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From Football to singing…meet the new Darnerien McCants

By Micheline Bowman

On the field he played for NFL teams like the Philadelphia Eagles and the Washington Redskins.  While he continues to pursue his sports passion playing professional football, his off the field hobbies have turned into a new passion and future career.

Meet Darnerien McCants the professional football player, Darnerien McCants the artist and Darnerien McCants the R&B singer. Now don’t be quick to judge that he’s just another athlete trying to break into the music world.  I think Darnerien has done his homework and realizes that it’s not going to be easy getting into the music game. He has a genuine love for music and takes his singing career seriously as he devotes hours to rehearsals and performing at various venues allowing audiences to see and hear another side of him.

I had the opportunity to see him perform live in December 2007 outside.  Yes outside!  It couldn’t have been more than 32 degrees at the time.  I knew that he was serious about his music when he agreed to perform for the annual community event Fox 5 in D.C. sponsors each year. The outside elements were very cold, but from the time he grabbed the mic, and the camera was on him…he was in his element.  Singing and performing just came naturally to Darnerien.

The television viewers had the chance to see and hear him and I wanted the web readers to have that same opportunity.  So I introduce to you, the myvoicedc readers…Darnerien McCants. 

Micheline- When most people think about you, they think football but you have been doing more than that I’ve noticed.

Darnerien- Yeah right now I’m working on my music career and doing some modeling.

Micheline- Wow that’s a different direction than playing football…how did the music side of you come about?

Darnerien- On Saturday’s when we would clean the house…V103 would be on the radio and I remember growing up and hearing my aunt singing Patti Labelle and other songs.  It was like music was always just a part of me from a child.

Micheline- So would you say your first talent was music and not sports?

Darnerien- Well I started playing sports at age 9 and singing in school around the same time. I would always have solos in school and I use to mimic Michael Jackson.  I remember when I was in the 5th grade and I had a winter concert, my mom said I couldn’t go and I just stopped singing. It was during the last few years in college that I started to pick it up again. Most people didn’t know I could sing.  My two best friends didn’t even know.  Most people thought I was crazy and talking to myself.

Micheline- I hear you’re also an artist?

Darnerien- Yeah…art is another thing that is kind of just in me. Coach Jimmy Ray, (Former Redskins Offensive Coordinator) he said something that touched me. “Never be ashamed of your talents.  Don’t waste them because you shame God of your ability for blessing you with the talents.”  I knew that I wanted to sing and show folks that I’m a talented singer, artist and football player.  I’ve been drawing since I was a baby…that is my natural talent.  I could draw anything I saw.  The hardest part for me was to draw images in my head.  When Coach Spurrier came to the team I released my art work. Then the next year I started balling on the field so it made it twice as easy to bring the music out.

Click here for the full interview...

KOBE BRYANT: OPTS TO SKIP SURGERY ON PINKIE

EL SEGUNDO, Calif. (AP) -- It's his little finger. But it may turn out to be a big problem for Kobe Bryant and the Los Angeles Lakers. Bryant has been diagnosed with a torn ligament in his right pinkie finger. A hand specialist has recommended surgery. But Bryant says he has decided to delay going under the knife. Surgery could sideline for six weeks. But Bryant is hoping rest and treatment will keep him on the court through the season and the playoffs. The injury took place when Bryant dislocated the finger at New Jersey last week. He aggravated it in Wednesday night's game at Minnesota. It's unclear if the injury will keep Bryant out of the All-Star game in Minnesota on Sunday.

Redskins Name Jim Zorn Head Coach

WASHINGTON (AP) -- After a suspenseful month of exhaustive interviews involving at least 10 candidates, the Washington Redskins decided their coach would be: none of the above.

Instead, it'll be first-timer Jim Zorn taking the mantle from Hall of Famer Joe Gibbs. Two weeks after being hired as the offensive coordinator, the former Seattle Seahawks quarterback was promoted to head coach Saturday night in a surprise ending to a secretive process that tried fans' patience and produced a new favorite every week.

The 54-year-old Zorn agreed to a five-year contract and was introduced at a news conference Sunday.

"I've always dreamed of being a head coach with a franchise rich in tradition like the Redskins," Zorn said in a statement released by the team. "As a player who had to fight Redskins teams at RFK as well as at our home field, I know about the history of this franchise as well as the passion of its fans. I won't let you down."


Zorn's Resume:

Playing career
  • Seattle Seahawks (1979-1984)
  • Green Bay Packers (1985)
  • Winnipeg Blue Bombers (1986)
  • Tampa Bay Buccaneers (1987)

Coaching career
  • Boise State (1988-1991)
  • Utah State University (1992-1994)
  • University of Minnesota (1995-1996)
  • Seattle Seahawks (1997-1998)
  • Detroit Lions (1998-2000)
  • Seattle Seahawks (2001-2007)
  • Washington Redskins (2008-present)

Zorn was the Seahawks' quarterbacks coach for the last seven years, helping develop Matt Hasselbeck into a Pro Bowl player, but he had never been a coordinator for an NFL team until the Redskins came calling. Now he's making the jump to head coach.

"We're proud that our search was diligent, thorough, and resulted in today's announcement," owner Dan Snyder said. "Jim's track record and reputation as a player, great teacher, and as a coach makes us confident that they will translate to success for the Redskins."

Zorn becomes the sixth coach under Snyder, who bought the team in 1999, and he ends a string of high-profile coaching hires by an owner who had developed a reputation for hiring top names at a top price. Snyder's last three coaches were Marty Schottenheimer, Steve Spurrier and Gibbs. None had a cumulative winning record, although Gibbs took the Redskins to the playoffs in two of his four seasons before his resignation Jan. 8.

Zorn's hiring came after Snyder held marathon sessions with a variety of candidates. Two prominent names, Jim Mora and Steve Spagnuolo, withdrew from consideration to remain with their own teams. Jim Fassel had multiple interviews, but fans were seething when word got out that the former New York Giants coach was a possible finalist.

Others who didn't fit the bill for a variety of reasons included Steve Mariucci, Ron Meeks, Pete Carroll and Jim Schwartz. Redskins assistant Gregg Williams had the support of many players, but he had been unsuccessful in his previous stint as a head coach in Buffalo and was fired after meeting four times with Snyder about the job.



Meanwhile, during several of the interviews, candidates mentioned Zorn as a favorable possibility as an offensive coordinator to replace Al Saunders, whose offense had been a disappointment for the last two years.

In the statement released by the team, Snyder -- who has been widely criticized during the coaching search -- went into detail to explain how Zorn ended up with the top job.

"We knew of Jim's stellar offensive reputation, so we hired him as coordinator, but we also suspected he would be a strong candidate for head coach," Snyder said. "After our first six-hour interview with him, I told Joe (Gibbs), 'This guy would make a terrific head coach.' But we stayed true to our commitment to interview every candidate."

The Redskins had to wait until the Super Bowl was played to interview their final candidate, Giants defensive coordinator Spagnuolo. After Spagnuolo announced on Thursday that he'd rather stay with the Giants -- who gave him a new three-year, $6 million contract -- Snyder said he invited Zorn to lunch.

"I told him we were considering him as the next head coach, and asked if he wanted to move forward. Without hesitation he said 'absolutely,' and that's all I needed to hear," Snyder said. "We spent two days taking Jim through the same interview process as every other candidate. Those sessions only confirmed my earlier comment to Joe: Jim Zorn will be a terrific head coach."

In his new role, Zorn will have plenty of guidance. Snyder kept most of Gibbs' staff intact, including veteran assistants Joe Bugel and Greg Blache. Blache was promoted to take charge of the defense after Williams was fired.

"Those guys have been around," Gibbs said from the garage area at Daytona International Speedway, where his team was preparing to compete in Saturday night's Budweiser Shootout exhibition race. "So what they did is continuity-wise, they kept the coaching staff and the support group and the training group and everybody, so he's in a real solid (situation)."

Zorn takes over a team that went 9-7, snatching the NFC's final wild card berth on the last weekend of the regular season, before losing to Seattle in the first round of the playoffs. The team is also well above the salary cap, although it has already started to address that problem by opening contract renegotiations with some of its highest-paid players.

The offense will undergo an overhaul under Zorn, who is expected to install a version of the West Coast attack. He will also have to sell himself to players who have expressed disappointment that the job didn't go to Williams, who has been hired as defensive coordinator of the Jacksonville Jaguars.

Zorn is a longtime local favorite in Seattle. He was the franchise's original starting quarterback in 1976, played nine seasons with the team and is in the Seahawks' Ring of Honor. He returned as an offensive assistant from 1997-98 and again as quarterbacks coach in 2001.

He also coached in college for nine years as a quarterbacks coach or offensive coordinator at Boise State, Utah State and Minnesota. In between his coaching stints in Seattle, he spent two years coaching quarterbacks with the Detroit Lions.

------

AP Sports Writer Chris Jenkins contributed to his report from Daytona, Fla.

(Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press.  All Rights Reserved.)  

 

 

Redskins' Green, Monk Elected to Football Hall of Fame

Former Redskins Darrell Green, left, and Art Monk, right, were elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame on February 2, 2008.

PHOENIX (AP) -- Like the two old friends they are, Darrell Green and Art Monk chatted about the latest news in their lives: making the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Never mind that thousands of people were listening to the conference call after Saturday's announcement. This was simply two former Washington Redskins sharing verbal hugs after receiving the sport's highest honor.

"May I just say to you when I first came to Washington, you had just won the Super Bowl, you guys worked me over for nine weeks and I hated all of you," Green told Monk, drawing laughter.

"I appreciate your words," Monk told Green, who covered Monk in practices for years. "I was trying to hear some of the comments that you made and I feel the same way. "



For the second straight year, former commissioner Paul Tagliabue failed to elected.

Other players joining Green and Monk included New England linebacker Andre Tippett, San Diego/San Francisco defensive end Fred Dean, Minnesota/Denver tackle Gary Zimmerman and senior committee choice, Kansas City cornerback Emmitt Thomas.

Monk finally was chosen in his eighth year of eligibility. He concluded his career after the 1995 season with Philadelphia, but spent 13 years with the Redskins as one of the NFL's premier receivers. Monk held records for most consecutive games with a reception (164) and career catches (820). Both have been surpassed, but Monk didn't play in as wide-open an era on offense as many other receivers. He was one of the most consistent possession and third-down receivers in the league throughout his 14 pro seasons.

"Whether I deserved to play in the NFL or deserve even to be in Hall of Fame, I just loved the game, loved to play, loved being out there," Monk said.

Green, one of the NFL's speediest and most skilled cornerbacks for two decades, spent his entire career (1983-2002) with the Redskins. He holds the record for consecutive seasons with an interception (19), and had 54 picks for 621 yards and six TDs. A member of the 1990s All-Decade team, Green made seven Pro Bowls.

"This is incredible. This is so special," Green said when informed of the vote. "This is out of this world. This literally transcends football, everything I have gone through to do what I was able to do. It was more than the ability to run and cover. It just goes so far beyond that."

The other player in his first year of eligibility, receiver Cris Carter, was not elected. Carter finished his 15-year career second on the career list in receptions and TD catches.

Inductions will be at the Pro Football Hall of Game in Canton, Ohio on Aug. 2.

"I looked forward to the day we are going to Canton," Green said, breaking up with emotion. "Hopefully, there are several hundred thousand hotels there, and several hundred thousand tickets."

Perhaps the most surprising outcome was that Tagliabue, again, did not get enough support.

In his 17 years as commissioner, the NFL experienced no labor stoppages, while its revenues from TV contracts skyrocketed. There also were expansions to Jacksonville, Charlotte, Cleveland and Houston under his watch, and several teams moved into new stadiums, many of them built with public funds.

But many, including some reporters on the 44-member selection committee, found Tagliabue unapproachable and uncooperative.

Also failing to get in were Redskins guard Russ Grimm, Buffalo Bills receiver Andre Reed, Oakland Raiders punter Ray Guy, Denver Broncos linebacker Randy Gradishar, Chicago Bears defensive end Richard Dent, Miami Dolphins guard Bob Kuechenberg, Vikings guard Randall McDaniel, and Kansas City Chiefs linebacker Derrick Thomas.

Senior committee nominee Marshall Goldberg was not elected, either.

Tippett, who is in town as the Patriots' director of community affairs, was considered the best linebacker in the AFC during an era when Lawrence Taylor ruled the other conference. An outstanding pass rusher who also could handle coverage, he was a force against the run after coming out of junior college.

"This is by far the proudest moment of my professional football career," said Tippett, who made the NFL's 1980s All-Decade team and waited 10 years for this day. "I will be joining the greats of the game and I am deeply honored."

Although he weighed only 230, Dean was a fearsome pass rusher because of his speed and agility; blockers struggled to get their hands on him. He starred with the Chargers from 1975-81, then with the 49ers from 1981-85.

"All I can say is thank you. I am trying to get my heart in order, it's still racing," Dean said.

Zimmerman was a standout for the Vikings from 1986-92 and the Broncos from 1993-97, winning a Super Bowl in his final season. He made his reputation in the USFL before joining Minnesota.

"I am in shock right now," Zimmerman said.

Thomas, who also was Green's position coach for years in Washington, was a superb bump-and-run and coverage cornerback for the Chiefs from 1966-78. He was the interim coach of the Falcons at the end of the 2007 season and has been retained as an assistant by new coach Mike Smith.

Thomas was thrilled with the company he is keeping, most specifically Green and Monk.

"Those guys have high character. I'm proud to go in with them."

(Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press.  All Rights Reserved.)  

 
Mark Gray hosts The SportsGroove Radio Program on NewsTalk 1450 WOL-AM & www.wolam.com Monday - Friday from 7-10 pm. Learn more about the show at www.myspace.com/thesportsgroove

Gray Matters
Gibbs Leaves Redskins Better Off But Future Is Cloudy

By Mark F. Gray

As Joe Gibbs said goodbye to Washington for a second time last Monday the opening lines of the Charles Dickens novel A Tale Of Two Cities came to mind.  The last four years were the best of times and the worst of times for the burgundy and gold.   But even in the bleakest hours it was also the season of light and the season of darkness.  Now after the winter of hope and we appear to be moving towards the spring of despair.

Though Gibbs record does not reflect any of the success that he had in the first tenure there can be no argument that the Redskins program is in much better shape than it was before he got there.   But with Daniel Snyder back in control without anyone who can police his decisions the descent back to mediocrity appears certain.

Read the full article...

Joe Gibbs Retires From the Washington Redskins

Joe Gibbs Retires

VIDEO: Official Press Conference

VIDEO: Joe Gibbs Speaks at a News Conference on Monday, January 07, 2008, before the announcement of his resignation.

 
Beacon House

Gray Matters
Beacon House Brings Pop Warner Title To NE D.C.
By Mark F. Gray

When it comes to youth sports the D.C. metropolitan area has been synonymous with producing some of the finest basketball players and teams in the country for years.  Football, however, has not taken a back seat as Pop Warner football teams from the region have made winning national championships common over the last four seasons. The Beacon House Falcons from northeast D.C. used a stifling defense to carry them to Pee Wee Division Championship at the Pop Warner Super Bowl in Orlando, Florida.

Beacon House became the sixth Pop Warner national champion from “the DMV” over the last five years.   The Falcons joined their suburban counterparts from White Oak and Lake Arbor who also won national championships this year.  Though each team took the same road to the Super Bowl, it was an even tougher struggle for Beacon House who needed helped from the community to get there.

Initially there was a financial crisis that looked as though it would cost them an opportunity to compete.  But once the story of their budget struggle made news on television and radio the community responded.  That also made it easier for their fans from northeast to hit the road for Disney.

“It was amazing the amount of support these kids got from the community, says head coach Maurice Vaughn.   “So many people traveled down to Disney to support these kids.  We had the loudest group of fans and the kids are very thankful for the support that we had”.

The Pop Warner Super Bowl is an eight day single elimination tournament at Disney’s Wild World of Sports complex in central Florida featuring eight regional qualifiers in each division.  This tournament begins the weekend after Thanksgiving which puts a financial strain on many families approaching the Christmas holidays.  Undaunted by tightening their personal budgets, the Beacon House contingent was one of the largest in Orlando.   Around 150 fans traveled by car or plane to cheer the Falcons to the championship.

“I was very surprised and appreciative for the overwhelming support”, adds  Beacon House athletic director Rodney Cephus.  “The community is still behind us and we just thank all the parents and people in the community for that support”.

The championship game was the first real test for the defense this year.  They had not trailed all season and after giving up 14 points in the second quarter against the Tustin Black Cobras of California the Falcons were in unfamiliar territory.  To win the national Beacon House would have mount a comeback after halftime.

“They came out and kind of tricked us in the first half, says cornerback Marc Childs. “We stepped up our game up in the second half and we stopped them on the goal line and took off from there”.

The Falcons scored a touchdown after the intermission but trailed 14-12 heading into the fourth quarter.  Beacon House scored 26 unanswered points in the final period erasing the deficit to win 38-14 and bring their first national championship back to the District.

“When we looked into the stands and saw all of our fans that really motivated us,” says quarterback Donald Campbell.   “We had to win a national championship for them”.

Located in the Edgewood Terrace community, Beacon House is a neighborhood based organization that supports at-risk youth and families in the area by offering educational, cultural, recreational and athletic programs.  The program has improved the academic development of kids in that area by raising math and reading levels by a full year after just 20 two hour sessions.  They have also found that kids who participate in the athletic program learn social and leadership skills that teach them skills to be successful in classroom and in life.  

“The kids have given the community a lot of pride,” adds Cephus. It is a constant struggle to maintain their programs.        In order for youth teams to be successful the efforts of volunteer coaches and support staff are critical. The kids are a testament to how an investment of time in youth can pay dividends on the field and in the game of life.

 
Mark Gray hosts The SportsGroove Radio Program on NewsTalk 1450 WOL-AM & www.wolam.com Monday - Friday from 7-10 pm. Learn more about the show at www.myspace.com/thesportsgroove

Gray Matters
Sports Media Owes Sean Taylor An Apology
By Mark F. Gray

Let me be the first to step up on behalf of my industry to do something people with more credibility and clout choose not to.   It is something that you won’t hear from columnists like Jason Whitlock, Michael Wilbon, or Len Shapiro.  It is something that wouldn’t be condoned by sports editors around the country such as Emilio Garcia-Ruiz of the Washington Post. So on behalf of the sports media business let me fall on the sword for everybody.

Dear Sean Taylor & Family:

I apologize for jumping to false assumptions and making them public in the hours leading up to your death.   If there was any sensitivity in my industry we should have waited for the facts before maliciously slandering your character.  We should have not jumped to conclusions about how your past may have played a role your murder.  We were wrong to put your family through unnecessary trauma in their time of grief as we were wrong in our presumptions about the case.   Although your past was part of the story, we were not vigilant in trying to find the truth and create an accurate opinion about you.

Rest In Peace Sean.

Sincerely,

On behalf of Mr.’s Whitlock, Wilbon, Shapiro, Garcia-Ruiz, and Gray
           
Read Mark's full story...

 

Reports: Taylor Suspect Linked to Earlier Crime

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Allison Seymour does a myvoicedc.com exclusive interview with Georgetown Hoya Mens Basketball Coach John Thompson III

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