|
|
Ryan
and Sanchez - happy team and happy faces
Photo
by Nick Laham- Getty Images
|
.while Bear Pascoe and Domenick Hixon play
Boss-Smith Photo-Nick Laham- Getty Images
|
Okay, the Week 2 NFL action is over
and now we have
additional perspective, but, if we had absolutely no perspective after
Week 1,
does one more game played qualify as an event worthy of contributing
true
perspective? I would say NOT!
Take the Giants, for example, please. They looked awful in their Week 1 loss vs.
the Skins, a team I had termed “low so many years”.
Then the Rams came to town after having had a
fairly successful (for them) opener against the Eagles. (Well, it had
been
close for most of three quarters anyway). It
wouldn’t have been surprising under those
circumstances if the Rams
had managed to beat the Giants.
Of course they didn’t.
The Rams fielded what was perhaps the worst set of
receivers I had ever
seen on any field anywhere. In fact, I
could expand my meaning somewhat to say that kids in the street playing
“association”
football have better hands. They played
some of the worst football I’ve ever seen.
So, in the face of such great
incompetence, you could have
expected the G-Men to have looked pretty good. But
they really didn’t. They
just
managed to survive against an incredibly inept team, one riddled with
injuries
and woefully short on talent seemingly everywhere.
So what does that tell us? Well, it tells me that the Giants still can
stink
out the joint, against
anybody. They did manage to run the ball
a bit. That was somewhat heartening, I
guess. In truth though, the only truly
good thing was their pass rush. Their
secondary still seems clueless and their passing game was only just
good enough
to enable them to run the ball.
The Jints probably won’t face Michael
Vick next week, a very
good thing, but it hardly matters. The
Eagles can beat the Giants with Vince Young or Mike Kafka at QB. The Eagles are chomping at the bit. The Giants spit the bit in Week 1 and haven’t
grabbed hold of it since. That’s what
happens to a team that doesn’t sign its best players.
As good as GM Reese had been in his
first season, that’s as
bad as he did this year. Losing Kevin
Boss and Steve Smith to free agency was just unconscionable. Losing Eli’s center (and friend) was almost
as bad. Their replacements just haven’t
got it. Those guys couldn’t really be
replaced. Talk about penny-wise and
pound foolish.
But why belabor a point.
The Giants stink. Coughlin
stinks. Reese really stinks and even
good ol’ Eli stinks. Who woulda thunk
it?
Now the Jets are a much happier story. They signed everybody they needed. When the Giants abandoned Plaxico, the Jets
came up with a contract for him. The
Jets worst receiver is better than the Giants best, at least this past
Sunday. The Jets have already won a game
they should have lost. The Giants can
only relax when that clock strikes zero.
But no team I’ve seen so far can say
they have all their bases
covered. The Eagles, for example,
managed to lose to the Falcons Sunday despite their 10-point lead when
Vick
went to the sidelines. They’re supposed
to be a dream team. If that’s true, it’s
a bad dream indeed.
Ok, so I forgot about the Pats. Actually, I’d love to forget about the
Pats. They may have some weak spots too
but, if so, they’re not so immediately obvious. Unless
you can call a two tight end offense a
weakness, the Pats seem
awesome.
But all of the above is based on two
weeks performance. The only things I’m
really sure of are that
the Jets will be happy as clams and the Giants will look like the
smiley face
upside down.
Baseball fans can be happy that the
wildcard races in both
leagues have become true races. As this
is written, our Mets are trying to put a damper on the Cardinals
post-season
hopes. And not only that but Cohen and
Darling are interviewing GM Sandy Alderson as to the future of the
franchise. Most notable from that
talk
was that October will be dedicated towards keeping Jose Reyes.
But the Cards and Giants are catching
the Braves and the
Rays are doing likewise with the Red Sox. With
just about 8 or 9 games to go, these wildcard
races will be going
to the wire. The Rays, however, have
much the worst of the schedule (and are now losing to the Yankees 5-0),
but the
Red Sox’s decline seems to just keep going of its own momentum despite
the
opponent.
If pitching truly does determine
pennant winners, the Rays
have a real shot but the Braves can pitch with the best of them, albeit
not
lately. The Cards may be the toughest of
the National League bunch with Pujols and Berkman in the lineup and the
best
fans anywhere. The Cards just pulled
ahead of the Mets in tonight’s game in their bid to remain just 3 games
back of
Atlanta who won tonight.
It always makes me a little sad when
the baseball season
winds down. It may be because it’s a
harbinger of worse things to come, colder weather, the end of summer,
barbecues
and the Jersey shore. But it also marks
the end of daily games in a sport that is played out day after day for
162
games. The NFL plays 16 games in 17
weeks and that’s all she wrote. We
look
forward to hype only for 6 days out of every 7.
All that inactivity would be broken up
in normal years by
NBA basketball. This year of course will
be anything but normal as the owners and players dig in their heels. So it’ll be college basketball only and, if
you’re a Seton Hall or Rutgers fan, there just won’t be much to think
about. That’s assuming the Big East
remains unchanged, a highly unlikely prospect right now.
Oh well, at least Curtis Granderson
may still get MVP.