Johnette Howard

Players in Tom Coughlin's corner

October 7, 2008

To anyone wondering if coach Tom Coughlin's honeymoon inside his own locker room has faded since the Giants' charmed Super Bowl run, the remarkable lack of friction he received from his players when he decided to slap Plaxico Burress with a two-week suspension was a revealing referendum on where Coughlin stands. Forget what unflattering things Burress later exposed about himself during his unrepentant talk with reporters on Monday, his first day back to work.

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  • 'Repeat' talk can begin now

    October 6, 2008

    The Giants love playing with a cause, but they'll need to invent a new one now. After the way they steamrollered the Seattle Seahawks yesterday, scoring the first six times they had the ball even without suspended wideout Plaxico Burress, the Giants won't have the No Respect card to play anymore. They look like the best team in the entire NFL right now, not just the rugged NFC East.

  • Islanders can't seem to do anything right

    October 5, 2008

    Hey, Islanders fans. Over here. Take a seat right here on the couch. The psychiatrist will be along in a second. This should take only a few minutes.

  • Mets can't afford not to bring back Manuel

    October 3, 2008

    The Mets announced Omar Minaya's contract extension yesterday, as expected. Then Minaya said he intends to pick up the option year on Carlos Delgado's contract, too. Which makes it only natural to ask what's taking the Mets so long to lock up the one guy who had an even better second half than Delgado, interim manager Jerry Manuel.

  • Donnie, here it's only money

    October 1, 2008

    It's nice that Knicks president Donnie Walsh has a stronger conscience about wasting money or pulling the trigger on contract buyouts as freely as his predecessors Isiah Thomas and Scott Layden did. But Walsh needs to get over the sticker shock of doing business in New York and cut the check to Stephon Marbury already. Make him go away. Shut down the Coney Island sideshow before it starts another season.

  • Finally, Jets get bang for their buck

    September 29, 2008

    Brett Favre first heard Joe Namath's name breathlessly invoked when the Jets pulled off the coup of getting him here from Green Bay in August, and Favre was similarly uncomfortable about the comparison yesterday when someone told him his six touchdown passes tied a franchise record set by Broadway Joe.

  • Mets' Manuel finds way to win and deserves to stay

    September 26, 2008

    The Mets' season still could end as awfully as it did last year when this final weekend at Shea Stadium is through. But Jerry Manuel's managing future shouldn't depend on what happens over the next three days. Not after another win like the Mets' climb back from the dead last night. If the Mets again miss a playoff spot by the season's end on Sunday, same as they did last year, this time it won't be because of some fatal lack of team character or something Manuel didn't do or comprehend.

  • Mangini deserves criticism after Jets' loss

    September 24, 2008

    You know the confusion is bad among the Jets when even the day after their Monday night thumping by San Diego, there was still confusion about exactly what the confusion was.

  • Giants kept running but finally passed test late

    September 22, 2008

    The Giants can put lipstick on a pigskin, as Eli Manning and the offense did by the rousing end of their escape yesterday against the Bengals with two late game-deciding drives. But the Giants didn't have to rally for their 26-23 overtime win because they underestimated the still-winless Bengals.

  • Giants kept running but finally passed test late

    September 21, 2008

    The Giants can put lipstick on a pigskin, as Eli Manning and the offense did by the rousing end of their escape Sunday against the Bengals with two late game-deciding drives. But the Giants didn't have to rally for their 26-23 overtime win because they underestimated the still-winless Bengals.

  • Girardi hasn't made a difference for Yankees

    September 17, 2008

    It's too early to say Joe Girardi will not be the manager the Yankees thought they hired, but this hasn't been said enough: Girardi has not had a good year. A thought that was impossible to ignore last night as the homestanding Yankees lopped another meaningless game off their schedule with a 6-2 loss to the Chicago White Sox just hours after baseball announced that Joe Torre, the guy they threw out to make room for Girardi, was nominated for the Hall of Fame.

  • Now Giants want to dominate, not just win

    September 15, 2008

    The Giants spoke all week about cutting quarterback Eli Manning loose, turning him from a mere game manager into a mauler. They wanted to probe this game against the Rams for big plays downfield, as if they had no fear the Rams might bristle if they read that. Then the game began yesterday and you understood why.

  • Suddenly, Favre and Jets have healthy chance

    September 11, 2008

    FLORHAM PARK, N.J.

  • All-time great Federer has grit and brilliance

    September 9, 2008

    It had been 12 parched months since Roger Federer won his last major title, a drought in which even his undeniable high moments clunked to some uncharacteristically dry finishes that, if nothing else, raised questions about where his talent as the best closer in tennis history had gone. But it was all coming back to Federer on the floor of Arthur Ashe Stadium - especially how to squeeze and squeeze the guy across the net like a python might until he'd wrung all the life out of 21-year-old Scotsman Andy Murray in this U.S. Open final. By the second set, Murray started to sag as if his will was crumbling, like he was fighting to merely slog on.

  • Murray's wait is nothing compared to Britain's

    September 8, 2008

    Of course this china-smashing, cart-toppling, dreamlike rush to the brink of history couldn't be easy for Scotland's Andy Murray. For tennis players from Great Britain, it never is. When the rains came Saturday, interrupting Murray's quest for an epic U.S. Open semifinal upset over top-ranked Rafael Nadal shortly after Murray had seized a two-sets-to-none lead, it was easy to predict what they were shrieking back in Britain, a nation whose male tennis players have been on a losing streak at major tournaments dating to 1936.

  • Federer needs to beat Nadal to reclaim mystique

    September 7, 2008

    The surprise that Roger Federer was about to spring yesterday was the best proof yet that his champion's conceit is back, not just his game. For Federer this has been a year of near-misses, blunted ambition, and lost chances to make some more tennis history.

  • Time’s working against Andy

    September 5, 2008

    Andy Roddick is only 26 years old. But at times, between launching some of the best wisecracks and serves on tour, the years and the psychic scars are starting to show.

  • Venus, Billie Jean have a bond, mutual respect

    September 3, 2008

    On the surface, they would seem to be the yin-yang couple of women's tennis. Billie Jean King is short and feisty and crackles with an irrepressible energy. When 6-1 Venus Williams is really, really upset, she's liable to frown slightly on the court. But that's it.

  • Federer belies his calm over demotion to No. 2

    September 1, 2008

    It's a harsh thing to call a man an outright liar. So let's just say Swiss star Roger Federer is in a forgivable state of denial. That's it. He hasn't been exactly lying over the past eight months while the rest of men's tennis has been ganging up on him and gaining on him. He's just been engaging in a forgivable deceit since arriving at the U.S. Open.

  • Lots of members in Federer conqueror club

    August 29, 2008

    It was a little disconcerting to see Roger Federer's head floating detached from his body yesterday, even if it was just on a new T-shirt that's being sold at the U.S. Open by his apparel company. But it's been that kind of year - weird looking - for Federer. When Federer had a stranglehold on the No. 1 ranking the past 4½ years and built his argument as Best Ever, it was short work to list everyone who defeated him in a single year.

  • Reason to watch women other than Serena, Venus

    August 27, 2008

    You could call this the first annual Adopt-a-Nobody plan. Or, kinder yet, five good reasons to reject that lazy but rampant talk that there's no women that's "interesting" or possessing any personality in this year's U.S. Open other than Venus and Serena Williams, who both - yawn - predictably pulverized their opponents in their opening-round matches yesterday:

  • Nadal clearly No. 1, but what happened to Federer

    August 24, 2008

    Rafael Nadal rolls into the U.S. Open as the world's newest top-ranked player, but much of the pre-tournament conversation and lingering disbelief surrounds Roger Federer, the man Nadal has displaced.

  • Yankees should be worried about the Angels

    August 1, 2008

    Henry Kissinger was riding in the elevator to George Steinbrenner's box at Yankee Stadium last night, his thumbs hooked around the canary-yellow suspenders he was wearing, when WFAN reporter Sweeny Murti couldn't resist asking him if he was surprised that Boston had traded Yankees-killer Manny Ramirez yesterday. "Yeah, I was," Kissinger nodded.

  • Yankees need some relief from sudden skid

    July 30, 2008

    This was a bad throwback game for the Yankees in more ways than one. It started with the sight of a female fan who went walking down a Stadium concourse just before last night's first pitch wearing a T-shirt that read "Anybody but Farnsworth."

  • Yankees need relief from sudden skid

    July 30, 2008

    It sounds odd to say a lot has fallen right for the Yankees this season when so much has gone wrong. It sounds like the title of some tortured country-western song. But last night was a bad throwback game for the Yankees in a lot of ways. Maybe it was a bad omen when a female fan went walking down a Stadium concourse just before the first pitch wearing a T-shirt that read "Anybody but Farnsworth."

  • Beltran stays lukewarm on red-hot Mets

    July 27, 2008

    Jose Reyes is really rolling now. Carlos Delgado, too. Even Mets starter Mike Pelfrey, who knows something about canyon-deep slumps, got an engraved watch from Major League Baseball before yesterday's game against the St. Louis Cardinals for being the National League's Player of the Week.

  • Oliver Perez's unpredictability part of his charm

    July 25, 2008

    If you're a baseball general manager, an opposing hitter, even Oliver Perez's own catcher or manager, the ever-changing charm and danger of the quirky Mets lefthander is that you never know what you'll get.

  • Can the ace go a little longer?

    July 23, 2008

    Johan Santana pitched fine. That wasn't the problem. The rub was yet another game that left you somehow wanting more. The problem was with his closer, Billy Wagner, out of the game with shoulder spasms, with the surging Mets playing arch nemesis Philadelphia for first place in the NL East, with his pitch count at a reasonable 105 pitches after eight innings, why didn't Santana bark "Over my dead body" when the Mets told him he wasn't going out for the ninth? Why didn't he growl and dare them to pry the ball out of his cold, clammy hands?

  • Talking Tiger Woods? Newbie Kim aces the test

    July 18, 2008

    Many of Anthony Kim's elders on the PGA Tour could learn a lot from the 23-year-old former bad boy who arrived at the British Open this week playing red-hot golf and talking boldly and refusing to shrink from the questions about whether Tiger Woods' absence from the field is "de-valuing" the event.

  • Nostalgia reigns for icons at Yankee Stadium

    July 16, 2008

    The send-offs for Yankee Stadium have been rolling out long before the 79th All-Star Game pulled into the old ballpark last night. But for the first time, it really did feel as if the countdown had begun. And it really did feel like the start of goodbye.

  • George: A real All-Star

    July 13, 2008

    George Steinbrenner has come to New York for only one other game this season - Opening Day - but he plans to be in the house Tuesday night when the All-Star Game visits Yankee Stadium one last time.

  • No reason to feel sorry for unwanted Bonds

    July 11, 2008

    Barry Bonds is not a victim, and he's not caught up in some expertly coordinated, widespread conspiracy to keep him out of baseball. That discussion needs to stop before it picks up any more steam now that the Diamondbacks, like the Mets and Tigers before them, have decided Bonds isn't the answer to their problems, even if the all-time home run king is still sitting out there, unemployed, as the All-Star break approaches and the division races heat up.

  • Jeter turns back clock to championship years

    July 9, 2008

    He came up with the sort of defensive play and the sort of clutch hit before that, that he seemed to make three or four times a week back in the day. This has not been Yankees icon Derek Jeter's best season, not by any measure. Yet here he was last night in an early July game the Yankees had to have - which tells you everything you need to know about their ragged season thus far - and suddenly it felt like time was spinning backward as Jeter ranged deep into the hole in the seventh inning to backhand a ball you didn't think he was able to get to anymore.

  • Clemens dug a hole and Pettitte can't help him

    February 13, 2008

    If the leaks about Andy Pettitte's deposition are correct, Roger Clemens will sit in a congressional hearing room today on Capitol Hill and continue a crash to Earth of his own making. The narrative about whether Clemens cheated to become the greatest pitcher of his generation will sharpen into more detail. And Clemens' crossover from icon to con man could be near complete.

  • Giants made themselves into champs

    February 5, 2008

    That the Giants' hotel was still standing yesterday morning after a raucous postgame celebration that stretched on until 4 a.m. ranked as only the second-biggest upset they pulled off as a team in the previous 24 hours.

  • MVP Eli outduels Golden Boy Brady

    February 4, 2008

    Patriots quarterback Tom Brady was hammering his feet up and down, anxiously slapping the ball against his left hand, hurriedly scanning the field to find someone open, but the Giants' pass rush just kept coming toward him like a lava flow, incinerating everything in its path.

  • Amazing Eli outduels Golden Boy Brady

    February 3, 2008

    Patriots quarterback Tom Brady was hammering his feet up and down, anxiously slapping the ball against his left hand, hurriedly scanning the field to find someone open, but the Giants' pass rush just kept coming toward him like a lava flow, incinerating everything in its path.

  • They should interview Pettitte, McNamee instead

    January 4, 2008

    I know 10 million people are expected to watch disgraced pitcher Roger Clemens defend himself on "60 Minutes" Sunday night, but interviewer Mike Wallace is talking to the wrong guy. Clemens, in addition to being Wallace's self-described good friend, doesn't have anything new to tell us about his alleged steroid and HGH use. Clemens' lead attorney, Rusty Hardin, said so himself in an interview this week.

  • Mitchell Report has plenty to blame for steroids

    December 14, 2007

    With every turn of the page in the Mitchell Report on performance-enhancing drug use that was released yesterday, what had been seen as a baseball-wide scandal at the start of the day narrowed swiftly and sharply, at least for New Yorkers. It became a Yankees and Mets story that will cast aspersions on everything from the Yankees' title runs of the 1990s to the damaged Hall of Fame candidacy of Roger Clemens. A few minutes after 2 p.m, Clemens officially became the white Barry Bonds.

  • Mitchell Report has plenty to blame for steroids

    December 14, 2007

    With every turn of the page in the Mitchell Report on performance-enhancing drug use that was released Thursday, what had been seen as a baseball-wide scandal at the start of the day narrowed swiftly and sharply, at least for New Yorkers.

  • Beltran' best shot to being key to city

    May 20, 2005

    He will go into this weekend thinking less about what his first Subway Series will be like and more about whether this will be the weekend when something big finally happens for him. Is this the weekend when something inside of him finally ignites, clicks in and breaks out?

  • Make it not pay to use

    December 8, 2004

    It's a consoling little idea to think that the baseball players' union and baseball commissioner Bud Selig will agree swiftly to a neat and tidy policy that will snare the steroid cheats, and quiet the federal prosecutors and grandstanding lawmakers who are baying at baseball's door and threatening to intervene. It's equally nice to daydream about a time in which Barry Bonds, Jason Giambi and every other alleged steroid user will have to live in a prison of his own shame, even if they're not prosecuted in court.

  • Quite a show on back nine

    June 21, 2004

    Phil Mickelson was straining at the seams of his talent and his patience and his nerves, he was pushing, pushing, pushing, trying not to wait till the last minute, trying his damnedest to send a wave of cheers, a heart-sinking roar - something - rolling back up the fairway at Retief Goosen, just to let Goosen know that his final-day lead suddenly wasn't safe at the U.S. Open, and that Mickelson had just done something to threaten him in this taut, two-man fight to the finish.

  • Mean course is great theater

    June 20, 2004

    The winds finally were gusting at Shinnecock Hills yesterday and suddenly, the golfers' scores were bobbing up and down like some poor little buoys on whitecapping seas. Jeff Maggert's score sank six shots during yesterday's third round.

  • Phil a major domo

    June 19, 2004

    Two months ago he still was dogged by that ear- burning, career-long refrain that he can't win the big one. Then Phil Mickelson won the Masters. Now the crowds swoon for him.

  • Enough already! We need old Tiger to be Tiger of old

    June 18, 2004

    Hey! I want the Master of the Golf Universe back. It's hard to see Tiger Woods reduced to this. It really is. I don't mean the sight of Woods landing only five of 14 shots on driving holes in the U.S. Open fairways yesterday or the sight of him muttering, cussing and slapping his thigh in anger during his fitful 2-over-par, opening-round 72. Anyone can have a rough day. What was extraordinary was the spectacle of seeing the once mighty Woods smile (smile?) after his petulant round and say - with a lilt in his voice, no less! - "I played all right."

  • Driven Singh not shy about dishing it out

    June 17, 2004

    Given his terrific tournament success, his penchant for blunt talk, his occasional willingness to rattle Tiger Woods' grill more often than anyone else in golf, fear is not a word you'd typically associate with Vijay Singh. Neither is guilt.

  • Masters win wipes away pained refrain

    June 16, 2004

    For two months, Phil Mickelson has been basking in the validation his Masters victory gave him. He has lapped up the affectionate applause from fans. He admitted on national television that he went to sleep that giddy night still wearing the green jacket he'd just won. He's no longer the best player never to win a major. He turns 34 today but suddenly he's seen as someone bursting with untold possibilities, a golfer whose ceiling has turned limitless, a remarkable athlete who finally understood the swashbuckling shot isn't necessarily the smartest one.

  • Much ado about 'I do'

    June 15, 2004

    Raymond Floyd has been a lot of colorful things during his 40-year golf career - big-time PGA Tour winner and high-stakes hustler, playboy/bar owner and backer of an all-female topless band called the Ladybirds during his hell-raising bachelor days.

  • Images of the Heart Are the Best Memorial

    September 11, 2002

    The first few days after it happened, the image that haunted me most wasn't the sight of the Twin Towers tumbling down one by one, horrific as that was as viewed from my Brooklyn apartment window. It wasn't the memory of that muffled boom I had heard before that as I sat on my sofa last Sept. 11, drinking my morning cup of coffee. "What the heck was that?" I asked a friend sitting next to me, not yet knowing a second plane had just hit the World Trade Center. Had I looked over my left shoulder, I would have seen both Twin Towers sheared open and belching smoke.

  • One Eye on Field And One on Sky

    September 16, 2001

    THE METS have followed the gruesome stories and mounting toll of Tuesday's plane hijackings and terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon as closely as anyone. But as the Mets drove into the parking lot at Shea Stadium yesterday to get back to work, what confronted them were a host of sobering new reminders.

  • Tragedy Hits Close to Home

    September 12, 2001

    Nothing immediately suggested something unspeakable had happened just outside my window, just seven miles away. All I heard was a muted boom. Then the Venetian blinds in my Brooklyn living room shuddered ever so slightly.

Johnette Howard

Johnette Howard

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