NFL Draft Guide

Fanspeak Has a Football Focus

May 14, 2013 in NFL

By Megan Shoup, Fanspeak CEO:

Big news here at Fanspeak. You may have noticed that we’ve been publishing a lot more football coverage recently, and that’s because Fanspeak has evolved into a football-focused website.

What does that mean? Whether you love NCAA Football, the NFL, Fantasy Football or following the NFL Draft, we’ve got you covered with fresh articles, engaging podcasts and informative season guides.

Here’s what you can expect from Fanspeak moving forward:

  • Daily articles covering every angle of the football world, from player news to mock drafts to game analysis to fantasy picks and more
  • Regular programming on the Fanspeak Radio Network, with lively discussions, debates and more with our regular panelists
  • Free downloadable guides throughout the year to help you prepare for football’s biggest events (NFL Draft, College Football, Fantasy Football and the NFL season)

We’re led in this effort by Content Manager Steve Shoup, a diehard football fan and resident NFL Draft expert. He’s a credentialed member of the media, reporting from the Senior Bowl, the East-West Shrine Game, and contributing to ESPN Sports Talk Radio and The FAN affiliates around the country.

It’s been a great evolution here at Fanspeak, and we’re excited to continue this journey with you. We encourage you to continue to comment on articles and connect with us on Facebook.

Remember, Fanspeak has you covered for everything football 24×7, 365 days a year…because football doesn't have an offseason!

CATCH THE FRIDAY FOOTBALL FRENZY TONIGHT AT 9

May 3, 2013 in NFL

THANK GOD IT’S FRIDAY FOOTBALL FRENZY TIME!

Join hosts Alan Zlotorzynski and NFL Draft Expert, Stephen Shoup, both of Fanspeak.com, as they  deliver the goods on the top rated FRIDAY FOOTBALL FRENZY! Tonight's show starts at 9 and you can catch it by clicking here.

Did you close the door, is there a window open, it’s getting a bit DRAFTY in the studio tonight. Alan and Steve will grade the NFL Draft and tell you who the big winners and even bigger losers were in a deep draft last weekend.

As usual, the show will start with NFL news and notes. The Jets cutting Tim Tebow is not the only newsworthy event of this past week. No worries, the guys have you covered.helmet

Following the draft breakdown, the guys will tell which undrafted free agents were signed and which ones are likely to make a splash next season in NFL training camps. With Free Agency winding down and the draft complete, training camp rosters are just about complete, Alan & Steve will tell you what each team still needs before they take the field this summer.

Speaking of free agency, they dynamic duo will get you updated on who is still left on the market and which player could potentially still make a huge impact.

Alan and Steve will also update any news involving the RAVENS AND REDSKINS for our loyal Baltimore and D.C. listeners.

Showtime is 9:00 p.m. and will last until midnight. Can’t catch it all, no worries—you can download every episode for free once the show is complete on I-Tunes or simply log onto Fanspeak.com

Be Sure To Catch The Friday Football Frenzy on the Fanspeak Radio Network Tonight

April 12, 2013 in NFL, NFL Mock Draft

THANK GOD IT’S FRIDAY FOOTBALL FRENZY TIME.  Join Alan Zlotorzynski and Stephen Shoup of Fanspeak.com on the Fanspeak Radio Network starting at 8:30 EST for the best football show on Blog Talk Radio.

Tonight, Alan and Steve welcome back Joe Unitas, son of legendary Baltimore Colts QB Johnny Unitas. Joe will discuss the selection of Joe Flacco to play his dad in the movie during the football scenes of the 1958 Championship Game.friday_football_frenzy_generic_1346083417565_49150_ver1.0_320_240

The movie, Unitas We Stand, which is based on the Tom Callahan book, Johnny U, The Life and Times of John Unitas– is set to begin production sometime this year in Baltimore.

Joe will discuss how and why the Ravens Super Bowl winning QB is the right choice to wear No.19. for the movie. Joe will also comment on recent comments from other members of the Unitas family about Flacco's selection to play his dad, which were not very kind to say the least.

Alan and Steve will have all of the news and notes from around the NFL as well as any recent free agent signings. With only 13 days remaining until the K.C. Chiefs are asked to make the first selection, Alan and Steve have all of the latest news surrounding the Draft prospects and the teams that will take them.

Thanks to Stephen’s hard work on the FANSPEAK NFL DRAFT GUIDE, the Frenzy has all of your NFL DRAFT needs covered. The guys will attempt to make it through the first two rounds tonight, as they give you their mock drafts.

Alan and Steve will also look back on some of the best and worst drafts in recent history and tell you where this class could fit in. Showtime is 8:30 and will run three hours.

 

Capitals Corner Pre-Game Show On The Fanspeak Radio Network

April 6, 2013 in NHL

By Alan Zlotorzynski: The Washington Capitals will face the Florida Panthers in Florida tonight (7:30 p.m.) for the first half of back-to-backs. The Capitals have compiled a 23-8-1 record against Florida in the last 32 matchups and have gone 10-5-1 in their last 16 road games vs. Florida. Washington is 3-0-0 this season against the Panthers, outscoring Florida 18-6 in that span, and have scored at least five goals in all three contests so far this season.

The Capitals recent surge is thanks in part to strong goaltending from Braden Holtby and the play of what was once known as the “Young Guns”. Defenseman Mike Green, center Nicklas Backstrom and forward Alex Ovechkin have led the charge. The trio, which is still considered the nucleus of the Capitals, has combined to score 18 goals while registering 35-points in their last 25 combined man games.CapitalsCorner

The Capitals hope to continue their stellar play within the Southeast division tonight, as they are 10-3-0 in division play this season. Washington has not lost a season series to the Panthers since the 2005-06 season and is looking to sweep the season series against Florida for the first time since 2009-10 when it went 6-0.

The Capitals are coming off a week in which they collected a point in each of their four contests, while posting a 3-0-1 mark. Washington needed overtime or a shootout to finish three of the four games, losing in overtime to the Flyers after holding a two-goal lead with a little over seven minutes to play. The OT loss did nothing to slow down Ovechkin and company as they quickly rebounded to beat the Carolina Hurricanes 5-3 in come from behind fashion two nights later.

The recent winning surge has catapulted Washington into a tie for first place in the Southeast division.  Washington is tied with the Winnipeg Jets, whom the Capitals beat by a combined score of 10-1 in back-to-back on the road in Winnipeg a few weeks back.

The Jets will visit Verizon Center on April 22 in what is shaping up to be one of the better finishes to the lockout shortened NHL season.

The Capitals were quiet until the end of the NHL trade deadline on Wednesday. It was just before the 3 p.m. deadline that Caps GM George McPhee pulled the trigger on a deal and acquired forwards Martin Erat and Michael Latta from Nashville. Erat ranked tied for first on Nashville in points and led the team in assists at the time of the trade and skated 14:43 in his Capitals debut on April 4 vs. the New York Islanders.

He ranks second in Nashville franchise history in career points (481), goals (163), assists (318), games played (723), game-winning goals (26) and ranks third in power-play goals (42). He recorded a career-high 58 points (19 goals, 39 assists) last season for Nashville and has eclipsed the 50-point plateau in five of the last six seasons. Erat entered the season as one of just 17 NHL players (including Mike Ribeiro) to have recorded 45 or more points each of the last eight seasons (since 2003-04).

Many Caps fans and NHL experts alike expected McPhee to  deal to deal unrestricted free agent center, Mike Ribeiro but Washington stood pat and instead traded their No.11 pick in last year’s NHL entry Draft, Filip Forsberg.

The deal enraged many Capitals fans and had many experts scratching their heads. Many demanded to know why Washington would trade away Forsberg's explosive north-south speed and well finessed stickhandling for Erat, who while a nice player doesn’t possess the potential of Forsberg and will be 32 years old in August. Not to mention Erat has two years remaining on his current contract with a salary cap hit of $4.5 million per season.

His best season occurred two years ago when registered 58-points for the Predators.  NHL Central Scouting ranked Forsberg as the top European prospect heading into last year’s draft recorded 15 goals and 18 assists for Leksand in Allsvenskan, the second-tier Swedish league.

Filip Forsberg

The 18 year old was dubbed an all-star at this year’s world junior championships — but because he’s playing in the second-tier Swedish league Caps GM George McPhee recently admitted it’s difficult to truly evaluate the young winger.

McPhee had asked Forsberg to report to Hershey soon but this was before he dealt him Wednesday.

Washington also added depth to their already young and talented core of defenseman on Friday. Washington announced they signed defenseman Patrick Wey to a two-year, entry-level contract beginning in 2013-14, McPhee announced.

The 6’3, 210-pound defenseman recently completed his senior season at Boston College, recording career highs in points (13), assists (12), games played (37, tied) and penalty minutes (54) and registered a plus-14 rating this season. Wey helped Boston College to a 22-12-4 record and a berth in the NCAA tournament. He was named a 2013 Hockey East Second-Team All-Star and named Hockey East’s 2013 Best Defensive Defenseman.

In 133 career games with Boston College, Wey collected 33 points (four goals, 29 assists) and 147 penalty minutes. He helped Boston College win the NCAA National Championship in 2011-12 and tallied one goal and three assists in four tournament games. Boston College also won the Hockey East Championship and the NCAA regular-season championship last season as Wey was named to the NCAA All-Tournament Team at the Northeast Regional.

The Pittsburgh native helped the United States win the bronze medal at the 2011 Under-20 World Junior Championship, appearing in six tournament games. Washington drafted Wey in the fourth round (115th overall) in the 2009 NHL Entry Draft.

WASHINGTON-FLORIDA CONNECTIONS:

G Jose Theodore spent two seasons in Washington (2008-10). He finished his career with the Capitals, playing in 104 games finishing with a 62-24-12 record with three shutouts. F Tomas Fleischmann spent the majority of his career in Washington (2005-10). During his time with the Capitals, Fleischmann played 283 games, recording 138 points (60-78-138).

TOP FIVE CAPS FACTS (Washington Capitals: Media Notes) 

Green streak –Mike Green scored for the fourth consecutive game on April 4 vs. the Islanders and has tallied 5g-1a in his last four contests. Thursday marked Green’s first goal spree of as many as four consecutive contests since he scored in four straight from Oct. 30-Nov. 7, 2010, a period that included Braden Holtby’s first NHL win (Nov. 5) and first NHL start (Nov. 7). Green holds the NHL record for consecutive games with a goal by a defenseman (eight games).

Here to assist –Nicklas Backstrom extended his point streak to four games with an assist on April 4 vs. New York and now has 1g-6a in his last four contests. Backstrom is currently tied for third in the league in assists (30) after tallying 17 helpers in 18 combined games in March and April.

Southeast treat –The Capitals have compiled a 10-3-0 record against teams from the Southeast Division this season, the best record in Southeast divisional play. Washington has won its last four contests against Southeast Division opponents and is 3-0 this season against Florida.

Explosive offense –The Capitals scored four goals in the game’s first 8:10 on March 7 vs. Florida. That marks the second-fastest four goals scored to start a game in Capitals history. The first came in 6:49 on 1/21/86 vs. the Minnesota North Stars. The four first-period goals tied a season high for a single period while the seven goals scored were a single-game high this season for Washington.

MORE CAPS NOTES:

All about Ovi:

* Alex Ovechkin has scored the most goals (359) and points (716) in the NHL since the 2005-06 season.

* Alex Ovechkin finished the 2011-12 season ranked fifth in the NHL with 38 goals.

Holtby shuts the door –Braden Holtby’s four shutouts this season are more than Washington’s team leader had in that department in 23 of the team’s previous 37 seasons of existence. With seven career shutouts, Holtby has tied Michal Neuvirth and Pete Peeters for fifth on the franchise’s all-time list.

Hitting the mark –Alex Ovechkin scored twice on April 2 at Carolina, including his 20th goal of the season. The only other active players to score at least 20 goals in each of their first eight NHL seasons are Jaromir Jagr (17), Teemu Selanne (11), and Ilya Kovalchuk (10, through last season). Ovechkin became the 36th player in NHL history to score 20 or more goals in his first eight seasons in the league and becomes the only player to have scored 20 or more goals each of the last eight seasons (since 2005-06).images

400’s –Nicklas Backstrom played his 400th career NHL game on March 31 at Philadelphia and with his four assists on April 2 at Carolina surpassed the 400-point plateau (402). Backstrom became just the 16th Capital to score 400 or more points with Washington.

Just win –Braden Holtby recorded his 16th win of the season on April 4 vs. the New York Islanders, extending a career-high for wins in a single season. Holtby won 10 games in 2010-11 and is one of just four goaltenders (Jim Carey, Michal Neuvirth and Semyon Varlamov) in Capitals history to post two or more seasons of 10 or more wins at the age of 23 or younger. Holtby’s 30 career wins rank him tied for fourth in Capitals history among goaltenders originally drafted by Washington.

Before the puck is dropped in south Florida tonight, be sure to join Alan Zlotorzynski for a special pre-game edition of CAPITALS CORNER/ THE NHL SHOW.

downloadAlan will breakdown the recent success of the Capitals and will tell what to expect the rest of the season, as he breaks down the remaining games. He will also break down the trade that sent the Capitals top first round selection from last year’s NHL Draft, Filip Forsberg to the Nashville Predators for veteran Martin Erat. He will tell you why it is not as bad as you have been reading or hearing.

Washington earned a point in every game this past week while posting a record of 3-0-1. Three of their four contests required overtime or a shootout to decide. With the help of Caps play-by-play man John Walton, Alan will have all of the audio highlights as well as the stats that matter from a very important week.

Alan will also recap the NHL trade deadline, as well as have all of the news and notes from around the rest of the league. He will also take you down to the minors where the Hershey Bears are fighting for a playoff spot and Reading Royals are in the playoffs.

Showtime is 5:30 on the Fanspeak Radio Network.

THE FRIDAY FOOTBALL FRENZY IS HEATING UP AS NFL DRAFT NEARS

April 5, 2013 in NFL, NFL Mock Draft

T.G.I.F…Thank God it’s time for the Friday Football Frenzy. Join hosts Alan Zlotorzynski and Stephen Shoup as they bring you 3 hours of non-stop NFL and college football talk.

Tonight, the guys will have all of the up to the minute NFL news and notes. They will recap the week in free agency and tell you which teams are winners and losers to this point in free agency. Alan and Steve will also tell you who the best remaining free agents are and where they could play next season.

The dynamic duo will also examine the bracket of quarterbacks that ESPN used to breakdown the all-time best. Alan and Steve will chime in with who they believe were the best field generals to line up under center in NFL history.helmet

The guys will address updated team needs, as the NFL Draft is just 19-days away. Speaking of the NFL Draft, Alan and Steve will continue their comprehensive breakdown of this year’s prospects. Tonight, the guys will breakdown the rest of the offense.

They gave you the QB’s and RB’s last week and this week will look at the WR’s, TE’s and offensive lineman. To cap off the Draft segment, Alan and Steve will have their latest “Mock Drafts”.

The guys finish the show with news and notes from the world of college football. Alan will have the’ Top 10 Players on The Rise for 2013”.

You will also hear interviews from around the world of sports talk radio from Tony Gonzalez, Mike Mayock, Osi Umenyiora, Wes Welker, Marcus Lattimore and others.

If McPhee Sells, Capitals Could Be Big Winners As Trade Deadline Nears Today

April 3, 2013 in NHL

By Alan Zlotorzynski: Despite overcoming another two-goal deficit on the road and winning a game they absolutely had to have on Tuesday night in Raleigh North Carolina vs. the Hurricanes, the surging Washington Capitals must be sellers by the time the trade deadline passes today in the NHL.

Mike Ribeiro is the hot commodity as trade deadline nears

Capitals General Manager George McPhee is not in as big a quandary as many are making him out to be before the 3 p.m. deadline approaches. Yes, McPhee has big decisions to make but if he plays his cards right, the Capitals could come out as winners for the rest of this season as well as into the future.

His team, following last night’s impressive 5-3 win, is now very much alive and in position to make their sixth consecutive postseason appearance. Once left for dead following a 2-8-1 start and sitting in the bottom of the Eastern conference, Washington has finally reached the 500 mark at 17-17-2.

They are now all alone in the tenth position in the eastern conference, just one point behind the NY Rangers for ninth and three points behind the NY Islanders for the all-important eighth and final playoff spot. Even more important, they control their own destiny.

With Tuesday’s win, the Caps maintained that destiny. After trailing the division leading Winnipeg Jets by as many as eight points two weeks ago, the Caps now trail the Jets by just two and hold two games in hand on Winnipeg and have one game remaining with the Jets. If they win those games and match whatever Winnipeg does otherwise, the Caps will finish ahead of the Jets.

Washington is now two points ahead of the Hurricanes, and although the Canes hold a game in hand, the Caps would finish ahead of Carolina if they win the one remaining game between the two teams this season while matching whatever else the Canes do the rest of the way.

Since the Caps began the season with just three points in 11 games, they have posted an impressive 15-9-1 mark (.596-point percentage hockey) and have done so by overcoming at times two and three goal deficits.

If they do not win their fifth division title in the past six seasons, Washington will likely need 53 to 55 points to secure a spot in this year’s playoffs. With 36-points and only 12 games left to play, the magic number should be eight. Winning eight of their remaining games would likely gain the Caps a playoff spot either way you slice the pie. And another division championship banner to hang at Verizon Center before realignment kicks in next season would be a nice way to go out, wouldn't it?

As impressive as the Caps have played over their last 10 games (6-3-1), they may need to be even more impressive down the stretch.  This means that playing .650-point percentage hockey may not be good enough. Washington’s goal should be to post records no worse than 8-3-1 (.708) or 7-2-3 (.708) to finish the shortened 48-game campaign.

According to Sports Club Stats.com, which tracks teams up to the minute playoff percentages, the Capitals have a 49.8 percent chance to make the post-season tournament. The same site says the Winnipeg Jets are in big trouble. With only a slim two-point lead in the division and having played two more games than Washington, the Jets have a 34.1 percent chance of making the playoffs. In other words, the Capitals– with their victory over Carolina control their playoff destiny.

In fact, Washington could go from a 10th seed in the East to a three seed and home ice in at least the first round of the playoffs if they overtake the Jets and win the division.

It also makes the April 23 game at Verizon Center versus Winnipeg extremely important. How important is it—- just think where the Caps might be if they had actually beaten the Islanders last week at home instead of losing 3-2. Speaking of the Islanders (39-points), they currently own the eighth and final playoff spot in the eastern conference but did the Caps a huge favor on Tuesday night by beating the Jets 5-2 on Long Island. It was Winnipeg’s fourth loss in a row and has their fans feeling déjà vu.

Last season, the Jets were considered contenders down the stretch until they lost 10 of their final 15 games causing them to miss the playoffs and spoiling the franchises return to Winnipeg. The Islanders, according to the website, own a 51.4 percent chance of making the playoffs with the New York Rangers, having played in 35 games, owning the best odds of the three teams, at 56.6 percent.

With all of that said, the Capitals can turn the trade deadline into a win-win situation by being big time participants. The Capitals possess the hottest commodity in center Mike Ribeiro, who has an expiring contract and is playing his heart out for a new one.

The team’s third leading scorer (11, 24) behind Nicklas Backstrom and Alex Ovechkin, turned 33 on Feb 10 and is looking for a contract that will likely finish his career. In this day and age and based on the numbers he’s accumulated this season, he’s likely to demand a  four or five year deal worth $5 to $6 million per season. If you look at George McPhee’s track record, Ribeiro is likely to be skating somewhere else next season, the question is will he be skating somewhere else on Thursday and that answer, for more than just money reasons– needs to be yes.

CAPS GM George McPhee has a busy day today

Since the 2004-05 lockout, McPhee has rarely signed a player in his 30s to a contract longer than two years.  There have been a few exceptions but only one was older than 30.  Joel Ward was 30 when he agreed to a four-year, $12 million deal as a free agent in the summer of 2011, center Michael Nylander was 34 in July 2007 when he signed a four-year, $19.5 million contract; and defenseman Tom Poti, was 30 in July 2007 when he agreed to a four-year, $14 million contract.

However, McPhee and head coach Adam Oates love what Ribeiro has done for this club during the tumultuous 2013 season and Oates may be Ribeiro’s biggest supporter in the organization in terms of giving him the long-term deal he seeks. The Caps rookie head coach may not have been behind the Caps bench during the past three seasons but he is well aware of how the Capitals experimented with several options at the center position on the second line.

Current Caps like Brooks Laich, Mathieu Perreault and Marcus Johansson have all had a shot to solidify the position. Former Caps players, Tomas Fleischmann, Eric Belanger and Brendan Morrison were also been given a shot but nothing helped stabilize the position for very long.

The many names reflect the Caps lack of success, as McPhee and Oates, as well as players like Ovechkin and Backstrom know Ribeiro has provided Washington with a worry free option at the second center position. Ribeiro has been especially key on the power play where his passing and play making has catapulted Washington from near the bottom of the power play rankings in the NHL to the top. Currently, Washington is second behind the Flyers (24.8) cashing in on 24.6 percent of their chances. They notched another power play goal on Tuesday and added a shorthanded marker for good measure. However, the Caps are struggling mightily on the penalty kill.

As good as they are with the extra man, is as bad as they are when down a man. Washington ranks next to last in the NHL in that category and must improve if they hope to make a deep run this spring. Making a move or two today could help do that for the Capitals. Another reason Oates may be against trading Ribeiro is because of what the Caps coach did as a player while wearing a Capitals jersey.

Traded to Washington by Boston with Bill Ranford and Rick Tocchet for Jim Carey, Anson Carter, Jason Allison and Washington's 3rd round choice (Lee Goren) in the 1997 Entry Draft back on March 1, 1997, Oates was 34-years old at the time and still had plenty of hockey to play in his career.

He notched 506 of his career’s 1,420 total points after he turned 34 and tallied 363 of them in the nation’s capital as a member of the Capitals. Considered a premier playmaker during his era, Oates would not be a member of the Hockey Hall of Fame if he did not score a quarter (25.5 percent) of his career points in Washington.  As the Capitals key playmaker on the second line, Ribeiro has 13-points in 16 games since March 2 and has 11-goals on the season, five with the extra man. Therefore, it is hard to imagine that Ribeiro’s production would drop of very dramatically during the next two or three seasons.

However, it is not the first two or three seasons of a new contract that concerns McPhee and the Capitals. Its years four and five and Ribeiro is not in as big a win-win situation as he may think. His age is a huge hindrance. The Caps may not be the only team unwilling to give him a four- or five- year deal. Only 27 players age 37 or older have suited up for an NHL game this season. What McPhee must also consider is getting nothing in return for Ribeiro if the Caps keep him and cannot re-sign him.

McPhee did not need to look any further than across the ice last night in Raleigh at former Capitals great, Alexander Semin to be reminded of that scenario from one year ago at the deadline. McPhee held onto Semin, not happy with the offers but he could not come to terms with him during the offseason and watched as he signed with a division rival late in the free agency period this past offseason.

The two Alex's together again, Semin and Ovechkin in Carolina

Semin has not hurt the Capitals yet, although he had two assists on Tuesday. Semi’s play is much improved this season. What did the hurt the Capitals was getting nothing in return for Semin’s services. It was strange yesterday to read an article on NHL.com lauding Semin for his attitude and work ethic this year in Raleigh. Old No.28 is second on the Canes with 36-points this season and in case you were keeping score at home, that would place him second in scoring on the Caps roster as well.

If you trade Ribeiro, you are likely to get immediate help in return and could ask for a high draft pick as well. Remember what McPhee pulled out of Colorado for Semyon Varlamov, that future Capitals player turned out to be Filip Forsberg.  Pierre Lebrun of ESPN reported on his Twitter account on Tuesday that Ribeiro’s agent, Don Meehan spoke to the Caps on Friday and will do so again on Wednesday.

In the back of McPhee’s mind is last year’s LA Kings, who proved anything is possible regardless of where you finish during the regular season. The Kings were the first No.8 seed to hoist Lord Stanley’s Cup and did so in dominating fashion by winning 16 of 20 postseason contests. This stretch included losing just one game combined in the Western Conference semi-finals and conference finals.

In the end, are you willing to hang onto Ribeiro to make a playoff run that is likely to end in the first or second round for the sixth straight season? On the other hand, are you willing to possibly sacrifice the playoffs and add to a roster that has always been a player or two short of contending? At this point, the Capitals are likely to make the playoffs with or without Ribeiro, especially in the weak Southeast.

The Capitals, regardless of what they do today are still not good enough, or tough enough to advance beyond the second round of the playoffs. It is time to start building at team that is capable of accomplishing that feat. The Pittsburgh Penguins are doing that with their rash of recent trades and it is time for McPhee to do it differently than he has in the past, which all Caps fans know is a broken record playing the same tune repeatedly.

This may mean parting with players that have become fan favorites such as Ribeiro and a few others with a bit more tenure in Washington. Speaking of the future and with realignment finally approved, Washington will rejoin the good ol boys from what used to be the Patrick Division, plus the Carolina Hurricanes and Columbus Blue jackets starting next season.

That’s right, the Great 8 and company will have to routinely worry about beating Sid and the Penguins, the Broad Street Bullies, the Blueshirts in Manhattan, those pesky New Jersey Devils, who seemingly win or appear in a Stanley Cup Final about once every three or four years– and the NY Islanders, who are bound to be a good franchise again one day if they keep picking in the top 5 of the NHL Draft every year.

As it stands right now, the newly formed Atlantic division will force the Capitals into playing playoff type hockey in raucous atmospheres almost once or twice a week throughout the regular season.

Ask yourself one question Caps fans, if the core of this team has been unable to advance beyond the second round of the playoffs since their five year playoff streak began under Bruce Boudreau back in 2008, do you think this team can compete with the likes of Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, New York and even a growing Carolina for an entire the regular season going forward without shaking the core of this unit a bit.

With that in mind, McPhee may also want to consider trading players like back-up goalie Michael Neuvirth and see what the market dictates for defenseman Mike Green. What could Mike Green bring right now that he is healthy and scoring goals again? Capitals fans know that whatever success they are seeing with Green simply will not last long because he is bound to hit the IR again.

Could Mike Green be an option today, not likely

With five goals and six points in the last six games, Green’s value has increased. Despite missing 13 games, he is tied for third in the NHL for goals among defensemen with seven. Having Green at the blue line has translated into a lot of success for the Caps since his arrival in Washington almost eight years ago—but this success has been during the regular season and like many on this roster, that success has not translated into the playoffs

The Caps made two moves Tuesday, signing University of Minnesota defenseman Nate Schmidt to a two-year, entry-level contract. The Caps announced he will practice Wednesday.

Rosters expanded beyond 23 at midnight and just counting those at the NHL level, Schmidt now gives the Caps 11 defensemen, which could make trading one(Karl Alzner, Mike Green, John Carlson, John Erskine, Jeff Schultz, Jack Hillen, Steve Oleksy, Tomas Kundratek, Dmitry Orlov and Tom Poti)  of the ones they already have, a foregone conclusion.

Schmidt is a left-handed shot, joining Alzner, Erskine, Schultz, Hillen, Orlov and Poti. Hershey Bears defenseman Cameron Schilling is also a lefty. The 21-year-old Schmidt had nine goals and 23 assists in 40 games for the Gophers this season.

Pending restricted free agent goaltender Michal Neuvirth has appeared in just three of the Caps’ past 24 games, but his uncertain injury status could hinder things a bit today but McPhee is likely to try to sell Neuvy as a long term fix to ailing goaltender starved organization. With that said, McPhee will not accept just anything for Neuvy. The 25-year-old, who sees himself as a starter, is the obvious backup to Braden Holtby.

The Capitals seem to be heading in the right direction with Adam Oates in charge. Oates has made great strides with restoring the scoring punch of Alex Ovechkin, who scored two more goals against Carolina and is now tied for third in the NHL with 20 goals this season. Ovie also stretched his current scoring streak to nine straight games. He has totaled 10 goals and 15 points during the life of his current streak and is scoring from a multitude of areas and with a variety of shots.

The Caps also have a solid group of players waiting in the wings with the likes of the above-mentioned Forsberg as well as Evgeny Kuznetsov. Nevertheless, that isn’t making your team tougher in a division that will require a lot of grit as well as goal scoring to win in the future. When you consider the new playoff format for next season, playing well within your division will be huge and gone will be the days of playing in and benefiting from the soft Southeast.

I say McPhee needs to roll the dice and trust in the system Adam Oates has in place. Yes, Ribeiro is a huge part of the Caps power play success but Oates system, which the Caps have seemed to master, requires quick puck movement and a hard play down low, which is creating opportunities all over the ice while up a man.

The Caps are playing with confidence and are rebounding from crushing defeats like the one goal setback to the Islanders last week at home and the loss on Sunday in Philadelphia in which the Caps led by two goals with a little over seven minutes to play in the game. They just cannot afford to suffer such setbacks going forward.

Regardless of what happens today the Caps should be a playoff team. This means that McPhee has to roll the dice and make his team better for the future if the situation presents itself and given what Ribeiro offers, its likely McPhee could see a ton of offers before 3 p.m. that will allow him to do just that.

IN OTHER MOVES:

The Caps also reacquired enforcer Joel Rechlicz from the Phoenix Coyotes for minor league forward Matt Clackson. Rechlicz, who played three games for Dale Hunter last season, will report to Hershey of the American Hockey League.

 

 

 

THE FRENZY RETURNS TONIGHT ON BLOG TALK RADIO

March 29, 2013 in NFL, NFL Mock Draft

Please join Alan Zlotorzynski and Stephen Shoup @ 9:00 for A VERY SPECIAL Good Friday edition of the FRIDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL FRENZY.

Tonight, the guys get you caught up with what is going on in the NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE. Alan and a Steve will break down, analyze what has happened in free agency, and tell you whom the winners and losers are to date.

helmet

Just 27 days away, the NFL DRAFT becomes the primary focus of the Frenzy from this point. Alan and Steve will begin their break down of this year’s class by breaking down the top players from each position. Tonight, the guys will start with quarterbacks, running backs and wide receivers.

Steve has been working tirelessly on the FANSPEAK NFL DRAFT GUIDE, which will be available to the public on April 1—tonight; you start to reap the benefits from his hard work, as he breaks the draft talent down just for you.

The guys will also have their mock drafts, 1-15 and tell you how  they think the top half off the league will draft starting on April 27.

For our local listeners, the fans in Baltimore and Washington D.C, Alan and Steve will recap the Ravens and Redskins off-season’s. The guys will tell you where each organization stands as they head into next month’s draft.

Showtime is 9-11:30, as the dynamic duo will leave no football stone unturned. The guys will honor the Football Gods in every way possible on this GOOD FRIDAY with yet another great FRIDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL FRENZY.

Please feel free to call the show (646-564-9713) or join the chat room during the show with any questions for Alan or Steve.

Click here for the link to listen to the Frenzy.

 

 

Play Fanspeak's March Mayhem Bracket Challenge! FREE & Chance to Win Prizes!

March 19, 2013 in NCAA Basketball

The MADNESS (or Mayhem as we like to call it) is here! College Basketball and the month of March…does it get any better?!  The brackets are set, so now its time to make your picks! Join & Play in the Fanspeak Bracket Challenge!

Its A) FREE, B) Super Easy to register and play and C) you can win PRIZES!  Prizes are Amazon Giftcards to the Top 3 winners!     

Make your picks today & you could win prizes!

Make your picks today & you could win prizes!

You can even start your own leagues with your co-workers, friends or family! Just click the "Leagues" button to do so after you join.

If you have any questions, email megan@fanspeak.com! But we hope you can play with Fanspeak and join the competition with other fans!

Play the March Mayhem Fanspeak Bracket Challenge HERE! 

Ravens Fans Please Step Back From The Ledge

March 13, 2013 in NFL

By Alan Zlotorzynski: Following a day in which the Baltimore Ravens traded a fan favorite in standout veteran wide receiver Anquan Boldin to the San Francisco 49ers for virtually nothing–but something, they lost two of their youngest emerging players on defense less than two hours into free agency.

Gone is pass rush specialist Paul Kruger, who signed with a division rival and LB Dannell Ellerbe, who is joining a player from another division rival– and together are taking their talents to South Beach to play for the Miami Dolphins.

Kruger signed with the Cleveland Browns for a ridiculous amount of money– and Ellerbe, along with Steelers wide receiver Mike Wallace, inked similar fiscally irresponsible contracts with the Miami Dolphins. When you factor in the Ray Lewis retirement, the remaining unsigned free agents like Ed Reed and the teams announcement today that they have cut hard hitting safety Bernard Pollard– Ravens fans are in full blown "jump mode".

Easy does it fellow Ravens fans. Let me take you back to when the Ravens made their first trip to the playoffs during Joe Flacco’s rookie year. In the backfield with Flacco were LeRon McClain and Willis McGahee. His receivers were Derrick Mason, Mark Clayton and Todd Heap. Blocking up front for the rookie from left to right was—Jared Gaither, Ben Grubbs, Jason Brown, Chris Chester and Willie Anderson.

LB Dannell Ellerbe is now a Dolphin

LB Dannell Ellerbe is now a Dolphin

Writing a “Where Are They Now” article may not be a bad choice for that list but on defense only Ray Lewis, Terrell Suggs, Haloti Ngata and Ed Reed were on the field in 2012, which started for that 08 squad. Brendon Ayanbadejo and Jameel McClain were listed second on the depth chart but that is it.

Taking it a step further, compared to just two seasons ago, the Ravens this season started six different players on offense and seven different players on defense.

Yes, players like Kruger, Ellerbe, Terrance Cody, Arthur Jones and Lardarius Webb were on the roster and contributed— but they were not listed as starters and combined to start just two games for the Ravens.

My point is, the Ravens always take their lumps early in free agency, and this year is no different. This happens to the Ravens organization all the time.

Don Banks of Sports Illustrated wrote this morning, “Overreaction to the first day of free agency is, of course, the natural order of things by now. Why only two short years ago, the Philadelphia Eagles signed everyone in sight early in free agency, while the New York Giants sat on their hands and tried to live down the outrage expressed by fans and media demanding to know why they would ever let such a valuable commodity like receiver Steve Smith sign with the rival Eagles. Yep, the same Steve Smith we have not really heard from since.

“How'd that one work out for the Eagles and Giants?”

Adding to what Banks wrote, the Eagles released the biggest prize of that free agent market just prior to the start of this free agency period when they cut cornerback Nnamdi Asomugha. The one constant in Baltimore has always been General Manager Ozzie Newsome. NFL front offices have become as much of a revolving door as the rosters these upper management gurus try to better each off-season.

Old timers such as like Bill Polian, Jerry Angelo, A.J. Smith, Marty Hurney, Scott Pioli, Mike Tannenbaum and Billy Devaney are either on the NFL Network, ESPN or playing with grand kids. Either way they are no longer running teams.

Paul Kruger and Ellerbe

Paul Kruger and Ellerbe

While that is the out with the old scenario, the in with the new list is a long one. Chicago's Phil Emery, Indianapolis' Ryan Grigson, St. Louis' Les Snead, Oakland's Reggie McKenzie, Jacksonville's David Caldwell, Kansas City's John Dorsey, Tennessee's Ruston Webster, the Jets' John Idzik, San Diego's Tom Telesco, Carolina's David Gettleman, and Arizona's Steve Keim are getting their first crack at being General Managers in the NFL.

Newsome is right where he’s been since the Ravens moved to Baltimore in 1996, sitting in his office in Owings Mills, Maryland making the right decisions for the Ravens.

Let us first examine why the Ravens did not keep Paul Kruger or Danelle Ellerbe. It came down to money with Ellerbe and the fact the Ravens had a price in their mind that they felt he was worth. Five years and $35 million was far more than Newsome was willing to spend.

Ellerbe earned the money he got from Miami. He rescued the Ravens when everyone thought Baltimore’s season was over when Ray Lewis went down with what was thought to be a season-ending injury. Ellerbe used the opportunity to step up and show the Ravens and the rest of the NFL that he was the long-term solution at the position. He was perhaps the most consistent player on a Ravens defense that was mired in inconsistency at that part of the season. Ellerbe helped settle down a rush defense that allowed 184.5 rushing yards per game during a four game stretch from October to November.

According to Pro Football Focus, against the run Ellerbe was solid, with 23 of his 35 solo tackles resulting in a defensive stop. Coming on 223 snaps against the run, that was good enough for a Run Stop Percentage of 10.3, tied for 14th among players at his position.

A look at his stats for the season shows Ellerbe with six missed tackles in the regular season, and five of them came against receivers in coverage. With just one missed tackle from 47 attempted against the run, Ellerbe was PFF’s fifth-most efficient tackler at his position in that regard.

Where Ellerbe really made his money was rushing the passer and the Dolphins play in the same division with Tom Brady. So paying Ellerbe seven million per season was a necessity for them.

Once again, according to PFF, Ellerbe had five sacks, four hits and nine hurries from just 79 snaps as a pass rusher. His Pass Rushing Productivity (PRP) was the best among PFF’s inside linebackers. That number could have been even more impressive if it were not for injuries slowing down the former undrafted Georgia Bulldog. Five of his 18 total pressures did come unblocked, but if you look back at his play as a pass rusher on the season, his quickness at the line of scrimmage from the snap allowed him to put pressure on quarterbacks almost instantly.

His quickness made him appear to be off-sides on almost every play. Like Anquan Boldin, the Ravens would not be Super Bowl Champions without the play of Ellerbe, but he did struggle in pass coverage this season. The Focus says teams targeted Ellerbe for 369 yards and 220 yards after the catch in the regular season.

While those stats are eye opening, keep in mind the sampling size is only 11-games as a starter. It is apparently enough for the Miami Dolphins, who perceive Ellerbe to be a bargain.735195_10151353885251229_2100439191_n

The Ravens have seen Ellerbe every day for the past four seasons and they have had more than enough of a sampling size to know or feel he was not worth that type of investment. Losing Ellerbe was a shock to the Ravens, they fully expected him to be back but they also had a chance to match the Dolphins offer and did not. That tells me all I need to know after watching this front office conduct business the way it has during the past 17-seasons.

Even more ridiculous was the five year, $40 million contract ($8 million per) the Cleveland Browns paid to Paul Kruger. The Ravens second round pick in 2009, 57th overall from Utah was a part-time player who came in mostly on pass rushing situations. Granted, he led the Ravens with nine sacks this past season but once Terrell Suggs went down with injury before the season started, he was expected to.

Kruger, like Ellerbe earned his deal. He did some nice things for the Ravens while on the field. Aside from leading the team in sacks, Kruger had 55 quarterback pressures in the regular season, while no other Baltimore linebacker had more than 21. His 20 pressures in the playoffs was double the total of any of his teammates. He tortured rookie QB Andrew Luck with five hurries, three hits, and three sacks in the Ravens’ Wild Card victory, and tallied two of their three sacks in the Super Bowl, according to PFF. Like Ellerbe, Kruger capitalized on his chance to start this season. Unlike Ellerbe, Kruger had shown this potential before as a backup.

Pro Football Focus says, “Playing in just 31.1 percent of the Ravens’ snaps last season, Kruger had 8.9 Pass Rushing Productivity and generated 29 quarterback pressures. His two best grades of the season came in games when he played in 48.8% and 55.9% of Baltimore’s defensive snaps. Rather than a small sample size, this is the case of a promising pass rusher turning into one of the leagues best when he was finally given the opportunity.”

With all of that said, it is easier to find more flaws in Kruger’s game and that is why the Ravens publically stated that Ellerbe and not Kruger, would  be  the priority once the Flacco contract was finished.

Kruger struggled against the run. He repeatedly failed to set  the edge in the running game and, if were not for the play of rookie Courtney Upshaw, who was one of the Ravens best run defenders this past season, this defense could have really been trouble. Kruger’s best game against the run this past season came in Kansas City but as a team, Baltimore allowed the Chiefs to rack up 214-rushing yards during the contest, a 9-6 Ravens win.

Kruger tied Adalius Thomas' club record with at least one sack during five straight games and Ellerbe's departure leaves the Ravens extremely thin at inside linebacker. With the Lewis retirement, Jameel McClain's neck injury, Josh Bynes' inexperience and Brendon Ayanbadejo’s age (36), it is likely the Ravens will look to sign a value-based player and then draft a player for the long run.

Consider this fact when feeling down on the Ravens for allowing both Kruger and Ellerbe to get away. The two combined to make just 21 starts during their time in Baltimore and will now make a combined $75 million over the next five years.  I do not think the Ravens would have been considered fiscally responsible if they had done that.

Ozzie Newsome

Ozzie Newsome

Plus, ask yourself this Ravens fans, would rather have kept Kruger, Ellerbe and Anquan Boldin and let Joe Flacco walk via free agency? That’s what I thought. That would have been considered one of the greatest front office misses in NFL history. While it is true that the Ravens allowed two of their more promising young stars to leave via free agency and it appears one, Ellerbe caught them by surprise; this defense was not dominating or scaring anyone last season.

The Ravens defense got better as the season went along because they got healthier. This was a defense that was described as old, and inexperienced in areas. However, the defense was also a big reason they won the Super Bowl. They held Andrew Luck without a TD, limited Peyton Manning to 21-points in Denver and shutout the best offense in the NFL during the second half of the AFC Championship game.

By the time it was all said and done, this was a defense that ranked out of the top 10 for the first time in nine seasons by finishing 17th in the NFL, 20th versus the run.  Those are not Baltimore like numbers. Numbers Ozzie Newsome will aim to improve upon whether in the draft or throughout the rest of free agency.

With five consecutive playoff appearances, the current Super Bowl Champions currently own the longest active postseason streak in the NFL. They have done so by almost completely turning over the roster it began the streak with back in 2008.

Even more impressive is that the Ravens have won at least playoff game during every year their current run. Ozzie Newsome has had the same blueprint for success every season since the team arrived from Cleveland and he is not going to ignore it now.

Every Ravens fan said the number one priority this off-season was signing Joe Flacco to a contract without having to franchise him. Mission accomplished.

Don Banks from SI points out that, “Ozzie Newsome is capable of providing the Ravens with the type of versatility and adaptability every franchise covets for it roster.”

They won with defense in 2000, as the Ravens offense chipped in when necessary. In 2012, they won the Super Bowl on the arm of Joe Flacco, as the defense chipped in when necessary. Banks pointed out this morning that the Ravens are not a sentimental organization. He is  right, the trading of Anquan Boldin, who wouldn't help the team with the salary cap and the fact that they were willing to let Ray Lewis walk four years ago when they told him to go and test the market is proof of that.

Super Bowl XLVII - Baltimore Ravens v San Francisco 49ersLewis of course returned to finish his career as a Raven Ironically, Ed Reed is experiencing that type of tough love as I write this. Newsome has never allowed his emotions to interfere with his decision making process. The Ravens watched homegrown talent get rich yesterday, as Ellerbe and Kruger left for big contracts. Today, they cut Bernard Pollard. They could still lose Reed, Bryant McKinnie and Carey Williams. Just another offseason in Baltimore, maybe not but it is one that the Ravens will find a way to overcome.

The Ravens have lost good starting players in the past. Ben Grubbs and outside linebacker Jarret Johnson bolted last season, and of course you know the list, which includes Bart Scott, Willis McGahee and many-many others. Baltimore fans were angry when Jets head coach and former Ravens defensive coordinator Rex Ryan was standing in Scott’s back yard the minute free agency started at midnight back in 2009. How ironic that while he was off in New York watching Tim, Tebowing on the sidelines, Scott may be back in Baltimore watching the very team he left for greener pastures get their second Super Bowl ring.

Newsome will not allow this team to enter into salary cap hell, he has a vision and operates off a firm blueprint.. It is almost surprising he was not a Hall of Fame running back in his career with all the vision Newsome has. He's been the architect of two Super Bowls in 12 seasons and he intends to leave the blue print to his already handpicked successor, the highly sought after Eric DeCosta, the team's assistant GM.

The Ravens have three playoff appearances, two division titles, two conference championship berths, and one Super Bowl win since the 2010 season kicked off.

Newsome did not sit idle yesterday and immediately went to work on improving the middle of the Ravens defense, which the Ravens GM said was a major concern during the team’s end of the year press conference. The Ravens signed New York Giants defensive tackle Chris Canty to a three-year $8 million contract, with $2.8 million guaranteed. Canty is huge at 6-foot-7 and 320-pounds. His long arms, quickness and high-speed motor have made him a presence in opponent’s backfields at times. He was slowed last year because of a knee injury but started nine games for the Giants in 2012 and recorded three sacks.

What will be fun to watch is Canty and Ray Rice posing. Each player raises their arms showing their big guns after making a good play. Rice usually after a touchdown.

Chris Canty

Chris Canty

I ended an article the other day by quoting the Bob Marley song, “Everything’s Gonna Be All right”. After the first day of free agency and the with second day starting by cutting Pollard, Ravens fans are in full panic mode.

So today, I end with the help of Third Eye Blind in saying, “Wish you would step back from that ledge my friend”. And I’ll use Mr. Marley for a chorus today and say once again, “Everything is gonna be alright”.

Let the Ravens front office do their job. A job that since 2000 has resulted in winning 60.5 percent of their games, 68 Pro Bowl appearances from it players, eight playoff appearances, three division titles, and two Super Bowl Championships. Have faith, Ozzie and company deserve it and have earned it.

Be sure to join Stephen Shoup and myself on Thursday for a special edition of the Friday Night Football Frenzy on the FANSPEAK RADIO NETWORK. We will recap free agency and what needs to happen going forward with remaining free agents. We will break down the deals that have been done and, which team over paid for what player.

We will continue to break down the NFL Draft and preview the college football offseason.

Showtime is 8:30—And remember the show is tomorrow night instead of Friday. There will be no show on Friday this week.

 

 

 

Trading Anquan Boldin Not The End Of The World For The Ravens

March 11, 2013 in NFL

Today, the Baltimore Ravens traded Ravens wide receiver Anquan Boldin to the San Francisco 49ers and I may be alone in my opinion, but this is not the end of the world for the Ravens or their fans. The Ravens have traveled this road and recently. With Ozzie Newsome in charge of a proven front office that is considered one of the best in all of sports, the organization is going to be just fine after today’s deal.

Boldin traded to 49ers

Boldin traded to 49ers

Does it hurt losing Boldin, you bet it does. This could really sting in an off-season when the heart and soul of the defense has retired and the second in charge, Ed Reed, could be leaving as well.

Boldin, considered the heart, soul and toughness of the offense is absolutely going to be missed. Fans will point to his leadership and of course, his stellar postseasons with the Ravens.

Boldin caught six passes for 104 passes and a touchdown in the Ravens’ 34-31 win over the 49ers last month in Super Bowl XLVII.

Missed even more is what you cannot see in the stat line. His catch on a bomb down the sideline and how he saved Ravens QB Joe Flacco when he hauled in a critical third-and-1 pass in the fourth quarter with 7:14 left to keep a drive moving that resulted in a Justin Tucker Filed goal, is not going to be replaced easily.

The three points forced the Niners to have to score a TD to win the game on the final drive, which they failed to do.

Boldin had a good 2012 season, catching 65 passes for 921 yards (both highs during his three years in Baltimore). In all during the playoffs, he caught 22 passes for 380 yards and four touchdowns. He is the Ravens’ all-time leader in playoff receiving yards with 616 and six touchdowns.

Even at 32, Boldin is still one of the game’s most productive players. Of all current NFL players, he ranks third in yards per game over his career (72.6), just behind Houston’s Andre Johnson and Arizona’s Larry Fitzgerald. He is also third in average receptions per game (5.5).

Trading Boldin to San Francisco was as good as it was going to get for the Ravens. The Vikings, who traded the disgruntled Percy Harvin to the Seattle Seahawks earlier in the day, offered a seventh round selection but the sixth rounder from the Niners sealed the deal.

According to The Baltimore Sun, over the weekend the Ravens asked Boldin to take a $2 million pay cut or be released. Boldin, who was set to have a $6 million base salary ($7.531 million salary-cap figure), reportedly rejected the offer. Instead of releasing Boldin and getting nothing in return, the Ravens opted to trade him to John Harbaugh’s younger brother, Jim.

THE RAVENS HAVE BEEN HERE BEFORE:

Todd Heap and D.Mason No. 2 and 1 in franchise history in rec.

Todd Heap and D.Mason No. 2 and 1 in franchise history in rec.

Furthermore, after years of “A” drafts, signing just the right free agents, as well as cutting the right ones, Ravens GM Ozzie Newsome certainly deserves the benefit of the doubt on his decision to trade Boldin. Newsome does have experience to draw from when he cut the franchises No.1 and 2 all-time leading receivers immediately following the lockout in 2011.

Following the lockout, Newsome and Ravens brass released wide receiver Derrick Mason and tight end Todd Heap. Both also happened to be two of Ravens QB Joe Flacco’s favorite targets at the time. Heap and Mason combined to catch 101 passes for 1,401 yards and 12 touchdowns the year before they were cut. At the time, Mason was six years older than Boldin, who led the Ravens in 2010 with 64 catches and 837 yards.

Mason, who had 802 of those yards in 2010 and seven touchdowns, tied with Boldin for the team lead, played for two teams the following season. He signed with Rex Ryan and the Jets before finishing the year with the Houston Texans. After he left Baltimore, Mason never scored another touchdown and had just 170 receiving yards in 12-games.

Less than a year after his release from the Ravens left him angry and bitter, Mason returned to the organization that he said his heart never left to say goodbye for good. Wearing the same suit that he wore when he signed with the Ravens in March 2005, Mason announced his retirement in June of 2011.

Heap signed with the Arizona Cardinals and did not fare much better than Mason did. The 12-year veteran missed more games (16) than he played (12) over two seasons. In 13-games with Arizona, the former Ravens first round selection (31 overall) of the 2001 Draft compiled 377 yards and one touchdown in just 13-games. The team cut him in early December, before the season ended.

Regardless, Joe Flacco recovered just fine and so did the Ravens. It is the nature of this business. Next man up is the philosophy with which this organization prides itself. in. That mantra will be put to the ultimate test this off-season

While it is very true that Flacco probably would not have won the little "red Corvette" that accompanies the Super Bowl MVP winner, or recently became the games highest paid player without Boldin, the Ravens have plans for Boldins $6 million salary ($7.531 million cap figure) for the 2013 season.

Let us be honest here. Yes, the Ravens won football games in a much different way during the 2012 season but ultimately, a big reason they hoisted the game’s biggest prize was that their defense got healthier and played much better in January than it did at any time this season. No touchdowns surrendered to Andrew Luck, holding Peyton Manning 21-points in Denver and shutting out Tom Brady in the second half in Foxborough wasn't because of anything Joe Flacco or Anquan Boldin did.

Deep down this is an organization that believes you still win football games with a top-notch defense and a solid rushing attack. They are happy to have a franchise quarterback and paid for their decision not to pay him more money last off-season - but trading Boldin for a sixth round pick may help support the fact that Ravens feel they are OK on offense and will work to spend a little more than they expected to on the defense this off-season.

THE NEXT MEN UP ARE PROVEN:

Boldin was not the only Ravens receiver that had a huge post season and that may have played a part in today’s decision. Paying a 32-year old receiver when you possess two proven NFL play makers at the position, who are ten and four years younger may not be good business sense in the long run.

In today’s NFL, the long run is Thursday September 5 for the Ravens, the day they open the 2013 season.xxx-usp_nfl-_super_bowl_xlvii-baltimore_ravens_vs_san-4_3_r536_c534

Newsome and company are putting an extreme amount of faith into the next NFL player taking his turn on dancing with the Stars, Jacoby Jones and former Maryland standout Torrey Smith. Smith was not happy about the move. He wrote on his Twitter account, "This business is BS at times.” While that may be true, it is a business and the Ravens have a history of knowing how to conduct it.

Jones was a tremendous acquisition for Newsome last offseason after he signed him from the Houston Texans. At 28, Jones is four years younger than Boldin and had an extremely clutch post season himself. During the Ravens Super Bowl run, Jones had five catches for 147 yards. But two of his catches were for 77 and 56 yards and produced touchdowns that Ravens fans will talk about forever. So will Broncos and 49ers fans for that matter.

He also set and NFL record by returning the second half kickoff in the Super Bowl 109 yards for another Ravens touchdown. This after he ran back three kicks (2KO and 1 PR) for touchdowns during the regular season. Two of them resulted in Ravens wins over the Cowboys and Steelers.

UNRESTRICTED STATUS NOT ONLY FREE AGENCY ISSUE:

Boldin’s money may also serve the Ravens well in another area. While much has been made about Ravens unrestricted free agents like Ed Reed, Dannell Ellerbe, Carey Williams and Paul Krueger, they have some pretty good unrestricted free agents to tender. Most of them other teams would be happy to have as well.

The Ravens are roughly $18 million under the salary cap heading into free agency and have plenty of holes to fill on their defense. The team has stated that they are targeting Dannell Ellerbe and not Paul Krueger.

The Ravens will still have to assign tenders to restricted free agents like tight ends Dennis Pitta (likely a second round, $2 million) and Ed Dickson (likely third round) and Arthur Jones (likely second round, $2 million). Heading into the draft, and following the Boldin trade they have 12 picks and will have to sign the draftees to contracts.

Freeing Boldin’s $6 million base salary will greatly help the Ravens retain some of their drafted talent.

I suppose Boldin’s comments from the days immediately following the Super Bowl when he told NBC Sports Network's Eric Kuselias Sr., “I won’t play in another uniform. We have a saying, once a Raven, always a Raven, and I’ll always be a Raven.” Boldin finished by saying, “Baltimore is the only place I want to play,” Boldin said. “It’s the last place that I will play. For me, I’ll retire a Raven — I’m not putting on any other uniform.”

NUMBERS NEVER LIE:

Ozzie Newsome

Ozzie Newsome

So much for the love-love feeling, players feel after winning the Super Bowl.  Boldin, who is in Africa on a mission, needs to pass a physical before the trade with San Francisco becomes complete.  Boldin’s change of mind may have come when he saw what the Miami Dolphins paid Brian Hartline (5-yrs $30.77 m $12.5 m guaranteed) and how receivers with less talent and accomplishments are going to get rich quick this free agency period.

Anquan Boldin put up some very clutch and impressive numbers during his stay in the Charm City. He caught 186 passed, amassed 2,645 receiving yards with 14 touchdowns in 45 regular season games.With that said, let us not forget about the following stats either.

Since moving to Baltimore in 1996, the Ravens, led by GM Ozzie Newsome, have had 17 drafts and selected 17 players in the first round. These picks have earned an amazing 53-combined Pro Bowls and several All-Rookie honors.

Additionally, The Ravens have had 30 different players earn Pro Bowl honors since the team’s inception in 1996. Of those, 16 are homegrown players – 15 drafted and one signed as a rookie free agent.

Do not be alarmed by the Ravens late pick in this year’s draft. Newsome and his staff have also proven to be above average there as well. The Ravens have found gems late in the first round, including LB Ray Lewis (26th), TE Todd Heap (31st), S Ed Reed (24th), G Ben Grubbs (29th) and T Michael Oher (23rd).

Newsome and the Ravens have a history of unearthing rookie free agent gems. On their final 2012 53-man roster, Baltimore had 13 players who entered the NFL as rookie free agents. Of those 13, the Ravens originally signed nine. In all, The Ravens had 13 Pro Bowlers on their 2012 53-man roster, including six who earned 2012 All-Star honors: S Ed Reed (ninth), DT Haloti Ngata (fourth), FB Vonta Leach (third), RB Ray Rice (third), G Marshal Yanda (second) and WR/RS Jacoby Jones (first).

Only Reed is considered a candidate not to return. I give you the above stats to calm the fan base down a bit after today. The Ravens will be just fine.

According to the Ravens media site, “Ozzie Newsome’s legacy is unlike any the game has seen. Known throughout all of sports as a premier leader, Newsome is a Hall of Fame player, the architect of Baltimore’s 2000 and 2012 Super Bowl championship teams and an elite personnel evaluator who became the NFL’s first African American general manager.”

Newsome also fosters a working environment that breeds standout coaches. By bringing in individuals who embrace the “Raven way,” Newsome aims to create a synergy that manufactures success among scouts, coaches and players. As a result, Baltimore has had many assistants move on to become head coaches on the collegiate and NFL levels.Super Bowl XLVII - Baltimore Ravens v San Francisco 49ers

Currently, seven head coaches (6- NFL 1- NCAA) came through the Ravens organization. Furthermore, after stints in Baltimore, eight former head coaches are now assistants or doing something with the game somewhere.

To paraphrase a Bob Marley song, “You rose up this morning– Smiled with the risin' sun, three little birds.” Don't worry 'bout a thing, 'Cause every little thing gonna be all right."

With Ozzie Newsome at the helm, you can do it again tomorrow and nothing could be truer, everything will be all right. Except there is one less bird to smile about——for now