Monday, December 16, 2013

Garrett's Process is Running Out of Time





Trust the process. This is what Jason Garrett preaches every week in press conferences whatever the result – win by 20 or lose by 20. Get better each day.  Don’t get caught up in results. The Cowboys need a new process to trust in. This one has only led to mediocrity. 

After a surprising Eagles loss to the lowly Vikings, and Dallas jumping out to a 26-3 halftime lead over a Packers team without Aaron Rodgers, Dallas was in prime position to retake the lead in the NFC East. However, the team collapsed in the second half and lost 37-36. This loss had everything America’s team has become known for: an injury riddled defense that has made Josh McCown and Matt Flynn look like Dan Marino and John Elway, in consecutive weeks, gave up 5 touchdowns on 5 possessions. The coaching staff made the questionable decision to throw the football while they were leading 36-31 late in the fourth quarter in one of the few games this season where Demarco Muarry and the offensive line had established the run game. Muarry piled up 134 yards on 18 carries, averaging 7.4 yards per carry. Tony Romo threw two late fourth quarter interceptions.  There were even off the field distractions with Dez Bryant walking to the locker room before the Packers took a knee to end the game. The usually predictable Garrett called out his quarterback in the post-game press conference saying Tony changed the play to a throw on the critical interception that led to the Packers go-ahead touchdown.  Both of these issues will be talked about at length on ESPN this week with the headline “Trouble in Big D?”. The national media will question the maturity of Dez Bryant, and the leadership of Tony Romo all week. Those are the least of the Cowboy’s worries though.

Maybe it’s a Thanksgiving hangover, or the spirit of giving during the holidays that makes Dallas so generous to their opponents late in the year. The Cowboys are 7-10 in the months of December and January under Jason Garrett. Even with all the turmoil of the past two weeks the Cowboys still control their own destiny in the playoff race. If they win their last two games they would get to host a wild-card playoff game in Jerry World.  They travel to Washington next week to face another backup quarterback in Kirk Cousins, and a coach in Mike Shanahan who seems to be doing everything in his power to get fired at the end of the year. The season will probably come down to another winner-take-all division game this time against the Eagles at home. Based on what’s happened the last few weeks, and the last few years, there isn’t much reason to have confidence in this team making the playoffs. Garett calling out Romo is uncharacteristic of him, and it’s indicative of a coach who is worried about his job. Jerry Jones said Garett was safe next year, but that doesn’t mean anything. If he really wanted to give him a sense of security, he would have given him a contract extension. There is a lot on the line for Dallas in their last two games, and for the sake of Garrett’s job, they better trust the process extra hard these next two weeks.

Stephen Simcox



Saturday, September 7, 2013

Cowboys Classic Recap


Here is a my recap of TCU’s loss to LSU on Saturday and my keys to the game.

There was some concern with how the inexperienced TCU Offensive Line would deal with one of the SEC’s best defensive fronts. How did TCU respond? By throwing on 6 of their first 7 plays. Offensive play calling by TCU was just that, Offensive. TCU ran the ball 25 times and passed 29. No attempt to establish the run against a team playing without their top linebacker. When TCU did attempt to run, they were pretty successful.

  B.J Catalon 8 carries for 53 yards (6.5 per carry)
  Waymon James 6 for 33 (5.5 per carry)
  Casey Pachall 2 for 16 (8.0 per carry)

This needs to change. By contrast, LSU ran 80 Offensive plays (46 runs, 34 passes) The ability to run the ball wears down a defense and causes the linebackers to cheat up  to stop the run. This leads directly to my next point.

The LSU receiving tandem of Odell Beckham and Jarvis Landry had good stats but upon further review, the TCU secondary was pretty good. Here is the breakdown:

  Kevin White was the focus of much of the LSU targeting but only gave up 4 receptions while defending 4 passes.
  Jason Verrett had 3 passes defended while only giving up 2 receptions for 18 yards.
  Sam Carter only allowed a 20 yard TD to Landry, although it was a 7 yard route and a missed tackle.
  Chris Hackett allowed 2 receptions for 27 yards.
  Elisha Olabode allowed 3 receptions for 46 yards.

TCU was playing a soft zone for much of the game. This was more conservative than normally seen under Coach Patterson. Most of these passes were in the zone just over the Linebackers and in front of the Safeties.

I fully expect this team to bounce back this Saturday when TCU hosts Southeastern Louisiana at 11 am at Amon G. Carter Stadium. I fully expect TCU to bounce back from this loss and show the rest of the Big 12 who they really are. Expect 100 yard rushing games from BOTH Waymon James and B.J. Catalon. 



















Until next time....
Geoff
@geoffrey_craig

Friday, July 26, 2013

The Head & Shoulders Curse



Everybody has heard of the Madden Curse right? Well in case you haven’t, it’s when the player on the cover of Madden football has gone on to suffer some form of injury or have the worst statistical year of their career. Anyway, when I was an intern at 105.3The Fan in Dallas I came up with something called the Head & Shoulders Curse. I came up with idea when I first saw the ridiculous shampoo commercial starring C.J. Wilson and Josh Hamilton of the Los Angeles Angels. I started thinking of previous sports stars who have starred in these great commercials and then gone on to have sup-par years.

 
Troy Polamalu, Safety for the Pittsburgh Steelers who first appeared in a Head &Shoulders commercial prior to the 2009 NFL season. That season he only appeared in 5 of 16 possible games, having career lows in every statistical category.



Joe Mauer, Catcher of the Minnesota Twins joined the Head & Shoulders team in 2011. Mauer underwent Arthroscopic Knee surgery and battled Pneumonia post surgery limiting him to 82 of 162 games. Another player joins Head &Shoulders and has the worst year of their career.




Olympic Swimmer Michael Phelps joined prior to the 2012 Olympics in London. Phelps placed fourth behind fellow American Ryan Lochte, Thiago Pereira of Brazil, and Kosuke Hagino of Japan in the 400-meter individual medley. It was the first time Phelps failed to medal in an Olympic event since 2000. His 4 gold medals was his lowest gold medal total at any Olympics or World Championships.



Josh Hamilton, Oufielder of the Los Angeles Angels left Texas for the glamour and glitz of LA, and soon after landed his first commercial sponsorship with Head & Shoulders. After signing a 5-year $125 million contract, the Head & Shoulders curse is reeking having on Hambone. Hamilton has hitting career lows for Batting Average (.223), Slugging Percentage (.409), and On Base Percentage (.278). He also has a League Leading eight(8) errors in the outfield. Angels fans think he stinks, but at least Katie likes the way he smells.


I’m sure this all sounds crazy. Curses, who believes in curses? Surely no one in Chicago or Boston. Maybe it’s just all coincidence; I just thought you should know about it. Until next time...

Geoff

Thursday, July 25, 2013

The Biogenesis Scandal




Hello baseball fans, We are just three days removed from the season-ending suspension of Brewers Outfielder Ryan Braun due to his connection to the Biogenesis Clinic. Now everyone is focused on Yankees Third Baseman Alex Rodriguez and what some media outlets have reported will be a 150-game suspension. With more than 20 current major leaguers including the aforementioned Braun and Rodriguez involved in this latest scandal, what should be done in regards to the testing. Both Melky Cabrera and Bartolo Colon were suspended 50 games last year for a failed test and appear on the Biogenesis Report. Are the penalties not strong enough? I believe they are not.

The benefits of using steroids and HGH still outweigh the consequences. Here are three prominent examples:



Melky Cabrera was a first time All-Star last year while playing for the San Francisco Giants. Cabrera had a single and a two-run home run in the National League’s 8-0 win. He was named MVP of the game and led the NL to having Home-Field Advantage in the World Series, which the San Francisco Giants went on to win. Despite being on the restricted list during the playoffs, Cabrera still received a World Series ring for his previous contributions to the ball club.











Bartolo Colon is a Starting Pitcher for the Oakland Athletics.  Colon was suspended August 22, 2012, for 50 games by MLB after testing positive for synthetic. Although he was suspended late in the year, the Athletics still were able to catch the Texas Rangers in the division and earn a trip to the playoffs for the first time since 2006.








Ryan Braun is an Outfielder for the Milwaukee Brewers. Other than Alex Rodriguez, Ryan Braun is the most recognizable name connected to the Biogenesis Clinic. Braun was an All-Star, Silver Slugger, and was the National League MVP for the 2011 season. He came under scrutiny on December 10, 2011 when a confidential urine test result was leaked to ESPN’s Outside the Lines. The test would result in a 50-game suspension, but Braun appealed the result. Braun’s lawyers argued that the sample was not handled properly. The sample was collected on Saturday, but the collector said there was no FedEx open to drop the sample off so he stored the samples until Monday and then mailed them off. Although there was no evidence of tampering, MLB's drug-testing program states that the samples should be sent to the laboratory on the same day they are collected "absent unusual circumstance." On July 22, 2013, MLB suspended Braun for the remainder of the 2013 season (65 games and the postseason) for his involvement with the Biogenesis clinic.


Not only did the players still benefit from cheating, but so did their teams. Without Colon, the A’s probably don’t win the AL West by 1 game. The San Francisco Giants don’t get Home-Field Advantage in the World Series without Cabrera’s heroics in the All-Star Game. There is no current way for MLB to punish the teams of cheaters. Here are some of my ideas of how baseball can start to clean up the game:

Post-Season bans for the teams of offenders would discourage cheating more than just suspensions for players. 
50-game suspension for first time offenders changed to season long(162 games) without pay. 

100-game suspension for second offense becomes a lifetime ban.

Just because it’s baseball doesn’t mean it has to have 3-strike rule.

Lets just wait and see what MLB does with all the players involved in the Biogenesis case. Bud Selig doesn't seem too happy about it.


Until next time...

Geoff

Thursday, July 18, 2013

How Ed O'Bannon killed NCAA Football





Thanks, Ed. Now NCAA Football 14 may be the last college football video game any of us can enjoy.

Yesterday The NCAA pulled the plug on their relationship with EA Sports. The NCAA released the following statement:

    The NCAA has made the decision not to enter a new contract for the license of its name and logo for the EA Sports NCAA Football video game. The current contract expires in June 2014, but our timing is based on the need to provide EA notice for future planning. As a result, the NCAA Football 2014 video game will be the last to include the NCAA’s name and logo. We are confident in our legal position regarding the use of our trademarks in video games. But given the current business climate and costs of litigation, we determined participating in this game is not in the best interests of the NCAA.


    The NCAA has never licensed the use of current student-athlete names, images or likenesses to EA. The NCAA has no involvement in licenses between EA and former student-athletes. Member colleges and universities license their own trademarks and other intellectual property for the video game. They will have to independently decide whether to continue those business arrangements in the future.

The NCAA made its decision amid continued litigation with former UCLA basketball player Ed O’Bannon, who’s filed an antitrust lawsuit in hopes current student-athletes can see a share of the revenue generated by their abilities. The former UCLA basketball star didn't understand why he wasn't being paid when the NCAA and EA Sports used his likeness in video games after he was no longer an NCAA student-athlete. In NCAA Basketball 09, there is a character “PF-31” that is similar to the 6-foot-8 O’Bannon — the player shoots left-handed, plays power forward and has O'Bannon's jersey -- No. 31.

The problem is that when you play an NCAA sport, you have to sign a waiver that relinquishes your right to make money off your likeness as an NCAA athlete (Jerseys, Programs, Books, etc.) The NCAA let EA Sports use those players' likenesses in video games, like the NCAA Football and NCAA March Madness franchises. Ed O’Bannon signed the waiver while he was a current student-athlete. He is arguing that by having a character that so much resembles himself, he and other former athletes should be entitled to some type of compensation. A trial is tentatively scheduled for 2014. A judge recently ruled that current NCAA athletes could also be listed as plaintiffs in the suit.

This seems like it will be the end of the line for EA Sports and College Football. But wait, just hours after the statement from the NCAA, Andrew Wilson, Executive Vice President of EA SPORTS released a statement regarding the future of the Football franchise:

By now, most fans will have heard that EA's licensing agreement with the NCAA is set to expire and that we have agreed to part ways.  I'm sure gamers are wondering what this means.

This is simple:  EA SPORTS will continue to develop and publish college football games, but we will no longer include the NCAA names and marks.  Our relationship with the Collegiate Licensing Company is strong and we are already working on a new game for next generation consoles which will launch next year and feature the college teams, conferences and all the innovation fans expect from EA SPORTS.

We took big creative strides with this year's college game and you’ll see much more in the future.  We love college football and look forward to making more games for our fans.

Only time will tell what happens next. In the meantime, head over to your EA Sports Locker and download your favorite Team Builder schools and rosters and get prepared to play NCAA Football 14 for the next few years unless you loved Bill Walsh Football, EA’s first attempt at a College Football game, and its extensive list of college football powerhouses:

Alabama
Nebraska
Arizona
Provo (BYU)
Boston (Boston College)
Pullman (Wash. St.)
College Station (Texas A&M)
Raleigh (NC State)
Colorado
S.C. (USC)
Columbus (Ohio State)
South Bend (Notre Dame)
Florida
Stanford
Georgia
State College (Penn State)
Hawaii
Syracuse
Kansas
Tallahassee (Florida State)
Miami
Tennessee
Michigan
Washington

Ed should be happy that EA Sports used his likeness (allegedly) in any of its games.
His stellar NBA career didn’t warrant him being included in anything. If Ed O’Bannon wins this lawsuit, it could change the landscape of not just video games, but all NCAA sports and how players are compensated. Current Student-Athletes could end up getting a percentage of jersey sales, but that's a bridge we will cross when we get there.

Until next time...

Geoff