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NFL DRAFT TIMELINES:

2007: Brady Quinn goes into lockdown.

2006: Reggie becomes New Orleans' favorite Bush.

2005: Funny nicknames and falling QBs.

2004: The Great Manning controversy.

2003: The Bengals remain on the clock.
2002: David Carr's biomechanics are questioned.
2001: Ryan Leaf makes Michael Vick a Falcon.
2000: Janikowski, baby.
1999: The Saints give it all for Ricky. Even funnier in retrospect, eh?



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A Shot Falls In Raider Nation

Newly signed Oakland Raiders wide receiver Javon Walker was found in Las Vegas unconscious, after apparently getting knocked out during a robbery. Vegas police are looking for suspects, but have already ruled out the Raiders quarterbacking staff, because they haven't been able to hit an open receiver in years.

Ba-DUM-bum.

Anyway, good luck with finding who robbed Walker. It's probably the same guy who shot Tupac back in 1996, judging from the wonderful job they've done finding him.

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Running With The Pacman

Well, it's been a week now and Pacman Jones has practiced with the Dallas Cowboys, picked off a couple of passes from a third-string quarterback, and hasn't gotten arrested yet.

You know, when not getting arrested is news, you might have a problem. When you start seeing headlines like "Pacman's Trip To Strip Club Ends In Arousal, No Arrests," you know the weekend status quo has come to regulary involve the police.

Ranger Rogered

The Major League Baseball draft was today, and the Texas Rangers passed on their glaring, decades-old pitching deficiency once again. Even though it's difficult to remember a Rangers pitcher that was a household name for any reason other than being a Medic-Alert spokesman, Texas decided to go instead with a fielder.

Texas drafted Justin Smoak, a switch-hitting first baseman that experts compare to Mark Teixeira. Perhaps they should just set their sites a bit lower and look for a guy that is similar to Teixeira, but not quite as good. Tex stayed in Arlington just long enough to get his value up and become the face of the franchise, then Texas couldn't pay him and had to trade him for a catcher and a bag of dirt.

Maybe if he had tweaked a hamstring somewhere along the way, he'd still be living in the Lone Star state.

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Dodgin' The Draft '08

Saturday, 7:30 a.m. - - A predraft catastrophe occurs when the hair of Mel Kiper, Draft Expert is damaged in transit. Luckily, a strike team consisting of a stylist, a makeup artist, and an arc welder are on hand to avert the tragedy.

2:00 p.m. - ESPN's official coverage of the draft begins, as opposed to the unofficial coverage they've been immersed in for the last two weeks.

2:01 p.m. - NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell welcomes us all to the the NFL Draft, telling everyone that the new "streamlined" format of the draft will make things go quicker. That's a good thing, since last year's draft finished during the halftime show of Super Bowl XLII.

2:02 p.m. - Goodell launches right in, announcing the Dolphins pick of Jake Long as the number one pick. To show his approval, Miami's Bill Parcells smiles so briefly, it can only be seen in HD.

2:10 p.m. - ESPN analyst Steve Young says the St. Louis Rams lack heart, and says that Jerry Rice brought heart to his 49ers teams of the 90's. Young has now officially crossed the line from thoughtful analyst to the bitter, doddering old "back in my day" guy. He then calls Chris Long "Chris Young," tells a rambling story about George Seifert's driving, and leaves to go take a nap.

2:12 p.m. - The Rams select Chris Long, son of Howie Long.

2:13 p.m. - The Raiders attempt to select Howie Long, father of Chris Long. Raiders owner Al Davis justifies the decision by saying Howie would "look good in black and silver."

2:14 p.m. - A cutaway shot of Chris Long shows him being interviewed by the NFL Network's Deion Sanders. This serves the twofold purpose of
a) reminding football fans everywhere that the NFL Network is also providing draft day coverage, and
b) reminding football fans that they don't want to watch it, because Deion Sanders is on it.

2:16 p.m. - A video recap of the past year for the Atlanta Falcons airs, leading Falcons fans to weep like they've just watched a double bill of "Steel Magnolias" and "Terms of Endearment."

2:18 p.m. - ESPN provides a close up of analyst Keyshawn Johnson, who is wearing a pinstriped suit, plaid shirt, and pink polka dotted tie. ESPN HD viewers everywhere throw up.

2:19 p.m. - The Falcons select quarterback Matt Ryan. Somewhere, Michael Vick's cellmate offers to cheer him up by shanking a prison guard for him.

2:27 p.m. - ESPN analysts discuss running back Darren McFadden's past, including character concerns, nightclub altercations, and paternity suit problems.

2:28 p.m. - Raiders owner Al Davis responds, "You had me at character concerns," and drafts McFadden.

2:35 p.m. - ESPN analyst Wendy Nix in Kansas City announces the Chiefs want to trade their pick, and will take the entire ten minutes before selecting a player.

2:36 p.m. - The Chiefs, who clearly weren't listening, draft Glenn Dorsey less than sixty seconds after Nix makes her report.

2:37 p.m. - Steve Young talks about Dorsey's "heart," then slips away to drink a cup of hot tea with this month's Reader's Digest.

2:44 p.m. - With the Jets on the clock, New York fans in attendance boo. No reason, just warming up.

2:46 p.m. - The Jets take defensive end Vernon Gholston, and Jets fans break out in hearty cheers that last nearly a minute, until they notice New England has the next pick and start booing again.

2:50 p.m. - ESPN has to use on-screen graphics to explain how last year, the New England Patriots somehow wound up trading draft picks for Randy Moss and losing their first round draft pick for cheating, yet somehow still wound up almost undefeated and have the seventh overall pick.

2:52 p.m. - The Patriots make another monster trade, sending their pick to New Orleans. In exchange, evil genius Bill Belichick gets the Saints next pick, a pick next year, and Harry Connick Junior.

2:57 p.m. - A flurry of trade fever breaks out, as the Jaguars trade up to get defensive end Derrick Harvey. Baltimore swaps with them in exchange for four draft picks, Keyshawn Johnson's polka dot tie, and a top secret ABC memo that explains what's happening on "Lost."

3:08 p.m. - Cincinnati goes on the clock, and selects linebacker Keith Rivers. Analyst Ron Jaworski says he's a player that can "blow up the running back," which is one of the few crimes that haven't yet been associated with the Bengals.

3:16 p.m. - An onscreen graphic shows the Buffalo Bills were 30th in the league in offense, and 31st in defense. The Bills top secret draft folder holds a single piece of paper that says "Draft Needs: Everything."

3:37 p.m. - The Chicago Bears select offensive lineman Chris Williams in an attempt to keep their stable of awful quarterbacks conscious.

3:43 p.m. - With their first round pick, the Detroit Lions draft a wide receiver. Ha-HA! Just kidding. The Lions break with tradition, and just trade the pick rather than screw it up.

3:50 p.m. - An on-screen graphic indicates Arizona's 8-8 finish last year was their best season since 1998, thus reminding Cardinal fans their team has completed their decade-long march back to mediocrity.

3:55 p.m. - The Cardinals draft Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie, a player who sounds like a top choice in the WNBA.

4:04 p.m. - The Ravens draft quarterback Joe Flacco, who Mel Kiper, Draft Expert refers to as "an athlete." Detroit Lions general manager Matt Millen sends an assistant to research whether that's important or not.

4:30 p.m. - The Dallas Cowboys go on the clock. ESPN mentions that the Cowboys trade for frequently arrested cornerback Pacman Jones is complete, thus simultaneously exciting fans and terrifying strippers all over the Dallas area.

4:39 p.m. - With the loss of running back Julius Jones, the Cowboys elect to replace him. After considering Davey Jones, Jesus Jones, Quincy Jones, and Blackbelt Jones, Dallas settles on Felix Jones.

5:10 p.m. - The Texans make their pick, which they obtained from Baltimore, who got it from Jacksonville, who won it on "Deal or No Deal."

5:35 p.m. - The first round ends with the perfect storm of NFL fanship, as the New York Jets and Giants have back-to-back picks. When the crowd realizes New York gets the final two selections because the Patriots forfeited their pick for cheating, the fans begin what can be described as the world's most overweight, alcoholic victory dance.



Previous NFL Draft Timelines:
2007: Brady Quinn goes into lockdown.
2006: Reggie becomes New Orleans' favorite Bush.
2005: Funny nicknames and falling QBs.
2004: The Great Manning controversy.
2003: The Bengals remain on the clock.
2002: David Carr's biomechanics are questioned.
2001: Ryan Leaf makes Michael Vick a Falcon.
2000: Janikowski, baby.
1999: The Saints give it all for Ricky. Even funnier in retrospect, eh?

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Gumbelicious

According to a headline on ESPN, Bryant Gumbel will no longer do play-by-play for the NFL Network.

First thought: Good Lord, was that what he was doing?

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Pacman Fever

The trade of strip club legend and alleged football player Pacman Jones has
hit a snag, sources said. The Cowboys have offered Tennessee Frogger Johnson and a draft pick. The Titans are holding out for a higher pick and the rights to Dig-Dug Jackson.

More details as events warrant.

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Brian Griese To Bucs For Undisclosed Reason

Good Lord, how many bad QBs does Tampa Bay need? The Bucs traded for Brian Greise, giving them roughly thirty-one quarterbacks under contract.

Generally speaking, if the Bears give up on a quarterback, there's not much talent left there. Picking up a signal caller from Chicago is like picking an accountant out of the Thrifty Nickel. The best you can hope for is that he'll only take your money without doing you serious harm.

Even worse, Greise spent time with Miami. Post-Dan Marino, Dolphin quarterbacks have a track record like Robert Downey, Jr.

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Eli's Coming: The Super Bowl XVII Timeline


Our official Super Bowl XLII Timeline:

Sunday, January 27, 5:30pm - The New England Patriots defeat the San Diego Chargers to advance to the Super Bowl, and continue their undefeated season. Bookies make the Patriots fourteen-point favorites to win the Super Bowl.

8:30pm - The New York Giants defeat Green Bay in overtime, earning the NFC Championship as a Wild Card team. Oddsmakers adjust, making the Patriots six-hundred-point favorites to win the Super Bowl.

Tuesday, January 29 - Patriots quarterback Tom Brady is seen in New York, visiting his supermodel girlfriend, Gisele Bundchen. On the way, he stops and buys a winning lottery ticket, finds a rare coin in his pocket, and strikes oil in her front yard.

Friday, February 1 - Patriots coach Bill Belichick stops off at Fotomat to pick up his pictures, then by force of habit takes the photos of six other people home with him.

Saturday, February 2 - Mercury Morris, member of the undefeated 1972 Miami Dolphins team, admits he's rooting for the Giants. He also admits he'd like a shot at Bundchen, if that doesn't work out for Brady.

Sunday, February 3, 5:00pm - The Super Bowl coverage begins, live from University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale, Arizona. The irony here is that the University of Phoenix doesn't even have a football team, and yet they can get closer to a Super Bowl than the Arizona Cardinals.

5:10pm - The Giants take the field, accompanied by a video package entitled "Resiliency."

5:15pm - The Patriots take the field, accompanied by a video package entitled "The Importance of Beating The Point Spread."

5:18pm - American Idol winner Jordin Sparks lip-synchs the heck out of the national anthem.

5:25pm - In a surprise standout defensive performance, the Giants keep the Patriots from scoring during the opening coin flip.

5:30pm - The game officially begins, brought to you by beer, trucks, and commercials containing the only new writing on television in the last six months.

5:44pm - The Giants score a field goal on their opening possession. We celebrate with a Diet Pepsi Max commercial based on a twelve year-old Saturday Night Live skit. Forget what I just said about new writing for the commercials.

6:02pm - Lawrence Maroney scores, giving the Patriots the lead. Fans everywhere assume we're seeing the start of an onslaught of points. Unfortunately, they also assume the new season of "Lost" will clear everything up.

6:08pm - In a marketing tie-in, Tom Brady appears on American Idol, where he brings Simon to tears with a perfect rendition of "I Will Always Love You."

6:10pm - The Giants get a big catch from Amani Toomer, a receiver whose name sounds like a well-dressed polyp.

6:11pm - The Giants get a delay of game penalty. In a commercial, Peyton Manning yells at his brother Eli.

6:13pm - The Patriots go three-and-out, and have to call a time-out to see if they remembered to pack a punter.

6:54pm - Halftime, Patriots lead 7-3. Anyone who bet the "under" is very happy.

7:01pm - The Fox halftime hosts tell us to go to our computers and vote on whether or not we think the Patriots are the greatest dynasty ever. Considering the outcome of the game is still very much in doubt, that seems a bit premature. That's like asking if that's the best burger you've ever eaten while you're still sitting in the drive-through lane.

7:05pm - The halftime show begins, with Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers performing. They lead with "American Girl," from their 1976 debut album. It's always good to open a show at a sporting event with a song so old, some of the players might have been conceived to it.

7:06pm - Bill Belichick sends an assistant coach to videotape Tom Petty's performance, just in case.

7:25pm - The second half begins, brought to you by punters, animated bugs, and killer robots from the future.

7:35pm - Belichick challenges a call, saying the Giants had twelve men on the field. For further evidence, he shows the refs the footage shot by his hidden cameraman.

8:01pm - The third quarter ends with no score, leaving us with either the tightest, most thrilling Super Bowl ever, or a game with less offense than France in a major conflict.

8:04pm - Fittingly, the fourth quarter begins with a punt. In a commercial, a Terminator unit from the future informs Sarah Conner that this Super Bowl is the beginning of the end.

8:08pm - A camera shot shows injured tight end Jeremy Shockey in the crowd, watching his Giants and drinking beer. This leads to the question "If you're on the team and injured, how big of a jackass do you have to be to not even be invited onto the field?"

8:11pm - The Giants throw a touchdown pass, breaking what feels like a week and a half drought since our last points. Our long national nightmare is over.

8:12pm - Somewhere in a darkened nightclub, Pacman Jones celebrates by punching a stripper in the face.

8:23pm - An on-screen graphic indicates both quarterbacks have a QB rating of right around 77. That's always something you want in the biggest game of the year, two guys running right about room temperature.

8:39pm - Brady hits Randy Moss for the go-ahead touchdown, reminding us all that "Hey, Randy Moss plays for the Patriots!"

8:56pm - Eli Manning throws a touchdown pass to give the Giants the lead. Brother Peyton pumps his fist, and promises to honor his brother in yet another series of television commercials.
9:03pm - A final heave for the Patriots is tipped away, and the Giants win 17-14. Bill Belichick leaves the field with one second remaining on the clock. The perfect season is broken, and somewhere, Miami Dolphins fans are happy for the first time in more than twenty years.

Previous Super Bowl Timelines:
Manning Up: Super Bowl XLI (2007, Colts vs. Bears)
Pitt Crew: Super Bowl XL (2006, Steelers vs. Seahawks)
Growing Up Brady: Super Bowl XXXIX (2005, Patriots vs. Eagles)
Patriot Games: Super Bowl XXXVIII (2004, Patriots vs. Panthers)
Jolly Rogered: Super Bowl XXXVII (2003, Buccaneers vs. Raiders)
Lack Of Ram: Super Bowl XXXVI (2002, Patriots vs. Rams)
Nevermore: Super Bowl XXXV (2001, Ravens vs. Giants)

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LT Time

Alleged NFL Analyst Deion Sanders has questioned the toughness of Chargers star LaDanian Tomlinson, saying LT didn't meet his expectations and his injury would have to warrant surgery to "get a pass" on this one.

Well, the football gods have spoken. Deion Sanders questioning someone's toughness is like Magic Johnson questioning someone's grasp of the English language. You just have to listen, because it's the funniest thing you've heard since the glory days of Mike Tyson press conferences.

Hey, remember the time that Deion Sanders made a tackle? I remember that day.

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Joakim On Sunshine

The Chicago Bulls have benched rookie Joakim Noah. Not the Bulls management, the actual team has benched him.

By a unanimous vote, the players suspended Noah for a second game after he got involved in a throwdown with a Bulls assistant coach.

Well, at 14-21 the Bulls might think it through before offering a night off in exchange for bad behavior. If their season gets any worse, Noah might show his remorse by sticking up a liquor store.

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The Falcon In Winter

Falcons cornerback DeAngelo Hall said he and other Falcons plan to visit dogfighting quarterback and felon Michael Vick in prison in January. Say what you want about Atlanta, but at least when you play for the Falcons you know your teammates will visit you in jail.

And that you will always have your January free for travel and vacation.

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ESPN - Source: NFL tells ref actions against Barnett 'over the line' - NFL

Green Bay linebacker Nick Barnett will file a grievance against NFL official Jim Quirk for wrestling him to the ground during a skirmish in the Bears game last Sunday.



Good idea. While you're at it, why don't you sue NFL Films for the footage of the takedown, so you're not immortalized to future generation as "the linebacker who got taken down by a grandpa?"

Or worse, the first victim on "Don Zimmer's Smackdown."

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Pirate Booty

The Oakland Raiders are writing off this season, just like last season, and the season before that, and the season before that, etcetera. THey've announced that their top pick JaMarcus Russell will start at quarterback this week against San Diego.

Man, nothing says "must see TV" like Oakland starting a rookie with a 24 QB rating against a playoff team that hates them.

Say what you want about the Oakland Raiders, but they do lead the league in quarterbacks who can throw a three interception game at a moment's notice. At least when Josh McCown is in there, they can run more than four different plays. With Culpepper back there, figuring out their offensive gameplan was about as complicated as Tecmo Bowl.

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The Lesser Simpson: Addendum

Just to complete my thought earlier about not know why Jessica Simpson was famous, the numbers are bearing me out, here. Her new movie opened at eight Texas locations on Friday, and pulled in a whopping $48 bucks a theatre.

Forty-eight dollars. In her home state. With Luke Wilson as the male lead.

Start the countdown to the Playboy shoot.

 

HEADLINES:
Detroit Lions Sue Charles Rogers For Impersonating An NFL Player
Aquaman Indicted For Role In Dogfish-Fighting Ring
Immigration Reform Bill Derails NFL Europe
Alex Rodriguez Plans To Leave New York, Purchase Canada
Daunte Culpepper Drops Daunte Culpepper From His Fantasy Team
NCAA To Investigate Claims Reggie Bush Given House, Car, Ambassadorship

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SUPER BOWL
TIMELINES
:
Super Bowl 40
(Steelers vs Seahawks)
Super Bowl 39
(Pats vs Eagles)
Super Bowl 38
(Pats vs Panthers)
Super Bowl 37
(Bucs vs Raiders)
Super Bowl 36
(Pats vs Rams)
Super Bowl 35
(Ravens vs Giants)
 

The Fistful of Sports Web Site is a forum for open discussion on the world of sports, pop culture, and society in general. The opinions expressed on this web site are those of the authors of the respective pieces. As with all humorous writing, please take this site with a grain of salt, and remember to play nice with others. The Fistful is always looking for contributors. For more information, send an email to Reid Kerr. All rights reserved. The Fistful of Sports web site and column are owned and operated by Reid Kerr.