2012年7月23日星期一
cheap nike jordans-Jamell Fleming ready for Arizona Cardinals' camp
Jamell
Fleming will play a lot for the Arizona Cardinals in his rookie season, whether
the former Oklahoma cornerback starts or not. Having made a strong impression
at voluntary workouts and a three-day minicamp, Fleming will be one of four
cornerbacks competing for the starting job opposite Patrick Peterson, the fifth
player selected overall a year ago. Jamell Fleming was a third round pick of
the Arizona Cardinals. AP photos Multimedia Photoview all photos Article
Gallery: Jamell Fleming ready for Arizona Cardinals' camp “I'm just trying to
learn the playbook, including nickel (packages) and be ready to contribute on
special teams,” Fleming said. “I feel I have the potential to be a starting
corner in the NFL at some point. I just have to take it step by step.” The
first step arrives Tuesday, when the Cardinals report for training camp in
Flagstaff, Ariz. Fleming will compete for the starting left cornerback vacancy
against William Gay, a five-year veteran who started the past two years with
the Steelers; Greg Toler, who was contending for the job last year before
suffering a torn ACL; and A.J. Jefferson, who lost the job after seven games last
year. Regardless who emerges as the starter, the Cardinals frequently play four
cornerbacks when facing multiple-receiver sets. “(Fleming) has been a
productive player in a big-time program,” Arizona coach Ken Whisenhunt was
quoted following minicamp. “That thing that really jumped off film was his
quickness. Watching him doing inside in the nickel, his change of direction is
really outstanding.” Playing inside in Arizona's nickel and dime packages most
likely will be Fleming's role his rookie season. Fleming (5-foot-11, 203
pounds) has good size to play in the middle. Selected in the third round, the
80th overall selection, Fleming believes his two years as a starter at OU in
the pass-happy Big 12 will help him adapt. “Just trying to learn the playbook as
fast you can is probably the biggest adjustment,” Fleming said. “They expect
you to learn everything.” Arizona didn't have a second-round pick. The
Cardinals' most pressing need was the offensive line, but they selected Fleming
with their second selection, stating he was a second-round talent that slipped
to the third round. “When you talk about a guy who can play inside or outside,
those guys have to be physical,” Whisenhunt said. “The bigger they are, the
more difficult it makes it for the offense. I'm interested to see how that
translates. His physical skill set is a good match for that.” Fleming, who
finished fifth on the team in tackles his junior and senior seasons, is
physical. He bench-pressed 225 pounds 23 times at the NFL Combine. That's why
Fleming is surprised when some have questioned his tackling skills. “It's funny
because I've had games where I led the team in tackles,” Fleming said.
“Sometimes I'd have a game where I had 11 tackles and two interceptions. In the
NFL, you have to be able to do both. But the real big thing is your coverage
against receivers.” That's Fleming's primary strength. He was second nationally
in passes defended his junior season and also recorded five interceptions. He
was named All-Big 12 last season. Fleming said he's excited for the start of
camp after getting a taste of the NFL during offseason workouts. He's already
been matched a few times in practice against All-Pro wide receiver Larry
Fitzgerald. “I think that will help me a lot,” Fleming said. “He runs the best routes
in the league.
jordans retro-Kobe the star when US basketball team goes abroad
BARCELONA, Spain (AP) — They carry cameras and microphones, sprinting
toward Kobe Bryant like Christmas shoppers who just spotted the "it"
gift sitting on shelves. Multimedia Photoview all photos Article Gallery: Kobe
the star when US basketball team goes abroad Their questions come quickly, some
in English, many in Spanish, and Bryant gives the perfect answer every time.
Yes, Spain is an incredible team that can pose problems for the U.S. No, Pau
Gasol isn't getting traded from the Lakers as long as he is there. The only
thing Bryant can't seem to explain to reporters is why he's so much more
popular than his teammates on the Olympic basketball team. "I don't know.
I don't know where it comes from or how that happens," he said Saturday
with a laugh. "It all started with the Dream Team in terms of basketball
becoming so global. When I came into the NBA, I kind of inherited kind of the
globalization of the game, and then having grown up overseas they really kind
of laid claim to me because this is where I learned how to play the game, is
overseas." Chris Paul figures Bryant owes it to the way he's won and
carried himself through the years — along with one other thing. "A lot of
it's got to do, too, that he plays for the Lakers. I learned that, too, I
learned that quick," Paul said. "Everywhere you go, shoot, the
Lakers, they never play a road game. Only time they might play a road game now
is in Oklahoma City." Bryant is not the best player on the U.S. team,
probably just cracking the top three at this stage of his career. Yet for as
good as LeBron James, Kevin Durant or any other U.S. player is, none draws the
attention of Bryant once the Americans leave home. "Well, he's been doing
it for 16 years in the NBA and in those 16 years the accomplishments are
incredible. I mean, they're worthy of a top-five player in the history of the
game, really," U.S. coach Mike Krzyzewski said. "And then he's been
so visible, been all over the world. In others words, he's traveled all over in
the offseason. Even when we're on this tour, he's a guy that gets out, meets
people. I think he has just made a commitment to being out there and as a
result, you know, people follow him." The Americans still marvel at the
frenzy surrounding Bryant four years ago in Beijing. U.S. assistant Mike
D'Antoni once joked that the thunderous "Kobe! Kobe!" chants during
the opening ceremonies had even James, Dwyane Wade and Carmelo Anthony going,
"What are we, potted plants?" Bryant had made multiple promotional
trips to the Far East by then and kept going out even during the Olympics to
see other sports. He was already better known than most players because of all
his All-Star appearances and five NBA championships.
retro jordans-Big 12 Conference must let Bob Bowlsby lead
IRVING, Texas — In the wake of the Penn State scandal, the Big
Ten Conference produced an 18-page plan that included a stunning proposal. New
Big 12 Conference Commissioner Bob Bowlsby wears a cap at the news conference
introducing him to the media at Big 12 headquarters Friday, May 4, 2012, in
Irving, Texas. (AP Photo/LM Otero) ORG XMIT: TXMO104 Multimedia Photoview all
photos Article Gallery: Big 12 Conference must let Bob Bowlsby lead Give
commissioner Jim Delany the power to fire football coaches. When the idea hit
the public square, the Big Ten quickly backtracked and said that proposal would
not be considered by league fathers. But merely the discussion of such a
concept shows the difference in philosophy from the Big 12 and peer leagues
like the Big Ten, SEC and Pac-12. Those conferences have anointed their
commissioners with power. The Big 12 has been slow to allow its commissioner to
make important conference decisions, much less institutional decisions. And
that's been the case historically, going back to the old Big Eight and
Southwest Conference days. So as the Big 12 starts the Bob Bowlsby era — he
took office July 1 and greets us Monday with a press conference at Big 12
Football Media Days across town at the Westin Galleria — it's fair to ask if
anything has changed. In the wake of two straight years of defections —
Colorado and Nebraska in 2011, Missouri and Texas A&M in 2012 — will Big 12
politics evolve? Will Bowlsby centralize power in a conference that always has
been run by the school presidents? Will Bowlsby take the lead on visionary decisions
like conference expansion and media ventures, or will he merely be executor of
whatever the 10 presidents want? “I don't think Dan Beebe was a puppet by any
means,” OSU president Burns Hargis, the current Big 12 chairman, said of the
Big 12 commissioner deposed last September. “And I can assure you that being a
puppet was not part of the qualifications we were looking for in our job
description.” I'll accept the latter. Can't accept the former. Beebe clearly
was fired because some Big 12 schools saw him as a figurehead controlled by the
University of Texas. Personally, I don't think that was a fair description, but
clearly it was the belief of some, including OU president David Boren. Of
course, there's a big difference between puppet and weak. I do think Beebe was
a weak commissioner, not because he was incapable of quality leadership, but
because this league's tradition and desire has been weak leadership. The
greatest example ever, of course, was former commissioner Kevin Weiberg, who
pushed for a Big 12 Network. League leaders — from Texas and OU and Nebraska
and A&M — patted Weiberg on the head and told him to scoot along. You know
what happened next. Weiberg resigned and helped the Big Ten launch its cash-cow
network. Institutional endeavors, like The Longhorn Network, helped splinter
the Big 12. But perhaps there is reason for optimism. Bowlsby did not take
kindly to the inference that he will be less than a Delany or a Mike Slive
(SEC) or a Larry Scott (Pac-12). “I would suggest you do a little homework on
me,” Bowlsby said. “I haven't been a puppet over the years.” Bowlsby suggested
his background — 16 years as athletic director at Iowa, six years as AD at
Stanford — provides him the unique vantage point of being on board for the Big
Ten's remarkable financial growth and Scott's recent transformation of the
Pac-12 from a loosely confederated league to a united power broker. Plus,
Bowlsby has the added bonus of experiencing it from places as diverse as Iowa
City and Palo Alto. “I bring a campus perspective,” Bowlsby said.
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