JaYnYcE
Soul Brother
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JMO:
That article was horrendous.
Brady and Manning were fairly even all game. There were a few differences I saw:
Usually two mistakes like that wouldn't cost you the game, but Manning didn't make any mistakes and the Giants recovered every time they did make a mistake.
- Brady threw that pretty horrid deep ball to Gronkowski for the INT
- Brady threw the other deep ball to no one for the safety
Other than that, you can argue Manning either threw slightly better "winning" passes or his receivers made slightly better "winning" plays.
Play the game tomorrow and maybe the Pats win, both teams were pretty evenly matched. Maybe the ball bounces to the Pats when Bradshaw fumbles next time. Either way the Giants may not have been clearly better but they certainly were not worse than the Pats.
- Manningham's catch was really tough and impressive, but Manning threw that ball almost perfectly.
- Welker's miss was also a tough attempt and would have been very impressive, but Brady slightly overthrew him
As to SpyGate, it is true they haven't won one since then. How much that helped is unknown as there are a ton of other factors that differ as well.
The Saints would have destroyed the Pats too.
SF did beat the Giants, but the Giants had an opportunity to win that game in the final seconds too. The Giants were not healthy most of the season.
The INT wasn't even that big a deal - he escaped pressure, and the Pats were on their own 43 and the Giants came out of it pinned on their 8. Essentially he avoided a sack and gave the Pats an excellent punt, which would have been a good field position trade if the Pats recovered the ensuing fumble or didn't line up in the neutral zone on 3rd and 7. Plus, he also had every reason to expect that even an injured Gronk could break up a jump ball with a back-up linebacker.
The writer also gets mad at him for chucking it downfield on 2nd and 11 with four minutes to go as if the Pats were about to run out the clock. Total nonsense.
Those "drops" were on awful passes. Welker and Branch were both wide open and Brady missed them. Sure they got their hands on them so they couldve caught them, but calling them drops is extreme. Even a decent pass and theyre both catches and games over. Heck if he led Branch instead of throwing it five feet behind him Branch couldve crab walked into the endzone.Brady was better than Eli, apart from the brain fart for a safety to open their possession. Yes, that cost them. But Eli had receivers who made great plays all game long. The Pats had 4-5 major drops on key plays. The other goat on offense was Mankins. Almost every time the Giants beat the Pats O-line, which wasn't often, it was Mankins that gave it up. Vollmer and Light were great, as was Waters.
Not enough risk taking on offense or defense for NE. So both teams played a shortened ball control game, which limited the Patriots possessions.
Those "drops" were on awful passes. Welker and Branch were both wide open and Brady missed them. Sure they got their hands on them so they couldve caught them, but calling them drops is extreme. Even a decent pass and theyre both catches and games over. Heck if he led Branch instead of throwing it five feet behind him Branch couldve crab walked into the endzone.
I hate the Pats so take my analysis as you will. BUT Brady deserves a lot of the blame for that game. He got all the glory for the first three super bowls when the Pats won by field goals that he didnt kick. The Pats D was the strenght of the team for all of the SB wins and now that the offense is the focus, they havent won. Brady missed a WIDE open Welker to ice the game. Everyone is saying Welker dropped it but Brady threw it over the wrong shoulder and made 5;8 welker spin around and jump in midair to even get his hands on it. It was an awful throw. On the last drive he had a WIDE open Branch across the middle and threw it three feet behind him. If he led him Branch is still running ala Forrest Gump. Again Branch got his hands on it so its called a drop but that was a bad throw too.
Ive always felt Brady was great, but overrated. He has played under the best coach, in the best system and for the best franchize in the league for his entire career. He has had an incredible offensive line his entire career. He backs up and has all day to scan the field and then throw 6-8 yard passes that his receivers turn into 15 or 20 yard gains. Brady was 0-14 on passes that were 20 yds or more in the air in both Super Bowls (according to Trent Dilfer). Hes obviously a great qb. His record speaks for itself. But he was given possibly the greatest scenario a qb could ever imagine (coach, system, franchize, o-line etc.) When hes pressured at all or when he has to throw the ball downfield hes just average. Just as he got all the glory for their wins, he needs to accept most of the blame for their losses.
0-14 when throwing the ball 20 yards in the air in the past two super bowls. Hes been outplayed in 5 of his last 6 playoff games twice by Joe Flacco, twice by Eli and once by Mark Sanchez. The only qb hes outplayed in the playoffs is Tim Tebow. I said he was great, but hes not this god that the media makes him out to be. Look at the Colts when Manning went down. They instantly became the worst team in the league. The Pats went 11-5 without Brady.How can anyone think anything except that you're a hater?
I mean, in the first Super Bowl, Brady lead them downfield for the inning field goal in 1:20 seconds while backed up.
In Super Bowl #2, Brady broke all time Super Bowl records for yards and completions, a record that hasn't been broken to this day. You're going to give credit to Vinatieri? Do you even realize Vinatieri missed two easy field goals that game? He was 1 for 3. That game should have been over long before the very end if it weren't for Vinatieri choking early in the game. In Super Bowl #3, Vinatieri did not kick the FG in the 4th quarter. Patriots went into it with a 24-14 lead and basically took the air out of the ball. They gave up a late TD and pinned McNabb at their 2 yard line with under a minute to go.
It's just absurd for you to say offense wasn't a focus back then. Look up how the Patriots lit up the Steelers offensively back then (and needed to because the Steelers scored 30). Look up how the defense gave up 29 points in 31 minutes to Carolina, so Brady had to carry them, breaking Super Bowl records in the meantime. He was methodical against the Eagles. Even in their playoff losses in subsequent years, the Patriots put up enough points to win (34 against the Colts in the AFCCG). Brady's flubs have been in the first Super Bowl against the Giants, against the Ravens 2 years ago and against the Jets last year. He was passingly OK against the Ravens if you look at the numbers. He played well yesterday.
The Welker catch, I disagree with you about that.The Giants were in a cover 3, and the Patriots knew they had them. All Welker had to do was sit in the zone. Normally he would have thrown it inside because that's the soft spot in such a zone, but Brady saw the Giants CB and safeties were totally confused and that the CB had not come off his man to take Welker (which would have Welker coming over the middle). So the safety, seeing that, didn't break for Branch running down the sideline, and instead held his position over the middle. What should have happened is the CB should have picked up Welker and the safety should have picked up Branch. instead, the CB hugged the sideline and the safety, realizing this, never broke. That left Welker wide open. But if Brady had done the thing Welker expected him to, thrown it inside, the safety would have been in position. Instead, he threw it to the outside because he saw the CB was sticking to Branch. The problem was two things: Welker had turned his body upfield as though he was going to score. He should have just sat down in the zone and adjusted long before the ball got there. Second, Welker is short, and one of the great things about him is that he often makes those acrobatic catches, because he has to. Otherwise, he wouldn't be a star in the NFL. This is what's expected of him. A taller receiver get up there and catches that with more ease. Welker has to work harder and he usually does.
An incredible offensive line? You have to tell the scouts that because they're the ones that skipped on drafting all the UDFAs that have fronted for Brady over his career, such immortals as Brandon Gorin, Joe Andruzzi, Stephen Neal, Dan Connolly, Mike Compton, Russ Hochstein, Gene Mruckowski, Grant Williams, and several others. If these guys were so good, how come no one drafted them? I can understand one or two bonafide UDFAs becoming stars (like Brian Waters currently) but by and large, the Patriots have had a patchwork offensive line, and when those players left the Patriots they were never heard from again. These OLs owe Brady their paychecks because his command of the pocket and his quick release makes them look really good. The only OLs drafted high by the Patriots have been Mankins, Light, Solder, and Vollmer. Prior to that, they were UDFAs.
You need to look at Brady's stats for throwing downfield prior to YAC. They are on the very high end. He started as a dink-and-dunk QB, but that was long long ago. After 2003, he's been at the top of the league throwing far downfield. As for being pressured, that too is overblown. Again, Brady's passer rating is very high when it comes to getting pressured. He thrives off of it actually since he's excellent in pocket awareness. You can get to him though and he has succumbed to pressure in the past, just like all QBs.
You're denying greatness and thinking up all sorts of excuses.
0-14 when throwing the ball 20 yards in the air in the past two super bowls. Hes been outplayed in 5 of his last 6 playoff games twice by Joe Flacco, twice by Eli and once by Mark Sanchez. The only qb hes outplayed in the playoffs is Tim Tebow. I said he was great, but hes not this god that the media makes him out to be. Look at the Colts when Manning went down. They instantly became the worst team in the league. The Pats went 11-5 without Brady.
In a parallel universe where one compares two teams with each other and follows the rule that if a team beats a team twice, once at the other team's home stadium, that the winner of those games is "worse" than the losing team which is "better", I grant to you that the Giants are that worse team and the Patriots are that better team. However, on Planet Earth, where I happen to live and make my living, I don't think I'm breaking any cardinal rules of empiricism when I say that the Giants beating the Patriots twice, once in a stadium in Foxboro, Massachusetts where the Patriots have locker rooms and offices and where their fans buy and occupy most of the seats, and then in a game that both teams fully understood to be the "championship" game, is extremely compelling evidence that the Giants are, speaking completely objectively here, the better team. Some would use the phrase "demonstrable evidence" to describe the Giant's two wins over the Patriots, and I would not object to that ussage on grounds of language or logic. Now, you may want to make this an unprecedented-in-a-football-season best of five game series and hope the Patriots pull out three in a row in order to defend your counterintuitive conclusion. Or you may think that the net points the teams scored against uncommon opponents (including, I should point out, the single, solitary, lonely team with a better than .500 record that the Patriots actually managed to defeat in a "game" this season by means of a missed chip-shot field goal) is somehow dispositive of the question. But I have to point out that those metrics are evidence that you are operating under a delusion I like to call "Massachusetts Thinking".
I suggest you create an objective metric for "better team" that compares two teams in relation to each other but doesn't take into consideration how those two teams actually perform against each other in "games" and submit that metric to the NFL. In the interim, perhaps you can create a "Better Team" trophy by wrapping a football in aluminum foil and nailing said tinfoil ball to a two-by-four and invite the Patriots to accept the trophy following a ticker tape parade you will be throwing for them in your basement.
In the Super Bowl,
- the significant questionable calls/non-calls were against the Giants' favor;
Eh, that's pretty homeristic if you ask me.
OI'm not sure the loss of your TEs was significant. I don't think Brady got hurt on the Tuck sack, but people like Esiason think he broke his collarbone. People are also noting he was 20-23 with 2 TDs before the sack with a 144 passer rating (and his three incompletes were the safety throwaway and the two JPP batdowns). After the sack, his numbers dipped, but I think it had a lot more to do with the INT he threw and the drops, rather than injury. if he really did do damage to the shoulder, I'd take that back.
Dilfer and Young were incredulous about the safety call, they thought it was bad. I think the refs were within the rules, but still very surprised they called it. Can't remember seeing that before, personally. I think the non-PI on Moore was the proper call. The Boothe hold totally turned Wilfork around so Jacobs could run right by where Wilfork should have been. Not a guarantee that gets called there each time but you can't quibble with it. Patriots were similarly called for a hold on the next possession, and though that was a clear hold (arm across the neck) the refs never called the same thing happening to Patriots rushers before that (Boothe in fact twice had a choke on Deadrick earlier in the game in clear view). What about seconds ticking away after the Bradshaw TD and Brady calling timeout? I can't see how you think refs were favoring Patriots.
Eh, that's pretty homeristic if you ask me.
OI'm not sure the loss of your TEs was significant. I don't think Brady got hurt on the Tuck sack, but people like Esiason think he broke his collarbone. People are also noting he was 20-23 with 2 TDs before the sack with a 144 passer rating (and his three incompletes were the safety throwaway and the two JPP batdowns). After the sack, his numbers dipped, but I think it had a lot more to do with the INT he threw and the drops, rather than injury. if he really did do damage to the shoulder, I'd take that back.
Dilfer and Young were incredulous about the safety call, they thought it was bad. I think the refs were within the rules, but still very surprised they called it. Can't remember seeing that before, personally. I think the non-PI on Moore was the proper call. The Boothe hold totally turned Wilfork around so Jacobs could run right by where Wilfork should have been. Not a guarantee that gets called there each time but you can't quibble with it. Patriots were similarly called for a hold on the next possession, and though that was a clear hold (arm across the neck) the refs never called the same thing happening to Patriots rushers before that (Boothe in fact twice had a choke on Deadrick earlier in the game in clear view). What about seconds ticking away after the Bradshaw TD and Brady calling timeout? I can't see how you think refs were favoring Patriots.
OK, I retract that line as unnecessary, while further wishing that we can unite as Huskies fans for the days ahead.
You got just about everything wrong in this post. Congrats.
He has the brain of a 4-year-old - no sense in arguing with him.
Also, to the person who said this article is a Boston thing: I'm pretty sure New York is about as bad.
The Giants were the better team because they won !! That's how it works,,, the best team is the team that wins barring any crazy officiating which did not exist on Sunday.
You are acting like Im saying Brady sucks. Hes easily a top 3 qb in the league and top 7 possibly 5 all time. But that doesnt mean hes not overrated. I love it. Blame the Pats D. They gave up 21 pts on Sunday and 17 four years ago. His amazing offense managed to score 14 and 17 pts so yeah lets blame the D. Easy schedule? The Pats had the biggest joke of a schedule Ive ever seen this year. They "beat" one team with a winning record, and that was the Ravens who quite clearly shouldve won that game. Facts are facts man. Tom terrific is now 6-6 with 17 picks in his last 12 playoff games. Go ahead and come up with your excuses for that.So after I refuted all the drivel above, that's the best you have?
The fact is, the Patriots defense has been awful and the Patriots have been retooling. This didn't start this year. It started a while ago. Two years ago against the Ravens, who was Brady throwing to? Do you even know? He did have a poor performance against the Giants 4 years ago. He's been in 23 playoff games. He's allowed to put up a stinker. Then came the two additional losses.
But, man, you are nuts out of your mind if you think he was outplayed by Flacco twice. You continue to make up crazy stuff out of your butt.
11-5? Had to do with a good backup QB and easy schedule. Previous year they were 16-0 against the toughest schedule ever. They got an easy schedule, so easy that SOS was poor enough to keep an 11-5 team out of the playoffs. After Manning came Curtis Painter. And, Manning wasn't coming off a 16-0 year. There's your difference.
But the idea that Flacco was better a few years ago is preposterous.
You are acting like Im saying Brady sucks. Hes easily a top 3 qb in the league and top 7 possibly 5 all time. But that doesnt mean hes not overrated. I love it. Blame the Pats D. They gave up 21 pts on Sunday and 17 four years ago. His amazing offense managed to score 14 and 17 pts so yeah lets blame the D. Easy schedule? The Pats had the biggest joke of a schedule Ive ever seen this year. They "beat" one team with a winning record, and that was the Ravens who quite clearly shouldve won that game. Facts are facts man. Tom terrific is now 6-6 with 17 picks in his last 12 playoff games. Go ahead and come up with your excuses for that.