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Brown
made gold look good. Above is Marques Colston.....
and Thomas Jones was the only Jet
playing well.
Photo by Chris Graythen - Getty Images
Photo
by Al Bello - Getty Images |
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It was a lost Sunday. For the Giants and Jets, that
is, and anybody
silly enough to root for them. I knew the Giants would be in trouble,
facing Drew Brees & Company with somebody named C.C. Brown at
safety and, well, I never put much faith in Dockery. The Jets were a
surprise flop though, losing in miserable fashion to one of the worst
football teams in the league.
Mark Sanchez has regressed a lot
from the quarterback he was against New England. It’s a shame really.
He’s aiming the ball. He’s doing almost everything required of a
quarterback badly. He even made Ryan Fitzpatrick, the Bills horrible
quarterback, look good, a feat I would have thought was impossible
before yesterday.
For the Jets, the game wasn’t the only bad
news. They also lost Kris Jenkins, their huge defensive tackle, to a
fairly serious knee injury. So there goes the run defense for the rest
of the season too.
And it’s easy to second-guess but I would
have got Sanchez out of there. He was clearly dazed and shaken, and not
likely to come out of it, which he didn’t. He seems to have lost any
confidence he may have had, and clearly, it’s time for a change. At the
very least, it’s time to institute some rules, like Joba rules, in a
way. Three picks and he’s out.
Not that it even makes a
difference anymore. Any team that could lose so easily to one of the
worst teams in the league cannot be expected to win many more. Forget
the playoffs, forget even mediocrity, this team is bad, bad, bad. Of
course, any team with a bad quarterback will be bad. We can only hope
that the regression of Sanchez isn’t a reflection of the coach’s
ability. Most people like Ryan, and I do too, but maybe he shows too
much confidence in people? It’s optimism gone amok.
I have to
admit that, while the Giants clock was being cleaned, I was enjoying
every bit of it as my fantasy team roster includes Brees, Colston and
Shockey. They all had their way with the Giants, especially Colston,
who seemed to just outduel anybody covering him for the ball. I knew he
was good but I didn’t realize he was great.
The Giants made
every Saint look great though, so it’s hard to tell how really good
Colston may be from yesterday’s game. I have to think the result would
have been much different if there had been any kind of coverage at all.
All I saw was guys in blue running with guys in gold, but when the ball
was in the air, the guy in gold went up and got it. The blue guy stayed
cemented to the ground.
Just about everybody who could have
caught a pass caught one. Not just Colston and Shockey, but Meacham,
Moore….Well, seven different players scored touchdowns for the Saints.
It was pretty much a massacre.
It was sad to see Eli do so badly
in his hometown. Equally as sad was to see him lose his cool with
running back Ahmad Bradshaw, who zigged when he should’ve zagged on one
play, resulting in horrific pressure on Manning and ultimately, an
interception.
There is hope for the Giants though. The Saints
may be the best team in the league, and they had an extra week to
prepare for this game. They exposed every Giants weakness, quite often
actually. But the Saints offensive line did its job pretty well too,
keeping what had been a fierce defensive front in check all day. Even a
hint of defensive pressure up front could have made a big difference.
I’ll
try to take solace in the fact that, as bad as the locals were, there
were some other teams that looked just as bad or worse. The first team
that comes to mind is the Eagles, who lost to the awful Raiders, but
the Titans were absolutely humiliated by the Patriots and the hapless
Redskins lost to the previously winless Kansas City Chiefs.
The
most revealing statistic of them all might be the fact that the
Redskins had faced a winless team in each and every game they’d played
this season but had only won two of them. Harried Skins head coach Jim
Zorn was relieved of his play-calling responsibility yesterday and
quarterback Jason Campbell was finally relieved at halftime in favor of
Todd Collins, who at least led the Skins to some field goals.
What
happened to the Eagles at Oakland is beyond me. I knew Oakland was
capable of fielding a very decent pass defense, what with the
highest-paid cornerback in the NFL residing in their secondary
(Asomugha got hurt), but I didn’t realize they could stop the run.
Evidently, it was not a big part of their game plan.
The
Eagles did lose their offensive tackle, Jason Peters, in the first
quarter, which probably doused any Eagle thoughts of running. But
McNabb was sacked six times, indicating some really big problems up
front. And Akers missed two field goals, McNabb called a timeout he
didn’t have, and they still should have won that game.
The
Cowboys had their bye week and got to watch everybody else lose. Not
too shabby. They’re coming off two fairly good weeks of play, having
lost a close one to the undefeated (for now) Broncos and having beat
the Chiefs by six in Kansas City. They get an extra week to prepare for
the very tough Atlanta Falcons next week, and they seem to have found a
wide receiver they didn’t know they had.
The Yanks had the day
off after beating the suddenly sorry Angels and seem a 50-50 chance of
winning still another at 4PM today, Pettite vs. Saunders. Arod’s been
great; he saved the game Saturday.
The Phils killed LA behind
Lee to go up 2-1. They’ll face Wolf tonight behind big Joe Blanton. I
wouldn’t be surprised if the Dodgers tie the series.
(9 and 4 on NFL Picks - have Denver tonight)
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