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Or, HBO predicts, one heck of a reality series.
The cable network is bringing its “Hard Knocks” franchise back to Cowboys training camp this summer, and HBO Sports president Ross Greenburg already is predicting best-ever ratings for his five-show series. Even with the Olympics as competition, he’s confident his weekly program will be overflowing with juicy story lines – with his cameras getting exclusive behind-the-scenes access.
“It’s fair to say this thing should go through the roof,” Greenburg said Wednesday.
Greenburg opened a news conference by joking about going to Cabo San Lucas or wherever else is necessary to tell the full story. It was an obvious reference to the getaway trip Romo and Simpson made during the bye a week before Dallas’playoff game in January, a vacation that didn’t sit well with fans, especially after the Cowboys were upset by the New York Giants.
But Greenburg later said “this is not the E! television network,” and insisted the obvious headliners will only get air time if they earn it.
“I swear to you it’s not going to be the Pacman Jones or the T.O. or the Tony Romo story. It just won’t,” Greenburg said. “They will be part of a team and part of the story, but they won’t be the center of it all. I just know that for a fact. The drama develops on its own. Unless the drama surrounds Tony and T.O. and others, it’s just not going to happen. ...
“There’s nothing like following that rookie trying to make the team. They’re still wearing that star and they’re trying to become a teammate of T.O. and Tony Romo, which is probably their dream. That’s great television also.”
Expect Terrell Owens to earn his share of time.
“If the cameras are going to be there, I’ve got to be ready,” Owens said Wednesday during an interview to promote his appearance next week on MyNetworkTV’s “Under One Roof.”
“It’s going to be an experience initially, but once you get into practice and two-a-days, guys are going to be too tired to focus on what’s being taped. It’s not really any different than playing in front of people in the stadium, game being televised. It’s no different than our practices being taped. It’s just more up close and personal. You get all the good, bad and ugly, the sweat, bumps, bruises and tears. Other than that, it’ll be good.”
Training camp will be held in Oxnard, Calif., with preseason games in San Diego and Denver before returning to team headquarters.
The last time the Cowboys were in Oxnard, Owens missed workouts with a hamstring injury that some considered a ploy to annoy coach Bill Parcells. Owens spent so much time riding a stationary bicycle that one day he came out dressed for the Tour de France. Greenburg would love for something like that to happen again.
“We’ll be on the inside telling the story out,” he said. “We’re giving the part the media can’t see.”
Vick ordered to pay bank $2.4 Million
RICHMOND, Va. – A federal judge on Thursday ordered imprisoned quarterback Michael Vick to repay more than $2.4 million to a Canadian bank for defaulting on a loan.
The Royal Bank of Canada sued Vick in September, arguing his guilty plea to a federal dogfighting charge –and the resulting impact on his career – prevented him from repaying the loan.
According to the suit filed in U.S. District Court in Newport News, the loan’s terms specify that any employment change negatively impacting Vick's income constitutes a default on the loan.
Vick is serving a 23-month prison sentence at the U.S. Penitentiary in Leavenworth, Kan., after pleading guilty last year to bankrolling a dogfighting ring. He was subsequently suspended indefinitely without pay and lost all his major sponsors, including Nike. He also faces state charges related to dogfighting.
"The criminal charges, and resulting impact on the Defendant's employment ... materially affect his ability to repay the Term Note," the bank said in the lawsuit.
The order from U.S. Magistrate F. Bradford Stillman requires Vick to pay $2.4 million, plus $499 in interest per day, starting Sept. 19, 2007, and the bank's attorneys' fees and costs of $11,950 plus interest.
compiled from advocate wire reports