Thursday, December 6, 2007

4th and Goal, Episode 23

This week we discuss the crazy Monday night game between the Pats and the Ravens, and preview the Pats and Steelers game this Sunday. We also talk about coaches on the hot seat, and the NFL's version of Hot or Not. All that, plus our picks for Week 14 of the NFL.


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Tuesday, December 4, 2007

Chernobyl, as interpreted by the Baltimore Ravens

"You didn't win, I lost"

It's a saying my father and I have had for years. It's usually uttered when we are shooting pool and one of us scratches on the eight ball, or something stupid like that. Anyone that has played with me has heard me say that. Because I scratch on the eight. A lot.

The Ravens should also be saying this today, after doing the improbable and losing to the New England Patriots last night. That's right. Last night the Patriots should have lost. But they didn't.

They didn't win either.

Sure they "won". But they didn't go out and earn it. Brady didn't put together a fantastic drive, working the sidelines and the clock, stepping up and making the throws when needed.

Sure, they moved down the field. And yes, they scored a touchdown. But most of those yards, and that touchdown, were given to them.

The Patriots were facing a 4th and 1 at the Baltimore 30 with 1:48 left in the game, down by 4 points. If they don't convert, the game is over. The Ravens stuff the play. Not even close.

And then the whistle.

Someone on the Ravens sideline called a timeout just before the play was snapped. Head Coach Brian Billick took the blame for the timeout, but replays clearly show it was their defensive coordinator that took the timeout. So the two teams line up again.

False start, on the offense. Now it's 4th and 6. The Ravens defense, which has shut down one of the most potent offenses we have ever seen all night, just needs to do it one more play.

And they didn't. For the first time all night, they don't get pressure on Brady, and they let him run up the middle for 12 yards.

The Ravens imminent implosion has begun. The Ravens are called for illegal contact, which tacks 5 yards on to the end of the run. The Pats get four more chances at the Baltimore 18.

But the defense holds again, and force another 4th down, this time 4th and 5, from the 13 yard line. Brady drops back in the shotgun and fires over the middle to his tight end, and it's incomplete! Game over, except the defense made another mistake. Holding penalty, on the defense, 5 yards and an automatic first down for the Pats.

Now the frustration has really set in.

The next play Brady throws a pass to the corner of the end zone, and at first glance it appears that Gaffney has made the catch. But replays seem to show that he didn't have control throughout the catch, that the ball was moving around in his fingertips, which should have made it an incompletion.

But the ref didn't see it that way, and after review confirmed that it was a completion, and a touchdown.

Keep in mind, the ref didn't say there was not enough evidence to overturn the ruling on the field, which I would have been ok with. The ball was out of the frame for much of the catch. He said it was a clear catch.

It was a meltdown of epic proportions, with a little help from the refs thrown in for flavor.

I don't agree with the Ravens when they say that the refs tried to give the Pats every chance possible to win the game. Baltimore took care of that on their own. The Ravens committed all of those penalties, and called that timeout, all of which directly prevented the Ravens from winning the game. But there is definitely cause for concern if reports of refs calling players "boys" (even if the ref in question is black himself) are true, and blowing an obvious replay.

But in the end, the Patriots remain unbeaten. But they certainly didn't win this game. And as their choke hold on history seems to be getting tighter, more and more cracks have appeared in the armor, and suddenly the juggernaut doesn't look unstoppable.

Monday, December 3, 2007

How? Why!?

What does a guy have to do to get noticed in the NCAA? Is it rushing for 2448 yards and 29 TDs through 13 games while carrying your team to their first ever conference championship? Apparently not. Is it being the second all-time single-season rusher, behind only Barry Sanders, with a chance to eclipse that mark in your final game of the season? Nope. Is it rushing for more yards than Marcus Allen (Heisman winner), Ladainian Tomlinson (Doak Walker Award winner), and any other running back in the history of the state of Florida. Damn it, no! None of those things seem to matter because UCF running back, Kevin Smith, has been shafted. Hard.

He leads the entire NCAA in yards, TDs, and yards per game. He tops a list that includes Mike Hart, Darren McFadden and Ray Rice - all three of which are Walker Award finalists. How the hell does the dude with MORE yards and MORE touchdowns get slighted? In 2000, LT ran for TCU, yet got the Walker Award. In fact, during that season, LT only rushed for slightly over 2000 yards. What is going on? TCU's schedule back then was just as cake-esque as UCF's. And, Kevin Smith got his team their first conference championship ever. EVER.

I'm hot on this point. It doesn't make sense to me. It is bad enough that the BCS screwed the pooch big time this year and we have an 11-2 team in the national championship game. It's bad enough that Ohio State, who has a strength of schedule ranking in the second half of the NCAA is playing for the national title. It's bad enough that a Missouri team who was number one just a week ago, is suspiciously absent in the BCS bowls, replaced by a team they beat (Kansas)! Ridicularo, I say! Ridiculee. I can't even get the correct words out of my fingertips.

The BCS and college football as a whole are too damn frustrating. I don't even know if a playoff would save my brain. Hell, at least teams like UCF and Hawai'i would have chances at the title. That'd be nice, considering they won their conference titles. Unlike a Georgia team, playing in a BCS bowl when they aren't even the bon-a-fide third best team in the SEC.

I love football, ladies and gentlemen (well, probably only one lady or gentleman, but still), but I am losing it when it comes to college football. I'll still watch, I suppose, but if a guy who broke records (Tim Tebow) and another who is making rushing history (24K Smith) can't get their respective awards, I may have to write a letter. That's right! A letter.

Shit...