Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Geoff Ogilvy Robert Allenby exchange angry words over Presidents Cup showing

Robert Allenby and Geoff Ogilvy were involved in a heated row after the Australian PGA Championship on Sunday.

According to The Herald Sun newspaper, witnesses claimed that the pair exchanged angry words during the tournament's afterparty at the Hyatt Coolum Resort, with some reports even having Allenby approaching Ogilvy and offering to settle it physically. Ogilvy declined.

The flashpoint came in the wake of a simmering feud started at the previous week's Presidents Cup.

Allenby lost all four of his matches in the 19-15 defeat to the Americans and said he had been hurt by public criticism of his performance. In defense, Allenby made digs at Ogilvy, Retief Goosen and Y.E. Yang -- his playing partners at Royal Melbourne -- for playing shots that "left him in the s**t.

"People look and say how disappointing can you be, because you didn't get a point, but when you're relying on someone else as well, it's sometimes not all just you," Allenby said.

He then claimed that Ogilvy "hit me in the trees three times off the tee and I had to chip out three times" in the Saturday foursomes.

Yang was the first to express disappointment at Allenby's comments, saying he "thought we were good teammates and being in a team environment, there is no one who played bad or good."

But what really appeared to irk Allenby, who went on to finish runner-up in the Australian PGA at Coolum, was a tweet from Ogilvy on Saturday, saying: "Warms the heart to see Robert playing so well this week."

Allenby, 40, took it as blatant sarcasm and it's understood that was the reason he approached his fellow Aussie.

There were reports of a smashed glass at the table where the conversation took place, but witnesses said it was accidental and not a result of a physical clash between the pair.

There was no immediate comment from either golfer but Ogilvy's manager, Paul Galli, was quick to play down the incident.

''Look, it wasn't TV Ringside or anything,'' he told the Melbourne newspaper, The Age. ''I wasn't there, but from what I've been told, it's a storm in a teacup. There were a few words spoken. They will be fine. I've got no doubt they can come together at the (Australian) Masters in a few weeks, have a beer and move on.'

Galli did confirm what had sparked the exchange.

''It goes back to what Robert said. Geoff didn't like being blamed by a teammate,'' he explained. ''But he didn't want to be part of the discussion (after Allenby approached him at the Coolum afterparty) and he doesn't want it to go any further. Let's focus on three great weeks for Australian golf.''

Allenby's manager Tony Bouffler added: "It was just two guys who'd had a few tough weeks letting off some steam and getting some things off their chest.

"It appears from what I've heard things may have been blown out of proportion. They're good mates and they're still good mates."

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Spacecraft casts new light on asteroid's history

A battered asteroid that was intercepted and surveyed by a European spacecraft last year may be the ancient remains of a planet that never formed, scientists say.

Fresh analysis of measurements taken from the European Space Agency's Rosetta probe found evidence that beneath the cracked and cratered exterior of asteroid 21 Lutetia was a molten, metallic core.

The findings, if confirmed, suggest the giant rock is a "planetisimal", a remnant of the early solar system that represents a wholesale jerseys snapshot of planetary development, rather than a fragment of a larger asteroid or a cosmic pile of rubble.

The Rosetta probe swung by the speeding asteroid in July 2010 at a distance of 282 million miles from Earth. At the time, Lutetia was the largest asteroid to have been visited by a spacecraft.

Close-up images of Lutetia revealed a surface scarred with large cracks and impact craters, evidence of the asteroid's long and battered history. The lump of space rock measured 121km long, 101km tall and 75km wide.

Infrared cameras aboard Rosetta found the surface temperature of the rock never exceeded -19C. Further measurements of the asteroid's density surprised scientists, because they suggest that the asteroid's interior has a dense, metallic core.

Benjamin Weiss, a planetary scientist at Massachusetts Institute of Technology who was involved in the study, said a molten core within Lutetia might indicate "hidden diversity" within the broader asteroid belt. "There might be many bodies that have cores and interesting interiors that we never noticed, because they're covered by unmelted surfaces," he said. "The asteroid belt may be more interesting than it seems on the surface."

If Weiss is right, Lutetia is a case of arrested development. The asteroid may have grown large enough to develop and retain a melting core, but then avoided the larger collisions that drive planet formation. It would be the first asteroid known to be partially differentiated, that is having a melted interior overlain by cooler layers. An international team of researchers describe the findings of the Rosetta fly-by in three papers published in the journal Science.

The spacecraft has flown past a number of asteroids since its launch in 2004 en route to the comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko in 2014. On arrival, Rosetta will release a small lander onto the icy comet and spend the next two years orbiting the asteroid as it heads towards the sun.

Monday, April 25, 2011

Derek Jeter is one of the few Yankees who is slumping, but is it too early in the season to worry?

This was about 10 days ago at Yankee Stadium, when it was still a little too early to consider linking Derek Jeter's slow start to his dramatic dropoff at the plate in 2010. The shortstop was in a good mood so I began pestering him, somewhat lightheartedly, for thoughts on the state of his hitting.

He wasn't biting, having already decided to stop talking about his decision to junk his new, no-stride approach. But, finally, he reached for what he considered a fitting analogy.

"You want to know what I think?" he said. "I think (Albert) Pujols is done. He's never going to hit again."

At the time, of course, Pujols, was making headlines by slumping badly, looking more like a pitcher at the plate than the game's most feared hitter. Jeter's sarcasm was obvious, but, forever guarded as he is, he immediately felt compelled to say, "Don't write that. I'm not serious."

"Thanks, Derek," I said. "I couldn't tell."

He laughed and changed the subject, but he'd made his point: In Jeter's mind his return to form was as sure a bet as it was for Pujols.

Since then the Cardinals slugger has responded as expected, knocking the ball out of the park with regularity, again raising the question of how St. Louis can afford to not pay him whatever it takes to re-sign him.

Jeter, however, has done nothing of the kind. Instead the Yankee captain continues to raise an entirely different question. That is, when is it no longer too early to attach significance to his slow start?

Of course, the way the Yankees are going, hitting home runs at a record pace, you also have to ask another question: Does it matter if Jeter isn't quite Jeter anymore?

With five more home runs in a 15-3 win over the Orioles Saturday night, including two from a reborn Russell Martin, the Yankees not only lead the majors with 35 longballs but have hit the most in club history through 17 games.

Jeter, meanwhile, has one extra-base hit, a double, in 68 at-bats. Saturday night he had a single in four at-bats to raise his batting average to .221.

Those numbers would be shrugged off as early and ugly if he hadn't fallen off to .270 last year, sparking so much debate about whether age was catching up with him. Instead they have to be at least somewhat alarming to the Yankee brass, which reluctantly gave Jeter that three-year, $51 million contract in the winter.

Perhaps most worrisome, ground-ball outs are once again a huge issue.

Going into Saturday night's game, according to FanGraphs.com, 73% of Jeter's balls in play were ground balls, by far the highest percentage in the majors. Only Royals' light-hitting shortstop Alcides Escobar, at 69%, is above 65% among all other players.

And that was before Jeter grounded out three more times, to go with a single to right and a walk.

It's significant because, while Jeter has always been a ground-ball hitter, his ground-ball percentage rose dramatically last season. He'd never been above 60% in his career, and then last year, when he seemed to go months without hitting the ball out of the infield, that percentage went to 66.

Essentially that's what prompted Jeter to work with hitting coach Kevin Long on the no-stride approach, both to keep from jamming himself by striding too far and also to give himself more time to get his hands extended, especially on inside pitches.

And while he looked good at times with the new approach in spring training, Jeter felt he was thinking about it too much when the season began, and went back to his old style when he didn't get immediate results.

So now you keep asking if this just really is more evidence that his hand/bat speed has slowed as he approaches his 37th birthday.

"It looks a lot like last year so far," said a scout at Saturday night's game. "He's not getting to the ball on time. I'm not ready to say he won't figure it out and have a good year, but the longer it goes on, the more you have to think age is a big part of it."

Jeter, for his part, is sticking to his decision not to talk about it.

"Nah," he said Saturday, "I'd rather not."

Jeter is not going to hit .221, we all know that. But I was convinced he'd have a bounce-back season because he loves nothing more than proving people wrong about him. Nearly a month into the season, I'm not convinced of anything anymore.

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

B's in for tough test against defending champs

While a berth in the postseason is certainly a feather in their cap, the Boston Bruins know there's a long way to go before they reach their goal.

The Black and Gold clinched a spot in the playoffs on Sunday with a win over the Flyers in Philadelphia and will now look to lock up the Northeast Division.

"It's always a good feeling," center Patrice Bergeron said of qualifying for the postseason. "There's seven games left and it's just one step toward our goal. Once you get in the playoffs, anything can happen. We're happy we clinched, but we haven't clinched the division yet. These are games we need to play well going into the playoffs."


The Bruins know how vital it is for them to play well  over the next few weeks, as bad habits and half-hearted play could carry on into the playoffs and spell doom.

"We want to make sure that we don't coast into the playoffs," Milan Lucic said. We want to make sure we're still being sharp and playing the way we know we can play."

Boston's matchup on Tuesday night will be just about the furthest thing from an automatic two points. The Chicago Blackhawks will visit TD Garden, as last year's Cup winners are fighting tooth and nail to hang on to the eighth spot in the Western Confernece.

"Obviously they're a great team," said Bergeron. "They're the defending champs. They're battling for a playoff spot, so it's going to be a tough game. We'll make sure we're ready and go from there."

While the 'Hawks boast some of the best offensive talents in the league, featuring Patrick Kane, Jonathan Toews and Marian Hossa, the Bruins have a pretty potent trio of their own in Lucic, David Krejci and Nathan Horton.

Krejci has elevated his game tremendously since the All-Star break. The first-line pivot will enter Tuesday's tilt with 21 points in his last 18 games.

"It's been fun to watch," Lucic said of Krejci's second-half surge. "He always seems to find an extra gear. I think he has a lot of fun with this time of year because it's exciting for him. He's definitely a player that we need to step up his game in order for us to have some success and hopefully make a long playoff push here."

One other key element to the Bruins potential playoff success will be continuing their turnaround on the power play. That effort kept rolling on Sunday in Philadelphia, as Boston scored both of their goals that night on the man advantage.

"I think we got the results that we wanted," said Bergeron. "At the same time, I felt that we were moving the puck better in the last eight or nine games or so. Now it finally worked and went in, so it obviously feel good, especially winning a game like that with our power play. It's definitely something we needed going into the playoffs."

Lucic also recognized how critical it will be to have the power play clicking.

"We need it to be something we can count on to get us a big goal in key moments," he said, "and it's been doing that lately."

As a long, arduous season winds down and the playoffs loom, Lucic believes that all the wear and tear one endures during the year is just a small price to pay to have another shot at a long run in the postseason.

"It's what you play for and it's the most exciting time of year," he said. "You almost seem to find that second wind. It is a grind going through an 82-game season, but it's a lot of fun when you put yourself in a position like this."

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Kendrys Morales is set back by a new injury, will open season on the DL

Reporting from Tempe, Ariz. — The return of Angels first baseman Kendrys Morales, already clouded by his slower-than-anticipated recovery from a broken lower left leg, has been pushed back even further.

Morales has soreness in the ball of his left foot, an injury that is not directly related to his surgery to repair the broken leg but has slowed his rehabilitation from it.

Morales returned to Los Angeles on Monday to be examined by Dr. Phil Kwong, a foot and ankle specialist. An MRI test revealed no structural damage in the foot, but there is too much inflammation for Morales to resume his running program.

"He's still working through some flexibility issues with his ankle and foot, and until those are resolved he can't move forward," General Manager Tony Reagins said. "He's day to day right now."

The Angels expected Morales, who broke his leg while jumping on home plate after a game-winning home run last May 29, to be a "full go" for the start of spring training.

He has been a no-go. The switch-hitting slugger, who in 2009 hit .306 with 34 home runs and 108 runs batted in, has not played in an exhibition game this spring and will open the season on the disabled list.

He began running from home to first on March 15, but the pain in his foot, which may have been caused by ill-fitting spikes, prevented him from rounding the bases aggressively.

"Obviously, we'd prefer he was ready, but we understand the significance of the injury," Reagins said. "If we can be conservative and smart on the front end, hopefully it will benefit us in the long run."

The Angels are expected to open the season with Mark Trumbo at first. The rookie has had an excellent spring, entering Tuesday with a .340 average, five homers and 13 RBIs. But he also had 13 strikeouts and no walks in 47 at-bats, and he has only 15 at-bats in the big leagues.

"Spring training is spring training," Reagins said. "You still have to go out there and do it at the major league level, in season, but it's good to see what he's done in spring training."

Trumbo had 36 homers and 122 RBIs at triple-A Salt Lake last season, but having Morales in the middle of the lineup would give the Angels a much better chance of winning the American League West title.

"I'm real confident in saying he'll be back in relatively short order," Reagins said. "I'm not anticipating him being out for months."

Back on track

Dan Haren gave up eight runs in 6 2/3 innings, but the right-hander called Tuesday's 95-pitch outing against a Cubs triple-A team a huge step in the right direction.

"I felt really good; I left a lot of balls up, but my arm speed is finally back," Haren said. "That was the longest dead-arm period I've ever had. I haven't felt good since [a March 7 game in] Mesa.

"But it bounced back today, and I'm glad."

Pineiro update

Joel Pineiro, who left Sunday's triple-A start after two innings because of tightness in his right shoulder blade, will remain in Arizona after the Angels break camp. He will pitch in a minor league game March 30.

With two off days in the first week of the regular season, the Angels won't need a fifth starter until April 10, so they could open the season with Pineiro on the DL and carry an extra reliever or position player.

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Brodeur to make eighth straight start

NEWARK, N.J. -- New Jersey Devils goaltender Martin Brodeur will make his eighth straight start Tuesday when his team hosts the Atlanta Thrashers here at the Prudential Center.

The choice is not too much of a surprise, particularly when you consider the future Hall of Fame goalie is 14-1-1 with a 1.81 goals-against average in his last 16 starts. The Devils, 22-3-2 in their last 27 games, have been playing playoff-type hockey for quite some time now as they continue their remarkable push to qualify for the postseason.

"What I'm enjoying right now is, regardless of how we play, we're staying in games," Brodeur said. "Even though we allow goals, we keep it under control when we're not playing that good. I think that makes it easier for me. I know we're able to shut it down and chip back into the game."

Seventeen of their last 19 games have been decided by one goal, including 12 of the last 14 victories. Also, the team's last four wins have been determined either in overtime or the shootout.

The Devils were allowing 3.17 goals per game when they were 15th in the Eastern Conference at 9-23-2 on Dec. 23. Today, they're allowing just 2.55 and are eight points from the eighth and final playoff spot in the Eastern Conference.

"You play the game the way it's played," Brodeur said. "For years that question has been asked to me because we didn't score that many goals and were always in tight games. I don't look at it like, 'I can't allow more than one or two goals.' I don't see it like that. I just play the game the way it's played. At the end of the game, it ends up to be a one-goal game or a 2-1 game or a 3-2 game."

Brodeur, who missed 13 games because of injury this season, is 19-20-2 with a 2.52 GAA and .902 save percentage. Backup John Hedberg is 13-11-2 with a 2.34 GAA and .913 save percentage.

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Penguins' Bylsma signs three-year extension

The typical NHL coach has the shelf life of a bruised pear.

Those who work for the Penguins often do not last nearly that long.

Dan Bylsma, who Wednesday signed a three-year contract extension that runs through the 2013-14 season, is the franchise's 23rd coach since it entered the NHL in 1967. Only two, Red Kelly and Ed Johnston, spent three consecutive full seasons and part of a fourth on the job.

But, while the position doesn't have a legacy of security for the guy holding it, general manager Ray Shero seems confident Bylsma is capable of defying those 4 1/2 decades of precedent.

"I think we've got the right coach," he said. "Ownership recognizes that. I certainly recognize that.

"The successful organizations have a plan in place, and a belief in the people they have, and they stick to that. ... Dan is the right coach for this hockey team moving forward, in the short term and the long term."

Bylsma replaced Michel Therrien as coach in mid-February 2009. (Therrien, it should be noted, had signed a three-year contract in the summer of 2008 and will remain on the Penguins payroll for a few more months, even though he hasn't been behind their bench in nearly 25 months.) The Penguins won a Stanley Cup about four months after Bylsma took over and are 104-52-19 under him. He already shares the franchise record for playoff series won (5), which speaks not only to his success but to the frequent turnover in his job over the years.

"I've been made aware several times of the longevity of Pittsburgh Penguins coaches," Bylsma said. "I might not be smart enough to have it dawn on me that that should be something I should be concerned about."

Actually, there doesn't seem to have been much reason for him to fret about it. Back when the Penguins were sputtering through the early weeks of this season, Shero let Bylsma know that the job was his.

"The team wasn't doing very well, but I sat down with him and said, 'Listen, you're my coach. I'm going to talk to you about a new contract at some point here,' " Shero said. "I was pretty sure we had a pretty good team back in October and November. I was 100 percent sure we had the right coach."

The contracts of assistant coaches Tony Granato and Todd Reirden will expire after this season, but Shero said he intends to work out new deals with them. The same is true, he added, of Wilkes-Barre coach John Hynes and his assistant, Alain Nasreddine.

"Both staffs have done really good jobs," Shero said. "We want to move forward with all these guys."http://longevity.com/

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Baseball Is Said to End Large Loans to Mets

The Mets, in need of cash to pay off loans and meet other financial obligations, can no longer look to Major League Baseball for substantial monetary assistance, according to two people briefed on the team’s finances.

The league, having already extended the Mets a $25 million loan in November to help the team meet operating costs, will not make another major loan to the club, according to the two people. The people would not be identified because they were not authorized to speak publicly on the matter.

Baseball’s decision to restrict the Mets’ access to further emergency funds probably leaves the team’s beleaguered owners, Fred Wilpon and Saul Katz, without their best remaining source of cash as they struggle to maintain control of the team in the face of a $1 billion lawsuit brought by the trustee for victims of the Bernard L. Madoff fraud.

Mets officials did not respond to two requests for comment.

The two people briefed on the situation said baseball could conceivably re-evaluate its position in the coming months if it thought it needed to protect its larger interests, like trying to avoid a fire sale of one of its elite clubs. In addition, with opening day a month away, baseball could make a modest short-term loan to help the Mets avoid defaulting on certain payments, like player salaries. But it would not be enough to rescue the Mets’ owners in any long-term sense, the people suggested.

“It’s tapped out,” one of the people briefed on the situation said, referring to the availability of more money.

After months spent denying they faced any financial difficulties, the Mets, with significant debt on their team and cable television operation, announced in January that they were seeking to sell 25 percent of the team, valued by Forbes magazine last year at $858 million. They recently acknowledged they would consider selling a larger stake but maintained they would never sell a controlling interest.

The Mets say the sale offering is because of the “uncertainties” surrounding the lawsuit filed by the Madoff trustee, Irving H. Picard. The lawsuit, filed in December, accuses the owners of having turned a blind eye to the possibility Madoff was operating a fraud, all while they invested ever more of their money and reaped ever more of his “fictitious” profits.

The judge overseeing the suit has chosen Mario M. Cuomo, the former New York governor, to try to serve as a mediator in settlement talks.

But the Mets appear to be under significant financial duress independent of the lawsuit. The $25 million loan, which was made after the Mets had already used up an M.L.B.-sponsored line of credit worth tens of millions of dollars, was extended to the Mets before the lawsuit was filed. Some in the industry see the loan as an indication that because of their heavy indebtedness, they are no longer able to borrow substantially from traditional commercial lending institutions.

With pressure mounting, and the financial pipeline from M.L.B. shut off in any meaningful way, the Mets’ ability to keep creditors at bay could hasten the sale of a portion of the team as they seek cash. The Mets, of course, would love to get the best price for the piece of the club, but the process takes time as potential buyers must be vetted first by the club’s representative in the sale, Steve Greenberg, and then Major League Baseball.

Baseball recently intervened to try to shore up another franchise, the Texas Rangers. In June 2009, soon after Texas’ holding company defaulted on $525 million in loans, Major League Baseball provided the club with a $15 million line of credit. Then, in November 2009, baseball again used its $1.2 billion credit facility to let the Rangers borrow up to $10 million more.

The Rangers had apparently used $18.5 million of the $25 million by the time they filed for bankruptcy protection last May. Several days after the filing, baseball agreed to provide the team with another $21 million loan. When the loans became public, the owners of several other teams complained that the loans gave the Rangers a competitive advantage, particularly when the team traded for the ace pitcher Cliff Lee.

In subsequent court testimony, Kellie Fischer, the Rangers’ chief financial officer, said that the team’s lending relationship with baseball “works for us.”

Fischer testified: “We’ve never had any issues with borrowing money as far as getting funded timely and providing information back and forth. M.L.B. has been very easy for us to work with.”

But the loans and working relationship notwithstanding, the Rangers’ owner, Tom Hicks, was still forced to sell. The team was sold for $593 million last August, and the loans were repaid.

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Astros counting on camaraderie to pave the way for 2011 success

http://plantenberg.insanejournal.com/

KISSIMMEE, Fla. — If the question is which is the more significant factor in winning, talent would usually take the vote over chemistry.
Yet logic suggests a team that cheap jerseys locks arms and sings folk songs before each game should fare better in the long run than one that brawls in the clubhouse every few days.

Most teams fall between those extremes, but the closer a team is to happy and hugging, the less likely it is to be a last-place loser. Every player isn't going to be happy, but the more happy players you have, the merrier a clubhouse will be.
Over the course of last season, the Astros' clubhouse went from dark and grumpy to bright and excited. Dark and grumpy was in last place the first 2 1/2 months. Bright and excited finished 33-27, the fourth-best record in the National League over the final two months of the season.
While it would be a cheap shot at two of the franchise's all-time greats to argue that Roy Oswalt and Lance Berkman were the Dark and Grumpy of the clubhouse, it was clear that by midseason the two veterans were not overly excited about coming to work with a struggling team in need of rebuilding.
http://cheapernfljerseys.blogcu.com/
They were professional about it, but on some level their lack of enthusiasm had to wear on their young teammates. After they were traded, the young Astros, with an average age of 27, began to play better. They found a way to come together.
No 'off' in offseason
Astros manager Brad Mills says it is important that his players are comfortable with and trust one another on the field. He saw that in his squad late last season and sees it thus far in spring training.
"A guy drops a ball and is ready to pick it up, but somebody else has got his back, that type of thing," Mills said. "A guy strikes out with guys in scoring position, and (a teammate) says, 'Hey, man, I'll pick you up,' as he's walking back, things of that nature.
"When guys start feeling like they are all pulling in the same direction, that character of the ballclub starts coming out. The personality of the ballclub starts forming."
No one yet knows what the dominant personality of this year's Astros will be, but they are off to a solid start in character-building. And it all started well before spring training began.
Winter workouts at Minute Maid Park were unlike any the team has seen in years.
MLB teams shut down for the offseason, leaving players on their own for the most part, except for those sent to play winter ball.
Hunter Pence says in previous winters the only players in Houston working out at the Astros' facility were young ones trying to make an impression. A couple of years ago, he and Wandy Rodriguez were the only two Astros on the major league roster who showed up regularly.
This winter, a couple dozen Astros, including players who don't make their offseason home in Houston, were on hand to prepare for the season.
"Spending that time together builds team chemistry," Pence said. "We all get better because we push each other. We challenge each other. We all want to get better together. That is important.
"This team has a lot of chemistry. We know that we're capable of doing good things, but we have to build off the end of last season and the work this winter. We have to continue to improve."
In the end, chemistry gets you only so far.
"I was part of clubs that had guys who hated each other and guys that loved each other, and it didn't matter as long as you're on the same page," said former Astros pitcher Doug Brocail, who is now a special assistant to general manager Ed Wade. "A good clubhouse doesn't necessarily mean that you all get along. It does make things easier when everybody gets along, but when everybody gets along at the end of the day, are you winning?"
Talent still plays big role
Togetherness and good chemistry helps produce wins. Winning breeds happiness.
"This game has to be played with an edge when you're on the field, but when we're in this clubhouse, you have to have fun with each other and take your mind off the game a little bit," new Astros infielder Bill Hall said. "Obviously, wins are about talent - you've got to have talent and play the game the right way to get wins - but a clubhouse with good camaraderie, with guys who hang out with each other and get along, has a better chance to win than one in which people don't get along."
Hall, who was on a 67-win Brewers team in his first full season in the majors and there when Milwaukee made the playoffs in 2008, said how veterans handle younger players sets the tone for a clubhouse. He believes young players tend to struggle when they feel like they are "playing on thin ice and walking on eggshells."
"Pitching and defense wins games, but it is important to be excited about being here and being a good teammate," Pence said. "You need to have each other's back and know you're going to go out there and fight for each other.
"We had that at the end of last season, and I think we'll have that this year."