I know this is supposed to be
about sports but does anything
feel better than finally not being sick anymore? Everything
matters again, at least a little
bit anyway. I just wish things were
going my way a little bit more.
I mean…the Giants are going
nowhere but home and the Jets
will be facing the Colts. Except for the
great Ohio State victory over Arkansas last night, all the Northern and
Eastern
teams got beat in the Bowl Games. Teams
I rooted for, like the Rams to beat the lowly Seahawks, went down in a
flurry
of dropped passes.
And there’s no baseball news to
get excited about, not if
you’re a Mets fan. If you’re a Mets fan,
the only question about who’ll win the NL East is whether it’ll be the
Phillies
or the Braves. The latest Mets acquisitions have been strictly
lower-level at
best.
But maybe the most depressing
thing of all for a
defensively-minded football fan is that I can’t fathom the Jets giving
the Colts
a run for their money. They’ve got the
really accurate Manning, the one who figures everything out at the line
of
scrimmage and just picks a defense apart, especially the ones being
tricky.
I remember feeling the same way
about the Niners offense
back in Joe Montana’s heyday.
The Niners threw all those short passes that
required no time at all to throw, using precision and timing to
frustrate the
best defenses of the day.
But our very own Giants team did
beat that Montana-led
offense. Guys like Leonard Marshall and
Lawrence Taylor wouldn’t let Montana finish the game and just creamed
those
Niners receivers all day long.
You just can’t assume anything
in football. The favorites tend
to win most of the time but any of those locks can go down in a wave of
violence and momentum. Arkansas
showed
that last night before finally succumbing to a brilliantly-executed
zone blitz.
I don’t expect the Jets to beat
the Colts. That
is, not unless they just do the following:
1.
Knock the crap out
of anything they see in blue.
2.
Hit
those
wideouts and tight end right off the line. Mess
up that timing. If
you give
up something along the way (and it’s almost inevitable but just once
would be
acceptable), so be it.
3.
Go for the 3 and
outs. Get that defense off the field.
4.
Don’t try to
outsmart Peyton Manning.
5.
Swipe at that ball
when it makes sense. Otherwise just make
the hard tackle.
6.
Run the ball. Use Joe McKnight if necessary.
7.
Protect Sanchez,
use max protect if necessary,
he only sees one or two receivers anyway.
8.
Continue with step
6.
Braylon Edwards and Santonio
Holmes seeking redemption won’t
beat the Colts, Mark Sanchez’s suddenly good shoulder won’t make the
difference, Rex Ryan’s making it a
personal battle won’t carry the day. What’ll beat the Colts is a
60-minute football
ass-kicking.
The Jets need to feel insulted
going in there. They have to be pissed off. They should remember that Peyton didn’t
recognize any personal battle with Rex. He
wasn’t aware of it. Rex
was
below his radar on awareness. The Jets
have to hit this guy. Clearly.
That ballyhooed offensive line
has to perform, Ferguson
and Mangold and Woody have to show up. If they think in terms of long drives and
clock-killing and 3 and outs,
they can outperform those guys in blue. They
can hold the ball forever. LaDainian
Tomlinson isn’t chopped liver. This is
the game for which he was picked up in the first place.
The game plan is so important. It should be conservative.
For Reggie Wayne there is
Darrelle Revis and for Garcon
there is Cromartie. There will be no
Austin Collie or Clark to worry about. There
is every reason to believe the Colts
passing game can be held in
check.
It
goes without
saying (and I’ve tried up to now not to say it), the Jets have to stop
any
sniveling Colts attempts to run the football. I
mean, it’s Addai and Rhodes, not Arian
Foster or, dare I say it,
LaDainian Tomlinson. And hell, isn’t
that what Rex Ryan really knows how to do?
Peyton Manning can get flustered. The Saints proved that last year.
If you keep the pressure on Manning (or really just about anyone not wearing a big
S on his chest), he can go bust. Of
course, the Saints were a lot smarter than this Jets defense has yet
shown
itself to be. But they definitely gave
Manning less time to think as the game wore on, and yet they still
covered
everybody.
The Jets can’t be the Saints but
they can be a smarter
Jets. Rex Ryan can’t try to be Sean
Payton but he doesn’t have to be Herman Edwards either.
He has to rely on his “best team in the AFC”,
play conservatively and not make the big mistake. He
has to concentrate on making the first
down in three attempts, and, if not, punt.
Peyton Manning has to feel the
pressure on every pass
attempt. Let him know there will be no
downs off when he can stand back there and survey the field. There must always be someone coming for
him. But, in addition to the pressure of
every down, Manning has to be made to feel the pressure of the game
situation.
If the Jets play the physical
game they’re noted for and
keep the pressure on Manning and that precision-passing game, they can
be
assured of either staying close or maintaining a lead very late into
the game.
If
they make no
obvious mistakes, if they can get Brad Smith free just one time, or
maybe even
get another safety out of a Jason Taylor, if they can just
“out-football” that
Indianapolis team for 60 minutes, that Colts team can be beaten.
I’d love to see it, to make
Peyton Manning “aware” of Rex
Ryan and the Jets.
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