Las Vegas Review-Journal

Refusing to indulge in star voting helps keep Sunday nights free

- RON KANTOWSKI COMMENTARY

Iwas lying low in the press row shadows at the Mountain West Conference men’s basketball championsh­ip game in March, sort of paying attention to San Diego State vs. New Mexico, when a media elf dropped an all-tournament ballot onto my laptop.

I did not fill it out.

I had spent most of the week at the Pac-12 tournament at T-mobile Arena. It didn’t seem right that I should vote for the MWC all-tourney team.

I only bring this up because Terrell Owens dissed the Pro Football Hall of Fame by skipping the official induction ceremony to instead make a Bizarro World acceptance speech at his alma mater of Ut-chattanoog­a. It got out that those responsibl­e for handing out the yellow blazers in Canton, Ohio, were considerin­g making attendance at the Canton, Ohio, ceremony mandatory.

This is what it seems the Southern Nevada Sports Hall of Fame decided before it enshrined boxer Floyd Mayweather into its hallowed second-floor alcove at Findlay Toyota where the shrine now exists in semi-permanency. The committee wanted to make sure Floyd would attend the shindig and not just send Leonard Ellerbe and his other peeps to drink up all the free champagne.

This dovetailed into a conversati­on about the Pro Football Hall of Fame election process. A 48-person committee votes on who receives a yellow jacket. All on the panel are with the media.

KANTOWSKI

run an up-tempo eight plays. Rookie Marcell Ateman, Griff Whalen, rookie Saeed Blacknall were the wide receivers. A couple penalties stalled the drive.

Finally, Bryant accompanie­d Cook on the field soon thereafter.

Those sitting rose for what followed. A quiet training camp for the Raiders wide receiver gained volume during the second of two joint practices against the Detroit Lions. Bryant ran a “go” route and caught a long touchdown from Cook on his first 11-on-11 snap. On his next rep, he demonstrat­ed concentrat­ion during a 50-yard touchdown versus the Lions’ top defensive back.

Bryant has seen fewer 11-on-11 snaps than many other receivers over the course of camp.

Wednesday was but one day. The Raiders look for more of the same.

“Today was probably his best day,” wide receivers coach Edgar Bennett said. “Obviously, he got more reps today because of his overall preparatio­n. Again, he’s putting the time in and the work in, and then he’ll benefit like he’s doing right now. That’s the starting point. It always starts with the preparatio­n. … He just needs now to be consistent and keep stacking success.

“He had a good day today. Now we need to stack tomorrow and keep building on it, keep building on it.”

Bryant sprinted past cornerback Teez Tabor for the first score. On the second, first-team All-pro cornerback Darius Slay was in press man coverage, as Bryant ran a shallow crossing route. Slay reached out and deflected Cook’s pass, but the ball flared off Bryant, who controlled it and outran the secondary.

On Saturday, coach Jon Gruden expressed disappoint­ment with Bryant’s progress in grasping the offense.

Specifical­ly, the Raiders want their wide receivers to be versatile, able to play multiple positions. That requires a strong grasp of the scheme. Bennett acknowledg­ed Wednesday there have been conversati­ons with Bryant in regard to his preparatio­n.

“We have,” Bennett said, “and we have these conversati­ons not just with him but with all of our players. … What is it going to take, as far as the time they have on their own? Obviously, with the CBA, you’re going to have to study. Guys understand that. They’re putting the work in. We’ve just to continue to stack those successful days like we did today.

“It all starts with the preparatio­n off the field, in the classroom, the attention to detail. And then when we get an opportunit­y to step onto the field, make sure we execute.”

Gruden was compliment­ary toward Bryant after practice.

He helped steer the Raiders’ acquisitio­n of him on April 26. In exchange, they sent a third-round pick to the Pittsburgh Steelers.

“Martavis is not a good talent. He’s a great talent, and we’re going to continue to work him into our offense,” Gruden said. “Today showed, I think, what he’s capable of doing.”

Contact reporter Michael Gehlken at mgehlken@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @Gehlkennfl on Twitter.

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