embracing the World Cup, but they were just preaching to the converted. It was the Americans who already loved soccer finding a way to watch the game, not those of us who just liked the game, or were ambivalent.<br /><br />Nearly all of those who got to experience the emotion of the game already had a deep seeded appreciation of the game. I won’t say that the emotion was wasted on them, but the chance to share it with the rest of America was lost as ESPN relegated the replay in primetime to ESPNU, which many don’t get, or at midnight on the more widely seen ESPN2. Even ESPN didn’t see the value of using prime airtime on this supposedly sport changing game.<br /><br />These thought were all running through my mind in the days following the game as I looked at the hyperbole being put forth about America embracing soccer through my cynical eyes. Then it was driven home the following Saturday when the US team played Ghana.<br /><br />Watching the game, I got caught up in it. I held out hope that the US could pull off the upset. Watched them fall behind early only to fight their way back and to ultimately fail. Losing was not unexpected, but there was some emotion there.<br />T<br />hat night I went to a baseball game with about 30 of my coworkers. The same crew that had announced the scores of the previous games to everyone else as they came across their computer screens the previous weeks. The same crew that discusses whatever big game was on the night before. The majority of whom are 25-40 year old sports loving American males. The demographic that, according to all reports, had just fallen in love with soccer.<br /><br />Not a word about the game was uttered the whole night as we ate our burgers and hotdogs and drank our beers. Lebron’s free agency was discussed, baseball talk flowed and talk of the upcoming football season was heard. All that sports talk and Soccer was already an afterthought. So quickly things had gone right back to normal. Nothing had changed.brickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01112765933861191439noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-526535362053774009.post-31077641298010900032010-07-08T18:19:00.000-07:002010-07-08T18:20:53.199-07:00Return of The KingWhat does it take to get brickinthebox posting again?<br />Is it a renewed sense of optimism surrounding the Raiders?<br />Is it the arrest of JaMarcus Russell for something that everyone knew was going on<br />for years? (What is the next shocking headline, Woody Harrelson arrested for pot?)<br />Is it just to see how many pointless questions I can lead a post with?<br />No, it is something much more sinister. A beloved American institution is under attack.<br />The story is all over the news, you can’t turn on the TV or surf the net without being<br />assaulted by the speculation, the analysis and the hyperbolae.<br />No we aren’t talking about the oil spill, or whatever Obama is doing. We are talking<br />about Lebron James’ vicious assault of Brett Favre.<br />That’s right loyal reader, your summer tradition of breathlessly awaiting word on Brett<br />decision on retirement has been ruthlessly abducted from the headlines. And perhaps<br />more disturbing, is the assault on Brett’s cherished title of being the pre-eminent attention<br />whore in sports.<br />The outright high jacking of the sporting landscape has obviously been well planned, and<br />rehearsed for optimal effect. And if you carefully examine the actions of the key players,<br />you will find the mastermind.<br />Player #1 – Brett Favre<br />It would not be surprising to find that Favre was ready to pass the torch to the next<br />in line, if he were truly contemplating retirement. But his actions show that he was<br />preparing for another Summer of dominating the headlines and sports talk radio.<br />Tearfully discuss how this could be the end after costing his team another playoff game –<br />check.<br />Carefully timed surgery to keep name in headlines – check.<br />Meaningless wager with hometown team – check.<br />Vague quotes served up to long time media accomplices to further agenda – check.<br />The evidence is clear. Brett actions are those of one who relishes his standing, and wishes<br />to wear the crown as long as possible.<br />Verdict – Victim<br />Player #2 – LeBron James<br />The heir to Jordan’s throne, I won’t list his on court accomplishments, because I couldn’t<br />give a fuck about basketball and don’t know them. But with his name and face plastered<br />all over the media, he appears to have been working hard to replace Favre the past few<br />years.<br />Show up wearing out of town gear to rile fans – check.<br />Avoid answering questions about preferred destination, while accepting any and all<br />invitations to be interviewed on that very subject – check.<br />Agree to a one hour special on the occasion of your decision – check.<br />It would seem to those eager to pass judgment that James and his marketing team are<br />the masterminds behind this coup attempt. There is only one problem. This is coming<br />too early in his career. And a true mastermind would recognize this, and the imminent<br />backlash. No, James’ ignorance of the potential consequences demonstrates that he and<br />his team are no potential masterminds.<br />Verdict – Willing Accomplice<br />This leaves just one potential mastermind. Those of you who are long time readers<br />will know his name. And if you tune in tonight, I am sure you will see his face.<br />Player #3 – Stuart Scott<br />That right, the man who holds an unexplainable hold over the Disney/ESPN empire.<br />Hiding behind his buffoonish façade, his lazy eye, his penchant for outdated pop culture<br />references, Stuart Scott has positioned himself to retake his spot as the premier ESPN<br />talent.<br />When you follow the breadcrumbs, it isn’t hard to pick up the trail.<br />Scott had it all. Free reign to impart his will over the worldwide leaders sports<br />programming. From forcing his way onto the Sunday/Monday night pregame show<br />to outright flaunting of his powers, such as his poetry jams. Scott could do whatever,<br />whenever he wanted.<br />But media power can be fleeting, and any sign of weakness can cost one his perch.<br />A mysterious Illness, coupled with others getting closer to reigning king of attention<br />whoring, Favre, than he could (Favre of course is a Southern white boy, read into this as<br />you will). And Scott new something had to be done.<br />First, media competition had to be eliminated. Some quick backdoor maneuvering was<br />all it took to discredit the likes of Steven A. Smith (let us not forget that White Males<br />from New England share many traits of their southern counterparts, and prefer a “safe”<br />alternate perspective).<br />Then a suitable heir to Favre’s throne had to be found. James was the obvious choice.<br />Willing to be thrust into the spotlight from a young age, desperate for the attention,<br />immature enough to embrace Scott and talented enough to garner the attention, he was<br />easy pickings for one as experience in manipulation as Scott.<br />Finally the hype machine had to be wound up. While Scott had seen his star fade due to<br />the ascension of those more physically gifted (Erin Andrews) or willing to flaunt their<br />limited physical gifts (Hanna Storm), or actually adept at their craft (Bob Ley), he still<br />had his claws deep enough into the worldwide leader to manipulate the weak minded.<br />And the weak were easily manipulated. Scott’s favorite tool was Bill Simmons. Feeding<br />on Simmon’s love for outdated pop culture, Simmons was a willing pawn in Scott’s<br />game. Possessing an internet following that is hard to explain, Simmons reached the<br />masses with Scotts message of “All that is James must be covered”.<br />With all the pieces in place, Scott could sit back and watch his master plan fall into<br />place. The ESPN machine will automatically gravitate towards properties it holds the<br />rights to (See world cup hype) so Scott, now in place as the man closest to James in the<br />organization had only to ride the wave.<br />Tonight a new King of the Attention Whores may be crowned, but while his predecessor<br />was a master media manipulator, this new King is merely a figurehead. Make no mistake<br />dear readers, tonight is the start of something far more sinister, The second reign of Stuart<br />Scott is at hand. The sporting world may never be the same.brickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01112765933861191439noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-526535362053774009.post-62446513287524986942009-09-17T19:25:00.000-07:002009-09-17T19:30:21.842-07:003rd Year Rookie QBDear Raider Nation,<br /><br />It has become apparent to me that I have been too harsh on JaMarcus Russell, I have erred in my judgment and become a hater. But I am here to pass my new found knowledge to my loyal reader:<br /><br />I have learned over the last couple days that since JaMarcus came out as a Junior we should expect less progress than with other QB’s(- 1 year).<br /><br />We all already knew, that even though he was on the team his rookie year didn't count thanks to the holdout (- 1 year).<br /><br />Last season had the whole Kiffen fiasco until week 4, then he had to relearn everything with Cable so lets be fair to JR and call it half a season lost (- 1/2 year).<br /><br />So if you do the math, JR isn't actually a 3rd year player with 2 seasons of experience, you have to subtract 2.5 years from his experience due to circumstances both in and out of his control.<br /><br />So when you do the Math, Russell is now in week 7 of his senior season of college. You have to understand that there is a huge jump from college to the NFL. You wouldn't expect a College senior to jump right into the NFL and produce.<br /><br />That is why he is making the same mistakes and problems we saw in his 1st games in the NFL, the same mistakes and problems some of us who watched more than the ND game pointed out prior to the draft.<br /><br />Anyone who expects progress at this point is clearly just trying to spin this incredible story of a College senior competing (albeit poorly) at the NFL level in a negative light. Which makes them a hater.<br /><br />Please don’t be a hater Raider Nation, remember this is only Russell’s 3rd rookie season, if he is still not showing progress after about half way through his sophomore season as an NFL QB, then it would be ok to be critical.<br /><br />So if you do the math, criticism of Russell can fairly begin after at least 2 seasons following this one (~2012), because this year is obviously a wash due to having rookie WR’s starting (- 1 year).brickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01112765933861191439noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-526535362053774009.post-71305385944046161902009-09-10T17:29:00.000-07:002009-09-10T17:38:09.558-07:00Brick's NFL Season Preview<style type="text/css"><!-- @page { margin: 0.79in } P { margin-bottom: 0.08in } --> </style> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Football is back, thank God. Tonight kicks off the NFL season with the Titans visiting Pittsburgh. I’ll be avoiding heading downtown despite the fact that Tim McGraw and the Black Eyed Peas (Isn’t that the punchline to “What happens in Tila Tequila’s bathroom?”) will be performing. I know, hard to resist shitty pop music. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">So with the return of the NFL season, it is time for the 2<sup>nd</sup> annual Brickinthebox NFL season preview. Where I tell you next seasons draft order, because, how else would you want to look at the NFL season, then by who will suck the most to the least. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Enough preamble, on with the show. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">#1 – Detroit Lions (2-14)</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">A huge step forward for Detroit, as I have them pegged for 2 wins this season, OK, not a huge step, but they have a killer schedule, tough luck Detroit, maybe next year you can pick a Franchise QB, instead of settling for the top rated one. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">#2 – Denver Broncos (3-13)</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">You know, if you look back in the archives, I said that I didn’t think that losing Cutler and adding Orton would kill this team. Fortunately bad draft picks, free agent acquisitions and Brandon Marshall will. And hey, look at that, they have already traded out of the top 10. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">#3 – New York Jets (3-13)</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">I honestly don’t think the Jets are that bad. I like their defense; I like their run game. But they have a brutal stretch to kick off the season, and I just don’t think a rookie QB is ready, and the bad early season momentum could kill this team. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">#4 – St. Louis Rams (4-12)</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Their left tackle of the future is playing right tackle, there are no weapons for Bulger to throw to, and I don’t think Bulger will be upright long. Hey, at least next year’s draft is deep in QB’s.</p><p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">#5 – Kansas City Chiefs (4-12)</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Matt Cassell is about to get a rude awakening. The offensive line is in shambles, Dwane Bowe isn’t bad, but isn’t Randy Moss, and there is no Wes Welker on the squad. The Defense won’t be horrid, but this team should have just finished the job and traded Larry Johnson, so they could complete the gutting. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">#6 – Tampa Bay Buccaneers (4-12)</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Thanks for being interm coach Mr. Morris, now the Glazers can continue their obsession with big name coaches and try to lure Shanahan and settle for Shotenheimer. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">#7 – Cleveland Browns (5-11)</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Brady Quinn is going to be the staring QB, I though new coaches and GM’s didn’t have to live with the previous regimes mistakes. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">#8 – San Francisco 49’ers(6-10)</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">If the 49’ers had a QB I would be projecting them much higher, hell they would be a playoff contender. But Joe Montana is not walking through that door. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">#9 – Buffalo Bills (6-10)</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">The recent firing of the offensive coordinator leaves me with no confidence in this team starting strong with some tough early games. Early losses should lead to the return of the T.O. show. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">#10 – Chicago Bears (7-9)</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">The 1<sup>st</sup> big surprise on my list, I have huge questions about the defense. With Tommy Harris looking like he is done, the middle is open. And I other than at TE and RB, Cutler just doesn’t have the weapons, oh and he is very overrated. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">#11 – Dallas Cowboys (7-9)</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">The Cowboys are going to get Wade fired this season, Jerry isn’t going to put up with empty seats in his shrine to his own ego. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">#12 – Houston Texans (7-9)</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">I keep hearing how this will be the season that Houston gets their shit together and produces a winning season. To me this looks just like the 8-8 team from last season, with a worse back-up QB, which is important when the starter is made of glass. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">#13 – New England Patriots (7-9)</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Well Holy Shit, I shocked myself when I totaled up the wins and losses at the end of my predicting exercise. Here is what it came down to, I don’t have a lot of faith in the Pat’s offensive line, and the linebackers and secondary are extremely shaky. If a team can rush the passer and throw the rock, I kept finding myself giving them the edge over the Pats. I’m most likely wrong, but would love to be right. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">#14 – Arizona Cardinals (7-9)</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Face it, the Cardinals got hot at the right time last season, and had some great luck with injuries to get to the Super Bowl. I don’t see Warner staying healthy all season, and I don’t see a return trip to the playoffs for the Cardinals. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">#15 – Jacksonville Jaguars (8-8)</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">The 1<sup>st</sup> of the two teams I completely whiffed on last season. Injuries were the excuse last season, but I think there was also a huge character void, as some key vets were jettisoned, and turds like Jerry Porter were brought in. They should return to respectability this season, but I don’t see playoffs. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">#16 – Oakland Raiders (8-8)</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Hey, it’s not a losing record. Raiders fan’s rejoice. There is some good young talent on this team, but the lines need major upgrades. This team is a year away and another reasonable off-season from contending for the division.<br /></p><p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"><br /></p><p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi5qPb0GLDysw5TV7XSl_ChlAAWJRUubU8HNN3MNaZTRLudYuOAh03hFsKiGB80RaZu025QHkeRrK9HC-8KOrXGdJoxF0IB647a2rXQ0tH36LJpr_6EQ1gNOxPNPqMmqZX7bo_l24uMTfuR/s1600-h/1202162048_really-hot-chick.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 246px; height: 320px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi5qPb0GLDysw5TV7XSl_ChlAAWJRUubU8HNN3MNaZTRLudYuOAh03hFsKiGB80RaZu025QHkeRrK9HC-8KOrXGdJoxF0IB647a2rXQ0tH36LJpr_6EQ1gNOxPNPqMmqZX7bo_l24uMTfuR/s320/1202162048_really-hot-chick.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5380001597509834578" border="0" /></a></p><p style="margin-bottom: 0in; text-align: center;">This is a long post, take a Random Hottie break<br /></p><p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">#17 – Carolina Panthers (8-8)</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Those who don’t improve themselves will watch everyone else pass them by. That will be the story of the 2009 Carolina Panthers, as they have watched Atlanta and New Orleans improve while they have stood pat.</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">#18 – Washington Redskins (9-7)</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">The 1<sup>st</sup> of the 9-7 teams, and the 1<sup>st</sup> of those to miss the playoffs on a tie-breaker. I like the D with the exception of (D)aGello Hall and I think Campbell takes the next step, but they will still come up just short. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">#19 – Atlanta Falcons (9-7)</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">If this prediction is right, I may have to admit that I was wrong about Matt Ryan. So pretty much I can’t win here. At least I can break even. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">#20 – Minnesota Vikings (9-7)</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">But Lord Favre is in Minnesota; they have to be better than last year. Sorry, but Favre is just as likely to cost a team a game in the crunch at this point in his career, and the temptation will be too great to put things into his hands when things get tough early, instead of sticking to the run game as in the past two seasons. Still I have them sneaking into the playoffs. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">#21 – Philadelphia Eagles (9-7)</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">The injury bug is already biting this team, and the loss of Jim Johnson will be felt all season long. Playoffs – yes, Vick in a Super Bowl – NO. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">#22 – Miami Dolphins (9-7)</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">The last of the 9-7 teams, and the only Division Winner, Last season wasn’t a fluke, the Dolphins have put together a slightly better than .500 team. Which, in a down year for the AFC East, is enough to get into the playoffs.</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">#23 – Tennessee Titans (10-6)</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">You know, I look at this record, and wonder what I was thinking making the picks. The loss of Haynesworth means nobody to dictate protections for the opponent, and that there will be more blitzing from the Titans, which to me will be too much for this team to overcome. So no playoffs this season, but still a damn good team. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">#24 – Cincinnati Bengals (10-6)</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Hold on, hear me out. The Defense is much improved, and could be middle of the pack, and I like what I am seeing from Coles and Henry meaning if Palmer is healthy, I see playoff for the Bengals. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">#25 – Seattle Seahawks (10-6)</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">The other team to really screw me last season, the Seahawks were also decimated by injuries. I think this is a bounce back year, with a weak NFC West helping the cause, the lack of a real running game kills them in the playoffs. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">#26 – Indianapolis Colts (11-5)</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Eleven wins, that sounds about right for the Colts. Moore and Mudd are still with the team as consultants, so the offense should continue to click under Payton. The Defense will have some growing pains as they transition to a more traditional 4-3, but it will be the health of the team that determines how far they go. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">#27 – New York Giants (12-4)</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">This team is built the way that I would build a team, from the front lines out, with a power running component. So it is no wonder I like them to do well. But the lack of a #1 WR leaves them a game short of home field advantage. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">#28 – San Diego Chargers (12-4)</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">This is perhaps the most talented team in the NFL, but they do have a hole on the offensive line, and at the helm. San Diego fans will be treated to yet another season of winning, followed by a post season of disappointment. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">#29 – New Orleans Saints (12-4)</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">If Greg Williams has the right pieces to run his defense (which I think he does) this team will be tough to compete with. Drew Brees and his WR’s are just on another level right now. This will be a fun team to watch, unless your team is playing them.</p><p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">#30 – Green Bay Packers (12-4)</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">They were close last season, but a few key loses both of players and games kept them from being a great team. This squad takes the next step this season, and with the right personnel to run the 3-4 they are switching to, they will be a force in the NFC.</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">#31 – Baltimore Ravens (13-3)</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">I actually got phone calls last season when I predicted that the Ravens would make the playoffs. But great defenses, good running games, and managing the game passing is a winning formula. As long as the defense stays great, I see this team being dangerous, and I like what I am hearing about Flacco’s development.</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">#32 – Pittsburgh Steelers (13-3)</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">No, I haven’t gone soft on the Steelers since moving to the Burgh. But when you play the AFC West and get your toughest non-division games at home (Tennessee, Green Bay, Minnesota, San Diego) you get a leg up. Throw in that the Steelers are built right, and you are looking at another Division Crown for the Steelers. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"><br /></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Quick and Dirty Playoffs</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">In the AFC, Baltimore and Pittsburgh advance to the Championship, with Baltimore winning the rubber match. </p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">In the NFC, The Giants travel to Green Bay in a rematch of two seasons ago. This time Aaron Rodgers leads the Pack to a win. </p>brickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01112765933861191439noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-526535362053774009.post-40194457273710476182009-09-09T13:59:00.000-07:002009-09-09T19:21:23.779-07:00Playing Chicken with RichardRichard Seymour is a Raider…or he could be soon…or he might not be. Depending on which side of the debate of the merits of this trade you stand on, you are either elated, or disappointed at this point, and your feelings have most likely changed 10 times in the last three days. <br /><br />IMO, if the Raiders can sign Seymour to a long-term deal, it is a fair trade for both sides. And most would agree, if they can get by the intellectual dishonesty being spewed by the Boys at Bristol, more on that another time, if the trade goes through. <br /><br />The thing is, I no longer believe that this is a high stakes game of chicken between Seymour and the Raiders. I think this is a game between the Patriots and Seymour, with the Raiders just willingly going along with the charade, with the hopes that they can reap the rewards should the trains collide. <br /><br />The leaks of strange information the past few days are what have lead me to this conclusion. Cable’s slip that there are financial issues to deal with in New England, the reports today that Seymour though he was close to signing an extension to stay in New England. Then you take into account that Seymour is the one player who, along with his agent, Eugene Parker, has actually won a stare down with Belichick in the past, and you have the ingredients for something different. <br /><br />My theory is that Seymour and the Patriots were in discussions on an extension, and things were not going as well as Seymour thought. The Pats, tired of dealing with the unreasonable demands of Parker issued a take it or leave it deal, and Parker thought they were bluffing. <br /><br />The Patriots then put together a deal with Oakland to send Seymour there for the 1st round pick in 2011, they also gave the Raiders the parameters of the deal that Parker and Seymour were looking for, and the Raiders found it acceptable. <br /><br />The Patriots have flipped the table and called Parker and Seymour’s bluff.<br /><br /> “You say if you can’t get this deal here, you’ll take it somewhere else, well take it in Oakland”.<br /><br />Now it is a full-fledged game of chicken between the Patriots and Seymour. Will Seymour blink 1st and accept the deal the Pats have on the table? Will Seymour take the offer in Oakland and report?<br /><br />One of these sides is going to lose; if Seymour goes to Oakland the Patriots loose a key clog in their attempt to get another ring, a 2011 pick is no help to the team this year, and the window of opportunity in the NFL is too short to count on anything that far down the line. <br /><br />If Seymour returns to New England at the reduced rate, yet another player will have lost the stare down with Belichick. His last chance at a big payday will be gone, sure he will be well paid, but he could have had more. <br /><br />And where does this leave Oakland, if Seymour doesn’t come, well the fans will be let down, but the team will be about where it was before, a 6 to 8 win team needing line help. If he does come, the Raiders will be a 7 to 9 win team, needing a little less line help, but with less amo down the linebrick.http://www.blogger.com/profile/04983353803798594796noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-526535362053774009.post-82553969672752268572009-09-02T19:32:00.000-07:002009-09-02T19:33:16.963-07:00Cable Makes A Rookie MistakeI’d say it was his 1st big mistake as a rookie head coach, but I’m sure some one will bring up breaking jaws, or sticking to long with Kwame, or taking a job in Oakland. But the move that Cable made last week shows that he is new at this whole scheduling thing. <br /><br />There is a reason that the vast majority of teams broke camp about a week prior to the Raiders leaving Napa. Most teams want to simulate a game week in the days leading up to their 3rd preseason game. Installation, game planning and walkthroughs, all done in the same manner as what will happen in the regular season. <br /><br />Cable may have run practices, and installed a game plan the same way that he will during the season, but there was one major difference. The players didn’t go home to their wives, kids, girlfriend and strippers each night. Instead they were sequestered in Napa at the Marriott. <br /><br />Then, following the final walkthrough, Cable released the inmates from the asylum. If you have ever gone through a football camp, you know the feeling of freedom you have after being under lock and key for weeks. Sure you have a couple hours a day to yourself each day, but for the most part you are little more than a prisoner, one who has to work out until you puke.<br /><br />So it was not the least bit surprising Saturday that the Raiders looked and played like they had hangovers. Chances are many of them did. As noted by recent Raider addition Greg Ellis, who chastised his teammates for being unprofessional. <br /><br />True it was unprofessional, and lead to being embarrassed on televisions all across the county, but it should have been far from unexpected. This is one of the youngest teams in the NFL, and has little on field leadership. Cable’s scheduling of camp set them up to fail, and fail they did, in a most embarrassing fashion. <br /><br />One can only hope that Cable knew exactly what he was doing; after all he has been around football his entire adult life, as both a player and coach. Maybe, just Maybe, having the players embarrass themselves was the point. It’s better that they do so in the 3rd preseason game, than in week 1 on national TV, as they have in 3 of the last 4 years.brick.http://www.blogger.com/profile/04983353803798594796noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-526535362053774009.post-29022537060054743122009-08-01T09:53:00.000-07:002009-08-01T09:54:27.027-07:00Is JR Busting out, or just BustingI should be the last person to criticize someone for being a little out of shape, I’m not obese, but I sure could stand some time in the gym. But what I should do, and what I will do are two different things. So why not blast JaMarcus Russell for being a fat ass. <br /><br />Yeah, that was the aptly nicknamed JaDummy telling reporters after the 1st day of practice “I am a little heavy, but I am not 300 pounds like you all said the last time.” Well congratulations JaMarcus, you aren’t pushing for the starting LT spot this season; that is quite an accomplishment. <br /><br /> I know what the Russell apologists will say, this is only the 1st day of camp, there is plenty of time to get into shape. Problem is, this was the same thing they said when those party pictures showed up a couple months back, same thing they said last season, same thing they said when he was drafted. <br /><br />It is becoming increasingly clear that JR just doesn’t get it. His coach, Tom Cable, publicly called him out a couple times during the off-season, and he missed the 1st week and a half of OTA’s. Now I know his mother had surgery, but how many of you would miss a week and a half of work due to a preplanned surgery for a relative.<br /><br />He made the gesture of inviting his WR’s to come down to Louisiana to work with him for a week, a move that was generally praised throughout the Raider Nation as a sign that he was turning the corner. But whatever credit he would have gained with this writer was more than negated by the reports that after doing so, Russell cut out of OTA’s a day early. <br /><br />Not that that should have come as a surprise to those who follow the Raiders closely. Thomas Howard was interviewed in the middle of OTA’s by Sirius NFL radio and refused to comment on how often JaMarcus was attending. Not something you do if your team leader is there every day. <br /><br />Sure there have been some positive quotes as well, as Michael Bush has stated that JR has much better control of the huddle, and Lewis Murphy has compared Russell’s on field demeanor in practice to Tim Tebow. But unfortunately the news coming out of Russell’s passing camp send a different message. <br /><br />At this time, it appears that only 4 WR’s attended Russell’s camp, of them, only Murphy appears to have a chance to make the team. Now Walker and DHB had health issues, but of the remaining players projected to make the roster (Higgens, Schilens, Miller etc…) no one seemed to be able to make the time to work with their anointed leader. Hell, Schilens was able to make the time to go play catch with Jeff Garcia, but not Russell. <br /><br />Now this could say something about the dedication of those players, and how serious they are about winning as Raiders, but I think it says more about how Russell is seen by his teammates. To me it says that Russell has lost the respect of a good portion of this team, if he ever had it to begin with. <br /><br />Look around the league, the premier quarterbacks all seem to get in extra work with their receivers, be it McNabb bringing everyone down to Arizona, or the Mannings spending extra time in their respective cities. What is the difference between these guys and JR? When they say lets get together, their teammates jump. When JaMarcus says it, they are free to ask, why weren’t the OTA’s a good time to get this work done?<br /><br />That to me is the worst news to come out of this off-season for the Raiders, if JaMarcus has lost the attention of this team, it will take a hell of a lot of effort and dedication for him to get it back. Problem is, JaMarcus has always seemed content to get by on his incredible physical ability going back to college. Dedication and effort seem to be a foreign concept to him. <br /><br />A man once said “Fat, Drunk and Stupid is no way to go through life”, and while I may try to prove this wrong, it is not the moto that I want to see the starting quarterback of the team I live and die with in the Fall try to prove wrong. <br /><br />Other Stuff<br /><br />OH NO, DHB dropped the 1st ball thrown to him in camp, THE SKY IS FALLING. <br /><br />Damn, some people are so eager to label this guy a bust, lets let this guy get his feet wet before we crucify him. Take a look back at some of the great receivers (Rice and Brown would be a good start) few light up the league from day 1. I’m not saying that DHB is hall of fame bound, but it is a little early for the Troy Williamson comparisons. <br /><br />Cutting a 6th round pick<br /><br />Sure cutting Stryker Sulak before camp even opened was a little strange. And wasting any pick pisses me off a bit. But I have a feeling that more draft picks than normal will not make their team’s final 53, the Raiders just started the process earlier than most. <br /><br />The thing is, most teams have plenty of Cap room this offseason. Where in past years a vet would get the ax before a rookie for financial reasons, team will be able to have more experienced players make up the back end of their roster now. It should make for better special teams play across the league, which is a good thing for football fans. <br /><br />Goodbye Andrew Walter<br /><br />I’ve always felt a little bad about the way Walter’s career with the Raiders has gone down. From being thrown out to the wolves under Shell, to being relegated to back-up behind Culpepper and McCown, even if he looked better to me on the field. It seems like he just never got a fair shake. <br /><br />Well, with DHB signing, the Raiders made the long awaited roster move of cutting Walter. Why this couldn’t have been done months ago, when he could have gotten a full off-season in with his new team, is beyond me, and a black mark on the Raiders. I hope he catches on somewhere else and does well, at least when he isn’t facing the Raiders. <br /><br />My guess is that he hooks back up with his old College coach, Dirk Cutter, in Jacksonville, and puts some real pressure on David Garrard. <br /><br />HOF here I come<br /><br />I’m sure it will be a couple years until I am inducted into the media wing for my outstanding writing, but I will be making my 1st visit to the Hall of Fame this weekend. That’s what the lovely Mrs. Brick gets for leaving the planning of our weekend up to me.brick.http://www.blogger.com/profile/04983353803798594796noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-526535362053774009.post-9444602762442115192009-07-29T18:03:00.001-07:002009-07-29T18:05:38.964-07:00Facebook kinda SucksI’m not real big on the newfangled communication tools out there, and by new fangled I mean anything developed in the last 15 years. I carry a cell phone only because it is required by my job, and they provide it. You won’t find me on any instant messenger, I have sent one text message in my life, and I had to borrow some one else’s phone to do so. To me the internet is for reading about football, fantasy sports and porn, maybe not in that order. <br /><br />So it was a big surprise to not only myself, but my close friends when I signed up for a Facebook account the other day. I blame my brother, who is the complete opposite of me when it comes to being social. It turned out he knew an old friend of mine who I hadn’t talked to in years was sick thanks to Facebook. So I decided to sign up just to get an update, turned out it was nothing serious. <br /><br />Much to my surprise, I didn’t stop there. I looked up the names of a couple of other friends and sent out friend requests. Even if a “friend request” sounds like the most pathetic thing a grown person can do to me. “Will you be my friend, I need some sort of public affirmation to make myself complete”. You are probably figuring out real quick why I can count my close friends on one hand, I’m just a little cynical, as if you hadn’t already gathered that from this blog. <br /><br />So with my 5 or 6 friend requests sent out, what did I do? Well other than putting a picture of myself up, nothing. Chances are with the information that my old friend was cool in my pocket I would never have looked at Facebook again. But then my inbox started getting hit, and my interest grew in this Facebook thing. <br /><br />See I wasn’t just getting Friend Requests from… well… friends. I was getting them from people I had quite honestly forgotten about. Not sure what that says about me as a person. Most of them I was pretty cool about getting in touch with, however superficial, but some of them left me scratching my head. <br /><br />I was getting requests from names I didn’t recognize, I had to go to their page and look at the pictures to get some sort of idea if I even knew this person (I drank a lot in college and we referred to everyone by nicknames, so I do have some excuse). Once I figured out who they were, I gladly accepted. <br /><br />I got friend requests from people I not only had forgotten about, but people that I never would have considered myself friends with in the 1st place. What do I do about these people? Do I accept their request, it’s not like having them in my friend list is going to hurt me in any way. Would it hurt their feelings if I reject them? Do I care since I didn’t consider them friends in the 1st place?<br /><br />And how did an ESPN writer get a hold of my name? Has my constant bashing of the four-letter network earned me the attention of some one there? Don’t bother checking my friend list for who it was, I haven’t accepted them. Now if they can get me a copy of that Erin Andrews video, they would get instant acceptance. <br /><br />Now I am putting way too much time and thought into this stupid Facebook thing. It is taking away from important Internet porn time as I read through the newsfeed on my homepage, looking to see if one of the people I am close with has posted something, or if it is just drunken notes and quiz scores. Too much time is being spent looking up who the hell this person requesting to be my friend is, and I don’t even think I have passed the 30 friend threshold, what the fuck are people with hundreds of friends doing? Do they even know or care about half the people on their list? <br /><br />I knew I never should have signed up for this thing, I was much happier walking around with my Zach Morris phone and having no contact with anyone that isn’t family or living within walking distance. Fuck you bro, I should never have sat around that fire drinking with you, now the Internet time I use looking for celebrity up-skirt shots has been severely compromised.brick.http://www.blogger.com/profile/04983353803798594796noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-526535362053774009.post-2743284172043293782009-07-29T18:02:00.000-07:002009-07-29T18:03:31.414-07:00Vick in Silver and Black?et’s start this posting off right, with a hearty Fuck You to Rodger Goodell. See I was putting the finishing touches on a piece about Mike Vick yesterday when the news broke that Goodell had conditionally reinstated the quasi-QB. So that piece just gets scrapped, no reason to belabor that point anymore. <br /><br />Instead, lets look at what Vick could do for the Raiders. I know, as a Raider fan I am tired of the team being linked to every malcontent and diva that hits the market, but while the press focuses on Washington, Miami and New England as potential destinations for Vick, why not examine the Pro’s and Con(Vicks) of Mike in Silver and Black. <br /><br />Pro’s<br /><br />The Raiders have been without a True Playmaker for Years<br /><br />This has been a constant theme in my writing. The Raiders have lacked anyone who forces Defenses to alter their game plan since Moss gave up on the team. Sure Nnamdi takes away one WR, but the reads remain the same for the QB. No one on either side of the ball affects coverage or protections. McFadden has the potential to, but has yet to show it consistently. <br /><br />If he can come back at anywhere near his previous form, Vick would force a LB to spy him at minimum. That takes one defender out of the equation, which is all you need. If the WR’s or McFadden can develop, this will create openings across the field. <br /><br />Now, I recognize that there is a huge question mark when it comes to his current skill level, but the possible reward here is huge. <br /><br />Russell has yet to Prove himself to be anything but Vick without the wheels<br /><br />I’m in danger of being labeled a hater when it comes to Russell, but I take the hater label as a badge of honor, it means the other person can’t refute anything you have to say, so they use the hater crutch. <br /><br />Face it; even with the progress Russell showed at the end of last season, he has yet to prove himself as anything other than a cannon armed, inaccurate, and slow to read defenses QB. Which is pretty much how you would sum up Vick prior to his suspension, with the added factor of Vick’s scrambling ability. <br /><br />I’m not advocating giving up on Russell for Vick, but Vick would be an excellent compliment to Russell on the depth chart, as you could prepare virtually the same game plan for both. Where as with the current back-ups (Garcia and Gradkowski) you have to adjust to their weaker arms. <br /> <br />He will come cheap<br /><br />Just look at the Franchise numbers to see what the current going rate is on game changing players. It is a steep price to pay; especially when there is no way of knowing if the guy will produce for your franchise. <br /><br />Vick won’t get anywhere near franchise money, but he will get much more than the NFL minimum that most columnists seem to be projecting. Why, because the potential to be a game breaker is still there. Now potential gets coaches fired, but when have the Raiders been averse to firing coaches. <br /><br />Wildcat<br /><br />Damn, I hate writing that word. The media has blown the whole wildcat thing so far out of proportion. Oh yeah, the Dolphins were the 1st team to have a running option get a direct snap. Tell that to Kordell Stewart, or Randel-El, or Cunningham, hell Darren McFadden lined up at QB in the preseason last year reviving his WildHog roots. But no, the Dolphins unleashed this previously unknown formation on the NFL. <br /><br />But it brings me to what I see as the best reason to bring in Vick; The versatility that it would afford the offense. With Vick on the field, he, McFadden and Bush would all be threats to run or throw on any play (remember Bush played QB in HS). <br /><br />This is the kind of thing I want to see in an offense, the ability to put a defense on its heels. The Raiders have been trying to do this with guys who stretch the field for years, and I’m not advocating going away from that, but just adding another element, remember Vick can get the ball down the field, the vertical game won’t go anywhere, it will just have more going on underneath. The more options you have, the more the defense has to account for, and the more likely they are to fuck up. <br /><br /><br />Con’s<br /><br />He may well be done<br /><br />One of my points in the aborted posting from yesterday was that quite simply, I think that Vick will be out of the NFL in three years. He has already missed two seasons in what should have been the prime of his career; the uncertainty regarding the length of his suspension will prevent teams from putting too much time into him this season. He will be nothing more than a limited package player this season. Meaning it will be three full seasons of Vick not being a NFL QB before he competes for a starting job next season.<br /><br />Chances are, this means his career is as good as over. He was already limited when it comes to QB skills, now he has missed two years of training, Mike being anything more than a gimmick player is a long shot. <br /><br />PETA<br /><br />Oh they will protest, they will be at the training camp of whatever team signs him, and they will be at the games; Anything to get themselves on TV. The Raider’s previously relatively calm off season will suddenly revert to the circus tents of the last few years.<br /><br />Personally, I could give a fuck about PETA, they serve no real purpose, and there are few groups I look on with more disgust. And I have donated to my local animal shelters, love my dog, and think what Vick did was inhuman. But kowtowing to these nut jobs in any way pisses me off. The fact that Goodell even met with these assholes to discuss Vick has made me lose some respect for him. <br /><br />As far as the Raiders, they are used to distractions, I may not wish another one for them, but this could serve to take some of the heat off of Russell and the much-maligned draft picks of this year. <br /><br />Where does he fit / Who do you cut<br /><br />This is a tough one, who do you cut to make room for a part time player? The Raiders just don’t have the depth anywhere to take a chance on Vick. They need three RB’s due to the inability of any of them to stay healthy. The WR’s are young and need time to develop. The Defense needs all the help it can get. <br /><br />You can say that you would make him the 3rd QB, but that would make him ineligible on game day. It may be the 3rd QB who gets the pink slip, but someone else would have to be inactive on Sunday. <br /><br />IMO, it would be a WR getting the pink slip. For the simple reason that the team could get by with 4 on the active roster thanks to the versatility of McFadden and Miller. Both of them could split out as a WR when needed. But who do you cut? You can cross Bey, Schillens, Higgens and hopefully Murphy right off the list. Can you afford the cap hit to cut Walker? <br /><br />Vick will miss the start of the Season<br /><br />The Raiders start the season with three straight against divisional foes. Having a winning record in division has to be this teams primary goal, as they are still a year or two away from competing against the premier teams in the league. <br /><br />Signing Vick, when he will miss these games, will do nothing towards achieving that goal. He could provide a nice mid-season boost, but if the Raiders once again fail to come out of the gates hot, it may well be too little too late. <br /><br />When I add it all up in my mind, I am advocating something I never thought I would. I would like to see the Raiders be the team that gives Vick his 2nd chance. I have written before that I think he should be able to earn a 2nd chance (he deserves nothing) but just not with the Raiders. Well I am officially softening my stance. <br /><br />IMO, the Pro’s to signing Vick slightly outweigh the Con’s. Due to the potential more than anything else. But there is one other factor that does weigh in this equation for me. The NFL players who have spoken up, have come out strongly supporting Vick’s right to play again. While the media would crucify Al for the move, it would be huge for winning the hearts and minds of the NFL’s players. And with the backlash the organization has experience from former players such as Worthless Sapp, the team could use the positive vibes among the players. I know it is a weak stance, but it may be just enough to sway some potential free agents. <br /><br />So how would I go about this? Three year, incentive laden deal, if he can push JR to the bench, he would have earned a starters salary, and the contract should reflect this. It would have to be made clear that he is being signed as a limited package player in year 1, the #2 for year two, with the potential to fight for that starting spot. <br /><br />He would have to be on board for learning the receiver tree, as the best fit for him at this time is being on the field with JR at the same time. Along with McFadden and Bush at other times. He has to be more than a decoy for the defense to respect him when he is on the field.<br /><br />Can he do all of this, I have no idea, but if he can, I would like to see him do it in Silver and Black.brick.http://www.blogger.com/profile/04983353803798594796noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-526535362053774009.post-14393585201280648212009-06-30T18:38:00.000-07:002009-06-30T18:39:43.166-07:00And Now For Something Completely DifferentI am of that age where all of my friends are married and having kids. The lovely Mrs. Brick and I have not yet taken that plunge, and while we talk about it on a regular basis, there is always a reason to put procreating off a little longer. <br /><br />Of course, being a red blooded American male, there is always that nagging little voice in the back of my head asking me “Why would you want to burden yourself with a child?”<br /><br />I have to say, that nagging little voice is a wise man. I mean its enough of a pain in the when you have a pet. You have to feed him, pay his bills, clean up his shit and god forbid you want to travel, then you have to make separate arrangements for the animal. <br /><br />As far as I can tell a kid is like a pet on steroids. Not only do you feed, cloth and raise them, but you have years of worrying and the expenses are much greater. My dog was trained to shit outside in a matter of a month or two, a kid, fuck they are in diapers for fucking ever. Then they get older and hate you, my dog loves me no matter what. Fuck as teenagers you have to worry about paying for college, drinking, drugs. And god forbid I have a daughter, my only goal in life at that point will be keeping her a virgin until at least 30, and off the stripper pole. Fortunately I have a shotgun. <br /><br />Then I saw a phrase the other day that made so much sense to me. A light went off in my head. Two words explained how so many of my male brethren got over these nagging thoughts and did their part towards having a child. <br /><br />No they weren’t “Busted Condom”, although that does explain many, or “Catholic Faith” it was something much more basic. <br /><br />See as males, we are in competition from day 1. Nobody wants to be the last guy picked for the pick up football game. Getting cut from a sports team is a fait worse than death. The ultimate goal is a championship, in whatever you are doing. The best rise to the top they get rings, they get accolades. No one remembers the guy in 2nd place. They remember the guy who gets the trophy. <br /><br />Parenthood for the man is the means to obtaining a living-breathing trophy. That’s right, bang the little lady, knock her up and 9 months later you are at the finish line, able to hold your new trophy for all to see. Friends and family shower you with gifts and accolades as you pass your personal Stanley Cup around to be kissed. Only you didn’t get this trophy for playing Hockey, you got it for Fucking. That’s right my friend you just won a:<br /><br />FUCK TROPHY<br /><br />Yeah, laugh if you want, I know I did when I first read those words as they related to having a child. But let it sink in a little, it is starting to make sense isn’t it. From day 1 what have those competitions been about? Has it been being the best baseball, football or basketball player, or has it been something more? Has it been about positioning yourself as the alpha male. The top dog who attracts the primo pussy. <br />The thing is, 99% of us never attain that alpha male status. We read about the exploits of our favorite athletes, musicians and actors. The piles of money, the jet setting life style, the beautiful women throwing themselves at their feet. We are forced to look elsewhere to obtain our champion status. And at my age, there is one surefire way to obtain the adoration of friends, family and colleagues. Get yourself a Fuck Trophy. <br /><br />And there is more to it than that. Sure its nice to get the gifts and the congratulatory backslaps. But that little Fuck Trophy is something more. It is a permanent record of the fact that you have had intercourse at least once. Since your first kiss, your boys, no matter how tight you are, have doubted that you are actually scoring as much as you claim. With good reason, everyone exaggerates. But now there is no doubt, pending a DNA test, that you have in fact put your penis inside that woman. <br /><br />You are a man now, fuck your bartmizfa or commencement, this is the day when all doubt is removed. You got your trophy. <br /><br />This is not limited to the everyman either. Just take a quick look at the celebrity ranks, and you can see that the pursuit of a Fuck Trophy is universal. <br /><br />Why would Brad Pitt want to risk ruining Angelina Jollie’s perfect body? They had plenty of kids running about thanks to 3rd world countries. There was no reason to risk marring that figure with stretch marks and sagging breasts. No reason except that Brad needed a Fuck Trophy to prove that he was in fact banging Angelina. <br /><br />Tom Cruise gets pelted with questions about his sexuality. But what does he have that none of us do? Fuck Trophies from multiple Hollywood actresses. <br /><br />Hell, even Michael Jackson, as strange and perverted as he may have been, went out of his way to get not one, not two but three Fuck Trophies to hold aloof (and almost drop) for the world to see.<br /><br />Think about it, everyone knows at least one guy who is way out of his league with his woman. Fate has smiled upon that poor sap at least once in his life. I like to think that some of my friends think that way of me. But I know for a fact that one of my friends is in this boat. Motherfucker stepped up in the bottom of the ninth and hit a grand slam. <br /><br />So it was no surprise that he quickly went about getting a trophy. Less than a year later his beautiful wife was with child, and he was strutting about like a peacock. But my man was not satisfied. He had his proof that he was hitting that, but he went for the back-to-back championships. Sure he claimed that the 2nd child was not planned, but now that you and I know about the status that comes with a Fuck Trophy, what do you think. <br /><br />I think that lucky bastard was poking holes in his own condoms. What better way to prove to all that he not only was having sex with a knock out, but was having it on a regular basis. That’s right, multiple Fuck Trophies. <br /><br />Of course it doesn’t end there. Soon the newness of your Trophy fades, someone else steels the spotlight with a Fuck Trophy of their own, and you are temporarily on the sidelines. But then, if you are lucky, your Trophy enters another phase. Where once again you feel the pride of everyone adoring you seed. That’s right, he or she makes something of himself or herself. <br /><br />How often do you hear about your coworker’s kid’s exploits on the field, the ice or in school? “That’s my boy” might as well be “That’s my Fuck Trophy”. The old man wants the praise heaped upon his offspring, because it is his way of showing his Fuck Trophy is better than anyone else’s. The better your Fuck Trophy, the better you look, the happier you are. <br /><br />Do you think Tom Brady’s father is having a mid life crisis? Fuck no; he has the ’86 Bears of Fuck Trophies. His Fuck Trophy has its own rings, millions of dollars and a Super Model wife. You can put that Fuck Trophy up against the greatest of all time, and hold your own. <br /><br />My old man, well lets just say he bought a Harley.brick.http://www.blogger.com/profile/04983353803798594796noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-526535362053774009.post-6719008262874410062009-04-29T04:05:00.000-07:002009-04-29T04:06:38.674-07:00WORST DRAFT EVERAccording to the Kipers of the world, I should be posting about how I am a beaten man today. The draft is a holiday on my calendar, and that Grinch, Al Davis, stole the tree and all the presents for Raiders fans. The Raiders must be the stupidest team in the NFL, since they didn’t draft according to the experts boards, they reached, and passed up can’t miss players for boom or bust types. Yep, according to them, I should be here ready to turn in my Silver and Black. <br /><br />I’m guessing if you have read this site before, you know what my answer to that is…<br /><br />FUCK THAT<br /><br />Sure I have been expounding on how teams need to maximize the value they get in the draft. Hell, I have spent hours on putting together a chart, and explaining that chart right here. But as a Raider fan, I had no expectation of the Raiders doing that in this years draft, I may be dumb, but I’m not stupid. Al hasn’t hired me yet, I’m sure things will be different once he brings me into the draft room. <br /><br />So, all that out of the way, lets take a look at the Raider’s 1st day draft picks, I will talk value here, but there are some outside factors to take into consideration, which I will also try to address. <br /><br />Round 1, Pick #7 – Darrius Heyward-Bey<br /><br />Right off the bat, the Raiders are the laughing stock of the NFL. I was only watching the NFLN’s coverage, but have read more than enough about BSPN’s coverage. Heyward-Bey, with Crabtree and Macklin still on the board, what the fuck were the Raiders thinking.<br /><br />From a Value perspective, the pick stinks. Bey was the 3rd ranked WR, I have a hard time believing that any other team would have selected him before 20. This is a classic trade down position if you are drafting for value. Raider apologists keep harping on the “fact” that there was no one to trade down with; Cable claimed in a press conference that the Raiders were reluctant to trade down, since there were teams trying to trade up ahead of the Raiders to grab Bey. <br /><br />I’m not sure I am completely buying either claim. With all the teams needing an OT, I can’t see Monroe not having enough value to garner a 1 and a 3, but we’ll never know for sure since he went next. As for other teams looking to jump up for Bey? With everyone reportedly looking to trade down, this one is hard to swallow as well. <br /><br />There was better value to be had, but it is hard to say just how much. The same factors preventing other teams from trading out of the top 10, also affected the Raiders. At some point you have to man up, and play the cards you have been dealt. <br /><br />Now from a BPA perspective, it all depends on how you rank your board. I could care less who the Kiper’s of the world feel is the best player at any given position. Because, truth be told, they are wrong as often as they are right. Lets think back to some recent drafts, and how the players were ranked, or hyped:<br /><br />Cutler was ranked behind Leinert and Young<br />Gallery was a 10 year lock at LT<br />Jones-Drew wasn’t mentioned in the same breath as Bush<br />Charles Rogers was ranked ahead of Andre Johnson<br />Mike Williams was a future HOF WR<br /><br />I could go on and on, but I won’t. The “expert” rankings of guys like Kiper are great for adding a talking point to the coverage, and handing out instant grades afterwards. But in the end are meaningless. If these guys were really such great scouts, they would be working in the NFL. Instead they stay on the sidelines, with their bad hair, and one size fits all rankings.<br /><br />One size fits all rankings, now there is an interesting point, glad I thought of it, and it fits what we are talking about to a T.<br /><br />What do I mean by one size fits all rankings, that’s easy. Kiper comes up with his big board of prospects. Grades them, ranks them, and then rips teams that don’t select players where he sees them. <br /><br />No consideration is given to scheme, personnel fit. Sure he looks at need, as in the Raiders need a WR, Crabtree is the best WR, the Raiders should take Crabtree. Doesn’t matter that what Crabtree’s skill set lends itself to is a short to intermediate control the ball through the air attack. Not what the Raiders run. In the world of one size fits all rankings, he is the best, so he is the best for the Raiders. <br /><br />Thing is, the NFL is not a one size fits all league. If it were, there would be no free agent busts. DeAngelo Hall would look just as good in the Raiders man press, as he does in the Redskins off man/ zones. <br /><br />So that all brings us back to the Raiders, every team ranks the players based on their scouting, their criteria and how they fit their scheme. There is no question that the Raiders had Bey ranked as the best WR on their board. He was the first WR taken in the draft. The Kiper’s will laugh it off as Davis’ fascination with the stop-watch rearing it’s ugly head again. But there are other factors that should be looked at. <br /><br />Bey played in a pro-style offense at Maryland. He may not have had much pro level talent around him, but there are three key factors that separate him from Crabtree and Maclin. <br /><br />1 – He blocked in the run game. Bey is given excellent marks in this regard. I have seen his blocking compared to Hines Ward in a couple places. In a run oriented system like the Raiders, this is invaluable. <br /><br />2 – Playing in a pro style offense, he faced defenses similar to those he will see at the next level. No spread out defenses to be seen here, take away the #1 WR with rolled coverage, press at the line. The Texas Tech offense is designed to defeat this and take the defense out of its comfort zone. Bey did not get this advantage.<br /><br />3 – Ran a complete pass tree, perhaps the most important of the three. Of the top WR’s, only Hicks in North Carolina can say the same. Bey spent most of his time running the deep stuff, but that is what the Raiders are going to ask him to do. The learning curve has been made significantly less daunting. <br /><br />Add in that Bey is the ideal combination of Crabtree’s size (actually a little bigger) and Maclin’s speed (actually a little faster), and to just use the one size fits all rankings, and declare that the Raiders made a mistake selecting Bey, IMO, is in itself a reach. <br /><br />So, while I swore at my TV when the Raiders selected Hayward-Bey at 7 instead of Monroe, Raji or even Orakpo or trading down, after I took a step back. I am satisfied with the pick, not my 1st choice, but as the draft unfolded I felt better and better about it. <br /><br />So why did I come away feeling better about it. Easy, look at the WR’s available when the Raiders were back on the clock at 40. Mohamed Massaquoi was the best WR still on the board. I had WR ranked as the Raiders number 1 need coming into the draft. Had they come away with Massaquoi and Louis Murphy, I would be very pessimistic about the Raiders having the horses to get JaMarcus to the next level. <br /><br />So that brings us to the 2nd round. <br /><br />Right off the bat, the Raiders do the smart thing and trade down. If we take Cable’s press conference at face value, Mitchell was the pick, he was on the board at 40, but the Raiders read the tea leaves right, and got themselves some extra amo later in the draft. Just what this team needed. But at this point, I don’t know who the target is, I just feel better about having a couple more tickets to this year’s lottery.<br /><br />Then the Raiders send the card up to the table and the announcement comes over the loud speaker:<br /><br />Round 2, Pick #49 – Michael Mitchell, S<br /><br />Queue the laugh track from the talking heads. Brick commences swearing at his TV, the lovely Mrs. Brick asks why I am watching this if I am just going to get angry. <br /><br />God Damn, I knew that Mitchell was a classic Davis pick, he fits the Raiders hard hitting secondary image like a glove. I expected the Raiders to take a flyer on him at some point, but not this early. My slowly growing warm and fuzy feeling with Bey and the trade down for picks was squashed. <br /><br />I fumed about this for a couple hours, then the reports started to come out. Mitchell claims that the Bears had told him that he would be their pick at 49. Funny, I had missed the fact that the Bears had traded out of their one 1st day spot shortly after the Raiders took Mitchell. But that was just a coincidence…right?<br /><br />No, the Chicago tribune verifies Mitchell’s story. Holly shit, the Raiders did play this just right. They came within two picks of missing their target. They took the player they wanted at just about the optimum position. That is Value, screw the one size fits all charts, screw the talking heads (credit does go to Mayock for eating crow the next day). Rarely do you get this much info on the inside of the 2 day poker game that is the draft, but damn it feels good when you do, and you team just played their hand perfectly. <br /><br />In the end, I have to say that I am pretty happy with the way the Raiders handled the 1st day of the draft, all things considered. Two players, who filled a need, fit the scheme and seem to have the work ethic that Cable craves. <br /><br />Sure it sucks to listen to the callers on NFL radio blast the Raiders. Suck to listen to Adam Schein (well it always sucks to listen to Schein) give the Raiders a “G” since “F” is too high of a grade. But you know what, if there is anything that has proven true about the draft year after year. It is this; nobody knows how these teams did for sure for a couple years. Anyone who claims to know any different is a blowhard. <br /><br />So for now, I welcome Heyward-Bey and Mitchell to the Silver and Black. Keep that chip on your shoulder, and use it to prove once again that the best use for Kiper’s head is holding up that strange hair, and that the hot air coming out of guys like Schein should be filling balloons for tourists somewhere, not polluting the otherwise outstanding NFL radio airwaves.brick.http://www.blogger.com/profile/04983353803798594796noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-526535362053774009.post-7590378437274920142009-04-25T14:25:00.000-07:002009-04-25T14:26:57.953-07:00QB & OT to drive the draftTaking a break from the draft value chart today, to look at how some recent player moves could affect the draft, and how this potentially sets up the Raiders.<br /><br />There are two positions driving this year’s draft, and it should come as no surprise that they are QB and OT. The face of the franchise and the guy who protects his back, there is a reason that NFL teams place a premium on these two positions. <br /><br />So how have the recent moves affected these two positions? Lets start with the QB. <br /><br />IMO, the moves to date don’t affect the QB class. Sure there are some that think that the trade of Cutler to Chicago puts the Broncos in the running for a QB, but I don’t see it. Not with Orton being a great fit for McDaniel’s offense and the large contract given to Chris Sims. I see a late round pick at QB for the Broncos, and the Bears would have been set running with Orton had they not acquired Cutler. <br /><br />The QB position will drive much of the draft, but the moves are yet to come. So what teams potentially could draft a QB in the 1st round? To me the list looks like this:<br /><br />Detroit (1, 20)<br />San Francisco (10)<br />New York Jets (17)<br />Tampa Bay (19)<br /><br /><br />At first glance not a whole lot of teams desperate for a QB, and, IMO, you can take the Jets off this list, as they have 2 unproven youngsters on the roster already, I think they are far more likely to be in play for a veteran. <br /><br />The intrigue here comes from the potential for a dark horse or three to jump into play. Some of the potential dark horses include:<br /><br />Seattle (4) – are they sold on Hasselbeck being healthy enough to make another run, or the potential of Wallace to take the reigns if Hasselbeck can’t? Or does the new staff want to start fresh with their own franchise QB?<br /><br />Cleveland (6)– Is Brady Quinn the future? Giving Anderson his roster bonus this season tells me they aren’t sold yet. Could Quinn be traded, resulting in the Browns taking another 1st round chance on a QB?<br /><br />Washington (13) – I’m hesitant to throw them in this mix. Snyder is anything but patient, and QB’s take years to develop. Giving up on Campbell now signals that the team is looking at a couple rebuilding years on offense. This hardly matches what their off season moves thus far have indicated. <br /><br />St. Louis (2) – See Seattle, but without a potential back-up plan in place. Back to back 2 win seasons, and a new coaching staff tells me that this could be a very likely landing spot for a QB. <br /><br />Add these teams to the potential mix, and you see why there could very well be some movement in the top 10 to get into position for either Stafford or Sanchez, and why Freeman is looking like a top 15 pick, and not a 2nd rounder. <br /><br />This also points to why things could get a bit complicated. Lets just say that Detroit is willing to send their 20 to Cleveland for Quinn. There is no guarantee that Sanchez or Stafford will still be there when Cleveland drafts at 6. So could the Lions select Sanchez #1, then trade him and the 20 to Cleveland for the 6 and Quinn, well not until the Browns are on the clock and the Lions can safely say that the OT they want is still on the board. In order to get a handle on that, you have to look at the OT class. <br /><br />Much like the QB class, there are less premier tackles than there are teams that need one. The Bills trade of Peters just adds yet another team with a huge hole to the list. Those that stand out as needing an impact player here are:<br /><br />Detroit (1, 20)<br />St. Louis (2)<br />San Francisco (10)<br />Buffalo (11, 28)<br />Washington (13)<br /><br />Then you add the following teams that may not need one today, but can’t wait much longer to address the position:<br /><br />Seattle (4) – Walter Jones is nearing the end, the time is now to bring in his replacement. <br /><br />Cincinnati (6) – Carson Palmer needs to stay upright if the offense is to get back to where they were three years ago. <br /><br />Oakland (7) – Retreads and projects litter the line. <br /><br />Jaguars (8) – IMO, the failing of this team last season started on the line, putting this unit back together has to be a priority. Signing Holt opens up the option to pass on a WR. <br /><br />Green Bay (9) – Free agency has opened a hole here. <br /><br />This should tell you something about the value of a LT, 10 of the top 15 drafting teams have a need here (sure Buffalo’s need is due to trade, but Peter’s play last season screamed need already). And with only 4 tackles having top 15 grades, demand is much higher than supply. <br /><br />The top 2 picks are going to go a long way to shaping this draft, and what shape it takes hinges on when the QB’s and OT’s go. If Detroit selects a QB, there will be allot of jockeying to get into position to take the next two guys. However if they select an OT, chaos could result as teams try to jump up. St. Louis’s follow up to Detroit’s 1st pick will cement the start of either the run at OT, or the maneuvering for a QB. <br /><br />So how does this all affect the Raiders?<br /><br />As a Raider fan I have to give credit to Davis and Cable, the number of bodies they brought in at OT allows them the flexibility to either stay out of this fray, and select one of the players who could slip due to inordinate demand at other positions. Or to be a player should a team get desperate for that #7 pick as there could very well either be just one OT left or someone could be in love with Sanchez. Or, they could very well grab any one of the 4 OT’s who could be there, with the flexibility to play him at either LT or RT depending on how the others already on the roster shake out. <br /><br />For once the Raiders have set themselves up very well in the 1st round.brick.http://www.blogger.com/profile/04983353803798594796noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-526535362053774009.post-65467650066039614212009-04-22T14:08:00.000-07:002009-04-25T14:24:51.557-07:00Drafting for Value, Part TwoFirst off, I would like to thank the guys over at blackreign.net for their feedback on the 1st column about drafting for value. Allot of what you are about to either read, or scroll past, is in response to their comments.<br /><br />One aspect that definitely needs further clarification from the last column, is the Team Need Factor.<br /><br />Determining a teams needs is very subjective. You would have a tough time getting 10 Raider fans to agree on the order of need for the team. And good luck getting behind the shield and finding out the only opinion that counts, Big Al’s.<br /><br />The Team Need Factor for the Raiders that was used is my opinion. I based that opinion on carefully looking at the depth chart taking into consideration age and contract status. But I can easily see how some may have a completely different ranking when it comes to what the Raiders need. I don’t claim that my ranking is correct; I just think it is better than yours.<br /><br />Next is the chart itself. I fully admit that this is far from a completed project. In order for the chart to become fully functional as a tool, the needs of every NFL team would need to be entered. You would have to fully stock the talent board (I have only the top 150). Then you could have a tool that is truly useful. Right now, it is nothing more than a concept and a means for explaining the value principle of drafting.<br /><br />Furthermore, the chart is not intended to be a stand alone tool. There is allot more that should go into draft prep than ranking the players, determining their value in relation to one another, and then determining their value to the individual team. A major outside item would be mock drafts. There is a reason that NFL teams spend weeks with their coaches and scouting staffs locked down, running mocks and various scenarios to see what could happen draft day. This is valuable planning that can be used to prepare a team for what they may see when they are on the clock. Where the chart comes in is to help evaluate how a pick at 40, will affect your value at 71.<br /><br />So if that is what it would be its best use, lets run through a scenario, a mock draft using the chart as a tool. I will be using the free mock draft from thehuddlereport.com as the basis for the mock. Stopping at each Raiders pick to discuss the options on the table, and how different pick would affect the potential value of the draft.<br /><br />And we are off:<br /><br />1)Detroit – Matt Stafford<br />2)St. Louis – Aaron Curry<br />3)Kansas City – BJ Raji<br />4)Seattle – Jason Smith<br />5)Cleveland – Malcolm Jenkins<br />6)Cincinnati – Eugene Monroe<br /><br />So what do the Raiders have staring them in the face right now. By the Raiders player value chart here are the top 5 options with the 7th pick:<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhkzmJVYElW70RllcODjToDG_PfI5l9Lqciq229OD5eYbwbtIlHynnB9hNGJS8gmPEjTjktXNkQE1ajKWPIg5nCjp7XPU9pj0LRSh0wKSmmmjwo87axazOyGdElWQ9AtEfUbc5agX5TyXWv/s1600-h/value+2+chart+1.bmp"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 336px; height: 139px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhkzmJVYElW70RllcODjToDG_PfI5l9Lqciq229OD5eYbwbtIlHynnB9hNGJS8gmPEjTjktXNkQE1ajKWPIg5nCjp7XPU9pj0LRSh0wKSmmmjwo87axazOyGdElWQ9AtEfUbc5agX5TyXWv/s400/value+2+chart+1.bmp" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5328739674794764194" border="0" /></a><br /><br />Grabbing Crabtree right here looks like a no brainer, his Raider Value is 370 points above the next available option. But, the point of this exercise is to look at the draft as a whole, simply running up to the podium with Crabtree scribbled on a card is not looking past the obvious.<br /><br />So let’s dig deeper. 1st we will assume that the Raiders stand pat, don’t trade down and take Crabtree, how could that effect their next two picks? Right off the bat, due to the selection of Crabtree, you decrease the Raider Value of any future WR. For this sample’s purposes we will lop 200 points of their value. And we are going to be a little conservative in our projections, and assume any player who’s ranked above the Raiders selection will be gone. So what would the options potentially look like in the 2nd and 3rd round with the value of WR downgraded?<br /><br /><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEge7rqLH6uMpu2yGL0W1eH-JcsUUwbF5hANfq1CQgMF9xETPLG-o0VbbPfNqd-Y65NOxv6S3Y3hVTQqyMIdta_9MUwF152cZPIFyQD03tAQov4DphkharrudT8Vg7Cun4AMyXSiPNdMhgCQ/s1600-h/value+2+chart+2.bmp"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 336px; height: 326px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEge7rqLH6uMpu2yGL0W1eH-JcsUUwbF5hANfq1CQgMF9xETPLG-o0VbbPfNqd-Y65NOxv6S3Y3hVTQqyMIdta_9MUwF152cZPIFyQD03tAQov4DphkharrudT8Vg7Cun4AMyXSiPNdMhgCQ/s400/value+2+chart+2.bmp" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5328739973585298114" border="0" /></a><span style="font-style: italic;">2nd Round Prospects</span><br /><br /></div><br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhzvz7EEhn5js0O-zLrZU3OuS08W9DaJ7gJfbhQgbZGupql04uBr6GFowFLmVQo2NgM5y1w6yQSuF4DDMls7TY3fCy0Ri8Nxx1zTzJFH4z8d-YvICz4g_0iT0919svZfqaIEoQOKKgVrxFT/s1600-h/value+2+chart+3.bmp"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 336px; height: 326px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhzvz7EEhn5js0O-zLrZU3OuS08W9DaJ7gJfbhQgbZGupql04uBr6GFowFLmVQo2NgM5y1w6yQSuF4DDMls7TY3fCy0Ri8Nxx1zTzJFH4z8d-YvICz4g_0iT0919svZfqaIEoQOKKgVrxFT/s400/value+2+chart+3.bmp" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5328740308496208818" border="0" /></a><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">3rd Round Prospects<br /><br /></span>Things aren’t looking too bad from a Raiders prospective. With the remaining glaring needs for the team being at OL, DL and S, there are plenty of high value picks projected to still be there in the 2nd but the value potential for the 3rd is limited as there are only 2 picks with values over 700, and by maximizing the 2nd (selecting either an OT or DT) you are counting on a player at a high demand position not jumping. The Raiders can feel confident that they can exceed their target of 6604 value points selecting Crabtree 1st, but can they do better?<br /><br />Say they select Orakpo 1st, there is more depth at WR in this years draft, so not downgrading the Value of the position opens up many more options in round 2 and affords more flexibility in round 3. The value point ceiling may not be as high, but the floor isn’t as low.<br /><br />Then there is the large and in charge Andre Smith. The value point hit in the 1st round and subsequent limiting of options in 2 and 3 makes him a bit unpalatable.<br /><br />As this column is getting a bit long already, and we are only at pick 7, we’ll hold off on trade down options for another post. And acting as the Raiders, we’ll swing for the fences and attempt to maximize our 3 round value by selecting Crabtree at seven.<br /><br />1)Raiders - Michael Crabtree<br />2)Jacksonville – Jeremy Maclin<br />3)Green Bay – Brain Orakpo<br />4)San Francisco – Andre Smith<br />5)Buffalo – Everette Browm<br />6)Denver – Tyson Jackson<br />7)Washington – Michael Oher<br />8)New Orleans – Rey Maualuga<br />9)Houston – Chris Wells<br />10)San Diego – Eben Britton<br />11)NY Jets – Mark Sanchez<br />12)Denver – Brian Cushing<br />13)Tampa Bay – Josh Freeman<br />14)Detroit – Peria Jerry<br />15)Philadelphia – Percy Harvin<br />16)Minnesota – Darrius Heyward-Bey<br />17)New England – Aaron Maybin<br />18)Atlanta – Robert Ayers<br />19)Miami – Vontae Davis<br />20)Baltimore – Hakeem Nicks<br />21)Indianapolis – Kenny Britt<br />22)Philadelphia – Knowshon Moreno<br />23)NY Giants – Clay Matthews<br />24)Tennessee – Darius Butler<br />25)Arizona – Brandon Pettigrew<br />26)Pittsburgh – Michael Johnson<br />27)Detroit – James Laurinaitis<br />28)New England – William Beatty<br />29)St. Louis – Brian Robiskie<br />30)Cleveland – Larry English<br />31)Seattle – Alex Mack<br />32)Cincinnati – Max Unger<br />33)Jacksonville – Alphonso Smith<br /><br />The Raiders are back on the clock with the 40th overall pick. Crabtree is on a plane to Oakland for a Sunday morning meet and greet with the media. And it is time to get serious again. The Raiders are feeling pretty good right now, and one look at their top 6 remaining players by Raider Value shows why.<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh0qIEgx1z8ZADNBbYtTujs-kOh4283sO7N_93c34GdzBZOqnKQeKLbzJT2-F8RVgt-LiyB3Yt29-YkAAznAGLaoUb8nIP_6cU2eFdkvPS5hQeZLMUJvuAW27Yoe5FnTi6wMJCBi3eXJjpt/s1600-h/value+2+chart+4.bmp"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 336px; height: 173px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh0qIEgx1z8ZADNBbYtTujs-kOh4283sO7N_93c34GdzBZOqnKQeKLbzJT2-F8RVgt-LiyB3Yt29-YkAAznAGLaoUb8nIP_6cU2eFdkvPS5hQeZLMUJvuAW27Yoe5FnTi6wMJCBi3eXJjpt/s400/value+2+chart+4.bmp" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5328741054601087138" border="0" /></a><br /><br />Now conventional wisdom may tell you that Delmas is the highest ranked player, and has slipped 6 spots to the Raiders, grab him now. But when you look at the chart, even if he is the highest rated player, his value to the Raiders isn’t as high as the DT who is still there. And a quick look at what remains of the potential 3rd round picks should clear things up. <br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEimUnekvYNEBwLYejVWtXKcOTtJVNXYkqI6pgt7JBaVwtkpMhhCRa-XTx0Poh-sm6TNtFXVDtVI9Rp2Vxz98odOuESNRRcgscYTHfR_3WxRnwZAoEygWa6ZvMoANiRj3Aum-mm2UEHTNcWA/s1600-h/value+2+chart+5.bmp"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 336px; height: 309px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEimUnekvYNEBwLYejVWtXKcOTtJVNXYkqI6pgt7JBaVwtkpMhhCRa-XTx0Poh-sm6TNtFXVDtVI9Rp2Vxz98odOuESNRRcgscYTHfR_3WxRnwZAoEygWa6ZvMoANiRj3Aum-mm2UEHTNcWA/s400/value+2+chart+5.bmp" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5328741357289524786" /></a><br /><br />Selecting Delmas in the 2nd would cause the Raiders to take a 600 point value hit. Without opening up the possibility of making that up in the 3rd. If the Raiders truly want to go with a combination of S & DT in the 2nd and 3rd, Hood and Vaughn gives a value of 2321, while Delmas and Moala gives a value of 1990. And there are higher score possibilities than Hood and Vaughn, Delmas and Moala just about maxes out your potential. <br /><br />So of course, since we are riding with Big Al, once again we swing for the fences and select Ziggy Hood at the 40 spot. <br /><br />I’ll save you recapping the rest of the 2nd round and the 3rd, and just point you to:<br /><br />http://www.thehuddlereport.com/Free/mockdrafts.shtml<br /><br />It has been entirely coincidence that my Raider picks have matched up with theirs. Lucky for me as it has made this easier. Since my board is currently only good through 3 rounds, we’ll take a look at what is still there for the Raiders, and see how we did. <br /><br />So based on their mock, what is there in terms of best value for the Raiders at 71?<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjtGt297uln2SEHQnByU_pmKpHnGdcxVFEm8mYdDCGHkGCZsUiitPnlJw5pcyI0L5YdjXNtrz1HyS8wQMJ7Fz4bfMN2qiWo6nBCdB2-4jw6REkbdegr1SflCT4_26AxtQrF6jtWv3l0o0aA/s1600-h/value+2+chart+6.bmp"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 336px; height: 257px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjtGt297uln2SEHQnByU_pmKpHnGdcxVFEm8mYdDCGHkGCZsUiitPnlJw5pcyI0L5YdjXNtrz1HyS8wQMJ7Fz4bfMN2qiWo6nBCdB2-4jw6REkbdegr1SflCT4_26AxtQrF6jtWv3l0o0aA/s400/value+2+chart+6.bmp" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5328741587073799810" /></a><br /><br />Some surprises to say the least, conservatively the Raiders had been hoping to get around 700 points of value out of their 3rd round pick. They can now max it out at 1278 by selecting Sidbury (remember since we have already selected a WR, we cut 200 points off their value). <br /><br />Crabtree – Hood – Sidbury<br /><br />At 8258 points on the Raider Value board, it would be hard to imagine the Raiders having a better 1st 3 rounds (ok I admit, I have already come up with ways to top it). Having the values predetermined made it easy to decide if you should pass on a sliding player (Delmas) or jump on them (Sidbury) on the fly. <br /><br />Of course, this is the Raiders I am drafting for, so just before making the call to NY to send in the Sidbury pick, Big Al wakes from his nap, sees Asher Allen on the board and overrules, selecting the CB with great speed. <br /><br />Crabtree – Hood – Asher<br /><br />7746 points, still a solid 1st three rounds, but once again Raider fans are fuming as the old man puts the secondary needs in front of building a solid line. <br /><br />Hope this helped clarify how I see this chart working as one tool among many in evaluating a team’s options in the draft. There are still plenty of things to look at as far as uses for this chart, including trade evaluation and a request for what happens when a premier player slips to the 2nd.brick.http://www.blogger.com/profile/04983353803798594796noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-526535362053774009.post-82946688019416360102009-04-13T17:13:00.000-07:002009-04-13T17:30:24.668-07:00Drafting For Value, A Different Way of Evaluating The Draft(Note this is a long one, I suggest you print it out and take it with you to the shitter, thanks goes out to Rupert, for reviewing the 1st draft of this and providing valuable feedback)<br /><br />For the last couple years I have stressed that teams should not simply draft the Best Player Available (BPA) or to fill a need. I have stressed maximizing the value of a team’s picks, but quantifying this when trying to argue the point with others has been difficult.<br /><br />Sure it is easy to debate if a RB should ever be taken in the top 10 by a team who isn’t drafting that high due to injuries or trade (the answer is no, and I will argue this until blue in the face, sorry McFadden fans). But to expand this across all positions as a starting point for any team looking at the draft, that is more difficult.<br /><br />With that in mind, I have tried to come up with a system, one that assigns values to players based on a number of factors, and weighs that against a value chart for the draft and the team’s needs. The goal is to be able to look at the chart and come up with the best case for the Raiders to maximize their value in the 1st three rounds of the draft.<br /><br />First thing first, I scrapped the traditional draft value chart. The NFL was a different monster when Jimmy Johnson and his brain trust came up with the chart in the 90’s. There was no salary cap, plan B free agency was a joke, and the players at the top of the draft got paid well, but not the absurd sums they do today.<br /><br />What I came up with is a system where the #1 pick is worth 5000 points, and every subsequent pick is worth 97% of the previous picks value. Then I added some modifiers. IMO the 11th pick of the draft is more valuable than the 10th, since once you get out of the top 10, the salary demands become more reasonable. But the value goes down more after 15, since you then enter the realm of 5 year vs. 6 year deals. Further modifications were made at the 33 spot, as, IMO, 33 is more valuable than 31 & 32 since you get an equivalent player, at a 2nd round price tag.<br /><br />(Yes I know there is no 8th round, but the NFL hands out about 32 compensatory picks on average, adding the equivalent of an 8th round to the draft, hence the 8 rounds on my chart).<br /><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg6fAIJ7dSYLS8hv01lKV7ATaVREWdgOXvxqb9pB5ZgC-18zBKbtEY1PNHZZRSUllKANhb82lb8IbmzMay2HUcvcb037MzKikAX9nZp_iEdnjbxl5li_qmDny3NsIIlbx0d_5I2jxosi0zt/s1600-h/value+chart.bmp"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 335px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg6fAIJ7dSYLS8hv01lKV7ATaVREWdgOXvxqb9pB5ZgC-18zBKbtEY1PNHZZRSUllKANhb82lb8IbmzMay2HUcvcb037MzKikAX9nZp_iEdnjbxl5li_qmDny3NsIIlbx0d_5I2jxosi0zt/s400/value+chart.bmp" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5324334337374524834" border="0" /></a><span style="font-size:78%;"><span style="font-style: italic;"><span style="font-size:85%;">Revised Pick Value Chart</span><br /></span></span></div><br />There is no reason that a team wanting to jump from the 3rd pick to the 1st should have to give up a 2nd and 3rd rounder. Under my revised system the value is simply a 3rd rounder. There is a reason so many of the trades in recent drafts make no sense to the talking heads on ESPN as they consult their charts. Their charts are out of date.<br /><br />So now I have, at least in my mind, my value chart for every pick in the draft. The next step is to stack the draft board regardless of team need. I don’t claim to watch every game, or be very good at evaluating players who are outside of the box. So I grabbed a ranking from a popular site. The Key was to find a ranking that was by grade, not by projected draft spot, or weighted by the value of the position (we’ll do that adjustment ourselves).<br /><br />Then that ranking was combined with the value chart above, resulting in the following ranking with trade chart value and player grade.<br /><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgy8fW10uilUwrDx_ygsefvDXqDvlgX8mD9io24VI4NuYjA_zq0Wk8Xa5_RRovpZCQlcS0Zg9qIBxiki8X104ZKJjHEI6AaTPVmGIrRQP_GIm5Bn-JHU4yLLG52ebeNy9qJV3j-Qbx-D0L9/s1600-h/top+15+by+grade.bmp"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 301px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgy8fW10uilUwrDx_ygsefvDXqDvlgX8mD9io24VI4NuYjA_zq0Wk8Xa5_RRovpZCQlcS0Zg9qIBxiki8X104ZKJjHEI6AaTPVmGIrRQP_GIm5Bn-JHU4yLLG52ebeNy9qJV3j-Qbx-D0L9/s400/top+15+by+grade.bmp" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5324334749304980738" border="0" /></a><span style="font-style: italic;font-size:85%;" >Top 15 Prospects by Grade W/ Pick Value</span><br /></div><br />Still with me? Because now it gets complicated.<br /><br />Now 3 factors are taken into account to get the players value modifier:<br /><br />1 – Grade. The most important factor of the rankings I found. The higher the player’s grade, the better the chance that they produce at the next level, in theory anyway. (Well, much better than the ranking by position I originally used).<br /><br />2 – Number of player at your position in the next 32. This is important for determining the scarcity of players at your position in the draft. For example after Stafford, there are only 2 other QB’s with rankings in the next 32 overall, while Jason Smith gets hurt since there are 4 more tackles in the next 32.<br /><br />3 – Positional Value Differential. This is used for determining the difference in value between the players at the same position. While there is only a 2 point differential between Jason Smith and Eugene Monroe, there is a 16 point difference between B.J. Raji and the next ranked DT.<br /><br />Those 3 factors are put into a formula to obtain the player’s value modifier. With the depth of OT’s in the 1st round, Jason Smith only gets a modifier of +4, while Mark Sanchez, due to there being only one more QB with a 1st round grade, gets a huge 113 point boost.<br /><br />After that the player gets an NFL position modifier. This is based on the scarcity and importance of the position in the NFL game. The highest value goes to QB, as is fitting for the most important position in the modern game. Then from there it hits the other key players on both sides of the passing game (offensive tackles, and the pass rushers who go against them) down to the plug and play positions (RB, FB, S). Look to the franchise numbers assigned to each position to get a good gauge of that position’s value to NFL teams.<br /><br />The value modifier is added to the original value and the total is multiplied by the positional modifier to get the adjusted player value:<br /><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgZyfWdpVAZCz6BV9iDob1Txyq14i2pOzBO90PtMPhxchWPZ29F2N7OpqQuYqjn9WQlmWQLrdoW2pOK0N2fj4XXw7Jl8_l5OqcEWryC6HDvBh8qe6IAaBi4ezUt12SY9DdieJUaXz_Riuek/s1600-h/top+15+by+NFL+Value.bmp"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 299px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgZyfWdpVAZCz6BV9iDob1Txyq14i2pOzBO90PtMPhxchWPZ29F2N7OpqQuYqjn9WQlmWQLrdoW2pOK0N2fj4XXw7Jl8_l5OqcEWryC6HDvBh8qe6IAaBi4ezUt12SY9DdieJUaXz_Riuek/s400/top+15+by+NFL+Value.bmp" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5324335013898559442" border="0" /></a><span style="font-style: italic;font-size:85%;" >Top 15 Prospects by Adjusted Player Value</span><br /></div><br />Feel like you are reading Pro Football Prospectus yet? I am guessing I have put half my readers to sleep by now. Leaving one of you who has gotten to this point.<br /><br />As you can see, Jason Smith remains the top rated player in terms of value, but my personal favorite player in the draft, Aaron Curry, drops to 11th.<br /><br />Curry’s drop should not be surprising. There are 5 other LB’s in the draft with 1st round rankings, and the linebacker position is not valued as much in the current NFL as evidenced by the franchise number for the position when compared to the franchise numbers for QB’s, OT’s and DE’s.<br /><br />Then there is Josh Freeman, who jumps up to 13. This illustrates both the premium put on his position, and the scarcity of viable quarterbacks in this year’s draft.<br /><br />All this is great, but we still have to get to the key point. How do you maximize the value of the draft pick for your team? You have determined the player’s value at this point with no consideration for team needs. Now is the time to add in that one final factor.<br /><br />The team need modifier is based on the same sliding scale as the NFL positional modifier, but of course taking into account the team’s current depth chart and the remaining years of the contracts for the players at the position.<br /><br />Since I claim to be a Raiders blog, I will obviously use the Raiders for my example. The Raiders low modifier is RB. With Fargas, McFadden, Bush and Rankin already on the depth chart, the Raiders have both depth and youth. The high modifier is WR where the Raiders have plenty of unproven youth, but no depth. WR is closely followed by DT, DE, S and OT. So now with the Raiders needs added in, the Raiders player value for the top 15 players in the draft looks like this:<br /><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgzAYS4fIPz-GdcM0osaDUtR0gNR2g94U8T6IlXltuDXAqfO-Wv1mF8SR9ni7vXQ1nYhiIEloLE0LOgWKk9nOP73EOe_QeKRdZIQJ3NVpoUOb82x8GcvVqS8GYTfidvYXmx3LxxDqkRWIy_/s1600-h/Top+15+by+Raider+Value.bmp"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 308px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgzAYS4fIPz-GdcM0osaDUtR0gNR2g94U8T6IlXltuDXAqfO-Wv1mF8SR9ni7vXQ1nYhiIEloLE0LOgWKk9nOP73EOe_QeKRdZIQJ3NVpoUOb82x8GcvVqS8GYTfidvYXmx3LxxDqkRWIy_/s400/Top+15+by+Raider+Value.bmp" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5324335291817140786" border="0" /></a><span style="font-style: italic;font-size:85%;" >Top 15 Players By Value to The Raiders</span><br /></div><br />With a revised value chart rating of 4165, the Raiders have plenty of potential picks that represent great value in the 1st round. Not a bad position to be in. The Raiders can stand pat at 7 and easily expect to get no worse than the 6th player in terms of value for their team, and more likely should better that, as both QB’s and Curry could go before the Raiders select.<br /><br />But the draft is not a one round animal. In order to maximize the value you get in the draft you have to project further than the 1st round. In order to keep this simple (HA, if you are still reading this I am impressed) I will just add in some information on 2nd and 3rd rounders.<br /><br />With the Raiders drafting at 40, let’s stick to the players ranked from 35 to 50 in adjusted player value to get a realistic feel for who may potentially be there:<br /><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhMR4MsA67Aaiq5ixI20Uuk_Mbaln6MoTPO9BYgPY5QzL1yjm8Cwgzh4VzaLoB4CAs2vAI99CeipGryZmtSJRl1tYiKnoGzfp2tbskyc-acKe_bTkEepdgk72DMXAaO4DLWwZNNVQ2IiJPk/s1600-h/2nd+Round+Prospects.bmp"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 323px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhMR4MsA67Aaiq5ixI20Uuk_Mbaln6MoTPO9BYgPY5QzL1yjm8Cwgzh4VzaLoB4CAs2vAI99CeipGryZmtSJRl1tYiKnoGzfp2tbskyc-acKe_bTkEepdgk72DMXAaO4DLWwZNNVQ2IiJPk/s400/2nd+Round+Prospects.bmp" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5324335528759898914" border="0" /></a><span style="font-style: italic;font-size:85%;" >Potential 2nd Round Picks</span><br /></div><br />The Value of the Raiders 2nd round pick is 1756 based on my revised value chart. There is far less value for the Raiders at positions of need in the 2nd than the 1st.<br /><br />So what does that tell you, it indicates to me that this is a very tradable pick for the Raiders. The key is how do you react as the draft unfolds? Do you try to jump up to get a player like Ziggy Hood or Kenny Britt who fills a need and represents great value? Do you stand pat and hope that a value player drops to you and take that player or reach? Or do you wait, see that the value isn’t there for your team, and trade down?<br /><br />Before we try to answer that, lets look at what may still be there in the 3rd round. And take the 1st three rounds in as a whole.<br /><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEguzsf5KCqRuyYJGpqR3bpC65gzu-6W_QOyV-SgdRioZOmMbVpT5mEy_II8Eo9efVKSAhNn7nEP-VwfVyFMEqTbZ2NxyImoCExE6pJlwAG_i8JGXRnlRqnNwnV0f-3wED8qCJhIJmTHwSui/s1600-h/3rd+round+prospects.bmp"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 340px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEguzsf5KCqRuyYJGpqR3bpC65gzu-6W_QOyV-SgdRioZOmMbVpT5mEy_II8Eo9efVKSAhNn7nEP-VwfVyFMEqTbZ2NxyImoCExE6pJlwAG_i8JGXRnlRqnNwnV0f-3wED8qCJhIJmTHwSui/s400/3rd+round+prospects.bmp" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5324335792565176722" border="0" /></a><span style="font-size:85%;"><span style="font-style: italic;">Potential 3rd Round Picks</span></span><br /></div><br />With a pick value of 683 for the 71st pick, based on the revised chart, there once again is not allot of value for the Raiders at this position. But, you cannot look at the draft in terms of one round at a time when trying to maximize value. You have to look at your draft as a whole.<br /><br />When you combine the Raiders 1st three picks this season, you get a total potential value of 6604 on the revised value chart. So lets look at some of the more popular 3 round series that Raider fans and draft experts have thrown out there, and see how they compare to the target value of 6604.<br /><br />1)Crabtree, Brace, More – 7250 points<br />2)Raji, Delmas, Robiskie – 6396 points<br />3)Orakpo, Britt, Chung – 7397 points<br /><br />Now I am not trying to argue against Raji or for Orakpo at this point, I am merely illustrating how one pick starts the dominos in motion and effects the potential overall value of the draft for the team. We still have two weeks until the draft to discuss potential trades, and who I feel the Raiders should draft 1st to maximize their potential value in this years draft.<br /><br />That’s right, this column checks in at 7 pages, almost 2000 words and 6 charts, and we are just getting started.brick.http://www.blogger.com/profile/04983353803798594796noreply@blogger.com0