May 16, 2012

Haslett has a lot to fix as Rams’ new coach

Smiles may be few and far between for Jim Haslett this season (Bill Greenblatt, UPI) St. Louis Rams owner Chip Rosenbloom introduced Jim Haslett as the team’s interim head coach following Monday’s firing of Scott Linehan.  "He took 100-percent of responsibility for the failures of this organization. But we are all comparable; we all share in the responsibilities of losing games. That includes other coaches, that includes the players, that includes the administration, that includes the ownership." Rosenbloom said.

Linehan was 11-25 from 2006 to the first four games of this season, but just 3-17 since the start of last year.  Rosenbloom went onto to have nothing but praise for Linehan as a man.

Haslett would rather not come into a situation like this in the middle of the season, but he’s looking for to the many challenges that lie ahead for him.

"The first thing I want to tackle? Well, I want to tackle, there’s a lot things, but I’m going to try to meet with all the players over the next couple days. One, talk about the practice schedule, No. 2, talk to the coaches, try to get what I believe it’s going to take to get his team turned around. I have some ideas on both sides of the ball and special teams, so we’ll address those and then we’ll go from there."

The biggest question I have, is what is he going to do with Trent Green.  Will he remain the starting quarterback, a very unpopular decision with the players or will he go back to Marc Bulger who the team is paying over $60 million to.  While Haslett didn’t come right out and say it, I have a feeling, he’s going back with Bulger.

"I’ll sit down with the offensive staff and decide what’s best for this team. I think Marc’s a heck of a football player. I think he’s one of the top quarterbacks that’s played. If you look at his numbers over the years he’s in the upper echelon of quarterbacks. But that’s something that I’ll sit down with the offensive staff and then we’ll decide what’s best for this team, for next week and the future."

This will be Haslett’s second stint as an NFL head coach.  He spent six years with the Saints, where he compiled 45 wins.

Haslett was interviewed by NFL.com and you can watch that interview.

Lohse signs on for four years

Kyle Lohse has 41 million reasons to smile...if that's a smile?  (Bill Greenblatt, UPI) The Cardinals shored up their pitching rotation for the 2009 season by signing pitcher Kyle Lohse to a four year contract worth $41 million, following a surprise 2008 season for Lohse.

I say surprise, because I’m sure not many Cardinal fans expected the results from Lohse who was signed late in spring training.  Lohse went 15-6 with a 3.78 ERA, 119 strikeouts and 49 walks over exactly 200 innings. 

However, pitching coach Dave Duncan really liked Lohse right from the beginning when his agent Scott Boras brought Lohse by for a look at him pitching off the mound.

Many experts had the Cardinals picked to finish well out of the race and while the argument can be made that fourth place and 11.5 games out of first is well out of the race, it wasn’t until the middle of September that this team started to fall out of the Wild Card race.

The experts felt the Cardinals didn’t have the starting pitching.  After Wainwright and Looper, there was Todd Wellemeyer and Joel Pineiro (who had arm fatigue late in spring training) and after that not many answers before Lohse arrived. 

Chris Carpenter was going to be out until early June (which was very optimistic) and the same was said for Mark Mulder (who never really made it back) so Lohse was truly a bright spot for this team.  Had Lohse not pitched the way he did, this team wouldn’t have been around by August.  Lohse could win the MVP of this pitching staff.

For his innings and winning record, Lohse has been awarded.  Now if the Cardinals can just address those bullpen issues…

Bond "really disappointed" in House rejection of rescue plan

Senator Bond says he’s really disappointed in the United States House’s rejection of a a compromise $700 billion plan to shore up the nation’s finances. Despite pleas from both Democratic and Republicans leaders, members defeated the measure 205-to-228. The fate of the package first proposed by the Bush Administration remains uncertain.

Bond says he understands Americans are outraged by the prospect of using taxpayer dollars to fix problems they blame out Wall Street, but Bond says Congress must act to protect Main Street from the financial sector crisis. Bond forecasts dire consequences should Congress fail to act. He says workers will be in danger of missing paychecks, family savings and retirement accounts will be placed in jeopardy, small business could fail and farmers will not be able to access the credit they need to operate.

Negotiators trudge back to talks with members of the Bush Administration in an attempt to pick up the pieces. Today, the House will not meet in observance of the Jewish holiday Rosh Hashanah. Supporters had hoped to have a package to the Senate by tomorrow.

It has been difficult to persuade enough members of Congress that the plan is needed. Leadership on both sides urged passage, but couldn’t get the numbers needed. In the end, 65 Republicans joined 140 Democrats to vote in favor of the measure, while 95 Democrats joined 133 Republicans to defeat it. Missouri reflects the difficulties. Two Democrats and two Republicans voted for the bill; Democrats Russ Carnahan of St. Louis and Ike Skelton of Lexington as well as Republicans Roy Blunt of Springfield and Jo Ann Emerson of Cape Girardeau. Two Democrats in the Missouri delegation, Lacy Clay of St. Louis and Emanuel Cleaver II of Kansas City, and three Republicans, Todd Akin of St. Louis, Sam Graves of Tarkio and Kenny Hulshof of Columbia, voted against the measure.

House Republicans raised objections to the initial plan submitted by the Bush Administration by Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson sent Blunt into the negotiations Friday. An earlier meeting at the White House reportedly devolved into a shouting match with Democrats accusing Republicans of upsetting the delicate balance of negotiations. Republicans criticized Democrats for keeping them out of negotiations.

The plan was intended to shore up the nation’s financial sector, rocked by bank failures that have nearly frozen the credit markets. Normal lending transactions have been held up. Even strong financial institutions have become skittish.

The bill sought to inject $250 billion into the financial sector immediately. Congress would be consulted before the remainder would be released. The money would have been used to remove troubled assets from the books of financial institutions, mostly mortgage-back securities that have lost considerable value with the collapse of the housing market.

Democrats won concessions on executive pay, eliminating the possibility of executives leaving companies that participate with so-called golden parachutes. Republicans won concessions that they claim will lessen the burden on taxpayers and force Wall Street to share in the cost of recovery, such as issuing warrants that would allow any windfall coming to companies to be shared with the government. A parallel insurance program would also be created.

The compromise had the backing of President Bush, who acknowledged it presents lawmakers with "a difficult vote" just a month outside the November elections. 

Download/listen Brent Martin reports (1:10 MP3)

Fall foliage expected to be spectacular this year

It’s the time of year when the breeze is a bit more brisk and the nights cooler that temperature change plus the wet spring and summer could mean a great year for fall foliage.

People often think of New England and the northern Great Lake states as the best places to see good fall foliage, but Manager Justine Gartner with the state Forestry Division said don’t discount Missouri.

"They’re further north than we are, so they’re fall color change is before us," she said. "So if your travel schedule doesn’t allow you to get out and do your fall color tour or your fall color trip in September and maybe you want to do it in October, well, Missouri is an idea place to do that."

The depth of color depends on the weather.

"Color really depends on having those nice, pretty, warm days and those real sharp, crisp nights that contrast combined with shorter days tells the tree it’s time to shut down it’s time to quit making food so the chlorophyll starts to dissolve and go away and when it does that then you get those nice pretty reds and pinks and yellows that show through and that gives you the pretty fall color that you need," Gartner said.

The northern parts of the state could start seeing good color next week, Mid-Missouri by the 15 th and the south by the 25 th .

download or listen to Aurora Meyer’s story here.

RNC official says Missouri not taken for granted in presidential race

In recent weeks and months, the public opinion polls showed Republican presidential candidate John McCain (R-AZ) opening a lead over Democratic nominee Barack Obama (D-IL). But the polls are now tightening and Missouri appears to be back in the toss-up category.

Republican National Committee Deputy Chairman Frank Donatelli says the GOP takes nothing for granted in Missouri, realizes the importance of this state in the grand scheme of things, and will spend a lot of time and effort trying to convince the voters of this state to support the McCain-Palin ticket.

Donatelli says there are several issues being stressed during this campaign, with a great deal of attention being paid to the issue of national security.

Download/Listen: Steve Walsh report (:60 MP3)