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Green-Ellis
celebrates with Kevin Faulk and Danny Woodhead
Photo
by Jim Rogash- Getty |
Giants
TE's Pascoe and Ballard celebrate Pascoe's TD
Photo- Ezra
Shaw--Getty |
This is the longest week in the sports
calendar. It must be.
I even turned on a minute or so of the Pro Bowl. There should be some form of punishment for
that, if the game itself isn’t penalty enough. Unless
you’re a madman or Super Bowl trivia expert,
this is a week for
that ski trip you always wanted.
Oh yeah, there’s basketball. Right. The Knicks
traded their
way out of contention and nobody wants to play for the Nets. Seton Hall was exciting for a brief while but
those heady days appear to be over. The
Australian Open was great, I must say, especially the Men’s Final
between
Djokovic and Nadal but that’s all over.
Oh yeah, there’s baseball hot stove
stuff. Every other team in the world is
doing
something interesting but if you’re a Mets fan, you have to be happy
with
less. For Mets fans, this is the
beginning of the beginning if you’re an optimist. It’ll
be a year of hoping a team plays over
its head….constantly.
I’m not into hockey but this week I
actually wish I
was. For a guy who’s never really
skated, it’s tough to follow hockey. There
is some Rangers buzz though and how often does
that happen? Okay, I’m done, what else is
there? Oh well, it’ll be a good week to
hit the gym
a lot. Geez, maybe I can even start
following the Republican nominees around. That’s
at least nasty.
I know this would probably be a good
time to do a nice
lengthy analysis of Giants-Pats but geez, it seems I’ve covered the
Giants side
of things enough already. I’ve
maintained they’d need the best defense in the league to even get this
far. That has proven true.
But they also seem to have a little luck
going for them lately, most notably against San Francisco.
I mean, really, how often is the
return guy going to let the
ball hit him in the knee? And how often
is the same guy going to fumble? That’s
what makes me nervous going into Indianapolis. It
would seem that maybe the G-Men’s good luck is
due to turn. I don’t want to put the horns
on them but,
really, will the Patriots give the ball up that easily?
I don’t think so.
Plus, there’re all those characters you’ve heard
about before. Yeah, yeah, Bellichick. Yeah, yeah, Brady. And
now, yeah, yeah, Gronkowski. But maybe the
big scary tight end will have
no wheels for this game. That sure
sounds like more good luck to me.
The question for me is whether or not
the Giants can beat
that Pats team without getting ridiculous breaks. It
is possible, I think. But it’s also
possible that Bellichick will
come up with something weird. For this
game, if I were him, I’d use the formula that won me a Super Bowl for
the
Giants against the Buffalo Bills back in 1991.
That day, Bellichick’s Giants defense
decided to let the
Bills QB Kelly complete short passes in front of them and then
proceeded to knock the ever-loving hell
out of the
receiver. Before you knew it, the
high-flying Bills were doing nothing and the Giants were just pounding
the ball
on the ground, keeping that Bills offense off the field.
Before the Bills figured out that the G-Men
were letting them run, it was almost too late.
I say “almost” because the Bills
actually did finally run
the ball into scoring position with a chance to win.
But Scott Norwood was wide right with his
field goal attempt. It was too late for
the Bills only because Norwood missed. All
of Bellichick’s scheming could have gone out the
window. Luck showed its ugly side to the
Bills that
day.
But the circumstances between that
game and this one are
similar. The Giants have a running game
for sure but the real threats are in the passing game and lots of yards
after
the catch. Why not sit back and blast
the hell out of Nicks and Cruz and Manningham? Why
wouldn’t the Pats force the G-Men to beat them
on the ground?
On the other side of the ball, the
Pats would try to run the
ball as O.J. Anderson did that January day in 1991.
That will really be the challenge for the
Pats. But, even if they can just get a
few yards now and then on the ground, it’ll enable Brady to dink and
dunk them
to death with Welker and Hernandez, their other tight end and
jack-of-all-trades. A ground game will
also
tire out those animals on the Giants defensive line.
If the Pats can do all those things,
pound the Giants
receivers, run the ball successfully, and dink the Giants to death,
they could
easily win this game. Incredibly enough,
the betting line currently says the Pats are favored by 3; the
over-under at 54
½. Vegas thinks it’ll be somewhere
around 29-26 in the Pats favor.
No two teams know each other better
than these Giants and
Pats, having played once this season already, and both head coaches
coached
together under Bill Parcells. When there
are no surprises, the team with the better talent will tend to win the
game. You couldn’t convince me that the
Pats have the better overall talent.
With a healthy Gronkowski, the Pats
may be more
talented. But a slowed-down Gronk makes
a big difference. He’s been Brady’s
favorite receiver. Even a big guy has
trouble playing with pain. And a high
ankle sprain presents a nice target for further injury.
I’d expect some low tackles on Mr.
Gronkowski.
This game is too hard to predict
really, but, especially if
both teams neutralize the perceived power on the other side, I’d think
this
will be a game of unlikely heroes, maybe a Patriots running back or a
Giants
tight end. I don’t think the “usual
suspects” will have a chance.
Look to the little guys in this one.
Definitely.