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Jeff Fisher is my Person of the Month!

October 21st, 2009 by Curt Popejoy

I have decided that each month, I am going to dedicate a blog to my favorite person of that month in football whether it’s college or the NFL.  I will normally wait until the last day, but this month, my clear winner if Tennessee Titans Head Coach Jeff Fisher.  He had a little early competition from Deion Sanders and Denver Broncos Head Coach Josh McDaniels.  But after this past Tuesday, if I’m going to do a weekend in Cabo with someone, it’s going to be Fischer.  Wanna know why?

Fisher was invited to attend a chairty event for Rocketown at Lipscomb University in Nashville, Tennessee.  A very good orginization and a great cause. Rocketown is a 40,000-square-foot entertainment complex in Nashville created for teens to gather in a drug- and alcohol-free environment.  Part of what he was to do, was introduce his good friend and former Head Coach of the Indianapolis Colts, Tony Dungy.

As he introduced Dungy, Fisher took off the jacket he was wearing, and was wearing a Peyton Manning jersey.  That itself is pretty funny, but then when he makes the comment, “I just wanted to feel like a winner” I got a newfound respect for the head coach, and I almost fell off my couch laughing.

Why do I find this so funny?  Because the Titans stink this year.  Their defense is beat up, can’t tackle, and have a 350lb hole in the middle of it they cannot fill.  On offense, they can’t move the football on the ground, so the old man in the sea, Kerry Collins can’t throw the football.   Meanwhile Fisher is cracking jokes about being a loser.  I think it’s great.  His job isn’t in jeopardy and he knows that this team will come around, probably next season, so he’s been given lemons and he’s making lemonade.

Oh, and lighten up Titans fans.  Your team is awful, and it’s not Fisher’s fault.  He knows that and that’s why he can laugh about it.  It’s not your fault either, so you can laugh about it too.  If I were Kerry Collins, I’d wear a Drew Brees jersey to a press conference in hopes someone asks him about their winning streak.

Quick thoughts on Michael Crabtree

October 6th, 2009 by Curt Popejoy

Before the media swallows this story alive, I wanted to put my point of view out on this, especially since my previous blog was so popular(I keed!).
The reason I believe that Crabtree is back in negotiations with the Niners has to do with a couple of factors neither of which involve a paycheck. The kid isn’t suddenly destitute or is having trouble paying his bills. Keep in mind he’s made almost $750k this year in endorsements while unsigned.
No this has to do with 3 very vital things that have come into play in recent weeks.
First, the Niners are better than most believed, and Shaun Hill has proven himself to be a more than adequate at getting the ball to his wide outs. If you don’t think this matters, you should dunk your head in a tub and wake up. If the Niners are 0-4 this isn’t happening.
Second, is I believe that the sponsors that Crabtree is working with now, are putting pressure on him. They are ok with paying up front money for now, but continuing that relationship with him would be tough without him under contract.
Third, and I think most important in this is, the tampering charges that have been leveled. At first I sort of dismissed this, but it seems now, things are more serious, and so getting Crabtree under contract, and shutting the door on that chapter would be of utmost importance to him, and the teams potentially involved.
From what I am hearing this has nothing to do with the reported contract demands. Honestly I don’t think it ever was. Would Crabtree have signed if they’d offered him a contract better than Darius Heyward-Bey, would he have signed? Probably, but that wasn’t the point.
I fully expect Crabtree and the Niners to work out a reasonable contract fairly quickly. I don’t think this is a situation where the Niners called Crabtree’s bluff and he caved. The situation has changed in several significant ways, and Crabtree and the Niners stand to benefit at this point, from a quick agreement. And don’t kid yourself, the Niners may be doing very well this year, but there’s no downside to adding a talented wide out to a team no matter how much trouble they give you. Just ask Denver.
I’m really glad this is going to get done, because the Niner franchise is really on the upturn and they can use his talent, and Crabtree is a great talent that the league deserves to see.

Snap Judgement USC/Cal

October 4th, 2009 by Curt Popejoy

The Trojans looked to come out and make a statement, and boy did they.  I said in my preview the unfortunate loss of Stafon Johnson meant more Joe McKnight and that was the undoing of the Cal Bears. He was the best back on the field today for sure, even with Jahvid Best in the building.

Matt Barkley didn’t have a great game. No touchdown passes, and didn’t look really sharp.  But anytime you are in a game with Kevin Riley, odds are you will still be the best QB in the game.  This kid is so shaky.  He hasn’t played well in quite a while, and I see no end in sight.

Oh, and let’s give a ton of credit for the performance of the Trojans D to the return of Taylor Mays.  He looked great out there, and you can just see when he’s on the field the whole defense plays better.

Where does Cal go from here?  Far from the polls that’s for sure.  Hopefully never to be seen again.  Riley will do his best to be sure of that, and at the same time keep Jahvid Best off anyone’s lips in discussing the Heisman.

Where does USC go from here?  They should move up in the Polls and remain on course to win the PAC-10, assuming they don’t choke against another mediocre conference opponent.

Snap Judgement Oklahoma/Miami

October 4th, 2009 by Curt Popejoy

Wow, what a game!  Two very good teams going at it for 4 quarters.  I’d love to finish that with, “and the best team won” but that really wasn’t the case here.  Now before I get any hate mail because I’m a Sooner fan, hear me out.

When I wrote about the upcoming game, I pointed out that Stoops would wait as long as possible to announce a starter and that’s what he did.  This cannot be a good thing for Landry Jones.  You just don’t prepare the same.  Jermaine Gersham was on crutches on the sideline, and early in the game, Jones favorite target Ryan Broyles goes out with an injury.

All that aside, the Sooners were still up 10-0 at one point.  Then the Sooner coaching staff decided to nod off and leave huge gaps in the short middle of their zone defense and Jacory Harris exploited.  Thank Mark Whipple for that.  They dink and dunked it right down the field while the coaches made no adjustments.  Just more failed blitzes up the middle vacating the same spot.

I tip my hate to Miami for the win, but it was at home, against a team at only partial strength on offense, and here’s my small rant, a group of officials who couldn’t find their flags when they should have. I’m a let them play kind of guy in many cases, but one thing I don’t like is pass interference.  If you don’t call it, the offense has no hope.  And the Miami corners for most of the game seemed incapable of playing coverage without committing PI.  It was called a couple of times, but by my count 6 more of Jones incomplete passes were a result of PI on Miami dbacks.  That’s unacceptable by an officiating crew.  Let the teams decide the winner, not the officials.  Just like in the LSU/Georgia game, in this game the officials had a profound effect on this game.

So all in all, I am less concerned about Sooners, and more concerned about what effect a “loss” like this will mean.  They will tumble in the polls and the Canes will be media darlings yet again.  Because they won a home game, against an undermanned team, with a huge advantage by the officials.  Nothing I’d be proud of.

Snap Judgement LSU/Georgia

October 4th, 2009 by Curt Popejoy

I said in my preview for this week, the team that wins this game will be the one that delivers the knockout punch.  And that’s exactly what LSU did in the form of a 33 yard touchdown run by Charles Scott.

For Georgia I spent most of the game thinking how I was going to write about how the play of Jox Cox was going to cost this game for the Bulldogs, but honestly he really rallied his team in the 4th quarter almost bringing them all the way back.  And no, that last pick doesn’t hurt him,because it was desperation.  But the story of this game really was the amount of skill players that LSU has, and how even the Bulldog defense couldn’t deal with the level of talent they were dealing with.

When I talk about the elite skill players on LSU, I will exclude quarterback Jordan Jefferson.  I realize he’s just a sophomore and has his best football ahead of him, but the fact is, if this team doesn’t win the SEC a lot of it could fall on the shoulders of this young man.  The team as a whole just seems to underachieve for the amount of talent they have, and that should translate to more dominance on the field.  Man per man, I’m not sure if there’s a team in the country with a better group of backs and wide receivers in the country.

For Georgia they too have a couple of really great skill players, but like LSU are hampered by inconsistent quarterback play.  Their defense is really solid all over the field but you could just see that they couldn’t matchup with the athletes for the Tigers.

At some point, the discussion of LSU as national champions is going to come up.  I suspect it’ll be next weekend, when Florida come to town.  A less than 100% Tim Tebow could leave the door wide open for Les Miles and the Tigers to take control in the SEC.

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