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Ponder and Newton Will Soon Play Some Memorable Games

Christian+Ponder+Dallas+Cowboys+v+Minnesota+Kw9Sr57XBXnl 205x300 Ponder and Newton Will Soon Play Some Memorable Games

Christian Ponder

They both have byes this week and it’s unlikely a lot of NFL fantasy football players will notice.  In fact, while most fans tuned into the Patriots at Pittsburgh last weekend or Dallas at Philly and while others got all giggly over the Lions’ seven sacks on Tim Tebow in Denver, the game of the future was actually being played in Charlotte, N.C.

It might have drawn a few yawns this week, but quite frankly, it’s unlikely to ever draw yawns again.

The folks in Charlotte and the fans back in Minnesota, people who will always follow their Vikings and Panthers through thick and thin, probably thought they were just doing what they always do on Sunday afternoon. It was another football game in the middle of a tough season

Heading into Sunday’s matchup, the Panthers were 2-5 while the Vikings were 1-6. Neither team was thinking about the playoffs and most NFL fans ignored the game like it was a blight on the sport.

And yet, the two people who were in control of the afternoon will, one day, be the Tom Brady-Ben Roethlisberger or Michael Vick-Tony Romo, of our future Sunday afternoons.

Sure, the teams were done. Eight weeks into the season and they were already thinking about Cabo, not Indianapolis, in January. Regardless, the two quarterbacks proved that they will soon be the guys everyone wants to watch. I guarantee it. In fact, this was the debut of the Ponder-Newton Extravaganza, a matchup that could last for the next decade… -plus.

Last Sunday’s final score read: Minnesota 24, Carolina 21. For Minnesota, rookie quarterback Christian Ponder went 18-for-28 for 236 yards and a touchdown. For Carolina, rookie quarterback Cam Newton went 22-for-35 for 290 yards and three touchdowns. However, with the help of a great runningback named Adrian Peterson, the Vikings emerged victorious. Peterson carried 21 times for 86 yards and a touchdown and caught five passes for 76 yards and another TD.

But while Peterson had already arrived, Ponder and Newton were the new kids on the block and they were the talk of the afternoon. Not because what they did was particularly spectacular, but because of the hints they handed football fans. This was just another game midway through a long season, but it was also a glimpse into the future. Cam Newton and Christian Ponder are the Next Ones.

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Cam Newton

Newton, last year’s Heisman Trophy winner, had been nothing short of remarkable from the day he arrived in Charlotte. At 6-foot-5, 250-pounds he cuts an amazing figure on the football field. The fact he has 4.59 speed and a rocket arm doesn’t hurt either. As a rookie, he’s second to the Saints’ Drew Brees in passing yards with 2,393 already this season. He’s completed 60.6 per cent of his passes. He’s averaged 299.1 yards per game. He can also run, run for touchdowns, throw on the run and think on the run. He has every possible tool.  He will be this year’s rookie of the year and a future MVP.

The kid on the other side, who just happens to be 6-foot-2, 230-pounds was playing only his second game as a professional, but with the help of Peterson and his sidekick, the electrifying Percy Harvin, the rookie from Florida State sent a note to the rest of the NFL, “I can play, boys.”

Poised, bright and fearless, Christian Ponder proved that he was worth a No. 12 draft pick to acquire.

Here’s how good he was: On third downs requiring 10 yards or more to convert, Ponder was successful on four of his six attempts. And he did it with a sorry collection of receivers who had neither hands nor speed. Were it not for Peterson and Harvin – who were formidable – Ponder might have been out there alone.

“We just took what the defense gave us,” Ponder said. “We didn’t try to force the ball quite as much as we did last week against Green Bay. Whatever they gave us, we tried to exploit.”

Now let’s not go too overboard on Ponder. He did lead his team to a three-point victory, but this all might have been moot if veteran Carolina kicker Olindo Mare didn’t miss a 31-yeard chip shot in the dying seconds, a kick that would have sent the game into overtime and might have provided a different result. And let’s also give credit where it’s due: Newton deserved a better fate. He was terrific.

But Ponder provided the Vikings and their fans with exactly what many pundits claimed he would. He won. And there are people on the sidelines this week saying that if Ponder had started all eight games – the first six belonged to veteran Donovan McNabb – the Vikings might be 6-2 as opposed to 2-6.

That’s mere speculation, of course, but one thing is certain: Newton and Ponder will do this again. And there is perhaps a time in the not-too-distant future when they will do it in an NFC Final.

Even though both Carolina and Minnesota are now 2-6 and likely out of the playoff hunt, the two head coaches will probably be given a reprieve, thanks to the two young QBs. Fans are quick to forgive coaches who let rookie quarterbacks — young stars selected high in the draft — develop into regular starters and team leaders. Ron Rivera in Carolina and Leslie Frazier in Minnesota will now get a few weeks off before the vultures in the mainstream media and on the blogosphere start demanding their heads again.

Vikings fans have quickly learned that young Ponder can play well on the road and win. In Carolina, they already know that 2-6 isn’t Newton’s fault, it’s the fault of a defense that would have a challenge stopping the opposing team’s cheerleading unit.

In years to come, Sunday’s matchup between Cam Newton, 22, and the Carolina Panthers and Christian Ponder, 23, and the Minnesota Vikings will be as highly anticipated as today’s meeting between Brady and Brees or Rodgers and Roethlisberger.

Some day, and some day soon, Cam Newton’s trip into Minnesota to exact revenge for a loss to Christian Ponder on that beautiful North Carolina afternoon of Oct. 30, 2011, will be the talk of football.



(The Coach and The Doc will have their NFL picks on Friday, Nov. 4)

Can the Packers Go 16-0?

MINNEAPOLIS – Sunday afternoon at the Metrodome in downtown Minneapolis, Aaron Rodgers delivered.

Of course, Rodgers has become so good at delivering lately that it’s hard to imagine there was a time not long ago when Packer fans demanded that Rodgers be relegated to No. 2 and the retired-unretired Brett Favre be given his job back.

Sunday in the Twin Cities, Rodgers brought his team back from a 17-13 halftime deficit against the Minnesota Vikings and in the din at the Dome, recorded a 33-27 victory. He also brought his team back in spectacular fashion. First he threw a 79-yard touchdown pass to Greg Jennings on the second play of the third quarter and then he took Green Bay right back down the field again and before the second half was four minutes old, Rodgers’ Packers had 14 unanswered points.

aaron rodgers1 Can the Packers Go 16 0?

Aaron Rodgers Takes Apart the Vikings Secondary

Suddenly, a 17-13 deficit was a 27-17 lead and the Vikings never threatened again.

Sunday, the 6-foot-2, 220-pound Rodgers (who actually looks much smaller in his street clothes) finished 24-for-30 for 335 yards, three touchdowns and no interceptions. He eviscerated a weak Vikings secondary but it was still a remarkable performance considering the thunderous noise inside the Metrodome. Fans from both sides had gathered to see the Packers go to 7-0 and to watch the Vikings new star, rookie quarterback Christian Ponder, get his first start.

Neither story line disappointed. Ponder went 13-for-32 for 219 yards, two touchdowns and two interceptions and got post-game kudos from Rodgers and Green Bay defensive lineman Clay Matthews. He wasn’t an A-plus quarterback by any stretch, but for a first-timer, he was quite good and if nothing else, he gave Vikings fans a little hope.

Rodgers meanwhile, won his 13th consecutive game – count ‘em, the final two games of last year’s regular season, three playoff games then the Super Bowl, and now seven straight this season. It’s the longest winning streak in the history of this storied franchise and it will be remembered as an incredible run even if it stops in Week 9 (the week after this week’s Packers bye week, got it?).

The Packers have beaten New Orleans (42-34), Carolina (30-23), Chicago (27-17), Denver (49-23), Atlanta (25-14), St. Louis (24-3) and now Minnesota (33-27) so far this season. They beat Carolina, Chicago, Atlanta and Minnesota on the road.

If you take a close look at their schedule, there is now a legitimate chance the Packers could run the table: After this week’s bye, they go to San Diego (tough one), play the Vikings at home, get Tampa at home, go to Detroit (San Francisco and Atlanta have put an end to the “Myth of the Lions”), go to the Giants, play Oakland at Lambeau, go to Kansas City, get the Bears at home and then finish with Detroit at home. If this team continues to play as well as it has in its first six games, there is no reason to believe that 16-0 is an impossibility.

As ESPN wrote: “Whether Green Bay can achieve perfection is one question, but the fact that the question is being raised in late October proves how formidable the Packers are.”

“I’m not going there, I don’t want to talk about,” said tight end Jermichael Finlay on Sunday night. “We’ll see what happens at the end of the season.”

Rodgers had a better sense of humour about what probably is, premature talk.

“I’m really looking forward to the bye this week,” he said with a grin. “Going undefeated? Not thinking about that. Although I do believe we can get better. We have seven wins and that’s nice, but there is no doubt in my mind that we can play better football.”

You would not have known that yesterday — especially if you watched the Packers offence. Green Bay had 25 first downs on 421 net yards. Rodgers’ quarterback rating was 146.5.

“It’s never easy coming to the Metrodome and never easy playing the Vikings,” said Green Bay head coach Mike McCarthy. “But at the end of the day, our offence really stepped up. It was our offence that got us the victory.”

And the guy at the helm of that offence is a guy who didn’t get a Division 1 scholarship coming out of high school, played a year of junior college before he caught the eye of head coach Jeff Tedford at the University of California. Played two years at Cal and was told he’d be a top NFL draft pick, but ended going 24th to Green Bay in 2005. He was the butt of derision and anger in Green Bay when McCarthy decided that Favre was gone and Rodgers was now the quarterback.

And yet as he answered questions after Sunday’s game, he was a 27-year-old veteran with a Super Bowl championship, a 13-game winning streak and 7-0 record heading into his bye week.

And one more thing: After Sunday’s impressive win here in Minneapolis, there is now a legitimate reason to believe that if McCarthy and the Packers really wanted to try – and that means playing his starters regularly through all 16 games this season – they could go 16-0 this season.

Aaron Rodgers must stay healthy, of course. That goes without saying. But if he does, and if McCarthy gets on board with the idea, there is a chance this Packers team could defend its Super Bowl title by running the table.

Week 4 in the NFL: All About The Undefeated Lions and Packers

It’s Week 5 in the National Football League and the bye weeks will start this week. So iof you are fantasy player, remember who’s in and who’s out.

There are 12 games on Sunday (not 15) and among the highlights, the 2-2 Jets play at 3-1 New England, 3-1 Tampa plays at 3-1 San Francisco; 1-3 Philadelphia is at 3-1 Buffalo and on Sunday night, 4-0 Green Bay is at 2-2 Atlanta. On Monday night, 2-2 Chicago plays at 4-0 Detroit. This week, the Ravens, Browns, Cowboys, Dolphins, Rams and Washington have the byes. Remember, if you have Joe Flacco in your fantasy pool, bench him this week. He’s not playing.

In the meantime, the NFL has never been as polarized as it is this year. There are good teams and bad teams and not many in the middle.

For instance, while only two teams – the NFC North’s Detroit Lions (4-0) and Green Bay Packers (4-0) – remain undefeated, there are 11 teams at 3-1. There are only eight teams at 2-2. There are seven teams at 1-3 and Miami, Indianapolis, Minnesota and St. Louis are all 0-4.

Meanwhile, with that huge come-from-behind 34-30 win over Dallas on Sunday (the Lions were down 27-3 in the third quarter), Detroit became only the fifth club since the 12-team format was adopted in 1990 to open a season 4-0 after opening the previous season at 0-4.

Meanwhile, according to the NFL’s statistics department, “13 teams, including the Tampa Bay Buccaneers (2-1), currently own or share a division lead. Nine of those clubs did not reach the postseason in 2010, including five – Buffalo (3-1), Detroit (4-0), Houston (3-1), Tennessee (3-1) and Washington (3-1) – that finished in or tied for last place in their divisions.”

The good teams in the NFL are very good and we found that out in Week 4. Let’s take a look back:

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Matthew Stafford

Detroit 34 Dallas 30

What a comeback. Dallas led 20-3 at the half and 27-3 in the third quarter and 30-17 entering the fourth quarter, but the Lions roared back with 17 unanswered in the fourth quarter as Matthew Stafford threw two touchdown passes to Calvin Johnson and Detroit improved to 4-0 to start the season. Dallas QB Tony Romo threw two pick-sixes in a five minute span in the second half.

Kansas City 22 Minnesota 17

The Vikings fall to 0-4 as Donovan McNabb has yet to win as the Vikings quarterback. K.C. QB Matt Cassel’s 52-yard TD pass to Dwayne Bowe was the difference. There is a growing mob in Minnesota who want to see McNabb out and Christian Ponder in as the Vikings quarterback. And if they don’t get rid of McNabb, then that mob wants head coach Leslie Frazier out.

Green Bay 49 Denver 23

The Packers Aaron Rodgers was sensational: 29-for-38, 408 yards and four touchdowns. He also rushed for two touchdowns. The Packers are the best team in the NFL and Denver quarterback Kyle Orton is just a loser (and the U.S. mainstream media, led by ESPN and it’s incessant anti-Tim Tebow rhetoric have to be held responsible for enabling GM John Elway and head coach John Fox to allow the Broncos to become a dreadful offensive team).

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Matt Forte

Chicago 34 Carolina 29

Matt Forte carried 25 times for 205 yards and a touchdown. In a losing effort, Cam Newton threw for 374 yards and a touchdown. Our good friend, Israel Idonije from Brandon, had another great game with two tackles and one tackle for a loss.

Cincinnati 23 Buffalo 20

The Bengals Cedric Benson carried for 104 yards while A.J. Green caught four passes for 118 yards. Meanwhile, rookie quarterback Andy Dalton had a big second half for Cincinnati when the Bengals outscored the Bills 20-3. The Bengals proved on Sunday that they are a much better than most pundits believe they are.

Houston 17 Pittsburgh 10

A statement game by the Texans, who shut down the Steelers’ Ben Roethlisberger. Houston QB Matt Schaub threw for a touchdown while RB Arian Foster rushed for 155 yards and a TD.

Tennessee 31 Cleveland 13

Titans QB Matt Hasselbeck threw for 220 yards and three touchdowns while RB Chris Johnson rushed for 101 yards. Cleveland outgained Tennessee but the Titans defense was just too good.

New Orleans 23 Jacksonville 10

The Saints’ Drew Brees threw for 351 yards and a touchdown while RB Darren Sproles added 188 all-purpose yards as the Saints improved to 3-1.

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Frank Gore

San Francisco 24 Philly 23

Niners QB Alex Smith was a solid 21-for-33 for 291 yards and two touchdowns while RB Frank Gore rushed for 127 yards and a fourth quarter TD. Philly’s Michael Vick was 30-for-46 for 416 yards and two TDs and yet the Niners improved to 3-1 while the Eagles fell to 1-3.

Washington 17  St. Louis 10

Washington’s defence sacked the Rams Sam Bradford six times. The Skins Ryan Torain carried for 135 yards and 20-yard TD. The Rams fell to 0-4 and nobody would have thought it would get that bad to start the season. The Rams have a brutal schedule in the first and a not-bad schedule in the second half. They could still finish 8-8.

NY Giants 31 Arizona 27

The Giants scored 21 points in the fourth quarter to win it. Eli Manning threw two touchdown passes in a 58-second span in the fourth quarter while Hakeem Nicks caught 10 passes for 169 yards and a TD.

Atlanta 30 Seattle 28

Atlanta QB Matt Ryan threw for 291 yards, and rookie wideout Julio Jones caught 11 passes for 127 yards as the Falcons held off a second-half Cards rally. 

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Wes Welker

New England 31 Oakland 19

The Pats Tom Brady threw for 226 yards and two touchdowns. Wes Welker had nine receptions for 158 yards and a TD. 

San Diego 26 Miami 16

Chargers QB Phillip Rivers threw for 307 yards and a touchdown as Miami fell to 0-4 and lost QB Chad Henne to a shoulder injury.

Baltimore 34 New York 17

The Ravens outstanding defense scored three touchdowns, the most in franchise history.

MONDAY NIGHT

Tampa Bay 24 Indianapolis 17

Bucs quarterback Josh Freeman threw a TD pass to Preston Parker and rushed for another as Tampa improved to 3-1.

 

Lions Look Great. Vikings Collapse Again. Week 3 Was Sure Interesting.

Matthew Stafford1 199x300 Lions Look Great. Vikings Collapse Again. Week 3 Was Sure Interesting.

Matthew Stafford, a young man madly in love with his right arm.

MINNEAPOLIS – It could easily be suggested, without much argument by the way, that the greatest moment in Detroit Lions history was Wednesday, Sept. 25, 2008.

No, that was not the day the Lions drafted Ndamukong Suh. That was the day that Lions owner William Ford fired club president Matt Millen, the ex-player-turned-TV-broadcaster-turned bullshit-artist that almost completely destroyed the Lions franchise with a series of inane draft picks and horrid coaching hires.

From that day forward, the Lions have slowly, but surely returned to the glory they once enjoyed. A glory they last enjoyed in the 1950s, when a fellow named Bobby Layne played quarterback.

Sunday afternoon, in front of 62,466 witnesses at the Metrodome, the Lions showed just how far they’ve come. Trailing 20-0 at halftime, they battled all the way back and won 26-23 in overtime. Led by quarterback Matthew Stafford and an outstanding corps of receivers, the Lions improved to 3-0 for the first time since 1980. And that’s significant.

The last time the Lions were 3-0, Stafford – and most of his teammates had not been born.

The last time the Lions beat the Vikings in Minnesota, in 1997, Stafford was nine.

The Lions have won seven straight games dating back to last season – 11 if you count the four pre-season games this year.

These are the new Detroit Lions, a Lions team that doesn’t even remember the 2008 squad that went 0-16. After all, Millen is gone and a team that was 4-36 in their last 40 games against Minnesota and Green Bay is now 1-0 against the Vikings this season and they don’t even see the Packers until Thursday, Nov. 24 – Thanksgiving Day.

Since Millen was fired, the Lions have, almost over night, become one of the most feared teams in the NFL. This year’s team is now 3-0 and with their phenomenal receivers and cocky young quarterback, they have a legitimate chance to challenge in the very good NFC North. Ever since the Ford Family fired Millen and hired Tom Lewand as president and Martin Mayhew as general manager, the Lions have turned the corner.

Since Millen walked out the door, the Lions drafted quarterback Matthew Stafford, a young man who is madly in love with his right arm, defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh, defensive tackle Nick Fairley, wide receiver Titus Young, linebacker DeAndre Levy, defensive tackle Sammie Hill, tight end Brandon Pettigrew, runningback Jahvid Best, strong safety Amari Spievey, offensive tackle Jason Fox and defensive end Willie Young.

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Brandon Pettigrew

Stafford, Suh, Levy, Spievey, Pettigrew and Best all started Sunday’s game and all played well. Stafford went 32-for-46 for 378 yards and two touchdowns. Pettigrew had 11 receptions for 112 yards. Best carried 12 times for 14 yards. Spievey had three tackles and a sack. Levy had three tackles. Suh had five tackles and a sack. Off the bench, Titus Young caught four passes for 51 yards, Sammie Hill had two tackles,

Meanwhile, kick and punt returner Stefan Logan was acquired as a free agent from Pittsburgh and was terrific on Sunday. He returned four punts for 37 yards and three kickoffs for 74 yards. Middle linebacker Stephen Tulloch was signed away from Tennessee and yesterday had seven tackles.

The moves this team has made since Millen was dispatched has made the Lions a surprisingly good team. The 3-0 start is no fluke.

“It was a difficult first half, we didn’t play that well,” said Lions quarterback Stafford, addressing the fact his team fell behind 20-0 at the half. “But then we started to do what we do best. We spread things out, we’d played quickly and we had guys make big plays for me.

“On the drive to the game-winning field goal, nothing needs to be said. We knew we were going to score. Like all good offences, we knew we’d make the plays that would get us into a position for Jason (Hanson) to kick the winning field goal.”

That’s the difference between a team that has won seven consecutive regular-season games, compared to a team that went 0-16 just four seasons ago. Good ownership finally put the right people in the right positions and they’ve given good young draft picks a chance to be successful.

It’s kind of the same reason I’ve taken over from Dr. Football as the Alpha Male of this prognostication team. Confidence. I buried the past, looked to future and decided that the Doc wasn’t really that smart.

This will be the third week The Coach has led this season and you’ll see when the picks are posted on Thursday. Last week, The Coach went 10-6 straight up (33-13 on the season) and a Matt Millen-like 5-11 (24-24) against the spread, but The Coach still leads and that’s all that matters. It’s the first time since we’ve started making these picks that The Coach has held the lead.

Yes, “The Roar” has been restored.

Let’s look back at Week 3, before we move forward on Thursday to Week 4:

SUNDAY AFTERNOON

Detroit 26 Minnesota 23 (OT)

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Percy Harvin, a great player who doesn't see the ball enough.

Detroit’s Jason Hanson kicked a 32-yard field goal on the fifth play of overtime to win it. The Lions trailed 20-0 at the half and came back to win and move to 3-0 while the Vikes fell to 0-3 with their third straight second-half collapse.

Buffalo 34 New England 31

The Bills came back from a 21-0 deficit and picked off four Tom Brady passes. Buffalo is the only unbeaten team in the AFC.

Carolina 16 Jacksonville 10

Cam Newton only threw for 158 yards and a touchdown, but this week he gets a win. He lost two straight despite throwing for more than 400 yards both times.

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Alex Smith of the Niners

San Francisco 13 Cincinnati 8

Alex Smith was 20-for-30 for 201 yards and the Niners Kendall Hunter rushed for the game’s only touchdown.

Cleveland 17 Miami 16

Colt McCoy completed 19-of-39 passes for 201 yards and two touchdowns, the winning TD to Joshua Cribbs. The Browns played without Peyton Hillis and still won a big game at home to got to 2-1.

New Orleans 40 Houston 33

The Saints outscored the Texans 23-14 in a thrilling fourth quarter. The Saints Drew Brees finished 31-for-44 for 370 yards and three touchdowns. TE Jimmy Graham caught four passes for 100 yards and a touchdown.

Tennessee 17 Denver 14

The Titans Matt Hasselbeck went 27-for-36 for 311 yards and two TDs including a four-yarder to Daniel Graham to win it.

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Philly's Michael Vick injured his hand.

NY Giants 29 Philadelphia 16 

Eagles quarterback Michael Vick was hit late and broke his right hand, non-throwing hand and then went off, saying the league’s referees don’t protect him like they do other quarterbacks. It’s true. If a defensive player so much as breathes on Tom Brady, there is a penalty. Vick takes a beating and there is seldom ever a flag.

Oakland 34 NY Jets 24

Raiders runningback Darren McFadden rushed for 171 yards and two touchdowns as Oakland improved to 2-1. The Raiders have been improving dramatically and this season with Jason Campbell and McFadden, the offence might be good enough to challenge to the West.

San Diego 20 Kansas City 17

The Chargers’ Ryan Mathews carried 21 times for 98 yards and two TDs. Matt Cassel’s late interception cost Kansas City a comeback.

Baltimore 37 St. Louis 7

Ravens rookie receiver Torrey Smith’s first three career receptions went for 133 yards and three touchdowns. He finished with five catches for 152 yards. Joe Flacco went 27-for-48 for 389 yards and three TDs to Smith.

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Green Bay's Jermichael Finley

Green Bay 27 Chicago 17

Green Bay’s Aaron Rodgers threw for 297 yards and three touchdowns, all to tight end Jermichael Finley. Brandon’s Israel Idonije had another good game with four tackles for the Bears.

Seattle 13 Arizona 10

Neither offense was any good but Seattle’s Tarvaris Jackson ran 11 yards for a TD in the third quarter and that’s all Seattle needed.

Tampa Bay 16 Atlanta 13

The Bucs Josh Freeman scored the first rushing touchdown of his career, and Tampa Bay’s defense forced three turnovers and sacked Atlanta QB Matt Ryan four times.

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Ben Roethlisberger

SUNDAY NIGHT

Pittsburgh 23 Indianapolis 20

The Colts lost quarterback Kerry Collins to a concussion and that ultimately cost them the game. Pittsburgh’s Canadian kicker Sean Suisham booted a 38-yard field goal with only eight seconds left on the clock.

MONDAY NIGHT

Dallas 18 Washington 16

Cowboys kicker Dan Bailey booted six field goals to give Dallas all 18 of their points. Tremendous effort by Cowboys QB Tony Romo who played with that serious rib injury.

All You Need To Know About Week 1 in the NFL

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Tom Brady, Awesome Again.

Before Dr. Football and I take on Week 2 in the NFL — our picks will be posted by Friday — we need to take stock of Week 1.

This week, as always, we learned 10 things:

1. The Baltimore Ravens and Chicago Bears made statements: “You guys can be madly in love with the Steelers and Packers if you wish, but we aren’t going to roll over and die.”

2. Tom Brady is still remarkable. His 99-yard TD pass to Wes Welker was jaw-dropping. The game itself was jaw-dropping. Brady and Miami’s Chad Henne combined to become the first duo of quarterbacks in NFL history to pass for 500 yards and 400 yards in a single game.

3. Despite what ESPN did by ripping Tim Tebow in order to help enable new Broncos GM John Elway to go with Kyle Orton, how long will it take before the Broncos finally go with the guy who wins as opposed to the guy who looks good losing?

4. The Detroit Lions might be legitimate.

5. Michael Vick could have a monster year. Matt Schaub and Phillip Rivers will be very good.

6. Three teams passed for more than 400 yards — and lost.

7. So much for all the whining about the new kickoff rule. Here’s the headline: “Three kickoff return touchdowns in Week 1 tied for the most in an opening weekend in NFL history (1970, 1998).” Looks like a good rule.

8. Like offence? There was a grand total of 7,842 net passing yards in Week 1. The most in a single week in NFL history. There were 14, 300-yard passers in Week 1, the most in a single week in NFL history.  The previous best was 13 in Week 10 of last year. And there were five games in which both quarterbacks threw for at least 300 yards, the most in any week in NFL history. Four 400-yard passers was the most in a single week in NFL history.

9. Carolina rookie quarterback Cam Newton had 422 passing yards, the most ever by a player making his NFL debut.

10. San Francisco’s Ted Ginn  Jr. became the 12th player in NFL history to return a kickoff (102 yards) and a punt (55 yards) for a touchdown in the same game.  Ginn accomplished the feat in just 59 seconds — the fastest in history.

Baltimore 35 Pittsburgh 7

The Ravens Joe Flacco threw three touchdown passes while runningback Ray Rice rushed for 107 yards and two TDs.

Chicago 30 Atlanta 12

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Brian Urlacher, Chicago Bears

Bears linebacker Brian Urlacher had an interception and returned a fumble recovery for a touchdown. If the Bears defence continues to rock, it will take pressure off Jay Cutler – who passed for 312 yards in the opener – and his offence. That will make the Bears a much better all-around football team. By the way, RB Matt Forte was brilliant once again and a strong running game will always work in a team’s favor.

Houston 34 Indianapolis 7

The Texans backup runningback Ben Tate rushed for 116 yards and a touchdown as Indy played without Peyton Manning. And without Peyton Manning, they were downright horrendous.

Cincinnati 27 Cleveland 17

The Browns fell asleep on defense late in the game and blew a 17-13 lead late. Cincinnati’s Cedric Benson carried 25 times for 121 yards and a touchdown.

Jacksonville 16 Tennessee 14

The Jags’ Maurice Jones-Drew rushed for 98 yards and a touchdown.

Buffalo 41 Kansas City 7

Kansas City was 11-5 last year and won the AFC West but Buffalo sauntered into K.C. and scored 40 points in a season opener for the first time since 1992. Fred Jackson carried for 112 yards for the Bills.

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Michael Vick, Philadelphia Eagles

Philadelphia 31 St. Louis 13

The Eagles Michael Vick was terrific. He threw two touchdown passes and ran for 98 yards. He now has 4,728 rushing yards, second most in the history of the game, behind only Randall Cunningham (another Philly QB) who had 4,928. Vick should break that record by Week 4.

Detroit 27 Tampa Bay 20

The Lions Matthew Stafford threw for 305 yards and three touchdowns. The Lions defense was very good, as expected. But the important thing for Detroit was that they beat a decent team on the road.

Arizona 28 Carolina 21

Arizona’s Kevin Kolb threw for 309 yards and two touchdowns while Carolina rookie Cam Newton threw for 422 yards and two TDs and ran for another touchdown. This one was all about Newton, even in defeat. The guy is going to be great if the Carolina coaches don’t screw with his game.

San Diego 24 Minnesota 17

The Chargers scored the final 17 points and the only 17 points of the second half as San Diego came back from a 17-7 halftime deficit.

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The Niners Ted Ginn headed to the end zone.

San Francisco 33 Seattle 17

Ted Ginn Jr. returned a kickoff 102 yards for a touchdown, then returned a punt 55 yards for a touchdown, all in a minute’s span in the fourth quarter to give the Niners the win.

Washington 28 NY Giants 14

The Redskins Rex Grossman threw for 305 yards and two touchdowns.

SUNDAY NIGHT

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Mark Sanchez, New York Jets

NY Jets 27 Dallas 24

The Jets were down 14 points in the fourth quarter and came back to win AT Dallas. Nick Folk kicked a 50-yard field goal to win in with 27 seconds left. The Jets Mark Sanchez was 26-for-44 for 335 yards and two touchdowns.

MONDAY NIGHT

New England 38 Miami 24

Wow! What a night for Tom Brady. He was 32-for-48 for a franchise-record 517 yards and four touchdowns. Wes Welker had eight catches for 160 yards and two touchdowns. Miami’s Chad Henne completed 30-of-49 passes for 416 yards and two TDs (see above).

Oakland 23 Denver 20

The highlight of the game came from Oakland kicker Sebastien Janikowski who booted an NFL record-tying 63-yard field goal. Only Tom Dempsey and Jason Elam have matched that distance. By the way, when is Denver going to realize that QB Kyle Orton can’t win.

This week our three biggest games are: Chicago at New Orleans, as the Bears take on a 2010 playoff team for the second straight week; San Diego at New England in a battle of high-powered offenses; and Philadelphia at Atlanta as Mike Vick goes back to his original NFL home.

A Visit With Blitznak the Magnificent

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Brett Favre: Not coming back.

Will Donovan McNabb be good enough to keep the Minnesota Vikings out of last place? Will the Philadelphia Eagles’ spending spree lead to a Super Bowl crown? Will Brett Favre suddenly show up in an NFL uniform this year?

We will answer these and other questions as we take a long, jaundiced look into the National Football League’s Crystal Ball. Of course, while looking into the future is always a risky bit of business, we’ve decided to seek out the best crystal ball gazer there is.

Blitznak the Magnificent, the man with the big ball… ahh, umm, the big crystal ball, has the answers to all of your queries, both fantasy and otherwise. He’s always right – at least, he believes he’s always right – and we were able to track him down at his cabin on Lake Winnipegosich deep in the northern Minnesota bush (OK, so he’s about eight miles northwest of Duluth near the Chippewa Casino on Hwy. 2) to interview the all-seeing NFL Oracle.

We posed the following 10 questions:

River City Sports Blog: So, Mr. Blitznak, the All-Knowing, will Donovan McNabb make a difference to the Minnesota Vikings.

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Bryant McKinnie: Playing DT on Roller Skates.

Blitznak, the Magnificent: Short answer? No. Long answer? If he gets any time to throw, he could be terrific. Trouble is, that offensive line in Minnesota couldn’t block the Vikings Cheerleaders. On the upside, Leslie Frazier cut left tackle Bryant McKinnie who played last season like he was on roller-skates. That fat tub of goo was done last year and when he showed up to training camp weighing in at about 450, you knew it was over. The O-line will be better, but probably not enough better to make Donovan McNabb the Donovan McNabb of 2005.

RCSB: Did the Eagles do the right thing, spending all that money on free agents and will it make them good enough to win the Super Bowl?

B the M: Make no mistake, young Grasshopper, you never do the wrong thing when you spend money to try to get good players in order to win games. At least, ownership is trying. Now it’s up to Andy Reid to make that team a winner and it might take some time. But the Eagles are good and they will do well this season. And DO NOT take pre-season seriously. Always remember, the year the Detroit Lions went 0-16, they were 4-0 in pre-season. Just because the Eagles stunk in Week 2 of the pre-season against Pittsburgh means nothing. To quote Allen Iverson, “its just practice. Did you hear me? It’s practice.”

RCSB: Who will be the best quarterback in the NFL this season?

 A Visit With Blitznak the Magnificent

The great Aaron Rodgers

B the M: Well, it sure isn’t gonna be Eli Manning despite what he thinks of himself. Sometimes I think Eli is just Peyton’s dumber little brother. What’s that? He is? Really? Anyway, it won’t be either Manning.

If you’re in a fantasy draft and you have Aaron Rodgers, Drew Brees, Mark Sanchez, Philip Rivers, Tom Brady or Michael Vick, you’ll be just fine. Detroit’s Matthew Stafford, if he can stay healthy, is the big sleeper. Matt Schaub in Houston could have a very interesting season, as well.

Stay away, stay as far as humanly possible away, from Kyle Orton, Chad Henne, Alex Smith, Matt Hasselbeck, Tarvaris Jackson and Andy Dalton.

RCSB: Is there a receiver we might not spend any time thinking about who could light it up this season?

B the M: Yep.

RCSB: Ah, well, who might that be?

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Look out! Here comes Jimmy Graham.

B the M: If you wanted to ask me about a specific player, why didn’t you just freakin’ ask me? My selection for ‘big improvement from 2010 to 2011’ is Jimmy Graham, tight end for the New Orleans Saints. At 6-foot-6, 260-pounds, he’s a load. He’s also a gigantic target for the already incredible Drew Brees. While everyone is double-teaming Marques Colston, Devery Henderson, Lance Moore and Robert Meacham, great big Jimmy Graham will be lurking around all by himself. Last year, as a rookie, Graham – a third-round pick out of Miami, by the way — had 29 catches for 341 yards and four touchdowns. This year, you watch: 65 catches, 800 yards, 12 touchdowns. I love me some Jimmy Graham.

RCSB: The “Reverend” Tony Dungy says Ndamukong Suh, “has to dial it back.” Do you think he should?

B the M: Hell, no. Praise the Lord and pass the ammunition. As long as Suh has enough dough to pay the fines, he should continue to kick the living crap of quarterbacks – legally or otherwise. He’s a freakin’ defensive tackle. He fights to the death on every play just to get to the quarterback and then the NFL says, “Oh, Mr. Suh, when you reach the quarterback (Who should be wearing a ballet tutu) you must back off.” That’s the dumbest thing I’ve ever heard. Here’s the motto of the NFL, “Do unto others BEFORE they do unto you.” If Suh changes his game, he won’t be the same player. He should just take $100,000 of his own money and put it in a trust fund for the fines he’ll have to pay, and go ahead and make $20 million a year when he becomes the best defensive lineman in NFL history.

RCSB: Which young player(s) will have the most impressive breakout seasons in 2011?

B the M: After Jimmy Graham, watch out for Ryan Mathews in San Diego. He and Mike Tolbert will share the load again, but after he closed the season with that 120-yard, three-TD game against Denver last December, he’ll take most of the reps this year. Last year, LeSean McCoy in Philly carried 207 times for 1,080 yards and seven touchdowns. Mike Vick will make those numbers larger in 2011. And if Matt Stafford stays healthy, he’ll light it up in Detroit. In fact, he could make the Lions offense as good as the Lions defense and that could mean a challenge to the Packers in the NFC North.

RCSB: Who is the best runningback in the NFL?

B the M: I love Chris Johnson and I think DeAngelo Williams is the most-under-rated back in all of football, but the answer is Adrian Peterson. He’s consistent and productive and absolutely your first pick on fantasy draft day. Even with that horse-pucky offensive line in Minnesota, he puts up big numbers. He is, without fear of legitimate argument, the best in the game.

RCSB: Can the Cincinnati Bengals win with a rookie quarterback?

B the M: You’re talking about that Andy Dalton kid aren’t you? Too bad. I hope he survives the season. The answer is no. In fact, Cincinnati will not only go 2-14 – if they’re lucky – but that team won’t be able to score in a women’s prison with a handful of pardons. Mike Brown is a donkey who should have traded Carson Palmer for a few draft picks and some real football players. Trouble is, Brown’s ego is more important than the welfare of his team. He could be one of the most incompetent dickwads in football history.

RCSB: Do you have a favorite player?

Danny Woodhead 1 300x244 A Visit With Blitznak the Magnificent

Danny Woodhead. He plays like his name.

B the M: Well, I shouldn’t, because I know all and when you know all, you know that your favorite player will one day Tweet a picture of his junk to a high school girl in Ottumwa, Iowa, and then all of your dreams will be shot to hell. But there is a player I like more than most. Danny Woodhead in New England is a riot to watch. He’s four-feet freakin’ tall, built like a porcupine and just as hard to tackle. He rushed for 611 yards last year playing second violin to Benjarvus Green-Ellis (the best name in the NFL next to Ndamukong Suh) and this year he’ll get a chance at running back and in probably some kind of H-Back set that Belichick will dream up on his walk from the locker room to the practice field. I love Danny Woodhead. I think his name is indicative of the way he plays.

RCSB: Can the Packers repeat?

B the M: Yes they can. But will they? That’s a more difficult question, Chubby. It’s extremely difficult to go back-to-back these days. When you have Aaron Rodgers at quarterback, A.J. Hawk at linebacker and Clay Matthews anywhere within 15 miles of a football field, you have a chance to win. The Packers are very good and in January, we’ll find out if they are better than the Eagles. And by the way, I live in Minnesota. It pains me to think that the Packers might win two Super Bowls in a row.

RCSB: Can anybody beat the Patriots and Eagles this year?

B the M: Sure. But will they lose very often? Not unless Bill Belichick and Andy Reid, both on the verge of pure unadulterated insanity, go completely bonkers. New England has everything plus Tom Brady. The Eagles have everything else. If it’s not a Patriots-Eagles Super Bowl, then the Jets and Saints or Packers will have played over their heads. That’s 10 questions. Now go away. Thelma wants to play the slots. Coming, dear.

It’s a Sports Renaissance in the ‘Peg.

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Donovan McNabb at Mankato, Minn.

MINNEAPOLIS — Every day I’m in the Twin Cities, sports people come up and ask me why I’m in Minnesota watching football and baseball. I tell then that my readership at www.fantrax.com demands inside knowledge of Major League Baseball and the National Football League, therefore, I’ve spent a long weekend in Minneapolis and Mankato, taking a first hand look at the Vikings, Twins and Chicago White Sox.

However, I have to admit, I understand their questions. With the return of the Winnipeg Jets, folks down here immediately assume that the only thing anyone is talking about in Winnipeg is the National Hockey League. I tell them it’s certainly at the top of every conversation, but there are still plenty of NFL, MLB, NBA and UFC fans in the ‘Peg and because I write far too many on-line columns that can be read all over the world, holding myself to the NHL in August is a tad narrow.

Of course, it is more difficult to leave Winnipeg, even for a weekend of MLB and NFL. It’s something that few people outside of Winnipeg think about: Winnipeg is in the midst of a Sports Renaissance (if you ask Mayor Sam Katz, the city is in a renaissance in a lot of other ways, as well, so check out http://www.newentertainment.ca/newmagazine/home.html and read my piece on what the mayor has brought to the ‘Peg).

As an example, when Winnipeg sports fans woke up on Saturday they had a professional football team in first place and a professional baseball team in first place.

The Bombers had just beaten the Edmonton Eskimos 28-16 thanks to a courageous effort by Buck Pierce and a defense that is as good as anything I’ve seen in Winnipeg since 1993. Even without Doug Brown, the Bombers shut down the heretofore best offence in the CFL and came back from an 11-1 first quarter deficit to outscore Edmonton 27-5 in the final three quarters. At 5-1, the Bombers are first in the East and tied with Edmonton for the best record overall.

andrew ace walker 200x300 Its a Sports Renaissance in the Peg.

Ace Walker

But that wasn’t the only big win on Friday night. Here in St. Paul, Minn., the Winnipeg Goldeyes came back from a 5-3 deficit by scoring three runs in the top of the seventh. After that its bullpen — Ian Thomas, Aaron Hartsock and Jamie Vermilyea — shut the St. Paul Saints right down en route to a 6-5 victory. With the win, the Goldeyes improved to 45-32 and pulled a full game ahead of second-place St. Paul in the race for first in the American Association’s North Division.

For the first time since 2001, the Bombers and Goldeyes are in first place at the same time. For the first time in history they’re both in first place while the Winnipeg Jets wait to start a new season.

I was over at River City Sports last Wednesday and had a nice chat with the young guys working on the sales floor. They knew that Jets gear would be popular, but even they were blown away by the rate at which the hats, T-shirts and memorabilia were flying off the shelves. There is no question that the Jets are the hottest thing to hit Winnipeg since the advent of indoor plumbing.

However, the return of the Jets has also coincided with two other professional success stories, the start of the Prairie Junior Football Conference season, the incredible improvement in the level of play in the Manitoba Junior Hockey League, top-notch university sports, the return of the Canadian Fighting Championship in September and more local amateur success than Winnipeg has had in decades.

There is a Sports Renaissance going on in this town and it just might last a while. All you have do is go to the games — or try to go to the games — to see what’s happening. After all, it’s hard to get a ticket to a Bomber game and the Goldeyes are drawing a younger crowd than they have in years. The city’s sports scene is exciting.

And to think, the Jets haven’t even played a game yet.

More Moves, More Winners and Losers.

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Vince Young

The National Football League’s training camps will open this weekend, but in the meantime the big moves just keep on coming:

1) Quarterback Vince Young, released by the Tennessee Titans yesterday, has been signed by the Philadelphia Eagles as Michael Vick’s backup. WINNER: The Eagles have had a great free-agent week. Young might be odd, but he can play and in the right circumstance, he can be a big help.

2) Chad Ochocinco is on his way from the Cincinnati Bengals to the New England Patriots. The Bengals will receive a pair of draft picks in return. Ochocinco will be great in New England. WINNER: The Pats. They always win with reclamation projects. Ochocinco will be outstanding in New England and QB Tom Brady has already formally welcomed his new target.

3) With Donovan McNabb now in Minnesota, punter Chris Kluwe announced this morning on K-FAN in the Twin Cities that he will wear No. 4 this season while McNabb gets No. 5. Didn’t some other old quarterback wear No. 4 last year? Can’t remember. WINNER: The Vikings. If McNabb is happy, the Vikings will be happy. And who gives a rat’s ass about the punter anyway?

drc More Moves, More Winners and Losers.

dominique rodgers-cromartie

4) The deal was done quicker than we thought. The Philadelphia Eagles traded quarterback Kevin Kolb to the Arizona Cardinals in exchange for cornerback Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie. A great trade for the Eagles. WINNER: The Eagles. Again. Rodgers-Cromartie is a dominant corner who will make the Eagles defensive immediately better. Kevin Kolb isn’t as good as the NFL’s fawning media experts made him out to be and he also lost his job to Vick. He wasn’t going to play in Philly. In fact, the Eagles are a lot better off with Vince Young.

5) The Carolina Panthers, who already signed linebacker Charles Johnson and runningback DeAngelo Williams made a deal yesterday to acquire tight end Greg Olsen from the Chicago Bears, signed linebacker Joe Beason tyo a five-year, $50 million extension and are now just hours away from signing rookie quarterback Cam Newton. WINNER: The Panthers. Because on Friday, they were last in the NFC South. Today, they could be third and with a quarterback, they could challenge.

Minnesota Vikings training camp opens on Tuesday. We will be there live next weekend.

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LATE FRIDAY ADDITIONS

1) Minnesota free agent defensive end, Ray Edwards, has signed a free agent deal with the Atlanta Falcons. WINNER: Falcons, for obvious reasons.

2) After his release from Dallas wideout Roy Williams has found a home in Mike Martz’s offence in Chicago. WINNER: Chicago. Martz will find a way to use this guy to help make Jay Cutler a better quarterback.

3) Safety and kick returner, Danieal Manning has agreed to a four-year $20 million with the Houston Texans. WINNER: Houston. Manning gives the Texans a double-barrelled shot of speed.

4) Cornerback Eric Wright tweeted on Friday that he’s going to the Detroit Lions. WINNER: The Lions only because it’s another experienced body on a team that Ndamukong Suh says is going 16-0 this season.

5) Big name players who were cut on Friday: Jets — QB Mark Brunell; Steelers — T Flozell Adams; Jaguars — G Vince Manuwai; Falcons — DL Jamaal Anderson, WR Michael Jenkins, RB Jerious Norwood; 49ers — K Joe Nedney.

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A QUICK WORD ABOUT THE BOMBERS…

Winnipeg now has a football team capable of winning the Grey Cup. As the ghosts have long said, “Offense draws crowds, defense wins championships.”

Thursday night, backup quarterback Alex Brink came off the bench in the fourth quarter, after an injury to starter Buck Pierce, and made a great run to set up a game winning touchdown pass to Terrence Edwards as the Blue Bombers beat the B.C. Lions 25-20 in front of more than 29,000 at Canad Inns Stadium last night. The Bombers trailed 13-6 at halftime and Pierce, who left the game with what’s being called a calf strain, got the home side going early in the second half with an 82-yard touchdown pass to Clarence Denmark on the first play of the third quarter.

On an emotional night honouring assistant coach Richard Harris who died of a heart attack on Tuesday, the Bombers defense was outstanding once again as Winnipeg improved to 4-1 on the season and matched their win total from all of last year. The Lions fell to 0-5.  The Bombers D is now No. 1 in every major statistical category in the CFL.

This D makes me think of Tyrone Jones, James West, Greg Battle, Paul Randolph, Rod Hill and Michael Gray. It’s good enough to win it all, no matter who plays quarterback.

More NFL Moves Make Winners of Minnesota, Miami and the Pats.

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Donovan McNabb

Isn’t this fun? The National Football League is back at work and it is blowing up.

As we told you yesterday, the Minnesota Vikings acquired Donovan McNabb from the Washington Redskins, as long as McNabb rewrites his contract. McNabb is slated to be paid $12.5 million this season and the Vikings won’t pay that. McNabb wants to go to Minnesota badly enough that he’ll re-work the deal. WINNER: The Vikings. They needed a veteran to mentor Christian Ponder and also give them some stability at the most important position on the field. Outstanding move.

The Carolina Panthers will pay runningback DeAngelo Williams $43 million over five years to stay in Charlotte. He’ll get $21 million guaranteed. WINNER: Carolina gets one of the most dynamic backs in the league back in the fold.

It appears the Miami Dolphins will make a deal with Denver to sign quarterback Kyle Orton. WINNER: Denver. Addition by deletion.

The Washington Redskins have completed a trade with the Denver Broncos, acquiring wide receiver Jabar Gaffney for defensive end Jeremy Jarmon. WINNER: Both teams got what they needed.

The San Diego Chargers made Eric Weddle the highest paid safety in history, giving him a five-year $40 million deal – that includes a $13 million signing bonus and $19 million guaranteed. WINNER: Eric Weddle.

The Philadelphia Eagles will deal quarterback Kevin Kolb to the Arizona Cardinals in a trade slated to go through tomorrow. WINNER: The Eagles rid themselves of a guy who won’t play and the Cardinals will try with another new quarterback.

Sidney Rice picture 236x300 More NFL Moves Make Winners of Minnesota, Miami and the Pats.

Sidney Rice

The Seattle Seahawks acquired Minnesota Vikings free-agent wide receiver Sidney Rice, a five-year deal worth $44 million. WINNER: Seattle. The guy runs great patterns and makes up for a lack of speed with great hands.

The Washington Redskins have traded defensive lineman Albert Haynesworth to the New England Patriots for a fifth-round draft pick. WINNER: New England. Nobody is better at reclamation projects than Bill Belichick and with Hayesworth and Vince Willfork in the middle, the Patriots could be formidable.

And the New Orleans Saints worked out terms of a trade that will send RB Reggie Bush to the Miami Dolphins, contingent on him agreeing to a new contract. WINNER: Miami. Reggie can still play – and make big plays.

Be back later with more…

The NFL is Back. Now It’s Fun.

LAS VEGAS — Here in the desert, you could hear the reaction. From the Sports and Race Book at the Wynn to the Sports Book at the Mirage, punters (a) breathed a sigh of relief and (b) grabbed the brand new futures sheets as the National Football League went back to work.

It has been extremely interesting here in Vegas as the big bettors try to figure out which player is going what team and which team will improve dramatically over 2010. In fact, there is an excitement about the NFL right now that I don’t believe the NFL thought would exist after a 4 1/2-month lockout. People are so into this free-agent frenzy that when the following happened over the last few days, there were actually cheers in the Mirage Book.

1) The Carolina Panthers signed linebacker Charles Johnson to a six-year $72 million deal.

2) The Baltimore Ravens signed offensive lineman Marshal Yanda to a five-year, $32 million contract. Yes, somebody actually cheered when he heard an offensive lineman had signed. That’s excited.

3) Wide receiver Santana Moss signed a three-year $15 million deal with the Washington Redskins.

4) The New York Jets signed WR Santonio Holmes to a five-year $48 million deal with $24 million guaranteed.

5) The Washington Redskins signed defensive lineman Barry Cofield away from the New York Giants. It’s a six-year $36 million deal with $12.5 million guaranteed.

Meanwhile, the Minnesota Vikings agreed to a trade that would give them veteran quarterback Donovan McNabb as long as McNabb reworks a contract that is set to pay him $12.5 million this season. The Vikings won’t pay that, but McNabb wants to be moved to Minnesota badly enough that he’ll take a new deal.

At the same time, the Vikings are now in a bidding war with the Seattle Seahawks to sign wide receiver Sidney Rice. The Seahawks have signed former Vikings quarterback Tarvaris Jackson, which means Matt Hasselbeck is out (he eventually signed with Tennessee)  and there was more talk yesterday about Brett Favre coming out of retirement to play in Philadelphia. Favre, apparently, laughed.

Regardless, the fun is upon us and teams are getting better as we speak. Right now, the Vikings, Jets and Redskins can all call themeslves winners.

We’ll be back later with more.