Pages

All Time Tampa Bay Buccaneers 53 Man Roster

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Part of a series; the previous post is here. Updated through 2019. All time Buccaneers 53 man roster.



QB Doug Williams
      QB Jameis Winston
     QB Vinny Testaverde
     QB Trent Dilfer
     
RB James Wilder
RB Warrick Dunn
     RB Mike Alstott
     RB Doug Martin
     RB Michael Pittman
WR Mike Evans
WR Kevin House
      WR Keyshawn Johnson
     WR Vincent Jackson
     
TE Jimmie Giles
     TE Dave Moore
C Tony Mayberry
G Ian Beckles
G Davin Joseph
T Paul Guber
T Donald Penn
    OL Demar Dotson
    OL Randy Grimes
    OL Steve Wilson
    OL Donovan Smith


DE Lee Roy Selmon
DT Warren Sapp
DE Simeon Rice
    DL Gerald McCoy
    DL Chidi Ahanotu
    DL Dave Logan
    DL Greg Spires
    DL Anthony McFarland
    DL Brad Culpepper
OLB Derrick Brooks
ILB Hardy Nickerson
ILB Shelton Quarles
OLB Lavonte David
    LB Cecil Johnson
    LB Richard Wood
    LB Hugh Green
    LB Barrett Ruud
    LB Dave Lewis
CB Ronde Barber
S John Lynch
S Cedric Brown
CB Mike Washington
    DB Mark Cotney
    DB Donnie Abraham
    DB Ricky Reynolds
    DB Brian Kelly
PK Connor Barth
P Josh Bidwell


A Hundred Games to Go.

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

My ballot at 40 games is here.

We're 60 games in, meaning the Giants have now played 60 games.  Here's the ballot.  I won't maneuver it to pick a rep for every team and I won't bother to look up how many roster spots each league is using this year (my guess, a million three) until the 80 game post.

AL
C Alex Avila (Mike Napoli)
1B Miguel Cabrera (Adrian Gonzalez)
2B Ian Kinsler (Ben Zobrist)
SS Asdrubal Cabrera (Yunel Escobar)
3B Kevin Youkilis (Alex Rodriguez)
LF Alex Gordon (Josh Willingham)
CF Denard Span (Jacoby Ellsbury)
RF Jose Bautista (Matt Joyce)
P Jered Weaver
   Dan Haren
   David Price
   Felix Hernandez
   Edwin Jackson
   James Shields
   Josh Beckett
   CC Sabathia
   Justin Verlander
   David Robertson
   Jonathan Papelbon
   Jordan Walden


NL
C Brian McCann (Chris Iannetta)
1B Joey Votto (Gaby Sanchez)
2B Rickie Weeks (Neil Walker)
SS Jose Reyes (Troy Tulowitzki)
3B Ryan Roberts (Placido Polanco)
LF Ryan Braun (Matt Holiday)
CF Matt Kemp (Andrew McCutcheon)
RF Lance Berkman (Jay Bruce)
P Roy Halladay
   Clayton Kershaw
   Matt Garza
   Madison Bumgarner
   Cole Hamels
   Tim Lincecum
   Kyle Lohse
   Jake Westbrook
   Tim Stauffer
   Jonny Venters
   Ryan Madson
   Fernando Salas

The Weekly Tendown May 29-June4 2011

Sunday, June 5, 2011

Dear Internet:

I'm under contract to develop a course in the history of American disasters; there's deliverable contact for the next four Fridays, and given my teaching 8 courses it's Tendown that gets sliced pretty closely to the bone (although, as it turns out, I decided to write a little bit this week). For those of you who care about such things - my apologies; if I had a way to make my living doing more of this and less of that, I would pursue that opportunity.  Absent that, I give you what I can this week.  A week where many saw more of Blake Lively and Anthony Weiner than had we anticipated.  Admittedly, I spent more time on the former than the latter, and despite only the Congressman's photo being a subject of news and chat show fodder, I'd expect I'm not in the minority.

Here's Tendown 79.

1. Have I Mentioned Lance Armstrong Used PEDs?
This week's story:

The director of the Swiss anti-doping laboratory informed federal authorities last fall that Lance Armstrong's test results from the 2001 Tour de Suisse were "suspicious" and "consistent with EPO use," The Associated Press has learned.

Also this week, this piece in SI, from a writer with cancer essentially saying that it doesn't matter.  What matters is the work Armstrong's done to combat cancer.

And...okay.  I'm in.  He's right and his correctness is self evident. Cancer is more important than PED use.  Going after Lance Armstrong seems a little frivolous.  And I'd view that piece with less irritation had I not spent the last decade reading/watching the full force of the sports media establishment deify Lance Armstrong while vilifying Barry Bonds, despite the level of evidence against both being essentially the same.  The ubiquity with which this thought has been reflected in sports platform upon platform, year after year, has caused otherwise reasonable people to uncritically accept the notion that Bonds's career somehow didn't happen; that he just simply could not have been the home run hitter that Roger Maris was.

Let's consider just the following.  Armstrong's first Tour win was '98.  He failed a drug test (later explained away) in '99, putting him on the European anti-PED radar.  The McGwire/Sosa home run race was '98; accepted wisdom is Bonds, seeing the acclaim each man got, despite not being the ballplayer Bonds was, began his PED use in '99.

Since 1999,  Lance Armstrong's been on the cover of SI 11 times.

Here's one.

Lance Armstrong, Cycling,

Lance Armstong, Bike racing, USA

Here's another.

Lance Armstrong, Cycling,

That's a third; I'll spare you all 11 - believe me, you can look real, real hard - you won't see the cover about PEDs.  To use the language of reality competition shows - sports media gave Armstrong the "hero edit". During the first decade of the 21st century, when you saw Lance Armstrong in SI or on ESPN, it was covered in glory, accusations against him dismissed as being part of the same French anti-Americanism that led to their failure to support us in our glorious war for Iraqi freedom.  Lance Armstrong=Great Sports Hero is a dominant thread in our recent sports narrative.

During this same time frame, Barry Bonds has been on 6 SI covers.

Barry Bonds, Baseball, San Francisco Giants

Like this one.

Barry Bonds, Baseball, San Francisco Giants

And that one.

Barry Bonds, Baseball, San Francisco Giants

And that one too.

Go read this piece, from 2007, discussing the clear way in which Sports Illustrated has framed Bonds as a villain throughout his career; my argument is SI is most easily captured by pieces like this and that - but from ESPN, to local radio shows from border to border - this type of systematic "Armstrong good, Bonds bad" message has branded itself into our sports brain.

So - this week, when another brick in the Armstrong used PEDs wall was met by the "but cancer is more important" response in SI; my response was to simultaneously nod in agreement, and curse the broader context in which that agreement takes place.

2. Cost/Benefit
We're spending 113 billion dollars this year in Afghanistan.

Meanwhile, as part of budget cuts in New Jersey, Chris Christie is asking that Medicaid eligibility be reduced from the current maximum income of approximately $25,000 for a family of 3 to...ready...$5317.

I guess there are ways a country can have both policies simultaneously, but, at present, they escape me.

3. The Article You need to Read This week
It's Bob Reich.


Government could have enforced the basic bargain. But it did the opposite. It slashed public goods and investments — whacking school budgets, increasing the cost of public higher education, reducing job training, cutting public transportation and allowing bridges, ports and highways to corrode.
It shredded safety nets — reducing aid to jobless families with children, tightening eligibility for food stamps, and cutting unemployment insurance so much that by 2007 only 40 percent of the unemployed were covered. It halved the top income tax rate from the range of 70 to 90 percent that prevailed during the Great Prosperity to 28 to 35 percent; allowed many of the nation’s rich to treat their income as capital gains subject to no more than 15 percent tax; and shrunk inheritance taxes that affected only the top-most 1.5 percent of earners. Yet at the same time, America boosted sales and payroll taxes, both of which took a bigger chunk out of the pay the middle class and the poor than of the well off.


4. Rand Paul - Big Government Crusader
Rand Paul is a hardcore libertarian - a real believer in limited government - even when the result of that belief leads to a negative consequence.

For example, Paul believes the element of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 that requires business open to the public to serve customers without regard to race is a government overstep.  Sure, that means a return to whites only lunchcounters - but Paul is arguing principle - the commerce clause should not be viewed as a large enough vessel to accommodate that broad a construction of congressional power.  It's not that Paul wants to see a hotel turn away black patrons - it's that he doesn't believe government should be powerful enough to stop it from happening.  Freedom over all.

This week,  Rand Paul said we should lock people up if they attend the wrong kinds of speeches.

I guess there are ways a United States Senator can hold both positions simultaneously.  But at present, they escape me.

5. The Top 1%
The richest 1% of households have 39% of global wealth.

The last 10 years was worse for growth in real wages than the Great Depression.

Not low enough for Iowa Congressman Steve King, who wants fewer government intrusions into the relationship between labor and management.  His argument would have been well received by the railroad operators of the late 1800s.

I think the free market should set the wages. Labor is a commodity just like corn or beans or oil or gold, and the value of it needs to be determined by the competition, supply and demand in the workplace.


But what we don't spend enough time doing is discussing the benefits of a subsistence economy, that was rectified by Texas Governor Rick Perry this week.

I think we're going through those difficult economic times for a purpose.  To bring us back to biblical principles.

The distance between our country right now and assigning blame for crop failure to judgment of a wrathful god seems slight to me.

6. It Gets Better.  It Gets Worse


As I promised a few weeks ago, here's the Giants video for the It Gets Better series.

Meanwhile, Brandon Belt's got a fractured wrist and, Buster Posey may never catch again.

7. I Write the Stories
My composition of the all time 45 man rosters for each NFL franchise continued this week - you can get to the Saints, Falcons, Panthers - here.

I'm working on the text for my top 100 NBA players of all time, that will release somewhere approximating the end of the NBA Finals (it could be that I was rooting against the Heat in Game 2 given how hard the price on investing in the Heat would then fall.  Could be.)

I also watch the graps - 3 4 star matches this week, the Kings of Wrestling against Go and Taniguchi from NOAH in April was 4 1/4, Sasaki v. Takeda from Big Japan in April was 4 stars; and Sekimoto v. Hero from WXW in April was 4 1/2 stars, meaning it is added to my Match of the Year post, which currently is up to 18 matches at 4 1/2+ stars for the year.

8. Bridesmaids.




I also saw movies - Blue Valentine, which you can watch; Michelle Williams was nominated for an Oscar, and she's great - but its a good reminder that Ryan Gosling is the best actor alive who isn't on your instant list for "who is the best actor alive"; Please Give, a meditation about death and furniture which you should move to the top of your Netflix queue; and Bridesmaids, which is funny and worth watching despite a conservative undercurrent that individual hard work is the key to overcoming economic hardship.  Did you lose your bakery in the recession?  Stop complaining about it and get back in the kitchen.  It's neither bad advice for the individual, nor a bad device for a film - but it doesn't offer structural critique; the film looks at the economy from a "life's unfair, grow up" perspective that denies decisions that have been made, that are being made right now, by policymakers which put Kristen Wiig in the position to need to move back in with her Rick Springfield caricature drawing mother.  My reaction was similar to the SI piece this week about Armstrong; I don't disagree with a word outside of the broader context.  When the Megan character talks about being bullied in high school and using the It Gets Better fuel of that to study real hard and now she makes a ton of money - that's an applause line for the audience; it's the Oprah moment - you are responsible for your own circumstance.  And the ubiquity with which that is said, the degree to which that message of your need/ability to repair your own circumstance penetrates us (like Barry and Lance) and renders, I'd suggest, messages that the real need is economic structural change, harder to get through - it makes it easier for the right wing to attack discussions of economic justice, of health care reform, of the need to raise taxes on millionaires as oppositional to the values of personal responsibility that we all uncritically accept.  Our responsibility, as we are reminded by Wilson Phillips in their performance of "Hold On", the knowingly chosen theme song for Bridemaids, is to "hold on for one more day, things are gonna change."

You know what will make things "get better."?  Laws.  Government policy that works on behalf of working class Americans.  The opposite of the past 30 years of US economic policy.  The opposite of what is being done in statehouses like New Jersey and Florida and Texas right now.  And when the right wing cuts social services even more brutally than they already have - putting even more Americans precariously close to destitution - there will be even more plucky pieces of pop culture telling us to stop complaining and bake some more cakes.

That's the thesis of a book I will never have time to write; the degree to which messages of personal responsibility in popular culture increase during times of economic inequality, obscuring the need for structural reform.

9. Speaking of Pop Culture
Something curious is happening with video games.

10. Don't Do This.  Seriously.
Who's up for a Rocky Balboa musical.

That's all for this time.  I'll be back next time.  If there is a next time...

Your pal,

Jim

All Time New Orleans Saints 53 Man Roster

Saturday, June 4, 2011

Part of a series.  The previous post is here. Updated after 2019 season. All time Saints 53 man roster.



QB Drew Brees
      Archie Manning
      Aaron Brooks
RB Deuce McAllister
RB Mark Ingram
     RB Dalton Hilliard
     RB Tony Galbreath
     RB Pierre Thomas
WR Marques Colston
WR Eric Martin
      WR Joe Horn
      WR Danny Abramowicz
      WR Michael Thomas
TE Jimmy Graham
      TE Hoby Brenner
C John Hill
G Jahri Evans
G Jim Dombrowski
T Willie Roaf
T Stan Brock
     OL Carl Nicks
     OL Joel Hilgenberg
     OL Zach Strief
     OL Jon Stintchcomb
     
     
DE Wayne Martin
DT Derland Moore
DE Cameron Jordan
    DL Jim Wilks
    DL Will Smith
    DL Charles Grant
    DL Frank Warren
    DL Joe Johnson
    DL La'Roi Glover
OLB Rickey Jackson
ILB Sam Mills
ILB Vaughan Johnson
OLB Pat Swilling
     LB Jonathan Vilma
     LB Joe Federspiel
     LB Scott Shanle
     LB Renaldo Turnbull
     LB Mark Fields
CB Dave Waymer
S Tom Myers
S Gene Atkins
CB Johnnie Poe
     DB Roman Harper
     DB Sammie Knight
     DB Frank Wattelet
     DB Toi Cook
     DB Russell Gary
    
PK Morten Andersen
P Thomas Morstead


All Time Carolina Panthers 53 Man Roster

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Part of a series.  Previous post is here. Updated through the 2019 season.  All time Panthers 53 man roster.



QB Cam Newton
      QB Jake Delhomme
      QB Steve Beuerlein
RB DeAngelo Williams
RB Jonathan Stewart
      RB DeShaun Foster
      RB Brad Hoover
      RB Christian McCaffrey
WR Steve Smith
WR Muhsin Muhammad
     WR Mark Carrier
     WR Ted Ginn
     WR Brandon LaFell
TE Greg Olsen
     TE Wesley Walls
C Ryan Kalil
G Travelle Wharton
G Trai Turner
T Jordan Gross
T Chris Terry
     OL Matt Campbell
     OL Jeff Mitchell
     OL Frank Garcia
     OL Andrew Norwell

DE Julius Peppers
DT Kris Jenkins
DE Mike Rucker
     DL Charles Johnson
     DL Kawann Short
     DL Brentson Buckner
     DL Star Lotulelei
     DL Greg Kragen
     DL Sean Gilbert
OLB Thomas Davis
ILB Luke Kuechly
ILB Jon Beason
OLB Kevin Greene
     LB Sam Mills
     LB Lamar Lathon
     LB Dan Morgan
     LB Will Witherspoon  
     LB James Anderson
CB Chris Gamble
S Mike Minter
S Deon Grant
CB Eric Davis
     DB Josh Norman
     DB Charles Godfrey
     DB Ken Lucas
     DB Richard Marshall
     DB Doug Evans
PK John Kasay
P Jason Baker

Blogger Template created by Just Blog It