Saturday, 31 December 2011

Say cheese: Green Bay Packers finally snap team photo

Updated: February 4, 2011, 6:35 PM ET

DALLAS -- The Green Bay Packers' much-discussed Super Bowl team picture finally has been snapped.

According to Friday's pool report, the Packers took their team photo shortly before the start of practice. Everyone was in attendance, including players on injured reserve.

Two injured players, linebacker Nick Barnett and tight end Jermichael Finley, complained last week when it looked like the photo would be taken before they were scheduled to join the rest of the team in the Dallas area this week.

Packers coach Mike McCarthy called his team "loose but confident" going into Sunday's game against Pittsburgh.


Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press


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Photographer Win McNamee feared for life amid falling ice

Updated: February 5, 2011, 11:14 AM ET

A veteran photographer says he feared for his life Friday when pieces of ice the size of bowling balls fell onto him from the roof of Cowboys Stadium.

"Honestly, while it was hitting me, I was thinking I'm going to die here," Win McNamee told The Dallas Morning News. "It was pretty frightening."

McNamee, who works for Getty Images, broke his shoulder in four places and will require surgery, the newspaper reported. He was to fly home Saturday to Washington, D.C.

McNamee was among at least six people injured after being struck by ice and snow outside the site of Sunday's Super Bowl between the Pittsburgh Steelers and Green Bay Packers in Arlington.

The NFL says the injured included private contractors it hired to prepare the stadium. One man was hit in the head, and one person remained in the hospital Friday night.

McNamee told The Morning News he was on assignment for snow-related photos. He said he heard noises resembling jet engines before seeing an "avalanche of ice."

Goodell The likelihood is they'll have to get somebody up there to get the snow off as soon as possible. They likely will be doing that in the next 24 hours.

” -- NFL commissioner Roger Goodell
of the Cowboys Stadium roof

"I had nowhere to go," he said. "It hurt pretty bad."

The general sense of frustration in the North Texas area with the long, cold week took an even worse turn Friday, when temperatures were below freezing for the fourth consecutive day and more snow fell three days after an ice storm.

"The likelihood is they'll have to get somebody up there to get the snow off as soon as possible," NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said Friday of the Cowboys Stadium roof. "They likely will be doing that in the next 24 hours."

The forecast called for temperatures getting into the low 40s under partly cloudy skies Saturday. There is a chance of rain or more snow early Sunday with the temperature again around 40.

The temperature won't matter to most of the 100,000 fans, who will be inside the stadium -- though it could be an issue for the 5,000 people with $200 tickets to watch the game from a party plaza just outside. Inside are the world's two biggest high-definition television screens, museum-caliber artwork, field-level suites and end-zone doors capable of sliding open, just like the roof.

But all those wonders took a backseat after Friday's accident.

"Safety is our priority, but we do have some unique circumstances around the stadium right now," Goodell said. "What we're focusing now is first the stadium and the people that were injured. Second is the safety of the people around the stadium, make sure that we can secure an area, make sure that they can continue to do what they need to do in a safe environment."

Informaton from The Associated Press was used in this report.


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Arizona man accused of sneaking pornography into 2009 Super Bowl broadcast

Updated: February 4, 2011, 11:01 PM ET

TUCSON, Ariz. -- An Arizona man has been arrested on charges that he used a computer to interrupt a local telecast of the 2009 Super Bowl with a 37-second pornography clip.

The FBI and Marana police took Frank Tanori Gonzalez into custody Friday on suspicion of fraud and computer tampering.

Authorities say someone cut into the Comcast cable broadcast of the game between the Arizona Cardinals and Pittsburgh Steelers that went to viewers in the Tucson area.

Comcast ended up offering a $10 credit to all of its 80,000 subscribers, whether they saw the brief X-rated clip or not, and the investigation was turned over to the FBI.

Authorities didn't say what led them to Gonzalez. His age and other background information wasn't available and it was unclear if he has a lawyer.


Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press


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Falling snow, ice at Cowboys Stadium hurts six

Updated: February 5, 2011, 1:31 AM ET

DALLAS -- Jerry Jones has long looked forward to Super Bowl week, to the glitz and glitter sure to come with hosting the NFL's biggest and most-watched event in his showcase $1.2 billion stadium.

The leadup to Sunday's game wasn't supposed to be like this.

A long, cold week in North Texas took an even worse turn Friday when six people were injured after being struck by ice and snow falling off the domed roof of cavernous Cowboys Stadium in nearby Arlington. None of the injuries appeared to be life-threatening, but the accident added to the general sense of frustration with cold weather in the Dallas-Fort Worth area this week.

The injured were private contractors hired by the NFL to prepare the stadium for the game. One man was hit in the head, another in the shoulder.

It was a jarring incident, coming two days before the game at the end of the season that saw the Vikings displaced -- twice -- after the roof of the Metrodome collapsed under heavy snow. No one was hurt.

The accident Friday wasn't the first involving icy conditions at Cowboys Stadium.

In December 2009, two workers doing maintenance on the icy roof were injured when they slipped and tumbled at least 50 feet. They didn't fall off the roof because they were stopped by what is basically a huge rain gutter. One of the workers broke a leg and suffered other injuries, and the other had a back injury.

[+] EnlargeDallas snow Win McNamee/Getty ImagesWorkers clear snow outside the perimeter of Cowboys Stadium after a storm hit the area Friday.

This NFL season started fresh for Jones, who wanted his Cowboys to become the first team to play a Super Bowl in their home stadium. Those hopes were dashed with a 1-7 start, but the Super Bowl was still coming to Arlington and once Green Bay and Pittsburgh sealed their trips to the big game, Jones was happy to host them.

"Great tradition, outstanding teams," Jones said at the Senior Bowl in Mobile, Ala. "With what the Packers are about and what the Steelers are about, it makes a great game. If you're in my shoes right now as far as Cowboys Stadium is concerned, I'm really proud that they're going to be there. I'm proud for North Texas."

Yet the wintry blast has challenged everyone.

Temperatures were below freezing for the fourth consecutive day Friday, when more snow fell three days after an ice storm. Most Super Bowl events have gone on as planned despite uncertainty that visitors won't be able to get to Dallas or might cancel their stays.

After Super Bowl media day Tuesday, Jones used some of his business background to address the snowy start of the week -- and his hopes after that.

"In sales, you set expectations at one point, then you stop and you close with a big pot you bang at the end," Jones said then. "So I'll start with these icy streets and end with beautiful days at the end of the week."

After Friday's accident, Cowboys spokesman Rick Dalrymple said Jones was not available for comment and referred questions about the falling snow and ice to the NFL.

Most stadium entrances were closed as a precaution and officials raised the temperature inside the arena in an attempt to melt any remaining ice. NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said workers were checking the roof for areas where there could be more issues.

"The likelihood is they'll have to get somebody up there to get the snow off as soon as possible," Goodell said. "They likely will be doing that in the next 24 hours."

The forecast called for temperatures getting into the low 40s under partly cloudy skies Saturday. There is a chance of rain or more snow early Sunday with the temperature again around 40.

The temperature won't matter to most of the 100,000 fans, who will be inside the stadium -- though it could be an issue for the 5,000 people with $200 tickets to watch the game from a party plaza just outside. Inside are the world's two biggest high-definition television screens, museum-caliber artwork, field-level suites and end-zone doors capable of sliding open, just like the roof.

But all those wonders took a backseat after Friday's accident.

"Safety is our priority, but we do have some unique circumstances around the stadium right now," Goodell said. "What we're focusing now is first the stadium and the people that were injured. Second is the safety of the people around the stadium, make sure that we can secure an area, make sure that they can continue to do what they need to do in a safe environment."

The accident came on the same day former Cowboys player Jamar Hunt settled his lawsuit seeking damages after he said he was hurt when the team's tent-like practice facility in Irving collapsed during a gusty storm in May 2009.

Attorney Michael Guajardo said Hunt received an undisclosed amount as a result of the settlement with Summit Structures, its Canadian parent, Cover-All Building Systems Inc., and two corporations controlled by Jones.

The Dallas-Fort Worth area received as much as 5 inches of snow overnight -- nearly twice its annual average -- and by Friday morning downtown Dallas hotels were selling ski hats and scarves alongside cowboy hats. A winter storm warning was issued for suburban Arlington, home of the $1.3 billion stadium where the Steelers and Packers are to play Sunday.

"It looks like, 'Oh, no, I'm back in Canada,'" said Sammy Sandu, a 32-year-old property developer from Kelowna, British Columbia. "It's just pouring down snow. Are we still at home, or have we left? We didn't drink that much last night, did we?"

Forecasters expected game day to be mostly sunny, with highs in the 40s, which would probably not be warm enough to melt all the snow and ice.

Sandu made it to Dallas with his father Thursday, but other members of their party weren't so lucky. His brother still hoped to arrive from Miami in time for the game, but a friend abandoned the trip after a flight from Vancouver was canceled.

Like much of the region, airlines were struggling to recover from a massive blizzard earlier in the week that brought up to 2 feet of snow and bitter cold temperatures to as much as half the nation.

More than 300 arriving flights were canceled at Dallas-Fort Worth Airport, a hub for American Airlines. The city's smaller airport, Love Field, was closed before dawn because of snow on the runways, but it reopened by noon. Love is home to Southwest Airlines.

Andy Williams, a 51-year-old attorney from Grafton, Wis., said he was frustrated to find his American flight from Milwaukee delayed for about five hours. He was already planning ahead for the worst-case scenario.

"If this flight gets canceled, I'll start driving down tonight," he said. "Clearly it's not my first choice but, at least you're in control of your own destiny at that point."

But the chilly temperatures were not expected to faze the teams competing in the real event, nor their hardy fans, who are used to cooler climes. The temperature in Dallas on Friday stood at 20 -- the same as Pittsburgh. Green Bay was slightly colder at 17.

"We deal with it very well back home," Steelers fan Alex Sax said on his way the NFL Experience fan festival in Dallas. "Here, they don't know how to deal with it. There's no plows. No salt trucks. When we drove from airport, we were the only car on the road."

Asked if the weather could affect future Super Bowl bids, Goodell said the conditions this year have been exceptional.

"We've had a winter to remember. Some would say to forget," Goodell said. "It's going to be a great weekend for us, and the weather's getting better."

The Super Bowl is scheduled to be played in Indianapolis next year and in the open-air New Meadowlands stadium in New Jersey in 2014.

Some Packers fans at Mitchell Airport in Milwaukee found themselves delayed but not completely downhearted.

James Jennings, 78, was scheduled to fly out of Milwaukee with his 44-year-old son. They were taking a charter flight as part of a package for which they paid a total of $25,000.

Jennings, a criminal lawyer from Norridge, Ill., said he had absolutely no doubt that the flight would leave as scheduled.

"At $12,500 a ticket, are you kidding me? They'd get Evel Knievel to fly that thing."

Elsewhere Friday, the bitter cold seeped into the South, where icy roads were blamed for several traffic deaths in Louisiana and Mississippi. The system extended its grip as far east as North Carolina, where freezing rain was possible.

The frigid weather also disrupted natural gas service in New Mexico and caused water pipes to burst in Arizona. Snow- and slush-covered roads made driving hazardous across Texas and neighboring states.

Greyhound spokeswoman Bonnie Bastian says the weather snarled travel through Texas, Oklahoma and parts of Arkansas and Tennessee.

By late Friday morning, 23-year-old Katrina Smith had been waiting in the Kansas City terminal for more than 30 hours. She was supposed to be in the city just 15 minutes to transfer buses as she headed from Denver to Tulsa, Okla.

"Everyone here is going to go crazy," she said.

Back in Dallas, organizers of at least one celebrity-filled Super Bowl event planned to host their Saturday celebrations inside.

DirecTV planned to host a "Celebrity Beach Bowl" in a heated tent, with a lineup of stars and athletes including Josh Duhamel, Alex Rodriguez, Chace Crawford and Hayden Panettierre.

"We're full speed ahead," said Jon Gieselman, the company's senior vice president of advertising and public relation. "The show will go on. We were prepared for something like this."

Informaton from The Associated Press was used in this report.


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Friday, 30 December 2011

Bears place Cutler, Forte on injured reserve

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With their playoff hopes dashed, the Chicago Bears placed quarterback Jay Cutler and running back Matt Forte on injured reserve on Tuesday.

Can't get enough Bears information? ESPNChicago.com has all the latest on the Monsters of the Midway. Blog

Cutler, who has missed the past five games -- all losses -- with a broken right thumb, was scheduled to have the pins removed from the thumb on Tuesday. Forte suffered a Grade 2 sprain of the MCL in his right knee on Dec. 4 against the Kansas City Chiefs.

Bears coach Lovie Smith said Monday that he wouldn't discourage either from playing in the season finale against the Minnesota Vikings on Sunday.

"If they're healthy and ready to go, we won't tell them no," Smith said. "But there are some other guys we feel comfortable playing. They're making progress, but if we had other things on the line (such as a postseason berth) we would take the same approach. We would never stop a player that wanted to play who was healthy and really ready to go. But I don't know if that'll be the case."

Forte told ESPNChicago.com on Dec. 17 he'd consider returning at less than 100 percent if the team made the postseason.

To fill the roster, the Bears elevated defensive tackle Jordan Miller from the practice squad to the 53-man roster and signed guard Mansfield Wrotto to the active roster. Miller, an undrafted free agent out of Southern University, has spent the season on the practice squad. Wrotto, selected by the Seattle Seahawks in the fourth round of the 2007 NFL draft, has played in 27 games during stints with Seattle and the Buffalo Bills.


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U.S. Steel memo: Miss work at your own peril

Updated: February 4, 2011, 11:08 AM ET

CLAIRTON, Pa. -- It's only natural that Pittsburgh-area steelworkers would want to watch the Pittsburgh Steelers in Sunday's Super Bowl.

But a U.S. Steel memo says workers in the Clairton, Irvin and Edgar Thomson mills who miss work Sunday or Monday "without just cause" will face "severe disciplinary action."

The United Steelworkers union has criticized the memo. A U.S. Steel spokeswoman tells the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette that the company doesn't comment on employee relations.

The newspaper says USW International vice president Tom Conway responded to the memo with an e-mail -- in black-and-gold type, the Steelers' colors -- that suggested adjusting schedules so volunteers who don't want to watch the game can work during it.

Conway suggested lost production during Sunday's 3 p.m. ET to 11 p.m. shift could be made up later.


Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press


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NFL, players' union hold first formal meeting since November

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DALLAS -- The NFL and its players' union met for two hours Saturday to talk about a new labor deal, their first formal bargaining session in more than two months.

The meeting was at a Dallas hotel, one day before the Pittsburgh Steelers and Green Bay Packers play in the Super Bowl at Cowboys Stadium. The full negotiating teams last sat down face-to-face on Nov. 22.

The sides issued a joint statement, saying they "plan to increase the number, length and intensity" of bargaining sessions so they can reach agreement before the collective bargaining agreement expires March 4. Two more sessions already had been scheduled for next week.

The statement called Saturday's session part of a "continuing effort to narrow the differences and reach a fair agreement that will benefit the players, teams and fans."

There was no immediate indication of what sort of substantive progress -- if any -- was made during Saturday's talks. Spokesmen for the league and union declined to comment.

The union has said it expects owners to lock out players if a new CBA isn't reached by early March.

Among the major issues are how to divide about $9 billion in annual revenues; the owners' push to expand the regular season from 16 games to 18 while reducing the preseason by two games; a rookie wage scale; and benefits for retired players.

During his annual Super Bowl news conference Friday, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said it was imperative to reach an agreement before the CBA expires.

"I frequently have said that I think March 4 is a very critical date," Goodell said. "A lot of different strategies will take place if we're not successful in getting an agreement by that time.

"We need to have intensive, round-the clock negotiations to address the issues and find solutions. I can assure you that I have that sense of urgency and I believe both sides do."

The league estimates there would be a cut in gross revenues of $120 million without a new agreement by early March; $350 million if there's no CBA by August, before the preseason starts; $1 billion if no new contract is in place until September. And if regular-season games are lost, the NFL figures the revenue losses would amount to about $400 million per week.

The old deal was agreed to in 2006 and could have been in place until 2012, but owners exercised an opt-out clause in 2008.


Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press


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Thursday, 29 December 2011

49ers release struggling wide receiver Edwards

SAN FRANCISCO -- Struggling wide receiver Braylon Edwards was released by the San Francisco 49ers following surgery on his right knee earlier this season that limited him.

Edwards tweeted the news Tuesday, attributing the move to his injury, which "required more time to rehab and hasn't allowed me to re-sync with the offense."

SandoBraylon Edwards wasn't contributing much to a 49ers offensive mix that has greatly changed from Week 1. There's no need for the 49ers to pursue a veteran in Edwards' place, Mike Sando writes. Blog

The 49ers confirmed Edwards' release.

"I wish the 49ers organization the best of luck during the playoffs," Edwards said in a statement on his website. "I will be working hard this off season to strengthen my knee and prepare for the 2012 season. Thanks for your continued support and for being such loyal fans."

Edwards had 15 catches for 181 yards and no touchdowns in eight games with five starts for the NFC West champion 49ers (12-3) after receiving a $3.5 million, one-year contract in August. That gave him a fresh start under coach and fellow Michigan man Jim Harbaugh.

He was inactive against St. Louis on Dec. 4 and again for the Monday night game. In a loss at Arizona on Dec. 11, Edwards had no catches and expressed his surprise not to be used more in the offense.

Harbaugh has said Edwards' performance in games and practice affected his playing time.

Harbaugh said Monday the team might look outside the organization this week to fill spots -- and that looks to be the case now -- heading into the regular-season finale Sunday at St. Louis. The 49ers are trying to secure the NFC's No. 2 seed and a first-round bye.

Edwards, the No. 3 pick in the 2005 draft, got hurt early in Week 2 against Dallas on Sept. 18 and missed four games before returning against his former team, the Browns on Oct. 30.

Edwards revealed in late November he also was dealing with a shoulder injury sustained in the fourth quarter of a 19-11 win at Washington on Nov. 6.

In a 16-6 loss on Thanksgiving night at Baltimore to Harbaugh's big brother, John, a second-quarter miscommunication between Edwards and quarterback Alex Smith on a deep throw to the end zone resulted in an interception. The 49ers didn't score a touchdown for the first time all season.

San Francisco had been eager to see Edwards' big-play ability when the club acquired him -- Harbaugh liked his size at 6-foot-3 and 214 pounds -- but it never happened. That lack of production became a bigger deal after the team lost Josh Morgan to a season-ending leg injury Oct. 9 against Tampa Bay. Morgan underwent surgery to have pins inserted in a broken bone in his lower right leg.

Edwards spent the first five seasons of his NFL career with the Browns, making the Pro Bowl in 2007, before playing the past two with the New York Jets. He also had a series of legal run-ins along the way.

Edwards made 53 receptions for 904 yards and seven touchdowns last season for the Jets and was determined to build on that with his new team. Then the injury delayed his progress.

Edwards made it clear when he discussed the shoulder injury that he hadn't returned to full speed or full strength since the knee injury.

"I'm playing through a football season. No one is ever going to be fully healthy, but just fighting every day," he said. "Injury means you can't play, but I do have a shoulder ailment, I'll say. Little bit of AC joint. Nothing super serious, but at the same time, it's nagging. It bothers me."

Last Tuesday, after a commanding 20-3 Monday night win over Pittsburgh, tight end Vernon Davis tweeted his support of Edwards and later said he was trying to step up as a leader.

"Thankful to have OfficialBraylon on my team. He's a true professional and football is very important to him," Davis wrote. "I think teammates should stick together. At the end of the day we will still be as one when the coaches are gone!"


Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press


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Bucs' embattled Morris: 'I will never fire myself'

TAMPA, Fla. -- Tampa Bay Buccaneers coach Raheem Morris made it clear Monday that he feels he shouldn't be made the scapegoat for his underperforming team, currently in the midst of a nine-game losing streak.

"I think I answered this question a couple weeks ago ... I will never fire myself," Morris said Monday, two days after the Bucs were beaten 48-16 at Carolina. "You don't go from being a coach of a year candidate to being the worst coach in the league to get fired within a year. It's about us. It's a little bit of everything."

YasinskasBucs coach Raheem Morris made it sound Monday like he plans on returning next season but his future in Tampa is still open to plenty of speculation, Pat Yasinskas writes. Blog

Tampa Bay has turned over the ball 36 times and allowed 449 points this season. What has been the most frustrating part for Morris has been a recent stretch of one-sided losses.

"No question ... bingo," Morris said. "But it happens because people go outside of the box and try to make plays that are just not there in order to get that football team, or basketball team, or hockey team to win. You've got to go play within the system and make the plays that technique and opportunity allow you to make. Once you got those things, it's just like the year before."

This year's struggles have not dampened Morris' view on the Bucs' youth movement. The Bucs are the NFL's youngest team for the second straight year.

"We made a collective agreement to go young when we took over this program," Morris said. "That's something we wanted to do. I believe in my guys. I believe in the system. I believe in the program. I believe in what we do. We want to build this thing young, and want to develop a team that goes out and wins, and wins consistently."

Morris said this year's deficiencies can be addressed during the upcoming offseason.

"We've got a chance to work on some of the fine details, some of the stuff we may have missed from last year," Morris said. "This year we'll have an offseason. This year we'll have a chance to be with them. This year we'll have great examples on how to lose games, and we'll have great examples on how to win games because we have the last two seasons to look at."

"Last year, this same team won 10 games, now through a little bit of smoke and mirrors so to speak, but that's not the point," Morris added. "You've got a chance to get better this offseason. You've got a chance to come out here and get an offseason and get these guys together. We're not a finished product, but you don't have to be a finished product in order to win. We proved that last year."

Information from ESPN.com NFC South blogger Pat Yasinskas and The Associated Press was used in this report.


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Crennel: Chiefs won't lay down vs. Broncos

KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- Romeo Crennel has already earned a reputation for being a straight shooter in Kansas City.

He knows the Chiefs squandered a chance to play for the playoffs in an overtime loss to Oakland on Saturday. He realizes that he might be coaching for his job Sunday against Denver.

Crennel I try to win every game. Every game is important to me. So what will happen will happen. I don't believe what I say, what I think, is going to make any difference. It's what I do, the work that I put out there. That's the thing that will make the impact.

” -- Romeo Crennel on his job status

He also understands the frustration that fans are experiencing as an ugly season draws to a close.

Crennel is willing to acknowledge all of that and more, which makes it easy to believe him when he says with resolution that Kansas City won't lay down despite the playoffs being out of reach.

"All these players, they want to win. They want to try to win," the interim coach said Monday. "I don't think anybody goes into a game trying to lose. Every player wants to win."

The Chiefs' frustrating loss to the Raiders was a microcosm of a rollercoaster year.

Things looked promising when Kansas City would put together long offensive series or force Oakland into three-and-out, only to look dire when quarterback Kyle Orton would throw an interception or the special teams would make a critical mistake.

The result was a loss that prevented a de facto AFC West championship game.

Now, the Chiefs are left to play for pride while Denver plays for the playoffs.

The Broncos are in if they win, or if the Raiders lose to the struggling San Diego Chargers.

"It's disappointing that we can't play in the postseason," linebacker Tamba Hali said, "(but) we signed up to play 16. We've got to go there and show those guys we can play."

Although bigger goals are no longer within reach, players know they can help Crennel land the head coaching job on a permanent basis with a win.

The former Cleveland Browns coach has a groundswell of support in the locker room, and the defensive coordinator is popular throughout the organization.

The decision will ultimately be up to general manager Scott Pioli and CEO Clark Hunt, and Crennel batted away any questions about his future before they were even broached Monday.

"I know there are some questions about my status and how this game might affect my status. I've said all along that at the end of the year, a decision is going to be made, and I was going to do the best I could for the three games I had an opportunity to do that," Crennel said.

"The first game was a really good game. This game wasn't as good, and now I've got one more game. I try to win every game. Every game is important to me. So what will happen will happen. I don't believe what I say, what I think, is going to make any difference. It's what I do, the work that I put out there. That's the thing that will make the impact."

Few people outside Oakland would begrudge the Chiefs for taking it easy against Denver.

Crennel doesn't expect that to be the case, though. He plans to put his best team on the field rather than get some young players in for the experience, guys like rookie quarterback Ricky Stanzi who have spent the majority of the season on the practice squad or the sideline.

"Every game that you play, the guy has to look in the mirror and know he's giving his best effort to try to win the game," Crennel said.

"I think that's the case Sunday with Denver, every guy on the team, the coaches included. Like I said, it's never one guy."

Wide receiver Steve Breaston said he's not necessarily trying to play spoiler against the Broncos, even though a few players quietly admitted that they would like nothing more than to knock Tim Tebow's team out of the playoffs, even if it means helping out the rival Raiders.

Rather, Breaston simply wants Kansas City to finish up the season on a high note, especially considering how many lows the Chiefs have experienced.

There was the season-ending injuries to Pro Bowl quarterback Matt Cassel, All-Pro running back Jamaal Charles, Pro Bowl safety Eric Berry and starting tight end Tony Moeaki.

There was the miserable start to the season that featured a pair of losses by a combined 89-10, one of the worst two-game stretches in franchise history.

There was the internal turmoil that ultimately resulted in the firing of coach Todd Haley after a 37-10 loss to the New York Jets, and the appointment of Crennel as the interim coach.

There was the loss Saturday to Oakland, when a victory would have yielded so much promise.

"Things happened throughout the season, the inconsistency," Breaston said. "But if you plan to be a part of this roster next year, you should have a lot of motivation."


Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press


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Super Bowl XLV: Pittsburgh Steelers' last practice watched by fans, families

Updated: February 5, 2011, 5:57 PM ETBy Calvin Watkins
ESPNDallas.com
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FORT WORTH, Texas -- The Pittsburgh Steelers' last practice in preparation for Super Bowl XLV at the Sam Baugh Indoor Practice Facility on the TCU campus was relaxed.

Family members surrounded the field as the players went over some situational plays during a casual walkthrough.

Players wore jerseys and shorts and quarterback Ben Roethlisberger wore the jersey of teammate Brett Keisel.

A relaxed practice in front of family members was the goal of coach Mike Tomlin, who followed a similar strategy for Super Bowl XLIII.

Tomlin was hopeful the addition of family members outside the field would help the players stay focused on the eve of the Super Bowl.

"Nothing else was normal," Tomlin said before boarding the team bus after the nearly 45-minute session. "But there's not a lot about this week that is [normal], so we're not going to fight against it. We're going to embrace it."

After the practice, family members gathered at midfield to greet their loved ones and take a team/family photo at midfield. Players also posed for individual photos as little kids ran around the field.

"It's two-fold," Tomlin said. "We want to honor them of course because their love and support is the reason why these men are here. But also we use them to a degree because we had to get some work done today and nothing outside of the white lines was normal but let's face it, nothing tomorrow night outside the white lines is going to be normal. This is a mock game for us, it represented just that. It was unique in terms of the people that were outside the field but the work we got done inside the white lines was very normal for a Saturday."

Among the people watching practice were owners Dan Rooney and Art Rooney II, TCU football coach Gary Patterson and Steelers greats John Stallworth and Mel Blount.

One person who watched practice was living his dream in 16-year-old Randy Stephens. The Wheeling, W.V., native received a gift from the Make-A-Wish Foundation to attend a Super Bowl. As an added bonus, he was allowed to watch Steelers practice on Saturday.

Hines Ward, Casey Hampton and Roethlisberger posed for pictures and signed a football for Stephens.

Off the field, the Steelers made a roster move placing rookie center Maurkice Pouncey (ankle) on the reserve/injured list and adding center/guard Dorian Brooks from the practice squad.

Nothing else has changed on the injury front as defensive end Aaron Smith (torn triceps) will not play on Sunday against the Green Bay Packers.

Calvin Watkins is a reporter for ESPNDallas.com.

Follow Calvin Watkins on Twitter: @calvinwatkins

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Wednesday, 28 December 2011

Tebow says confidence 'fine' after 4-INT defeat

ENGLEWOOD, Colo. -- He's revived a foundering franchise with last-minute magic and put the buzz back in the Broncos. Tim Tebow's next challenge is rebounding from the worst game of his career.

Tebow threw four interceptions in a 40-14 loss at Buffalo on Christmas Eve, two of which were returned for touchdowns in a 19-second span.

If Tebow was shaken by the first four-interception game of his life, he isn't showing it, insisting "my confidence is just fine."

That faith will come in handy Sunday when Tebow tries to beat the guy he couldn't beat out in training camp -- Kyle Orton, who brings the Kansas City Chiefs (6-9) to Denver with a shot at spoiling the playoff hopes of a team that shunted him aside.

As I always say about anything, looking forward, time will tell.

” -- Broncos coach John Fox
on picking Tim Tebow over Kyle Orton

The Broncos (8-7) can clinch the AFC West and their first playoff berth since 2005 with a win.

Asked if he's confident he has the better quarterback for this matchup, Broncos coach John Fox replied: "Well, we made that decision, you know. As I always say about anything, looking forward, time will tell."

While Tebow was in the midst of taking the NFL by storm with a six-game winning streak that included four straight fourth-quarter comebacks, the Broncos granted Orton his request for his release.

Orton was hoping to go back to Chicago, where Jay Cutler had broken his right thumb. But the Chiefs, who had lost quarterback Matt Cassel to a hand injury, had a higher waiver claim and so Orton ended up in Kansas City.

Orton dislocated a finger on his first pass attempt but rebounded to hand the Green Bay Packers their only loss with a stellar performance two weeks ago that could pay off handsomely this offseason when he becomes an unrestricted free agent for the first time.

First, he'll get the chance to exact some revenge on the team that gave up on him.

"We knew we may have to face him down the line and we kind of took that risk," Broncos boss John Elway said of releasing Orton on Nov. 22.

Elway said it was best for Orton to get a fresh start somewhere else after being supplanted by Tebow. Plus, it saved the Broncos $2.5 million in salary, so everybody won.

One of them won't be a winner on Sunday afternoon.

Three weeks after the much-hyped Tim Tebow vs. Tom Brady showdown ended badly for Denver with a 41-23 defeat at the hands of the New England Patriots, the Broncos are downplaying Orton's return to Mile High.

"I think my interpretation this week is the Denver Broncos vs. the Kansas City Chiefs," Fox said, "and I'm sure that will be their approach as well."

Tebow said almost exactly the same thing after his poor performance against the Bills.

"I think it's the Denver Broncos and the Kansas City Chiefs," he said. "That's a great rivalry and it'll be a great game. (I'm) excited we get to play at home in front of our fans. I think that as a player, as a quarterback, as someone who has dreamed of that his whole life, it'll be exciting to have one game, one last game, one last opportunity to make the playoffs."

The Broncos could lose Sunday and still make the postseason if San Diego beats Oakland. But the Broncos aren't counting on anybody but themselves.

"In my mind, it's much like a playoff game already," Fox said. "For most intents and purposes, we need to win this game. And that will determine our fate."

The Broncos are coming off their worst performance of the season, one in which they surrendered touchdowns on offense, defense and special teams, a terrible trifecta that was especially troubling coming against a team that hadn't won since October and was long ago eliminated from the playoff picture.

They made the Bills look like the Patriots.

Cornerback Champ Bailey said he's stumped as to why the Broncos keep finding themselves in a fourth-quarter fix: "I just know at some point throughout the second and third quarter we find a way to make it hard for ourselves."

After overcoming deficits all year, the Broncos haven't been able to do it the last two weeks.

Elvis Dumervil lamented the lack of big defensive plays since Wesley Woodyard forced a fumble in overtime that led to a win over Chicago on Dec. 11. He said the solution was threefold: "No turnovers, stopping the run and getting after the quarterback. That's the way you win."

In their last two games, the Broncos are minus-7 in takeaways, have just three sacks and have yielded 301 yards rushing. That's the way you lose.

None of those quarterback takedowns have come from rookie linebacker Von Miller, who is stuck on 11½ sacks, three shy of Jevon Kearse's NFL rookie record set in 1999.

"It's that big cast on his thumb," Fox said. "It's hard to play this game with both hands let alone just one."

Miller tore ligaments in his right thumb, an injury that required surgery and sidelined him for one game.

"It's definitely a factor," Fox said. "A different type of cast isn't going to let him use his hand any differently because we still have to immobilize the thumb. We'll make do. He'll get better and so will we."

The Broncos, however, might have to face Orton with a makeshift secondary. Safety Brian Dawkins left last week's game with a recurring neck injury that could spell the end to his stellar 16-year NFL career that includes eight Pro Bowls.

Fellow starting safety Quinton Carter pulled a hamstring and nickel back Chris Harris hurt his neck, too. That means the starting safeties might be Raheem Moore and David Bruton, which could affect defensive coordinator Dennis Allen's aggressive approach against Orton, who went 6-21 with the Broncos after winning his first six games with them in 2009.

The Chiefs were eliminated from playoff contention last weekend, so they're strictly playing the spoiler role, just as they were two years ago when they came into Denver and thumped the Broncos 44-24.

"I'm always fired up about a game regardless of who it is," Broncos running back Willis McGahee said. "This is a game we need and must take, a must-take game. We need to go into that game and play lights-out football."

Or the lights could go out on another Broncos season without a trip to the playoffs.

Fox said he hasn't decided whether to keep the Chiefs-Raiders score and stats off the stadium's scoreboards Sunday: "I would hope our focus is all on the field against Kansas City," he said.


Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press


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Ryan gives support to Sanchez, Schottenheimer

Updated: December 27, 2011, 11:41 AM ETBy Jane McManus
ESPNNewYork.com
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After a disastrous offensive performance that left many New York Jets fans fuming -- the audacity of 59 passes as the Jets allowed five sacks to the New York Giants in a 29-14 loss Saturday -- fingers are being pointed with the playoffs a distant possibility heading into the final game of the season.

A cheerless Christmas Eve was not what the team expected after a promising start. The Jets boasted the blockbuster re-signing of wide receiver Santonio Holmes and snatched a newly-released Plaxico Burress from a half dozen other interested teams. Yet now, the Jets season is one loss to Miami away from being a flat disappointment.

In his weekly spot, New York Jets head coach Rex Ryan joined Stephen A. Smith on The Michael Kay Show to discuss his team's lackluster performance against the Giants. Rex was also asked to respond to the notion that the organization may be ready to give up on QB Mark Sanchez.

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Some critics have renewed calls for offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer's firing, others have suggested that Mark Sanchez, who is in his third season, is not the quarterback of the future. Two days after a humbling loss to the Giants, Ryan gave them each a vote of confidence.

"I have a huge amount of confidence in both guys there's no doubt," Ryan said. "I've stated over and over my feelings about Mark Sanchez. And I've said it before, no quarterback is going to look great when that's all you do and you fall behind. It wasn't Mark's best day by any stretch of the imagination, but we know he's done it."

Then Ryan turned to back his offensive coordinator.

"As far as Brian Schottenheimer goes, shoot, we'll just keep working side by side and shoulder to shoulder," Ryan said, "and we're trying to find a way to beat Miami."

The Jets are 27th in the NFL in total offense. Ryan did say that he'd like to see the Jets stretch the field more. But he also pointed to the Jets improvement in red zone efficiency.

Earlier in the season, Ryan allowed that bringing in an additional voice helped with that.

SportsNation Do the New York Jets have any legitimate chance of making the playoffs? Vote now!

The Jets bought in former Colts offensive coordinator Tom Moore as a consultant as the season began. He spent some time in Florham Park during the team's training camp, and was brought back three weeks ago to ride along for the rest of the year. Schottenheimer said he never considered the addition to be a threat.

"It truly makes the things that we were doing before so much easier," Schottenheimer said.

Schottenheimer is made available to the media once a week, usually on Thursdays.

Dustin Keller, the fourth-year tight end, backed both Sanchez and Schottenheimer and said he was surprised that the offense had not fared better this season.

"At the end of the season we should have everything figured out," Keller said. "That's not the case. It's something we need to get better at."

After the loss to the Giants, a report surfaced that the Jets front office was engaged in an internal discussion about whether Sanchez was the right quarterback for the future.

"It's just not true," Ryan said on 1050 ESPN's "The Michael Kay Show."

Asked by ESPN's Stephen A. Smith if Ryan would consider Colts quarterback Peyton Manning if he became available, Ryan laughed.

"There's no way we're looking to replace Mark Sanchez," Ryan said.

Ryan allowed that if he were starting a team from scratch that anyone would take Manning, but in the situation the Jets were in now, he would stick with his admittedly imperfect quarterback.

Sanchez has never had the same group of receivers in his three years as quarterback. In his first year, he had Jerricho Cotchery and Laveranues Coles, then Braylon Edwards and Holmes were brought in. This summer, Cotchery left and veteran slot receiver Derrick Mason came in. The Jets benched and then got rid of Mason after the Baltimore loss.

"Never at any time have we been consistent," Keller said of this season.

Offensive lineman Matt Slauson said the players didn't lack confidence in Sanchez.

"We aren't shaken by anything," Slauson said. "If you look at what Mark has done since he's been here, he is an amazing quarterback, and even though we've lost a lot of tough games, he is moving in the right direction."

Ryan was asked if he thought there needed to be changes in the offense if the season ends in as disappointing a fashion as their performance indicated on Christmas Eve.

"I thought we did an excellent job in the offseason of putting together what I think is an excellent football team with a lot of talent," Ryan said. "Have we had the results we were hoping for? No. But again the season's not over, and we'll look at everything obviously at the end of the season, but right now we're competing for it, we've got a chance and we've just got to find a way to get it done this week."

Ryan inherited Schottenheimer as offensive coordinator. The son of former NFL coach Marty Schottenheimer has been taking his lumps ever since he came in from San Diego in 2006. After the 2008 season, when Brett Favre and his injured shoulder nosedived late in the season, head coach Eric Mangini took the hit.

When the Jets drafted Sanchez after Ryan arrived, some of the criticism ebbed as Schottenheimer started to develop the one-year starter at USC. He has been brought along slowly, but with running back Thomas Jones in '09, the offense worked.

Ryan's support for Schottenheimer was a bit less spirited than for Sanchez, and went only as far as the final game of the season. Ryan is hoping that a win in Miami makes all of some questions go away. Backing into the playoffs would be even better.

"Obviously, it doesn't look good right now, but the season's still not over," Ryan said.

Jane McManus covers the Jets for ESPNNewYork.com.

Follow Jane McManus on Twitter: @janesports

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Tennessee Titans interview Mike Mularkey, Perry Fewell for head coaching job

Updated: February 4, 2011, 6:32 PM ET

NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- The Tennessee Titans have interviewed their first candidates outside of their own building in the search for a new head coach, talking to Atlanta offensive coordinator Mike Mularkey and New York Giants defensive coordinator Perry Fewell.

The Titans confirmed Friday they completed formal interviews with Mularkey and Fewell. The team is not commenting any further until they conclude the search to replace Jeff Fisher.

Mularkey is the first candidate interviewed by Tennessee who has been a head coach. By interviewing Fewell, the Titans satisfied the Rooney rule by talking with a minority candidate.

This is the second head coaching job Mularkey has interviewed for this year. He interviewed with the Browns before they hired Pat Shurmur, though he also canceled an interview with Denver.

Mularkey went 14-18 with Buffalo from 2004-05 before resigning in 2006 due to philosophical differences with the head office. He started coaching in the NFL in Tampa Bay before moving to Pittsburgh for eight seasons, the last three as offensive coordinator, where he mentored Kordell Stewart and Tommy Maddox.

He has been in Atlanta the past three seasons grooming quarterback Matt Ryan to the AP NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year award in 2008. Ryan led the Falcons to a 13-3 record and the NFC's No. 1 seed this season.

This is Fewell's fourth interview this offseason for a head coaching job, after he talked with Carolina, Cleveland and Denver.

The 48-year-old coach spent 2010 as defensive coordinator with the Giants. He had been defensive coordinator in Buffalo under Dick Jauron until he was fired, and Fewell was interim head coach of the Bills for the final seven games, going 3-4.

The North Carolina native started coaching in college and is familiar with Nashville from his stint at Vanderbilt, where he coached the secondary from 1995-97.

Tom Coughlin hired Fewell in Jacksonville in 1998 as his defensive backs coach, and he stayed in that job through 2002. Fewell coached St. Louis' secondary in 2003-04 and was with Chicago in 2005, when the Bears had an NFC-best 24 interceptions with Pro Bowl selections in Nathan Vasher and Mike Brown.

Fewell went to Buffalo as Jauron's defensive coordinator in 2006, running the Bills' 3-4 defense. It allowed only 14 touchdown passes in his last two seasons, and the Bills tied for fifth in the NFL with 33 takeaways. That's a category the Titans struggled in this season.

Coughlin hired Fewell again in January 2010 as his defensive coordinator.

The Titans started the search by interviewing offensive line coach Mike Munchak, considered the top candidate for the job, and offensive coordinator Mike Heimerdinger earlier this week.


Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press


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Tuesday, 27 December 2011

NFL commissioner Roger Goodell says naming-rights deal for proposed Los Angeles NFL stadium "positive development," but said financing is "very difficult proposition"

Updated: February 4, 2011, 6:39 PM ETBy Tim MacMahon
ESPNDallas.com
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DALLAS -- NFL commissioner Roger Goodell described the financing of a football stadium in Los Angeles as a "very difficult proposition" despite this week's announcement of the most lucrative naming-rights agreement in sports history.

Anschutz Entertainment Group, the entertainment company that owns the Staples Center among other properties, announced a 30-year, $700 million naming-rights deal with Farmers Insurance for a Los Angeles stadium.

"I think it's obviously a positive development because it's an important revenue stream, but even with that positive development the financing of the stadium in Los Angeles is still a very difficult proposition," Goodell said during his Super Bowl XLV news conference Friday. "We have to get the collective bargaining agreement addressed in such a way as to make it so that it is a smart investment that that can be financed so that we can create the kind of economic activity in Los Angeles that I believe can happen if we're successful, whether it be in downtown or out in the City of Industry.

"There are some great opportunities for us to continue to grow the game, but we have to recognize that cost is associated with that and address it in a way that incentivizes everyone to make those kind of investments. I think this is a positive thing for the league, for the players, for the game, and for, most importantly, our fans in Southern California."

Other prominent NFL figures expressed optimism this week that Los Angeles would land a franchise soon.

"To me that is a major indication of the viability of a franchise in Los Angeles," Cowboys owner and general manager Jerry Jones said of the naming-rights deal. "That's significant money no matter who you are, so I think that is a big plus."

Added Steelers president Art Rooney II: "It's a great football town. They've supported a few franchises over the years, and hopefully we'll get another one back there by at least 2016."

However, Goodell said he does not want any of the NFL's 32 franchises to change locations.

Goodell was asked specifically about the possibility of the Chargers leaving San Diego to move to Los Angeles.

"We want to keep our teams where they are," Goodell said. "The Chargers have been committed to getting a solution in their stadium in San Diego for, I believe, well over eight years now. They've been working on different alternatives. They've spent an extraordinary amount of time and resources to try and develop those solutions and they still continue to this day to do that. They want to be in San Diego. They want the Chargers to be in San Diego, and so does the NFL. But, we need to find a solution to the stadium issue in San Diego."

Tim MacMahon is a reporter and columnist for ESPNDallas.com. You can follow him on Twitter.

Follow Tim MacMahon on Twitter: @espn_macmahon

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Brees tops Marino's passing mark in Saints rout

Yasinskas In one sweeping stroke, Drew Brees broke a once-unreachable record and the Saints' foremost division rival, writes Pat Yasinskas. Blog

• Stats & Info: Breesing into the books


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Saturday, 5 February 2011

Washington Redskins owner Daniel Snyder wants apology, correction from Washington City Paper

Updated: February 4, 2011, 8:49 PM ET

DALLAS -- Washington Redskins owner Daniel Snyder defended his decision to sue Washington City Paper, saying a column and doctored picture of him "crossed the line; it's that simple."

"Enough is enough," said Snyder, who often has come under criticism during his ownership of Washington's NFL team.

He spoke to reporters Friday in Dallas, where the Super Bowl will be played Sunday, and made his first public comments about the lawsuit filed against the weekly paper and its parent company, Atalaya Capital management LP, in New York State Supreme Court on Wednesday. The suit seeks at least $1 million in damages for each of the two causes of action, plus punitive damages.

The suit says the story entitled "The Cranky Redskins Fan's Guide to Dan Snyder" defamed him and an accompanying altered photo -- with horns and a beard drawn in pen -- had anti-Semitic references.

The suit claims the weekly newspaper used "lies, half-truths, innuendo and anti-Semitic imagery to smear, malign, defame and slander" Snyder. The suit also says the newspaper reported Snyder engaged in criminal conduct by "forging names."

On Friday, Snyder said: "I respect the media. My father was a journalist. But don't call me a criminal. Don't lie."

He said he wants a personal apology and a correction.

Asked whether he worried about drawing more attention to the story, Snyder replied: "I don't care. What's right is right, and what's wrong is wrong. Put horns on me? I'm Jewish. You crazy? You don't do that."

In a post on the newspaper's website Wednesday, managing editor Mike Madden said the image "is meant to resemble the type of scribbling that teenagers everywhere have been using to deface photos for years. The image of Snyder doesn't look like an 'anti-Semitic caricature' -- it looks like a devil."


Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press


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NFL commissioner Roger Goodell says owners committed to agreement

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DALLAS -- Roger Goodell recognized the questioner, even kidded him.

Chad Ochocinco was in no joking mood.

The Bengals receiver, reporting for his own OCNN network, stood up at Goodell's annual Super Bowl news conference Friday and asked the NFL commissioner how close the league and players union were to a new contract that would avoid a potential lockout.

"I can tell you the commitment on behalf of the ownership is on getting an agreement," Goodell said. "This is the window of opportunity to get this done right. Otherwise, uncertainty is going to seep into all of our operations. ... I say, let's get to work, let's get an agreement that works for everybody."

Goodell and union officials were to meet Saturday in Dallas, the first formal bargaining session since November. Two more sessions have been scheduled for next week, at an undisclosed location.

Commissioner Roger Goodell emphasized how he and his staff and team owners are willing to work around the clock to get a new agreement completed in time, writes John Clayton. Column

NFLPA spokesman George Atallah described the meeting as "a window of opportunity" and added: "We intend to go in there with open minds and open ears."

"I don't think it's a good idea to set any expectation, other than the fact that we intend to sit down and continue to have a discussion that should guarantee football for our fans, football for our players," NFLPA executive director DeMaurice Smith said Thursday.

Goodell said it was imperative to have a deal before the collective bargaining agreement expires in a month.

"I frequently have said that I think March 4 is a very critical date," Goodell said. "A lot of different strategies will take place if we're not successful in getting an agreement by that time.

"We need to have intensive, round-the clock negotiations to address the issues and find solutions. I can assure you that I have that sense of urgency and I believe both sides do."

Asked whether the owners will lock out the players, Goodell replied: "We have not made any determination with what will happen on March 4."

The union has said it expects to be locked out if there is no agreement.

"Status quo is not acceptable," Goodell said. "We have to address these issues going forward. ... The pendulum has shifted too far in one direction."

He called the union's request for teams to open up their financial records a negotiating ploy, and said a brewing dustup over whether teams can name franchise players could be headed to court.

Patriots owner Robert Kraft reiterated Goodell's description.

Goodell Status quo is not acceptable. We have to address these issues going forward.

” -- NFL commissioner Roger Goodell

"If I thought that was the variable, I would push for that," said Kraft, who will be present for Saturday's session. "The NBA opened its books. I don't want someone telling us we weren't not spending enough for a marketing guy, or this, or that. That isn't the key to getting a deal done. If it were, I'd be a big supporter of it. That's just a red herring."

Goodell said a work stoppage of any length would draw backlash from fans and sponsors. He noted that would hurt everyone because "when that revenue decreases, there is less for us to share."

In the owners' view, the shift is toward the players. So they opted out of the agreement in 2008, two years after it was reached.

The major issues are how to divide about $9 billion in annual revenues; the owners' push to expand the regular season to 18 games and reduce the preseason by two games; a rookie wage scale; and benefits for retired players.

Goodell added: "There are no deal-breakers."

That includes the league's desire to expand the regular season to 18 games. Goodell said fans repeatedly tell him the quality of preseason games doesn't meet NFL standards.

"That was one of the basis at which we started to look at the 18-2 concept," he said. "I feel an obligation to do the best we can to present the highest quality. If we can't do it right, we won't do it."

Goodell knows his reputation -- and his paycheck -- would take a hit without a deal. Goodell has vowed to drop his salary from nearly $10 million, including bonuses, to $1 if there is a work stoppage.

"I don't want my salary to go to a dollar. My wife doesn't want my salary to go to a dollar," he said, drawing laughs. "But it's a collective sacrifice if we're not able to get an agreement. It should affect everyone in the league. ... We should avoid it to get something done as soon as possible."


The NFL's collective bargaining agreement expires in March, and a lockout is a real possibility. ESPN.com Topics keeps you up to date on all the latest on the labor situation. More »

Goodell also said he had spoken to Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Michael Vick three times in the last two weeks. Vick was reinstated during the 2009 season after spending 18 months in prison on federal charges of running a dogfighting ring.

Vick's name has been attached to several events that don't fit the rehabilitated image he's trying to cultivate. Goodell said Vick told him others were using his name without permission.

"I don't want him to put himself in a position where bad things can happen around him," Goodell said. "He takes that seriously.

"We're looking for success stories; we're not looking for players to fail. He's paid a very significant price and he's doing the right thing."

Goodell praised the Dallas-Fort Worth area for handling the difficult weather, saying the ice and snowstorms would not jeopardize the region's chances of hosting the game again. This is the first Super Bowl to be staged here and Friday's was the second snowstorm this week.

"Frankly, that's our stage," Goodell said of 100,000-seat Cowboys Stadium. "You're going to be seeing the Super Bowl from one of the greatest stadiums in the world. ... The fact it can handle weather by closing the roof is a benefit."

Information from The Associated Press and ESPNBoston.com's Mike Reiss was used in this report.


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