Archive for December, 2009

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009

RealClearSports: The Problem with Drafting a Quarterback

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com

In the spring, Tim Tebow of Florida, a quarterback, a Heisman Trophy winner, a community leader, son of an evangelist, will be available in the NFL draft, which means a lot of people who think they know what makes great football will wonder if they know what makes a great football player.

The suggestions and predictions of why Tebow either will be a star or a flop will pound us in the face, and despite reputations, both of the analysts and the athlete, nobody really has a clue.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2009

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009

SF Examiner: Niners’ QB questions linger after Smith’s rocky season

By Art Spander
Special to The Examiner

SAN FRANCISCO — With one game left in the 49ers’ season of “What do you mean we haven’t made progress?” here are unavoidable conclusions about young Alex Smith, the quarterback who keeps getting his passes batted down by lineman and his future kicked around by journalists.

Read the full story here.

Copyright 2009 SF Newspaper Company

Sunday, December 27th, 2009

Alex on Niners: It wasn’t like we were inept

By Art Spander

SAN FRANCISCO — It didn’t rain. Two thirds of the seats had people in them. And the 49ers won. And you thought sportswriters only emphasize the negative.

Let those guys in Detroit pick on the Lions. Which they’ve done. And they will do. “Three wins in three seasons,” one of the Detroit scribes moaned in the elevator at Candlestick Park.

The 49ers are better than that. But not good enough for the postseason. They keep making you wonder if and when they’ll reach that pinnacle.

Alex Smith, who’s supposed to lead the offense, got a bit defensive  Sunday when someone wondered why San Francisco started slowly against Detroit.

“It wasn’t like we were inept or anything,” mused the quarterback.

Not when compared to the Lions. They are inept.

They also have the worst defense in the NFL, ranking 32nd of the 32 teams, allowing 31 points and 396 yards a game. So when the Niners finished with 310 yards and a 20-6 victory, questions had to be asked. That they will remain unanswered is just part of the equation.

The question about the lack of fans is easily solved. No matter that the “paid attendance” was listed at 69,732, there were no more than 45,000 — and maybe around 42,000.

That’s understandable for a game between the now 2-13 Lions and the now 7-8 Niners held two days after Christmas. Even if it was the home finale.

The Niners won’t be back at Candlestick until August, and what changes will have been made, what players added or subtracted, we’ll have months to learn.

San Francisco’s last game of the season-which-might-have-been is Sunday at St. Louis against the 1-13 Rams. The word “inept” also is applicable in their case.

Although Smith suggested the Niners offense Sunday wasn’t as bad as it appeared, San Francisco’s defense won the game, as it has won a few games over the last three months.

There were three interceptions and three fumble recoveries, enough turnovers to stagger even the Patriots or Colts and certainly enough to be the ruination of a team already close to ruination, even if it doesn’t give up the ball.

“Hopefully,” Niners coach Mike Singletary explained, “they (the takeaways) will be the trademark of any defense we have. You can’t really achieve things that you want to achieve as a defense unless you take away the ball. That’s when teams turn around. It really makes a difference.

“You can look at any game we won this year, and there’s a pretty good chance we won the turnover ratio.”

When you look at this one, you are no nearer deciding whether Alex Smith will be the essential quarterback, whether he can win games and not just keep the Niners from losing them.

Was the sputtering offense, two field goals and no touchdowns in the first half, Alex’s fault? Or the fault of the offensive line? Or the fault of the play calling and decisions of coordinator Jimmy Raye? Or any combination thereof?

Frank Gore did run for 71 yards, and became the first Niner ever to rush for 1,000 yards or more for four straight years. Vernon Davis did catch three more balls, one of those for his 10th touchdown reception, a single-season Niner mark for tight ends. Yet, there are problems.

“Could it be because of distractions of the holidays?” Singletary asked rhetorically of the offense before halftime, “or are we still in a funk because we’re not playing for a playoff position? It might be a number of things, but we picked up in the second half.”

Smith was less discontent. He completed 20 of 31 for 230 yards and a touchdown, and didn’t have an interception, solid if not outstanding. No apparent mistakes, which always works for a quarterback at any level.

“I didn’t think it was a slow start,” said Smith in rebuttal to someone’s query, “anywhere except on the scoreboard. We were doing some things, moving the ball, kicking two field goals. We didn’t convert on fourth and one and missed a field goal (the kicker was just-signed Ricky Schmitt). If you convert one or two of those, it’s a completely different game.”

But they didn’t convert one or two of those.

The Niners’ first touchdown, in the third quarter, was a play perplexing enough for Singletary to say he would have those involved, Smith and Davis, come to a room for a bit of conversation. On third and goal from the Detroit two, Alex swept right and seemed destined for the end zone. But just as he arrived at the line of scrimmage, Smith tossed a moon ball to Davis in the corner.

“I need to find out if Vernon needed another touchdown, something like that,” Singletary said. “Because Alex came to the sideline, and I scratched my head, and he knew what I was going to say. He said, ‘Coach, be nice, be nice.’”

Will Singletary? “It depends what the answer is. If the right answer is, ‘Vernon really wanted one,’ I can live with that.”

For now, Singletary and the Niners will have to live with a win over the Lions. Sure, virtually everybody has one of those, but it’s still acceptable, even mandatory.

Sunday, December 27th, 2009

L.A. Daily News: Carroll, Trojans get a feel-good ending with triumph in Emerald Bowl

By Art Spander
Special to the Daily News

SAN FRANCISCO — It was a win. In the town where he was born. In the stadium where Barry Bonds broke the home run record. That was enough for Pete Carroll, even if might not been enough for those critics who call themselves USC fans.

Read the full story here.

Copyright 2009 Los Angeles Newspaper Group

Friday, December 25th, 2009

RealClearSports: A Different Christmas for Stephen Curry

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com

OAKLAND — This is a different Christmas for Stephen Curry. His first as a pro. His first away from home. His first playing basketball for a losing team.

Life is a learning process. Curry was ahead of the curve. His father, Dell, played in the NBA. Stephen knew more than others. But there was much he didn’t know.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2009

Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009

RealClearSports: Bay Area Full of Dysfunction

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com

SAN FRANCISCO — That the San Francisco 49ers are telling us they could play in Oakland, while the Oakland Athletics are more than hinting they want to play in San Jose, might not make sense to people back in the rust belt. Yet it’s perfectly logical to us demented folk along the Pacific.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2009

Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009

SF Examiner: Carroll endures a rare rough season at Southern Cal

By Art Spander
Special to The Examiner

SAN FRANCISCO — Pete Carroll is making the best of it, which always has been his way. The letter writers in L.A. are down on him, because lately he hasn’t done what they wanted. Pete’s even a little down on himself, not that the enthusiasm doesn’t wash over the disappointment in a second or two.

Read the full story here.

Copyright 2009 SF Newspaper Company

Friday, December 18th, 2009

RealClearSports: Tiger Recognized as Athlete and Punch Line

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com

Well, there’s one thing we learned from all this. No, not that Elin Nordegren is going back to Sweden. Rather that golfers indeed are athletes.

Otherwise why would Ms. Nordegren’s soon-to-be-ex be voted Associated Press Athlete of the Decade?

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2009

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

RealClearSports: Randy Moss Is Up to His Old Tricks

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com

He showed up in a limousine, with an escort of seven police officers. Randy Moss made a grand entrance his first day with the Oakland Raiders, proclaiming, “Who wouldn’t want to be in silver and black?”

Two years later, April 2007, the answer was Randy Moss.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2009

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

SF Examiner: 49ers on their way to recapturing glory

By Art Spander
Special to The Examiner

There was a feel of the ’80s at Candlestick on Monday. Not only because Alex Smith was kneeling down as the clock ran out. Not only because the crowd was screaming, noise that reverberated back into time, but because the 49ers played the way they once played — and presumably may play again.

Read the full story here.

Copyright 2009 SF Newspaper Company