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Rushing
the passer never occurred to Mike McCarthy..............and Shonn
Greene took advantage of misdirection
Photo by Christian Petersen - Getty Images
Photo
by Andy Lyons - Getty Images |
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I kept wondering yesterday as I
watched the Arizona-Green
Bay match, “how many times could I hit Mike McCarthy in the head with a
2x4
before he covered up”? After Warner’s
first TD pass, I would have been thinking, “maybe I should rush this
guy”. After the second, it would have
been, “ok,
the very next TD he throws, I’m going to start putting the heat on this
sonova
gun”.
And then I would have really started
bringing linebackers,
safeties, corners at Warner…..and you know what? Maybe
he beats the blitz a couple of times
but maybe he doesn’t finish the game either.
In no event does he continue carving up my defense
with absolutely no
ramifications.
If I knew McCarthy was going to sit
back, rush three and
play a friggin’ zone, there is absolutely no way I would have picked
Green Bay
to win that game. You couldn’t have
given me enough points. The NFL makes
teams divulge injuries but not gameplans. There
is no reporting requirement for
stupidity.
It was painful for me to watch the
heroic effort of Aaron
Rodgers in the face of a rush, scrambling around, making impossible
throws to
an almost equally adept group of receivers.
That Jennings catch on the sidelines was one of the
best I’ve ever
seen. Green Bay did not deserve to
lose. Only McCarthy did.
So Mike McCarthy joins my list of bad
coaches, along with
the memorable Herm Edwards, Rich Kotite and other numbskulls from the
past. Thankfully for me, he was not on
the Jets sideline. We had a guy who isn’t
a real deep thinker. He’s just a guy who
reacts to what’s right there in front of him.
And what was in front of Rex Ryan
Saturday were the
Cincinnati Bengals….those poor bastards.
They didn’t stand a chance. Ryan’s
pound-the-rock offense and his grinding defense made the Bengals paper
tigers.
And, while I had picked the Jets to cover, I thought that they’d lose
in the
end; I thought they’d lose to a veteran quarterback, Carson Palmer,
while their
rookie quarterback Mark Sanchez would finally succumb to the gravity of
the
moment and throw a pick or two.
But it wasn’t just pounding that
ground down the
Bengals. It was misdirection.
The Jets watched the films, DVD’s probably….whatever. They saw a pursuing defense, some might have
said an over-pursuing defense, and they took advantage.
They took the lead and held it.
But you can’t misdirect without the threat of
pounding. And that threat was taken very
seriously by the Cincinnati Bengals.
Of course, much of that strategy went
unreported. That telecast was one of the
worst ever on
television. Joe Gibbs is a color
guy? I still can’t remember anything the
play-by-play fella said; in fact, I still can’t remember his name. (I looked it up..Tom Hammond?)
The color guy was Joe Theisman.
To most football fans, I’ll have to say no
more. Somebody called him the human
filibuster. He was being kind. Theisman didn’t even know the rules for a
catch. It was either that or his mouth
was moving waay faster than his brain could kick in.
Of course, none of that’s important. The Jets won.
They romped. And they
talked. Then they talked some more. But that’s okay. Rex
is strong on visualization. What the hell,
it seems to be working. I can see him at
work behind the scenes, “Now,
Mark, I want you to picture Dustin Keller all alone behind the defense,
you’re
running right with nobody in your face and all you have to do is throw
the ball
to him.” If anything like that did in fact
happen, I wouldn’t be surprised.
The Pats lost, of course, to a Ravens
team that used a lot
of the same Jets tactics to overwhelm their opponent.
This was another game that I picked for the
Ravens to cover but not win. I gave too
much credit to Brady and Belichick and the Pats being home and all that
meant
absolutely nothing, nada, zilch to the Ravens.
They just kicked butt. And
it
surely was a sweet thing to see.
Those Ravens were ready and the
readiest Raven was Ray
Rice. (Say that 5 times fast). Ray just started off by scooting through an
opening and then turning on the jets for an 83-yard touchdown. Then their defensive end on just a 3-man front
gets around his blocker and swipes the ball out of Brady’s hand
resulting in
another touchdown. And that was pretty
much all she wrote.
I must say though that I’m somewhat
surprised that some
people are thinking that that game might mark the end of the Patriots
dominance. That’s pretty crazy. Belichick will analyze and measure to the nth
degree, make the changes he must, and the Pats will be back. Then the Pats fans will say, “Geez, it’s so
nice not to have Vrabel and Seau and……”.
I’m working backwards here somewhat as
the game I cared
about most, except for the Jets game, is the one I’m covering last. It wasn’t much of a game though.
McNabb had no time to throw and his fleet of
fleet receivers never got open. DeSean
Jackson…erased, Jeremy Maclin…who?, Brent Celek….huh?
The Cowboys made them disappear.
I have to admit that Wade Phillips
used to be on my list of
horrible coaches, stemming mostly from his alleged contention that he
could
devise a defense that could consist of nobodies….that his brilliant
strategy of
spacing and discipline could totally frustrate any opponent. No stars would be required.
I guess years of failure at Denver may have
changed his mind. His defense now seems
to have been adapted so that his stars are used in his defense to fully
showcase their abilities…..but within the scheme of his overall
strategy. It was his defense that beat
Philadelphia. And it was his defense
that got the Cowboys into the game at all.
J-E-T-S….Jets…..Jets….JETS!!
Next stop San Diego and more later on that.

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