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JERRY MAGEE

Gates is in line for Gonzalez's glory

At this rate, in five or six years or maybe 10 years, it could be Antonio Gates going through all this. For better and worse. Mostly better.

There has been a bit of negativity over the passage of Shannon Sharpe by Tony Gonzalez as the most prolific pass-receiving tight end in NFL history, virtually all the mildly sour grapes squeezed by Gonzalez himself. Today, the Kansas City Chiefs star surely will get the 3-yard reception he needs to break Sharpe's career mark of 10,060, but he clearly was bitter to have to do it on the road at Carolina.

More Jerry Magee Columns

Oakland memories, and fade to black: Excuse me. This is where I get off. In Oakland. End of career, if what a newspaper guy does can be called a career. I would call it a joy. But newspapers aren't going so well and I am not so young and thus it is goodbye from Oakland and Gertrude Stein, you had it all wrong.

Tomlinson at common turning point: Mostly opinions, all mine: We have seen the best of LT. He has thrilled us, but running backs who have been exposed as long as he has to the trauma that running backs absorb tend to find that their skills are not eternal.

Issues facing Young aren't surprising: A man who has experienced the most vaulting sort of success comes into the NFL, and now there are no huzzahs for him, only failure and questions and humiliation.

For openers, it's thrills and emotion: Another opening, another show. Opening games in the NFL are somehow different, with their heightened expectancy and the element of uncertainty that accompanies them. What they are is thrilling. I know they are for me.

NFL defenses catching up in electronics at last: High tech is making a further incursion into blocking and tackling. Nothing, it seems, is safe from it.

Big stadiums = big-ticket item, shutting out working folk: Some phrases stick in the mind. This one is lodged in mine: “Sturdy lads from the mill towns.”

Paul Brown would frown at son's move: It must have occurred to you as it did to me after Mike Brown stunningly, and I think wrongly, returned Chris Henry to the good graces of the Cincinnati Bengals: his father would not have done that.

Is Toronto ready if Buffalo shuffles on?: I'm worried about the Buffalo Bills. How about you? No? A pity. I don't think I would be exaggerating by saying I cherish Buffalo, where football is important to a population willing to suffer to attend games in the terrible cold of winter in western New York.

Favre soap opera elicits memories of Johnny U: For more than 15 years, the quarterback had been working in the same town and it had been good there for him, where he had the status of a demigod, only now he was moving with his mastery and his pride. Particularly his pride.

Glamorous 'Boys perfect for 'Knocks': It's not as if Terrell Owens is going to be going one-on-one against some sprite who expresses her expertise by teetering atop a balance beam. On second thought, in a way, it is.

Tagliabue should not impact hall: A touchy matter, this. Reference is to Jack Kemp's candidacy for the Pro Football Hall of Fame and, more particularly, Paul Tagliabue's support of it.

Football wants Favre, but do the Packers?: Walk into the Green Bay Packers' Lambeau Field dressing quarters in recent seasons and you would not have seen Brett Favre. His was a place apart, in a little room set aside for him exclusively.

It's early, yes, but rank Pats No. 1 . . . and Bolts No. 2: Seven different teams have represented the NFC in the past seven Super Bowls, which suggests how markedly matters can change from year to year in the NFL.

On draft day, NFL's GMs played 'deal or no deal': Let's get into the mathematics. Of the 252 selections in the NFL draft, 32 were compensatory picks, which cannot be traded. That leaves 220.

Clubs try to utilize 1-2 punch with RBs: Pittsburgh's extraordinarily talented Willie Parker is 27, in the prime years of his career and has averaged 1,337 yards over the past three seasons. Yet the Steelers used a first-round pick to select another running back, Rashard Mendenhall of Illinois.

Dolphins make OT Long No. 1, spoil draft buzz: It wasn't the butler who did it, it was Bill Parcells. An action most foul. The league's mystery story had much of its intrigue eliminated yesterday when the Miami Dolphins announced they have reached a contractual accord with Jake Long and on Saturday intend to make the Michigan offensive tackle the NFL draft's ranking selection.

Manning-Tyree fever was catching: When he got back to his hotel room in the wee hours, Eli Manning was weary, but not so weary that he did not turn on a television set.

Novel idea: Giants need to sit on ball against Pats: In order to win a football game, a team can have a marvelous quarterback, but even a Tom Brady is helpless unless he has the football. Try getting it against the New York Giants.

Eli Manning has had Super fling in the postseason: A former Chargers quarterback is in the Super Bowl. All right, the San Diego club had title to Eli Manning for only about an hour.

Why Chargers will win: They've done it before: I guess what we thought we saw here in November didn't actually happen. The man next door, Bob Kravitz, refers to it as “a complete aberration.”

Retiring, Gibbs puts his worries behind him: Joe Gibbs' worries, one trusts, are over. Gibbs stepped away from the Washington Redskins yesterday and away from football, which, because it is a game of a thousand details, created for him a thousand worries.

Titans don't face music or dance: Choosing the proper dance partner can make the music sound so much sweeter, and the Tennessee Titans chose the wrong one yesterday.

Titans get late Dungy Christmas gift: Lo! The team responsible for “The Music City Miracle” is in the NFL playoffs, not because of something that had its source from on high but because of the charity of Tony Dungy, which was just as good.

Browns fans singing, 'Come all ye faithful': “Believeland” is a play on the word “Cleveland,” where the citizens are great in their faith that the Browns are going to be transported today into the NFL's postseason.

About Jerry Magee

Jerry Magee has been a Union-Tribune staff writer since 1956. In his time at the newspaper, he has covered the Padres of the Pacific Coast League, boxing, tennis and the Chargers, whom he chronicled for 25 years following the team's arrival in San Diego in 1961.

In 1987, Magee was awarded the Dick McCann Memorial Award by the Pro Football Hall of Fame for long and meritorious reporting in the field of professional football. The award honors the memory of McCann, the hall's first director, who died in 1967.

Magee was born in Chicago and was raised in Nebraska. His first job on a newspaper was as a copyboy on the Omaha World-Herald, where one of his tasks was to mix flower and water into the paste used by copy readers. He was graduated from the University of Nebraska in 1950, served in the Army in Korea and worked on newspapers in Nebraska and Oklahoma before joining the Union-Tribune.

Contact him at jerry.magee@uniontrib.com.


In the newspaper:

Latest AP Headlines

Final results every Sunday in the Union-Tribune.

Sports Blog

Kearny baseball coach steps down: Ryan Guidi said he has resigned as baseball coach at Kearny High. Guidi said the school was unable to give him a teaching position, and in his current teaching position...

Baseball

Red Sox beat Angels 3-2, move on to ALCS and Rays: The past postseason stars are gone. A new breed keeps the Red Sox winning. Curt Schilling, Manny Ramirez, even Mike Lowell – all World Series MVPs – are missing from the group of players Boston will take into the AL championship series.

NFL

Zorn's attitude has Redskins on a roll: Given a chance to brag, Jim Zorn was asked whether coaching has something to do with the startling early success of the Washington Redskins.

NBA

Still adjusting, Thunder must take to road: Kevin Durant and his Oklahoma City Thunder teammates will have to wait to get settled into their new hometown.

Golf

Grass couldn't be greener for PLNU's Cyr: If you've been to Maui, you've probably at least driven through Sam Cyr's hometown of Makawao. It's in the “up country,” on the road to the Haleakala Crater and the national park. You might even have seen some paniolos, Hawaiian cowboys, on the street.

Soccer

New World Cup bidding system in the making: FIFA president Sepp Blatter will propose new World Cup bidding rules that would dash the hopes of the United States to host the 2018 tournament.

College Football

Nebraska coach's confidence not shaken: One embarrassing loss won't shake Bo Pelini's confidence. The Cornhuskers' first-year coach has faith in his plan to rebuild the once-great program, despite Saturday's 35-point loss at home to Missouri.

College Basketball

OU tops Big 12 poll: Oklahoma is the preseason favorite for the first time in the Big 12 coaches poll, and defending national champion Kansas was picked third along with Baylor.

Other Columnists

This time the Hall can get it right: The news came out last week that the Baseball Hall of Fame veterans committee will vote on several old stars who never got elected by the baseball writers, and so far haven't been graced by the veterans, either.

On Air / Local Events

TV, radio and live: Daily broadcast and local sports event schedules.

Horse Racing Results

Horse racing results: Latest results from regional meets.


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