Tag Archives: larry fitzgerald

Great effort by Arizona. Indy-San Diego was a Tim Donaghy special.

You have to hand it to old Kurt Warner. He did a wonderful job on Saturday to give the Arizona Cardinals a 30-24 victory over the Atlanta Falcons in the first game of the NFL’s Wild Card weekend. The old guy still has some big-time chops. 

 

Warner went 19-for-32 for 271 yards, two touchdowns and one interception and had a passer’s rating of 94.7 to lead the Cardinals to the first upset of the day.

 

With Larry Fitzgerald having a particularly good afternoon, catching six Warner passes for 101 yards and a 42-yard touchdown, the 9-7 Cards were full marks for their victory.

 

Can’t say the same about San Diego’s  23-17 win in OT against Indianapolis.

 

The National Football League should be ashamed of itself. There is very little doubt that Ron Winter’s officiating crew had San Diego to cover. If I ran a Vegas casino, I’d want an investigation. The officiating in overtime looked more suspicious than anything Tim Donaghy ever did in the NBA.

 

As I watched the replays and saw all the offensive holding on San Diego that was, of course, completely ignored, especially on that overtime drive, all I could think of was “How many of these officials had San Diego to win or San Diego to cover?” Sure glad I had the Chargers on one of my Sport Select tickets. Gentlemen, I appreciate the help.

 

I especially liked the phantom holding on that incomplete pass for a first down. Nice work. Oh yeah, and the defensive holding while the exact same defensive lineman, the one who was called for holding, was being, well, tackled. Brilliant stuff. 

 

Over the course of the game, San Diego had three penalties for 40 yards while Indy had nine for 74. More importantly, the Colts were assessed three key penalties on that one overtime drive. That’s fix city baby. That’s how you get an 8-8 team to beat a 12-4 team. 

 

In fact, that was just about the phoniest finish to an NFL playoff game I’ve ever seen. But, then again, here in Canada I’ll take the government’s money. Thanks boys. You’re crooked as hell and my wallet likes it.

 

 

Put on your fantasy thinking caps. The 2008 NFL season starts tonight.

Say whatever you like, but this is the greatest moment of the sports calendar.

 

The National Football League, the greatest sports league on the planet, opens a new season tonight with the Washington Redskins at the defending Super Bowl champion New York Giants (that’s still hard to write with a straight face), and I have just spent an entire morning answering questions like these…

 

“I have a choice. The Lions defence in Atlanta or the Jags defence in Tennessee? What do you think?”

 

I like the Lions defence, not because I particularly like the Lions defence per se, but because the Lions are favoured on the road for the first time in 23 games and only the fourth time this decade, so since hell has indeed frozen over again, I fear Vince Young more than I fear Matt Ryan.

 

“I have a choice between Matt Hasselbeck in Buffalo or Derek Anderson at home against Dallas. What do you think?”

 

I hate road openers (unless it’s Detroit in Atlanta), and I’m not sure Dallas is as good as everyone thinks. Derek Anderson will put up some points at home. I’m not sure Hasselbeck, against a pretty decent Buffalo defence playing in their own backyard, will do much of anything.

 

“I can either go with Arizona’s Anquan Boldin at San Francisco or the Jets’ Jerricho Cotchery in Miami. What do you think?”

 

Boldin is a great receiver, but Kurt Warner will look for Larry Fitzgerald first (wouldn’t you?). Boldin doesn’t even want to be in Aizona anymore. Brett Favre, meanwhile, seems to love Cotchery. Big target who runs Brett’s routes. Take Cotchery simply because he’s going to see the football.

 

Isn’t this fun? It’s football season. Real football season. Major league football season. And there is nothing more fun than lining up your fantasy team in Week 1.

 

So without further adieu, here are the 10 things you need to know heading into the NFL’s Kickoff Weekend:

 

1. The Lions and Vikings will battle for first in the NFC North. Barring catastrophic injuries to either team, they could both battle for the NFC crown. In fact, if you’re looking for a sleeper team in the NFC this season, look out for Detroit. they have an easy travel schedule (only 11,860 miles, making them 27th on a list led by Seattle at 34,766 miles) and their quarterback, Jon Kitna, is not as inept as his reputation would suggest. In fact, Kitna threw for 4,068 yards last year, his second with the Lions, becoming the first quarterback in club history with back-to-back 4,000-yard seasons.  Kitna, who passed for a career-high 4,208 yards in 2006, ranks fourth in the NFL with 8,276 yards over the past two seasons. The 12-year veteran has thrown for 200 yards in 28 of his 32 starts with Detroit, the most 200-yard games in the NFL during that span. If the Lions get any defence at all, they could win a lot of football games. 

 

2. The New York Giants won an NFL single-season record 10 consecutive road games in 2007, going 7-1 in the regular season. Considering they opened the year in London, England, they travelled 15,618 total miles. They won’t do that again and, as a result, won’t win the NFC East.

 

3. Watch out for teams with a “tandem backfield.” In 2007, 12 clubs boasted two running backs each with at least 500 rushing yards apiece, including five playoff teams: Dallas, Indy, the Jags, the Giants and Seattle. In fact, in Jacksonville, Maurice Jones-Drew and Fred Taylor (1,202) combined for 1,970 yards and they went 12-4 with a first round playoff win.

 

4. RUN THE FOOTBALL!!! Last season, teams with a 100-yard rusher won 73.4 per cent of the time, compared to 56.9 per cent for teams with a 100-yard receiver and only 53.1 per cent for teams with a 300-yard passer. Run the football, win the game.

 

5. Oh yeah, and force turnovers. San Diego led in takeaway-to-giveaway ratio with a plus-24 takeaway differential and finished 11-5 (it didn’t hurt to have LaDainian Tomlinson either). 13-3 Indy was next at plus-18 while 16-0 New England was third at plus-16.

 

6. The New England Patriots went 16-0 last season. They also finished first in fourth-down conversions, going 11-for-11 and second in sacks with 47. The Super Bowl champion New York Giants led in sacks with 53, but both defensive ends Michael Strahan (rertirement) and Osi Umenyiora (knee injury) are gone.

 

7. Win in Week 1: According to the NFL’s media department, there are never any guarantees, “but there are trends and they start in Week 1.” History is clear that the best way for a team to start its drive towards a possible Super Bowl championship is to win its opening game. The 42 Super Bowl winners have a 34-7-1 record in the Kickoff Weekend games of their title seasons. However, as the Super Bowl XLII champion New York Giants proved, a loss on Kickoff Weekend can still lead to a championship season. According to the league, since 1978, when the NFL went to the 16-game schedule, and excluding the abbreviated season of 1982, teams that are victorious on Kickoff Weekend are more than twice as likely to reach the playoffs than losers of an opening game. 

 

8. Once again, you have to like Pittsburgh. After all, QB Ben Roethlisberger is chasing his third divisional title in five years. Roethlisberger has a 39-16 (.709) regular-season record and was named to his first Pro Bowl after shattering the Steelers’ single-season record for passing touchdowns (32) and passer rating (104.1) last season. Yeah, it’s hard NOT to like Pittsburgh.

 

9.  A team that’s been forgotten during the pre-season is Tampa. The Bucs won the NFC South last year and have won the division three times under head coach Jon Gruden. In fact, under Gruden, the Bucs are 17-0 since 2002 when not committing turnover. Meanwhile, quarterback Jeff Garcia was named to Pro Bowl last year and in his career (incl. playoffs), Garcia’s teams are 32-12 (.727) when he has 95+ passer rating. The Bucs will not roll over this year.

 

10. Can the Giants repeat? The short answer is no, but until we meet up in Tampa in January, who really knows, right?

Welcome to the State of Hockey

ST. PAUL, MN – Welcome to the Xcel Energy Centre, one of the great hockey buildings anywhere in the world.Tonight, we’ll blog periodically from Game 5 of the Minnesota Wild-Colorado Avalanche Western Conference opening round series.

After getting drilled 5-1 in Game 4 — and trying desperately to appear tough in the third period — the Wild have to lick their wounds, buck up and play legitimately tough hockey, not stupid, penalty-filled, dumb-ass hockey. 

The Avalanche, meanwhile, just need to do exactly what they did in Game 4 — skate, skate, skate and take advantage of mistakes made by a tiring Wild defence. With Kim Johnsson, Brent Burns and Martin Skoula playing nearly 28 minutes a night for Minnesota, the Avalanche can certainly use their speed to wear down a Wild defensive unit that is undermanned and overworked.

The lights have dimmed — gone right freakin’ out actually — the show is starting, they’re playing The State of Hockey and 18,000 people, all decked in Wild jerseys are going nuts. Makes me think of White Outs at the Old Barn. 

If the Wild don’t respond to this welcome, they’re done.   

FIRST PERIOD — Minnesota comes out banging and the Avs don’t like it. Paul Stastny takes a dumb tripping penalty, but the stone-handed Wild can’t convert. Marian Gaborik still doesn’t have a point in the series. 

Oh, oh. Todd Fedoruk takes a penalty and at 12:24, Andrew Brunette — a former Wild star — picks up some garbage in front and roofs it. It’s an easy goal and the Wild now have some stress. They’ve carried the play but haven’t been rewarded and Colorado has just too much skill.

About 30 seconds later, David Jones takes a penalty and in the first few seconds of the power play, the Wild get a scoring chance, but Jose Theodore is too quick. The Wild have territorial advantage and plenty of chances, but somebody needs to convert. 

With four minutes left, the Wild have outshot the Avs 13-5, but Colorado still leads. The Wild need to score because it’s hard to imagine they can keep up this pace. The Avs are starting to get to more loose pucks and winning the little battles.

With 2 1/2 minutes left, Peter Forsberg takes a penalty and right away Brent Burns has a chance and Brian Rolston gets a big rebound, but Theodore stones them both. Shots are 16-6 and Theodore is getting better. 

On the 17th shot with 39.3 seconds left in the period, the Wild get on the board. Pierre-Marc Bouchard takes a great pass from Brent Burns (second of the playoffs) and drifts a one-timer past Theodore. It’s about time and it seems only fair.

Minnesota owned the first period and the Avs scored on their one real chance. That’s hockey.

End of the first: Colorado 1 Minnesota 1.

SECOND PERIOD — Ran into Larry Fitzgerald Sr. between periods. The father of the spectacular Arizona Cardinals receiver, Larry Jr., is a columnist with the Minneapolis Statesman-Recorder, the highly-regarded African-American paper in the Twin Cities and he’s a bigger hockey fan than people give him credit for. He’s also, evidently, a big Derek Boogaard fan. Go figure.  

So what happens at the start of the second period? Boogaard gets one of his rare shifts and on a seemingly innocuous play, almost tips in a goal.The Wild have now outshot Colorado 21-9 but just can’t beat Theodore.  

Stephane Veilleux, the young man the Denver media believes should be jailed for his behaviour in this series, picks up a penalty and the Avs take control. But despite owning the Minnesota zone and despite making a couple of great passes, Minnesota goalie Nicklas Backstrom has to face only one shot. 

Moments after the penalty ends, Gaborik has another glorious chance but can’t get a backhander up over the leg of Theodore.

The building has exploded. Aging Ian Laperriere has big Boogaard lined up and he drills him at the Avalanche blueline (it’s an interference penalty in any other league) and the big guy goes down with a thump. Trouble is, the big guy gets right up and Laperriere doesn’t move. Boogaard went down because he doesn’t skate very well. Laperriere went down because he bodychecked a truck (Boogaard is 6-foot-7, 260 pounds).

This little incident fires up the Wild who take control of the game. Minnesota gets three great chances, but they fire three booming shots right at the A on Theodore’s jersey. The shots are now 30-12 and Colorado isn’t anywhere to be found.

The Wild own this game. It’s like one long, protracted power play. Colorado can’t even clear the puck. First it’s Gaborik, then it’s Burns, then it’s Mikko Koivu. Chance after chance after chance and yet they can’t beat Theodore.

And it’s not like Theodore is unbeatable. The Wild either shoot it right at the goalie’s pads or they miss the net altogether. Burns, the best player on the ice, should have five goals, but officially, he doesn’t have that many shots.

In the final 12 seconds, Colorado gets its first solid chance of the period, but Backstrom has not fallen asleep and makes the save.

Shots at the end of the second: Colorado 14, Minnesota 32.

Score at the end of the second: Colorado 1 Minnesota 1   

THIRD PERIOD — Early in the third, Minnesota’s Sean Hill takes a penalty and for a minute and 55 seconds, the Avs do nothing. Then, with five seconds left in the power play, John-Michael Liles sets up Wojtek Wolski who one-times it past a startled Backstrom.

The shots are 34-16 and Colorado leads 2-1.

Colorado’s superior playmaking pretty much puts this one away. At the 6:25 mark, Paul Stastny takes a pass from Milan Hejduk (who took a beautiful pass from Peter Forsberg) and roofs a backhand to make it 3-1.

Minnesota has toughness and heart, but Colorado has speed and skill and that combination looks like a winner.

There are 19,364 rabid Wild fans in this building tonight and probably half of them think they have better hands than the boys on the ice who happen to be wearing Wild uniforms. 

This is a truly wonderful place to watch hockey. The Wild are down 3-1 with less than two minutes to go and not one person has left the building. These aren’t fair weather fans who try to beat the traffic. They’ll go down with their team.

The final shots on goal are 40-17 in favour of the Wild, but Colorado’s pure hockey talent was just too much for a big, strong feisty team with plenty of moxy, but not a whole lot of skill.

The place erupts as Brian Rolston finally scores (he had a million chances) to make it close. But it’s 19:57 and the dream is dead.

This series should be over on Saturday in Denver.

FINAL SCORE: Colorado 3 Minnesota 2  – Video highlights below

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CjglWRaQr9I]