Favre Enough: Brett’s Streak Over

Detroit, MI (Sports Network) – Minnesota Vikings quarterback Brett Favre will be inactive against the New York Giants at Ford Field on Monday, ending his NFL-record regular-season consecutive start streak at 297.

Word came down just before 6 p.m. (et) of the decision, announced through the Vikings’ Twitter feed and later confirmed on the club’s website.

It will mark the first time since September 20, 1992 that Favre will not start a game at quarterback. At that time, the Southern Miss product was in his first season with the Green Bay Packers, and served as backup to Don Majkowski. This is also the first time since September 6 of that year that Favre will not participate in an NFL game.

Tarvaris Jackson will be under center instead, making his first start since 2008. Jackson replaced Favre last week and threw for 187 yards on 15-of-22 passing with two touchdowns and three interceptions in Minnesota’s 38-14 victory. The Vikings have won two straight to improve to 5-7.

Favre practiced on a very limited basis on Friday, but his status for what was to be Sunday afternoon’s game in Minneapolis remained in question even as the contest was postponed, then moved, due to the collapse of the Metrodome’s inflatable roof due to heavy snowfall.

The 41-year-old was quoted by multiple sources late Sunday, including the Minneapolis Star-Tribune, as saying his status for the game was in doubt, even with the extra day to prepare and heal.

Favre, who sat out Wednesday and Thursday, suffered a shoulder injury on his first pass attempt during last week’s game against Buffalo and missed the remainder of the contest. He was diagnosed with an SC sprain to his right shoulder.

Starting left guard Steve Hutchinson did not participate in drills on Thursday or Friday after taking limited reps on Wednesday. Hutchinson, who had a streak of 131 straight starts (including the playoffs) snapped when he missed the Bills game, is suffering from a broken thumb and also will be inactive.

Wide receiver Percy Harvin will once again be inactive due to persistent migraine headaches, while defensive end Ray Edwards is also unable to play with an ankle injury.

Minnesota will also be without cornerback Chris Cook (knee), safety Tyrell Johnson (knee), wide receiver Hank Baskett and defensive tackle Fred Evans.




Gack Sports

Good enough to beat the Lions won’t be good enough from now on

Did the Bears realize this was the Detroit Lions they were playing? It should’ve seemed obvious, what with flying to Detroit and playing on a field that said “Lions.’’ And they should’ve taken the opportunity to follow that big win…




RosenBlog

Bmore Nerdy: Thought CAPRICA Was Enough? Here Comes More BATTLESTAR!

The power of Battlestar Galactica for the SyFy Network continues to be proven, as with Caprica barely through it’s first season, a second series has been greenlit with a 2-hour pilot, Battlestar Galactica: Blood & Chrome.

Another prequel to the 2005 reboot of the 1970′s Sci-Fi series, Blood & Chrome will depict the younger years of William Adama during the 10th year of the first Cylon War.

Personally, I haven’t enjoyed Caprica nearly as much as I have Galactica proper, but if this will be closer to the series that birthed it, I will be very glad.  I can’t help feeling like this is going to the same well one too many times. We shall see.

The official press release follows:

Battlestar Galactica: Blood & Chrome takes place in the 10th year of the first Cylon war. As the battle between humans and their creation, a sentient robotic race, rages across the 12 colonial worlds, a brash rookie viper pilot enters the fray. Ensign William Adama, barely in his 20’s and a recent Academy graduate, finds himself assigned to the newest battlestar in the Colonial fleet… the Galactica. The talented but hot-headed risk-taker soon finds himself leading a dangerous top secret mission that, if successful, will turn the tide of the decade long war in favor of the desperate fleet. “The ‘Galactica’ universe as re-imagined by Ron Moore and David Eick is rich with possibilities and backstory,” said SyFy’s Mark Stern. “We jumped at the chance to revisit the William Adama character and explore this exciting chapter in the BSG narrative which falls between the events of the original series and the prequel, ‘Caprica,’ currently airing on Syfy.”

“While maintaining the themes of politics, social propaganda, and the timeless question:  what does it mean to be human? – ‘Blood & Chrome’ will also return us to the authentic, relentless depiction of combat and the agony and ecstasy of human-Cylon war, which was the hallmark of ‘Battlestar Galactica’s’ early seasons,” said Eick. Michael Taylor wrote the teleplay from a story by Eick, Taylor and Bradley Thompson & David Weddle.

Source: Deadline.com.

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If the Detroit Pistons peformance against Memphis was not enough to make you tune in this season, I don’t know what will be

Like Weezy said, I’m goin’ in.

And although I respect people who aren’t, Friday’s preseason finale against the Memphis Grizzlies, even in a loss that they should’ve won, proved one thing beyond a doubt to me: the Detroit Pistons are worth watching this season, are worth investing time in if you love basketball.

They are far from a perfect team, and my hope that they are reasonably successful and fun to watch won’t prevent me from writing about what I see as problems as the season goes along. As fans, we only saw two preseason games, the first and the last. Both were against good teams, albeit Miami in the season opener is several notches above Memphis. Anyone who watched those two games and didn’t come away thinking that the team didn’t make significant progress from the start of camp to now isn’t really giving an honest assessment. The Pistons have talent, the on-court chemistry is much better than last season and, mismatched or not, they have lineups that are interesting to watch.

The Memphis game was well-played on both sides, played at the intensity level any coach would be happy with in the game before the regular season starts, and the Pistons had many bright spots while also getting exposed on some things that need to be shored up. Below I’ll break down, based on the Memphis game, some things both pluses and minuses that I’ll be watching for this season.

Daye is worth going out to watch

+ Watch the team because of Austin Daye. Daye scored 22 points against Memphis, led the Pistons in scoring this preseason and has an array of skills that allow him to score from essentially any spot on the floor. Last season, I (like many fans probably) admittedly questioned the Daye pick. My thinking, at the time, was that the Pistons could’ve come out of the draft with Ty Lawson, Dejuan Blair and Jonas Jerebko rather than Daye, DaJuan Summers and Jerebko. And although I’ll forever rue not taking Blair and his lottery pick-worthy talent when he was still on the board in the second round, I fully believe that by season’s end no one who watches the Pistons will complain about the Pistons taking Daye over Lawson. He’s teeming with potential offensively. I’m no longer skeptical of that aspect of his game. Daye will score in this league for a long time.

Daye will have defensive struggles no matter what position

- We have to be realistic about the fact that Daye will struggle defensively, and I don’t mean because he’ll be playing some power forward. Daye started off the game covering Zach Randolph. For real.

Just the thought of it is enough to make people laugh. Daye was noticeably overmatched strength-wise against Z-Bo. But his length allowed him to battle — Randolph shot only 2-for-6, Daye had a hand up every time Randolph shot, Daye was able to knock away a couple passes by fronting the post and he got a hand on a Randolph pass as he tried to kick the ball out and re-post for better position. The fronting strategy didn’t always work, as Daye was in terrible position to give up offensive rebounds if Ben Wallace was pulled away from the paint, but overall, he’s smart enough and competitive enough to use his long arms down low to at least be bothersome, even if he is going to give up some points.

Where he’ll struggle is on the perimeter defense against strong wings who can put it on the floor. Against post players, Daye can use all of his weight, plant himself and hold on for dear life. Against wings who are athletic enough to get a running/dribbling start, Daye will get off balance as he has to move his feet, and as we saw on Sam Young’s driving layup to put Memphis up two in the final minute, once Daye is moving and off balance some, the offensive player can use contact to simply bump Daye out of the play. Young drove into Daye, created contact, Daye bounced off and Young had a wide open shot in the paint.

I certainly don’t want to see Daye get beat up by playing the four, but don’t assume that the four is the only place where he’s going to face physicality. He lacks strength, something he’s working on, but that can be exposed by perimeter guys just as easily as we assume it will be exposed by fours.

Making up for poor defense with activity

+ Teams that aren’t great defensively can still make plays. The Pistons have too many guys who are porous defenders to ever be considered good defensively as a team. Wallace won’t be on the floor enough and is not the feared rim-protector he once was, so the solution isn’t going to be simply funneling everyone inside to him when they beat their guy on the perimeter.

Against Memphis, the Pistons made plays defensively that helped their offense. Both centers, Greg Monroe and Wallace, had active hands (busy hands?) all night. Monroe isn’t an elite shot-blocker by any stretch and although Wallace can still block the occasional shot, he’s not exactly Dwight Howard hanging out inside. Bigs who don’t block many shots can make up for it by having quick hands down low. Wallace and Monroe both exhibited this, each coming away with two steals. Monroe has actually averaged nearly two steals per game for the preseason.

And the team is not devoid of shot-blocking either. Both Tayshaun Prince and Daye not only had blocked shots, but blocked shots that led directly to run-outs and buckets. The Pistons might give up some high percentage shooting nights to opponents, but if they can come up with ways to use their quickness to force turnovers or their length on the perimeter to block shots and get quick scores, they’ll remain close enough to have a chance to win in many games.

Too many transition hoops

- With the positives of the defense came ample negatives. The second unit did a pretty terrible job against the Memphis second unit. In the second quarter, after the Pistons starters held Memphis to just 40 percent shooting in the first quarter, the Memphis bench came in against the Pistons bench and immediately went on a run. For the game, Tony Allen, Sam Young and Darrell Arthur shot 19-for-27 and scored 42 points.

The major problem was transition. Memphis got a lot of uncontested run-outs on defensive rebounds and executed several medium breaks after missed and made shots that really helped those active bench guys get easy shots. One factor was the fact that Rodney Stuckey was the only healthy point guard on the roster. With Stuckey resting in the second quarter, Prince ran the point (kind of) by bringing the ball up. But after he got the offense started, he did what a natural wing does — clears out and moves either to a corner or closer to the basket. On many plays, there didn’t seem to be anyone taking on the usual point guard role of being the last line of defense to prevent leak-outs. Everyone seemed to be caught underneath the free throw line or trying to crash the offensive glass.

Charlie V looks more disciplined

+ Charlie Villanueva‘s shot selection is going to be much better. Twice in the first half, Villanueva had OK looks at three-pointers. Both times, he passed them up and ended up with better shots for himself. It seems like a relatively minor point — NBA players pass up shots to try and get better ones all the time. But not Villanueva.

Throughout his career, the biggest reason he’s been a streaky player is because he always plays in a hurry. He gets a semi-decent look, and he’s shooting it. On nights when his shot is falling, that’s great. He can score points in bunches when he’s feeling it. But there were many more nights when he wasn’t in a rhythm, and the more he missed, the more he’d seem to hurry shots. Against Memphis, he was under control, he shot it well and he didn’t take any shots that I considered poor shots all night.

Villanueva has to get active on the boards

- Villanueva’s rebounding was a problem. The main problem was he didn’t do any. He finished with one in 27 minutes. I think in the role it appears he’ll be playing — scoring big man off the bench — it’s not vital that he be the best rebounder on the team. It’s unrealistic to expect he’ll morph into that. But you can’t be nearly seven feet tall and get one board in a game.

Better shooters on the court will make Stuckey a better PG

+ Rodney Stuckey is going to play really well if he’s on the floor with good shooters. No one can say that Stuckey didn’t play an efficient game. He had seven assists to two turnovers, the offense ran smoothly with him in the game, he shot well (would’ve been at 50 percent if not for a three-point attempt with the shot clock running down and a halfcourt heave at the end of the game). He even played pretty good defense against Mike Conley, who had a poor shooting first half before hitting a couple shots late to get up to 4 -for-9.

The difference with Stuckey is simply being on the court with people who can shoot. Having Daye’s three-point stroke in the starting lineup will help Stuckey more than anyone. Daye drew Randolph out of the paint, taking one big man away from the rim and giving Stuckey less traffic to finish in.

When Stuckey played with Daye, Villanueva and Ben Gordon on the court at once in the second quarter, the driving lanes really opened up. Stuckey (sometimes fairly, sometimes not) has been labeled as a poor passer because of his low assist total and the fact that he gets hung up in the lane and can’t get the ball back out when he should pass. Playing with shooters will change that. Spacing is so key in the NBA, and the Pistons had terrible spacing all season a year ago. This isn’t an argument for or against Stuckey as the long-term answer at point guard, but if Daye plays as much as he should and if Gordon and Villanueva shoot it better, Stuckey will have more opportunities to finish and passing lanes to kick it out will be bigger. On top of that, passing to better shooters will make his assist total go up if they are converting a higher percentage of their jumpers.

Decision on final shot was a poor one

- Stuckey’s decision when the Pistons had the ball, down two, with :22 seconds left was pretty terrible. It was hard to tell if it was a designed play or a play that Stuckey took upon himself to try and make, but as soon as the ball was in-bounded, Stuckey immediately drove it inside and had his shot blocked by Allen. Greg Kelser seemed to think it was Stuckey calling his own number. I hope that’s what it was, because I can’t say it would be a good coaching decision to not run a play that will give your team the final shot in that instance. After all, it’s the preseason. No reason to try and extend the game out. Hopefully the real play called for the Pistons to try and win or lose on a final shot.

I admire Stuckey wanting the ball in that instance and trying to make a play. But it wasn’t a good decision, even if the shot went in.

Pistons have intangibles to be a pesky team

+ We’ll close on a positive. Memphis came into the game trying to get to 8-0 in the preseason, so they played with more intensity than perhaps many teams would in that instance. Detroit was short-handed as Will Bynum and Jason Maxiell joined Tracy McGrady on the sidelines nursing minor injuries. Gordon played 11 minutes, but banged his shoulder against Marc Gasol in the first half. He came back into the game, but didn’t play much as a precaution.

So basically, the Pistons played a good NBA team extremely tough with only eight guys at their disposal. Teams that have lacked elite talent or had roster deficiencies have made up for those things with smart play, toughness, being opportunistic and playing with great chemistry in the past. The Pistons have those qualities. There are still tough decisions that need to be made with the rotation when everyone is back healthy, but there is also plenty of reason to think that the Pistons can be highly competitive on a nightly basis and be worth watching this season, whether that results in a decent win total or not.

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PistonPowered

Well that’s good news. Here’s hoping the NCAA had enough fun screwing this kid the first time…

Alfyhilltweet

Well that’s good news. Here’s hoping the NCAA had enough fun screwing this kid the first time around.

OTS: With Hill going the JUCO route, we probably won’t see him for another couple of years, but late is better than never. Clearly he has the talent and I don’t think anyone would argue that we could not use another edge rusher now.

Roll ‘Bama Roll

“You guys got no sense of urgency!” Saban bellowed, loud enough to be heard throughout the busy…

“You guys got no sense of urgency!” Saban bellowed, loud enough to be heard throughout the busy practice field. “You play like sticks!”

Linebacker Dont’a Hightower called it “loafing.”

“I want people to care,” McElroy said. “The thing that bothers me more than anything — not necessarily from a talent standpoint — is just ‘How much do you care about the team? What are you willing to give to allow the team to be successful?’ I think that’s something we all need to take a look in the mirror, offense, defense, special teams, everybody. … No one is really giving as much effort as they probably could be.”

Gentry Estes: Veterans voice opinions to get Tide rolling again in preseason

F-bomb. Not the kind of quotes you want to be reading less than three weeks before the season opener. Raw talent and quality depth notwithstanding, it seems like the team is not where it needs to be mentally.

Roll ‘Bama Roll