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Most Valuable and Most Deserving
Photo by
Chris McGrath - Getty
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Antonio
Pierce-Most Unsung
Photo-Al Bello - Getty |
All
New Yorkers are
Giants fans today. But they weren't on Friday. Everyone was
shocked
on Sunday. How often do we have to see an offensive juggernaut
get beat
in a Super Bowl before we're able to digest the fact that they don't
necessarily
win in February, especially not against a determined and talented
opponent.
Yet it was easy to recognize that the Giants were hot, that they had
great
leadership on both sides of the ball, that they had an overpowering
defense,
that they had a legacy quarterback, that they were having more fun all
week
than were the Patriots. Enthusiasm? The Patriots showed
little of
that in those two weeks before the big game. And they showed that
same
weakness in the game, especially in the trenches.
Even given all of that, however, the Giants may have needed a
miraculous catch
on the other end of a spectacular escape by the suddenly slippery Eli
Manning
to come away with the victory. I say "may have" because David
Tyree's jumping, reaching, ball to head-squeezing catch occurred on a
third
down. There's no doubt in my mind that somebody else would have
made a
play on fourth down. Much as Brandon Jacobs pounded through the
Pats on
that fourth and one. Much as Amani Toomer did on third and ten,
coming
back and securing a throw a few inches off the ground. Much as
Steve
Smith did on third and eleven.
It shouldn't have had to come to 4th quarter heroics. The Giants
physically dominated the entire game. If you could knock the
G-Men for
anything, it's that they gave all their fans the scare of their
lives. To
be honest, watching the game was painful for a true Giants fan.
Yes, we
could cheer the heroic pass rush from Strahan and Umenyiora and Tuck,
and even
Jay Alford and Kawika Mitchell, and love the 45-yard catch and run by
rookie TE
Kevin Boss, and thrill to the pounding of Jacobs and the slashing of
Bradshaw....but where were the results?
With 2:42 left in the game, despite having their butts kicked for the
entire
game, the Pats were up by three. We had to watch Randy Moss
celebrating
the lead (and himself) on the sideline. We had to endure seeing
Cory
Webster slip, enabling the score. We had to endure the huge Chase
Blackburn failure to get off the field, thus prolonging a Patriots
drive that
could have been a Giants death knell. We had to watch a battered
Brady
complete short pass after short pass to Welker and Faulk and Moss.
There had
also been the interception on Smith's bobble, the missed opportunity to
a
wide-open Plaxico.
While it's difficult to say the Giants were unlucky, given the outcome,
they
really didn't have much luck. I suppose all the good fortune they
lacked
for 57 minutes and change came back to them on that one final
drive. Yet
Tyree's catch, even that seemingly individual moment was the result of
some
excellent teamwork, that of center Shaun O'Hara and guard Rich Seubert
continuing their struggle against Richard Seymour and Jarvis Green, who
had run
a beautiful stunt on the play. Their staying with their blocks is
what
really enabled Eli to escape the grasps and make that wondrous throw.
But that play may have never come to pass without Toomer's earlier
heroics, or
the work of the offensive line and Brandon Jacobs on that seemingly
forgotten
fourth down. And, even that miracle may have been forgotten if
not for
the nifty work of Antonio Pierce, the linebackers and that hard-hitting
secondary. The point here is that the Giants victory truly was a team
effort,
and that statement certainly doesn't exclude the head coach, his
offensive and
defensive coordinators.
The biggest surprise of the game was that the Giants pass rush had such
enormous success versus that of their last regular season game.
The
Giants coaching staff had the presence of mind to hold back in that
game from
showing their entire blitz package, as the playoffs were coming
up. As a
result, the Patriots couldn't solve the Giants pass rush. As a
result,
Brady had no time to throw. As a result, Brady threw the ball up
many
times with almost no hope of a completion. As a result, the
Patriots
juggernaut offense was reduced to just 14 points, just short of Plax’s
prediction so derided by Brady, a derision that may have given those
defenders
just the push they needed.
In the final analysis, this was a
match of two very similar
opponents. Both teams had good
leadership, but the Giants was a hair better.
The superior offense of the Patriots was negated by
the fierce Giants
pass rush and sound coverage. The
kicking game went to the Giants. Feagles
was much more effective than was Chris Hanson.
Gostkowski never got his lone opportunity.
As good as Eli was on this day, the
day he would tie his
brother in Super Bowl wins, it would be a stretch to say he was better
than
Brady. Indeed, if not for the
level-headedness and accuracy of Brady, maybe the Pats wouldn’t have
even been
close in this game. A lesser quarterback
would have come undone.
It must be said that, in retrospect,
Belichick may have lost
this game. His decision to eschew a
field goal attempt on a 4th and 13 from the Giants 31 was a
serious
error. The failed Pats 4th
down pass attempt kept the score at only 7-3 in favor of the Patriots. The game was ultimately decided by three
points. A punt would have made some
sense in a field-position game, an attempt to make a first down was
borne of
arrogance.
And that may have been the real key to
victory, a magnificent
display of teamwork but a lack of arrogance by 53 guys who now get
their place
in the sun.
