According to Chris McCosky at the The Detroit News the Lions have signed Norwegian-born kicker Havard Rugland, a YouTube sensation better known as “Kickalicious,” to a one-year deal:
Looks like the kicker version of jumping out of a pool to me.
According to Chris McCosky at the The Detroit News the Lions have signed Norwegian-born kicker Havard Rugland, a YouTube sensation better known as “Kickalicious,” to a one-year deal:
Looks like the kicker version of jumping out of a pool to me.
I thought this comment from the Friday Buzz feature at The National Football Post was interesting:
There is an uncomfortable and eerie feeling in the agent community. More players than ever have been ask to take pay cuts and the amount of unsigned quality players still on the street has agents feeling uneasy. From one veteran agent: “I’m not sure if this is just an anomaly in the market place because of a flat cap this year, or if there is some informal collusion going on amongst owners, or if this is a trend that’s here to stay. If so, it looks like the back end of the second deal is just window dressing and the chance for a third deal is dead.” We won’t really know until next year.
First, I despise the word “collusion” when it comes out of an agent’s mouth only marginally less than I do when it comes out of the mouth of a representative of the player’s union. The NFL doesn’t need any more lawsuits, particularly from the union.
Having said that, I really doubt that its justified. Teams are spending to the cap. In fact, to some extent they’re obligated to spend to the cap. As long as they’re doing that, I can’t see how there can be a complaint. If they’re spending less cash up front its almost certainly because the cap won’t be increasing to accommodate the back end of those contracts like it used to. At least not for the next year or two.
My message to the players is “welcome to the real world”. Finances are tight all over and, to a certain degree, the NFL is probably feeling it. Your cap might be flat for the next couple years but be grateful you aren’t dependent upon government funding right now.
Brian Urlacher is really going to wish he’d taken that $2 million from the Bears. Its not that I’m unsympathetic to the players’ situation. But looking back on it, no one should be surprised.
Sean Jensen at the Chicago Sun-Times gives a list of players who mock drafts going to the Bears (without reference or links to whose drafts they are):
1. Alec Ogletree, LB, 6-2, 242, Georgia
2. Manti Te’o, LB, 6-1, 241, Notre Dame
3. Jonathan Cooper, G, 6-2, 311, North Carolina
4. Sylvester Williams, DT, 6-3, 313, North Carolina
5. Arthur Brown, LB, 6-0, 241, Kansas State
6. Chance Warmack, G, 6-2, 314, Alabama
7. Desmond Trufant, CB, 6-0, 190, Washington
8. Tyler Eifert, TE, 6-6, 250, Notre Dame
9. Tank Carradine, DE, 6-4, 265, Florida State
This promises to be a good draft for the Bears. Some of these players, particularly Ogletree, Cooper and Warmack, are expected to go higher than 20. The team can afford to sit back and take which ever steal falls to them. A nice situation.
Philedelphia has elected a most worthy candidate into its Hall of Fame. Via The Onion:
“A voting panel of journalists and prominent sports figures elected the D battery to the Philadelphia Sports Hall of Fame Sunday, honoring the alkaline storage cell’s many achievements in pelting players from visiting teams. “The D battery is as synonymous with Philadelphia sports as intoxicated fistfights, cheering for a severely injured player, or intentionally vomiting on a child,” said Philadelphia sportswriter Ray Didinger, adding that the Hall of Fame plans to install an interactive exhibit that allows children to throw batteries at life-size cutouts of rival athletes.”
Powerful choice.