NFL Pro Bowl In Game....

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2014 Pro Bowl features new format for NFL all-star game
National Football League
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The 2014 Pro Bowl, presented by McDonald's, will feature a new format for the NFL All-Star Game based on major changes proposed by NFLPA President Domonique Foxworth designed to make it the ultimate fan-friendly celebration of the game, the NFL and NFL Players Association announced Wednesday.


Gone is the familiar AFC vs. NFC match-up that has existed since 1971. Instead, players will be selected without regard to conference in voting by fans, coaches and players. For example, the top six quarterbacks following voting will earn distinction as All-Stars, regardless of how many are from AFC or NFC teams.


Players will be assigned to teams through the Pro Bowl Draft, in which two leading vote getters will join two NFL.com fantasy football champions -- who will attend the Pro Bowl -- to draft players. One of these champions will earn their spot as part of Lenovo's Fantasy Coach of the Year program, which provides NFL.com fans a chance to be rewarded for their fantasy football skills. The other champion can compete for a Pro Bowl role by playing at NFL.com/fantasy.


The fantasy football champions will have Hall of Fame help. Pro Football Hall of Famers Jerry Rice and Deion Sanders will serve as alumni team captains, assisting the Pro Bowl team captains and fantasy football champions in the draft process.


"As players, we wanted to keep the Pro Bowl to honor excellence in individual performance and connect with the fans in a different environment," Foxworth said. "To do that, I worked with a group of players to map out new ideas."


The Pro Bowl player draft will air on Wednesday, January 22 on NFL Network. Players will practice with their teams on Thursday, Friday and Saturday. The coaching staffs will be from the losing teams in the AFC and NFC Divisional playoffs with the best regular-season record. The 2014 Pro Bowl takes place on Sunday, January 26 at Aloha Stadium in Honolulu, Hawaii, and will be televised by NBC.


"We were very receptive to the ideas that Domonique and the players put forth," said NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell. "From there, our office worked closely with him in developing the concept. The players made it clear that they wanted to continue the Pro Bowl and were committed to making it better than ever. We think these changes will enhance the game for both fans and players."


In addition to these changes, several other aspects of the Pro Bowl will be new in 2014:


» Game within the Game -- A two-minute warning will be added to the first and third quarters and the ball will change hands after each quarter. This will increase the opportunities for quarterbacks to direct "two-minute drills," which are especially exciting for fans.


» No Kickoffs -- The coin toss will determine which team is awarded possession first. The ball will be placed on the 25-yard line at the start of each quarter and after scoring plays.


» Rosters -- The rosters will continue to consist of 43 players per squad. The kick return specialist will be replaced by an additional defensive back.


» Cover Two and Press Coverage -- The defense will be permitted to play "cover two" and "press" coverage. In previous years, only "man" coverage was permitted, except for goal line situations.


» Stopping of the Game Clock -- Beginning at the two-minute mark of every quarter, if the offense does not gain at least one yard, the clock will stop as if the play were an incomplete pass. This rule will make the team with the ball attempt to gain yardage toward the end of each quarter.


» Game Timing -- The game clock will start after an incomplete pass on the signal of the referee, except inside the last two minutes of the first half and the last five minutes of the second half.


» Play Clock -- A 35-second/25-second play clock will be adopted instead of the typical 40-second/25-second clock.


» Sacks -- The game clock will not stop on quarterback sacks outside of the final two minutes of the game. Currently, the game clock stops in these situations outside of two- minutes of the second and fourth quarters.
 
Is this game still an auto over play with the rule changes? Past couple years I bet the over and have hoped they wouldn't take the game away... It should still be an over play I think
 
No prob gyno.

This is a game where the players don't give a shit on defense and are there enjoying the weather and Hawaii lifestyle after a long and arduous season. I don't really know what all these rule changes mean though and how they'll affect the play... If you're not allowed to pressure and blitz the QBs in this league will find ways to move the chains. I'm just trying to guess where this will open. Somewhere around 75-80?
 
The Pro Bowl under was the easiest bet of the week when it opened up last year. It got bet up to 80 if I remember correctly.
 
2013: O/U 79.5... result 62-35
2012: O/U 75..... result 59-41
2011: O/U 66.5... result 55-41
2010: O/U 57..... result 41-34
2009: O/U 65.5... result 30-21
2008: O/U 62.5... result 42-30
2007: O/U 61..... result 31-28
 
I lost that 2009 bet. I remember that....my largest on the PB ever too haha

Game is dumb on so many levels, yet I still watch
 
I lost that 2009 bet. I remember that....my largest on the PB ever too haha

Game is dumb on so many levels, yet I still watch

You still watch that thing, twink? I haven't watched the Pro Bowl since I was like 8 years old.
 
Pro Bowl typically an auto bet on the over... I wonder if the new format this year will change things up. Will they actually try to play defense now?
 
Draft is tonight on NFL network. Honestly this might be the most interesting thing ever aired on NFL Network lol
 
Well, Day 2 of the Pro Bowl Draft is tonight. Day 1 was already completed last night...

"Tuesday was the first day of the NFL's Pro Bowl Draft, held in Kapolei, Hawaii. Tuesday's draft focused on defensive tackles, the offensive line and special teams. Here's the full rundown of who went where. For even more Pro Bowl information, click here.

With 60 players still left to be selected, the second day will include wide receivers, running backs and quarterbacks. The second half of the draft will air Wednesday at 8 p.m. ET on NFL Network.

Team Sanders:

Color: Yellow
Captains: J.J. Watt and Jamaal Charles
Coach: Chuck Pagano

Team Rice:

Color: Orange
Captains: Drew Brees and Robert Quinn
Coach: Ron Rivera

Defensive tackles

Sanders: Ndamukong Suh, Gerald McCoy and Dontari Poe
Rice: Jason Hatcher, Marcell Dareus and Kyle Williams (assigned)

Guards

Sanders: Marshal Yanda, Logan Mankins and Kyle Long (assigned)
Rice: Jahri Evans, Ben Grubbs and Evan Mathis

Centers

Sanders: Mike Pouncey and Alex Mack
Rice: Ryan Kalil and Nick Mangold (assigned)

Fullbacks

Sanders: Marcel Reece (assigned)
Rice: Mike Tolbert

Special teams

Sanders: Matthew Slater
Rice: Justin Bethel (assigned)

Punters

Sanders: Brandon Fields (assigned)
Rice: Johnny Hekker

Long snappers

Sanders: J.J. Jansen
Rice: Matt Overton"
 
OAHU, Hawaii -- Cam Newton said he thinks he'll have a little edge come Sunday at Aloha Stadium. It's not like Ron Rivera will rush the passer, right?
Welcome to the new Pro Bowl, with no conference affiliations, two teams drafted fantasy style by Hall of Famers Deion Sanders and Jerry Rice -- and a whole lot of extra intrigue.
Newton, the Panthers' quarterback, was drafted by Team Sanders; Rivera, the Panthers' head coach, is directing Team Rice. And so, after the first day of Pro Bowl practice at Hickam Air Force base on Thursday, the politicking started.
Alex Smith (Team Rice) said he hopes fellow Chief Tamba Hali (Team Sanders) won't hit him hard. Bengals linebacker Vontaze Burfict (Team Rice) already promised he won't hit his real-life teammate A.J. Green (Team Sanders): "If A.J. catches one over the middle, I'll let him go."
And Chargers safety Eric Weddle (Team Sanders) said no, he won't blitz Chargers quarterback Philip Rivers (Team Rice), "but I will pick him off. Happily."
The first-ever Pro Bowl Draft, which started Tuesday and finished with a fancy green room and oceanside TV set Wednesday, "brings another element," Eagles running back LeSean McCoy said. Smith said he's pumped to play alongside a bunch of guys he rarely sees, and Falcons legend Tony Gonzalez, who's been to 14 Pro Bowls, said all this talk of the game's demise is greatly exaggerated.
"I hope they never ever switch it off this island or stop playing it," Gonzalez said. "This doesn't ever stop being fun."
Thursday's practice certainly was. Sanders was an especially vocal team captain, barking suggestions that his squad's coach, the Colts' Chuck Pagano, good-naturedly took. Players wore shorts and a variety of color-coordinated hats. And one point, as Steelers wide receiver Antonio Brown lined up next to the Eagles' DeSean Jackson and opposite Team Sanders teammates/cornerbacks Darrelle Revis and Patrick Peterson, there was enough laughing to break up the whole play.
(For the record, Peterson, the Cardinals star, said if he's matched up against Arizona teammate (and Team Rice wide receiver) Larry Fitzgerald, "I will definitely tackle him. I'm not going to take his knee out, but I have to tackle him.")
Light as these days are, Terrell Suggs warned against believing there isn't a level of competitiveness, too. Guys have pride, he said, and when among the best, "you still want to be the best."
The Browns' Joe Haden said he was burned he wasn't the first cornerback drafted, while Peterson, who was the first corner taken, said he did think it mattered that the captain who was a cornerback took him.
"I knew 'Prime' was going to come and get me," he said.
Chiefs running back Jamaal Charles, a player captain for Team Sanders, said he definitely lobbied some: "I fought for my offensive tackle, Branden Albert" -- and that he definitely got some heat from Chiefs linebacker Justin Houston (Team Rice) for not fighting enough for him.


"You can't get mad at me. I'm just a captain. I'm a scouting director, not the actual GM," Charles said, as a little boy dressed in a Bills jersey told him he was his favorite player. Charles thanked the little boy and then said, "Justin's just mad because we have the better team."
Brown wouldn't say which of his quarterbacks -- Newton, Nick Foles or Andrew Luck -- threw the best ball, but he did say he was watching how the other receivers on his team went about their drills. "This is a chance," he said, "to pick up things from the best."
In the end, one of the all-time bests, Gonzalez, said if his career couldn't end at the Super Bowl, this game is the next best option.
"Look around. We're in Hawaii," he said. "How cool is this?"
 
team mates are playing against each other and will basically let them score because they dont want there to be injuries
 
So true....dont think Derrick Johnson is going to go low on Jamaal. Small play OVER 89/Seahawks +7.5.
 
Domonique Foxworth isn't in Honolulu, but he's monitoring Pro Bowl festivities closely from home, hoping the all-star game he played a large role in saving gets the jolt of life it needs.
Foxworth, the NFL Players Association's outgoing president, first pitched some of the key changes being implemented this week during the 2012 offseason after commissioner Roger Goodell threatened to cancel the game.
That includes the player draft by two Pro Football Hall of Fame captains (Deion Sanders and Jerry Rice this year), two-minute drills to end each quarter and the legalization of zone coverage.
PRO BOWL: How to really fix it
"Roger was very serious about potentially canceling the Pro Bowl because apparently it's very expensive and isn't of a ton of value to them," Foxworth told USA TODAY Sports this week.
"To be honest with you, I was completely comfortable with eliminating it until I talked to the players, and they said they loved it and they want to be there."
Not all players feel that way. The litany of "injury" scratches has been an issue for years, along with the quality of play and flagging fan support. But others consider the trip a reward and validation they've ascended among the NFL's elite.
VIDEO: Pro Bowl preview
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For Foxworth – who had a seven-year NFL career as a cornerback but never made the Pro Bowl – the greatest fear is the "unconferenced" reboot could lead to a player injuring his own NFL teammate with a hit. Players participating have voiced the same.
"That's the only legitimate concern, and I completely understand it," Foxworth said. "I was faced with the possibility of canceling the game or trying to make it interesting. If some of these conflicts that we create make it so we can't go forward, then we'll throw the game out."
It won't be Foxworth's call. His term as NFLPA president ends in March. He's in business school at Harvard, recently completed a 10-day project for Kate Spade in Brazil and has been rumored as a candidate for executive director of the National Basketball Players Association.
If the changes to a seemingly unsalvageable event work out, the successful collaborative effort with the NFL would be a positive line on Foxworth's resume, given the labor strife that so often serves as a backdrop across pro sports.
"Hopefully," Foxworth said, "this particular relationship is like a catalyst to show that we can work together and not everything we do is like we're fighting against each other."
Kickoff – or whatever it's called, since kickoffs were eliminated, too – is set for 7:30 p.m. Eastern on Sunday.
 
The rosters for the first Pro Bowl to not feature teams representing the AFC and NFC are now officially in place.
The two teams were drafted by Hall of Fame wide receiver Jerry Rice and Hall of Fame cornerback Deion Sanders on Wednesday night.
The rosters for the two teams are as follows:
Team Rice:
QB: Drew Brees (NO), Philip Rivers (SD), Alex Smith (KC)
RB: LeSean McCoy (PHI), Matt Forte (CHI), DeMarco Murray (DAL)
FB: Mike Tolbert (CAR)
WR: Brandon Marshall (CHI), Josh Gordon (CLE), Alshon Jeffery (CHI), Larry Fitzgerald (ARI)
TE: Jimmy Graham (NO), Tony Gonzalez (ATL)
OL: Joe Thomas (CLE), Tyron Smith (DAL), Jordan Gross (CAR), Jahri Evans (NO), Ben Grubbs (NO), Evan Mathis (PHI), Ryan Kalil (CAR), Nick Mangold (NYJ)
DL: Robert Quinn (STL), Cameron Jordan (NO), Cameron Wake (MIA), Kyle Williams (BUF), Jason Hatcher (DAL), Marcell Dareus (BUF)
LB: Robert Mathis (IND), Justin Houston (KC), John Abraham (ARI), Vontaze Burfict (CIN), Derrick Johnson (KC)
CB: Alterraun Verner (TEN), Joe Haden (CLE), Brandon Flowers (KC), Antonio Cromartie (NYJ)
S: Jairus Byrd (BUF), Antrel Rolle (NYG), Eric Reid (SF)
K/P: Stephen Gostkowski (NE), Johnny Hekker (STL)
PR/ST/LS: Dexter McCluster (KC), Justin Bethel (ARI), Matt Overton (IND)
Team Sanders:
QB: Cam Newton (CAR), Andrew Luck (IND), Nick Foles (PHI)
RB: Jamaal Charles (KC), Alfred Morris (WSH), Eddie Lacy (GB)
FB: Marcel Reece (OAK)
WR: A.J. Green (CIN), Dez Bryant (DAL), Antonio Brown (PIT), DeSean Jackson (PHI)
TE: Jordan Cameron (CLE), Jason Witten (DAL)
OL: Branden Albert (KC), Trent Williams (WSH), Duane Brown (HOU), Logan Mankins (NE), Marshal Yanda (BAL), Kyle Long (CHI), Mike Pouncey (MIA), Alex Mack (CLE)
DL: J.J. Watt (HOU), Mario Williams (BUF), Greg Hardy (CAR), Dontari Poe (KC), Ndamukong Suh (DET), Gerald McCoy (TB)
LB: Tamba Hali (KC), Terrell Suggs (BAL), Brian Orakpo (WSH), Luke Kuechly (CAR), Paul Posluszny (JAX)
CB: Patrick Peterson (ARI), Darrelle Revis (TB), Brent Grimes (MIA), Tim Jennings (CHI)
S: Eric Berry (KC), Eric Weddle (SD), T.J. Ward (CLE)
K/P: Justin Tucker (BAL), Brandon Fields (MIA)
PR/ST/LS: Cordarrelle Patterson (MIN), Matthew Slater (NE), J.J. Jansen (CAR)
 
Yup. Live here. Hard to tell with hawaii weather. It could rain for 10 mins and clear up. This one looks like it'll last at awhile. Got 2 and a half hours till kick off.

Here's the typical daily weather report "sunny with a chance of showers". Weatherman is always right....
 
Game is dumb on so many levels, yet I still watch

thank you. Now we have Rice and Sanders doing a draft? As if that's going to add excitement? Who cares? How does that improve the game which means nothing?

Ive always taken this game as 3 hours of talking football. I'm always hoping the booth can bring us something of interest going into the Super Bowl game or even the upcoming draft.
 
Yup. Live here. Hard to tell with hawaii weather. It could rain for 10 mins and clear up. This one looks like it'll last at awhile. Got 2 and a half hours till kick off.

Here's the typical daily weather report "sunny with a chance of showers". Weatherman is always right....

Cool, I envy you... Vacationed once in Hawaii for 2 weeks. Didn't wanna leave.

Thanks for the update... I just don't think this thing stays under. Even more so now with the new rules. Only thing I wonder is what difference allowing "cover 2" and "press" coverage will make, if any.
 
Cool, I envy you... Vacationed once in Hawaii for 2 weeks. Didn't wanna leave.

Thanks for the update... I just don't think this thing stays under. Even more so now with the NEW RULES. Only thing I wonder is what difference allowing "cover 2" and "press" coverage will make, if any.

Hopefully the 2 minute drill at the end of each quarter equals to points, as I already bet the over earlier in the week.

Weather is at a very light drizzle now. Still overcast. Bout to take my 3 year old to the movies so I can't update the weather before kickoff.
 
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