Fandom - ESPN Playbook: Football

Paul Salata, the creator of the NFL Draft's Mr. Irrelevant and Irrelevant WeekAP Photo/Craig RuttleWith Mr. Irrelevant, Paul Salata is still "doing something nice for someone for no reason."

Each goes by the name Mr. Irrelevant, but no two are alike.

So when Irrelevant Week is held annually in Newport Beach, Calif., to honor the last player taken in the NFL draft, many of the activities are tailored to fit the guest of honor.

While all participate in the Arrival Party and Lowsman Banquet -- where each receives the opposite-of-the-Heisman Lowsman Trophy (depicting a player in mid-fumble) -- players can decide what else they want to do.

One asked to go clubbing in Los Angeles with Paris Hilton. Another chose to spend time with his family and sleep extra hours in his soft hotel bed. Others, who’d never been to California, wanted to go Jet Skiing or sailing, play golf on a course overlooking the Pacific or meet their sports heroes.

In 2008, David Vobora, a linebacker from Idaho chosen by the Rams, wanted to see the Playboy Mansion and meet the women from “The Girls Next Door” reality TV series. After an evening that included dinner with Hugh Hefner, hanging with “The Girls,” getting a tour of the mansion and sharing Hef’s movie night, Vobora told one reporter it was “a slice of heaven.”

And that’s pretty much been the goal of Irrelevant Week since it began in 1976: to treat the last as if he were first.

Each April, when Mr. Irrelevant is drafted in New York, Irrelevant Week CEO Melanie Salata Fitch is right there to get his requests for Irrelevant Week (usually is held in June).

“I say, ‘Hey, congratulations’ and 'What do you like?' and 'What do you eat?' and 'What have you always dreamed about?' and I start designing events,” she says.

After 37 Irrelevant Weeks, she’s confident the players have had a great time. How could they not? Her mission is to treat each “like a king.”

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The Vikings look like the Vikings again -- mostly -- and the Dolphins don't look quite as much like the Dolphins as they used to.

That's the takeaway from Thursday's two NFL uniform unveilings. The Minnesota and Miami uniforms both had been leaked earlier this week, but now we have a much better look at the teams' new uni sets.

Let's start with the Vikings (all images courtesy of Nike).

Vikings jersey

Almost any change would have been an improvement here, given the awful uniforms the team had been saddled with in recent seasons. For the most part, the Vikings are going back to a no-nonsense NFL look but with a few odd details, as follows:

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Who are the worst teams to win a title?

April, 18, 2013
Apr 18
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Jorge Posada of the New York YankeesEzra Shaw/ALLSPORT Jorge Posada and the 2000 New York Yankees had a little extra reason to celebrate.
If the Los Angeles Lakers do the improbable -- the very, very improbable -- they would join quite the exclusive club.

Ditto the Boston Celtics (or the Chicago Bulls, Houston Rockets, Atlanta Hawks or Milwaukee Bucks).

And over in hockey, there's still a host of teams -- the Detroit Red Wings and New York Rangers among them -- capable of pulling off this feat: winning a championship with a regular-season winning percentage of .550 or worse.

In the history of the four major pro sports, only 14 teams have done so -- most of them in the NHL (the only two sub-.500 champs also came from hockey). Thrice have MLB teams taken titles despite mediocre seasons. And then there's a lone NBA team, the 1977-78 Washington Bullets, meaning no one from the NFL has pulled the big turnaround; after all, a 9-7 record makes for .563.

So, who are these surprising champions, the ones who bucked the percentages to lift their respective trophies? Let's take a look -- by percentage.

1937-38 Chicago Blackhawks
.385 (14-25-9, 37 points out of possible 96)
• The "worst"-ever champion, these Hawks had the sixth-best record of the NHL's eight teams and boasted a winning percentage .125 points lower than No. 5. They beat the Toronto Maple Leafs (.594) 3-1 in the Stanley Cup finals.

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Webber & the 10 biggest sports gaffes

April, 5, 2013
Apr 5
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Chris Webber with the Michigan Wolverines against the North Carolina Tar Heels calling a timeoutAP photo/Susan RaganChris Webber had a great career, but one mishap from college still lives on -- 20 years later.
Hard to believe, but it's true: 20 years have passed since Chris Webber made his most infamous play, calling for a timeout with none left in the 1993 national championship game between Michigan and North Carolina.

So, to "celebrate" the 20th anniversary of this play by Webber -- who, it must be said, went on to make multiple NBA All-Star teams -- we bring you the 10 biggest in-game gaffes in sports history:

NFL – Replacement Hail Mary (Sept. 24, 2012)
On the final play of the Week 3 game between the Seattle Seahawks and Green Bay Packers, Seattle's Russell Wilson threw the ball 24 yards to the end zone. It was complete, but to whom? The Packers' M.D. Jennings and Seahawks' Golden Tate both appeared to have claims to the ball. After much deliberation, the replacement refs called for a touchdown, and the Seahawks controversially won 14-12.

NHL – Patrick Stefan blows it (Jan. 4, 2007)
Patrick Stefan of the Dallas Stars blew a sure-fire empty-net goal with Dallas leading by one over the Edmonton Oilers with less than 15 seconds left. His gaffe led to an Oilers break and Ales Hemsky scored with two seconds to go in regulation.

Soccer – A swing and a miss (Oct. 11, 2006)
Down 1-0 to Croatia, England was desperately trying to get back into its Euro 2008 qualifier in Zagreb. But that took a turn for the worst, when Gary Neville back-passed to goalkeeper Paul Robinson, who took a swing and a miss and the ball rolled in.

MLB – Home run off Jose Canseco’s head (May 23, 1993)
It happened like this: Cleveland's Carlos Martinez hit a long fly ball. Texas Rangers outfielder Jose Canseco lost sight of the ball in the sun. As Canseco looked away, the ball came down, bounced off Canseco's head and over the wall for a Cleveland homer.

Men's college basketball - Chris Webber’s timeout (April 5, 1993)
Down 73-71 to UNC, Webber dribbled across halfcourt where he was met by defenders, calling a timeout with 11 seconds left. But, as mentioned before, Michigan was out of timeouts. A technical was issued and the Tar Heels made four straight free throws to win the NCAA title.

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The Buffalo Bills' Don Beebe and Leon Lett of the Dallas Cowboys in Super Bowl XXVII
Getty ImagesOops.
NFL – Don Beebe chases down Leon Lett (Jan. 31, 1993)
In Super Bowl XXVII against the Buffalo Bills, Dallas Cowboys defensive lineman Leon Lett picked up a fumble at the 35-yard line. He ran 64 yards -- showboating the last few -- before he was stripped of the ball by Don Beebe at the 1. The ball rolled through the end zone for a touchback.

MLB – Bill Buckner’s error (Oct. 25, 1986)
You know this one: In Game 6 of the 1986 World Series, Boston Red Sox first baseman Bill Buckner committed an error against the New York Mets -- albeit one that merely contributed to, rather than caused, the cursed team from New England's fall from World Series-winning position to heartbreak.

College football – the Stanford band (Nov. 20, 1982)
After John Elway drove Stanford for the go-ahead field goal with four seconds left, Stanford kicked off to Cal, just hoping to kill the clock. But Cal used five laterals on the return to reach the end zone -- with the Stanford band on the field, preparing to celebrate a victory.

NFL – Miracle at the Meadowlands (Nov. 19, 1978)
The New York Giants led 17-12 and just needed a kneel-down to win the game. But a running play was called, a fumble ensued and Philadelphia Eagles cornerback Herman Edwards took the ball 26 yards for a touchdown to give the Eagles a 19-17 win.

NFL – Jim Marshall runs the wrong way (Oct. 25, 1964)
The San Francisco 49ers completed a pass to Billy Kilmer, who was stripped of the ball. Minnesota Vikings defensive end Jim Marshall picked it up and ran 66 yards to the end zone, throwing the ball into the air in joy. Unfortunately, he had ran to the wrong end zone, resulting in a 49ers safety.

Missing The Cut

• Leon Lett (hello again) touches ball after blocked field goal

• Bill Gramatica celebrates field goal by jumping in air (tears his ACL)

• Joe Niekro caught with emery board on mound
video
After seeing the Los Angeles Lakers’ winning streak come to an end at 33 games in 1972, forward Jim McMillian said NBA fans had seen something special.

“We just finished a streak that I don’t believe any other team is going to break,” he told the Los Angeles Times.

Now more than 40 years later, McMillian’s prediction looks solid after the Miami Heat’s bid to catch the Lakers was stopped by Chicago on Wednesday night after 27 straight wins.

Many more seemingly unbreakable streaks also remain on the books. In honor of those 1971-72 Lakers, Playbook offers the best and most unbreakable streaks in sports, ranked from No. 33 to No. 1:

33 -- Basketball: Harlem Globetrotters, 2,495 straight wins over Washington Generals
Though the Generals were built to lose -- which they did flawlessly to the ’Trotters from 1962 to 1971 -- they took a 100-99 victory over Harlem while playing as the New Jersey Reds, finally ruining the script. Generals owner Red Klotz said the win “felt like killing Santa Claus.”

32 -- College football: Mount Union (Ohio), 55 consecutive victories
The most dominant program in NCAA Div. III history, Mount Union has 11 national championships and this record winning streak from 2000-2003. The Purple Raiders also won 54 straight from 1996-99.

31 -- College squash: Trinity (Conn.) College men, 252 consecutive wins
The longest winning streak in varsity collegiate sports stretched from 1998-2012, when it was finally snapped by Yale. The run included 13 national championships.

30 -- College soccer: North Carolina women, 103 consecutive wins
Not only did the Tar Heels put this streak together from 1986-1990, but after a loss to Connecticut on Sept. 22, 1990, North Carolina then won 101 straight games -- that's an astounding 204 wins in 205 games.

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Ray Edwards: From the huddle to the ring

March, 15, 2013
Mar 15
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Ray Edwards, formerly of the Atlanta Falcons, now a boxerKevin C. Cox/Getty ImagesReleased by the Atlanta Falcons, former DE Ray Edwards is trying his hand(s) at boxing.
“Problem player."

That's how Ray Edwards was branded after being released less than two years into his five-year, $30 million deal with the Atlanta Falcons in November. With the "locker-room cancer" label attached, Edwards knew it wouldn’t be easy to find more work in the NFL, even though his belief in his talents never faltered. So he turned to the only other thing he knew -- boxing.

“I’m 100 percent into boxing,” Edwards told ESPN Playbook. “Nobody’s called me; nobody’s called my agent. I’m moving on with my life because the NFL doesn’t stop for me. They will keep going.”

The Purdue product and former Minnesota Viking gave pro boxing a try during the NFL lockout in May 2011 with a decision victory over Tyrone Gibson and fought twice in 2013, with wins over Cory Briggs and Nick Capes.

It was the latter bout that garnered Edwards attention, though certainly not the kind he was looking for. The fight was suspicious, with Capes dropping like a sack of bricks from a punch that seemingly missed just 13 seconds into the bout. North Dakota fight commissioner Al Jaeger concluded it was a dive and suspended Capes, whose real name is Greg Scott.

The 6-foot-5, 258-pound Edwards swears he had no knowledge of the arrangement and “respects the game of boxing too much to do that.” With the incident behind him, Edwards (3-0, 2 KOs) continues his boxing career with a heavyweight bout Friday against journeyman Van Goodman in Hinckley, Minn.

“I want to be heavyweight champion,” said Edwards, who recorded 8.5 sacks in 2009, his best season. “Anything less than that, I failed myself, my trainers and all those who believed in me. I know it’s kind of early to say this, but I know how to think the game.”

Edwards isn’t the first accomplished athlete to give the Sweet Science a whirl. The following pro athletes have tried to cross over into boxing over the years, albeit with little success:

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Sports Pages: Tom Coughlin's best advice

March, 5, 2013
Mar 5
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Tom CoughlinAP Photo/Evan VucciIn his new book, the New York Giants head coach recommends sticking to a firm schedule to reach your goals.
Author: Tom Coughlin, with David Fisher

Title: "Earn the Right to Win: How Success in Any Field Starts with Superior Preparation"

In a sentence: Coughlin teaches readers how to be a successful, hard-nosed son of a gun -- whether for a meeting, a job interview or a home-improvement project -- through intense planning and sweating the small stuff.

Sample chapter: "Success Is in the Details." (Well, duh.)

Interesting quote: A notorious stickler for rules, Coughlin tends to rub people the wrong way at first -- in the foreword, Michael Strahan writes that he hated the coach soon after he took over the Giants -- but there is an underlying reason for Coughlin's methods. “The purpose of setting rules isn’t to catch people and punish them," he writes, "but rather to find those people who are willing to make a commitment to their team and their teammates.”

Bar fodder: During a tough road loss on the West Coast, Coughlin noticed his players looked worn down throughout the game. So, he changed his thinking to find an edge. The Giants stopped flying cross-country on Friday and now travel the day before the game. "Scientifically this doesn't hold water, but it has worked for us," he writes.

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Los Angeles Lakers and Boston Celtics at the Boston GardenJonathan Daniel/Getty ImagesOh, the Gahden. All those banners. And all those dead spots.

Some have hosted special speeches. Others? Major milestones. All of them: great games.

And they’re no longer with us.

So, as we celebrate the biggest noncompetition moments in North American stadium history with the Playbook Stadium 50, and as we count down the best venues that still exist, we also must take an in memoriam moment, and list some of the most iconic venues that exist now only in photos, on film and in our minds.


Boston Garden (1925-98)
Famed (and derided?) for its lack of air conditioning and, during Celtics games, the dead spots on its parquet floor, this place -- belovedly mispronounced by locals -- exists as a memory of winning: Five of the Bruins' six titles were won here and 16 of the Celtics' 17.


Chicago Stadium (1929-95)
Before becoming the United Center's parking lot, the original "Madhouse on Madison" played host to an array of big events, including Democratic and Republican conventions, the first NFL playoff game (thanks to a snowstorm), three Blackhawks championship teams, and the first three titles for the Michael Jordan-led Bulls. It also was a pretty cool place -- as in, it was the first major arena with an air-conditioning system.

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Douglas-Tyson among 10 best upsets ever

February, 11, 2013
Feb 11
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Buster Douglas and Mike TysonAP Photo/Tsugufumi MatsumotoBuster Douglas' shocking 10-round win over Mike Tyson still resonates 23 years later.

Monday marks the 23rd anniversary of Buster Douglas' thunderous, stunning win over the vastly favored Mike Tyson in Tokyo. And although it was a match of many myths, one thing's for certain: It was one of sports' greatest upsets.

Here's a look at, arguably, the 10 best across all sports:

NFL: NEW YORK GIANTS BEAT NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS (Feb. 3, 2008)
The Patriots entered the game 18-0 and were 12-point favorites against the Giants. But New York QB Eli Manning connected with Plaxico Burress for a touchdown with 39 seconds left to win it.

COLLEGE FOOTBALL: APPALACHIAN STATE BEATS MICHIGAN (Sept. 1, 2007)
In front of more than 109,000 fans at the Big House, the fifth-ranked Wolverines lost 34-32 in its opener against Appalachian State, a team that entered the game as a 27-point underdog.

OLYMPICS: RULON GARDNER BEATS ALEXANDER KARELIN (Sept. 27, 2000)
Karelin had never lost in 15 years of international competition. He had won three consecutive gold medals and seven consecutive world titles. Then Gardner shocked the world.

WOMEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL: HARVARD BEATS STANFORD (March 14, 1998)
Only one time has a No. 16 seed ever beaten a No. 1 seed in the NCAA tournament. This was it. Harvard beat Stanford 71-67 in a game that was an eye-opener for some and a “no way” moment for others.

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Flem File: Inside the Ravens' victory room

February, 5, 2013
Feb 5
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John HarbaughHarry How/Getty ImagesJohn Harbaugh's embrace of his daughter was one of many indelible moments after the Super Bowl.
It started with a kiss.

For Super Bowl XLVII, the Baltimore Ravens’ locker room was located deep under the north side of the Superdome, about 50 feet from the field and at the epicenter of an impossible labyrinth of tunnels, doorways, ramps, curtains, purple bunting and security checkpoints that eventually funneled team members into a narrow, private corridor that could not have been any wider than 10 feet. In the wonderful chaos that is the Super Bowl postgame, however, this troublesome layout created a physical and emotional bottleneck. It was located halfway between the expansive glass and tile lobby facing Poydras Street, and the outside world of media, fans, friends and family, and halfway between the confetti-covered football field, the locker room, team officials and teammates. And so it forced every last person in the Ravens' organization, at one point or another -- from Ray Lewis to Joe Flacco to John Harbaugh, Steve Bisciotti and even Michael Phelps -- to stop, pause, exhale and privately express in his own unique way, the full joy and weight of what the team had just accomplished on the world's stage in one of the wildest Super Bowls ever.

The first person to float in through this space was Harbaugh. The overshadowed big brother, who played at a MAC school and paid his dues as a longtime special-teams coach, was surrounded by a pack of family members who all sort of compressed into each other like bumper cars when hit by the bottleneck outside the Ravens’ locker room. Snapping from coach to father in the spare nanosecond of that pause, Harbaugh instantly recognized, like any dad, that the special spot near his heart, just under his left arm, was occupied by his daughter Alison.

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Barry Sanders and Jim BrownGetty ImagesBarry Sanders and Jim Brown are considered by many to be the two best running backs ever.
There aren’t many football players more synonymous with the Pro Football Hall of Fame than Barry Sanders and Jim Brown. So it made sense for the two legendary running backs to be on hand as the Hall of Fame debuted Gridiron Glory, a traveling exhibit that will feature more than 200 mementos from Canton, Ohio, including the Vince Lombardi Trophy.

Gridiron Glory is in New Orleans for Super Bowl week and will visit St. Louis and New York throughout the next year.

Sanders and Brown took a few minutes away from the exhibit to speak to ESPN Playbook about all things Hall of Fame.

Who’s the one person not in the Hall of Fame who should be?

Sanders: I’d have to think about that. It’s a difficult process. I played against Cris Carter, and without having put a lot of thought into it, I think he’s someone who would probably get my vote, if I had to choose one. There are a lot of great players who have played who are on the borderline that will probably get in eventually. But it’s not an easy process, and it’s not always cut and dry.

Brown: I guess I’d talk about Art Modell, because I was involved with him as a human being and he won a championship with us, and won one with the Ravens, and so I thought that it would be natural for him to get into the Hall of Fame with those credentials. But some guy in Cleveland said he wasn’t worthy, and that was that.

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Brother vs. brother in pro sports history

January, 24, 2013
Jan 24
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Jim and John Harbaugh will meet for the second time when they face each other in the Super Bowl in New Orleans, and it'll be another case of the HarBros making history.

They are the only set of brother head coaches to square off in any NFL game; they faced each other last season in Week 12. They also will become the first brothers to compete in a postseason game as head coaches in any of the four major North American pro sports (NBA, NHL, NFL and MLB).

However, there have been nine other sets of brothers in the three other major pro sports to face each other as head coaches. Here's how every pair has fared against each other:

NBA

Herb Brown* vs. Larry Brown
Leader: Larry, 4-2
Herb and Larry BrownGetty ImagesHerb: Pistons (1975-78). Larry: Nuggets (1974-79, ABA and NBA); Nets ('81-83); Spurs ('88-92); Clippers ('92-93); Pacers ('93-97); Sixers ('97-2003); Pistons ('03-05); Knicks ('05-06); Bobcats ('08-11).

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How to raise Super Bowl coaching sons!

January, 21, 2013
Jan 21
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Jim Harbaugh of the San Francisco 49ers and John Harbaugh of the Baltimore RavensMichael Zagaris/Getty ImagesJust look at those HarBros. And your kids could be like them someday, too!

You will get sick of hearing about the HarBowl in the next two weeks. In fact, you likely already are sick of hearing about the HarBowl. Even the name itself is awful.

“Bowl” and “baugh” do not rhyme. It’s not even close. All “HarBowl” sounds like is “horrible,” and no one wants to watch a horrible football game. That’s what the Pro Bowl is for.

But media over-coverage aside, you can’t deny that two brothers coaching against each other in the biggest football game in the world is a story that would fill any family with pride. Many of you out there who have kids or will one day have kids are probably wondering how to raise two Super Bowl coaches of your own. It’s not easy, but if you follow these simple steps, you too can maybe one day watch your sons yell and scream in from of 100 million people.

Tips for Raising Super Bowl coaching sons

In the womb … Many parents sing to their child in the womb or play classical music. This is wrong if you want to raise a Super Bowl coach. What you want to do is place a giant coach’s headset over the belly and then pipe in audio from game tapes or highlights of great halftime speeches. Great coaches don’t take five minutes off, so don’t let your in-utero coach lounge around for nine months doing nothing.

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Dissecting Tom Brady's 41 playoff TDs

January, 17, 2013
Jan 17
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Tom Brady flem fileKurt Snibbe/ESPN.comBehold the complete and annotated (and massive) list of Tom Brady's 41 playoff TD passes.
Near the end of last season I sat down with Aaron Rodgers for a fascinating and in-depth look at the art of playing quarterback. After elevating the most dynamic and demanding position in sports to an entirely new level, Rodgers was on the verge of winning the 2011 NFL MVP Award. But consistently during our lengthy and wide-ranging conversation, one other quarterback’s name kept coming up.

This was the guy Rodgers studied and wanted to learn from. This was the quarterback Rodgers measured himself and all others by. The rest of us might be in awe of Rodgers, I kept thinking, but he’s still in awe of this guy.

Tom Brady.

I thought of that last week when, almost as a footnote to the New England Patriots’ win over the Houston Texans in the AFC divisional round, it was said that Brady had become just the third quarterback in NFL history to throw for 40 TDs in the postseason, joining Joe Montana and Brett Favre.

Now, I know it’s the Patriots’ Way to never stop or pause for a moment to acknowledge or even celebrate the grandest of individual accomplishments until the season is officially over -- and sometimes, not even then. I mean, Bill Belichick is apparently too busy to bother with shirt sleeves for crying out loud, so do we honestly think he’s gonna stop to acknowledge Brady's admission into the 40 TD Pass Playoff Club, maybe one of the most prestigious and difficult accomplishments in the entire game?

Yeah, I don’t think so.

But that doesn’t mean the rest of us shouldn’t.

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Teammates: Eric Decker rates the Broncos

January, 10, 2013
Jan 10
7:51
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Eric DeckerRon Chenoy/USA TODAY SportsWith 13 TDs this season, the third-year wideout is a finalist for the 2012 VIZIO Top Value Performer award.
Editor's note: Welcome to another installment of "Teammates," an occasional Playbook series in which athletes share personal tidbits and anecdotes about their colleagues.

It’s pretty obvious why Broncos receiver Eric Decker is a finalist for the 2012 VIZIO Top Value Performer award, given to the player who most exceeds the worth of his paycheck.

With base pay just under $500,000, Decker finished second in the NFL with 13 touchdowns. Not surprisingly, he was quick to give credit to the quarterback who connected with him on those scores, Peyton Manning.

“It’s nice to have No. 18 in town,” Decker told ESPN Playbook. “Since he’s been here, he’s helped me grow so much as a pro as far as preparing, getting better as a football player and knowing the game better.”

To celebrate his achievement, we asked Decker to bestow a few awards of his own to his teammates. Here’s what he said:

Best dresser: “David Bruton. During October, it was Breast Cancer Awareness Month. He actually got a suit in pink to wear for all our away games. He’s always wearing the new jeans, new shoes.”

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