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Brady hurt his knee early
Photo
by Elsa-Getty Images/AFP
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and da
Bears beat Peyton Manning
Photo
by Andy Lyons - Getty Images |
It
was just too much, way too much to absorb...a full schedule of football
games,
a Mets doubleheader against the hated Phillies, Brett Favre vs. Chad
Pennington. Who could even think about Serena winning another
U.S.
Open?
Sunday
certainly didn't disappoint, if you were a Mets fan, a Jets fan, or a
football
fan in general. The Mets salvaged the third game of their series
against
the Phillies behind Johan Santana and still more heroics from Carlos
Delgado.
The
Jets pulled a tough one out against a surprisingly tough Miami team and,
for those who just love
football, NFL style, Tom Brady hurt his knee, not a happy circumstance,
surely,
but one that seemed to open up new vistas for teams in the AFC East. That could mean the Bills, who looked
ridiculously strong against the Seahawks, will battle it out with the
Jets and
Pats for the division title.
The
great Peyton Manning and his Colts couldn't beat the Bears! And
da Bears
looked like the old Bears, all defense and just enough offense. And, oh yeah, Serena Williams beat Jelena
Jankovic for the U.S. Open title.
Of
course, that Mets win was the best for this writer. Not only did
Carlos
Delgado rip two loooong home runs, not only did Johan Santana baffle
Phillies
hitters into the eighth inning, but Luis Ayala gave Mets fans hope that
he may
be a legitimate closer, no matter what happens with Billy Wagner's
elbow.
<>It was a channel-flippers delight.
From
my perspective in
Toms
River,
there were two football games of particular interest, Eagles-Rams and
Jets-Dolphins.
Maybe it was fortuitous
that the Eagles and
Number 5, Donovan McNabb, pulled away rather early from the lowly Rams,
allowing that much more attention to be paid to Chad Pennington’s
comeback
against the Jets.
Chad came within a couple of inches of
bringing the Fish all
the way back from a 13-point deficit versus the Florham Park boys in
green,
foiled in the end only by the quick and sure hands of cornerback
Darelle
Revis.
<>Of course, all that action afforded very little time to
catch Pedro Martinez and the Mets endure an old-fashioned wuppin’ by
the
Phils.
Just as well, I guess….who wants
to watch a favorite pitcher get whacked?
Other surprises abounded around the
league. There was Jake
Delhomme threading the needle to one of his more obscure wideouts with
zero
seconds on the clock to break the Chargers’ hearts and signal the
return of
John Fox and his Carolina Panthers.
<>There were the horrid Detroit Lions lying down against
the
Falcons and letting LaDainian Tomlinson’s former backup in
San Diego,
Michael Turner, light them up for
TD after TD.
And B.C.’s own Matt Ryan’s
first career pass went for a TD for 62 yards!
The Cowboys seemed to be having a
field day vs. the Browns
until Tony Romo got bent, folded and mutilated by three giant bodies in
brown. But not before he hit Terrell
Owens for a vintage touchdown.
<>There was another new QB in Baltimore too, a really tall
fellow named Joe Flacco who ran one in from about 40 yards out.
And there was Ray Rice from
Rutgers
making some nice runs too.
That all this
occurred against the Bengals of Cincinnati and their whacko wideout
Ocho Cinco
made it all the more enjoyable.
Expectations of a great game between
the Saints and
Buccaneers materialized as Reggie Bush wowed the Bucs secondary with
moves
they’d never seen and a stiff arm too. Drew
Brees hit Devery Henderson for about 85 yards. But
old veteran Tampa QB Jeff Garcia wasn’t
able to bring the Bucs all the way back this time.
<>In some quarters, they said the Eagles would be tough,
but
nobody said it with conviction except those rabid fans last seen
shrieking “Fly
Eagles Fly” into the night.
But a rook
named DeSean Jackson seemed all they said he might be.
And little Brian Westbrook was pretty huge
once again.
Oh, and did I mention the
90-yarder to a fellow named Baskett?
After the totally uneventful Giants
win over the hapless
Redskins on Thursday night, not much was expected in the way of
excitement this
first Sunday in September. Surely there would be the same stories this
year,
New England, San Diego
and the Colts would dominate the AFC action. Jaguars
and Titans would threaten but weaken down
the stretch. The Cowboys would once again
rule the NFC,
and the same Giants and Packers would threaten once again
The Bears would be terrible once again.
<>In one fell swoop though, the Pats lost the best QB in
either league, maybe for the season.
The
Chargers lost with no time on the clock, the Colts lost to the Bears.
And Ben Roethlisberger and his boys in black
and gold lit up the scoreboard, with cameos by Hines Ward and the
return of
Willie Parker.
Hmm, maybe things will be different
this year.
<>Maybe anything is possible.
Rookie
quarterbacks can excel in this league, and
wide receivers too, if
just given the opportunity.
Old QB’s can
still return from injuries to wow the crowd, big defense and heart can
still
win games, and old-fashioned power football can still be overwhelming.
And it’s not over yet, this first NFL
week. There is still a contest between
those
formidable Vikings and Favre-less Pack coming up, those same Vikings
accused of
tampering with good ol’ Bret. It should
be a war.
<>Despite all the strange pigskin happenings though, the
highlight of the day was still that Mets game.
Delgado’s
first homer dented the scoreboard at Shea,
impressive enough,
but his second seemed
to soar over the
stadium’s upper deck.
And those two
dingers followed a two-run single in the first that put the Mets on top
for
once in this series.
Thanks to Santana, the Mets wouldn’t
need anybody but
Delgado on this night. Howard, no
problem. Utley, who’s he?
Jayson
Werth, fuhgeddaboutit.
The Mets are still up by two. WOOHOO!
