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Dallas Gets 2011 Super Bowl

Jerry Jones is finally getting a new stadium and it’ll soon host its first Super Bowl.

The new Dallas Cowboys stadium in Arlington will host the 2011 Super Bowl, the National Football League announced Tuesday. NFL owners, in a secret ballot, chose North Texas over bids from Arizona and Indianapolis. The game is not only expected to turn the world’s attention to the Dallas area – nearly 140 million people watched all or part of this year’s Super Bowl, played in Miami – but also to generate hundreds of millions of dollars in economic benefits to North Texas cities and businesses.

“This is going to be a wonderful, wonderful event,” Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said following the announcement. “The Super Bowl asked us to do what we could do to take it to another level. When you’re talking about a Super Bowl, that’s a pretty challenging commitment.”

The new Cowboys stadium will hold almost 100,000 people, and far more visitors than that will flock to North Texas for Super Bowl XLV and the week of lavish events that will precede it.

In Arlington, Mayor Robert Cluck rushed into City Council Chambers to take a call from Mr. Jones on the speaker phone.

“We’re going to have the Super Bowl,” Mr. Jones said from Nashville. “You’re my first call. We just walked out. We got the vote.”

“I knew we’d do that,” Dr. Cluck said.

“I’m glad you did,” Mr. Jones laughed.

And with that, the celebration in Arlington began. Out came the blue, white and silver balloons. Out came a huge banner saying “Arlington Welcomes Super Bowl XLV in 2011.” And out came caps with similar sentiments for all the council members.

“This is a remarkable development,” Dr. Cluck said. “It’s a big day for Arlington and a big day for North Texas. It shows what can happen when we all work together.”

Dallas, Fort Worth, Irving and other area cities also expect to share in the largesse. “I’m extremely pleased for North Texas that we have been chosen to host the Super Bowl,” Dallas Mayor Laura Miller said in a statement, “It will bring enormous economic benefits to our region — not to mention be a point of pride and a whole lot of fun.”

Bill Blaydes, chairman of the Dallas City Council’s Economic Development and Housing Committee, said he’s uncertain what the game’s overall economic effect will be, “but having your city on TV screens for 30 straight days leading up — you can’t pay for that kind of advertisement.” But landing the Super Bowl is somewhat bittersweet, since Dallas’ Fair Park — not Arlington — should have played home to the Cowboys’ new stadium, Mr. Blaydes said. In 2004, public financing negotiations among Mr. Jones and Dallas county and city leaders failed, prompting the Cowboys to approach Arlington’s city government.

[...]

Securing a Super Bowl was a priority for Mr. Jones when he announced plans to build a retractable-roof stadium in Arlington. Neither Texas Stadium in Irving, the Cowboys’ current home, nor the Cotton Bowl in Fair Park is suitable for the game, because neither has a roof that closes – an NFL requirement for cities where the weather is likely to be inclement in January and February.

Mr. Jones and his advisers wisely chose Roger Staubach – an immensely popular Hall of Fame quarterback whose name is synonymous with the Cowboys’ glory days — as the public face of the North Texas Super Bowl bid. Mr. Staubach led the closed-door presentation to NFL owners this morning.

Arizona was considered a long shot to win the 2011 game, since it’s already hosting next year’s Super Bowl. In Indianapolis, a new, domed stadium is being built downtown for the Indianapolis Colts. North Texas has never hosted a Super Bowl. Houston has hosted two – Super Bowl VII in 1974, which was played at Rice University Stadium, and Super Bowl XXXVIII in 2004, at Reliant Stadium, home of the Houston Texans.

Now, if only the Cowboys can make it a home game!

 

Brownback Praises Manning in Wisconsin, Gets Booed

Sam Brownback got into a bit of hot water with a Wisconsin crowd Friday by implying Payton Manning wasn’t as good as Brett Favre.

The GOP presidential hopeful drew boos and groans Friday at the Wisconsin Republican Party convention when he used a football analogy to talk about the need to focus on families. “This is fundamental blocking and tackling,” he said. “This is your line in football. If you don’t have a line, how many passes can Peyton Manning complete? Greatest quarterback, maybe, in NFL history.”

Oops, wrong team to mention in Wisconsin, once described by Gov. Tommy Thompson as the place “where eagles soar, Harleys roar and Packers score.” Realizing what he had said, the Kansas Republican slumped at the podium and put his head in his hands. “That’s really bad,” he said. “That will go down in history. I apologize.”

His apology brought a smattering of applause and laughter. He tried to recover, saying former Packer Bart Starr may be the greatest of all time, but the crowd was still restless. “Let’s take Favre then,” Brownback said. “The Packers are great. I’m sorry. How many passes does he complete without a line?” “All of them!” more than one person yelled from the back. “I’m not sure how I recover from this,” Brownback said. “My point is we’ve got to rebuild the family. I’ll get off this.”

Pretty amusing.

From a political angle, this is probably a wash for Brownback, since his recovery was handled well enough. Not to mention the fact Starr and Favre both have far more chance of getting elected president in 2008 than he does; Manning would, too, were he old enough to be eligible.

In a football context, comparing quarterbacks from three eras is tough. Starr is in the Pro Football Hall of Fame and Starr and Manning will surely join him the first year they’re eligible. Starr led the Packers to five NFL championships, including the first two Super Bowls. That’s an unmatched achievement. That was in a much smaller league in an era long before free agency, though, so a great team could stay on top much more easily than today.

Favre is a three-time NFL MVP, the only man with that distinction. He led the Packers to two Super Bowls, winning the first. He has been famous in recent years not so much for his excellence, though, but his endurance and tenacity. He’s started more consecutive games, by far, than any quarterback in history, a streak that looks like it’ll only be broken in retirement. That streak is all the more impressive because of the personal tragedies he’s endured in recent years.

Manning is fresh off his first Super Bowl win and is statistically the best passer of the three. He may, indeed, be the best pure quarterback ever to play the game from a technical standpoint. He’s got a ways to go, however, to move ahead of the likes of Starr, Favre, Terry Bradshaw, Roger Staubach, Joe Montana, and Troy Aikman on the accomplishments scale.

 

2007 NFL Draft Grades

NFL Draft Logo 2007 Below are some expert analyses of Day 1 of the 2007 NFL Draft. I’ll update the list over the next couple of days as more roll in.

Note: Bumped to top from 6:54 am April 29.

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NFL Draft 2007 – Round 7

NFL Draft Logo 2007 The 7th and final round of the 2007 NFL Draft is underway. New England has selected USC inside linebacker Oscar Lua with their pick from Oakland.

 

NFL Draft 2007 – Round 6

NFL Draft Logo 2007 The 6th Round of the 2007 NFL Draft is now underway.

 

NFL Draft 2007 – Round 5

NFL Draft Logo 2007 The 5th round of the 2007 NFL Draft is well underway. It gets much less exciting for the fans at this point, as the reaction to our team’s picks is generally “Who?!”

Still, some great players wind up being taken here. Picking well in the 5th and 6th rounds distinguishes great drafts from merely good ones.

 

NFL Draft 2007 – Round 4

NFL Draft Logo 2007 Round 4 of the 2007 NFL Draft is underway. The Oakland Raiders started us off by taking Michael Bush, a running back who would likely have gone early in the first round were he healthy. He’ll likely sit out his first year, a la Willis McGehee a couple years back, but the Raiders are getting him for a high 4th, not a low 1st that the Buffalo Bills spent. Potentially, the steal of the draft.

 

2007 NFL Draft Day Trades

NFL Draft Logo 2007 The guys at ESPN.com analyze all the trades from Day 1 of the 2007 NFL Draft. While I tend to look at these trades in terms of the numerical value of the picks, they simply look at the players each team winds up picking with the selections.

 

NFL Draft 2007 – Round 3

NFL Draft Logo 2007 The draft has been ongoing over nine and a half hours and Round 3 is just now getting under way, with the Oakland Raiders taking Georgia DE Quentin Moses. Thankfully, as Norm Hitzges points out, teams only get 5 minutes a pick from here on out.

 

NFL Draft 2007 – Round 2

NFL Draft Logo 2007 Round 2 is underway and I’ll update as it goes along. The trades are fast and furious and there’s much less information available as we get deeper in the draft and I won’t do player-by-player analyses other than perhaps for the picks made by the Dallas Cowboys and really oddball news (like Philly taking Houston QB Kevin Kolb with their first pick).

 
 


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