OldEnglandPatriot
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I enjoyed the Peter-King-style thread yesterday, so I'm shamelessly jumping on the bandwagon:
1. Media experts, including - perhaps especially - former players and coaches, make terrible handicappers. The evidence is everywhere in print and on TV, and it's hardly a new observation. Still, I was particularly struck by Fox's studio experts picking the Lions-Eagles game this past Sunday. All four chose Detroit like it was the most obvious pick imagineable; a lock. Result, Philadelphia win by five touchdowns.
I'm not saying you couldn't make a case for the Lions in that game, but if I were a betting man (which I am) I would have considered it a fairly tough game to pick and a classic no-play. All four experts going for a Lions team that cannot run the ball at all, has red zone problems, a so-so defense, and had merely scraped past Oakland and Minnesota - well, it beggars belief.
2. This new penalty for spiking the ball on achieving a first down is dumb, irritating and pointless. The 'No Fun League' gag is old, but the league keeps on seeking out ways to prove it is valid. On Sunday, Clinton Portis broke a 16-yard run for a first down and in his excitement spiked the ball. Amost immediately he realised he was about to get penalised and put his head in his hands. It was deeply sad, like watching an excited puppy get slapped for wagging it's tail.
Frankly, even if you are of the stiff, uptight 'they're-men-they-shouldn't-show-any-emotion' school of thought, I'm sure you'd agree there are more worthy rules changes upon which the NFL could have expended time and effort.
3. You may 'play to win the game' - but what if you don't gameplan to win the game? Apparently, Herm Edwards and his Chiefs' ingenious gameplan when they hosted Minnesota on Sunday was to 'run the ball down their throats'. Good work picking out just about the only thing Minnesota does well - defending the run - Herm and Co. That Kansas did win was down to finally realising in the second half that their knuckle-headed strategy wasn't going to work.
4. Besides being rubbish at picking games, journalists also say the stupidest things. Devin Clancy in USA Today Sports Weekly suggests in passing that 'talk about the Patriots' videotaping scandal probably won't die down until ... they lose a few games'.
Hmm, that seems to make absolutely no sense at all. Actually, the Pats losing a few games would have everyone yelling 'See! Now they don't have videotapes they are no good!'. What will cause the cameragate talk to die down - and it seems to have already begun to work somewhat - is the Patriots crushing opponent after opponent en route to a fourth Superbowl crown. I can't wait!
5. Discussions of AFC dominance always seem to 'beg the question'. For instance, when the crew on HBO's excellent 'Inside the NFL' get asked - about once a season - why the AFC is so dominant over the NFC, they answer with comments like 'the AFC has better quarterbacks', or 'the AFC have better defenses'. But that isn't answering the question at all - we all know that better teams have better quarterbacks, players, coaches; the question is WHY should it have come to pass that these better things are concentrated in the AFC?
Is it a cyclical reaction to the previous years of NFC dominance, in some way? I have no idea, but I wish the guys who know more than me would come up with something or else just admit they don't know either.
1. Media experts, including - perhaps especially - former players and coaches, make terrible handicappers. The evidence is everywhere in print and on TV, and it's hardly a new observation. Still, I was particularly struck by Fox's studio experts picking the Lions-Eagles game this past Sunday. All four chose Detroit like it was the most obvious pick imagineable; a lock. Result, Philadelphia win by five touchdowns.
I'm not saying you couldn't make a case for the Lions in that game, but if I were a betting man (which I am) I would have considered it a fairly tough game to pick and a classic no-play. All four experts going for a Lions team that cannot run the ball at all, has red zone problems, a so-so defense, and had merely scraped past Oakland and Minnesota - well, it beggars belief.
2. This new penalty for spiking the ball on achieving a first down is dumb, irritating and pointless. The 'No Fun League' gag is old, but the league keeps on seeking out ways to prove it is valid. On Sunday, Clinton Portis broke a 16-yard run for a first down and in his excitement spiked the ball. Amost immediately he realised he was about to get penalised and put his head in his hands. It was deeply sad, like watching an excited puppy get slapped for wagging it's tail.
Frankly, even if you are of the stiff, uptight 'they're-men-they-shouldn't-show-any-emotion' school of thought, I'm sure you'd agree there are more worthy rules changes upon which the NFL could have expended time and effort.
3. You may 'play to win the game' - but what if you don't gameplan to win the game? Apparently, Herm Edwards and his Chiefs' ingenious gameplan when they hosted Minnesota on Sunday was to 'run the ball down their throats'. Good work picking out just about the only thing Minnesota does well - defending the run - Herm and Co. That Kansas did win was down to finally realising in the second half that their knuckle-headed strategy wasn't going to work.
4. Besides being rubbish at picking games, journalists also say the stupidest things. Devin Clancy in USA Today Sports Weekly suggests in passing that 'talk about the Patriots' videotaping scandal probably won't die down until ... they lose a few games'.
Hmm, that seems to make absolutely no sense at all. Actually, the Pats losing a few games would have everyone yelling 'See! Now they don't have videotapes they are no good!'. What will cause the cameragate talk to die down - and it seems to have already begun to work somewhat - is the Patriots crushing opponent after opponent en route to a fourth Superbowl crown. I can't wait!
5. Discussions of AFC dominance always seem to 'beg the question'. For instance, when the crew on HBO's excellent 'Inside the NFL' get asked - about once a season - why the AFC is so dominant over the NFC, they answer with comments like 'the AFC has better quarterbacks', or 'the AFC have better defenses'. But that isn't answering the question at all - we all know that better teams have better quarterbacks, players, coaches; the question is WHY should it have come to pass that these better things are concentrated in the AFC?
Is it a cyclical reaction to the previous years of NFC dominance, in some way? I have no idea, but I wish the guys who know more than me would come up with something or else just admit they don't know either.











