The big upset everybody seems to be looking for is Arizona over the Dallas Cowboys. I wouldn't quite call that one just yet. I have a couple of other upset specials in the mix though. With weeks 1-5 failing to disappoint, I'm feeling week 6 will be just as exciting. Let's have at it then.
CHI @ ATL: Atlanta is young and exciting, but Chicago plays power football. Da Bears, by two scores. Winner: Chicago
MIA @ HOU: This is something of a trap-game for Miami, and as StreetCred has said, the Phins are very vulnerable to taking a step back here. But a Parcells’ team has an advantage in this situation, and the Dolphins will be coming out on top. The Texans simply are not smart with the football, turning it over much too often. Winner: Miami
BAL @ IND: The Baltimore Ravens’ defense has put up great stats, but they have yet to play a premiere offense. Indy’s defense has been nothing to speak of, and as a team, Indy’s been outscored by 11 points so far this year. Still, with Indianapolis, it is going to be a constant progression as they get guys back and Peyton Manning returns to form. Winner: Indianapolis
DET @ MIN: Detroit is hapless, helpless, and however else you could describe this miserable team. They’ve fallen pretty hard since posting a 6-2 mark at the ’07 season’s midway point. Hopefully the fans will have something to root for in a couple years. Winner: Minnesota
OAK @ NO: Why does this game have some serious upset potential? Well, when you have a Saints team that gives the opposing team opportunities via turnovers, losing to a hungry Raiders team that has been pretty sure with the football in relying heavily on a power running game, certainly becomes a possibility. Winner: Oakland CIN @ NYJ: If Carson Palmer were in for this one, and if Ocho wasn’t making a fool of himself, Cincinatti would have a good shot at an upset. It just ain’t in the cards. Winner: New York
CAR @ TB: Carolina is the more well balanced team, and their solid pass defense takes on a bit of a sloppy passing attack at Tampa Bay. Winner: Carolina
STL @ WAS: Two teams in the league have turned the ball over just once so far this year. Those two teams? The New York Giants and the Washington Redskins. Bad news for St. Louis fans, who have already gotten a taste of one of those squads. Winner: Washington
JAC @ DEN: Still not sold on Denver, a team giving up 388 yards per game on defense. Jaguars pull out a win, getting back to some of the football efficiency they were utilizing last year. Winner: Jacksonville
DAL @ ARI: So, some are just now realizing what anyone with half a brain could tell you before the season started: Dallas is a good football team, but their roster is not super-human. Still, they have talent and this is one that they’ll win via the ground game. Winner: Dallas
PHI @ SF: Donovan McNabb has called out himself and his teammates. I like the move, because this is a team that needs to get fired up if they want to hang in the East. Winner: Philadelphia GB @ SEA: Green Bay hasn’t been playing football near the level they were at last year, and a lot of that’s not on Aaron Rodgers. Seattle is awful though. Winner: Green Bay
NE @ SD: San Diego was caught off-guard by a team in Miami that will prove to be a good one, over the course of the year. Their defense needs to get back to its opportunistic old self, and they need to frustrate Cassel to win this one, which I think they can do. Winner: San Diego NYG @ CLE: On paper in the preseason, this looked like a premiere matchup. The Giants beat up the Browns starters in the preseason in a fashion that haunts players, and the Browns have completely fallen out of the conversation of decent teams since then. Winner: New Jersey
What to predict, what to predict? Let's take a look at some teams listed as viable Super Bowl contenders this year:
Colts: 1-2 Jaguars: 2-2 Patriots: 2-1 (and very misleading, at that) Chargers: 2-2 Vikings: 1-3 (though I never considered them a genuine Super Bowl team, the hype was certainly there)
Now, we all could imagine that some of the teams on this list would have come across some difficulties at this point in the season, but I don't think anybody imagined they all would. The AFC is wide open, and that's a preliminary to one of my picks. I'm not crazy, I swear to you. TEN @ BAL: Tennessee hasn’t beaten any great teams yet, but Baltimore doesn’t fall into the “great team” category anyhow. Tennessee has the stingier defense and a veteran at quarterback. Upset special for Baltimore? I can’t call it. Winner: Tennessee
KC @ CAR: Kansas City didn’t so much prove that they are decent football team as much as they merely highlighted just how bad Denver is on the defensive side on the ball. They won’t run all day on Carolina, and Carolina gets a sure win at home. Winner: Carolina
CHI @ DET: Detroit finally ousted Millen. Detroit is still the same Detroit we know and love, and the same Detroit that Detroit fans find painful to watch. Winner: Chicago
ATL @ GB: Aaron Rodgers doesn’t need to be Brett Favre. He’s known that for years as Favre’s backup, and with an organization that showed some guts in supporting him, he won’t forget it this week. It’s unrealistic. One thing I admire about Rodgers is that he looks like a guy who’s learned from a great quarterback and is trying to make a mark as a great quarterback in his own right, as opposed to trying to be the guy that he studied under. Rodgers will be ready to go if he plays on Sunday. Winner: Green Bay IND @ HOU: Indianapolis has been ####ed up. With the bye week, they are still hurting. They’ll be alright though. They have time to heal before playing Tennessee, and they’ll take this one from Houston. Peyton Manning will have a level-head, and for football fans, it’s going to be exciting to watch Peyton Manning grind out Ws. Winner: Indianopolis
SD @ MIA: In a recent blog post, I projected Miami sneaking into the playoffs this year on a wildcard spot in a shaky AFC. That starts here with a huge upset over San Diego. Granted, I think the Chargers are still looking damn good to take the conference this year with the way things have been going in the AFC, I still think this Miami team has upset potential. They don’t turn the ball over, and their one-two in the backfield is going to be rough on the Chargers. Winner: Miami
SEA @ NYG: Having the Bengals at home was a trap game, and as a Giants fan, it wasn’t the kind of thriller you like to see your team take part in. However, a “W” is a “W”, and the trap-game has come and gone. Or has it? The Giants are notoriously bad after the bye. Plaxico has been benched. However, I think the young guys will pick up the slack very nicely, seizing one of the few opportunities to be the go-to receivers they will have this year. The Giants have to pick up a win following a bye at some point or another, don’t they? Winner: New Jersey
WAS @ PHI: Philly is a physical team, and they are at home. But the Redskins have some confidence, and they’ll ride it out into this week over an Eagles team that has their greatest component on offense listed as questionable. This will put Philly in a tough spot if they lose, and Washington will be getting the Super Bowl hype when they win. Winner: Washington
TB @ DEN: Explosive offense, or great defense? I’ll take the great defense sir, and can I get a little “your offense couldn’t outscore the Kansas City Chiefs” on the side? Thank you. Have a good one. Winner: Tampa Bay
BUF @ ARI: Buffalo hasn’t gotten much credit at 4-0, and no, maybe they don’t deserve it. But take a look around the AFC and tell me who has lived up to the expectations? The Bills will be listed as a weak 5-0, but that’s still just two wins short of the total they accounted for last season in a 5 games as opposed to 16. Winner: Buffalo
CIN @ DAL: You know, Dallas has the talent, but I just think they are poised to fall apart against the Bengals. Oh, I couldn’t resist that. In all seriousness, Cincinatti without Carson Palmer means that the “any given Sunday” rule does not even apply. Winner: Dallas
NE @ SF: The Gold Rush is back! The Gold Rush is back! The Gold Rush is back! The problem is that New England is going to loot the 49ers down to their last peso. Winner: New England
PIT @ JAC: Pittsburgh is ####ed up. Jacksonville isn’t 100% either though, and Pittsburgh’s defense is still a rough unit. I’m going to bank on the fact that Jacksonville, while they will generate pressure, it won’t be enough to put Big Ben out of the game like the Eagles had. Winner: Pittsburgh
MIN @ NO: The Saints offense is starting to get some momentum going, and Minnesota has been dealt a tough slate and now finds themselves at 1-3. I’m going to pick against the Vikings in spite, seeing as in the preseason, they rivaled the Saints of ’07 with all of the Super Bowl hype surrounding what was in reality a .500 team. And to be honest, I just can’t stand that. Winner: Saints
Twelve teams make the playoffs in this league. That being said, these
rankings will feature six teams from each conference. No more. No less.
Your team may be a top 12 team in theory, but when push comes to shove,
only 12 teams make the playoffs. As they stack up right now, the only
teams that have proven anything remain in the NFC East. Bias? I guess
one could call it that, but the top two teams in the AFC just haven't
beaten anybody, and the rest of the conference is off to a pretty sorry
start, considering where they were just a year ago.
1. New York Giants (NFC East division title):
The defending Super Bowl champions are in first place in hands down the
best division of football. Granted, any team in the NFC East could take
the division, but right now, with Dallas hitting a snag, the Giants are
undeniably the team to beat. If I sound biased, I really could care
less. With what we've seen in the NFL this year, the Giants deserve the
#1 spot, especially after a Cowboys loss. Granted, it was week 1 and
this Redskins team has gotten better, but the Giants kept Washington
out of that game altogether, and the Redskins are proving they are a
talented football team. The defending champs are consistent on both
sides of the ball, ranked 4th in both total offense and total defense,
as well as tied for 2nd in the league in points allowed at 14.3 per
game.
2. Washington Redskins (Wildcard): The Washington
Redskins are doing what everybody is marveling at the Titans for doing,
only they are playing ball-control football against better teams.
That's exactly why I had the Redskins picked for an upset in Dallas.
Both the Titans and the 'Skins share the league lead with a +6 turnover
differential. However, the Redskins have proven they can control the
ball against a talented cowboys team, holding onto the ball for over 38
minutes in that game. That's the kind of play that brings home
championships.
3. Dallas Cowboys (Wildcard): The
biggest cause for concern for the Cowboys is what makes the Washington
Redskins a tough football team. Ball control. They have a big-play
offense, and the kind of offense that is liable to score on an opposing
defense every time it takes the field. That's all fine and good, but
twice this year Dallas has had problems in the time of possession
battle. Against the Eagles, they were dominated in that regard into the
third quarter of play. The Redskins dominated that battle throughout.
The Dallas defense is solid, but when put out on the field for twice as
long as the offense, they are put into a bad situation. That will wear
on this defense and the unit may have problems late in the season if
the Dallas offense doesn't manage the clock better.
4. Buffalo Bills (AFC East division title):
Sure, Titans fans probably aren't too happy to see their team not in
the top two, let alone fall behind the Bills. At the very least, the
opponents the Bills have beaten combine for a total of 4-11, which is
one game ahead of those that Tennessee has beaten. Their defense is
playing well, and their offense is far more explosive than that of
Tennessee. If you're looking for a the overlooked mark the Bills have
made through the first four that resembles that of a championship
squad, look no further than their defense's ability to come up with the
stop on third down, with a league leading 19.2%. Granted, this will
probably change once they encounter better opponents, but even to force
weaker teams punt more than four out of five times is damn good.
5. Tennessee Titans (AFC South Division title):
The Titans have yet to beat a legitimate opponent this year, so I'm
sorry I'm not sorry for ranking them this low, considering their four
opponents have a combined record of 3-12. How this fact has completely
escaped the minds of fans and analysts alike is beyond me. They are
ranked a whopping 22nd in the league in offense. Now, that being said,
I've always said the Titans were a good team, and they are playing good
football. They just haven't done anything great yet this year, and a
division that was supposed to be the AFC counterpart to the NFC East is
a whopping 3-7 outside of Tennessee, while the East is 8-4 outside of
the front-running New York Giants.
Plenty of people will draw
comparisons between the Titans and championship teams. The
difference-maker is that championship teams do what the Titans are
doing now to good football teams. I'll believe in the Titans when they
grind one out against a team with a winning record.
6. Carolina Panthers (NFC South division title): The Panthers have
played well, and winning the first two without Steve Smith was solid.
They get the one-up over the Bucs here because they don't turn the ball
over so much on offense, even though the Buc's defensive play has made
up for that. Still, at 3-1, the Panthers only have outscored opponents
by a total of 10 points. What to make of that? Well, they have some
resolve, that's for sure. Two wins decided by a field goal or less came
against good teams in the Chargers and Bears, without Steve Smith. The
loss to the Vikings will go overlooked, for now.
7. Pittsburgh Steelers (AFC North division winner): Yes, the
offense has taken a couple of more hits and losing a starting guard is
no joke for a line that has already been looking poor. Still, the
Steelers defense is one that will win games for them. Surprisingly
enough, they are behind only the Redskins and Titans in the turnover
differential column, and that's a credit to Big Ben just as much as it
is this defense. Despite taking an absolute beating, Roethlisberger has
kept a good handle on the ball.They will grind out wins, and with
Cleveland looking in poor shape this year, it will be another division
title for Pittsburgh.
8. San Diego Chargers (AFC West division title): San Diego Super
Chargers? I'm Ron Burgundy? Well, San Diego came back and beat the
Raiders to avoid a 1-3 start. Granted, they haven't been playing great
football, but for this team, it was merely the "W" they needed. Much
like the Colts need to do in this week upcoming, the Chargers bought
some time to get back into a groove. They will, and fortunately for
them, the Broncos don't have the defense to make a run at the division
crown.
9. Green Bay Packers (NFC North division winner):
Aaron Rodgers is currently being limited to handoffs in practice, but
it looks as though he is going to start against the Falcons. It was a
toss-up between Da Bears and the Pack, but I just can't bank on Kyle
Orton to play decent enough week in and week out. We won't have an idea
until week 11, and that's one to mark on the calender. The Packers got
the guns on offense. Da Bears have the defense. Sure, defense wins
championships, but nobody ever said offense couldn't get you there. The
Packers defense will settle down and get back to their '07 form, giving
them the edge.
10. Indianapolis Colts (Wildcard): The
Colts are off to a shaky start and are being dragged down by injuries.
They needed that bye week, and all they need to do this week is stay
healthy against the Texans and come away with the "W". This is not a
statement game for the Colts. They've got three games upcoming before
they take on the Titans, and I can certainly see them coming away with
two of those to pull to .500. They ought to be quite a bit healthier
when they take on the Titans, which will make for an exciting game. The
Colts will heal up, and much like the 2006 regular season which ended
with a Super Bowl victory, the Colts will be dangerous come playoff
time. Perhaps it's even better for this team to not have a chance to
rest in the last week of the season, as it surely didn't help them in
'07.
11. Arizona Cardinals (NFC West division title): Arizona was
brought down to earth in these past couple of weeks, and if I didn't
have a crazy wildcard selection to throw at you, they would be in the
twelve spot. The Arizona Cardinals are going to be that one team that
keeps the fans guessing, "Is there really going to be a 7-9 team in the
playoffs this year?" Brought back down to earth via the Redskins and
Jets, this Cardinals team will win in the same fashion many thought the
Seahawks would earn a playoff berth: keeping their head above water in
a very weak division. Good news for the Cardinals though: the Gold Rush
is not in fact back, the Seahawks are sending Holmgren off in dramatic
fashion, and the Rams are making a case for the #1 draft selection.
12. Miami Dolphins (Wildcard): Call
me crazy. Say it again. I'll take two for this one, but in a weak
division and conference this year, the Dolphins have the guns to grab
that last spot. I just said the Dolphins have the guns to grab that
last spot. I did. I said it, and I will take all accountability for
saying it. However, seeing as turnovers are the theme of the day, let's
throw a number out there: 1. Just one turnover by this Dolphins team
this year, and that single turnover was a Pennington interception in
the final second of the Dolphins/Jets contest in a situation in which
he had to force a pass. But that's not the whole story here.
The
one-two punch of Brown/Williams finally got going in full effect last
week. With Pennington being the "underrated game manager" that he is,
and I wholeheartedly agree with the SRMgenius when he says that, this
offense has the pieces to be real good. The defense is young, but not
terrible. They will make progress. Most importantly, it's a Bill
Parcells team, and everybody knows that he can turn around the league's
worst faster than anybody.
An upset over San Diego in week 5
is a viable possibility, especially with the coaching staff's apparent
willingness to get creative with the play-calling. The Dolphins went up
against a very good receiving core (even without Brady, a tough unit to
cover) against New England, and had the bye week to serve as additional
preparation. One can imagine that they will throw something interesting
out there. A win over San Diego would set the tone for the rest of the
season, and would put the Dolphins right there in the mix.
Dark horses:
Philadelphia Eagles: Shame to call this team a dark horse, but right now they seem to be falling back to Philly's old bad habits. They could easily make the top ten on the rankings here, and they could very well make the playoffs with a wildcard berth. With every single game in this NFC East being so critical though, Philly has to be able to close out games. They haven't done that in two big games this year.
Denver Broncos: I'm sorry, but a team that is all offense and absolutely no defense is hard to consider a playoff team, especially if dropping a game to the Kansas City Chiefs is any indication. Definitely got some firepower and could very well pull it together, but I do think this team is poised for an average season, and not a whole lot more.
Who would've thought that out of the six teams heading into a bye this week (keeping in mind that four of those teams combined for three division titles, two conference championships, 49 regular season wins, and a Lombardi trophy), a mere 8-10 record would have been produced three weeks into the season between the lot of them? That's an abomination considering the accomplishments listed above. The Colts are 1-2. Seattle is 1-2. They are both currently tied with Miami, who by the way just humbled the Patriots to make the defending AFC champs look very soft at 2-1. The only one of these four '07 playoff teams that is showing any semblance of where they left off last year is the New York Giants. Let's get started:
New York Giants: Not a whole that I'm going to say here. The Giants are 3-0, off to their best start since their third trip to the Super Bowl coming off of the 2000 season. It's hard to believe that the Giants couldn't manage a 3-0 start in any of the following seven seasons, which included four playoff appearances, one division title, and a league championship. Let's keep in mind that the 2000 roster was headed by Kerry Collins, a Michael Strahan in his 20s, Jason Sehorn, and an emerging Tiki Barber. So, while drawing comparisons between the two teams and Giant teams of the past is nice, they don't provide much in terms of substance.
That being said, the tests still lie ahead for the Giants. They get Philly, Pittsburgh, and Dallas consecutively in the coming weeks. And while they are playing Seattle following the bye week, the Giants are historically bad coming out of the bye. And of course, Plaxico Burress has been benched for that game. Fortunately for the G-men, Seattle's lone win has come against the St. Louis Rams.
New England Patriots: Every single team in the league right now has to be fired up to go and play a game in Gillette Stadium after watching the Pats and more importantly, Bill Belichick, shovel down a huge slice of humble pie courtesy of a team that had lost 17 of its last 18 heading into that game. I can't believe that I almost forgot that karma has a tendency to hit in threes. The Super Bowl loss despite being heralded as the best team in the history of the NFL, 18-0, and double-digit favorites was the first strike, and damn was that one hell of a blow in itself.
But low and behold, Bill Belichick would underestimate just how much the karma gods appreciate class in football, and just how much they dislike teams that go for it on fourth down with a lead greater than two scores late in the fourth quarter, but do not have the gut to do it against teams that play them well. Just minutes into the season opener in New England, Bill Belichick would lose the one player with whom he has seen all of his success as a head coach in Tom Brady. Then came the loss to Miami, but it was not just a loss. It was a 25 point blowout, and now the Patriots are en route to missing the playoffs. It turns out that the karma gods love the NFL, and Bill Belichick is painfully learning the repercussions of attempting to spite the league with poor sportsmanship.
Indianapolis Colts: Well, Peyton Manning has apparently decided to feel what it's like to be a human being in this world, first requiring knee surgery and not looking his old self upon his return. Well, almost human, considering that his claim to the second longest active starts streak in the NFL is still in place. The Colts are beaten and bruised, and they need this bye week in a bad way. It's easy to forget that a key reason the Colts passing attack has been so potent in previous years is due to the solid running game that supplements it. Addai and Rhodes have been virtually non-existent, and the blocking has just been awful with all of the injuries on the line. Bob Sanders is out again, and the Colts can't win games with a good deal of their talent on the sidelines.
Miami Dolphins: If one 1-2 team looks to be heading in the right direction, it's the Miami Dolphins. They show that they can play some serious ball when they establish a running game. They did that against the Patriots in week three, and with underrated quarterback Chad Pennington taking the snaps, the 'Phins looked really good. How good will they be? Well, with a division whose only legitimate threat is the Buffalo Bills, the Dolphins could sneak up and grab a wildcard spot. Likely? Probably not. But, despite the fact that a large number of analysts ever so desperately want Favre to succeed in 2008, if there is going to be a story of a veteran quarterback making a comeback in the AFC East, it will be Chad Pennington. Don't sleep on the Dolphins in a conference that has suddenly reversed roles with its NFC counterpart, and will certainly have a 9-7 wilcard team or two.
Seattle Seahawks: Things are looking rough on the preseason NFC West favorite. If I recall correctly, Adam Schein wrote an article something to the tune of how tough Seattle was, as a team that gets overlooked. That was the first sign of troubles to come. This team is in rough shape with injuries, with their only win coming against a hapless St. Louis Rams team that got outscored in the previous two weeks by a whopping 79-16. Great news for Seattle, as they play the defending champion Giants coming off of the bye. The NFC West is looking once again like Kurt Warner's house, and the best part about that is that he is an Arizona Cardinal.
Detroit Lions: Detriot is 0-3, so no, no 10 win guarantees being tossed around by Jon Kitna. Jon Kitna played the karma game last year and lost. The 6-2 Giants met the 6-2 Lions in Detroit. The Lions went on to lose that game 16-10, though Jon Kitna was quick to say that the better team had lost the contest. That's a no-no. Michael Strahan's reaction was priceless though, stating that he felt the Lions were the worst 6-2 team he had ever played. Karma smiled upon the 15 year gap-toothed veteran. The Lions won one game over their next seven. The Giants made history.
Matt Millen's gone, but you can almost hear the Sweet Child O' Mine lyrics ringing in the background. "Where do we go now? Ooh, where do we go?". Millen's gone, but Detroit is still Detroit. Detroit fans deserve a little better. As funny as it may be for Detroit to continue as the perennial laughing stock of the NFL, it's time for them to pass the buck.
First off, I would like to address the Monday Night "thriller" between the Cowboys and Eagles. Whoever buys into the idea that the shootout between these two teams was a showcase of talent is out of his mind. Alex Marvez calls Tony Romo's play heroic, and I'm thinking that he watched a different game. Tony Romo cost his team big on that endzone fumble, and when he had a chance to put the game away, he went three and out. Donovan McNabb simply wanted the game less, fumbling it twice on handoffs and running around like an #### and not making a play when afforded all of the time in the world. On third and long, a veteran quarterback should know that checking it down is a must. To take a sack there was absolutely horrendous.
Where was that mighty pro-bowl supplemented defense of the Dallas Cowboys last night? The Eagles moved the ball effortlessly. Just the same, while the Eagles did a great job stuffing the run, their secondary got beat on the deep ball too many times. The difference in the game was the awful special teams play of the Eagles, as Felix Jones picked them apart to provide beautiful field position time and time again. Overall, a pretty sloppy game, and these two teams better pick up their play or they will lose this week to two very hot teams in Green Bay and Pittsburgh.
KC 10 @ ATL 21: Atlanta will work off a Michael Turner to beat a weak Kansas City team and jump to a misleading 2-1 start.
OAK 7@ BUF 24: Buffalo is looking more and more like the team to beat in the AFC East. The Patriots/Jets game indicated that the Jets just aren't a playoff caliber team. Buffalo is looking like the only real threat out of a sorry division, but that is not to take any credit away from them. Buffalo is 2-0 against '07 playoff squads, a mere two weeks into the season.
CAR 27 @ MIN 17: Carolina has gotten back to their playoff-caliber form, but let's not write off the Vikings just yet. EDIT: Let's in fact write off the Vikings. Gus under center is worse than Jackson under center, and even if he plays well this week (which I wouldn't bank on), he'll fall apart sooner than later. This is a must win for the Vikings, and the coaching staff has decided that they must lose.
ARI 24 @ WAS 28: This Washington picked up some confidence last week, and while Kurt Warner has looked brilliant, his near-perfect game did come against the Miami Dolphins. The 'Skins take this one.
TB 14 @ CHI 20: The Bears showed last week that their win against the Colts was no fluke. Their defense is looking like more than Tampa can handle at the moment. Da Bears.
HOU 14 @ TEN 24: Tennessee will move to 3-0 with Collins under center. Collins can win games, and he looked pretty damn impressive in week two.
MIA 14 @ NE 17: If Miami can finally get their ground game going, it will be a close game. I expect them too, but Matt Cassel will still be a headline next week, with a miraculous 2-0 record as a starting quarterback.
CIN 10 @ NYG 31: The defending Super Bowl champions continue to sharpen their game against inferior opponents, such as the hapless Bengals.
NO 20 @ DEN 28: Denver is the more complete team. Sure, they may have been put into position to win by a bogus call, but they still had to take advantage and execute. I like the call by Shanahan. It was a gutsy move to go for the conversion, and that will pay dividends for him and his team's confidence.
STL 17 @ SEA 28: I cannot decide who is a bigger disappointment between the Rams and the 'Hawks, even though Seattle has the upper hand in this one. The Rams just look embarrassed, and Scott Linehan looks like a joke out there on the sideline. The Seahawks are looking like this year's first legitimate pretender, and the NFC West is no longer soft enough for them to slip into the playoffs.
DET 17 @ SF 24: Detroit is looking a lot like Detroit, and San Fransisco will come out on top in this one. No need for a lengthy explanation regarding why the Detroit Lions are just awful year after year. Though to me, it's more entertaining to have a team like the Lions to depend on to be a sub .500 squad every year. It gives you something to talk about during the week. "Hey Al, what happened to your team on Sunday? Lost to the Detroit Lions, and you said they were going places. Chuckle, chuckle."
JAC 13 @ IND 17: Indy is simply looking like they may have gotten it together, and Jacksonville, while still a good football team, looks like they haven't. Indy keeps within a game of the Titans at week three's conclusion.
CLE 21 @ BAL 20: Cleveland's been a disappointment this year, and injuries are only hurting an already shoddy defense, but they have enough firepower to beat out the Ravens, at the very least.
PIT 27 @ PHI 28: This is going to be a hell o####ame. I'm going back and forth on this one as I write this, but I'm going to have to give it to Philly in Philly. DAL 20 @ GB 31: I'm doing the unthinkable. That is, I'm putting the Cowboys down two scores to the Aaron Rodgers led Green Bay Packers. Who was it that gave the Pack a fighting chance with brilliant play when Brett "The Media's Beloved Jet" Favre was playing pretty damn poorly in the regular season against the Cowboys? Aaron Rodgers. The young quarterback is the real deal, and he faces an overrated defense on Sunday. Wade Phillips is a disgusting excuse for a head coach there in Dallas, judging by his reported comments at halftime and his refusal to acknowledge that the Eagles' offense moved the ball well against his defense ("well" is an understatement).
The NFC East loses it's first game to a non-division opponent, finishing week 3 at 9-3 collectively, and 7-1 against non-division opponents.
NYJ 14 @ SD 35: The San Diego Chargers are coming out fired up and will take out plenty of that aggression on an overrated Jets team. I'm kicking myself for picking the Jets last week, as my initial thoughts this season seemed to be a bit more accurate: the Jets and their savior are overrated. San Diego, after giving the fans a gut-wrenching first two weeks against teams that should not have taken them down to the wire let along beat them, finally gives them reason to cheer.
After a crazy week in the NFL and a dismal week in regards to my picks, I'm looking for a much more sound week. While I did throw down one too many upset specials (by that, I'm referring to my picking of Cleveland over Dallas), the two other teams I picked to upset brought the game down to the final drive, threatening not only in their respective opponent's territory, but threatening with do or die circumstances. Those two teams would be the Dolphins and the Bucs. There were definitely a few games this week that were beyond predictable. The Colts lose at home to the Chicago Bears? The Chargers fall short to the Panthers? And while Buffalo was a reasonable pick to win, I don't think anybody could foresee them putting the lights out on the Seahawks.
One pick I did have going for me was the Green Bay Packers winning at home. Rodgers played just as well as he did at Dallas last year. That was not an upset, but merely just bringing the Minnesota Vikings back down to earth. I will reiterate. The Vikings are reminiscent to the Saints of '07: overhyped and overrated.
This is how the NFL is shaping up for week two:
TEN 20 @ CIN 10: Tennessee is minus Young, but that matters not. Kerry Collins is still a solid QB who can step in and win games. And well, Cincy was looking bad heading into week one, and now they just look awful.
BUF 24 @ JAC 27: One of the tougher games to call, but I'm going with Jacksonville at home over the upstart Bills. The Bills are exciting, but they played a soft-looking Seahawks team. Jacksonville bounces back in a close one. NO 28 @ WAS 17: The Redskins will take a few weeks before anybody gets a read on what will become of them this year. With the way Jim Zorn ran his two minute offense without that critical hurry-up aspect, don't expect a whole lot.
NYG 27 @ STL 7: In reference to a post I made a few weeks ago, the Giants looked very much like the NFL's Joe Frazier in the opener. They didn't continue to batter the Redskins offensively in the second half, but the defense held on eight of eleven in third down situations and looked strong throughout. Expect much of the same this week in a thoroughly one-sided Giants' victory.
GB 35 @ DET 14: The Aaron Rodgers led Green Bay Packers continue to roll.
CHI 14 @ CAR 24: I'm not hopping on the Bears' bandwagon, but Carolina looks to be tough this year, and they will win by two scores. IND 31 @ MIN 17: Indy, despite a poor week one performance, lays it to the Vikings, who unexpectedly start the season two games behind Green Bay after just two weeks.
OAK 14 @ KC 20: A battle between two pretty bad teams, and Oakland is the worse of the two.
ATL 17 @ TB 20: Michael Turner was signed to be the spark plug in this Atlanta offense, and he will make the game interesting. However, the Bucs are the better team all around, and they will bounce back this week.
SF 21 @ SEA 27: Wow. A week ago I wouldn't have imagined this one as a tough pick. Seattle at home, but not by much.
BAL 10 @ HOU 20: Rookie quarterbacks have their ups and downs, and the Texans will be looking to bounce back from the spanking they took last week. Texans even out against the Ravens, and Joe Flacco will get a taste a Mario Williams.
MIA 21 @ ARI 14: Call me crazy but I like what I saw from the Dolphins a week ago (minus the lack of a running game). They had a shot to win the game on the final drive, and that in itself is a good sign. Ricky Williams and Ronnie Brown will show up big this week, and Pennington will manage a Dolphins victory.
SD 28 @ DEN24: The Chargers lost on the final play to what looks to be a very competent Panthers squad. Denver went out and beat the Raiders senseless, but they are the Oakland Raiders and still a miserable team at that. Still, a good, close game in a Chargers win.
NE 10 @ NYJ 17: The experts are saying not to write the Patriots off, and that makes guys like me look more like an expert every day. As in the preseason, New England just looks like they do not want to be their without Brady on the field. Cassel will soon follow suit once he begins to play decent NFL teams. PIT 28 @ CLE 27: I'm not sure that will be the actual score, but I'm lending emphasis to how close this game will be. Pittsburgh looked great last week and Cleveland looked awful. But in this rivalry, the games will be exciting and down to the wire, and they will still usually end with a Pittsburgh victory.
PHI 24 @ DAL 21: Hands down, the game of the week. I referred to the Giants/Dallas rivalry in another post as similar to that of Ali and Frazier. Philadelphia looks to be emerging as this year's George Foreman in that context, but there will be no rope-a-dope coming from Dallas. Philly wins in Philly fashion, with Donovan McNabb and Westbrook leading the offense and Jim Johnson masterminding this defense. Johnson's disciple Steve Spagnuolo ended the Cowboys' Super Bowl hopes this year, and the guru will pick up where his protege left off.
Seeing as we have more "weekly predictions" posts than anyone could care to count, perhaps we can organize a community based league to compare records for the purpose of bragging rights. We can also get discussions more centralized to keep a broader range of opinions in one place. If anybody is interested, just say so and post your week one winners, so we can get this going before the game on Thursday. All participants must submit this weeks' picks by 4:00 pm EST on Thursday.
Let's kick it off. I will throw an upset special or two into the mix
here, and I look forward to any thoughts an opinions anyone might be
willing to share.
Crack open a cold one, 'coz it's football season, baby.
WAS 14 @ NYG 31: Giants by seventeen here, as the offense will
roll and the defense will look good. The Redskins haven't looked too
solid. If Jason Taylor does not play, the 'Skins D will have a
difficult task ahead of them.
DET 27 @ ATL 13: Detroit will win and Jon Kitna may feel good
enough about it to promise a Super Bowl. But everyone else will know
that the Atlanta Falcons are the Atlanta Falcons, Jon Kitna is Jon
Kitna, and the Lions are still a .500 team at best.
CIN 14 @ BAL 10: Cincy has a receiver to cover for a hurt Chad
Ocho Cinco, but may struggle in the running game. Still, the Ravens have no quarterback. Joe Flacco, did it really come to you already?
SEA 24 @ BUF 20: Seattle is not as tough as they are thought to
be, and the impression of a team that barely edged the Redskins in the
playoffs last year before getting walloped by the Packers remains. They
will still edge the Bills in this one.
NYJ 14@ MIA 17: Everybody will be looking to see Favre light it
up, and while that may happen, I have a feeling Pennington will be the
story of the week after upsetting his former team. He's about as tough
as they come and has more talent (but lacked blocking) than most would
care to realize.
KC 13 @ NE 28: Just because the entire New England team as a
whole looks as though they don't even want to be out there on the
field, my gut tells me to pick against them purely on principle.
Against any halfway decent team, I would. But NE is lucky to have KC as
a get-it-together game. That could still go both ways heading into week
two though, as getting back into the habit of going for it on fourth
downs will hurt them.
TB 28 @ NO 20: Tampa Bay, the more well-rounded team will win
this one. Looking at players who want it bad, one might be inclined to
focus on Shockey. But the moment things don't go Shockey's way, he
forgets how to be a teammate and how to just shut up and play his role.
On the other hand, we have Jeff Garcia, who just a few weeks ago was
more or less told by his organization that he would be Favre's backup.
Garcia is an average quarterback, but he can get fired up and playing
well. With something to prove, Garcia will have a big game.
STL 10 @ PHI 17: Philly has looked good lately, and they will
start the season on a good note against the Rams. The game will be a
lot more one-sided than the final score will suggest.
HOU 14 @ PIT 20: Pittsburgh at home. Pittsburgh at home. The Steelers have tough schedule, but this is a game they will win.
JAC 28 @ TEN 17: Jacksonville is a tough team and can move the
ball on offense, and I don't think Vince Young will be able to exploit
their secondary.
DAL 31 @ CLE 35: Upset special. The Cowboys will be brought down
to earth in week one, losing an offensive shootout with the Browns. The
Browns didn't look great in the preseason, but they are more liable to
show up determined to pull the upset, and they have the guns on offense
to do it.
CAR 17 @ SD 24: San Diego, and it will be their playmakers on
defense that make the difference. Phillip Rivers may struggle a bit,
especially with the impending comeback of Julius Peppers, but he has an
MVP in the backfield to bail him out.
ARI 20 @ SF 10: 'Zona, with Kurt Warner at the helm.
CHI 6 @ IND 24: Not even a question, as the Bears are a team
that have no upset potential in them. They are a mess, two years
removed from the Super Bowl, playing the very team that beat them up
pretty good.
MIN 14 @ GB 20: Minnesota are similar to the Saints of '07:
overhyped and overrated. Green Bay, a very talented team before even
considering the quarterback position, is underrated. Rodgers is the
right guy for them to have, as he is young enough to withstand the
temperatures at Lambeau in January, something Favre apparently could
not do.
DEN 21 @ OAK 7: The Raiders still aren't close yet. Another year of growing pains for Oakland fans.
Is it me, or does it seem that the NFL as a whole is more exciting to watch than in recent years? Sure, the regular season has yet to get underway, but it seems that we have more potential Super Bowl contenders and teams on the rise than we could care to count right now. Hell, even the preseason has been entertaining, and as a football fan, I feel as though there may not be a better time to be one. And while the Favre drama may have been a bit overdone during the offseason and into training camp, for a die-hard, it certainly took some of the pain away from not being able to catch a game of football at least twice a week.
Starting with the comparisons between the AFC and NFC, in recent years, the AFC has been unquestionably the better conference. The Patriots and the Colts had been considered a league of their own, and many went as far to say that their classic AFC championship game match-ups may very well have been the real "Super Bowl". Even right up until Super Bowl XLII had reached it's conclusion, the expectations of the NFC representative were limited.
Even before the Giants had made their postseason run, it seemed as though the so-called experts were merely picking which NFC team would make the game the most interesting, as the Patriots capped off their glorious 19-0 run that was never to be. Some favored Dallas, whose offense could at the very least make the game a high scoring affair. Others seemed to favor Green Bay for the irresistible headline Brady versus the Old Gunslinger Brett Favre would provide. But not many thought the JV team, whoever it may be, would pull through. The NFC is inferior. Let's go ahead and reformat the playoffs so that perhaps the Colts and Patriots can play each other in the Super Bowl. When the Giants had made their claim to be the NFC's representative, it was almost hysterical to the analysts. The predictions were ludicrous and nearly all of them had the Giants being blown out of the water, and this was a team that had played well against the Patriots in the regular season.
The AFC still may have more contenders, but the NFC has certainly made up quite a bit of ground. The rivalry between the New York Giants and the Dallas Cowboys has always been intense, but now these two teams have proven to possess the amount of talent that when pitted against one another, football fans are in for a championship-caliber bout that matches a showdown between the Patriots and Colts. The NFC East as a whole is now right on par, if not half a step ahead of the AFC South in the debate over football's toughest division. The NFC is clearly catching up, and the remarkable thing about that is, the AFC hasn't gotten any worse.
Looking at the quarterbacks representing teams in each respective conference, the NFC has generally been overshadowed by Tom Brady and Peyton Manning. In fact, the entire league has been out of the conversation when it comes to these two future Hall of Famers. Now, Tony Romo has emerged as a top-flight quarterback. Eli Manning has come into his own and made some brilliant plays down the stretch during the Giants' Super Bowl run. Drew Brees generally puts up big numbers, and if the Saints can get back to winning football games, he will certainly be back on the radar. Even the near-forgotten Donovan McNabb is poised to have a big year, and there remains to be mentioned a few others that could certainly make things interesting in the NFC with a big year, such as Jason Campbell, Matt Hasselback, and Jeff Garcia.
In the AFC, David Garrard has emerged as one who doesn't turn the ball over often and can scramble to make big plays. Derek Anderson came out of nowhere to lead the Browns just shy of a playoff berth, and Big Ben Roethlisberger knows how to win games. Jay Cutler and Philip Rivers certainly have the potential to be top quarterbacks in this league. And let's not forget about Favre, who at 38, seems more and more like a kid every day. What's not to like about the way the 2008 season is shaping up?
Football fans can witness several great match-ups on prime time:
Week 1: Giants at Redskins on Thursday Night, Vikings at Packers on Monday Night Week 2: Steelers at Browns on Sunday Night, Eagles at Cowboys on Monday Night Week 3: Cowboys at Packers on Sunday Night, Jets at Chargers on Monday Night Week 5: Steelers at Jaguars on Sunday Night, Vikings at Saints on Monday Night Week 6: Patriots at Chargers on Sunday Night, Giants at Browns on Monday Night Week 7: Seahawks at Buccaneers on Sunday Night Week 8: Colts at Titans on Monday Night Week 9: Patriots at Colts on Sunday Night Week 10: Giants at Eagles on Sunday Night Week 11: Jets at Patriots on Thursday Night, Cowboys at Redskins on Sunday Night, Browns at Bills on Monday Night Week 12: Colts at Chargers on Sunday Night Week 13: Seahawks at Dallas on Thursday (Thanksgiving) Week 14: Patriots at Seahawks on Sunday Night Week 15: Giants at Cowboys on Sunday Night, Browns at Eagles on Monday Night Week 16: Jaguars at Colts on Thursday Night, Chargers at Buccaneers on Sunday Night, Packers at Bears on Monday Night
That is a lineup loaded with great games on paper. Fifteen games in sixteen weeks feature match-ups between '07 playoff teams on prime time. Several other match-ups include teams favored to make a serious run at the playoffs this year. In my humble opinion this is as good as it gets for NFL football. The year is 2008, and it is a great time to be a fan.
Writing off a Super Bowl champion team is nothing new. Just a year ago, the idea of the Colts, a young team loaded with talent and also led by a future Hall of Famer behind center, was buried by the hype surrounding the Patriots' off-season moves. While I did not agree with it at the time, the hype was in some ways justified by a historical, record-setting season. However, the Colts proved to be on the same level as the Pats last season, and we saw that it was not just on paper during a regular season match-up in which the Colts stacked up well against New England without Marvin Harrison. Clearly, both teams finished on the same page. Any one of the thirty-one teams that fall into the broad spectrum of varying degrees of talent that are also not defending Super Bowl Champions begin the season on the same plane.
For any team to win a Super Bowl, all of the right elements must fall into place. That much is a given. Even as superb a regular season as anyone can have does not translate into a successful one. Any member of the Patriots' '07 roster can attest to that. That being said, there are a small handful of teams that have the talent to make a serious run at the Lombardi trophy this year. The Giants are one of them. And while winning one Super Bowl is a daunting task in itself, the Giants certainly have the talent to make it to Tampa this year, barring any unforeseen circumstances that generally cause the training camp favorites to miss.
To begin the defense and the loss of the future Hall of Fame defensive end, Michael Strahan, is the basis of most arguments against the Giants' shot at any kind of success, as many would argue that the team is not capable of winning the NFC East. Yes, the gap-toothed wonder will surely be missed out there, and the Giants' would unquestionably be a better unit with Strahan, despite his age. Depth at linebacker is certainly one of the team's largest concerns, and Gibril Wilson is a hard-hitting young safety who is really starting to develop. Still, the Giants' defensive unit will be an improvement on last year's.
The Giants have a young defense that played exceptionally well down the stretch last year. Young players, generally speaking, progress from year to year. Not to mention, this was a defense that went from giving up 80 points in the first two games of the season, to punishing one of the league's best offensive lines for five sacks in the Super Bowl. The reason for this was the progressions the unit made in Steve Spagnuolo's brilliant Jim Johnson-esque scheme. With the core of this defense now having a full season and another off-season to work on mastering their craft, we will see a defense that plays at a high level, consistently. Michael Strahan will surely be missed, but let's not forget that Justin Tuck recorded ten sacks as a backup.
Moving on to the offense, once again, we will see a unit that plays at a high level, much more consistently. However, this will be primarily due to strides Eli Manning has made as a quarterback. Eli Manning, while showing a glimpse of brilliance here and there has been awfully inconsistent throughout his career. However, over the course of his last five games last season, he made his leap into the top tier of quarterbacks in this league by doing something he hadn't done throughout his career: manage games consistently. Looking at the statistics, during this stretch he was 4-1 against opponents who posted a combined regular season record of 67-13 (counting the Pats twice). He threw twelve touchdown passes, while only throwing two interceptions (taking into account the fact that the only pick he threw in the post-season was more or less a ball Steve Smith should have caught, but instead, tossed it to Ellis Hobbes).
During this stretch, he was without Shockey, and while the running game certainly could have used the star tight end's blocking, the Giant's offense will be fine without Shockey this year. Kevin Boss will only get better, and Steve Smith (who missed much of the '07 regular season due to injury) will continue to progress as well. The Giants drafted another potential play maker in Mario Manningham, and Burress is poised to have another big year, especially if he is healthy enough to practice during the season. That being said, look for Eli to put up Peyton-like numbers during the season, and that will largely factor into them having a much better regular season this year as opposed to last. Combined with a powerful running game and a great deal of depth in the backfield, the Giants offense has a considerable amount of talent overall.
In the right frame of mind, the Giants are as dangerous as a team can be. While the talk is centered around their NFC East rival in Dallas, the Giants have the talent to match-up well with them every single time they take the field. When the Boys in Blue take the field this season, do not look for the team that went 10-6 during the regular season, posting a lowly 3-5 record at home. They probably will not show up. However, it would not be surprising to see something along the lines of the Giants team that went 4-1 over that five game stretch, taking the field week in and week out.
As for the Cowboys and Giants and how their seasons will end, one would be hard-pressed not to believe that either of the two could bring the NFC, a conference mocked as the junior varsity league in recent years, another Lombardi trophy. And until we have crowned this year's Super Bowl champion, whoever it may be, football fans everywhere can expect to witness one of the most exciting season's in recent history.
Power Rankings:
1. Giants (Defending champions with a young team that is only getting better.) 2. Cowboys (With the losses the Patriots have taken and the additions the Cowboys have made, they are a small notch ahead heading into the regular season) 3. Patriots (Much of the defending AFC champion's team returns, and if they can avoid the hangover, they will head into the playoffs with home-field advantage once more) 4. Colts (Has the talent to match any of the top teams in the league, but the question of durability is a big one) 5. Jaguars (A talented team that will be exciting to watch, and should also give the Colts a run for their money in the division) 6. Chargers (The difference in determining whether the Chargers will be good or great this year will rest on the play Philip Rivers.) 7. Steelers (A tough team with a tough schedule. The Steelers may falter at times in the regular season, but come playoff time, they will be battle-tested and as big a threat as anyone). 8. Browns (A young and exciting team that will make the playoffs, but is still half a step back in the AFC) 9. Packers (The NFC's third best team has fallen down the ranks due to the question mark surrounding Aaron Rodgers at quarterback. Still, a talented enough team otherwise on both sides of the ball to compete and make the playoffs.) 10. Eagles (This may in fact be a little bit of a stretch, but I like the Eagles over the Vikings, who have huge question marks in the passing game and pass defense. Asante Samuel to an already solid defense and a healthy McNabb to take some of the pressure off of Westbrook in making plays will make this team a playoff contender in the NFC.)