I've been tailgating at New England Patriots games from 1987 to present day. What a difference a
couple of decades make! These tales from the tailgate include everything from the soul-sucking feeling
of a 1-15 season to the unexpected thrills of Super Bowl titles. I often hear people say that Pats fans
are spoiled and arrogant. Not all of us. Some, like me, still can't believe Vinatieri's kick was good.
Friday, December 30, 2011
Game films
Tom Brady is banged up again. Shoulder this time. When you watch the hits he takes week after week it's amazing he hasn't missed more time. It's also amazing some question his toughness. I watched a montage of Brady getting knocked around and it reminded me of the opening scene of one of -- if not the greatest -- football movies of all time. "North Dallas Forty" from 1979. The '70s were great for football in the movies.
One of the greatest football films starts off with one of the greatest opening scenes of any genre. Nick Nolte, veteran wide receiver, struggles to get out of bed the morning after a game. With each step he takes he is reminded of every big hit he took the night before. No dialogue needed.
But the movie has lots of great dialogue. My favorite line is when the coach is telling his players that the key to winning is consistency. Game in and game out. He tells them that a computer has spit out info on each of them that they need to follow religiously to improve consistency, adding "No one of you is as good as that computer."
That's a scene -- and a line -- that speaks to a lot more than the football world these days.
Tuesday, December 27, 2011
Reading Material - Jets' Edition
MT. RYAN: Have another doughnut. |
There was a lot of good reading after this holiday weekend of football. Drew Brees broke the record for passing yards in a season. The Lions clinched a playoff spot for the first time in decades. The Giants and Cowboys set themselves up for a winner-take-all NFC East battle next Sunday. God let Tim Tebow lose on Christmas Eve. Lots of great stories.
But none more entertaining than all the stories about the New York Jets after their loss to the Giants. Gotham is all a twitter about their men in green. For good reason. The Jets are plummeting. Their coach Rex Ryan has become Nero. The team that he guaranteed would be playing in their third straight Super Bowl still hasn't made it there yet. And unless the seas part perfectly for them next weekend they won't even be making the playoffs this time around.
The whole Rex Ryan shtick is wearing thin. He can talk a good game. But it's becoming less clear if he can coach a good game.
- Mark Sanchez passed 59 times in a game that was close most of the way. The Foot Doctor is not getting a lot of love for that.
- Ryan spent the week before the game challenging the Giants. A pretty good football team. A team that one might not want to give extra motivation too. Ryan just can't help himself.
- The Sanchize -- a.k.a. quarterback Mark Sanchez -- is suddenly not looking like he has a long Pro Bowl career ahead of him in the Meadowlands. I've been a Sanchez fan -- four road playoff wins in his first two seasons will do that -- but his star is definitely starting to dim. Next year will be a key one for him -- and his coach.
Of course it's the coach that all the talk is about. It always is when it comes to Rex Ryan. He is always credited with taking the pressure off his team and putting it all on him. That's media B.S. Pressure is created by poor play. Bad coaching. Throwing games away. Pressure is created on Sunday. Not on Tuesday at a press conference. The media doesn't create pressure -- although Felger sure wants to think it does. The opposing offense or defense creates pressure. All Ryan's act does is put more pressure on his team to live up to his ridiculous predictions and guarantees. And when they don't... trouble. Ryan gets praised for showing confidence in his team. Every coach is confident in his team. Belichick sure is. Talking about it is not as important as coaching it. Ryan talks. Belichick coaches.
The Boston media started this season with predictions of the Jets taking over the AFC East. Many said Gang Green had already surpassed the Pats with last year's playoff upset at Gillette. It was a huge moment for Mt. Ryan. The biggest in his career. Look what he's done since. Not much. Meanwhile, Belichick and the Pats are working on another #1 AFC seed. Some day the Jets will beat up on the Pats again. It's inevitable. It might even happen with Ryan as coach. But I doubt it.
I love the big guy. He's brash. He's entertaining. He's larger than life. He's also a great football guy. But he's not a great football coach. At least not at NFL level. Not yet anyways.
I watched the replay of the Jets-Giants game on Game Rewind on NFL.com. The replay starts with the coin toss. All the Giants captains are out there. But Plaxico Burress (former Giant) is the only Jet captain to come to midfield. A mind-game move by Mt. Ryan. The announcer says "Rex Ryan is unbelievable. He's always got something to get that other team thinking at the beginning of the game." Next shot is Giants coach Tom Coughlin getting ready for the kickoff. He doesn't seem too concerned with how many Jet captains show up for the coin toss.
That's the thing about Ryan. Trash talking all week. Professing your team is the best in the league even in the face of embarrassing loss after embarrassing loss. Trying to psych the other team out at the coin toss. That's not coaching. That's not leadership. That's just grandstanding. And that works just fine when the team is winning. But when things go bad, a grandstander has nothing else to fall back on. You can't go from being boastful and obnoxious to humble and reasonable. It just looks like weakness when you do.
Rex Ryan is looking pretty weak right now.
Monday, December 26, 2011
The season of giving - and taking
WEEK 16
'Twas the night before Christmas, and all through Gillette, not a creature was stirring, not even the Pats offense.
OK. That's not exactly the making of a holiday classic. But yesterday's game will be remembered as a classic comeback if the Pats can nail down the top seed next week and take advantage of that home-field advantage in the playoffs like they did in the good old days. (7 or so years ago).
I had the holiday evening shift at the newspaper so Shep, two of his sons, and his dad took in the atmosphere in section P2. Handicapped parking (Shep's dad gets that sweet spot). He texted me a photo from the chilly pre-game tailgate. I was a little bummed to be missing out. Then the Pats fell behind 17-0 and I was feeling a little less bummed.
Was Tony Mazz right? Were the Dolphins the perfect team to expose the Pats weaknesses? As Stephen Gostkowski's field goal attempt flew woefully left as time expired in the first half it was sure looking that way. The Pats D was playing its usual up and down game, bending and sometimes breaking. The offense was getting harassed by a good defense. In just the first quarter, Brady was sacked twice, hurried four times, and knocked down three other times. It looked a lot like the last three playoff games in which the Pats are 0-3. The difference was that Brady -- while constantly under pressure -- didn't make any mistakes. That will be the key come playoff time. The Pats will face some tough defenses and the yards will not be so easy to come by. Brady and the offense has to protect the ball till they can weather the storm and start making some plays.
That's what they did against Miami.
The Pats offense started making plays and scoring points while the defense held Miami at 17. Brady ran the QB sneak for two TDs and threw for a third... a classic Brady scramble inside the 10 that ended with him finding Branch at the back of the end zone. The Pats scored 27 unanswered points, but not with lightning quick strikes. An 11-play drive. A 7-play drive. Another 7-play drive. A 10-play drive. An 11-play drive. The Pats, down 17-0, methodically worked their way back into the game. The Pats, down 17-0, ran for 119 yards. That's patience. That's good play-calling.
If the Pats find themselves down early in the playoffs in the face of a ferocious pass rush, it's the formula they will need to use to survive. Hopefully they will get off to a fast start. Slow starts have been a problem this season. But the 12-3 Pats have overcome most of them. Just like the Christmas Eve win over Miami. It wasn't pretty, but it was a W.
I got a text from Shep after the game.
"Whew!'
Whew indeed.
Saturday, December 24, 2011
Happy Holidays
White Christmas? No thank you. I'm quite enjoying this snowless (so far) winter. But I still love snow. Especially during football games. Here's a great video from one of the best snow games I've ever been to.
Wednesday, December 21, 2011
Game films
Football and movies. My two favorite forms of entertainment. When they are combined into one ... well, it doesn't get much better. As another public service, along with the Reading Material posts, I will post a clip of some of the best football scenes from the movies. Seemed like a good way to get in the mood for the playoff season just ahead. I have already requested Saturday the 14th off from work just in case the first playoff game falls on that day.
The first clip is from 1970's M*A*S*H. The classic Vietnam-era movie about the war in Korea. Football in Korea? As the general says when he's setting up the game with Col. Blake "My unit plays other units and we often put a little wager on the game. Like $5,000. The military feels it's one of the main gimmicks we have to keep the American way of life going here in Asia." To which Col. Blake responds "Betting?"
It's a 10-minute clip but worth every second. Especially the part where Hot Lips and the other "cheerleaders" start yelling when the other team's best player goes down... "He's hurt! He's hurt! He's leaving the game, he's hurt!"
Maybe I'll get to yell that if Pittsburgh comes to Gillette and Big Ben tweaks that ankle again.
Labels:
Football,
football scenes,
MASH,
movies,
Tales From the Tailgate
Monday, December 19, 2011
Faith no more
WEEK 15
My fantasy football team made the playoffs for the first time since 2005. I was playing my nephew Pete. He had Drew Brees. I had Tim Tebow.
He killed me.
The Patriots went to Denver for a huge game between playoff contenders. The Pats had Tom Brady. The Broncos had Tim Tebow.
The Pats killed 'em.
Tebow had a pretty good game. But Brady had a much better one. (As did Drew Brees, thus ending my fantasy football season).
The Pats are now 11-3 and won their (are you listening, Rex?) ninth AFC East title in 11 years. They lost defensive MVP Andre Carter for the rest of the year and what's left of that defense will be seriously tested come playoff time. But they are 11-3 a year after going 14-2. Just enjoy it. They seem to be.
The 41-23 victory over the sainted Broncos was as big a statement game as you can get in the regular season. No. The Broncos aren't the Ravens. Steelers, Packers, or Saints. But they were on one of those magical rolls that teams get on sometimes. Remember Morgan Magic? It's never easy to beat a team on a roll like that. On the road. Especially when that team comes out of the gate at full speed. Denver had 167 yards rushing in the first quarter ... the first quarter alone. Tebow broke a Ninko tackle and trotted for a nine yard score on the opening drive. Everyone knew the Broncos were going to run it, but the Pats D was showing no signs of being able to stop it.
The Pats answered back in a most unexpected way... a touchdown by Ochocinco. (Ocho reverted to his useless self the rest of the game). The Denver running game then easily gashed its way to another touchdown and the red-hot Broncos were up 13-7. The Pats were being challenged on the road. Pressure -- as Borges would say -- was being put on the offense. How did the respond?
Brady and the offense would outscore the Broncos 34-10 the rest of the way, notably without touchdowns by either Gronk or Welker. Aaron Hernandez had a big game as did the running game that put up 141 yards. By the time Danny Woodhead lunged over the goal line near the end of the third quarter the Pats had locked up a convincing road win and the AFC East.
As Tedy Bruschi would say, hats and T-shirts for everyone.
The Patriots finish the regular season with home games on Christmas Eve against Miami and on New Year's Day against Buffalo. "Tis the season for some holiday tailgating.
Sunday, December 18, 2011
'Send the National Guard ...'
TALES FROM THE TAILGATE
Broncos 34, Patriots 8 (11/17/'96): The Patriots head to Denver yet again for a huge regular season game. It very rarely goes well out there. Actually, it doesn't go too well wherever the Pats play the Broncos. Denver is 25-16 all-time against the Pats. Tom Brady is 1-6 against the team from Colorado. There have been some ugly losses in those games for the Pats. Ugly.
I've been to a lot of great games over the past 20-plus years. They are the games that all Pats fans remember fondly. But I've seen some heartbreaking losses and been to some blowouts that had me daydreaming of the post-game hamburgers by halftime.
There was the game in '98 against Atlanta when the line getting into the old concrete toilet bowl was so long we missed the first ten minutes. By the time we got to our seats the score was already 21-3 Falcons. It was one of the rare games that our co-worker Ken came with us. Sorry Ken. There was the '95 game against the Saints that ended with me slouched up against my car in the parking lot after the Pats surrendered two touchdowns (69-yard pass, 66-yard run) late in the game for a 31-17 loss and an official end to that season's playoff hopes.
The Super Bowl Patriots had their moments too. In '05 the defending champs were in a great battle with the Chargers on a beautiful October day. The score was tied 17-17 at the half and Paul and I said something like "This team is just so much fun to watch." ... The Chargers outscored the Pats 24-0 in the second half. The lasting memory of the day -- other than the post-game burgers -- is Antonio Gates making catch after catch as he brushed of would be tacklers like flies at a tailgate. It was ugly.
But not as ugly as the ugliest game I have ever had the bad luck of witnessing. And of course, it was against the Denver Broncos.
The Broncos came into Foxborough with a 9-1 record against the Parcells' Pats and their 7-3 record. It was a statement game. The Broncos made the statement. By the end of the first half it was 24-0. Denver out rushed the Pats 198 yards to 17. The Denver D stuffed Drew Bledsoe, holding him to just over 200 yards passing and a pick. It was one of those games where the loudest sound of the day -- other than Denver running backs smashing into and over Pats defenders -- was the groans from the stands after almost every play.
We sat on the visitors side in the old stadium. Though we were pretty far up we could see that the Denver players -- especially Shannon Sharpe -- were mocking Pats fans as the score got higher and higher. The stadium emptied out after the score hit 34-8. At one point Sharpe picked up one of the sideline phones and got into an animated conversation. We thought maybe he was ordering pizza since the game was all but over.
It wasn't till I got home and turned on SportsCenter that I saw what Sharpe was saying on the phone. "Mr. President! Call the National Guard... Send help! ... We are killing the Patriots!"
There'll be no Shannon Sharpe making calls to the president today. But there will be Tebow making calls to God. I like the Pats chances this time around.
Saturday, December 17, 2011
Tebow-mania
Just when you think you've seen the last craze in pop culture... along comes another that's bigger and better than all the others. Tim Tebow. As John Lennon would say ... "He's more popular than Jesus now." Wait. He is Jesus.
The Globe's Dan Shaughnessy captures the excitement surrounding Tebow and tomorrow's Pats-Broncos game as only Dan Shaughnessy can. Another great Patriots game to look forward to. Happy Holidays.
The Globe's Dan Shaughnessy captures the excitement surrounding Tebow and tomorrow's Pats-Broncos game as only Dan Shaughnessy can. Another great Patriots game to look forward to. Happy Holidays.
Labels:
Denver Broncos,
Football,
NFL,
Tales From the Tailgate,
Tim Tebow
Friday, December 16, 2011
Romeo. Oh, Romeo.
ROMEO: Telling it like it is. |
Romeo Crennel -- defensive coordinator for the Pats Super Bowl teams -- has another shot at a head coaching job. He left the Pats after the '04 title and ran the Browns for four long seasons. He was let go after a four win 2008. Romeo just didn't catch too many breaks during those four years in Cleveland. Injuries. A tough division. Bad drafting. Angry fans in dog masks. Just not much luck.
Now he has the controls of the Chiefs for the final three games of the season to show what he can do. He starts this weekend against ... the undefeated Packers. His bad luck continues.
Romeo doesn't really seem to be cut out to be NFL head coaching material. He's just too nice. But he's a great defensive coordinator and his players seem to love him. But he's just too nice. And just too honest. Take his press conference today as a good example.
Romeo announced that he was benching Tyler Palko in favor of veteran Kyle Orton. Not exactly a shocker. Palko has been awful. But most coaches don't announce a QB change until the last second. You know, keep the opponent guessing. Keep the media clueless. It's the Belichick way. It's the NFL way. But it's not the Romeo way.
When asked why he decided to announce the QB change, Romeo answered honestly. Nicely.
"I thought about Green Bay not knowing but then I said, "Hey, they don't care who our quarterback is.' When they look at the quarterbacks on our roster, they don't care who plays. They look at Tyler and what he's done the past couple of weeks and they look at Orton and know he's got a finger injury (uh, they do now) and they look at a rookie (whatever his name is). I don't think they are shaking in their boots."
An NFL coach saying "All our QBs suck, so who cares who starts."
Love that Romeo.
Thursday, December 15, 2011
Reading material
The firing squad for coaches usually begins lining up right after the New Year's Eve hangover begins to wear off. While the playoff teams start preparing for the tournament, the also-rans start "charting a new course," "heading in a new direction," "making a fresh start."
Haley's and Sparano's firing makes three for the season so far. Jacksonville axed long-time coach Jack Del Rio a few weeks ago. That will probably be it till the season ends. Who will be next? Norv? Yes. Has to be Norv's time.
Seems they were anxious for a fresh start in Kansas City and Miami. The Chiefs axed head coach Todd Haley on Monday, followed a few hours later by the Dolphins saying see ya to Tony Sparano. (Not Soprano). It was pretty clear both coaches were not going to be around next season so I guess the teams decided why not beat the New Year's rush.
- In KC, the focus is now squarely on GM Scott Pioli. The former Patriot exec came to the Chiefs with three Super Bowl rings and a promise to return KC to its glory days. Things looked promising with a surprising division win last season but it's been more gory than glory in 2011. Now Pioli is looking for a new coach. Word is he's leaning towards another former Pat, Josh McDaniels. Good luck with that.
- In Miami, the Phins looked like they might save their coach's job when they ran off four wins in five weeks but then they got pounded by Philly at home Sunday. Time to take Sparano for a ride. Sparano is a good guy and pretty good coach. But he had a lousy team. So he had to go.
- That's the way it goes with coaching. Not just in the NFL but in all sports. As they say, you can't fire the players. So the coach has to go. As your teenager might say ... life's not fair.
Monday, December 12, 2011
Show of emotion
Highlights of yesterday's very entertaining victory in D.C.:
- Gronk catches two more TDs to set the record for tight ends.
- Brady throws for 357 yards and three touchdowns.
- McCourty and Ihedigbo play the entire game with basically one arm and still come up with some big plays.
- Andre Carter is once again a force on the D line. And Big Vince wasn't too shabby.
- Wes Welker continues his amazing season.
- The defense adds to its turnover total.
The thing that dismissed Globe writer Ron Borges decides to write his column about? Well if you read Borges you know he wrote about the epic Brady-O'Brien shouting match. What else?
Borges offers that the fight is a result of the fact that the Pats keep playing in tight games and that has increased the pressure-cooker level on the offense. Classic Borges.
He ignores the fact that Brady was the same way in '07 when the team was winning games 45-10. He ignores the fact the Charlie Weis did a lot of yelling at his quarterback when the team was winning Super Bowls. He ignores the fact that if Brady hits an open Welker for a TD on the play before the pick the game is over and everyone can relax. He ignores the fact that any win on the road in the NFL is a good win. Instead he compares the moment with the old Bronx Zoo of the Yanks. Classic Borges.
In Borges's thinking the Pats should win every game 20-3 so that there's no stress on the offense. That way Brady can put up a few touchdowns then sit back on the bench and relax with a cup of Gatorade in the second half as the defense stuffs the other team. Anything other than that is a team that isn't good enough. Problem is that the other teams have offensive players who can make plays. Like the Redskins. Even the soon-to-be-perfect Packers have played in a lot of close games (till yesterday). That's the NFL. The Saints barely won yesterday. The Niners were upset by Arizona. The Ravens -- with their great D -- lost to Seattle. What the Pats did in '07 was a freak of football nature. Even the best of teams spend most of their times winning close games. That's what makes them the best teams. They can handle the pressure and win those games.
There's a moment in one of the "America's Game" video highlights from one of the Super Bowl years where offensive coordinator Weis is ripping the offensive players for sloppy play. He goes on a profanity-laced rant for about 15 seconds and then at the end looks at Brady who is standing off to the side and barks "You included!" It's a great moment. (You can watch it in the video below. Start around the 22:30 mark). As someone who has had a great view of the team's bench for many years I can say that's one of the best parts about watching the Patriots. The intensity. Doesn't matter if the score is 30-0 or 30-30. Belichick, his coaches, and his players are all focused on the next play. There's not a lot of celebrating and relaxing going on like you see, say, on the Cowboys bench.
Bill O'Brien fits right into that approach. It's great to see that a young offensive coordinator isn't afraid to get in the Hall of Fame QBs face. O'Brien -- like Weis and McDaniels before him -- knows that Brady can take it. In fact he thrives on it. And he will give it right back. The Pats don't always win (two home playoff loses proves that) but they are always prepared and focused. Too much pressure? On Brady and the hated Patriots? Please.
Borges says everyone will just brush the incident off as "it happens all the time" but don't you be fooled. Borges knows better. He always has. Belichick was a bad hire. Seymour was a wasted first-round pick. Cutting Lawyer would destroy the team. Moss was washed up. Oh, and of course Bledsoe was better than Brady.
Borges always knows better.
There's a moment in one of the "America's Game" video highlights from one of the Super Bowl years where offensive coordinator Weis is ripping the offensive players for sloppy play. He goes on a profanity-laced rant for about 15 seconds and then at the end looks at Brady who is standing off to the side and barks "You included!" It's a great moment. (You can watch it in the video below. Start around the 22:30 mark). As someone who has had a great view of the team's bench for many years I can say that's one of the best parts about watching the Patriots. The intensity. Doesn't matter if the score is 30-0 or 30-30. Belichick, his coaches, and his players are all focused on the next play. There's not a lot of celebrating and relaxing going on like you see, say, on the Cowboys bench.
Bill O'Brien fits right into that approach. It's great to see that a young offensive coordinator isn't afraid to get in the Hall of Fame QBs face. O'Brien -- like Weis and McDaniels before him -- knows that Brady can take it. In fact he thrives on it. And he will give it right back. The Pats don't always win (two home playoff loses proves that) but they are always prepared and focused. Too much pressure? On Brady and the hated Patriots? Please.
Borges says everyone will just brush the incident off as "it happens all the time" but don't you be fooled. Borges knows better. He always has. Belichick was a bad hire. Seymour was a wasted first-round pick. Cutting Lawyer would destroy the team. Moss was washed up. Oh, and of course Bledsoe was better than Brady.
Borges always knows better.
Sunday, December 11, 2011
A Capital victory
WEEK 14
Bring it on Sports Blab Radio. Bring it on Borges. Bring it on Felger. Bring it on.
There'll be lots of talk about the defense giving up another tanker full of yards. There'll be lots of talk about how the Pats had to battle to the final play to beat the lowly Redskins. There'll be lots of talk -- LOTS OF TALK -- about the heated argument between Brady and offensive coach Bill O'Brien on the sideline.
The Pats' exciting, entertaining 34-27 victory against Washington -- their first ever in the nation's capital -- was exactly what I expected. I was saying all week (right, Rich?) that the Skins are much better than their record. They lead the league in sacks and have hit on a great, young rusher in Roy Helu (126 yards). Those two things combined with the fact that Rex Grossman is capable enough to move the ball against the Pats' bruised and bad -- uh, I mean battered -- secondary and I figured it would be a hard-fought game. It was. The Pats just won a few more of the battles. That's what it takes to steal a road win in the NFL.
It also takes having a monster on offense named Gronk. The second-year tight end set the record for most touchdown catches in a season. The good-hands man had 160 yards receiving and two touchdowns. The old record was 13. Gronk now has 15. He's not done.
Neither is the Pats D. Sure they gave up another 400-plus yards of offense. Sure they had trouble covering the AARP receiving corp of Santa Moss, Stallworth, and old friend Jabar Gaffney. Sure they gave up a lot of big plays. But... the D had another strong game in the red zone.
The game would have been over if Brady doesn't throw a little behind Welker as he cut across the goal line wide open with just a few minutes left in the game. The next play Brady threw a pick in the end zone giving Washington one last shot to tie the game. The Skins drove inside the Pats' 10-yard line with just seconds to play when Tracy White and Jerod Mayo stepped up and combined for a game-ending play. Grossman hit Santana Moss but White hit Moss at the same time popping the ball loose and into the hands of a diving Mayo. When the play was over defensive backs McCourty and Ihedigbo -- who were playing injured the whole game -- couldn't even raise their arms in celebration. That's guts.
The Pats are 10-3 but you might not know that when you pick up the paper (please pick one up) or turn on the radio or TV this week. You'll read and hear lots of "The Pats have some serious problems ..."; "They won't be able to get away with that in the playoffs ..."; "They were lucky..."; "Brady and O'Brien's fight is a sign this team is cracking ..." This game will provide a week's full of pointless chatter in the Sports Blabosphere. Lots of pointless chatter.
Where's my iPod?
Bring it on Sports Blab Radio. Bring it on Borges. Bring it on Felger. Bring it on.
There'll be lots of talk about the defense giving up another tanker full of yards. There'll be lots of talk about how the Pats had to battle to the final play to beat the lowly Redskins. There'll be lots of talk -- LOTS OF TALK -- about the heated argument between Brady and offensive coach Bill O'Brien on the sideline.
GRONK: Feeding the beast. |
It also takes having a monster on offense named Gronk. The second-year tight end set the record for most touchdown catches in a season. The good-hands man had 160 yards receiving and two touchdowns. The old record was 13. Gronk now has 15. He's not done.
Neither is the Pats D. Sure they gave up another 400-plus yards of offense. Sure they had trouble covering the AARP receiving corp of Santa Moss, Stallworth, and old friend Jabar Gaffney. Sure they gave up a lot of big plays. But... the D had another strong game in the red zone.
The game would have been over if Brady doesn't throw a little behind Welker as he cut across the goal line wide open with just a few minutes left in the game. The next play Brady threw a pick in the end zone giving Washington one last shot to tie the game. The Skins drove inside the Pats' 10-yard line with just seconds to play when Tracy White and Jerod Mayo stepped up and combined for a game-ending play. Grossman hit Santana Moss but White hit Moss at the same time popping the ball loose and into the hands of a diving Mayo. When the play was over defensive backs McCourty and Ihedigbo -- who were playing injured the whole game -- couldn't even raise their arms in celebration. That's guts.
The Pats are 10-3 but you might not know that when you pick up the paper (please pick one up) or turn on the radio or TV this week. You'll read and hear lots of "The Pats have some serious problems ..."; "They won't be able to get away with that in the playoffs ..."; "They were lucky..."; "Brady and O'Brien's fight is a sign this team is cracking ..." This game will provide a week's full of pointless chatter in the Sports Blabosphere. Lots of pointless chatter.
Where's my iPod?
Saturday, December 10, 2011
'We want to play them'
Rex Ryan seems to be rounding into playoff form. After a few weeks of looking despondent as his team lost to the Pats (for the second time) and then got Tebow-ned in Denver, the big guy is feeling feisty again. I guess a couple of very shaky wins over a couple of very shaky teams will do that.
In an interview with Mike Lupica of the NY Daily News, Ryan ignored the fact that the 7-5 Jets have no room for error to get back into the playoffs and ignored the fact that they haven't played a sound football game in weeks. He also ignored the fact that his quarterback is regressing at an alarming pace and that his "run it down their throats" style doesn't work if you can't actually run the ball.
Lupica asked Mt. Ryan about all those issues. Finally, as it always does with Ryan and the Jets, the topic came around to the Patriots. That's the 9-3 about to win another AFC East title Patriots.
Ryan had this to say...
"I feel like we're gonna play them again and I'm excited about that. We WANT to play them. No question we want to play them."
The only way the Jets can play the Pats again is to win their last four games, go on the road and win a playoff game (maybe two), and then get on the Fung Wah and head to Boston.
See you in January Big Fella. Maybe.
Thursday, December 8, 2011
Final quarter
There are four games left in the NFL regular season. One quarter of football to go. Some teams have firmly established themselves as the top contenders once the tournament starts. Some are still battling to find their spot. Several of the divisions are pretty much settled (like the AFC East) but the fight for the wild-card spots among some good teams should make for an entertaining stretch run.
1. Green Bay (12-0): I'm rooting for the Pack to go 16-0. I'm hoping if they are the second team to accomplish that feat then Mr. Kraft will finally take down the perfect regular season banner hanging in the North end zone. Please take it down! As for the Packers... They look like a team ready to defend their title come playoff time. Rodgers is having an MVP season. And the defense is good enough.
2. San Francisco (10-2): The Niners have already clinched the NFC West. Not much of an accomplishment. But they are also in position to take the #2 seed behind Green Bay. That is an accomplishment for a team that self destructed time and time again last year. Jim Harbaugh is going to be coach of the year. His true coaching ability will be tested in about a month.
3. Baltimore Ravens (9-3): The question to ask in ranking the 9-3 teams is who can beat who. The Ravens have beaten the Steelers twice and if they were playing the Pats, Saints, or Texans in a playoff game they would be the pick of most people. They have lost a few games against bad teams (the Jags and the Seahawks) but when they are playing in a game with playoff intensity they have just that -- playoff intensity. Their pounding running game and pounding defense will make them very hard to beat.
4. New England Patriots (9-3): The mood of the Blabosphere seems to be that the Patriots are a paper contender. True, the only people the defense scares are the fans. But a team that has Brady, Welker, Gronk, Wilfork, Carter, Mankins, Hernandez, Mayo, Branch, BenJarvus, Ninko (just to name a few) is one tough team. And dangerous. The defense took a lot of heat in the one-and-done playoff losses the last two years. But it was the offense not clicking on all cylinders that really hurt. If the offense can get on a roll come January it's going to be a fun ride.
5. Pittsburgh Steelers (9-3): I know. The Steelers beat the Pats just a month ago. But in the playoffs the Pats have owned the Steelers time and time again. I don't think that will change if they should meet again. Even at Heinz. It still amazes me that a QB as Big as Ben can avoid pass rushers like he does. The two-time Super Bowl champ is great. And he has a great group of young receivers. All I want for Christmas is a Steelers-Pats AFC title game at Gillette.
6. New Orleans Saints (9-3): NFL analysts ask the same question week after week. Who can stop the Pack? The Saints. That's who. Drew Brees often gets left out of the Brady-Rodgers MVP debates but he shouldn't. The Saints stumbled as defending champs. Much like the Pats did in '02. We know what the Pats did the next two years. The Saints may be that team.
7. Houston Texans (9-3): Houston had the playoff door opened for them when Peyton Manning went down for the season. But then All Pro receiver Andre Johnson got hurt. Then RB Arian Foster went down. Just when they came back starting QB Matt Schaub was lost for the year. Then his backup Matt Leinert followed him to the IR. And yet the Texans keep winning. It's like the Texans know they will never get this good a shot to win their division again.
8. Detroit Lions (7-5): The talk of the early season is now the talk of the late season. But for very different reasons. The Lions started off 5-0, more than living up to preseason expectations. Those expectations were based on an aggressive defense but it was the Stafford-to-Johnson connection (two TDs per game) that was key to the fast start. The offense has cooled off and the defense has taken aggressiveness to the level of stupidity. Now all the talk is how out of control the Lions are.
9. New York Jets (7-5): There they sit. Gang Green. Mt. Ryan's boys. Once again battling just to make the playoffs after an off-season of predictions of how they were going to dominate the league. Once again dealing with inconsistencies from their quarterback and their coaching staff. Once again having me hoping that they don't make the playoffs for fear that once they get in they will do some damage -- in Foxborough.
10. Denver Broncos (7-5): What the hell are they doing on this list? Oops. Sorry Tim Tebow. I mean what the heck are they doing on this list? The Denver Tebows are the story of 2011. The team started off 1-4 with Kyle Orton as their QB. He is no longer their QB. Rookie Tim Tebow took his place and has ran (and sometimes passed) his way into the hearts of Denver fans.
11. Dallas Cowboys (7-5): The 'Boys have had one of the craziest regular seasons I have seen in a long time. The have blown games that they should have won to the Jets, the Lions, the Pats, and most painfully, the Cards last week. Dallas could easily be 9-3. But they're not. That must be driving Jerry Jones crazy. The Cowboys will be tough to beat in the playoffs if they can stop beating themselves.
12. Atlanta Falcons (7-5): There are a total of eight teams with a 7-5 record. They are all good teams. Not great. The best five are listed here. (The other three -- Oakland, Tennessee, Chicago -- are not far behind when healthy.) I give Atlanta the nod over them because they have a good balance of offense and defense. And they went 14-2 last year.
Dishonorable mention: I could put the 0-12 Colts here again. But I'm going to take it easy on Indy fans. This quarter the honor goes to the New York Football Giants. I know, they are 6-6 and a pretty good team. And they have had a brutal schedule. But since they pulled off another last second comeback to beat the Pats at Gillette a month ago to go to 6-2 they have lost every game. They might not even make the playoffs. They were talking like champs when they left Foxborough. Way to build on that momentum.
1. Green Bay (12-0): I'm rooting for the Pack to go 16-0. I'm hoping if they are the second team to accomplish that feat then Mr. Kraft will finally take down the perfect regular season banner hanging in the North end zone. Please take it down! As for the Packers... They look like a team ready to defend their title come playoff time. Rodgers is having an MVP season. And the defense is good enough.
2. San Francisco (10-2): The Niners have already clinched the NFC West. Not much of an accomplishment. But they are also in position to take the #2 seed behind Green Bay. That is an accomplishment for a team that self destructed time and time again last year. Jim Harbaugh is going to be coach of the year. His true coaching ability will be tested in about a month.
3. Baltimore Ravens (9-3): The question to ask in ranking the 9-3 teams is who can beat who. The Ravens have beaten the Steelers twice and if they were playing the Pats, Saints, or Texans in a playoff game they would be the pick of most people. They have lost a few games against bad teams (the Jags and the Seahawks) but when they are playing in a game with playoff intensity they have just that -- playoff intensity. Their pounding running game and pounding defense will make them very hard to beat.
4. New England Patriots (9-3): The mood of the Blabosphere seems to be that the Patriots are a paper contender. True, the only people the defense scares are the fans. But a team that has Brady, Welker, Gronk, Wilfork, Carter, Mankins, Hernandez, Mayo, Branch, BenJarvus, Ninko (just to name a few) is one tough team. And dangerous. The defense took a lot of heat in the one-and-done playoff losses the last two years. But it was the offense not clicking on all cylinders that really hurt. If the offense can get on a roll come January it's going to be a fun ride.
5. Pittsburgh Steelers (9-3): I know. The Steelers beat the Pats just a month ago. But in the playoffs the Pats have owned the Steelers time and time again. I don't think that will change if they should meet again. Even at Heinz. It still amazes me that a QB as Big as Ben can avoid pass rushers like he does. The two-time Super Bowl champ is great. And he has a great group of young receivers. All I want for Christmas is a Steelers-Pats AFC title game at Gillette.
6. New Orleans Saints (9-3): NFL analysts ask the same question week after week. Who can stop the Pack? The Saints. That's who. Drew Brees often gets left out of the Brady-Rodgers MVP debates but he shouldn't. The Saints stumbled as defending champs. Much like the Pats did in '02. We know what the Pats did the next two years. The Saints may be that team.
7. Houston Texans (9-3): Houston had the playoff door opened for them when Peyton Manning went down for the season. But then All Pro receiver Andre Johnson got hurt. Then RB Arian Foster went down. Just when they came back starting QB Matt Schaub was lost for the year. Then his backup Matt Leinert followed him to the IR. And yet the Texans keep winning. It's like the Texans know they will never get this good a shot to win their division again.
8. Detroit Lions (7-5): The talk of the early season is now the talk of the late season. But for very different reasons. The Lions started off 5-0, more than living up to preseason expectations. Those expectations were based on an aggressive defense but it was the Stafford-to-Johnson connection (two TDs per game) that was key to the fast start. The offense has cooled off and the defense has taken aggressiveness to the level of stupidity. Now all the talk is how out of control the Lions are.
9. New York Jets (7-5): There they sit. Gang Green. Mt. Ryan's boys. Once again battling just to make the playoffs after an off-season of predictions of how they were going to dominate the league. Once again dealing with inconsistencies from their quarterback and their coaching staff. Once again having me hoping that they don't make the playoffs for fear that once they get in they will do some damage -- in Foxborough.
10. Denver Broncos (7-5): What the hell are they doing on this list? Oops. Sorry Tim Tebow. I mean what the heck are they doing on this list? The Denver Tebows are the story of 2011. The team started off 1-4 with Kyle Orton as their QB. He is no longer their QB. Rookie Tim Tebow took his place and has ran (and sometimes passed) his way into the hearts of Denver fans.
11. Dallas Cowboys (7-5): The 'Boys have had one of the craziest regular seasons I have seen in a long time. The have blown games that they should have won to the Jets, the Lions, the Pats, and most painfully, the Cards last week. Dallas could easily be 9-3. But they're not. That must be driving Jerry Jones crazy. The Cowboys will be tough to beat in the playoffs if they can stop beating themselves.
12. Atlanta Falcons (7-5): There are a total of eight teams with a 7-5 record. They are all good teams. Not great. The best five are listed here. (The other three -- Oakland, Tennessee, Chicago -- are not far behind when healthy.) I give Atlanta the nod over them because they have a good balance of offense and defense. And they went 14-2 last year.
Dishonorable mention: I could put the 0-12 Colts here again. But I'm going to take it easy on Indy fans. This quarter the honor goes to the New York Football Giants. I know, they are 6-6 and a pretty good team. And they have had a brutal schedule. But since they pulled off another last second comeback to beat the Pats at Gillette a month ago to go to 6-2 they have lost every game. They might not even make the playoffs. They were talking like champs when they left Foxborough. Way to build on that momentum.
Wednesday, December 7, 2011
Reading material
As I've written before. The NFL is a coaches' league. You can have a great QB. A great defense. But it doesn't matter if your coach can't handle the pressure or keep his players focused. That was the theme of many stories in out-of-town newspapers after Week 13.
- First and foremost there's Dallas. The Cowboys thought they were done with this kind of mess when they dumped Wade Phillips. Wrong. Jason Garrett's bungling of the last 30 seconds of yesterday's game was beyond anything I've seen Wade do. There is no defending not calling a timeout with 26 seconds left. No defending it. I would link to a column from the Dallas Morning News but my free online subscription does not give me access to columnists. I have to get the newspaper delivered for that. But I don't live in Dallas. Gee. I wonder why newspapers (and their websites) are struggling.
- A little further east in the NFC division of the same name finds the Eagles falling to new lows. In Seattle. Andy Reid has lost his team and after 13 years looks well on his way to losing his job.
- Another sign that a coach doesn't have control of his team is penalties. The Raiders have been famous for this for years. The Detroit Lions have taken their place as the most undisciplined team in the NFL. Coach Jim Schwartz has a cocky attitude for a guy who hasn't won anything yet. When they were 5-0 he was strutting around the sidelines. He hasn't been strutting lately.
Monday, December 5, 2011
Gronk
Gronk is just one grab with his giant hands away from breaking the NFL record for most TD catches in a season by a tight end.
Gonzalez. Casper. Coates. Ditka. Francis. Clark (Dwight and Dallas). Gates. All legends at the position. None of them ever caught 14 touchdowns in one year. Gronk's about to do it in his second season. I wasn't too excited when the Pats drafted him.
Once again, Belichick was right and I was wrong. Brady to Gronk has become the best combo in the league today. Almost unstoppable. Gronk has even changed my opinion about the tight end position. I never thought anyone could do that.
Beating a dead horse
WEEK 13
Patriots 31, Colts 24 (12/4/'11): Entering the fourth quarter at Gillette yesterday, the Pats had a very comfortable 31-3 lead. It was about halfway to what I thought would be a 42-6 final. The crowd was enjoying the glow from a beautiful late fall day. A look down at the Pats bench showed the players were mostly doing the same.
If the Pats can get a road win next Sunday and get to 10-3 they can lose one of their last three and still have a good shot at a bye. The final three will not be easy. A trip to Denver to play the fifth Beatle Tim Tebow. A home game Christmas Eve against a rejuvenated Miami team and then a New Year's Day home against always tough Buffalo. That's why the stretch of KC, Philly, Indy, Washington was so important. Run the table there and you have room for error. They are one win away from that.
Yesterday's win against the Colts was not supposed to be among the win-and-move-on games. But the Manning-less Colts are closing in on a perfect season. 0-16. I wonder if they will hang a banner for that next to the one they have for losing in the divisional round? (They really do have such a banner). The anticipation in the parking lot at 9 a.m. was for the spicy wings warming up, not so much for the game. The reason we were in a good mood was not because we were excited to watch Dan Orlovsky play quarterback. We were in a good mood because of the partly sunny, 50 degree day. We were in a good mood because of beer for breakfast.
The game was another slow start for the offense. (Insert "that has to stop" comment here). But once Brady, Welker, Gronk, and company got going it was game time. Gronk scored three more touchdowns. He is one shy from setting the record for TDs in a season by a tight end. Whenever I get annoyed that the Pats can't seem to find a young NFL-caliber wide receiver (Bethel, Tate, Price) I remember that they have drafted Gronk and Hernandez. Two of the best pass-catchers to enter the league in years. Welker had another great game and the defense -- at least while people were paying attention -- continued to improve. Most importantly the D is getting healthy. Mayo looks to have his speed back and Chung and Spikes should return soon.
It wasn't a perfect day. The fourth quarter was full of mistakes. And some in the crowd decided to boo Adam Vinatieri. It certainly wasn't loud enough to warrant all the talk on the Blabosphere today (or maybe I just wasn't paying attention again), but it was still surprising. If people want to boo #4 because he went to the enemy Colts and helped them win a Super Bowl that's up to them. But they are wrong. Vinatieri delivered the greatest moment in New England sports history. I can close my eyes right now and see the ball sailing right down the middle of the Superdome. I hope the few hundred who were booing don't plan on coming to #4's induction ceremony into the Pats hall of fame. There should only be cheers for him.
The Pats held on for the victory in front of a nearly empty stadium. Brian Hoyer even played. It just wasn't a playoff intensity kind of day. Even at the tailgate.
Mark boarded the Amtrak at Penn Station in New York at 2 in the morning. In tow he had a bottle of wine, newspapers -- and two large tin trays of wings that he had marinated and a tin tray of celery, carrots, and ranch dressing for dipping. Bergs gathered him in Providence and after a stop for breakfast they arrived at the Enchanted Forest. Shep set up the new portable oven and Mark put one of the trays of wings in to warm up. We toasted another day of great weather, turned on some Allman Brothers, and enjoyed the glow.
Twenty minutes later the tin tray of wings was set on the table and the eight of us gathered around with plates at the ready. Mark pulled off the foil cover. The next second we were all bent over laughing at the sight of a steaming tray of celery, carrots, and two plastic containers of ranch dressing. Seems that in the glow of the morning Mark hadn't checked to see if it was actually the tray of wings he was putting in the oven. Clearly, our tailgate is not quite in playoff form either.
"i'll be ready come January," Mark said.
When we all finally stopped laughing I took a closer look at the steaming tray of raw veggies and dip.
"I don't think it's quite done yet."
Patriots 31, Colts 24 (12/4/'11): Entering the fourth quarter at Gillette yesterday, the Pats had a very comfortable 31-3 lead. It was about halfway to what I thought would be a 42-6 final. The crowd was enjoying the glow from a beautiful late fall day. A look down at the Pats bench showed the players were mostly doing the same.
A check of the final score shows that the Colts scored three unanswered touchdowns in the final quarter. I can't say I really noticed. The game was -- of course -- never in doubt. The final score came with about 30 seconds left to play. It was more annoying than anything else. Like the last two weeks (KC, Philly), the goal was to beat an inferior team, get the W, and move on. It will be the same next week in Washington.
If the Pats can get a road win next Sunday and get to 10-3 they can lose one of their last three and still have a good shot at a bye. The final three will not be easy. A trip to Denver to play the fifth Beatle Tim Tebow. A home game Christmas Eve against a rejuvenated Miami team and then a New Year's Day home against always tough Buffalo. That's why the stretch of KC, Philly, Indy, Washington was so important. Run the table there and you have room for error. They are one win away from that.
Yesterday's win against the Colts was not supposed to be among the win-and-move-on games. But the Manning-less Colts are closing in on a perfect season. 0-16. I wonder if they will hang a banner for that next to the one they have for losing in the divisional round? (They really do have such a banner). The anticipation in the parking lot at 9 a.m. was for the spicy wings warming up, not so much for the game. The reason we were in a good mood was not because we were excited to watch Dan Orlovsky play quarterback. We were in a good mood because of the partly sunny, 50 degree day. We were in a good mood because of beer for breakfast.
The game was another slow start for the offense. (Insert "that has to stop" comment here). But once Brady, Welker, Gronk, and company got going it was game time. Gronk scored three more touchdowns. He is one shy from setting the record for TDs in a season by a tight end. Whenever I get annoyed that the Pats can't seem to find a young NFL-caliber wide receiver (Bethel, Tate, Price) I remember that they have drafted Gronk and Hernandez. Two of the best pass-catchers to enter the league in years. Welker had another great game and the defense -- at least while people were paying attention -- continued to improve. Most importantly the D is getting healthy. Mayo looks to have his speed back and Chung and Spikes should return soon.
It wasn't a perfect day. The fourth quarter was full of mistakes. And some in the crowd decided to boo Adam Vinatieri. It certainly wasn't loud enough to warrant all the talk on the Blabosphere today (or maybe I just wasn't paying attention again), but it was still surprising. If people want to boo #4 because he went to the enemy Colts and helped them win a Super Bowl that's up to them. But they are wrong. Vinatieri delivered the greatest moment in New England sports history. I can close my eyes right now and see the ball sailing right down the middle of the Superdome. I hope the few hundred who were booing don't plan on coming to #4's induction ceremony into the Pats hall of fame. There should only be cheers for him.
The Pats held on for the victory in front of a nearly empty stadium. Brian Hoyer even played. It just wasn't a playoff intensity kind of day. Even at the tailgate.
Mark boarded the Amtrak at Penn Station in New York at 2 in the morning. In tow he had a bottle of wine, newspapers -- and two large tin trays of wings that he had marinated and a tin tray of celery, carrots, and ranch dressing for dipping. Bergs gathered him in Providence and after a stop for breakfast they arrived at the Enchanted Forest. Shep set up the new portable oven and Mark put one of the trays of wings in to warm up. We toasted another day of great weather, turned on some Allman Brothers, and enjoyed the glow.
Twenty minutes later the tin tray of wings was set on the table and the eight of us gathered around with plates at the ready. Mark pulled off the foil cover. The next second we were all bent over laughing at the sight of a steaming tray of celery, carrots, and two plastic containers of ranch dressing. Seems that in the glow of the morning Mark hadn't checked to see if it was actually the tray of wings he was putting in the oven. Clearly, our tailgate is not quite in playoff form either.
"i'll be ready come January," Mark said.
When we all finally stopped laughing I took a closer look at the steaming tray of raw veggies and dip.
"I don't think it's quite done yet."
Friday, December 2, 2011
Early to rise
The Pats host the Colts Sunday at 1 p.m. It was originally scheduled to be the Sunday night game and it was originally circled on my calendar as the home game of the year. Pats-Colts. Brady-Manning. Battle for AFC supremacy. Cold beer on a cold December night. Billy dressed as Santa.
Then Peyton Manning's fused neck put him out for the year. And the Colts proceeded to lose every game since. Every game. They come into Gillette at 0-11. Indy's run of consecutive years in the playoffs is over. So the television execs decided Pats-Colts was no longer worthy of prime-time viewing and moved the start time to 1 p.m. I can't blame them, but it begs the question why Eagles-Seahawks was deemed still worthy of being on last night. That game was a dog (sorry Vick) before the season even started.
The time change means that this is now the first 1 p.m. game of the year. 1 p.m. games make for the best tailgating. Why? Well, how often do you get to stand outside and drink at 9 in the morning? (If you answered "All the time" then you might have a problem.) For me, it's a few Sundays every winter. 1 p.m. games mean getting up around 7 in the morning, packing the car, grabbing a large coffee at Dunkins' while filling up the thermos, and getting into the lot when it opens at 9. The first beer cap is popped shortly after that.
The forecast is for temps in the mid 50s and mostly sunny. Perfect tailgating weather. That will make up a bit for the fact that this game probably won't add much to the greatest sports rivalry of the past decade. The Pats and Colts have staged some great battles, with each taking their share of huge wins. I've been lucky enough to be at most of them. The best one is captured in the video at the top of the post. What a game that was.
Labels:
Indianapolis Colts,
New England Patriots
Wednesday, November 30, 2011
Reading material
I work Saturdays. I have Mondays off. It's ideal during football season. (Not so much in the summer). Between the many, many chores I accomplish each and every Monday, I take a little time to watch the NFL Network's day-long recap of all the Sunday games, catch the replay of ESPN's NFL Primetime, watch the Monday Night preview shows, and surf the tubes to check out what fans and columnists are saying about their teams in other towns. That last part is always entertaining. People say -- and write -- the darnedest things.
So as a public service, I'll link to a few stories every Wednesday for your reading pleasure.
So as a public service, I'll link to a few stories every Wednesday for your reading pleasure.
- The Chiefs were supposed to become the Patriots West. Scott Pioli, second only to Belichick in importance in building a dynasty where one never even seemed imaginable, took over Kansas City with the goal of returning the franchise to the top of the NFL. It hasn't worked out so far.
- One of the main themes of the 2011 season has been back-up quarterbacks. From the Colts waking up Kerry Collins from his couch to replace Manning, to Houston losing Schaub and Leinert for the season in back-to-back weeks, the topic of quality back-up quarterbacks -- or the lack thereof -- has come up in town after town. One of the latest is in Chicago.
- Speaking of back-up QBS, Tim Tebow won again. Tebow also failed to complete ten passes -- again. Touchdown Jesus ("I just want to thank my Lord and Savior." Apparently God's not into passing) is the story of the NFL right now. The Broncos are surprisingly in the playoff race. Suddenly I can't wait till the Pats travel to Denver in a few weeks.
- The Jets beat the Bills in the battle for second place in the AFC East. It's yet another game the Jets could have/should have lost. To their credit, the Jets players were quoted after the win acknowledging they aren't playing nearly well enough. But it was the antics of Bills' wide receiver Steve Johnson that was the focus in Buffalo.
- Finally, there's the Philadelphia Eagles. Their nightmare season continued with the 38-20 beating at the hands of the Pats. Eagles fans were chanting for coach Andy Reid's job. If there's one city where losing takes on an extra level of disappointment, it's Philly.
Monday, November 28, 2011
Winning ways
WEEK 12
Teams have to learn to win in all ways.
A team that wins every game easily isn't prepared when faced with a nasty playoff battle. A team that knows how to win a 16-13 war but can't put 30 points on the board is going to have a problem against the best offenses. A team that falls behind and can't battle back has to play perfect football to win. The best teams -- in any sport, really -- can play any style you want and beat you at each.
Patriots 38, Eagles 20. It was worse than that. Philly scored a meaningless TD in the final minute to break the defense's string of games holding the opponent below 20 points. The defense -- despite injuries to key starters -- is making plays and gaining confidence. The offense continues to run like a machine. There will be more bumps along the way, but if the D gets Chung and Spikes back and the team stays healthy elsewhere there will be more playoff action at Gillette. Yes, the Pats are due for a home playoff win. But it's way too early for that blog post.
The Eagles jumped all over the Pats in the first seven minutes, building a 10-0 lead and threatening to expose the fact that the Patriots don't really have an NFL secondary at the moment. But then two things happened. The Patriots responded, outscoring Philly 38-3. Philly responded, outscoring the Patriots 50 embarrassing mistakes to zero. It was a good thing Santa was not in the stands.
Like last week's win against KC, there's not a whole lot to be be gained breaking this one down. Same holds true for the next two games against the winless Colts and the hapless Skins. If New England is to earn a first-round bye, these are games that they not only should win, they must win. There can be no letdowns or trap games. Yesterday had the appearance of a trap game early. Then Brady, Welker, Branch, Gronk, Bennie, and a lot of guys on defense with much less familiar names decided they weren't losing.
A team that never gives up. That never stops playing no matter what the score. Or as the coach would say "Sixty minutes! Do you hear me?! Sixty minutes!" That's the most important way to know how to win.
Teams have to learn to win in all ways.
A team that wins every game easily isn't prepared when faced with a nasty playoff battle. A team that knows how to win a 16-13 war but can't put 30 points on the board is going to have a problem against the best offenses. A team that falls behind and can't battle back has to play perfect football to win. The best teams -- in any sport, really -- can play any style you want and beat you at each.
The 2011 New England Patriots are winning in all ways. They have dominated teams from start to finish. They have held off late comeback attempts. They have stolen last-minute victories. They have won some beautiful games. They have won some ugly games. Yesterday, they added another style of victory. They fell behind early but came roaring back for a dominating come-from-behind decision.
Patriots 38, Eagles 20. It was worse than that. Philly scored a meaningless TD in the final minute to break the defense's string of games holding the opponent below 20 points. The defense -- despite injuries to key starters -- is making plays and gaining confidence. The offense continues to run like a machine. There will be more bumps along the way, but if the D gets Chung and Spikes back and the team stays healthy elsewhere there will be more playoff action at Gillette. Yes, the Pats are due for a home playoff win. But it's way too early for that blog post.
The Eagles jumped all over the Pats in the first seven minutes, building a 10-0 lead and threatening to expose the fact that the Patriots don't really have an NFL secondary at the moment. But then two things happened. The Patriots responded, outscoring Philly 38-3. Philly responded, outscoring the Patriots 50 embarrassing mistakes to zero. It was a good thing Santa was not in the stands.
Like last week's win against KC, there's not a whole lot to be be gained breaking this one down. Same holds true for the next two games against the winless Colts and the hapless Skins. If New England is to earn a first-round bye, these are games that they not only should win, they must win. There can be no letdowns or trap games. Yesterday had the appearance of a trap game early. Then Brady, Welker, Branch, Gronk, Bennie, and a lot of guys on defense with much less familiar names decided they weren't losing.
A team that never gives up. That never stops playing no matter what the score. Or as the coach would say "Sixty minutes! Do you hear me?! Sixty minutes!" That's the most important way to know how to win.
Tuesday, November 22, 2011
Returning home
WEEK 11
Patriots 34, Chiefs 3 (11/21/'11): My brother Jim and I rolled into Gillette a few minutes into the first quarter. We were a little late because I had to work -- not because Jim had returned home from Morocco less than 48 hours earlier.
The Patriots were also returning home after their huge win against the Jets. The Pats lost their last home game a few weeks ago to the other New York team, snapping their 20-game winning streak at Gillette. Last night, in the cold, it was time to start a new one. Since they were playing the Chiefs a victory seemed certain.
But as Jim and I settled into our seats and buttoned up our jackets, the zeros on the scoreboard made it clear the Pats were continuing their trend of slow starts. It's a trend that has to stop. But, for the second week in a row, it's a trend that did not prevent them from winning going away.
It's not a game worth spending too much time analyzing. Beating the Chiefs easily at home is just one of the things a team has to do if it wants to win its division. The win moves the Pats to 7-3, now two games ahead of both the Jets and Bills. It looks like the Pats' domination of the AFC East will continue. Sorry Rex.
Other positives were the running game (157 yards) and the D holding the Chiefs to just three points. That should help lower the all-important points-allowed-per-game stat. The defense has held the other team below 20 points the last two weeks. Granted, neither the Jets nor the Chiefs have much of an offense right now. But it's still a good trend, especially when considering how shorthanded the D has been during that time. Both the offense and special teams made big plays when needed. There was a lot to like.
The thing I liked the most about the night? It was the first game this year where it was cold enough to see your breath. It really is football season now.
Patriots 34, Chiefs 3 (11/21/'11): My brother Jim and I rolled into Gillette a few minutes into the first quarter. We were a little late because I had to work -- not because Jim had returned home from Morocco less than 48 hours earlier.
The Patriots were also returning home after their huge win against the Jets. The Pats lost their last home game a few weeks ago to the other New York team, snapping their 20-game winning streak at Gillette. Last night, in the cold, it was time to start a new one. Since they were playing the Chiefs a victory seemed certain.
But as Jim and I settled into our seats and buttoned up our jackets, the zeros on the scoreboard made it clear the Pats were continuing their trend of slow starts. It's a trend that has to stop. But, for the second week in a row, it's a trend that did not prevent them from winning going away.
The Pats scored two quick touchdowns in the final five minutes of the second quarter to turn an ugly 3-0 deficit into an entertaining 14-3 halftime lead. The fun continued in the second half. The stars of the game were Gronk -- again -- on offense and Andre Carter -- again -- on defense. Brady, after a slow start, had a solid game and Julian Edelman (or Lt. Jim Dangle as we now call him at the tailgate) returned a punt for a touchdown. Kyle Arrington added another two picks to his league leading total of seven. All-in-all it was an entertaining night of football against an inferior team.
It's not a game worth spending too much time analyzing. Beating the Chiefs easily at home is just one of the things a team has to do if it wants to win its division. The win moves the Pats to 7-3, now two games ahead of both the Jets and Bills. It looks like the Pats' domination of the AFC East will continue. Sorry Rex.
Other positives were the running game (157 yards) and the D holding the Chiefs to just three points. That should help lower the all-important points-allowed-per-game stat. The defense has held the other team below 20 points the last two weeks. Granted, neither the Jets nor the Chiefs have much of an offense right now. But it's still a good trend, especially when considering how shorthanded the D has been during that time. Both the offense and special teams made big plays when needed. There was a lot to like.
The thing I liked the most about the night? It was the first game this year where it was cold enough to see your breath. It really is football season now.
Monday, November 21, 2011
The color of purple
I had only seen one NFL game at a stadium outside of the boundaries of Foxborough.
Now make that two. I spent the weekend in Ravenstown. That's Baltimore to you and me. I was there for a newspaper union meeting and some of us decided to take in the Ravens-Bengals game at M&T Bank Stadium after the conference was over. What a great time. It was near 70 degrees and the NFC North battle came down to the last play. I was rooting for Cincy (quietly) because the Ravens are a big challenge to the Pats for the #1 playoff seed. Unfortunately the Ravens edged the upstart Bengals 34-27 in a very entertaining back-and-forth game.
One of the best things about being at a game that doesn't involve the Pats? It doesn't really matter who wins so there's no chance of disappointment at the final gun. It's just a chance to enjoy some quality football in person. Something I'll get another chance to do tonight at Gillette. Two NFL games in two days? Yes please.
Then Joe Flacco and the offense took the field. It got loud in the stadium again. Real loud. Only not with cheers and roars. With boos. Lots of boos. And when the offense couldn't move the ball the boos echoed all the way across the parking lot to Camden Yards. The residents of Ravenstown were not too happy with their offense. Cries of "Run it!" "Give it to Rice!" "Flacco you suck!" followed every incomplete pass. The mood soon changed after Flacco connected on a couple of touchdowns and the Ravens opened up what looked like a comfortable lead. Suddenly there was lots of love for the offense. Fans are the same everywhere.
I took advantage of the big lead (which quickly got smaller) to stroll around the stadium to see what Ravenstown had that Patstown didn't -- besides lots of people wearing purple. Prince would love it there.
Turns out they don't have powdered cinnamon to go on their fried dough. They don't have Don Julio margaritas. And most importantly, they don't have bathrooms big enough to prevent a line from snaking out into the concourse. I haven't waited in a bathroom line for ten years. Thank you Mr. Kraft.
What Ravenstown does have is very friendly people working there. Like the young guy who did my security pat-down. "Nice hoodie," he said as he checked my pockets for weapons. "Enjoy the game." Or the transit employee who made sure the drunk purple people didn't wander on the train tracks. "Stay behind the yellow line everyone. I wouldn't want anyone to get hurt." Then she added as people stumbled aboard the train "Have a nice, safe night." Finally there was the Baltimore police officer who led the fans in a "Let's go Ravens" chant as he did crowd control. Not the kind of things you see around Gillette.
Ravenstown has one more thing that Foxborough doesn't. Lots of people of color. I would estimate the number in the stadium to be more than 30 percent. At Gillette you'd be lucky to see 30 black fans total. In Baltimore, fans of different races enjoy rooting for their team together, exchanging high fives and hugs. It made me realize that although we've come a long way as far as football goes in Patstown, we really haven't made much progress when it comes to creating a more diverse crowd.
Now make that two. I spent the weekend in Ravenstown. That's Baltimore to you and me. I was there for a newspaper union meeting and some of us decided to take in the Ravens-Bengals game at M&T Bank Stadium after the conference was over. What a great time. It was near 70 degrees and the NFC North battle came down to the last play. I was rooting for Cincy (quietly) because the Ravens are a big challenge to the Pats for the #1 playoff seed. Unfortunately the Ravens edged the upstart Bengals 34-27 in a very entertaining back-and-forth game.
One of the best things about being at a game that doesn't involve the Pats? It doesn't really matter who wins so there's no chance of disappointment at the final gun. It's just a chance to enjoy some quality football in person. Something I'll get another chance to do tonight at Gillette. Two NFL games in two days? Yes please.
It was also a chance to see if the much-heralded Ravens fans are louder than their much-maligned counterparts in New England. It was pretty loud when the Baltimore defense took the field to start the game. The Ravens -- with Ray Lewis (who didn't play due to a sore toe) -- have been known for their defense since winning the Super Bowl a decade or so ago. In Ravenstown it's all about the D. The fans love Suggs, Reed, and their leader Ray Ray who was shown on the Jumbotron so much you would have thought he was playing. When the defense stopped Cincy on a three-and-out the stadium, which doesn't have an open-end like Gillette's lighthouse, was rocking. It was impressive.
Then Joe Flacco and the offense took the field. It got loud in the stadium again. Real loud. Only not with cheers and roars. With boos. Lots of boos. And when the offense couldn't move the ball the boos echoed all the way across the parking lot to Camden Yards. The residents of Ravenstown were not too happy with their offense. Cries of "Run it!" "Give it to Rice!" "Flacco you suck!" followed every incomplete pass. The mood soon changed after Flacco connected on a couple of touchdowns and the Ravens opened up what looked like a comfortable lead. Suddenly there was lots of love for the offense. Fans are the same everywhere.
I took advantage of the big lead (which quickly got smaller) to stroll around the stadium to see what Ravenstown had that Patstown didn't -- besides lots of people wearing purple. Prince would love it there.
Turns out they don't have powdered cinnamon to go on their fried dough. They don't have Don Julio margaritas. And most importantly, they don't have bathrooms big enough to prevent a line from snaking out into the concourse. I haven't waited in a bathroom line for ten years. Thank you Mr. Kraft.
What Ravenstown does have is very friendly people working there. Like the young guy who did my security pat-down. "Nice hoodie," he said as he checked my pockets for weapons. "Enjoy the game." Or the transit employee who made sure the drunk purple people didn't wander on the train tracks. "Stay behind the yellow line everyone. I wouldn't want anyone to get hurt." Then she added as people stumbled aboard the train "Have a nice, safe night." Finally there was the Baltimore police officer who led the fans in a "Let's go Ravens" chant as he did crowd control. Not the kind of things you see around Gillette.
Ravenstown has one more thing that Foxborough doesn't. Lots of people of color. I would estimate the number in the stadium to be more than 30 percent. At Gillette you'd be lucky to see 30 black fans total. In Baltimore, fans of different races enjoy rooting for their team together, exchanging high fives and hugs. It made me realize that although we've come a long way as far as football goes in Patstown, we really haven't made much progress when it comes to creating a more diverse crowd.
Friday, November 18, 2011
That's so offensive
I heard a voice on sports radio as I was driving home Thursday night say he thought the Jets-Broncos game would set offense in the NFL back 20 years. He was only off by about 90 years. The forward pass was made legal in 1906. If they could have looked into the future and watched last night's game they might have had second thoughts.
As ugly as the 5-5 Jets' playoff prospects. Mt. Ryan said "Our playoffs start next week." That's a problem because his offense is not ready for the playoffs. It's not even ready for preseason. In a matter of five days the Jets made a season's worth of mistakes, both physical and mental. A loss to the Bills and the Foot Doctor can start making his Super Bowl predictions for next year.
The Broncos are also 5-5 but they are a lot happier about being .500. It's all a matter of expectations. The hero of the game was rookie Tebow -- known for his ability to pass on the word of the Lord and his inability to pass anything else. Tebow was coming off a game in which he completed just two passes. Two! But one of those two was for a long touchdown to win the game. And he can run. Actually, running -- at this moment -- is pretty much all he can do. He won the game with a 20-yard touchdown scamper through the vaunted Jets D. It was a heck of a play by Tebow. And a heck of a collapse by the Jets
I added Tebow to my fantasy football team to replace Michael Vick who has been a huge bust in both the real and fantasy worlds. I didn't do it because I thought Tebow would score me a ton of points. He won't. I did it because after drafting a dog killing jerk I thought it might be a good idea to replace him with a man of God. I felt a need for atonement.
The passing performances of Tim Tebow and Mark Sanchez were sick. As in nausea inducing. It was that bad. Sanchez threw his second pick-six in five days. The one against the Pats helped seal defeat. The one last night helped give away a win. He gave Denver a touchdown when the Broncos offense couldn't even get a first down. Sanchez missed open receiver after open receiver. Tebow missed everything. It was ugly.
As ugly as the 5-5 Jets' playoff prospects. Mt. Ryan said "Our playoffs start next week." That's a problem because his offense is not ready for the playoffs. It's not even ready for preseason. In a matter of five days the Jets made a season's worth of mistakes, both physical and mental. A loss to the Bills and the Foot Doctor can start making his Super Bowl predictions for next year.
The Broncos are also 5-5 but they are a lot happier about being .500. It's all a matter of expectations. The hero of the game was rookie Tebow -- known for his ability to pass on the word of the Lord and his inability to pass anything else. Tebow was coming off a game in which he completed just two passes. Two! But one of those two was for a long touchdown to win the game. And he can run. Actually, running -- at this moment -- is pretty much all he can do. He won the game with a 20-yard touchdown scamper through the vaunted Jets D. It was a heck of a play by Tebow. And a heck of a collapse by the Jets
I added Tebow to my fantasy football team to replace Michael Vick who has been a huge bust in both the real and fantasy worlds. I didn't do it because I thought Tebow would score me a ton of points. He won't. I did it because after drafting a dog killing jerk I thought it might be a good idea to replace him with a man of God. I felt a need for atonement.
Monday, November 14, 2011
Hurts so good
WEEK 10
The Pats were bruised and battered.
Coming off two tough losses, with the Blabosphere howling at their door, with some of their key defenders on the sideline, in the aftermath of Phat Albert's release, and against the big talking team from New York at their stadium on a Sunday night ... the Patriots were faced with as big a regular season challenge as they've had in years. They responded by playing one of the gutsiest (is that really a word?) games I've seen in a while. Question their talent. Question their depth. Question the GM. (I have). But don't question this team's toughness and fight. And don't question the coaching staff. The Pats were hurting. They responded by doing the hurting.
The schedule for the Pats, on the other hand, now sets up perfectly. The only winning team they face is the Bills at the end of the season and the Bills are toast. Every game is tough in the NFL (just ask Baltimore), but beating the Jets is such a monumental shift in the fortunes of the two teams that Ryan couldn't hide how crushed he was. Asked if the Jets could still win the East, he shrugged his shoulders and said "It sure doesn't look too good."
Rex wasn't alone at being stunned. Not many people in New York saw this coming. The Pats fans I knew were optimistic, if not confident. The Pats lost two tough games but had battled the whole way. They have come up big a lot the last two years. None bigger than last night.
The first half was stressful to watch. Brady couldn't get in a groove and both teams wasted opportunities to take control. The Jets opened the game by driving, quickly and easily, to the Pats 9-yard line in just four plays. The D was missing Spikes and Chung. A defense that was already pretty shallow in the depth department was just about empty and the Jets were taking advantage of it, throwing the ball easily. It didn''t look good. But the drive stalled thanks to two Sanchez incompletions and kicker Nick Folk missed a very short field goal. Big mistake #1.
Brady and the Pats drove to the Jets 32 but were stopped and Gostkowski came out and nailed a 50-yarder for the 3-0 lead. A few minutes later the Jets faced a 3rd-and-8 on their own 42 when what would become the story of the game emerged. A pass rush. That's right. A pass rush. By the Pats D. Andre Carter bulled his way through the tight end's block and recorded his first of a team record 4..5 sacks in the game. A pass rush. Wow. The Pats offense drove deep into Jets territory but had to settle for a field goal and a mere 6-0 lead. That was the pattern for much of the first half. The Pats D pressuring Sanchez and the Pats offense moving the ball but coming up short.
The Pats got the ball at their own eight with about five minutes to go and still up 6-0. An incomplete pass and botched shotgun snap brought up a 3rd-and-long from their own five. The Jets D trapped Brady and he had to dump the ball off to avoid the sack. Safety. 6-2. A score that perfectly captured the frustrating nature of the play. That's when the game really started.
Sanchez -- as he has often done in his two-plus years in the league -- shook off a slow start and led his team on a big scoring drive to take the lead. The biggest play of the drive was not a play at all -- it was a timeout called by Sanchez. After completing a second-and-goal pass down to the two, Sanchez called a timeout with 1:24 to play in the half instead of letting the clock wind down or forcing the Pats to burn a timeout. Big mistake #2. Mt. Ryan reportedly called it "the stupidest thing in NFL history." (I think that honor goes to yesterday's Falcons 4th-and-inches call in OT). The Jets scored on the next play to take their first lead but the timeout left the Pats offense with 1:20 to respond. Respond they did.
Brady -- who, even including losing causes, has led at least a dozen huge drives so far this season -- methodically moved the team 80 yards in seven plays, capping it off with an 18-yard TD pass to Gronk. It was a great catch by Gronk who had a monster game. Brady and Belichick used the clock and their timeouts perfectly. The Pats defiantly walked off the field with 13-9 lead. It was an ugly, frustrating half of football. The second half would be easier to watch.
Both offenses opened with three-and-outs as the defenses continued to dominate. The Pats punted away on their second possession, but returner Joe McKnight took his eye off the ball (big mistake #3), and the ball bounced off his chest, eluded the grasp off three Jets, and was recovered by the Pats. The offense added a field goal to push the score to 16-9.
Then the Jets marched inside the Pats 40 but on first down Sanchez's pass skipped through the fingers of running back Shonn Greene, off the hands of Mayo, and right into Ninko's lap. The linebacker returned the ball to the Pats 43. Big mistake #4. There would be no field goals this time. The offense went no huddle and the Jets D actually didn't seem prepared for it. Hernandez, Branch, Woodhead, and Faulk all made plays as if to prove the offense is so much more than Welker and Gronk. Which it is. Then Gronk proved he is the most important part, making another great touchdown catch. Pats 23-9.
Sanchez -- who seems to play better in the playoffs than the regular season -- answered with a 10-play touchdown drive to get the Jets and Fireman Ed right back into the game. There was a whole quarter to go. It was the Pats best quarter of the season -- so far.
The offense got the ball at their own 16 and -- using the hurry up again -- put together a 16-play drive that chewed up almost seven minutes of clock. Once again the ball got spread around. Welker. Woody. Hernandez. Gronk. Faulk. And finally Branch who took a quick out pass from Brady, put a move on the DB, and skipped into the endzone. The Blabosphere has been obsessing on how other than Welker and Gronk the Pats have no weapons. Sometimes I'm just not sure what games they are watching.
Three plays after Branch's TD came big mistake #5. Sanchez tried to hit LT over the middle at the Jet 10 but Ninko -- looking a lot like that other #50, or even old #54 -- stepped in front of the soon-to-be-retired running back and took it in for a pick six. Pats 37-16.
How did the undermanned, bruised, and battered Pats beat on the Jets so convincingly? By doing the one thing that really matters in football... protect the ball. I've said it time and time again. Turnovers is the only stat that doesn't lie. Two of the Pats three losses are completely because of turnovers. All of the six wins are because of lack of turnovers. The score may have been 37-16. Just as important was another score: Jets big mistakes 5, Pats big mistakes 0.
Another number of note. Tom Brady and Bill Belichick set the record (117) for most wins by a QB-coach tandem last night. What a way to set the record.
The Pats were bruised and battered.
Coming off two tough losses, with the Blabosphere howling at their door, with some of their key defenders on the sideline, in the aftermath of Phat Albert's release, and against the big talking team from New York at their stadium on a Sunday night ... the Patriots were faced with as big a regular season challenge as they've had in years. They responded by playing one of the gutsiest (is that really a word?) games I've seen in a while. Question their talent. Question their depth. Question the GM. (I have). But don't question this team's toughness and fight. And don't question the coaching staff. The Pats were hurting. They responded by doing the hurting.
The look on Mt. Ryan's face in his post-game press conference said it all. Big Rex's stated goal before the season -- other than the Jets winning their third Super Bowl in a row fir him -- was to knock the Pats off the top of the AFC East hill. With an improbable 37-16 win, the Pats had sent the Jets tumbling down again. The Patriots are once again in control of the division and the Jets are once again looking at a second half of the season spent scratching for a wild card spot. The last two years they managed to claw their way in (or in the case of '09 have the Colts let them in) but the Foot Doctor knows you can't pull that off every year. And they have to fly to Denver for a tough game Thursday night. It's a must win road game.
The schedule for the Pats, on the other hand, now sets up perfectly. The only winning team they face is the Bills at the end of the season and the Bills are toast. Every game is tough in the NFL (just ask Baltimore), but beating the Jets is such a monumental shift in the fortunes of the two teams that Ryan couldn't hide how crushed he was. Asked if the Jets could still win the East, he shrugged his shoulders and said "It sure doesn't look too good."
Rex wasn't alone at being stunned. Not many people in New York saw this coming. The Pats fans I knew were optimistic, if not confident. The Pats lost two tough games but had battled the whole way. They have come up big a lot the last two years. None bigger than last night.
The first half was stressful to watch. Brady couldn't get in a groove and both teams wasted opportunities to take control. The Jets opened the game by driving, quickly and easily, to the Pats 9-yard line in just four plays. The D was missing Spikes and Chung. A defense that was already pretty shallow in the depth department was just about empty and the Jets were taking advantage of it, throwing the ball easily. It didn''t look good. But the drive stalled thanks to two Sanchez incompletions and kicker Nick Folk missed a very short field goal. Big mistake #1.
Brady and the Pats drove to the Jets 32 but were stopped and Gostkowski came out and nailed a 50-yarder for the 3-0 lead. A few minutes later the Jets faced a 3rd-and-8 on their own 42 when what would become the story of the game emerged. A pass rush. That's right. A pass rush. By the Pats D. Andre Carter bulled his way through the tight end's block and recorded his first of a team record 4..5 sacks in the game. A pass rush. Wow. The Pats offense drove deep into Jets territory but had to settle for a field goal and a mere 6-0 lead. That was the pattern for much of the first half. The Pats D pressuring Sanchez and the Pats offense moving the ball but coming up short.
The Pats got the ball at their own eight with about five minutes to go and still up 6-0. An incomplete pass and botched shotgun snap brought up a 3rd-and-long from their own five. The Jets D trapped Brady and he had to dump the ball off to avoid the sack. Safety. 6-2. A score that perfectly captured the frustrating nature of the play. That's when the game really started.
Sanchez -- as he has often done in his two-plus years in the league -- shook off a slow start and led his team on a big scoring drive to take the lead. The biggest play of the drive was not a play at all -- it was a timeout called by Sanchez. After completing a second-and-goal pass down to the two, Sanchez called a timeout with 1:24 to play in the half instead of letting the clock wind down or forcing the Pats to burn a timeout. Big mistake #2. Mt. Ryan reportedly called it "the stupidest thing in NFL history." (I think that honor goes to yesterday's Falcons 4th-and-inches call in OT). The Jets scored on the next play to take their first lead but the timeout left the Pats offense with 1:20 to respond. Respond they did.
Brady -- who, even including losing causes, has led at least a dozen huge drives so far this season -- methodically moved the team 80 yards in seven plays, capping it off with an 18-yard TD pass to Gronk. It was a great catch by Gronk who had a monster game. Brady and Belichick used the clock and their timeouts perfectly. The Pats defiantly walked off the field with 13-9 lead. It was an ugly, frustrating half of football. The second half would be easier to watch.
Both offenses opened with three-and-outs as the defenses continued to dominate. The Pats punted away on their second possession, but returner Joe McKnight took his eye off the ball (big mistake #3), and the ball bounced off his chest, eluded the grasp off three Jets, and was recovered by the Pats. The offense added a field goal to push the score to 16-9.
Then the Jets marched inside the Pats 40 but on first down Sanchez's pass skipped through the fingers of running back Shonn Greene, off the hands of Mayo, and right into Ninko's lap. The linebacker returned the ball to the Pats 43. Big mistake #4. There would be no field goals this time. The offense went no huddle and the Jets D actually didn't seem prepared for it. Hernandez, Branch, Woodhead, and Faulk all made plays as if to prove the offense is so much more than Welker and Gronk. Which it is. Then Gronk proved he is the most important part, making another great touchdown catch. Pats 23-9.
Sanchez -- who seems to play better in the playoffs than the regular season -- answered with a 10-play touchdown drive to get the Jets and Fireman Ed right back into the game. There was a whole quarter to go. It was the Pats best quarter of the season -- so far.
The offense got the ball at their own 16 and -- using the hurry up again -- put together a 16-play drive that chewed up almost seven minutes of clock. Once again the ball got spread around. Welker. Woody. Hernandez. Gronk. Faulk. And finally Branch who took a quick out pass from Brady, put a move on the DB, and skipped into the endzone. The Blabosphere has been obsessing on how other than Welker and Gronk the Pats have no weapons. Sometimes I'm just not sure what games they are watching.
Three plays after Branch's TD came big mistake #5. Sanchez tried to hit LT over the middle at the Jet 10 but Ninko -- looking a lot like that other #50, or even old #54 -- stepped in front of the soon-to-be-retired running back and took it in for a pick six. Pats 37-16.
How did the undermanned, bruised, and battered Pats beat on the Jets so convincingly? By doing the one thing that really matters in football... protect the ball. I've said it time and time again. Turnovers is the only stat that doesn't lie. Two of the Pats three losses are completely because of turnovers. All of the six wins are because of lack of turnovers. The score may have been 37-16. Just as important was another score: Jets big mistakes 5, Pats big mistakes 0.
Another number of note. Tom Brady and Bill Belichick set the record (117) for most wins by a QB-coach tandem last night. What a way to set the record.
Friday, November 11, 2011
Half 'n half
Every team in the NFL (including the Pats) has now played at least eight games. It's the half-way point of the season. What a first half it has been. There was a lot of talk in the first few weeks about the trend towards 45-40 games. A lot of wasted talk. The defenses -- as they always do -- are starting to assert themselves. The scores are dropping along with the temperatures.
The defending champs are the last unbeaten team and look to be helmet and shoulder pads above the rest of the field. Other than that the league is a free-for-all. Eleven of the 16 teams in the AFC are .500 or better. The AFC North alone has three teams with six wins. The NFC has nine teams at .500 or better. Take away the NFC West (please) and the quality of play throughout the league is as competitive as it's ever been. The football has been highly entertaining. The playoff races should come down to the wire in several divisions. The NFL Redzone is going to get a workout.
The league's top team is an easy one. After that it's a battle for We're No. 2!
1. Green Bay Packers (8-0): The Pack has outscored its opponents by almost 100 points. Aaron Rodgers is having what could be the first of several MVP years. Brett Favre will soon be a distant memory for Green Bay fans. Interestingly, the Pack's pass defense is second-to-last in the league. Maybe pass D isn't that important after all. I thought the Pack was a decent team that got hot at the right time last year to win their title. I was wrong. They were a great team that finally started putting it all together. A Pats-Pack rematch in the Super Bowl would be great.
2a. San Francisco 49ers (7-1): The Niners have only allowed 118 points. By far the lowest in the league. That's how you turn an underachieving team into a division champ. The rest of the NFC West has combined for just five wins. Two less than San Fran. Pete Carroll won't be sneaking into the playoffs this year. The Niners could wrap the division up by the time we all sit down for our turkey dinner. That really isn't a good thing for anyone, including the Niners.
2b. Baltimore Ravens (6-2): The Ravens accomplished their main goal for the regular season. Sweep the Steelers. But the Bengals were on the other side waiting for them. Now the Ravens will have a chance to sweep the Bengals and take the brutal AFC North. I think they will. Anquan Boldin has started to look like he did in Arizona. That makes Baltimore very dangerous.
2c. New England Patriots (5-3): They may have lost their last two games and their offense may be "struggling," but the Pats are still a top five team in the league. Hopefully they will prove me right Sunday night. The Pats had an off game in Pittsburgh coming out of their bye but losing at Heinz is no disgrace. Neither is losing to the Giants in a tight battle. The Pats -- as they often do -- got away from the run in the two losses. They need to get back to it. And -- stop me if you've heard this before -- they need more of a pass rush.
2d. New York Giants (6-2): Eli Bleeping Manning. Who would have thought that little Manning would ultimately become more of a pain in Belichick's side than his big brother? He pulled out another clutch win last week and has Tom Coughlin's G-Men back on top in the NFC East. They have maybe the best pass rush in the game and some young, explosive receivers to go along with a pounding running game. This is a very good team. They will be tough in the playoffs.
2e. New York Jets (5-3): How good are the Jets? They sure looked bad in their three-game losing streak. And they really haven't looked all that great in their current three-game winning streak. But the defense is starting to play like a Rex Ryan D and the running game is starting to show signs of life. And the big guy on the sideline is still doing a good job coaching. They play the Pats Sunday night and then have to fly out to Denver for a Thursday night game. Two games in five nights that could decide their playoff fate.
2f. New Orleans Saints (6-3): The Saints biggest problem so far has been winning on the road. Brees and the offense are averaging a league best 445 yards a game. That will win just about anywhere. The Saints are averaging about 320 yards passing and 125 yards rushing. That's balance. Darren Sproles was by far the best free agent pickup this year. He can do it all. The Saints D is even improved, averaging in the middle of the pack in most categories.
2g. Detroit Lions (6-2): The Lions were the hot story of the early season but have stumbled just a bit. Just a bit. Their red-hot offense has cooled down due to no running game. That has put more pressure on Stafford and he has looked more like a young QB lately. But the defense is still fierce. Surprisingly, Detroit is unbeaten on the road but only 2-2 in Motown. The Lions biggest problem is they are in the Pack's division so their only path to the playoffs is the wild card. Not an easy path in the NFC.
2h. Pittsburgh Steelers (6-3): The Steelers got stomped at home on opening day by Baltimore. They looked old. Since then they have gone 5-2. Steelers! Geez. They just keep winning. They have had a a habit the last decade of following up a great year (AFC champs) with a bad year. I was betting on that again. It doesn't look like a good bet. Big Ben keeps getting it done. Mike Wallace has taken over for Hines Ward very nicely. The defense continues to play solid, ranking third in the league in yards per game and fifth in points. Guess they aren't so old after all.
2i. Houston Texans (6-3): The team that is flying under the radar in the AFC. Houston usually has succumbed to the Colts by this point of the season. Freed from that shadow, the Texans are steadily heading towards their first division title (and playoff spot) in franchise history. The defense is leading the way. Houston is first in yards allowed, second against the pass, and fourth against the run. Mario Williams was worth the pick. The fact that they are winning without Andre Johnson says a lot.
2j. Cincinnati Bengals (6-2): They haven't played the Steelers or the Ravens yet. Actually, they've barely played anyone. But they are 6-2 and their defense is playing great. Of all the teams at the top of their division, the Bengals are the biggest question. As in... Who the hell plays for the Bengals? Rookie Andy Dalton from Texas Christian is playing solid rookie quarterback. Not making too many mistakes. First-round pick A.J. Green is playing outstanding rookie wideout. But it's the D that is the story. The Bengals are second against the rush and only allowing 17 points a game. If they keep that up they should make the playoffs.
2k. Atlanta Falcons (5-3): Another team flying below the radar. The Falcons had the best record in the NFC last season only to get bounced at home in their first playoff game. Like the Pats. Unlike the Pats, they have a defense that can stop people. Matt Ryan and Michael Turner give the Falcons balance on offense. Julio Jones is another rookie wideout who would have looked good in a Pats uniform. The Falcons are better on the road this year which should help them come playoff time.
Dishonorable mention: I said at the start of the year this could be a rough one for Indianapolis Colts fans. I had no idea how rough. 0-8. Wow. I guess Manning really was the reason that team won all those games. GM Bill Polian should be embarrassed. He apparently thought Manning would stay healthy and play another ten years. Because it's clear there was no Plan B. Sorry, Colts fans. You'll have lots of free time on Sundays come January. I know that's not very appealing since you live in Indianapolis.
The defending champs are the last unbeaten team and look to be helmet and shoulder pads above the rest of the field. Other than that the league is a free-for-all. Eleven of the 16 teams in the AFC are .500 or better. The AFC North alone has three teams with six wins. The NFC has nine teams at .500 or better. Take away the NFC West (please) and the quality of play throughout the league is as competitive as it's ever been. The football has been highly entertaining. The playoff races should come down to the wire in several divisions. The NFL Redzone is going to get a workout.
The league's top team is an easy one. After that it's a battle for We're No. 2!
1. Green Bay Packers (8-0): The Pack has outscored its opponents by almost 100 points. Aaron Rodgers is having what could be the first of several MVP years. Brett Favre will soon be a distant memory for Green Bay fans. Interestingly, the Pack's pass defense is second-to-last in the league. Maybe pass D isn't that important after all. I thought the Pack was a decent team that got hot at the right time last year to win their title. I was wrong. They were a great team that finally started putting it all together. A Pats-Pack rematch in the Super Bowl would be great.
2a. San Francisco 49ers (7-1): The Niners have only allowed 118 points. By far the lowest in the league. That's how you turn an underachieving team into a division champ. The rest of the NFC West has combined for just five wins. Two less than San Fran. Pete Carroll won't be sneaking into the playoffs this year. The Niners could wrap the division up by the time we all sit down for our turkey dinner. That really isn't a good thing for anyone, including the Niners.
2b. Baltimore Ravens (6-2): The Ravens accomplished their main goal for the regular season. Sweep the Steelers. But the Bengals were on the other side waiting for them. Now the Ravens will have a chance to sweep the Bengals and take the brutal AFC North. I think they will. Anquan Boldin has started to look like he did in Arizona. That makes Baltimore very dangerous.
2c. New England Patriots (5-3): They may have lost their last two games and their offense may be "struggling," but the Pats are still a top five team in the league. Hopefully they will prove me right Sunday night. The Pats had an off game in Pittsburgh coming out of their bye but losing at Heinz is no disgrace. Neither is losing to the Giants in a tight battle. The Pats -- as they often do -- got away from the run in the two losses. They need to get back to it. And -- stop me if you've heard this before -- they need more of a pass rush.
2d. New York Giants (6-2): Eli Bleeping Manning. Who would have thought that little Manning would ultimately become more of a pain in Belichick's side than his big brother? He pulled out another clutch win last week and has Tom Coughlin's G-Men back on top in the NFC East. They have maybe the best pass rush in the game and some young, explosive receivers to go along with a pounding running game. This is a very good team. They will be tough in the playoffs.
2e. New York Jets (5-3): How good are the Jets? They sure looked bad in their three-game losing streak. And they really haven't looked all that great in their current three-game winning streak. But the defense is starting to play like a Rex Ryan D and the running game is starting to show signs of life. And the big guy on the sideline is still doing a good job coaching. They play the Pats Sunday night and then have to fly out to Denver for a Thursday night game. Two games in five nights that could decide their playoff fate.
2f. New Orleans Saints (6-3): The Saints biggest problem so far has been winning on the road. Brees and the offense are averaging a league best 445 yards a game. That will win just about anywhere. The Saints are averaging about 320 yards passing and 125 yards rushing. That's balance. Darren Sproles was by far the best free agent pickup this year. He can do it all. The Saints D is even improved, averaging in the middle of the pack in most categories.
2g. Detroit Lions (6-2): The Lions were the hot story of the early season but have stumbled just a bit. Just a bit. Their red-hot offense has cooled down due to no running game. That has put more pressure on Stafford and he has looked more like a young QB lately. But the defense is still fierce. Surprisingly, Detroit is unbeaten on the road but only 2-2 in Motown. The Lions biggest problem is they are in the Pack's division so their only path to the playoffs is the wild card. Not an easy path in the NFC.
2h. Pittsburgh Steelers (6-3): The Steelers got stomped at home on opening day by Baltimore. They looked old. Since then they have gone 5-2. Steelers! Geez. They just keep winning. They have had a a habit the last decade of following up a great year (AFC champs) with a bad year. I was betting on that again. It doesn't look like a good bet. Big Ben keeps getting it done. Mike Wallace has taken over for Hines Ward very nicely. The defense continues to play solid, ranking third in the league in yards per game and fifth in points. Guess they aren't so old after all.
2i. Houston Texans (6-3): The team that is flying under the radar in the AFC. Houston usually has succumbed to the Colts by this point of the season. Freed from that shadow, the Texans are steadily heading towards their first division title (and playoff spot) in franchise history. The defense is leading the way. Houston is first in yards allowed, second against the pass, and fourth against the run. Mario Williams was worth the pick. The fact that they are winning without Andre Johnson says a lot.
2j. Cincinnati Bengals (6-2): They haven't played the Steelers or the Ravens yet. Actually, they've barely played anyone. But they are 6-2 and their defense is playing great. Of all the teams at the top of their division, the Bengals are the biggest question. As in... Who the hell plays for the Bengals? Rookie Andy Dalton from Texas Christian is playing solid rookie quarterback. Not making too many mistakes. First-round pick A.J. Green is playing outstanding rookie wideout. But it's the D that is the story. The Bengals are second against the rush and only allowing 17 points a game. If they keep that up they should make the playoffs.
2k. Atlanta Falcons (5-3): Another team flying below the radar. The Falcons had the best record in the NFC last season only to get bounced at home in their first playoff game. Like the Pats. Unlike the Pats, they have a defense that can stop people. Matt Ryan and Michael Turner give the Falcons balance on offense. Julio Jones is another rookie wideout who would have looked good in a Pats uniform. The Falcons are better on the road this year which should help them come playoff time.
Dishonorable mention: I said at the start of the year this could be a rough one for Indianapolis Colts fans. I had no idea how rough. 0-8. Wow. I guess Manning really was the reason that team won all those games. GM Bill Polian should be embarrassed. He apparently thought Manning would stay healthy and play another ten years. Because it's clear there was no Plan B. Sorry, Colts fans. You'll have lots of free time on Sundays come January. I know that's not very appealing since you live in Indianapolis.
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