Belle of the "Ball"
by: tjw118
Giants vs. Texans: A Dog Fight to the Finish
Nov 08, 2006 | 8:04AM | report this

Note: I must apologize to my loyal readers who think I have fallen off the map. I've been bogged down with work and have had little time to put in my two-cents to FoxSports. I am currently enrolled in a sports writing class, so this posting is my first assignment. I know it's a little outdated, but I hope you enjoy! -Belle

     While the final seconds ticked off the clock in Giants Stadium on Sunday, all you could hear was the collective exhale from the crowd. As the 14-10 victory over the Houstan Texans was set in the record books, perhaps it was the team who was most relieved the game was over.

     The New York Giants may be 6-2, but the performance against the Houston Texans (2-6) hardly earned style points or affirmations from the crowd. With a massive match-up against the 7-1 Chicago Bears next week, Giants fans were hoping to see a game that would reassure a victory over the Bears, not a game that proved any team can win on any given Sunday.

     Nobody understands that sentiment better than Chicago. The previously undefeated Bears lost at home to an underwhelming Miami Dolphins team in a game that many expected to be a Chicago blow-out. Instead it was a Chicago bust, setting up a huge match against the Giants to battle for the number one place in the National Football Conference.

     With injuries plaguing the Giants and several key athletes unable to play, the team relied on the veteran performance of the league’s leading rusher, Tiki Barber, who had 15 carries for 115 yards. The Giants took a 7-0 lead in the first quarter, thanks to a 16 yard run in which Barber scampered up the left sideline to the endzone. With Barber, it’s always business as usual. Immediately after his touchdown, he returned to the bench and donned his Giants cap, no smile, no accolades, just a calm look on his face that said “I did my job, now you do yours.”

     Giants quarterback Eli Manning did his job, completing 17 of 28 passes for 179 yards. He had several needle-threading passes to tight-end Jeremy Shockey, including a 25 yard pass near the Houston goal line in the second quarter. That play should have resulted in a touchdown, but thanks to a crushing hit by Houston’s Glenn Earl, the tackle forced the ball loose from Shockey’s hand and the play was ruled incomplete.

     The Glenn Earl hit was illustrative that when a team is struggling the little dog continues to fight, and that’s what Houston did for four quarters. Earl wasn’t the only Texan to deliver bruising blows. First round draft pick Mario Williams managed a sack on Manning in the second quarter and continued his torment of the quarterback for the remainder of the game. With Houston up 10-7 over the hometown team at the start of the fourth quarter, the sleep-walking game quickly turned in to a dog fight.

     The Giants inability to stop third-down conversions helped keep the Texans within striking distance of the upset victory. Thanks to an offensive surge by the Giants that resulted in a 3 yard touchdown pass from Manning to Shockey, the Giants assumed the 14-10 lead with less than eight minutes remaining in regulation. The stagnant Giant defense was jarred awake by the nippy Houston offense, but managed to silence the little dog when Giants linebacker, Gerris Wilkinson, forced a fumble that ended the Texans final march to the endzone. 

     While the little dog may be laughing back to Texas, it was the bigger dog that won the battle and will continue to Chicago. The Giants might have overlooked the Texans, but there is no looking past the Bears.

9 Comments | Add a comment   categories: NFL, New York Giants, Chicago Bears, Houston Texans, Tiki Barber, Eli Manning, Jeremy Shockey, Mario Williams, Glenn Earl
 
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ShooterB
Nov 8, 2006
8:28 AM
The Giants/Bears game should be a good one. The Texans came close to pulling off the upset last week, and the Bears are also coming off an unlikely loss. Being a Philly fan, I can't really root for the Giants...but you know how that goes.

coach Hunter
Nov 8, 2006
8:34 AM
It was a good game. The giants show resillience despite injurys and hung on to win. I give them an A+ in effort an beleivability.

tjw118
Nov 8, 2006
8:41 AM
Thanks for the comment, guys! My question is this: when the NFL is made up of the elite football players, in general, why is any one team bad? If all these guys are getting paid oodles of money to play football (ie: Mario Williams) how can their team be bad? Or is it proof that even in a league of amazing talent, there will always be someone or some team that under performs?

tjw118
Nov 8, 2006
8:51 AM
Secondly, while no game is ever a "sure thing" it seems that the "Any Given Sunday" statement appears to be more true in the NFL verses the NCAA. While upsets in either league are exciting, they appear more frequently in the NFL rather than in college. Also, when it happens in college, it generally is the demise of the team where as in pro football, it seems to have less of an affect on the final outcome. True?

ShooterB
Nov 8, 2006
9:54 AM
There really isn't that many "bad" players in the NFL. To get to the NFL, it does require a minimum amount of talent and skills...which is much more than the average human has.

But also, there is exceptional talent...which is next to impossible to counter (see Peyton Manning, and others). But since the talent level for the league is so high...success can be determined by factors such as: team chemistry, execution, diligent effort, etc.

Many times, a "bad team" is a very talented group that doesn't have chemistry...or doesn't achieve their potential, individually or as a team.

Which is why it's great each & every Sunday. Of course, sometimes Thursday, Saturday, or Monday too. But that doesn't have the same ring to it.

The_Dan
Nov 8, 2006
3:21 PM
Giants v. Bears should be good. Might be the 2 best teams in the NFC right now.

Welcome back tjw. Did you hit the beers too much and the computer keyboard not enough and that's why you've been away for a bit? Cheers.

Dudski
Nov 11, 2006
4:47 PM
You ask an interesting question. Football is still a team sport and finding pieces that fit together AND a coach who can motivate them is probably what separates the better teams. Then, too, there are probably about 20 atheltes in football who are really difference makers and having one of them (say, a Payton Manning) is a very big advantage.


Nov 13, 2006
4:48 AM
Maybe Michigan might be a topic?

This was a from a real blogger.

Incognito.

sportthink
Nov 14, 2006
10:18 AM
I'd like to know more!

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ABOUT ME


tjw118
Who says a theater girl can't love sports? I may be a Northwestern graduate, but I'm an Ohio State Buckeye at heart. Born and raised in Columbus, Ohio, I relocated to New York City to find a life on the stage. After four years of trying, (and finding some success), I am preparing to return to graduate school to pursue journalism. As an NGS II finalist, I got my feet wet as a FoxSports blogger and think it may be my new calling. Like theater, I doubt a job in online journalism will pay very well...but what can you do? I sing, I dance, and I can drink beer and eat chicken wings at a sports bar like the best of them...what more could you ask for?
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