Wednesday, December 27, 2017

Nine bold predictions for 2018 that actually make sense


2017 is almost in the books and 2018 is on the horizon. The sports world saw some surprises in 2017 such as the Falcons blowing a 28-3 lead, South Carolina making the Final Four and the breakthrough seasons from quarterbacks Jared Goff and Carson Wentz, but 2017 also saw some of the expected; Cavs/Warriors in the NBA Finals, Baker Mayfield winning the Heisman, the Patriots and Steelers dominating the AFC. You never know what will happen in 2018, but here are nine bold predictions in the sports world that actually make sense. In no particular order

                                     Skylar Thompson wins the Heisman
If you haven't heard of Kansas State quarterback Skylar Thompson, you are missing out. The dude is a dang treat to watch. The freshman from Independence, Missouri came into the season as the third stringer, but injuries to Alex Delton and Jesse Ertz prompted Thompson to play in seven games, while Thompson's numbers were not particularly sexy, he has tremendous upside and will most certainly be the starter for the Wildcats next year. Thompson is reminiscent of Collin Klein and the Big 12 could be wide open next year given that the league's two best quarterbacks; Baker Mayfield and Mason Rudolph will be gone.

Iowa wins the Big Ten West
I am the least confident in this one, but its not that far-fetched. Not too many expected Iowa to win the West in 2015, but they did it. The 2015 team lost lots of key pieces from the year before just like the 2018 team will. The Hawkeyes will lose their top two running backs in Akrum Wadley and James Butler, but they've liked what they've seen from Toren Young and Iowa always produces solid running backs. Nathan Stanley will have a year of experience under his belt after throwing for over 2,500 yards and 27 touchdowns with just six interceptions as a sophomore. Noah Fant has flourished into one of the best tight ends in the nation and they return four of their five starting offensive lineman.The Hawkeyes lose a chunk on the defensive side including; Bo Bower, Nathan Bazata, Josey Jewell and Josh Jackson, but expect to see improvement from Matt Nelson, Anthony Nelson, Parker Hesse and Jake Gervasse. Iowa's schedule is also favorable as their two toughest match-ups are; vs. Wisconsin at Kinnick Stadium and on the road against Penn State.
 Houston Rockets, 2018 NBA Champions
This one is bold in the sense that it is anyone except the Cavaliers or Warriors. Eventually someone else will come along and win, or at least I'm hopeful. The Rockets have made no secret about the fact that they've built themselves to compete with the Warriors. They are currently tied for the Warriors with the best record in the NBA and have wins over Cleveland and Golden State for what that's worth. The Rockets have a ring-chasing Chris Paul, who is doing exactly what they went out and got him for, Eric Gordon who is having his best year since 2012 and a hungry James Harden, who wants to prove to everyone that he should also be considered with the likes of Lebron, Durant and Westbrook.
Jim Harbaugh leaves Michigan... to become Colts head coach
Michigan fans will not want to hear this, but it is a real possibility. Michigan fans will also say that he would never leave his alma mater, but coaches have done that before. Loyalty ceases to exist in sports anymore. Michigan has underachieved in Harbaugh's four seasons, they've been a year away from winning the national title for the last four years and still haven't been able to get over the hump. Harbaugh has been a nomadic coach, never coaching anywhere longer than four years. His divorce from the NFL wasn't pretty and you have to think that he still feels like he can win in the NFL. The Colts would be the ideal job for Harbaugh. He played in Indianapolis, he coached Andrew Luck and they play in a weak division. Their roster isn't great, but it's a pretty similar situation to what he took over in San Francisco. 

Giancarlo Stanton breaks the single-season home run record

Giancarlo Stanton does not have any trouble hitting home runs, so putting him in the easiest ballpark to hit them in should be interesting. Stanton joined the Yankees this off season to create Murderer's Row 2.0, teaming up with Aaron Judge and Gary Sanchez. The trio combined for a total of 144-homers in 2017. Stanton had the best year of his career in 2017, knocking 59 dingers en route to his first National League MVP Award. Stanton is now on a winning team, in a cupcake ballpark. The key for this prediction is whether or not Stanton stays healthy. He played in 159 games in 2017, the most of his career. It will be a task for him to hit 74 home runs, but it's possible.

Chase Elliott wins NASCAR title
Chase Elliott has already won a championship in NASCAR, but it was in the Nationwide Series. I think Chase Elliott has the potential to win the Monster Energy Cup Series Title in 2018. Elliott has yet to win a race in NASCAR's premiere level, but he's been close on many occasions, picking up a runner-up finish seven different times. Elliott appeared to be on his way to a berth in the championship four, but an accident with Denny Hamlin at Martinsville prevented him from racing for the title. Elliott will get his first career win in 2018 and will keep the wins coming after that en route to the title at the tender age of 23 years old, making him NASCAR's youngest champion.
Two Big 12 teams will make the Final Four
Two teams from the same conference making the Final Four is not as rare as you might think. It's happened 11 times since 2000, as a matter of fact the Big 12 has done it twice (2002 and 2003) The Big 12 might be the best conference in college basketball, with every team playing really well in non-conference play, but it gets overlooked because nobody in this conference strikes you as a great team. Which is what makes this conference dangerous. TCU is off to their best start in school history and might not have what it takes to make a deep run, but you never can tell with Jamie Dixon coached teams, Trae Young is an absolute beast and could be capable of putting Oklahoma on his back and carrying them deep into the post-season, this is not one of Bill Self's greatest Kansas teams, which means it might be a Final Four team given their recent history.

Jaguars win the AFC
I won't go as far as saying Jacksonville will win the Super Bowl, but the Jaguars should be considered as a legitimate contender in the AFC. It's no secret that the AFC runs through Pittsburgh and New England, but Jacksonville already manhandled Pittsburgh once this year. I know that it's difficult to beat a team twice in a year, but the Jaguars are a team that is built to do that, they are also built to beat New England. Teams that beat New England do so by putting pressure on Tom Brady and running the ball down their throat, Jacksonville is capable of doing both. Many people will argue that Blake Bortles isn't capable of taking the Jaguars to the Super Bowl, but they must have forgotten that Rex Grossman and Trent Dilfer started in Super Bowls. Many people also do not believe that Bortles can go into New England and win, but the only two quarterbacks who have beat the Patriots in Foxboro in the playoffs in the Brady/Belichick era are Joe Flacco and Mark Sanchez. Not exactly elite territory.
Jimmy Garoppolo, 2018 NFL MVP
 
Jimmy G is a straight G, or at least it looks that way. The former Patriots backup was traded to San Francisco just prior to the trade deadline. He has started the last four games for the 49ers. In those four games, the 49ers are 4-0, Garoppolo has thrown for 1,200 yards and four touchdowns. It appears at this moment as if the 49ers nailed this one. The 49ers should franchise tag Garoppolo in 2018. Kyle Shanahan is a quarterback expert, the 49ers are a very young team and could possibly break through in 2018. If the 49ers are a playoff team next year and Garoppolo is putting up numbers similar to what Carson Wentz had before he went down, then Garoppolo will certainly be considered for league MVP.
 
 
 

Friday, December 15, 2017

Ranking the Power Five College Football Head Coaching Hires

Eleven power five programs made head coaching changes this offseason, seven of those programs because they fired their previous coach. Four schools were forced to find a new coach after their previous head coach had left for another head coaching gig. Let's take a look at which programs got their head coaching hire right and which programs did not.

DISCLAIMER-This is only Power Five schools (ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac 12 and SEC). I also did not include Ole Miss promoting interim head coach Matt Luke, because he had been there all year.

#11 Arizona State-Herm Edwards
Resume-Head Coach with New York Jets (2001-2005, 39-41) and Kansas City Chiefs (2006-2008,15-33)
Previous Head Coach-Todd Graham, fired after six seasons. (46-31).

This hiring makes no sense at all. Edwards has spent the last eight years as an analyst at ESPN and has not coached at the collegiate level since he was an assistant at San Jose State in 1987. There is no indication whether or not Edwards is capable of recruiting at the level it will take to be competitive in the Pac-12. The Sun Devils have stated that Edwards' role will be more of a CEO type and that his coordinators will have a large say, the problem is they currently are looking for both an offensive and defensive coordinator. This hire is almost guaranteed to blow up in Arizona State's face. I don't see Herm or the AD that hired him lasting more than three years.

#10 Tennessee-Jeremy Pruitt
Resume-Defensive Coordinator at Florida State (2013), Georgia (2014-2015) and Alabama (2016-2017)
Previous Head Coach-Butch Jones fired after five seasons (34-27).

To be fair, I think Jeremy Pruitt has the potential to be a successful head coach. However, given the mess that the Tennessee coaching search was it would have taken Jim Harbaugh, Nick Saban, Bill Belichick, Urban Meyer or bringing Bear Bryant back to life and hiring him to make this hire rank high on my list. I don't see how Vols fans look at Pruitt as a better candidate than Greg Schiano was, but Pruitt has built good defenses wherever he goes and has spent the past two season guiding Alabama's defense. Pruitt will know what it takes to beat Alabama but will be expected to win and win quickly in Knoxville or he will face the same fate as his predecessor, Butch Jones.

#9 Oregon State-Jonathan Smith
Resume-Offensive Coordinator at Washington (2014-2017)
Previous Head Coach-Gary Andersen resigned after two and a half seasons (7-23).

Jonathan Smith is the perfect hire for Oregon State, he is number nine on this list because I do not know enough about him to put him any higher, but this is a heck of a lot better hire than the two ranked below it. Smith spent the last six years under the tutelage of Chris Petersen, one of the most underrated coaches in the nation. Smith was a four-year starter for the Beavers from 1998-2001. He led the Beavers to a Fiesta Bowl, so his hiring is a homecoming in Corvallis. Smith already hired Mike Riley to serve under him and possibly guide him in his first head coaching gig. The big task for Smith is going to be trying to compete with Oregon. Speaking of that. 
                                          
                                               #8 Oregon-Mario Cristobal
Resume-Head Coach at Florida International (2007-2012, 27-47), Assistant Head Coach at Alabama (2012-2016) and Co-Offensive Coordinator at Oregon (2017)
Previous Head Coach-Willie Taggart took the Florida State job after one season (7-5).

Remember when Oregon was cool and on the brink of a national title? They are now on their fourth head coach since 2013. Hiring Cristobal is a good football hire, but not the splash that you might expect from Oregon. The Duck's decision to keep the coaching hire in-house is an indication that they liked what they saw from Cristobal this year. He took Florida International to their first-ever bowl game and helped produce NFL-talent offensive lineman at Alabama. Cristobal will be expected to turn Oregon's offensive into one of the nation's productive, if not the most exciting. This isn't as sexy of a hire as luring in Kevin Sumlin, but it is a good football move.

#7 Arkansas-Chad Morris
Resume-Offensive Coordinator at Clemson (2011-2014), Head Coach at SMU (2015-2017, 14-22)
Previous Head Coach-Brett Bielema fired after five seasons (29-34).

Morris' record does not look impressive, but SMU went 1-11 the year before they hired Morris. He turned SMU around by going 5-7 and 7-5 in his last two seasons. He made the Mustangs a "fun to watch" football team averaging just over 40 points per game in 2017. Morris deserves credit for helping put Clemson on the map. Morris guided Clemson's offense to the Orange Bowl twice before he left. Morris has shown that he can recruit the Texas area which will be pivotal for Arkansas if they want to be able to compete with Alabama and LSU. His teams at SMU struggled to play defense, allowing 35.5 points per game in 2017. That type of defense doesn't breed success in the SEC, but at Arkansas, the main objective should be to bring a fun, entertaining brand of football. Which Morris should be capable of doing in Fayetteville.

#6 Mississippi State-Joe Moorhead
Resume-Head Coach at Fordham (2012-2015, 38-13), Offensive Coordinator at Penn State (2016-2017)
Previous Head Coach-Dan Mullen took the Florida job after nine seasons (69-46).

This hire would be ranked higher if Moorhead had experience as a head coach at a major program. He has had success just about everywhere he goes. Moorhead took a Fordham team that went 1-10 the year before he arrived and turned them into a perennial contender. Losing just 13 games in four seasons including five in his first. Moorhead then left Fordham to become offensive coordinator at Penn State and was the mastermind behind the success of Trace McSorley and Saquon Barkley. You could even argue that he saved James Franklin's job last year. Moorhead will finally have the chance to prove that he should have been considered for more major jobs. 

#5-Florida State-Willie Taggart
Resume-Head Coach at Western Kentucky (2010-2012, 16-20), South Florida (2013-2016, 24-25) and Oregon (2017, 7-5)
Previous Head Coach-Jimbo Fisher took the Texas A&M job after eight seasons (83-23).

This is Taggart's third head coaching job in the last three seasons, but it is definitely the best one he has had. Taggart succeded with very little at Western Kentucky, turned South Florida back into a winning a program and took Oregon from an abysmal 4-8 to a respectable 7-5 record. Taggart is from Florida and knows what it takes to be successful in the Sunshine State. He recruited the state while at South Florida and will have more resources at Florida State. Taggart never really has had the chance to play with a full deck yet. This could be it. He will be expected to win and win now or else his stint in Tallahassee may be short.

#4 Texas A&M-Jimbo Fisher
Resume-Head Coach at Florida State (2010-2017, 83-23)
Previous Head Coach-Kevin Sumlin fired after five seasons (51-26).

You would think that hiring a coach who has won 78 percent of his games and a national championship would be the best hire, but I don't think it is. Jimbo won a title at Florida State and kept the Seminoles relevant but there were seasons where they underachieved or disappointed. Much like Texas A&M did under Sumlin. Fisher has experience recruiting in Texas and also had success recruiting against Florida schools for in-state prospects much like he will have to recruit against the Texas schools for home-grown recruits. Fisher left Tallahassee due to a rift between him and the athletic department. Texas A&M has placed lofty expectations on itself since joining the SEC and if Fisher fails to live up to those expectations he could face a similar situation to what he faced at Florida State.

#3 Nebraska-Scott Frost
Resume-Offensive Coordinator at Oregon (2013-2015), head coach at Central Florida (2016-2017, 18-7)
Previous Head Coach-Mike Riley fired after three seasons (19-19).

Nebraska finally got a head coaching hire right, or at least it looks that way. The Cornhuskers did not overthink this hire and brought Frost back home. Frost built an exciting brand of football at Central Florida and took the Knights from winless to undefeated in just two seasons. Frost has played or coached under the minds of Tom Osborne, Bill Parcells, Bill Belichick, Jon Gruden and Chip Kelly. He knows what it takes to be successful at Nebraska having previously done so as a player. Frost will need to be given time however as Riley left the program in utter disarray. Thinking that Frost will turn things around in anything less than three seasons is far-fetched. 

#2-Florida-Dan Mullen
Resume-Head Coach at Mississippi State (2009-2017, 69-46)
Previous Head Coach-Jim McElwain fired after three seasons (22-12).

This is a home-run hire for the Gators. Mullen was the offensive mastermind that led the Gators to two national championships as its offensive coordinator from 2005 to 2008. Mullen turned Mississippi State into a respectable program and will have any more resources at Florida than he did at Mississippi State. Florida should be expected to compete for the SEC East title immediately if they can fix their mess of a quarterback situation. Mullen developed Alex Smith, Tim Tebow and Dak Prescott at the college level and has always had decent quarterback play, so he should be expected to do the same in Gainesville.

#1 UCLA-Chip Kelly
Resume-Head Coach at Oregon (2009-2012, 46-7), Philadelphia Eagles (2013-2015, 26-21) and San Francisco (2016, 2-14)
Previous Head Coach-Jim Mora fired after six seasons (46-32)

UCLA hit a home run that Mike Trout would be proud of. Say what you want about Chip Kelly. Yes, he failed in the NFL, sure he's a jerk and different, but the dude won at the collegiate level and made Oregon cool. Kelly is renowned for his offensive innovation. UCLA has long been seen as the little brother of USC. UCLA hiring Kelly puts the Bruins on the map and gives them the opportunity to contend. At Oregon, Kelly proved that he was capable of recruiting the Los Angeles area and his name alone could be enough to help UCLA bring in some homegrown talent. I am going to go ahead and make the bold prediction that UCLA will make the playoffs under Kelly in the next five years.  

Friday, September 29, 2017

Why your NFL team will suck this year


Image result for blake bortles

The NFL Season is only two weeks old and we are still trying to get a grasp on most teams. Some appear to be easier than others. Every year, there is one team that is expected to do great, but sucks (i.e.… 2011 Eagles) and a team that is expected to suck, but finds its way into the playoffs (2008 Dolphins).

 I am here to tell you why every team will suck this year.

Arizona Cardinals-Carson Palmer and Larry Fitzgerald are both well past their prime, I guess it’s fitting that they are in Arizona considering that’s where just about every old person goes to retire. The Cardinals will be without David Johnson for at least two months, which means they will have to trust Kerwynn Williams to carry the workload that Johnson usually would. The Cardinals currently have 128 rushing yards through just two games, meaning that their lack of a running game is forcing them to rely on a 37-year-old Palmer.
Atlanta Falcons-All hangovers are bad, but Super Bowl hangovers are the equivalent to drinking a bottle of Jack and then chasing it down with a case of Milwaukee’s Best. Since 1997, the team that has lost the Super Bowl has failed to make the playoffs the next year 40 percent of the time. No team has returned to the Super Bowl the year after losing it since the Bills in 1993.  The Falcons also tend to turn away from Julio Jones at points in the game forcing them to rely on Taylor Gabriel and Mohammed Sanu. Their defense is above average, but still very young and will be without their best defensive player Vic Beasley who is expected to miss at least a month after he suffered a hamstring injury in their win over the Packers.
Baltimore Ravens-The Ravens have done what they needed to do to win in their first two games against opponents that do not look very good (Bengals and Browns). Joe Flacco’s gunslinger mentality forces him to make a handful of mistakes. Since winning the Super Bowl in 2012, he has thrown 63 interceptions and has the worst touchdown to interception ratio for a quarterback who has started multiple seasons since then. Their running game is a liability as well since Terrance West and Buck Allen are at best average running backs. They will need more production from their running game in order to be able to rely on their good defensive play and to make up for Flacco’s inconsistencies.
Buffalo Bills-The Bills defense has been solid through the first two weeks, only allowing a combined 21 points from the Jets and Panthers. The offense; however seems to be mediocre at best. Tyrod Taylor has the ninth best QBR rating in the NFL right now, but they did play the Jets in Week 1. Taylor no longer has the deep threat weapon that they had prior to trading Sammy Watkins. The Bills expect LeSean McCoy the focal point of their offense, but he was awful against Carolina, only picking up nine yards on twelve carries. The good news is that The Bills are in prime position to reach in 2018 to draft a quarterback after acquiring the Chiefs first round pick in the Patrick Mahommes trade, but that does not help them in 2017.
Carolina Panthers-The Panthers are 2-0 despite a lethargic start. Christian McCaffery has failed to wow me so-far despite a ton of preseason hype. This team has a ton of weapons on the offensive side, but just lost tight end Greg Olsen to a broken foot. They have also tried to make Cam Newton into a pocket quarterback, I personally think he is capable of doing that, but based on what happened to RG3 and Michael Vick, I can see where some people have their doubts. The Panthers went 6-10 and found ways to lose in 2016. Losing six games by seven points or less. They will have to be able to close out games in 2017.
Chicago Bears-Mike Glennon looked OK in Week one against the Falcons (26/40 213 yards and one TD), but struggled in their loss to Tampa Bay. This season the Bears will learn why nobody else wanted to pay him $15 million a year to a quarterback that has only started 20 games with a record of 5-15. Glennon is a good backup, but clearly not a capable starting quarterback and is just a stopgap quarterback for the Bears while they groom Mitchell Trubisky. The Bears are also inept at wide receiver after losing their top two receivers (Cam Meredith and Kevin White) to injuries. Their defense is also not up to the standard that we are accustomed to seeing the Bears defense be, having allowed an average of 26 points in their first two games.
Cincinnati Bengals-How Marvin Lewis still coaches there just baffles me. He is the equivalent to Jeff Fisher. Lewis has been just good enough to not be fired. That could change if things do not get better for the Bengals. Their offense has been historically inept, becoming the first team to fail to score a touchdown in their first two home games since the 1939 Eagles. Andy Dalton has been firing blanks and has the worst QBR in the league (9.6). Their offensive line has taken a step back since losing Kevin Zeitler to free agency, which could be a part of Dalton’s early woes. The Bengals could end up handing the reigns over to A.J McCarron if things do not get better for Dalton. Which probably won’t fix anything but McCarron is nothing more than a game changer.
Cleveland Browns-The Browns have lots of young talent; however that does not mean they will succeed in 2017. The Browns have gone a dismal 88-202 since rejoining the NFL in 1999. The Browns have also started 27 different quarterbacks in that time and have only started one quarterback for the entire season once (2001, Tim Couch). DeShone Kizer has the tools to be their signal-caller of the future, but he is still very raw and is prone to make mistakes. The Browns are very young team that does not have a lot of experience aside from Joe Thomas. They let their number one receiver (Terrelle Pryor) leave during free agency and they cut their best defensive player (Joe Haden). You will never believe this, but the Browns are going to be a dumpster fire in 2017.
Dallas Cowboys-The Cowboys will struggle if Ezekiel Elliott ends up getting suspended. They have a great offensive line, but Elliott is the type of game-changer that neither Darren McFadden nor Alfred Morris can be. Dak Prescott will also be exposed as nothing more than a game manager who has been aided by a strong running game. The Cowboys have a mediocre defense at best. Their secondary is pretty banged up. The Cowboys defense was so bad in Week 2 that it made Trevor Siemien look like John Elway. The secondary will struggle with the other quarterbacks on their schedule such as Matt Ryan, Aaron Rodgers, Kirk Cousins, Alex Smith and Derek Carr.
 Denver Broncos-The Broncos have looked impressive through the first two weeks, but do not be fooled. The Chargers are choke artists and we just discussed how bad Dallas is defensively. Trevor Siemien had a good game, but even a blind squirrel finds a nut occasionally. Siemien is a run of the mill quarterback who will struggle against superior defense. Their ground game consists of a trio of injury prone running backs (C.J Anderson, Jamaal Charles and Devontae Booker). The Broncos offensive line is also a question of concern given that they struggled in 2016.
Detroit Lions-The Lions recently made Matthew Stafford the highest paid player in the NFL. Which is good, because he is about all the Lions have. Detroit makes no bones about the fact that they do not run the ball. Last year they only had three 100-yard rushing games. They managed 82 rushing yards against Detroit, but they do not have a go-to running back. Golden Tate is not Calvin Johnson and Eric Ebron has yet to live up to the hype hauling in only seven scores in three seasons. He will have to become more of a red-zone threat. The Lions also have an average defense that consists of journeyman players and an aging Haloti Ngata.
Green Bay Packers-Aaron Rodgers is perhaps the best quarterback in the league, but the Packers are not the best all-around team. Their weaknesses were exposed in their Sunday night loss to the Falcons. They do not have a reliable running game. Their starting running back is a converted wide receiver, and if he goes down, they will be forced to rely on a trio of rookie running backs. Jordy Nelson and Randall Cobb both suffered injuries against Atlanta. Rodgers will be forced to rely on Geronimo Allison and DaVante Adams if Cobb and Nelson cannot stay healthy. Protecting Rodgers might be hard for the Packers as well. Their offensive line has been bad the first two weeks. The Packers have a mediocre at defense, last year they had one of the best rushing defenses, but one of the worst passing defenses. Only the Saints gave up more passing yards and only the Browns, Rams, and Saints gave up more passing touchdowns.
Houston Texans-The Texans offense has looked underwhelming. Tom Savage apparently had a short leash and they turned to rookie Deshaun Watson after Savage had an abysmal first half against Jacksonville. You would think the Texans learned from the David Carr mistake that you should be careful handing the reigns over to a rookie signal-caller, but Watson did show flashes of brilliance in Week 2 and he has the weapons around him to succeed, but the Texans should expect growing pains from their rookie signal-caller. Watson had the tendency in his first start to tuck it run when his primary target was not open, that could be detrimental to what the Texans want to do offensively and could put Watson in danger. The offensive line is also a liability, their best lineman Duane Brown is currently holding out and they are an average line with him, they have been atrocious without him allowing 13 sacks in two games including 10 against Jacksonville.
Indianapolis Colts-Aside from Andrew Luck the Colts easily have the worst roster in the NFL. Bad news for them is that Andrew Luck has missed the first two games and it sounds like he is going to miss at least a few more. Scott Tolzien was garbage in Week 1 (9-18, 128 Yards and 2 Interceptions). Tolzien was not good at Wisconsin, so I am not sure why the Colts thought he was a reliable quarterback. They did make the switch to Jacoby Brissett, but even Brissett cannot be expected to succeed with the lack of talent surrounding him. With Luck, the Colts have the ability of going 6-10, without him they will be lucky to win three games.
Jacksonville Jaguars- If Blake Bortles never has to throw the ball, the Jaguars will be fine or maybe Bortles should just treat the entire game as if it is garbage time. Nearly twenty-one percent of Bortles touchdowns in the past two seasons have came when the game is out of reach.  More than any other quarterback. His quarterback rating is over thirty points better in garbage time. The Jaguars have lots of young talent surrounding Bortles, but they are without their number one receiver Allen Robinson who tore his ACL in Week 1. The Jaguars appeared to find a winning formula in the opener against Houston by developing a game plan that took a lot of work away from Bortles; however, Bortles did what Blake Bortles does in Week 2 against Tennessee. Asking for the Jaguars to win while their quarterback does essentially nothing is a lot to ask for.
Kansas City Chiefs-The Chiefs have been the most impressive team throughout the first two games. Alex Smith has confidence that I had not seen from him in his previous four years in Kansas City. However, is this the new Alex Smith or a fad? If Smith returns to his old self, that could be trouble. Rookie running back Kareem Hunt has looked impressive in his first two games, but he would not be the first rookie to have two good games, and then fade into oblivion. Tyreek Hill is the fastest player in the league, but surely, at some point teams will find a way to contain him or minimize him. Travis Kelce is perhaps the best tight end in the league, but he can be a doofus and it might end up costing his team a game at some point. Derrick Johnson looks and plays old and the secondary does have some question now that Eric Berry is out for the season.
Los Angeles Chargers-New Coach, new city, same inability to close out games. The Chargers went 5-11 last year, losing nine of those games by less than a touchdown. It appears their tendency to choke moved from San Diego to Los Angeles when even their quarterback would not. The Chargers could be 2-0 if not for two missed game-winning or game-tying field goals. The Chargers have a young team with a lot of talent, but history shows that teams who move rarely play well in the first season in a new city.  The Chargers also play in the toughest division in the league.
Los Angeles Rams-The Rams have been one of the more surprising teams so far this season. They have scored 114 points through three games. They only scored 224 points in 2016. The Rams will struggle if Jared Goff struggles like he did in 2016 (5 TDs, 7 INT and an 0-7 record) Todd Gurley also has to return to his 2015 form, not his 2016 form (3.2 YPC, 6 TD’s). The offensive line has to be better than it was in 2016. Rams quarterbacks were sacked too much in 2016 (49 times) three Ram’s offensive lineman ranked in the top 15 in sacks allowed (Tim Barnes, Rob Havenstein and Greg Robinson) Thankfully only Havenstein is in the 2017 lineup, but they still have to be able to protect Jared Goff in order for him to be successful.
Miami Dolphins-Last year the Dolphins bounced back from a 1-3 start to make the playoffs without their starting quarterback Ryan Tannehill. Tannehill is out in 2017 with an ACL injury. Jay Cutler came out of retirement to run Adam Gase’s offense. The Dolphins have a ton of offensive weapons, but the real question is whether Cutler can be a competent quarterback. He has not been good the last few years throwing 34 interception in 35 games since 2014.
Minnesota Vikings-Last year everyone panicked when Teddy Bridgewater went down with a pre-season injury. Sam Bradford stepped and led the Vikings to a 5-0 start. The defense then fell apart as the Vikings lost eight of their last 11 games to finish 8-8. The Vikings failed to close out games in the latter half of the season losing four games by one score or less. Sam Bradford looked magnificent in their Week 1 win over the Saints, but he has been out with a knee injury. He has been a week-to-week decision the past couple weeks, so it is tough to tell when he will come back. The Vikings will have to rely on Case Keenum until Bradford is able to come back. Keenum has essentially been a journeyman bouncing from Houston and Los Angeles. The offensive line was absolutely awful last year. Pro Football Focus ranked them as the 29th best offensive line and tackle T.J Clemmings was statistically one of the worst tackles in the league. They will have to be able to protect whomever their quarterback is if they want to succeed this year.
New England Patriots-Father time has never lost to anybody and at some point he is going to beat Tom Brady, it is just a matter of when. Brady is 40 years old. Even the greatest quarterbacks have failed to do much once they hit the age of 40. I am sure many teams will take an aging Tom Brady over whomever they have at quarterback, but the Patriots could struggle if Brady regresses. He is a bookshelf in the pocket, so the offensive line has to stay consistent. They do not have a go-to running back, Rob Gronkowski cannot be trusted to stay healthy and the defense has struggled immensely allowing over 30 points per game.
New Orleans Saints-Unless you have been living under a rock, you know that the Saints defense is terrible. You and I could probably team up and throw for 300-yards on them. The Saints scored 30+ points in a losing effort three times last year. They have offensive firepower, but cannot stop anybody. On the offensive side, Drew Brees is also getting up there in age (he is 38.). They signed Adrian Peterson this year, which made absolutely no-sense because Peterson does not fit what they do offensively. The seat for Sean Payton has to be hot and I think this could be the end of the Drew Brees era in New Orleans.
New York Giants-Many pundits predicted that the Giants would make the playoffs, but the Giants have looked disappointing the first few weeks of the season. They have no running game and make no bones about it. Paul Perkins is not a liable starting running back. The offensive line, particularly Ereck Flowers has been terrible. Eli Manning is aging and immobile, so he has to be protected which the Giants do not seem capable of doing. They signed Brandon Marshall to compliment Odell Beckham, but Marshall has been non-existent so far. The only bright spot for the Giants seems to be Beckham, but he has not been healthy.
New York Jets-The Jets are atrocious. They might have the worst roster in the league. Their quarterback situation is a mess. I have no idea why teams keep signing Josh McCown. Bryce Petty is not the answer and Christian Hackenberg might go down as one of the most overrated freshman quarterbacks in the history of college football. The Jets are relying on an aging Matt Forte to lead their ground attack. Their receiving corps is young and inexperienced except for Jermaine Kearse. The Jets traded away Sheldon Richardson, their best defensive player. Todd Bowles seat is flaming hot and perhaps rightfully so. The Jets were 10-6 his first year in New York, but they have drastically trended downward after that.  The Jets will be lucky to win three games and appear to be in prime position to tank the 2017 season with the hopes of being able to draft Sam Darnold or Josh Allen next year.
Oakland Raiders-The Raiders have tons of young talent and one of the best young quarterbacks in the league. It is difficult to find much bad with the Raiders. They have an underrated coach, an experienced running back, a massive offensive line and one of the best defensive players in the league. However, the Raiders defense is pedestrian outside of Khalil Mack. The defense will have to step up in 2017. They also have to play better in the AFC West. Last year, they were swept by the Chiefs, split with the Broncos and narrowly defeated the Chargers.
Philadelphia Eagles-The Eagles have all the makings of a team that could surprise people in 2017. They have a young quarterback who is becoming a rising star, a veteran offensive line and a solid front seven on the defensive side. However, their biggest weakness on defense is their secondary. They have been dinged up and are relying on rookie Rasul Douglas at Safety. The running game has been non-existent on the offensive side, Darren Sproles is out with a broken arm, LeGarrette Blount has done very little since they signed him and they have not been able to get much production out of Wendell Smallwood.
Pittsburgh Steelers-The Steelers have one of the best top to bottom rosters in the NFL, but they are far from perfect. Ben Roethlisberger is aging and his playing style gets him hit a lot. He has only started all 16 games twice since 2010 and the Steelers struggle without him. They have to keep him healthy because Josh Dobbs or Landry Jones could be tough to watch. The Steelers also tend to struggle on the road; they’ve lost 11 games on the road in the last three years including losses to opponents who are inferior to them.
San Francisco 49ers-The 49ers are bad. Brian Hoyer is their starting quarterback, but look for C.J. Beathard to be the guy by the end of the year because Hoyer has a history of injuries and inconsistencies. This team is very different from the teams that Jim Harbaugh put together in 2012 and 2013. The 49ers have one of the younger and more inexperienced rosters in the NFL and it has shown the first few weeks.
Seattle Seahawks-The Seahawks could very well be a Super Bowl team. They have a stout defense, an experienced quarterback and one of the leagues’ best coaches but their offensive line has been terrible. They even made the Packers defense look good in Week 1. The Seahawks have ignored spending money on their offensive-line and it has showed. The running game has been relying on Chris Carson who has done well in the first couple games, but Seattle always seems to have a running back who has two or three solid games and then falls a cliff (i.e.…CJ Prosise, Thomas Rawls).
Tampa Bay Buccaneers-The Bucs are another team that has a lot of young talent. 2017 could be their breakthrough year. Jameis Winston has the tools to be a star, they have one of, if not the deepest receiving corps in the league and they have a stellar defense. The big question mark on the offensive side is how productive their running game can be. Doug Martin is currently suspended and Charles Sims is mediocre at best. The offensive line also needs to be consistent to keep Winston upright.
Tennessee Titans-The Titans are similar to the Bucs. They have lots of young talent. Marcus Mariota could be a star for the next five or ten years, but he has yet to have a breakthrough year. He needs to have that in 2017 for the Titans to make the playoffs. They play in a weak division and should be able to win it with just their offense. Their defense is run of the mill, which could potentially doom them.
Washington Redskins-The Redskins are a difficult team to wrap my finger around. Kirk Cousins is one of the most polarizing quarterbacks in the league. He has a lot of upside, but his gunslinger mentality also causes him to make costly mistakes at time. Their run game is solid, but not wowing.  Jordan Reed cannot be trusted to stay healthy, the defense is very young and could possibly experience some growing pains, but Greg Manusky is one of the more underrated coordinators in the league.
So there you have it, obviously not all of these teams will suck. Some of them were so much easier to dissect. The season is still young, so it will be interesting to see which teams prove me wrong and which teams prove me right.


Thursday, August 24, 2017

It's time to take a knee on shaming anthem protests

Image result for colin kaepernick kneeling
This year, Colin Kaepernick will probably once again sit on Sundays during the national anthem, however he will more than likely be sitting just like everyone else, on his couch watching the action rather than participating in it. A once-shining star in the NFL, his career has flamed out, partially due to a decline in performance, but in more part due to a controversial decision to kneel during the national anthem. Many people who sit on their butts and munch potato chips during the national anthem on Sundays publicly shamed Kaepernick for his action. Kaepernick may not be in the NFL this year, but many other NFL players such as Michael Bennett, Marshawn Lynch have opted to continue Kaepernick's stance. Just this week, ten Browns players partook in a "protest" of the national anthem that included a white player for the first time. It is pretty obvious that players are going to take a knee, so we should too. Not with the national anthem, but for the visceral attacks towards them and their character.

Before I go any further, let me say that even I do not completely agree with anthem protests, however I believe in freedom. I have several friends and loved ones who have served this country, so I stand for the anthem, but I do not nor will I judge someone for thinking of it differently.

Anywho, lets delve into the issues that surround the anthem "protests"

                                                         What does the anthem mean?
The meaning of the anthem is different to everybody, to some people it's a sign of respect to the many who have fought hard to protect this country, to others it's just a song that is played at just about every event. I will make the argument, albeit unpopular that the anthem is probably a little too overplayed, but there's a time and a place for that. Many people have said that the actions of players such as Kaepernick, Bennett and Lynch are disrespectful to the military. However, many military members have applauded and supported them for their courage. Michael Bennett, actually came from a military family.

                                                                  Patriotism
Whether we like to admit it or not, America has a misconstrued sense of Patriotism. Many people believe that if you stand for the anthem, you are a patriot and if you don't, you are a communist. That is silly. Patriotism is more than just standing for the anthem, it is constantly wanting to move America forward, it's wanting to make it a better place for our kids or their kids. It's accepting that the right thing is not always the popular thing. Kaepernick felt like this was the right thing. For those of you that are familiar with the United States Constitution, the First Amendment reads: 'Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.'

Many of use the First Amendment to defend ourselves in arguments. Now, I understand that essentially all the First Amendment protects you from is legal action, but what Kaepernick has done is a harmless and hasn't hurt anyone, except maybe their feelings. He legally has every right to do what he is doing, whether we like it or not and that's the beauty of America. We don't have to like it, but we should accept it.  I would even make the argument that Kaepernick's stance is perhaps almost just as patriotic as someone who chooses to stand.

                                                                          American Reaction
Many people have been upset by the recent stances of athletes, and they have just as much right to be upset as Kaepernick does to kneel, I won't take that away from them. However, many people have said ridiculous things, some have even threatened to boycott the NFL, some might, but many won't. Two Sundays from now many people will sit down and watch their favorite NFL team. Ask them if they want Kaepernick on their team and they will say no, however a Steelers fan will have no problem with Ben Roethlisberger (who has twice been accused of sexual assault) playing and I'm sure Saints fans were pleased when the Saints signed Adrian Peterson (who was suspended for most of the 2014 season for a child abuse claim against his three year old son, just less than a year after his two year old son was beaten to death by his mothers boyfriend.). As a Chiefs fan, I'm also guilty of this by rooting for Tyreek Hill (just google it), however I would open Kaepernick with open arms if the situation would need be. Until we can quit rooting for athletes who have been involved in high profile incidents that might have actually harmed someone, we should probably stop short of saying Kaepernick should never be allowed to play in the NFL.

                                                                       Why isn't Kaepernick on a team?
The anthem isn't the sole reason Kaepernick remains unsigned. Kaepernick's unemployment can likely be contributed to the fact that his recent performance might not completely justify the circus that signing him would bring. However, it is awfully hard to defend that belief when I see guys like Thad Lewis who hasn't played in four years get signed over Kaepernick, the only reason I can possibly think of is that Kaepernick likely would not have accepted the same deal that Lewis would have.

                                                                       Where do we go from here?
As Americans, we should look at the message and not how it is delivered. Whether you like it, or not this probably isn't going to stop anytime soon. The best thing we can do as an American society is not shame these athletes for kneeling, but instead ask ourselves why they are kneeling, and then ask what can we do to fix this? America is the greatest country world, but that doesn't mean it can't be made it even greater. Maybe, that is a message that athletes such as Colin Kaepernick, Michael Bennett and Marshawn Lynch are trying to get across, but as Americans we will be stuck in this until we decide that is time for us to take a knee on our vitriol towards the anthem protests.