Feeds for May, 2010

DUNTA ROBINSON WORTH THE MONEY!

http://www.ajc.com/sports/atlanta-falcons/falcons-new-db-dunta-538865.html?cxtype=rss_sports_82014

Falcons’ new DB Dunta Robinson: His corner By Steve Hummer

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

4:32 p.m. Monday, May 31, 2010

The initial report on the Falcons’ latest big buy, cornerback Dunta Robinson, is that he is one tough customer.

That has yet to be revealed on the Flowery Branch practice field. During the team’s current “voluntary” workouts, Robinson is only out there playing patty-cake with the receivers. None of the rough stuff on Robinson’s resume — the tight press coverage, the crackling tackling, the ’tude — is really appropriate in May.

It’s a different story when it comes to real estate agents. He’s just been killing them lately.

“It’s a great time to go house shopping,” said the player whose position, after all, is built upon opportunism.

He has the means. He is, in fact, slopping over in means, leaving the Houston Texans for a six-year, $57 million ($25.5 million guaranteed) free-agent deal with the Falcons. Problem is, people know it, and he is having trouble negotiating the kind of price that suits him in a down market. Relocating to Gwinnett County is taking longer than planned.

Robinson’s guiding rhyme chills any commissioned agent’s blood: “I’m looking for the steal, not the deal.”

Probably just the kind of thinking you want from a player acquired to put the larceny back in the Falcons’ pass defense, ranked 28th in the NFL last season.

Robinson is in no rush to find a place, since he can bunk with his parents in the Oconee County home he built for them. It is about a 45-minute commute to Flowery Branch and nearer than that to the Athens area where he grew up and established a tangle of roots.

If the mesa of money didn’t convince him to sign with the Falcons, if the Arthur Blank recruiting pitch (which came with private jet transportation, plus dinner and a Hawks game) didn’t dazzle Robinson, the simple attraction of moving back to Georgia tipped the deal.

‘Safety mentality’

Here is one of those situations where personal tastes and team needs seemed to come together and sing perfect harmony.

“Just being home, knowing everything around me, being able to go and see people I grew up with, see my mom and dad on a regular basis — it all has been a dream come true,” Robinson said, sitting in the green, green grass of home after a Falcons training session last week.

“I can’t wait to get out on the field and play on Sundays.”

And Falcons fans, fearing the cocked arm of Drew Brees, can’t wait to see what he’s got.

Come that still distant season, Robinson will be expected to remake the character of the Falcons’ secondary. That callow, oft-abused unit badly needs a veteran presence and a guiding personality.

The Falcons paid a premium for a cornerback who reportedly will bring a rare combination of abilities. There is the speed that has survived one severe knee and hamstring injury. And the aggressiveness that always has been there, since the days he was playing 8-year-old football in Athens and, as Robinson’s father recalls, officials at least twice stopped games because his boy was hitting too hard.

Of the difference one man might make, Falcons new secondary coach Tim Lewis said, “Let’s hope better coverage means more sacks and more sacks means more wins.”

A seventh-year veteran, Robinson, in theory, is one of those corners you stick on the other guys’ best receiver and then go on with your life.

“It’s nice having a guy you don’t have to worry about,” Falcons safety Erik Coleman said.

But don’t just call him a cover guy. To Robinson, that is an insult by omission.

“I hear a lot of guys say they’re a cover corner,” he said, “I don’t want that beside my name. I want ‘complete corner’ beside my name. A guy who can play press. A guy who can backpedal. And a guy who can come up and hit like a safety. I think it’s rare in this league that you get a corner who can do every single thing, and I’m trying to work myself up to that.”

“He has a safety mentality with cornerback skills,” said Don Hudson, his position coach at Clarke Central High, now working just down the road at Cedar Shoals.

As Lewis goes to work blending in Robinson, one attribute he won’t have to install is confidence.

Robinson comes from the Texans with the reputation of playing with a swagger, his long dreads flying, his mouth constantly in motion. The idea of standing out was formed well before that, though.

Betty and Willie Robinson like their own names just fine, but, as Dunta’s dad observed, “There are thousands of Willies or Bettys in the world.” So the couple gave their three children names that you’d have to chew on for a while, challenging names, names that anyone hooked on phonics had no shot at pronouncing properly. Then you’d have to remember them.

The first born is a daughter, Shkeida. The last, a rising sophomore running back at Georgia Southern, is Darreion. The middle child is pronounced “DONE-tay” but spelled Dunta.

Tepid recruitment by UGA

The Robinson men are a bit on the smallish side, as far as football goes. In Dunta, now listed at 5-10, 185, but going about 140 in high school, that physical trait only served to make him more determined to be noticed.

“He was always told he was too small to do this or that, and that fired him up,” his father said.

To this day, Dunta still can work up a righteous lather about Georgia backing off its recruitment of him. Growing up in Athens, he wanted nothing more than to be a Bulldog. But the last word he heard from coach Jim Donnan’s staff was a feeler about possibly playing wide receiver.

That’s how a future No. 1 draft pick at cornerback ends up at South Carolina and, Robinson would quip, how some coaches find themselves in broadcasting.

In the 2004 draft, the Falcons took a cornerback with their first pick — eighth overall. He was a unique fellow, that DeAngelo Hall. Two picks later, Robinson went to the Texans.

One of the first moves Thomas Dimitroff made as Falcons GM was to trade the highly flammable Hall to Oakland. Robinson will match himself as a player against Hall or any other DB. But could he ever hope to compare with the former Falcon in outrageousness?

“I’ll see what I got for you,” he laughed.

Last season with the Texans, Robinson had his moments. Holding out in a contract dispute, he was the only franchise player in the NFL not to sign a deal before training camp. Consequently, Robinson missed all of the preseason. The two sides failed to reach a multi-year agreement, settling on a one-year, $9.9 million deal in time for the season opener. Hardly starvation wages. Still, for that first game, Robinson dressed up his shoes with a handwritten message for Houston GM Rick Smith that read, “Pay Me Rick.”

“That marriage was over before the season started,” Robinson said.

In reviewing film of Robinson’s play last season, Lewis said he noticed no drop-off as a result of the strained relationship. Still, last season was the first in his pro career without an interception. Averaging 86 tackles in the previous three seasons in which he played all 16 games, Robinson had 64 last year.

Robinson’s father admitted that the dispute last season weighed on his boy. Conversely, now that all is happiness and light, “You’ll see that old Dunta,” Willie Robinson promised.

How could he not be happy and satisfied these days? Robinson is once more in the company of his close family, near the four-team youth football program he has sponsored for years — the Athens Oilers — and near enough to one of his favorite restaurants, Food for the Soul on Athens’ Broad Street, to almost smell the buffet.

“My mindset is great now. I feel I’m in a place where they want me. They gave me an opportunity. I want to come in here and not let Mr. Dimitroff down, not let Mr. Blank down, not let coach [Mike] Smith down. I want to come in here and be a great football player.”

In that quest, unlike the search for a bargain home, there is no room for negotiation.
Source >> Atlanta Falcons Blogs

Atlanta mayor wants new stadium

Mayor Reed said on 790 that he wants a new stadium as long as it is downtown, near the dome. He said the city would ante up 18 million every year to help Blank build it as long as it stayed downtown, that’s what the hotel tax is for. He said the dome could still be used for other events, thus opening the way for an open air stadium. Two questions..where would they put it and where would we park ? Im still think a retractable roof stadium is the answer. Keep in mind, these plans would be for 4 or 5 years down the road.
Source >> Atlanta Falcons Blogs

Coach Mike Smith Speaks About Falcons’ Offseason Goals

Knox Bardeenby Knox Bardeen

Filed under: ,

FLOWERY BRANCH, Ga. — Head Coach Mike Smith says that the Atlanta Falcons are going to stress consistency this offseason — not just on the field, but in the classroom.

It’ll be of great help that just about every player on the roster is in camp for OTA’s. Only John Abraham — coach Smith eluded to having open talks with the defensive end and knowing where he is — and Dominique Franks are missing.

In the video below, Smith said that the surgical players are going to keep rehabbing, but Jonathan Babineaux, Kerry Meier and Chauncey Davis will be back, “sooner [rather] than later,” and gave a time period for their return of seven to 10 days from Wednesday.

When asked if free agent addition Dunta Robinson and Brian Williams are considered the starting cornerbacks, Smith said that the secondary was in a state of flux. Nothing was set in stone.

“The defensive backfield group is going to be the most watched [position battle] this offseason and be very, very competitive.”

To see what else coach Smith had to say after Atlanta’s OTA, check out the video below:

 

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Source >> FanHouse

Coach Mike Smith Speaks About Falcons’ Offseason Goals

Knox Bardeenby Knox Bardeen

Filed under: ,

FLOWERY BRANCH, Ga. — Head Coach Mike Smith says that the Atlanta Falcons are going to stress consistency this offseason — not just on the field, but in the classroom.

It’ll be of great help that just about every player on the roster is in camp for OTA’s. Only John Abraham — coach Smith eluded to having open talks with the defensive end and knowing where he is — and Dominique Franks are missing.

In the video below, Smith said that the surgical players are going to keep rehabbing, but Jonathan Babineaux, Kerry Meier and Chauncey Davis will be back, “sooner [rather] than later,” and gave a time period for their return of seven to 10 days from Wednesday.

When asked if free agent addition Dunta Robinson and Brian Williams are considered the starting cornerbacks, Smith said that the secondary was in a state of flux. Nothing was set in stone.

“The defensive backfield group is going to be the most watched [position battle] this offseason and be very, very competitive.”

To see what else coach Smith had to say after Atlanta’s OTA, check out the video below:

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Source >> FanHouse

Top Ten Things Gonzo (mighta) Thought….

Top Ten Things Gonzo (mighta) Thought While His Plane Was In Trouble


10) Am I still going to get my In-Flight Granola?

9) I hope I DVR’ed the American Idol finale.

8) Not at #$%%ing #999!

7) Did that clerk give me my Frequent Flyer Miles?

6) My pilot sure looks a lot like Al Davis.

5) Is that stewardess wearing a parachute?

4) I should’ve rode with John Madden.

3) Really? The Saints?

2) What would Jack Bauer do in a situation like this?

1) I should’ve ordered the cheeseburger.
Source >> Atlanta Falcons Blogs

Just A Reminder Falcons vs Giants

Falcons vs Giants on NFL Network Sunday at 12 central 1 eastern for those of you who would like to watch it again.
Source >> Atlanta Falcons Blogs

Who is more important to the Steelers? Troy or Ben?

It seems like the Steelers were a different team with Troy Polamalu out of the lineup. I wonder if I’m not the only one who thinks he’s more of a difference maker then Ben Roethlisberger
Source >> Atlanta Falcons Blogs

Should Abraham Be at OTA’s?

He was, in fact, coming off a record year with 16.5 sacks and most could certainly give him the benefit of the doubt if he chose not to show up for OTA’s, especially since they are not required and are purely voluntary.

Source >> Topix

NFC South Breakthrough Candidates: Atlanta Falcons

The obvious choiceA isA often-injured Jerious Norwood.A One week “Mysterious Jerious” shows us glimpses of stardom, only to go down the following week.A He is a more talented athlete than Burner Turner but cannot fight off the injury bug.A A pure home run hitter in every sense of the imagination, but what will his role be this season?A Jason …

Source >> Topix

Re: Is There A Football Equivalent Of A Perfect Game?

Arthur Blank consoles Kroy Biermann, who's just learned he'll never pull off a perfect game.

More photos »

Curtis Compton - AP

Arthur Blank consoles Kroy Biermann, who’s just learned he’ll never pull off a perfect game.

Browse more photos »

“Last night, Roy Halladay made history by being the 20th major leaguer ever to throw a perfect game. No hits, no walks, no runs, no errors.

It got me thinking… is there a football equivalent to an historic feat like a perfect game? I considered a couple possibilities…”

– Bleeding Green Nation

BGN suggests shutouts, perfect QB ratings, and 500-yard passing days as possible perfect game equivalents, acknowledging that all of these fall short. Let’s dig in. Two key pieces to the perfect game mystique are in play:

1. It’s the only single-player performance in North American team sports that 100% guarantees victory.

As far as the effect on the outcome of the game goes, there is no football equivalent. There is no performance a single football player could pull off that would guarantee victory for his team — a 45/45, 600-yard passing performance could be undone by fumbles, bad defense, penalties, bad kickoff coverage, missed field goals, Chris Houston, and so on. Theoretically a team could play a game that could not possibly lose, but there’s nothing a single player can do to absolutely guarantee victory.

Even if Michael Turner scores a touchdown on the first play of every drive, his team could still lose due to a blocked extra point. Even if Sam Baker shuts down all four defensive linemen all by himself for the entire game, his team could still lose due to Mike Mularkey end-arounds. (RELATED: we need to come up with an official term and drinking game event for the Mike Mularkey end-around. I say we call it The 285, as it’s basically a standstill-paced-yet-life-gambling swoop all the way around Atlanta. Take a shot, run one lap around the house, take another shot.)

In college, David Klingler once passed for over 700 yards, and his team only won by 12 points. I’m sure there’s a perfect example of an unbelievable individual performance as part of a loss instead of just a surprisingly close game, but that’s the only one that comes to mind.

2. Rarity. MLB pitchers have only thrown 20 perfect games, and only 18 since 1900. 

The MLB season features about ten times more games per year than the NFL’s does. By my two minutes of calculations using CSVs from baseball-reference.com and pro-football-reference.com, there have been 194,766 MLB games played, and only 13,901 NFL games played (those numbers might be slightly off, or they might not. Again, two minutes). So a perfect game is even rarer than it appears to be — it happens only once every 9,738 games. It’ll happen about every 4 years from here on out, assuming 162 games per team and 30 teams.

The NFL equivalent of a once-every-9,738-games event would only happen once every 38 years — and that’s assuming we’re talking 16-game seasons stocked with 32 teams. Since (A) the league hovered around only 20 teams until the early 1960s and (B) each team played only 10 to 14 games for all but 32 of the NFL’s 89 seasons, the football equivalent of a perfect game would literally have to have been a once-in-a-lifetime event.

Once every 9,738 games means it’s happened once and won’t happen again until 2026, when Matt Ryan will be skipping training camp to film Wrangler 2.0 Jeans commercials. (Yes, at the league’s current size, this perfect-game-equivalent will likely happen twice a lifetime from now on. Set your Tivos for 2064!) In other words, the sole greatest single-player performance in NFL history is the only acceptable equivalent of the perfect pitching performance, mathematically speaking. And it still falls short of perfect-game status as it did not guarantee victory.

So… the sole greatest single-player performance in NFL history… any idea which one that is?

Source >> Falcoholic