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#1 |
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Ring of Famer
Join Date: May 2003
Location: The Ville
Posts: 12,077
Adopt-a-Bronco: Brian Dawkins |
Lance Schulters� future with the Tennessee Titans is uncertain at best. The
veteran safety could end up being a June 1 salary cap casualty after his agent Brian Levy met Monday with Titans general manager Floyd Reese to discuss Schulters� situation. With Schulters in limbo, he will not take part in the team�s six on-field organized team activities over the next two weeks. Those workouts begin today. If Schulters does hit the open market, one team purported to have interest in him is the Atlanta Falcons, where Schulters could reunite with one-time 49ers defensive coordinator Jim Mora Jr., who his now the Falcons head coach. The Ravens remain confident that Deion Sanders will return as a nickel back. "The plan is for him to join us for the June minicamps," Billick said. "That was the plan all along, and I have heard nothing to indicate that won't happen." Romeo Crennel said the Browns do have some interest in linebacker Peter Boulware, whom the Baltimore Ravens released last week. Boulware, a former Pro Bowler, missed the 2004 season with a knee injury. ``We are interested, and we are doing our homework and trying to find out what his situation is,'' Crennel said. ``He's coming off an injury situation... we're trying to find out what his contract desires are and then we'll see if it fits within our budget and go from there.'' Crennel added that Boulware would be a good fit in his 3-4 defense. ``He's got experience in it so I think it would be a decent fit.'' Questions persisted, though, regarding two individuals who were not at the Colts voluntary four-week summer school, running back Edgerrin James and linebacker Rob Morris. James is under contract after signing his one-year, $8.1 million tender as the Colts' "franchise" player in mid-March. Morris remains an unrestricted free agent after his contract expired March 1. James' absence wasn't a surprise. The team's career rushing leader has usually spent his offseason working out in South Florida. "I know Edgerrin's down in Miami, probably one of the most physically-fit athletes in the National Football League," quarterback Peyton Manning said. Whether James shows up for the Colts' mandatory three-day minicamp, which begins Friday, is anybody's guess. Contrary to media reports, Titans GM Floyd Reese said he has not had any recent conversations with the Buffalo Bills regarding the availability of running back Travis Henry. Likewise, Reese has had no contact with Eddie George or his representatives of late either. Two other veteran linebackers remain on the open market -- ">Baltimore Ravens' castoff Peter Boulware and ex-Cincinnati Bengal Kevin Hardy -- but if the Colts sign a free agent, Tony Dungy prefers "somebody that's been with us." There's something Vikings quarterback Daunte Culpepper wants people to know about his fractured friendship with Randy Moss: He didn't fracture it. Culpepper said he is willing to talk to Moss about the rift, if only Moss would pick up the phone and call him. "My phone number hasn't changed. If I'm a friend, why didn't he talk to me?'' Culpepper said Monday. "My number ain't changed and I ain't never had a beef with him.'' Culpepper claims he tried calling Moss before and after the enigmatic wide receiver's trade to the Oakland Raiders on March 2. "I did. That's beside the point. He knows,'' Culpepper said. "That's all I care about. He knows.'' Culpepper was reacting to comments Moss made in the latest issue of Sports Illustrated. Asked about his friends, Moss told the magazine, "I thought Culpepper was, but now that everything's happened, it seems to me I lost a friend. � I thought I had a friend in Daunte, but obviously I didn't." Former Denver Broncos linebacker Bill Romanowski detailed Monday how he stayed one step ahead of the NFL's drug policy in an effort to perform at peak levels. "It wasn't about illegal. I was doing things that they couldn't test for," said Romanowski, who was known during his career for his use of performance-enhancing supplements and has been implicated in the Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative (BALCO) steroids scandal. "As soon as they found out that something could be tested for, I stopped taking it. I didn't want that embarrassment, but I pushed that envelope ethically and morally because if I could take something that would help me perform better and it wasn't on the list, I was going to take it. "I had two criteria: Would it hurt me? And would I test positive? "In the end, there's been some embarrassment at what I had to deal with." There is no experimentation going on with the Giants and their quarterback situation. The search is over. The team is entirely comfortable going into training camp � and heading into the season � with Tim Hasselbeck as the backup to Eli Manning. Getting awarded Hasselbeck off waivers from the Redskins was no minor move in the minds of the Giants, as they coveted him, hoped he'd get cut and then sweated out the waiver process until they received word last Monday that they got their man. "Hasselbeck was a gift," GM Ernie Accorsi yesterday told The Post. "We did not expect him to become available. We have a high regard for him. If he were a free agent he would have been at the top of our list. This is not one of these stop-gap things." Skins coach Joe Gibbs has yet to hear from safety Sean Taylor, who has boycotted offseason workouts. Taylor is not expected to participate in the first of 14 organized team activities today, which amount to practices without pads. Asked if Taylor planned to attend, his agent, Drew Rosenhaus said, "I'm not going to comment on Sean's situation." Ravens strong safety Ed Reed, who wants a new contract, was an unexpected no-show at practice. "I visited with Ed last week and he didn't say anything about not being here, so I am surprised he's not here," Billick said. "But this is voluntary, so that's his choice. Why he's not here, you have to ask Ed." Washington's cap situation is one reason that the club will almost certainly release wide receiver Rod Gardner, if it can't trade him, and gain $2.1 million in cap space. Top draft pick Matt Jones will be on the sidelines today when the Jaguars start the next phase of their offseason workout program with a three-day passing camp. The workouts will be part of the 14 organized team activities the team is allowed to have in helmets and shorts before training camp opens in late July. Coach Jack Del Rio said Jones, who strained a hamstring on the first day of the mandatory minicamp April 29, aggravated the injury last week and Del Rio said the Jaguars don't want to rush him back in May. Del Rio said he's not sure if Jones will be able to participate in workouts later in the week. The Jaguars will work three days a week for four of the next five weeks -- skipping Memorial Day week -- and then will wrap up the drills with workouts Tuesday and Wednesday, June 21 and 22. According to sources with knowledge of Santana Moss's contract extension -- worth about $31 million over six years -- the wide receiver received a signing bonus of $3 million, meaning that the Redskins theoretically could release him before next season without much of a cap hit. The first day of the Saints' coaching session workouts went according to plan Monday with one notable exception: Fakhir Brown was nowhere to be found. The starting right cornerback was one of two veterans not present at the team's first two-hour, on-field workout. Defensive tackle Brian Young, who was on a honeymoon after being married Saturday, was excused; Brown was not. "I don't know where he is," Saints coach Jim Haslett said. "His agent (Ted Marchibroda Jr.) doesn't know where he is. We haven't been able to find him. I don't know what the problem is, if there is one." Will Poole is expected to miss the entire 2005 season after having reconstructive surgery on his left knee, a disappointment to the Dolphins who hoped to salvage the cornerback's season. Poole tore the anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee during an offseason training session May 4. Monday's surgery also repaired the player's medial meniscus. Browns running back Reuben Droughns has returned to Cleveland and is working out with the team again. "Right now, I'm not worrying about the business side of it," he said Monday night by phone. "All I'm concerned about is learning the system and getting in shape for the season." Droughns, acquired in a trade with Denver for Ebenezer Ekuban and Mike Myers, walked out of the Browns' off-season conditioning program in April and said he was prepared to hold out for a bigger deal. Droughns is represented by Drew Rosenhaus, who currently has several players in contract disputes, including Philadelphia's Terrell Owens. The Browns have declined to say whether or not they would be willing to redo Droughns' deal. Browns running back Reuben Droughns, who is holding out for more money (he's scheduled to make $950,000 during the 2005 season), was seen at the Browns training camp facility. But all isn't well, just yet. ``Reuben was in the building (Berea) today,'' Crennel said. ``I didn't see him working out. Maybe he'll work out (Tuesday.) I haven't had the chance to talk to him. I don't know what (his) thought process is, but if he's decided to come back, then we're going to teach and coach him just like we're doing with everybody else who is here.'' A confident Zygi Wilf said Monday he will become the lead investor in the Minnesota Vikings, and he anticipates NFL owners, meeting next week in Washington, D.C., will approve his purchase of the team. In a wide-ranging interview with the Star Tribune, the New Jersey real-estate developer acknowledged for the first time that he will become the general partner of the Vikings and that Reggie Fowler, the Arizona businessman who hoped to become the team's principal owner, will be but one of several limited partners. "I don't want to say what the NFL will do, but we're looking forward towards receiving approval," Wilf, 55, said in his company's offices, within a long field goal of New York City. "I'm confident that the NFL is enthusiastic about our group's approach." Onterrio Smith and "The Original Whizzinator" have been the punch line to countless jokes since then, but he brushed off reporters' questions after practice by saying, "Gotta go to work." Fellow running back Moe Williams said Smith's situation isn't a distraction or even a hot topic of conversation in the Vikings' locker room. "We do our little one-liner jokes, and that's the end of it," Williams said. "That's about it." The NFL is investigating Smith, who already has two strikes against him in the league's substance-abuse program. He faces a one-year suspension for his next offense, but possession of test-altering paraphernalia outside of a testing situation is not a violation of league policy. The third-year running back took his normal repetitions during Monday's practice. Coach Mike Tice has made "consistency" the theme for the Vikings on and off the field this year, from the staff through the players. "It's the difference in finishing 9-7 and winning the Super Bowl," he said. Patriots center Dan Koppen calls the two-month break between the Super Bowl and the beginning of the offseason conditioning program a crucial time in allowing players to show up in the spring ``with a whole new attitude.'' But when it comes to Koppen, the last thing the Pats want is a new attitude. That's because the third-year veteran is straight out of the Patriots handbook, a selfless and intelligent pro who espouses just about every attribute Bill Belichick wants from his players. Koppen is also considered one of the best young centers in the league, but if you ask him whether making his first Pro Bowl in 2005 is one of his offseason goals, his response is team first. Last season the Bears' offense sputtered under backup quarterbacks Jonathan Quinn, Craig Krenzel and Chad Hutchinson. Ron Turner took particular note of former Purdue quarterback Kyle Orton, a fourth-round draft pick, in the Bears' first spring mini-camp. "I had seen him some in high school and I tried to recruit him [to Illinois]," Turner said. "And I obviously watched him a lot at Purdue and I watched some film. He has a live arm, and he's real smart. He's picking things up very quickly." The Bears' regular summer training camp opens July 23 in Bourbonnais, Ill. Ravens TE Todd Heap, who could miss half the preseason while rehabilitating from shoulder surgery, watched from the sideline. "I'll be ready to go for the season," Heap said. "I just want to make sure everything is healed up and ready to go before I play." Tampa Bay was interested in bringing him back, and Washington offered a three-year contract. But Roland Williams accepted the Rams' one-year, $690,000 offer to replace Cam Cleeland as the No. 2 tight end behind Brandon Manumaleuna. "It's great to come back and have a rebirth in the place where I was born as a football player," Williams said. "I think it's always been a good fit, honestly. ... It's an offense that I love and had some success in." And he just can't wait to start blocking for the 6-1, 231-pound Jackson, who averaged just over 5 yards (673 total) on 134 carries last year as a rookie after the Rams made him their first-round draft pick. "The boy is big, and runs strong and hard," Williams gushed. "That's why they call him the 'Train.'" It's not training camp or even minicamp, but Washington's veterans will be on the Redskin Park fields with their coaches today for the first time since New Year's Day. Redskins coach Joe Gibbs termed these days as an indoctrination for his new veterans, including receivers Santana Moss and David Patten and center Casey Rabach. All three are projected starters. Did You Know? Former Bears safety Doug Plank, for whom the vaunted "46 Defense" was named by defensive coordinator Buddy Ryan, has led the AFL Georgia Force to its first Southern Division championship. Negotiations are continuing with the Silverdome with an expectation that the Lions' former home stadium will be one of two practice sites for Super Bowl XL on Feb. 5, 2006. The Lions moved to Ford Field after the 2001 season after 26 seasons at the Silverdome. Officials for the NFL and Detroit Super Bowl Host Committee have been in talks with Silverdome officials about having the AFC champion practice at the Silverdome. The NFC champion will practice at the Lions' Allen Park facility. |
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#2 |
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"Nemo Me Impune Lacessit"
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Northern California
Posts: 12,580
Adopt-a-Bronco: Von Miller |
I would take a chance on Schulters. I think the more veteran leadership we have in a young secondary, the better.
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#3 |
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Lost In Space
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: DC
Posts: 19,139
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I wonder if we can trade a second rounder and RB for Sean Talyor. Come on Danny boy we have deal for you.....
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#4 |
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Ring of Famer
Join Date: May 2003
Posts: 15,352
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I hope Sean Taylor sits a while...let's improve our draft pick from them.
SSJ |
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#5 |
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"Hoodie Jr"
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: Hot Springs, Ouachitah
Posts: 77,090
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We don't have close to the money to deal with Sean Taylor. Man, Rosenhaus has about 10 holdouts right now.
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#6 |
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Solid Starter
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Canada
Posts: 195
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If Rod Gardner is released, we have to pick him up.
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