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The Bottom Line ~ The truth, the whole truth

Archive for July, 2007

Tuesday’s Line

July 31st, 2007, 9:33 am by patrickdonohue

One of the things that I hate the most when reading blogs is those that are not updated frequently. And alas, I’ve become one of them. So I returned to my news reader to find more San Diego Comic-Con stories than you can shake a stick at and more Michael Vick news. Fun.

If you get bored, I’d highly recommend Kevin Smith’s Smodcast that he does with longtime friend and producer Scott Mosier. Really funny, insightful stuff on a variety of topics, the least of which appear to be movies. Here’s the link if you’re interested.

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No, seriously…

Who knew an exclamation point could be so expensive.

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Will the NHL return to ESPN next season? And by next season, we mean 2008-2009.

The Cleveland Cavaliers are suing Ticketmaster, claiming the ticket broker of being a *gasp* monopoly?!?! I hate buying anything through Ticketmaster. I think if I had all of my “convenience charges” back, I could finance an Web 2.0 start-up.

You know you’re in trouble when Michael Irvin comes to your defense.

The Titans are shutting down Pacman Jones’ dreams of becoming the next Superfly Jimmy Snuka.

Freddy Adu signs with Portuguese football club Benfica. Wanna know why the MLS is never going to be a successful and respected soccer league? Because it can’t hold onto talent like Adu.

T.J. “Who’s your momma?” thinks NFL commish Roger Goodell is being “mean” to Bengals linebacker Odell Thurman.

Fanhouse’s Big Ten preview.

A rare Navy football story.

Eric Wright and Joe Thomas have agreed to contracts with the Browns. Brady Quinn continues to act like a moron.

Wisconsin AD, and former football coach, Barry Alvarez is in favor of a Big Ten championship game if the league expands to 12 teams.

Chicago Tribune columnist says Big 10 commish has some ‘splaining to do.

Kansas City Star columnist Jason Whitlock calls out Priest Holmes.

LSU head coach Les Miles tries to downplay all of the stupid things he’s said this off-season.

Tennessee quarterback Erik Ainge is in search of a go-to receiver. Erik, his name is Robert Meachem, he’s in New Orleans. Just thought I could help.

L.A. Times’ columnist T.J. Simers proves can make you an elitist jerk.

Mark Richt says his Georgia Bulldogs are not “too far away” from being a title contender. Check his office for a gas leak.

The AJC’s Tony Barnhart on the early Heisman race and the five things to expect in the SEC this year.

The AJC’s Jeff Schultz says Georgia is flying under the radar and could surprise some people this year.

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Well-rounded news…

The Consumerist is reporting that Best Buy has fired some Geek Squad personnel following newspaper articles about “agents” taking files from customer’s computer.

Select Best Buy stores open mini-Apple stores.

NBC wants the sometimes-funny Jimmy Fallon to replace Conan O’Brian as late night host.

Premiere’s 20 fresh faces of comedy.

A major investment group has called for the resignation of Whole Foods CEO John Mackey after it was discovered he was posting to a Yahoo! stock forum anonymously.

The Federal Trade Commission may block Whole Foods’ acquisition of rival Wild Oats. Seriously, consumers need two places where they can buy overpriced health food. Good lookin’ out, FTC.

The New York Times and NBC News will collaborate on their coverage of the 2008 Presidential Campaign.

A first look at the Lost videogame. Warning: You should secure your brain before you watch this! I almost lost mine. No pun intended.

A teaser trailer for the Dark Knight. Oh man. I don’t usually get excited about trailers, especially one that is 45 seconds long. But I’m a dork and I like Batman so this made me excited. 

New Cold War Kids video for “Hospital Beds”.

Kathy Griffin on her date with Andrew W.K.

Kevin Smith to write and direct episode of Heroes spin-off.

Some Lost news from Comic-Con.

The Bottom Line on… Georgia

July 31st, 2007, 8:28 am by patrickdonohue

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Under the radar.

That’s how Georgia head coach Mark Richt described his team at SEC Media Days last week in Birmingham. Heading into the 2007 season, the Bulldogs are a little bit of a mystery.  Quick! Name four Bulldogs on this year’s roster! Can’t do it? Neither can I. Richt will have his hands full with a young team that returns just three starters on defense and seven on offense.

At quarterback, Georgia returns sophomore Matthew Stafford, the winner of last year’s quarterback carousel. There’s no question Stafford matured as the year went on last season but his numbers are still troubling. The first true freshman to start at quarterback at Georgia since Eric Zeier completed just 52.7 percent of his passes while throwing twice as many picks as TDs (13-7) and struggled at times with his touch and accuracy. Stafford will need to learn to play within himself, as he did toward the end of last season. If Stafford is to be successful, he’ll need some weapons at wide receiver — weapons he doesn’t currently have. Stafford, Richt and offensive coordinator Mike Bobo will need some playmakers to emerge from a pack of underachieving wide receivers that include Mohamed Massaquoi, Sean Bailey, Mikey Henderson, A.J. Bryant and Demiko Goodman. The Georgia ground game should be solid as senior Kregg Lumpkin and much-hyped redshirt freshman Knowshon Mereno (ESPN.com’s SEC Newcomer of the Year in the spring) will split time in the back field.

Of the seven early enrollees on campus this spring, five of them are offensive lineman. Seniors Fernando Velasco and Chester Adams will anchor an offensive line that looks like it will feature three lineman who will be playing in their first collegiate game when the Bulldogs play Oklahoma State on Sept. 1. The line will need to mature in a hurry if this offense is to be effective.

Willie Martinez’s defense returns just three starters, having lost six of his front seven, including all three starting linebackers. Thankfully, the defensive backfield looks like it will be a fast, ball-hawking unit that may be able to make up for some of the mishaps up front. There are certainly no superstars on this unit.

I don’t think anyone really knows what to make of this team. Certainly the return of Matthew Stafford, Kregg Lumpkin and the emergency of Knowshon Moreno certainly makes the offense intriguing but the loss of 8 defensive starters has to make even the most faithful Bulldog fan concerned.

Bottom Line Prediction: 9-3. This could very well be the most underrated nine-win team in college football this year. I see the Dawgs dropping their road contests at Alabama, at Tennessee and their annual tilt against the Gators in Jacksonville. But their nine wins are certainly volatile. If they go on a slide like they did last year, they could easily be a seven-win team especially given their games at home against Auburn and South Carolina. 

 

The Bottom Line on…. South Carolina

July 30th, 2007, 12:56 pm by patrickdonohue

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It might take more than some snazzy new jerseys for the South Carolina Gamecocks to be a threat in the SEC East in ‘06.

Forget that head coach Steve Spurrier’s squad returns 16 of 22 starters on offense and defense and is coming off what many believe to be South Carolina’s best recruiting class ever, the Gamecocks still have some unresolved issues at some key positions and have a treacherous road schedule.

After struggling against Georgia and Mississippi State at the beginning of 2006, senior quarterback Blake Mitchell got the hook in favor of the more athletic Syvelle Newton who helped the Gamecocks win four of the next six games. After being arrested following a brawl at a near-campus bar (the charges were subsequently dropped and Mitchell served a one-game suspension), Mitchell was re-inserted into the lineup following a near miraculous comeback at Arkansas and would throw four TDs in the Gamecocks win in the Liberty Bowl. Despite a less-than-spectacular showing in the Garnet and Black game (13-39, 150 yards), it appears the QB job is once again Mitchell’s to lose. Expect the backup position job to be a three-horse race between Chris Smelley, Tommy Beecher and jailbird freshman Stephen Garcia.

Fielding the best pair of running backs not named McFadden and Jones, South Carolina’s running game will serve as a nice compliment to their shaky passing game, which will be without record-breaking receiver Sidney Rice, who opted out early for the NFL.  Junior Kenny McKinley will likely be Mitchell’s go-to-receiver but the passing game will need Larry Freeman, Freddie Brown or Mike West to develop into scoring threats to be an effective compliment to their relatively solid ground game.

Despite the hole left by the departure of Sidney Rice, no unit has more to prove than the Gamecocks O-Line and no unit is perhaps more important.  To put it bluntly, it is the line’s performance that will determine what kind of offense Spurrier can run. After being “steamrolled” in the spring game, it appears the line has a long way to go and Spurrier may have to play it safe and keep Mitchell upright rather than going 5 wide, empty backfield and chucking the ball all over the field.

The defensive line returns first-team freshman All-America Eric Norwood, who led the team in sacks last season but lose Casper Brinkley who joins his twin brother Jasper at linebacker. With a rotation of hungry young players, the defensive line could turn into one of the best in the conference.  Returning a pretty solid core of starts from last season (including some new additions) the South Carolina defense looks as if they can hang with some of the conference’s best offenses. And they’ll have to. With road tilts against Tennessee, LSU and Arkansas.

Coming off an eight-win season last year, Gamecock fans could be expecting Spurrier to finally push them over the edge and into an SEC east title. But it’s not going to happen this year. Regardless of the fact that they play Georgia, LSU, Tennessee and Arkansas on the road (three of which they couldn’t beat last season at home). Look for this to be a transition year, one in which some of Spurrier’s recruits from the ‘06 class get some playing time and mature. Expect to see more than one quarterback, my guess is that Blake Mitchell will struggle and won’t last the whole year and will get pulled, probably in favor of Smelley.

Bottom Line Prediction: 7-5. You can never count a Steve Spurrier coached-team out of any game and it wouldn’t surprise me if the Gamecocks gave the Gators all they can handle in Columbia on Nov. 10, ditto for Georgia on the road in week 2. Best case scenario for this team is 8-4. Anything better and you’re betting that they will beat one or more of the following teams: LSU, Tennesee, Florida or Arkansas. Not likely

The Bottom Line on… Ole Miss

July 27th, 2007, 8:31 am by patrickdonohue

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If BenJarvus Green-Ellis is to make it through the 2007 season, the Ole Miss athletic training staff may want to consider wrapping the Rebels leading rusher (and former Hoosier) in Nerf.

Green-Ellis carried the ball 234 times last season and is expected to receive the same amount of carries this year, as offensive coordinator Dan Werner will look to control the ball with the running game and grind out some wins. At quarterback it appears to be a three-horse race between seniors Brent Schaeffer and Seth Adams and redshirt freshman Michael Herrick. Unfortunately for the Rebs, their most talented quarterback, Texas transfer Jevan Snead, will be sitting out this season after transferring. Though Schaeffer is hands-down the most athletic of the three, he lacks the consistency that head coach Ed Orgeron would like to have in his signal-caller. My guess is that it will likely be Schaeffer for the first part of the season and if he starts to circle the drain its a toss-up between Adams and Herrick.  If Ole Miss is to be competitive this season, it will need to develop more offensive weapons than Green-Ellis. The Rebels finished last in the conference in total yards and scoring last season (261.5 ypg, 15.7 ppg) and will need to develop other offensive threats, particularly at wideout where sophomores Dexter McCluster and Marshay Green return after impressive ‘07 campaigns. Whoever Orgeron starts at quarterback will have the benefit of starting behind a line that is returning four starters from last year’s unit, including All-SEC second-teamer Michael Oher at left tackle and sophomore right guard John Jerry who received freshman All-America honors last season.

Teams will be scoring on the Ole Miss defense at will. The defensive line is a trainwreck despite the improvement of sophomore end Marcus Tillman during the spring. The Rebs will never be able to match the production or the talent of linebacker Patrick Willis, who was drafted in the first round of May’s NFL draft and the team is practically starting over at corner and safety as junior Jamarca Sanford moves back to safety after a season at Will linebacker.

With so many holes to fill, the Rebs could use some early season non-conference wins.. but they won’t get any this season. They open the season at Memphis before hosting Big 12 favorite Missouri. Their first forseeable win isn’t until week 5 when Ole Miss hosts Louisiana Tech on Homecoming in Oxford.

Bottom Line Prediction:  2-7. This is a tough conference for programs that are rebuilding and the Rebels play an absolutely monstrous schedule including non-conference clashes with Memphis and Missouri. Three wins is probably the best-case scenario for this team if they can squeak out a victory in Starkville in the Egg Bowl.

The Bottom Line on… Kentucky

July 26th, 2007, 9:36 am by patrickdonohue

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It was pretty difficult not to notice Kentucky’s ascent to SEC credibility last season. The 8-4 season the Wildcats tallied last season was enough to revamp excitement about the program in Lexington and throughout the state and earned head coach Rich Brooks a new four-year deal. Despite returning what has to be one of the most promising and exciting offenses in the conference, 2006 will prove to be a tough act to follow.

Offensively, you can’t say enough about this team. They have the SEC’s best quarterback, that’s right best quarterback, in senior Andre Woodson, an explosive returnman/tailback in Rafael Little, second-team all SEC wideout Keenan Burton and first-teamer tight end Jacob Tamme. But then there’s that offensive line, which is a frightening assemblage of new players and transformed players. Just how bad is it for UK’s O-Line? The line’s only two returning starts, junior tackle Garry Williams and junior left guard Christian Johnson, were suspended in the spring because of academic difficulties. But it’s Andre Woodson, one of the Bottom Line’s Top 5 breakout stars for the ‘07 season, that makes this offense worth watching. Woodson is returning from a season where he threw just seven interceptions and 31 touchdowns. With just 13 picks in 760 career attempts, the senior signal-caller currently owns the lowest interception ratio in SEC history. Rafael Little returns at tailback and will be a versatile and complex scoring threat and defenses will need to know where he is on the field at all times. He could line up in the backfield, in the slot or out wide. One of Brooks’ favorite formations is to go empty backfield with Little and Burton lined up on the shortside and letting them run option routes. UK returns an underrated crew of receivers led by Burton and Dicky Lyons, who caught 50 balls for 822 yards last year. But Lyons may not be a sure thing at that no. 2 receiver spot. Senior Steve Johnson, Jr. came on towards the end of last season and impressed during the spring and had offensive coordinator Joker Phillips singing his praises, saying the 6-3 receiver was actually better off press coverage than Keenan Burton. Expect Phillips to stretch the field with senior tight end Jacob Tamme, who was the Wildcats third leading receiver last season. Initially recruited to Kentucky as a receiver, Tamme’s speed and hands mimic that of a wideout and make him a deep threat. If the offensive line can mature and find some cohesion, the Kentucky offense could be hands-down the best in the conference.

While the offense was spectacular last season, the defense was anything but. Bluntly put, the defense was hideous last year. Finishing second to last in all of Div. 1-A football in pass defense and total defense and surrended more than 200 yards a game on the ground, good for 108th in the country. The area that the defense did excel in was creating turnovers. The Wildcat D forced 32 turnovers (18 of which were fumble recoveries) making for a 1.15 turnover ratio that was good for second best in the country. But to expect any defense to repeat that feat would be wishful thinking. The defensive line is a mess, returning only two starters on a defensive line that was pushed around and dominated for much of last season. (The UK defense surrendered 351 yards on the ground last year to Louisiana-Monroe). D-Line coach Rick Petri will need young guys to step up and step up fast. At linebacker, the team returns SEC-first teamer Wesley Woodyard, who had a team high 122-tackles last year at Will linebacker. Junior Braxton Kelley returns at middle with junior Johnny Williams returning at Sam. If the Kentucky front seven is to be anything close to respectable, it will have to improve on their 46.5 percent success rate on third down, which ranked worst in the conference last season. Sophomore Trevard Lindley could become one of the SEC’s best young corners this season shoring up the right cornerback spot. The battle for the starting left corner spot is anything but steady with sophomores E.J. Adams and Paul Warford battling for the start. After an explosive offseason, Marcus McClinton returns at free safety after almost being kicked off the team. In March, McClinton was temporarily suspended from the team after being arrested for setting off homemade explosives in his apartment (one of the aforementioned explosives injured the safety), reportedly consisting of dry ice inserted into bottles of water. McClinton and returning strong safety Roger Williams are experienced if not unspectacular and will need to be leaders on a unit that gave up 270 yards per game through the air. In a conference where Early Doucet, Percy Harvin, Marcus Monk and Earl Bennett line up wide, this relatively young unit will be put to the test early and often. Expect to see some track meets.

Grueling. That’s what comes to mind when you look at Kentucky’s schedule. The Wildcats travel to Arkansas, Vandy, South Carolina and Georgia. And play host to Florida, Tennessee and LSU. The Wildcats also play host to their Commonwealth rivals, Louisville in Week 3.

Bottom Line prediction: 5-7. Chalk up losses against Louisville, Florida, South Carolina, Georgia, Tennessee, Arkansas and LSU. I would not be at all surprised if UK tallies an upset or two (maybe against South Carolina or Georgia at home) but I wouldn’t bet on it. A game of interest for me will be the Sept. 15 matchup against Louisville at home. My guess is that Kentucky will give the Cards all they can handle but the Louisville offense is just too much with Harry Douglas and Mario Urrutia.

Wednesday’s Line

July 25th, 2007, 9:59 am by patrickdonohue

Over my morning bowl of cheerios, I watched Mike and Mike this morning and thought the show posed a very interesting question, “Do sports fans care about scandals?” The answer to that question, though, as the pair found out is very complex. As it pertains to steroids in baseball, I don’t care about steroids in baseball or Barry Bonds breaking Hank Aaron’s home run record because I just don’t care about baseball. There are enough things in the world for me to be outraged about so much so that I don’t need to feign outrage in anything. But I think with sports scandals in general, sports fans just get worn out. I can’t listen to sports talk radio hosts talk about Michael Vick anymore, or Tim Donaghy or Barry Bonds. I just don’t want to hear it. And it’s not that I don’t care about those stories. I’m just tired. I need a nap from scandals.

In more exciting news, my hometown,Terre Haute, Ind., totally got a shout-out during Tony Dungy’s appearance on Letterman last night to plug his new book.

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No, seriously…

A 16-year-old drove his truck to an island in the middle of a shallow Pennsylvania river and couldn’t get back.

Inmates split on Woody Allen.

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Eagles corner Sheldon Brown says leveling Reggie Bush in the playoffs last year was like running through a cardboard box.

New Steelers coach Mike Tomlin is already putting the team through the ringer.

What is Brady Quinn thinking? I think on draft day, everybody was kind of pulling for the guy to get drafted because of the embarrassment he caused himself by showing up to the draft without knowing where he would go or how far he’d fall. And now he has grossly overestimated his value and is pissing off an entire city that wants to embrace him. Cleveland wants to love Brady Quinn. He needs to quit acting like a petulant child and get to camp. What a dope.

You can still chew snuff at Tennessee football games but Neyland Stadium will now be smoke-free .

Bobby Petrino trying to keep the Falcons focused on the game on the field. Good luck.

LSU senior tailback Alley Broussard is leaving the team.

Matt Leinart’s legal battle with his ex-girlfriend Brynn Cameron could get very public and very messy.

Cotton Bowl executives are lobbying to make the Dallas-based bowl a BCS bowl.

SI’s Stewart Mandel on how the Michael Vick scandal has effected Virginia Tech.

Eagles draftee Kevin Kolb signs with the team. I was so hoping for a holdout.

Boise State running back (and publicity hound) Ian Johnson has hired extra security for his weekend wedding following racist threats.

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Well-rounded news…

USAToday profiles fanboys.

Naomi Watt, Stuart Townsend and Joseph Fiennes have all been cast for roles in Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince. Not so fast.

Blockbuster may be losing money but it’s beating Netflix, says BusinessWeek.

Facebook founder finds himself in court; being sued by former colleagues.

Though relatively small companies, XM and Sirius merger is huge for the future of satellite radio, says Washington Post.

Has the mystery behind J.J. Abrams’ “mystery” project been solved?

How a movie poster got me totally excited for a Western.

The cover of Bottom Line fav. Kanye West’s new album, Graduation.

Blender’s top 25 most influential people in online music.

The Huffington Post’s Eric Williams thinks a Seth Rogan-led Green Hornet movie, or any Green Hornet movie, is a bad idea.

The Bottom Line on… Arkansas

July 25th, 2007, 9:06 am by patrickdonohue

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The single biggest question for me surrounding the reigning SEC West division champions is what effect will all the off-season drama (See: former offensive coordinator Gus Malzahn leaving for Tulsa, Mitch Mustain and Damian Williams transferring to Southern Cal and a fan using FOIA to get head coach Houston Nutt’s cell-phone records) will have on this squad. Will they adopt an “us against the world” mentality and play with a chip on their shoulder or will all the drama of the off-season serve as a distraction, heap more pressure on the team and ultimately make Nutt a lameduck coach in what would be his last year in Fayetteville? We’ll see.

With his job on the line Houston Nutt has the benefit of having two of the best running backs in the SEC and in all of college football lining up in the backfield with Heisman front-runner Darren McFadden and Felix Jones. The Razorback offense should continue to benefit from the continued use of the Wildcat package in which McFadden lines up at quarterback with Jones at tailback. The more time that Casey Dick spends on the sideline the better. No position on this entire Razorback offense is more suspect than quarterback. With Mustain soaking up the sun in SoCal, junior Casey Dick has been named the starter, for better or worse. Dick will have to improve on a 2006 campaign where he posted a completion percentage of 49.2 and threw for 99.1 yards per game with nine touchdowns and six interceptions. If Dick struggles early, don’t be surprised if Dick gets the hook for junior Nathan Emert, who took some big steps during the spring. If you think the Razorback coaching staff has loads of confidence in Dick, consider this quote from offensive coordinator David Lee.

“Casey had an interesting spring at quarterback,” Lee said. “I thought he started off red hot and then really struggled for the middle part of spring practice and then came back and had a good spring game.”

“At the same time, the other quarterback (Nathan Emert) was really consistent, knew where to go and definitely pushed Casey for the first-team quarterback job with a great spring.”

The Razorbacks need something resembling a passing game to keep opposing defenses from lining up every down with 8 in the box to stuff the run. The teams wide receiver corps is a little thin with only 6′6″ senior Marcus Monk returning. Between converted quarterback Robert Johnson, London Crawford, Reggie Fish, Rod Coleman or Chris Baker, someone is going to have to step up and prove they can be a solid no. 2 receiver. The offensive line returns two starts including potential All-Americn center Jonathan Luigs. The performance of the line, especially its ability to effectively run block will be key to the success of the unit as a whole.

The Razorback defense is weak from front to back. Losing end Jamaal Anderson and tackle Keith Jackson and potentially losing tackle Marcus Harrison to injury could leave the Razorbacks with huge holes to fill on their defensive line. At linebacker, the Razorbacks will need Weston Dacus to do his best to fill the shoes left by Will linebacker Sam Olajubutu. In the defensive backfield, the Razorbacks are weak at the corners with what could be two of the SEC’s most underrated safeties behind them, in safety-turned-linebacker-turned-safety Matt Hewitt and free safety Michael Grant, who returns from a grisly knee injury in 2006. Freshmen could be expected to contribute in the defensive backfield, which could mean mistakes and some big plays. Expect this defense to finish in the bottom half of the conference in total defense.

Coming off their division championship, the Razorbacks face a hairy schedule in 2007 that seriously hinders their chances of making it back to Atlanta. They travel to Tuscaloosa, Knoxville and finish the season in Baton Rouge in the Battle for the Boot. Home tilts against Auburn and Kentucky could prove tricky but this team will live and die with how it plays on the road in hostile environments.

Bottom Line prediction: 8-4. I can’t imagine a universe in which Arkansas goes into Tennessee and LSU and comes out with a win. I’m also expecting the Razorbacks to drop two of three against Alabama, Auburn and South Carolina.

Tuesday’s Line

July 24th, 2007, 9:09 am by patrickdonohue

I am tired of the Michael Vick story. I’ve made my position on this matter unmistakably clear. The league, in keeping with the precedent set forth by the commish’s Pacman Jones ruling, have to suspend Michael Vick. I had a feeling that the animal rights’ groups would pressure the league and the franchise so heavily that they would have to make Vick take an indefinite leave of absence. And that’s what’s happening now. That being said, I’m over it. I don’t want to hear anymore about it on sports talk radio or read more columns from reporters across the country about how the league should throw the book at the (soon-to-be former) Falcons QB. I agree with all of those positions, by and large, but I’m done with this story. There is such a thing as media over-saturation and I’m there.

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No, seriously…

The French government has installed two toilets at the top of Mont Blac, Europe’s highest peak, which will have to be emptied by helicopter.

Great white sharks apparently don’t like kayakers.

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How effective will Rams first round pick Adam Carriker be at defensive tackle? I saw Carriker practice at the Senior Bowl and he’s got it all. He’s very quick, has great feet and hands and an unbelievable motor. The Rams shouldn’t over-think this. Leave Carriker at end. 

Great column in today’s Washington Post by columnist Sally Jenkins about the NBA ref scandal.

George Brett and the greatest gameday promotion ever.

Tennessee joins the list of schools who do not plan to drug test its high school athletes. I think a lot of these states are doing a big thing badly. If you think that steroid use and the use of performance enhancing drugs by high school athletes is limited to states like Texas and Florida, you’re kidding yourself. 

Florida basketball lines up another lackluster non-conference schedule.

Butch Davis on trying to rebuild the UNC football program.

Les Miles backs down from USC/Pac-10 comments. Not a bad idea, coach. Maybe Les peeped the Trojans’ depth chart.

Bobby Bowden has high expectations for his pair of (so far) underachieving quarterbacks.

AJC columnist Terence Moore says there is no way Michael Vick ever plays for the Falcons again.

Bob Stoops says he’s in no hurry to name his starting quarterback. At some point, this is just arrogance. Quarterback by committee has never worked anywhere. The Sooners need a starter. 

Carmelo Anthony follows Edgerrin James’ lead; introduces ‘the new Melo.’

Fellow Huskers impressed so far with new quarterback Sam Keller. I kind of think Keller is a baby. When Dirk Koetter didn’t name him starter at Arizona State, instead of staying and fighting it out with Rudy Carpenter, he immediately packed up and left. His mental toughness is certainly suspect.  

Mizzou coach calls QB Chase Daniel “amazing.”

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Response from last night’s YouTube debates is in. (New York Times/Time Magazine’s TV Blog/Jeff Jarvis). To be honest, I didn’t find this all that spectacular. The questions were predictable and kind of average. They certainly were no different than any question posed to the candidates during a traditional debate. I’ve decided that while I think Obama is the more viable candidate and certainly someone I would vote for, I love Joe Biden, even if he puts his foot in his mouth — a lot. Oh and as anyone who watched last night will tell you, Sen. Mike Gravel is nuts.

Premiere Magazine’s list of 10 TV shows that should be movies.

Is Netflix in trouble?

NBC is being sued after someone caught on Dateline’s “To Catch a Predator” series killed himself. While it is difficult to argue with the intent of this series, as a journalist, I do not feel in any way that reporters should be doing the police’s job for them and making the news. It was really only a matter of time before this happened.  

Teen Vogue to fold? Where will LC “work?” 

Part 2 in Entertainment Weekly’s Top 50 Best Love Songs ever.

The Cinematical on how much a critic should spoil a film when writing a review. When writing reviews and when I did the Industry Outsider podcast, I tried to always be respectful of the readers and listeners who hadn’t seen the film. To not do that, in my opinion, is an arrogant and pompous things to do because at that point you are not writing the review for anyone else, you’re writing it for your own self-satisfaction.

TiVo to debut a $299.99 HD DVR. Nice. I think this will prove to be the right price point for this product.

CBS’ Public Eye on how the internet has become the destroyer of financial models.

The Bottom Line on… LSU

July 24th, 2007, 8:10 am by patrickdonohue

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Yikes.

Those were my exact thoughts when I read Les Miles comments about USC and their schedule, comments that he has since backed down from. (Comments that may or may not have stemmed from residual bitterness over losing top Louisiana prospect Joe McKnight to Southern Cal). And probably wisely so. As good as the Tigers will be this year, they’re not USC. Miles’ team is hands-down the favorite to win the SEC and a BCS championship between the Tigers and Trojans would be any sportswriters dream. The game would force Miles’ team to cash a check that his mouth wrote. After sniping USC, the Pac 10 and Alabama, it’s clear that Miles is pretty confident about his team this year and he should be.

It’s amazing to think that despite the departure of JaMarcus Russell, Dwayne Bowe, Craig Davis and LaRon Landry, LSU is still the favorite to win the SEC West and the conference championship. At quarterback, the Tigers will start senior Matt Flynn, who famously filled in for Russell in the Peach Bowl trouncing of the Miami Hurricanes in 2005. Flynn is a consistent, accurate quarterback and his mobility will give the Tigers offense, and new offensive coordinator Gary Crowton, some additional play-calling options. Expect to see a running back by committee in the backfield, with Crowton promising to “go with the hot hand” with Alley Broussard, Keiland Williams and Charles Scott all seeing some time. Replacing Dwayne Bowe and Craig Davis won’t be easy, but you can’t be too worried if you have Early Doucet lining up wide. If Brandon LaFell and speedster Trindon Holliday can become consistent scoring threats, the LSU offense will be as multi-faceted and dangerous as any in the conference. With three starters returning on the offensive line, and a fourth if you include oft-injured right guard Will Arnold, the success of this offense will rely on the success of the line to stay healthy, open holes for the running backs, and protecting Matt Flynn and giving him time to find Doucet, LaFell, Holliday and tight end Richard Dickson.

Every offensive coordinator in the conference had to have been slamming their head against their desk when they found out that LSU’s defensive tackle Glenn Dorsey (an almost sure-fire first round pick after his junior year) decided to come back for his senior year in Baton Rouge. But for all the attention Dorsey gets, the Tigers will use a four-man rotation at tackle that will include Charles Alexander, Marlon Favorite and sophomore Al Woods coming in to spell Dorsey. Needless to say, running on the Tigers won’t be easy. With Tyson Jackson coming off the left end and Kirston Pittman, Rahim Alem and Tremaine Johnson all sharing time at right end, passing against the Bayou Bengals won’t be that much fun either.

At linebacker, the Tigers will return all three linebackers from last year. With the addition of some underclassmen who saw playing time last year as freshman, defensive coordinator Bo Pelini says this is the best corps he’s had since he arrived in Baton Rouge. With seniors Chevis Jackson and Jonathan Zenon starting at the corners, junior Curtis Taylor and senior Craig Steltz won’t face a baptism by fire as they try to replace four-year starters LaRon Landry and Jessie Daniels. The success of this defense will absolutely rely on how well this unit plays. If Jackson and Zenon can hold their own against the best receivers in the conference, it will free up Steltz and Taylor to fly around and make plays.

Few teams in the SEC this season have a schedule that is more favorable for a national championship run than LSU. Death Valley will play host to Virginia Tech, Florida, Auburn, South Carolina and Arkansas. The Tigers have a road schedule that is as weak, if not weaker, than Florida’s with games on the road against doormats Mississippi State, Ole Miss, an improving Kentucky team and a game in New Orleans against an overmatched Tulane team. But then there’s that game on Nov. 3 against what’s his name in Tuscaloosa. The storylines will be interesting but the game won’t be. Alabama isn’t there yet.

Bottom Line prediction: 11-1. My sole concern will this team is Miles himself. He’s done an awful lot of talking this offseason and I can’t help but wonder how Miles’ mouth will detrimentally affect his team this year. That week 2 game against ACC-favorite Virginia Tech at home could be an early season stumbling block. There’s also those tricky Gators that could easily hand the Tigers their sole loss of the season. Given their favorable road schedule, the Bayou Bengals will win the SEC West and be in national championship contention. Oh I can only hope we’re looking at a USC/LSU national championship.

Coming tomorrow: Arkansas

Monday’s Line

July 23rd, 2007, 10:07 am by patrickdonohue

Had a pretty uneventful weekend. Consisted mostly of watching DVDs (Alpha Dog, Children of Men and Season 4 of Degrassi). Little to no sports consumption though I am LOVING the new NCAA Football 2008 for the 360, much to the chagrin of my girlfriend.

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No, seriously…

A man in New Orleans found a knife in his back more than 5 months after he was stabbed in a fight.

Zimbabwe authorities are pissed at a medium that led them on a hunt for diesel fuel the medium said was in the northwestern part of the country.

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Great Q&A on The Big Lead with The Washington Post’s Michael Wilbon.

The Falcons could face some serious consequences if Michael Vick practices, says SI’s Peter King.

Hawaii wants ESPN’s College Gameday to travel to the Big Island for the Warriors’ tilt against Boise State. Not gonna happen.

Brynn Cameron not about to put Matt Leinart up for Father of the Year. Unfortunately, this story isn’t that surprising.

A pair of stories on how Virginia Tech football players are preparing for the start of the ‘07 season. New York Times/Orlando Sentinel

Is Brady Quinn a jerk?

SI’s Grant Wahl on David Beckham’s debut Saturday night.

Keith Hernandez on his famous role on Seinfeld. The Zapruder-style footage of Hernandez spitting on Kramer and Newman is one of my favorite moments in television history.

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Well-rounded news…

The Minneapolis Star-Tribune on Best Buy’s Geek Squad taking stuff off your computer. Consumer rights blog The Consumerist led the way on this story. Good job, guys.

University of Kansas students will have their internet privileges taken away if they are caught file sharing.

The assistant managing editor at the Birmingham News is a genius!

An amazing map of Web 2.0.

Netflix has lowered their subscription fees in an effort to keep up with Blockbuster online. $1 guys! That’ll show ‘em!

Flying Gonzo!

Part one of Entertainment Weekly’s Top 50 Best Love Songs Ever.

Bottom Line fav Nada Surf to hit the road in the fall to preview new material from their upcoming, yet-to-be-named album.

David Chase addresses The Sopranos finale.. sort of.

The Sacramento Bee will begin posting video letters to the editor on its site.

What to do with that Joan Obsborne CD you can’t believe you own.

XM and Sirius execs continue to try to convince the FCC that its merger is good for consumers. No way.

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