 |
|
It'll be Jay Cutler's rocket
arm.....
and the broad shoulders of Clinton Portis
Photo
by AP - Yahoo
unattributed
Photo
by Otto Greule Jr. - Getty Images |
|
Thank God for Thanksgiving but
especial thanks for the day
after. That’s the day the family’s all
together but the company’s gone home. That’s
the day for pancakes in the morning and no
cooking or cleaning up
to do. That it’s also about the time I
overfill the furnace with water and spend the night with the comforting
but
eerie sounds of clanking pipes is even easily forgotten, so full of
anticipation as I am for the coming day.
Yeah, Friday after.
That’s
the day you do reflect, the good things, the bad things, all that, and,
for a
sports nut, it’s an affirmation of the normal state of things.
In the NFL, it’s the dominance of
Dallas, and the putridness of
Detroit. In most Fantasy Leagues,
it’s the
last week of the regular season, and Sunday we’ll find out which
brainiacs made
the playoffs.
It’s also a big, big day in college
football, the only day
in fact that some fans pay any attention at all. This
day may not be as good as some of those
I recall from the past, but it will still be pretty good.
It’s the height of the season and usually
chock full of regional matchups that decide who’ll have bragging rights
for
another year. And to hell with the BCS
and Bowl Games.
Not that I’m even into college football.
But
I still remember with a good deal of fondness
those
Turkey Friday
games
between
Alabama and
Auburn
and
Oklahoma vs.
Nebraska.
I
don’t see those on the schedule today, I suppose
Nebraska
has slipped and
Auburn,
who knows, I couldn’t really tell you.
But still, I’m watching Pitt against West Virginia
right now and that’s not all
bad. West Virginia
(7-3 overall, 4-1 in the Big East) can tie an unlikely Cincinnati team
for first place in the Big
East with a win. Dave Wannstedt’s Pitt
team is also 7-3 overall but just 3-2 in the conference.
They’re leading 7-0 right now and WVU looks
like it’ll be coming back.
LSU plays
Arkansas
later on CBS, and I have no clue as to why.
Both
teams just aren’t that good, not this year
anyway, the same goes
for
Colorado playing
Nebraska,
although
Nebraska
still has some hopes. Then the late game features UCLA and
Arizona State,
both with no hopes whatsoever of winning anything, and this couldn’t
even be
characterized as a regional rivalry.
If
anybody can tell me what the sports networks are thinking, please drop
me a
line.
Still, I’m determined to enjoy the day. It’ll be this Pitt game and then
Colorado-Nebraska. I’ll tune in to some
NBA action later on, see what Charles is up to. (If
you’re asking Charles who?, this column is not
for you. Click elsewhere.
Thanks). But Miami will be up
against Phoenix
at 8 and Shaq’s
always a giggle. Then Dallas
vs. the Lakers and there’s Dirk and Kobe. Life
is good.
But maybe not if you’re a West
Virginia fan.
Pat
White just got smacked down at the two
and they’re settling for three.
Geez,
will Pat White ever graduate?
He’s been
around forever, it seems.
And we still have Sunday to look
forward to. The G-Men might have a real
battle on their
hands at FedEx Field in Landover vs. the Skins, who’re 7-4 and feature
a
healthy (supposedly) Clinton Portis, the best running back in the
league. Although the Giants beat the Skins
in the
opener, by a score of just 16-7, the Skins were awful in that game, the
first
under new coach Jim Zorn, and they’ll be missing the big mouth Brandon
Jacobs
and the big hamstring Plaxico Burress.
Can the G- Men do to the Skins what they did to the
Cardinals a week ago?
I don’t think so,
especially in the aftermath of the Eagles convincing drubbing of
Arizona
yesterday.
Arizona
just couldn’t stop the run again, or any piece of the Eagles game, for
that
matter.
A look at the stats reveals some
interesting data. The Skins rate very
favorably on defense when
compared to the Giants, both against the run and the pass.
And, if they can stop Derrick Ward and maybe
even Ahmad Bradshaw, who never seems to get enough playing time, it’ll
get very
hairy indeed.
The Giants are comfortably ahead.
They
don’t really have to win while the Skins
will be fighting for their playoff lives.
They
play smart defense usually, but the Giants have
some smart fellows
themselves, especially at the receiver position with Toomer and Steve
Smith and
even Plax’s backup, Domenick Hixon, looked really good vs.
Arizona.
Of course, you have to like the Giants
chances, what with
that offensive line, and Eli standing tall over center.
I don’t think Jason Campbell measures
up. But that’s why they play the
game. Will a chance at knocking the
Skins out of the playoffs be motivation
enough for the Giants to overcome that bruising Skins running game? And if they do stop that, will they forget
about Santana Moss?
The much-ballyhooed Jets will be playing at 4 on
Sunday.
They’re coming off two gigantic
wins, versus the Pats and then the now once-defeated Titans.
They’ll be going against the crazy Broncos, a
team coming off a horrible 31-10 loss to the lowly Oakland Raiders.
But the Raiders do have a great
defense against the pass,
just ask Jake Delhomme. The Jets
secondary may look like cake in comparison. Despite
the presence of Darrell Revis in that
backfield, they’ve allowed
148 first downs through the air.
And, if anybody can put the ball in the air, it’s Denver
QB
Jay Cutler.
He’s got some nifty
receivers too, a fast and huge fella named Brandon Marshall on one side
and a
tricky Eddy Royal on the other.
They’ve
got two tough tight ends that can both catch the ball in Scheffler and
Graham
too.
It could be that they’ll master the
porous Jets passing defense.
Yeah, Thanksgiving Friday, the best
day of the year.
