Must-see: Ruslan Salei’s life celebrated in sand animation as Lokomotiv anniversary nears (VIDEO)

29 Aug
2012

Next Friday (Sept. 7) marks the one-year anniversary of the Russian plane crash that killed 44 of the 45 people on board — including the players and coaching staff of the KHL's Lokomotiv Yaroslavl.

Among the former NHL players we lost: Defenseman Ruslan Salei, who played from 1996-2011 with the Anaheim Ducks (formerly Mighty Ducks of Anaheim), Florida Panthers, Colorado Avalanche and Detroit Red Wings.

The former captain of the Belarus national team was remembered last weekend in Minsk at the first Ruslan Salei Memorial Tournament. Part of that remembrance was one of the most beautiful tributes we've ever seen inside an arena.

Here is Ruslan Salei's life and career celebrated in sand art, as seen on the Jumbotron at the start of his namesake tournament. You may want to keep the hankies handy.

Wow. No words.

One can only imagine how his wife and children felt watching that amazing work, bringing Rusty back in some small way before the tournament in his honor.

His son, by the way, dropped the ceremonial first puck at the tournament:

Here's a Wiki primer on sand animation.

The Salei tournament team representing Vityaz Chekhov of the KHL. (Yes, that Vityaz Chekhov.)

s/t Arh1Puma, via Reddit Hockey.


Tags: , animation, , Chekhov, , , Mighty Ducks of Anaheim, , Ruslan, Ruslan Salei, Ruslan Salei?s, sand,
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Stewart and Kenseth don’t anticipate carryover from Bristol crash

28 Aug
2012

Tony Stewart and Matt Kenseth have moved on from their tangle on Saturday night.

On Saturday, after the two collided on the track and Stewart flung his helmet at Kenseth, Stewart said that "I'm going to run over him every chance I get for the rest of the year." On Tuesday after a promotional appearance at Charlotte Motor Speedway, he said that he had no intention of seeking Kenseth out on the track for unprovoked retribution.

From the AP:

'You get over that stuff. It's been part of racing for as long as I can remember and that won't be the last time you see two drivers have a disagreement,'' Stewart said, adding he'll only run over Kenseth ''if I need to. It's not our intention to go seek him out.

''We've gotten along more races than we've disagreed.''

Kenseth was at Kansas Speedway on Tuesday for a Goodyear tire test to prepare for the track's newly repaved surface, and he shared Stewart's sentiment and said that the two had more important things to focus on in the next 12 race; namely the championship.

"I think you're going to have problems with people here or there and most times its not one person's fault and you've got to work those problems out and move on," Kenseth said.

"People don't see things the same way. If everybody saw the same thing the same way, there would never be wrecks — well, I guess there would be accidents but there wouldn't be as many."

Stewart added that he was happy that he wasn't penalized for the helmet toss. However, it would have been surprising if he did. Todd Bodine threw his helmet earlier in the year at Pocono and wasn't penalized.

'I figured I was going to get some kind of penalty for it, so it's nice to know that's something you can get away with," Stewart said. "I just wish we could get a more lengthy list of what we can do and can't do. I think we could make it a lot more entertaining if we knew what we could do.''

Tags: appearance, , , , Kenseth, Matt Kenseth, , , Tony Stewart, ,
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Preseason injuries a concern for Raiders (Yahoo! Sports)

28 Aug
2012
ALAMEDA, Calif. (AP) -- Long after practice began, Oakland Raiders defensive tackle Richard Seymour and five of his injured teammates - including four projected starters - slowly made their way out to watch the workout.
Tags: ALAMEDA, , , Long, , , , , Raiders, Richard Seymour, ,
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The Essentials: Vancouver Canucks edition

28 Aug
2012

(This month, Puck Daddy asked bloggers for every NHL team to tell us The Essentials for their franchises — everything from the defining player and trade, to the indispensable fan traditions. Here's our own Harrison Mooney, giving us The Essentials for the Vancouver Canucks.)

If we're being fair, the most essential aspects of Canuck fandom are pessimism and self-loathing. In the 41 years of this franchise, very little has gone our way and it's gotten to us. We've become oversensitive. Our fuse is short. It can make us our own worst enemy, such as that one time we rioted.

And also that other time.

Our ever-increasing pessimism has made us a tough fanbase to please. Mark Messier, Canadian hero? We hate him. Nevermind that he was voted the Canucks' most valuable player in 1999-2000. He's the worst. Roberto Luongo, the best goalie to ever play for the Canucks? Get him out of here. The 2010-11 team that went to the Cup Final? Blow it up.

But there's a bright side to our blind pessimism. The moment something manages to wriggle out from under it, we love it unconditionally. We deify it. So help us if you ever say an unkind word about that thing. Don't even think about it, or we'll mess you up. We're crazy, remember. We destroyed our own city once twice.

And you stay away from Trevor Linden.

Player

Did I mention we love Trevor Linden? Because we love Trevor Linden. And not just for his hockey ability. He's also a stud. Our men tell our women they're looking "Trevor Linden good" -- that's how much we love Trevor Linden.

Vancouver's love for Trevor Linden goes beyond hockey for a number of reasons, foremost of which is that hockey alone couldn't earn him that special place in our hearts. Linden was excellent -- a heart and soul guy -- and he very nearly dragged the Canucks to a Stanley Cup Final in 1994. But he's hardly the franchise's best player. Markus Naslund is the Canucks' all-time leading scorer. Linden's third on that list, and he'll be fourth by the end of next season (if it happens).

Even at his prime, Linden wasn't the best. In terms of pure skill, Pavel Bure was way beyond him. But there's a reason Linden's jersey is retired and Pavel's isnt.

Linden just clicked with this city. He was and still is active in the community. He played a rugged, two-way game. He gave his all every night. He put Jeff Norton through a pane of glass. He played 16 seasons for the Canucks, bleeding blue and green and white and red and black and maroon and darker blue. When it comes to essential players, there is no other choice.

Season

This one's going to raise a few eyebrows, what with its recency and the sour taste it still leaves in people's mouths, but the 2010-11 season had it all.

Daniel Sedin won the Art Ross, Ryan Kesler won the Selke, Alain Vigneault was nominated for coach of the year, Mike Gillis was GM of the year, Roberto Luongo and Cory Schneider won the Jennings, the Canucks led in almost every team category, the team won the Presidents' Trophy, and they came within a game of winning the Stanley Cup. That's a damn good year, and the fact that this selection is going to be met with criticism is absurd.

Sure, there's 1994 to consider, a year that's had just enough time to go from "thing that happened" to "legend", but that Canuck team went on a flukey run. For most of the season, they were a middling, unimpressive team. When it comes to a whole season, nothing beats 2010-11.

Granted, there was a bit of a ruckus afterwards, but technically that happened after the season was over. So it doesn't count.

Game

Saturday, June 11th, 1994. It was Game 6 of the Stanley Cup Final, and with the Rangers leading 3-2, the Canucks needed the win. Lucky for them, everything went their way. Jeff Brown scored the first goal. Early in the third, he scored the third, giving the Canucks a 3-1 lead. Then, late in the third, Geoff Courtnall scored, but the play continued, and the Rangers scored to make it 3-2. After review, Courtnall's goal was counted, and the score suddenly changed to 4-1.

Reviewing this game now, two things stand out: 1) holy Hell, was there a lot of hooking back then. 2) Trevor Linden played the greatest game of his career.

Game 6 was also the moment Linden reached sainthood. Heck, there's even a photo of the exact moment it happened. At the end of the game, an iconic photo was snapped. In it, an exhausted, beaten-up Linden rests on Kirk McLean, hardly able to move. Later we'd learn he had two broken ribs. But it didn't seem to matter. "He'll play, you know he'll play. He'll play on crutches," said Jim Robson.

If there were an essential photo category, this would be it.

Goal

It's tempting to make this Alex Burrows's goal from the 2011 Stanley Cup playoffs, but no discussion of essential Canucks moments is complete without a Pavel Bure goal.

Bure's best was the double overtime winner over the Calgary Flames in Game 7 of the first round of the 1994 playoffs. The Canucks had gone down 3-1 in that series before clawing their way back with two straight overtime winners. And then Bure made it three after getting in behind the Calgary defence:

Good thing I'm already sitting down.

Trade

Markus Naslund for Alek Stojanov. Because the Canucks got Naslund, who wound up being one of the best players in franchise history, and the Penguins got some guy named Stojanov.

Unsung Hero

Thomas Gradin was inducted into the ring of honour in January of 2011, so he's been somewhat sung, but he doesn't get nearly enough credit for the trail he blazed in the late 1970s, as a European NHLer and as a Swede in Vancouver.

Gradin was the Canucks' first European player and his success primed this city to embrace Swedish stars in bulk. We've done so in recent years, with stars like Patrik Sundstrom, Matthias Ohlund, and Swedish captains Markus Naslund and Henrik Sedin.

Gradin has continued on with the Canucks as a Swedish scout and was instrumental in the drafting of Henrik Sedin, Daniel Sedin, and Alex Edler.

Franchise Villain

Did I mention we don't particularly care for Mark Messier out on Canada's West coast? Seriously, our feud with the first ballot hall of famer is still ongoing. Earlier this summer, he managed to claim another six million dollars from the team. He haunts Vancouver even still.

It all began in 1994, when Messier's Rangers defeated the Canucks for the Stanley Cup. But it didn't end there. Not by a longshot.

Not content to simply break the hearts of Vancouverites from afar, Messier infiltrated the room, signing in Vancouver in 1997. He immediately took the captaincy from Trevor Linden -- who, as I mentioned earlier, we would prefer you not mess with -- and he took the number 11, which had been unofficially retired  since former number 11 Wayne Maki died of brain cancer in 1974.

Taking a letter from a god and a number from a dead guy won't win you many friends, but these are things that can be overcome if you play well, and Messier did not. Now, he didn't play terribly, but 60 points in year 1 made it Messier's worst season since his rookie year. And the team, believed by many to be a Messier-type away from contention, instead finished dead last in the Pacific Division. Then all that grave-robbing and Linden-disrespecting really mattered.

It still matters, dammit.

Fight

The greatest fight in the history of the Vancouver Canucks? Gino Odjick versus the St. Louis Blues. And the officials. And clothing.

My favourite part is when the official tries to grab his jersey, but forgets there's no jersey and gets a handful of pec. Then Odjick pushes his hand away like, "Don't touch me, man, I'm practically naked."

Coach

Mike Keenan. Just kidding.

I'm going to get crucified for this, but... Alain Vigneault.

Sure, Roger Neilson has a statue outside the arena. And sure, Vigneault's recent extension wasn't exactly met with glee. He definitely has his critics. They say he switches up his lines too much, that he doesn't adjust quickly enough in the playoffs, that he gets outcoached, that he plays favourites, that, secretly, the Sedins are the coach of the team, and that he broke Cody Hodgson's back on purpose.

But these are all unsubstantiated claims, and if it's empirical evidence you want, AV's got it. He's got the most coaching wins in Canucks history, both in the regular season and the playoffs. He's got two more Presidents' trophies than any other Canucks coach. He's been nominated for the Jack Adams thrice and won once. Also, his laughter is infectious:

And here he is laughing at the suggestion that Kyle Wellwood was trying really hard in a game.

Never change, Vigneault.

Broadcaster

Jim Robson. Absolutely nobody in Vancouver has ever called a game like he did and it's not even close.

Arena Behavior/Tradition/Trend

Towel Power is a great tradition, and it comes from a great story. In Game 2 of the 1982 Western Conference Finals in Chicago, the Canucks got what coach Roger Neilson felt was the short shrift from the officials. After having a goal waved off, they were whistled for four consecutive penalties. After Denis Savard scored on the powerplay, putting the Blackhawks up 4-1, the Canucks' coaching staff decided to lobby some kind of protest. Tiger Williams suggested throwing sticks onto the ice.

But Neilson, a craft sort, opted instead to place a towel on the end of his stick and wave it in mock surrender. The act was not appreciated, and he was ejected from the game.

It was appreciated in Vancouver, however, and when the series headed back there for Game 3, fans were armed with white towels to show their support for the team. The tradition continues to this day.

And so: the next time you claim Canuck fans are all a bunch of tinfoil-hatters, know that any conspiracy theory we espouse has nothing to do with you. We're simply trying to rally the base.

Arena Food

Yikes. The food in Rogers Arena is decidedly unmemorable. Your best option is to hit up a Japadog stand on Robson during the walk to the arena.

Swag

I'm resisting the urge to say a car flag.

It's the Flying V jersey. What an ugly, ugly, ugly thing. But it's not just a jersey. It's a metaphor for this team. When it's at its ugliest, and it often is, we celebrate it. We embrace it. We wear it. The Vancouver Canucks -- as disgusting as they've looked for many, many years -- are ours. Heck, they used to wear this jersey, that's how incompetent they are.

But a true Canucks fan doesn't just cheer for the team in the rare moments they're winning and looking good. A true fan cheers for them when they're awful, and they look even worse. That's what wearing the Flying V is all about. It's like those monks that whip themselves in the back to show their devotion, but for hockey.

Previously On Puck Daddy

The Essentials: New York Islanders edition

The Essentials: Boston Bruins edition

The Essentials: Colorado Avalanche Edition

The Essentials: Dallas Stars Edition

The Essentials: Washington Capitals Edition

The Essentials: Anaheim Ducks Edition

The Essentials: Montreal Canadiens Edition

The Essentials: Detroit Red Wings Edition

The Essentials: Ottawa Senators Edition

The Essentials: New Jersey Devils Edition

The Essentials: Phoenix Coyotes Edition

The Essentials: Florida Panthers Edition

The Essentials: Los Angeles Kings Edition

The Essentials: Carolina Hurricanes

The Essentials: Pittsburgh Penguins

The Essentials: San Jose Sharks

The Essentials: New York Rangers

The Essentials: Edmonton Oilers Edition

The Essentials: Tampa Bay Lightning Edition

The Essentials: Columbus Blue Jackets Edition

The Essentials: St. Louis Blues Edition

The Essentials: Buffalo Sabres Edition

The Essentials: Philadelphia Flyers Edition

The Essentials: Chicago Blackhawks Edition

The Essentials: Toronto Maple Leafs Edition

The Essentials: Calgary Flames Edition

The Essentials: Nashville Predators Edition

Tags: Canucks, , , , jersey, moment, , Trevor Linden, Vancouver, vancouver canucks,
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The Nets’ new $1 billion Barclays Center is already completely covered in rust, by design

28 Aug
2012

When Brooklyn Nets part-owner Jay-Z opens up the new Barclays Center with a series of hippin' and the hoppin' concerts in late September, those attendees who haven't walked by the new Nets arena might be surprised at the building's rustic exterior look. Or "rusty" exterior look. Because, seriously, there's rust all over the outside of the place. On purpose.

The New York Times is reporting that the building has been covered in 12,000 pieces of something called "weathering steel," which appears to be a needlessly long way of describing "rusted metal." The impetus behind the use of the product is apparently a mix of function and fashion, and popular in some parts of New York City. Though some, according to the Times' piece, have yet to be swayed.

Elizabeth Harris has the scoop:

Weathering steel — often known by its old brand name, Cor-Ten — develops a fine layer of rust, which then acts as a protective coating against moisture, slowing its own corrosion process almost to a stop. While it can look suspiciously unfinished to the casual observer, it has many fans in the world of art and architecture.

This industrial, raw-looking material can be seen on a smattering of homes in and around New York City, and though they may be vastly different in design, scale and method of construction, they all have one thing in common: a fiery apron of orange on patches of the pavement below. That is because especially in its early life, weathering steel drips.

Though the "weathering steel" phenomenon is catching on in parts of NYC, the Times admits that "residential examples are not plentiful." Worse, as anyone who grew up with a Datsun station wagon in the family's driveway will tell you, when hit by rain rust tends to bleed. Even if it doesn't sleep.

[Related: Kevin Seraphin's love of snakes has reached Jake Roberts status]

It seeps, actually, right down to the pavement below where it stains the sidewalks and stoops. Worse, it discolors windows; some of which might belong to neighboring residents or business owners that didn't quite get on board with the idea behind pre-stained metal as something to be admired as a party piece.

Worse, to me, is the fact that the pre-rusted steel was "put through more than a dozen wet-and-dry cycles a day" at a treatment center in Indianapolis before it was sent Brooklyn's way. I'm not exactly chaining myself to trees or trading in that Datsun for a Prius, but that seems like a ridiculous waste of a finite necessity just for mostly aesthetic uses.

This is nothing new, of course. For years blue jeans have come pre-worn, and even Fender introduced a series of "road worn" guitars a decade ago in order to give musicians the feeling that comes from playing an instrument that has been knocked around for a while. The building, if we're honest, doesn't look all that bad.

It's 2012, though, and trends tend to be trendy and impermanent; much more so than a pair of blue jeans or Fender Stratocaster. The fashion behind a rusted-out exterior could fade long before the stained sidewalks ever do. Which could be another shot to the bow of Brooklyn residents, already wary of the Nets muscling into their block.

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Tags: Barclays Center, , , building, exterior, , , , New York City, , times, , Weathering steel
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Aaron Hernandez on Robert Kraft: ‘He changed my life’

28 Aug
2012

When writing about the five-year, $40 million contract extension given to New England Patriots tight end Adrian Hernandez, we briefly touched on the $50,000 donation Hernandez made to the Myra Kraft Foundation, the charity named after the late wife of Patriots owner Robert Kraft, "out of respect for Robert drafting him, [and] for doing his deal two years early."

Turns out, the gesture was far more emotional than we knew. Monday also marked the team's annual Charity Gala, and when Hernandez presented Kraft with the check, it got a little dusty in the room.

"One of the touching moments since I've owned the team -- knowing that this is our charitable gala tonight -- Aaron came into my office, a little teary-eyed, and presented me with a check for $50,000 to go to the Myra Kraft Giving Back Fund," Kraft told Mike Rodak of ESPN Boston. "I said 'Aaron, you don't have to do this, you've already got your contract.' And he said, 'No, it makes me feel good and I want to do it.'

"That made me feel good because part of the thing that we learned early on is that we have a lot of young men who come into this business, and they come from humble financial homes, and part of what we try to do is make them understand is that there is a psychic income involved in giving back both your time and your financial resources, if you can do that."

Hernandez understood the value of that "psychic income."

"He changed my life," Hernandez said of Kraft. "Now I'm able to basically have a good chance to be set for life, and have a good life. I have a daughter on the way, I have a family that I love. It's just knowing that they're going to be OK ... Knowing that my kids and my family will be able to have a good life, go to college, it's just an honor that he did that for me. He gave me this opportunity. The $50,000 to help his foundation, obviously, is basically like saying 'thank you' and it means a lot to me.

"He didn't need to give me the amount that he gave me, and knowing that he thinks I deserve that, he trusts me to make the right decisions, it means a lot. It means he trusts my character, and the person I am, which means a lot, cause my mother, that's how she wanted to raise me. They have to trust you to give you that money. I just feel a lot of respect and I owe it back to him. Not only is it $50,000, cause that's not really, that's just the money that really doesn't mean much, with the amount given, it's more, I have a lot more to give back, and all I can do is play my heart out for them, make the right decisions, and live life as a Patriot."

Hernandez will turn 23 in November -- he's got an amazing future ahead of him in one of the league's most incendiary offenses, and quite a few years in which to enjoy catching passes from a fairly decent quarterback in Tom Brady. But more than the football stuff, Hernandez seemed to grasp a deeper meaning behind the contract extension, which isn't always the case. It's a testament to the culture Kraft has established since he became the team's majority owner in 1994. He had been involved in the franchise's ownership since 1985, but bought out former owner James Orthwein to keep the team from moving to St. Louis. Many thought Kraft overpaid at the time. Now, his $175 million investment seems like one of the more ridiculous bargains in sports history.

Hernandez hopes to be a similar bargain -- he's been inspired not only by Kraft's generosity, but by the spirit behind it.

"This is a place that not only did it change my future from them paying me, but it just changed me as a person," he said. "You can't come here and act reckless and do your own stuff, and [I] was one of the persons that I came here, I might've acted the way I wanted to act, but you get changed by Bill Belichick's way. You get changed by the Patriots' way.

"Now that I'm a Patriot, I have to start living like one, and making the right decisions for them."

Tags: , Adrian Hernandez, , , , Hernandez, Myra Kraft Foundation, , , person, Robert Kraft, ,
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Elimination Eight: The players I hate more than you

28 Aug
2012
by in General

I'm very reluctant to put the word "hate" in the headline above. I don't know any of these chaps personally. I'm sure they're all quite nice and engaging fellows.

But at the fantasy draft table (or better yet, the fantasy auction table), I'm looking for value. I'm trying to exploit a marketplace, looking to take advantage of industry biases, group-think, oversights and over-corrections. I'm not going to click on all of these opinions and that's fine (last year I steered you from Vick — direct hit — and also worried about Stafford — bad miss). You only have to be a little better than the average to make a profit in this make-believe stat chase.

While I never say never, here are eight players I doubt I'll own on any teams in 2012:

-- Andre Johnson, WR, Texans: Everyone knows the flaws with AJ by now. He's played three full seasons out of the last seven. He's never made it to the 10-touchdown mark. His seven-game, 492-yard season killed a lot of fantasy players last year, especially those who faithfully waited for his return while wearing rose colored glasses. He's already 31, into his tenth pro season.

But here's what I really don't understand: even with the obvious downside, why is he so expensive, yet again, into 2012?

Johnson's current expert ADP is No. 5 at the wideout position, and it's the same in Yahoo! drafts. Thank you sir, may I have another? Given the incredible depth at the position, there's no way I'm spending a Top 20-25 pick on this talented-but-frustrating headache. While I can partially understand injuries at the running back spot — it's an attrition position that invites so much contact — we expect our premium wideouts to play most of the season. That's a long-running problem with Johnson.

And even if Johnson does stay on the field, how high is the upside? Maybe Matt Schaub isn't good enough to turn Johnson into the spiking machine we've all been waiting for. Maybe the Texans don't throw enough in the red zone. I know Johnson is an overlord between the 20s, but for his sticker price, I want a shot at 12-15 touchdowns, at least in theory. I'm done waiting for it.

-- Tony Romo, QB, Cowboys: It pains me to put Romo on this list because I've always been a fan of his, to the point of almost being an apologist. But look around Romo. His most talented receiver (Dez Bryant) is a walking police blotter. His second-best receiver (Miles Austin) is constantly hurt. His security blanket tight end (Jason Witten) is coming back from a lacerated spleen (just typing that makes me a little queasy). And the offensive line has been a mess all summer.

I can't say the price is silly on Romo: he's currently the ninth QB in Yahoo! ADP, and he's also the No. 9 quarterback in the industry ranks. But with the depth of the quarterback board this year, I'd rather go one of two ways — pay for something safer, or go cheaper and take a stab at upside. I refuse to close my eyes and simply wish for all of Dallas's problems to magically sort themselves out.

-- Philip Rivers, QB, Chargers: A few months ago, I envisioned Rivers on many of my teams, maybe most of them. I've changed my mind, decisively. The injuries to Vincent Brown (a super route-runner) and Ryan Mathews (a handy receiver) have me concerned, and the Chargers offense line could be one of the five worst in the league. Sure, Antonio Gates looks terrific right now, but how long can we expect that to last?

I also worry about a slow start in San Diego, because it seems like every Norv Turner club stumbles out of the gate. You only have 13 or 14 weeks in most leagues to qualify for the fake-football playoffs. I want a strong break when the flag drops.

-- Mark Ingram, RB, Saints: Maybe he'll turn into a special player someday, but I saw no evidence of it as a rookie. A 3.9 YPC on this offense is almost a crime — Darren Sproles was at 6.9 last year and Pierre Thomas managed 5.1. Heck, Chris Ivory — a ham-and-egg runner no one is in love with — went for 4.7 a pop, and even Drew Brees made 4.1 yards on his infrequent runs. And don't tell me about Ingram being held back by a goal-line and short-yardage role: he only collected 10 goal-line carries (and one touchdown there, for what it's worth) and he averaged a pedestrian 3.8 yards on first down.

Platoon backfields are common, so it's no big deal when teams have two runners to split the work. But the Saints will have at least three runners battling for their share of the pie, and that significantly caps Ingram's upside (unless the dominoes really fall his way). Pass catching, you ask? He had just 11 receptions last year. I know Ingram was nicked up for much of his first season and only played 10 games, but hey, that's the NFL. Every back is nicked up to some extent. I'm not chasing this one.

-- Shonn Greene, RB, Jets: He was used plenty in 2011 (12th in the league in carries) and he's a steady runner if the hole is there, but don't look for Greene to run over people on his own. He was just 18th in the league in broken tackles per running backs and 19th in elusiveness rating (both stats from the invaluable Pro Football Focus). And look what Greene did in New York's eight losses: 52.8 yards per game, 3.9 YPC, one crummy rushing touchdown. Do the 2012 Jets look like a winning team to you? Greene needs a path to playing time when things go south.

I realize Tim Tebow might eventually take over the Jets offense and he's the type of mobile quarterback that stretches a defense horizontally and opens rushing lanes. But would Greene, a non-lateral runner, gain much from Tebow's presence? Again, he's a gaping-hole runner, not a cutback monster. Industry consensus slots Greene at 23 right now, while Yahoo's ADP says 25. I won't bother to consider him unless the price gets even cheaper.

-- Ryan Mathews, RB, Chargers: Everyone sees the talent here. Mathews has a shiny 4.7 YPC for his pro career, along with 72 receptions. He can run everything in the book, do the dirty work inside and hit some home runs outside. You have a reason to be excited.

But Mathews has also been an injury mess in San Diego (10 games missed through two years) and that comes on the heels of an injury-plagued career at Fresno State. And as everyone knows by now, he busted his collarbone on his first summer carry this year. Even geography plays against Mathews: three-quarters of his 2012 games will be played after 4 pm ET. Do you want to be sweating bullets on his status nearly every week?

There's a price where I might be willing to take the Mathews plunge, but I don't see it on the shelf. His current industry rank is a lofty No. 12, and that's consistent with the wide range of user ADPs I've surveyed. I want my early picks to offer a combination of upside and floor; Mathews makes good on the former but fails with the latter.

(Don't worry if you're a Mathews fan, you're in good company. And one of my esteemed colleagues will have plenty of nice things to say on Mathews soon enough. Stay tuned.)

-- Ahmad Bradshaw, RB, Giants: I hate to ding Bradshaw in any way; pound-for-pound, he might be the toughest player in the league. He's battled through ankle and foot problems for years but gallantly played through them most of the time. But let's not miss the effect it's had on his game: his YPC has dipped in every pro season (down to 3.9 last year), and he's only played one full NFL season.

The Giants see the issue here, which is why they added exciting rookie David Wilson in the first round. New York's also been shifting the offense fully into Eli Manning's hands; Manning's pass attempts have risen for three straight years. Bradshaw is currently the No. 14 running back on expert consensus and a Top 20 ADP back on every major site. I can't pay that sort of price.

-- Jacob Tamme, TE, Broncos: Here's a case of a player who's so underrated, he's quickly become overrated. At current count there are 17 industry experts who consider Tamme a Top 10 fantasy tight end.

With all due respect to those fine fantasy minds, they're wrong. And I'll gladly step to the side and let them chase Tamme all they want.

The case seemed easy enough in the spring: Peyton Manning landed in Denver, Tamme soon followed, and everyone thought back to how that duo clicked in 2010. But Tamme's blocking keeps him off the field a fair amount of the time (and perhaps at the goal line); the Broncos also added a capable TE in Joel Dreessen; and Tamme has been dropping everything this summer. I'm slotting Tamme 19th at tight end, which means I have no realistic chance of getting him. No worries there. Draft Kyle Rudolph instead, and thank me in December.

Follow Roto Arcade on Facebook. We'll be eternally grateful.

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The Essentials: Nashville Predators Edition

27 Aug
2012

(This month, Puck Daddy asked bloggers for every NHL team to tell us The Essentials for their franchises — everything from the defining player and trade, to the indispensable fan traditions. Here is Dirk Hoag of On The Forecheck, giving us The Essentials for the Nashville Predators.)

By Dirk Hoag, On The Forecheck

Player

David Legwand has lived up to his nickname, "the Original Nashville Predator."

As the team's first-ever pick in the Entry Draft, his personal progress has mirrored the team's to a large extent. Chosen immediately after Vincent Lecavalier, he'll always be dogged by offensive comparisons to the Tampa Bay star, but has nonetheless emerged as the most important forward on a highly competitive team over the last several years.

His style of play also matches up nicely with the perception of the Preds as a whole. A strong skater with a solid reputation for defensive play, 'Leggy' chips in at a decent clip offensively, but will never be confused with a Brad Richards or Henrik Sedin.

Even if his methods sometimes veer into the bizarre, he manages to get the job done and since he no longer commands one of most expensive contracts on the team, even some of his longtime detractors are beginning to appreciate the value he brings to the lineup.

Season

The 2006-2007 campaign marked a dramatic close to the Craig Leipold era in Nashville. David Poile had patiently built up his team over time and had a real contender on his hands, with names like Paul Kariya, Kimmo Timonen, and Tomas Vokoun leading the way. They finished just three points shy of the Presidents Trophy-winning Buffalo Sabres, but since they couldn't catch Detroit for the Central Division crown, they finished 4th in the West and drew San Jose as a first-round opponent.

In that series (the first time the Preds had reason to be favored), a combination of injuries and poor discipline cost them against a more composed Sharks squad, and left a critical question lingering in the air: did Barry Trotz & Company have what it takes to win in the postseason?

Game

The Detroit Red Wings have (until this spring's playoff run) always provided the measuring stick for Nashville, and back in the 2008-2009 season, with memories of the Great Fire Sale still lingering over the team, the gap between the two division rivals seemed larger than it had been in years.

On a Saturday night in February, however, in front of a sold-out crowd (including former blogging star turned Maple Leafs beat writer James Mirtle) the Predators gave the Wings a good old-fashioned curb-stomping. Jason Arnott recorded a hat trick, Shea Weber completed a Gordie Howe hat trick, and Pekka Rinne pitched the shutout as the home team romped to an 8-0 triumph that fans are still talking about as a high-water mark.

Goal

Part of the criticism that some folks level at David Legwand is that his offensive output is overstated due to the number of empty-net goals he scores, but nobody's chirping about the one he tallied on April 24, 2011, which clinched Nashville's first-ever playoff series win. He put the icing on a 4-2 victory in Game 6 against the Anaheim Ducks, and as the call on CBC described at the time, tears were flowing in the stands as the puck crossed the line.

Trade

The Peter Forsberg trade still serves as a cautionary tale for those who like to see their favorite team send away a package picks and prospects to acquire a veteran ringer for a playoff run.

In 2007, the Predators had their best team to date, a genuine contender with aspirations to play long into the spring. When the normally staid David Poile came out with the announcement that he had acquired one of the game's all-time great centers, Nashville perked up and took notice that this team was serious about making a run. As noted earlier, even though Forsberg played well, the Preds' playoff run came up woefully short, leaving many fans questioning whether the short-term buzz had been worth it.

At the time, the cost seemed dear: young forward Scottie Upshall, defenseman Ryan Parent, along with 1st- and 3rd-round draft picks. As it turned out, however, Upshall has struggled to live up to his potential, Parent has pretty much flamed out as an NHL player, and the Preds were able to get that 1st-round draft pick back during the ensuing Fire Sale trade of Timonen and Scott Hartnell to Philadelphia. That pick turned into defenseman Jonathon Blum, how is currently trying to earn a spot on the Nashville blueline this fall.

Unsung Hero

Of course you've heard about the key figures who have been around this team since the beginning. David Poile, Barry Trotz, David Legwand, etc. Perhaps the real heartbeat of the franchise, however, is found in an amiable, mentally disabled locker room attendant named Craig Baugh, known to everyone as "Partner".

Even though his job involves the most menial of tasks, doing the grunt work to make sure everything is ready for teams coming to play at Bridgestone Arena, you can't help but smile when Partner walks in the room.

In 2010, Jessica Bliss of the Tennessean ran a profile piece (as found at USA Today) which showed not just how much the Predators appreciate Parter's attitude, but the impact it makes on visiting players as well:

When a visiting team is preparing to leave Nashville, Baugh usually stands nearby, waving goodbye to the players as the bus engine grumbles and the vehicle pulls away. The moment is often bittersweet.

"It's sad, though, because I don't want them to leave," he said. "It's going to happen, though."

There was a time when the departing bus unexpectedly stopped.

Signaling to the driver to hold on, Joe Thornton descended the stairs and walked toward Baugh. One of the NHL's premier centers, the 6-foot-4 Thornton wrapped his arms around Baugh, saying, "We love you, big guy. We love you."

In a sports world where the notion of keeping a positive attitude becomes at times a tired cliche, Partner's infectious outlook provides genuine inspiration.

Franchise Villain

Many would choose former owner Craig Leipold for this spot, citing the 2007 Fire Sale which precluded his departure from Nashville, and his recent hiring away of Ryan Suter to patrol the Minnesota blueline. But I'll give him a pass, given the way he went the extra mile to make sure the team landed in local hands back in 2007 when Nashville's true hockey villain showed his colors: Jim Balsillie.

When the news first broke that Leipold was planning to sell the Predators to Balsillie, there was hope that a wealthy, hockey-crazed owner might pour resources into this developing team and line them up for a real Stanley Cup run. But over the next few days and weeks, warning signs started flashing.

Rather than addressing Nashville fans personally on sports radio, he had his lackey Richard Rodier deliver a tepid, disingenuous interview, in which he couldn't even interrupt his schedule for a few minutes - he huffed and puffed his way through the segment, explaining that he was on a treadmill at the time while spouting platitudes about how great the team was on the ice.

Then, just a few days later, Balsillie opened up a website taking season ticket deposits for NHL hockey in Hamilton, as clear an indication as one could ask for that he had no intention of keeping the Predators in Nashville. That triggered a reaction by Leipold to scuttle the deal and sell to a local consortium instead, even though he ended up taking a $10 million bath on a loan he extended to "Boots" Del Biaggio to facilitate the deal.

Later, during the Phoenix Coyotes bankruptcy fiasco, we heard even more juicy stuff, when Leipold alleged that Balsillie & Rodier had been working behind the scenes to undermine the Preds' relationship with the City of Nashville as early as 2005, two years before attempting his purchase of the team.

Yeah, even though his recent downfall at Research In Motion makes him just a shadow of the figure he was in recent years, Jim Balsillie stands alone atop the Preds' list of villains.

Fight

The Preds have, for quite a while now, had a pretty decent secondary rivalry going on with the Calgary Flames, and while this usually means tight-checking, low-scoring games between the two teams, sometimes it boils over into some genuine nastiness, and it all began back in January of 2003 when Jarome Iginla took a run at Tomas Vokoun. Vokoun immediately answered back, triggering a full-on fracas which included Jamie McLennan coming down the ice for some goalie-on-goalie action.

This became a recurring theme between the Flames and Preds, as Iginla had another run-in with Vokoun in November of 2003, and March of 2004 when Miikka Kiprusoff took his turn dropping the gloves with the Nashville netminder.

Coach

Hmm... So tough to choose here. In a tight race, I'll have to go with Barry Trotz, winning by a neck.

Broadcaster

Pete Weber and Terry Crisp - just as Nashville has enjoyed unprecedented stability in the front office and behind the bench, TV broadcasts are simply the Pete & Terry show, much to Preds fans' delight. Not only do these two enjoy on-air chemistry (which, admittedly, gets in the way of the play-by-play sometimes), but they serve a critical off-ice role as ambassadors of the team and the sport at large.

Arena Behavior/Tradition/Trend

Chants: One of the unique aspects of Nashville Predators games has always been the college-like atmosphere driven from Cellblock 303, where razzing opponents (goalies in particular) is an essential part of the action. As someone who attended games at the University of Michigan in the mid-90's when Yost Arena became a madhouse, I couldn't believe my eyes & ears when I went to my first Preds game and saw that same kind of spirit translated to the NHL level.

Whether it's thanking PA announcer Paul McCann for letting us know that there is one minute left in the period, or singing along with Tim McGraw after the Preds score, when you go to a game at Bridgestone Arena there's no chance that you'll be left sitting on your hands all night long.

Arena Food

Perhaps the signature food item associated with the Predators isn't even found in the arena - in recent years, an in-game promotion rewards fans with a free Wendy's Frosty if the home team scores four goals that night.

Of course, as a parent of young children, if often ends up that I have to swing by and pick some up even if it's not free that night, but it's a fun part of the Nashville tradition.

This led to an infamous blooper, however, when the Pittsburgh Penguins mounted a late-game comeback in October 2010, in which they beat the Preds 4-3. Once the Preds hit three goals early in the third period, the crowd started cheering "we want Frosties...", but one local sportswriter thought they were taunting Pittsburgh, saying "we want Crosby." Since Sid the Kid scored the tying goal and assisted on the overtime winner, the recap in the paper the next day spun the narrative of a superstar answering the challenge of the crowd.

That only validated many fans' feelings that the newspaper was simply out of touch with the team and its fans.

Swag

The Mustard Jersey.

Described as a horror by fans around the league, but beloved in Nashville, the Mustard 3rd jerseys became a rallying point for Preds fans and can now serve as a distinction between the old-timers and the relatively new fans at the rink.

Those threads also carried with them an air of invincibility; Nashville put up a 38-19-12 record during the five seasons in which they used them, including a 21-3-2 record over the final two seasons (2005-6 nd 2006-7). At times I think it would be cool for them to surprise the faithful and bring these jerseys out of mothballs for a special occasion.

Hmm... Winter Classic 2014, anyone?

Previously On Puck Daddy

The Essentials: New York Islanders edition

The Essentials: Boston Bruins edition

The Essentials: Colorado Avalanche Edition

The Essentials: Dallas Stars Edition

The Essentials: Washington Capitals Edition

The Essentials: Anaheim Ducks Edition

The Essentials: Montreal Canadiens Edition

The Essentials: Detroit Red Wings Edition

The Essentials: Ottawa Senators Edition

The Essentials: New Jersey Devils Edition

The Essentials: Phoenix Coyotes Edition

The Essentials: Florida Panthers Edition

The Essentials: Los Angeles Kings Edition

The Essentials: Carolina Hurricanes

The Essentials: Pittsburgh Penguins

The Essentials: San Jose Sharks

The Essentials: New York Rangers

The Essentials: Edmonton Oilers Edition

The Essentials: Tampa Bay Lightning Edition

The Essentials: Columbus Blue Jackets Edition

The Essentials: St. Louis Blues Edition

The Essentials: Buffalo Sabres Edition

The Essentials: Philadelphia Flyers Edition

The Essentials: Chicago Blackhawks Edition

The Essentials: Toronto Maple Leafs Edition

The Essentials: Calgary Flames Edition

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Jack Jablonski and Stanley Cup: Why Kings’ Davis Drewiske wins world’s coolest guy today (PHOTO)

27 Aug
2012

Davis Drewiske only played nine games with the Los Angeles Kings last season, and didn't see any postseason ice time, but tradition dictates that he gets to spend a day with Stanley. And what a way to spend it:

Via his brother Max's Twitter feed (that's him on the right), this is the hockey-world-inspiring Jack Jablonski getting some Stanley Cup time with Drewiske.

From KARE 11:

The 27-year-old defenseman scheduled a viewing party Monday afternoon for the hockey arena in Hudson, Wisconsin, where he learned how to play the game... but he had at least one place he wanted to stop first.

Drewiske picked up the Stanley Cup shortly after it landed in the Twin Cities, and drove it to the home of Jack Jablonski, the Benilde-St. Margaret's hockey player who was paralyzed after crashing into the boards headfirst last winter.

Jablonski's injury and courageous rehabilitation brought together the hockey world in the last several months, including a fundraiser in July that had NHL dignitaries and $120,000 in ticket sales. He became a national sensation and local hero: Earlier in August, he blew the celebratory gjallarhorn to help kick off the Minnesota Vikings' season.

Fueling his inspirational story: The fact that Jabs has made remarkable progress from the dire predictions about his health initially.

He moved a leg in May and was shown crawling on a video with helpers at the Courage Center rehabilitation facility.

As for Davis Drewiske, he was unsure before receiving the Cup if his name would appear on it, seeing as how he didn't fit the 41 regular-season game/one game in the Final standards.

He told UWBadgers.com that he did "have confirmation on the spelling of my name from someone within the team." LA Kings Insider said the official engraving of the Cup takes place in Quebec on September.

Bringing the Holy Grail to Jack Jablonski = qualification for engraving, right?

Tags: coolest, Davis Drewiske, , , Jack Jablonski, , , , Stanley, stanley cup, ,
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Jayson Werth displays some excellent improvisation skills with barehanded grab (Video)

27 Aug
2012

Jayson Werth's Philadelphia reunion did not go the way he probably would have wanted. The Washington Nationals' bearded one went a combined 2 for 12 with no extra base hits as the Nationals were swept in three games by the Philadelphia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park.

Werth, however, did make the most of one of his miscues, avoiding the blooper reel with a very entertaining barehanded catch during Sunday's game. So there's that.

Want more baseball fun all season long?
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