Tom Brady spotted climaxing at Patriots practice facility

Rumor in Foxboro has it Matt Light wore his Slim Goodbody outfit again. Such a tease. To be perfectly honest, Brady actually looks like a heartbroken Lloyd Christmas moments after spotting his best friend Harry with Mary Samsonite, but alas,…
The Sports Hernia Blog

Injured Toews returns to practice

Jonathan Toews practiced with the Blackhawks Saturday. It was the first time he took the ice since suffering a right shoulder injury last Tuesday against the Blues….
Inside the Blackhawks

Boozer excused from practice

Forward Carlos Boozer didn’t attend the Bulls’ practice session at the Berto Center on Thursday. Coach Tom Thibodeau he was excused and will play Friday afternoon when the Bulls host the New Jersey Nets at the United Center. “He’s out…
Inside the Bulls

Gibson sits out practice

Taj Gibson, who suffered a concussion on Saturday, didn’t practice today and is listed as doubtful for Tuesday night’s game against the Philadelphia 76ers. “He’s still not feeling great, so we held him out today,” coach Tom Thibodeau said. “He’s…
Inside the Bulls

Boozer fine after first practice

Carlos Boozer participated in the Bulls’ full practice on Monday and it’s looking more and more like the power forward will see his first game action Wednesday when the Bulls host the Orlando Magic at the United Center.

“I’m doing good,” Boozer said afterward. “I thought I had a pretty good day of practice, my hand felt good and it’s getting better and better. That’s all I can hope for.
“A couple of times it got hit, which is good to find out how it felt after getting hit. [It was] a little sore, but overall I thought it was a good day.”

Boozer, who had surgery to repair a broken right hand on Oct. 5, has been medically cleared, so the decision of when he plays in a game is his.

“When my hand’s ready,” he said of when he’ll see game action. “It’ll be my decision.”

Inside the Bulls

Williams, Black back at Practice

Mike Williams returned to practice today.

Good news today on the injury front (relatively) as rookie receiver Mike Williams and linebacker Quincy Black were back at practice today. Black has been nursing an ankle injury that had Adam Hayward and Dekoda Watson preparing to potentially take his starting reps on Sunday. Hopefully Black will be able to go on Sunday, but it remains to be seen how everything will hold up and if he’ll be full strength.

Williams on the other hand has become more of a concern as he is nursing a knee injury. Stephen Holder of the Times says that the severity of the injury isn’t really known but Raheem Morris mentioned yesterday that they were evaluating Williams on a day-to-day basis. He had been held out of practice the past two days but went this morning. Williams has 51 receptions for 769 yards and 7 touchdowns. He could be a potential offensive rookie of the year candidate and has a legitimate shot at going over 1,000 yards and ten touchdowns if he can remain healthy for the remainder of the season.

Hopefully both of these guys can go on Sunday but we won’t know for sure whether or not for sure until about an hour and a half before the game. If Williams can’t go Arrelious Benn and the rest of the receivers will need to step up big. Kellen Winslow is also knicked up.

The Pewter Plank | A Tampa Bay Buccaneers Blog

We Talkin’ Bout (Bowl) Practice – Penn State Edition

Matt McGloin looks to keep the QB job and Rob Bolden looks to retake it.

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Gene J. Puskar – AP

Matt McGloin looks to keep the QB job and Rob Bolden looks to retake it.

The 2011 season starts today.  I know that may seem odd, especially with the yet to be announced bowl game looming (hopefully on January 1), but the foundation for the 2011 season will be set during these bowl practices and continue on into the Spring. 

Playing in a bowl game is not the honor it once was.  In today’s bowl landscape, if you are 6-6, chances are you are going bowling.  If you believe a 6-6 team should be bowling is a discussion for another day.  We are hear to talk about practice (man).

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 Most teams use bowl practice to prep for the following season.  It’s during these practices that players will switch positions, either on a permanent or temporary basis, in preparation for the following season.  Penn State struggled to a 7-5 record this season.  The number one culprit was the defense.  It’s been touched on all year long.  The defensive line can’t get consistent pressure on the QB.  The linebackers are a step slow (no matter which direction they were going), and the defensive backs are inconsistent and don’t create turnovers. 

Much has been made of Penn State’s 2009 and 2010 recruiting classes.  We’ve already seen members of the 2009 class show what they can do (Curtis Drake, Devon Smith, Stephon Morris – the 2009 version, Sean Stanley, Malcolm Willis, Justin Brown) and some of the 2010 kids (Silas Redd, Robert Bolden, Khairi Fortt).  Well it will be during these four weeks that the redshirted kids of 2010 and the 2009 backups get an opportunity (their first of three) to crack the two deep for next season.

Five Players Penn State needs to step up during bowl practice:

 

1. Robert Bolden – QB: Bolden became the first true freshman to start a season opener during the Joe Paterno area.  Fans were excited that the coaches were going to play the ”best option”, regardless of their age.  Bolden had an up and down season, and though he did show promise, he also showed he needed to improve his decision making (7 INTs).  It’s easy to forget that he walked off his high school graduation stage in June and onto Penn State’s campus – no spring workouts, no time in the weight program, minimal exposure to the playbook.  Bolden showed he has the physical tools and, thanks to the local and national media, poise. Plugging in Bolden for a series or two during the final games would have been a mistake.  These bowl practices are his first real chance to regain his starting position.  Put will Mr. Moxie himself (McGloin) let him.

2. Kevin Newsome – QB?: When Newsome committed in 2008, fans rejoiced.  The loss of Pat Devlin stung, but the highly touted, but raw Newsome would fill in our QB hole.  Most assumed he would sit behind Daryll Clark and then assume the starting spot in 2010.  Well that didn’t happen, not even close.  Newsome is an outstanding runner, but as a passer, his mechanics, field vision, and pocket patience leave much to be desired.  With the emergence of Rob Bolden and Matt McGloin, Newsome quickly fell to third on the depth chart.  And with Paul Jones coming off his redshirt season, third can quickly turn to fourth.  So what does Penn State do with Newsome?  Because of the depth at his current position, many fans think Newsome will take the Devlin and Jeff Hostetler route and transfer to another school.  Another option, if Newsome wishes to remain a Nittany Lion would be a position change.  Newsome has great size (6-2, 220) and speed, which makes a position change possible.  Penn State is stacked at WR and RB, but CB, S, or LB could be an option.  A dark-horse position would be defensive end, ala Brad Scioli (converted QB to TE to DE).  Newsome still has a redshirt season to use.  He could take that time to bulk up or learn his new position.

3. Mike Hull – LB: Penn State has been spoiled with athletic, instinctive linebackers.  2010 showed we do recruit mortals every once in a while.  Chris Colasanti was a great kid, waited his turn, and kept his nose clean.  Being a hard worker is great, but Chris was a step slow and not nearly as quick as diagnosing a play as a MLB needs to be.  Hull took his redshirt in 2010, and I hope he ate plenty of protein and carbs to bulk up his 211lb frame.  Hull could potentially provide the speed necessary to eliminate any black holes in the middle of our defense, especially on passing situations.  Hull should start tackling Cutis Dukes early and often, especially if he is going to have any chance of stopping Alabama’s Trent Richardson (something Penn State didn’t do so well with in 2010).

4. Evan Hailes – DT: Halies has been a BSD favorite ever since this video hit youtube:


Hailes, already listed at 307lbs, took his redshirt season in 2010 to turn some of that baby fat into pure Larry Johnson, Sr man muscle.  The defensive line was pretty lackluster all season long.  Ollie Ogbu struggled to be “the man” without Jared Odrick taking on the double teams.  Devon Still had his moments, but was not consistent enough in his first year of real playing time.  Hailes will have to work his way into the rotation, which shouldn’t be a problem considering the lack of success the defense had in 2010.  Halies needs to show enough promise in the winter to prove to the coaches he can be relied on next season.

5. Miles Dieffenbach – C: Penn State will again be rebuilding their offensive line in 2010. The entire right side of the line and center are finished at Penn State.  Doug Klopacz was serviceable at center, regardless of the vomit inducing tattoos on his left arm.  Dieffenbach will battle Ty Howle for the vacated Klopacz spot.  Miles has the desired size (6-3, 290) and was heavily recruited out of the Pittsburgh area.  Penn State hasn’t had a freshman anchor the offensive line since Joe Iorio did it as a true freshman walk-on in 1999.  Dieffenbach and company will need to be firing on all cylinders from day one, especially with a question mark at QB.  Silas Redd is a different type of runner then Evan Royster.  He has more moves then Brandon Ware at the Old Country Buffett and his running style will allow the offensive line to get away with things they weren’t able to with Royster at RB.



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