There are times when life and sports intertwine, transcendent instances that are permanently etched in the mind like a champion's name in Lord Stanley's cup. And the funny thing is, sometimes you don't recognize the magnitude of the moment until it passes and you look back.
For me, December 8th, 1987 is one of those moments. That night, hockey history was made when Ron Hextall fired the puck into an empty net becoming the first goalie to legitimately score a goal (sorry, Billy Smith).
My father and I were nine rows off the glass that night, my sister and brother ten rows behind us. Rather than leave early to beat the traffic as my dad suggested, we stayed in our seats and celebrated like maniacs when the shot went in. On the ride home, my dad thanked me for talking him into staying. I've never left a game early since.
The Flyers' opponent on December 8th, 1987? The Boston Bruins.
Last night, I sat with my son to watch Game 7. I promised him he could watch the whole game, bedtimes be damned. The Flyers, once down 0-3 in their Eastern Conference semifinal match-up against the Bruins, fell behind by three goals in the game's first ten minutes. While picking up the pieces of my shattered remote control, I told him he may be going to bed earlier than I thought.
Nope, I'm watching the whole game, he informed me.
During the first intermission, after James van Riemsdyk had cut the deficit to two, I had the following exchange with my boy:
Me: "You think we can come back?"
Him: "Yeah, do you?"
Me: "I don't know, bud. I'm not sure."
Him: "But we were losing by three."
Me: "The game or the series?"
Him: "Both."
Me: "Good point."
Great point, actually. Most teams that fall three games back in a best-of-seven series roll over and die. Only five have come all the way back to force a seventh game. Two actually won the series, but that hadn't happened since 1975.
We stuck it out. Scott Hartnell and Danny Briere atoned for first period high-sticking penalties that resulted in power play goals by the Bruins with second period markers that evened the score.
When Simon Gagne potted the go-ahead power play goal in the third, we jumped around the living room like my old man and I did the night Hextall scored. As time expired and the comeback was complete, I picked him up and just laughed.
As I carried him up to bed, I thanked him for staying with me. We had just witnessed sports history. Hopefully he'll remember May 14th, 2010 as vividly as I remember December 8th, 1987.
I know I will.
May 15, 2010
April 5, 2010
Mr. McNabb Goes to Washington
From a historical perspective, April 5, 2010 stands out like none in recent memory. The world's best golfer is making his return to competition from a self-imposed suspension for personal indiscretions. The NBA and NHL seasons are winding to a close. Today was Opening Day for Major League Baseball. The NCAA will crown a men's basketball champion this evening.
Oh, and April 5, 2010 is the day I emerged from blogosphere hibernation.
You see, during my hiatus, I had poignant pieces crafted regarding, in no particular order, Harry Kalas, Allen Iverson, Michael Vick, Andy Reid, Chris Pronger, Mike Richards, Ray Emery, and Cole Hamels. But I never had the inspiration to put pen to paper (or in this case, fingers to keyboard). It was going to take something magnanimous to bring me out of my 13-month slumber.
The best quarterback in the history of the Philadelphia Eagles and one of my all-time favorite athletes being traded to a division rival? Yup, that fits the bill.
Let's not confuse this with the Philadelphia Eagles the NFL Franchise trading it's best and perhaps most important player. This was Philadelphia Eagles, Inc. divesting an asset that they felt was beyond its useful life. In short, this was a business decision, not a football decision.
To paraphrase Chris Rock, I'm not saying they should have traded him, but I understand.
If I've learned anything in my life, it's that all relationships run a course, and the marriage between McNabb and the Eagles was damaged beyond repair. This had to happen now, while McNabb still had value.
The writing was on the wall when they traded up to draft Kevin Kolb a few years back, insisting all along that McNabb was still the guy. They have spotted Kolb in with mixed results. McNabb was pulled for the second half against Baltimore late in 2008 but regained his job the following week and led the Eagles to the NFC Championship game. When McNabb was injured on Opening Day of the 2009 season, Kolb became the first quarterback in NFL history to throw for at least 300 yards in his first two starts.
Football people will tell you that Kolb is a better prototypical fit for Andy Reid's version of the West Coast offense. It's predicated on controlling the clock with short, accurate passes. McNabb was always the square peg being jammed into the round hole. To his credit, he did more with less than any quarterback I can remember. McNabb belongs in a run-first offense where he can execute play action and throw deep balls over a collapsed secondary.
Sound like a Mike Shanahan game plan to you?
McNabb's greatest asset in Reid's offense was intelligence. He took what the defense gave him, and rarely tried to force throws. His TD-to-INT ratio speaks to that. Whether or not Kolb inherited that from his predecessor remains to be seen. After all, he has only played about two and a half meaningful NFL games. Per the Eagles brain trust, that's enough of a sample size to render McNabb expendable.
For their sake, and ours, let's hope they're right.
Oh, and April 5, 2010 is the day I emerged from blogosphere hibernation.
You see, during my hiatus, I had poignant pieces crafted regarding, in no particular order, Harry Kalas, Allen Iverson, Michael Vick, Andy Reid, Chris Pronger, Mike Richards, Ray Emery, and Cole Hamels. But I never had the inspiration to put pen to paper (or in this case, fingers to keyboard). It was going to take something magnanimous to bring me out of my 13-month slumber.
The best quarterback in the history of the Philadelphia Eagles and one of my all-time favorite athletes being traded to a division rival? Yup, that fits the bill.
Let's not confuse this with the Philadelphia Eagles the NFL Franchise trading it's best and perhaps most important player. This was Philadelphia Eagles, Inc. divesting an asset that they felt was beyond its useful life. In short, this was a business decision, not a football decision.
To paraphrase Chris Rock, I'm not saying they should have traded him, but I understand.
If I've learned anything in my life, it's that all relationships run a course, and the marriage between McNabb and the Eagles was damaged beyond repair. This had to happen now, while McNabb still had value.
The writing was on the wall when they traded up to draft Kevin Kolb a few years back, insisting all along that McNabb was still the guy. They have spotted Kolb in with mixed results. McNabb was pulled for the second half against Baltimore late in 2008 but regained his job the following week and led the Eagles to the NFC Championship game. When McNabb was injured on Opening Day of the 2009 season, Kolb became the first quarterback in NFL history to throw for at least 300 yards in his first two starts.
Football people will tell you that Kolb is a better prototypical fit for Andy Reid's version of the West Coast offense. It's predicated on controlling the clock with short, accurate passes. McNabb was always the square peg being jammed into the round hole. To his credit, he did more with less than any quarterback I can remember. McNabb belongs in a run-first offense where he can execute play action and throw deep balls over a collapsed secondary.
Sound like a Mike Shanahan game plan to you?
McNabb's greatest asset in Reid's offense was intelligence. He took what the defense gave him, and rarely tried to force throws. His TD-to-INT ratio speaks to that. Whether or not Kolb inherited that from his predecessor remains to be seen. After all, he has only played about two and a half meaningful NFL games. Per the Eagles brain trust, that's enough of a sample size to render McNabb expendable.
For their sake, and ours, let's hope they're right.
March 4, 2009
No News Would Have Been Good News
As the 3:00 PM trade deadline got closer and closer, it appeared as though the Flyers were going to stand pat. Considering their position in the Eastern Conference standings and their limited salary cap flexibility, they would have done well to do nothing.
Then I read this posting on ESPN's running trade deadline blog:
"We just confirmed the Coyotes traded Daniel Carcillo to the Philadelphia Flyers in exchange for Scottie Upshall and a second-round draft pick."
Why the hell would they make a move like that? In case you're not familiar with Carcillo, check out his stat line. So basically they traded a young, third-line winger with speed and grit who can chip in a few goals AND a second round draft choice for a poor man's Riley Cote. Brilliant.
So what was the purpose? It's not like they cleared a ton of salary by moving Upshall ($1.25 million). Maybe they did it to set up another move.
That second move? Acquiring defenseman Kyle McLaren from the San Jose Sharks organization. Not the Sharks, but their AHL affiliate. Again, its hard to see the logic in this one. Does McLaren crack the top six, or was this a move to bolster the Phantoms' Calder Cup chances?
Before the deadline, the Flyers had three solid lines (Mike Richards centering Simon Gagne and Mike Knuble, Jeff Carter pivoting Scott Hartnell and Joffrey Lupul, and Danny Briere between Claude Giroux and Upshall). They also had the option of swapping Upshall and Gagne to and creating a modern-day French Connection line with Gagne, Briere, and Giroux.
With Upshall gone, it will be hard for John Stevens to juggle his lines. You can't play Aaron Asham, Cote, and Carcillo together. They'd spend more time in the penalty box than on the ice. Would that line get four minutes of ice time in a playoff game?
Thier D pairings were also good - Kimmo Timonen with Ryan Parent, Matt Carle and Braydon Coburn, Randy Jones and Andrew Alberts. Whose shifts does McLaren take?
The formula was in place for the Flyers to make another run - settle on a starting goalie (Read: Antero Niittymaki), stay healthy, and secure home-ice advantage in the first round. I'm not saying that still won't happen, but I liked their chances a lot more yesterday than I do today.
All because Paul Holmgren made trades simply for the sake of making trades.
Then I read this posting on ESPN's running trade deadline blog:
"We just confirmed the Coyotes traded Daniel Carcillo to the Philadelphia Flyers in exchange for Scottie Upshall and a second-round draft pick."
Why the hell would they make a move like that? In case you're not familiar with Carcillo, check out his stat line. So basically they traded a young, third-line winger with speed and grit who can chip in a few goals AND a second round draft choice for a poor man's Riley Cote. Brilliant.
So what was the purpose? It's not like they cleared a ton of salary by moving Upshall ($1.25 million). Maybe they did it to set up another move.
That second move? Acquiring defenseman Kyle McLaren from the San Jose Sharks organization. Not the Sharks, but their AHL affiliate. Again, its hard to see the logic in this one. Does McLaren crack the top six, or was this a move to bolster the Phantoms' Calder Cup chances?
Before the deadline, the Flyers had three solid lines (Mike Richards centering Simon Gagne and Mike Knuble, Jeff Carter pivoting Scott Hartnell and Joffrey Lupul, and Danny Briere between Claude Giroux and Upshall). They also had the option of swapping Upshall and Gagne to and creating a modern-day French Connection line with Gagne, Briere, and Giroux.
With Upshall gone, it will be hard for John Stevens to juggle his lines. You can't play Aaron Asham, Cote, and Carcillo together. They'd spend more time in the penalty box than on the ice. Would that line get four minutes of ice time in a playoff game?
Thier D pairings were also good - Kimmo Timonen with Ryan Parent, Matt Carle and Braydon Coburn, Randy Jones and Andrew Alberts. Whose shifts does McLaren take?
The formula was in place for the Flyers to make another run - settle on a starting goalie (Read: Antero Niittymaki), stay healthy, and secure home-ice advantage in the first round. I'm not saying that still won't happen, but I liked their chances a lot more yesterday than I do today.
All because Paul Holmgren made trades simply for the sake of making trades.
March 1, 2009
The Three Stooges: Jeff, Joe & Andy
Let's take a look at the Eagles off-season so far:
Donovan McNabb delays signing a contract extension, voicing his desire to see the team add some pieces and solidify their standing as a legitimate championship contender. Not an outrageous request, especially considering that the Eagles were three minutes from winning the NFC Championship game in January, have tradeable assets, and plenty of room under the salary cap.
Free agency opened on Friday with the Birds signing either Tra Thomas or Jon Runyan's replacement, tackle Stacy Andrews from Cincinnati. He's bigger and younger than Runyan or Thomas, plus he can team with baby brother Shawn on one side of the line.
On the same day, reserve running back Correll Buckhalter flying the coop for Denver. Considering the fragility of Brian Westbrook, they easily could have ponied up some money to keep Buck around. But he wasn't going to supplant a healthy Westbrook as the starter, so it's understandable.
Here's where the moves go from justifiable to asinine.
In a move that was long overdue, the Eagles traded disgruntled cornerback Lito Sheppard to the Jets. Their take? A fifth round pick in 2009 and a conditional pick in 2010. Really? That's all they get for a former first round pick with Pro Bowl talent? Fifth round picks are guys that get cut in training camp or compete for spots on the practice squad. This is the best deal you can get for Sheppard?
The wide receiver everyone wants, Bengals cast-off T.J. Houshmandzadeh, reportedly fell out of favor with the Eagles because he was allegedly asking for more money from them then other suitors. Wait, you mean to tell me a free agent is looking for as much money as he can get on the open market?
No other receiver news to report. It's doubtful that The Stooges have even inquired about Anquan Boldin, and they may have their window of opportunity. How much would it cost to acquire Tony Gonzalez? Will they take a chance on Marvin Harrison? Would you even want them to at this point?
The most crushing blow has to be Brian Dawkins, the heart and soul of the defense (and probably the whole team), walking away without so much as an offer from Larry, Moe and Curly. Through it all, Dawk intimated his desire to stay here. He probably would have taken less than he got from the Broncos. I mean, does this sound like a guy who wanted to leave? How can you put a price on the intangibles that Dawk brought to the table?
So in review, the Eagles entered 2009 needing to stabilize the tackle position, add a running back (Derrick Ward, anyone?), safety, tight end and perhaps a receiver. So far, they've lost people at all of those positions (when you factor in the failure to re-sign Runyan, Thomas, and L.J. Smith).
The sliver lining here is that the Eagles have two first round picks and salary cap space. The gray part of the cloud is that Jeff, Joe & Andy are still calling the shots.
Donovan McNabb delays signing a contract extension, voicing his desire to see the team add some pieces and solidify their standing as a legitimate championship contender. Not an outrageous request, especially considering that the Eagles were three minutes from winning the NFC Championship game in January, have tradeable assets, and plenty of room under the salary cap.
Free agency opened on Friday with the Birds signing either Tra Thomas or Jon Runyan's replacement, tackle Stacy Andrews from Cincinnati. He's bigger and younger than Runyan or Thomas, plus he can team with baby brother Shawn on one side of the line.
On the same day, reserve running back Correll Buckhalter flying the coop for Denver. Considering the fragility of Brian Westbrook, they easily could have ponied up some money to keep Buck around. But he wasn't going to supplant a healthy Westbrook as the starter, so it's understandable.
Here's where the moves go from justifiable to asinine.
In a move that was long overdue, the Eagles traded disgruntled cornerback Lito Sheppard to the Jets. Their take? A fifth round pick in 2009 and a conditional pick in 2010. Really? That's all they get for a former first round pick with Pro Bowl talent? Fifth round picks are guys that get cut in training camp or compete for spots on the practice squad. This is the best deal you can get for Sheppard?
The wide receiver everyone wants, Bengals cast-off T.J. Houshmandzadeh, reportedly fell out of favor with the Eagles because he was allegedly asking for more money from them then other suitors. Wait, you mean to tell me a free agent is looking for as much money as he can get on the open market?
No other receiver news to report. It's doubtful that The Stooges have even inquired about Anquan Boldin, and they may have their window of opportunity. How much would it cost to acquire Tony Gonzalez? Will they take a chance on Marvin Harrison? Would you even want them to at this point?
The most crushing blow has to be Brian Dawkins, the heart and soul of the defense (and probably the whole team), walking away without so much as an offer from Larry, Moe and Curly. Through it all, Dawk intimated his desire to stay here. He probably would have taken less than he got from the Broncos. I mean, does this sound like a guy who wanted to leave? How can you put a price on the intangibles that Dawk brought to the table?
So in review, the Eagles entered 2009 needing to stabilize the tackle position, add a running back (Derrick Ward, anyone?), safety, tight end and perhaps a receiver. So far, they've lost people at all of those positions (when you factor in the failure to re-sign Runyan, Thomas, and L.J. Smith).
The sliver lining here is that the Eagles have two first round picks and salary cap space. The gray part of the cloud is that Jeff, Joe & Andy are still calling the shots.
January 15, 2009
Getcha Resume Ready
Word out of Dallas is that Cowboys management will begin internal discussions regarding the possible release of Terrell Owens, or as I like to call him, that asshole that used to wear Jason Avant's number.
As we all know, anytime a receiver becomes available, the Eagles are one of the teams mentioned as a potential landing place. Inquirer columnist Bob Ford even mentioned something about it in his blog today.
So would I want him back? Let me be perfectly clear on this.
No.
Hell no!
No fucking way!!!
Next question.
Here's the reality. Terrell Owens has been on three NFL teams and has divided three locker rooms. He's feuded with quarterbacks, other receivers, coaches and management. I don't care how talented he is. I don't care that on the field, he can be a difference-maker if he wants to be.
But last time I checked, he's not on the field right now.
To be honest, I don't think they need him. Three weeks from now, we may be talking about the Super Bowl champion Eagles and never again will we have to recount the litany of mediocre pass catchers that Donovan McNabb has had to deal with during his tenure.
And seeing as Jerry Jones holds Owens in high regard, for reasons unbeknownst to me, best bet is he'll be running routes in Dallas next season, watching as Tony Romo airmails passes over his head.
Good thing he has him some him to love.
As we all know, anytime a receiver becomes available, the Eagles are one of the teams mentioned as a potential landing place. Inquirer columnist Bob Ford even mentioned something about it in his blog today.
So would I want him back? Let me be perfectly clear on this.
No.
Hell no!
No fucking way!!!
Next question.
Here's the reality. Terrell Owens has been on three NFL teams and has divided three locker rooms. He's feuded with quarterbacks, other receivers, coaches and management. I don't care how talented he is. I don't care that on the field, he can be a difference-maker if he wants to be.
But last time I checked, he's not on the field right now.
To be honest, I don't think they need him. Three weeks from now, we may be talking about the Super Bowl champion Eagles and never again will we have to recount the litany of mediocre pass catchers that Donovan McNabb has had to deal with during his tenure.
And seeing as Jerry Jones holds Owens in high regard, for reasons unbeknownst to me, best bet is he'll be running routes in Dallas next season, watching as Tony Romo airmails passes over his head.
Good thing he has him some him to love.
January 10, 2009
The Condiment Column
OK, so THAT happened...
Yes, I've been underground for a while, thanks in part to a family vacation to DisneyWorld, holidays, two weeks of Mom's home cooking, and a computer hard drive crash that caused all of my files to disappear like Kaiser Soze.
But now I'm back for 2009, and hopefully better than ever even if I am ten pounds heavier. Though the time for resolutions has past, I have a few for this column in 2009:
1. Shorter, more frequent posts - easier to read and, quite frankly, write
2. Increased inclusion of photos and links I find enjoyable and relevant
3. No more censorship - I'm surly by nature and swear like a truck driver. I'll continue to watch my language in front of my children and around the office, but in this forum I'm going to let it fly. If that offends you, please accept my apologies.
With all that said, I've been stewing over a lot for the last two months. Allow me to catch up (Get it? Ketchup? "The Condiment Column?" God, I'm such a fucking dork).
The Eagles have made a somewhat surprising run to the second round of the playoffs. Based on pre-season expectations, it's not shocking that they're still playing in January. But a season that looked lost after a tie in Cincinnati and the unnecessary benching of Donovan McNabb against the Ravens has been salvaged. The defense has been sensational, especially in the December 7th dismantling of the Giants in Jersey.
The stars aligned in Week 17 when Chicago lost in Houston and Oakland overcame a ten-point deficit and beat a Tampa Bay team that was in the midst of a collapse that would make New York Mets fans cringe. As a result, the Eagles-Cowboys game was essentially a playoff, and since we all know Dallas doesn't win playoff games (4,396 days since their last victory) we were treated to this face:
Speaking of treats, the Flyers are in first place in the Atlantic Division at the midway point of their season. Despite that, they only have one All-Star (Jeff Carter). Thank you, dumbass Montreal Canadiens fans, for making a mockery of the game by voting guys like Mike Komisarek (1 G, 2 A in 24 games this season) and Alexei Kovalev (11 G, 20 A) as starters while more deserving players like Washington's Nicklas Backstrom (12 G, 33 A) and Mike Green (10 G, 16 A), Boston's Phil Kessel (24 G, 17 A), and of course Flyers Mike Richards, Simon Gagne, and Kimmo Timonen will be at home on All-Star weekend.
I've vented before about the issues with fan voting, but this one takes the fucking cake. If Gary Bettman had any kind of stones, he'd intervene and send Mike Komisarek home.
Hello, Raul Ibanez, Chan Ho Park, and, if you believe the rumors, Mr. Mia Hamm!
Happy trails, Maurice Cheeks, Pat Burrell, and L.J. Smith (Oops, got a little ahead of myself on that one. Check back in a couple of weeks).
The last time the Phillies won the World Series, the Eagles won the NFC and advanced to the Super Bowl. I'm not saying, I'm just saying...
Yes, I've been underground for a while, thanks in part to a family vacation to DisneyWorld, holidays, two weeks of Mom's home cooking, and a computer hard drive crash that caused all of my files to disappear like Kaiser Soze.
But now I'm back for 2009, and hopefully better than ever even if I am ten pounds heavier. Though the time for resolutions has past, I have a few for this column in 2009:
1. Shorter, more frequent posts - easier to read and, quite frankly, write
2. Increased inclusion of photos and links I find enjoyable and relevant
3. No more censorship - I'm surly by nature and swear like a truck driver. I'll continue to watch my language in front of my children and around the office, but in this forum I'm going to let it fly. If that offends you, please accept my apologies.
With all that said, I've been stewing over a lot for the last two months. Allow me to catch up (Get it? Ketchup? "The Condiment Column?" God, I'm such a fucking dork).
The Eagles have made a somewhat surprising run to the second round of the playoffs. Based on pre-season expectations, it's not shocking that they're still playing in January. But a season that looked lost after a tie in Cincinnati and the unnecessary benching of Donovan McNabb against the Ravens has been salvaged. The defense has been sensational, especially in the December 7th dismantling of the Giants in Jersey.
The stars aligned in Week 17 when Chicago lost in Houston and Oakland overcame a ten-point deficit and beat a Tampa Bay team that was in the midst of a collapse that would make New York Mets fans cringe. As a result, the Eagles-Cowboys game was essentially a playoff, and since we all know Dallas doesn't win playoff games (4,396 days since their last victory) we were treated to this face:
Speaking of treats, the Flyers are in first place in the Atlantic Division at the midway point of their season. Despite that, they only have one All-Star (Jeff Carter). Thank you, dumbass Montreal Canadiens fans, for making a mockery of the game by voting guys like Mike Komisarek (1 G, 2 A in 24 games this season) and Alexei Kovalev (11 G, 20 A) as starters while more deserving players like Washington's Nicklas Backstrom (12 G, 33 A) and Mike Green (10 G, 16 A), Boston's Phil Kessel (24 G, 17 A), and of course Flyers Mike Richards, Simon Gagne, and Kimmo Timonen will be at home on All-Star weekend.I've vented before about the issues with fan voting, but this one takes the fucking cake. If Gary Bettman had any kind of stones, he'd intervene and send Mike Komisarek home.
Hello, Raul Ibanez, Chan Ho Park, and, if you believe the rumors, Mr. Mia Hamm!
Happy trails, Maurice Cheeks, Pat Burrell, and L.J. Smith (Oops, got a little ahead of myself on that one. Check back in a couple of weeks).
The last time the Phillies won the World Series, the Eagles won the NFC and advanced to the Super Bowl. I'm not saying, I'm just saying...
November 9, 2008
The Week 10 Picks
CLEVELAND (-3.0) over Denver
ATLANTA (-1.0) over New Orleans
Tennessee (-3.0) over CHICAGO
DETROIT (+6.5) over Jacksonville
MIAMI (-8.5) over Seattle
Green Bay (+2.5) over MINNESOTA
NEW ENGLAND (-3.5) over Buffalo
St. Louis (+8.0) over NEW YORK JETS
Baltimore (-1.0) over HOUSTON
OAKLAND (+9.0) over Carolina
PITTSBURGH (Off) over Indianapolis
Kansas City (+15.0) over SAN DIEGO
PHILADELPHIA (-3.0) over New York Giants
ARIZONA (-9.5) over San Francisco
Bye: Cincinnati; Dallas; Tampa Bay; Washington
Week 10: 0-1 (.000); 0-1-0 (.000)
Week 9: 8-6 (.571); 10-4-0 (.714)
2008-09 Season: 78-52 (.600); 68-57-5 (.544)
ATLANTA (-1.0) over New Orleans
Tennessee (-3.0) over CHICAGO
DETROIT (+6.5) over Jacksonville
MIAMI (-8.5) over Seattle
Green Bay (+2.5) over MINNESOTA
NEW ENGLAND (-3.5) over Buffalo
St. Louis (+8.0) over NEW YORK JETS
Baltimore (-1.0) over HOUSTON
OAKLAND (+9.0) over Carolina
PITTSBURGH (Off) over Indianapolis
Kansas City (+15.0) over SAN DIEGO
PHILADELPHIA (-3.0) over New York Giants
ARIZONA (-9.5) over San Francisco
Bye: Cincinnati; Dallas; Tampa Bay; Washington
Week 10: 0-1 (.000); 0-1-0 (.000)
Week 9: 8-6 (.571); 10-4-0 (.714)
2008-09 Season: 78-52 (.600); 68-57-5 (.544)
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