Saturday, December 29, 2007
The Top Ten Sports Stories of 2007
1- April-December. Michael Vick busted for dogfighting.
The fall of an American superstar. From the initial denials to the subsequent confessions, all the way through to his guilty plea and 23 month jail sentence, Michael Vick was unquestionably the biggest sports story of the calendar year 2007. A star quarterback sent to prison at (or near) the height of his career for cruelty towards animals, Michael Vick's saga connected with people from all walks of life, sports fans or not. The Atlanta Falcons' quarterback was a man of two different faces: one public, one private, and the private face clearly wasn't anything pretty. Eligible for parole in May of 2009, it's hard to see Michael Vick playing football again before fall of that year at the earliest. If you've got a heart, and there's room for forgiveness somewhere inside of it, you're hoping that this story ends with some sort of redemption at the end. Hoping, at least.
2- April-August. Barry Bonds takes down Hank Aaron's HR mark.
This was the biggest story from the start of the 2007 baseball season through to mid-August. Barry Balco now has 762 home runs, seven more than Hank Aaron's career mark of 755. The fact of the matter is, Barry Bonds was a Hall of Famer before the HGH, so he has to be a Hall of Famer after it, right? It's not like he did anything that violated MLB's rules at the time. Bud Selig is the real man to blame here. Easily the worst commissioner in baseball history. Not only did he allow the steroids' environment to exist, he more than facilitated it. The home run record is probably the most hallowed mark in all of American sports. Barry Bonds now owns it. Huge story, whether you believe it was earned fairly or not.
3- September-December. New England's perfect season.
Tom Brady throws 50 touchdown passes, Randy Moss makes 23 touchdown catches and the Patriots cruise to the first 16-0 mark in NFL history. A tremendous feat in any NFL campaign, let alone nowadays in the current landscape of parity. Clearly New England needs to win the Super Bowl in 2008 to ensure that the season goes down as the all-time greatest, but it's already been a magical ride for Bill Belichik's crew. Spygate was all the motivation he needed. You think he was coaching angry this year? You think?
4- December. George Mitchell steroids report released.
It took way too long for this thing to come out. And when it finally did, you had to have major questions about the actual "evidence" listed within. But clearly, a lot of it was true, because you haven't heard many denials from the guys who were named. Roger Clemens has maintained his innocence the most vehemently, but then, he has the most to lose. Clemens is to pitchers now what Bonds is to hitters. A guy who took performance enhancers (when it wasn't against the rules) to take his physique into the next stratosphere. How Cooperstown handles all of this will be fascinating to see.
5- January. Peyton Manning finally wins the big one.
He was supposed to be the guy who couldn't win the big game. Well, not anymore. Mr. Commercial himself stepped up and carried the Colts on his back to a Super Bowl Championship in February of 2007. Taking out Brady and the Patriots in the AFC Championship was a thing of beauty for football fans who wanted Manning to just get to the final game. Dominating a very strong Chicago Bears' defense in the title tilt sealed the deal. Choker no more.
6- April. Florida Gators win men's hoops championship for 2nd straight year.
It's simple: no team had ever done this before. The same starting five goes back-to-back for the national championship, and really does cruise through the NCAA Tournament in March. Joakim Noah, Al Horford, Corey Brewer, Taurean Green and Lee Humphrey played with complete selflessness that head coach Billy Donovan has to take credit for. Given the current landscape of college basketball, we'll probably never see anything like this again.
7- September-December. College football season is year of the upset.
USC, Ohio State, West Virginia, Oklahoma, LSU, Texas, Missouri, Florida. Just a sampling of the top contenders in the country who lost games while at or near the top of the polls. This was without question the craziest season in college football history and proof positive that an eight-team playoff is the only way to rightfully decide the national champion.
8- September/December. Boxing delivers two great fights.
Jermain Taylor and Kelly Pavlik fought a highly enjoyable seven-round middleweight championship on the Boardwalk in Atlantic City, NJ, in late September. Taylor knocked Pavlik down (and almost out) in round two, then Youngstown's Finest somehow climbed to his feet, and finished off Taylor in round seven. The rematch is set for February in Las Vegas and should be fantastic. Meanwhile, Floyd Mayweather and Ricky Hatton turned in a tremendous USA vs. UK 138 pound bout in early December. Mayweather is the best pound for pound fighter in the world today. Boxing will never be the most popular sport in America again, but it's definitely not dead.
9- October. Boston Red Sox win 2nd World Title in 4 years.
The Curse of the Bambino? Never heard of it. After going 86 years without a World Championship, the BoSox have now won two in four seasons. Anchored by the dominant pitching of Josh Beckett, Curt Schilling, Daisuke Matsuzaka and Jonathan Papelbon, Boston steamrolled through the postseason, sweeping Colorado four games to none in the Fall Classic. David Ortiz and Manny Ramirez are one of the greatest 3-4 punches in baseball history. Manager Terry Francona is the new Rodney Dangerfield: he gets no respect.
10- October. Marion Jones busted for steroids, loses track titles.
The tip of the iceberg, really. Marion Jones, the star of the 2000 Olympics in Sydney had long denied, adamantly, that she ever used performance enhancing drugs. Then the feds found the evidence they needed to make a strong case against her, and Jones folded like a house of cards. Pleading guility to perjury and obstruction, Jones apologized for lying to everyone and setting a bad example for the youth of America. What she was really apologizing for was getting caught.
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Honorable Mention:
-Sean Taylor killed (Darrent Williams earlier in year)
-Virginia Tech bounces back from massacre
-Roger Federer and Tiger Woods continue domination of tennis and golf
-San Antonio Spurs win fourth NBA title
-Anaheim Ducks win first Stanley Cup
-Brett Favre finds the fountain of youth
-Adrian Peterson's monster rookie year
-New England's spygate scandal
-Colorado Rockies win 21 of 22, surge to first World Series
-New York Mets' historic collapse in NL East
-ARod's opts out of record contract for new record contract
-LeBron James' coming out party in NBA East Finals against Detroit
-Jimmie Johnson wins NASCAR crown for 2nd straight year
-Arkansas Razorback athletics: DMac, coaching drama, hoops and football
-JAB
Josh's Top 10 Movies of 2007
Here we go:
1- 300
It says a lot that a digitally-enhanced film gets my vote as the top movie of 2007. But this wasn't a great year for cinema, particularly in the first six months of the calendar, so I'm giving my top nod to the story of the Spartans in Ancient Greece. A group of noble, high energy warriors fight to the death to keep their city alive against barbarous intruders. The visuals in this one are stunning, the plot is easy to follow and I have no qualms about calling it the most well-done film of the year.
2- American Gangster
Ridley Scott gets the director's dream cast and keeps it punchy. Denzel Washington and Russell Crowe square off on opposite sides of the law: Denzel plays longtime drug dealer Frank Lucas while Crowe is the ethical cop on the heat of his trail. The two actors share only a brief scene near the end of the movie, but watching them take their turns in method is good enough for me. Strong soundtrack, historical basis, and a job well done by a big money team in making this one.
3- Darjeeling Limited
Ultra-talented director Wes Anderson returns with this tale of three brothers on a spirtual odyssey in India. Owen Wilson (in easily the best performance of his career), Adrien Brody and Jason Schwartzman play the siblings who ride the train Darjeeling through the hills and valleys of India. It's the death of their father that brings them together initially, while the tragedy that unites them on a treacherous riverbend solidifies the bond. The film has hilarious dialogue that keeps it together despite some slight structural flaws. Brody's resigned "I'm just gonna hold this one in for a while" is the best line in American cinema this year.
4- Knocked Up
The only film I saw this year that had me laughing all the way through. A slacker (played by Seth Rogen) impregnates a high-achieving entertainment reporter. Most of the jokes come from the circle of friends the slacker hangs around with, but Catherine Heigl is both funny and believeable as the leading lady. As with all of director Judd Apatow's flicks, this movie does a deft job of balancing great humor and the heartfelt nature of decent drama. Probably the most fun of any movie this year.
5- Superbad
A knockoff of Knocked Up, this comedy still stands on its own. Written by Seth Rogen, a couple of "loser" high schoolers do their best to get booze, get laid, and keep their friendship while running from the clueless cops. Chistopher Mintz's Mclovin is already one of the great film geeks of all time, and his performance in this one steals the show. Judd Apatow's crew is offically dominating Hollywood.
6- No Country for Old Men
Cormac McCarthy's novel is brought to the big screen by the Coen brothers. The book is fantastic (most of McCarthy's stuff is), while the Coens get themselves out of the hibernation forced by duds like Intolerable Cruelty. Josh Brolin and Tommy Lee Jones give strong performances as the man who stumbles on $2 million and the sherriff who's trying to help him, while Javier Bardem should win an Oscar for his demonic interpretation of badass killer Anton Chigurh. The shootout in the middle of the book is wasted on film, but the story is so good that the move can't help but hold your attention all the way through.
7- Reign Over Me
Am I the only one who really liked this movie? Don Cheadle---a tremendous talent---is the dentist friend of Adam Sandler, a man who's entire family perished in the tragedy of 9/11. Sandler can only relate to the world through his IPod and video game system, while Cheadle tries to break down his walls. An emotional film that hits hard. The use of "Drive All Night" by Bruce Springsteen might be the best placement of a song in a movie this year.
8- The Lives of Others
A foreign language film (German with subtitles) that shows life in East Germany under the watchful eye of the secret police. A famed writer tries to sort out the details of his existence while everything he says or does is known in advance. A warning against Big Brother is a warning for citizens everywhere, regardless of country of origin.
9- Rescue Dawn
Most folks probably didn't take the time to see this Werner Herzog effort, and while it's not on par with a Herzog film like Wrath of God, it's still definitely a quality production. Christian Bale is a Vietnamese POW who leads a group of hostages on their way out of a camp in the middle of a jungle. Bale has emerged as a superstar.
10- Borat
Sacha Baron Cohen takes his Ali G character to the big screen, with largely funny results. I'm still not sure what exactly Cohen is trying to achieve---with all of his anti-semitic and straight racist language. He's Jewish himself, but that doesn't justify keeping your own people down. Or is he just poking fun at the ignorance of others? This movie made a big splash. You decide.
-JAB
Tuesday, December 18, 2007
Josh's Top 10 Albums of 2007
A couple of late in the year holiday releases---Paul Thomas Anderson's There Will Be Blood and Denzel Washington's The Great Debaters---have forced me to stave off on the Top 10 Movies of the year, but I'll get my list of best flicks out to you fine folks soon enough. Also, look for the Top 10 Sports Stories of 2007 before the New Year's ball drops. I realize it's probably a bit strange that I like Top Ten lists so much. Maybe it's just all the Letterman I watched growing up.
Anyway, and more importantly, happy holidays to everyone! If you need some music to bob your head to right about now, the following list of albums would be worth a little of your money and a lot of your time. Here are my picks for the Top 10 Albums of 2007:
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1- Arcade Fire, Neon Bible
"Every night my dream's the same/The same old city with a different name."
Far from a perfect album, Neon Bible is, in many ways, a tremendous achievement because of its flaws. Striving for greatness, Win Butler, wife Regine Chassagne and the rest of their Canadian crew recorded most of this disc over twelve months inside of a giant old church. The creaks and groans of the building did nothing to hurt this album's spectacular acoustics, ranging from the guitar-driven urgency in Springsteenfest "Keep the Car Running" to the soft prayer of organ-laden "Intervention" to the quiet anger simmering on ivory throughout "Ocean of Noise." Released in March, not every song on Neon Bible stands on its own, but that's part of what makes the whole so strong. Apocalypse, war, poverty, self-loathing and love are just several of the many themes the group tackles here. Arcade Fire's debut album, Funeral, probably had a bit more of a "wow" factor to it. But this is still a great effort by a young band just learning how to use everything at its disposal while at the peak of its powers. My album of the year.
2- Kanye West, Graduation
"Can I talk my shit again?"
Please do, Mr. West. Career album number three continues the rocket ride Kanye's been on over the last four years. Face it: most of the tracks on this one just make you want to get up and shake your booty. "Champion", "Good Life", "The Glory" and "Homecoming" are all grooving floor rompers. "Stronger"---with its bizarre Daft Punk sample---not only works, but would absolutely be on most music fans' mix CD for the soundtrack to 2007. It might even be the lead single. Clearly, Kanye West is as good a producer as there is in the music game today. Is he an elite MC? Absolutely not. But with age may come a little more ego checking at the door, and a la "Big Brother" Jigga, he may just get there yet.
3- Wilco, Sky Blue Sky"Nothing more important than to know someone's listening."
You could argue that this was the best "album" of the year. Which is to say, almost none of the tracks on this disc jump out at you on their own. But taken as a whole, from the twangy rumbles of "Impossile Germany" to the dream world of "Leave Me (Like You Found Me)", there may not have been a better vision of cohesiveness on a record this year, and there most certainly hasn't been in Wilco's career. Lead man Jeff Tweedy is older and wiser now, but still as mournful as ever for the lost youth of his past. Truly one of those albums you just throw on the CD player and let play from beginning to end. And again. And again...
4- Jay-Z, American Gangster"Pray for me."
Inspired by Ridley Scott's movie of the same title, Jay-Z bounces back from the lameness of Kindgom Come to release his most relevant music in four years. It's a pseudo autobiography for Mr. Hove. Musically, at least. "Pray" and "Fallin" are dynamite as the opener and closer (how funky is that hook on "Fallin"!?!), but "Roc Boys" is the best song on the album, and may be the coolest hip hop song this year. Why'd Jigga retire in the first place again? Uh, you got me on that one.
5- Radiohead, In Rainbows"How come I end up where I started? How come I end up where I went wrong?"
The greatest living band in the world today is in prime form on its seventh album. All the fanfare and headlines surrounding the self-release of this one via the Internet overshadowed how good the music actually sounds. Ten tracks that flow seamlessly into one another, starting with the rock drop of "15 Step" and "Bodysnatchers", floating through slow burners like "Arpeggi" and "All I Need" before closing with the dramatics of "Videotape." Even with the pay-what-you-want distribution system, Thom Yorke and company prove that, in pop music, the album still matters more than anything else.
6- Spoon, Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga"Blow out your cherry bomb for me."
Austin's finest are it again, with maybe their most polished effort to date. This one has Beatles overtones written all over, especially in ditties like "You've Got Your Cherry Bomb" and "Underdog." Gotta love the horns sprinkled around, even if some of the lyrics sound like they fell out of a major acid trip. Strong opener "Don't Make Me a Target" is both political and direct. This album proves that a terrible title doesn't necessarily mean anything about what it holds inside.
7- Bruce Springsteen, Magic"Is there anybody alive out there?"
A deep album really, about America and the perilous times in which we live. But it's got the beautiful facade of E Street's jangly sound too. This is as old school as Bruce gets with his homeboys anymore. "Radio Nowhere", "Livin' in the Future" and "Long Walk Home" are all instant classics. "Terry's Song" is the best song about friendship the Boss has written since "Backstreets." Besides how good it all sounds, any excuse to get the E Street Band back on tour is good enough for me.8- Seal, System
"Rolling out of my bed/I still can't find the truth I've been searching for."
Some people are probably laughing at this selection. But Seal is an artist who's been underrated for a long time. Such is the plight of anyone with a smooth voice and smash singles coming out the wazoo for most of the '90s. Yesterday's news, right? I guess not. Every track on this one is grooving, most with techno beats but some with simple acoustic guitar a la Seal's greatest album, Human Being. The duet with wife/supermodel Heidi Klum is too much, but songs like "Amazing" and "Rolling" get stuck in your brain and won't come out any time soon.
9- Common, Finding Forever
"The karma of the streets is needs and takes."
Chicago's finest MC keeps the momentum of Be rolling throughout this disc. Kanye is back to lend a hand on the beats and production side of things, but it's the engaging lyrics that keep me coming back for more. "Drivin' Me Wild" and "The Game" are both gems, while "So Far to Go" makes me want a D'Angelo comeback album really, really badly. Common's first ever #1 release, and justified.
10- The White Stripes, Icky Thump
"Well, America, you can't be a pimp and a prostitute too!"
Jack and Meg White drop another straight-forward stompfest. The title track single had, in my opinion, the best guitar riff of the year. The cover of "Conquest" is cool and "You Don't Know What Love Is" comes across as downright funny---in a good way. Jack's side work with The Raconteurs isn't half bad, but it's not the same kind of magic rock he creates with Meg.
-JAB
Friday, December 14, 2007
Baseball's All Chemical Team: The Mitchell Report Released
You've still got to question a lot of the information in the 400 plus page report though, but at least it's out there. ($20 million in baseball funds alloted to the investigation . . . for a short novel's worth of circumstantial pages? Hmmm.)
Honestly, most of the evidence in the report was hearsay and conjecture. So-and-so asked so-and-so if he knew how to find some human growth hormone, and so-and-so called so-and-so about getting a shipment sent to him. This is the smoking gun? I think not.
Now Commissioner Bud Selig (still somehow employed) says he will dole out punishment on a case-by-case basis. Punishment for what, Bud? There weren't even rules against this stuff five years ago!
But most of the names on the list are plausible. Below are my picks for the cream of this crop.
JOSH'S 40 MAN ROSTER FOR BASEBALL'S ALL-CHEMICALLY ENHANCED TEAM
LF-Barry Bonds/Gary Sheffield/Jack Cust
CF-Lenny Dykstra/Gary Mathews, Jr./Jose Guillen
RF-Sammy Sosa/David Justice/Jose Canseco
1B-Mark McGwire/Rafael Palmeiro/Wally Joyner
2B-Chuck Knoblauch/Brian Roberts/Fernando Vina
SS-Miguel Tejada/Randy Velarde/Mike Lansing
3B-Ken Caminiti/Matt Williams/Troy Glaus
C-Todd Hundley/Paul LoDuca/Benito Santiago
DH-Jason Giambi/Mo Vaughn/Hal Morris
SP-Roger Clemens/Andy Pettite/Kevin Brown/Denny Neagle/
Paul Byrd/Kent Mercker
RP-Brendan Donnelly/Matt Herges/Darren Holmes/
Jason Grimsley
CL-Eric Gagne/Derrick Turnbow/Mike Stanton
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Wow. I could've managed this team and we still would have won multiple world championships. But the Roid Rage fights in the clubhouse might have been a little too violent too ignore.
Thanks for facilitating the culture that killed the game of baseball, Mr. Selig.
-JAB
Wednesday, December 12, 2007
Straight Shocker: Bobby Petrino Gets Arkansas Job
And so maybe now the ache and pain of the Houston Nutt era can finally be buried. It's time for the glitzy new offense. At long last, it's time for the spread attack Razorback fans have long wanted.
But didn't something about this whole deal seem just a little bit off last night. I mean, so much for the phrase "a man of his word" then, huh? In this day and age of big business sports, it appears the saying has rung as hollow as the men who like to use it so much. Bobby Petrino---the new Man of the Moment here in the Natural State---was on public record yesterday morning as "having no interest in leaving the position (he was) committed to with the Atlanta Falcons." Of course, this statement came just hours before Petrino reversed course in a hurry, telling his agent to contact Arkansas about its coaching vacancy. By 10:30 PM last night, Petrino was Calling the Hogs at an introductory press conference on the Hill.
All that aside, from the moment Petrino expressed serious interest yesterday afternoon, it was a no brainer for the Hogs. Already spurned by the likes of Tommy Tuberville, Tommy Bowden and Jim Grobe in the past ten days, athletic director Jeff Long was peering at a list of names that had dwindled significantly. Rumors swirled around Arkansas's interest in Auburn's Will Muschamp and Oklahoma's Brent Venables, but even Reggie Herring (UA's interim coach) was starting to look like a realistic fit. Gus Malzahn got an interview, for goodness sake. And yet, while every one of those names would have had its band of supporters, none would have made everyone as happy to jump on board the bandwagon as Bobby Petrino. Once he reconsidered coming to Arkansas, Jeff Long must have been licking his chops. In Petrino he had several key criteria he'd been looking for all along: a proven winner (41-9 at Louisville, 3-10 this year with Vick-less Atlanta notwithstanding), a guy with serious head coaching experience, somebody who had been to (and won) a BCS game and who was widely known as a tremendous recruiter. Given all that, can you really blame Long for rushing to the podium with his new coaching bride last night? I mean, sure, it all felt a bit rushed, but after the Bowden and Grobe fiascos, there was no way Arkansas could let Petrino get a night of sleep in to think about this one.
Now I'll admit the idea of leaving a $5 million-per-year job for one that pays less than $3 million a season doesn't sound all that appetizing, though I think it would be a nice problem to have. But Petrino's heart clearly wasn't all that invested in his NFL gig anymore. Realistically, head coach of the Falcons probably stopped being the "dream job" Petrino once called it as soon as Michael Vick fessed up to his involvement in a dogfighting ring. Losing your superstar quarterback for something completely unrelated to injury---as well as for something you had nothing to do with---well, let's just say it sucked the air out of the balloon for both Petrino and his organization. The road back was going to be difficult and long for the Falcons' franchise (two years? three?) and a look in the mirror after Atlanta's 34-14 Monday Night Football thrashing at the hands of New Orleans was apparently all that it took for Petrino to assess his options and then renege on a $24 million contract agreement with team owner Arthur Blank. No check of conscience at the door. Just see you later, to the A-T-L.
But back to the matter at hand for Razorback fans. The hiring of Bobby Petrino is a slam dunk for them. Talk to pretty much anyone in Arkansas today and I'll bet they tell you how excited they are by this hiring. A quick survey of listeners on my talk show today revealed the general reaction to Petrino as a 9 out of a possible 10 in terms of support for the new Head Hog. That's about right, because Petrino will bring a fresh offensive look to Arkansas football---finally---and he's just the kind of elite recruiter who should be able to bring a viable playmaking quarterback to Fayetteville at long last as well. To put it plainly, for the next few years, he's the perfect fit for the Razorback fan base. He's got pizzazz and flavor, something that potential coordinator candidates Will Muschamp of Auburn and Brent Venables of Oklahoma did not. He knows how to balance a spread passing attack with a grinding run game. And collegiately speaking, he just wins. A 41-9 mark in four years is impressive at any school this side of USC, but achieving that at Louisville? My goodness, just go ask Petrino's Cardinal successor Steve Kragthorpe how difficult that is to do. Petrino literally put Louisville football on the map, a place that basketball school had never been before. To think he won't be able to take Arkansas to another level competitively is nothing short of foolish.
Amongst other things said last night, Petrino claimed that "the opportunity to coach in the SEC was something (he) just couldn't pass up." It's obvious that the Southeastern Conference is the preeminent college football league in America---I view it as the baseball equivalent of Triple 'A'---but you've got to wonder whether or not Petrino will come to regret those words at any point. In a division loaded with power teams (LSU, Auburn, Alabama) and big name coaches (Les Miles, Tommy Tuberville, Nick Saban, Houston Nutt), Razorback fans will still expect plenty of wins out of their major coaching investment. And Petrino should deliver---in a year or two. But the cupboard will be all but bare in 2008, with All-World tailback Darren McFadden in the NFL, along with the departures of Peyton Hillis, Marcus Monk, Robert Felton, Felix Jones and Jonathan Luigs (in all likelihood).
With Petrino in place, the glow for the Razorback nation is a beautiful maroon right now. But will it last through five wins and seven losses next year? And ultimately, will it stay fixed in the memory banks of a passionate fan base if Petrino does as his history says he will, and leaves after three or four years for greener pastures elsewhere? Those are strong practical questions for another day down the road. For today, the point of it all is that the Razorback football ship has its main sail righted again.
-JAB
Thursday, December 06, 2007
Spurned Again! The Razorback's Search for a Football Coach Continues
Completely unbelievable. That's the only way in which you can begin to describe the University of Arkansas's search for a new head football coach. Tommy Tuberville, Tommy Bowden and now Jim Grobe have all in the span of a week publicly turned down the opportunity to coach the Natural State's Finest. All three will go back to their universities (Auburn, Clemson and Wake Forest, respectively) with a lot of additional cash money to show for it. With multiple media outlets declaring in previous days that Tuberville and Bowden were each already signed, sealed and delivered, only to have the whole thing dissipate within hours both times, it's been easy to stay skeptical of any rumored hiring announcements. But clearly, Grobe's about face this morning proved to be the most stunning of all. What exactly transpired in the hours between 11 PM last night (when the local newspapers went to press with "Grobe is hired" as their front page headlines!) and 8 AM this morning (when Grobe told UA Athletic Director Jeff Long that he was having doubts) may never be revealed. But it's certainly a juicy thought for speculation . . . Was it a guilty conscience that jumped up when he had to address his team? Did his family say it would miss the smell of the spruce pines of North Carolina too much? Or maybe, and most likely, the whole thing was just another man's ploy for a pay raise? To me, there are several huge ironies in this whole thing. The first is the obvious one: the similarity to the Dana Altman situation back in April is downright scary. At that time it was Creighton's Altman, like a delirious deer, stumbling into the flashlights of a packed Bud Walton Arena to be introduced as the new men's basketball coach. Altman got himself near run over when they asked him to Call the Hogs too. Remember how strange he looked? Like a bride making up her mind to run away. Well at least with Grobe you can say he had the foresight not to come to Fayetteville for an introductory press conference. Still, what's with the Razorbacks and wanting to hire people who aren't sure if they want to be here? Surely, you would think you'd be able to read some of the signs of uncertainty in a person while you were interviewing him for the job right? The second irony has got fall on the label of "integrity." As in the saying, he's a man with great integrity. That's all we heard about Grobe (Altman too, for that matter). How he had such belief in what he was doing with his football program. Which begs the question, if this man was so filled with integrity, how come he seemed so close to casting aside his life's work at Wake Forest? An ACC Championship and BCS appearance last year was undoubtedly a strong feat with the Demon Deacons, but Grobe himself must've known how tough it was going to be to do it again there. Wow, that integrity and belief sure did seem to waver in the face of a 1.1 million dollar raise, huh? And yet the biggest irony of them all may be the poetic justice of the whole thing. I won't kill Jeff Long yet because he hasn't publicly said anything his search process. But you have to have questions about how this whole thing is being conducted. There have been far too many leaks from far too many moles on the Board of Trustees and in the Razorback athletic hierarchy who have publicized Long's moves darn nearly every step of the way. How can you expect a guy to do a legitimate, full-fledged search for the right person when he's surrounded by people who feel the need to approve his every move. I don't want to name names here. This isn't about that. But Long is unconsciously setting himself up for a really hard first year on the job. Replacing Frank Broyles was hard enough. Now he likely has to reprove himself all over again in front of a fan base that has demonstrated it will fly planes over stadiums with protest banners flying behind them if it doesn't like you. Real easy environment to work in right? No wonder they pay him the big bucks. -JAB |
Wednesday, December 05, 2007
Who's the Best? Some NFL Top Ten Lists
I've been getting a lot of emails lately from my Morning Rush and Extra Point listeners about end of the year lists. What's the best sports story of 2007? Who's the best NFL coach this year? How many of those early season predictions of mine actually came true? I'll do the yearly tradition thing and give you my top ten sports stories of the year in just a couple weeks, and there's plenty of time yet to see if any of those predictions will actually come true! (I wouldn't hold my breath about the Saints though. Yuck.) Here are a few of my year-end Top 10 lists for you NFL diehards: Top 10 NFL Quarterbacks of 2007 1- Tom Brady, New England. 41 TDs and a 70% completion percentage. Ridiculous. 2- Tony Romo, Dallas. Mobile, with a great deep ball. A tremendous breakthrough season. 3- Brett Favre, Green Bay. Interceptions way down. Where'd he find the fountain of youth? 4- Ben Roethlisberger, Pittsburgh. Let's just pretend that motorcycle thing never happened. 5- Peyton Manning, Indianapolis. A great year considering Harrison's missed most of it. 6- Derek Anderson, Cleveland. He's played so well, Brady Quinn may be traded. 7- Matt Hasselbeck, Seattle. Quiet and steady, bound for the playoffs again. 8- David Garrard, Jacksonville. Another huge success story. Byron who? 9- Philip Rivers, San Diego. Up and down at times, but still hugely talented. 10- Jeff Garcia, Tampa Bay. Another ageless wonder. Top 5 NFL Wide Receivers of 2007 1- Randy Moss, New England. The freak is nasty again, just more athletic than everyone else. 2- Terrell Owens, Dallas. Phillips has calmed him down. Near impossible to cover 1-on-1. 3- Steve Smith, Carolina. Best pound for pound wideout in the league. If only he had a QB. 4- Braylon Edwards, Cleveland. Huge bounceback from injury, monster year. 5- Reggie Wayne, Indianapolis. Showing he can be the #1 we all thought he was. 6- Larry Fitzgerald, Arizona. Another physical freak, has done it with rotating QBs. 7- Antonio Gates, San Diego. Listed at TE, really just a spectacular over-the-middle WR. 8- Plaxico Burress, NY Giants. Slowing down, great numbers without practicing all year. 9- Santonio Holmes, Pittsburgh. This is what Steelers thought they were getting last year. 10- Wes Welker, New England. Best possesion receiver in the game right now. Top 10 NFL Running Backs of 2007 1- Adrian Peterson, Minnesota. Despite knee injury, career is off to a rocket start. 2- Joseph Addai, Indianapolis. Phenomenal progress from year one to year two. 3- Bryan Westbrook, Philadelphia. Has carried a huge load with McNabb's troubles. 4- LaDainian Tomlinson, San Diego. Statistical fall-off from last year no surprise. 5- Willie Parker, Pittsburgh. Great speed around the edges, still maturing. 6- Marshawn Lynch, Buffalo. Any other season, he's the rookie of the year. 7- Reggie Bush, New Orleans. Now featured back is a tremendous pass catcher. 8- Clinton Portis, Washington. Smaller chunks of yardage than in the past, still strong. 9- Jamaal Lewis, Cleveland. When he runs well, the Browns' offense is unstoppable. 10- Edgerrin James, Arizona. Another veteran who's bounced back with solid numbers. |
-JAB
Wednesday, November 28, 2007
The End of the Houston Nutt Era
Did Houston actually choose to resign? Was his skin not quite as thick as we all thought it was? Perhaps the constant abuse he and his family took over the last couple of years was the driving force behind his decision. Or maybe it wasn't. Maybe the writing really was on the wall, and Arkansas' athletic hierarchy of Chancellor White, Jeff Long and Frank Broyles realized it was time to turn the page. So many questions with so many answers that Razorback fans will likely never get.
Speculation for a duller day, I guess. For now, we've got a coaching search in full effect at the U of A, and a list of candidates that is pretty thick, some more realistic than others. Want some names? For starters: Tommy Tuberville, Butch Davis, Chris Petersen, Mike Leach, Brent Venables and Bo Pelini are all in the conversation. Names like Jimmy Johnson and Gus Malzahn are a lot farther fetched, for obvious reasons. And then there's the bigger lot of names that most of us aren't even aware of yet. With a search committee aiding in the process, don't expect it to take all that long either. If I had to guess, I'd say a new coach is hired by the end of the month.
Meanwhile, Nutt is already in Oxford, Mississippi, doing his best Rebel performance to secure what was supposed to be a pretty decent recruiting class for the recently-canned Ed Orgeron. And who came blame him for making the move within the SEC, and striking while the iron was still hot? No one. And that proverbial iron doesn't get any hotter for a coach than in the aftermath of a triple overtime road upset of LSU, the #1 team in the country.
So Nutt goes his way and Arkansas heads out in a new direction all its own. Ten years is a long run for any coach these days, let alone in the SEC, and regardless of whether or not you liked Houston Nutt the coach or Houston Nutt the person, it was finally time. Change can be a really good thing---it frequently is---but only sometimes is it absolutely necessary. This was definitely one of those times.
-JAB
Monday, November 26, 2007
Breaking News: Houston Nutt to Resign
Nutt has been the head coach at Arkansas since 1997. There has been plenty of speculation about his job security over the last couple of years, and it appears that it's all finally come to a head.
If this is indeed the end of his run, Houston Nutt went out with perhaps his most impressive coaching victory to date, a 50-48 triple overtime triumph at #1 LSU on Friday. No word yet on who will succeed Nutt as head coach.
More details and reaction to come in tomorrow's blog.
-JAB
Wednesday, November 14, 2007
Razorbacks Get Manhandled in Knoxville
What stands out: 4th and a yard at UA's own 45 yd line---and Darren McFadden is on the sideline? I don't fault giving the ball to Peyton Hillis there, but DMac has got to be on the field, if only to draw some attention from the defense. Houston Nutt has offered no legitimate answer for that thus far, and none appears forthcoming.
-Passing on first down almost exlusively throughout the first half. I realize that Arkansas was trying to balance things out against Tennessee, but way, way too much emphasis on the air attack.
-Halfway through the third quarter, Nutt turns down a 37 yard field goal by Alex Tejada and instead goes for it on 4th and 12 at the Vols' 20 yard line. Down by 21 points, I understand the urge to go for it there, but on 4th and 12 it's just a bad decision. The fade pass to Hillis in double coverage wasn't even close, and Arkansas came out of that drive with nothing. You have to get points there.
-Late in the third quarter, with Arkansas trailing by three scores but still in the game, Nutt replaces Casey Dick with the almost completely inexperienced Nathan Emert. A move that smelled of desperation, Emert was thrown to the wolves in an impossible spot.
Look, the Felix Jones' thigh injury was a big factor for Arkansas, but it was from the determining aspect of the game. The Razorbacks chose a terrible time to play their worst game of the year on both sides of the ball---12 penalties is far too many---and now they have no one to blame but themselves.
A loss to the seriously-improved Mississippi State Bulldogs in Little Rock on Saturday and you can kiss a bowl bid goodbye. All-Americans Darren McFadden and Felix Jones in the same backfield and you can't even make a bowl? Oh, mama.
The Houston Nutt train is headed for the end of the tracks.
-JAB
Monday, November 05, 2007
Early November's High Notes
Darren McFadden's performance versus South Carolina on Saturday night was one for the ages. Setting an SEC single game rushing record with 321 yards, D-Mac literally rolled over a Gamecock's defense that didn't prove much of a challenge at all. Sprinkle in a TD throw to Robert Johnson, and you have to believe that McFadden has played his way right back to the fringes of the '07 Heisman Trophy race. More importantly for Arkansas is a three game win streak that has reinstalled some hope in the Razorback fan base. A trip to Tennesee looms this Saturday, then it's home for Mississippi State before the finale at Baton Rouge against LSU. It's no stretch to envision Arkansas at 8-3 overall, 4-3 in the SEC by the time of the game with the Tigers. But it will likely take a Razorback road triumph in that contest to springboard the Hogs into a New Year's Day bowl, and McFadden back into serious Heisman contention.... Meanwhile, former Oklahoma Sooner tailback Adrian Petersen set an NFL single game record with a 296 yard rushing performance for the Vikings against the Chargers. Currently on pace for a 2,000 yard season, Petersen is putting together one of the greatest rookie seasons of all time. And when you consider that Minnesota (much like Arkansas) has next to no passing game to speak of, the speedy tailback's numbers are even more impressive. Already one can see that Peterson and McFadden are the likely heir apparent superstar tailbacks at the next level for years to come.... |
Elsewhere, the story of NFL Week 9 was New England's 24-20 come-from-behind triumph over the Indianapolis Colts. Despite getting besieged by pass interference penalties, the Patriots rallied for two touchdowns in the final nine minutes, with Tom Brady overcoming a rare two interception performance to throw three more TDs (33 on the season now, for those of you keeping track at home). Roosevelt Colvin was a beast in the win at linebacker for New England, a team that now has a realistic shot at running the regular season slate. Tough games still loom against Baltimore, Pittsburgh and the Giants, but it's no stretch to think New England can get it done.
As for the likely AFC Championship game rematch that awaits these two teams, it's going to be another good one to watch, but probably tilted even more so to New England. Sure, I realize that neither WR Marvin Harrison or left tackle Tony Ugoh played in this game for Indy, but going on the road and playing well in bad weather has never been Peyton Manning's forte, and it's all but assured that he'll have to do that now just to get back to the Super Bowl....
The new Ridley Scott-directed film American Gangster is really good, if too violent. It also takes a lot of patience, at over two and a half hours. But it's good stuff, with Denzel Washington knocking them dead (literally) as a drug kingpin. Washington is always a tour de force on the screen and it's no different here, and the same can be said for Russell Crowe, who plays the cop out to get him. An all-time great film? Absolutely not. But it's a fun start to what should be a good holiday film season. My Grade: B+
-JAB
Monday, October 22, 2007
Arkansas Goes on Road, Thrashes Mississippi
Now that's more like it. After losing their first three SEC games of the year, the Razorbacks rolled over the Ole Miss Rebels, 44-8 in Oxford on Saturday. It was a refreshing change of performance for an Arkansas team that has floundered well below preseason expectations. And with the refreshment comes the hope that the Hogs can keep their seasonal ship rolling straight through November.
Tailbacks Darren McFadden (22 carries/110 yards) and Felix Jones (15 carries/101 yards) were back on their respective games, while the offensive line did a tremendous job of opening space in front of them. Even quarterback Casey Dick was on his game, throwing 11 completions in 17 attempts, for 96 yards and 3 TDs against a sole meaningless end-of-the-first half interception. Peyton Hillis was a weapon out of the backfield as well, catching 4 passes for 60 yards, while TE Andrew Davie had the first two TD catch game of his young career.
And still, this one was mostly about the defense for the Hogs. With six sacks and four interceptions, there's no question that the Razorback 'D' went into this one with the intent of driving the Rebels firmly back on their heels. Surely, they did that and more, generating pressure up front, playing solid man coverage and giving defensive coordinator Reggie Herring the ability to blitz as freely as he wanted, without the worry of springing a leak. Arkansas' defensive performance was so good it made talented Rebels' QB Seth Adams look really bad, and with him, a host of skilled receivers.
It's way too early to reach much into this game: Ole Miss stinks. Now Arkansas plays a terrible Florida International team on Saturday. But if the Razorbacks can keep their good play going against South Carolina in two weeks, there's a very realistic chance that this club could play its way back into New Year's Day bowl consideration. For head coach Houston Nutt, under fire after a lackluster first half of the season, that's about as good a turnaround as could be hoped for at this point.
-JAB
Tuesday, October 16, 2007
Radiohead reaches new heights "In Rainbows"
1) 15 Step: Opening against the background of a stomping, shifting backbeat, lead singer Thom Yorke intones the questions: "How come I end up where I started? How come I end up where I went wrong?" Splashes of guitar help the song lift into full-blown takeoff, with all kinds of crazy sounds---howls, reverb, children clapping---jump out of the background. A bona-fide rocker.
2) Bodysnatchers: This tune was debuted as fast and guitar-heavy during Radiohead's brief European tour last year. The guitars remain, though the tempo's been turned down a bit. Jonny Greenwood and Ed O'Brien trade riffs while Yorke wails lyrics about paranoia in "the 21st century! The 21st century!." A solid 1-2 punch to open.
3) Nude: A song that's already more than ten years old, "Nude" used to be called "Big Ideas." After struggling fruitlessly for a long time on the proper incarnation for the melody, the band has settled on a slow, ruminating chord progression full of strings. Some Radiohead diehards may be upset with this "final" version, but I think it does the original tune some final justice.
4) Arpeggi: A beautiful song with (relatively) depressing lyrics about "weird fishes" and the "bottom of the sea", this is probably the most efficient reworking of any tune on the album. Gone are the dramatic piano chords, replaced instead with choppy acoustic guitar splashes. The song builds to a harmonic crescendo about four minutes in; it literally sounds like it's being played under water somewhere at the very depths of the ocean.
5) All I Need: One of my personal favorites of Radiohead's recent concert setlists, the music and lyrics strike a perfect balance. It's a slow, romantic burner with lyrics about being "In the middle of your picture, lying in the leaves/You're all I need." Yorke's voice sounds tremendous here, carrying the song towards the end, where it breaks back down over fractured piano chords. A fresher version of Radiohead's younger balladry days.
6) Faust ARP: At a little over two minutes, it's easily the shortest song on the album. Early reviews have likened it to McCartney's "Blackbird", and it's not a bad comparison. I have little idea as to what the title means. Something about a German author? Hmmm...
7) Reckoner: This will probably upset Radiohead diehards the most. Played live last year, the song was straight ahead Radiohead rock at its OK Computer-like best. Now it's another slow builder, bathed in symphonic swirls. It's a pretty tune at its core, but yet another sign that the Oxford quintet have elected to go in the slower is better direction on Rainbows. Still a very good song though.
8) House of Cards: The easiest-to-digest track on the whole album. Its laid-back guitar fuels the almost reggae melody. Yorke's opening lines: "I don't want to be your friend/I just want to be your lover." They're as direct and love-themed as any he's written since The Bends. At five and a half minutes, it's also the longest song on the album. Doesn't feel like it though. An absolute gem.
9) Jigsaw Falling Into Place: Played live under the working title of "Open Pick." Another song that's been boiled down to its slow-paced core. It possesses a groovy rhythm track keyed by bassist Colin Greenwood and drummer Phil Selway. Another tune that's sure to confuse those looking for the fast-paced rock and roll of recent Radiohead shows.
10) Videotape: Continuing in the tradition of Radiohead LP closers like "Street Spirit", "Motion Picture Soundtrack", "Life in a Glass House" and "Wolf From the Door", this is a heavy ballad riding on the emotions of an album full of them. Yorke sings about his personal Judgement Day, where everything he's done is diplayed in videotape, a la the now-classic film comedy Defending Your Life. It's an interesting idea, and it hits hard with happiness and remorse intertwined. "This is the most perfect day I've ever known," sings Yorke. If he's speaking about In Rainbows and its place in the Radiohead album canon, it certainly comes awful close.
Josh's Grade for In Rainbows: A-
-JAB
Monday, October 08, 2007
Springsteen Heads Back to E Street for More Magic
Hearing Bruce Springsteen play with the E Street Band is like going home and hanging out with a bunch of old friends you haven't seen in a long time: it just feels good. For the Boss, it must've felt as such on latest studio album Magic, his first effort with the E Streeters since 2001's The Rising. It's career release number fifteen for Springsteen if you're keeping score at home. Opening with the poppy lead single "Radio Nowhere", Springsteen's album is focused in both mood and intention. The single is about searching for good music in an age where the industry is shrinking and consolidating by the day (more by necessity than choice). It's a good opener, and in line shortly afterwards are old school sounding Springsteen cuts like "You'll Be Coming Down" and "I'll Work For Your Love." Better than both of those though is "Living in the Future." It literally sounds like E Street circa 1978. Clarence Clemons' jazzy sax is all over it, with a catchy hook and busy guitars to boot. It's as good as anything Bruce has done with E Street in ten years. Then Bruce turns his attention to serious matters, particularly war in the modern age, on cuts like "Gypsy Biker", title track "Magic," second single "Long Walk Home" and strings-laden closer "Devil's Arcade." "Biker" and "Home" are probably the best of that bunch, and Springsteen does a fine job of describing the horrors of warfare and its consequence without laying the finger too heavy with blame on any one person or thing. The best song on the album though is the finale, "Terry's Song." Written for recently deceased longtime Bruce friend Terry McGovern, the track is both beautiful and simple in its tone and delivery. Producer Brendan O'Brien must have realized so as well: he leaves the song almost completely free of any studio tricks. If there's one major complaint of the album, it's that it sounds a bit slick and overproduced in places, but that's the only real quibble I've got. It's always great hearing Bruce back at work on E Street for the love of his listeners, and this album is another unquestioned success. Josh's Magic Grade: B+ -JAB |
Tuesday, October 02, 2007
Josh's Early October Storylines
A 66-7 victory over North Texas doesn't do much to change the public perception of the Razorbacks, but it can certainly help the players gain some confidence in themselves. The passing game was more than functional; for a change, it was seriously impressive. Casey Dick looked way better on the playaction throws, while wideouts London Crawford and Robert Johnson stepped up and made some nice catches. Defensively, the secondary finally started turning to look at the ball (sure does help, huh?), while the stud tailback duo of McFadden and Jones churned out 270 first half yards before mercifully hitting the bench for half number two.
Things won't get any more exciting this coming weekend, when Arkansas hosts former I-AA school Tennessee-Chattanooga in Little Rock. A rout it shall be, and the Hogs will then be 3-2 when the night wraps, but they'll still be stuck on 0-2 in SEC play, a mark that won't change---for the positive or the negative---until they host Auburn in Fayetteville a week from Saturday.
One real Chattanooga storyline of note: Heisman hopeful Darren McFadden needs 151 yards rushing (probably all in the first half) to set the all-time Razorback ground mark in front of his hometown fans in Little Rock. Here's hoping D-Mac gets it done in the Rock.
Mets Slide All the Way Out
An epic collapse apparently won't cost Mets' skipper Willie Randolph his job, but it probably should have. Watching New York trip over itself during the final 17 games of the season was one of the more painful experiences of my sports life. The pitching completely collapsed, both starting and in the bullpen, while the offense lost almost all of its spunk. A lot of that stemmed from the top of the lineup: Jose Reyes looked like a completely different player during the final two months of the season. He went from a guy who was arguably becoming the most exciting all-around player in the game to a guy who couldn't even get on base.
A lot of the fold-up was psychological. After losing eight straight times to the Phillies towards the end of the year, the Mets clearly no longer believed in themselves. The swagger was gone, and soon, so was their divisional lead. And now New York enters an offseason filled with questions, while Philadelphia parties like it's 1993. Oh, the misery....
LCS Picks: Cleveland over Boston in ALCS; Chicago over Colorado in NLCS
World Series Champ: Cleveland Indians
NFL Wraps First Quarter of Play
New England is once again the team to beat, at 4-0 through one quarter of the season. The "undefeated" talk has already started up, with Tom Brady (13 TD tosses) playing like the Most Valuable Player. Clearly the addition of Randy Moss (7 TDs already) has made the Patriots scary good; rumors of the Freak's athletic demise were undoubtedly exaggerated. Don't sleep on the Colts yet though: at 4-0, they are still the defending champions until someone proves otherwise.
The two other undefeated teams are unquestioned surprises. We knew Dallas would be good, but this good, this fast under Wade Phillips? My goodness. Tony Romo is playing like a bona fide star, while Marion Barber has emerged as the best red zone tailback in the NFL. If the Cowboys' 'D' ever gets up to speed, it's going to mean serious trouble for the rest of the NFC.
And then there's Green Bay. Brett Favre has his Packers off to a 4-0 start, and now he also has the all-time TD toss mark in the bag, shattering Dan Marino's previous tally of 420. Favre is playing like he's 28, not 38, and the Green Bay defense has improved as much as any group in all of football.
The list of disappointing starts is a lot longer, stretching from San Diego, Philadelphia and Cincinnati (all 1-3) to New Orleans, Saint Louis and Miami (all still winless).
A fourth of the NFL season is it all it is, but now is the first real good time to take stock of where your respective team is---or isn't.
Springsteen Back with "Magic", Crows Postpone, Radiohead Loses Collective Mind
Yes, I've already picked up my copy of Bruce Springsteen's new album Magic, but I've yet to put it in the CD player for a spin, so give me just a couple of days till I offer you a full-fledged review. It's coming though, I promise . . . the E Streeters are back, baby.
In other music news: the Counting Crows have, rather unfortunately, elected to postpone the release of their fifth album Saturday Nights, Sunday Mornings until after the New Year. Something about being too busy to take care of "all the little details" according to lead singer/songwriter Adam Duritz in a post on his band's website. Too bad about that. Almost six years now since the last Crows' album.
Meanwhile, British collective Radiohead---arguably the greatest living rock band in the world today---has taken a completely different route in releasing their seventh album, titled In Rainbows. With almost no advertising or advance notice, and no record deal to speak of (the previous one has already been fulfilled) the group will release the album on its own via the internet next Wednesday, October 10th. Ten songs will be available, and here's the crux of the craziness: downloaders will have the right to pay as much or as little as they like for each and every song. You read correctly: downloaders can elect to pay nothing for the songs if they so choose. On December 3rd, the band will then release a double CD of the album, containing eight extra tracks, along with artwork and more. That too can only be ordered online and will set you back a mere $80 in American cash.
Will it prove to be a profitable decision for Radiohead? Time will tell, but at the least, it's certainly a statement against the big music conglomerates. Kudos for that, but still sort of crazy if you ask me. That's Radiohead for you.
-JAB
Friday, September 28, 2007
Kanye West Back Strong with Graduation
It's hard not to call Graduation Kanye West's crowning achievement to date. Gone are the annoying skits and intros that plagued Late Registration. In their stead are thirteen cuts that leave the listener feeling even a little bit slighted on the light side when all is said and done. The album opens with the soft samplings of Jay-Z on "Good Morning." Some creative rhyming on this cut: "I'm like a fly Malcolm X/Buy any jeans necessary" makes it a nice introductory piece, and then it is immediately followed by "Champion", with a dead ringer for Lauryn Hill crooning away in the background. Lead single "Stronger" rocks the beat as track three, then it's the unique "I Wonder" and funky "Good Life" back-to-back before second single "Can't Tell Me Nothing." A phenomenally strong first side to the disc gets a bit sluggish in the middle with "Barry Bonds" (Lil Wayne's contribution is weak) and "Drunken Hot Girls" (why bother?), but then Kanye regains his footing with a strong finish. "Flashing Lights" and "The Glory" are total dance gems, while "Everything I Am," "Homecoming," and "Big Brother" are all perfectly felt emotional odes. (Indeed, Kanye's "Homecoming" collaboration with Chris Martin is even better than Jay Z's "Beach Chair" of last year.) Closing with "Brother"---a tribute song to Mr. Hovito----is a bit strange, but sometimes less is more, right? Clearly, Kanye is now as relevant and prevalent as any rapper/producer in the business. Three albums in, his production skills are untouchable, while his rhyming seems to have improved with each disc. A head-to-head "battle" with 50 Cent assured Graduation of some good sales, and it's no surprise to see the album debuting at number one with just about one million copies sold. A bit of a lull in the middle, and a tad short on total tracks, Kanye irregardless graduates from my CD player with a strong A- and hands-down the best hip hop release so far this year. -JAB P.S. Next up: Springsteen and the E Street Band drop Magic on Tuesday. |
Monday, September 17, 2007
September's Sports Takes
It could always be worse . . . You could be O.J. Simpson.
Still, for Razorback fans, it doesn't get much more painful than a 41-38 loss at Alabama on Saturday night. The Hogs coming back from 21 points down twice in the ballgame, only to lose on a John Parker Wilson-to-Matt Caddell TD toss with eight seconds left. Arkansas' tailbacks were phenomenal in defeat, with Darren McFadden (he is not human) rushing for 195 yards on a career-high 33 carries and Felix Jones chipping in with 96 yards of his own. McFadden was, simply, spectacular. None of his numbers came on runs longer than 24 yards. Six yards, eight yards, twelve, five, ten . . . The way D-Mac ripped off physically-pounding run after run impressed me more in this game than in any other of his performances. But the defense struggled mightily all game long, spotting the Crimson Tide a 21-0 lead after one quarter. It was 31-10 in the 2nd half before a ferocious Razorback rally saw Arkansas take the lead with eight minutes to go. All this, just to suffer, oh so painfully, as Nick Saban's crew chewed away at the deficit with a 42-yard Leigh Tiffin field goal and a punch-you-in-the-gut 73 yard game winning TD drive at the end.
You can pinpoint any number of areas in this one that hindered Arkansas' cause: the secondary was scorched, again, and rarely turned to look at incoming passes. Jerrell Norton: what are you doing, buddy? The defensive front was feeble in its pass rush (though decent against the run). Casey Dick struggled early, finishing 11 of 23, but had a couple of key drops, including one by Reggie Fish that could have gone for a touchdown. Indeed, wideout London Crawford was so excited to catch a pass in the open field that he fumbled the football untouched, killing another Arkansas drive in Alabama territory.
And then there's the coaching. I give Houston Nutt a lot of credit for keeping his team in the game---and sticking with the run---down by 21 points in the second half. But in Arkansas' final drive, with tailback Darren McFadden on the sideline suffering from a "slight" concussion, the Hogs tried to run the clock out and couldn't. The biggest play of the game, to me, was a 3rd and 12 with 2:30 left, the ball still inside of Arkansas' 40 yard line. Instead of running the ball and taking another 40-45 seconds off the clock (against an Alabama team that had no timeouts left), Nutt called for a rollout pass by Dick, which fell incomplete and saved the Tide a bunch of precious seconds.
A terrible pass interference call against Kevin Woods on a 3rd and 9 and a ridiculous clock delay for measurement with :21 seconds left both aided the Tide's win, but I hate to say a game was exclusively decided by the officials when it definitely was not.
It's always easy to go back and criticize things afterwards, but the fact of the matter is this: Arkansas is 1-1, 0-1 in the SEC, and has a tall task coming to Fayetteville this weekend in the shape and form of the Kentucky Wildcats. Led by All-Conference QB Andre Woodson, the Cats are better than most people think, and showed it by beating #8 Louisville this week. Barring significant defensive progress, it would not be much of a surprise to see Kentucky put a load of points on the board against the Hogs again this weekend.
Even with the best player in the country in Darren McFadden, it wouldn't be surprising if Arkansas were 0-2 in the league after Saturday.
Quick Hits from Week 2 of the NFL
-How do the Cleveland Browns score 51 points in a month, let alone in a single game? Truthfully, I have no idea. But that's just what they did this weekend, outscoring Cincinnati 51-45 behind 5 touchdown passes from Derek Anderson. (Doesn't he play basketball?) Of course 215 yards by RB Jamaal Lewis on the ground helped greatly (I guess he isn't finished), but it's still a really bad loss for the Bengals. Not time for the Brady Quinn era in the Rock and Roll city just yet.
-Meanwhile, the QB controversy in Jets land is on, and I don't understand why. A 20-13 loss to the Ravens wasn't all that surprising, and neither were the struggles of first-time starter Kellen Clemens. The quarterback from Oregon did absolutely nothing for three quarters against the stout Baltimore 'D', then got it going in the hurry-up and rallied the Jets for what should have been the tying score. (WR Justin McCareins missed two touchdown throws in the final 90 seconds.) Yet it's clear that New York's offense isn't the same without Chad Pennington on the field, and there's no question in my mind that he should be the starter next weekend at home against Miami. The fact that any Jets followers even consider Clemens the man for the job right now is kind of scary. The three times in Pennington's career when he's been healthy and on the field for most of the season, they've made the playoffs every time. Let's not get stupid and throw the season away after two weeks for experience's sake here, Mr. Mangini, okay?
-Can it be that the Dallas Cowboys are the best team in the NFC? Quite possibly. Just two games into the Wade Phillips' era, Big 'D' looks offensivly more potent than it has at any point since Troy Aikman retired. QB Tony Romo looks well over any ill effects of last year's post-season field goal snafu. Terrell Owens actually seems "happy" and he's dancing again all over the field again. And Marion Barber seems to be getting better with each and every game of his still-young career. Dallas' defense doesn't look anywhere near good enough yet, but that's Phillips' specialty, and it's no stretch to think it will be where it needs to be by the end of the year.
Major League Baseball Through to Final Two Weeks
Boston, Cleveland, the L.A. Angels . . . those three teams are locks for the postseason in the American League. The Yankees are all but a shoo-in for the Wild Card. The National League? Well, that's sort of a different story.
Nothing is fully settled yet, though it looks like the Mets and the Diamondbacks will get in. We know it'll be either the Brewers or the Cubbies in the Central now that the Cardinals have collapsed, but who'll be the NL Wild Card? Probably San Diego, but it could be the Phillies if they can get any pitching down the stretch. Philadelphia has now won an astonishing eight straight games against the Mets after a weekend sweep that still sees them at 3 1/2 games out. At the least, New York's team confidence has taken a major hit. At the most, the Mets could be in for an historic collapse.
I'll wait another ten days or so before giving out my end of the season awards, but as has been usual of late, it looks like all eight teams that make the playoffs are going to have a realistic chance to win the World Series.
OJ Squeezed by the Cops Again
Just a quick parting ponderance here, but what in the world goes on in O.J. Simpson's mind? Here he is, somehow a free man after everyone and their mother knows he got away with double homicide 12 years ago, and he gets himself arrested again? Craziness. Man, if I were O.J., at this point, I'd be wary of even jaywalking. Apparently Las Vegas police are pretty confident that Simpson and a bunch of his thieves broke into a hotel room filled with sports memorabilia last week and demanded they get it all---at gunpoint. Simpson claims most of the stuff taken was his, and has already tragicomically used the quote "what happens in Vegas is supposed to stay in Vegas" in his own defense, but it doesn't sound like there's any way the 60-year-old Simpson is going to avoid jail time on this one.
I know, I know, we all said the same thing about Simpson when he faked a suicide note, fled in a Bronco and put a gun to his head, before finally allowing police to arrest him for the murders of his ex-wife and her boyfriend more than twelve years ago. It looked like an obvious conviction for murder, but defense attorney Johnny Cochrane somehow worked his way out of it---"if the glove doesn't fit, you must acquit." But this time, O.J. is going down. Big time. Hey O.J., Johnny Cochrane isn't alive anymore. Maybe you should've thought about that before orchestrating this latest disaster.
On second thought, eliminate my initial ponderance. I was confused to have even had it. I realize now that I have absolutely no interest in knowing anything about what goes on in O.J. Simpson's twisted brain. It would freak me out way too much....
That's it for now, folks. I'm out.
-JAB
Thursday, September 06, 2007
2007 NFL Preview, Part II: The NFC
NATIONAL FOOTBALL CONFERENCE NFC East (y)-Philadelphia Eagles (12-4) (x)-Dallas Cowboys (10-6) New York Giants (6-10) Washington Redskins (5-11) NFC North (y)-Chicago Bears (11-5) Minnesota Vikings (9-7) Green Bay Packers (7-9) Detroit Lions (4-12) NFC South (y)-New Orleans Saints (13-3) (x)-Carolina Panthers (10-6) Atlanta Falcons (6-10) Tampa Bay Buccaneers (5-11) NFC West (y)-Seattle Seahawks (11-5) Saint Louis Rams (9-7) San Francisco 49ers (8-8) Arizona Cardinals (5-11) (y- division winner x- wild card) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Playoffs: 1st Rd: Dallas over Chicago, Carolina over Seattle 2nd Rd: New Orleans over Dallas, Philadelphia over Carolina NFC Championship: New Orleans over Philadelphia Super Bowl: San Diego over New Orleans Best Head Coach: Sean Payton, New Orleans Best Offensive Player: Bryan Westbrook, Philadelphia Best Defensive Player: Brian Urlacher, Chicago |
Wednesday, September 05, 2007
2007 NFL Preview Part I: The AFC
AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE Playoffs: 1st Rd: Indianapolis over Baltimore, Cincinnati over Denver |
Tuesday, September 04, 2007
Razorbacks Open 2007 With Familiar Recipe
For Arkansas, a 46-26 season opening victory over Troy was about what should have been expected. The Hogs looked great on the ground----DMac (151 yards), Felix Jones (129 yards), Michael Smith (58 yards)----as all the tailbacks chipped in, but the aerial assault was anything but. QB Casey Dick was a mediocre 11 for 20 for 108 yards, and didn't complete a pass to a wide receiver until halfway through the third quarter. (Heisman frontrunner Darren McFadden made the pass of the night too: a 42 yard TD strike to WR Crosby Tuck off his back foot in the 3rd quarter.) But the offensive line was strong in front all night long, allowing next to no pressure on its backfield, and you got the feeling like new Offensive Coordinator David Lee still has plenty of tricks up his sleeve. Defensively, it was also a hit and miss opener. In the first half, primarily playing zone, Arkansas got shredded by Troy QB Omar Haugabook. There was next to little pass rush on top of that, and the Hogs' 'D' looked like it could become a major concern for its fans. (What's with the secondary never turning to look at the football?) Up only 23-17 at the halftime break, a switch to man coverage in the 2nd half seemed to stabilize everything a bit, and Arkansas rolled on from there for the twenty point win. Defensive Coordinator Reggie Herring's defenses usually improve as the seasons go on, but the question of who will replace Jamaal Anderson's 13.5 sacks from a year ago remains unanswered. |
Special teams, however, were a major plus. Freshman placekicker Alex Tejada was an impressive 4 of 4 on field goal attempts, even though the longest was just 35 yards. A missed extra point in the second half aside, Tejada should be a major boon to the offense this year, especially when you consider that Arkansas made a grand total of six field goals all of last year! And as far as kickoff returns go, what can you say? Jones broke a 90 yard return to the house in the first half, and it probably won't be the last time he does it this year. Hmmm, let's see: kick it to Jones or McFadden? Not a fun choice for any opposition.
The punt return tandem of Michael Smith and Reggie Fish failed to impress, but with a bye in week two, there's plenty of time for Houston Nutt's Razorbacks to retool before a crossroads game at Sabanation and Alabama on September 15th.
-JAB
Monday, August 27, 2007
Arkansas' 2007 Football Preview: Part III- Overall Outlook
Meanwhile, senior DE Marcus Harrison was shaping up to be a great comeback story as he rebounded from a torn ACL suffered in April. Instead, he's now hoping to avoid jail time for an incident in Fayetteville over the weekend. Harrison was caught speeding by police, and when they searched his vehicle they found an ecstasy pill and two marijuana cigarettes. Razorback head coach Houston Nutt has since suspended Harrison "indefinitely", and it's possible now he won't play until much later in the season, if at all. More intriguing is the question of whether or not Harrison's troubles will filter over psychologically to the rest of the team, as he has been one of the unquestioned emotional leaders of this group for the past couple years.
Away from those woes, however, Arkansas fans have some obvious reasons for being optimistic. First and foremost is the two word phrase known simply in the Natural State as "D-Mac." Darren McFadden is so tremendously capable offensively---running, passing, catching---in every possible way, he makes even the most serious of doubters believe anything is possible for the Hogs' offense when the ball is in his hands. There is no doubt that McFadden is the preseason favorite to win the Heisman Trophy; still, whether or not the do-everything tailback actually becomes the first Razorback player to win the award will probably most come down to how many wins his team ultimately gets.
Additionally, special teams should improve significantly for Arkansas this season. First and foremost, Hog fans now have a placekicker in Alex Tejada who should be able to consistently make extra points and short range field goals, two usual gimmes that were regular adventures for the Razorbacks last year. The freshman Tejada is a Springdale native who's known for his big leg and ability to make field goals well over the 50 yard mark. With his arrival, last year's kicker, Jeremy Davis, has moved over to handle punting duties. There shouldn't be much of a dropoff there from departed senior Jacob Skinner.
Maybe most important for Arkansas' special teams is the return game, now that the NCAA has mandated a rule change for all kickoffs to be made from the 30 yard line (like the NFL) instead of the 35. The five yard difference will put the ball in play more often on kicks, which bodes well for the Hogs. Having a return tandem like Felix Jones and Darren McFadden is downright intimidating for any other school and Arkansas should have pretty good field position every time it gets the ball this year.
Yes, Reggie Fish is handling the punt return duties again, along with backup tailback Michael Smith. But Fish appears mentally stronger and more capable of making the right decisions in the return game now than he did a year ago, when he was essentially thrown into the fire. No one will soon forget his botched punt in the end zone late in the third quarter of the SEC Championship game against Florida, let alone Fish himself. But they say whatever doesn't kill you only makes you stronger, and Arkansas fans can only hope that's the case with Fish now as well.
Throw all this into the Season Predictor Blender, shake it up, mix it down, and what do you get? A very interesting milkshake . . . Tasty with an offense that should be able to run the football till the cows come home, led by aforementioned Heisman contender Darren McFadden (maybe the greatest Razorback of all time) and speedster change of pace stud Felix Jones. But the same offense that is so phenomenal with the run has an injury-prone quarterback who will struggle against the stouter defenses, especially with no early season go-to target at wide receiver. The offensive line should be good enough to win lots of ball games, but the passing game probably won't be, even with the substitution of David Lee for Gus Malzahn at offensive coordinator.
You've also got a defense that is thin in terms of depth and elite talent, one that I expect to take a while to find its way. Reggie Herring is an underrated defensive mind, but it just doesn't look like he has all the necessary guns this year. Jamaal Anderson, Chris Houston, Sam Olajubutu and Keith Jackson were all integral parts of the unit last year, and all are playing in the NFL right now. That's with good reason. They were really good. There's no telling how much Arkansas will miss them at times this year.
Throw in a head coach who is constantly under fire in Houston Nutt and things just start to get a little bit strange. Unbelievable as it sounds, Nutt is now in his tenth season as head coach at Arkansas, and while still a pretty great motivator, and a halfway decent recruiter, his in-game decisionmaking, along with his difficulties in sorting out the X's and O's department, usually limit his ability to lift the Razorbacks to wins against the best of college football's best (i.e. USC, LSU, Florida and Wisconsin from a year ago.) Nutt will help this team be good, but can he turn it into something truly great? History, obviously, is not on his side.
The schedule opens with a competitive opponent in Troy, before a bye in week two. Could the open date have come at a better time for Arkansas? Absolutely, but you take what you get. September 15th's trip to Alabama will be a huge season indicator, as the Crimson Tide contest usually is for Arkansas. To think the Hogs will beat Nick Saban's team on the road for just the second time in the Houston Nutt era is probably a bit of a stretch, especially without Marcus Monk. Then it's home for Kentucky, an entertaining offensive opponent that Arkansas should be able to handle. Cakewalks through North Texas and Chattanooga loom after, before the best home game of the year, October 13th against Auburn. I'm picking Arkansas to win that game, but it would be far from surprising if Tommy Tuberville's crew avenged last year's home defeat. Ole Miss, Florida International and South Carolina are all highly winnable games for the Razorbacks, but then things get hugely difficult down the stretch. On the road at Tennessee on November 10th? Ugh. A home game in Little Rock against Mississippi State is next, and then it's off to Baton Rouge, at LSU the day after Thanksgiving. Um, ugh again.
Here's what I think: Arkansas goes 9-3 this year, 5-3 in the SEC (8-4, 4-4 would be far from surprising as well) but does not go back to Atlanta for the conference championship game. The Hogs will make a decent bowl and could realistically end up with ten victories on the year when all is said and done, but even with all-world talent Darren McFadden there are too many question marks to think this team will top last year's win total.
-JAB
Wednesday, August 08, 2007
Arkansas' 2007 Football Preview: Part II- The Defense
Much like the offense, it all starts up front with the defensive line. This year’s starting defensive ends will be Antowain Robinson and Malcolm Sheppard. Robinson was a bull at times last year, teaming with Jamaal Anderson to give Arkansas a fearsome pairing off the edges. Offseason shoplifiting troubles have put his leadership abilities back up for questioning, but the fact remains that he is the only proven pass rush commodity on the entire team. On the flip, Malcolm Sheppard may be the most hyped player---improvement-wise---on the defense. All we’ve been told is how much better he’s gotten in just a single offseason, and if he’s even half as good as Anderson, the Hogs should be fine off the edges. Expect Chris Wade to share time with Malcolm Sheppard in the DE rotation. Up the gut the Hogs will rely heavily on Ernest Mitchell and Marcus Harrison. Mitchell was a tremendous surprise to those around the program last year, coming in and playing so well after injuries to linemen up front. One of those injuries was indeed to Marcus Harrison, and unfortunately, he’s hurt again. Harrison tore his ACL in spring ball, and it’s unclear how quickly he’ll be back to 100% speed, if at all. The depth behind these guys is slight, to put it nicely, with Fred Bledsoe, Cord Gray and Marcus Shavers the first guys in line.
In the middle of the field, I think Arkansas has a chance to be a lot better than many people think. There’s no doubt that LB Sam Olajubutu was the defensive leader---vocally and on the field---over the past few years, but there’s no reason to think Arkansas can’t replace his physicality. First in line is Weston Dacus. The MLB plays bigger than he looks and has a tendency to cut down opposing tailbacks who’ve busted through the first line of defense. Flanking Dacus on the edges will be a lot of depth, if not a lot of proven commodity. Freddie Fairchild had a strong freshman season before seeing his sophomore campaign sidelined by a torn ACL in game two against Utah State. He’s going to be counted on for his speed off the side and in blitz packages. Then there’s a group of guys who haven’t really fully separated themselves from another. Chip Gregory, Ryan Powers and Wendal Davis are all expected to contribute, but I think it’s a true freshman who may make the biggest impact of them all. Texas native Jermaine Love is a frosh who looks like a junior. Physically, he is good to go in the SEC right now, but the question is going to be whether or not is able to grasp Herring’s schemes quickly enough. It’s my guess he’ll be starting by the Kentucky game.
Back it up to the secondary and things again don’t look nearly so bleak for the Hogs. FS Michael Grant has made what seems to be a complete recovery from a nasty knee injury suffered against South Carolina last year. He’ll be asked to help cut down on the big play again, and he should be able to take some chances, playing alongside physical SS Matt Hewitt. The corners are slated to be incumbent starter Materral Richardson and senior Jerrell Norton. How well JUCO safety transfer Walner Leandre plays in August could affect all of that.
Throw it all together, and upon further inspection, there is room for optimism about this year’s defense. Coordinator Reggie Herring has shown a tendency to have his teams improve as the seasons go on, and with no USC on the schedule this year, the Hogs may be able to skip an early season embarrassment in the points allowed department. Arkansas’ defense will be good this year, but will it be great? Therein may lie the answer to whether or not Arkansas gets itself back to Atlanta.
D-Line: B+
Linebackers: B-
Secondary: B+
Overall: B
-JAB
Tuesday, August 07, 2007
Arkansas' 2007 Football Preview: Part I - The Offense
Let's start, as will most, with the tailback depth. Darren McFadden enters his third and final season at Arkansas as the preseason fave to win the Heisman Trophy. He's so good, adjectives don't do him justice. Think of the best running backs ever to play the game----Jim Brown, O.J. Simpson, Barry Sanders, Gale Sayers, Eric Dickerson, LaDainian Tomlinson----and McFadden truly does seem to have the skillset of the best of the lot of them. He's very strong, extremely fast, and highly agile, but he also possesses the one football attribute that can't be measured: Game IQ. Knowing when to cut, when to feel for a defender, and being able to anticipate things happening before they even do, those are the things that make up a player's Game IQ. The great ones had it, and D-Mac does too.
Even with a superback in McFadden, Arkansas' fortunes in the backfield do not rest on him alone. He's also got a great backup in Felix Jones. On any other team, Jones would be the star, but with Arkansas, he's got to fight for his opportunities. Averaging over seven yards per game again would be a great way to earn more of them . . . And woe is the plight of third string running back Michael Smith! He's certainly good enough to start for half the other schools in the SEC, but it's hard to see how he'll get the football much at all this year.
Yet the story with Arkansas' backfield success this year will---as is the norm---have more to do with the men blocking than with the speedsters themselves. Namely, Peyton Hillis. Already rated by some draft publications as the best fullback in the country, Hillis was a huge cog in the ground and passing attacks for the Hogs a year ago. With Hillis on the field, Arkansas maintained its versatility, never allowing opponents to know whether it intended to run or pass. With Hillis out of the lineup at the end of the year, Arkansas flat out struggled to move the football. It's up to Hillis to stay healthy, keep his head down, mouth shut and carve up nice chunks of space for his host of talented tailbacks. If he can do those things, he'll get his number called more often as well.
And then there's the offensive line. It was so good last year, with seniors Tony Ugoh, Stephen Parker and Zach Tubbs leading the way. The question now is whether guys like Jose Valdez, Nate Garner, DeMarcus Love and Mitch Petrus can stabilize a unit that has its stars entrenched in center Jonathan Luigs and guard Robert Felton. I'm of the belief that it can and will be a truly strong unit once again. It's also important to remember that tight end Wes Murphy was essentially a sixth lineman for Arkansas last year; now, with him gone, talented pass catching TE Ben Cleveland is going to be expected to improve his blocking drastically, while 6'7 Andrew Davie gets his share of opportunities to play, if only because of his intimidating size.
To the quarterbacks we go. Last year it was a battle to the end of August camp to see who would emerge as Arkansas' starter. Freshman Mitch Mustain pushed Junior Robert Johnson to the brink, all but taking the starting position from him. At the time, Casey Dick was battling a bad vertebrae in his back. Fast forward to now. Mustain went 8-0 as a starter before getting benched and later transferring to USC. Robert Johnson was converted to wide receiver. And Casey Dick's back is now healthy. It will indeed be Dick as the starting quarterback to begin the season for the first time in his Razorback career. He has all of eight starts under his belt, but at times seems to have a good command of the offense. How he is able to work with new offensive coordinator David Lee on correcting his mechanics is going to have as much as anything to do with his success this year. Hog fans want to know whether 3 for 19 against LSU was an aberration or a sign of more of the same from their quarterback. Beyond Dick, it's anybody's guess. Nathan Emert, Clark Irwin and froshes Joe Chiasson and Nathan Dick (Casey's younger bro) comprise a depth chart that isn't wowing anybody. And that's putting it lightly. It just may be the case where one significant injury to Casey throws the whole Hogs' season out of whack.
And who will these guys be throwing the football to? Marcus Monk dabbled with the idea of going pro, but wisely decided to return for his senior season. He's already Arkansas' all-time leader in touchdown receptions, and a tremendous number one option, but even he lacks gamebreaking speed. Beyond Monk, it's entirely up in the air: seniors like Chris Baker and Robert Johnson, junior Reggie Fish, sophomores London Crawford and Carlton Salters, and freshman Marquez Wade are all jockeying for position on the wideout depth chart. If there's one huge question mark hanging around the offense (besides QB depth) it's got to be the unproven wide receiver play.
Put in charge of all this stuff is offensive coordinator David Lee. Back for a third stint with the Hogs after time with Bill Parcells' Cowboys, Lee has been handed---we're told---complete control of play-calling in Houston Nutt's offense. Last year, the public was told the same thing about Gus Malzahn, and anybody reading this article who wasn't living under a rock knows how well that worked out. Still, this is different. Nutt and Lee aren't being forced to work together: they're actually friends. Houston will have his share of input (and he should, as a head coach) but come Saturdays it will be Lee's decisionmaking on the offensive side of the ball. How he balances the running and passing games, how often he uses Darren McFadden out of the Wildcat package, and how many spread sets he goes with are all decisions he'll have to make. And the Razorback faithful is certainly curious to see how it's all going to work out.
RBs: A+
O-Line: B+
QBs: C+
WRs: C
TEs: C-
Offense: B+
-JAB