What a weekend for
sports as football moved to the middle of the beginning and baseball
moved toward the beginning of the end.
In
pro football, it’s hard to decide whether the Giants or the Jets had
the better game. They both won, of course, and while the Jets beat
Brady and the Pats, something they surely haven’t made into a habit,
the Giants had to come back still one more time to edge the Cowboys in
their new digs with a game-ending drive that reminded some fans (i.e.
me) of Eli’s Super Bowl clincher.
This guy was in San
Francisco. I had the pleasure of watching Frank Gore score on two long
runs of about 80 yards each for touchdowns in beating one of the
would-be NFC West contenders, the Seattle Seahawks. The Raiduhs won too
in a laugh-fest against the Chiefs, a game that had a lot of people in
KC wondering whether their head coach has any thimbleful of a brain.
The
Saints rolled again. The Steelers lost to the Bears. Arizona bounced
back from their loss to the Niners with an execution of the Jaguars.
Seattle lost its quarterback in much the same fashion as had Donovan
McNabb and Number 5’s replacement passed for 391 yards but still
managed to get his team shellacked..
Peyton Manning seemed to do
it all by himself in the Colts win over the Fish and Houston, which
looked vey bad against the Jets, beat the Titans in a shootout. All in
all, the Week 2 action lent a little more information towards deciding
which teams will be 2009 contenders.
The best thing about the
Giants game might have been the emergence of Mario Manningham as their
Number One receiver. Manningham seemingly was open all night and he was
catching everything too, even the one he juggled in the end zone. The
question of who’ll replace Plaxico may have been answered. (Condolences
to Plax who got sentenced for the full two years today).
The
G-Men didn’t escape unscathed though. Justin Tuck’s shoulder looked as
if it might not be the same for weeks to come. They also seemed to get
every break imaginable, which, while nice, doesn’t really bode well for
the future. The running game really didn’t impress, Jacobs and Bradshaw
managing just 95 yards, and their defense against the run was a little
bit scary at times.
But they’re 2-0 and they’ve beaten two
division opponents. While they haven’t beaten the Eagles yet, things
don’t look too good for the Birds. So the G-Men are lookin’ good
heading into Week 3. As they’re slated to play the Tampa Bay Bucs,
whose pass defense has gone decidedly south, it should be one more week
of big numbers for the passing game.
As I was in that city by
the bay, I didn’t catch the Jets game, except for highlights. Most of
those featured Tom Brady sliding and ducking and throwing before he
would have liked. It’s a tribute to his savvy in the pocket that he
didn’t get sacked, but the outcome was the same, hurried passes and a
non-existent passing game by Patriot standards. And Revis shut down
Randy Moss….not too shabby.
And yeah, the Pats didn’t have
Welker, but it’s hard to say whether it would have made that much
difference. In truth, I think it would have been a lot harder if Welker
were able to play. And, in general, the Jets offense really didn’t do
much against a Pats defense that featured 3 or 4 newbies that replaced
some very big names in Boston.
So there is a decided buzz in New
York for football. After the decidedly non-buzzing Mets season, and the
recent decline of the Yankees, it’s nice to hear, especially for Jets
fans, I imagine.
But the Jets per se are getting a little full
of themselves, even though that whole defensive toughness thing that
Ryan has instilled may require it, I suppose. But I’m not crazy about
the talk. It’s Week friggin’ Two. And the usually strong but winless
Titans are on tap. Let’s beat a few more teams before we get crazy.
But
the weekend wasn’t all about football. The Yanks lost again and are
just four games ahead in the loss column in the Division over the Red
Sox. As they’re now in La-la Land playing (and losing to) the Angels,
things might be looking up for Boston….finally.
The Yanks are
down on their pitching too, especially as they’ve gone out of their way
to screw up Joba, and they’re already driving Burnett to distraction.
I’m looking forward to the Yanks losing two more to the Angels and host
Boston only two games up in the loss column.
The Twinkies aren’t
dead yet either, and, aside from losing a bet to my brother if they
make the playoffs, the thought doesn’t really upset me. Detroit doesn’t
send me. The Twins have the better lineup, I believe, and are a little
more exciting to watch.
The Rangers are just about dead, which
disturbs me. What a hard-luck team, losing Michael Young, their
shortstop, and Josh Hamilton to injuries down the stretch. Losing six
in a row to Seattle and the lowly A’s quite did the job.
Much to
my dismay, in the National League, the Giants hit a road block and the
Rockies are sailing. The Marlins are still in it too. So the last
eleven games of the baseball season look to be very exciting.
My
Metsies are still in the news too, if only to say what bad shape
they’re in and point out how difficult it may be to right the ship. A
painful topic maybe, but one that is at least interesting. I understand
they’ll have about thirty million to spend if they stick to their
current budget.
And, if the Wilpons want to hang on to their
financial credibility, which has been questioned in some quarters,
they’ll spend some money. And keep most of the core.
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