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OT: Revis wants 20M per year...

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Re: OT: Revis wants 20M per year....

I disagree. A lot of these guys had extenuating circumstances. The best you can point out is T.O. and Smith. Those two are still very good receivers who had quarterback problems last year. T.O. had to put up with the likes of Fitzpatrick and Smith had to go through Delhomme/Matt Moore. You see me Owens and Smith, I raise you Andre Johnson, Randy Moss (twice), Reggie Wayne (twice, once in the AFCCG). Frankly, I disagree with your assessment about T.O. and Smith. They are both still very good wide receivers. Just ask Shawn Springs who trailed Smith by a good 7-8 yards as he was getting burned for a TD.



That's fine. Revis still shut down the Andre Johson and Matt Schaub duo along with the Peyton Manning and Reggie Wayne duo. But, since we're on the subject, for all the QB issues Smith had to put up with on top of being on a run-first team, Steve Smith was 18 yards shy of a 1000 yard season and scored 7 TD's on the year. It wasn't his most impressive year, but Smith is still a very good WR whether you want to admit it or not. As for Owens? Despite only having 55 receptions, he reeled in 829 yards, 5 TD's, and a 15.1 YPC average. I personally think these numbers are pretty decent for guys who are "no longer #1 WR's playing with bad QB's". Just goes to show you that other corners in the league still struggled against them despite their team's deficiencies at quarterback.



Are you going to try to tell me that Lee Evans was the featured target in the Buffalo offense last season? Evans was the WR2 in that offense. It was T.O. who drew the majority of the attention from opposing defenses.

Lets just leave it at we disagree. I do not believe a QB/WR combo that didn't produce is tough competition regardless of the reason.
When we are talking about the competition faced by a corner covering the #1 WR I dont believe catching 1 pass against Shawn Springs is a valid yardstick to tell me that guy is one of the toughest to face in the entire league.
Shutting down Wayne when he is sitting on the bench isn't relevant either.
Again, if you were to rank the #1 WRs in the NFL based on thier production last season (I cannot accept that a guy who didn't produce because he was old oir his QB weak equals tough competition) and look at which ones Revis faced and didnt, it would be blatantly obvious he faced competition that was somewhere in the vicinity of the NFL avarge last year.
55 catches or a few yards shy of 1000 does not equal sucky but it is at or near the bottom of #1 receivers.
To show me the competition was above average you have to show me who he faced compared to who others face, not tell me how good you think the guy who only caugt 55 passes all season is, and isolate one play another guy made. The WRs that outperfomed those guys made plays like that too.
 
Why would the the Raiders put Asomugha opposite a guy who gets 500 yards a season (many #2 guys are pretty bad) when the other WR is getting 1,200 a season?

Because they are the Raiders, which makes the conversation of just how good Asomugha is so difficult. He plays basically always at RCB, while the Raiders LCB has generally been pretty poor the last few years. We know Asomugha is great, but the Raiders just have him lock down the defensive right side no matter where the WRs line up.
 
Maybe we can go hunt down a Raiders fan who can tell us a little something about their defensive strategy. I don't watch many Raiders games at all, but I'd imagine Asomugha doesn't get much help on the defensive right either.
 
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Re: OT: Revis wants 20M per year....

Name one. 10char

I've got no dog in this hunt, because I figure Revis and Nmadi are the two best CBs in the game and I'm not worried about which is #1 since neither is a Patriots but, regarding your request, you could start with the teams in the NFC North.
 
Re: OT: Revis wants 20M per year....

Name one. 10char

Pick whichever you want.
The argument here is the contention that
"Revis faced the toughest competition anyone has in years"
I contend the competition he faced was thoroughly average for a #1 conrer, that is, the teams on the Jets schedule were no better than the teams on the average NFL teams schedule in terms of the competition they provided for a #1 corner.
In other words, the best WR on the teams the Jets faced cumulatively were the average of all NFL #1 WRs.

I showed that the Jets faced Buff and Miami twice, Jacksonville, Oakland, Carolina, Tampa, Tennesse Cincinnati, and Indy with each of those teams playing reserves. That is 11 of the 16 games that are clearly against #1 receivers who were in the bottom half of #1 receivers in production. (Its silly to say the competition was tough because the receiver 'is good' but the QB sucked)
I did not include Atlanta and thats borderline top half vs bottom half.
So the 'toughest competition in years' adds up to Moss twice (once without Welker) Andre Johnson, Colston, and White plus 11 games where the competition of #1 WR was below average.
I think you can find many teams that faced WRs in the top 5 or 10 more than 4 or 5 times. A lot of them.
 
Re: OT: Revis wants 20M per year....

Lets just leave it at we disagree. I do not believe a QB/WR combo that didn't produce is tough competition regardless of the reason.

Clearly, both of those guys were able to produce in sh!tty situations. I'm not suprised that you ignore that on top of the fact that he was able to shut down Wayne, Johnson, and the guy who will eventually be looked at as the #2 greatest wide receiver to EVER play the game... twice. On top of two of the best wide receivers in the past decade and two rising up and comers. But all of this is inconvenient to your argument, so I see why you choose to constantly focus on Owens and Smith while ignoring the entire body of work.

When we are talking about the competition faced by a corner covering the #1 WR I dont believe catching 1 pass against Shawn Springs is a valid yardstick to tell me that guy is one of the toughest to face in the entire league.

If you'd like, I can tell you other CB's that Steve Smith burned throughout the season.

Shutting down Wayne when he is sitting on the bench isn't relevant either.

How about the AFC Championship game? That good enough for you?

3 rec. 55 yds. 0 TD

Let's take a look at the Colts other two receivers, Garcon and Collie...

11 rec. 151 yds. 1 TD
7 rec. 123 yds. 1 TD

There's a reason for this. That reason is because Wayne was stranded on "Revis Island". During the game they took a look at the match-up over the course of several plays (in which Revis was in one on one coverage). Manning didn't even so much as glance at Wayne after the first quarter. He was shut down, much in the same way he was in the first half of their first meeting.

Again, if you were to rank the #1 WRs in the NFL based on thier production last season (I cannot accept that a guy who didn't produce because he was old oir his QB weak equals tough competition) and look at which ones Revis faced and didnt, it would be blatantly obvious he faced competition that was somewhere in the vicinity of the NFL avarge last year.

And if you look at the 2008 regular season, Jay Cutler was the #3 passer in the league and D'Qwell Jackson (go ahead and Google him) was the top tackler in the league... even above Patrick Willis and Jon Beason. Once again, stats are important, but they are far from the know-all, end-all of any debate.

55 catches or a few yards shy of 1000 does not equal sucky but it is at or near the bottom of #1 receivers.

First of all, you contradicted yourself here. At or near the bottom of #1 receivers does = sucky. Secondly, whether you want to admit it or not, 12 yards shy of a 1000 yard season and 7 TD's is extremely impressive for any receiver playing in a run first offense with a quarterback tandem of Matt Moore and Jake Delhomme. Steve Smith is still extremely talented and showed last season that he's still capable of burning opposing CB's. Same goes for Owens, who clearly showed that he made the best of the chances he got last season.

To show me the competition was above average you have to show me who he faced compared to who others face, not tell me how good you think the guy who only caugt 55 passes all season is, and isolate one play another guy made. The WRs that outperfomed those guys made plays like that too.

Let me know when you can name corners who Andre Johnson, Randy Moss, Reggie Wayne, and the like faced all season that followed them around the field on every play, the vast majority of which was in man coverage and then we can go about comparing the two. As I said before (which you conveniently keep ignoring), Nmandi is the only guy in the league right now even close to Revis' class. With him, we can't even be sure how much he stuck to the opposition's #1 WR. Once again, either an argument cannot be made for another corner or the argument is a landslide victory for Revis. We can be sure he stuck to the WR1 against the opposition. 100% sure actually. According to Jay, whose opinion I would put more stock in than anybody on this board, Revis saw mostly man coverage due to the Jets' aggressive scheme.

Your challenge, Andy (since you clearly aren't "done" even though you keep saying you are): name me one other cornerback in the league that shadowed the oppositions primary receiving threat on every play and whose scheme dictated that he played in man coverage the majority of the time. Do that and we can sit back and compare.
 
Re: OT: Revis wants 20M per year....

20 Million dollars????!!!!!!!!!


He needs to put food on the table and feed his family.
 
Re: OT: Revis wants 20M per year....

Clearly, both of those guys were able to produce in sh!tty situations. I'm not suprised that you ignore that on top of the fact that he was able to shut down Wayne, Johnson, and the guy who will eventually be looked at as the #2 greatest wide receiver to EVER play the game... twice. On top of two of the best wide receivers in the past decade and two rising up and comers. But all of this is inconvenient to your argument, so I see why you choose to constantly focus on Owens and Smith while ignoring the entire body of work.
Thats not really true. YOU were the one harping on those 2.
Whether or not he 'shut down' anyone is irrelevent to discussing the quality of competition he faced, as is listing reasons why they were weak competition, such as the QB.
Who is tougher competition TO with Fitzpatrick throwing to him, or Miles Ausitn with Romo throwing to him, to name 1?



If you'd like, I can tell you other CB's that Steve Smith burned throughout the season.
Not really relevent because all #1s burn some corners, but half are still below average competition as #1s.



How about the AFC Championship game? That good enough for you?

3 rec. 55 yds. 0 TD

Let's take a look at the Colts other two receivers, Garcon and Collie...

11 rec. 151 yds. 1 TD
7 rec. 123 yds. 1 TD

Irrelevent. This discussion is not at all about how he played. I concurred that he had a very good season.
This discussion is about your claim that his play should be considered even better because he played against the best comeptition anyone has faced in years.
That means if Terrence Newman faced tougher competition and allowed 300 yards a game, you are wrong.

[quote[There's a reason for this. That reason is because Wayne was stranded on "Revis Island". During the game they took a look at the match-up over the course of several plays (in which Revis was in one on one coverage). Manning didn't even so much as glance at Wayne after the first quarter. He was shut down, much in the same way he was in the first half of their first meeting.[/quote]

again not relevant to the level of competition.

And if you look at the 2008 regular season, Jay Cutler was the #3 passer in the league and D'Qwell Jackson (go ahead and Google him) was the top tackler in the league... even above Patrick Willis and Jon Beason. Once again, stats are important, but they are far from the know-all, end-all of any debate.
What does that have to do with anything? My argument is not stat based at all.
My argument is that the overall quality of the #1 WRs on the Jets schedule last year was no more than average. You can say anything you want about TO, but if you are facing the Bills on a given Sunday in 2009 and your job is to cover the #1 WR you have an easier day than almost all of the other 31 corners who will do that job that day.


First of all, you contradicted yourself here. At or near the bottom of #1 receivers does = sucky.
no. the 25th best #1 WR is not sucky. He is not as good as 24 others, but he doesnt suck

Secondly, whether you want to admit it or not, 12 yards shy of a 1000 yard season and 7 TD's is extremely impressive for any receiver playing in a run first offense with a quarterback tandem of Matt Moore and Jake Delhomme. Steve Smith is still extremely talented and showed last season that he's still capable of burning opposing CB's. Same goes for Owens, who clearly showed that he made the best of the chances he got last season.
But the WRs that ACTUALLY produced more were tougher competition.




Let me know when you can name corners who Andre Johnson, Randy Moss, Reggie Wayne, and the like faced all season that followed them around the field on every play, the vast majority of which was in man coverage and then we can go about comparing the two. As I said before (which you conveniently keep ignoring), Nmandi is the only guy in the league right now even close to Revis' class. With him, we can't even be sure how much he stuck to the opposition's #1 WR. Once again, either an argument cannot be made for another corner or the argument is a landslide victory for Revis. We can be sure he stuck to the WR1 against the opposition. 100% sure actually. According to Jay, whose opinion I would put more stock in than anybody on this board, Revis saw mostly man coverage due to the Jets' aggressive scheme.

You seem to still want to make this about how Revis played. I concerred he played very well.
My entire dispute is that you overexxagerate by adding that he played tougher competition. If he played 10 games against the top 15 WRs in the NFL then youd have the start of an argument. But he played most of his games against teams that were not good pass offenses.


Your challenge, Andy (since you clearly aren't "done" even though you keep saying you are):
You've got me there.

name me one other cornerback in the league that shadowed the oppositions primary receiving threat on every play and whose scheme dictated that he played in man coverage the majority of the time. Do that and we can sit back and compare.
that is not the topic. I agree that Revis was very good last year, and is the best or 2nd best corner in the NFL.
I dispute that he faced competition that was tougher than normal last year much less the toughest anyone has faced in many years.
By the way, I do dispute the contention that Revis is one on one vs the top WR without help every play because its not true. Perhaps 'more often than most corners' is fair, but to imply he shadows the #1 WR all over the field on every play without any help is just not correct.
 
Re: OT: Revis wants 20M per year....

There's a reason for this. That reason is because Wayne was stranded on "Revis Island". During the game they took a look at the match-up over the course of several plays (in which Revis was in one on one coverage). Manning didn't even so much as glance at Wayne after the first quarter. He was shut down, much in the same way he was in the first half of their first meeting.

A couple of questions. If Revis was truly playing "one on one" on "Revis Island", then why couldn't the safeties help contain Garcon/Collie better? Same thing for the 2nd Patriots game, why did Welker get ~200 yards? Are the Jets incapable of scheming to help cover these secondary WRs while Revis is on his own island?

I don't have the game to re-watch but it seems very fishy to me that Manning would not even look at Wayne if he saw 1-on-1 coverage against any DB in the NFL. Even though Revis did an awesome job on Moss, Brady still is throwing to Moss when he catches Revis 1-on-1 with him (provided he has the time to obviously).
 
Re: OT: Revis wants 20M per year....

daryl revis is ok. i don't think he's that great. he's certainly no deion sanders or champ bailey. but it will be fun to see if revis can clean the jets' bank account.

.. And it will , no more hot dogs for years to come for Fatso and dirty Sanchez
 
Re: OT: Revis wants 20M per year....

Part I

Thats not really true. YOU were the one harping on those 2.

Not that I really care to get into a pissing contest with you, but here is my second response to you...

Our coach has a very intersting opinion when it comes to stats. Statistical analysis is important in a discussion like this, but it is hardly the know-all, end-all in any sport. Terrell Owens, Steve Smith, Marques Colston, and Roddy White are extremely talented receivers who have given opposing CB's fits in their time in the league. Andre Johnson, Reggie Wayne, and Randy Moss fall into the same category as those four and had impressive seasons. Despite any down seasons, it's pretty widely recognized that Revis faced a tough line-up.

Then here is the first part of your response to that...

I guess I'll just drop it because to tell me that Steve Smith and Terrell Owens WHEN THEY ARENT PRODUCING HIGHLY AGAINST PRETTY MUCH ANYONE, whether it because of them or their QB are tough competition is just something I don't buy.

You pretty much completely ignored mentions of Colston, White (I'm guessing because they had capable QB's), Moss, and Johnson and specifically zoned in on Steve Smith. Pretty clearly, it was you who decided to harp on those two. I've simply responded to your posts.

Whether or not he 'shut down' anyone is irrelevent to discussing the quality of competition he faced, as is listing reasons why they were weak competition, such as the QB.

No it isn't. Most of these guys he faced had great to solid seasons. The fact that he shut them down when the vast majority of other CB's in the league were unable to do so (which is what our debate about the level of competition essentially is centered around) is absolutely relevant.

Who is tougher competition TO with Fitzpatrick throwing to him, or Miles Ausitn with Romo throwing to him, to name 1?

So wait, now you DO want to argue Nmandi/Revis? That's fine. I can play this game too. Who is tougher competition? Miles Austin with Romo throwing to him or Randy Moss with Tom Brady throwing to him (twice in one year, no less)? What exactly were you hoping to accomplish with this statement?

Not really relevent because all #1s burn some corners, but half are still below average competition as #1s.

Clearly, if said #1 is burning more CB's than he isn't, he is having a decent season is he not? With Smith, he had good games matched up against Antoine Winfield, DeAngelo Hall, and our slew of corners off of the top of my head. Both Winfield and Hall are looked at as above average corners and, even with the quarterback situation holding him back, he was still able to have success against them when matched up on them. Not so against Revis. Owens had good games matched up against Cortland Finnegan and Rashean Mathis yet was shut down by Revis. Randy Moss had success when matched up against Buffalo, Miami, Atlanta, Tennessee, and Indy. In two games against the Jets, going against Revis and OPENLY wanting to beat Revis, Moss was held to his lowest yardage total of any game in the season. Do I need to tell you about Andre Johnson? Johnson saw his lowest yardage total of the season when matched up against Revis.

If you want to talk competition, then you should consider everyone he played against instead of focusing soley on two guys. Smith and Owens are not at the top of the list, but they've been two of the best receivers in the NFL in the last decade. Revis shut Moss down twice and he'll eventually be a first ballot Hall of Famer. Many people ALREADY look at Moss as the second best WR of all time behind Jerry Rice. Colston was a 1,000 yard receiver in 2008 and was solid this season. He saw his production drop due to the overwhelming amount of weapons the Saints had in 2009. That doesn't change the fact that he's an extremely talented, big bodied receiver who has Drew Brees throwing him the ball. Mike Sims-Walker is an up and comer who exploded on the scene this year and almost had a 900 yard season despite playing in a run first offense with David Garrard throwing him the ball. Roddy White had an 1,100 yard season with 11 TD's. He gave most of the CB's he faced a hard time this season and yet had one of his worst games when matched up with Revis. If you want to throw out what he did against Reggie Wayne (another top receiver in the NFL in 2009) during the regular season, I won't fight you on it. That's why I put a star next to that game earlier in the thread. But, if you're going to do that then you should look at the AFCCG, a game in which he did shut down Wayne throughout the entire contest.

Disposing of all of these guys and cherry picking two names out of there to try to make an argument is bad form, at best. You essentially sound like you're arguing on how you feel (and we all know how you feel) instead of arguing based on facts.

Irrelevent. This discussion is not at all about how he played. I concurred that he had a very good season.

Sorry, but you pretty clearly don't believe this if you keep arguing that he did it against "sub-par" competition.

This discussion is about your claim that his play should be considered even better because he played against the best comeptition anyone has faced in years. That means if Terrence Newman faced tougher competition and allowed 300 yards a game, you are wrong.

If Terrence Newman, who is a pretty good corner, faced the competition that Revis did, played man coverage against him the majority of the time, shadowed that receiver down the field, and still did what Revis was able to do against the CB's mentioned, this thread would be about me praising him. As it stands, Revis did all of this. So I am here now applauding him.

As for what you quoted, I don't see at all how it's irrelevant. Against the Colts top receiver, Revis shut him down. That was the highest level of competition they could offer him. Lesser competition, or competition that Revis was not covering, both went on to have outstanding games simply because Wayne (once again, one of the top receivers in the league) was taken out of the game. Seeing as Wayne was one of Revis' competition and was outstanding competition at that, it is plenty relevant to point out how he did. Dismissing it as irrelevant when that isn't the case simply tells me that you don't have much of a counter argument.

What does that have to do with anything? My argument is not stat based at all. My argument is that the overall quality of the #1 WRs on the Jets schedule last year was no more than average. You can say anything you want about TO, but if you are facing the Bills on a given Sunday in 2009 and your job is to cover the #1 WR you have an easier day than almost all of the other 31 corners who will do that job that day.

Seriously, Andy? Your argument has been ABSOLUTELY stat based. You've used stats that I posted about Steve Smith and Terrell Owens' numbers to try to center your argument on saying that they are no longer #1 WR's. You've used stats to try to make an argument for Nmandi because "only 28 passes were thrown his way". You've used stats to try to make a claim that he faced weak passing offenses.

But the WRs that ACTUALLY produced more were tougher competition.

I never made a claim that Smith and Owens were the toughest competition. I claimed that they were tough competiton on a tough schedule. Randy Moss was top of the line competition. Shut down twice. Andre Johnson was the top receiver in the NFL last season. He had is worst game against Revis. Reggie Wayne was all but taken out of the AFCCG and was a ghost in the first half of the first meeting. All three of these guys were in the top five of receivers last year. Trying to dismiss this as not being top competition is assanine.
 
Part II

You seem to still want to make this about how Revis played. I concerred he played very well.
My entire dispute is that you overexxagerate by adding that he played tougher competition. If he played 10 games against the top 15 WRs in the NFL then youd have the start of an argument. But he played most of his games against teams that were not good pass offenses.

Next year, he'll have Moss twice and Owens will be replaced by Brandon Marshall twice. He'll also face Boldin, Sidney Rice, Greg Jennings, Calvin Johnson, Andre Johnson, and Chad Ochocinco. I'm not sure how Wallace and Johnny Knox are going to look in their sophomore seasons but if they're even better than they were in their rookie years, Revis will have tough match-ups against the Steelers and the Bears as well. That's absolutely brutal. I personally hope Revis fails, horribly. Nothing would make me happier. But if he shuts them down next year, I would expect you to come back here and eat some crow. Granted, I expected it of the people who kept trying to tell me that Favre wouldn't help the Vikings that much last year and the crow eating never happened, but you can't win them all I guess.

that is not the topic. I agree that Revis was very good last year, and is the best or 2nd best corner in the NFL.
I dispute that he faced competition that was tougher than normal last year much less the toughest anyone has faced in many years.

Again, where did I say "many"? You make it seem like I don't think that anybody since the 1960's has faced the competition that Revis faced last year.

By the way, I do dispute the contention that Revis is one on one vs the top WR without help every play because its not true. Perhaps 'more often than most corners' is fair, but to imply he shadows the #1 WR all over the field on every play without any help is just not correct.

And I never said that he was one on one on every play. However, he is in one on one man coverage more than most of, if not every single one of, the cornerbacks in the league.
 
Re: OT: Revis wants 20M per year....

A couple of questions. If Revis was truly playing "one on one" on "Revis Island", then why couldn't the safeties help contain Garcon/Collie better? Same thing for the 2nd Patriots game, why did Welker get ~200 yards? Are the Jets incapable of scheming to help cover these secondary WRs while Revis is on his own island?

As far as I can tell from reading up on their defensive strategy after Jays' post, they blitz either one or both of their safeties a lot of the time when in their base defense (the 3-4) as well as other formations. The Jets safeties also assist in the running game more than the average team as well. But even then, why does every other team have trouble covering Welker? Problems against him aren't just singled out to the Jets.

MVP Watch: The case for Darrelle Revis - Shutdown Corner - NFL - Yahoo! Sports

That article should help you gain a little bit of insight into Revis, the Jets defense, and his importance to that defense. If you don't want to click the link, then this is the part you want to pay attention to...

Well, now you're talking about all-time shutdown corners, a term that is overused and frequently mis-applied (except by this fine blog, of course!) A true shutdown corner, as Sanders was in the mid-1990s, will kill the production of every elite receiver he faces and erase about a third of the field for the opposing quarterback by locking down in man coverage. When that happens, other defenders can do other things. Safeties who aren't required to give help up top can shade coverage in other ways, blitz, or play the run. Linebackers don't have to commit to the short passing game on that end -- they can be more aggressive. It's why the Jets' run defense has actually improved since the loss of huge nose tackle Kris Jenkins(notes) in Week 6.

Oh, and there's also a section in this for you, Andy...

It's not just that Revis has completely dominated every elite receiver he's faced this season (the per-game numbers are here; add Chad Ochocinco's(notes) four-target, no-catch performance in the regular-season finale and expect a re-run in the wild-card sequel this weekend), it's how that dominance has changed the Jets' fortunes. Rookie quarterback Mark Sanchez(notes) has struggled as most rookie quarterbacks do, which puts the pressure on New York's running game and defense. This is not a team that can afford to get into shootouts.

They never have to, because of Revis. And as impressive as the per-game numbers are, the cumulative totals are truly astonishing. According to Football Outsiders' final regular-season metrics, teams allowed an average of 8.07 yards per target to #1 receivers -- the Randy Mosses and Andre Johnsons of the world. The real elite guys. The Jets, on the other hand, allowed an unbelievable 4.08 yards per target to those same elite receivers! One guy, in mostly man coverage, putting up those numbers.

EDIT: This should help as well, emoney.

http://www.maddentips.com/forums/showthread.php?t=128622

It's a little rough, but you'll see that there are a lot of instances in which the Jets have DB's blitz. Not just safeties, but also corners which means that the safeties are left in one on one man coverage.
 
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Oh, and one more post on this, then I'm done with this debate since I'll just end up repeating myself over and over again. But, even if you don't think that Revis faced top of the line competition (which I obviously believe he did), you can't deny that what he did was impressive. Here is Wikipedia's synopsis of his season. Apparently, the Chargers playoff game was the only game in which he didn't shadow one receiver around the field. In that game, he allowed 1 reception for -4 yards and had an INT....

Darrelle Revis started off the '09 season matched up against some of football's best wide receivers. In Week 1, he helped limit Houston Texans Pro-bowler Andre Johnson to four receptions for 35 yards. Revis then faced Tom Brady and the New England Patriots, when he matched up against another Pro-bowl receiver, Randy Moss, and limited him four receptions and 24 yards after catching 14 passes for 141 yards the week prior. Revis also had an interception against Brady, helping the Jets defense to be the first team since 2006 to stop the Patriots from scoring a touchdown.

In Week 5 against the Miami Dolphins, Revis was beaten by wide receiver Ted Ginn, Jr. for a 53-yard touchdown reception on Monday Night Football.[13]

Revis and the Jets defense later limited the New Orleans Saints offense to ten points, with Revis holding Saints wideout Marques Colston to two receptions for 38 yards. Revis then held Buffalo Bills wide receiver Terrell Owens to three receptions for 13 yards in Week 6. However, the Jets would lose both games due to turnover problems. Revis would go on to blanket another bunch of receivers including Randy Moss and Ted Ginn Jr. again, Jacksonville's Mike Sims-Walker and Oakland's Louis Murphy.

During Week 12 of the '09 season, Revis shut Carolina Panthers receiver Steve Smith out, to only 1 reception for 5 yards. Revis also intercepted Panther's quarterback Jake Delhomme twice, returning one of the two interceptions for a touchdown, his first defensive touchdown of the season, and his second of his 3 season career. The next week (Week 13), Revis and the Jets played on Thursday Night Football against the Buffalo Bills, and Revis recorded his 5th interception of the season. He was matched up against Terrell Owens once again, this time, Owens got 31 yards, apposed to his 13 yard game during week 6. Not only did Revis perform well against Owens, but he also threw an enormous block on him, which resulted in Owens tumbling to the ground hard and fast.

Jets head coach Rex Ryan has stated on several occasions that he thinks Revis is the "best" cornerback in the NFL, and that he is also the best cornerback he's worked with, in all of his years of coaching defenses. NFL Total Access ranked him as the No. 3 cornerback in the league on a Best In The Biz list before the '09 season kicked off. Deion Sanders also said "Revis is going to be the best corner in the game for years."[14]

Revis ended the year winning a Pro Bowl spot, and earned major respect inside and outside of the league. In Week 17 (the NFL's last regular season week), he ended up locking Cincinnati Bengals receiver Chad Ochocinco down to the point where Ochocinco didn't even receive a single reception, mainly in part because a win would not advance Cincinnati to a higher seed in the playoffs, and also because Ochocinco left the game with an injured knee. The Jets won the game 37-0, their second shutout, and third 'defensive' shutout. The victory qualified the Jets for the postseason, and the two teams met up again six days later during the first round. During their 24-14 victory over the Bengals, Revis again shut down Ochocinco, limiting him to 2 catches for 28 yards and collecting an interception.

In the second week of the playoffs, Revis and the Jets defeated the AFC's #2 seed the San Diego Chargers, 17-14. Since the San Diego Chargers had a large variety of well acclaimed receivers, Revis was forced to cover most of them. Philip Rivers, the San Diego quarterback, only threw the ball to a receiver covered by Revis three times during the entire game. Two of the three were tipped away by Revis for an incomplete pass, and the third was an interception. His interception was made diving to the ground to catch the ball that was deflected off the shoe of Chargers' wide receiver Vincent Jackson. Revis' interception changed the momentum of the game and was instrumental in the Jets' 17-14 victory. The win led the Jets to the AFC Championship game against the Indianapolis Colts, the Jets first trip to the AFC Championship game since 1998. The Jets lost 30-17, due to a lack of scoring in the second half (0 points), and poor secondary playing, with the exception of Revis himself, who only allowed 2 receptions.

Revis lost in the Defensive Player of the Year voting to Charles Woodson, 28-14. Rex Ryan, as well as many others think that the results are a disappointment. During an interview when asked on his thoughts, Ryan said "This, in my opinion, was the best year a corner has ever had, the most impact a corner has ever had in the National Football League. That's my opinion. Apparently, that wasn't how everybody felt." He also went on to say "The number that I think that's interesting would be 8, and no that's not amount (I'm talking about) of touchdown passes Green Bay gave up against Arizona. That is the number of touchdown passes we gave up all season, as the Jets. And the biggest reason for that is Darrelle Revis".

I would strongly suggest doubters to follow this link: Darrelle Revis - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

And check out the stats allowed for his 2009 season. Revis didn't allow more than 58 yards to any receiver all season long. Also suprised Louis Murphy was the one who gained the most yards against him, another up and comer.

This post is about it for my incessant arguing in this thread. Andy, I'll give you the last word if you'd like...
 
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Kontra, don't get me wrong I'm not arguing against Revis being great. I just have a hard time believing that he doesn't frequently have safety help over the top.

"I don't have numbers," Pettine said, per Dave Hutchinson of the Newark Star-Ledger. "We mixed our coverages up a lot. You have to do that against New England. You can't give them one look. I can say this, we weren't in a lot of true cover zero [man-on-man] with no help. Nobody in the league is. Most teams in the league, I would be shocked if they averaged more than four or five snaps a game of straight man coverage with no help.''

Along the same lines I also wonder how much Asomugha gets on the defensive right side of the field, and what the Raiders strategy is with him.

Go Celtics!
 
Part II



Next year, he'll have Moss twice and Owens will be replaced by Brandon Marshall twice. He'll also face Boldin, Sidney Rice, Greg Jennings, Calvin Johnson, Andre Johnson, and Chad Ochocinco. I'm not sure how Wallace and Johnny Knox are going to look in their sophomore seasons but if they're even better than they were in their rookie years, Revis will have tough match-ups against the Steelers and the Bears as well. That's absolutely brutal. I personally hope Revis fails, horribly. Nothing would make me happier. But if he shuts them down next year, I would expect you to come back here and eat some crow. Granted, I expected it of the people who kept trying to tell me that Favre wouldn't help the Vikings that much last year and the crow eating never happened, but you can't win them all I guess.



Again, where did I say "many"? You make it seem like I don't think that anybody since the 1960's has faced the competition that Revis faced last year.



And I never said that he was one on one on every play. However, he is in one on one man coverage more than most of, if not every single one of, the cornerbacks in the league.

OK I'll just make this succinct.
Revis played great.
The #1 WRs on the teams he played against was an average group of #1s. #1 WRs are good players. Some #1s are better than others. Facing 16 #1s doesn't mean that competition is better than the 16 #1s someone else faced unless he really did face most of the better ones. He didn't.
 
Kontra, don't get me wrong I'm not arguing against Revis being great. I just have a hard time believing that he doesn't frequently have safety help over the top.



Along the same lines I also wonder how much Asomugha gets on the defensive right side of the field, and what the Raiders strategy is with him.

Go Celtics!

No, he has safety help over the top depending on the situation and the game. No CB will ever play without a hint of safety help in a 16 game season. It's just impossible. But based on what I've seen and read, Revis gets it less than every other CB around the league with maybe the exception of Nmandi.
 
Part V

The End

Heh. Yeah I know. I almost feel like a Jets fan. Time to go take a bath in a bleach and acid mix and set myself on fire for a few seconds so I can feel clean again.
 
My problem is not what Revis has done last year which was pretty amazing. My problem is the myths around the guy that were created.

Myth #1: Revis never gets any help. You watch either game against the Pats and there were times Revis clearly gets help over the top with Moss. He needs it less than most CB, but he still gets help.

Myth #2: He is on the primary WR all the time. First, you can argue Welker is the Pats' primary WR and he never covered him. But semantics aside, the Jets do run zone defenses and he wouldn't play man in that scenario especially when I read the Jets send an extra rusher over 67% of the time.

Myth #3: Revis went up against most or a lot of the elite WRs in the game. Not true. The only WRs in the top 10 in yards last year that he went up against were Andre Johnson, Randy Moss, Reggie Wayne (for half a game in the regular season and in the AFC Championship game), and Vincent Jackson (in the playoffs where he had an impressive 7 catches for 111 yards). Guys like Roddy White (13th), Marques Colston (18th), Chad OchoCinco (19th), Steve Smith (25th), and TO (33rd) may have been elite players for many years prior to 2009; but in 2009 they were either slight above average, average, or in TO's and Steve Smith's case pretty mediocre. Shutting down the #1 WR receiver on a near week in, week out basis is pretty amazing, but inflating the talent he faced because he faced a lot of big names having down years only cheapens his accomplishment in my book.

I think Revis had a great season last year, but I also have to commend the Jets' spin machine for creating his legend even greater than his accomplishment. They successfully got the mediots to blast a guy like TO for being a major bust signing for the Bills one minute and calling him an elite WR the next minute when Revis shuts him down. I personally think that might be as impressive as Revis' accomplishments.
 
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