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I
know one thing. Drew Brees was Drew Brees............
Photo
by Jonathan Daniel- Getty Images
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........but was this guy really Cam Newton Sunday
?(shown w Auburn) Photo-Kevin C. Cox- Getty Images
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Perspective, it’s a hard thing to find
and even harder to
keep. That’s what I’ve been thinking in
the wake of Sunday’s NFL openers. I know
the NFL is perennially hard to figure but this year could be more
ridiculous than
most seasons. Maybe it’s the shortened
pre-season….but I don’t really think so.
The most strikingly surprising game to
me, I suppose, was
Sunday night’s Jets-Cowboys game. I had
expected the Jets to cover whatever deep routes the Boyz would run and
do a
pretty fair job of stopping their running game too.
I had expected a low-scoring game, one that
the Jets would squeeze out in the end using their running game behind
that
terrific offensive line.
Wrong, wrong, wrong, on just about
every count, except that
the Jets did manage to win. But, winning
the way they won is almost inconceivable. Could
the Jets repeat that late-game performance on
any other
Sunday?
No way. Gimme
a
break, a blocked punt for a touchdown followed almost immediately by a
“gimme”
interception ? And
then a long, long field goal, given the
circumstances, to win the game in regulation. In
what other game will that Jets safety Leonhard
stop Jason Witten on
the 2-yard line only to have the opposing quarterback then fumble the
ball away
on the one?
Everything I thought was so was not. The Jet offensive line was, all in all,
non-existent in the first half. It was
the old “weakest link in the chain” ploy used by the Cowboys to put a
big rush
on Mark Sanchez. But the Jets couldn’t
“ground
and pound”. It was LaDainian Tomlinson
and pray for rain for the better part of the second half.
Thank God for “LT”. (We
all know he’s not LT but WTF)?
I must throw a bone here for Mark
Sanchez. Except for that unfortunate
fumble that put
seven on the board for the Boyz, Sanchez was great.
Who can throw on the run as accurately as he
does? Who can avoid the rush as he did
and find all those different receivers downfield, both throwing from
the pocket
and, once again, on the run.
While I’m giving out bones, how about
Plaxico? He didn’t do anything
spectacular, I guess,
but just Plax being Plax was plenty good enough. The
same could be said for Santonio Holmes
being himself. That’s some receiving
corps the Jets possess, especially when you add Derek Mason into the
mix. But will that kind of game put Rex
into the
grave before his time?
Primary running back Shonn Green was
not Shonn Green, or
maybe he was just Shonn Green with no blocking. Look
out, Shonn! Here
comes
another big hit. If the run game doesn’t
improve in a hurry, this season could really get strange.
Think “Cardiac Cards”, if anybody but
me can remember that far
back. When you think about it, the Jets
do have the personnel to be that kind of a team. And
that kind of game can be really
entertaining. But “ground and pound” it’s
not.
One game is a poor indicator of future
performance in the
NFL though, especially in a season with an abbreviated pre-season. Did any running backs have a big day? Not really. Four
backs exceeded 20 fantasy points for the week
(which is, after all,
pretty analogous to real live performance). They
were the Chargers’ Mike Tolbert, the Eagles’
LeSean McCoy, the
Bengals’ Cedric Benson and the Bears’ Matt Forte. All
those teams won.
There were several other 100-yard
rushers though, most
notably Darren McFadden’s 150-yard tally for the Raiders.
So, all in all, the teams that truly wanted
to run the ball were pretty successful at it. Those
teams showing less commitment in that regard
were correspondingly
less successful. Our New York Giants
could very well be put in that category.
And the Giants could be put in another
category as
well. If there were an award for “most
uninspired”, the Giants could have been right at the top of the list. I couldn’t even watch them.
I didn’t expect them to stop the Redskins and
they didn’t disappoint me. That they
would do so little on offense was a surprise. That
their offensive line would be dominated was
shocking.
The Giants show every sign of being an
unhappy team, a team
that’s not having a good time, so much so that they really don’t care
much
whether they win or lose. And you can
put this year’s version of Eli Manning on the top of the list of the
truly
uninspired. Ahmad Bradshaw carried 13 times for 44 yards.
Manning was 18-32 for 268 yards and just one
INT but it was a huge one to put it mildly.
But are the Redskins much better than
we thought? Were the Bills much better too? How about the Carolina Panthers?
The Bills were really bad at stopping
the run last
year. The Chiefs, their opponents, had a
bigtime rushing game featuring Jamaal Charles, another fantasy
wunderkind. Of course it was the Bills and
Fred Jackson
who piled up the rushing yards. The
Chiefs did almost nothing in any phase of the game.
Ryan Fitzpatrick, the Bills quarterback, was
phenomenal
. Are the
Chiefs as bad as they looked? They were a
playoffs team last year. Are the Bills
that good?
Another vastly disappointing team was
the Atlanta
Falcons. Their QB, Matt Ryan, ballyhooed
last year as “Matty Ice” and armed this year with the addition of a
supposedly
Superman wide receiver, Julio Jones, did nothing through the air,
relatively
speaking. He certainly didn’t target his
rookie much.
But worse
than that,
the Falcons coaching staff didn’t seem to understand their predicament. They played a very conservative game when the
situation demanded some verve. They
showed nothing. Matty Ice was the most
timid player on the field.
I know one thing.
Drew Brees was himself. Was
Cam
Newton himself? Can we expect that
terrific
performance to continue?
We need some perspective.