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Up to the Leaders
Photo by
David J Phillip-AP
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All in the Family ?
Photo-David J Phillip-AP |
Even the gods of football have to be tired of the Patriots same sad old
song. Team, team, team, ad nauseum, that same tired old injury
report, Bruschi, Vrabel, Seau, yada yada, and of course Brady Brady
Brady. It's that sameness of spirit that'll beat the Patriots
Sunday night. It's too mechanical, too rehearsed, a team of
automatons led by a sociopathic coach who may have assembled a team
that seems a little long on experience and a little short on enthusiasm.
The Giants, on the other hand, are a team coming off three impressive
victories, all on the road, and with their season on the line in each
one. Along the way, they beat an old nemesis, Jeff Garcia, in the
first playoff game, then they beat a team to which they had twice lost
during the regular season, then they beat another team that thrashed
them in the regular season, a team with a Hall of Fame quarterback on a
tradition-rich field in zero-degree weather.
If you truly do believe in the team concept, then you have to pick the
Giants on Sunday. In Tom Coughlin, they have a head coach
who has changed his coaching style to accommodate and strengthen his
team. In Kevin Gilbride, they have an offensive coordinator with
the guts to listen to his players to improve the offense. In
Steve Spagnuolo, they have a defensive coordinator with the guts to
adjust his schemes to the strengths of his players, to play
bump-and-run with the most dangerous receivers in the game, to blitz
when four men alone couldn't get it done.
They have no super-model spouse at quarterback, just Eli Manning, a guy
with a strong football heritage, a guy who does what he needs to do to
win, a guy who'd love to get a ring to match his older brother's, a guy
who'd love to laugh with his Dad after still one more huge win.
Records aren't important to him. He was just as happy after a win in
Buffalo, one in which at least five of his passes were dropped and his
rating was about 32, as he was after his 132 qb rating in the Cowboys
victory.
The Giants have other leaders too, hungry men all, such as Antonio
Pierce on the defense, who held up two men at once until help could
arrive against the Packers to prevent a sure touchdown. Michael
Strahan leads a group of strong defensive linemen, athletic types who
stop the run and the pass too. On the offense, Amani Toomer has
played like a man possessed in these playoffs, making seemingly every
big third-down catch, and who remembers how bad it felt to lose a Super
Bowl.
Another thing weighing heavily in the Giants favor is defense.
The Patriots with their high-flying offense have not been particularly
impressive on the defense. Although they only gave up 12 points
to the Chargers, it was to a Chargers team playing without their
premier back, LaDainian Tomlinson, and with a hobbled
quarterback. Previous to that game, they surrendered 20 points to
a Jacksonville team that had a rather one-dimensional offense compared
to that of the Giants. And, of course, prior to that game, the
Giants scored 35 against them.
The Giants defense has been opportunistic as well as good.
Against Dallas, it was the defense that made two consecutive 4th
quarter stops to ruin the Cowboys year and versus the Pack, it was a
key 4th quarter interception against Bret Favre that carried the G-Men
to the Super Bowl.
Of course, the Giants did indeed lose to the Patriots in that first
encounter but it was without one of their emerging stars, the powerful
and speedy Ahmad Bradshaw, who has been one of the keys to the Giants
victories in their playoffs run. Not only has he been a threat to
score every time he touches the ball, he has, more importantly, helped
eat up the clock, something the Giants were unable to do against the
Pats in the second half of the first game. The Giants also had
some gross misfortune in a blown coverage after the injury to Sam
Madison that resulted in that long touchdown pass to Randy Moss, the
fastest, strongest,most dangerous receiver in the NFL today, just ask
him.
There is also the fun factor. The Giants are a heavy underdog,
they can play fast and loose. They don't carry the weight of
fantastic expectations. The Patriots carry the burden of all
those consecutive wins and, significantly, they do seem rather afraid
of losing this game. They realize what they're facing and don't
want to blow this most important game of all, the one that could render
all their previous records rather meaningless. They seem rather
tight in their interviews and it wouldn't be surprising if they play on
Sunday as tentatively as they interview.
There is some precedent, of course, for heavy underdogs winning Super
Bowls, two significant ones belonging to New York teams. The Jets
were 17-point dogs to the Colts back in that most famous Super Bowl of
them all, the one responsible for the merger of the AFL and the
NFL. These same Giants, in fact, were underdogs to that Buffalo
Bills team who were 7-point favorites in Super Bowl XXV, the Bills who
had beaten the Giants once that season already, the Bills who had
scored 51 in their last outing against the Raiders.
The Giants
won that day with a power running
game and some magnificent defense, an imaginative defense that changed
defensive formations throughout the game. The Giants controlled
the ball,
and, by the time the Bills figured out what was happening to them, it
was too
late.
I think the Giants will once again win a final encounter. Any Giant could be the hero, Manning, or Strahan or Toomer. But it could also
be Jacobs or Bradshaw or even Kevin Boss. It could even be Cory
Webster. But the G-Men will get it done.
