Tag Archives: Seattle Seahawks

Headlines 1/14/13

After I posted an article about how bland the Divisional Round of the Playoffs usually are and writing a lengthy article about maybe one or two games you should be watching, the Divisional Round of the playoffs went and shut me up good.  We’ll get to Saturday’s games at some point today, but for now, its the Atlanta Falcons hosting the San Francisco 49ers after they squeaked by the Seattle Seahawks yesterday 30-28.  Nick Eaton of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer writes that the future is bright for Seattle despite the loss thanks to the play and (the hopeful) continued progression of rookie QB Russell Wilson.  Meanwhile, Nick Schultz of the Atlanta Journal Constitution writes that the Falcons decided to take every single fan on a rollercoaster ride of emotions on Sunday without any pause to give fans rest, but they finally did it.

In Beantown, Tom Brady and the Patriots once again dominated the Houston Texans and won 41-28 thanks to some unlikely heroes for the Pats, namely Shane Vereen.  Opportunity knocked and Shane Vereen, aka next man up, answered the call for the Pats writes Michael Whitmer of Boston.com.  Tania Ganguli of the Houston Chronicle writes that the Texans will have a ton of what ifs as they dissect this season.  In other news, JJ Watt said its customary, home or away, for him to spit on the field and wipe the spit with his feet.  It just so happened that his spit landed on the Pats logo which caused a pregame stir. Jackie Mac of ESPNBoston wrote that perhaps that Monday Night win wasn’t a fluke, and the Pats are just that much better than the Texans.  There was bad news for Pats fans, they will be without superstar TE Rob Gronkowski for the remainder of the playoffs thanks to him reinjuring his forearm and this time breaking it.  Now comes the fairy tale that is the Ray Lewis thank you tour coming into town.

I’m not going to really delve that deep into the Pats/Texans game because I, and from the looks of it, most NFL fans knew what the result was going to be.  When the Texans Daneal Manning ran the opening kickoff deep into Patriots territory, I thought for a brief moment that maybe this day would be different, but that was quickly erased from my mind when the Patriots held the Texans to 3 points.  You can’t settle for three points playing against Tom Brady when you get that deep.  You have to convert and you have to score and the Texans just couldn’t do it and that told you all you needed to know.  When the Pats went up 7-3 and then 10-3, it felt like 35-3 and you just never got the sense that Matt Schaub was going to lead the Texans back.  The Texans just don’t have that many offensive weapons.  Yes, their defense was missing a few key pieces but this league is about match ups and the Patriots are just a terrible match up for the Texans.  Their defense got enough initial pressure but it was based on blitzing and against Tom Brady you can’t send an extra defender on the blitz because he’s the best QB at reading coverage and finding the one on one or one on none match ups and exploiting them.  The stats tell you the story.  He gets better when the blitz and pressure are put on him.  You have to get pressure from the front four and the Pats offensive line has been doing a brilliant job of getting that pressure on.  

The Ravens will be more of a challenge thanks to the talents of Haloti Ngata and Terrell Suggs and Ray Lewis being there at LB.  But according to ESPN Stats and info, Tom Brady has the quickest release in all of the NFL at 3 seconds.  The key for the Ravens will be to get pressure from the front four and hope that coverage holds up long enough to keep them honest.  The Pats being without Rob Gronkowski will help the Ravens but as the Texans found out, the Pats have more secret weapons stashed away for them to use and they know how to use it.

I’m torn in the other game about what to say.  On the one hand, yes Seattle has nothing to be ashamed of.  They played their butts off, and they almost won the game.  But how can you ignore all the mistakes they made in the first half?  That first half put them in such a terrible spot going into the second half that if they had just played a bit better, they would’ve won.  Had they taken the three points in the first quarter, they would’ve won.  Had Wilson just thrown the ball away and left a few seconds on the clock and kicked another FG, they would’ve won the game.  Thats six points they gave up due to stupid playcalling (by rule you always take the points on the road no matter what) and by terrible clock management (had no timeouts to get the FG team out and Wilson took the sack).  That second half was enough to convince me that Seattle is the better team of the two, but the first half shows how much work they have to do.  Down 14-0 against the Redskins and 20-0 and then 27-7 against the Falcons put the Seahawks in a bind but they showed mental toughness and resiliency, two huge attributes to have during this time of year, that show that next year they won’t come as a surprise to anyone and there are lessons to grasp at here.

If I’m the Niners, I watched that second half and started licking my chops.  The intermediate areas were open all day for Wilson and he wisely took what the defense gave him.  There’s no doubt that they are wiping the sweat off their brow because going against the Seahawks may have been a tougher task but they will gladly take the away game against the Falcons over a home game against their division rivals.  The Seahawks know the Niners and would’ve easily been a tougher match up but the way Colin Kaepernick played Saturday, it may not have mattered who played against the Niners on Sunday.  

Yes Matt Ryan exercised demons on Sunday, but not before making Falcons fans sweat.  There was a sequence in that game where you saw all the confidence flushed from his face and him saying over and over again in his head “this is not happening.  Not again.”  I felt bad, but then he came with :31 seconds left and threw two beautiful passes to set up Matt Bryant’s game winning field goal.  I hope all the head coaches who think icing the kicker is a solid strategy watched Sunday as Matt Bryant shanked the first attempt.  I’ve never been a fan of the icing the kicker strategy as it is used in the NFL because making a kicker think about it is fine, but you call the timeout well before he gets to attempt a practice field goal.  You’re giving the guy a mulligan.  If you want him to think about the field goal then as soon as it seems like the team is lining up for a FG attempt you call the timeout.  Let him sit and stew about it and give him one shot at trying to make it.  That’s the best strategy and I hope that we end this silly strategy of icing the kicker as he’s taking his first shot at it.  But making the guy kick a pseudo practice FG is stupid and basically negates anything you were trying to accomplish in the first place.  Either you give the guy confidence that he will hit it, or you give the guy a better understanding of what not to do when attempting it for real.  

The Knicks ended their three game slide by defeating the New Orleans Hornets 100-87 Sunday thanks to 27 points from Carmelo Anthony.  Next up is a trip to London to take on a good young Pistons team.  That may be what the doctor ordered according to Jared Swerling of ESPNNY.com.  Mitch Lawrence of the New York Daily News writes that the Knicks feasted on a young Anthony Davis who didn’t do anything spectacular on Sunday.  Postgame was fun thanks to Amare’s revelation that he’s been on a vegan diet for the last three months and Carmelo Anthony was fasting for fifteen days. Nate Taylor of the New York Times writes that the Knicks were calling this a must win game for the and for several stretches, they played like it.

So Carmelo has been fasting for fifteen days huh?  Is it coincidental that he and the Knicks would get off to such slow starts or are there other reasons?  Who knows, but atleast we have another theory now to go with because I was lost.  Yes, the Knicks were playing some of the better defensive teams in the NBA in Chicago and Indiana and Boston this week, bu still, their offense seemed to play every bit the age Knicks fans were afraid they would wind up playing.  I said a few days ago that the Knicks are somewhere between the 18-5 team that shot out of the gate to begin the season and the team that struggled these last three games.  They weren’t as bad as they showed in Indiana, but they may not be as good as they showed in their early season win streak.  Look, the Knicks have a ton of talent and with Iman Shumpert’s return (he’s set to make his season debut against the Pistons on Thursday), I’m sure the Knicks will look better.  But then again, the Knicks are also hoping to get Rasheed Wallace back and Marcus Camby back and Raymond Felton back, so the never ending line of excuses for why the Knicks are playing so poorly won’t end with a Melo fast.  They aren’t at full strength.  I’m not going to judge the Knicks until they are whole, but at what point will they be whole again?  With this team, and its age, they are a fragile bunch.  Camby seems to get injured a ton and there’s no real timetable for Wallace’s return unless a day to day gives fans an exact timing on the healing process.  They are an old team with tons of veteran guidance but if they don’t have them playing what’s the use?

I’m looking forward to this road trip especially playing against the Pistons who are figuring things out as of late.  Their record doesn’t reflect the young talent they have that’s starting to flourish.  Greg Monroe is a very good center.  Andre Drummond is a rebounding machine and has tons of untapped potential as a finisher in this league.  Brandon Knight can turn into a very good point guard though I think his ceiling is limited.  The Pistons won’t be a lay up win for the Knicks and so they will have to take this next game seriously and win.  Getting Shumpert back will be helpful but the Knicks constantly having to work guys back into the rotation is tough to gain any kind of consistent play.  The Knicks will play better once they have everyone healthy and whole and will be able to wear teams out without wearing their own team out.  Jason Kidd has played 30 minutes or more in 10 of their last 14 games.  That kind of heavy workload consistently does not bode well for the elder statesman.  Here’s hoping that Felton gets back sooner and Shump can hold down the fort as he’s recovering as well.  

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The Official Disaster

courtesy of SI.com
Two refs, two calls.

Barring a miracle it seems, replacement refs will again be on football fields all across America come Thursday night into Monday Night.  That is the reality staring NFL players in the face if they don’t do anything, but the question now becomes what?  What can anyone besides the regular refs and Roger Goodell do to solve this huge crisis that has erupted?  Yesterday I heard multiple people tell fans of the sport to write to their owner.  To threaten to not watch the games when they come on to show the NFL that they are serious about a solution.  I heard people say that the players should strike and threaten to not play as a show of solidarity for their zebra brethren.

But those two things won’t happen because the NFL in the end is king.  No matter how loud the voices get or the cries become, the NFL doesn’t have to budge and Monday Night’s game showed that neither do the refs.  And the stalemate continues.

According to sources in the know, the major dispute is over money.  Surprised?  That’s what all these things come down to.  The NFL wants the refs to take a 401k pension package equivalent to what most employers across America offer their employees.  The refs want to stay with their fixed pension plan.  The referees also want a pay raise but that is more a secondary concern to the pension plan.  The NFL’s thinking is that its foolish to offer part time employees like the refs, a better pension than full time employees, but the real concern becomes future negotiations.  If the NFL relents on this issue with the referee union, imagine the leg that the players union can stand on once they have to re-enter into negotiations down the road in 2020.  The NFL would rather avoid setting this precedent and have dug their heels in thinking that offering $2 million extra dollars will appease the referee union.  The refs in turn have rejected all proposals and have decided to be gung ho about getting what they want.  Remember, a majority of these refs have day jobs, some are even lawyers and so they understand fully what they are getting into and have banded together because this is supplemental income.  This is not something that will ruin their lives.  The NFL can’t hold that same kind of carrot over them like they did the players.  Every day the players held out, they knew that the players would feel the sting of losing another paycheck and so they atleast had that.  In this case, they don’t hold that leverage and worse, the replacement refs are NOT doing them any favors.

The first two weekends were not a complete disaster.  Then came week 3.  To count, the replacement refs gave the 49ers, an extra timeout they didn’t have.  One ref threw his hat on to the field which Kevin Ogletree subsequently slipped on preventing him from making an attempt at a catch that would’ve resulted in a touchdown in the Cowboys/Bucs game.  In Washington, anticipating a ten second run off that could’ve ended the game as a result of a false start penalty with :07 seconds left, the Bengals began walking on to the field and an incensed Redskins sideline erupted saying the game wasn’t over (which they were correct on), and were flagged for unsportsmanlike conduct which resulted in another 10 yard penalty which pushed the Redskins back even further.  Kyle Shanahan, the son of Redskins coach Mike stalked the referee all the way to the locker room.  Then there’s the helmet to helmet hit that Darrius Heyward-Bey took in the Oakland/Pittsburgh game that was not called a penalty despite the fact that everyone in San Francisco heard that hit.  That hit resulted in Bey being taken off on a stretcher and suffering a neck injury and a concussion.  Oh and by the way, the Raiders were penalized only 3 times during that entire game while the Steelers were tagged for ten flags.  When have you ever seen the Raiders NOT get more yellow flags than the other team?  They gave the game to the Saints when Roman Harper looked like he recovered a fumble and ran it in during overtime but the replays showed that Kansas City RB Jamaal Charles clearly was down before the ball came out.  By the way, an estimated 80% of calls were overturned on replay this weekend.

But those pale in comparison to the legitimate gripes that came as a result of the two nationally televised games.  As in, everybody and their mother were watching these games.   During the Patriots/Ravens game, the Pats were whistled for 24 penalties and the Ravens got an equally disturbing 14.  Those penalties ruin the flow of the game and worse, if there isn’t any consistency, can be maddening for any team.  The final kick went way above the right side of the goal post, which the refs ruled as good.  Earlier in the week, the NFL had sent a memo to all 32 teams to “respect the shield” and warned players AND coaches to not try and intimidate the referees.  A lot that accomplished; Belichiek was last seen running down an official and even putting his hands on him to try and stop him from going into the locker room.  That will certainly warrant a hefty fine and given Roger Goodell’s recent abuse of power, could even result in a suspension depending on how hard a line he wants to take on this.  The Commissioner is stuck between a rock and a hard place here.  If he gives out a $25,000 fine despite warning everyone to not cross that line, he will be viewed as going soft.  If he suspends Belichiek it will seem too harsh.  One thing is for sure, the discussion will still be on the refs.

The problem with Sunday night’s game was that flags weren’t consistent.  Some plays got flagged and some were ignored.  During the final few minutes the referees tried to remove any of the aggressiveness the defense wanted to use by constantly throwing flags.  It was embarassing and did further damage to any kind of reputation these replacement refs were trying to build with the players.  But Monday night’s game may take the cake.  If you thought the home team got some calls on Sunday night, Monday night’s game was more of an all-in move by the replacement refs to completely sabotage the integrity of the game of football.  I do take this time to remind folks that I’m not blaming these refs.  To go from division 3 college games to the pros is a leap of extraordinary measure and to expect them to be completely caught up on everything would be asking too much.  We know this, they know the rule book but NOT completely.  Meaning they know the rules but they dont know when to enforce them which is like saying you know how to fly a plane in those simulators but have no confidence to fly a real plane.  The replacement refs are equal victims in this as are the fans and the players of this league.  They are being blamed despite the fact that these are honest, hard working men who are just doing what they are being told.*

*= that is until we find out that they were involved in a huge gambling scandal which would ultimately destroy the reputation of the NFL as a whole.  Watch last night’s game and especially that last drive by Seattle and tell me you didn’t feel something funny with those two calls that set up the final play.  

On Monday Night, in a tight game and the Packers leading 12-7, the Seahawks got the ball with :46 seconds left.  After completing a laser to Sidney Rice.  Two plays later, Russell Wilson spun away from pressure, looked up field and heaved a pass to the left corner of the end zone where MD Jennings leaped and instead of batting it down, attempted to make the interception but, as he was coming down with the ball, both hands on it, Golden Tate had one arm on the ball and slipped his second hand in there to make it seem as if there was simultaneous possession.  The rule book states that any simultaneous possession calls go to the offense.  However, the rule book also states that it can not be simultaneous possession if the defender establishes possession of the ball and another player sticks his hand in there to try and get possession at the last minute.

Every scoring play is held up for review so the referees had a chance to review the play and come to their own conclusion.  But the review had to be based on the call on the field which was what caused even more confusion.  One referee signaled INT and touchback, while a second referee signaled TD, resulting in the tie being broken by the head referee.  We all knew that the home team was going to get the call.  Now, in replay there has to be sufficient video evidence to overturn any call and after a plethora of replays I can’t see how you overturn the call regardless of how they called it.  It was such a 50/50 proposition that you were damned if you do damned if you dont, except that a majority of America thought it was an INT because of the replays clearly showing MD Jennings coming up with the interception.   After review the play was upheld and mass chaos and WTF bombs were dropped in Seattle and we wake up to the chaos of sports radios clamoring for an end to labor strife and await a statement by the NFL as it relates to last night’s game.

Most would agree that the Commissioner, outside of resolving this case, probably will NOT make a statement directly though Greg Aiello, the NFL spokesperson will surely send an email to all teams and to the media on behalf of the league.  Will it address JUST last night’s game or will it account for all the games directly affected by the questionable officiating throughout Week 3’s and even the previous weeks games remains to be seen but last night was a clear case that the regular officials are needed.  But I don’t even want to get into specific plays.  Its clear by the extra pushing and shoving by the players after almost every play that none of them respect the officials to restore order and so its almost an anything-goes type of atmosphere sometimes.  The refs are, to their credit, trying to dissuade that by calling a bunch of penalties but that’s only getting the teams more frustrated and when you have a sport in which players constantly get hit, they will lash out.

Initially I was on the replacement refs and the league’s side in this.  I felt as though the regular refs were asking for too much in this case despite the overwhelming profits that NFL teams and the league has as a result of television contracts and all the other revenue streams they can generate out of thin air.  I figured that regular refs make horrendous calls too that decide games and because its all human interpretation anyway, that maybe it isn’t right to be all up in arms.  But after 3 consecutive weeks of horrific calls I’ve turned and last night’s game was the turning point.  Games are going longer because the refs are inexperienced and are trying to get the call right.  Players are blatantly hitting each other with cheap shots and the like with no real fear of being reprimanded.  There are more in-game scuffles than I can previously remember.  But more than any of these reasons, I’m looking at it not from week 3’s perspective, I’m looking at down the road during week 14 when divisions become at stake.  What happens if this call were made in week 14, and it cost the Packers a division?  What happens then?  How does the NFL respond then?  How can they make the case that they want to hold on to a few more dollars while threatening the integrity of the game?

We’ve all heard the arguments that the integrity of the game is on the line, and that player safety is key here but more important than all of that, despite all that’s going on, because there is no resolution it seems as if the Commissioner and the owners don’t care.  This kind of attitude that’s clearly in the air will only result in one thing, something worse than Belichiek grabbing an official or Kyle Shanahan running an official into the tunnel or Brandon Spikes tweeting that they need to send these replacement refs back to foot locker where they belong.  A line will be crossed that the NFL can not expect to fully recover from and Roger Goodell will personally be held responsible for and that line will be too hard to see because they have already been blurred.

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