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Friday, March 28
 
Junkin mishap making teams focus on deep snappers

By Len Pasquarelli
ESPN.com

For 19 seasons, Trey Junkin labored in anonymity, his private badge of honor the fact that NFL special teams coaches didn't need even five fingers to enumerate the errant deep snaps he had produced during his career.

Then all that changed on Jan. 5, when Junkin's botched placement snap deprived New York Giants place kicker Matt Bryant the opportunity for a 41-yard, game-winning field goal, and set off a Keystone Kops sequence in which the game referees blew a pass interference call in San Francisco's 39-38 first-round playoff victory.

That final play, with panicked holder Matt Allen scrambling to his right and launching a desperation heave far downfield, focused much attention on the officiating crew headed by referee Ron Winter, and essentially earned many of the zebras involved public reprimand from commissioner Paul Tagliabue. Alas, it also ended a mostly faceless professional existence for Trey Junkin, brought out of retirement by Giants officials just to snap in the playoffs.

One of the greatest postseason comebacks in NFL history also represented a humbling comedown for Junkin, a class act who stood up to tough postgame questioning, and then announced he would never play again.

LAST WORD
Bill Parcells
Parcells
"This is a business that can wear you out. It can wear me out. You know what kind of personality I am. A 'Type A' personality. I'm all past that. This is a different enterprise for me now. I'm enthusiastic. I'm energized. I look forward to it. Will it beat me down again? Yes. The answer is yes, it will. But until it does, I'm giving it everything I've got."
-- Bill Parcells, on his return to coaching, after a three-year hiatus

The shame of the matter is that after years of having his brilliance ignored, albeit it while playing a position in which the art form is about as esoteric as yodeling, Junkin will be largely recalled by fans for the letdown nearly three months ago. It is reminiscent of another standout deep center, the late Dan Turk, who while playing for the Washington Redskins muffed a field goal snap in a 1999 playoff loss at Tampa Bay, then died of cancer before he ever got the opportunity to redeem himself.

In virtually all of the obituaries following Turk's death, that botched field goal snap was prominently noted, a bit unfair for a player who rated as one of the league's best at his position for 15 seasons.

There is some irony, though, in Junkin's plight.

For two decades he worked hard to raise the consciousness, and the salary level, for NFL deep snappers. Still it took the most abject moment of his career to succeed on the first count but also, somewhat providentially, on the second one as well. In large part because of the attention afforded Junkin and his poor snap in the playoff game, more teams now realize the value of having a dependable deep snapper.

And in a trend that has stayed most below the radar during this offseason, but which is nonetheless undeniable, that value is being reflected for the first time in the contracts to which deep snappers are being signed.

"There's no doubt that the (New York-San Francisco) playoff game resulted in the higher profile and bigger paychecks we're seeing now at the position," acknowledged agent Kevin Gold, who represents three clients in the NFL, all of them deep snappers. "The teams are working to lock up deep snappers with long-term contracts and much bigger signing bonuses. The sad part is that, after snapping flawlessly for nearly 20 years, it took one bad play (by Junkin) to fuel this trend."

Gold operates a web site (longsnap.com) that is exclusively dedicated to news about guys who make a living hunched over and staring back through their two legs. It might rank as the ultimate niche site, and his championing the cause of deep snappers as the consummate cottage industry, but his hits are increasing commensurate to the pay increases snappers are realizing.

Just since the end of the 2002 season, there have been contracts awarded to deep snappers that not too many years ago would have been unfathomable, given the pay scale at the position. According to NFL Players Association salary documents, Junkin collected an aggregate of just $103,000 in signing bonuses in 20 seasons, with $68,000 of that coming in his rookie deal with the Buffalo Bills in 1983.

In the final 17 years of his career, Junkin banked just two signing bonus checks, totaling a paltry $20,000. But his errant snap, and the significance that it held because it occurred in a playoff game, means long snappers are now starting to see some long green. The misery of one man has turned into money for others.

Consider these recent deals: Philadelphia re-signed Mike Bartrum, cited by many as the league's premier deep snapper because of his coverage skills, to a five-year contract which included $280,000 in upfront money. A bidding between Cleveland and the Giants over Ryan Kuehl grew so heated, the six-year veteran was able to elicit from New York a five-year deal that included a record signing bonus of $325,000. New England deep snapper, barely known outside the Patriots locker room, landed a five-year contract with a $305,000 signing bonus.

This week alone, deep snappers Derek Rackley of Atlanta and Seattle's J.P. Darche signed new four-year contracts with upfront bonuses of $300,000 and $200,000, respectively. The lone unrestricted free agent snapper still available, longtime veteran Aaron Graham, is still being pursued by at least two teams and could realize a six-figure bonus. Most of the base salaries in the recent deals are for the league minimum but, in landing signing bonuses never before seen at the position, deep snappers are gaining some security.

To be fair, there have been some six-figure signing bonuses awarded deep snappers in the past, but those were isolated occurrences. Patrick Mannelly of the Chicago Bears received a $300,000 signing bonus on an extension of five years in 2001. Gold negotiated an extension for Indianapolis snapper Justin Snow in 2002 that featured a $240,000 signing bonus. James Dearth of the New York Jets received a $150,000 signing bonus in 2002. And last year also the Dallas Cowboys paid former Rams deep snapper Jeff Robinson upfront money of $800,000 on a four-year, $4.8 million contract.

One caveat on the Robinson deal, though, is that he also plays tight end and his contract reflects that. Most of the other deep snappers with the contracts noted above are exclusively special teams performers.

For years, special teams assistants around the league have sought to have their franchises retain exceptional deep snappers when they locate one, and now it seems those entreaties are being heeded by several clubs. A position that historically has been an afterthought, and where backup linebackers and tight ends were often pressed into duty, has gained in relative prominence.

"People don't understand how demoralizing it is to have a deep snapper who is scattering the ball all over the lot," said St. Louis Rams special teams coach Bobby April. "It affects the mentality of your special teams, really of your whole roster, maybe even the city where you play. I mean, the fans see that you can't even do something they consider pretty mundane, and they've got to feel like something is rotten about the whole deal, you know? It's sort of like: 'My, gosh, you guys can't even do that right? What a bunch of screw-ups!' Your team can fall into that same attitude when your deep snapper is just some scattershot guy."

Even with the recent emphasis on the position, April agrees there are still some teams who afford the deep snapper spot short shrift, basically because they feel that just about anyone can be taught the chore. Despite that take, more teams are selecting players who are exclusively deep snappers, feeling that the 53-man roster affords such a luxury now.

When the Rams lost Robinson in free agency last spring, April pointed out, team officials invested a seventh-round choice in the 2002 draft to take deep snapper Chris Massey. Not until about the sixth game of the season, April conceded, did he quit fretting that Massey might launch a snap high into the rafters. Now he feels St. Louis has a deep snapper for the long-term.

And that, it seems, is what more teams are seeking.

Early in his career, Junkin played some tight end, enough to have totaled 17 catches, 144 yards and seven touchdowns in his long career. But in the final two-thirds of his career, Junkin played only on special teams, and that is now the case for an increasing number of deep snappers.

"It used to be that, if you had a deep snapper," Gold said, "teams would say to you, 'So what other position does he play?' You really don't hear that too much anymore. That one bad snap of Trey Junkin's career, because it came in a playoff game, really raised the recognition level (of the position)."

And raised the compensation level, finally, for deep snappers as well.

Around the league

  • Marvin Lewis
    Lewis
    Rookie head coach Marvin Lewis has provided much-needed structure to the Cincinnati Bengals organization and, when it comes to the franchise's draft plans, it is clear he has his house in order. During this week's annual league meetings, Lewis donated a headline of sorts to an otherwise news-challenged confab in Phoenix, essentially announcing the club has narrowed its candidates for the first overall selection to four: quarterbacks Carson Palmer of Southern California and Marshall's Byron Leftwich, cornerback Terence Newman of Kansas State and Michigan State wide receiver Charles Rogers. In truth, what Lewis and Bengals owner Mike Brown prefer to do is trade the pick, but there aren't a lot of suitors. Lewis insisted the team has yet to make a decision from among the four, and will delay until after the Leftwich workout on April 7, then weigh the strengths and weaknesses of the prospects in the elite quartet. Word is, though, that Lewis is more sold on Palmer, the Heisman Trophy winner, than he is publicly acknowledging. Palmer worked out for Bengals officials last week and threw the ball well by all accounts. Cincinnati officials are wary of the fact Palmer enjoyed just one big college season and of the rumors he does not quickly assimilate an offense. But if Lewis is going to be around a while, and it certainly seems he is, he doesn't necessarily need to grab a guy with his first-ever choice as a head coach who will start as a rookie. The signs, from talking to folks close to Lewis, is that Palmer is the frontrunner. No matter who takes the top spot, Lewis made it clear the player will be signed well in advance of the draft, and negotiations figure to begin at least two weeks prior to the lottery. "It's not going to be a surprise on draft day," Lewis said. "As quick as we can, we want to come to a consensus, and a decision. There's no question we'd like to get our pick signed prior to the draft. There's no secret there."

  • So how much will his disastrous performance in Wednesday's on-campus workout hurt Arizona State defensive end Terrell Suggs? Hard to say. But it's fair to point out that several teams were flabbergasted at how poorly he ran and, even more so, how his nervousness transformed into high anxiety. Suggs was certainly sluggish, failing to get into the coveted 4.6-range other defensive ends have posted in their workouts, and didn't appear very strong. "No excuse," said one personnel director who attended the workout. "He looked like a guy who didn't take this seriously." That said, even if Suggs had collected those 24 sacks he registered in 2002 lining up against a mannequin, it would be enough to tempt teams to scrutinize him closely on videotape. It is certainly likely that Suggs cost himself some money, and fell several spots in the first round, but he is probably still a top 10 selection. And maybe even top six, since the sack-challenged Arizona Cardinals (just 65 sacks combined in the past three seasons) would have to consider Suggs if he dropped to their spot in the round. And there is this: ESPN.com has learned that Houston officials, who were serious about Suggs as a potential candidate for their No. 3 slot overall, lunched with the Sun Devils star on Thursday afternoon. Look for Texans general manager Charley Casserly and coach Dom Capers to get an individual look at Suggs in drills sometime in the next two weeks. Fact is, Suggs is thinking about running again for any team that wants to see him, probably in a couple weeks.

  • Then again, don't be shocked if the Texans poke around to see just what it might take to land the No. 1 overall choice from Cincinnati, which clearly would prefer to deal back a few spots. The conventional wisdom for months has been that Charley Casserly would try to move back in the first round and collect additional choices. But the Texans are smitten with Michigan State wide receiver Charles Rogers, feeling he could be the deep threat for David Carr for years to come, and might try to get into position to grab the draft's premier offensive playmaker. Since the Detroit Lions are expected to take Rogers with the second overall selection, the Texans would have to leapfrog them, and that means dealing with Cincinnati for the top pick.

  • The much-discussed trade that would send New England safety Tebucky Jones to New Orleans obviously didn't occur at the league meetings, but the two head coaches involved did talk more about it than they let on. Clearly, those discussions are not dead, and a deal could yet be struck. One Saints official confided in Jones, who is boycotting the Patriots' offseason workout program at this point, that if a trade happens, it will come around draft time. The biggest hurdle involved in the potential swap is that New Orleans still refuses to surrender the second-round draft choice the Pats are demanding. A solution might be to have New England throw in a middle-round pick, in addition to Jones, for the second-rounder. Sweetening the pot just a little for the reluctant Saints might move talks along and, eventually, to completion. As noted here last week, Jones and New Orleans officials already have a contract agreement in principle: a five-year deal that totals about $18.75 million, includes a $5 million signing bonus and then an additional option bonus of $1 million.

  • League officials were surprised at the degree of support generated for the proposal to add two more teams to the playoffs but, because they didn't expect such fervor for the idea, hadn't done much background work on it. So instead of voting on the issue at the league meetings, the concept was tabled until the next session, in May at Philadelphia. The commissioner is not a big proponent of expanding the playoffs, not until the league has operated under its realigned format for at least another season, and he will twist some arms between now and the May meeting. Don't look for the proposal to pass. Interesting about the proposal that would have provided each team at least one possession in overtime, but which fell seven votes shy of endorsement, was how the league got bogged down in verbiage. The owners couldn't even agree, ESPN.com has confirmed, of what constitutes a "possession." Indeed, there were two or three typed pages defining what might be considered a possession. As much as anything, the semantics helped to kill off any chance of passage, along with the fact that some of the old-guard opponents of an overtime change spoke fervently against it.

  • Jon Gruden
    Gruden
    At last spring's annual league meetings, Tampa Bay coach Jon Gruden surprised reporters by announcing he planned to move starting strong-side linebacker Shelton Quarles to the middle linebacker vacancy created by the departure of Jamie Duncan in free agency. The moved worked brilliantly, as Quarles enjoyed a superb year in the middle, notching 159 tackles, which more than doubled his previous career high. Now it seems that Gruden and defensive coordinator Monte Kiffin are at it again. The Bucs staff plans to work No. 3 cornerback Dwight Smith at free safety, where the free agency departure of Super Bowl most valuable player Dexter Jackson to Arizona has left a void, during the spring mini-camps. The move, just like the switch of Quarles a year ago, could be a brainstorm. A two-year veteran, Smith is a tremendous "on ball" defender, with great range, toughness and a knack for the big play. As the team's "nickel" corner, Smith had four interceptions last season, and 10 passes defensed. Then he added three more thefts during the playoffs, including two in Super Bowl XXXVII, both of which the former Akron star returned for touchdowns. If the transformation works, Gruden and Kiffin will look like geniuses again. And if Smith somehow falters, the Bucs will probably just elevate second-year pro Jermaine Phillips, a safety with size and run support skills, into Jackson's former spot. But don't bet against Gruden being right on Smith as a young guy ready for a starting spot. After all, the Bucs coach has a pretty good track record, and you can ask Shelton Quarles about it.

  • Tampa Bay isn't the only team that will reshuffle its secondary in 2003. Fact is, the San Diego Chargers could line up with not a single starter in the same place he played last season. The team's 2002 first-round draft choice, Quentin Jammer, will take over one starting cornerback spot after missing much of his rookie training camp in a contract snit. Free safety Rogers Beckett is moving to the strong safety spot to replace the departed Rodney Harrison. Longtime cornerback Ryan McNeil slides into to free safety. That leaves an opening at one cornerback position and there is a chance the team could re-sign Alex Molden, released earlier in free agency for cap reasons, to fill that void. If not, the Chargers will count on one of their several young corners to step up.

  • The latest sign that the Chargers probably won't bring back kicker Steve Christie for 2003: ESPN.com has learned the club auditioned three free agents -- Mike Hollis, Todd Peterson and Michael Husted -- in San Diego on Thursday. Of the three, Peterson was the most accurate on field goals, missing just one. But because he has not been practicing kickoffs, Peterson was not as solid in that area. Hollis missed three placements and Husted, while owning the strongest leg for kickoffs, was scattershot. Hollis, by the way, turned down a three-year, $3.1 million offer, which included a $750,000 signing bonus, from Buffalo earlier this month. The Bills then acquired Seattle restricted free agent Rian Lindell. Passing on what seemed to be a pretty good offer in a very slow market might not have been the wisest move Hollis could have made.

  • Fred Taylor
    Taylor
    Look for the Jacksonville Jaguars and tailback Fred Taylor to complete a contract extension within the next week or two. Taylor is entering the final year of his contract and is scheduled to earn a base salary of $816,000 for the 2003 season. Taylor demonstrated again in 2002 that, when healthy, he is one of the game's premier all-around backs.

  • Washington officials are disappointed, but not distraught, at their failure to reach a contract agreement with reluctant wide receiver Raghib Ismail. One reason the team has adopted a ho-hum attitude over the cessation of contract talks with "The Rocket" is because, truth be told, they weren't certain that he really wanted to resume his career after suffering a serious neck injury in the Dallas training camp last summer. Every time the two sides drew closer to an agreement, Redskins officials told ESPN.com, Ismail threw up another bargaining roadblock. Their conclusion was that Ismail didn't want to return but simply couldn't convince himself of that reality. But a bigger reason the Redskins are not losing sleep over Ismail's apparent decision to retire is that the team feels it has a young burner who could well emerge as a deep threat in 2003. Cliff Russell, a third-round choice in 2002 who missed his entire rookie campaign after he blew out a knee last summer, has been spectacular at times during the club's offseason workouts. The former Utah standout is running pain free, appears to be fully rehabilitated, and hasn't lost any of his mid-4.4 speed, according to team officials. Russell has a legitimate chance to be the No. 3 wideout behind starters Laveranues Coles and Rod Gardner.

  • Oh, yeah, after popping the news Wednesday that Redskins owner Dan Snyder was on the trail of unrestricted free agent tight end Ernie Conwell, we can now report his interest has waned. The more the impetuous Snyder considered it, the more he convinced himself Conwell would be too pricey an addition, and at a position that isn't a high priority anyway in the Steve Spurrier offense. Washington tight ends combined for just 20 receptions in 2002. Part of that, of course, was that the Redskins tight ends weren't very good. More significant, though, was that the "Fun 'N' Gun" offense does not throw the ball to the tight end very often.

  • Since the flow of daily news from Valley Ranch is being pretty closely controlled, it's difficult to discern how Bill Parcells and the Cowboys plan to use the fifth overall choice in the draft. There have been rumors that The Tuna would like to move back in the first round, and pick up some extra choices, since his team needs quantity and quality. But if Kansas State cornerback Terence Newman was available at the Cowboys spot, it could be difficult to pass on him. Pair up Newman, who many scouts feel is the best player overall in the draft, with second-year veteran Derek Ross, and the 'Boys certainly would have a young and talented corner tandem. But there are also rumblings that Parcells might like Marshall quarterback Byron Leftwich, a player with the kind of pocket stature and accuracy Parcells covets. Parcells noted Thursday that it is tough to evaluate last year's two young starters, Chad Hutchinson and Quincy Carter, because they played under such duress. The bet here is that, once Parcells sees them on the field, Carter and Hutchinson aren't going to look any better to him than they have on videotape. So whether it's Leftwich or a veteran like Brian Griese, look for some kind of change at quarterback.

  • As of Friday morning, there was $163,915,781 in aggregate cap room in the league, an average of $5.122 million per team. But the numbers are a little misleading, since 11 teams have over $5 million in spending room and 11 have less than $2 million. There are actually five teams with less than $1 million and the Tennessee Titans have a league-low $1,178 in cap space. Five teams have more than $10 million each -- Arizona ($21.98 million), Minnesota ($16.29 million), Houston ($13.56 million), Philadelphia ($12.43 million) and New Orleans ($12.27 million) -- and they represent nearly 48 percent of the available cap room leaguewide.

  • Keith Newman
    Newman
    Atlanta owner Arthur Blank has sometimes made himself an easy target (we know, since we've taken aim a few times) by overpaying to acquire or retain players. But since the signing of cornerback Tyrone Williams two weeks ago, a deal in which the former Green Bay starter received a signing bonus of $3 million, the Falcons have settled into a fine-tuning mode in their annual roster revamping. And they've done a very nice job, indeed, of adding depth and filling in holes, and done it in very thrifty fashion. The club retained blue-collar tight end Brian Kozlowski and added "nickel" corner Tod McBride, linebackers Keith Newman and Twan Russell, and wide receiver MarTay Jenkins, and doled out a total of only about $1.5 million-$1.6 million each to do so. All of the players should contribute to a team that should contend again for a playoff spot, and is capable of challenging Tampa Bay for the NFC South crown, and personnel chief Ron Hill clearly has worked hard to tweak the roster with solid mid-level veterans. McBride is a proven "nickel" player and, while his contract looks like a four-year, $9.38 million deal, the structure shows it will actually be for one year at $1.3 million or two years at $2.33 million. Russell adds speed on special teams and Jenkins speed on offense and kickoff returns. But the pickup we like best was that of Newman, a three-year starter in Buffalo, and a very productive player when Falcons defensive coordinator Wade Phillips was the head coach of the Bills. In 2000 under Phillips' stewardship, Newman posted eight sacks, and we felt that number would increase when new coach Gregg Williams installed a "46" defensive scheme. It didn't happen, though, and Newman fell out of favor. Playing under Phillips again could resurrect his career. The guy is just 26 years old and, even if the Falcons signed him for depth, the bet here is that he will vie for a starting job.

  • The Pittsburgh Steelers haven't chosen a quarterback in the first round since taking Mark Malone in 1980. The streak probably won't end next month but it could. ESPN.com has learned that Steelers officials will bring Kyle Boller of California and Florida's Rex Grossman to town for individual interviews in the next two weeks. Boller figures to be long gone when the Steelers pick at No. 27 in the round, but Grossman might still be on the board. The irony is that Pittsburgh scouts are decidedly split on the former Gators star. At some point, however, the team has to address its need for a quarterback of the future. Somewhat surprising is that the Steelers are not planning now to upgrade the salary of starter Tommy Maddox, who seemed to be counting on an increase. Maddox is scheduled to have a base salary of just $650,000 for 2003, one of the lowest in the league for a starting quarterback.

  • One of the biggest beneficiaries of the league's decision to move forward with the NFL Europe season as scheduled is a contingent of former players now serving as coaching interns in the spring loop. There are 13 onetime players who are involved in this partnership program, designed by the NFL and the NFL Players Association, the aim of which is to begin enlarging the pool of minority coaching candidates. Among the interns are former players like Hugh Green, Martin Bayless, Barry Foster, Eric Green and Amp Lee. The coaching interns were uncertain for a few days earlier this week, as NFL owners wrestled with the notion of sending players overseas, if they would have a chance to get any hands-on experience. As hard as players pushed to play the games as scheduled, Green acknowledged, some of the interns pushed even harder. "It's a great opportunity," said Green. "My goal is to be an NFL coach and you've got to get started somewhere. I don't know what would have happened to us had they canceled (the season)."

  • Now that Tampa Bay officials have completed restructuring the contract of wide receiver Keyshawn Johnson, a maneuver that carved out about $2.5 million in desperately needed cap room, the team will sign former Chicago starting quarterback Jim Miller as a backup. The Bucs also figure to begin negotiations with free agent linebacker Dwayne Rudd and to resume their efforts to re-sign starting offensive left tackle Roman Oben, who played surprisingly well over the second half of last season. Also, ESPN.com has learned that tight end Rickey Dudley has agreed in principle to return for another season with the team.

  • Unless you are St. Louis kicker Jeff Wilkins, of course, the departure of wide receiver Ricky Proehl to Carolina as an unrestricted free agent, might not seem like such a big deal to the Rams special teams units. But his exit left the Rams, and Wilkins, without a proven holder for placement kicks. No matter how mentally stable Wilkins might be, few things rattle a kicker as much as having to break in a new holder, and it remains to be seen who will fill that chore. Newly-acquired punter Sean Landeta will be entering his 19th NFL season in 2003 but, somewhat astonishingly, he has never held on a regular basis in all those years. Backups safeties Steve Bellisari and Nick Sorensen have been practicing recently with Wilkins, but there is really no guarantee either will make the regular-season roster.

  • Congratulations are in order for Oakland senior administrator (the Raiders must spend days creating these unconventional management titles) Bruce Allen, who this week was named the NFL's executive of the year, in a vote by his peers. Allen annually does one of the league's best juggling acts, just getting the Raiders under the salary cap, and he certainly deserved to be recognized for his acumen. But here's a surprise: The runner-up to Allen, who received 11 votes, was his boss. Yep, Al Davis garnered seven votes to finish second in the balloting.

  • Punts: Just because the New England Patriots made an early foray in free agency, and signed higher-profile players like linebacker Rosevelt Colvin, safety Rodney Harrison and cornerback Tyrone Poole, doesn't mean the club is done shopping. In his first three years as the Patriots' head coach, Bill Belichick acquired 29 meaningful free agents. And 14 of them were signed on May 31 or later. Look for Belichick and the Patriots to add a few more parts late in the free agency period. … Although the Raiders remain in the hunt, Minnesota officials expect to re-sign tight end Hunter Goodwin before the draft. … The Broncos, who are shopping for at least one tackle to help keep Jake Plummer out of harm's way, will meet next week with former Dallas starter Solomon Page, and figure to sign the four-year pro. … San Francisco continues to dangle restricted wide receiver Tai Streets in trade talks, even though the 49ers couldn't reach a deal two weeks ago that would have sent him to the New York Jets. … The three-year contract that wide receiver Curtis Conway signed with the Jets includes a signing bonus of $1.25 million. The base salaries are $760,000 (for 2003), $1.5 million (2004) and $2.06 million (2005). There are roster bonuses of $195,000 ('03), $695,000 ('04) and of $695,000 ('05). … Defensive tackle Jeff Zgonina, one of the best second-tier free agents still available, will meet with Miami officials early next week. The Pats are also interested. The Chiefs offered Zgonina a deal but he considered it insufficient. … Funny, isn't it, how Tennessee owner Bud Adams was proclaiming just about five months ago that the Titans were being "outcoached." Now Adams wants to sign Jeff Fisher to a contract extension.

    Len Pasquarelli is a senior NFL writer for ESPN.com.








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