Donte Stallworth returning kicks in Patriots’ OTAs

The Patriots essentially have 5 wide receivers competing for 2 or maybe 3 spots behind Wes Welker, Brandon Lloyd, Jabar Gaffney. Those 5 receivers are Deion Branch, Donte Stallworth, Julian Edelman, Matt Slater, and Jeremy Ebert. Both Edelman and Slater have returned kicks in the NFL in the last couples seasons and Ebert, their 7th round pick rookie, was a return man in college. Even Deion Branch, who hasn’t returned a punt since 2004, had been getting some reps as a punt returner in OTAs as the Patriots try to cover all of their bases when evaluating the 5 receivers.

Donte Stallworth is now being given some reps returning kicks in OTAs, even though he hasn’t done that in a game since the 2003 season. It’s unclear if Stallworth will show anything that will help him stay on the roster, but it’s a good sign that he’s been given reps there. The Patriots didn’t give Chad Ochocinco and Anthony Gonzalez reps there and then cut them outright. The fact that the Patriots are giving Stallworth the chance to show them everything he can possibly do is a sign that he won’t have the same fate. Even if he doesn’t end up making the roster, it looks like he’ll be in this until the final cuts.

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Titans’ Mike Munchak says early schedule will affect the quarterback battle

The Titans might have the most interesting offseason quarterback competition this offseason, if only because they might be the most talented team in the league with an unresolved quarterback situation. Matt Hasselbeck led them to a 9-7 record last year, but he turns 37 in September and Jake Locker was their 8th overall pick last season and played well in limited action behind Hasselbeck last season.

So far, all of the signs have pointed to Hasselbeck starting for the Titans, even though the coaching staff is still insisting that there is no favorite yet. Adam Schefter believes Hasselbeck will continue to start until he struggles, which was the case last season, and GM Ruston Webster says that the competition will come down to more than just stats. Hasselbeck’s experience and intangibles would definitely count as that.

Speculation that Hasselbeck would start was further fueled today when Mike Munchak said that the Titans’ early schedule will affect the quarterback battle. The Titans face the Patriots, Chargers, Lions, Texans, Vikings, and Steelers in their first 6, a tough early season schedule. They might not want to throw their young quarterback out there to that when they still have a capable veteran starter.

The Titans still have not decided on a quarterback and there are still saying that it’s 50/50 between the two, but Hasselbeck does appear to have the inside track early. This isn’t to say Locker can’t win the job if he really impresses in Training Camp and the Preseason, but it looks like Hasselbeck’s job to lose. The Titans feel they can compete this year, after last year’s solid 9-7 season, and they probably won’t want to go through the ups and downs of a young quarterback when they can go with a reliable veteran.

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Steelers’ Isaac Redman says he’ll carry the load

With Rashard Mendenhall’s status up in the air for 2012 with a torn ACL, Isaac Redman, who used to be Mendenhall’s backup, says he’s “certain” he’ll carry the load for the Steelers this season. That would appear to be the case, at least early on. Mendenhall will likely start the year on the PUP and the Steelers don’t have another running back to challenge Redman. They drafted Chris Rainey in the 5th round, but he’ll have more of a Dexter McCluster role than anything.

If Redman, who has a career 4.5 YPC, impresses, he could get at least an even split of the carries even if Mendenhall is healthy. He was already stealing a good chunk of Mendenhall’s carries last year even when Mendenhall was healthy and Redman was unproven. He got 110 carries to Mendenhall’s 228. All signs point towards Mendenhall having a breakout season in 2012. He’s a popular fantasy sleeper, but might still be underrated.

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Rashean Mathis and Aaron Ross to compete for Jaguars’ starting cornerback job

Rashean Mathis has been a starting cornerback of the Jacksonville Jaguars for years, but because he’s age 32 in August and tore his ACL last season, the Jaguars signed Aaron Ross this offseason, someone with starting experience from the New York Giants. The Jaguars official website confirmed today what many expected, that Mathis will have to earn his starting job back from Ross now that he’s been cleared to practice.

Mathis has really struggled in coverage over the last 2 years, and while Ross hasn’t been much better, he is much younger and not coming off a major injury so he’s probably the favorite. The Jaguars signed Ross for 9.75 million over 3 years this offseason and only resigned Mathis for 2 million over 1, another sign that Ross is the favorite.

The loser will likely line up in the slot and William Middleton, who played significant snaps last season because of injury, will be the #4 cornerback. If injuries strike again, he’ll play significant snaps again. Of their top 4 cornerbacks, only Ross is signed after this season so the Jaguars will have a lot of decisions to make at the position next offseason.

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Texans’ Matt Schaub says he’s 100%

Matt Schaub suffered a broken foot week 11 last year, effectively killing the then 7-3 Texans’ Super Bowl chances, which were just starting to look promising. TJ Yates played admirably and probably better than anyone would have expected, but the Texans still lost in the AFC Semis to the Baltimore Ravens. Now 7 months removed from the injury, Schaub says he’s 100%. He won’t participate in the Texans’ minicamp next week, for precautionary reasons, but he should be a full go for Training Camp.

The Texans have lost a lot this offseason, including 2 starters on the offensive line, Mike Brisiel and Eric Winston, their starting middle linebacker, DeMeco Ryans, their best pass rusher Mario Williams, Joel Dreesseen, who played significant snaps at tight end, and Jason Allen, who played significant snaps at cornerback. However, they still have a lot of talent and made it to the NFL’s final 8 last year without Schaub and with Andre Johnson missing significant time. In a weak AFC, they could end up with a 1st round bye if everything goes right.

Jay Cutler is concerned about Bears’ offensive line

Jay Cutler has never been one for “saying all the right things.” It rubs some people the wrong way, but I do appreciate his honesty. Cutler has done it again, expressing concern for the offensive line by saying “until we get those front five hammered down, we’re still kind of up in the air offensively.” Cutler isn’t saying anything that isn’t true. The Bears offensive line has surrendered more sacks over the last 2 seasons than any other line in the league, with Cutler taking most of them, and if you ask 5 different people, they might give you 5 different week 1 starting lineups for the Bears upfront.

That being said, with Mike Martz gone, Cutler won’t have to hold the ball as long. In 2009, without Martz, the Bears allowed 35 sacks, which is significantly less than the 105 combined they’ve allowed in the last 2 seasons, and they did that with a very similarly talented group upfront. Without Martz, Cutler has always had a knack for getting the ball out with good timing, taking just 11 sacks in 2008, his last year with the Broncos. With Mike Martz gone and Brandon Marshall coming in, the Bears offense has a good chance to improve on where it was last year when they started 7-3 before injuries struck. The Bears should be a very competitive team in the NFC this year.

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Keenan Lewis to start for Steelers?

The Steelers were an aging team over the last few seasons and they lost a lot of starters this offseason as a result, especially defensively where they lost James Farrior, Aaron Smith, and William Gay, and might not have Casey Hampton ready for week 1. Gay signing with the Arizona Cardinals opened up a hole at cornerback opposite Ike Taylor. There are three candidates for the job: 2009 3rd round pick Keenan Lewis, 2011 3rd round pick Curtis Brown, and 2011 4th round pick Cortez Allen.

According to Pro Football Weekly, Keenan Lewis has the “early edge”. This makes a lot of sense. He’s the most experienced of the bunch and was the highest on the depth chart last season, playing 404 snaps as their #3 cornerback. He’s also been getting the bulk of the 1st team reps in OTAs. The competition is far from over, but it appears, right now, that it’ll be Lewis starting, and Brown and Allen serving the #3 and #4 roles respectively. Lewis boldly predicted earlier this offseason that he’d make the Pro Bowl this season.

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MD Jennings to start for Packers?

He might not be a big name or even someone anyone’s ever heard of, but the Packers have had success with guys no one’s heard of before and they might have found another diamond in the rough. MD Jennings is currently working out with the 1st team at safety in OTAs as Charlie Peprah is injured. Peprah is no sure thing to keep his job, however. The Packers used a 4th round pick on Jerron McMillian and have contemplated moving Charles Woodson to safety if 2nd round pick Casey Hayward can establish himself there this offseason.

Jennings will definitely be given a chance to compete for the starting job this offseason and the fact that he’s impressing in Peprah’s absence is definitely a good sign. Jennings was undrafted out of Arkansas State last season and was on almost no one’s radar. As a rookie he was primarily a special teamer and played just 10 snaps on defense. However, as I said before, the Packers are known for finding diamonds in the rough.

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The post that probably should have been 3: My thoughts on the Miami Heat and Boston Celtics

The Miami Heat were done. They were down 3-2 to an inferior Boston Celtics team that had simply outplayed them. LeBron had failed to score in the final 8 minutes of a close loss in Game 5 in a game that brought back memories of game 5 of the Eastern Conference Finals in 2010. Same teams. Same situation. Same result, losing to an inferior team.

Except something happened. Something that hadn’t happened since LeBron’s game 5 failure in 2010. LeBron stopped caring what everyone thought. He stopped trying to be “unselfish” and went into “I’m the best basketball player on the planet and I know it mode.” That’s what we haven’t seen from LeBron in years. That’s what’s always frustrated me about him in the past 2 years. He left Cleveland to join one of his greatest rival’s team’s and let him remain the alpha-dog. He frequently passed in key situations. He started caring more about setting up his teammates than winning.

He became the bad kind of “unselfish,” the opposite of the good kind of “selfish” that Jordan was, what I call competitive selfish, an attitude where you want to win more than anything and if that means your teammates also win then so be it. Jordan was that kind of selfish. Brett Favre was that kind of selfish. LeBron used to be, but since 2010 he has been over-thinking everything.

In a way I don’t blame him. In this 24/7 news cycle, EVERYTHING he does is questioned. For years. Would Michael Jordan have started 2nd guessing himself in the same situation? Probably not. But we don’t know. For the past 2 games, however, LeBron stopped caring what everyone thought. He led. He took over games, big games. I don’t what exactly what happened. Maybe it was that kid yelling “good job, good effort” at him (if so can that kid be MVP?). Maybe it was the fact that Wade was struggling so he had no choice but to become “selfish” and take over. I don’t know what.

But LeBron hadn’t looked that good since 2007, when he brought a team that had absolutely no business being there to the finals on the strength of 25 straight scored in game 5 of the Eastern Conference Finals against the Pistons. That team’s leaders in minutes played were LeBron, Larry Hughes, Zydrunas Ilgauskas, Drew Gooden, Sasha Pavlovic, and Donyell Marshall. Eric Snow started 45 games at point guard. They made the finals.

In Miami, he hadn’t played like that yet. In Miami there was always the temptation to be 1a to Dwyane Wade’s 1b even though LEBRON IS BETTER THAN HIM and the team is less efficient that way. For the past two games, he didn’t care about this being “Wade’s city” or about splitting the “alpha dog” role with Wade. He made Wade HIS sidekick because he’s the best player on the planet and that’s the way it should be.

If LeBron continues this in the Finals, they will win. If he doesn’t, they will lose because Kevin Durant is nearly as talented and knows his role. And that’s why these Finals will be so interesting. Can LeBron keep this up? Remember it’s only been 2 games, but he used to do this all the time in Cleveland because he had to. If he can, the Heat will win and LeBron will have EARNED his MVP and the title of best player in the league. If he can’t, Durant and the Thunder will win and Durant will have proved that he’s the best in the league. And the media scrutiny will be back on LeBron and rightfully so because everyone knows he CAN and probably SHOULD win this series.

Oh, and these finals might be a preview of a good percentage of the finals matchups in the next decade. Something tells me this isn’t the last time the Heat and Thunder will play in the NBA Finals. These Finals might get record ratings (insert joke about David Stern rigging them to go 7 games, although it’s not a joke because it’ll probably happen). When’s the last time we saw the league’s two unquestioned best players met in the finals? 1987? Maybe 1997-1998 (Jordan and Malone)?

And that brings up a better question. Who is the 3rd best player in the league? We know, unquestionably, who the two best are. Durant and LeBron. Put them in either order, fine, but argue that there’s a player in the league better than those two and you’re an idiot. However, who is #3? You can make arguments for so many different players, but you can also make counter arguments for all of them.

I raised this question on Twitter (@stevenlourie) a few days ago, mentioning Rondo in the tweet. I got these responses: Kobe, Dwight Howard, Chris Paul, Dirk Nowitzki, Derrick Rose. You could probably throw Tony Parker, Dwyane Wade, Russell Westbrook, and Kevin Love into that discussion without anyone looking at you funny. But look at the counter arguments you can make for all of these players.

Rajon Rondo- Has never averaged more than 13.7 points per game, 62% career free throw shooter, 24% three point shooter

Kobe- 34 in August, shot 43% last year, has never won without Phil Jackson

Dwight Howard- Frustrating flip flopper, had back surgery

Chris Paul- Never been out of the 2nd round, knee problems

Dirk Nowitzki- 34 this offseason, coming off a down statistical season

Derrick Rose- Torn ACL, might never be the same

Tony Parker- The Spurs almost traded him last offseason

Dwyane Wade- Currently on a milk carton in the greater Miami area

Russell Westbrook- 43% career shooter, doesn’t seem to understand how to play point guard yet (key word is yet. He’s only 23. I haven’t given up on him “getting it” yet)

Kevin Love- Doesn’t play any defense

I said Rondo because of how he played this post-season and because I think he’s turned a corner as a player. He is capable of both taking over a game offensively at any time and having a good game even when he’s not scoring and he can lock down anyone 6-6 or shorter defensively. This postseason he averaged 17.1 points per game, 6.5 rebounds per game, 11.8 assists per game, and 2.4 steals per game while being the best player on the same court as 5 future Hall of Famers (LeBron, Wade, Garnett, Pierce, Allen) for 5 games of the Eastern Conference Finals. As a Celtics fan, I’m incredibly excited to begin building around him and trying to delete everywhere I ever said we should trade him for Steve Nash and Marcin Gortat because it “gives us a better chance to win now.”

And that brings me to my next point. What’s next for the Celtics? As it’s been said eloquently before, the Celtics were in year 5 of a 3 year plan this season. Conventional wisdom suggests that this team should have been blown up 2 years ago, but after they made no moves at the trade deadline this team basically went into Eminem mode (I’m not even really supposed to be here right now, so fuck it, might as well make the most of it) and took the Heat to 7 games in the Conference Finals. Before game 7 I tweeted “win or lose, the 2012 Celtics have given absolutely everything they had this season.” They all played through injuries, even the coach Doc Rivers had a major back injury. They won at least 75% of the effort plays and gave 110% every single night. The Celtics played like there was no tomorrow because there wasn’t one.

Well now it’s tomorrow and the Celtics are at the crossroads they all saw coming. The 2012-2013 Celtics will either look different or incredibly different and there is no 3rd option. Ray Allen is a 37 year old free agent. Kevin Garnett is a 36 year old free agent. Paul Pierce and Rajon Rondo will have their names thrown in trade talks and even though I just said a few paragraphs ago that I was excited for the Celtics to build around him, the unbiased “stock trader” fan in me thinks it couldn’t hurt to see what they could get for Rondo if they sold high.

The good news for the Celtics is that their current payroll for 2012-2013 is 34.5 million so they basically have a blank state. They can probably resign Kevin Garnett somewhere around 30 million over 3 years and Brandon Bass has an option for 4 million which will probably be exercised. Allen will probably be let go because of the emergence of Avery Bradley. This means that the Celtics can actually bring back their starting 5 from the Philadelphia series at a payroll of around 49.5 million and 3 of the 5 would be under 30.

If they use their cap space and 2 1st round picks wisely, the 2012-2013 Boston Celtics will be a lot deeper than the 2011-2012 Boston Celtics were and they still have one of the best coaches in the business. The 2011-2012 Boston Celtics had Keyon Dooling, Marquis Daniels, Mikael Pietrus, Greg Sietsma, and Ryan Hollins as their bench guys, which meant that their over the hill starting lineup had to play way too many minutes, especially in the playoffs. They can add strong bench guys in free agency this offseason and I wouldn’t be opposed to Ray Allen being one of them at the right price. The Celtics can legitimately bring back their top 6 guys from a team that made it to game 7 of the Eastern Conference Finals and still be under the cap.

Can’t a Garnett/Bass/Pierce/Bradley/Rondo starting 5 compete again in 2012-2013 if they add the right bench guys? They did this year without a strong bench and with Bradley missing the Eastern Conference Finals. The Spurs did it this year with a similar formula. A better bench will allow Garnett and Pierce to play fewer minutes and Bradley’s absence in the Heat series was not mentioned enough. Bradley was their best on ball perimeter defender and they played a team with two of the best perimeter scorers in the league. You can’t tell me that wasn’t a huge absence, probably even bigger than the Bosh absence for Miami because Bosh only missed 4 games.

However, unlike last year, they won’t have that “no tomorrow” feeling motivating them like they did this year. This is clearly the Heat and Thunder’s league right now. The Celtics will still only be a fringe contender in 2012-2013. And yes, I realize this probably should have been 3 posts, but this is my 1st NBA post since last year’s finals.

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Rams to begin extension talks with Chris Long and James Laurinaitis

Chris Long and James Laurinaitis are big parts of the Rams’ defense. However, both are now heading into their contract year and for a Rams team already devoid of talent defensively, they can’t afford to lose arguably their two best defensive players. As can be expected, the Rams will begin extension talks with the pair in the near future.

Chris Long was the 2nd overall pick in 2008 and has emerged as one of the best pass rushers in the league. Over the past 2 years, he has 115 combined quarterback pressures, most of anyone in the league over that stretch. He also has 21 sacks and 25 quarterback hits over that stretch. He’s graded out 5th and 4th respectively in 2010 and 2011 as a pass rusher among 4-3 defensive ends on ProFootballFocus. Though he has graded out as below average against the run, he’s still managed to rank 15th and 14th respectively over those two years.

Laurinaitis, a 2009 2nd round pick, has graded out positively overall over the past 3 years as a starter and ranked 14th overall among middle linebackers in 2010. He’s managed 100+ tackles in each of his first 3 years in the league, good for a combined 376 tackles, a whopping 310 of which were solo. The Rams will want to lock up one of these two guys to free up the franchise tag for the other.

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