Tag Archives: Chargers

Daily Rounds 1/4/2012

And so it went in the NFL as more and more retentions and dismissals were announced.  Dean Spanos, owner of the San Diego Chargers, announced that GM AJ Smith and head coach Norv Turner would be returning for the 2012 season but according to San Diego Union Tribune reporter Kevin Acee, both know that if they don’t make the playoffs in 2012, they will not get a similar vote of confidence from the owner Spanos.  Acee went on to write that much of this falls on AJ Smith, the GM and he knows it.  Meanwhile, Andy Reid was given a vote of confidence by the Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie.  Les Bowen of the Philly Daily News said that despite all the harsh tone and sentiment, Jeff Lurie expressed confidence in Andy Reid, albeit in a limited time frame.   Despite the defense’s inability to stop many people, Paul Domowitch of the Daily News says that Andy Reid put Juan Castillo in a pretty uncomfortable situation and so he shouldn’t be left out to dry by Reid whatever decision he makes on the defensive coordinator.  Dan Graziano of ESPN.com says that the Eagle owner used the word unacceptable so much that bringing back Reid made the word meaningless.  The Bears let go of GM Jerry Angelo and Brad Biggs of the Chicago Tribune writes that it was thanks to an abysmal history of draft selecting that led to the former scout’s dismissal from the top job in all of Chi-town football land.  Dan Pompei of the Tribune writes that forcing Lovie Smith on the new GM is a recipe for disaster.  Sean Jensen of the Chicago Sun Times writes that it was not enough talent as say a Green Bay or a Detroit that ultimately led to the dismissal of Jerry Angelo.  Jon Greenberg of ESPNChicago.com says that the Bears made the right moves and threw out some names since the Bears are in the solution business.  Peter King of SI.com weighs in on all topics including how the dominoes may fall once the dust settles.  

Is that enough for you?  A day after the Rams fired Bill Devaney and Steve Spagnuolo and Raheem Morris was sent packing in Tampa, a few more jobs opened up in NFL offices and a few quite surprisingly stayed shut.  I want to focus on them specifically so let’s run them down one by one:

Chargers:  The biggest surprise of the day was that Norv Turner will wake up this morning as the head coach of the San Diego Chargers.  If you hear talent evaluators and scouts talk about the job that AJ Smith has done in building the Chargers from perennial doormats to one of the elite teams, you’d think this team won a few championships.  Yet that’s the chatter among folks in the know:  the talent is there to win it all.  And that would lead one to believe that its the coach’s fault.  Right?  Wrong.  Apparently Norv has earned ONE FINAL shot at winning a new contract and it doesn’t necessarily mean winning a championship.  The Chargers are a very good team and over the final month showed that by playing well.  The regular season finale showed everything you needed to about the Chargers: their offense was clicking and yet the Raiders still had a chance in the end to win it.  The biggest problem the Chargers have is their head coach.  I’ve always felt that Norv Turner running an offense and Norv running a team are two totally different people and one easily out paces the other.  Some guys just can’t do the head coaching thing and it doesn’t take anything away from the offensive genius that Norv has, I’m just saying that perhaps the man would be better served wearing just that one hat than say the coach’s hat too.

Eagles: As surprising as the Chargers retention of Smith and Norv was, I wasn’t surprised by Andy Reid being given one more chance.  The shortened training season and programs limited the ability of Juan Castillo to install his defense and for Jim Washburn to install his wide 9 scheme.  But look at the raw numbers and the final 6 weeks and a different Eagles team started to emerge.  A team more confident and a team capable of scoring and playing with anyone.  Yes, the competition wasn’t all that but a team sometimes just needs to build confidence and say the Giants lost to the Jets and then the Cowboys beat the Giants in week 17, the Eagles would be hosting a playoff game.  Yes, as awful as that team played throughout the first 2 months of the season the Eagles still had a glimmer of hope heading into the final two weeks.  But there was just too much “unacceptable”-ness that couldn’t be ignored.  Reid’s decision to make Castillo, a former offensive line coach into a defensive coordinator was a dubious one.  The organization built a championship caliber defense to go with its high octane offense but I kept telling people that the offensive line was going to be a problem and it led to Vick getting injured and spending a ton of time on the side line.  The Eagles were plagued by mental errors and that falls on the coach’s lap.  Most of his decisions back fired on him during this season where all the expectations were that he not only make it to the playoffs but have a deep run.  None of that materialized.  Even in a very mediocre year for the NFC East, the Eagles with all that talent couldn’t win the division which is an upset in it of itself.  The next order of business will be to figure out what to do with Juan.  Hist last few games have been impressive and perhaps giving him a full offseason to help his players understand the scheme and the coverages may be of use.  BUT, Steve Spagnuolo, the former Eagles defensive coach is out there and there’s a rumbling among Eagle fans to retain him as the defensive coordinator a post he wanted a few years ago but was apparently held back by Reid which led to some tense times in Eagle land and eventually led to his emergence in New York as a Giant and a Super Bowl trophy.  The Eagles have plenty of tough decisions to make but make no mistake, the real unacceptable part will be this time next year if the Eagles are again left out of the dance, and Reid is looking for a lifeline: do NOT expect it from Jeff Lurie.

Bears: I agree with Dan Pompei- its tough to assume that the new GM and Lovie Smith will get along but there’s no denying that had Matt Forte and Jay Cutler NOT gone down with injuries the Bears would’ve been in the thick of things.  They were 7-3 and then Cutler and Forte went down.  I see them winning at minimum two of the games they lost.  They definitely beat the Broncos and they definitely beat the Chiefs.  That’s a 10-6 season and a wild card berth.  There were certainly holes and as Peter King pointed at the offensive line as a mystery that Jerry Angelo could never solve.  His draft record was poor and aside from Matt Forte, he didn’t draft a game changing star since trading for Jay Cutler.  But the biggest black mark was that Sam Hurd signing.  I don’t agree with it but Hurd’s arrest and charges and the fact that Angelo was accused of not doing a thorough background check may have been his undoing.  Bringing too much negative publicity may have been the final straw and there are several personnel moves that make you scratch your head.  That coupled with the fact that the Lions and Packers are teams that have been built from within and have the ability to have sustained excellence the Bears HAD to make a move to get on the boat of doing the same and bringing in a person who can draft well and help to build the core of the Bears from within.  That I feel was the biggest dilemma for the Bears who, like the Colts have masked a lot of their problems through scheme (Mike Martz also got the door) and great QB play.  The Bears had a decent team and aside from those two injuries to their most prominent offensive pieces, the Bears had very little shot of having a run with Caleb Hanie.  Lovie’s refusal to sit Hanie though was kind of odd and could’ve been the catalyst for his own firing.  Donovan McNabb may have helped the Bears a bit though even he would’ve been a long shot to cure the Bears considering their offensive line was just NOT any good.

Then there’s the decision that will REALLY make this offseason interesting.  The Indianapolis Colts fired Bill and Chris Polian Monday and owner Jim Irsay is setting the tone for a rebuilding year.  If that’s the case the Indianapolis Star’s Bob Kravitz says that means Andrew Luck will be the Colts QB in 2012 and Peyton Manning will be elsewhere.  Alex Marvez of FoxSports says that the best case scenario for the Colts would be that Peyton Manning’s neck isn’t healthy and it makes it easy for the organization to cut ties with the future hall of famer.  If not, there’s a major decision in the hands of a new GM.  Judy Batista of the New York Times says that the change was more of a cultural change as the Polians seemed to be outshining even the head coach Jim Caldwell who was spared the axing.  The decision on Caldwell will rest with the new GM.  

The Peyton Manning decision will be the most interesting personnel decision made by any one team that I can remember.  Imagine a QB with two or three more years of elite level at the quarterback position hitting the open market for teams to take.  Let’s take a look at the 12 teams that made the playoffs this year.  Out of the 12, 6 of them could use an upgrade immediately.  Imagine the Ravens with Peyton at the helm.  Imagine the 49ers with Peyton under center.  The Broncos may have Tebow magic but Peyton Manning could deliver them victories.  The Texans with Manning passing to Andre Johnson?  That’s Super Bowl worthy.  Then you open him up to owners like Daniel Snyder who has already said he would hand Peyton a blank check and let’s be real, he would and give him anything he wants.

But what about his legacy as a Colt?  In my estimation it wouldn’t suffer.  Look, this is a part of the business of football.  Teams are better off running superstars out of town a year early than a year late because of the propensity of injury in this sport.  The QB position especially is difficult.  Unfortunately the Colts won’t even be able to take advantage of having Peyton in the line up.  The Colts have until March 1st to make a decision on Peyton.  That’s the day that he’s owed a huge roster bonus upwards of $20 million.  His salary cap number will be a ridiculous $28 million which would be at the very least 1/6th of the teams’ cap number making it impossible to make additional roster changes.  The decision with the head is to finally cut Peyton Manning though it sounds harsh.  Its the right move for the organization that needs to look to its future and by firing the Polians they did just that.  We dont know what the Polians would’ve done had they been in charge of making that decision but Jim Irsay paved the way for a change.  Its something that had to be done.

Let’s not think that by any measure this is an easy decision.  Yes, Peyton’s neck surgeries the last few years are a troubling trend.  Yes, he’s getting older.  But his absence showed you how absolutely top heavy this team is in terms of production and play.  Without Peyton they are a doormat, a 2-14 disaster.  Its a result of bad drafting that has left this team woefully thin at several positions.  The Colts need to move forward and regardless of where you are as a fan, the right move is to release Peyton Manning so the Colts can build this team up the right way and give Andrew Luck a chance in the coming years to lead a good team.  If he’s as advertised if you build a solid offensive line, and get some more weapons along side Pierre Garcon (Reggie Wayne is most likely leaving and hopefully Austin Collie stops being concussed) the Colts can rebuild this team back in a division with the Texans who always have one reason or another why they can’t run away with the division.  Then there’s the Jags who are in rebuilding mode and are years away without a franchise QB at all.  Then there’s the Titans who are the second or third best team in the division depending solely on Indy’s play.  Again, this decision WILL NOT be easy but its necessary that the Colts look to the future and NOT hold on to the past.

Meanwhile the local football team in the playoffs, the Giants are looking at their battle tested schedule and wondering if they could take the 49ers and the Packers to the brink, why can’t they make a run?  Ralph Vacchiano of the Daily News gets the players pulse.  Tom Rock of Newsday says that Antrell Rolle after giving props to Tom Coughlin continued the respect train and it stopped at the doorstep of fellow safety Deon Grant who sat him down and got him to be himself.  Osi Umeniyora played Sunday but suffered a setback on the high ankle sprain.  While he’s expected to miss some practice time do not expect him to miss the first playoff game in Metlife Stadium.  Mike Vaccaro says that the Giants can turn the volume up and bring some life to Metlife Stadium.  Paul Schwartz of the New York Post says that Giant fans shouldn’t compare any run the Giants may have with the one in 2007.  

Its interesting that Mike Vaccaro brings that up because the Giants in 2007 relied on a road reliable team to cruise into the Super Bowl.  The Giants rallying cry was road warriors and its been over 10 years since the Giants had a home playoff win so the Giants are overdue.  Its also interesting that the similarities between eerie events happening that year and the events of this year.  The Giants would love this team to author a similar ending and surely there is no super duper team that has no weaknesses that it would be the height of improbability that the Giants walk into their home this season and win BUT the Giants have a few glaring differences.  That team’s offensive line and running game were stout, both of which are concerns heading into the playoffs.

The Giants would have a similar up hill climb with the Saints being a very difficult task since the Giants would likely have to face them in the SuperDome where they are 8-0 this season and they are 10-0 in domes overall.  The Giants however have a passing attack which features Victor Cruz.  My biggest key going into the Falcon game will be how Nicks handles it.  Nicks is the unquestioned number one regardless of the feel good story that Cruz is.  Nicks is the move the chains/Plaxico guy who can make big catches and having both of them going at the same time would do wonders for this team and afford HUGE holes for the offensive line to work with.

The Giants need the defensive line to play lights out over the next month in order to have any chance to move forward.  If they don’t play well the secondary will get lit up.  Not a maybe, it WILL get lit up.  The pressure is on the defensive line to cause pressure and force mistakes.  The Giants will need all the help they can get.

Tyler Kepner of the New York Times believes that the Yankees are saving their cash to spend big next winter when guys like Matt Cain and Cole Hamels may wind up as free agents.  

The name to keep in mind is Matt Cain.  Cole Hamels will be retained by the Phillies barring some major malfunction on the organization’s thinking.  The Phillies have a ton of money tied up in Cliff Lee and Roy Halladay (two worthwile contracts even at THAT price), but not retaining your home grown under 30 ace like pitcher would be the height of stupidity and the antithesis of how the Phillies have operated under Ruben Amaro Jr.  Cain however remains with the Giants, a team who will have to pay HUGE bucks to Tim Lincecum and will try to tie up Buster Posey (if they are smart) and I dont know where they are willing to go payroll wise but they would have to crack the $100 million barrier to afford both and I dont know that the Giants want to sustain that kind of payroll for multiple seasons which will eventually be what they have to do in order to keep the nucleus together.  Look, the Yankees were smart NOT to invite CJ Wilson to their facility for a try out.  Its clear the Yankees do NOT want to be used to drive up his price EVEN if it benefits them by making a fellow contender spend more but the Yankees are only going to gain an ace by trade.  My guess is that the Yankees somehow pry Felix Hernandez loose from the Mariners UNLESS Prince Fielder decides to sign in Seattle.  Seattle CAN operate as a big market club but are being built through the minor leagues by Jeff Zdiruneck.

My guess is that the Nationals sign Prince Fielder.  The Mariners trade Felix to the Yankees  for multiple pieces (start with Jesus Montero AND Dellin Betances and perhaps Gaby Sanchez) which IS the right move for both teams and the Yankees STILL don’t win a world series.  Look, I’m no Mayan but I’d be lying if I told you I thought the Yankees can expect to find another Freddy Garcia AND Bartolo Colon to offset their lack of pitching depth.  You know what you got in CC Sabathia (workhorse ace) and in AJ Burnett (5.00 ERA) and at some point in time the Yankees can expect Mariano to drop off in production though I would NEVER bet against the greatest closer in the history of the position.  I expect a slightly down year from Curtis Granderson.  I expect Robinson Cano to have an MVP year next year.  I expect the slow regression of the captain and Alex Rodriguez to continue and for Manny Banuelos to have a decent rookie campaign.  I even predict he makes the team from the outset of the season.

Finally, before quitting the blog for the day, Lynn Zinser of the New York Times talks about the repercussions for Santonio Holmes quitting on his team.  Now that Rex Ryan has been shut up for good, everyone else is doing the talking and its not complementary.  Mike Lupica of the Daily News calls Rex and the Jets the joke.  Brian Costello of the Post says that Mark Sanchez during an interview with 1050 ESPN took full responsibility for trying to make things right with Santonio Holmes.  Roderick Boone of Newsday said that Rex vowed to spend more time with the offense.  

Lynn hit the nail right on the head.  Often times when players are making certain decisions during the heat of the battle they rarely think about its consequences.  They give in to their emotions and let them  take control.  Holmes wanted the football.  He didn’t get it.  He pouted.  But the setting for that was the problem.  The season was on the line and as it turns out, the Jets COULD HAVE made the playoffs had Holmes kept his head in the game and made plays to help the Jets win the game.  BUT, what can’t be ignored is that Holmes criticisms have some merit.  The offense has stunk for some time now but at least over the last two years when the Jets went on extended runs they had some sort of identity:  they were a run-oriented offense.  They went away from that slowly with Holmes’ acquisition and Plax this year but to do that in addition to cutting several veterans who would’ve provided leadership in the locker room was a recipe for disaster.  Add that to the fact that the training camps were cut short by the lockout and the team had very little time to get acclimated to the new system the Jets were setting themselves up.  By the time they tried to revert back it was too late.  They had squandered too many games and another year out of a great defense.  The Jets face a tough question but my choice would be to keep Santonio.  The Jets need to bring in a QB to really challenge Sanchez.  You want to see your franchise guy man up and win a QB competition straight up which is why throwing money at Matt Flynn is a good idea.  Of course if Peyton Manning comes into play you could make a run but with the Jets current cap situation he would have to take a lesser deal to come to the Jets though he may want to do that with how close the Jets are and the chance at playing Tom Brady twice a year.  But who knows, right now Mark Sanchez has to do what he can to reclaim that locker room because he’s NOT a leader that can voice his opinions.  Santonio had NO RESPECT for him and thus missed meetings that he tried to set up.  That kind of insubordination deserves a huge presence by Rex who needs to give up this idea and belief that he can coach anybody and focus on putting together a good team not necessarily the most talented one.

The Jets were once a team and I think most players would love to play for a coach like Rex Ryan who wears his emotions on his sleeve but Rex needs to take a step back and assess exactly what went wrong.  My opinion?  Get rid of Schotty if you are going in a different direction at the QB.  IF you get Peyton ax Schotty and get a decent offensive coordinator to take his place.  I would pray that Schottenheimer gets the Jaguars job which is apparently open.  The fact is, the Jets need help in the locker room which wasn’t the case until this year.  Either way, they want their players to quit the baby act and not quit on themselves.

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DIVISIONAL REACTION Pt. 2- THE JETS

Ok, so I reserved an entire blog post to help Jet fans savor the moment but I wanted to be slightly different.  Let’s forget that I predicted a close Jet victory.  Sure I never gave you exact scores but come on, who’s perfect?  Not I.  But let’s be real here.  Most people are swallowing a bit harder today knowing that the Jets are in the AFC Championship game after two teams who had nothing to play for let them moonwalk into the playoffs.  I agree that you can’t back into the playoffs by winning but you sure can have the backdoor opened for you if you know some people.

Regardless of how they got here, they are making everyone regret ever letting them crash their party.  The Jets beat the San Diego Chargers for several reasons of which I will get into.  But with the Colts, Vikings, and Saints winning their first games after a multi-week layoff and the Jets defeating San Diego after facing two teams that rested their players in hopes of getting healthy before the playoffs, this whole debate about resting and not resting will be an interesting and never ending debate.

Why the Jets won: Rex Ryan’s single greatest characteristic that endears him to his players is his ability to keep it real.  He doesn’t hide anything.  He has no filter.  He says what he says and doesn’t look back.  He’s passionate about his players and his team and has a reserve of confidence in them so big that he just can’t wait to tell everyone about it.  I’m convinced he would think he’s the best team in the league week in and week out, even if he were in the midst of a losing season.  That’s his confidence.  He’s also very realistic about his team and recognizes its weaknesses but never plays up any of them.  If his team has any, he won’t be the one to admit to them.  I like that and the players do to.  They like knowing their coach is just as wacky as they are and more often than not, these players will run through a wall for him and that’s what you have to love.

But more so than that, the consistency with which he rules applies also to the gameplan.  Never once Sunday, did you ever get the feeling that the Jets were panicking because they kept having 3 & outs after 3 & outs.  Not once did you think that they were not going to run the football on a majority of their snaps.  No, the Jets played their game.  You knew coming into the game they were going to run it down their throats.  The Chargers had to be aware of that and yet, still, was there any doubt that that Shonn Greene run wasn’t going to happen?  That run was eventually going to happen, no doubt about it.  The Jets were going to get that first down at 4th and 1.  The Jets won because they put Mark Sanchez into manageable situations and never got away from running the ball once they went down 7-0.

2.  Their defense played rock solid.  When Phillip Rivers threw that touchdown pass in the second quarter, i’m sure every analyst figured the floodgates were about to open.  It never happened.  Know why?  Smart idea for Rex to use Darrell Revis the RDPOY (real defensive player of the year) in different spots on the field.  Remember that screen game that people were fearing with Darren Sproles?  Two separate plays, one by Revis to tackle Sproles for a loss and another in which Eric Smith read it and followed Sproles which forced Rivers to throw it away had San Diego scrambling to rip that page out of their playbook which in my mind was a huge mistake.  The Jets entering half time with a 7-0 deficit was more a victory for the Jets than a lead for the Chargers.  Everytime Rivers held the ball and desperately wanted to throw it deep, no one was open and that goes to the solid game that the secondary had.  We knew that the Chargers wouldn’t really challenge Revis and when they did (according to Peter King of SI.com- 4 passes were thrown Revis’ way and “one was complete, toLaDainian Tomlinson, for a loss of four yards. One, toLegadu Naanee, was batted down by a diving Revis on a cross route. One, toVincent Jackson, a deep pass up the left seam, was overthrown, with Revis and Jackson running stride for stride. And the fourth, to Jackson, was up for grabs between the two, with Revis coming down with a juggled ball for an interception in a spectacular play.”) Revis had none of it.  There was really nothing for the Chargers to be had.

3. 4th and 1-  This will be detailed from the Chargers perspective but I’ll go from the Jets side first.  We all know the situation.  The Chargers had no timeouts.  Under two minutes to play.  The ball was on the Charger 34.  Now usually when the camera cuts to the head coach, you can see him consulting someone about what the percentages are with the different options.  Not Rex.  Rex went for it.  No hesitation.  Complete belief that he could get it.  Not only that.  The more interesting point was that he brought out Thomas Jones.  Not Shonn Greene who had earlier run for the longest TD run in Jet playoff history.  He brought out his freshest legs.  The guy who had just polished off a 1400 yard season.  A captain on his team. I know people are going to say how this was definitely a go for it kind of situation.  But many coaches shy away from it and opt rather to punt the football.  I don’t even doubt teams would go for the field goal although that would’ve been too much of a risk.  But it was the right play and Rex was prepared for it.  No hesitation.  None.  That’s why the Jets are playing and the Chargers aren’t.

Why the Chargers lost:

1. Sloppy play.  Let’s be clear about one thing, the Chargers lost this game just as much as the Jets won and it starts with the mental mistakes that kill teams this time of year.  In the beginning there were the delay of games and the fumbled snap.

2. Game plan-  This could go with sloppy play because the Chargers somehow unthinkably gave up on the screen game with Darren Sproles which, had they ran it a few more times, i’m pretty sure they would’ve hit on at least one of them.  But that wasn’t the problem.  Darren Sproles last carry in that game was to close the first half.  Think about that.  Darren Sproles, their weapon out of the backfield whom the Jets didn’t match up well against, was never used inexplicably so that they could give LDT carries during the game.  LaDanian Tomlinson who hasn’t been LDT since 2007.  Given the decisions they will have to make during the offseason, LDT will most certainly not be a Charger next season (do you blame them?), so perhaps they were giving him as many carries as they could as a good bye present? Was it so that he could give them some kind of indication that he could still play?  I’m still trying to figure out why the bulk of the carries went to a back who’s very much out of his prime.  But somehow, I don’t think the Jets are complaining.  By halftime, when Darren Sproles had a few carries and they eventually missed a 57 yarder for San Diego (you really can’t put that on him, kickers statistically miss half the time on those), you figured the Bolts had figured out that maybe, just maybe this Sproles kid is good enough to run their offense through.  Nope.  Never happened.

3. Onside kick.  Technically this is part of sloppy play but let’s be real here, this deserves its own number and separate headline.  This move baffled me from the get go.  Why would you attempt to onside kick it to the Jets when the possibility of you kicking it off to them and holding them to a 3 and out exists?  You know the Jets are going to run the football, they won’t attempt a pass since they are keeping Sanchez in manageable situations so they can’t risk an interception.  You know that if you stop them, then you can force a punt and Weatherford, the Jets punter was not having a great day punting with an average of 38 yards which would’ve set you up at the very least on the 40.  With over a minute to go and no timeouts, you had about 40 yards to go and sure you don’t trust your kicker but at the very least you have to go for a touchdown as well.  This is the league’s most explosive offense and it forgot what got them to the dance.  I remember being in Giants stadium when they drove on the Giants D (although to be fair, the Giants D is nothing compared to the Jets), and scored a game winning touchdown.  Its been done before and the Chargers could’ve done it again but it lost confidence in themselves.  My idiot coach theory lives on.  Despite the Jets getting the first down, I truly believe it would’ve gone down different had the Jets been pinned in an endzone which was one of the loudest places in the stadium to be and had to get a first down from there instead of the 40 yard line of the Chargers.  The field position game is important and the Chargers just didn’t have a great understanding of the flow of the game.

4.  Nate Kaeding….AND Philip Rivers.  We can sit here and try and pretend that Nate Kaeding was the reason the Chargers lost but aside from his 2 missed field goals (like i said before, that 57 yarder is not a unforgivable miss), Phillip Rivers didn’t show up playing at his highest.  I like Phillip Rivers.  I like his moxie, and his make up.  He’s a tough nosed kid that all his teammates can rally around.  He’s got guts and heart.  But Sunday’s game showed you that you still need a good brain on top of your shoulders to be an effective QB.  His two interceptions in the second half were back breakers, especially the one that set up the Jets first touchdown where he threw to Antonio Gates while Gates was still running his route and his back turned to the ball.  The only person who had his eyes on the ball was Jim Leonhard who saw it coming, and turned around in time to pick it off.  We can sit here and blame Kaeding and i’m sure he got roasted for it, but we can now safely say that no placekicker wants anything to do with the Jets come postseason time right?  I mean they have some magical power over kickers which have forced 5 field goals to be missed and four in a row.  Its unbelievable.

SMALL NITPICKING OF THE JETS: I know its time for celebration but there were a few small things that i saw of the Jets that i didn’t like.  Ok so maybe one major problem.  The Jets insistence on not kicking it to Darren Sproles.  Basically they announced the game plan early that they were not going to allow the pint sized rocket to beat them.  Its a good thing that the Chargers weren’t paying attention to any of that.  Every squib kick, or short kick gave San Diego better and better field position.  Even late with a 10 point lead, the Jets still were funny kicking it to Sproles which again gave them great field position to start nearly every drive.  Its a good thing that the Chargers weren’t paying any attention to that though.

Kerry Rhodes has been kind of a mystery this season.  He started off this year as probably one of the more interesting figures that Rex Ryan saw while studying tape of the Jets and a guy he thought could fill in as his Ed Reed in New York.  But their relationship was rocky to say the best.  He was benched for a few games and then came back and has played strongly.  However, Sunday when he came off the end and had that strip sack of Rivers, his first reaction was to jump up and celebrate, meanwhile there was a scrum for the ball and the Chargers recovered.  Compare that to Jim Leonhard (former Raven with Rex Ryan) who layed a hit on Malcolm Floyd (on a catch by the way, that incomplete pass ruling was horrendous), and jarred the ball loose while his helmet flew off his head, went head first, no helmet into the pile to recover the football.  Which he did.  It goes to show you how frustrating a guy like Kerry Rhodes must be to a coaching staff that sees the ability but does not see the heads up play enough to warrant giving him any praise.  You give a guy like Kerry Rhodes praise and suddenly his head becomes larger than the Goodyear Blimp.  I have a feeling that if the Jets go to the Super Bowl or even win, he’s going to be first in line for a pay raise.

To sum up, the Jets won because the Chargers lost the game for them and the Jets, having accepted “gifts” from Indy and Cincy (two weeks in a row), came and took this one from the Chargers.  But let’s be real here.  Teams win all the time because other teams don’t play at their best and the Jets should not be looked at in any other way than the better team each week.  No doubt about it.  Whether the team comes to play or not, its not the Jets problem.  The Jets needed to win each game and they have.  No Jet needs to apologize.  They just need to keep winning and allow the haters to roll off.

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Divisional Predictions

We all claim to know a lot about a certain topic. I figured after last week’s 3-1 weekend, I knew all there was to know about playoff football. Last night, I figured that I knew enough to figure that the Arizona Cardinals were good enough to beat the New Orleans Saints. The reason I figured, was that
1. they had more momentum going into the game.
2. Kurt Warner hinted at retirement prior to the playoffs starting and of course God loves him so…can’t really go against that logic.
3. They were battle tested after surviving against the Packers.
4. The Saints were reeling.

Those are all fine and well, unfortunately I failed to properly analyze all the factors the Saints had going for them:

1. The Superdome. Many call it the loudest place for a visitor to come, and one of the last true home field advantages left in the NFL.
2. They resigned fan favorite Deuce McCalister to a contract simply to lead them out onto the field. On the cool scale that rates a 8 and it rightfully sends chills down my spine for them to extend that courtesy to a guy who symbolized the Saint franchise for so long.
3. Louisiana. If any one place has karma stored up, who beats N’awlins, right? This entire state deserves everything good coming to them.

So for todays game, I refuse to look past obvious signs when picking today’s games.

(Home team in caps)
Dallas (+3) over MINNESOTA- Calling it for what it is, I just don’t think the Vikings are playing the kind of football that would warrant me having any kind of confidence in them. Plain and simple. More importantly, I think the Cowboys are finally playing up to their ability which was always their knock. Whether it was Romo’s inability to win in December (which, while really funny and good to use in trash talk to Cowboy fans, shouldve never fell solely on his shoulders), the T.O. distraction, or Wade Phillips (come on, stupid coach theory in full effect here), there were always silly factors legitemately holding them back.
What’s changed? Maybe watching himself on the humongo screen has finally wisened up the bunch that they need to play better. Maybe, having all those distractions finally cast aside has freed all parties from this imaginary weight hanging over this franchise. Or maybe they realized how good they were and they decided to play hard each snap. Regardless, I believe firmly in that “a-ha moment”. That moment of epiphany which seldom few have. The Boys had it against the Saints when they decided to go all out and beat the Saints, then unbeaten. Its similiar to when the Giants, having nothing to play for, played all out against the Patriots and gained confidence from the mere fact that they could hang with what many people were already crowning the best team ever. You know how that story ended. The Cowboys walked into the Superdome needing to win that game to stay alive in the playoff race, and in a performance that was flat out dominating, thoroughly out-played the best team in football at the time. That was the sparkplug, which eventually has led them to the Hubery Humphrey Dome in the Twin Cities. Its led them to Brett Favre, Tony Romo’s idol growing up. No need to tell you that in my mind these offenses match up very well against each other. However, the strength of the defenses is a little different. The offensive line of the Vikings have played absolutely atrociously. No doubt in my mind, I see the combo platter of DeMarcus Ware and Anthony Spencer, having a field day and spending so much time on Brett Favre that they may become permanent stitches of his jersey. Brett might have been his idol, but today the student will beat the master. Now, I know, you may be saying, but Swith, what about Wade Phillips, don’t you feel he will make a stupid mistake to ruin it for the ‘Boys? My answer is, remember that Brad Childress is his counterpart today. A man, I’m convinced, got that beard, and head mic for the sole reason that he felt as though no one was taking him seriously. I still don’t.Wade, you’ve met your match.

Jets (+8) over Chargers- The closer I’m getting to game day, the more I want to pick the Chargers here, but let’s see, the Chargers have one of the worst run defenses and the Jets have the best run game in the league. On the flip side, the Chargers have one of the best passong attacks in the league, while the Jets blitz from every angle exposing their secondary to one on one match ups on a receiving corps that averages 6’4 and taller. I get that the Chargers will score points regardless of how many Darell Revis’ there are on the field. I get that the Chargers won’t be run heavy today and put Darren Sproles split wide to use his speed. I get that Norv Turner is excellent at spreading the field against blitzing teams. Ok, so what is my case for the Jets? No homer-ism. I think they can control the clock. They can get enough stops, and Mark Sanchez can be capable enough for another 12-18 effort. Will he throw a pair of picks? Likely. Will he get sacked? Yes. But will the running attack go over 200 yards? Yes. Will Brad Smith be feautured? I think so. Will Jets, regardless of outcome, have a better time of possession. Yah.
As long as the Jets do that, they have a chance to keep it close. My prediction is this: either a very close Jet win, OR a San Diego blowout.

Enjoy Divisional Weekend!

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