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The
Giants defense handled everything the Falcons could muster
Photo
by Al Bello- Getty |
But Aaron
Rodgers will be doing the mustering.....
Photo- Scott
Boehm--Getty |
What an NFL Wildcard Weekend!!
I had thought this past weekend might
be one of those
yawners that seem to happen now and then. The
matchups certainly didn’t lend themselves to
one’s thinking that it’d
be great entertainment, especially not the Broncos-Steelers game. I’d been looking forward to the
Giants-Falcons, of course, but the other games didn’t send me, except
for maybe
the Bengals against the Texans. I
thought the Bengals had a great chance.
Wrong, wrong, wrong!!
The Texans were off and running early. JJ Watt, a lineman for Pete’s sake, made a
reaching stab of a Dalton pass to the flat and that play pretty much
was a
harbinger of things to come. There’d be
no Dalton dramatics, there’d be no stopping the Texans running game….it
was a
pretty routine win for the contingent from Texas. For
one more year, it’d be a shame to be a
Bengals fan.
That Saturday night, the Saints-Lions
was on the
schedule. Nobody in their right mind
thought the Lions would be able to stop Drew Brees but they actually
did pretty
well through the first half before utterly crumbling in the second half. It was like a snowball rolling down the
hill. But, if you like watching a good
quarterback work, Drew Brees is one of the three quarterbacks in the
league
that can absolutely destroy a defense.
One of the other two, of course, Aaron
Rodgers, is
unfortunately facing our Giants this weekend. His
Packers have lost just once this year and
Rodgers has been a huge
part of the reason. The man is as
accurate as anybody who’s ever played. He
rolls around in the pocket and will take off
running when the
opportunity presents itself. The man
just rolls.
Yeah. That’s
true. But what about the Giants
defense? Won’t that pass rush get to
Rodgers? I certainly hope so but that
Pack OL ain’t chopped liver and I’m not so sure the Falcons OL had one
of its
better days against the G-Men. But,
statistically, as I can recall, the Falcons OL was pretty high in the
rankings.
What I’m trying to say is that, if the
Giants defensive line
is the best in the league, if they can get to any quarterback in the
league,
then Rodgers might find himself running around a bit more than he is
used
to. I’ve already heard the Giants have a
puncher’s chance and that’s as good an analogy as any, I suppose.
The trouble is that even a Rodgers
under pressure is going
to be pretty damned good. He’ll roll
around and get rid of the ball when he must but most of the time, he’ll
just
find those receivers in perfect stride. Or,
if they’re covered, he’ll just do that
back-shoulder routine that’s
so impossible to stop. Rodgers throws to
everybody and he throws on the run probably better than anybody. So, even if he’s running, that doesn’t help
the opposition as much as you’d think.
When the Giants beat the Pats in early
2008, Brady was the QB
and, at the time anyway, Brady was considered the best quarterback ever. As things turned out, the Giants did indeed
get to Brady and the pressure affected him bigtime.
But Brady is a statue compared to Rodgers.
The aforementioned Brady is still in
these playoffs, of
course, and his Pats should have another reasonably good time against
the Broncos. All I can say about that one
is Tebow, Tebow,
Tebow, Tebow. Watching Tebow running
that Denver offense, when it’s all working, is a thing of beauty. What’s he going to do? Well,
he could run himself, he could simply
hand off or he could run to the edge and pitch it, or he could just
wing it
down the field, that last being the least likely of all.
That is, until Sunday afternoon. After Sunday’s game, the defense will have to
figure against the Broncs passing game as well. Tebow’s
316 yards passing and two touchdowns, and
another one rushing,
pretty much killed any thoughts that the Broncs were only
3-dimensional. Any
more dimensions, of course, would be out of this world, by definition,
and that’s
exactly what most Broncos fans are thinking about their quarterback
these days.
After the Giants crushing of the
witless Falcons, I would’ve
been happy with the day as it was. I
didn’t really need a great Broncos game, even if the Broncs opponent
was the
hated Steelers, the hated Ben Roethlisberger, that stupid Kiesel beard,
that
bully Harrison, and Mike Tomlin just out-thinking and out-motivating
everybody
else on the sidelines.
The way Denver went about their
business was special. That first half was
especially good, watching
the Broncos not only take the lead with a beautifully-thrown Tebow pass
that
went the distance, but then adding insult to injury by just piling up
some more
points. And when hated Big Ben took the
Steelers all the way back to inevitably
tie the game in regulation, one had to think the worst.
But Tebow’s on-target dart to Demaryus Thomas on the first play of overtime
was just
great. There would be no Steelers
victory that day. Tebow to Thomas took
care of that.
Saving the best for last, the Giants
game proceeded pretty
much as I had expected. The game started
slowly, both teams did nothing and then things heated up quickly. But I’d thought both teams would have some
success through the air. I’d thought
Falcons head-man Mike Smith would ultimately blow the game. As things turned out though, Smith took his
team out early with badly-run quarterback sneaks while the ponderous
Michael
Turner watched from the bench.
And the Giants defense stopped
everything the Falcons could
muster.
But Rodgers will be doing the
mustering this week and their
head coach isn’t Mike Smith. The G-Men
need to bring their best game. If they
truly have become the best defense in the league, as it certainly
appeared on
Sunday, they could even win this thing.