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Posts Tagged ‘Tedy Bruschi’

Arizona to retire the football jerseys of seven former Wildcats

Thursday, July 15th, 2010

Chuck Cecil is mobbed by fans after the 1986 victory over Arizona State/Tucson Citizen photo

The Arizona Wildcats will be retiring the football jerseys of seven former players at the game against USC on Nov. 13.

Those seven are: linebacker Ricky Hunley, safety Chuck Cecil, placekicker Steve McLaughlin, cornerbacks Antoine Cason, Darryll Lewis and Chris McAlister, and defensive tackle Rob Waldrop.

Before you say, “Where’s Tedy Bruschi?” understand the criteria: According to university policy, jersey honors are reserved for athletes who were national players of the year or inducted into the National Football Foundation College Football Hall of Fame.

Cason and Lewis won the Thorpe Award for defensive backs. McAlister won the Mosi Tatupu Award for special teams play. McLaughlin earned the Groza Award, given to placekickers. Waldrop won the Outland Trophy for the top interior lineman and the Nagurski Award as the defensive player of the year. Hunley and Cecil have been inducted into the Hall of Fame.

(Cecil is part of the class that will be enshrined Saturday. You can watch the event streaming live from 5:15 p.m. to 7 p.m. Tucson time at www.footballfoundation.org, www.xosdigital.com or www.collegefootball.org.)

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Arizona Wildcats notebook: Impressive list of ex-Cats on TV

Saturday, July 10th, 2010

Former UA linebacker Antonio Pierce, here celebrating the New York Giants' victory in Super Bowl XLII in Glendale, will have new duties in front of the camera this season.
Photo by John David Mercer, US Presswire

NOTE: This is part of the weekly “Nothing But The Notes” column at WildcatSportsReport.com, one of the partners in the TucsonCitizen.com Sports Network. For notes on basketball recruiting, incoming freshman guard Daniel Bejarano, sophomore big man Kyryl Natyazhko and more, check out the link at WildcatSportsReport.com.

Now-retired New York Giants linebacker Antonio Pierce announced last week he is joining ESPN as an analyst, yet another ex-Wildcat in a prominent TV role.

Tedy Bruschi joined ESPN after retiring last summer, former Suns general manager Steve Kerr will become a lead NBA game analyst for TNT next season, Glenn Parker is a college football analyst for Versus, and Joe Magrane works for the MLB Network.

Moreover, UA grad Dan Hicks is one of NBC’s announcing stars. Sean Elliott was at ESPN for a while; now he works on local San Antonio Spurs telecasts. Tom Tolbert was an NBA analyst with NBC, ABC and ESPN (he was part of the broadcasting team of the 2003 NBA Finals with Brad Nessler and Bill Walton) before becoming solely a radio personality in San Francisco.

Miles Simon, after his contract as an assistant Arizona basketball coach was not renewed in the summer of 2008, worked last season as a college basketball analyst for Fox Sports Net.

All in all, an impressive roster of ex-Cats in the TV biz.

Who’s your TV favorite? Anybody we missed? …

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Jennie Finch should be the ‘Bear Down Leader’

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010
Jennie Finch is currently competing for Team USA at the ISF Women's World Championship in Caracas, Venezuela.

Jennie Finch is currently competing for Team USA at the ISF World Championship in Venezuela.

The website WildAboutAZCats.com — one of our partners in the TucsonCitizen.com Sports Network — has been running a bracket contest called “Bear Down Leader.”

It has pitted 32 of the greatest Arizona Wildcats athletes of all-time against each other, with readers voting for the winner.

It’s not strictly a “who’s best” argument, or who had the most lucrative pro career, or who is the most famous.

The way I’ve interpreted the competition is like this: Which former UA athlete do you think best represents Arizona?

The answer to that, for me, is Jennie Finch.

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Second-rounder Gronkowski and the Patriots are a good fit

Friday, April 23rd, 2010
Rob Grokowski is headed into a good situation with the Patriots/Tucson Citizen photo

Rob Grokowski is headed into a good situation with the Patriots/Tucson Citizen photo

Former Arizona tight end Rob Gronkowski landed with one of the NFL’s top franchises, where he will catch passes from one of the NFL’s top quarterbacks and play not too far from his family.

About an hour into the second round of the draft Friday, the New England Patriots selected Gronkowski with the 10th pick in the round and the 42nd overall pick.

The Patriots moved up two spots in a trade with Oakland in order to select Gronkowski.

Gronkowski, who was attending the draft with his family (from western New York), friends and agent Drew Rosenhaus, gave NFL commissioner Roger Goodell a hug after his name was called.

Gronkowski described to USA Today how it felt getting the phone call from the Patriots before the official announcement.

“It was an unbelievable moment,” he reflected. “I didn’t know the (Massachusetts) area code. Drew (Rosenhaus), my agent, was like, ‘Oh, it’s New England.’ I was like, ‘Yes! That’s my team!’ It was very emotional for my family and I.”

Gronkowski had dreams of going in the first round, but this is close and about as well as he could have expected coming off back surgery that cost him the 2009 season. The Patriots had a need at tight end, and quarterback Tom Brady certainly will know how to get Gronk the ball.

“He sounds like a player who could play in the northeast,” said ESPN’s Chris Berman.

Said ESPN’s Steve Young: “When you have great quarterbacking … getting your tight end is almost or more important than receiver.”

ESPN draft analyst Mel Kiper Jr. gave a mixed review of the pick, citing other Patriots’ needs and his opinion that Gronkowski’s running is “not really fluid.”

“A little stiff in terms of his movement,” Kiper said. “Doesn’t adjust to the poorly thrown ball all that well. Will be a solid in-line blocker. … But his stiffness bothered me a little bit coming off a year when he is coming off a back injury.”

UA fans have had plenty of reasons to cheer the Patriots in the past 15 years or so, after they converted Tedy Bruschi from All-American defensive end to Pro Bowl linebacker and one of the faces of the franchise. Bruschi and former UA punter Josh Miller recently were selected to the Patriots’ all-decade team.

Ex-Wildcat Tedy Bruschi up for the College Football Hall of Fame

Thursday, March 11th, 2010
Tedy Bruschi after the 1994 Fiesta Bowl shutout of Miami/Tucson Citizen photo

Tedy Bruschi after the 1994 Fiesta Bowl shutout of Miami/Tucson Citizen photo

Former Arizona defensive end Tedy Bruschi, who is tied as the NCAA’s career sacks leader, is on the ballot for the first time for the College Football Hall of Fame.

Bruschi, who played defensive end at Arizona from 1991 to 1995, ended with 52 sacks, tied for the most in NCAA history with Derrick Thomas. Bruschi was a consensus All-American in 1994 and a unanimous All-American in 1995, when he was the Pac-10 Defensive Player of the Year.

Bruschi is one of 77 players on the ballot. The Hall of Fame class will be announced May 27.

Other first-time candidates on the ballot include 1995 Heisman-winning running back Eddie George from Ohio State and former Georgia offensive lineman Matt Stinchcomb.

Arizona has two former players in the College Football Hall of Fame — linebacker Ricky Hunley, who was enshrined in 1988, and safety Chuck Cecil, who was inducted in December.

Bruschi retired from the New England Patriots before last season and is an analyst for ESPN.

UA notebook: Cats defenseless against top scorers

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

Random thoughts (and notes) while wondering if Arizona football coach Mike Stoops sent a congratulatory message to Super Bowl-winning coach Sean Payton of the New Orleans Saints. Their connection: They were teammates on the replacement Chicago Bears during the 1987 NFL players’ strike …

Say this, the Arizona basketball team is good at one thing: Giving up career highs.

It started with the season opener, when NAU guard Cameron Jones went for 29 points.

Later in the non-conference season, there was the epic 49 points from BYU’s Jimmer Fredette. And the 34 points allowed to Lipscomb’s superb post player Adnan Hodzic.

More recently, Oregon’s LeKendric Longmire came off the bench to tie his career-best with 18 points. On Jan. 31, Theo Robertson poured in 27 points, his personal best. And, on Feb. 6, Washington State big man DeAngelo Casto had a career-high 19 points to go along with plenty of other mayhem in the paint.

In between those two games, Washington’s Quincy Pondexter lit up the Wildcats for 30 points, one off his career high. In any case, he used that to help grab Pac-10 Player of the Week honors.

Basically, if the other team has an elite scorer, Arizona usually can’t stop him, from Wisconsin’s Trevon Hughes (24 points), to Colorado’s Cory Higgins (28), to UNLV’s Tre’Von Willis (25), to Oklahoma’s Willie Warren (25), to Louisiana Tech’s Kyle Gibson (25) to Stanford’s Landry Fields (31), to all the guys mentioned above. …

Mike Bell

Mike Bell

Mike Bell became the ninth former UA player to earn a Super Bowl ring. The New Orleans Saints running back only had two carries against the Colts, slipping on an off-tackle third-and-goal attempt from the 1, but he was a key part in the championship season. Bell actually had the most rushing attempts (172) on the team during the regular season.

As for the other Super Bowl-winning Cats:

*Tedy Bruschi has three rings (Patriots — 2002, 2004, 2005 Super Bowls)
*T Bell has two (Steelers — 1979, 1980)
*The following have one — Ron Gardin (Colts, 1971), Edwin Mulitalo (Ravens, 2001), Chris McAlister (Ravens, 2001), Josh Miller (Patriots, 2005), Michael Johnson (Giants, 2008) and Antonio Pierce (Giants, 2008).

For the complete list of ex-Cats in the Super Bowl, go to our sports network partner WildAboutAZCats.com. …

Scout.com released its initial list of top 150 football recruits for next season. How in the world did CDO running back Ka’Deem Carey not make the list? … Reason No. 5,871 to not get put too much stock into recruiting rankings: There was a lot of buzz when running back Ryan Bass — the 31st-best player in the nation, according to Scout.com — committed to Arizona a couple of years ago, and much angst when he then signed with Arizona State. He spent two unspectacular years with the Sun Devils, was suspended at the end of last season and has now transferred to Idaho. …

Jamelle Horne

Jamelle Horne

UA junior forward Jamelle Horne is nothing if not consistently inconsistent, but how in the world has he scored single-digit points in six of the past seven games? Is he injured in some way that has not become public? He began Pac-10 play by averaging 16 points through four games. In the seven games since then, he is averaging 6.3. Something is not right … Four of the 23 football players in Arizona’s recruiting class have spent time on a Division I roster. They are defensive lineman Willie Mobley (redshirted at Ohio State in 2008), defensive end Mohammad Usman (had 10 tackles in nine game with Houston in 2008), linebacker Paul Vassallo (redshirted at Nevada in 2007) and, of course, Texas transfer receiver Dan Buckner. …

Among the football newcomers, long snapper Chase Gorham from Scottsdale is the one most guaranteed of playing time in 2010. The Wildcats lose two seniors on the long-snapping depth chart, and Gorham is supposed to one of the best around. He is the son of Charlie Gorham, a UA kicker in 1972 and 1973. “I know how much I really, really, really love the Cats,” Charlie said in a video interview with Wildcat Sports Report, part of the TucsonCitizen.com sports network. “The minute he steps foot on the football field at the U of A, I am going to be bawling.” …

The father of Arizona basketball commit Jordin Mayes, a point guard from Los Angeles Westchester High School, offered this honest assessment of his son to WildAboutAZCats.com: “Jordin has to learn more about managing the game and getting better at that,” Darryel Mayes said. “He has the skills to score big points when he needs to. As a point guard, he has to get others involved. But as he matures, he will understand more that he must keep the defense on its heels. Sean (Miller) and his staff can see the ability of Jordin scoring when the opportunity presents itself. When the play calls for a bucket, get that bucket. Don’t pass up that shot. That’s called playing too nice.”…

The Arizona softball team begins its season Friday at the Kajikawa Classic in Tempe. Mike Candrea‘s team has its home opener on Feb. 20 with a doubleheader against Missouri. One of the changes at Hillenbrand Stadium is a padded outfield fence, replacing the wooden face that has been a hazard to outfielder’s faces. “I’m really looking forward it,” said junior centerfielder Lauren Schutzler. “I was joking with my family that Coach put that up because he’s getting sick of me not catching the ball. That wood wall was kind of a big omen out there. Any time you would run into that wall, you would get splinters, you would bang your head. It was horrible.” The padding comes a few years too late for Caitlin Lowe, who became a YouTube sensation when she crashed into the fence during postseason play in 2007. The outfielders will now have a little security when going hard after fly balls. “But it’s going to be another thing that raises expectations,” Schutzler said. “Coach is going to be like, ‘I put that padding out there for you, you better be going into it.’”