2011年2月28日星期一

Baldinger: Kevin Kolb has not shown he can start in the NFL

NFL Network analyst Brian Baldinger is 97.5 The Fan this afternoon with Johnny Marks and had not much to Eagles quarterback Kevin Kolb, one of the most players in the league will be said spoken.
Baldwin was a great defender of the Kolb from last season when the quarterback was named the starter, but backup quarterback does not impress the Eagles, he played last year.
He said he did not know how Kolb played when they put pressure liners last season. Baldwin said Kolb was captured in a higher percentage than any other quarter in the league. Number 4 was sacked 16 times this season by throwing the ball only 189 times. Percentage Thatsit huge and not very far from being dismissed for 10% of the time.
Most viewers blame poor play on the offensive line of bags, the piston has suffered, but the former Eagles offensive lineman,  said Kolb origin of some of the bags because he did not say pocketBaldy fixed in position piston attempt to escape the pressure and not to improve the analyst football.The NFL not trust that piston to remain in the pocket when throwing under pressure, success, and the ball. He kept saying that Kolb would not have thought he was now ready for an entry in the league. 陋 ats to say too much that a guy who had called the Eagles starter a year is not ready now for an entry in the NFL.
Baldwin will get the Eagles a first-round pick for Kolb. Do not agree with Paul Domowitchs belief that birds acquire the ability for a first round pick for backup signal caller. With all the teams that a quarter to the league, so I can not find first-round pick piston now he will never lead a decent life.
I hope none of the teams who hear in the light of trade for piston Baldy, what to say it, because if they did, they had been able to return.

2011年2月21日星期一

Source: Nets believe they will get Anthony

NEWARK, N.J. -- While the Nets remain confident about acquiring Carmelo Anthony, a person familiar with the trade talks says New Jersey is interested in acquiring some former Knicks if the Denver Nuggets decide to ship Anthony to New York.

The person insists the Nets remain "confident" they can acquire Anthony in a deal that would ship point guard Devin Harris, rookie Derrick Favours, two other players and four first-round draft picks to Denver. If the deal falls through or Anthony is dealt to the Knicks instead, the Nets are prepared to pick up some of the pieces.

The person spoke to The Associated Press on the condition of anonymity because the person was not authorized to speak for the team.

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The Nets and Nuggets have talked about a deal in which New Jersey will send two first-round draft picks to Denver for Russian centre Timofey Mozgov and one of the three other players the Knicks reportedly are willing to send to Denver -- Danilo Gallinari, Wilson Chandler or Raymond Felton -- according to the person familiar with the talks.

Knicks coach Mike D'Antoni said Monday he was "ready for anything."

"I think everybody is waiting the next three days to see what happens, see the cosmetics, see if it's big," he said. "We're ready for anything but we do business as usual. We're preparing for Milwaukee."

The Knicks return from the all-star break against the Bucks on Wednesday, less than 24 hours before the trade deadline, not knowing what their roster may look like. Gallinari, Felton, Mozgov and Chandler were all at practice Monday.

Asked if he favoured trading for Anthony while giving up three starters, D'Antoni said: "We could sit here, debate all day, but I'm not going to do it. It's just not worth it."

Anthony had said he hoped to resolve his future by the end of All-Star weekend while the entire basketball world gathered in Los Angeles. Instead, he remains a Nugget for now.

Gallinari, whose name has been mentioned ever since the Anthony trade talks started, said he had not talked to Knicks president Donnie Walsh and D'Antoni.

"We didn't talk about it because it's been getting old," he said. "The same thing for a month, more than that. We're talking about this team, what I should do, what I could do and what's my job, reach our goals. We're not talking about the trade.

"It's tough to leave New York. It's part of the NBA life and it's part of how the NBA works. You got to deal with that."

The Melodrama reached perhaps its most bizarre point Sunday. Nets owner Mikhail Prokhorov essentially said at least the Nets drove up New York's price. And the Knicks hierarchy insisted they were unified in their pursuit of the all-star forward amid reports someone who no longer works for the team -- Isiah Thomas -- was pulling the strings.

Anthony finally acknowledged meeting with Prokhorov and Madison Square Garden chairman James Dolan, saying they were "generic meetings that (the Nuggets) allowed me to take, but nothing specific."

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AP Basketball Writer Brian Mahoney in Los Angeles and freelance writer Adriano Torres in Greenburgh, N.Y., contributed to this report.