Wide receiver Isaac
Bruce is moving close to a reunion with his former head coach.
FOXSports.com
has learned that Bruce is heading to San
Francisco for a free-agent meeting with the 49ers,
which recently hired Mike Martz as their offensive coordinator.
Bruce
spent the past 14 seasons with St.
Louis, including six (2000 to 2005) when Martz was
head coach. The Rams released Bruce on Thursday to avoid paying him a $2
million roster bonus.
One of
the most prolific wide receivers in NFL history, the 35-year-old Bruce has 942
career catches for 14,109 yards and 84 touchdowns.
Another
free-agent wide receiver garnering interest is New Orleans’ Devery Henderson. FOXSports.com
has learned that Tampa Bay will be hosting Henderson on a visit. A four-year NFL
veteran, Henderson caught 20 passes for 409 yards and three touchdowns last
season while making nine starts.
Henderson has the kind of big-play ability currently lacking in Tampa Bay’s
wide receiver corps outside of Joey Galloway.
X: The
Dallas Morning News reported that the Cowboys have traded defensive tackle
Jason Ferguson to Miami.
Dallas and the
Dolphins will swap sixth-round picks in the 2007 draft, which moves the Cowboys
to the top of the round. Dallas
also will receive a 2009 sixth-round pick.
After
missing almost all of last season with a torn biceps, Ferguson became expendable when Jay Ratliff
and Tank Johnson played well in his place. The Dolphins were in need of a 3-4
nose tackle after releasing Keith Traylor. Ferguson also played under Dolphins executive
vice president Bill Parcells in 2005 and 2006 when the latter was Cowboys coach.
X: Dolphins
guard Rex Hadnot is visiting today with the Houston Texans. Hadnot, a 55-game
Dolphins starter who played at the University
of Houston, is believed to have become
expendable in Miami after the club reportedly signed
San Francisco
guard Justin Smiley to a free-agent contract.
After Sunday’s 37-20 loss to Dallas, linebacker Joey Porter should know it was easier to back his words when playing for Pittsburgh rather than the downtrodden Miami Dolphins.
Porter talked some trash about Marion Barber to FOXSports.com before the game, calling him “cocky” and saying the Cowboys running back “thinks he’s a tough guy sometimes.” Porter also said he was “going to be looking for” Barber.
It didn’t take long for Porter to find him, as the two exchanged words on the field before the game. Porter also was penalized 15 yards for unsportsmanlike conduct on Barber’s first carry when ripping off his helmet on a tackle.
Barber was unfazed and proceeded to rush for 89 yards and two touchdowns on just 14 carries. Porter finished with a measly two tackles, which isn’t what the Dolphins expected when signing him to a five-year, $32 million contract this off-season.
Barber said afterward that he was unaware of Porter’s pre-game comments and had nothing further to add. But such a plea of ignorance sounds su####ious, especially when wide receiver Terrell Owens said he knew about Porter’s barbs.
“I think Marion handled that situation very nicely getting into the end zone twice,” Owens said. “Marion, by no means, is going to shy from anyone. His name should be ‘Marion the Barbarian’ because he has a nose and a knack for the goal line. If there is contact to be made, he's going to make it."
As for Porter, he was short with Dolphins media after a second consecutive loss.
“We are a better defense than we showed the last two weeks,” Porter said. “To have it happen like it did (against Dallas) … it’s kind of embarrassing.”
Questionable decisions
The list of suspect personnel moves made by Cam Cameron since he became Dolphins head coach in January continues to grow.
With a rebuilding team, Cameron should be trying to groom youngsters in backup roles. While rookies like starting center Samson Satele and returner/backup wide receiver Ted Ginn Jr. are playing, Cameron declared three promising draft picks and first-year players -- defensive tackle Paul Soliai, defensive end Rodrique Wright and running back Lorenzo Booker -- inactive against Dallas. Cameron instead used journeymen lacking the same potential to make a significant future impact.
Case in point: Receiving snaps ahead of Soliai was Steve Fifita, whose high-energy play is tempered by his diminutive size (he’s generously listed at 6-feet tall and 312 pounds on the Dolphins roster). Fifita doesn’t have the dimensions to man the nose tackle position in case 38-year-old Keith Traylor gets injured --- which has happened each of the past two seasons -- and was enveloped by massive Cowboys right guard Leonard Davis during one unsuccessful Dolphins goal-line stand. At 6-foot-4 and 344 pounds, Soliai could physically handle the spot with more experience, but the opportunity to gain some was wasted Sunday.
Cameron may soon face a more crucial decision at quarterback if Trent Green doesn’t rebound from a sluggish start. Green matched his career high for interceptions Sunday with four and was high with too many throws, which is a bad sign from a 37-year-old quarterback already struggling to complete deep passes.
Cameron’s two other quarterback options are four-year veteran Cleo Lemon, a career reserve set to become an unrestricted free agent in the off-season, and rookie John Beck. Miami made Beck its “quarterback of the future” when selecting him in the second round after passing on Brady Quinn.
There would be additional bumps for Miami’s already struggling offense if Beck were given snaps now. But when the Dolphins are out of playoff contention – which could be as early as midseason judging by the team’s early performance and New England’s hot start – Cameron needs to get Beck on the field with an eye toward 2008.
There’s just no guarantee Cameron will do it.
Turning of the tide
Don’t underestimate the impact a 23-20 victory against Seattle could make on the Arizona Cardinals. Talent isn’t lacking in the desert so much as confidence, which Cardinals cornerback Eric Green confirmed after Arizona squandered yet another late-game lead in last Monday’s 20-17 loss to San Francisco.
“We just never finish,” Green lamented.
The Cardinals finally did thanks to Neil Rackers’ 42-yard field goal with one second remaining.
Lack of maturity
Having closely followed Cincinnati since my days as a Bengals beat writer in the mid-1990s, I’ve come to this conclusion: The franchise will generally play up or down to the level of competition being faced. The reasoning stems from an overall lack of maturity on a roster that annually fails to grasp consistency is key to ongoing success.
A 51-45 loss to Cleveland after forcing six turnovers in a season-opening victory over Baltimore further confirms my su####ion.
Feeling the heat
After Joey Harrington was sacked 13 times in Atlanta’s first two games, I can understand Michael Vick wanting to avoid this type of punishment.
With 19.5 sacks in his first two NFL seasons, Dallas Cowboys linebacker DeMarcus Ware can walk the walk. But his teammates jokingly say he can’t talk the talk.
Apparently, Ware speaks so quickly when he gets excited that his teammates can’t comprehend what he’s trying to say.
“He’s from the South so he’s country,” said laughing Cowboys linebacker Bradie James, referring to Ware’s Alabama roots. “That’s what it is. He has his own dialect. All the time, we never understand him.
“If he gets excited, we have to slow him down. We have to say, ‘Alright, rewind D-Ware. Slow down and say it again.’”
Defensive end Marcus Spears considers Ware one of his best friends but admitted he also needed time to learn how to connect.
“We’ve known each other since the (2005) Senior Bowl. I heard this cat talking and didn’t understand anything he said,” Spears said. “It sounded like gibberish … The biggest thing was learning his language.”
A laughing Ware said such comments from fellow Cowboys players don’t surprise him.
“Because I’m from the South, they always say a lot of my words go together,” said Ware, who is one of the most well-liked players in the Cowboys locker room. “They’re like, ‘DeMarcus, what did you say?’ They know when I get excited, they get pumped, too.’”
No wonder the Cowboys held their camp in different spots besides Dallas for as long as anyone can remember. The heat index for Wednesday morning’s practice was in the triple digits and not much better for the afternoon session. Mercifully for the players, the Broncos and Cowboys decided to cut their joint morning work about 30 minutes short.
The Cowboys returned to their Valley Ranch headquarters after opening camp in San Antonio at the air-conditioned Alamodome.
One benefit of being back in Dallas is that it gives legendary NFL figures who live in the area the chance to attend. Roger Staubach, Lee Roy Jordan and Pat Summerall were among those who passed by Valley Ranch during Wednesday’s sessions.
Cowboys owner Jerry Jones has a passion for football, but he made an observation about the Dallas-Denver practices that shows he also thinks about the sport as a business.
Jones noted that there were more than $300 million in player salaries between the teams on his practice fields. The Broncos spent a ton this off-season acquiring new talent like running back Travis Henry, cornerback Dre Bly and tight end Daniel Graham, while the Cowboys signed right guard Leonard Davis to a seven-year, $49.6 million deal.
Speaking of dollars and cents, declining a $20,000 bonus offer from the Broncos to instead sign with Dallas for $10,000 less as an undrafted college free agent in 2003 might have been the best financial decision Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo will ever make.
Broncos coach Mike Shanahan said he made a strong push to sign Romo, a fellow Eastern Illinois University alumnus, but was turned down. Romo felt he had a better chance of making the Cowboys’ roster, which he did en route to winning a starting spot in 2006.
Scheduled to become an unrestricted free agent in 2008, Romo will cash in with a massive bonus, which could exceed $20 million if he excels this season.
Another player unsuccessfully courted by the Broncos was wide receiver Terrell Owens, who snubbed a Denver contract offer in 2006 for a more lucrative deal with Dallas. Owens reflected upon the dinner he had with Shanahan as he was being dangled as trade bait by a Philadelphia Eagles franchise that had grown tired of his disruptive antics.
“There was an opportunity there,” Owens said. “I never got a chance to thank them just for the consideration. It just didn’t work out. It was just talks and the beginning stages of me becoming a free agent.”
Owens remembered the last touchdown he scored while with the Eagles came while he was being covered by Broncos cornerback Champ Bailey in 2005. Told by a reporter that it was a 90-yard reception, Owens corrected him and cracked up the media crew surrounding his locker by saying, “It was 91, to be exact.”
With a problematic finger from 2006 now healed, Owens might be on his way to making those same kind of impact plays this season. But with T.O., you just never know.
Alex Marvez is a Senior NFL Writer for FOXSports.com . He's covered the NFL for 13 seasons as a beat writer and is the president of the Pro Football Writers of America.