Wow, what can I write
about on a weekend when Charlie Weis and Lawrence
Frank both got fired, the Jets earned a hard-fought victory against
Carolina using some seemingly cockamamie color-code system to direct
their rookie QB, and two NFL games were decided by last-minute
touchdowns thrown by the likes of Vince Young and Chris Redman? And
let’s not forget Dennis Dixon.
Well,
it’s easy really. I don’t really care that much about Notre Dame or
Charlie Weis. I figure both parties will make out just fine, thank you.
And Lawrence Frank is better off going elsewhere, given the bad roster
and bad luck he has been handed. Lawrence Frank will come up roses if
it’s true that good things happen to good people.
And all I can
say about Vince Young is that I was wrong about him. I’ve been thinking
for five weeks now that he’d be a total failure. I’ve been thinking
he’s just another one of these great college QB’s who couldn’t make it
in the big time. But he lead that Titans team down the field twice from
deep, deep in his own team’s territory to ultimately come back and win
the game…twice.
And it was great that a backup QB you never hear
“boo” about stepped up in a big situation to lead his Falcons team to
victory, and on fourth down no less. Chris Redman did just that
yesterday to keep the Falcons in the playoff picture, for at least one
more week anyway.
And I was amazed as Dixon kept the Steelers
in the game against the Ravens for about 4 ½ quarters. He did it
on
short notice too, as Big Ben Roethlisberger’s headaches occurred only
Saturday.
But, without a doubt, the best prospect for discussion
is the color-code system that Rex Ryan and the Jets concocted to keep a
rein on their rambunctious quarterback, Mark Sanchez. It seemed too
simple and a little silly. How confident could we be that the Jets made
the right pick? I mean, did this guy ever play football? Was USC always
ahead?
For his part, Sanchez was exultant after the victory and
was only too happy to heartily accept the color-codes. That at least
shows some humility. He may eat franks on the sideline and he might
“diss” the entire NYC media population but he does readily accept
direction and, too often this season, blame.
But for once there
was no blame. Not that he lit up the joint, an impossible feat given
the conservative plan, but he did throw for some yardage, not a lot,
and he only threw one interception. He didn’t fumble one time.
Two things bother me a little though.
For
one, this system worked great in a game their defense easily
controlled. Jake Delhomme, as I had foreseen in my last words on the
subject, threw the ball all over the yard. His only problem was he
didn’t discriminate on the color uniforms to which he threw the ball.
The Jets were only too happy to catch it when he did. The Jets took the
early lead. The closest the game got was 7-3.
So when was the
code any color but red? I mean, maybe he had an amber somewhere along
the line, but the predominant color all night had to be red. What
happens when they have to give him the green?
The only other
troubling thing is that he’d need the system at all. But hey, maybe a
rookie QB, who’s had to digest all this new information week after
week, needs the focus, needs the hand-holding, to keep his tenuous hold
on reality in a game that can be chaotic at best.
I just hope
he understands the game a little. A lot of millions went his way. There
were reservations from his USC coach Pete Carroll as to whether Sanchez
was ready for the NFL at all. Hopefully, Pete was wrong about Sanchez.
He’ll be the face and future of our New York Jets for many years to
come. He started the season on fire but has stumbled through too many
games, games his very tough defense deserved to win.
It’s great
to have an athletic quarterback though. Just watching him avoid the
rush and take off once in a while gives me hope for the Jets in the
future. He’s really not all that accurate, at least not thus far, but
he throws very well on the run, and, hell, Eli Manning isn’t all that
accurate either, not like his big brother.
And some NFL experts would undoubtedly say he’s too short.
(As
this is written, Drew Brees has been beating up the Patriots. Drew is
just a hair over 6 feet and seems to manage quite well. They’re now
ahead by 38-17 and it’s great to see the Pats get their noses rubbed in
it a little. The Saints are now just running the ball into the line so
as not to embarrass them any more than they’ve already been. I love
sweet justice).
But the point is that, short or tall, a real
quarterback has other resources to beat you with. Sanchez seems to have
some of them, if not all of them just yet.
Rex Ryan seemed to
think so too, and was challenged to find a way to deal with Sanchez’s
wilder impulses. He seems to have found just the thing. If it takes a
little more communication with the sideline to make the rookie a
top-flight quarterback, I’m on board with that.
Maybe when the
color does change to green, he’ll respond. The last two Jets games will
be against the undefeated Colts and the top defense right now, the
Cincinnati Bengals. But the next three, at Buffalo, and then against
Atlanta and Tampa Bay, are certainly winnable, especially if Sanchez is
working in red mode, or even amber.
Sometimes things that work very simply simply work. Rex Ryan has found
a system that’s a lot like that.
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