« Hey, Big Ten, Fuuuck Youuuu (Part II) | Home | Reliving Drew Nicholas on Madness Day »
DMV: Matt Jones Is Worth the ‘Trouble’
By Jamie Mottram | March 19, 2009
DMV is a daily roundup of District-Maryland-Virginia (mostly) sporting links.
La Canfora doesn’t think the Skins should pursue Matt Jones, but, considering he’s cheap, tall and talented, I do (as does MJD). [Skins Insider]
Plus, Devin Thomas and Malcolm Kelly are workout no-shows. [Redskins 360]
Chris Cooley on the Cutler-to-Skins rumors. [Cooley]
A flow chart of the Skins’ free agency strategy. [Hogs Haven]
Zorn Star just seems like a good dude. [The Redskins Blog]
Gary says half the NCAA auto-bids couldn’t win a game in the ACC. [Bog]
Super-recruit Lance Stephenson has made up his mind between Maryland and Kansas (sorry, St. John’s), and will announce April 1. [The Quad]
Georgetown falls short at Baylor in the NIT. [Y! Sports]
Va. Tech beats Duquesne in double-OT. [Y! Sports]
Richmond beats St. John’s in the CBI. [Y! Sports]
And JMU beats Mount St. Mary’s in the CollegeInsider.com! [Y! Sports]
Nats cut bait with promising but injury-riddled starter Shawn Hill, sign quality reliever Joe Boemeil. [Nats Journal]
As expected, John Lannan is the Nats Opening Day starter. [Nats Journal]
The fantasy forecast for Nats’ rookie SP Jordan Zimmermann. [Roto Arcade]
Cataloging new Nat Julian Tavarez’ various eccentricities. [D.C. Sports Bog]
Appreciating unsung Caps forward Brooks Laich. [WaPo]
Today: Radford-UNC (2:50), Maryland-Cal (2:55), American-’Nova (7:20), Caps at Lightning (7:30), Morgan State-Oklahoma (9:40), VCU-UCLA (9:50)
Topics: DMV, Redskins | 4 Comments »



March 19th, 2009 at 8:27 AM
A cocaine addict playing in cocaine city?
Yes. A thousand times yes.
March 19th, 2009 at 9:01 AM
Is D.C. really cocaine city? Or did you just say that out of respect for Marion and Dexter?
March 19th, 2009 at 10:33 AM
Can we get the Free Agency Flow Chart added to the back of the Offseason Champs shirt?
March 19th, 2009 at 10:46 AM
I hear “Cocaine City” came in second behind “Taxation without Representation” for license plate slogans.