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Sage Rosenfels Is Looking for Work

 Sage Rosenfels Is Looking for WorkReuters

Miami is looking for a quarterback.  And a quarterback that first came up with the Dolphins is now looking for work.

Alex Marvez of FoxSports.com writes that Sage Rosenfels wants back into the NFL after a “mysterious blood infection” plagued him in August.

The Giants released Rosenfels from injured reserve after placing him on the season-ending list before the season. Rosenfels is now a free agent and looking for work.

We’ve always thought of Rosenfels as one of the better backups in the league. He had a strong showing early this preseason and would make sense for a team like Miami that is looking for depth.

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Michael Beasley Thinks His NBA 2k12 Rating Is a Bit on the …. High Side.

Usually when an athlete hears about their video game rating, they think it’s absurdly low. After all, having that kind of ego is central to their ability to step up and make plays. Don’t get it confused, that’s not always a good thing, especially when it comes to Michael Beasley. (Clang.) But surprisingly, in an interview with IAmAGM.com where he acknowledged his little mush-face incident, he wasn’t upset with his 78 rating. In fact, he didn’t think it would be that… high. (Yeeaaaaaahhh.)

IamaGM.com: 2K12 ratings leaked early, you got a 78 how do you feel about that?

MB: That’s higher than I thought.

via Exclusive: Michael Beasley addresses the Dyckman Park incident | IamaGM.com.

Well, hey, Bease, glad you can be honest with yourself. Maybe think about that the next time you’ve got that 18 footer with two defenders closing and Kevin Love’s in the corner screaming “I’m open. I’m open. For the love of God, I’m open.” Just a thought. You know, thinking outside the box.

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Tottenham Takes Firm Control of Rivalry

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Jamie Trecker is a senior soccer writer at FoxSoccer.com. A working journalist for 25 years, he covers the Champions League, European soccer and the world game for FoxSoccer.com.

Updated Oct 2, 2011 11:19 PM ET

Tottenham mercilessly exploited Arsenal’s notoriously lax defense to put together a 2-1 win today in the North London derby. The result cemented Spurs’ dominance over the Gunners and added to the mounting pressure on manager Arsene Wenger.

The result leaves Arsenal in 15th in the Premier League heading into the international break, faced with many more questions than answers.

The match will be tape delayed on FOX later Sunday (check local listings).

Arsenal stand revealed as a side in precipitous decline. They are not a team going through a rough patch or a side being hurt by unlucky breaks. They have, in fact, become a bad team. They have glaring weaknesses at virtually every position and penchant for making head-slapping mistakes.

Against Tottenham — who aren’t exactly title contenders this season, either — Arsenal had about 40 minutes when they covered up the fact that they play with defenders few other teams at their level would hire. Yes, they are missing one key player in Thomas Vermaelen, but there still is little excuse for the sloppiness and lack of attention to detail that Arsenal exhibit in front of their goal.

Teams have figured out that if you pop the ball over what passes for a back line, you can take shots at will. Better yet, if you are patient enough, you can wait for the inevitable moment when Arsenal switch off and just gift you both the ball and an inviting target. That happened twice today.

First, Rafael van der Vaart chested down a searcher from former Gunner Emmanuel Adebayor to exploit some particularly horrible ball-watching from Arsenal; then Kyle Walker scored the winner when Gervinho allowed the defender to drift uncontested and fire a shot right through Wojciech Szczesny. The keeper should have saved it, but to be fair, he had spent inordinate amounts of time cleaning up the messes left by Alex Song and the immobile Per Mertesacker in front of him. In fact, Adebayor could have had one of his own after Song and Mertesacker helpfully cleared a path for him, but the young Polish goalie was able to get a limb to it.

Arsenal got on the board from an unlikely source: Aaron Ramsey, who in all other aspects, had a miserable game. He scored when van der Vaart, in an Arsenal-esque fugue state, allowed Song to dash past him to the byline before crossing for the easy tap-in ahead of Brad Friedel.

Who did well for Arsenal? No one, really. Gervinho is shaping up to be a bust on the order of Maroune Chamakh; Mikel Arteta does not impress, and as we’ve already noted, the less said about the defenders, the better.

In recent weeks everyone in Arsenal’s organization has felt the need to tell anyone within shouting distance that Wenger won’t be fired. This is both admirable and telling. This team is so awful that any other manager would now be looking for work. To be fair, firing Wenger isn’t going to make misfires like Carl Jenkinson or Andrei Arshavin any better, but the Gunners are nonetheless a team clearly lacking leadership. At times, they look like a bunch of kids just trying to get through another miserable 90 minutes. At others, they look like a bunch of would-be star players trying to get the heck out the door by any means.

Tottenham, in contrast, looks like a side that is recovering from last spring’s dip in form. That was a spell when they were over-stretched by their European and Premiership demands, and they certainly might experience that fatigue again soon. If Gareth Bale does not look like the wunderkind of last season, there were at least moments today when we saw some of his old panache on the left wing. The defense is tighter with the presence of the reliable Friedel and the return of Ledley King, but the biggest question about this edition of Spurs is whether Adebayor will prove to be the answer at the head of a still-iffy attack.

There is no question, however, that Spurs are the North London team on the rise. That they did not have to play especially well to beat a side which once danced around them suggests how smoothly they have reversed the pecking order.

The saddest thing of all? Before the match, Harry Redknapp, manager of Arsenal’s arch-rivals, was the latest man to throw his support behind Wenger. And why not? After all, his Spurs keep beating them. I’d support a “colleague” like that, too.

Jamie Trecker is a senior writer for FOXSoccer.com covering the UEFA Champions League and the Barclays Premier League.

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Johnny Knox May Take Roy Williams Starting Job

 Johnny Knox may take Roy Williams starting jobReuters

Roy Williams has been a starting receiver in Chicago in name only early this season.  Johnny Knox has tripled his production and more than doubled Williams’ targets despite coming off the bench.

On Sunday, Williams may not even be a starter in name only anymore.

John Czarnecki of FoxSports.com reports that Knox will replace Williams in the starting lineup on Sunday.  Williams has four catches for 55 yards this year. He dropped a touchdown last week. Another pass intended for him was picked off.

We’re deep into Mike Martz’s second season in Chicago, and the Bears offense can still completely self-destruct like they did in the second half last week.  They have the right matchup to bounce back this week; Carolina’s defense is badly banged up.

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NBA Says “You Want Revenue Sharing? We’ll Give You Revenue Sharing! All Revenue Sharing Everything!”

Since the beginning of the NBA lockout, revenue sharing has been a huge issue. When you have an entity locking out its employees, and you have a massive disparity between the rich contingents and the poor contingents within that entity, naturally the employees are going to ask “Why don’t you just redistribute some of that wealth among yourselves, like the other leagues do?” For years, literally years, the NBPA has maintained that the best way to recover the losses for the owners in the recession is through revenue sharing. The league has insisted that that is an owners’ issue, and not a players’ issue, and would not be part of the conversation. But eventually, that has relented, and on Friday, we got the first indications of what that plan might look like. And geez, Louise, did they ever decide to attack the problem with fire and brimstone as David Stern has promised they would.

From Ken Berger of CBSSports.com:

The only progress described by anyone Friday other than the fact that theyll meet again Saturday was the state of the owners revenue sharing plans. Stern revealed for the first time that the league is prepared to triple the current revenue sharing pool in the first two years and quadruple it starting in the third year.

But even that issue is clouded in big-market, small-market politics and the issue of when the high-revenue teams will begin to substantially increase their sharing. According to two people familiar with the owners revenue sharing plans, the Lakers and Knicks would be called upon to pay the lions share — with the Lakers paying roughly million and the Knicks million — into the new pool. But some big-market teams are increasingly reluctant to share their growing local TV revenues; the Lakers, for example, recently signed a 20-year, billion deal with Time Warner that dwarfs some teams total revenue.

via Star power stirs up NBA talks – CBSSports.com.

That’s daring. That’s substantial. That’s borderline insane. To be clear, the revenue sharing doesn’t just increase the first two years. From NBA.com’s David Aldridge:

And rev sharing will quadruple every yr forward from yr 3, meaning at least 0M/yr thru deal. Yr 1: 0M, moving toward 240 in Yr 2

via Twitter / @daldridgetnt: And rev sharing will quadr ….

That’s a boatload of money. I mean that’s an epic tonnage of money that is being moved from the big markets to the small. I’m one of the staunchest supporters of revenue sharing you’re going to find and even I think that’s really far, if not too far.

But more importantly, for the fans, who don’t really care that much about parity or revenue sharing’s effect on it, this represents a huge “OK, now what you got?” from the owners. The players said they needed a revenue sharing plan. The league gave them one. Dwyane Wade may have freaked out over David Stern’s finger, but this revenue sharing plan’s totality may be the biggest finger the league can give the players and their reluctance to deal on the economic issues.

The players are getting some of the things they want out of this deal. Now it’s time to see what they’re going to have to surrender.

Posted in NBAComments Off

Happy Birthday, Tom Sestito: Flyers Winger Gets Waived, Four-game Suspension

Normally, Sept. 28 must be a joyous day for Philadelphia Flyers winger Tom Sestito. Barring religious limitations, it’s likely that this day has been full of cake and presents and good old-fashioned fun during his first 23 birthdays.

His 24th might not be quite as spirited (although there might be cake, too). CSNPhilly.com’s Sarah Baicker reports that the NHL suspended Sestito for the remainder of the preseason and two regular season games for a hit from behind on New York Rangers forward Andre Deveaux. Some might call the punishment surprisingly “light” – Rangers head coach John Tortorella said that it was worse than Jody Shelley’s hit, although he might be a little biased – but it’s important to note that Sestito isn’t a repeat offender.

One might argue that at this point, every new suspension sheds a little more light on Shanahan’s decision-making process. (James Wisniewski’s suspension showed that an actual contributor can get a stiff punishment, for example.) This one is interesting, though, because it shows that sheriff Shanahan will clearly pick on people with a rap sheet far more than those with a clean record.

To compound an already trying day for Sestito, the Flyers put him on waivers. Chances are he’ll be back in the AHL soon enough, which might force the minor league to consider his NHL suspension. Who knows if he’ll get many other opportunities at the NHL level in the future, but hopefully he learns from this mistake, because he’s certainly paying for it.

We’ll update this post in the likely event that Shanahan will release an explanatory video. Here’s a link to the hit in the meantime.

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Andrew Bogut Will Never Be the Same

I would post the video, but in all honesty, if I watch it again I’m going to throw up. If you have not seen the Andrew Bogut elbow injury, you can find it at thingswhichshouldneverbeshownagain.com. (Not a real site. I don’t want you landing on some random spam page.) Anyway, Bogut has been rehabbing after losing most of last year still trying to recover from it, which makes sense considering his arm was obliterated. And in an interview with the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, Bogut shared some good news… and some bad news. From the Sentinel:

On how is elbow feels after the surgery performed in April by Dr. James Andrews and if he still has limitations: “I will have limitations my whole life, but compared to where I was this time last year, it’s night and day better. I am shooting every day and lifting weights four times a week. My elbow still gets very achy if I overdo training (too many shots in one day), so I still have to be a little bit careful.”

via Bogut plays waiting game – JSOnline.

There’s a lot of precedent for why Bucks fans need to be horrified of their future. The team is entirely built around the former top draft pick, and hearing “this is going to suck for the rest of my life” has to cause a mass onslaught of Cure records and bourbon. There’s always the chance that Bogut will surprise everyone, that his positive comments are the real indication of where he’s at. But to put it simply, Bogut went through trauma. He’s lucky to be able to use the arm at full function. Then again, players have played through pain before and Bogut shows every indication of being willing to do the work to make it all the way back. The Bucks need that to happen.

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Report: No Winter Ball for Manny Ramirez After All

Earlier today, we found out that Manny Ramirez intends to follow through with his plans to play winter ball in his native Dominican Republic. Now we find out it’s probably not going to happen after all.

According to ESPN.com, Ramirez will have to drop his plans because of his suspension for failing a drug test earlier this year. Ramirez opted to retire from MLB rather than serve his 100-game suspension, but because the Dominican winter league is connected to MLB, he will not be allowed to play there.

An MLB official confirmed that since Ramirez has unresolved MLB drug-program violations and the Dominican winter league is affiliated with MLB, commissioner Bud Selig’s office considers him ineligible to play in the league.

According to the report, Ramirez could only play for an independent team unaffiliated with Major League Baseball. Long Island Ducks, anyone?

You can follow Bob on Twitter here, or if Facebook is your thing, be his friend here.

Posted in MLBComments Off

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