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Author: Neil Keefe

MLBPodcasts

Podcast: Danny Picard

The only way I wanted Jon Lester to return to the AL East as as a member of the Yankees, but since that apparently was never really an option, I’m ecstatic that Lester is out

Jon Lester

The only way I wanted Jon Lester to return to the AL East as as a member of the Yankees, but since that apparently was never really an option, I’m ecstatic that Lester is out of the division and out of the American League and most importantly, not in Boston. If the Red Sox were able to re-sign Lester after their embarrassing offer to him last year, I would have been devastated knowing that the Red Sox could treat a homegrown pitcher and a face of their franchise like dirt and then get him back anyway. Fortunately, Lester didn’t go back to the Red Sox and now he’s a Cub.

Danny Picard, host of The Danny Picard Show on WEEI and of Comcast SportsNet New England, joined me to talk about Jon Lester choosing to sign with the Cubs over the Red Sox, what led to Lester leaving Boston in the first place and what the team’s plans are now that they lack a stable rotation.

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BlogsYankees

The State of the Yankees: Winter Meetings Edition

Before Friday, I was worried about the 2015 Yankees. I’m still worried about them and what the summer is going to be like coming off of back-to-back summers of bad baseball and two Octobers without

Brian Cashman

Before Friday, I was worried about the 2015 Yankees. I’m still worried about them and what the summer is going to be like coming off of back-to-back summers of bad baseball and two Octobers without watching the Yankees in the postseason. On a scale of a 1 to 10, I was a 10 on Friday morning before the Yankees traded for Didi Gregorius and signed Andrew Miller and now that 10 is a 7. I wish it could have fallen to a 5 or even a 4, but with question marks still in the infield and the rotation and the status of re-signing David Roberston still unknown, it’s a hard 7 right now.

Fortunately, the Yankees have a chance to fix some of those needs this week in San Diego at the Winter Meetings. Brian Cashman talked with Mike Francesa on WFAN on Friday about the trade and signing as well as the overall state of the franchise heading into the meetings with a little over two months until spring training, so I did the only thing I know how to do when Cashman speaks and that is to comment on his comments.

On trading for Didi Gregorius.

“He’s a 24-year-old, left-handed hitting, middle-of-the-diamond, defensive-first shortstop. He struggles against left-handed pitching, hits against right-handed pitching, so look forward to getting him in here and having him play a signficiant role and probably connecting with Brendan Ryan in a platoon situation as least in the outset.”

I think I said everything I could say about Didi Gregorius on Friday without him playing a game for the Yankees yet. I really, truly hope he is the answer and the long-term answer at shortstop in the post-Derek  Jeter era and I hope the Yankees aren’t going to find themselves in the same situation the Red Sox have been in for the last decade with a longer, deeper and more complex cast to keep track of than The Wire at the position.

I wish the idea the of having him platoon with Ryan weren’t true or even an option considering Ryan is about as close to an automatic out as you get to a player, who can still be on a Major League roster, but if Didi performs, that will take care of itself.

On signing Andrew Miller.

“He’s clearly a guy that used to be a high-end No. 1 pick starter that eventually has now found his niche in Major League Baseball as a very successful setup situation, and we’ve seen it up close and personal. We thought there is a lot of value for us if we could team him with our current cast we have in the bullpen with a big guy like Dellin Betances from the right side, add Miller from the left side.”

If the Yankees’ signing means David Robertson isn’t coming back then Brian Cashman has failed. The 2015 Yankees can’t rely on only Betances and Miller the way they relied on only Betances and Robertson last season, giving Shawn Kelley, Adam Warren, David Huff and just about anyone who could pass a physical in the second half to get them important outs. Outside of Tanaka (when healthy), the Yankees don’t exactly have a rotation that’s capable of giving them distance in starts and the more high-end relievers in the bullpen, the better, so they’re not asking Michael Pineda, CC Sabathia (when healthy) and Hiroki Kuroda (if re-signed) to do things they can’t do.

The best part of having Miller is that it solves the left-handed debacle the Yankees have faced since Damaso Marte in the 2009 playoffs. Average lefties like Boone Logan or Clay Rapada or Billy Traber or Matt Thornton or David Huff or Rill Hill aren’t needed or relied on when you have Miller slinging that silly slider. And because he is going to keep me from having to watch a below-average lefty try to get David Ortiz out just because he throws with his left hand despite having limited talent, I think I’m going to go ahead and buy an Andrew Miller jersey.

On if signing David Robertson is still a possibility.

“I don’t know. I think we’re going to continue to evaluate all potential opportunities that present themselves here throughout the winter. It’s taken some time to get to where I am today … I’m not going to rule anything out.”

Let me elaborate on the previous answer as to why not signing Robertson is a disaster.

David Robertson is a proven elite reliever in New York and now also a proven closer and heir to Number 42’s job. He has been an important member of the bullpen going back to 2009 and especially the ALDS that year when his bases-loaded escape in extra innings against the Twins in Game 2 potentially saved the series.

Cashman’s track record trading for and signing big-name, free-agent relievers isn’t exactly something he will go out of his way to make room for on his resume and I’m sure he would edit his own Wikipedia page if he found the information on there. In recent years, he gave us free agents Kyle Farnsworth (three years, $17 million) Matt Thornton (two years, $7 million) and traded for Boone Logan (from Atlanta with Javier Vazquez for Melky Cabrera, Mike Dunn, Arodys Vizcaino and cash). Even though he wasn’t a big name, I would also like to included Cashman’s trade of Tyler Clippard for Jonathan Albaladejo. The best big-name free-agent reliever to come to the Yankees has been Rafael Soriano and Cashman can’t be credited with signing him because ownership did it against his wishes and he spoke out against the signing at the press conference to announce the Soriano deal.

The best Yankees relievers have been homegrown and I’m a big believer in building your bullpen from within and not going out and buying one. But if you have the resources to bring in Andrew Miller, who seems like a more stable and proven commodity than the others named, go for it, just don’t sacrifice bringing back your closer and a homegrown elite arm because of it.

The Yankees always seem to nickel and dime their own players when it comes to free agency, but are more than willing to open their wallet when it comes to other teams’ talent. Robertson should have been locked up before he ever became a free agent (the same way Cano should have been) and that’s Cashman and the front office’s fault for their contract negotiation policy and now they are going to have to overpay or extend themselves to a place they didn’t want to go with Robertson to bring him back, and that’s their own fault.

On adding starting pitching.

“It’s an area I would like to address if I can …We might not be able to get everything taken care of to our comfort level, but we’re certainly making the efforts to try and do so.”

It’s an area I would like you to address as well. With Shane Greene traded for Didi Gregorius and if Masahiro Tanaka and CC Sabathia are healthy for Opening Day then the rotation currently looks like this:

1. Masahiro Tanaka
2. Michael Pineda
3. CC Sabathia
4. David Phelps
5.

That’s not a typo. The 5 spot isn’t filled in because it’s unknown. The Yankees have 80 percent of a rotation and the most reliable of the four health-wise is Phelps, who I hope isn’t in the Opening Day rotation and then it’s Pineda, who made just 13 starts last year, which were his only 13 starts in three years on the Yankees. Brandon McCarthy should have been locked up prior to hitting free agency (this is a common theme), but he wasn’t.

I could understand Cashman saying “We might not be able to get everything taken care of to our comfort level” if there weren’t any free-agent starting pitchers on the market this year. I mean actually zero free agents available. But Jon Lester is there and so is Max Scherzer and to a lesser degree, so is James Shields. All it will take to get one of those three is money. No players, no prospects, just money. If I’m watching spot starts being made in May and the Yankees trying to see if any of their Triple-A starts can get through four innings in the majors in June, I will remember Cashman saying on Dec. 5 that he was making an effort to address the team’s starting pitching.

On the possibility of signing Chase Headley.

“We’ve stayed in touch with Headley’s representatives and we continue to have dialogue. Thankfully we have the flexibility because of Prado and Refsnyder and Pirela, who can’t take a shot at second, we can move Prado over to third, so were protected, but we have stayed engaged no doubt about it.”

On if he would be comfortable starting with A-Rod, Prado and the two rookies at second base.

“As long as the kids stepped and did what we projected them to do. You have these future projections on players if they’re going to hit that ceiling, we need them hit it in the short term. They have to develop at the big league level just like we’re looking for Didi to do, but wed’ be comfortable to do that if that’s the best route to go, yes.”

I put these two Cashman quotes together because they go hand in hand. If we’re looking an Opening Day infield of Mark Teixeira, Martin Prado, Didi Gregorius and Alex Rodriguez or Mark Teixeira, rookie, Didi Gregorius and Martin Prado, I’m not exactly going to feel “comfortable” like Cashman suggests. I would probably feel as comfortable as sleeping on the hardwood floor of an apartment with no pillow and a sheet as a blanket. I would prefer Mark Teixeira, Martin Prado, Didi Gregorius and Chase Headley as the Opening Day infield. It’s not exactly Ritz Carlton deluxe suite “comfortable” but it’s certainly Marriott king bed “comfortable”.

On how he feels about Mark Teixeira.

“I feel good. We had good meetings with him, his operating surgeon and our medical staff at the end of the year. He’s working his tail off up in Fairfield County where he lives and I think you’re going to see a closer version to what we were used to seeing prior to that injury he sustained with the wrist.”

The last time someone asked me how I felt about Mark Teixeira and I used the word “good” in my answer was probably before the start of the 2011 season and the last time Teixeira had played was when he tore his hamstring against the Rangers in the ALCS and no one was that upset because he had been 0-for-14 in the series. Cashman just said, “I feel good” about Mark Teixeira coming off a .216/.313/.398 season (all career worsts) in which he missed games due to a hamstring injury, wrist problems, a rib cage issue, a knee problem, a lat injury, tired legs from standing on the bases (that’s not made up), light-headedness and also from hurting his pinky finger. When Cashman said, “I think you’re going to see a closer version to what we were used to seeing prior to that injury he sustained with the wrist,” I’m not sure if he meant we’re going to see 2009 Teixeira or 2012 Teixeira. I’m guessing we’re going to see 2012 Teixeira since 2009 Teixeira is never coming back.

On Masahiro Tanaka.

“Tanaka left as a healthy player, so we’ll see him when he returns from Japan and hope that he remains healthy and can be obviously what he was in the fist half of the year for us.”

There are three options with what will happen with Tanaka’s elbow:

1. Nothing and he continues to pitch the way he did before the tear was discovered.

2. His elbow completely tears and he needs Tommy John and misses a calendar year.

3. He has lingering and nagging issues with it and is on and off the disabled list.

I have to believe in No. 1 because if I don’t then the summer of 2015 is likely going to go the same way that 2013 and 2014 did. The Yankees don’t seem to be as worried about the possibility of Tanaka going down for a year any time hr throws a pitch, since they have the ability to sign a front-end starter, so I can only follow their lead and believe in the health of Tanaka’s right elbow.

On CC Sabathia.

“In CC’s case, he’s here rehabbing with Stevie just finishing off his rehabilitation program from the surgery so we expect unless there’s some sort of ? that he’ll be ready to hit the ground running 100 percent when spring training starts.”

I have no expectations for Sabathia. When there were rumors last year that his injury and surgery could be career ending, all of plans for how an older, slimmer CC could reinvent himself on the mound were erased. Now I look at him as a bonus if he can give the Yankees anything. I don’t mean “anything” as in his 5.28 ERA from last year or his 4.78 from 2013. I mean give me “anything” as in better than 2013, but worse than 2012 (3.38), but closer to that 2012 number. Just don’t give me the guy that can’t get through six innings or blows a three-plus run lead when he does. I don’t want to see that guy ever again.

On if he expects to be active at the Winter Meetings.

“I’ve been trying to be active all winter and today we obviously were able to get two things pushed across. We’re going to continue to be active, i just don’t know. It’s just hard to predict whether you’ll have anything to show for your efforts.”

I want to be surprised between now and Christmas. I want one of those “The Yankees are a closer to a (insert number)-year deal with (insert big-name free agent)” tweets or for those words to show up on the ticker on ESPN the way we got a few last offseason and seemingly have every year forever. Actually, I don’t want one of those. I need one of those. And then I can start to feel good about the 2015 Yankees.

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BlogsYankees

The First Shortstop Since Fourth Grade

The last time the Yankees needed a shortstop I was in fourth grade. Now for the first time since I was nine years old, the Yankees’ shortstop is someone with a number other than 2,

Did Gregorius

The last time the Yankees needed a shortstop I was in fourth grade. Now for the first time since I was nine years old, the Yankees’ shortstop is someone with a number other than 2, someone not named Derek Jeter.

Part of me is still holding out hope that everything that has happened since February when Jeter announced his retirement has been one big, well-planned and sick joke. I sometimes wish I have been living in my own version of The Truman Show and that everyone in the world has been in on it by trying to make me think Derek Jeter will never play baseball again. It’s the reason why I still haven’t written my “Goodbye” column for him and have put it off for as long as possible and will likely put it off until at least spring training and maybe even Opening Day.

But if everything about Jeter over the last 10 months has been a worldwide plan to trick me into thinking the last link to my childhood baseball fandom is gone then I guess Brian Cashman and the Yankees front office is heavily invested in the joke since they traded a 26-year-old promising starting pitcher in Shane Greene for a 24-year-old shortstop in Didi Gregorius. I’m beginning to think Derek Jeter really isn’t coming back.

In this city, there a few people and a few jobs that are impossible to replace and Derek Jeter is No. 1 (and in the sports world is No. 1 across the board in the country). Anyone who was going to replace Chris “Mad Dog” Russo alongside Mike Francesa was never going to be “Mad Dog” and that show and time slot was never going to be the same and fortunately there hasn’t been anyone to try to fill those shoes. The person who is going to one day replace Mike Francesa every weekday from 1-6:30 on WFAN shouldn’t expect rave reviews since that transition will likely have Bob Raissman and Phil Mushnick longing for the days of the Pope. Joe Girardi had to replace Joe Torre, who spent all 12 of his seasons with the Yankees in the playoffs and six of those 12 in the World Series, and unless Girardi topped four World Series in his first five years, he was never going to be Torre. David Robertson had to replace not only the Yankees’ 17-year closer, but the greatest closer in the history of baseball. Despite a revolving door of sandwich makers, the cafeteria in the Time Life Building in Rockefeller Center is probably still looking for a sandwich-making replacement for Norma. And now Didi Gregorius is taking over (not replacing) for Derek Jeter.

Aside from actually becoming the First Shortstop Since Fourth Grade, former Arizona Diamondbacks general manager Kevin Towers didn’t exactly do Gregorius any favors when he traded for him and gave his evaluation of the shortstop.

“When I saw him he reminded me of a young Derek Jeter. I was fortunate enough to see Jeter when he was in high school in Michigan and he’s got that type of range. He’s got speed. He’s more of a line drive-type hitter, but I think he’s got the type of approach at the plate where I think there’s going to be power there as well.”

So for any irrational Yankees fan out there, that December 2012 quote couldn’t have been more perfect for setting Gregorius’ expectations as high as possible by implanting the idea that Gregorius looks and plays and could be Derek Jeter. Sure, Towers didn’t know at the time that his newly acquired young player would be the Yankees’ shortstop of the future in two years, but in retrospect he couldn’t have given a worse possible quote to stifle expectations for a kid being asked to do an impossible job unless he said, “Didi Gregorius is related to Derek Jeter.”

The person who took over for Derek Jeter was never going to have a fairytale transition into their new job unless their April 2015 replicated Shane Spencer’s September 1998. But when it comes to Didi, he might be best set up to be the new Yankees’ shortstop because he isn’t a big name free agent or a proven star, who the Yankees had to either back up the money truck for or trade the farm to acquire. If the Yankees had signed Hanley Ramirez or traded for Troy Tulowitzki, the First Shortstop Since First Grade would have A-Rod-like pressure from their first at-bat with the Yankees. Ramirez would have cost the Yankees another multiyear deal for eight figures for a player in his 30s with past injury and personality problems. Troy Tulowitzki would have cost the Yankees an even longer contract for an even more injury-prone player and some of the organization’s best prospects on top of that. If Didi doesn’t live up to Kevin Towers’ initial comparison and isn’t the long-term answer for the Yankees then all it cost was a 26-year-old right-handed starter, who is anything but proven. And if it does work out, the Yankees just got the foundation up the middle for the future for an unproven 26-year-old right-hander.

I have seen Gregorius play minimally during his 191 career games in the majors, but if his glove is as good as touted and his offense can mirror his 2013 season (.252/.332/.373) or if his offense starts to show signs of what he did in 260 Triple-A plate appearances last season (.310/.389/.447) then I have no problem with Didi being the future. Even without knowing what he is yet or what he will become, he’s a better option than watching Stephen Drew or Brendan Ryan become the First Shortstop Since Fourth Grade since we already know what they are.

As recent as Friday morning I was scared about where this Yankees offseason was headed and what my 2015 summer was going to look like with holes still up the middle and question marks in the rotation and in the bullpen. But I feel a little more comfortable in knowing that there is a real, true, viable player who could be the Yankees’ answer at shortstop.

Didi Gregorius doesn’t have to be Derek Jeter and if he wanted to, he can’t be. No one can. For now, he’s just the First Shortstop Since Fourth Grade and with four months until Opening Day, he can’t be anything more.

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NFLPodcasts

Podcast: Tim Duff

We are nearing the end of Rex Ryan being the head coach of the Jets. With just four games left in the season, the man who came to New York running his mouth to the

John Idzik and Rex Ryan

We are nearing the end of Rex Ryan being the head coach of the Jets. With just four games left in the season, the man who came to New York running his mouth to the media and making unnecessary Super Bowl predictions is playing out his final days running the team he had a win from the Super Bowl in back-to-back seasons as the Jets limp to the finish line.

For the fourth time this season, my friend and lifelong optimistic Jets fan Tim Duff joined me to talk about how the Rex Ryan era will be remembered by Jets fans, who the next coach and quarterback should be and which teams to now root for to win the Super Bowl and he had me almost feeling bad for Jets fans as you could hear the devastation in his voice.

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BlogsGiants

NFL Week 14 Picks

It’s the home stretch. The final month and four weeks of the regular season to take us through the holidays and into the playoffs where the Giants won’t be the for the third straight year.

Eli Manning

It’s the home stretch. The final month and four weeks of the regular season to take us through the holidays and into the playoffs where the Giants won’t be the for the third straight year.

It was weird in the 2011 playoffs against the Falcons when the Giants were playing their first playoff game since losing to the Eagles in the 2008 playoffs to think about how much time had passed between postseason appearances for them (obviously not a lot compared to other teams, but a lot for the Giants) and if the Giants are to rebound next season and reach the playoffs again, it will be a year longer drought from Super Bowl XLVI to then than it was from 2008-11.

The Giants have gone 18-26 since winning the Super Bowl and now we are likely looking at the last month of Tom Coughlin’s 11-year tenure with the team. When the Giants were defending champions and 6-2 and back in 2012, I didn’t think two years later I would be wondering when the next time they would make the playoffs would be, but here we are looking at another postseason-less Giants season. And to make matters worse, the Patriots appear headed back to the Super Bowl and if the Giants aren’t there to stop them, who will?

(Home team in caps)

Dallas -4 over CHICAGO
When the Bears were leading the Lions 14-3 on Thanksgiving, I was not only wondering why I didn’t bet the Bears to cover, but why I didn’t hammer the Bears’ money line as well. But then that 14-3 led to a 24-3 deficit and at the end of it all, the Bears lost 34-17, were outscored 31-3 after that early lead and finished with 13 rushing yards and two more Jay Cutler interceptions. Every week that I take the Bears makes me feel like Drew Barrymore in 50 First Dates and Sunday represents Adam Sandler making me remember why I swore to no longer pick the Bears back in Week 6.

Baltimore +3 over MIAMI
I wouldn’t mind jumping on the Dolphins’ bandwagon if they were to make the playoffs as currently one of five 7-5 teams in the AFC. The problem is that jumping on their bandwagon would likely be a short ride to elimination. I don’t like the Dolphins aside from the fact that they match up well with the Patriots (which John Jastremski eluded to on the podcast this week) and that is enough for me to pull for the Dolphins since it could mean ending the Patriots’ season. But aside from that, the Dolphins aren’t a team anyone should feel confident backing, considering their narrow escape against the Jets, their meltdown against the Packers and their early-season debacles against the Bills and Chiefs. I need to see a little more than a three-point victory against a Geno Smith-led Jets team playing for nothing in Week 13 to have me put my faith in a team this January (if they make it).

CINCINNATI -3 over Pittsburgh
Two of my least favorite teams meeting this week and for some reason I’m doing the dumbest thing anyone picking NFL games by the spread can do aside from picking Jay Cutler giving points: picking Andy Dalton giving points. I’m wondering at what point of the game I will regret this pick and the over/under is currently set at the first TV timeout. But to be fair, the Bengals have won three straight, are home where they have lost once in the last two years and did go into the Superdome three weeks ago and beat the Saints, which is something as rare as getting a seat on a Metro North train that doesn’t have some unusual stain or residue on it.

Indianapolis -4 over CLEVELAND
I would like to know what this line would be if Johnny Manziel were starting. And whatever that line is, I would be taking the Browns to cover it. I’m not sure how Mike Pettine has watched Brian Hoyer recently and watched Johnny Manziel was able to do in limited time and thinks that Hoyer gives his team the best chance to win. Yes, the Browns are 7-5 this season with Hoyer throwing 11 touchdowns and 10 interceptions and everyone is acting as if what he is doing is improbable when they should be surprised the Browns have a 7-5 record despite his inconsistent play and should be wondering how many more wins the team could have if Manziel had been the starter. But I’m sure Pettine will bench Hoyer for Manziel at some point on Sunday with the Colts holding a commanding lead and the Browns will fall to 7-6 and waste a chance at giving themselves the best chance to win a home game in December with a playoff spot on the line.

Jacksonville +6.5 over HOUSTON
Somewhere someone who isn’t a Jaguars fan or a Texans fan is going to bet on this game and watch it in its entirety. Think about that.

New York Giants -1.5 over TENNESSEE
I have never used this on the Giants before, but after what happened in Jacksonville, I’m not sure how a TV network can justify shelling out an exorbitant amount of money to broadcast this game when they could just donate that money to charity or pay for some kids to go to college. Here it goes:

Somewhere someone who isn’t a Giants fan or a Titans fan is going to bet on this game and watch it in its entirety. Think about that.

NEW ORLEANS -10 over Carolina
I thought I knew who the Saints were. I thought they were indestructible in the Superdome and just had to worry about finding a way to win two or three road games each year to make the playoffs. But then they went and lost three straight home games for the first time since 2005 before bouncing back on the road in Pittsburgh. If the Saints can’t win at the Superdome, but can suddenly win on the road and in a place like Heinz Field then how is anyone picking games or wagering on games anymore? The Saints are definitely going to win the NFC South with a losing record and then win their first-round playoff game to make up for what happened to them in the 2010 playoffs in Seattle after a week of every talking head show debating about how unfair it is that an under-.500 team received a playoff berth.

DETROIT -10 over Tampa Bay
I was ready to write how Ford Field is becoming what the Superdome once was and then I remembered that the Bills went there and won back in Week 5. But even if Detroit’s home-field advantage isn’t what New Orleans’ has been during the Sean Payton era, this year it’s strong enough that this game will be teased down by every person making a teaser this week.

St. Louis -3 over WASHINGTON
“RGIII and Out” might be the best nickname I have ever heard in my life and I can’t wait to bring it up when I talk to my friend and Redskins fan Ray Schneider next week on the site before the Giants and Redskins meet for what should be promoted as the “Battle for the Basement” in the NFC East. With reports surfacing that Jay Gruden is done with RGIII and wants him off his team just two years removed from winning the division, the Redskins are following the Jets’ path to success: one step forward, 93 steps backward.

MINNESOTA -6 over New York Jets
I can’t stop thinking about what the Vikings’ season could have been if Teddy Bridgewater had been the starting quarterback from Week 1, Adrian Peterson didn’t behave the way he did and if Norv Turner ever realized that Cordarrelle Patterson is on his team. At the worst, their 5-7 season could easily have been flipped and at 7-5 right now, they would be in the mix for a playoff spot. But they’re not.

DENVER -10 over Buffalo
I don’t really trust the Broncos anymore and I don’t know if they will be able to overtake the No. 1 overall seed in the AFC from the Patriots over the next four weeks, and if they’re not, we might as well cancel the AFC playoffs and pencil in the Patriots for the Super Bowl. It’s time the Broncos played like the Broncos.

ARIZONA +1 over Kansas City
Bruce Arians probably regrets saying that the Cardinals can still win the Super Bowl with Drew Stanton as his quarterback, but really believing Stanton was that good wasn’t his biggest problem. His biggest problem was saying “can still win” as if the Cardinals could have won with Carson Palmer as their quarterback. The Cardinals’ three-game lead has slipped to a one-game lead in the division and after they missed out on the playoffs at 10-6 last year while the 8-7-1 Packers were in, the Cardinals deserve to have a  little redemption this season.

San Francisco -9 over OAKLAND
I would take San Francisco -24 here and if they didn’t cover I wouldn’t even care. I don’t know how anyone could feel confident taking the Raiders to cover or even score after what happened last week.

Seattle +1 over PHILADELPHIA
Right now, the Patriots have the 1-seed in the AFC, which means they are pretty much going to the Super Bowl. The only two NFC teams I think that can beat them in Arizona in February are the Seahawks and Packers, so I will be rooting for both teams (two teams I don’t like) the rest of the season until one emerges from the NFC.

SAN DIEGO +4 over New England
This pick is about one thing and one thing only: getting the Broncos the 1-seed.

GREEN BAY -13 over Atlanta
The Packers are the best home team in the league right now and against a 5-7 Falcons team that is currently leading the NFC South, 13 points feels too low.

Last week: 9-7-0
Season: 95-96-1

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