Archive for the 'Hobbies' Category

New England Patriots Tickets - Reshuffling The Team

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009
Robert asked:

__________________________________________________________________
Following the exit of four assistant coaches and Scott Pioli the vice president of players’ personnel, the England patriots are involved in a process of recruiting a new squad.

The assistant coach Shane Waldron has been promoted as tight ends coach. The assistant director for college of scouting Jonathan Robinson was also promoted to the post of director, a post that had been vacant since January 2008, since the departure of Thomas Dirmitoff who left for a post of general manager in the falcons.

 Waldron becomes the second assistant coach to be appointed during this off season by Coach Bill Belichick. He joined the England Patriots the previous season after working as an offensive graduate assistant at Notre Dame for a period of three seasons, where he worked under former Patriots offensive coordinator Charlie Weis.

Wide receivers Coach Bill O’Brien has also been promoted to quarterbacks coach replacing offensive coordinator coach Josh McDaniel’s, who left for a position as head coach to the Broncos.

Head coach Belichick also replaced special teams coach Brad Seely with Scott O’Brien, a former special teams coach in Cleveland, and Dom Capers with Boyer, a move seen outside as promoting those within or those he has ever worked with before. Monti Ossenfort who is making his eighth come back season in NFL and a 5th with the patriots was also given the position of a national scout.

 There is also news on England patriots signing a contract with franchised QB Matt Cassel which will mean that Tom Brandy stays on bench following his knee surgery rehabilitation. Cassel remains the most valuable in market for now as long as Kurt Warner remains in Arizona which is expected to happen.

The patriots set a record of 11-5 the past season thanks to Cassel who came to their rescue after Tom Brady suffered a knee injury during the first week of the season. In December, England missed the playoffs after losing 4-0 making the ravens and the dolphins qualify.

With most coaching positions filled up, the patriots now have to concentrate on quarterback situation which is very vital to the team. They also have to make the difficult decision of using Cassel basing on Brady’s health condition, and make up their mind if they are willing to pay him the expensive amount a franchised player gets or sell him to another team and make money out of that move. Cassel is expected to get 14 million dollars if the patriots decide to use him.

However it will be hard for the patriots to keep both Cassel and Brady in the team bearing in mind that NFL does not permit any team to spend money any how which makes it impossible to keep the best players on the field.

For a long time the patriots have not been successful in getting a replacement on the free agent market which made them lose many touch down passes last season. The patriots still remain with 18 unrestricted free agents of which they have to choose from.

 



MAJOR

Nick Saban: a Great College Football Coach Who Might Bring Alabama Back to Greatness

Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008
Ed Bagley asked:


Copyright © 2007 Ed Bagley

Nick Saban recently became the University of Alabama football coach by signing the richest contract ever awarded to a college football coach.

His 8-year, $32 million deal with the Crimson Tide has a base salary of $225,000 that will be supplemented by a personal services fee of $3.275 to $3.975 million per year. College football supporters are awash with money for winners who they believe can put their team on top.

Saban’s deal does not include a buyout clause if he leaves, but it does cap public appearances at 15 per year (for alumni and booster clubs) that are unrelated to endorsements.

The contract also has incentives that could generate another $650,000 for on-field and academic success with his players. One biggie is $200,000 if he reaches the BCS championship game and escalates to $400,000 if Alabama wins.

Saban also gets a country club membership, two cars, a luxury box at Bryant-Denny Stadium and up to 25 hours of yearly flight time for personal travel in a non-commercial plane.
__________________________________________________________________

Ah, it is good to be Nick Saban in Alabama today. Now he must win and win big, something he has been able to do at other college coaching positions.

In his only year as head coach at Toledo he took the Rockets from 6-5 to 9-2 and the Mid-American Conference co-championship.

Saban then went to Michigan State and in five seasons turned the Spartans from a mediocre, continual late-season failure into a 9-2 season that included wins over Notre Dame, Michigan, Ohio State and Penn State before he resigned in 1999.

A season earlier, MSU knocked off then No. 1 ranked Ohio State 28-24 at Ohio Stadium and routed highly-ranked Notre Dame before folding later in the season.

If the Big 10 was not tough enough, Saban’s next stop was another five seasons with the LSU Tigers in the even tougher, nastier Southeastern Conference.

He chalked up a 10-3 mark and an SEC championship in his second year and topped things off with a 13-1 record in his fourth season (2003) that earned the Tigers a second SEC championship with Saban as well as the BCS national championship title after a 21-14 win over the Oklahoma Sooners.

After two average years trying to get the Miami Dolphins of the NFL in gear, he left to become Alabama’s new hope. Saban was able to build a defense with the Dolphins but never really got the offense going, suffering his first losing record as a head coach.

Saban’s extended family has football connections. His cousin Lou Saban was a two-time All-Big Ten player at Indiana University and later was head coach for the NFL Buffalo Bills, Denver Broncos and New England Patriots.

Saban played as a defensive back for Don James when James was head coach at Kent State University. James also coached NFL great Jack Lambert and led the Golden Flashes (it may be true) to their only Mid-American Conference title in 1972.

Like Saban, James was a winner. James went on to coach 18 seasons at the University of Washington. He was twice named National College Coach of the Year (1984 and 1991), guided Washington to the National Championship in 1991, took the Huskies to 6 Rose Bowls (winning 4), won the Orange Bowl title in 1985, had a 10-5 bowl game record, and won 22 straight games from 1990 to 1992.

James was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1997; Saban will likely be inducted into the same Hall of Fame at some point in the future.

Here is what Saban had to say about James: “Don James was my college coach at Kent State. I guess he had as much of an impact on me as anyone in terms of organization, quality of work, (and) being the best you can be. He’s the person that got me (into) coaching.”

Saban was a graduate assistant and then defensive assistant for the Kent State University football team.

I have distant connections to Saban and James.

I graduated from Michigan State in 1966 and saw two great years of football before graduating. I remember the 1966 “Game of the Century” between then No. 2 ranked Michigan State and No. 1 ranked Notre dame that ended in a 10-10 tie when Norte Dame decided to settle for a tie rather than go for the victory.

There were 5 All Americans on MSU’s 1966 team: fullback Bob Apisa, halfback Clinton Jones, defensive end Charles “Bubba” Smith, wide receiver Gene Washington and rover (linebacker) George Webster.

I remember a game in 1965 when All-American running back Jim Grabowski from Illinois and George Webster were running full steam toward each other and Webster flattened Grabowski. It was one of the greatest tackles I ever witnessed. Grobowski went on the play for the NFL Green Bay Packers and Chicago Bears.

Football at MSU then turned to crap until Nick Saban arrived and took the Spartans back to prominence. It was one long drought that lasted from 1967 to 1999.

I relocated to Washington State in 1973 and followed the University of Washington Huskiesand Don Jamescloser than I did Michigan State during those years. Here in Washington Don James is affectionately known as the “Dawgfather” and treated with as much respect as was Don Corleone in The Godfather movie.

You will not meet a better college football coach or person than Don James, he is always about honesty, integrity and doing the right thing.

My expectation is that Nick Saban will bring Alabama football back to its rightful place. I have been a Crimson Tide fan since the day “Joe Willie” Namath walked onto the Alabama campus.

I am also fired up for the football season to start as Michigan State has a new head coach, a guy named Mark Dantonio who is serious about defense and will instill the kind of discipline and winning attitude MSU needs.

The days of the country club atmosphere are over at Michigan State. Players will either get with it or get gone. Dantonio will not accept losing and neither will Saban. Look out SEC, here comes Nick Saban.



ARMANDO