Tree of Life

01 May

A Criticism of the Steeler's Draft by Jon Pennline

published in category: Pittsburgh Steelers on Tuesday, May 1st, 2012 – 8:45 am

If ever there was a draft that highlighted Steelers' GM Kevin Colbert's selection strategy, it was this one. The Pittsburgh Steelers, as they have over the last two decades, chose the most talented player over a player that would fit a larger need. To an extent, the Steelers were able to do both in the 2012 NFL draft, selecting the most talented guard and one of the most talented tackles. However, while the offensive line has potential to go from worst to first, the defense continues to age.

David Decastro was a great pick. With the Steelers waiting for 23 other teams to make their first selection, Decastro was more of a dream pick. Luckily, some teams reached for players out of the projected path. The Chiefs took NT Dontari Poe with the 11th pick -a prospect on the Steelers' board- and the Seahawks took Bruce Irvin, a pass rushing linebacker with so much baggage, Southwest Airlines would charge extra.

The Steelers took Decastro and pundits everywhere exclaimed this was the perfect pick for the perfect team. Descastro can do it all as a guard. He can pass block, he is a monster at pulling, drawing comparisons to Alan Faneca, and he's a great character individual with a fiery competitive spirit.

With a potential future All-Pro guard selected, the Steelers took Mike Adams in the second round. At 6'7 325 pounds, Adams has the talent to be an excellent left tackle. His stock dropped tremendously after testing positive for marijuana during the combine. Assuming Adams has his priorities in order, the Steelers expect to have a revamped offensive line that can finally protect its 100 million dollar quarterback.

But there is a problem with this draft class.

The Steelers barely filled any holes on defense. Sure, they drafted Ta'amu Alameda in the fourth round as a possible replacement to Casey Hampton but, with the league becoming more pass-oreinted, the nose tackle is seeing more time on the sidelines.

With their third round pick, the Steelers took inside linebacker Sean Spence. However, Spence is undersized (5'11 231 pounds) for a run stuffing linebacker and the Steelers already have a playmaker at that position in Lawrence Timmons. Plus, with the steep learning curve under Dick Lebeau's defense, Stevenson Sylvester is already way ahead of Sean Spence to replace Larry Foote. In the end, the Steelers used their third round pick to draft another linebacker.

By all calculations, Pittsburgh did improve their roster with some talented draft picks. But I am still skeptical this draft class is going to improve the team enough to make them Super Bowl contenders for the next years. The Steelers will have better protection for Ben Roethlisberger and they will probably have a better rushing offense creating a more balanced attack.

But if you hear footsteps, it's Ray Rice. He's running, and he's going to be running all over Pittsburgh until the defense has the talent to stop him. While one of the NFL's youngest offenses got younger, the defense is still going to be one year older and one year slower. With no picks being used on replacing Ryan Clark or Troy Polamalu, the Steelers will have to wait another year to improve their defense.

Posted in Pittsburgh Steelers

 

28 Apr

Steelers Round 2: Mike Adams

published in category: Pittsburgh Penguins, Pittsburgh Steelers on Saturday, April 28th, 2012 – 1:58 am

Come and meet the Pittsburgh Steelers' value-laden draft picks: Safe and Risky. If Day 1 of the Steelers 2012 NFL Draft was a smoke alarm, then Day 2 was a kitchen fire. 1st Round draft pick David DeCastro enters the Black and Gold family representing arguably the most sure-thing evaluation in the entire crop of college talent. 2nd Round draft pick Mike Adams comes to town as arguably this year's most volatile scouting combination of talent and character concerns.

Adams, a 6'7 1/4, 323 lb offensive tackle from Ohio State University, was taken by Pittsburgh with the 56th overall pick of the 2012 Draft despite three significant off-field incidents on his resume:

– In January of 2009 he was cited for possessing drug paraphernalia (police found a pipe in Adams' car during a traffic stop), a charge that was dismissed for insufficient evidence and for which Adams also passed a drug test. (Separately that year, Adams would be demoted to scout team during fall camp and suspended the first two games of the season for violating team rules.)

– In 2011 Adams was one of five Ohio State players who were handed a five game suspension for receiving improper benefits from a Columbus tattoo parlor. In Adams' case, he had sold gear including his 2008 Big Ten championship ring and was ordered to repay $1000.

– In 2012 at the NFL Scouting Combine, Adams reportedly tested positive for marijuana. Adams did not tell any teams of the possibility of this positive test for drug use during Combine interviews, but later chose to come forward with the information upon receiving official news of the positive test (NFL teams would not have learned the results themselves until one week prior to the NFL Draft).

In particular, the latter incident of failing a pre-arranged drug test at one of the nation's biggest job interviews was an eyebrow raiser. It gives Adams a first-offense under the NFL's substance abuse policy, a second of which will result in a four game suspension. In total, Mike Adams' rap sheet of red flags that was enough to remove Mike Adams from the Pittsburgh Steelers prospect list for a time, according to Director of Football Operations Kevin Colbert.

"In Mike's case, he sought us out once he was aware of the situation [of testing positive]," said Colbert. "He requested a face-to-face interview and meeting with myself, Art Rooney II, and coach Tomlin, and we obliged. When Mike came in, we told him he's off our draft board. These are the stipulations that you have to accomplish for us to draft you, which the young man did. He met our criteria, he met our stipulations, and we were comfortable taking him where we took him."

Colbert would not elaborate as to what those criteria may have been.

Adams was contrite when speaking about the situation, saying that arranging the meeting was "more about trying to get back in their good graces. I knew that I screwed up. I've been a lifelong Steelers fan. I struck out to meet with them and just to let them know what happened and show my remorse and let them know that I love that organization and that I'll do anything to be a part of it. That's the team I wanted to go to from day one."

On the field, despite some very obvious impressive physical traits (including 10.7 inch hands), Adams is not a sure thing either.

The former Buckeye has 25 starts at left tackle in the Big Ten under his belt, and tape that includes 33 TD-resulting blocks over his final two seasons as a starter. In Adams' final eight starts as a senior he produced 78 knockdown blocks for the Ohio State offense, and a performance against Wisconsin's J.J. Watt (the Houston Texans first-round pick in 2011) stood out during 2010 as one where Adams used his massive size to swallow up an elite edge rusher.

On the other hand, Adams has produced spotty play over the course of his career, in particular struggling with the power of Adrian Clayborn and Ryan Kerrigan in matchups with those former Big Ten foes (granted, both first-round talents at pass rusher in the NFL). Adams also only benched 19-reps at 225 pounds at the Combine and does not have a body that looks sculpted at an NFL level. And durability wise, the Ohio State product had knee surgery, shoulder surgery, and a season-ending foot injury throughout the course of his college career.

Sean Kugler is the offensive line coach of the Pittsburgh Steelers, and he summed up Mike Adams the football player in this way:

"He has great size and long arms. He can bend for a guy his size. He has a lot of length to him and that is important at the tackle position. He's a physical player and a size combination that is hard to beat at the tackle position. [But] he's going to have to work at his entire game. I wouldn't say that he's a finished product. A guy his size, speed probably will be his nemesis. We'll continue to work on that. There will be some technique things. He presents other problems to players."

But in the end, the biggest storyline of Mike Adams' career in Pittsburgh will likely be his character. A Farrell, PA native until the age of 12, Adams' favorite boyhood team has taken a chance that he will change his ways and stay be incident-free. Does he have a drug problem that he can't control or was it just a case of, in the words of Colbert, "young people [making] mistakes?" Does he care enough about the game, more than failing a test at that job fair would indicate? Is he smart enough to realize all that is at stake for him, including the likely $300,000 or more he cost himself by slipping from a 1st Round prospect to Round 2?

If he pans out, the Steelers have found another highly touted bookend lineman to go along with last year's 2nd Round selection of Marcus Gilbert, and they've given themselves increased depth behind current rostered-tackles Willie Colon and Jonathan Scott. If he doesn't pan out, Adams will be filed along with several other recent Round 2 draft mistakes the Steelers have made, including Limas Sweed, Ricardo Colclough, and Alonzo Jackson.

Welcome to Pittsburgh, boom or bust Mike.

Posted in Pittsburgh Penguins, Pittsburgh Steelers

 

25 Apr

Four Questions for the Pens this Offseason by Daniel Dudley

published in category: Pittsburgh Penguins on Wednesday, April 25th, 2012 – 8:58 am

After the Pittsburgh Penguins failed to put a dent into the Stanley Cup Playoffs for the third year in-a-row, needless to say, they have a lot of work to do.
From top to bottom the entire Pens organization failed, yes, failed. Ray Shero, (signing Michalek and Martin), Bylsma, (not adjusting to playoff hockey), Crosby and Malkin, (not showing up when it counted), and Fleury and the defense (not showing up at all).
No one is safe from criticism and since this season is over earlier than expected there are a lot of questions that need to be answered. Here are four that I would like to be addressed.
1. Why does Ray Shero have faith in Dan Bylsma?

Posted in Pittsburgh Penguins

 

25 Apr

Five Things We Learned from the 2011-2012 Pittsburgh Penguins by Jon Pennline

published in category: Pittsburgh Penguins on Wednesday, April 25th, 2012 – 8:56 am

It still amazes me how quickly this season went for the Pittsburgh Penguins; seems only yesterday they were opening up against the Vancouver Canucks to start their western road trip. From there, the team got out to an 8-3-2 start, good enough for first in the Eastern Conference.

Then injuries showed their ugly head, again, as it seemed impossible for the Penguins to have more than three healthy defensemen at a time. Sidney Crosby returned from an 11 month absence and tallied four points against the New York Islanders. But his concussion -or broken neck- symptoms returned and he was shelved for another three months.

Crosby's second departure created a six game losing streak, in which the team was soon bombarded with questions on why they couldn't win. But the play of Evgeni Malkin appeared to lead the team out of their hole and the Penguins recovered in a big way to win 11 straight before losing to Philadelphia in overtime.

The loss proved to be a bigger deal than most thought.

The Penguins went 9-8-1 in their final 17 games and lost in the first round to the Philadelphia Flyers in stunning fashion. While this most recent playoff defeat may go down as the biggest disappointment in franchise history, the organization certainly has a lot more on their plate than they thought.

Here is what we learned about the Pittsburgh Penguins in lieu of the 2011-2012 season:

This is not a Stanley Cup team
Say what you want about the matchup -the Flyers have been dominant over the Penguins in the last two years with a record of 12-5-1- however, the way in which this team lost has been a characteristic all season, overshadowed by their high offensive skill. The Boston Bruins went 2-2 against the Penguins with both their losses involving miraculous breakaway saves by Marc-Andre Fleury (twice on David Krejci) and Brent Johnson (twice on Tyler Seguin). The same could be said in Pittsburgh's 8-1 win over Tampa Bay on February 25th. Marc-Andre Fleury stoned Martin St. Louis multiple times in the first period, allowing the Penguins to get up 3-0 at the end of the first. The matchup against the Flyers was bad but had they not played Philadelphia, another team would have exploited their weaknesses in the defensive zone.

Bylsma's system showed flaws

"Get to our game." The biggest quote of any hockey player on the Penguins (and really everywhere). If the Penguins get to their game, it means they are constantly putting pressure in the offensive zone. With a healthy Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin, James Neal, Jordan Staal, and Kris Letang, this team is certainly capable of eating up time with the puck. Blysma's aggressive system led to the highest goal total in the regular season by any team. What his system failed to do, however, was account for the other team when they had the puck. Team defense was incredibly poor. Forwards failed to back check which led to odd-man rushes off of turnovers in the offensive end. Making matters worse, the defensemen were bad at getting the puck out of their own zone leading to goals and they were equally as bad at protecting the stretch pass in the neutral zone. Since the Penguins won't be playing hockey for another five months, Dan Bylsma should have plenty of time to clean up the X's and O's. His job relies on his ability to make adjustments to his system. This franchise, led by Mario Lemieux, will not stand for another embarrassing first round exit in 2013.

Not the most talented team in the division

The Penguins boast a young, talented core. On their roster, they have three centers unmatched in talent by any team in the league; two of which combine for three Art Ross Trophies, a gold medal, a Conn Smythe, and a Stanley Cup. With talented young defensemen such as Kris Letang, a 40 goal scorer in James Neal, and a Stanley Cup goaltender in Marc-Andre Fleury, it is easy to see why this team was picked to win the Cup this season. But the Flyers proved that they are the younger, more talented team. Six rookies including 19 year old Sean Couturier, started for Philadelphia. Couturier was monumental in shutting down Evgeni Malkin in the series. Brayden Schenn proved to be an agitator with grit and skill, scoring the game-tying goal in game one. No single player is more talented than Sidney Crosby or Evgeni Malkin, but as a team, the Flyers have enough to compete for years to come. Add into the mix that the Penguins may lose Jordan Staal within the next year due to free agency or trade, and the Penguins certainly have some catching up to do.

Penguins need a quarterback on the power play

Let's face it, this team needs someone on the blue line to direct the power play. That player could be Kris Letang, but in the two seasons since Sergei Gonchar's departure, Letang has shown an inability to run the power play by himself. He is a talented defenseman, loaded with offensive talent, but his erratic play with the puck and inability to bring the puck up ice has been a thorn in the side of the Penguins on the man advantage. The fact that Steve Sullivan had to play the point in the playoffs is a true testament to how much Letang has to improve.

Simon Despres is ready

Like everyone else in this city, I believe it is time to move on from Paul Martin. If the Penguins can find a team desperately trying to spend to the cap floor, maybe they can orchestrate a trade for a mid-low round pick. Otherwise, Martin should be sent to the minor ala Wade Redden. Simon Despres filled in for Martin after game 3 and looked stable despite playing in his first NHL playoff game. Despres is a big defenseman, listed at 6'4 220. He doesn't hit for his size but he is exceptionally skilled at getting the puck out of his own end, something every player struggled with in black and gold. With defenseman, Joe Morrow, right behind Despres, the Penguins would be wise to take a page out of Philadelphia's book and give these youngsters a chance. If they prove to be the better defensemen on the ice, then they need to play, regardless of age.

The Penguins enter the most interesting offseason in their post-lockout history. With questions surrounding the defense, coaching, power play, and Jordan Staal, Pens' GM Ray Shero has a lot on his plate. Shero already expressed full faith in the coaching staff on Tuesday's press conference, so now the attention turns to the players. Who stays and who goes? Do the Penguins mistakenly stand pat on what is surely a team with a few holes? We'll have to wait and see.

Posted in Pittsburgh Penguins

 

23 Apr

Collin Wagner Hexed By the VooDoo, Power fall 51-48 by Dominic Errico

published in category: College Sports on Monday, April 23rd, 2012 – 9:02 am

Kicking in the AFL is a difficult proposition. The goal posts are only nine feet wide. Obviously not much space to aim to make a successful kick.

Having said that it's Collin Wagner's job to make kicks for his team, and he failed in that regards four times on Friday night, and the Power came up three points shy of reaching the .500 mark. Overall, Wagner missed three field goals and an extra point in a closely contested game.

The game saw solid quarterback play from the Power's Derek Cassidy. He completed 18 of 27 passes for 226 yards, 5 TD's and an interception. He also lost a fumble. His rival on the other side of the field, Kurt Rocco, one of the AFL's best this year, was somewhat erratic, finishing 19 of 39 for 276 yards, and matched Cassidy's touchdown and interception numbers.

P.J. Berry, the reigning two time JLS Ironman of the Week winner, had another standout game for Pittsburgh. He opened the Pittsburgh scoring with a kickoff return for a touchdown. Overall he had nine returns for 252 yards and a score, he threw a touchdown pass, and added 4 catches for 44 yards and a score.

Randy Hymes continues to state his case as the Power's top receiver this year. He finished three yards shy of the century mark and hauled in three touchdowns. Good times for Randy Hymes indeed.

Chris LeFlore tied the franchise record for interceptions in a season by nabbing his fifth pick of the year. He still has ten games to move ahead of Josh Lay in the record books.

This was a game in which the Power seemed to outplay the VooDoo in many ways in the game, but again, they had critical mistakes at critical points of the game and once again find themselves adding to the loss column. The fumbled exchange between Derek Cassidy and center Beau Elliott definitely hurt, as did the Power's inability to stop the VooDoo on fourth down on the game winning touchdown drive.

In spite of it all, the Power still had their chance to tie the game and go to overtime, but once again, they found themselves just a bit off the mark.

Pittsburgh will come back home to take on their divison rivals, the Cleveland Gladiators, on April 28th. It's Fan Appreciation Night for Power fans. Get your tickets for the game now.

Posted in College Sports

 

18 Apr

Throw back the Throwbacks please! by Dominic Errico

published in category: Pittsburgh Steelers on Wednesday, April 18th, 2012 – 11:05 am

The Steelers unveiled their new throwback jerseys for the 2012 season, and judging by the comments on Twitter and fan message boards, the fans aren't happy with them.

This is the NFL where most teams change their jerseys every few years so that fans spend more money buying the latest versions of the jersey in their neverending quest to be "the ultimate fan."

While the Steelers haven't drastically changed their main uniform much over the last two decades outside of the number font, they do alter the throwback jerseys every couple of years. I kind of liked the version they've used the last few years, but these ones. I dunno.

The jerseys are replicas of the uniforms worn in the 1934 season. The shirt features black and yellow alternating stripes with big rectangle blocked numbers with a white background. I guess those fans who have been wanting the Steelers to go back to block numbers got half their wish at least. The pants are khaki/tan and the socks mimic the shirt with alternating black and yellow stripes.

My first opinion on these jerseys are that they are ugly. I walked away to reset my eyes and came back. Yup…still ugly. So ugly you need the double paper bag method. For those unfamiliar with that double paper bag method, that means one for what you are trying to hide and one for your head in case the other bag falls off.

I understand the nostalgia trends in the league and lord knows we'll see some people buying these and wearing them proudly, but you could achieve that sentiment without wearing something as hideous as these.

I think out of the 300 comments I've seen regarding these I've seen maybe ONE positive reaction and even it seemed tongue in cheek.

Odds are good they'll wear these for one of the Ravens games this year. Maybe they should wear them against Cincinnati. Call it the "Stripes Bowl" or something. You could even get Bill Murray or Harold Ramis to be the ceremonial coin flip guy.

The only problem with Cincy would be all the felons and thugs on their team getting confused by the prison stripes. Maybe the refs should wear solid shirts for that one. Otherwise we'd have a whole lot of stripes going.
I think I speak for 99% of Steeler Nation when I say throw back the throwbacks please!

Posted in Pittsburgh Steelers

 

17 Apr

Letang's Immaturity Restrains Norris Candidacy; Penguins by Jon Pennline

published in category: Pittsburgh Penguins on Tuesday, April 17th, 2012 – 10:54 am

Since he was drafted in the third round by the Pittsburgh Penguins in 2005, Kris Letang has been touted, albeit somewhat unfairly, as the next Paul Coffey. Although he profiles to be more of a two-way defenseman, Letang's offensive prowess is what stands out the most.

Letang's physical talent is undeniable. He is one of the fastest skaters in the league, seemingly never trapped when the play is going the other way. He also possesses a decent shot, smooth stick handling moves, and, at times, unbelievable vision. His physicality makes him a lot tougher to play against in comparison to Coffey. In fact, there have also been comparisons made between Letang and a smaller version Chris Pronger.

But lately, especially on the biggest stage, Letang has shown more semblance to "Nuke" Laloosh, the superstar pitcher played by Tim Robbins in the 1988 classic, Bull Durham. Letang's talent is sometimes wasted by his immaturity; or, as Crash Davis (Kevin Costner) puts it, "Million dollar arm, ten cent head."

Nothing was more evident of Letang's immaturity and lack of composure than his brief performance in game 3 of the Eastern quarterfinals against the Philadelphia Flyers, Sunday. After telling reporters that the Penguins would play a more defensively focused game, Letang completely went against his own words 20 seconds into the game.

After the Penguins recover from an immediate Paul Martin turnover, the puck gets dumped into the Flyers' zone. While Pittsburgh is in the process of trying to recover the puck and set up a cycle, Letang pinches between the face-off circles in front of Ilya Bryzgalov, leaving Martin to fend for himself on the blue line.

That's being more defensive?

It gets better. After Matt Niskanen takes a cross checking penalty to put the Flyers on the power play, Letang cross checks Sean Couturier to give the Flyers a 5 on 3 advantage. Less than a minute later, Daniel Briere scores to put the Flyers up by two.

Rather than cooling down and realizing that the only way to effectively defeat a team is to outscore them, Letang ends up fighting Kimmo Timmonen just four minutes after Briere's goal. He pounds the snot out of Timmonen but, in the process, gets ejected from the game and then proceeds to shush the crowd as Max Talbot did three years ago. Within 12 minutes of the game, Letang has committed a penalty that directly resulted in a goal, a fighting major, game misconduct and subsequent ejection.

You want to shush the crowd? Try making a play. Instead of using your stick to slash and hack players, try using it to take away a passing lane.

This is not the behavior of a Paul Coffey, Nick Lidstrom, Zdeno Chara or even Chris Pronger caliber player. Talent-wise, he has the potential to reach that level. But the lack of composure and discipline, especially against a team that is pushing you to the brink of elimination, is inexcusable. The talk of Letang being a Norris candidate should be placed on hold until he shows the maturity to manage that kind of situation.

The defensive zone coverage and decision making abilities on the breakout are both areas of needed improvement and Letang has shown a steady growth in both areas since coming up with the club in 2007. The turnovers are still evident and, at times, he appears to lose complete focus in his own zone. However, those issues should resolve themselves with experience. The maturity level needs to be fixed immediately. The Penguins cannot afford to have Letang take stupid selfish penalties when he is depended on as the biggest scoring threat on the blue line, by far.

Posted in Pittsburgh Penguins

 

15 Apr

Power overcome 31-point deficit to beat Orlando Predators by Dominic Errico

published in category: Sports Talk Radio on Sunday, April 15th, 2012 – 3:49 pm

What is it with the blown leads at Consol Energy Center this week? Pittsburgh fans watched their hockey team blow leads in the Stanley Cup Playoffs to cross-state rival Philadelphia. The arena team chose to flip the script this time around.

When all was said and done, the Power (2-3) completed the largest comeback (31 points) in the 25 years of the Arena Football league, winning 57-54 in overtime against the Orlando Predators (0-5).

The Power offense once again struggled early. Two of their first three drives ended with failed fourth down conversions. Down 20-7, and driving, Mike Lucian let his man come free and Andrico Hines was knocked silly and out of the game. The injury may have been a blessing in disguise for Pittsburgh given how inaccurate Hines was slinging the ball around.

Derek Cassidy entered the game in relief of Hines and his first drive ended with a pick-six by Eddie Moten to put Orlando up 34-10.

The Power secondary changed tactics at halftime according to defensive back Larico Stevenson. They shifted to man defense and the results were very evident. Stevenson's interception on the Predators second drive got the ball rolling. Pittsburgh got lucky on a Eddie Moten interception that was then fumbled in the end zone and recovered by P.J. "Superman" Berry for a Power TD .

The next Predators drive ended when T.T. Tolliver dropped a 4th down conversion. Chris LeFlore then had back to back interceptions as Orlando was fading fast. The Preds had one last chance to win it in regulation but kicker Mark Lewis missed a field goal wide left and the game went to overtime.

Pittsburgh's defense once again held Orlando in check, forcing the Predators to settle for a Lewis field goal. Pittsburgh then won it when Cassidy found Christian Wise in the end zone for the game winning touchdown. to send the 4464 fans at Consol into a frenzy.

After the game Coach Siegfried spoke about how the bench remained positive despite the circumstances. He said the players impressed him with how focused they were on coming back. He said this the biggest successful comeback he had ever been part of at any level of football. Siegfried also gave a lot of credit to Derek Cassidy for showing toughness in the face of adversity.

Larico Stevenson credited Coach Derek Stingley for making the halftime adjustment on coverage and also gave a big amount of credit to the Power fans for their energy.

P.J. Berry spoke up about putting the game on his shoulders when he returned a kickoff in overtime to the Predators 19 to set up the game-winning touchdown.

It wasn't pretty for most of the game, but at least it was historic.

Stats for Pittsburgh:
Derek Cassidy: 12-22, 148 yards, 5 TD, 1 RUSH TD, 3 INT
Mike "Joystick" Washington: 7 rec, 65 yards, 2 TD.
Randy Hymes: 5 rec, 72 yards, 2 TD
P.J. Berry: 3 rec, 66 yards, 1 TD, 7 kickoffs for 151 yards.
Chris Wise, 1 rec, 19 yards, TD (Game Winner)
Chris LeFlore: 2 INT
Larico Stevenson: 1 INT

Stats for Orlando:
Justin Roper: 24-46, 245 yards, 6 TD, 3 INT
Bobby Sippio: 7 rec, 83 yards, 3 TD
Nate Forse: 7 rec, 65 yards, 1 TD
Dwayne Eley Jr.: 6 rec, 62 yards, 1 TD
T.T. Tolliver: 4 rec, 35 yards, 1 TD
Eddie Moten, 2 INT, 1 TD

Posted in Sports Talk Radio

 



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