Tag Archives: National Football League

Ponder and Newton Will Soon Play Some Memorable Games

Christian+Ponder+Dallas+Cowboys+v+Minnesota+Kw9Sr57XBXnl 205x300 Ponder and Newton Will Soon Play Some Memorable Games

Christian Ponder

They both have byes this week and it’s unlikely a lot of NFL fantasy football players will notice.  In fact, while most fans tuned into the Patriots at Pittsburgh last weekend or Dallas at Philly and while others got all giggly over the Lions’ seven sacks on Tim Tebow in Denver, the game of the future was actually being played in Charlotte, N.C.

It might have drawn a few yawns this week, but quite frankly, it’s unlikely to ever draw yawns again.

The folks in Charlotte and the fans back in Minnesota, people who will always follow their Vikings and Panthers through thick and thin, probably thought they were just doing what they always do on Sunday afternoon. It was another football game in the middle of a tough season

Heading into Sunday’s matchup, the Panthers were 2-5 while the Vikings were 1-6. Neither team was thinking about the playoffs and most NFL fans ignored the game like it was a blight on the sport.

And yet, the two people who were in control of the afternoon will, one day, be the Tom Brady-Ben Roethlisberger or Michael Vick-Tony Romo, of our future Sunday afternoons.

Sure, the teams were done. Eight weeks into the season and they were already thinking about Cabo, not Indianapolis, in January. Regardless, the two quarterbacks proved that they will soon be the guys everyone wants to watch. I guarantee it. In fact, this was the debut of the Ponder-Newton Extravaganza, a matchup that could last for the next decade… -plus.

Last Sunday’s final score read: Minnesota 24, Carolina 21. For Minnesota, rookie quarterback Christian Ponder went 18-for-28 for 236 yards and a touchdown. For Carolina, rookie quarterback Cam Newton went 22-for-35 for 290 yards and three touchdowns. However, with the help of a great runningback named Adrian Peterson, the Vikings emerged victorious. Peterson carried 21 times for 86 yards and a touchdown and caught five passes for 76 yards and another TD.

But while Peterson had already arrived, Ponder and Newton were the new kids on the block and they were the talk of the afternoon. Not because what they did was particularly spectacular, but because of the hints they handed football fans. This was just another game midway through a long season, but it was also a glimpse into the future. Cam Newton and Christian Ponder are the Next Ones.

cam newton panthers 254x300 Ponder and Newton Will Soon Play Some Memorable Games

Cam Newton

Newton, last year’s Heisman Trophy winner, had been nothing short of remarkable from the day he arrived in Charlotte. At 6-foot-5, 250-pounds he cuts an amazing figure on the football field. The fact he has 4.59 speed and a rocket arm doesn’t hurt either. As a rookie, he’s second to the Saints’ Drew Brees in passing yards with 2,393 already this season. He’s completed 60.6 per cent of his passes. He’s averaged 299.1 yards per game. He can also run, run for touchdowns, throw on the run and think on the run. He has every possible tool.  He will be this year’s rookie of the year and a future MVP.

The kid on the other side, who just happens to be 6-foot-2, 230-pounds was playing only his second game as a professional, but with the help of Peterson and his sidekick, the electrifying Percy Harvin, the rookie from Florida State sent a note to the rest of the NFL, “I can play, boys.”

Poised, bright and fearless, Christian Ponder proved that he was worth a No. 12 draft pick to acquire.

Here’s how good he was: On third downs requiring 10 yards or more to convert, Ponder was successful on four of his six attempts. And he did it with a sorry collection of receivers who had neither hands nor speed. Were it not for Peterson and Harvin – who were formidable – Ponder might have been out there alone.

“We just took what the defense gave us,” Ponder said. “We didn’t try to force the ball quite as much as we did last week against Green Bay. Whatever they gave us, we tried to exploit.”

Now let’s not go too overboard on Ponder. He did lead his team to a three-point victory, but this all might have been moot if veteran Carolina kicker Olindo Mare didn’t miss a 31-yeard chip shot in the dying seconds, a kick that would have sent the game into overtime and might have provided a different result. And let’s also give credit where it’s due: Newton deserved a better fate. He was terrific.

But Ponder provided the Vikings and their fans with exactly what many pundits claimed he would. He won. And there are people on the sidelines this week saying that if Ponder had started all eight games – the first six belonged to veteran Donovan McNabb – the Vikings might be 6-2 as opposed to 2-6.

That’s mere speculation, of course, but one thing is certain: Newton and Ponder will do this again. And there is perhaps a time in the not-too-distant future when they will do it in an NFC Final.

Even though both Carolina and Minnesota are now 2-6 and likely out of the playoff hunt, the two head coaches will probably be given a reprieve, thanks to the two young QBs. Fans are quick to forgive coaches who let rookie quarterbacks — young stars selected high in the draft — develop into regular starters and team leaders. Ron Rivera in Carolina and Leslie Frazier in Minnesota will now get a few weeks off before the vultures in the mainstream media and on the blogosphere start demanding their heads again.

Vikings fans have quickly learned that young Ponder can play well on the road and win. In Carolina, they already know that 2-6 isn’t Newton’s fault, it’s the fault of a defense that would have a challenge stopping the opposing team’s cheerleading unit.

In years to come, Sunday’s matchup between Cam Newton, 22, and the Carolina Panthers and Christian Ponder, 23, and the Minnesota Vikings will be as highly anticipated as today’s meeting between Brady and Brees or Rodgers and Roethlisberger.

Some day, and some day soon, Cam Newton’s trip into Minnesota to exact revenge for a loss to Christian Ponder on that beautiful North Carolina afternoon of Oct. 30, 2011, will be the talk of football.



(The Coach and The Doc will have their NFL picks on Friday, Nov. 4)

Week 14 Pretty Sensational… and Two More Games to Go

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — While sitting in the press box in Jacksonville, Fla., yesterday, most of the conversation that wasn’t being directed toward David Garrard and the surprisingly good Jags, was being directed at Brett Favre, his swollen collarbone and the big hole in the Metrodome’s Teflon roof.

Early Sunday morning, the big pillow in Minneapolis collapsed under the weight of a foot and a half of snow which immediately meant two things: (1) Sunday’s game between the Vikings and New York Giants that was already postponed until Monday night because of the blizzard in the Twin Cities, would now have to be played in Detroit and (2) This is the beginning of the end for the Vikings in Minnesota?

You can pretty much guarantee that if a new building for the Vikings isn’t on the front burner of the Minnesota House, the Vikes won’t be playing in the cold much longer. Both L.A. and San Antonio are calling and the money seems to be in place to make that franchise comfortable in warmer climes. If the Minnesota legislature isn’t preapred to build a new stadium soon, you can pretty much start packing up the moving vans.

Art Modell, Georgia Frontiere and the Irsay family would be so proud.

Meanwhile, Brett Favre told reporters in Minneapolis and Detroit that he expects his streak of 297 consecutive starts as an NFL quarterback to end tonight. Favre’s shoulder/clavicle injury has not responded as well as he’d like to treatment and he said it’s likely Tarvaris Jackson will start tonight against the Giants.

Well, it had to end sometime.

OK, Sport Select and Fantasy Players, here are your NFL scores and highlights for Week 14…

Last night…

Philadelphia 30 Dallas 27

The Eagles improved to 9-4 as DeSean Jackson had 210 yards receiving and scored the winning touchdown early in the fourth quarter. Michael Vick threw for a touchdown and ran for another.

Yesterday afternoon…

Detroit 7 Green Bay 3

Green Bay quarterback Aaron Rodgers left the game with a concussion in the first quarter and never returned. In the end, Drew Stanton of the Lions out-dueled Matt Flynn of the Packers.

New England 36 Chicago 7

The Pats clinched a playoff berth and improved to 11-2 as Tom Brady threw for 369 yards and two touchdowns in a snow-storm in Chicago. Deion Branch caught eight passes for 151 yards and a touchdown. The Pats have won five straight.

Jacksonville 38 Oakland 31

The game we watched yesterday here in Florida was a thriller. David Garrard threw three TD passes while Maurice Jones-Drew rushed for 101 yards and a touchdown, the sixth straight game in which Jones-Drew has rushed for 100 yards or more. Oakland’s Darren McFadden rushed for 123 yards and two touchdowns and caught three passes for 86 yards and another TD.

Tampa Bay 17 Washington 16

Washington scored in the dying seconds and were about to kick the extra point to send the game into overtime when they botched the point after and lost.

Miami 10 NY Jets 6

Miami’s Chad Henne found Brandon Marshall for the game’s only touchdown in the first quarter.

Atlanta 31 Carolina 10

Falcons runningback Michael Turner carried 28 times for 112 yards and three touchdowns.

Buffalo 13 Cleveland 6

Buffalo’s Fred Jackson rushed for 112 yards while Cleveland’s Peyton Hillis rushed for 108 yards but neither team had miuch more offence than that.

Pittsburgh 23 Cincinnati 7

The Steelers didn’t have much offence, but Troy Polamalu and LaMarr Woodley each returned interceptions for touchdowns. The Bengals have lost 10 straight.

New Orleans 31 St. Louis 13

Drew Brees threw three touchdown passes, two to Marques Colston.

San Francisco 40 Seattle 21

Niners quarterback Alex Smith threw for 255 yards and three touchdowns.

Arizona 43 Denver 13

Arizona’s Tim Hightower carried 18 times for 148 yards and two touchdowns.

San Diego 31 Kansas City 0

The Chargers Phillip Rivers threw for 226 yards and two touchdowns.

Tonight, two games on a Monday: Baltimore plays at Houston in the real Monday Nighter, while the Giants face Minnesota at Detroit in the fake Monday Nighter.

Week 11 Was About as Goofy as the NFL Can Get.

The National Football League might be the most successful, most prominent sports league on the planet. It makes nothing but money and is on television in just about every country in the world.

But every now and again, there comes a week when the craziness just gets bigger than the biggest league on the planet.

For instance, take the Sunday that was:

1. Tennessee quarterback Vince Young doesn’t like the fact that his head coach Jeff Fisher took him out of Sunday’s game against Washington. Seems Fisher was told by the team doctor that Young had injured his thumb and the doctor worried that he would have no control over his passes. Young disagreed, but Young apparently didn’t make his own opinion known to the head coach. So the coach takes Young out of the game. Young blows up. Not only does he throw a temper tantrum, he tosses his jersey and shoulder pads into the crowd and bolts the stadium before the coach’s post-game address to the team. Kids don’t do that at the bantam level.

2. The worst offensive line in the history of professional football killed the Minnesota Vikings once again. Of course, everybody in football wants to blame Brett Favre for the fact that nobody on his team can block. The defense gives up, the coaching staff mails it in and the Vikings get waxed 31-3 at home by Green Bay. Monday morning Brad Childress is fired as Vikings head coach. Leslie Frazier is named interim head coach. Why? Frazier’s defense quit on him on Sunday. Will he fix the offensive line? No. Will players re-sign because of Frazier? No. Wilf fired Chilly for the sake of firing him.

3. Now with the Dallas Cowboys, quarterback Jon Kitna faced his former team, the Detroit Lions on Sunday. Dalls blasted Detroit 35-19. The Lions should never have released Kitna.

4. Halftime: Cincinnati 31, Buffalo 14. Game over: Buffalo 49, Cincinnati 31. Oh, my goodness. And IN Cincinnati, no less.

5. Raheem Morris might be right. The 7-3 Tampa Bay Buccaneers might be the best team in the NFC.

6. There will be no Disney sports movie. Brian St. Pierre, the stay-at-home dad who was signed off the couch last week, started for the Carolina Panthers on Sunday. The Panthers lost 37-13 to Baltimore. St. Pierre completed 13 of 28 for 173 yards and a touchdown. Not bad for a guy who couldn’t play at the UFL level this season. And against that Baltimore defense. It still might be a Disney movie.

7. Michael Vick wasn’t as good as he was in Week 10, but he was calm, cool and collected as he beat the New York Giants 27-17 with a late comeback. He’s still on pace to be NFC MVP.

Let’s take a close look at what went on in Week 11.

Sunday night…

Philadelphia 27 NY Giants 17

LeSean McCoy rushed for 111 yards on 14 carries, the big run was a 50-yarder for a touchdown late in the game that gave Philly a comeback win. The Eagles led 16-3, fell behind 17-16 and won late.

Sunday afternoon….

Green Bay 31 Minnesota 3

Green Bay’s Aaron Rodgers went 22-for-31 for 301 yards and four touchdowns. Greg Jennings caught seven passes for 152 yards and three touchdowns. It was Minnesota’s worst home loss since 2001 and it’s expected that Brad Childress will be fired as head coach soon.

Pittsburgh 35 Oakland 3

The Steelers’ Ben Roethlisberger went 18-for-29 for 275 yards and three touchdowns.

Dallas 35 Detroit 19

Former Lions quarterback Jon Kitna completed 18-of-24 passes for 147 yards and three touchdowns as Dallas won its second in a row under new head coach Jason Garrett.

Baltimore 37 Carolina 13

This was surgical. Joe Flacco completed 24 of 33 passes for 301 yards and a touchdown.

Jacksonville 24 Cleveland 20

The Jags’ Maurice Jones-Drew followed a 75-yard reception with a one-yard touchdown run late in the fourth quarter to win it. Jones-Drew rushed for 133 yards and caught three passes for 87 more yards.

Buffalo 49 Cincinnati 31

Cincinnati led 31-14 at the half and were outscored 35-0 in the second half. Buffalo’s Freddie Jackson carried 21 times for 116 yards and two touchdowns. Steve Johnson caught eight passes for 137 yards and three touchdowns.

NY Jets 30 Houston 27

Mark Sanchez, who had three TD passes, hit Santonio Holmes with a six-yard touchdown pass with 10 seconds left to win it. Holmes caught seven passes for 126 yards and two TDs.

Washington 19 Tennessee 16 (OT)

Graham Gano kicked a 48-yard field goal in OT to win it. Tennesse’s Vince Young is no longer the starter and Randy Moss didn’t catch a pass.

Kansas City 31 Arizona 13

Dwayne Bowe caught two touchdown passes, giving him a team-record six straight games with at least one score, and Kansas City remained unbeaten at home.

New Orleans 34 Seattle 19

The Saints Drew Brees completed 29 of 43 passes for 382 yards and four touchdowns. Marques Colston caught eight passes for 113 yards and two TDs.

Tampa 21 San Francisco 0

The surprising Bucs improved to 7-3 by winning in San Francisco for the first time in nine tries. Josh Freeman threw two TD passes for Tampa.

Atlanta 34 St. Louis 19

The Falcons Matt Ryan threw two TD passes and Michael Turner carried 28 times for 131 yards and another TD.

New England 31 Indianapolis 28

The Pats improved to 8-2, but had a 31-14 lead in the fourth quarter, but Manning, who threw for 396 yards and four touchdowns, almost brought the Colts back.

Tonight, in the Monday Nighter, it’s the Denver Broncos in San Diego to face the Chargers.

The NFL Makes the Right Decision… Sort Of.

The National Football League made an interesting, and proper, decision this week. They decided that for this season’s playoffs, at least, the team that won that won the coin toss wasn’t necessarily going to have the advantage over the team that didn’t.

And while the coin-toss winner will continue to have an advantage in one sense, when it comes to the post-season, the coin-toss winner can’t get away with having a great field goal kicker and little else.

By a vote of 28-4 (who voted against this?), the league decided to give both teams a chance to score in overtime so long as the team that won the coin toss didn’t score a touchdown. In other words, if the team that got the ball first in OT went down and kicked a field goal, the other team got a shot at tying the game or winning it with a touchdown of their own.

That’s the way the rule should always have been. As we said on 92-CITI-FM this morning, “the CFL doesn’t do a whole lot of things better than the NFL, but one thing it does do considerably better is conduct its overtime.” At least the CFL’s overtime system is fair. Both teams get the ball at least once, both teams have a fair chance to get their offences on the field.

For years — this regular season included — the lucky NFL team has won far more often than it should. It sure doesn’t take any skill to win a coin toss. At least, when this year’s playoffs roll around, both teams will get a fairer, if not a completely fair, shake and that’s a step in the right direction.

In fact, it’s probably the best decision made by the NFL’s competition committee since the day they decided to move the uprights to the back of the end zone.

More Stuff Banging Around in My Noggin…

I was sitting in the press box at Canwest Park last night waiting for the Goldeyes and Joliet to get it on when my brain started to go thump, thump, thump.

Here’s what fell out onto the page…

1) Last Friday night, Minnesota Vikings head coach Brad Childress felt that Brett Favre would play at least a half against Houston next Monday night.

Childress said all he wanted from Favre last Friday night in Minneapolis was to complete all the exchanges from centre-to-quarterback ad to hand the ball off to Adrian Peterson.

“If he completed a couple of passes, great,” Childress added. “That’s not what we were after. We have a 39-year-old guy playing his first game of the year after 2 1/2 days of practice. Taking the exchange from centre was a good first step for Brett.”

I asked Childress during the news conference how long he felt it would take Favre to get used to his teammates, the terminology, the surroundings and his own physical capabilities and Childress was forthright.

“Two weeks,” he said.

That sounds about right. Sounds like it was about right for Michael Bishop, too.

2) A website/newsletter/journalistic-type-place called the Bleacher Report, picked the Top 100 players in baseball this month. No. 1 was Albert Pujols. No argument there.

However, at No. 5 was Minnesota’s Joe Mauer. No. 5? Number Freakin’ 5?

I cancelled my subscription. Anyone who picks Mauer No. 5, hasn’t ever seen Mauer play and if they haven’t seen Mauer, they have nothing of interest to a baseball fan.

Mauer is a freakin’ catcher for goodness sake. He plays the toughest position on the field and throws bee-bees from his knees to each of the bases. He handles a pitching staff. He calls for pitches. He has to know everything going on out on the field at all time.

Meanwhile, he hits .380. And he’ll win the American League batting title this year with at least 30 home runs, 100 runs scored and 100 RBI even though he didn’t play a game until May 1.

However, he’ll also lead the AL in slugging percentage (.635) and on base percentage (.449) and right now, he leads Pujols in batting average and on-base percentage (Pujols is slightly ahead in slugging percentage, .665 to .635).

Mauer is a lifetime .328 hitter who won the AL batting title in 2006 (.347) and 2008 (.328) and he’s a freakin’ catcher. Oh yeah, and he’s only 26.

Hanley Ramirez and a couple of pitchers couldn’t carry Mauer’s 6-foot-5, 235-pound jock to the ballpark. The Bleacher Report is not a report. It’s a bunch of dudes farting around.

3) They say female South African runner Caster Semenya is not a woman, but a man. The IAAF is forcing her to undergo tests to determine that she’s indeed a woman. As it is for most sports governing bodies, humiliating people is an easy thing to rationalize. In fact, the IAAF “ordered” her to take the tests. Ordered.

Hey, I don’t know if she’s a man or a woman, but if she says she’s a woman, she’s a woman. What real man would want a woman’s medal anyway?

And besides, despite the humiliation she’s been forced to endure, one thing is certain. She has the best abs in sport … anywhere, anytime, any sex.

Can ex-Steeler Whisenhunt Coax the Mediocre Cardinals to a Title?

NFL Super Bowl Report No. 1, Saturday, Jan. 24, 2009

TAMPA — Some thoughts from Day 1 on Florida’s remarkable West Coast:

 

1) So what’s the real reason for the incredible improvement of the Arizona Cardinals? Was it the re-invigorated play of the young-again Kurt Warner? Was it the brilliance of Larry Fitzgerald (who might be the best all-around athlete in the NFL)? Was it a defence that has come around during the past five weeks?

 

Yes and no. While all of those things had a lot to do with it, it is, ultimately, the coaching of Ken Whisenhunt. A former Steelers assistant who took the job in Arizona just as Pittsburgh was hiring Mike Tomlin, Whisenhunt brought along Pittsburgh assistant Russ Grimm to be his assistant head coach and another Steelers assistant, Kevin Spencer to run his special teams.

 

The Cards are now headed to their first Super Bowl. The Steelers are going for the seventh time in 43 years. Although he denies it, Whisenhunt has brought a little Steeler tradition to the desert.

 

2) Depending on where you go in Las Vegas, the Pittsburgh Steelers are either 6 ½ or seven-point favourites in next Sunday’s Super Bowl XLIII. Ask the Arizona Cardinals and that’s exactly what they want to hear. Let’s not pull any punches. This year the 9-7 Cardinals, a team that lost 35-14 at home a month ago to the less-than-brilliant Minnesota Vikings, were a mediocre football team that caught fire at exactly the right moment. 

 

According to Cards head coach Ken Whisenhunt, “I think that it’s not a surprise that we would be an underdog. This is a very good football team that we are going against; one that a number of the members of this organization are familiar with. Obviously, there will not be a lot of people singing our praises. Hopefully, that will keep us focused.”

 

The Cards might get as much energy from the oddsmakers as they get from Tampa’s abundance of strip clubs over the next week. 

 

3) Do uniform colours matter? Guess we’ll find out in Super Bowl XLIII. On Thursday, the Arizona Cardinals, the official home team in Tampa, chose to wear their home red uniforms in the big game. 

 

That means the Steelers will wear their white road uniforms, just as they did when they defeated Seattle for the NFL title three years ago in Detroit. In the 2006 Super Bowl, Pittsburgh had the option of wearing their black home jerseys, but decided to wear white after playing and winning three road playoff games in as many weeks.

 

This will be only the third time in their seven Super Bowls the Steelers have worn white. They’ve never lost in their white jerseys. 

 

Some Thoughts From a Crazy Weekend of NFL Playoff Football…

A few thoughts from a weekend in front of the big new Sony Bravia HD…

 

(1) OK, so I’d make a lousy NFL owner. No question about it. I know, because, on Saturday afternoon, if I owned the Carolina Panthers, I’d have fired head coach John Fox at halftime.

 

Let’s be honest, five interceptions will cost any team any football game and Carolina QB Jake Delhomme did himself no favours by coughing up the football five times. However, had Fox been marginally prepared for the Cardinals, Delhomme would not have found himself in a position where he had to force so many second-half passes.

 

Fact is, the Panthers could still have beaten the Arizona Cardinals on Saturday WITH five Delhomme interceptions, if Fox and his staff thought it might be somewhat important to actually try to cover Arizona wideout Larry Fitzgerald.

 

Fitzgerald came into Saturday’s game as the leading receiver in the NFC (1,431 yards). He might be the best receiver in football. He’s not a secret. 

 

Meanwhile, his receiving partner Anquan Boldin was injured and not in the lineup. So suddenly, with one of the Cards’ two most important weapons out of the equation, Carolina still forgot that Fitzgerald was playing. The Panthers allowed Fitzgerald to catch eight passes — six in the first half — for 161 yards and a second-quarter touchdown. Had Carolina shut down Fitzgerald before halftime, they’d have shut down the Cardinals. 

 

I hope this doesn’t sound presumptuous, but why didn’t Fox think of that?

 

(2) Evidently, in the National Football Conference, the 17-week regular season doesn’t mean very much. This coming Sunday a 9-6-1 team will journey to the home of a 9-7 team to play for the NFC title.

 

That’s right. It will be the 9-6-1 Philadelphia Eagles against the 9-7 Arizona Cardinals in the NFC championship game and the team hosting the game, the Cards, lost 35-14 at home to the Minnesota Vikings less than a month ago.

 

In a league where four injury reports are published every week just to keep the gamblers happy, it has now become painfully obvious the only reason the NFL’s regular season exists is for the benefit of the gamblers. 

 

After all, when an 11-5 team misses the playoffs and a 9-7 team could win the Super Bowl, the integrity of the schedule comes into question and right now, it would appear the only reason they bother to play a regular season is so you and I can bet on it.

 

(3) Why is it that people hate Minnesota Vikings QB Tarvaris Jackson so much? Seems everyone from Vikings head coach Brad Childress to the entire Minnesota media corps wants the Vikings to find a way to make it appear as if ol’ T-Jack never existed.

 

Which brings up the following question: “Because T-Jack had no support whatsoever from his offensive line in a 26-14 playoff loss to the Eagles two weeks ago, is he any worse at playing quarterback than Eli Manning — who had some support at home this past week and lost 23-11? With no help from his Hawgs, T-Jack DID put up more points against that Eagles defence than L’il Manning.

 

Just asking.

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.

 

 

No quit in Colts. Vikings blow 15-0 lead, lose 18-15 in fourth quarter collapse.

MINNEAPOLIS — There was absolutely no quit in the Indianapolis Colts offence on Sunday afternoon. 

 

After trailing for the entire game, the Colts put up 18 unanswered points in the second half, 11 in the fourth quarter, as the Colts came from behind to defeat the Minnesota Vikings 18-15.

 

The Vikings had built a 15-0 lead in the third quarter on a five Ryan Longwell field goals (of 45, 27, 53, 46 and 28 yards) but without any touchdowns, the Vikes simply didn’t get far enough ahead of Peyton Manning and the Colts, 

 

“I’m very proud of our effort today,” said Colts head coach Tony Dungy in a strangely quiet Colts locker room after the game. “We never got discouraged even though we were down 15-0 and I think a lot of that had to do with the fact we didn’t give up a touchdown. We had this feeling that if we hold them to field goals, then we can still catch them. It was great to see us win that game even though we continued to make a lot of mistakes.”

 

This was a huge win for Indy. As Dungy pointed out, “It’s important to get to 1-1 with Jacksonville next week.”

 

“That’s a big inter-divisional game for us and being 0-2 and facing those guys (the Jaguars) would have been really tough,” Dungy added. “What we take out of this victory is that we kept it close enough to win.”

 

Not surprisingly, the Colts comeback was led by quarterback Peyton Manning who played almost flawlessly in the final quarter to give the Colts their first win two starts this season.

 

On the final Indianapolis drive — right after the Colts defence stopped the Vikings inside their own five — Manning got Indy into  position for Adam Vinatieri to kick a 39-yard field goal with three seconds left on the clock to win it. 

 

On a third-and-nine, Manning threw a 20-yard touchdown pass to Reggie Wayne in the fourth quarter to tie the game, after Joseph Addai had run a yard for a disputed touchdown in the third quarter (not one replay showed clearly that the football ever got near the plane of the goal-line let alone crossed it).

 

With the win, Manning avoided the first 0-2 start since his rookie season in 1998. Yesterday Manning completed 26-of-42 passes for 311 yards, one touchdown and two interceptions.

 

“It just took a long time for us to get going,” Manning said afterward. “That’s two games in a row that we just didn’t come out firing on all cylinders. We’ll have to work on that.”

 

The Vikings, meanwhile, wasted an outstanding defensive effort and a particularly solid bit of work from tailback Adrian Peterson. Peterson rushed for 160 yards while Jared Allen, the multi-million dollar free-agent defensive end, who was acquired in a trade with Mansas City in the off-season, had three tackles and his first sack as a Viking.

But as the Colts’ Canadian offensive lineman, Calgary’s Dan Federkeil pointed out, the Vikings tired in the fourth quarter. 

“I’m really tired, but I don’t think I’m as tired as those guys (the Vikings defence),” said Federkeil, the University of Calgary grad who starts at right guard for the Colts. “That was a tough game today, but if you look at the way their defence played in the first quarter, compared to the fourth quarter, there was just no comparison. They tired and we were able to hang in there long enough to get the offence going.”

Vikings fans, in a loud, sold out Metrodome, really wanted to blame quarterback Tarvaris Jackson for the loss, but it was hardly his fault. Bernard Berrian, who was paid $16 million as a free-agent this past off-season, dropped three passes right in his hands. Visanthe Shiancoe dropped a perfect pass in the end zone. With any kind of help, Jackson could have been the hero.

The Vikings, now 0-2, face Carolina at the Metrodome next Sunday.

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?