Reasons I will not miss Jay Cutler:

1. Here he is reaching out to Troubled Human Plaxico Burress after the Bears’ GM had already said the team had no interest in signing him. I’m sure Angelo was shocked that Cutler would do something to undermine his front office. Raise your hand if you saw this coming…

2. Here he is at Cubs games, irritating fans by refusing to sign autographs. I think that’s what most agents recommend when a player wants to rehabilitate his image. Raise your hand if… oh, nevermind.

As Dr. Z used to say in his online Sports Illustrated column, grading teams on the draft immediately after the draft concludes is among the dumbest trends in sports journalism. Except for the very few players that make strong contributions in their rookie years, it’ll be at least a couple of years before we have any idea how to judge what happened this weekend.

That said, the Broncos drafted a guy named Ayers and an Iowa Hawkeye, so it must’ve gone pretty well.

I don’t have any problem with Knowshon Moreno as their first pick; I imagine it’s hard for an offensive-minded coach to go into training camp with big questions remaining at both quarterback AND runningback. And Ayers is supposed to be the most versatile defensive player coming out of college this year. And between Alphonso Smith, Darcel McBath, and David Bruton, hopefully they’ve started to plan for the day when their aging defensive backfield falls apart.

But what were they doing trading up to get a blocking TE at the end of round 2? And how do you get through the entire draft without taking a defensive tackle? Who is going to play nose tackle in this new defense?

My brother Zeke had his “Powerless Rankings” site over at Blogspot, and has now re-upped over here at WordPress. If you like football, read it. I don’t know anybody who knows more about current personnel in the League. And the new blog’s much more attractive than the old, I must say.

Anyhow, he’s got his Powerless Mock Draft over there. Since the draft starts tomorrow, you should go check it out.

Apparently, Roger Goodell didn’t read his calendar very carefully when putting together the 2009 NFL schedule. From the AP:

The New York Jets, upset about being scheduled for home games on consecutive Sundays in direct conflict with Jewish holidays, sent NFL commissioner Roger Goodell a letter Thursday asking that one of the game times be changed.

Given the percentage of Americans who identify as Christian, I would understand if a lot of NFL fans who don’t live in the northeast finding this complaint a little strange, given that NFL and NBA games are played on Christmas, to say nothing of the longstanding tradition of NFL Thanksgiving Day games and NCAA football on New Year’s. Of course, that’s because those games don’t interrupt Christian traditions: though fans might glance at their watches during church to see if they’ll get home for the 1:00 EST games every Sunday, the traditional starting time seems deliberately set to allow people time to return from church.

That is completely different from Yom Kippur, the Jewish day of atonement. If the NFL were played in the spring, and they scheduled a game on Ash Wednesday or Holy Thursday… Well, they wouldn’t, of course. Because somebody in the room would say, Hey wait. That’s Ash Wednesday.

Just sloppy on the part of the NFL. This should be easily remedied by making it an extra Thursday game, or Monday, or something. That will piss CBS off, no doubt, but the NFL needs to make this right.

Jay Cutler goes to Chicago, a team with no good wide receivers, a rebuilt offensive line, and a local media who won’t protect a whiny quarterback just because he has a huge throwing arm.

Denver gets Kyle Orton, who is reportedly an accurate thrower, and a team leader who has won the respect of his team by playing hurt. And they get two first round pics, and a third.

Is there any doubt who got the better end of this deal?

Here’s what I learned this week:

(more…)

was the Denver Broncos’ 2009 playoff hopes ending. If Josh McDaniels is really a genius with young signal callers, now would be an excellent time to prove it.

In the meantime, anybody want a moody quarterback?

Zeke alerted me to the news and wants him in Minnesota. They don’t appear to be on the list of interested teams. The problem now is this: he’s a whiner, possibly a headcase, with a strong arm and exactly zero-point-double-zero playoff wins. This does not help the Broncos’ bargaining position.

The whole situation does prove, however, that while Jake Plummer might not have been the Broncos’ most talented quarterback, he was perhaps the most prescient. Before McDaniels was hired, before the trade talks with Tampa Bay and New England, before the pleas for face-to-face meetings and the ignored text messages, Plummer nailed it: Jay Cutler = Jeff George.

Brady Quinn would look pretty damn good in blue and orange, don’t you think?

Jay Cutler's successor?

Jay Cutler's successor?

If you want a quick lesson in how to go from looking like the person wronged to looking like the person in the wrong, look no further than Denver QB Jay Cutler.

Yes, Jay, the Broncos’ front office messed up when they listened to Tampa Bay’s trade offer. Yes, by all appearances, you are better than Matt Cassel. I, personally, think they were nuts to consider trading you. You have every right to react to this news by expressing your shock and disappointment to the Denver media.

But in order to continue looking like the good guy in a bad situation, rather than a whiny 25-year old kid, you can’t say “No” when the coaching staff then tries to meet with you. You go in, let them apologize, and then the heat stays on the young coach who almost traded away his star quarterback.

I was as pissed as anyone when I read that they even thought about trying to bring in Matt Cassel and send Cutler packing. Yeah, I get why McDaniels would want to bring somebody in who already knows the offensive terminology, and wouldn’t need a year to adjust. But Cutler can put up big numbers, and has the arm, mobility, and football intelligence needed to win Super Bowls.

The longer Cutler pouts about this, though, the worse he looks. Cutler is their quarterback, and they can trade him if they want. He needs somebody close to him to tell him to get in there, talk things out, and move on, so that Denver can get on with their free-agent spree.

Brian Dawkins/Photo courtesy of Eric Mencher, accessed at Philly.com

Brian Dawkins/Photo courtesy of Eric Mencher, accessed at Philly.com

As impressed as I was that the new coaching and management staff of the Denver Broncos were willing to cut half the players from a lousy defense, I did wonder to myself, who are we going to get to replace these guys?

It didn’t take long to get my answer. Not forty hours into free agency, Denver has added Andra Davis (LB, Browns), Correll Buckhalter (RB, Eagles), J. J. Arrington (RB, Cardinals), Jabar Gaffney (WR, Patriots), and Renaldo Hill (S, Dolphins). And now, the best of the lot: according to PFT, Brian Dawkins, Philadelphia’s longtime pro-bowl safety, just signed a five-year deal with the Broncos, while fans back in Philly gnash their teeth and rend their garments.

It’s hard to judge some of these moves. Buckhalter and Arrington haven’t been every-down backs, but with a different offense to be installed by McDaniels and company, maybe that’s not what Denver needs anymore. But they’re making moves, and on paper at least, the defense is already better than it was two months ago.

I hate to say it, but this was certainly not among the greatest Super Bowls, despite what the NBC crew would have us believe after the game. Way too many penalties, too many mistakes by both teams, and an Arizona team that barely showed up in the second half. The last ten minutes were very exciting, but even that was tainted by the final Arizona play, which was called a fumble but should’ve been overturned. Brutally poor officiating.

I’d be surprised if the majority of viewers wasn’t disappointed in the result. The Cardinals–coming from behind, erasing the biggest deficit in Super Bowl history, Fitzgerald racing down the field between both Pittsburgh safeties with a couple of minutes left–were very easy to root for, and it didn’t take long to move me from “I just want a good game” to “I want Arizona to win.” Too bad, though it was a tremendous catch by Santonio Holmes to win.

And now it’s a long sleep for football until the draft. Pro Bowl? No thanks. I’ll get some work done next Sunday instead.

Well, I hate to go the obvious direction, but I just don’t see how Kurt Warner and the Cardinals overtake the Steelers. I wouldn’t be absolutely shocked–who could be, after last year?–but really. The Cardinals just barely beat the Eagles at home last week, the Steelers have had two weeks to study the second half of that game, and they will know when to and when not to blitz Warner. The Cardinals’ running game stinks, so they’ll be one-dimensional on offense.

I certainly would be happier if the Cardinals won, and I do think they’ll have some big plays, but I just don’t see how they beat Pittsburgh.

The prediction: Steelers 27, Cardinals 14

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