Categories
College Football

Journalism Watch List: D-Tread Not Dennis Dodd’s Biggest Problem

Write controversial articles.

That’s the easiest part of Dennis Dodd’s job this week, CBSSports.com‘s senior college football columnist. All he has to do it get people pissed off by writing insensitive, foul, and untrue attacks on good people who are on track to become major football head coaches after the Spartans’ appointment in Pasadena, Calif. next January. The Spartans’ trip to then-No. 18 Michigan showed that nothing was wrong between Mark Dantonio and Don Treadwell and lent some further definition to the Big Ten race. Otherwise, Dodd has to be really worried. He has got to know by now that CBSSports.com has a fallback, a first runner-up should he not be able to fulfill his duties as senior columnist. (Gratuitous Weekend Watch List parody if you don’t get it.)

Categories
College Football

CBSSports’s Dennis Dodd Needs to Apologize for Scathing Attack on Don Treadwell

Dennis Dodd needs to apologize. Notshould, not would be wise to, but needs to. And needs to first thing Monday morning.

Each Friday during college football season, Dodd publishes his Weekend Watch List in which he discusses the upcoming games. But this past Friday, he took it a step further.

Categories
NFL General

2010 NFL Week 5 Picks and Podcast

Ok so week 4 wasn’t so great but we held our own against the ESPN crew and they only pick straight up. Ryan’s 9-5 against the spread last week was one of the best around the interwebs. This week’s lineup of games is really weak. Out of 14 games, there are maybe 3 worth really paying attention to. Nevertheless, we’ve got insight into every game, crappy or not. (The games that is, not the insight.)

The featured games this week are KC @ Indy, NY Giants @ Houston, Tennessee @ Dallas, and Minnesota @ NY Jets. We also discuss the MLB playoffs.

This week’s NFL betting odds are from Betus.

You can download the podcast directly (running time 90 mins) or subscribe to the feed.

If you use iTunes, just click here and then click subscribe and iTunes will take care of the rest.

Categories
College Football

Gold Isn’t Worth Its Weight In Gold

Maybe the irrelevance of the team shouldn’t bother me. Maybe their recent struggles shouldn’t impact my personal judgment of the program. Maybe the name should still scare me. Maybe they should still be a measuring stick. I mean, they have won “11” national championships (that number is debatable), have had 7 Heisman trophy winners and were a dominate force for about 80 years. Yeah they got history, tradition, pride and everything a major program could want. So maybe, I should give them more justice. The respective AP writers seem to, so why shouldn’t I?

Categories
NFL General

2010 NFL Week 4 Picks and Podcast

Week 3 was a good week for the Sportscolumn staff. Now we hope to extend it to week 4. Week 4 is a great week in the NFL season. At the quarter pole, we should have a much better idea of which teams can be considered legitimate playoff threads.

The featured games this week are Baltimore @ Pittsburgh, Washington @ Philadelphia, Chicago @ NY Giants, and New England @ Miami.

You can download the podcast directly (running time 90 mins) or subscribe to the feed.

If you use iTunes, just click here and then click subscribe and iTunes will take care of the rest.

Categories
Boston Red Sox MLB

Calling the Wambulance: Jonathan Papelbon

Everyone who watches sports, plays sports, used to play sports; they have all had problems with officiating. Fans and athletes (humans in general) are inherently biased. If the 49ers have a pass interference penalty called against them, I ignore the actual rules and list all the reasons why Nate Clements was not at fault. Naturally, if it’s called against the other team, I comment on how fantastic the officiating has been this game.

Major League Baseball may be the toughest league to umpire in, and despite being harshly scrutinized, statistics show that MLB umpires do an unbelievably accurate job making calls every season. Still, one missed call can change an entire at-bat, which can change an entire game, which can change an entire series, which can change an entire season. But, human error has been a part of the game forever and despite the possibility of the expansion of instant replay, I highly doubt that umpires will ever be completely replaced by emotionless machines.

Categories
College College Football

Week 4 Mini-Cap & The Fall College Football TV Lineup

       Welcome sports addicts to another week of my literary lullabies. It’s hard to believe a third of the regular season is already over. But on the glass is half full perspective, we still have 4 months of TV viewing for followers of the pigskin persuasion. The field is becoming clearer and with several weeks worth of battles left the cream will soon rise to the top. But here at Dozier’s Diary we take it one week at a time. And so we begin with some thoughts from the previous weekend.

Categories
Video Games

Curt Schilling’s Rhode Island Hoodwink

By Diane M. Grassi

Curt Montague Schilling, has never been one to duck controversy nor a good game of old-fashioned hard ball.

In fact, in the latter part of his Major League Baseball (MLB) career as a starting pitcher, who many experts believe will be an easy entry into the Baseball Hall of Fame, Schilling became a lightning rod for controversy.

Categories
NFL General

2010 NFL Week 3 Picks and Podcast

A lot of surprises in the NFL over the first two weeks. Teams expected to bottom feed are 2-0 and teams expected to make deep playoff runs are 0-2. Meanwhile, a whole host of teams have decided to make a switch at QB just two weeks into the season. With more information about these teams, our picks should get better this week. Right? We’ll see.

The featured games this week are Tennessee @ New York Giants, Dallas @ Houston, Atlanta @ New Orleans, and Green Bay @ Chicago. This week’s spreads courtesy of your friendly neighborhood sportsbook.

You can download the podcast directly (running time 90 mins) or subscribe to the feed.

If you use iTunes, just click here and then click subscribe and iTunes will take care of the rest.

Categories
NFL

RJ’s NFL Blog to be named soon: Week 2 recap

Do people still blog? As a service to our loyal readers and podcast listeners, RJ (and friends) will be sharing some of the top, bottom, power bottom and strange stories and opinions about the No Fun League every week. Look for it Tuesday mornings right here throughout the NFL season. Please comment or contact me @ [email protected].

1)My sky is falling way faster than your sky is falling

This might be the argument between forlorn Vikings fans, downtrodden Cowboys fans and disappointed 49ers fans. All three teams, who many expected to be near the top of their divisions, find themselves in an 0-2 hole. The Cowboys, despite losses to the Redskins and Bears as favorites, are exactly one game behind the rest of the NFC East and a handful of dumb, albeit correctable mistakes (btw who does Alex Barron have pictures of that keeps him on that roster?) from being 2-0. The Vikings, on the other hand, should be a bit more worried. They’ve had a lot of injuries, but are reportedlyin serious talks with the Chargers in landing WR Vincent Jackson. It’s the schedule that doesn’t bode well for the Fighting Favres: after a home game against the feisty Lions and a bye, they go to New York to meet the Jets, host the Cowboys, then road games at Green Bay and New England. The schedule isn’t that much easier for Dallas (at Houston, bye, Tennessee, at Minnesota before home games against Jacksonville and the Giants before things get really tough). The Cowboys are still very talented and as I mentioned before, just a few mistakes away from winning those games.

The 49ers are in a much better position simply because of their division. While they aren’t a lock to beat anybody, they don’t have a real headache game until they visit Green Bay in December with a lot of Rams and Raiders and Cardinals in the mix before that. Trust me, 0-2 (maybe even 0-3) isn’t that hard to overcome in the NFC West, despite already losing to the Seahawks.

2) Our mountaintops are way higher than your mountaintops

On the opposite end of the spectrum, there’s lots of rejoicing in places like Kansas City, Houston, Pittsburgh and even Miami. Teams going into 2010 with modest to middle-of-the-pack expectations find themselves alone in first place across the AFC afterall won on the road . The Texans may have finally arrived after a thrilling come-from- behind win in Washington after trailing 27-10. The Chiefs took advantage of the generous Browns, while the Dolphins and Steelers used outstanding defense to win as heavy underdogs.

I’ll say Pittsburgh is in the best shape going forward. Despite not having anything close to resembling an NFL offense and a quaterback situation that’s the envy of 2003, the Steelers defense is back in 2008 form and holding the fort until Ben Roethlisberger returns from suspension and the offensive line gets healthy. Houston has serious problems with pass defense, the Dolphins can’t score despite having their best personnel on the field and the Chiefs are 2-0 despite the best (or wors)t efforts of their coaching staff (i.e Jamaal Charles still doesn’t get the ball nearly enough). Seriously, the Chiefs are better than advertised, but I just don’t see it happening consistentley. Stay tuned, though.

3) Since when did John Kerry become coach of the Eagles?

Vick. No, Kolb. Wait, it’s Vick. I think.

That’s the way the quarterback situation is playing out in coach Andy Reid’s head this week. The only problem for the Eagles and their fans, it actually came out of his mouth that way. Vick has looked rejuvenated since coming off the bench against Green Bay and a victory in Detroit. With the offensive line woes the Eagles have, the stationary Kolb might literally be killed on the field. Plus, it’s hard to argue right now with Vick’s effectiveness, and as the cliche goes, you always play the hot hand. As Vin Diec argued in his column, however, Kolb was named the starter after waiting about  32 years as Donovan Mcnabb’s understudy. The Eagles need to see if this guy was worth the wait; and a single half of football where he collected more chunks of turf in his facemask than he completed passes just isn’t enough time to make that assessment. Reid’s flip-flopping on the matter does nothing to help the situation.

Thanks for checking out the first, albeit light, effort. Like Brett Farve, I missed training camp so it may take a few weeks to round into form. Expect more stories per week (I just couldn’t bring myself to write about the Manning Orgy that took place Sunday night), more cliches and colloquiallisms than y’all can shake a stick at, parenthetical asides and of course, Steeler love. Until they lose a game.