Last week in MMQB, Peter King told us that with Robert Griffin all things are possible. This doesn't seem so true this week after the Redskins lost to the Steelers. It seems Griffin couldn't make his receivers catch the football. Between God helping the Colts beat the Packers and all things being possible with Robert Griffin, there has been a lot of religious imagery in MMQB lately. Peter also criticized those who contribute to LiveStrong, mostly because he feels like he can stand in judgment of everyone else while staying in his little bubble where everything he does or says should be as free of judgment as possible. Only Peter King wouldn't keep his criticisms of people donating towards a good cause private. Peter also was surprised at the smut AOL shows on their home page, while also blissfully ignoring he works for a magazine that puts out the swimsuit issue every year (which isn't smut, but definitely shows more skin than any link on the AOL home page would show). This week Peter talks playmakers, pleads for more time for Mike Vick, and then tells us ten things he thinks he thinks, even though his entire MMQB essentially is what he thinks.
"Just landed. Thank you God''
-- Tweet from New
York Giants defensive end Justin Tuck at 1:13 a.m. today, six minutes
after the team charter from Texas just beat Hurricane Sandy up the East
Coast.
Robert Griffin says, "You're welcome. With me, all things are possible."
Wow. Time to cower in the corner (and I don't mean Bill).
(Throws heavy fruit at Peter in anger)
Peyton Manning has been ascending as his surgically repaired neck
improves daily, weekly, monthly; Sunday night's 34-14 rout of the Saints
was another Manning-frozen-in-time game (73 percent passing, 309 yards,
three touchdowns, no picks), and as he told me last week: "The whole
goal was try to get better every week, even if only a little bit better
every week. And I knew all along the nerve would take a long time, and
you couldn't rush it. It'll be a tad better in two weeks, then a tad
better two weeks after that. On game day, I get a little juice and feel
pretty good.''
Oh sure, Peyton Manning openly admits to using steroids, or "juicing" as the kids like to say, and no one seems to care about it. It's bad enough he has a bionic neck, allowing him to sense heat patterns of defenders and rotate his neck in a full 360 degree circle, but now he spits in the face of the NFL drug policy and no one cares. What can't this man get away with?
2. Reid's got to give Vick one more week.
Except Andy Reid didn't give Vick one more week (or did he? I keep reading conflicting stories). Reid is in full "gotta keep my job" mode, which means he needs to make changes now to stop the Eagles from losing games. I don't think Nick Foles is ready to start for the Eagles, but Andy Reid has to keep his job and win games. He's not winning games with Vick, so he made a change. While not an unselfish move on Reid's part, the Eagles can now see what they have in Nick Foles for next season.
But I look at a couple of things with the Eagles' offense right now.
One: Vick's been pretty accurate over the past month: four straight
games of 60 percent completions or better.
Except he is a turnover machine. He didn't commit any turnovers this past week and the Eagles still lost, but Vick turns the ball over at an alarming pace. So this tends to overshadow his completion percentage.
Two: LeSean McCoy has had three straight poor games -- 53, 22 and 45
rushing yards -- with 15.3 carries a game. He's just got to get the ball
more.
I don't know, 15 carries per game isn't a lot, but it also isn't a small amount. At 15 carries per game McCoy needs to put up better yardage numbers than he is currently putting up over the last three games.
The Saints have allowed more yards over the first seven games of an NFL
than any team ever has. This is the kind of game made to give a
struggling team confidence. And Reid has invested so much time and
effort in Vick -- who didn't turn it over once Sunday in the loss to
Atlanta -- that to yank him now Reid would have to have an inordinate
amount of trust in rookie Nick Foles to win big. I think there are too
many signs that Vick and McCoy could bust out in New Orleans for Reid to
yank Vick now.
What's the definition of insanity? Doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result? I don't think Nick Foles is the answer and I probably wouldn't start him at quarterback. Having said that, at least I'll give Reid points for being so desperate he doesn't trot the same players every single week and he is at least trying to save his job.
I don't get how Peter thinks Vick and McCoy could bust out this week. Sure, they could, but if anything they are both trending towards "no change" or "downward." I'm just throwing this out there if Andy Reid wants to think about it. I know a guy who can save his season. Jimmy Clausen. He can be had for the low introductory price of a 6th rounder.
3. A big day for a small corner. Of all the defenses in football,
none plays offense like Chicago's. The Bears scored their sixth
defensive touchdown of the season Sunday. The Bears' savvy 5-foot-8
corner, Tim Jennings, picked off Cam Newton twice in a 23-22 win,
returning one for a touchdown that doomed Carolina. "This is what I
always thought Tim would be,'' Tony Dungy said Sunday night at the NBC
studios. "He's matured a lot, and he fits perfectly in that defense.''
By the way, Tim Jennings was on Steve Smith all day and Smith caught seven passes for 118 yards and barely missed a touchdown grab. So while Peter is giving Jennings kudos, Smith pretty much used him all day. It just so happens one pass not directed for Smith was intercepted by Jennings and one pass was intercepted by Jennings when Smith fell. Jennings played well enough, but he didn't exactly do a great job on Smith, who is the receiver Jennings was matched up with for most of the day.
He caught a lucky break when Steve Smith fell midway through the fourth
quarter and he was able to dart into the open space, pick off Newton and
run for a touchdown. Earlier, he had a perfectly timed diving
interception on an attempted throwaway by Newton, a poor decision by the
quarterback.
Like I said, he made one good play and the rest of the day he was pretty much average.
5. The play of the day ... maybe the year. Vick Ballard was a
lightly regarded mid- to-late-round prospect from Mississippi State, a
219-pound bruiser thought to be a better runner between the tackles than
outside of them.
He's from Mississippi? Why didn't Peter King call Brett Favre to get his opinion of Ballard? There has been half of a page of MMQB and we haven't had a Brett Favre mention yet. Rectify this, Peter!
"I knew I was going to dive for the pylon,'' Ballard said as the Colts
waited to take off from Nashville for Indianapolis after the game. "I
did it twice in college and didn't make it. Once, I fumbled through the
end zone. The other time, I got stopped at the inch-yard line.'' Huh?
The inch-yard line?
Yeah Peter, the inch-yard line. Have you never heard this phrase before? This would be a ball that is right near the goal line and almost in the end zone. Sometimes Peter has the interviewing skills of a 11 year old girl who is interviewing a member of One Direction. Peter seems in awe of what the other person is saying, as if that person is saying the most interesting and revelatory statements Peter has ever heard.
Not saying a man whose team was 9-29 in the last 2.5 years doesn't
deserve to have his job jeopardized, even though the timing for firing
GM Marty Hurney in Carolina was ridiculous. What good does it do to fire
a GM in the middle of a season?
I wrote a post defending Marty Hurney from Bill Barnwell a few weeks ago where I called Hurney an average General Manager. Average just wasn't going to cut it anymore. So Peter is telling me he doesn't know why a General Manager who has never had a back-to-back winning seasons and is 9-29 since 2010 got fired? Really? My question is, why not fire him midseason? Why wait until after the season if Hurney is going to be fired anyway?
The real reason Peter is defending Hurney is because Hurney was a beat reporter before taking a job with the Redskins and then joining the Panthers. Peter is just looking out for a fellow sportswriter.
Don't tell me, though, that Hurney left the cupboard bare. His
sixth-round pick in 2010, defensive end Greg Hardy, had three sacks of
Jay Cutler Sunday.
After having done nothing the rest of this year, being benched for a rookie against Dallas and being pulled from practice on Thursday for not giving enough effort. Good try though, Peter. Hardy hasn't been great this year at all.
His big 2011 free-agent keeper, Charles Johnson, Hurney's third-rounder
in 2007, had two sacks of Cutler with two forced fumbles.
This is another if not good, but necessary, signing. These are also two players who played well in a game the Panthers lost, but aren't enough to save his job. Hurney also has never had back-to-back winning seasons as a General Manager and hired Ron Rivera, who will be fired after this year as well.
I know the way the business works, and I know Hurney deserves to be
under the gun, and I know Cam Newton now is not a sure long-term thing
in Carolina, and Hurney wanted Newton as his franchise quarterback.
Against Peter's wishes, I'm pretty sure Cam is staying in Carolina for another couple of years. Hurney is gone and I would bet $1000 Newton stays in Carolina for another two years minimum.
I'm just saying nothing is ever totally black and white in this game,
and Hurney's record should include it all: the questionable free agent
spending, the unlikely Super Bowl run in 2003, the three playoff berths
in 10 seasons, the inability to get Carolina out of a losing funk over
the past four seasons.
So he was an average GM playing for a 78 year old owner who had major heart surgery a few years ago and fired his last head coach because he strives for consistent winning in the team he owns? This consistent winning wasn't happening. What's to figure out or question?
1. Houston (6-1). J.J. Watt had neither a sack nor a deflected pass over the weekend.
What? What a terrible weeke---
Of course, the Texans didn't have a game.
Oh Peter, you little devil! You got me. I thought something was really wrong when your Defensive Player Pin-Up of the Year didn't have a deflected pass or a sack.
4. Chicago (6-1). Bears 23, Panthers 22 at Soldier Field Sunday.
Another margin of one here: Bears six interceptions returned for
touchdowns this year, Cam Newton five touchdown passes this year.
This is the second of Cam Newton bashing statements in this MMQB. Peter King does not like him some Cam Newton at all. It's probably just for the better. After all, Newton has played 23 total games in the NFL and Peter already knows he isn't the long-term answer. You will see throughout this column the passive-aggressive criticism of Newton by Peter.
Tony Romo threw four interceptions and Peter has nowhere near the passive-aggressive criticism for him that he gives towards Newton. Not that Romo deserves the criticism because the interceptions weren't all his fault, but it seems Peter will pick and choose when to criticize a receiver or a quarterback for an interception as it fits his agenda.
7. New England (5-3). After the best end-zone celebration of the
season (by far), the one with Rob Gronkowski looking very much like a
Buckingham Palace guard, Gronk was asked what his touchdown celebration
was, exactly. He said: "That little nutcracker dude who's guarding the
house."
He's so quirky and precocious! I just need to hear more Gronk stories. I bet Peter just wants to wrap Gronk up with J.J. Watt in the same sleeping bag and just tickle them to death.
13. Seattle (4-4). If I were Seattle GM John Schneider, I'd call
Chiefs GM Scott Pioli, and ask if there's any way he'd dump Dwayne Bowe
for a fourth-round pick. And if he would, which I doubt, I'd be a buyer.
I'd use those exact words too. "Is there any way you'd dump Dwayne Bowe for a fourth round pick?" That'll surely sweet talk Pioli into making the deal.
The Award Section
Jason Witten, TE, Dallas. Witten looked crushed after the Giants'
29-24 win over Dallas Sunday, even though he set the franchise record
for receptions in a game -- 18, amazingly, including 13 in the second
half -- for a total of 167 yards. Everyone in the park knew where Tony
Romo was going with the ball,
To the Giants defensive players? I'm kidding Cowboys fans. I give Romo credit for leading the Cowboys back.
Special Teams Player of the Week
Justin Medlock, K, Carolina.
On a typical late October day in Chicago -- chilly, winds gusting up to
25 mph -- first-year kicker Medlock, from UCLA, kicked four field goals
in the first three quarters to give Carolina a 19-7 lead. When Cam
Newton gave the lead back,
"When Cam Newton gave the lead back." This is an incredibly misleading statement. The Bears drove the ball down the field to cut the Carolina lead to 19-14 and then on the very next possession with Steve Smith running a timing route, Smith fell running his route after Newton threw the ball and the ball went right into Tim Jennings hands for a pick-six. Cam Newton "gave the lead back" in the same way Peter's boy Peyton Manning gave the Saints a Super Bowl victory. It's incredibly misleading to those who didn't watch the game and while I really don't like harping on this, it's clear that Peter King does not like Newton and it shows in his tween-like passive aggressive criticisms of Newton.
Peter places the blame on Newton for "giving the lead back." Newton wouldn't have had to give the lead back if Steve Smith had not just missed catching a touchdown pass that Newton threw. Peter doesn't mention that nor does he mention Newton led Carolina down the field to take the lead BACK from Chicago after this interception. Peter fails to mention this of course because it doesn't fit his narrative nor his agenda when talking about Newton. Newton isn't a great quarterback and he is over-hyped, but to place blame on him for every little thing that goes wrong for Carolina is disingenuous at best.
Goats of the Week
The Washington receivers. Nine drops. Nine! A disgraceful performance in Pittsburgh.
I read 10 drops. Either way, the Redskins receivers played very poorly and the Redskins loss isn't Robert Griffin's fault at all.
Bradley Fletcher, CB, St. Louis. As if Tom Brady needs help,
Fletcher got whistled three times for pass interference in a 45-7 loss
to the Patriots -- and every one was on third down, meaning that three
times he gave the Patriots new life.
That's horrendous, but can we really blame Bradley Fletcher for the Rams losing by 38 points? He is a "goat" for this?
Robert Meachem, WR, San Diego. With the Chargers sleepwalking
their way through a dismal performance at Cleveland, Meacham broke into
the clear and turned for a Philip Rivers pass, thrown perfectly over
Cleveland coverage. Meacham dropped it. He blew a clear touchdown.
Cleveland beat the Chargers 7-6.
So this loss was mostly Meacham's fault? Back to harping on Peter picking and choosing when to blame a quarterback or receiver to fit his narrative: How about Steve Smith missing a touchdown pass that would have won the game for Carolina or falling down causing a pick-six? Either play easily can be seen as having cost Carolina the game against the Bears. Peter blames the receivers when it is convenient, but a quarterback blows the lead when Peter has a different point to prove.
The Deep End
Each week, thanks to play-by-play game
dissection by ProFootballFocus.com, I'll look at one important matchup
or individual performance metric from one of the Sunday games.
Sure, let's look at a player from this past Sunday's game. I wonder which player that played this past Sunday that Peter takes a look at?
This week, I wanted to take a look at the first half of Houston
defensive end J.J. Watt's season. He's been the best defensive player in
the league so far, and so I had ProFootballFocus.com analyze where the
23-year-old versatile run-stuffer and pass-defender has lined up, and
what alignments his plays have been made from.
So Peter goes with a player who was on a bye this week. Then to make it worse, he talks (again) about J.J. Watt, who is Peter's Defensive Player Pin-Up of the Year. In high school, if a person talks about another person this much, then people start wondering. I'm starting to wonder.
I don't want to spoil things, but J.J. Watt has been great this year. The metrics that ProFootballFocus.com looked at confirm this. Unfortunately, this may only increase the wattage (see what I did?) of Peter's love for Watt.
I was deep in coach, in a middle seat. (The only way to fly! A middle
seat for five hours and 15 minutes!) The 50ish woman seated to my left
got increasingly frustrated with her iPad, sighing heavily, until
finally she said, "Damn daughter!" and took the iPad and hit herself on
the scalp with it. I clanked over, wondering if I was to feel the wrath
of the iPad-abuser next, and she said, "My daughter must have erased
this app I need! I can't figure the damn thing out!'' I told her I was
sorry, and asked her what she did for a living.
"I'm in sales,'' she said. "On the way to San Francisco for a sales conference."
"Oh,'' I said. "What do you sell?''
"Well, various things,'' she said.
Well, all right then. We flew the rest of the way in crammed, painful quietude.
How dare this lady not want to talk to the stranger in the seat beside her! She was clearly frustrated and probably not in the mood to be interviewed, but that shouldn't matter when given the chance to speak to the great Peter King. Next time Peter King is on the Acela trying to do a phone interview or some work I wish someone would saddle up to him and start talking to him. Let's see how he likes it.
I rarely speak to people on planes and if someone is clearly having a bad day and doesn't care to elaborate on their job description then I wouldn't include this brief conversation in my weekly NFL column as if this lady had some sort of obligation to answer Peter's questions in a more elaborate manner.
1. I think this is what I liked about Week 1:
g. Chandler Jones is one impressive rookie rusher. He had a 17-yard sack of Sam Bradford.
That is impressive. Is there anything else Peter would like to add to his statement that Jones is an impressive rookie pass rusher or is this supposed to be our only required evidence of this statement? I'm not saying Chandler Jones isn't impressive, but is Peter basing this statement on this sack or Jones' entire resume as a rookie?
k. Richie Incognito, the mauling Miami guard, graded out like a road-grader against the Jets.
You know Peter wanted to say Richie Incognito wasn't "incognito" against the Jets.
2. I think this is what I didn't like about Week 8:
g. Philip Rivers isn't getting much help, obviously, but a few of his
throws in Cleveland were way too far off target for a man with his
resume.
Rivers' resume...and what is that resume again? He's been a very good quarterback in his career and has a 3-4 career playoff record. Much like Peter said about Andrew Luck after he didn't throw one pass well in a game a few weeks ago, I guess we can put Rivers' Hall of Fame canonization on hold because he played poorly during one game.
l. Rex Ryan's confidence. Gone. Vanquished. Sanchized.
Tebowlotomized.
4. I think Cam Newton did something at the end of the first half
in Chicago that really bugged me. From the Chicago 33, the Panthers
called a Hail Mary with three seconds left. Newton threw it way over the
end line. Either he wanted someone in the stands to have a souvenir, or
he didn't want to risk another interception on his stat sheet. I'm
guessing the latter, and I don't like it.
So Peter King is accusing Newton of overthrowing the end zone in order to not get an interception on his stat sheet, despite having absolutely zero proof this is the case. Tony Romo's last pass on fourth down Sunday night went out of the back of the end zone as well. Was he trying to ensure he didn't have his fifth interception? Why doesn't Peter accuse him of this?
More importantly, what proof does Peter have that Newton gives a shit about his stat sheet and another interception being on it? Newton overthrew the end zone and why would Peter guess the worst unless he absolutely wanted to believe the worst? He's unbelievable (Peter, not Newton. Newton's football skills are pretty believable in their averageness). Peter wants to view Newton's actions in a way that reinforces his prior belief. So while he has no proof Newton did throw the ball out of the back of the end zone intentionally, he thinks that is something Newton would do based on his preconceived notions about him.
This play didn't even matter. Ron Rivera should have had Peter's Special Teams Player of the Week (Justin Medlock) come out and try a 51 yard field goal with three seconds left instead of throwing a Hail Mary anyway.
b. San Francisco: best walking city in America.
Put up the plaque San Francisco! You've been named "best walking city" by the honorable Peter King.
g. I need to see Argo.
Then do. Just don't keep us informed, that's all I ask.
The Adieu Haiku
Hey, Jim Cantore!
Tell 'em from D.C. to Maine:
Respect Sandy's wrath.
Isn't that only four syllables in the first line? Maybe I'm not good at counting. If you are going to lower yourself to doing a haiku, you may as well do it correctly, no?
9 comments:
Maybe it's Jim Can-tor-ay...or maybe Peter's an idiot and shouldn't write poetry in a football column.
As for the Chargers...dear God what an abortion game that was. Norv "Derp" Turner had a bye week to prepare for the lowly Browns and his team looked atrocious. The game plan seemingly didn't compensate for Rivers' shaky play recently or the anticipated weather. I get they don't have incredibly talented players all around but IT'S THE GDAMN BROWNS!
Ryan Mathews fumbles (again), Meachem drops the bread-basket throw, and for some reason the team celebrates successful field goal kicks as if they had just won a playoff spot. FFS Derp's team should have won that game by 20 points, but instead we sucked it and us long-suffering Charger fans will have to endure another crappy year.
I feel your Carolina pain.
Vick Ballard's run the "play of the year?" Not sure about that. The spin was impressive, but a tthe end of the year I hardly think anyone will consider a week 8 19-yard TD pass (albeit in OT) in a game between the Titans and Colts as the play of the year.
What good does it do to fire a GM in the middle of a season?
A lot, actually. It gives the new GM a few weeks to see what he wants to do in the off-season. Is there someone he's thinking about getting rid of, is there a potential trade opportunity, what upcoming FAs are worth keeping?
You know what's a terrible idea? Letting the GM you're about to fire handle the draft, then bringing in a brand new GM to manage a team full of guys he may not have wanted.
Or better yet, firing the old guy and giving the new GM a couple weeks to prepare for the draft.
Fire the GM, get the new guy, let him figure out what his moves are and let him flesh out his off-season plans over the remaining season. Seems like a great idea to me, but I'm not paid to write about my coffee.
Don't tell me, though, that Hurney left the cupboard bare. His sixth-round pick in 2010
You hear that Ben, your old GM hit on one sixth round pick in 2010, so he totally should have kept his job. Too bad that every other draft pick (sans Cam) has been an utter disaster.
and Hurney's record should include it all: the questionable free agent spending, the unlikely Super Bowl run in 2003, the three playoff berths in 10 seasons, the inability to get Carolina out of a losing funk over the past four seasons.
Other than the SB appearance, none of that screams "he shouldn't be fired" and that was 9 years ago.
Made the playoffs 3 times in 10 years? Fantastic... oh wait, no that's actually pretty bad considering the talent they had.
The fact is this: Hurney got himself fired this off-season when he gave out ludicrously lavish deals to three RBs and gave his DE way too much money (needed to keep him, yes, but holy shit did Johnson get overpaid).
What exactly about that is healthy to keep around? He had his chance to build the team the way he wanted, he let Peppers go and then gave Peppers type money to an inferior player. He thought an aging (sorry Ben) WR and a stable of pricey backs would turn the offense into a juggernaut.
He inherited a terrible team in 2002, had a few solid to excellent drafts. Absolutely, without a doubt, he did a very good job his first couple of years.
About 2006, he started sinking a bit. Didn't have a very good draft in 06, good/grea 07, mediocre 08, bad 09, shit himself in 10, ditto 11.
Honestly, if you look at the 09-11 drafts, he had one very good pick and that was Newton.
This is a GM who drafted a RB paid that RB well... then drafted another RB. Who drafted a QB, paid that QB relatively well... then drafted another QB the next year.
He's drafted four QBs since 2005; including three in two drafts.
Those four QBs have combined for an incredible 31 starts and 21 of those are by Newton.
Over the past three drafts, he has drafted FIVE wide outs and none of them are particularly good (although Lafell seems to be doing better).
Basically, he had high draft picks three years in a row and managed to get one impact player. That's the kind of crap that gets you in trouble.
I'd call Chiefs GM Scott Pioli, and ask if there's any way he'd dump Dwayne Bowe for a fourth-round pick. And if he would, which I doubt, I'd be a buyer.
If I were the SF 49ers, I'd call Packers GM Ted Thompson and ask if there's anyway he'd dump Aaron Rodgers for a fourth-round pick. And if he would, which I doubt, I'd be a buyer.
What if Pioli counters with a third? Would you be a buyer then Peter?
By the way, Tim Jennings was on Steve Smith all day and Smith caught seven passes for 118 yards and barely missed a touchdown grab. So while Peter is giving Jennings kudos, Smith pretty much used him all day.
I'm not saying that Tim Jennings is the greatest corner but give the guy some credit. Smith was targeted 16 times that day and only caught 7 of them. If you throw to a Pro Bowl wideout that many times I would hope that he would come up with some no matter who was covering him.
Anon, that's a game the Chargers have to win. Two weeks to get ready for it and they put up 6 points. I've never criticized Norv Turner too much, but it's clear the Chargers aren't exactly moving forward at this point.
I blame Turner, but I also blame A.J. Smith in some ways. It seems he has allowed quality players to get away in free agency. I feel like Smith has put the Chargers behind the 8-ball in allowing some players to get away in free agency and not effectively replacing them in the draft. I could be wrong and am not excusing Turner, but I get the feeling it may be better to sort of start over in San Diego in terms of GM and coach.
Anon, that will be the play of the year until Peter names another play as play of the year. He names a new play of the year every couple weeks.
Rich, part of the reason Hurney was fired was to send a message the mediocrity wasn't acceptable. Hurney/Richardson were very close and it says if Hurney can get fired then anyone can get fired. What Peter forgets is Jerry Richardson allowed John Fox to coach an entire year while knowing he wasn't going to be retained. Fox should have been re-signed or let go before the 2010 season and Richardson didn't make the move. So this is sort of a makeup for that.
This year's draft has been pretty solid so far with three starters (and an occasional starter in Frank Alexander...replacing who? Greg Hardy), but there have been some brutal drafts.
I personally really like LaFell, but I am in the minority on that. I don't think he's a star, but see him as a 2nd WR. Regardless, I don't agree with all the criticism of Hurney from Panthers fans especially. I think he did a pretty good job for a while. Like I wrote in the Barnwell piece, he has had 2-3 bad drafts (not including this year) and that just doesn't cut it. It's a bottom line issue. The team hasn't had back-to-back winning seasons. That gets you fired.
I would buy Bowe for a third round pick. I know it isn't necessarily smart to pay for wide receivers in free agency, but I would trade a third for Bowe and then try to re-sign him.
Deep in coach...does it get worse than that? Then no one will talk to you? What kind of Guantanamo Bay-type airline is Peter flying? Yeah, just pay the upgrade.
Frank, I tried to give him some credit, but Smith would have caught more than 7 passes if Newton didn't display his usual accuracy. There were 16 passes thrown to Smith, so obviously he was getting open. Smith got the better of that matchup, but you do have a point. I could give him great credit in run support and a couple of Newton's errant passes were because of good coverage. I wish Carolina had corners who tackled like he does.
Jennings had a great day and I should give him credit for that, while also recognizing Smith had a pretty good day against him.
As far as Peter's "deep in coach" comments, I'm just taking it as a victory that he didn't lament airline coffee or their lack of a solid craft beer selection.
Anon, that is an excellent comment. We should probably take these small victories where we can get them.
He called Medlock a first year kicker. Fact checking is hard.
http://www.nfl.com/player/justinmedlock/2507216/profile
I am a casual fan and I remember him kicking. Also from Madden's Free Agent pool.
Eric, damn I feel bad too. I knew Medlock had kicked before and didn't even point it out. It's not like he plays for my favorite team or anything, nor had I read several stories in the Charlotte papers about him.
I missed this just like Peter King. Embarrassing.
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