Thursday, December 30, 2010

Fixing Carolina / Taking On The Role As General Manager


As you can tell, I have been on vacation for the past two weeks and I have spent a lot of time blogging and lets say I have been doing a lot of thinking as well. I kept asking myself if there was one thing I could do for the people of North Carolina for the holidays that can give them hope in the sports world. So I decided that I would hire myself as the manager of football operations for the Carolina Panthers and I would fix all of their problems in one year.

http://www.bullcitystateofmind.com/home/2010/12/30/fixing-the-carolina-panthers-taking-on-the-role-as-general-m.html

Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Labor Strife Looms For NFL, NBA, NHL In 2011



NEW YORK • Labor strife looms in the New Year for the NFL, NBA and NHL. By this time next year, two of the three leagues could be dark.

The National Football League's labor contract expires March 4, followed by the National Basketball Association's on June 30, Major League Baseball's on Dec. 11 and the National Hockey League's on Sept. 15, 2012.
Only baseball, interrupted by eight work stoppages from 1972-95, shows signs of peacefully reaching a new agreement.

NFL players, meanwhile, are bracing for a stoppage, going so far as to post a "Lockout Watch" countdown clock on the home page of the union's website.

CARRY ON

http://www.stltoday.com/sports/baseball/professional/article_3266a0ee-7d7e-5921-ab22-233fb679e543.html

Monday, December 27, 2010

Panthers Lock Up # 1 Pick in 2011 NFL Draft


It was about time the Carolina Panthers and their fans got Luck-y. Get it? No? Okay, don’t worry about it. It wasn’t that good.

Either way, the Panthers have officially wrapped up the No. 1 overall pick in the draft and are now on the clock. Their season was over long ago, but they worried the fanbase by actually winning a couple games. But, thanks to wins by the Denver Broncos and Cincinnati Bengals, the Panthers cannot be overtaken as the worst team in the league.
So, let the speculation begin. Who do the Panthers take and, absent a new CBA, give nearly $55 million guaranteed?

Right now, the most likely selection is Stanford quarterback Andrew Luck. (Do you get the joke from earlier?) However, Luck is a junior and has not said one way or another whether or not he plans to leave school early.
But really, why wouldn’t he? He should see what happened to Jake Locker and think better of actually staying in school. Had Locker come out last year, there’s a good chance he, and not Sam Bradford, would have been the No. 1 pick. He’d be sitting pretty with $50 million in guaranteed money and not a lot to worry about.

Instead, he’s probably going to fall to the middle or tail-end of the first round, if not all the way to the second

http://nflspinzone.com/2010/12/27/carolina-panthers-lock-up-no-1-pick-in-2011-nfl-draft/

Saturday, December 25, 2010

A Few Christmas Stories From The World Of Sports


A Christmas story, every year: The crusty old coach gathers his players each December.

He’s usually barking instructions about the zone blitz, the defense he virtually invented, or how to stop the world’s best offenses.
There are no softies who make a 38-year career out of coaching in the NFL. Not a lot of softies who played college football for Woody Hayes and then 14 years in the pros, making 62 interceptions.
He’s a humble guy who doesn’t like the spotlight. Except every Christmas, when he gathers his troops in the locker room and, from memory, recites “The Night Before Christmas.”

And some of the toughest players in sport sit transfixed as their leader starts off. “Twas the night before Christmas, and all through the house ...”
Now maybe you know why guys like Troy Polamalu and James Harrison will run through fire for Dick LeBeau.

More Unique Christmas Stories From The World Of Sports.........

http://newsok.com/a-few-christmas-stories-from-the-past/article/3526718

Friday, December 24, 2010

Panthers Do Little To Slow Steelers’ March Toward Bye & AFC North Crown


Ben Roethlisberger showed off Pittsburgh’s deep passing game, and the Steelers inched closer to a division title and a first-round playoff bye by beating the visiting Carolina Panthers, 27-3, on Thursday night.

Pittsburgh (11-4) will wrap up the A.F.C. North title and the bye if it beats Cleveland on Jan. 2. The Browns (5-9) could end the division race even earlier than that if they upset the Baltimore Ravens (10-4) at home on Sunday.

“It’s good to be in the clubhouse before everyone else this weekend with a necessary win,” Steelers Coach Mike Tomlin said.

CARRY ON

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/24/sports/football/24nfl.html?src=twrhp

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Panthers @ Steelers Preview


The Pittsburgh Steelers (10-4) clinched a playoff spot last week despite losing at home to the New York Jets and hope to move a step closer to winning the AFC North when they host the Carolina Panthers (2-12) on Thursday Night Football. The Steelers (-13.5) are tied for Baltimore atop the division but would win the tiebreaker based on a better divisional record than the Ravens at this point. Of course that could change since both teams still play Cleveland on the road.

Pittsburgh saw its four-game losing streak end on Sunday with a 22-17 loss to the Jets, which is the team’s second straight setback at home to a team with a winning record. The Steelers had allowed progressively less points in their previous three games but did not have safety Troy Polamalu on the field due to an Achilles’ injury. Polamalu could miss the rest of the regular season and has been one of the best defensive players in the NFL this season.

CARRY ON

http://www.madduxsports.com/blog/thursday-night-football-picks-steelers-vs-panthers-nfl-game-preview-11730/

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Panthers 19 Cardinals 12




CHARLOTTE, N.C. — In what was likely his final home game as Carolina's coach, John Fox ensured he'd leave with a winning overall record.

He can thank his quarterback for his getting a long-awaited first victory.

Jimmy Clausen outplayed John Skelton in a matchup of rookie quarterbacks, John Kasay kicked four field goals and the Panthers beat the punchless Arizona Cardinals 19-12 on Sunday to snap a seven-game losing streak.

Clausen threw only his second touchdown pass of the season in his first win in eight starts. Jonathan Stewart rushed for 137 yards and the Panthers (2-12) held the Cardinals to 43 yards rushing.
Fox, in the final year of his contract, improved to 73-69 in a rare bright spot amid a miserable year.

http://www.ajc.com/sports/clausen-panthers-shut-down-782035.html

GAMEDAY / Arizona @ Carolina


Season Records:

Cardinals: 4-9, 4th in NFC West, Last Week: W vs. Denver, 43-13
Panthers: 1-12, 4th in NFC South, Last Week: L vs. Atlanta, 31-10

Gametime:

Sunday, December 19th, 1:00 p.m. EST, Bank of America Stadium, Charlotte, NC

A Pair of Rookie Quarterbacks go to Battle:

So a couple of last place teams with rookie quarterbacks will face off at Bank of America Stadium this Sunday. This match up is a far cry from the 08-09 divisional playoff game between these two squads when Kurt Warner and the Cardinals’ defense shocked the NFL with a stunning 33-13 victory over Jake Delhomme and the heavily favored Panthers. These are two starkly different teams now that are just trying to navigate their respective ways through a thoroughly disappointing season.

http://www.nflgridirongab.com/2010/12/19/gridiron-gab-week-fifteen-preview-arizona-at-carolina/

Friday, December 17, 2010

Fox Deserves Our Ovation



On Sunday John Fox will coach his final home game as the Carolina Panthers head coach. He will likely get booed by fans who can’t stomach the season that was. Fox entered the 2010 without a contract extension and while Jerry Richardson hasn’t publicly said he would relieve his franchise of the HC, he hasn’t given the smallest indication that he won’t. Truth is, when this season ends, Fox won’t get fired he will simply be left to walk away because he won’t have a contract.

But when he takes the field on Sunday, he deserves our ovation and regardless of the way the game plays out, he will deserve it again when he walks off the field

CARRY ON
 
http://catcrave.com/2010/12/17/fox-deserves-our-ovation/

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

'Carolina Dreamin’ / Is Jim Harbaugh’s Best Chance In The NFL With The Panthers ?


The Stanford Cardinal program has risen from the ashes. Four seasons removed from a 1-11 debacle and the firing of Walt Harris, who was the Cardinal head coach for just two seasons, Stanford is heading to their first ever BCS bowl game, the Orange Bowl against Virginia Tech. This year’s 11 wins are the most for Stanford in a single season in school history, a stunning fact considering that the Cardinal has been playing football since 1891. Quarterback Andrew Luck, who threw for 3,051 yards, 28 touchdowns, and just 7 interceptions, finished second in this year’s Heisman race behind Auburn QB Cameron Newton. This makes two years in a row that Stanford has had a Heisman finalist, as running back Toby Gerhart finished second to Alabama running back Mark Ingram last year. Prior to Gerhart and Luck’s placements in the Heisman voting, the last Cardinal to be a finalist for the prestigious award was John Elway, who finished second to Georgia running back Herschel Walker in 1982. The question on everyone’s mind is who is the person responsible for this dramatic turnaround in the Stanford program, and the answer is quite clear and simple: Jim Harbaugh.

CARRY ON

http://isportsweb.com/2010/12/13/jim-harbaugh-to-the-panthers/

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Carolina Clobbered 31-10, Panthers Fall To 1-12


CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - The Atlanta Falcons still aren't very flashy. They certainly didn't wow anybody playing the NFL's worst team Sunday.

All they do, seemingly, is win.
Michael Turner ran for 112 yards and three touchdowns, Matt Ryan threw for another and the Atlanta Falcons maintained their grasp on the best record in the NFC with a 31-10 victory over the Carolina Panthers.
The Falcons (11-2) built a 17-0 halftime lead, survived a brief hiccup to start the third quarter, and cruised to their seventh straight win. John Abraham and Kroy Biermann each had two sacks, Mike Peterson picked off Jimmy Clausen and the Falcons became the latest team to shut down the league's worst offense.

Jonathan Stewart rushed for a season-best 133 yards, but lost a fumble on Carolina's first play from scrimmage to set up Atlanta's first TD. Things didn't get much better for the Panthers (1-12), who dropped their seventh straight stayed on track to get the top pick in the draft.

CARRY ON

http://www.cbssports.com/nfl/gametracker/recap/NFL_20101212_ATL@CAR/falcons-31-panthers-10





Friday, December 10, 2010

Panthers Are Unrecognizable During Disastrous Season


"The climb to the penthouse is long and arduous. The slide to the outhouse is swift and sure."
-- former Falcons coach Norm Van Brocklin in the 1970s .

FLOWERY BRANCH -- When the colorful Van Brocklin came up with the aforementioned quote, he could have been talking about the current Carolina Panthers.

It seems only yesterday that Steve Smith was running away from defensive backs, Julius Peppers was tormenting quarterbacks and quarterback Jake Delhomme was tossing passes with pinpoint accuracy.

The Panthers were in the NFL's penthouse, the Super Bowl, as recently as 2004. Offseason decisions, however, have led to a swift slide to that proverbial outhouse.
The Panthers, who face the Falcons at 1 p.m. on Sunday at Bank of America Stadium, are 1-11 -- the worst record in the league.

CARRY ON

http://www.ajc.com/sports/atlanta-falcons/panthers-unrecognizable-during-disastrous-771541.html

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Richardson To PSL Owners / I Am Committed To Winning, I Take Full Responsibility For Our Shortfalls


The Carolina Panthers will enter play this weekend at 1-11 and securely in the NFC South basement. Apparently, team owner Jerry Richardson decided it was time to reach out to his beleaguered fan base.

The Gaston Gazette reported on Tuesday that Richardson recently sent out letters to all season ticket holders, imploring them to keep the faith in what has been a hugely disappointing season.

"I know how difficult the season has been for you," Richardson wrote. "As the person ultimately responsible for putting a team on the field, I take full responsibility for our shortfalls. It is agonizing that we have not performed at the level we had planned for and expected."

CARRY ON

http://www.nfl.com/news/story/09000d5d81cbb88f/article/panthers-owner-i-take-full-responsibility-for-our-shortfalls

Sunday, December 5, 2010

Seattle Blitzes With A 21-Point Third Quarter SMACKING Carolina 31-14



SEATTLE (AP) — A trio of touchdowns from Marshawn Lynch and a nearly perfect third quarter made for one miserable half by the Seattle Seahawks.

Against hapless Carolina, that was more than enough.

Lynch scored on a pair of 1-yard runs in the third quarter, sandwiched around Lofa Tatupu's 26-yard interception return for a score, and the Seahawks rallied from a 14-0 deficit for a critical 31-14 win over the Panthers on Sunday.
Lynch added a 22-yard touchdown in the fourth quarter for the first three-touchdown day of his career as Seattle overcame injuries to their top two receivers and an awful first-half performance to stay even with St. Louis on top of the NFC West. Seattle (6-6) broke a two-game losing streak.

CARRY ON

http://www.latimes.com/sports/football/nfl/wire/sns-ap-fbn-panthers-seahawks,0,3572824.story







Friday, December 3, 2010

Panthers @ Seahawks / Playing For Little More Than Pride


RENTON — The last time the Carolina Panthers came to Qwest Field, they were playing for a Super Bowl berth. Almost five years later, pride is pretty much all that is at stake for the Panthers.
As far as the Seahawks have fallen from their 2005 Super Bowl season, things are even worse for the Panthers this year. Carolina is currently 1-10, good for the worst record in the league, and has scored fewer points and gained fewer yards than any team in the NFL.

“I think just youth,” Panthers coach John Fox said on a conference call. “We have a lot of youth in some critical positions — quarterback, wide-out — you know, we started young and then like everybody, you get the injury bug and that makes you even less effective because it’s not so much that you don’t have players that are qualified, it’s just that they aren’t as trained in your system or this league at the rate you have to be to play fast.”

http://www.kitsapsun.com/news/2010/dec/02/panthers-playing-for-little-more-than-pride/

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Jonathan Stewart Returns To Seattle


The last time Jonathan Stewart played in Seattle, he ran for 251 yards and two touchdowns. Of course, he was playing for the Oregon Ducks, who shredded a hapless Huskies defense for 661 yards of total offense, including a school record 465 yards rushing.

Now the Lacey native returns to Seattle under vastly different circumstances with the Carolina Panthers. The team is 1-10 and Stewart missed two games with a concussion. He's rushed for just 306 yards on 81 carries this season.
With rookie quarterback Jimmy Clausen learning on the fly, teams have been and will continue to load up the box and stop the run game first and force Clausen to beat them.

Here's the transcript from our conference call with Stewart...........................

CARRY ON

http://blog.thenewstribune.com/seahawks/2010/12/01/jonathan-stewart-returns-to-the-puget-sound/

Panthers @ Seahawks





The Carolina Panthers and the Seattle Seahawks face off in Week 13 of the NFL Season. For the Panthers, they come in having won just once this season and assume the roll of spoiler from here on out. For the Seahawks, despite a record that is under .500, they remain in a tie atop the NFC West division with the St. Louis Rams, as this clash with the Panthers will be a critical game for them to get a win.


The Seahawks dropped to Kansas City 42-24 this past week, as the Seattle defense gave up 503 yards of offense including 270 yards rushing. That is a frightening statistic that will have to improve this week if Seattle is to win this week against the Panthers.

CARRY ON

http://www.sportsbookgurus.com/news/seattle-seahawks-6-favored-over-carolina-panthers

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Kasay Field Goal Hits Upright As Time Expires, Panthers Fall To Browns 24-23



CLEVELAND -- In a game much more entertaining than the usual Panthers' 2010 contest but ultimately ending with the same result, Carolina (1-10) has lost its fifth straight game and guaranteed John Fox's first double-digit loss season with the team.

Cleveland (4-7) edged the Panthers, 24-23, after John Kasay missed a field goal on the final play of the game. Kasay's 41-yard field-goal attempt hit the left upright and bounced away, ruining what was about to be a remarkable comeback led by rookie quarterback Jimmy Clausen.

CARRY ON

http://scottfowlerobs.blogspot.com/

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Browns, Delhomme To Face Panthers For The First Time



CLEVELAND (AP) -When quarterback Jake Delhomme stepped inside Cleveland's huddle at practice this week and barked out a play, it was as if he had never left.
The Browns had come full circle in 2010.

"It was like friends reuniting,'' left tackle Joe Thomas said.

On Sunday, the Carolina Panthers will feel the same way. They still consider Delhomme one of their own.

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/football/nfl/wires/11/26/2020.ap.fbn.panthers.browns.adv28.1086/

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Mike Goodson & Jordan Gross / Where Carolina's Backfield & Line Can Go From Here



In a previous article, the SRG Positioning Algorithm™, created by Explosive Growth author Glenn E. Dawson, was applied to Carolina Panthers rookie quarterback Jimmy Clausen. Here again is the Algorithm, now applied to the running backs and offensive line of the Panthers:


The SRG Positioning Algorithm™

1) Where are you, really?

2) In what direction are you going?

3) How will you likely go?

• Where are the running backs, really?

The Carolina Panthers, once feared for their two-headed rushing attack, have struggled running the ball this season – prior to the advent of second year back Mike Goodson. One reason for this has been poor blocking from the offensive line, as well as no respect for the passing game from opposing defenses.

Moreover, the offensive playcalling has not been designed for success. DeAngelo Williams had shown some burst before being placed on injured reserve, but for the most part the rushing attack has been virtually nonexistent. Now, the injury bug has bitten the position, with Tyrell Sutton, DeAngelo Williams, and Jonathan Stewart all hurt.

Mike Goodson, a running back previously used more as a receiver and kick returner in the Panthers offense, started in place of Williams against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and the Baltimore Ravens, and has easily claimed the starting slot for the duration of the season. Goodson’s play has been a pleasant surprise, as he has been able to hit the cutback lanes that have featured so prominently in DeAngelo Williams’ career, and break the tackles that Jonathan Stewart had struggled with all season.

Goodson’s success has made it so that one of the two higher-profile backs may find himself traded in the offseason so as to bolster other positions.

• In what direction are the running backs going?

At this point in the season, just like the rest of the offense, there is no direction - and with no direction comes the arrival of entropy. A direction for the offense needs to be established. For the running backs, the ideal direction would be for them to return to former dominance, and at the very least, to give Jimmy Clausen (or another QB) a strong enough rushing attack that it doesn't force him to do everything. Mike Goodson has given the team something to build around, and that should do nothing but enable a direction’s establishment.

• How will the running backs likely get there?

With the struggles of the offensive line, production from the running backs may depend on the savvy-ness of the offensive play calls. The best way to deal with run blitzing is to catch the defense with screens, but the Panthers have done a poor job of executing on screen plays. However, screens should still be a focus in practice, in addition to plays similar to screens - the check-downs, the quick timing routes, et cetera, in the plan outlined for Jimmy Clausen in this article apply again here.

Some gadget plays also have the chance of opening up the rushing game - having Mike Goodson take the ball to the outside and then throwing it back across the field to Clausen (or another QB), who could then throw it deep, might be worth considering, or faking that play so Goodson can continue running.

Another idea may be to modify the hook and ladder play - have the running back split out towards the sideline, and hit the tight end with a pass on a hitch route, timing it so that the tight end can then flip it to the running back with a head of steam. This play could be run after throwing the ball deep to stretch the defense, as the safeties and linebackers may give more of a cushion in coverage. It is imperative that the passing game and the rushing game work in cohesion with each other to spread the defense out and confuse the defense. Running should not take away from passing, and passing should not take away from running - the two elements should instead be a complement to one another.

• Where is the offensive line, really?

The offensive line play has gone along with the theme this season: a lack of direction resulting in a lack of production. Without a vision, without an idea of where to proceed in the future, you become mired in the quicksand, slowly sinking. The line has not been able to give any quarterback sufficient time to diagnose a defense and make a play, and has rarely been able to consistently open holes for the runners. John Fox has looked for improvement by shuffling some of the players on the line, but it hasn't worked yet. I still contend, though, that it is a coach's job to provide improvement.

Also, right tackle Jeff Otah has missed, and will miss the rest of, the 2010 season. This has created a domino effect alongside the offensive line. False starts have also been a problem for tackle Jordan Gross, tight end Jeff King, and others. One symptom of false starts that no one might be thinking of is the change in quarterback cadence during the season. Four – technically five - different quarterbacks have taken snaps for the Panthers this season, in addition to players starting on the line who had not normally been starters. Going from one cadence to another may be contributing to the false start issue.

• In what direction is the offensive line going?

A recurring theme through this article is that there is no direction, or a lack of direction, which allows entropy to set in - players do not have a vision they are working towards, they are simply being asked to go out on the field of play and risk their bodies for schemes that are not designed to give the best possible chance of playing true offense. For the line, the goal, the direction, the vision should be to provide more-than-adequate blocking in both the run game and the passing game. Continuity at the quarterback position should help them with that, somewhat.

• How will the offensive line likely get there?

Firstly - keep the current personnel grouping. More switching will just make it harder for the line to gel and develop chemistry. Secondly, keep the same quarterback behind center as much as possible so that they become attuned to him (obviously injuries can make that harder).

Thirdly, diagnose what it is exactly that is making them struggle in run-blocking - is it technique? A lack of fundamentals, missed assignments, lack of motivation, et cetera? Once the factors have been determined, work hard on coaching them through these problems, helping them develop, whether through extra repetitions in practice, extensive film study, or other methods. Do the same for pass-blocking, in addition to creating a fast-paced, up-tempo passing attack where the ball gets out in 3-4 seconds. This will take pressure off of the offensive line to hold the opposing defensive line back.

For further analysis on other areas of the Carolina Panthers, please visit this link.

Monday, November 22, 2010

Ten Quick Observations From Yesterday's Game


1. Ryan Kalil had a terrible day yesterday both snapping and blocking.


2. The hit on Todd Heap by Charles Godfrey that forced the fumble that James Anderson caught out of bounds - on that play, Chris Gamble quits playing as soon as Heap is knocked out of bounds, and in fact, isn't even looking towards Heap as the ball flies out - had he kept his head in the game, he had a better angle to make the recovery before going out of bounds then Anderson did. This is why you have to always keep playing. Kudos to Anderson for the effort, but if this were Lovie Smith's Chicago Bears defense, that would be a "loaf" on Gamble's part.

3. Mike Goodson has an outside shot at 1000 yards rushing - it's unlikely, but he's 730 yards away with six games left. He would need to have one of the most consistent stretches of a Panther running back ever, but if he even gets in the neighborhood, that would be amazing for him. It would also help the confidence of the offensive line.

4. Passblocking is still an area of concern for the line - it can open holes up for Goodson to hit the cutbacks that have been a staple of DeAngelo Williams' career to date, but it cannot consistently give any quarterback time to make decisions.

5. I don't understand why more teams in the NFL don't run the no-huddle offense consistently. It is one of the best ways to get a QB in rhythm and keep a defense on its heels, limiting substitutions.

6. Brian St. Pierre looks like he could run a very good dink & dunk offensive scheme - several of his passes yesterday were plays that could have been made by the intended targets.

7. David Gettis will be a solid number one or number two receiver, but I'm still convinced Carolina needs one more guy - be it a high profile rookie in next year's draft, or a veteran.

8. All NFL players should be taught geometry. In fact, a football-geometry mini course could prove amazingly beneficial to all players both offense and defense.

9. Carolina is NOT far away from being a contender with the current roster. All that is needed is a direction, a vision - that which makes a team cohesive. That comes from the top down. One or two pieces might help push the team over the top, too.

10. Carolina needs to be more aggressive - on 4th and short between the 40s, especially with a running back gaining approximately 5.6 yards everytime he touched the ball, the team needs to go for it, even just as a matter of pride.

Sunday, November 21, 2010

St. Pierre Picked For 6 Twice; Panthers Crumble, Lose Again 37 - 13




Brian St. Pierre's 88-yard scoring pass was just a distant memory by the time this one ended. And that was well after St. Pierre's back-to-back interceptions, both for touchdowns.

Baltimore just clobbered Carolina, 37-13, to drop the Panthers to 1-9 this season.


The Ravens led the entire way, but Carolina actually got within a touchdown early in the fourth quarter on Brian St. Pierre's 88-yard TD pass to David Gettis. That made it 20-13, Baltimore, and gave the Panthers a bit of life.

http://scottfowlerobs.blogspot.com/

Saturday, November 20, 2010

Nearly 31, St.Pierre Finally Gets A Chance



Here's how you know you've hit the big time:
You're mentioned alongside men like Dan Manucci, Tom Yewcic and Sam Etcheverry.

Well, not exactly.

If you don't know who those guys are, it's okay. Most people don't. But when Brian St. Pierre starts for the injury-riddled Carolina Panthers on tomorrow, he'll have settled in next to them on the Mount Rushmore of quarterbacks who made their pro-football starting debut when they were already in their 30s.

CARRY ON

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704170404575624830196580888.html?mod=googlenews_wsj

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

What The Panthers Are Lacking On Offense



When a football team is last in the league in wins, passing yards, total yards and points, there is plenty of blame to go around. Still, there is some talent on the Carolina Panthers roster, except at one important position.
There is one player on the offense who is important to both the passing and running attacks. A guy who can open pathways for a runner or slip downfield for a pass. That is the tight end. In Charlotte, the “tight” refers to how the team refuses to get off the purse strings to get a good one.

A couple of weeks ago, there was a news story about the reimaging of the tight end. Rather than having a slow-footed blocker who occasionally catches passes, most teams now expect the TE to be one of their better athletes. It mentioned people like Antonio Gates and Jimmy Graham who played basketball in college, but had skills that translated well to the NFL.

All I could think was, “Wow, the Panthers need to read this.” The Panthers once had one of those dual-purpose TEs that offensive coordinators feared. Wesley Walls and Steve Beuerlein hooked up on dozens of TD passes. When he retired, Walls held the team record for TD grabs. Since then, the Panthers haven’t tried very hard to replace him.

CARRY ON

http://www.mtairynews.com/view/full_story/10343027/article-What-the-Panthers-are-lacking-on-offense?instance=secondary_sports_left_column

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Where Jimmy Clausen Can Go From Here


Jimmy Clausen and the Carolina Panthers can go from here to success through the application of the SRG Positioning Algorithm™. In the book Explosive Growth: How to Create Task-Oriented Growth Plans (SRG Publications), author Glenn E. Dawson provides the SRG Positioning Algorithm™ as a set of three questions that act as a compass to guide the journey towards a goal.


Quote:

The SRG Positioning Algorithm™

1) Where are you, really?

2) In what direction are you going?

3) How will you likely go?

1. Where is Jimmy Clausen, really?

Clausen has had a tumultuous rookie campaign. When playing, he’s shown flashes of potential, but has struggled with a low trajectory of passes, allowing passes batted at the line, plus a lack of time from his offensive line. Additionally, Clausen is rarely able to gain rhythm. To his credit, he has shown the ability to make something out of nothing by extending the play and finding a receiver, or even scrambling. He’s shown good accuracy on longer throws. Also, he is not afraid to try to fit a ball into a tight window. He shows potential, but there is an obvious lack of true support and effort from the coaching staff towards mentoring and developing Clausen.

2. In what direction is Jimmy Clausen going?

Currently, there is a lack of direction and confidence towards Clausen, which is negatively impacting his performance. The goal with Clausen should be for him to grow as a person and player, becoming a competitive NFL quarterback. His direction, then, is that which will enable him to be best equipped for that eventuality.

3. How will Jimmy Clausen likely get there?

The best way for Clausen to get there is to let him play offense – real offense. Consider utilizing the no-huddle and a mixture of quick slants, square ins, square outs, hook patterns, hitch and go’s, wheel routes, etc., with routes all over the field available every play. To deal with pressure from the defensive line, design dump-off passes to the running backs and receivers out of the backfield or in the flat towards the side the defense is heavy on, and run the occasional draw, delay, or trap play from the same formation. Also, incorporate the bootleg and other designed quarterback roll-out plays to get Clausen on the move and force the defense to react. Take advantage of gadget plays, motion, and actively trying to best the opposing defense. Mix it up, and switch the receivers around. The faster the play develops, the less time the defense has to react – and then when a longer-developing play is tried, it will catch the defense off guard. Work with Clausen on his release point to give him a higher trajectory, perhaps through accuracy drills in practice that require the ball to crest like a wave. If his throws are tending to be off, focus on timing routes in practice as well. Be proactive about Clausen, as well as supportive. Playcalling like this will really allow Clausen to experience the full repertoire of an NFL offense, and give him valuable understanding. Be proactive about Clausen, as well as supportive. Show confidence and trust in him, and give him the best opportunity to succeed. Give Jimmy Clausen the motivation to want to better himself, rather than allowing anemia to take over.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

In NFL Computer Profiling, I show how NFL players are assembly line pieces: if they do not perform well initially, they are swapped out for another piece; and how within the landscape of the NFL, the majority of coaches do not mentor or develop their players, seeking instead to coach through statistical loopholes and copycatting what works for another team. The malaise currently enveloping the NFL is from a lack of development and mentoring; a lack of cognition that football is a group-task, not an individual task. Coaches should be mentors, providing players with the tools they need to improve, the advice they need to incorporate those tools, and the support they need to execute those tools. The upcoming feature-length article “Where Can Clausen and Carolina Go From Here” takes Dawson’s SRG Positioning Algorithm™ even further, applying it beyond Jimmy Clausen to five other components of the Carolina Panthers, accomplishing deeper analysis as well as providing methodology by which to achieve true development and mentoring through the epitome of coaching.

__________________

~RL~

Friday, November 12, 2010

Fox Not Ready To Give Up On The Season


Under head coach John Fox, the Carolina Panthers have always been known as a tough, physical team on both sides of the football.

It didn't matter who was at quarterback or running back or defensive tackle, opposing teams knew it would be a long, bruising day.
In his ninth year as coach, Fox's Panthers have started a rebuilding phase. Add in the fact that this is Fox's final year under contract, and there have been a lot of distractions in Charlotte.

But while the league's second youngest team prepares to take on the league's youngest team in the Tampa Bay Bucs on Sunday, Fox is still working to get his team out of its current funk.

"Anytime you lose, I mean, this game is only fun when you win," Fox said. "As coaches and players, you put a lot of effort in, and you expect to get results."

http://www.theledger.com/article/20101111/NEWS/11115100/1002/SPORTS?Title=Panthers-Fox-Not-Ready-To-Give-Up-on-the-Season

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Six Great Stories For Veterans’ Day


Happy Veterans’ Day, In honor of our national holiday for veterans, we’ve rounded up some of our favorite past features about military heroes....keep'em close to your heart.

Amazing Heroes of the United States Military

Read the stories of war heroes like the Tuskegee Airmen and Sgt. Merlin German, a courageous burn victim.

http://gimundo.com/news/article/amazing-heroes-of-the-united-states-military/

Army Veteran Brendan Marrocco Is First Quadruple Amputee to Survive—and Thrive

Brendan Marrocco, a soldier who served in Iraq, came back as a quadruple amputee. Despite his disabilities, he is full of joy and moving on with his life.

http://gimundo.com/news/article/army-veteran-brendan-marrocco-is-first-quadruple-amputee-to-survive-and-thr/

Soldier Reunited with the Dog Who Saved His Life

After a dog named Rufus helped fend off a suicide bomber, Sgt. Chris Duke decided to bring him home.

http://gimundo.com/news/article/soldier-reunited-with-the-dog-who-saved-his-life/

The Amazing Christmas Ceasefire

During World War I, British and German soldiers put down their weapons to celebrate the holiday spirit together, in a remarkable event known as “the Christmas Truce.”

http://gimundo.com/news/article/the-amazing-christmas-ceasefire/

Code Talkers: The Secret Heroes of World War II

During World War II, a small group of Native American tribesmen were entrusted with translating the Allied troops’ secret messages into a secret code based on their own native languages.

http://gimundo.com/news/article/code-talkers-the-secret-heroes-of-world-war-ii/

Video Montage of Soldiers’ Surprise Reunions with Family Members

A heartwarming montage of military members surprising their loved ones at home.

http://gimundo.com/videos/view/video-montage-of-soldiers-surprise-reunions-with-family-members/

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Losing Season Prompts More Fans To Sell Tickets Cheap


CHARLOTTE, NC (WBTV) – The Carolina Panthers host a 1-7 record with the latest loss to the Saints on Sunday. The team's struggle on the field means they dominate the morning conversation at places like The Head Shop.

"We call it black Monday when they lose and we've had a lot of black Mondays," Owner Mike Waters said. Waters is a 16 year PSL owner. Asked if he regrets the decision this year, he says no. But Waters has some customers who do. A sign hangs in the shop advertising tickets for sale.

Online Panthers tickets can be found everywhere, for cheap. Places like ticket exchange show more than a thousand tickets up for sale for future home games.
"We're definitely seeing a lot of sales going to the opposing cities as well as the fans of the opposing teams," Greg Carl with Maxim Tickets said.

In fact Carl estimates 70 percent of ticket sales are for opposing fans.
But a bad season may actually benefit fans.
Carl notes tickets for the last three home games are at a historic low - as cheap as $15 for some seats against the Arizona Cardinals.

"Some panthers fans that may not be able to generally afford to go to a game are having an opportunity to this season," Carl said. "The demand for the NFL product in and of itself does help so whether the team is playing well or bad, we are able to move a majority of tickets. From a revenue standpoint however, that's where you'll see the difference from season to season."

On the flip side, brokers say sellers will be lucky to get half the face value of the ticket.
And another possible reason for keeping the value down - the team's young age. The Panthers don't have the history of other teams to attract fans.
Die hard fans say they continue to see empty seats. By halftime Sunday game goers said more Saints fans remained than Panthers fans.

"There's no one really happy with coaching, not really happy with Jerry. We've got some disgruntled fans around town now," Walters said.

Sunday, May 9, 2010

Meet The Woman Who Founded & Fought Mother's Day


The memorial now known as Mothers Day was founded by Anna Jarvis in tribute to her mother, Ann Marie Reeves Jarvis. The first fully organized Mothers Day program was held at the Andrews Methodist Episcopal Church in Grafton, Taylor County, West Virginia, on May 10, 1908. The honored mother had already laid the foundation for such a day in the last fifty years of her life.

Ann Marie Reeves came to West Virginia at age twelve when her father, the Rev. Josiah W. Reeves, a Methodist minister, was transferred from Culpepper Co., Virginia to Philippi in Barbour County. Seven years later, in 1850, at the age of seventeen, Ann Marie married Granville E. Jarvis, son of a Baptist minister. The couple lived in Philippi for a short time and then moved to Webster in Taylor County where Granville began his career as a merchant.

MORE http://www.wvgenweb.org/taylor/mothersday/mother.htm

http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/36969170/ns/today-mothers_day_guide?Gt1=43001

Monday, April 19, 2010

''Remembering Joel Buchsbaum, The Original Draftnik''


NEW YORK – Neighbors thought the little man was strange.

They didn't know who he was or what he did for a living. They knew only that he spent most days holed up in his apartment, a small one-bedroom on the fourth floor. And that he got loads of mail. His mailbox in the building's lobby bulged with letters and magazines. Many days, stacks of envelopes were bundled with twine on the floor. The superintendent, who often signed for the packages, couldn't stand it.

"I said no more, please no more," the super said. "Too much mail."

But the deluge kept coming, all bound for Apartment 4L, where things went in but hardly anything went out, including the man who lived there.
The tenant, a quiet guy who never married, left Brooklyn once, maybe twice a year. He left his building only a few hours a day. He walked his dog, visited his mother in the building next door or went to the gym.

He always looked the same: Bed-head hair. Baggy sweatshirt or sweater. Windbreaker. Long pants, even in the sticky heat of summer. His Jack Russell terrier scampered behind him, leaving puddles.
Neighbors said the man was likable and polite, a gentleman. Friends called him caring and honest. A real sweetheart.

But strangers rushed past him and kids stared.

He was so thin, he seemed to drown in his clothes. His eyes were sunken, his fingers thin as pencils. In his 40s, he looked 80.
His name was Joel Buchsbaum. And in the confines of his apartment, he became a football savant.
Buchsbaum could tell you anything about football, anything about players – even from 10 years ago. Heights. Forty-yard dash times. Injuries. If a guy sprained an ankle, he knew which ankle.

About his personal life, though, he didn't say much. It seemed he loved football more than life itself.
Obsessive and passionate about the game, yet absent-minded in life. That was Joel.
The name on Buchsbaum's apartment buzzer was J. Buchabaum. He lived there 17 years but never bothered to correct it.

He never managed to put enough postage on envelopes, just slapping on stamps. He was a menace on the road, driving his used Mazda sedan 20 mph in the fast lane. And his health? It was far down his list of important things.
"He was always too busy to eat, so he never ate," said his mother, Fran Buchsbaum. "With him, it was football, football, football. He thought it was all he needed."

Buchsbaum's fixation with work was overwhelming. He once said: "When it comes my time to go, I hope I'm 90, and I've just finished another draft. Yeah, that's the way I want to go."

He didn't make it.

On the morning of Dec. 29, 2002, in his nondescript building on Avenue I in the Flatbush section of Brooklyn, Buchsbaum died at age 48, alone in the apartment where he lived a secluded life between peeling, cracking walls.
He was 5-8 and less than 100 pounds when his heart gave out. He fell to his bedroom floor, and there he lay, surrounded by the world he created – a place where quirky college dropout Joel Stephen Buchsbaum became an NFL legend.

A Cult Radio Figure

Officially, Buchsbaum's job was contributing editor for Pro Football Weekly. He wrote columns for the magazine and produced books about the 600 to 800 college players available for the NFL draft.
In his yearly book, he detailed players' strengths, weaknesses and personal information. He threw out one-liners, too: "Looks like Tarzan but plays like Jane." "It's a $20 cab ride to get around him."

Though this year's draft book has his name on it, for the first time in 25 years, next weekend's event will go on without him.
Buchsbaum also had weekly radio shows in Houston and St. Louis. Over the airwaves, he became a cult figure. His nasal, Brooklyn monotone – not a booming broadcasting voice – was his trademark.

Unofficially, Buchsbaum was one of the best evaluators of football talent. He called himself "a glorified information gatherer" because he consulted many sources to produce what NFL bigwigs say was the definitive draft guide. He didn't have to ask teams what they were going to do. He knew.

His analysis was so good that NFL coaches, owners and personnel people sought his advice.
"I tried to hire him as a scout with the [Cleveland] Browns every year," said New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick. "But he always said he'd rather work for all 32 teams.
"There's a thousand people out there that write draft books, and they aren't worth the paper they're written on. But Joel? He was something special."

While NFL scouts were traveling to colleges to check out players, Buchsbaum was perched in front of his TVs, studying videotapes of games and workouts. That was his advantage.
"He knew the players better than any scout for any team," Belichick said. "Studying film is crucial, and that's why he was so good. He did it 24 hours a day."

Buchsbaum saw tapes he wasn't supposed to. Practice sessions. Private workouts. He had connections at every NFL team.
Belichick considered him a close friend, calling on the morning of the draft, then that night to talk about different scenarios. Buchsbaum was good at keeping secrets.

Oakland Raiders owner Al Davis was a buddy. So were New York Giants general manager Ernie Accorsi and Chicago Bears general manager Jerry Angelo. And NFL front office people. And agents.
"He had a network in the NFL better than I've ever heard of," said Bobby Beathard, Atlanta Falcons senior adviser and former Washington Redskins general manager.

Accorsi said: "There weren't a lot of people who influenced all these top people in the league like Joel did."

Part Of His Mystery

Of all the people who knew Buchsbaum, most knew him only by phone.
"It certainly was out of the ordinary," Belichick said. "It was like having an affair."

It was part of his mystery.

A St. Louis Post-Dispatch columnist in the 1980s joked that Buchsbaum was fictional because no one had ever seen him. Was he short? Blond? Fat? Alive?
"I was never in his presence. That puts me in the same category as 99 percent of people that knew him," said NBC sportscaster Bob Costas, who hosted a St. Louis radio show with Buchsbaum in the late 1970s. "A sighting of him was like a sighting of Bigfoot.

"A portion of our audience thought he was a put-on. His voice was almost as if you invented a sports brainiac cartoon character."
In 1978, Buchsbaum started his radio career on St. Louis' KMOX. His name, usually pronounced Bucks-baum, was mispronounced Bush-bomb. He didn't care. He was happy to sit in his raggedy recliner and talk football to listeners many miles away. He was happy to be just a voice.

He avoided cameras. As part of an agreement, his column in Pro Football Weekly ran without his mug shot.
A picture would've captured this: a pale, angular face. Teeth too big for his mouth. Ears popping out. Outdated, outsized glasses with thick lenses.
Eventually, his photo made it into newspapers, when stories came out about this new breed of person called a draftnik, someone obsessed with the NFL draft.

Now there is Mel Kiper Jr., the ESPN personality identified by his distinct hair styling. But first there was Buchsbaum, the guy no one could identify.

Avoided The Public

Unlike Kiper and other draftniks, Buchsbaum preferred to avoid the public. Most of his social interaction was at the gym.
His NFL friends couldn't understand. He had many offers to go to lunch or to nearby games. But Buchsbaum declined, saying he was busy. Or his dog was sick. Or he was on a diet.

Occasionally he went to the Kickoff Classic at Giants Stadium at the start of the college season. Other than that, he watched games from his apartment, a space so messy that his mother vowed never to visit. Only his editors and best friend visited regularly – a few times a year.
"Getting into his apartment was like getting onto Gilligan's Island," one NFL executive said. "We all wondered what it was like."

There was plenty to see beneath the dust. Every cranny was filled with magazines, newspapers and thousands of videotapes from games and workouts, each labeled. Texas A&M v. Texas 1998. Notre Dame Work Out '93.
Rickety bookshelves threatened to crush him. Books, binders and spiral notebooks filled his closets. They hid stains on his worn-out carpet. They elbowed dust bunnies from beneath his bed. The bathtub was a book bin.

In the clutter of his living room were his lifelines: the phone; three TVs of varying size, only one hooked up to cable; three VCRs, some so old their buttons were held on by dry, yellowing Scotch tape. He often watched and taped three games at once.
There he worked 80 to 90 hours a week, 52 weeks a year.

"He gambled his entire well-being for the sport, and he didn't want anything in return," said Accorsi, who lives in Manhattan but met Buchsbaum only once. "His compensation was our respect. That was more important to him than any kind of money."
Money was never a concern. Pro Football Weekly paid him well and covered his phone bills, as high as $1,500 a month. He didn't need much to live on anyway.

In Love With Sports

He was an only child who resided with his parents until he was 31. His father, who died in 1999, was first assistant corporation counsel for New York City. His mother, a buyer for a local clothing store, eventually made her son and his junk move to the building next door.
Stanley Buchsbaum hoped his son would become a lawyer, but Joel had other ideas. He introduced his son to sports, and Joel fell in love.

They went to Mets and Jets games. They talked about football and hockey. But they loved baseball the most. To protest the Dodgers' leaving Brooklyn in 1957, the Buchsbaums were Baltimore Orioles fans. Joel named every dog he ever had Brooks or Miss Brooks, after his favorite player, third baseman Brooks Robinson.

He boasted about the "O's" to his friends. Back then, he was gregarious, one of the gang. Despite his insistence that he was "never any good," he played stickball in the streets until dusk, football in the schoolyards. He was pudgy but coordinated.
"There are a lot of misconceptions about Joel: He wasn't always thin, and he wasn't spastic," said Andrew Kulak, a boyhood friend. "He was a great pitcher and a great quarterback."

Buchsbaum once was obsessed with becoming a major league pitcher, just as he was obsessed with perfection in everything he did. In third grade, his mother said, he began memorizing box scores. As friends played Stratomatic, a baseball board game, he kept statistics.
His love for statistics soon became his only connection to athletics. When puberty hit, he stopped playing team sports. He developed a serious case of acne and withdrew from his friends.

One autumn, he returned to high school much thinner.

"He was obsessed with getting into shape because he wanted to be an athlete so badly, but he obviously went too far," said Paul Helman, a longtime friend. "Looking back, maybe it was anorexia or something. He just worked out all the time."
His mother said Buchsbaum lost weight because he developed food allergies. He went to State University of New York at Albany but came home after one semester, due in part, she said, to his eating problems.

In 1974, after giving Brooklyn College a one-month trial, he gave up on college. He was 19 when he began thinking up his own career. One that didn't exist.

A Collector's Item

Growing up, Buchsbaum was fascinated by Pro Football Weekly's draft coverage. So he tried it himself. For hours, he sat in a local kosher pizza parlor, scribbling notes about college players.
At age 20, he wrote his first draft report. His mother typed it and took it to the copy shop. He sent it to 120 newspapers and magazines. The next year, the Football News hired him, and his first draft analysis was published in 1975.

He moved to Pro Football Weekly in 1978, when his early draft reports were 50 pages. His last report was nearly 200 pages.
"This year's book is going to be a collector's item," Accorsi said. "You look at it and you think, 'Oh, Joel – I really miss him.' "

When Buchsbaum started out, the draft was a small affair, held at a Manhattan hotel. Now it's broadcast live on ESPN from Madison Square Garden. Thousands of people attend. Millions watch.
It was the one day of the year, guaranteed, that Buchsbaum left Brooklyn. And one day, guaranteed, that people could see the man who lived a hermit's life. It was his domain: While other reporters were sequestered in the media section, he was allowed near the team tables.

"He had a presence at the draft," said Joel Bussert, NFL senior director of player personnel. "He had an identity there. He was an important man there. I don't think he ever realized how important he was in football."
As the draft grew, Buchsbaum's methods stayed the same.

He wrote his reports in notebooks with No. 2 pencils. Pro Football Weekly editors sent him a computer, but it stayed in the box for months.
When the magazine sent him to a typing class, he resisted. Only last year did he agree to use e-mail.

Not A Jokester

Buchsbaum had his routine.
Every night, he visited his mother at 11:30. Every day, he went to the gym, wearing a fanny pack that held a notebook and pencils. He changed his NFL cap daily so he wouldn't show a particular allegiance.
He worked out with his best friend, Marty Fox. Buchsbaum climbed onto a bike in front of the TVs and barely pedaled. Or he lifted the lightest plate on the weight machines. He said he didn't want to waste calories; he just wanted to keep his parts moving. As usual, he was serious.

"You never joked around with Joel because he just wasn't that hip," Fox said. "You just had to accept him for what he was."
Many people didn't know what to think. They wondered why he insisted on commandeering the TV sets. They didn't find out who he was until he was featured in The New York Times two weeks before his death.

"People here loved him because he was as nice as can be, but some people thought he had AIDS or something," gym sales manager Michael Carlin said.
Buchsbaum had health problems for years, but never complained, and few people inquired.
Even his friends weren't sure what was wrong. Fox thought Buchsbaum had Crohn's disease, a gastrointestinal disorder. Others thought Buchsbaum was struggling with diabetes or cancer.

The death certificate cites natural causes. His mother said he died of a heart attack.

"It was terrible," she said. "You can't just live on lettuce."

He Had Demons

His NFL contacts understood his passion for the game and respected him for his hard work. Though they knew he was thin, they didn't know why.
"He had demons inside of him," an NFL executive said. "Because he was always afraid of failure. He was scared because he said he wasn't trained for anything else."

His mother said she tried to get him to relax, maybe have a family. Even when his father died in 1999 and friends worried about how it affected him, he kept working.
"After his dad died, he was really down. I thought, 'God, what is this guy going to do now? This poor guy doesn't have a life,' " Beathard said. "I always hoped he'd get a job at the NFL office, so he could get out of Brooklyn and do other things. I always wondered, 'Is this what he wants?' because I really cared about him and liked what was inside of him."

Parcells Connection

Many of Buchsbaum's contacts turned into friends, including Scott Pioli, the New England Patriots' vice president of player personnel. They talked about things other than football. Buchsbaum often chatted with Pioli's wife, Dallas, whose father is Bill Parcells, coach of the Dallas Cowboys.
They never saw him in person, but the Piolis loved their phone friend. It was mutual.

Months after the Piolis' wedding in 1999, Buchsbaum sent them a gift in brown wrinkly paper, probably a former supermarket bag. Inside, there was a wooden sailboat with a note saying, "Along the seas of life may your ship always sail smoothly."
Several weeks later, they spied the same ship at a supermarket. It was $18.99.

"We both started laughing," Pioli said. "It said a lot about the man. It was simple and thoughtful, and not in a derogatory way, it was him. It was something he felt in his heart, and even if it was a cheap old boat from Shop Rite, he wanted to get it for us."
On New Year's Eve, Pioli and Belichick drove from Massachusetts to New Jersey for Buchsbaum's funeral. Only about a dozen people showed up. His mother. His editor. A couple of cousins. A few friends from the gym. Accorsi. Bussert.

In February, about 30 people went to a memorial service at the annual scouting combine, where NFL teams evaluate prospective players. Pro Football Weekly staffers handed out tribute books filled with stories and notes about Buchsbaum. More than 300 e-mails from all over the world were posted on the magazine's Web site about him.

Pile Of Mail

Fran Buchsbaum didn't know that her son was famous, or that he influenced so many people.
At 84, she is a whisper of a woman. Most days you can find her in the same spot, sitting in her neat beige living room.
These days, she listens to a tape of the St. Louis radio show dedicated to her son. He's described as "the only man who knows and who cares who is the third-string quarterback from Alcorn State."

There's a pile of mail on the desk in her foyer, sent by her son's admirers, but she hasn't had the strength to read it, even months after his death. Instead, she holds the tribute book. A chain smoker, she exhales and smoke floats through the room like a thin veil.

"Such adoration, such adulation," she said, wiping a tear. "I had no idea. Every one of these people says he was a genius. I've never heard of these men, but look here, an NFL general manager said he was a legend. I guess he would know."
Pictures of her son line her bookcase. In one, he's a tan teenager with meaty arms, sitting on a couch with a dog. Another shows him as a high schooler with longish, wavy hair and a broad face.

Her son's TVs are in her living room, each bound for another household. They sit next to two wooden sailboats he gave her.
In the building next door, Apartment 4L is empty.
After Buchsbaum's funeral, his editor went into the apartment to collect material for the latest draft book. He took about a dozen small boxes. The building's superintendent threw away the rest.

In the cupboards, the super found 500 cans of mushrooms, 100 bottles of Diet Sprite, some popcorn and dozens of ice cube trays filled with soda. The gas to the oven was off. No one cooked there. The air conditioner had been broken for years.
Now Buchsbaum's dog, Miss Brooks, taken in by a cousin, is living in the suburbs. The floor is bare. The rooms echo.

Next door, Fran Buchsbaum is alone.
Nearly three months after her son's death, she received a call from a reporter looking for Joel. He needed insight about the draft.
"I can't give you any information," she said. She covered her eyes. Then, "He's dead. That's it. It's over."

The End........