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Bill
Sheridan is quite proud of his losing
processes..................................................
and will Nate Robinson just revert to his losing ways?
Photo by Joe Epstein - StarLedger
Photo
by John Angelillo - UPI
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As I finally get to watch a college
bowl game that I’ve heard of, the
Cotton Bowl, my thoughts turn to some of the crazy happenings this week
in sports.
Giants defensive coordinator Bill Sheridan’s
responses to questions regarding his job status, Broncos’ head coach
Josh McDaniel’s decision to bench Brandon Marshall for the finale and
Knicks coach Mike D’Antoni’s decision to take Nate Robinson off the
bench against the Hawks, come immediately to mind.
First there is the remarkable story of Bill Sheridan, Giants defensive
coordinator.
He benched Osi Umenyiora, arguably the best defensive player on the
team. He never rushed the passer despite having the worst secondary in
the league. His players never showed any heart despite having shown
pretty unequivocally two years ago that they had huge heart when
playing for Steve Spagnuolo. He’s big on losing the forest for the
trees.
But Sheridan thinks he should be retained. He actually said the
following earlier this week:
“One thing at least we will get credit for is we stuck to our plan of
how we’re going to coach and how we’re going to teach and
gameplan….We’ve done that every single week and, like they say, the
proof will be in hindsight.”
Excuse me, Bill, but……this year’s
Giants defense has performed worse than just about any Giants defense
in the long and mostly illustrious history of that great franchise.
They have allowed 49 touchdowns in 15 forgettable contests, 20 on the
ground, 27 through the air and 2 special teams TD’s.
The best
defensive team also resides in New York, or actually New Jersey, if you
want to be technical. That would be the New York Jets. They actually
have a meaningful game tomorrow. Anyway, they have allowed just 26 (vs.
49) touchdowns, 11 rushing (vs. 20), just 8 (vs. 27) through the air,
and a comparatively bad 7 on special teams. Compare….8 receiving
touchdowns to the Giants 27!
Sheridan is a man who tried to
get himself situated in the booth rather than the sidelines for games.
His responses the other day to questions as to his job status tell you
why. They are suggestive as to his personality. He is an automaton.
Football is an emotional game. Maybe Sheridan would fit better at
Toyota.
I’ll breathe a huge sigh of relief when he is gone.
I
actually have mixed feelings on the Josh McDaniels/Brandon Marshall
showdown number 2. On Marshall’s side is the fact that an injury is an
injury. On the coach’s side is the fact that an MRI showed nothing
wrong. Coach also is sitting Tony Scheffler, his tight end, who has
grumbled about game plans. Good for him. They should take the measure
of Kansas City without those two malcontents.
Then there’s the
curious case of Nate Robinson, the nutcase Knicks guard with a lot of
talent and…..well, that’s all. He scored 41 last night to beat the
Hawks but the Knicks record without Robinson in the lineup was 9-6.
Nate doesn’t defend, doesn’t listen to his coach… or anybody for that
matter, and doesn’t seem to really care who wins the game.
I’m
almost sorry Robinson impressed last night. The Knicks are better
without him. Good for Mike D’Antoni for having the guts to sit him, and
the guts to play him as a last resort. But Robinson won’t change. In
the long run, he’ll be a detriment to winning. Bring him in when you
need some scoring and then sit him along with his other clueless friend
Mr. Curry.
I’ve pretty much had it with selfish players. And clueless coaches too.
In
this same vein, in a new book by Bob McGinn, “The Ultimate Super Bowl
Book”, there are some real gems, including stats from the games and
other things you’d expect, but also some interviews and quotes from
coaches and players in hindsight on the games. I highly recommend it.
For
Giants fans, there are several tidbits of “inside the game” type
material, such as Bill Belichick’s take on the game, details as to the
defensive calls and big plays, and a re-hash of the big catch by Tyree
and the double-move and fade by Plaxico for the game-winner.
There
are also quotes from Spagnuolo, such as his recollection of the long
Patriots drive that preceded the winning Giants drive…..”It was
max-protection, they kept the tight end in. They were in a pressure
situation needing to score and they executed their offense…..We should
have pressured more.”
It’s also worth noting that Rex Ryan’s Dad
Buddy coached the defensive line for the Jets in Super Bowl III, and
that Don Maynard was hurt pretty badly, which was why George Sauer
caught all the passes that day from Broadway Joe. I was also reminded
that, after the AFL Kansas City Chiefs whipped the NFL’s Vikings the
very next year, 1970, there was the merger.
Each one of those
first four NFL-AFL games was truly more than a game. Ever since, each
Super Bowl has pretty much just been another game.
Not that each
game doesn’t have its own excitement though; tomorrow’s Jets game will
certainly go a long way towards defining the Jets stature in New York,
along with that of Rex Ryan and those defensive stars, Revis and Scott
and Harris, and whether Ochocinco will make good on his web-site
promises.
There’s the Cowboys-Eagles game too. Will McNabb and
that wondrous group of wide-outs dictate against a Cowboys defense that
sparkles, especially against the run. (When I was foaming at the mouth
about the Eagles earlier, I hadn’t considered that the Boyz defense had
only allowed 7 rushing touchdowns all year and just 19 through the
air….the Eagles numbers are 10 and 25…quite a difference).
The
Pats – Texans will also be a big one. The Texans have a decent shot at
the playoffs still, and the 1 PM start guarantees they won’t know in
advance how the Ravens and Broncos and Jets are doing.
The Steelers have about the same shot. Stay tuned.

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