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NFL 2011 season

Started by Alcibiades, April 19, 2011, 07:52:21 PM

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CountDeMoney

Pitta's the underneath/blocking/check-off TE, Dickson is the home run threat;  look for Dickson to line up a lot in the slot, as opposed to the line.
I was sorely disappointed in Torrey Smith, he didn't run his routes, he stopped early, he had gator arms.  Doss was much braver across the middle and had the better game.

But now they have the WR in Lee Evans that can uncork behind the safeties, opening things up for Anquan Boldin and Ray Rice, and that matters.

Overall, I think they're better at WR than they were at the end of last season.  They just have to keep Flacco upright.  The man's a timing-oriented QB that can shred a secondary with his accuracy given the time;  can't be time on target when he's running for his life.

Ed Anger

LOL, the cameraman for the pack-brownies game was so fooled by Rodgers play fake they didn't get the TD catch live.  :lol:
Stay Alive...Let the Man Drive

Alcibiades

Nice little piece by Peter King from SI, his whole article seems pretty good, actually.  And not just because I like what he opened with.   :blush:

Quote
With their even-keeled leaders, the Packers could very well repeat

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. -- We'll get to the news of the weekend in a few hundred words, to touchbacks and Starcaps, to playing for now and playing for later, to Colt McCoy taking a big step and Matthew Stafford taking a healthy one, to the first week of the silly season and the panic it induces, to the team trying to figure how the coin toss works and the team trying to figure where to kick off from, and to the NFL player with a tattoo thing for Elizabeth Taylor. In due time. Oh, and reading between the lines, the NFL is not happy with the Bears Wildcatting their own kickoff spot. But more about that later.
When I think about what to lead the column with, I often think: What did I see or experience in the last few days that interested me the most? Sometimes it's obvious, sometimes not. This week, I thought of my conversation with Mike McCarthy on a bench next to the Packers' practice field Tuesday night in Green Bay. It was around 9:45. The players were gone, the fans were gone, and now it was just me and McCarthy, with a couple of PR people in the wings, on a chilly night that felt more like Oct. 9 than Aug. 9.
McCarthy was telling me a story about the Super Bowl championship banner the Packers had installed at the Hutson Center indoor practice facility, across from Lambeau Field, when no one was looking. The players were back at practice on an inclement day, working indoors at the Hutson Center, when McCarthy elbowed a couple and said, "Hey, look.'' And there it was.
Maybe it's not a big deal that the Packers didn't have a big ceremony to raise the banner or a ceremony when the fourth Lombardi Trophy was put in a case outside the locker room. And when the Packers play the opener Sept. 8 against New Orleans, there will be a simple "2010'' unveiled near the other 12 years the team won a championship. No flags, no banners. Just a year, with, as GM Ted Thompson told me, "sort of a tablecloth over it, and we'll pull that off, and then we'll play football. That's what we're supposed to do.''
The celebrations are Ted Thompson's responsibility. And so banners are going to be put up when no one is looking -- in this case, by stadium workers on a quiet day in June with no attention -- and there won't be any pomp, because in Thompson's world, this is the Packer Way. Act like you've been there before. This is what the Packers are supposed to do.
***
"It's funny,'' Aaron Rodgers told me. "When I was sitting in that Green Room at the draft in New York, and I was dropping, and no one would pick me, the last thing I was thinking was it was a good thing. But I'm glad I got to fall way down. I should be here. It's the place for me. The game is bigger than us. The team is more than us. It's a community team, blue-collar and understated and not at all about self-glorification. Vince Lombardi put it that way: Winning is the only thing that matters. It's about the team.''
We're in a me-first era. In most places maybe, but not in Green Bay. Not with Thompson and McCarthy and Rodgers, the leaders of this group. I have no idea if they'll repeat (a dirty word to McCarthy, who thinks every year is a new year with new players), but I do know they've created a model that every youth coach, every high school coach, every college coach and, yes, a whole lot of pro coaches would be smart to emulate. It's not just something they say in front of the minicams, and then sneak off to New York to make a commercial for Visa. It's who they are.
There's such a head-scratching lack of look-at-me in this organization. Then you see where it came from. Thompson, from the bedrock roots of Texas high school and college football. McCarthy, who learned the Pittsburgh way, who got his start in the coaching business by working at Pitt for nothing and collecting tolls at night on the Pennsylvania Turnpike to pay his rent. And Rodgers, who rose from no scholarship offers out of high school to a hardscrabble junior college to Cal to Brett Favre's caddie to the Super Bowl. I told Rodgers I remembered the Dallas Morning News story about his roots during Super Bowl week in February, and his dad, a chiropractor in California, having no shred of evidence in his office -- not a photo, trophy or framed ticket stub -- that his son was an athlete of any sort.
"We're not big public-eye people,'' Rodgers said.
When he came to Green Bay and sat for three years, he was even less of a public-eye person. Favre was The Man. And when Favre continued to waffle about whether he wanted to play or not, Rodgers said nothing. When the Packers stood behind Rodgers, he said little. When Favre came back to try to regain his job, Rodgers said nothing.
And when it was the biggest story in sports back in 2008 -- pick a side: you're for Favre or for Rodgers, and there's no middle ground -- Rodgers said precious little. Rodgers knew Thompson and McCarthy had his back, and though it was going to be tough, he could trust them to keep their word. Which they did. And in the last three years, despite the mud that landed on all of them after the Favre debacle, every one of them today looks like a genius.
Thompson for sticking to his guns, McCarthy for believing in Rodgers, and Rodgers for shutting up and just playing football. Rodgers' average season since 2008: 4,130 passing yards, 29 touchdowns, 10 interceptions. And a Super Bowl win.
***
Thompson, in a conference room in the team's refurbished Lambeau Field office, sipped a Diet Coke out of one of those cute tiny bottles and considered what his regime had done. It's not something he likes to do, because any time you take time to consider the past is time you spend not working on the future.
I thought back to the time I sat with Thompson in the middle of the Favre mayhem. Same voice. I thought back to Super Bowl Sunday night in Dallas, when he could have crowed but didn't. Same voice. And now. Same voice.
"Honestly,'' Thompson said, "it takes your breath away sometimes. When you win a championship in Green Bay, you're part of a very special fraternity. You're part of the men from the teams in the '20s, '30s, '40s, '60s and '90s, the men who won a title. These players now can stand alongside the great ones. When you win in this town, you become a little bit immortal. Just like those before us. That's the beauty of this place: We didn't invent it. We're just continuing it.''
Somewhere in Green Bay, maybe in the house across from Lambeau Field with the fence painted with IN COACH McCARTHY WE TRUST, pride in this franchise is at a level not seen since Vince Lombardi coached. It's a beautiful thing, a town one-80th the size of New York on top of the football world, with a chance to stay there.


Read more: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2011/writers/peter_king/08/15/camps/index.html#ixzz1V6vw7sfk

Wait...  What would you know about masculinity, you fucking faggot?  - Overly Autistic Neil


OTOH, if you think that a Jew actually IS poisoning the wells you should call the cops. IMHO.   - The Brain

CountDeMoney

Interesting stat re: moving the ball up on kick-offs--

QuoteLast season, 16.4 percent of kickoffs weren't returned. In the first weekend of the preseason, there were 43 touchbacks in 127 kickoffs (33.9 percent).

Goodbye, KO returns for TDs.

Neil

Quote from: CountDeMoney on August 16, 2011, 05:20:08 AM
Interesting stat re: moving the ball up on kick-offs--

QuoteLast season, 16.4 percent of kickoffs weren't returned. In the first weekend of the preseason, there were 43 touchbacks in 127 kickoffs (33.9 percent).

Goodbye, KO returns for TDs.
Yeah, but that's the point.  'Safety' trumps every other concern right now.  In a year or two, they'll just get rid of the kickoff and start people at the twenty.  A few more years, and they'll start banning tackling and they'll play flag football instead.
I do not hate you, nor do I love you, but you are made out of atoms which I can use for something else.

CountDeMoney

The bodies are beginning to drop:

QuoteThe New York Jets are down a key backup and in serious need of depth on their offensive line.

Citing a league source, the New York Daily News reported Tuesday that backup center Rob Turner suffered a broken leg in Monday night's game and is scheduled to undergo surgery.
Turner is projected to miss eight to 10 weeks following surgery and rehabilitation, according to a source.

QuoteThe Denver Broncos' defensive line depth is about to be tested in a serious way.

Starting defensive tackle Marcus Thomas will miss the remainder of the preseason with a strained pectoral muscle. Thomas' chest muscle wasn't completely torn off the bone, as Elvis Dumervil's was when he suffered a season-ending injury early in last summer's training camp, so the Broncos hope he'll be ready for their Sept. 12 season opener against the Oakland Raiders.  The news could be worse for fellow defensive tackle Ty Warren, who suffered a torn triceps that could threaten not only his season but his career.

Steelhead Ike Taylor broke his finger. Out all pre-season.  NFL Properties has been notified.

Ed Anger

Stay Alive...Let the Man Drive

Sophie Scholl

Quote from: Ed Anger on August 19, 2011, 07:15:56 PM
Stafford is a stud.
Made out of glass.  He'd be great of he could stay healthy for a whole season.
"Everything that brought you here -- all the things that made you a prisoner of past sins -- they are gone. Forever and for good. So let the past go... and live."

"Somebody, after all, had to make a start. What we wrote and said is also believed by many others. They just don't dare express themselves as we did."

Ed Anger

I'M BEING OPTIMISTIC.

I need a team to run to when the Bengals start 0-5. The lion intrigue me.
Stay Alive...Let the Man Drive

CountDeMoney

Quote from: Ed Anger on August 19, 2011, 07:24:39 PM
I need a team to run to when the Bengals start 0-5. The lion intrigue me.

House of Spears doesn't hurt, either.

Ed Anger

Quote from: CountDeMoney on August 19, 2011, 07:25:54 PM
Quote from: Ed Anger on August 19, 2011, 07:24:39 PM
I need a team to run to when the Bengals start 0-5. The lion intrigue me.

House of Spears doesn't hurt, either.

I about splooged when he almost ripped off Andy Dalton's head.
Stay Alive...Let the Man Drive

Ed Anger

I wonder if Vince Young cries when he sees Colt McCoy starting and he is riding the pine.
Stay Alive...Let the Man Drive

Sophie Scholl

Colt McCoy->Evan Moore = $$ tonight.  Also, an interesting situation with Cleveland and Detroit playing MLB and NFL games against each other tonight.
"Everything that brought you here -- all the things that made you a prisoner of past sins -- they are gone. Forever and for good. So let the past go... and live."

"Somebody, after all, had to make a start. What we wrote and said is also believed by many others. They just don't dare express themselves as we did."

Ed Anger

I'm noticing Robiskie disappearing again. As I predicted in a earlier thread, he ain't gonna be that good in the NFL.
Stay Alive...Let the Man Drive

dps

Quote from: CountDeMoney on August 16, 2011, 05:20:08 AM
Interesting stat re: moving the ball up on kick-offs--

QuoteLast season, 16.4 percent of kickoffs weren’t returned. In the first weekend of the preseason, there were 43 touchbacks in 127 kickoffs (33.9 percent).

Goodbye, KO returns for TDs.

Did you hear about the Bears kicking from the old spot during most of their first preseason game and the game officials didn't notice?