Category: Fantasy Football (Page 160 of 324)

Giants get benefit of calls in win over Eagles

Brandon JacobsYou never want games to come down to instant replay decisions, but unfortunately it’s unavoidable in the NFL. And hey, at least the NFL has instant replay to insure that the correct calls are made.

The Giants got the benefit of two back-to-back challenges in their 36-31 win over the Eagles on Sunday night. The first was when Eli Manning appeared to have crossed the line of scrimmage on an attempted pass on a 3rd and 10 from the Philadelphia 20 yard line early in the third quarter. Manning completed the pass for a first down, but the refs had ruled he had crossed the line of scrimmage, which led to a loss of down. But Tom Coughlin wisely challenged the play and the call was reversed because replay (kind of sort of) showed that Manning’s right heel was still behind the line of scrimmage.

The Giants were awarded a first down and after a dropped touchdown reception by Kevin Boss, Brandon Jacobs scored on a three-yard touchdown run. Of course Jacobs fumbled, but refs said he had broken the plane. Andy Reid challenged, but replay showed that the ball did (kind of sort of) crossed the end zone while Jacobs still had the ball. With the touchdown, New York took a 27-24 lead and never trailed from that point.

The calls were close, but it appeared that the refs got them both right. Regardless, both of these teams are better than what they showed Sunday night. They each combined for four turnovers and while Donovan McNabb threw three touchdown passes, he wasn’t particularly sharp. Of course the Giants had a lot to do with that, taking away Philly’s running game and forcing McNabb to throw into tight passing windows.

The key in this game was that the Eagles couldn’t stop Jacobs and the rest of the Giants’ plethora of running backs. New York owned the line of scrimmage and have found an emerging red zone threat in tight end Kevin Boss, who is cheaper than Jeremy Shockey and less disruptive.

With the win, the Giants are now 7-1 in the division. But that NFC East is going to be a dogfight until the end.

Herm Edwards plays the goat after Chiefs fail to convert 2-point conversation

Tony GonzalezIt’s that old notion – go for two and make it, you’re a genius. Go for two and fail to convert, you’re a goat. Well, Kansas City head coach Herman Edwards will have to play goat this week as his decision to go for two late in the fourth quarter in San Diego on Sunday backfired as the Chargers beat the Chiefs 20-19.

It’s hard to criticize Edwards (or any head coach for that matter) who goes for two when his team is 1-8 and on the road. When the Chiefs scored to cut the deficit to 20-19 with only 29 seconds remaining in the game, they had stolen on the all momentum after driving 60 yards on 14 plays. Edwards figured that his best chance to win was right there at the goal line, instead of trying his luck in overtime. Again, at 1-8, screw it. Go for the win. Obviously it didn’t work out well for Herm, but I don’t blame him for the thought process.

Even though his team lost, what a game by quarterback Tyler Thigpen (27 for 41, 266 yards, 3 TDs, 0 INTs). Maybe he has a place in the league after all. It appears that KC has taken the training wheels off him the past couple weeks and have allowed him to throw downfield. He looked great Sunday, especially throwing to tight end Tony Gonzalez, who had a fantastic touchdown catch in this game that showed his immense concentration.

Speaking of which, the Chargers shouldn’t scare anyone. They’re pedestrian at best and their defense still has a ton of holes. Whichever team between them and Denver gets to nine wins this year will win the AFC West.

Colts right back in the hunt with huge win over Steelers

Indianapolis ColtsTwo weeks ago the Indianapolis Colts were stomped by division rival Tennessee on Monday night and at 3-4, things looked rather bleak. But since then, the Colts have rattled off wins over two top teams in the AFC and all of a sudden the tide is turning for a franchise that everyone expects to be a lock every year for the postseason.

Indy earned a hard-fought 24-20 victory over the Pittsburgh Steelers on Sunday to get to 5-4 on the season. And while they’re not a pretty 5-4, the Colts are definitely back in the playoff hunt in the AFC.

While it’s nice that Peyton Manning (21 of 40, 240 yards, 3 TDs) has shaken off some rust, the Colts can thank their defense for their back-to-back victories the past two weeks. Indy picked off Ben Roethlisberger three times on Sunday and held the Steelers to only 55 yards rushing. It’s absolutely amazing what Bob Sanders means to their defense and the play Melvin Bullitt made in the end zone at the end of the game was phenomenal.

At some point, the Colts are going to need to get their running game back on track because they’re not going to win many games when they only rush for only 62 yards. But there’s no question Indy is a dangerous team again and with Houston, San Diego, Cleveland, Cincinnati and Detroit coming up over the next month and a half, there’s no reason to think that they can’t go on a huge run.

The Rams are an embarrassment

Jim HaslettRemember when Jim Haslett took over for Scott Linehan about a month ago and the Rams beat the Redskins in Washington and then crushed the Cowboys at home the very next week? Well, those wins are nothing but a distant memory.

The Jets hammered the Rams 47-3 at Giants Stadium on Sunday, but it wasn’t even that close. St. Louis trailed 40-0 at halftime, turned the ball over five times, managed only 200 total yards and were just 4 of 10 on third downs. Even when they marched into the red zone, they still couldn’t muster any points.

It was impressive how the Rams responded when Haslett was chosen as interim coach. They showed emotion, played inspired and actually resembled a football team. But their last two games have shown that the front office needs to completely blow this team up. They need a new quarterback because Marc Bulger has been a disaster and Trent Green should have retired two years ago. They need an offensive line. They need a secondary and they need a new direction.

As for the Jets, I know Brett Favre gets all the attention for the team’s turnaround this year but the defense deserves a ton of credit too. Eric Mangini has the defense playing more aggressively and unsung players like Abram Elam are stepping up big. If the Jets make the playoffs this year, Favre would have played a big part. But it’ll be the defense that will determine just how far they eventually go.

Matt Ryan has made the Falcons a contender

Matt RyanStop hesitating and say it: The Atlanta Falcons are a playoff contender. Their 6-3 record isn’t a fluke. They’re that good.

Yes, three of their victories are against the Lions, Chiefs and Raiders. They’ve also gone into Lambeau and beaten the Packers, topped the Kyle Orton-led Bears and in their latest victory, crushed the Saints 34-20 on Sunday. (The only reason the score was that close is because New Orleans scored on a fluke “Hail Mary” pass as time expired.)

Matt Ryan (16 of 23, 248 yards, 2 TDs) has lifted the Falcons to contender-status, but it’s not just him. Michael Turner was a fantastic free agent signing. Jerious Norwood can take one to the house every time he touches the ball. Roddy White has developed into a true No. 1 receiver. Michael Jenkins is finally living up to his first round status. And the defense has been much, much better than people expected.

Speaking of the defense, they intercepted Drew Brees three times on Sunday and returned one of those picks for a touchdown. First-year head coach Mike Smith has completely turned Atlanta’s defense around and the players have bought into his philosophy of playing physical.

As for the Saints, little is going right for them. Injuries have started to mount and at 4-5, they’re two-three games behind every team in a stacked NFC South. Frustration is starting to boil over, too, as cameras caught Drew Brees screaming at Jeremy Shockey on the sidelines on Sunday. Not that Brees was out of line – Shockey looks like he’s already given up. He’s not as involved in the offense as he thought he would be and it looks like he’s not even running full routes any more. There’s no question that Billy Miller is the Saints’ best tight end right now.

These are two teams heading in vastly different directions.

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