NFL play-offs

These are in full swing now.

A quality ball game last night and delighted the Eagles beat the Giants. Who possibly could have thought when Donovan McNabb bust his knee in November that Philly would even make the play-offs, let alone be the form team now we’re into the business end of the season. Jeff Garcia has done an amazing job as back up quarter back and the final drive before David Akers game-winning field goal as time expired was vintage Garcia. The Eagles this season remind me of the Patriots in Tom Brady’s forst season when he came in as an unknown when Drew Bledsoe got injured and led them to Super Bowl victory. Obviously Garcia’s different in that he’s been around the block but he’s getting the job done.

Speaking of Brady he was ruthlessly efficient last night against the Jets. The lads aon Sly were saying the Patriots are like the German football team, ruthlessly efficient. They just stepped it up and eased away towards the end of the 3rd quarter, it finished 37-16.

Didn’t see Saturday’s games but Seattle held off Dallas, 21-20. I did see the clip where Tony Romo made an incredible fook up. They had a field goal to win 23-21 as time was expiring and he dropped the snap. It squirmed out of his hands so he had to pick it up and try run it in for a TD instead but he got hauled down a few yards shy of the line. He was inconsolable afterwards!

Indianapolis easily beat Kansas back in the AFC. What a difference between 2 brothers. Peyton Manning is awesome at QB for the Colts whereas Eli looked like a lost puppy for the Giants last night in Philly.

Anyway. we move on to divisional play-off weekend next Saturday and Sunday.

Fixtures (seeds in brackets):

AFC:
New England Patriots (4) at San Diego Chargers (1)
Indianapolis Colts (3) at Baltimore Ravens (2)

NFC:
Seattle Seahawks (4) at Chicago Bears (1)
Philadelphia Eagles (3) at New Orleans Saints (2)

Saw the Cowboys game on Saturday night, unbelievable fook up from Romo. The Cowboys have had problems with Field Goals all season. They cut their regular kicker half way through the season after he missed some vital field goals. They reckon there will be major changes now in Dallas with head coach Bill Parcells expected to step down following the defeat.

The Eagles and Giants game was very good game, both defences had the upper hand for the most part. Agreed on Eli Manning, dont know what all the fuss about him is. He was the number one draft pick 3 years ago but he has failed to live up to expectation. Also last night marked the end for Giants running back and star man Tiki Barber who is retiring to take up a televsion career as a breakfast show host.

Next weekends game between the Colts and the Ravens should be a great game. The winner of the Superbowl is most likely to come from the AFC.

I agree with all that. The AFC looks much stronger this year.

The Chargers have been amazing all year but do you think the Patriot’s big game experience could see them win in San Diego? Will Manning be able to fire the Colts to victory in Baltimore? I actually wouldn’t be surprise to see two relative upsets in the AFC as the 4 teams left are all quality franchises (I said franchise on purpose and laughed as I wrote it).

Tiki Barber is an absolute gent and has been a wonderful ambassador for the whole Giants organistation (on purpose here again) and I wish him all the best. I think the Eagles can win in New Orleans as the Saints are not good at defending the running game and Westbrook is having a big season for the Eagles. I do think the Bears will be far too Strong for the Seahawks though.

Interesting times ahead.

If the Patriots can stop LT they have an excellent chance although that is easier said than done. You would never back against Tom Brady getting the job done.

New Orleans is actually the story of the year. Last year the team were 3-13 and have completely turned it around this year to win the divison with 10-6. Their head coach Sean Peyton was named coach of the year last week and led by Drew Brees and rookie sensation Reggie Bush they have become the number one ranked offence.

The bears should overcome Seattle although their QB Rex Harrison has been having a nightmare of late.

Qualiy viewing ahead although im sure you were as pissed off as me last night bandage when they lost the live link to FOX USA during the Giants Eagles game late in the 4th Quarter.

I remember being in the US last year when the draft was taking place and there was absolute outcry when Houston Texans, who had 1st pick in the draft, went for someone else (can’t remember who) instead of Bush. Then the Saints came in and snapped him up as 2nd pick. He was sensational in college football. Every time I go to the US I’m never less than amazed at the popularity, coverage on TV and attendances at college sports. College basketball and football is definitely bigger than the NHL and almost as professional as pro hoops and gridiron.

I was indeed well pissed off when the feed went last night. The English guy, Nick Halling, was hilarious to watch. He was so into the game, he was nearly crying when they lost pictures.

Yeah Houston went for Mario Williams ahead of Bush which was a big surprise.

The College football is absolutely massive. When i was there last week all the Bowl games were on, about 90,000 people at every one of them.

That lad Nick Halling is funny in the studio, the only problem is though when it comes to the Superbowl sky in their wisdom send Nick out to commentate and he is schedit. You need to have the red button to get the legendary John Madden doing the commentary.

Good thread lads. A touch out of my depth on the NFL these days, due to not having Sky Sports for the past year, but I have it back now. Just need to sort out some sort of multi-room viewing because Mrs Rock doesn’t appreciate sport on tv all the time.

College football in the States is maybe my favourite thing about the whole country. It’s funny when people here talk about how the GAA is unique - seeing 80,000 people watching amateur sportsmen in a massive stadium unwatched by most of the world. College sports in the US are of course similar in many respects.

Shit meant to post about that English dude on Sky too. How fecking annoying is it when he gets to commentate on the Super Bowl. It’s useless. Don’t mind it there as an option but it shouldn’t be the default.

The funniest has been ITV covering the Super Bowl over the last couple of years.

Gabby Logan presenting with Clive Allen, because he guest kicked for the London Monarchs once, and Martin Johnson, the ex rugby player, as the pundits.

I have to laugh at Halling. He’s just so intense and passionate about it. Kevin Cadle is coolness personified despite calling the Eagles the 76ers last night.

ITV coverage is brutal but at least they use American commentators from some network over there. Not as good as Troy Aikmen on Fox or Phil Simms on CBS. John Madden is undoubtedly the best commentator though even though we dont see him here much as he does the NBC coverage of Sunday night games in the States which Sky dont cover.

Did you ever see Dermot O Leary from Big Brother guest commentating on Sky. Fookin hilarious. He plays for some Sunday league pub team in the UK so they wheel him out every so often for his “expert” views.

Indianapolis 15-6 Baltimore 6: A battle down in the trenches. All field goals. Didn’t watch much of this as I was watching a cracker of a game between Espanyol and Barca.

New Orleans 27-24 Philadelphia: Now this was a belter. Stayed up til 4.15 for this and it was well worth it. Philly went 21-13 up in the 3rd quarter - Westbrook had a 62 yard TD run and before that Garcia connected with Stallworth for a 79 yard TD pass. The Saints kept coming back though. They destroyed Philly on the ground - Reggie Bush was excellent but Duece McAllister was the man last night. He got the last 2 touchdowns. A couple of big turning points in the final quarter - Philly had a 2nd down and 1 about 4 yards out and in the end had to settle for a field goal to make it 27-24 when a TD would have given them the lead. Also, Bush had a fumble when the Saints were winding down the clock and Philly recovered on their own 40 yard line with 2 mins 43 secs left. Garcia connected with Baskett on 4th and 10 and it looked like they could go on and at least tie with a FG or even win it with a TD but there was a flag for holding and they were brought back and lost their chance.

Today:
Seattle at Chicago
New England at San Diego (This is not the Ryder Cup but this will be epic)

Yes Bandage, right you are yet again.

The Chargers fooked up incredibly last night. At 21-13 up they intercepted a Brady pass and then as the guy was running back with it he fumbled it with the Patriots recovering possession again. From the ensuing drive they got the TD and 2 point conversion to level things up. Brady had been struggling but then showed his class and authority to bring them on a length of the pitch drive for the game winning field goal. He has the best post-season winning record of all time - I think it’s 12 wins out of 13 now. When the pressure came on you just knew the Patriots were going to do it. That said the Chargers still had time for a mammoth 56 yard field goal attempt to level it but it tailed off wide. They actually pretty much dominated the game but there was a lot of other silly penalties that they gave away that allowed the Patriots to stay in touch. They will be gutted.

Didn’t see much of the other game but I heard Grossman played much better than he had been. Surprised Seattle stayed with Chicago right to the end but Gould kicked two excellent pressure field goals, one to level it and the other to win it in overtime.

Next weekend’s Conference Championship games:

AFC
New England Patriots at Indianapolis Colts

NFC
New Orleans Saints at Chicago Bears

Again, I’m going for two away wins with the Patriots big game experience to tell against the Colts and the Saints offense to blow Chicago away.

Quiet Coach Bill has no place to hide
George Kimball

America at Large: Should the New England Patriots defeat Indianapolis in Sunday’s AFC Championship game, they will return to the Super Bowl for the fourth time in six years, but a sizeable portion of this weekend’s armchair audience will be pulling for the Colts.

Some of them doubtless would just like to see an infusion of fresh blood added to the mix for Super Bowl XLI, while others hope to see Indianapolis quarterback Peyton Manning overcome his play-off jinx and finally win a big game.

And then there are those who, aware the coaching staff of the losing team in Sunday’s encounter will take charge of the AFC all-stars in the Pro Bowl in Honolulu, can’t wait to see what happens when Bill Belichick starts giving orders to LaDainian Tomlinson. Tomlinson, the NFL’s Most Valuable Player in the recently concluded regular season, lashed out at the Patriots in general and Belichick in particular in the aftermath of New England’s come-from-behind upset of the Chargers in last Sunday’s play-off game in San Diego.

After Tom Brady rallied the injury-depleted Patriots to score 11 unanswered points in the final five minutes to oust the AFC’s top-seeded team 27-24, several of the winning team’s players uncharacteristically celebrated at midfield by (a) mocking Charger Shawne Merriman’s unique “lights-out” sack dance, (:wink: pointedly stomping on the Charger logo painted at midfield and (c) in at least one case, taunting the losers by pantomiming the “choke” sign.

Tomlinson, who had performed valiantly in the crushing defeat, had to be restrained from going after the visiting antagonists, and refused to shake hands with several New England players. He was still seething in the locker-room over what he termed the Patriots’ “disrespect”.

“I can’t sit there and watch that,” he said. “I was very upset. They showed no class at all - and maybe that comes from their head coach.”

A day later Tomlinson reiterated his criticism of Belichick. “It all starts at the top,” said LT.

Having known Bill Belichick for two decades, I think it’s safe to say he’s probably as unhappy over the comportment of his players in San Diego as was Tomlinson, but it goes without saying that the episode could portend a decidedly chilly relationship in Honolulu next month.

Widely acknowledged to be the NFL’s best coach, Belichick has traditionally, and deliberately, affected a public image as colourless as the drab grey sweatshirts he wears on the sideline on game days. But for a guy who shuns the limelight, he’d been in the public eye a lot more often than he’d care to be over the past year even before Tomlinson made him part of Sunday’s post-game story.

Fourteen months ago Belichick, riding the crest of two successive (and three in four years) world championships, was the subject of an insightful book by a distinguished author. David Halberstam’s The Education of a Coach detailed the relationship between the Patriots’ boss and his father, Steve Belichick, a longtime coach at the US Naval Academy.

“He was not a man of charisma, as one expected of coaches, but a quiet man of chalk,” wrote Halberstam of Bill Belichick.

That November, just as The Education of a Coach was climbing the best-seller lists, Steve Belichick succumbed to heart failure and died at 86. Six weeks later the Patriots were eliminated from the Super Bowl chase by a 27-13 play-off loss in Denver.

During the off-season last summer, Belichick’s name abruptly surfaced in the gossip columns of New England newspapers when he was named as the “other man” in a New Jersey divorce case. The complainant, a construction worker named Vincent Shenocca, charged in court documents that his wife of 10 years, a former receptionist for the New York Giants, had engaged in a relationship that lasted several years.

With word of the New Jersey case, Belichick’s own divorce, which had been proceeding quietly in Massachusetts, also became the subject of undesired scrutiny. Two months ago, the Belichick family was back in the news when Stephen Belichick, the coach’s 19-year-old son, was arrested for possession of what was even by police standards a “very small amount” of marijuana and placed on six months’ probation.

Following each of their regular-season games, the post-game handshakes between Belichick and his former protg, New York Jets’ coach Eric Mangini, had been so pointedly chilly that a massive posse of cameramen had staked out a midfield position following the Patriots’ play-off win over the Jets two weekends ago.

As it turned out, this time Belichick and Mangini shared a warm embrace, but not until Belichick had manhandled one of the photographers, Jim Davis of the Boston Globe, shoving him out of the way because he was blocking his path to his one-time acolyte.

Although Belichick later phoned Davis to apologise, the incident was captured on national television and, much to the New England coach’s embarrassment, replayed countless times.

There is no evidence that Belichick condoned, much less approved, the post-game antics in San Diego last Sunday. An educated guess would be that the miscreants have already been dragged to the woodshed for a verbal hiding, though the coach would never admit as much.

“I’m just trying to win a football game,” is Bill Belichick’s guiding credo, and the Patriots will have their work cut out for them at the RCA Dome. Although New England famously ousted more talented, Manning-led Colts teams in play-off games en route to each of their last two Super Bowl wins, the fact Indianapolis prevailed in two regular season meetings this year and last by an aggregate 67-41 returns Belichick squarely to the place he likes least: the spotlight.

Interesting article there rocko. LT went absolutely nuts when the game was over the other day.

I can’t wait for the Patriots/Colts game. The likely SuperBowl winner will come from this tie and it should be off the hook.

I meant to get involved here earlier in the week. Some brilliant games last weekend alright. The Colts game was easily the worst but that was an outstanding win for them against the Ravens. On Sunday night Brady showed what a legend he is.

The article was interesting alright. Belichick sounds like Alex Ferguson in that article. Cant knock his record though. Gonna go for the Colts and Bears this weekend although i would like to see New Orleans make it to the superbowl. Just think the bears will smother their offence and home field advantage should swing it.

From The Guardian:

Brilliant Brady gears up for more Patriot gains
Not only is the New England quarterback sickeningly perfect off the field, his play-off record proves he’s sickeningly perfect on it.
Oliver IrishJanuary 18, 2007 02:53 PM
Rod Stewart was almost right when he sang “Some guys have all the luck”. In fact, one guy has all the luck. That guy is Tom Brady, the 6ft 4in, square-jawed quarterback for the New England Patriots. Brady is already an NFL legend, and he’s not yet 30. He won three Super Bowl rings in four seasons between 2001 and 2004. In two of those games he was voted MVP (Most Valuable Player) and he will almost certainly be voted into the NFL’s Hall of Fame before he’s 40.

Off the field, this demigod, who is often branded “the most eligible bachelor in America”, has guest-hosted Saturday Night Live and dated a gorgeous Hollywood actress (Bridget Moynahan, Will Smith’s co-star in I, Robot). Just when things couldn’t get much better for Tom, the Boston Herald reported this week that Brazilian supermodel Gisele Bndchen - so ridiculously tall and beautiful that she makes other Brazilian supermodels look like girls-next-door - was waiting for him outside the locker room after he led the Pats to a comeback play-off win, at the San Diego Chargers on Sunday.

I should hate Brady, with his perfect smile and perfect career. Except … I don’t hate him at all. There’s really nothing to dislike about this handsome young athlete, unless you count a dalliance with George W Bush a couple of years ago - Brady sat next to first lady Laura Bush at the president’s state of the union address in 2004. Hatchet-toting journalists have repeatedly tried to peg Brady as a rampant Republican, but he has never explicitly professed an allegiance to America’s red-state party.

No, Brady is admirable, a near-perfect freak whose greatest talent is to win when it really matters. His post-season record - 12 wins and just one defeat, to the Denver Broncos last season - is awesome. He also holds the record for the longest post-season win streak (10). In that respect, he is the natural heir to Joe Montana, the impeccable San Francisco 49ers quarterback, who won four Super Bowl rings - three as MVP - and never flinched in the face of a blitz. Like Montana before him, Brady always finds a way to win the big games. All this is remarkable for a man who has been playing in the NFL for just seven seasons. Brady was the Pats’ sixth-round draft pick in 2000, and arrived with no fanfare or great expectations. New England signed him as the back-up to starting quarterback Drew Bledsoe. When Bledsoe suffered internal bleeding during a game against the New York Jets in 2001, Brady replaced him and never looked back.

This season, Brady has expertly steered the Patriots to within one game of Super Bowl XLI. That’s what he does. Without him, there is no way that the Pats would have defeated San Diego, on the road. The Chargers, led by supremely gifted running-back LaDainian Tomlinson, were the form team of the regular season, posting a franchise-best 14-2 record. But a combination of Brady’s unflappable brilliance - he recovered from a terrible start to engineer a last-minute scoring drive - and horrible decisions by San Diego coach Marty Schottenheimer meant that the Chargers threw the game away, losing 21-24. Their season, which promised so much, is over; the Patriots, and Brady, march on.

This Sunday’s AFC Championship game sees the Patriots take on the Indianapolis Colts, in Indianapolis. That means the juiciest of quarterback showdowns, between Brady and the Colts’ Peyton Manning. Manning, the first overall pick in the 1998 draft, is the greatest quarterback never to reach a Super Bowl. He has a golden arm, the best in the NFL, but he’s 5-6 in the play-offs. Manning can be unstoppable at times - the problem is, he usually picks the wrong times. For that reason alone, I go with Brady and New England to overcome the Colts and reach a fourth Super Bowl in six seasons.

Gagging for the games tonight. Just did a Patriots/Saints double with combined odds of 4/1. Should be interesting enough.

Hopefully I’ll get to see some of these tonight.

Been playing Madden 07 on the Xbox360 for the weekend and it has a belter of a feature called superstar mode. You create your own player and choose his attributes and then go through training and shit to develop him into a player. I’m a QB just out of college and got drafted by the Vikings - I said in a press conference that I’d have chosen Green Bay but I wasn’t too disheartened.

I did very well in the pre-season scrimmages and training drills so I was starting QB for a warm-up game against the Steelers at Pittsburgh. The pressure got to me a bit though. Stats were ridiculous. I had 5 possessions.

  1. No first down, 2 sacks and a running play failed to get back to the line of scrimmage
  2. No first down, 1 sack, 2 incomplete
  3. Threw an interception, missed a simple tackle and conceded a TD
  4. Sacked twice and 1 incomplete
  5. Interception on first down

Not a single first down earned. I got hooked during the second quarter when we were 24-0 down and some lad called Johnson came on (not sure if he’s the regular starter) and threw 3 TD passes and we lost 24-22.

Got picked for the second game against the Ravens though - hoping that the coach will give me a few running plays to get me started. I don’t have enough influence to call the shots on the park yet so I’m cannon fodder for a blitz if we’re not prepared.

just watchin the games here. Half time Bears lead Saints 16-7. Saints were muck in the first half with three turnovers. they just got a touchdown with a minute to go in first half. sets it up for an interesting second half

Game is really taking off now. Reggie Bush after scoring an 88 yard touchown catch. Bears QB not playing well either.