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Wednesday, July 28, 2004

The Gridiron Classic will be coached by Beamer and Tressel

Frank Beamer of Virginia Tech and Jim Tressel of Ohio State will coach in the Gridiron Classic next year. The postseason all-star game will be played Jan. 15 at The Villages, a retirement community northwest of Orlando. Beamer ranks fourth among active Division I-A coaches with 167 wins. He is preparing for his 18th season at Virginia Tech. Tressel, entering his fourth year with the Buckeyes, has an overall record of 32-7. That includes a perfect 14-0 season, Big Ten co-championship and the 2002 national championship.

posted by Anonymous @ 1:13 PM

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The Gridiron Classic will be coached by Beamer and Tressel

Frank Beamer of Virginia Tech and Jim Tressel of Ohio State will coach in the Gridiron Classic next year. The postseason all-star game will be played Jan. 15 at The Villages, a retirement community northwest of Orlando. Beamer ranks fourth among active Division I-A coaches with 167 wins. He is preparing for his 18th season at Virginia Tech. Tressel, entering his fourth year with the Buckeyes, has an overall record of 32-7. That includes a perfect 14-0 season, Big Ten co-championship and the 2002 national championship.

posted by Anonymous @ 1:13 PM

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Willie Williams is playing football for Miami

Star football recruit Willie Williams will be admitted to Miami despite a previously undisclosed arrest record, but he must abide by what the school says are tougher academic standards. University president Donna Shalala said the school has "placed the bar high" for Williams, considered the top high school linebacker by many recruiting services. "There will be academic conditions that he must meet," Shalala wrote in a letter released Tuesday. "Additionally, he will participate in a program that we provide for all athletes that provides mentoring, constructive counseling and monitoring of their behavior -- both on and off campus." The 6-foot-2, 225-pound Williams pleaded no contest earlier this summer in two separate episodes in Gainesville during his official visit to Florida, one of his many pursuers. He faced a felony count of setting off fire extinguishers at his hotel, along with a misdemeanor battery charge for hugging a woman without consent. Each plea resulted in a year's probation for Williams, whose arrest record dates back to 1999, mainly for theft and burglary. What happened in Gainesville could have sent Williams to jail for a year; he was already on probation for a 2002 felony burglary charge. Williams, a Miami native, met with media for the first -- and maybe last -- time since his police record became known after the trouble in Gainesville. He attended a news conference with athletic director Paul Dee and Hurricanes coach Larry Coker. Williams was also joined by his mother, sister and grandmother. "I know in the past I have made some mistakes, but I have learned from these mistakes," said Williams, who added that he will not talk to the media in the "foreseeable future." Dee insisted the decision to admit Williams did not signal a return to the old days when the Hurricanes were referred to as a team of "convicts."  "I can't control what people think," Dee said. "I can tell them what the facts are. The fact of the matter is there is no return to the 'days of misunderstandings,' as I prefer to call it." Along with the school's code of conduct, Dee said Williams would also have to abide by several special academic conditions. He did not give details. "I take this very personal," Coker said. "I think that my reputation and my legacy are on the line with all these players that I recruited ... not just with Willie. "I believe in this young man." A University of Miami panel ultimately recommended that the school admit the Parade All-American. "They brought broad experience in reading complicated admissions applications, which in this case revealed a more accurate picture of a young man than what you have read to date," Shalala wrote. Williams had 83 tackles and 18 sacks last season, helping Miami Carol City win the Florida Class 6A title. His arrest record and the complaints levied against him in Gainesville were revealed Feb. 4, the same day Williams signed his letter of intent to enroll at Miami. Miami freshmen report to camp Aug. 9, with practice scheduled to begin the next day. The Hurricanes open the season, their first in the Atlantic Coast Conference, on Sept. 6 against Florida State.

posted by Anonymous @ 1:10 PM

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Can Gunther Cunningham shape up the Kansas City defense?

Yes. This guy could shape up the Michelin man. He's tough. He's aggressive. And he's determined to prove himself again as a coordinator, which, it just so happens, he did so well at Kansas City in the 1990s the Chiefs named him head coach. There was a feeling in Kansas City last year that the Chiefs had the players on defense, they just got caught playing a scheme unsuited to them. I guess we'll find out.
Cunningham's approach is to make the defense in his image, which means you better stay out of its way.
"We'll be very aggressive," Cunningham promised. "It's very much an up-the-field defense, and it will center around speed."
Look for cornerback Julian Battle and linebackers Kawika Mitchell and Monty Biesel to push the starters. The Chiefs were fourth last year with 37 takeaways, but they couldn't stop the run -- surrendering an average of 5.2 yards a carry, the league low. That won't happen again. Cunningham won't stand for it.

posted by Anonymous @ 12:49 PM

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Who wins the quarterback job in Dallas?

The early money is on Quincy Carter, not because coach Bill Parcells likes the guy but because Drew Henson is a year away. Sure, the Cowboys acquired Vinny Testaverde, but that was as an insurance policy against Carter self-destructing ... which, of course, is always possible.
Parcells likes quarterbacks who don't screw up, and Carter threw more interceptions (21) last year than touchdowns (17). Not good. Nevertheless, he's still the bet over Testaverde, who's 40 and serves as a reliable backup if and when Carter falters. The quarterback of choice is Henson, but he needs time. Carter and Testaverde give it to him.

posted by Anonymous @ 12:48 PM

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Will we see Ricky Williams with Miami before camp is over?

Only Ricky knows, but my guess is no. People familiar with Williams believe he's sincerely retired, mostly because they believe he saw the NFL as too structured and too confining.
"I think when he talked to the team in minicamp and told them everyone has do their part and push forward he was talking to himself," said one source close to Williams. "And I think it dawned on him after returning from this trip (overseas) that he couldn't do what he was preaching others to do."
He conceded that Williams is complicated and described his situation as "layered," with Williams' three children a factor. Williams loves kids, and when interviewed at the 1999 NFL combine he told the New Orleans Saints he wanted to be an elementary school teacher when he was through with pro football. Now he has his chance.
"I think he delayed this as long as he could," said the source. "Sometimes people don't make decisions until they have to, and now he has to. I don't think he's coming back ... at least not this year

posted by Anonymous @ 12:47 PM

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Who feels the heat most in Cleveland, Jeff Garcia or William Green?

Neither. It's Butch Davis. The head coach two years ago jettisoned defensive coordinator Foge Fazio, saying the club's defense wasn't good enough. Then he pitched offensive coordinator Bruce Arians overboard after last season, saying the offense wasn't good enough. Now, the team president is gone. A vice president is gone. Heck, the public relations director is gone. Which leaves ... Butch Davis.
Davis is in the line of fire, and he better hope this outfit is a whole lot better than it looks. The Browns not only aren't the best team in the AFC North; they're not the best team in Ohio, and that's trouble. Browns fans won't stand for another year of mediocrity, which means Davis better make something happen ... and now.

posted by Anonymous @ 12:45 PM

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Can the Denver Broncos replace Clinton Portis?

Yes. And they will. The Broncos operate under the same philosophy as San Francisco, namely that you can plug virtually anyone but the Venus de Milo in at running back and get 1,000 yards. They did it with Terrell Davis, sixth-round pick. They did it with Olandis Gary, fourth-round pick. They did it with Mike Anderson, sixth-round pick. Heck, put Indianapolis on the schedule more than once last year, and Quentin Griffin -- another fourth-round pick -- might have wound up with 1,000 yards.
The Broncos made the trade for Champ Bailey because they needed an elite cornerback more than they needed an elite running back and because they believed they could -- no, would -- find a suitable successor to Portis. Take your pick: There's Garrison Hearst, Griffin, Anderson and, oh yeah, Tatum Bell. Rookie running backs thrive in Mike Shanahan's system, and Bell might be the next Portis. Or Anderson. Or Gary. Or Davis ...

posted by Anonymous @ 12:43 PM

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Will David Boston become a dominant receiver again?

The signs are encouraging. When Boston showed up in Miami, receivers coach Jerry Sullivan demanded two things of him: 1) He wanted Boston to lose weight, and 2) he wanted him to participate in the team's offseason conditioning program. Boston did both, coming around after the team's first minicamp when Sullivan showed him tapes of his 2001 season.
"He didn't say much," said Sullivan. "He just looked. I think he saw a different guy than what he imagined he was at the time. And I think he was impressed with who that guy was."
He had company. Boston was a Pro Bowl receiver in 2001 for the Cardinals, hauling down 98 passes for 1,598 yards and setting a team record with nine 100-yard games. Sullivan, who coached him there, thinks Boston can regain that form. More important, he thinks Boston believes he can, too.
"He's in the best running shape since he's been in the league," said Sullivan. "My expectations for him are to become better than he was before. He's more mature now, so hopefully he sees things in a little different light."

posted by Anonymous @ 12:40 PM

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Can Carson Palmer make the Bengals a winner?

Let's see, he hasn't taken a regular-season snap, and history says the game is unkind to first-time starting quarterbacks. Troy Aikman was 0-11 in his rookie season. John Elway threw twice as many interceptions as touchdowns. Peyton Manning was 3-13. Only there's a difference here: This isn't Palmer's first season. It's his second, and that might be a blessing.
"Now, he's not feeling like a rookie who's here for the first time, where everything is new," said quarterbacks coach Ken Zampese. "All those things that are anxiety builders for a guy are not there. So there's a confidence. Plus, he's seen how the game works and how we might change things during a game. And he's built relationships with his teammates. He just wants to be seen as one of the guys, who isn't treated any differently than anyone."
Good luck. Because of his position and because he's a No. 1 pick he must be treated differently than everyone. But he's in a better spot than, say, Manning was in his first tour of duty. The Bengals have a solid offensive line. Running back Rudi Johnson looks legit. And the defense should improve from its 28th-place finish of a year ago. All of that will help with Palmer's learning curve. Then there's his natural ability. Zampese compares Palmer's arm to that of a young Jim Everett, and that's not bad. But the arm is not the issue; experience is. Look for Palmer to gain plenty of exposure in preseason games.

posted by Anonymous @ 12:39 PM

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Who's under more pressure in Philadelphia -- Andy Reid or Donovan McNabb?

It's Reid, by a nose. He has taken the Eagles to three straight NFC Championship Games, which is great. But he has lost three straight NFC Championship Games, which is not. Reid's all-for-one-and-one-for-all approach took the Eagles far ... but not far enough. Which is why he took on controversial Terrell Owens and defensive end Jevon Kearse, who has suited up for exactly 18 of his past 32 games. Heck, Reid even took back linebacker Jeremiah Trotter, whom he released two years ago when Trotter demanded megabucks.
Reid ran an egalitarian operation, and he ran it well. The only problem was that it didn't take the Eagles beyond the front porch, which is why Owens and Kearse are here. Owens is a terrific playmaker, but he must be handled carefully. Kearse is a terrific playmaker, too ... when he plays. Give Reid credit for having the guts to take chances, but as with any gamble there's a risk -- and pity poor Brad Childress if T.O. dissects the play

posted by Anonymous @ 12:35 PM

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Does the return of Joe Gibbs guarantee Washington its first playoff team since 1999?

No, but it sure improves them. There is no better coach than Gibbs at adapting to the players he has. He won with Joe Theismann as his quarterback. He won with Doug Williams as his quarterback. He won with Mark Rypien as his quarterback. He won with John Riggins, too. No, George Rogers. No, Earnest Byner. I think you get the idea.
In Clinton Portis he has the franchise back to make Washington the rushing threat it wasn't last season, and that makes the Redskins more dangerous to everyone on their schedule. It does not, however, mean they're a lock to push Philadelphia. Gibbs is a marvelous coach, but he won in an era when there was no salary cap and there was Bobby Beathard. Let's see how he adapts to change.

posted by Anonymous @ 11:17 AM

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Who will win the Super Bowl according to Clark Judge

First things first. The New England Patriots are better, stronger and deeper than they were a year ago when they won the Super Bowl. That said, they won't repeat as champions. Why? Easy. Virtually no one these days repeats as champions. Look at the Patriots of two years ago. They were a popular choice to defend their title and might have were it not for one itzy-bitzy glitch: They didn't make the playoffs. Neither did everybody's favorite of a year ago, Tampa Bay, a 5,000-pound gorilla that was supposed to be the most complete package since Gina Lollobrigida. Then the Bucs failed to defend their Super Bowl title when they fizzled to 7-9. Sure, this year's Patriots are loaded and play in a division where the competition, i.e., Miami, just lost its most valuable player. But it's not the competition that's the problem; it's a trend that has one team repeating as Super Bowl champion over the past decade. Of the past five Super Bowl winners, no one the following season made it farther than the 2001 Baltimore Ravens -- who lost in the divisional round of the playoffs -- while three others failed to reach the postseason. So who wins this year's Super Bowl? Ah, that's the first in our Top Ten Questions entering the season, and go no farther for the answer: Anyone but New England. Gimme Philadelphia. Or Seattle. Kansas City. Denver. You name it. Anyone but New England. Anything else? As a matter of fact...

posted by Anonymous @ 10:45 AM

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Preseason kicks off with the Hall of Fame game.

The Denver Broncos will face the Washington Redskins in the 2004 Hall of Fame Game.  The National Football League released the preseason schedule that will begin with the HOF Game in Canton on August 9th.The game will be televised on ABC's Monday Night Football beginning at 8:00 PM.Washington Redskins coach Joe Gibbs returns to Canton where he was enshrined in 1996.  Although many Hall of Fame coaches have coached in the Hall of Fame game, Gibbs becomes just the second Hall of Famer to coach in the game after he was enshrined.The Broncos kick off the preseason one day following the induction of John Elway.  The quarterback is the first long-time Denver player to be elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame.Washington is 3-0 in Hall of Fame games. The Redskins beat the Lions, 20-3 (1965), the Cincinnati Bengals, 17-9 (1975), and the Buffalo Bills 31-6 (1989). Denver is 1-1 in their two visits to Canton. The Broncos beat the Lions 10-7 in 1976 and then lost to Detroit, 14-3 in 1991.

posted by Anonymous @ 10:13 AM

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Lesnar signs with the Vickings.

Brock Lesnar is hoping to become the next big thing for the Minnesota Vikings. Better known to World Wrestling Entertainment fans as "The Next Big Thing," Lesnar signed a contract with the Vikings. The former NCAA heavyweight wrestling champion from Minnesota wants to win a spot on the defensive line. At 6-foot-3 and 286 pounds, the 27-year-old Lesnar has not played football since his senior year of high school in South Dakota. "He's very serious about this," said Lesnar's agent, Ed Hitchcock. "He worked out today and (coach) Mike Tice said he wanted to sign him." Lesnar retired from the WWE in March. In April, he sustained a pulled groin, bruised pelvis, broken jaw and broken left hand in a motorcycle accident. Lesnar tried out for the Vikings in June. He had another workout with them on July 27. After that workout a month ago, Lesnar said, "This isn't a publicity stunt." "This is the real deal," he said then. "It's something I want to do. I don't want to wake up when I'm 50 years old and say I should have tried." Hitchcock said then-Tampa Bay coach Tony Dungy expressed interest in Lesnar after he left school. "Football is something he's always wanted to pursue," Hitchcock said. Scott Studwell, the Vikings' director of college scouting, was willing to give Lesnar another look. "He is a project with a capital P," Studwell said in June. "He's got physical tools, but he has a long way to go." The Vikings also signed guard Tam Hopkins. They released safety Ben Nauman and defensive tackle Jeff Womble.

posted by Anonymous @ 10:06 AM

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Sherman's statement in regards to the death of the VP of the Packers.

Today the Green Bay Packers not only lost a valuable member of its team, but also a trusted and loyal friend.
Mark Hatley loved his family, he loved his friends, and he loved football. He lived each day completely -- filling each with his enthusiasm and passion for life and those in it. We should all be so fortunate to live like he lived.
He will be missed by many.
Our sympathies go out to his entire family, especially his wife, Claudia.

posted by Anonymous @ 10:04 AM

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Packers VP Hatley dead at 54

Mark Hatley, the Green Bay Packers' vice president of football operations, has died at age 54.  Hatley's agent, Bob LaMonte, said he received a call from coach and general manager Mike Sherman informing him of Hatley's death overnight. Hatley was second in command behind Sherman on personnel matters in Green Bay, where he was responsible for overseeing the team's scouting efforts. The cause of his death is unknown.
LaMonte said in a phone interview from his home in Half Moon Bay, Calif., he had just seen Hatley on July 26 when he was in Green Bay to meet with Sherman. "He was going golfing. He was fine," LaMonte said of Hatley. Hatley joined the Packers in May 2001 after a four-year stint in Chicago, where he drafted back-to-back rookies of the year in Brian Urlacher and Anthony Thomas in 2000 and '01. Sherman wanted an experienced front-office hand to stay on top of college scouting matters and free agency while he was occupied with running the Packers. Hatley was known as a tireless worker who spent countless hours in the film room scouting college talent. He began his career in personnel in 1992 as pro personnel director for the Kansas City Chiefs and was hired by the Bears in 1997. A native of Borger, Texas, Hatley played linebacker at Oklahoma State, leading the Cowboys in tackles in 1971 before beginning his coaching career at OSU from 1973-75. He also worked at Tulsa, Texas Christian and Baylor before joining the New Orleans Saints' coaching staff in 1984. He joined the Chiefs as linebackers coach in 1987. "Mark was a consummate professional," LaMonte said. "Everywhere he went he had great success. He's been terrific at his job and was just a fantastic individual. You'll never meet a better guy." Hatley is survived by his wife, Claudia; daughter, Eliza; and two grandsons.

posted by Anonymous @ 9:48 AM

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NFL video games

footballLast week the NFL released its annual list of the top-selling teams of licensed apparel and merchandise, and once again traditional favorites such as Oakland, Dallas, Green Bay and Pittsburgh assumed prominent spots. Also befitting NFL custom, the league proclaimed itself as still king of the sports licensing mountain. For now, this much is true. The NFL posted $3.2 billion in retail sales in 2003, according to the league and License! 
Earth-shattering tackles. Towering home runs. Dead ducks falling from the sky.For more than two decades, armchair quarterbacks and little kids with big-league dreams have had the chance to play through the eyes of their favorite players thanks to innovative video games.Sports fans of all ages have watched video game consoles evolve from the prehistoric Atari 2600 and Commodore 64 to the modern Xbox and PlayStation 2. The games today offer video game enthusiasts dazzling graphics, elaborate play and brilliant detail. But some of them just don't hold a candle to the classics. 

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posted by Anonymous @ 8:22 AM

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Taylor happy to have all the business stuff out of te way!

Sean Taylor's path from draft day to signing day was anything but orthodox, so it's not surprising he'd rather not talk about it.After a series of adventures involving agents, a $25,000 fine, baggy shorts and misfired shaving gel, the No. 5 overall pick out of Miami finally settled in Tuesday with a seven-year, $18 million contract from the Washington Redskins."I'm real happy to have all the business stuff out of the way and all the agent issues out of the way and get back to football," said Taylor, expected to be the opening-day starter at free safety.He became the highest draft pick to sign so far this season, even though he fired his agent shortly after the draft and didn't hire new ones until last week.The details of the contract were confirmed by a Redskins official and a person involved in the negotiations, who both spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity. The sources said Taylor will receive a $7.2 million signing bonus, and that the total bonus money in the deal -- including option and roster bonuses -- exceeds $13 million.The contract includes incentives that can make the deal worth up to $40 million over six years, while the seventh year can be voided. The incentives are based on playing time, performance and Pro Bowl or All-Pro selections.Taylor will join coach Joe Gibbs and the team on the practice field Wednesday for the final day of a three-day passing camp. The first standard training camp practices -- in full pads with mandatory attendance for all players under contract -- begin Saturday.Agent Jeff Moorad and vice president for player personnel Vinny Cerrato worked quickly to get the deal done. Cerrato flew to California for two days of talks last week, and Moorad made a surprise return trip to Redskins Park on Monday, showing up unannounced at the front door."I don't remember one coming together this quick," Moorad said. "I'd certainly have to say it's unique."For several months, the Redskins couldn't negotiate with Taylor because he didn't have an agent. At one point, he told Cerrato that he was thinking about representing himself -- then later added that he would perhaps have a lawyer by his side to hash out the legalese. Then he finally hired Moorad and Eugene Mato."We were getting anxious," Cerrato said. "I was calling him quite often: 'Let's get somebody. Sean, if you want your money, you've got to have someone come talk to us.' We were very happy when he finally made a decision."Without an agent to advise him, Taylor left the NFL's mandatory rookie symposium in June for a day -- a major offense in the eyes of the league. He was fined $25,000.Taylor also had an inauspicious debut at spring minicamp, wearing his shorts so baggy they kept falling to his knees. A very unflattering photo of him appeared in the local paper the next day, giving his teammates easy hazing fodder for the rookie.He was then the victim of a prank gone wrong at a later minicamp, when his vision was impaired by a pile of shaving gel squirted into his face by linebacker LaVar Arrington. Taylor was whisked away for treatment and had to miss practice the next day.Tuesday was Taylor's first public forum to explain some of his actions, but he didn't have much to say. He declined to give an explanation for leaving the rookie symposium, criticized the media for the way the situation was covered, and suggested he might appeal the fine.Asked about his agents, Taylor said he fired his old one because "it wasn't a good fit" and waited until the last minute to hire new ones because "it was really no rush.""It's a transition," Taylor said of his eventful spring and summer. "And it's bumps and bruises through that transition, and it's how well you shake those things off. You become a man through the whole situation, a better man."Taylor's new teammates weren't exactly brimming with sympathy.Cornerback Fred Smoot said Taylor should expect the usual rookie practical jokes, although the shaving gel might be checked at the door."I got treated real bad my rookie year," Smoot said. "Don't worry about it. We're on top of that."Linebacker Kevin Mitchell said Taylor has been suitably humbled now he realizes he's just one of many "big fish" in the NFL."He realized that up here you can't get away with wearing the baggy shorts," Mitchell said. "You've got to have them tied up tight."

posted by Anonymous @ 8:20 AM

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Coughlin's NFL style in training camp.

By the latter seasons of Tom Coughlin's eight-year tenure in Jacksonville, most of the veteran Jaguars players had become accustomed to his demanding training camps and the earlier griping largely subsided. But some Giants players complained in the spring about minicamp practices and, as a result of their grievances, New York lost two sessions of its allotted 14 organized practice days.Coughlin is too mature a coach to bear a grudge, although he has acknowledged he feels he now knows the identities of at least some of the veterans who complained to the NFL Players Association. Vengeance or not, Coughlin is going to do the things that have made him successful, and that means tough but focused practices. This is, after all, a team that was supposed to vie for a Super Bowl berth in 2003 and won just four games. The same players who quit on Jim Fassel last season might wish they had played harder for him once they get a taste of Camp Coughlin I. The good side for Giants fans: Coughlin knows how to win and knows how to get a team prepared to play.

posted by Anonymous @ 7:06 AM

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Williams might owe the Dolphis 8 million.

Ricky Williams could be forced to give back the Miami Dolphins more than $8 million already paid to him because he retired before the expiration of his contract.Because of penalty clauses included when Williams' contract was reworked two years ago, the team could try to recoup $5.3 million in incentive money, said sources familiar with the terms who requested anonymity. The Dolphins also could seek $3.3 million of the $8.8 million signing bonus Williams received when he joined the New Orleans Saints in 1999, the sources said.The Dolphins said they've made no decision about whether to pursue the matter. Williams' contract expires in 2006."The contract is not an issue," general manager Rick Spielman said. "The contract will eventually take care of itself. The focus has been on moving forward without Ricky and getting ready for training camp."Williams stunned the Dolphins when he informed them of his retirement decision Friday, and they've had no contact with him since, Spielman said. Williams, who has been traveling for the past week, was in Boston on Tuesday and may return to South Florida by the end of the week, said his agent, Leigh Steinberg.Williams decided to retire aware of potential consequences, financial and otherwise, Steinberg said."He's very much at peace and excited about embarking on the next phase of his life," Steinberg said. "I don't anticipate him changing his mind, but history is replete with examples of athletes who had second thoughts at later dates."Barring a change of heart, Williams' retirement at age 27 leaves the Dolphins with a huge void in their offense. They'll begin training camp workouts Saturday missing a player who rushed for 3,225 yards in two seasons with Miami.Williams was to earn at least $3.6 million this year, with incentives possibly pushing that total as high as $6 million.The Dolphins acquired Williams before the 2002 season. He led the NFL that year with 1,853 yards rushing and broke nine team records. Last season, he ran for 1,372 yards.

posted by Anonymous @ 6:15 AM

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The Gridiron Classic will be coached by Beamer and Tressel
The Gridiron Classic will be coached by Beamer and Tressel
Willie Williams is playing football for Miami
Can Gunther Cunningham shape up the Kansas City defense?
Who wins the quarterback job in Dallas?
Will we see Ricky Williams with Miami before camp is over?
Who feels the heat most in Cleveland, Jeff Garcia or William Green?
Can the Denver Broncos replace Clinton Portis?
Will David Boston become a dominant receiver again?
Can Carson Palmer make the Bengals a winner?
Who's under more pressure in Philadelphia -- Andy Reid or Donovan McNabb?
Does the return of Joe Gibbs guarantee Washington its first playoff team since 1999?
Who will win the Super Bowl according to Clark Judge
Preseason kicks off with the Hall of Fame game.
Lesnar signs with the Vickings.
Sherman's statement in regards to the death of the VP of the Packers.
Packers VP Hatley dead at 54
NFL video games
Taylor happy to have all the business stuff out of te way!
Coughlin's NFL style in training camp.
Williams might owe the Dolphis 8 million.

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