Sports
NFL Divisional Playoff Picks
At Pittsburgh -3 Baltimore
You gotta love this matchup. Two brutally physical teams that hate each other and split close games in the regular season get a postseason rubber match to decide who gets to represent the division in the AFC Championship game. Both teams can run and stop the run. Both teams have quality QBs and gam-changing safeties. Linebackers on both sides can wreak havoc on the opposing team’s offense. There’s no trickery here. No hidden surprises. Just 60 smash mouth minutes of entertaining football. Ray Rice will make more plays in the passing game and he’ll have more of an impact than Rashard Mendenhall. Mike Wallace finds the endzone. Big Ben outduels Flacco the road warrior, and the Steelers D makes a couple more impact plays than Baltimore’s defense. No room for kicking errors here. It’ll be a close one, but after Saturday, Tomlin will have a 7-0 record against the Ravens in games started by Big Ben.
PICK: Steelers -3
At Atlanta -2 Green Bay
The Falcons looked kinda vulnerable against the Saints a few weeks back. I’ve been underestimating Atlanta all year, but I just don’t see this Packers run ending in the divisional round. Rodgers is playing confident, mistake-free football, and he now has the semblance of a running game to pair with his top-notch passing skills. Atlanta isn’t without weapons, but the Packers defense is just better. During the regular season, Green Bay allowed fewer points and fewer yards than Atlanta. There will be a good deal of scoring in this game. Matt Ryan will stay composed, Turner will rack up yards, but the Packers win ‘cause they’re a better team that’s peaking at the right time.
PICK: Packers +2
At Chicago -10 Seattle
I’ve hated on the Bears all year, but this team has managed to really get into a groove. The o-line is protecting better, they’re more balanced offensively, the defense has looked sharp and Matt Forte had a great second half. Cutler’s a wildcard, though. When he plays good, he looks damn near elite. When he makes mistakes, he makes them in bunches. I didn’t think Seattle could win the last two weeks, but they took advantage of their home field, moved the ball well and they reduced turnovers. I think the Bears are going to win this game, but the line doesn’t reflect the momentum that Seattle’s accumulated. Forte goes off and the Bears win, but not by more than 10.
PICK: Seahawks +10
At New England -9 NY Jets
So many insults. So many foot references. I can’t wait for this game to be played so that we can end all the talk and just watch some bitter division rivals play angry football. I didn’t think the Jets would get out of Indy, but they did. The Pats look poised as hell, though. They’re the favorites to win the Super Bowl for a reason. They don’t turn the ball over and their defense is quietly gelling. But the Jets are bitter. They’re angry about the regular season beatdown. They’re angry about being second-fiddle to the golden boy QB and the genius head coach. The Jets will be high on emotions, but the Pats will be programmatic with their attack. If Sanchez plays throws passes like he did last week, this game has the potential to turn ugly real fast. The Jets deserve to be where they are, but the Pats will remind them who owns the AFC East.
PICK: Pats -9
Last week: 2-2
Season: 129-122-7
Jan 14th
NFL Wildcard Weekend Picks
I love the playoffs. Anything can happen in the NFL postseason, but the start of the playoffs also signals that the end is near. Soon, there won’t be any more football on Sundays. You’ll have no excuse to block off half your weekend for beers, TV and couch time. You’ll have to start taking out your lady, going to family events, all kinds of nonsense like that. Might as well enjoy football while you still can. Do yourself a favor enjoy a Saturday and Sunday full of quality Wildcard action. Now on to the picks.
New Orleans -10 At Seattle
Seattle messed up my miracle parlay last week. Everything fell into place with Pittsburgh, Houston, Atlanta and Tampa Bay all covering. Then, the Rams walked into a a fired up home crowd and a surprisingly efficient Charlie Whitehurst. So thanks Seattle for cheating me out of a $400-plus payout. The Saints are banged up, but they still have Brees at the helm. He should do more damage against Seattle than Bradford and a group of wide receivers that couldn’t catch a damn thing. The spread’s high and I’d like to give some respect to the Seahawks at home, but I can’t do it. Hasselbeck’s going to get pressured and Brees can create enough big passing plays to cover the wide margin.
Pick: Saints -10
At Indianapolis -2.5 NY Jets
The Jets are a decent team. They beat the Steelers on the road and they rebounded from their late season losses with a strong showing last week. Still, I’m not going to pick against Peyton Manning at home. Collie’s gone, but the running game is coming up strong. The Jets will be able to move the ball on the Colts D, but as long as Manning doesn’t have shifty-rattled playoff feet, he should be able to lead his team to victory.
Pick: Colts -2.5
Baltimore-3 At Kansas City
Playing at Arrowhead’s no easy task, but the Ravens can win playoff games on the road. Cassel’s mistake-free season has gotten messy over the least couple games, and the Ravens offense hasn’t really been lighting up opponents as of late. This is going to be a low scoring grinder game with Charles and Rice battling for tough yards on the ground. One big turnover should tip the scales, and with an extra-emotional Ed Reed on the field, the edge goes to the visiting team.
Pick: Ravens -3
At Philadelphia -2.5 Green Bay
Vick will face the blitz and still make plays. But will he make mistakes as well? Vick needs to be smart with the ball and the Eagles need a heavy does of LeSean McCoy to keep Green Bay’s defense honest. I think Aaron Rodgers is dialed in right now, and I like the Packers to edge out the Eagles in a high scoring game.
Pick: Packers +2.5
Last week: 8-8
Season: 127-120-7
Jan 7th
Week 17 NFL Picks
At Kansas City -3.5 Oakland
PICK: Chiefs -3.5 |
At Green Bay -10 Chicago
PICK: Packers -10 |
At New England -3.5 Miami
PICK: Pats -3.5 |
At Philadelphia -7 Dallas
PICK: Eagles -7 |
At Indianapolis -9.5 Tennessee
PICK: Titans +9.5 |
At NY Jets -2 Buffalo
PICK: Bills +2 |
Jacksonville -2.5 At Houston
PICK: Jags -2.5 |
At Atlanta -14.5 Carolina
PICK: Falcons -14.5 |
Pittsburgh -6 At Cleveland
PICK: Steelers -6 |
At New Orleans -7.5 Tampa Bay
PICK: Bucs +7.5 |
At Baltimore -9.5 Cincinnati
PICK: Bengals +9.5 |
St. Louis -3 At Seattle
PICK: Rams -3 |
At Detroit -3 Minnesota
PICK: Lions -3 |
At San Francisco -6.5 Arizona
PICK: Cardinals +6.5 |
NY Giants -4 At Washington
PICK: Giants -4 |
San Diego -3.5 At Denver
PICK: Chargers -3.5 |
Last week: 11-5
Season: 119-112-7
Dec 30th
2011 Pro Bowl Roster Selections
The 2011 Pro Bowl roster selections are out, and while there are a plenty of familiar faces in the mix, there are quite a few newbies in the bunch this season. The Pro Bowl is going back to Honolulu this year, and the game will be played a week before the Super Bowl. Here’s a couple of quick observations on the 2011 Pro Bowl roster selections:
- Four rookies made the Pro Bowl this year (pictured above), and all of them deserved the recognition. Lions DT Ndamukong Suh leads all interior lineman with 9 sacks this season. He’ll start for the NFC. Steelers center Maurkice Pouncey has been a strong, stabilizing force for an offensive line that’s been uncharacteristically shaky the past couple seasons. Plus, he’s got a great name for an O-lineman. Pats CB Devin McCourty’s racked up six picks, two forced fumbles and 81 tackles for a super-young defense in New England, proving again that the Pats know how to find draft gems at the bottom of the first round. Titans kick returner Marc Mariani amassed 1411 yards and one score on 56 kickoff returns this year. He also added 322 yards and a score on 25 punt returns.
- The QB selections shouldn’t surprise anyone. The AFC’s picks include Brady, Manning and Rivers. Vick, Ryan and Brees will represent the AFC. Solid groups for both squads. Vick and Brady were neck-in-neck as consensus MVP picks before the Eagles fell flat against the Vikings in last night’s Tuesday Night Football upset. Brady should lock up his second MVP award without much debate.
- Lots of newcomers made the Pro Bowl this year. The NFC is sending seven first-time selections to the Pro Bowl. The AFC is sending 14 fresh faces.
- Texans WR Andre Johnson likely won’t play in the Pro Bowl. I think Steelers receiver Mike Wallace should get some consideration when the league looks to fill that spot.
- The Pro Bowl just isn’t big enough to include every awesome player in the league. Notable snubs this year include guys like Aaron Rodgers (101.9 QB rating, 3693 passing yards) and Matt Cassel (27 TDs to 5 INTs), Chris Johnson (1325 yards, 11 TDs), Peyton Hillis (1164 yards, 11 TDs) and LeSean McCoy (over 1000 yards rushing, leads all RBs with 78 catches for 592 yards), LaMarr Woodley (8.5 sacks, 3 forced fumbles and 2 INTs), Derrick Johnson (116 tackles, 4 forced fumbles) and Shaun Phillips (11 sacks). It’s hard to argue against the selections at QB, RB and LB for either squad though.
- Is DeAngelo Hall worthy of a trip to Honolulu? I know he’s got six interceptions, but it seems like the guy gets burned a bunch.
- Old timers like Packers CB Charles Woodson and OT Chad Clifton made the NFC squad on reputation this year.
- Tony Gonzalez has been ridiculous for years, but this season the future Hall of Fame tight end didn’t do a damn thing. We broke 100-yards just once (in Week 3), and he only had three weeks where he delivered double-digits fantasy points. He’s just not the same guy. Useful, sure, but no longer worthy of being named an elite, All-Star-type player.
Here’s the complete list:
AFC Offense |
NFC Offense |
Quarterbacks
Tom Brady, New England Philip Rivers, San Diego Peyton Manning, Indianapolis |
Quarterbacks
Michael Vick, Philadelphia Matt Ryan, Atlanta Drew Brees, New Orleans |
Running Backs
Maurice Jones-Drew, Jacksonville Arian Foster, Houston Jamaal Charles, Kansas City |
Running Backs
Michael Turner, Atlanta Adrian Peterson, Minnesota Steven Jackson, St. Louis |
Fullback
Vonta Leach, Houston |
Fullback
Ovie Mughelli, Atlanta |
Wide Receivers
Andre Johnson, Houston Reggie Wayne, Indianapolis Brandon Lloyd, Denver Dwayne Bowe, Kansas City |
Wide Receivers
Roddy White, Atlanta Calvin Johnson, Detroit DeSean Jackson, Philadelphia Greg Jennings, Green Bay |
Tight Ends
Antonio Gates, San Diego Marcedes Lewis, Jacksonville |
Tight Ends
Jason Witten, Dallas Tony Gonzalez, Atlanta |
Centers
Nick Mangold, N.Y. Jets Maurkice Pouncey, Pittsburgh |
Centers
Andre Gurode, Dallas Shaun O’Hara, N.Y. Giants |
Guards
Kris Dielman, San Diego Logan Mankins, New England Brian Waters, Kansas City |
Guards
Jahri Evans, New Orleans Chris Snee, N.Y. Giants Carl Nicks, New Orleans |
Tackles
Jake Long, Miami Joe Thomas, Cleveland D’Brickashaw Ferguson, N.Y. Jets |
Tackles
Jason Peters, Philadelphia Jordan Gross, Carolina Chad Clifton, Green Bay |
AFC Defense |
NFC Defense |
Defensive Ends
Dwight Freeney, Indianapolis Robert Mathis, Indianapolis Jason Babin, Tennessee |
Defensive Ends
Julius Peppers, Chicago John Abraham, Atlanta Justin Tuck, N.Y. Giants |
Interior Linemen
Haloti Ngata, Baltimore Vince Wilfork, New England Richard Seymour, Oakland |
Interior Linemen
Ndamukong Suh, Detroit Jay Ratliff, Dallas Justin Smith, San Francisco |
Inside Linebackers
Ray Lewis, Baltimore Jerod Mayo, New England |
Inside Linebackers
Patrick Willis, San Francisco Brian Urlacher, Chicago |
Outside Linebackers
James Harrison, Pittsburgh Cameron Wake, Miami Terrell Suggs, Baltimore |
Outside Linebackers
Clay Matthews, Green Bay DeMarcus Ware, Dallas Lance Briggs, Chicago |
Cornerbacks
Nnamdi Asomugha, Oakland Darrelle Revis, N.Y. Jets Devin McCourty, New England |
Cornerbacks
Asante Samuel, Philadelphia Charles Woodson, Green Bay DeAngelo Hall, Washington |
Strong Safety
Troy Polamalu, Pittsburgh |
Strong Safety
Adrian Wilson, Arizona |
Free Safeties
Ed Reed, Baltimore Brandon Meriweather, New England |
Free Safeties
Nick Collins, Green Bay Antrel Rolle, N.Y. Giants |
AFC Specialists |
NFC Specialists |
Punter
Shane Lechler, Oakland |
Punter
Mat McBriar, Dallas |
Kick-Return Specialist
Marc Mariani, Tennessee |
Kick-Return Specialist
Devin Hester, Chicago |
Kicker
Billy Cundiff, Baltimore |
Kicker
David Akers, Philadelphia |
Special-Teamer
Montell Owens, Jacksonville |
Special-Teamer
Eric Weems, Atlanta |
Dec 29th
Week 16 NFL Picks
At Pittsburgh -14 Carolina
PICK: Steelers -14 |
At Chicago -1 NY Jets
PICK: Bears -1 |
Dallas -7 At Arizona
PICK: Cowboys -7 |
Baltimore -3.5 At Cleveland
PICK: Ravens -3.5 |
At Miami -3.5 Detroit
PICK: Lions +3.5 |
At Kansas City -5 Tennessee
PICK: Chiefs -5 |
At Philadelphia -14.5 Minnesota
PICK: Eagles -14.5 |
Indianapolis -3 At Oakland
PICK: Colts -3 |
At Jacksonville -7 Washington
PICK: Jags -7 |
Houston -2.5 At Denver
PICK: Texans -2.5 |
At St. Louis -2.5 San Francisco
PICK: Rams -2.5 |
At Green Bay -3 NY Giants
PICK: Packers -3 |
At Tampa Bay -6 Seattle
PICK: Bucs -6 |
San Diego -7.5 At Cincinnati
PICK: Chargers -7.5 |
New England -8 At Buffalo
PICK: Pats -8 |
At Atlanta -2.5 New Orleans
PICK: Saints +2.5 |
Last week: 7-9
Season: 108-107-7
Dec 23rd
Ines Sainz Interview
It’s funny how sports lets us talk about cultural themes that we don’t normally discuss in everyday conversation. Let’s take gender equality for example. It’s not really something you talk about on the regular, but when the women’s basketball team at UConn tries to break the all-time NCAA basketball winning streak, the issue becomes a source for water cooler conversation all week. Sports allows us to talk about bigger issues in a totally detached, relaxed and conversational way. Under the umbrella of athletic competition, no topic is off limits. Everything – culture, identity, values, etc. – can be folded in.
That’s why the Ines Sainz/Jets story took on such a life of its own. Sexism and exploitation are interesting topics, but they become much more discussable when wrapped in the easy-going blanket of sports talk.
I’m sure you’ve heard about what happened when TV Azteca reporter Ines Sainz visited a Jets practice back in September. Stories came out that this stunning reporter was subjected to all kinds of disrespectful behavior by the Jets players (and other members of the organization). Balls were thrown her way on the practice field so that players could try to bump into her. There was some lewd behavior reported in the locker room when Sainz was trying to interview QB Mark Sanchez.
Sainz was embarrassed and tweeted about it. Fellow reporters were offended and jumped to her defense. The Association for Women in Sports Media stepped in and filed a complaint with the Jets and the NFL. The story blew up, and Sainz even appeared on Good Morning America to talk about it.
After the story reached critical mass, two opinion camps formed. One camp saw Sainz as a victim of sexual harassment, in the workplace no less. Here’s a woman with an established career as a professional sports journalist who was mistreated by a bunch of chauvinistic, sophomoric football players. Her rights needed to be defended, and the culture of pro football players, with respect to their treatment of women reporters, needed to be changed dramatically.
The other camp saw Sainz as an opportunist. A sexy bombshell who used her good looks and attention-hunger to exploit a situation for her own gain. I mean what sort of treatment did she expect wearing jeans that tight?
After speaking with Sainz, I believe that there’s a lot of gray area to explore between these two opinion camps. Ines Sainz is a lot of things. She’s a wife, a mother, an international sports personality and a former Miss Spain. Sainz’s journalistic approach may be a bit cheeky, but she’s not just some bimbo journo. She’s articulate, engaging and experienced. Sainz has interviewed over 300 athletes in her career, guys like Peyton Manning and Lionel Messi, Roger Federer and Jerry Rice. She’s covered all kinds of sports events from around the world. Super Bowls, top tennis matches, multiple World Cups. Stuff like that.
Is she gorgeous? Unquestionably yes. Is she a victim of sexual harassment? She’ll be the first one to tell you no. When I asked her if she felt mistreated by the Jets players that day at practice, this is what she said:
“No, I didn’t feel like they were not treating me well. I went there, I did my job. I had the chance to make my interview when I arrived at the locker room. Evidently, the moment [in the locker room] wasn’t the best. But it wasn’t as rude as people think because – as I said many times – I just hear things like ‘Senorita Bonita’ or ‘I want to be Mexican’ or something like that. Probably, Latin women, we are kind of used to men that say something nice to us. But it wasn’t anything offensive or sexual even. I think that it’s lean, the line that you can cross between being nice and always friendly and, I don’t know, cat calls I think they call it. So I truly believe that in this particular moment, it wasn’t a bad thing. Everything was not with the intention to disturb me,” she said.
One woman’s compliment is another woman’s sexual harassment. So was it all an overreaction?
Dec 22nd
Week 15 NFL Picks
At San Diego -10 San Francisco
PICK: Niners +10 |
At Dallas -6 Washington
PICK: Cowboys -6 |
Kansas City -1 At St. Louis
PICK: Rams +1 |
At Tampa Bay -5.5 Detroit
PICK: Bucs -5.5 |
At Tennessee -1.5 Houston
PICK: Texans +1.5 |
At Baltimore -1.5 New Orleans
PICK: Saints +1.5 |
At Indianapolis -5 Jacksonville
PICK: Colts -5 |
Atlanta -6 At Seattle
PICK: Falcons -6 |
At Carolina -2.5 Arizona
PICK: Panthers -2.5 |
At Pittsburgh -6 NY Jets
PICK: Steelers -6 |
At Cincinnati -1.5 Cleveland
PICK: Bengals -1.5 |
At Oakland -6.5 Denver
PICK: Raiders -6.5 |
At Miami -5.5 Buffalo
PICK: Dolphins -5.5 |
At New England -11 Green Bay
PICK: Pats -11 |
At NY Giants -2.5 Philadelphia
PICK: Eagles +2.5 |
Chicago-6 At Minnesota (TCF Bank Stadium)
PICK: Bears -6 |
Last week: 7-9
Season: 101-98-7
Dec 16th
2010 College Bowl Preview
Outside of the NFL playoffs, it may be the greatest multi-week sports season of the year–in fact it is the harbinger of the playoffs for the pros. It surrounds the Christmas and New Year holidays, and it even spurs annual debate through crowning a Champion without a playoff system. Oh yeah. It’s time to go bowling!
If you feel there are too many bowl games, get over yourself! Why? Is it too much football for you? Are you paying taxes for these games? C’mon! Get in the holiday spirit, Scrooge.
I don’t care who the bowl sponsor is, or who’s playing in it…I’ll watch it and enjoy it. At first glance a couple weeks ago, I thought the match-ups looked pretty uninteresting, yet after careful consideration, the potential for some great football games is undeniable.
Let’s break ‘em down in play order:
12/18 – New Mexico Bowl: BYU vs. UTEP
BYU is a pretty easy favorite in this match-up. UTEP QB Trevor Vittatoe is a difference maker, yet his ankle is busted up, and he’s less than four days from having to put it to the test. If he’s somehow able to play through the pain, the Miners could make it interesting.
12/18 – Humanitarian Bowl: Northern Illinois vs. Fresno State
Northern Illinois put up an impressive 10-3 season, losing a heart breaker in the MAC Championship. Now they’re meeting a Fresno team led by veteran coach Pat Hill who has been given multiple weeks of preparation. This promises to be a battle, and picking either team would be a logical decision. The vast majority of the nation is going with the bulldogs, but I’m taking the Huskies.
12/18 – New Orleans Bowl: Ohio University vs. Troy
Ohio QB, Franshaw “Boo” Jackson. He can be exciting when he’s hitting on all cylinders, yet I was unimpressed with the MAC this season. I’m going against the populous once again on this one, and sticking with the team from the south. I see another battle, and Troy coming out on top.
12/21 – St. Petersburg Bowl: Southern Miss. vs. Louisville
Didn’t ya hear? Brett Favre found a game of NCAA eligibility and is coming out of collegiate retirement. I just couldn’t pass up the opportunity to use the image. Look at the young gun slinger… Call me insane, but I’m going against the majority again with this pick. I feel like Louisville has the slight edge. It has the potential to be another close one.
12/22 – Las Vegas Bowl: Utah vs. Boise State
Aside from a couple missteps vs. TCU and Notre Dame, Utah put together an impressive season. They won close games down the stretch and earned this match-up vs. powerhouse, Boise State. The Broncos BCS dreams were crushed in the NCAA game of the year vs. Nevada, yet a week later they went back to work and took care of business. I have a feeling that Kellen Moore is going to go off in Vegas like a 21 year old with their multi-millionaire father’s credit card. …that Kellen Moore is going to go off in Vegas like a fat dude at the Circus Circus buffet. He may opt for both options–I know I would. BSU is the team that I would never bet against. You shouldn’t either.
12/23 – Poinsettia Bowl: Navy vs. San Diego State
Navy is impressive… but San Diego State is possibly the best 8-4 team in the country. They have played everyone close. Everyone. Their 4 losses were by a combined 15 points. I think the Navy option attack might give them headaches, and I’m rolling with the Midshipmen…as of now. I reserve the right to change my mind due to the factual evidence listed above. It’s worth noting, this is the final game for Navy QB Ricky Dobbs–the kid is a stud. He has always played well in big games, and probably loves the thought of being the underdog.
12/24 – Hawai’i Bowl: Hawaii vs. Tulsa
Hawaii at home? Check. Hawaii with a devastating passing attack? Check. Tulsa with a suspect secondary? Check. Tulsa with the ability to score a lot of points? Check. Could be a shoot out, but this one is going to the Warriors of Hawaii.
Dec 15th
Interview with Former Heisman Winner and Super Bowl MVP Jim Plunkett
The Heisman Trophy will be awarded this weekend to the best player in college football, and I had a chance to speak to a former recipient of college football’s top honors, Jim Plunkett. Plunkett had quite an interesting football career. He was super-hyped coming out of Stanford, he won the Heisman in 1970, and he was selected by the New England Patriots with the first overall pick in 1971.
Plunkett started 14 games for the Pats in 1971 and completed just 48 percent of his passes while compiling a record of 6-8. The following year, Plunkett threw eight touchdowns and 25 interceptions, and lost 11 out of the 14 games he started. Plunkett struggled with injuries over the next few seasons, and in 1975, the year the Patriots drafted Steve Grogan, Plunkett was traded to the 49ers. Plunkett’s tenure in San Francisco started well (he led the team to a 6-1 record), but the Niners tailed off and Plunkett was released by the team during the 1978 season.
With his career teetering on journeyman status, Plunkett was picked up by the Raiders in 1978. He served as a backup that year and barely saw the field the following season. When QB Dan Pastorini broke his leg a few weeks into the 1980 season, Plunkett stepped in, led the Raiders to nine wins in 11 games, helped the team earn a wild card berth in the playoffs. He went on to lead the Raiders to a 27-10 victory over Dick Vermiel’s Eagles in Super Bowl XV. Plunkett was 33 years old. He was the first QB to lead a wild card team to Super Bowl victory, and he became the first (and only) player of Latin-American descent to win the Super Bowl MVP.
Plunkett would return to a backup role before an injury to Marc Wilson forced him into the top spot on the depth chart again in 1983. Plunkett responded by leading the Raiders 10 wins in 13 games. The Raiders made the playoffs again and served up a blowout victory over the Redskins in Super Bowl XVIII. Plunkett’s the only NFL QB with two Super Bowl victories to not be enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame. He currently does post-game radio shows and tons of TV work for the Raiders.
During our interview with Plunkett, we chatted about this year’s Heisman trophy ceremony, Stanford QB Andrew Luck, Raiders’ owner Al Davis, today’s pass-happy NFL offenses, his pick for who will take home the Heisman this year, and whether he thinks college football needs a playoff system.
CS: So you won the Heisman Trophy back in 1970.
JP: Back in the Dark Ages, yes.
CS: Can you tell us what it’s like to belong to such an elite fraternity of college football greats?
JP: Well, obviously it’s a great feeling to be chosen among so very few. It’s started in 1935, the first Heisman award, and now they’re up to 76 that are coming up this year. It’s a great feeling, you know. You were selected among so many other certainly very viable athletes back when, for me 1970. Any number of people could have won that, but you were chosen because of what you did on the football field and how you carried yourself off the field. It really means a lot to me as it does to all the other recipients over the years.
CS: Now people are calling Stanford QB Andrew Luck one of the best NFL QB prospects to come out in years, and some coaches said the same thing about you back in the day.
JP: Right.
CS: Do you think Luck is ready to make a big splash in the NFL and what’s it like dealing with those high expectations going in to your pro career?
JP: Well you know number one, yes I do really, truly believe that Andrew Luck is probably the best passing quarterback in college today. I don’t think there’s any doubt about it. I see him almost every week. I was at the Oregon State game. I go to most of the home games, sometimes a road game or two, and he’s head and shoulders above everybody. As far as just passing the football ,there are other quarterbacks who could probably run better obviously, but he runs pretty well as well. He’s got a great feel for the game, a great feel for what’s happening around him and he reads the defense extremely quickly and more often than not goes to the right receiver. He’s got a great arm. He can throw off balances almost as well as he can when he’s stepping into the throw because he’s got that great arm strength. He anticipates well. He’s got some innate abilities. He can sense pressure, get out of trouble, take off and either run or give himself more time by shuffling around. He’s just a great kid and he’s a great football player and it’s just fun to watch the way he executes out there. That being said, whenever you go somewhere, expectations are always high when you’re a front pick if that’s what Andrew will be – and I’m sure he will be, he might even be the very first pick. So when somebody steps into that kind of situation, they’re always scrutinized very heavily, especially if you start off right away. You get paid a lot of money and professional fans in particular expect results right away. That doesn’t always happen but he’s a lot like… there’s a kid over at Saint Louis, I just can’t remember his name right now, out of Oklahoma – San Bradford – who won the Heisman a couple of years ago. He’s in that mold. He’s in the Manning mold, Eli and Peyton. He’s just ahead of his time so to speak. But yeah, I mean you get in the NFL, you usually go to a team that has not had a great season, so they’re not probably as good as some other team you might go to. Sometimes it’s a learning curve, it’s a process. You get beat up a little bit. You take your lumps, and hopefully when all the dust settles, you’ll have made progress. Sooner or later you’ll be the quarterback they’ve drafted you to be.
CS: How can fans participate in this year’s Heisman trophy ceremony process?
JP: Well I think the best way is to go to Heisman.com. It will give you the information whether you want to come as an individual, buy a table, be a sponsor, there are different levels. It’s a great event to attend. You get to see some of the greatest football players arguably of all time, some great former Heisman winners. I know a lot of the guys go. I’ve gone to the last three. I go in streaks. I can’t make them all as I do work for the Raiders during the season. But it’s a fabulous event to watch, especially if you have kids, take grandchildren. It is just a lot of fun to be there, to see them, to talk to them, to hear them talk, get autographs at times, it’s just a wonderful experience. I’ve sent some people here from California where I live – I live over by Stanford – out to the Heisman. Sometimes through some of the raffles we’ve had out here, to make them part of the thing. One of my best friends has gone back twice. They’ve enjoyed the experience so much. So I highly recommend it. Come out and see some of these great former athletes and have a great time.
Dec 10th