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The Manning with blocking (left) and the one with
none............................ Vernon Davis and the Niners couldn't
shake the Saints
Photo by Andy Lyons - Getty
Photo
- by Jed Jacobsohn- Getty |
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Is anybody else tired of all
the
melodrama surrounding the New York
football teams? I think it shows a huge
team character and chemistry deficit.
The Jets beat the Patriots, a huge win
given their slow
start, and all we hear about is Braylon Edwards. The
Giants play one of their worst games
ever, but all we hear about is Brandon Jacobs and his helmet, or Antrel
Rolle,
a new Giant, who says there’s no leadership on the team.
I’m really tired of it.
If you want any analysis, you have to tune in to MLB
or NFL or NBA Networks. The newspaper
coverage is a wasteland. Can anybody tell
me what the Giants are going
to do about that horrible offensive line, when they’ll get their tight
end
situation fixed, or when they can rid themselves of David Diehl as the
tackle
on the left-hand side?
The Jets are a reality show. I don’t even care about them anymore, except
for Rex
Ryan, who seems to
be a good man under all that baloney. Tom
Coughlin has the Giants playing under his unique
form of despotism
again, after disbanding that pesky players committee after they won
that Super
Bowl. And his team played like a team
that doesn’t care.
The Jets-Dolphins matchups over the
years have been awesome,
practically each and every one. This
year’s game could be the best one of them all. Yet you’ll hear nothing
about
that in the papers.
It’ll be that tough Jets offensive
line and running game
facing off against a Fish defensive line that spit back Adrian Peterson
after a
few attempts inside the ten-yard line. It’ll
be two young QB’s showing off their wares,
Sanchez against Henne. Sanchez should have
time but see no open
receivers. Drew Henne, Miami’s QB, will
see open receivers yet have no time to get the ball to them.
But underlying all the talents on the
field is that
indefinable team chemistry, a factor in football games more so than in
any
other sport. How will the Jets react to
being told to tone it down after Braylon Edwards’s arrest ? How will the Dolphins come out after thrashing
the Vikings this weekend?
Team
chemistry…the
Jets have some, the Dolphins have some, even the Kansas City Chiefs
have
some. The Giants have none.
Neither do the Bills or half a dozen other
teams, even some of those who spend big money for players.
The poster-boy for team chemistry
would have to be the New
Orleans Saints. On Monday night, before
a packed house in San Francisco, they showed the timely combination of
good
offense and defense that just got the job done, no matter what the
circumstances.
I’ve been a closet Saints fan for a
few years now, and to me, their Monday
night game against the
San Francisco 49ers proved that a team that believes in its coach, and
a coach
who believes in his team, can accomplish wonders…..packed house, Jerry
Rice
Day, mad Mike Singletary….it just doesn’t matter.
You’ll seldom see a team play as hard
as the Niners did
Monday night. Their head coach, Mike
Singletary, had been rabid all week after the Niners opening loss
against the
lowly Seahawks , a loss that was largely attributable to coaching. But Monday night, Singletary’s team came
ready to play.
The Niners may have been too ready. After a bad snap for a safety and an early
Drew Brees-engineered drive, the Saints took an early 9-0 lead. But, when backed up to their ten-yard line
with the crowd screaming, the Saints played conservatively, using runs
and
short passes to gain ground. When they
could not, they simply punted. There
would be no Saints meltdown; the Niners would have to earn every yard.
The Niners kept coming though. Frank Gore was a battering ram, the un-Brandon
Jacobs. But Saints CB Roland Harper
intercepted an Alex Smith pass to thwart one drive, only to have the
Niners
force another Saints punt when they sacked Brees, who was fortunate to
keep his
grip on the football.
Then the Niners really started turning
it on. Frank Gore, Alex Smith and a few
different
receivers put together a clock-eating drive to pull within 9-7. Then they forced another Saints punt to take
control of the ball again with about 7 minutes left in the first half.
The Niners kept coming.
Banging Frank Gore into the line and using some deft
passing from Alex
Smith, they drove again to the Saints 12-yard line.
But the Saints kept their composure, and when
Delanie Walker had the ball punched out at about the 4-yard line, it
was the the
Saints who swarmed to the ball, the
Saints who would hold on to lead at the half.
In the second half, the Niners changed
gears. Two long passes to Morgan and tight
end
Vernon Davis spearheaded their next drive, one that was good for an
eventual TD
that gave the Niners the lead 14-9, for the first time.
It was then that the Saints really
showed their
character. Using their big guns, Bush
and Colston and Pierre Thomas, the Saints took the lead again on their
very
next possession. And their defense held,
first by forcing a 3 and out, then
intercepting a Smith pass.
Punting then became the order of the
day. The Saints held on like bulldogs in a
few
sequences that included a nifty Brees batted pass to himself. But a Niners goal-line stand forced a Saints
field
goal. Instead of putting the game away,
the Saints lead was only 8.
A TD and
2-point
conversion could still tie it. The
Saints finally blinked. The Niners took
advantage and tied it. The crowd went
wild. It looked bad for the Saints.
But the Niners left 1:19 on the clock,
too much time against
a QB like Brees, a coach like Payton and some great team players named
Colston
and Thomas. Hartley kicked the winning
field goal with zero on the clock.