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Pierre-Paul
was all over the field all game long........
Photo
by Ronald Martinez- Getty
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The
Cowboys lose, it's Tony Romo's fault......
Photo- Tom
Pennington-Getty |
NFL fans and owners are a tough
audience. The Cowboys lose, it’s Tony
Romo’s fault; the
Bears lose, it’s Marion Barber’s fault (twice); the Chiefs lose, it’s
the head
coach’s (Todd Haley) fault.
At the same time, Denver’s success is
all due to Tebow (Tebow,
Tebow, Tebow), the Giants success to Eli Manning and Jason Pierre-Paul. Our predisposition to have heroes, I guess,
is the reason there are still monarchies in the world today.
Not that I even mind the hero worship
that much, especially
in the cases of Eli and Pierre-Paul. Eli
was great last night, making all the throws and all the right decisions. Pierre-Paul was all over the field all game
long and finally blocked the kick that would have tied the game for the
Cowboys. But Mr. Tebow (Tebow, Tebow, Tebow) had a lot of help in that
Bears
game, even if he very well might be the reason every Bronco player
thinks he
can be great too.
But poor Marion Barber; his first
error was allegedly
running out of bounds to stop the clock, thereby giving the Broncos
time to tie
the game. But he didn’t really run out
of bounds. He took a tremendous blow
from the side that knocked him out of bounds. His
late fumble was actually a strip, something that
shouldn’t happen
but does sometimes for a guy who gained over a hundred yards for the
Bears
yesterday and scored their only touchdown on a very nifty run and
side-step
that left his defender on the ground.
Poor Todd Haley; his team lost Jamaal
Charles, one of the
league’s top running backs, Matt Cassell, their quarterback, Tony
Moeaki, their
tight end, Eric Berry, a Pro-Bowl safety and a pretty good linebacker
too named
Brandon Siler. The real story is that
the GM in KC hates the head coach, always has hated him, and was only
too happy
to finally pull the trigger.
Romo threw for 400 yards and zero
interceptions. His “overthrown” pass to
Miles Austin is what
detractors say lost the game.
But as Mom used to say, “it takes two to
Tango”, and there’s no better example of that than the curious
chemistry
between a QB and his receiver. Austin
had been out with a bad hammy for weeks and who knows whether he was
running
full speed or not.
Now everybody’s saying the Giants will
be the NFC East
Champions. And, while I’d love to agree,
it’d certainly help me lean in that direction if I thought for one
minute that
their defense could stop anybody. They
certainly didn’t stop the Cowboys.
But the Giants defense is practically
the worst defense in
the league. They’ve given up 349 points
in 13 games, by far the worst statistic among playoff-caliber teams and
exceeded in futility by only Minnesota, Carolina, Tampa Bay,
Indianapolis and
Oakland.
I keep hearing how bad the Patriots
defense is but they’ve
surrendered only 274 points, 75 less than the Giants.
That equates to a TD per game at least.
The Pats have scored a whopping 396 compared
to the Giants 324. The Packers, last
year’s Super Bowl winner, have given up 278 and scored a league-leading
466. Face it, Giants fans, the pass
defense is a sieve. If they manage to
cover everybody, it’s an accident.
The Giants still have a long road
ahead too. They should dispatch the
Redskins at home
next week but then they’ll be facing the Jets and, in their last
regular season
game, they’ll face the Cowboys once again, a team that will have had
the taste
of revenge on their tongues for three full weeks. Just
as a benchmark, the Cowboys defense has
given up just 281 points.
What saves the G-Men are their
defensive line, even without
Osi Umenyiora, Eli Manning and those terrific receivers, Nicks and Cruz
and
Manningham, and now, the tight end too, a fellow named Jake Ballard who
already
has 589 yards and 4 touchdowns, pretty incredible for a rookie tight
end. Hakeem has gained over a thousand
yards
already, with 6 touchdowns, but he’s an All-Pro.
Yeah, yeah, I know, matchups are
everything. The Giants proved that against
those very
same Packers last week, forcing them into overtime to finally eke out
their 13th
victory without a loss. But the very
best teams have secondaries who can cover people more often than not. Defensive lines are great but the best QB’s
will find somebody, even given just a little bit of time.
Eli has been matching up with the best
of those quarterbacks
too. Eli can make all the throws and
out-think opponents most of the time too. In
fact, Eli is one of those guys, like Aaron
Rodgers, like Tom Brady
and like even Tim Tebow, who make everybody play better.
It’s a special gift and doesn’t happen for
just anybody.
So what are the Giants missing? Until last night, I would have said it was
the offensive line. Until last night, I
would have said it was the running backs. But
last night I changed my mind. Brandon
Jacobs, that big goof usually, was
everything I could have ever
wanted in a running back last night. The
offensive line surrendered no sacks.
But even after last night, I still
have to question that
secondary. George Allen hated having
rookies anywhere on his team. He couldn’t
deal with the mistakes. He’d have put a
gun to his head last night (perfectly okay in Dallas and much of the
country). Those corners and safeties
were just clueless last night. They’re
only
fooled when the opponent decides to pass. And,
oh yeah, those linebackers are a little suspect
as well.
Of course,
nobody
stops quarterbacks these days. It’s
against the rules. If anybody was
watching as Skins linebacker London Fletcher dealt Tom Brady a
perfectly legal
hit and got called for unnecessary roughness, they’d have been as sick
as I
was.
The only sure thing though is that,
whatever losses are
found down the road, it’ll be somebody’s fault.