Archive for September, 2005

Mrs B’s podcast

Monday, September 19th, 2005

Check out Mrs B’s game review podcasts.

Week 2: Panthers 27, Patriots 17 (1 - 1) (1 - 0) (0 - 0)

Monday, September 19th, 2005

Over at The Virtual Tailgate there were good friends and there was good food. Sadly, that was about it for good things that day.

First and foremost, something must be done about the (not so) special teams. This is the third year that they’ve been underperforming. I think it’s time for Brad Seeley to get his walking papers. The kick coverage is atrocious. Practically every kickoff comes back over the 30. And then there are the punts… How can this team forget about lane discipline? There were three gigantic returns (one for a TD called back on a penalty) and in all three the returner initially ran into traffic and began to cut back. And in all three, instead of maintaining their lanes, the coverage team all converged on the returner. So when he made is move and escaped the crowd, there was no one left to cover him. To add insult to injury, on the one that went down to the Pats 14, it looked like Izzo was going to be able to push Gamble out of bounds wayyyy back near the beginning of the return, but just before he reached Gamble, another Patriot Tebucky Jones’d him out of the play. I do need to give a fractional gold star to Ben Watson on that play, though. He came out of nowhere in a burst of speed to run down Gamble and save the TD. It was very impressive, doubly so for a man of Watson’s size.

Second, what was wrong with Brady? Even back in the first quarter, when the OL was giving him some time, he was high. And it got worse from there — like throwing three feet over the head of a completely wide-open Watson. The INT wasn’t great either, but at least that took a very nice play on the part of the Carolina linebacker. The fumble wasn’t really his fault, though — the rusher came in from the blind side and the ball was all the way back. I did not like Brady’s body language on the sideline — head in hands, sulking, etc. Don’t want to see him become another Manning. He also seemed to do a lot of yelling at people. Not sure I like that.

I hope the horrible running game so far this season is the OL and not Dillon suddenly getting old. I don’t see much in the way of holes, but Dillon seems slower and isn’t running over people like he did last year. Hope it’s just a perception.

Bad day from the receiving corps. Lots of drops and lots of failures to get separation. The long gainer to Troy Brown was sweet, though. Bittersweet, actually, since it very vividly demonstrated the speed Brown has lost in the past couple of years. Two years ago he would have taken it all the way. Still, it’s nice to see him involved in the offense.

Terrible day from the OL. For starters, they had at least six false starts, including one of the first offensive play of the game. They failed to open up any running holes. After the first quarter they gave Brady little time. Matt Light was beaten like a drum.

The D actually played reasonably (minus two really stupid penalties). They held Carolina to 250 total yards, with about 145 in the air. And there was Vrabel’s INT return for a TD (though that was a stupid play by Delhomme than it was a great play by Vrabel). I wanted to kill Colvin for a totally stupid hands-to-the-face penalty that nullified a Starks INT. Leaving Proehl wide open down the middle was bad, too. And Harrison’s stupid personal foul gave Carolina a FG. But overall the defense did pretty well.

The coaching was sub-par. Why no screens to blunt the pass rush, especially in the second half? The ongoing special teams debacle has already been discussed. And why wasn’t the Watson fumble challenged? Yes, it probably would have stood, but at that point the fumble was the ballgame. There was nothing to lose by challenging it. I do agree with the other non-challenges. I saw the Davis fumble get recovered in the endzone by Carolina (no thanks to CBS — game telecasting is getting worse and worse). And Brady’s fumble was definitely a fumble — the hand wasn’t moving yet).

Next week will be a big test. I can handle a loss (though it’ll hurt) if they lose having played a clean, sharp game. But if they come out in a game of next week’s magnitude even remotely close to the way they did this week, I will have to seriously question if this year’s edition has what it takes to even make the playoffs in the first place.

Well, two positives from today

Sunday, September 18th, 2005

(1) At least it was to an NFC team.
(2) My productivity should be up this week.

Here are six sure inactives

Sunday, September 18th, 2005

Tully Banta-Cain, Andre Davis, Brandon Gorin, James Sanders, Chad Scott, and Tyrone Poole all did not make the trip down to Charlotte.

Here we go again with the injured secondary :(.

Welcome!

Saturday, September 17th, 2005

Welcome to the blog. Everyone is encouraged to register (see that “Register” link over on the right-hand side under “Meta”) . However, at least for now you can leave comments without being a registered user. If comment spam gets too bad, I might have to change that. However, your first comment won’t get posted until I approve it. Once you have at least one approved comment, future comments go through without moderation.

And if you’d like to blog here about the Pats (and some NFL stuff in general), that’s a possibility as well. The blog is currently configured so that any registered user can submit a draft article that will get posted on my approval. So think about it!

More fun ways to watch Pats games

Saturday, September 17th, 2005
  • Attend The Tailgate (home) or The Virtual Tailgate (road). We won’t bite :-)
  • If you can’t find a bunch of friends to cheer/complain/kibbitz with during the game, do it remotely with a bunch of hardcore fans at the PatsFans.com chat room. This can really be a blast if you’re otherwise stuck at home.
  • More game discussion happens in the forums at BSMW. Just pick the Sports Radio Discussion category and then pick the thread of the day.
  • For intelligent around-the-league commentary during games, check out the relevant week’s Open Thread over at Football Outsiders
  • .

Please leave more suggestions in the comments!

It’s not paranoia if they really are out to get you

Friday, September 16th, 2005

Simmons again:

And here’s where you expect me to mention New England’s impossible schedule over the next five weeks, how they’re the first team in NFL history to play four games on the road in five weeks against teams that averaged 11 wins last season, and how this is doubly ironic since Indy was handed a cream-puff schedule that included a bye right before their Week 9 game in Foxboro.

One wonders what Dungheap and his Merrie Old Band of Whiners has to do with this…

Zip’s Carolina Review

Friday, September 16th, 2005

Zip has his Carolina review up.

T.I.B., the next important stat?

Friday, September 16th, 2005

Simmons actually says something funny for the first time in ages:

When Baltimore fans derisively cheered an injured Kyle Boller last week, that made me think of something: Can you imagine any other career in which you could suffer an injury, but because you stink at your job so much, everyone else in your office will start cheering derisively as you’re helped out of the building? Do you ever bounce back from that one? Instead of creating complicated statistics that only like 0.3 percent of the human population can understand, I wish the Football Outsider guys would research stuff like “Effectiveness of shaky quarterbacks in the weeks and months after a T.I.B. (traumatic injury booing).” Now that’s the stuff that would be fascinating. Has any quarterback ever bounced back from that situation before and thrived in front of those same fans?

Don’t forget about Mike Reiss, either

Thursday, September 15th, 2005

Any serious Pats fan must check out Mike Reiss’s blog at least several times a day. Even though he works for the Globe, he does a great job covering the team — and his best work doesn’t even make it to print :(. How the Globe can continue to employ lazy, miserable hacks like Cafardo and Borges is beyond me.