A jam-packed column begins with the NFL’s latest embarrassment—a preseason game cancellation due to unsafe field conditions. Plus notes from the road, including Carolina, Tampa, Jacksonville, Houston and more

HOUSTON — So much to do, so much to say, so much to cover. Starting with this: Roger Goodell will spend the 10th anniversary of being named commissioner (he got the gig in Northbrook, Ill., on Aug. 8, 2006) clunking heads together in Canton and New York today over the cancellation of the Hall of Fame Game on Sunday night. The cause: poor artificial turf conditions. The upshot: a serious re-examination whether the game should be played, and if it should, where.

The MMQB’s Jenny Vrentas was in Canton, and I asked her to give us a short summary of what happened and why. We’ll get to that in a few moments. But first: It’s probably smart to play the Pro Football Hall of Fame Game—if you’re going to play it at all—54 miles north in Cleveland, on a pristine field, rather than on a glorified high school field at the Hall of Fame in Canton. It’s actually used for high school games, mostly, the rest of the year. There’s just too much at stake, even with a first preseason game with regulars barely seeing the field, to play the game on a risky surface.

Suffice it to say the debacle of Sunday night simply cannot happen. It’s an embarrassment of the highest order. Cancelling a nationally televised game, with ESPN marking the occasion with its new pregame team and new crew in the booth, is a ringing exclamation point to those who like to pile on Goodell for his failings in office. It’s a coincidence that it comes as Goodell and the league mark the milestone. (Or don’t mark; in a league that celebrates every anniversary and birthday with PR fireworks, not a peep about Goodell’s 10-year anniversary.) Or millstone. Not sure which it is.

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For now, I’ll move on with the column, checking in with:

• Carolina, where Ron Rivera continues to stand by his man.

• Atlanta, where owner Arthur Blank is standing by his boss too.

• Tampa Bay, where patience is not a virtue.

• Jacksonville, where Myles Jack has a very strong message for the NFL, and for the college players who come behind him.

• Houston, where one of the best players of the last 15 years had a surprise birthday party last night. In training camp.

And there’s the Hall of Fame speeches (nice job, Favre and DeBartolo and Dungy) … the return of Monte Kiffin … the return of “Hard Knocks,” with Jeff Fisher whacking someone in episode one … and the Nickname That Shall Not Be Named isn’t going anywhere. On with the show.

* * *

Cam Newton and Ron Rivera are starting from scratch after a disappointing end to an otherwise electric 2015 season. Grant Halverson/Getty Images

Ron Rivera is steadfast behind his quarterback, as he probably should be

SPARTANBURG, S.C. — Early in the off-season, Ron Rivera was in need of some advice handling people. One person in particular. He emailed the noted former U.S. Navy admiral, William McRaven, now the chancellor of the University of Texas, and asked another very bright leader of men if he’d handled Cam Newton’s post-Super Bowl press conference mopefest the right way. You may recall that Rivera found no fault with Newton the player or postgame speaker, and even said the NFL shouldn’t subject Super Bowl-losing players to interviews the night of the game.

“Did I enable him?” Rivera asked McRaven.

No, McRaven said. The retired admiral is a believer in praising in public and criticizing in private, and he thought Rivera did the right thing by standing by his most important player. Backing Newton, McRaven felt, would show Newton his coach cared about him, and provide a good example to learn from. Essentially, the admiral felt that even in a transcendent year for the NFL MVP, a humbling game and postgame aren’t the worst things in the world to experience, because sports mirrors life. Sometime you fail. Deal with it.

Here we are, six months after the only bad day of the Panthers’ 2015 season, and Rivera still feels strongly about the events that followed the Super Bowl loss to Denver. He still thinks losing players should talk the day after the game, rather than 20 to 30 minutes after the game, and he thinks the losing coach is the one who should stand up after the game as spokesman for the team.

“We want our football players to lay it on the line, to give everything in the biggest game of their lives, and then we want them a few minutes after the game to be all normal and eloquent about it? People want our guys to be gentlemen right after the biggest loss of their lives. Hey, I want my guys to be crushed.

“People look at other athletes and how they handle a big loss. Jordan Spieth’s been pointed out to me. He’s been taught to handle losses with elegance. In football, the game’s different. I’m paid to be eloquent after wins and after tough losses, and I should be the one to do that.”

That’s not going to happen, players from losing teams cocooned until the next day. I understand Rivera’s frustration, and it does often seem cold to me for a losing player after the Super Bowl to walk off the field and into the media interview area. Often they haven’t been spoken to by coaches yet. The league could bring winners in first, followed by players from losing teams. But the demand is too great and the game too big. The NFL MVP loses the Super Bowl, and he can’t walk into the sunset for 15 hours.

Rivera talked to others this off-season, seeking advice. One adviser: Tony LaRussa, who told him to forget last season and build his team all over again in 2016. That’s been one of Rivera’s themes with his team. Put in the work, start from scratch, and the reward—for all 53 players, including Newton—can be bigger in 2016.

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* * *

Field maintenance workers scrambled to get the turf ready for Sunday night’s game, which ultimately was cancelled due to unsafe playing conditions. Jenny Vrentas/The MMQB

An embarrassing night for the NFL

The MMQB’s Jenny Vrentas reports from the debacle of the week in Ohio...

CANTON, Ohio — The weekend that is supposed to be a celebration of football turned extremely embarrassing for the Pro Football Hall of Fame and the NFL on Sunday night. About an hour before the Hall of Fame Game between the Colts and Packers was supposed to kick off, teams were notified the preseason contest would be canceled because of unacceptable field conditions. Thousands of fans sat in their seats, waiting through replays of the previous night’s Hall of Fame speeches, until an official announcement finally came at 8:01 p.m.

The issue was a botched paint job on the field turf. The turf at Tom Benson Stadium in Canton has been criticized in the past, with former Steelers kicker Shaun Suisham suffering what would be a career-ending ACL injury in last year’s Hall of Fame game. Suisham led the charge this offseason on this issue, which helped result in the creation of a joint committee between the NFL and NFLPA to monitor field conditions, including at non-traditional venues like Canton.

• PETER KING: Why the NFL-NFLPA field condition pact is significant

But the turf at the stadium last night was new, installed earlier this this summer with the surface used in the Superdome for the 2016 Sugar Bowl. About 20,000 fans sat on top of the playing surface during last night’s enshrinement ceremony. The cover on the field didn’t come off until Sunday morning, and the issue arose when areas of the turf were painted, including the Hall of Fame logo at midfield.

One club official who was on the field before the game, inspecting the turf, said afterward: “There wasn't one person on the field once we got out there who said we should try to play. Even if there was, the players would have called the union and gotten it called off ... I am dumbfounded that they didn't have the field right.”

Things looked bad less than two hours before kickoff when both teams’ head coaches, general managers, owners and medical staffs were conferencing at midfield. Looking up close, there were clumps where red, white and blue paint had congealed with the turf pellets, creating patches that were both slick and rock-hard, an obvious safety concern. Workers were spraying around the logo and driving vehicles with what looked like street-cleaning brushes back and forth, in an apparent attempt to break up these clumps. Later, they were shoveling up piles of loose turf pellets into trash cans. It was an ugly scene.

“The turf is definitely hard,” Packers safety Ha Ha Clinton-Dix said, pushing his foot against the field surface after the game had been called off. “They did a great job putting safety first. But it’s an opportunity missed for the young guys, not just to get experience but to do it in front of 32 teams.”

The NFL made the right decision in the name of player safety. But as Colts owner Jim Irsay railed in an interview with ESPN, whose Monday Night Football crew was on site to broadcast the game, “this shouldn’t happen.”

“First of all, I’m glad that the field safety protocol was followed and the game was canceled,” NFLPA president Eric Winston wrote in a text message. “Shaun Suisham led on this key issue this offseason, and the protocol has become vital already this season. Second of all, the HoF game for, at least, the second year in a row has a surface that is unacceptable.”

There are plenty of players and coaches who would like to see the game scrapped. That probably won’t happen, but you can bet they’ll talk about switching venues.

* * *

NFL commissioner Roger Goodell has been a punching bag for the public but still has the support of owners like the Falcons’ Arthur Blank. John Amis/AP

The voice that counts

FLOWERY BRANCH, Ga. — I begin a question to Falcons owner Arthur Blank: “As a member of the Compensation Committee …”

“The chair,” he says.

Today being the 10-year anniversary of the day Blank and the league’s other 31 owners voted for Roger Goodell to succeed Paul Tagliabue, I thought I’d ask one of the men most responsible for Goodell’s power and influence and salary how he’s doing. I saw Blank last week, and so obviously his comments were made before the Hall of Fame debacle Sunday night.

Before I sat down with Blank, I got a tour of his office, filled with photos nostalgic and current with people from around the league. There’s a note from Goodell, from 2011. It ends with: “I will work tirelessly to make you proud of me.” The relationship between the two men, clearly, is more than commissioner/owner. If the current climate, in which Goodell is probably the most disliked man in American sports, is wearing on Blank and concerning to him, he doesn’t voice it.

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“I give him a lot of good grades—a lot of great grades,” Blank said, sitting on a couch in his office. “There should be more recognition of the great things he’s done for the game in his 10 years. My hope is he brings his passion and intelligence to the job for years into the future.”

Then Blank said: “But it’s a hard job. Very hard.”

Under Goodell, the league has increased revenues from $6 billion in 2006 to a projected $14 billion this year, a 133 percent increase in a decade. Blank bought his franchise for $545 million in 2002; if he sold it today with the Falcons’ new stadium set to open in 2017, he’d likely fetch at least $2 billion for it. “From a business perspective, we’ve done phenomenally well in the last 10 years,” Blank said. “The valuations of teams are growing at rates that no one expected. We’ve adjusted well in a changing world. Roger does care deeply about the important issues, like player health and safety.”

But the universal public animosity? “I don’t know about the ‘universal’ part,” Blank said. “Roger, in my opinion, comes across the best when he’s not scripted, when he’s answering from the heart.”

The Compensation Committee approved paying Goodell $111 million in salary and benefits from 2013 to 2015, and I get no indication from owners when I speak to them about a rumbling for change. It’s just hard to imaging Goodell lasting another 10 years if public opinion doesn’t take a turn for the better.

* * *

Dirk Koetter was an offensive coordinator for three teams, dating back to 2007, before getting his first chance as a head coach. Chris O'Meara/AP

The Bucs have to get the coach right one of these days

TAMPA — One thing I admire about Bucs GM Jason Licht: He doesn’t shy away from the tough questions or the tough issues, and what they mean to his franchise and his own future. Such as this one: When is Tampa Bay going to pick a coach and stick with him through tough times?

Illustrating what happens when the Bucs have remained with a coach, and when they haven’t, going back two decades:

Head Coach Seasons Playoff Years W-L Tony Dungy 6 3 56-46 Jon Gruden 7 4 60-57 Raheem Morris 3 0 17-31 Greg Schiano 2 0 11-21 Lovie Smith 2 0 8-24

I spy a trend. Dungy and Gruden got long tenures, relatively speaking. Morris, Schiano and Smith averaged 2.3 years of a chance.

On my camp trip, when I’ve asked coaches and executives (three so far) about the impatience of teams with head coaches, every one named Tampa Bay as a problem franchise, particularly after Smith was whacked last January despite having a rock-solid relationship with his defense and the strident support of Jameis Winston, his franchise quarterback.

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So, I asked Licht: How important is it for you for this latest choice, former offensive coordinator Dirk Koetter, to be correct?

“Extremely,” he said in the Bucs’ cafeteria Saturday morning before an early practice. “Extremely. My career’s probably on the line with this pick. That was the thing I thought about right away: We’ve got to find the guy who’s going to have success and eventually leave on his own terms.”

Very few coaches ever do that, of course. None in the past 30 years in this town. The beloved Dungy, a saint in this area, the new Hall-of-Famer, was bitterly disappointed to get fired after a 2001 playoff run. He left Gruden a Super Bowl team. Gruden won one, then got whacked himself six years later. And of course, you don’t know what’s more important in the early head-coaching career of a head man, security or success. But I’d advise Koetter to hold off on building his retirement home on the gulf shore.

Still, there’s little question Licht is happy with Koetter. “We had a slew of injuries and a new quarterback and a rebuilt offensive line, and we had the best offense in the history of the franchise,” Licht said. “I starting getting texts that first week, from offensive and defensive players: ‘Please hire Dirk.’”

The advantage for Koetter is he was able to bring in a defensive coordinator, Mike Smith, to whom he could cede the defense and who’d been a head coach. So Koetter will still be able to focus heavily on the offense he choreographed successfully last year. And he has a good teacher of the quarterback position in Mike Bajakian, working with Jameis Winston every day. But Koetter’s going to have to earn the respect of the defense now (in fairness, his defensive players have to earn his respect too), and this is his way: “You give respect to get respect.”

Those who know Koetter say he prides himself on being a teacher. It felt strange to be in a coach’s office, as The MMQBteam was on Saturday, and gather around a coffee table, and look down to see “Oh, The Places You’ll Go,” by Dr. Seuss.

Reading material in the office of Bucs coach Dirk Koetter. The MMQB

“Every message that a coach gives his team is in that book,” Koetter said.

Let’s see …

“I'm sorry to say so but, sadly, it's true

that Bang-ups and Hang-ups can happen to you.

…

Oh, the places you go! There is fun to be done!

There are points to be scored. There are games to be won.

And the magical things you can do with that ball

will make you the winningest winner of all.

Fame! You’ll be famous as famous can be,

with the whole world watching you win on TV.”

Koetter won’t make this game harder than it is. That’s probably a good approach, especially to young players who probably aren’t going to be moved by Lombardi’s words. But however he approaches it, there’s a bottom-line mentality here, for better or worse, and he’d better hurry.

* * *

Four questions with …

Rookie kicker Roberto Aguayo of the Buccaneers. Oh, there will be some pressure on him. Tampa Bay GM Jason Licht dealt a fourth-round pick to move up 15 spots to obtain the late-second-round pick he used on Aguayo.

Don Juan Moore/Getty Images

​MMQB: Do you feel the pressure, being a second-round pick? Obviously, most teams don’t take kickers that high.

Aguayo: I think I’ve had pressure, I mean, all my life—going into Florida State, replacing Dustin Hopkins, the NCAA’s all-time leading scorer. I mean there’s going to be ups and downs, that’s just the way of the sport. … The pressure’s always there but it’s not really for me. I guess it just doesn’t affect me mentally.”

MMQB: Strange to think something can be easier in the NFL than in college football, but the hashmarks are narrower in the pros. You were either perfect or close in college when kicking from what would be the NFL’s hashmarks. Is it a big deal to you?

Aguayo: It’s a big difference. In the NFL, they’re basically in line with the uprights, and you don’t have those wide angles you’ve got in college when you’re out on the outside hashes. So it’s a different kind of mind game in the NFL.

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MMQB: You played soccer, and you’re a fan. What did you think when Messi missed that penalty kick in the Copa America final?

Aguayo: I saw that. That’s sports. You know, say if I were to miss a kick at the end of the season, it’s just, I mean that’s what the sport is, why we enjoy it, because you never know. That night, everybody thought, Oh, Messi’s going up to take a penalty. He’s gonna make it, guaranteed.

MMQB: That’s what they’re going to think about you. How do you feel about that?

Aguayo: It’s just the way of the game. It’s that pressure, man. Sometimes at the end of the game, it’s just me, and I need to win, I need to do it. Only a few people in the world get to do that, so it’s fun at the end of the day.

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Myles Jack hasn’t had any issues at camp with the knee that caused him to drop out of the draft’s first round in April. Gary McCullough/AP

Myles Jack is back, and he’s got a message

JACKSONVILLE — There was something heartening about seeing number 44 in white turning and sprinting to chase a play Friday night in a Jaguars scrimmage at Everbank Field, or making the defensive play call and lining up his mates. Myles Jack was playing full-speed football again. Jack’s the former UCLA linebacker, still only 21, who sat much of his last college season after knee surgery, whose stock fell from top-five prospect to pick 36 in the 2016 draft. Now he’s tried to put that behind him. (He hasn’t.) And he wants his story to be a cautionary tale for future Myles Jacks.

“Please put this in all caps,” Jack told me Friday.

(LIKE THIS?)

“I want to tell all the guys coming out in the draft next year, and future years: If there’s any questions about you, answer them IMMEDIATELY. Nip it in the bud. If you have to be arrogant, if you have to be rude, whatever. Get your point across. If there’s any questions—and that’s probably my biggest mistake, because I’m not an outspoken person on like Twitter or Instagram if a rumor comes out—don't be quiet. Not to say anything bad about my agent, but don’t let your agent handle it. Just do it yourself, get out there, you know what I mean, and, fight, you know, fight for yourself. Because looking back, if there was one thing I could do, with all the microfracture, I wish I would have just jumped out and clarified it.”

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Two days before the draft, Jack told Bart Hubbuch of the New York Post that “down the line, possibly, potentially,” he could have microfracture knee surgery. Microfracture is a riskier surgery than ACL surgery and involves creating small cracks in the bones of the knee to spur cartilage growth. Even mentioning it would scare an NFL team. Teams were already cautious about Jack, coming off surgery. The microfracture addition made it worse.

“After the story came out,” Jack said, “[NFL Network’s] Ian Rapoport tagged along and he has a bajillion followers so that just went haywire and everybody’s like, ‘Oh you need surgery now!’ And y’all seen me do pro day and I’ve done everything that’s been asked of me? I did a 40-inch vertical [jump], and people with bad knees aren’t doing that.”

Jack is settling in Jacksonville, where it’s all football on a very young team. He seems happy enough, and he ran around Friday night with verve, still in the process of getting to know his new mates. But he won’t forget the mega-draft-drop.

“In hindsight,’’ he said, “it’s always gonna be a permanent scar. It’s something I’m gonna have to live with, but landing here, I mean, that’s a perfect situation.”

* * *

It’s pretty hot here

HOUSTON — I landed at the Houston airport late Saturday afternoon and got in a rental car. The temperature gauge on the dashboard was 99. It was 100 on Sunday. Forecast highs for the week, beginning today: 99, 99, 99, 100, 100.

Heat index (combining heat and humidity) on the field Sunday for the 9 a.m. practice: 120.

The one constant at camp for the Texans? Oppressive heat. Bob Levey/Getty Images

The medical staff here does proactive IVs. Before Sunday’s training-camp practice (2 hours, 35 minutes) on the fields across the street from the Texans’ stadium and locker room, team medics gave out 35 IVs to players, including DeAndre Hopkins. “Before I got here, I thought you got an IV when you had surgery and that was about it. Now we get them all the time.”

Coach Bill O’Brien works the team out two-thirds of the time outside, and one-third inside the Texans’ practice bubble, where it’s 72 degrees. That’s where the team will work this morning. “I think you make it through by determination,” said Hopkins. “I think it keeps guys true. You better treat your body right. Like, you can’t go out and do whatever at night, then expect to come in here the next day and practice outside and practice well. Your body will be dead.”

The Texans have equipment guys lugging those eight-packs of small bottles of Gatorade, not just squirts of water; Sunday, some players just grabbed a bottle on the sideline, wrestled it from its plastic coupling and inhaled it. It’s just incredible to stand out in such heat for two-plus hours and imagine players who have to try to make a football team in the oppressive conditions.

Other Houston notes:

• Re the strange story in New Jersey, where Darrelle Revis and Brandon Marshall fought at practice Friday, with Marshall reportedly taunting the great corner for getting burned by Hopkins (five catches, 118 yards, two touchdowns, including a 61-yard TD bomb) last season: “I was shocked when I heard,” Hopkins told me. “I guess it means I’m doing my job. I knew I’d beat him that day, because no one can cover me man-to-man. I think he’s a great corner. But he has trouble with quick guys and length.”

• Sunday was punter Shane Lechler’s 40th birthday. On Sunday night, O’Brien and players Vince Wilfork, Brian Cushing and Johnathan Joseph called Lechler to the front of the team auditorium, gave him a cake shaped like the number 40, and also got him a walker, some Rogaine, and those Steph Curry sneakers people think look old-fashioned. Then the teams sang him Happy Birthday. He’s coming off a season in which he avearged 47.3 yard per punt, fifth in the league, and no one here is trying to nudge him into retirement. In 16 seasons, the 47.3-yard average is better than any of his first six NFL seasons, and just two-tenths of a yard off his career average. Here’s how long he’s been around: Lechler’s had beers with Ken Stabler. “I’m not in any mood to start growing up,” he said.

• Too early to tell if J.J. Watt will play the opener. He’s 18 days out from back-disc surgery that is probably a seven-week rehab. “I wouldn’t bet against him,” O’Brien said, “but he’s not going to play ’til he’s ready. He knows that too, and he’s okay with it.”

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Former Broncos safety David Bruton has found a new home in the Washington secondary. Alex Brandon/AP

Six camps, six interesting names

Continuing my section of roster-scanning the teams I saw in the past week for interesting old faces in new places:

Baltimore: Benjamin Watson, tight end. Watched him in one practice. So who knows what it all means. But watching that one practice, last Monday night in the Ravens stadium, made me think I’d draft Watson as a tight end if I were trying to win a fantasy league. I mean, not as the best tight end, but as a top-five tight end. Healthy, he’ll catch 70 balls.

Washington: David Bruton Jr., safety/special teams. After a valuable run in Denver that culminated with a key role on the Broncos’ Super Bowl special teams, Bruton and his mountain bike (he’s as avid a biker as there is in the NFL) are in Richmond for training camp, trying to help Ben Kotwica’s kicking game. Really good signing. Bruton’s a great chemistry guy and valuable player.

Atlanta: Matt Simms, quarterback. I must say I’ve never seen four consecutive Matts on any roster in NFL history. (And really, isn’t that what we all look for?) Here we go, by jersey number: 2. Matt Ryan, QB; 3. Matt Bryant, kicker; 4. Matt Simms, QB; 5. Matt Bosher, punter. I just wish Matt Schaub were 6 instead of 8. Simms needs to beat out Sean Renfree, the former Duke passer, for the third QB here.

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Carolina: Mike Scifres, punter. After 100 years in San Diego and coming off left knee surgery, Scifres hasn’t had a great camp so far. He’s battling a rookie named Swayze Waters, and Ron Rivera kept open the possibility last week he could bring in another punter for competition. So we’ll see.

Jacksonville: Monte Kiffin, defensive assistant. After his sojourn to USC to coach with son Lane, Kiffin is back in the NFL as an extra set of eyes for coach Gus Bradley. Good to see him on the sidelines Friday night, eyeing Jalen Ramsey in press coverage during the Jaguars’ scrimmage. “I didn’t coach last year,” Kiffin told me. “You know, I’m 76 years old. I love football. You can only take so many long walks.”

Tampa Bay: Bryan Anger, punter. The man drafted five picks ahead of Russell Wilson in 2012 wasn't quite the punter-savior the Jaguars thought him to be. Now he arrives to gives the Bucs a unique group of specialists, along with rookie kicker Roberto Aguayo: Has any team in recent years (or ever) had a punter and kicker who entered the league as top-70 draft picks?

Houston: Devon Still, defensive tackle. Still and his daughter, Leah, were an inspirational story in Cincinnati, with Leah beating cancer when her dad played for the Bengals. And here he is trying to prolong his NFL career. For now, Still is spelling the great J.J. Watt on the Houston defensive line, and if he has a good August, he’s expected to make the team as depth on a solid group.​

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Brett Favre’s 36-minute speech was the longest in the history of the Hall of Fame. Joe Robbins/Getty Images

Hall of Fame Quotes of the Week

I

“I overheard my father talking to the three other coaches, and I heard him—and I assume I didn't play as well the previous week only because of what he said, and he said, ‘I can assure you one thing about my son, he will play better. He will redeem himself. I know my son. He has it in him.’ And I never let him know that I heard that. I never said that to anyone else. But I thought to myself: That’s a pretty good compliment, you know? My chest kind of swelled up. And, again, I never told anyone. But I never forgot that statement and that comment that he made to those other coaches. And I want you to know, Dad, I spent the rest of my career trying to redeem myself. I hope I succeeded.”

—Brett Favre, the first Hall of Famer in memory to make his speech without a script, recalling the last game of his high school career.

II

“I could be the only inductee of this great Hall who did not make his high school football team.”

—Eddie DeBartolo

III

“Who would have ever thought that a young man from Kiln, Miss., whose father ran the wishbone, would hold every passing record in NFL history at one time? Pretty doggone amazing if you ask me.”

—Favre

IV

“I’m not the 10th Steeler from the Super Bowl XIII team to be enshrined. But you could have won a lot of money in ’78 if you bet that I’d be one of those 10. I remember making a tackle my rookie year, and Dwight White asking in the huddle, ‘What’s your name again?’”

—Tony Dungy

V

“Imagine the jitters I felt as a 30-year-old kid walking into the first owners meeting, hearing the roll called out by the legendary Pete Rozelle—Halas, Mara, Rooney, Hunt, Davis. I remember thinking: What the hell am I doing here?”

—DeBartolo

VI

“It was the third round of the 1979 draft, and I remember standing outside our makeshift office in Redwood City, California. Bill Walsh came out and said, ‘There is this kid from Notre Dame on the board. Should we take a shot with him in the third round?’ Having graduated from South Bend I said, how can you go wrong with somebody from Notre Dame? So we drafted Joe Montana, and he came out the next day. I looked at him and almost fell over. He was a kid. He had a big Fu Manchu mustache. He looked like he weighed about 170 pounds. He was listed at 6-2, and he didn't look an inch past 6-foot. I said: Oh, dear God. It turns out that was just his secret identity, because when he got on the football field, Joe Montana turned into Superman.”

—DeBartolo

* * *

Regular Old Quotes of the Week

I

“Somebody’s gotta lose their job over this.”

—Randy Moss, in his first appearance on an ESPN pregame show Sunday night, when the Hall of Fame game was canceled because of poor field conditions in Canton.

II

“I’ve been a part of teams that went to seven Super Bowls, and I’ve never been to one with a crappy locker room.”

—Carolina GM Dave Gettleman, after watching his players go wild at a lunchtime magic show in the camp cafeteria. Gettleman wasn’t sure whether the 20 or so players having great fun in the cafeteria would translate to anything on the field, but his point was that this team is a together team, and that matters on a winning team.

I saw the magic show, and wrote this story about it.

III

"I've been in the league for nine years now, and I've only been on two teams where the guys were a team: the New York Giants and now with the Patriots."

—Patriots tight end Martellus Bennett, in a cool story about the Bennett brothers by Mina Kimes in ESPN The Magazine.

Weird. Martellus Bennett would have been able to meet his teammates as a group for the first time when off-season workouts began April 18. He did this interview in the summer, before training camp and before any games were played. And he can judge the Patriots’ team ethos already. Not saying he’s wrong. Just saying that is one quick and decisive indelible first impression he got from the Patriots, to make that judgment now.

IV

“I’m not in the conception business. We’re just trying to play football.”

—San Francisco coach Chip Kelly, told the other day by a reporter that there seemed to be a lot of misconceptions about him.

V

“If it’s 45 or 50 snaps, they’re going to have to give me an IV.”

—New Atlanta pass-rusher Dwight Freeney, 36, who most assuredly will not be playing 45 snaps a game in 2016.

Freeney played 13 games in Arizona last year, and was on the field between 21 and 33 snaps in those 13 games.

* * *

Allen Robinson hopes to benefit this season after getting in extra work with his quarterback over the summer. John Raoux/AP

Stat of the Week

Remember this number: 1,530.

Last year, Blake Bortles, then 23, and Allen Robinson, then 22, connected 80 times for 1,400 yards and 14 touchdowns. They were one of the impressive touchdown combinations in the NFL. What do they do for an encore? And how do they get better?

Well, the ages help, first of all. They’re single, and the most important thing in each of their lives is improving at football. They did that by meeting about 25 times, most often with other receivers there too, in the offseason in Jacksonville, and then also nine times in OTA practices at the Jags facility. Thirty-four throwing sessions together. I asked Bortles how many throws he’d made to Robinson at each one. He estimated between 30 and 60, either on routes or with Robinson in a static position downfield, so Bortles could practice. I asked Bortles if it would be fair to take the average—45 throws to Robinson per session. He said yes.

“How does that manifest itself now?” I asked Bortles. “How can you tell if it helps?”

“We have a simple stick combination,’’ he said, referring to the staple of so many offenses. The stick route sends a receiver or tight end five to seven yards down field, and he and the quarterback read what the defender’s doing on the play and make their decision accordingly; usually the quarterback will throw to the shoulder away from the defender. It works so well because oftentimes, when the quarterback takes a short drops against pressure, he needs a sure-thing intermediate concept, and this is about as sure as it gets. And in practice, Bortles had been enjoying the matchup of Robinson against free-agent import cornerback Prince Amukamara.

Continued Bortles: “Three receivers. The two inside run the [stick] route, and the outside guy runs a little fade in the end zone. And Allen was out wide and for the past two or three days, he had been crushing Prince on slants, just low one-step slants. But here, immediately from the snap, he gave a little one-step-in slant and took off running a fade, instead of a slant. That wasn’t necessarily what he should do, and last year he never would have done that. But he knew Prince was a little bit shell-shocked from this slant he’d been crushing him with over the last couple days.

• THE MMQBFANTASY RANKINGS:QUARTERBACKS | RUNNING BACKS | WIDE RECEIVERS | TIGHT ENDS

“Last year, if the call was a fade, Allen would have just run a straight, normal fade. But he’s gotten better at really understanding our offense and understanding defenses and corners. And I think now us being on the same page, to where if it was our first time together, I would have looked at him and been like, ‘Oh my god, what’s he doing?’ But now I see what he’s doing, I know what he was doing, and I adjust with him, and I throw a ball to him for a touchdown.

“This is a game where you just figure things out like that. You do stuff like that on the field, and after it’s done you walk over and give A-Rob a high five and then you go back in the locker room. I said to him, ‘Hey, you tried to sell him on that slant and get back outside for the fade, right?’ He’s like, ‘Yeah, yeah, I got him on it the past two days.’

“It was pretty cool because I thought that was why he did it, and then when he explained it, it was the same exact definition.”

I told you to remember the number 1,530. That’s 34 off-season workouts between the third-year quarterback and the second-year-old wide receiver with designs on being great, with, according to Bortles, about 45 throws per sessions between the two … 34 times 45 equals 1,530.

Want to get better at something? Do it 1,530 times.

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Factoids of the Week That May Interest Only Me

I

Tampa Bay quarterback Mike Glennon and his wife had a baby last Wednesday, which was also Tom Brady’s birthday. The Glennons named their baby Brady, born 39 years after Tom Brady was born in the Bay Area.

Dad says Brady Glennon was not named after Tom Brady, but it seems like a little bit too much of a coincidence that Brady was born on Brady day for Brady to not be named after Brady.

“Mike said he didn’t name it after Brady,” Jameis Winston reported exclusively Saturday. “But I know he was hoping that baby was born on Tom Brady’s birthday. I know that for a fact.”

II

There is a video beer ad in Everbank Stadium, home of the Jags, featuring owner Shad Khan holding up a new Bud Light can with a Jaguar logo on the front. Good-looking can.

“We call them Khans,” the Jacksonville owner says.

WE CALL THEM KHANS, the message board blares.

• JAGS CAMP REPORT: Even Blake Bortles’ mom knows—Jacksonville is loaded with talent heading into the season

III

The MMQBis doing a poll of players on its training camp tour, asking players anonymously some question about the game and about life. One of the questions: “Who do you think is the best player on the planet?” Our Jenny Vrentas asked one player the other day, and the player thought about it for a moment, then said:

“Which planet?”

IV

Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie had the ultimate wildlife vacation. He went on a gorilla trek in Rwanda. Came a few yards from a gorilla family and just observed.

Eagle vacation runner-up: President Don Smolenski was in Iceland with his family the day Iceland’s soccer team beat England in the European championships. The Smolenskis were glued to the TV, as were all Icelanders not in France for the game.

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Mr. Starwood Preferred Member Travel Note of the Week

Some nights on the training camp tour are just cool. Last Wednesday was one of them. By day we saw the Falcons northeast of Atlanta. The next day, we were scheduled to see the Panthers in Spartanburg, S.C. So Wednesday night, we stopped by Fluor Field in Greenville, S.C., to see the Class-A Greenville Drive against the Asheville Tourists, with Drive GM Eric Jarinko our host. A beautiful night for baseball—warm but not oppressive. It would have been perfect had I not bounced the first pitch. Which was actually a football. I threw out the first football to former Fresno (Calif.) high school receiving star-turned-Drive outfielder Trent Kemp, and he short-hopped it fluidly. “No problem!” he said after the errant toss. Then we met some fans, had some beers, ate some barbecue sandwiches, talked to some more fans, put it all out on Facebook Live (yes, even the one-hop football throw), and were on to the next stop.

Our thanks to Jarinko and his media-relations manager, Cameron White, for being so hospitable, and to the fine people of Greenville for being welcoming. And one more thanks: to Mike Matheny, the manager of the Cardinals. His son, Tate Matheny, is a Drive outfielder, and I went to him before the game to tell him good luck and to say how much I enjoyed his dad’s book, “The Matheny Manifesto,” about perspective and lessons for youth sports coaches. It’s a terrific read, and so valuable today, when some youth coaches (and more parents) forget why kids play sports. “Yes sir,” Tate said—one of about seven “yes sirs” he said to me in 60 seconds. “That book was really important to him.”

Anyway, no great dramatic story here—just gratitude to good people for a nice evening at the ballpark.

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Tweets of the Week

I

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V

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Matt Ryan and the Falcons have improved their win total for three straight seasons, a trend they hope to continue after last season’s 8-8 campaign. John Bazemore/AP

Ten Things I Think I Think

1. I think I’ve got six random thoughts after nearly two weeks on the road at camps:

a. Washington won’t be changing its nickname anytime soon. When I was in camp, talking to club president Bruce Allen the other day, a visitor to camp approached me and said he really liked my stand on the team name, how I proposed a couple of years ago that the name should be “Americans” or “Warriors” instead of “Redskins,” and the team could honor the military at every home game. (I cannot take credit for the idea, by the way.) So I was a bit stunned that this fellow didn’t recognize Allen, who has led the drive to never, ever, ever change the name. At one point, Allen said in no uncertain terms that the name would not be changed.

b. Jameis Winston is ripped. He’s lost only eight pounds (he weighs 231 now), but the change in his body is noticeable. He hired a trainer and is eating smart—and not at all hours of the day—after getting a body wakeup call seeing his peers at the Pro Bowl.

c. Watched some training-camp tape of Dante Fowler, the pass-rusher Jacksonville drafted third overall last year, then lost for the season in his first practice with a torn ACL. Actually, watched with Jags GM Dave Caldwell. Two impressive things: His lateral quickness and quickness around the edge seem unaffected by his surgery; he’s Von Miller-quick. And on one bull-rush against backup tackle Josh Wells, Fowler—giving up 54 pounds to the tackle—punch-rushed with a shot to Wells’ sternum and Wells went backpedaling fast, to keep his balance. The perception with Fowler is so focused on speed and quickness as a rusher, but it’s not just that. Tackles are going to have to respect his power.

d. One of the quarterbacks Albert Breer notes in his video story about Tom House is Matt Ryan. I asked Ryan about what House and fellow QB tutor Adam Dedeaux did. Seems Ryan worked on one of the weaknesses in his game: throwing efficiently, consistently, to his left. “Get your feet underneath you,’’ Ryan said. “Make every throw the same. I worked very hard on that. I think it helped. You want to make the defense defend all 53 yards of the field, and not just one side, obviously.’’

e. Early candidate for breakout defensive player this year: Eagles defensive end Vinny Curry. He’s moving from the 3-4 to a 4-3 rush end under new defensive coordinator Jim Schwartz. In the old defense, he had 13 sacks in the past two years. “I have a long way to go, but I’ll die trying,” Curry told me. “What I’m better at this year is with my technique—my feet, my first step. I consider myself a core part of this defense, and this year, when our defense is mentioned, I want my name to come up, and not at the end of the conversation.”

f. Three early standouts for the Patriots in camp: wideouts Aaron Dobson (who before this season had been unreliable, with just 53 catches in three seasons) and practice-squadder Chris Harper, who, according to Bill Belichick, “has probably made as much progress as any of our players in the last calendar year.” Dobson’s just more mature this year, perhaps realizing year four was his last straw in Foxboro … and guard-tackle Joe Thuney, the rookie third-round pick from North Carolina State. On our visit to Foxboro, Thuney got high grades for toughness, versatility and shutting his mouth. Watch returning offensive line coach Dante Scarnecchia get Thuney ready to play meaningful downs by Week 1. That’s what the Patriots do: get young linemen ready to play, then play seven or eight multiple series per game to see what combinations are smart.

2. I think the Pro Football Hall of Fame has this challenge on its hands, and it’s a daunting, and perhaps impossible, one: to make the weekend gauzy and warm and fuzzy and nostalgic, all in one. When baseball inducts its players, you invariably read stories headlined thusly: “Reflections on a weekend with the baseball gods.” (Dan Shaughnessy, Boston Globe, July 25.) In fairness, Shaughnessy was honored this year for long and meritorious writing on baseball. But the point is, those stories and feelings are common around the baseball Hall’s inductions. Is it the media, celebrating the history of baseball more than football? Is it the fact that so many media members who cover baseball have had such a love affair with the game for so long? Or is the fact that media folk covering football can’t find the same way to celebrate the history of the game when so many former players have long-term health problems?

3. I think the one camp scene that just looked different to The MMQB Team was in Spartanburg, summer home of the Panthers. We saw the seventh of 14 practices slated for Wofford College, the camp home of the team for 21 years. Halfway through camp, the Panthers set an all-time attendance record (79,804). “We’ve done a lot of beautification and modernization here,” said team president Danny Morrison, “but the key, obviously, is a successful team with players the fans like.”

4. I think this video of a Spartanburg High linebacker and a Panthers linebacker—mentee and mentor from the day the two squads practiced side by side—is one I’ll remember for a while. The kid was so honored to be with his idol.

5. I think it’s probably smart to play the Pro Football Hall of Fame Game—if you’re going to play it at all—54 miles north in Cleveland, with a pristine field, rather than on a glorified high school field at the Hall of Fame in Canton. There’s just too much at stake, even with a first preseason game with regulars barely seeing the field, to play the game on a risky field.

6. I think this is the underrated matchup of Week 1: Former Falcons coach Mike Smith and former Matt Ryan tutor Dirk Koetter—now the defensive coordinator and head coach of division rival Tampa Bay, respectively—at Atlanta, where coach Dan Quinn is very noticeably dismantling Smith’s read-and-react defense and replacing it with a voracious one.

7. I think this is the early line on Tom Brady’s attitude in camp: No sadness, no anger (except at defenders on the field), no frustration from the suspension that he shows anyone, and, I’ve heard, hard to tell any difference between this year and a normal (non-suspension) year. As someone who knows Brady told me over the weekend: “He’s doing what he’s always doing: trying to massacre the defense at every practice. That’s how he feels he gets better.” One other interesting note on Brady, from our visit to camp nine days ago: Devin McCourty said Brady, who turned 39 last Wednesday, “reminds me of Benjamin Button. He does not age. I can honestly say there is no difference that I see from Tom now and when I got here [in 2010].”

8. I think I’m ready for the Rams edition of “Hard Knocks,” which debuts Tuesday on HBO. I have not seen any early clips—though I did ask—but I can tell you these factoids: It’s the first “Hard Knocks” featuring a West Coast team and the first time they’ve had the No. 1 overall pick from that year’s draft (Jared Goff). Look for a lot of coach Jeff Fisher and for NFL Films to try to blend in plenty of Hollywood glamour.

9. I think there are three injuries of early camp that hurt teams the most: Chicago center Hroniss Grasu (torn ACL, according to the Chicago Sun-Times), which takes Jay Cutler’s impressive young security blanket away; Detroit tight end Eric Ebron, who may have suffered an Achilles injury in a team scrimmage Saturday; and (this will cause an eyebrow or two to raise) CFL transplant wide receiver Eric Rogers, who tore his ACL in a non-contact kickoff drill the other day in 49ers camp. No one knows much about Rogers, but the Niners had plans for him and had to outbid several teams last winter to sign him. That team needs big contributors on an offense lacking them. But if Ebron is lost, that would put the top three Detroit tight ends out, at least for now, with Brandon Pettigrew (on the temporary NFL PUP list) still rehabbing from knee surgery. And without Calvin Johnson, Matthew Stafford was going to need a breakout season from Ebron, the underperforming 10th pick in the 2014 draft. If Ebron is lost, the pressure on Stafford multiplies.

10. I think these are my non-football thoughts of the week:

a. I am rooting for you, Yusra Mardini. The whole world is—or should.

b. A swimmer for the Olympic Refugee Team … what a great idea.

c. How cool was it Sunday evening to see David Ortiz and teammate Travis Shaw make their way to the press box to greet Vin Scully, and to thank him for his years of service to the game? I love that.

d. Scully told the story during the Dodgers-Red Sox series this weekend of Ted Williams hitting a homer in his last at-bat of his career, thinking seriously of forgetting his grudge against Boston sportswriters and tipping his cap when he crossed home plate, and then not doing it. Scully quoted John Updike writing, “Gods don’t answer letters,’’ regarding Williams’ refusal to doff his cap. (Actually, it was “Gods do not answer letters,” but who’s counting?) The retelling the story was so beautiful.

e. Scully on Ortiz: “Baseball will grieve when he hangs ’em up.”

f. Way to go, Ichiro: You not only got your 3,000th hit in American baseball, but you got it with a triple. I feared an infield dribbler, because Ichiro had been struggling so, and residing mostly on the bench.

g. I suppose I should have some strong feelings about Alex Rodriguez not playing baseball any more, after Friday. I'm ambivalent. Never liked him much, and certainly not since the positive PED tests. But all sports need villains, and rivals, and he was a good one for such a long time.

h. Coffeenerdness: Shoutout to Steve Mejia and the fine service people at Fields Mercedes Benz in Jacksonville. Not only was there terrific coffee in the customer waiting room but also there was great and timely service when The MMQB’s van need three gallons of fluid for some emission protector called diesel exhaust fluid. We had about 50 minutes before Jaguars practice to fix the van, and Steve got us in and out in 20 minutes. Really saved us. And the coffee was good, too. That’s what I call good service—and he gave us a couple of gallons for the rest of trip, just in case we get low in this last week of the journey.

i. Beernerdness: One overriding thought about the quality of beer on this two-week tour so far—the quality of craft beer in this country is utterly fantastic. There’s been Titletown Brewery in Green Bay; Upland in Indiana; Farmer Ted’s Cream Ale, from Asheville, N.C.; Fu ManBrew witbier (Monday Night Brewing in Atlanta); and Love Street Kolsch Style Blonde, from Karbach Brewing here in Houston … All you brewers, please take a bow. You’ve helped make this trip fun, with so many options in virtually every camp stop we make. Dinners are fun when you’ve got so many choices for a pregamer.

j. I feel so much pressure now that I know Andrew Luck reads number 10 of Ten Things I Think I Think. However will I focus on the inane task at hand?!

k. Tom Jackson had his last telecast on ESPN Saturday night. He deserves our respect, and our affection too. He’s a good person. Twenty-one years ago, at the Dallas-Pittsburgh Super Bowl in Arizona, I had my brother-in-law and his dad at the game with me. The night before the game, we were out to dinner at a restaurant in Scottsdale, and I saw Jackson. He said hi, and I introduced him to dad and son. He walked back to his table. Five minutes later, three drinks showed up at our table. “They’re from that guy,” the waiter said, pointing to Jackson.

l. And you, Chris Mortensen: So glad to see you recognized by your peers with the McCann Award, given annually to a scribe with meritorious service covering pro football. Great to see you on hand.

m. Attention fans in and around Cincinnati: The MMQB team will have a tweet up Wednesday, 6:30 p.m. at the Moerlein Lager House. We'll be there until about 8 p.m. Come join us for a beer and some Bengals talk.

* * *

The Adieu Haiku

No game in Canton.

Did this one just get scheduled?

Black eye of the week.

• Question or comment? Email us at talkback@themmqb.com.