NFL Week 15 ROY power rankings Posted by Mike Farley (12/25/2010 @ 10:00 am)
There was an article in USA Today’s Sports Weekly about what a solid rookie class this has been, and it’s so true. Offensive rookie of the year power rankings 1. Sam Bradford, St. Louis Rams—He’s thrown for 3065 yards on a team that won one game last season, and might possibly lead them to a playoff berth. 2. Aaron Hernandez/Rob Gronkowski, New England Patriots—Between them, 953 yards and 13 TDs through 14 games. Those are Antonio Gates-esque numbers. 3. Colt McCoy, Cleveland Browns—Did you need more proof that this kid is the future at QB? Yeah, the Browns lost to the Bengals, but McCoy put up 243 yards with 2 TDs and no picks, and completed 19 of 25 for a ridiculous 76% completion percentage. 4. Mike Williams, Tampa Bay Bucs—Through 14 games—58/880/8, and a big reason for the Bucs’ resurgence this year. 5. Dez Bryant, Dallas Cowboys—As electrifying a young player the NFL has seen in a long time. Defensive rookie of the year power rankings 1. Ndamukong Suh, Detroit Lions—Becoming a defensive leader on his team as a rookie, and helping the young Lions become respectable again. 2. Devin McCourty, New England Patriots—Not only does this young stud have 6 interceptions, but he has 77 total tackles to rank near the top for NFL corners. 3. Eric Berry, Kansas City Chiefs—This is a guy you just don’t throw the ball near, and even if you don’t , he has ridiculous closing speed. 4. Joe Haden, Cleveland Browns—McCoy is the offensive bright spot, Haden the defensive one on a team showing promise in the Holmgren regime. 5. Earl Thomas, Seattle Seahawks—Hasn’t had a pick in a while, but his 5 still ranks near the top in the NFL. Posted in: NFL Tags: Aaron Hernandez, Cleveland Browns, Colt McCoy, Dallas Cowboys, Devin McCourty, Dez Bryant, Earl Thomas, eric berry, Joe Haden, Kansas City Chiefs., Mike Williams, National Football League, Ndamukong Suh, New England Patriots, NFL, NFL defensive rookie of the year, NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year, NFL rookie of the year, Rob Gronkowski, Sam Bradford, Seattle Seahawks, St. Louis Rams, Tampa Bay Bucs
NFL Week 14 ROY power rankings Posted by Mike Farley (12/18/2010 @ 9:00 am) Since they vote for offensive and defensive rookies, lets’ change it up this week…
Offensive rookie of the year power rankings 1. Sam Bradford, St. Louis Rams—We’ll let the New Orleans game slide. For now. 2. Aaron Hernandez/Rob Gronkowski, New England Patriots—You shut one out, and the other will burn you. Or, of course, will Deion Branch and Wes Welker. 3. Mike Williams, Tampa Bay Bucs—Was almost shut out by Redskins, but like Bradford, we’ll let it slide because he’s had such as great season on a promising young team. 4. Colt McCoy, Cleveland Browns—He will get the start Sunday against Cincinnati after missing a few games with an ankle injury. Let’s see if it makes a difference, because McCoy has sparked the Browns before. 5. Dez Bryant, Dallas Cowboys—The Cowboys sure missed him against the Eagles. Defensive rookie of the year power rankings
1. Ndamukong Suh, Detroit Lions—Is anyone really surprised at the ease the big fella transitioned into the NFL? 2. Devin McCourty, New England Patriots—6 picks leads all rookies. 3. Earl Thomas, Seattle Seahawks—Quiet the last few weeks, but who wants to throw in his direction? 4. Eric Berry, Kansas City Chiefs—Berry’s interception against the Chargers was the only good play of the game for his team, and it was a thing of beauty. 5. Joe Haden, Cleveland Browns—His five picks is right behind Thomas, and his overall play has been stellar. Posted in: NFL Tags: Aaron Hernandez, Cleveland Browns, Colt McCoy, Dallas Cowboys, defensive rookie, Detroit Lions, Devin McCourty, Dez Bryant, Earl Thomas, eric berry, Joe Haden, Kansas City Chiefs., Mike Williams, Ndamukong Suh, New England Patriots, NFL, NFL rookie of the year, offensive rookie, Rob Gronkowski, Sam Bradford, Seattle Seahawks, St. Louis Rams, Tampa Bay Bucs
NFL Week 13 ROY power rankings Posted by Mike Farley (12/11/2010 @ 9:00 am)
This race is getting to be as exciting as the Heismann race. Well, maybe. 1. Sam Bradford, St. Louis Rams—Is everyone comparing this kid to Troy Aikman because of how he plays and leads his team calmly? Or because he’s lanky and wears #8? We’ll go with the former, for now. 2. Ndamukong Suh, Detroit Lions—Leads all DTs with 8 sacks, and is third in total tackles among inside guys with 49. 3. Devin McCourty, New England Patriots—Leads the NFL with 6 interceptions 4. Earl Thomas, Seattle Seahawks—Wow, it’s turning out to be a monster DB class, isn’t it? 5. Joe Haden, Cleveland Browns—Like I said….. 6. Aaron Hernandez/Rob Gronkowski, New England Patriots—Really, the numbers are astounding from this dynamic TE duo: 65 catches, 835 yards, 10 TDs 7. Mike Williams, Tampa Bay Bucs—On pace for 68 catches, 1025 yards and 9 scores. Not bad for a rookie. 8. Colt McCoy, Cleveland Browns—Well, yeah, it’s not like he had to play that great to keep the job from Jake Delhomme, but he went and got injured. 9. Dez Bryant, Dallas Cowboys—Another bummer of a season-ending injury. 10. Eric Berry, Kansas City Chiefs—His 69 tackles and 2 picks don’t tell the story about how QBs fear this kid Posted in: NFL Tags: Aaron Hernandez, Cleveland Browns, Colt McCoy, Dallas Cowboys, Detroit Lions, Devin McCourty, Dez Bryant, Earl Thomas, eric berry, Joe Haden, Kansas City Chiefs., Mike Williams, National Football League, Ndamukong Suh, New England Patriots, NFL, NFL rookie of the year, Rob Gronkowski, Sam Bradford, Seattle Seahawks, St. Louis Rams, Tampa Bay Bucs
NFL Week 12 ROY power rankings Posted by Mike Farley (12/05/2010 @ 10:00 am)
It’s turning out to be a pretty awesome rookie class. 1. Sam Bradford, St. Louis Rams—Turning out to be a very strong rookie campaign—on pace for 3586 yards, 25 TDs and 13 picks. And the upstart Rams are now in a tie for first with the Seahawks. 2. Ndamukong Suh, Detroit Lions—Suh is like Albert Haynesworth—doesn’t put up huge numbers, but teams have to game plan around him. Just think how good he’s going to be in five years. 3. Earl Thomas, Seattle Seahawks—Leads all NFL safeties with 5 picks, and averaging 6 tackles a game. 4. Colt McCoy, Cleveland Browns—Averaging almost 200 yards a game and has a stunning 63.8 completion percentage. If only he didn’t get hurt, we would be putting him up there with Bradford. 5. Dez Bryant, Dallas Cowboys—Let’s see if Jon Kitna gets him the ball a bit more today. 6. Devin McCourty, New England Patriots—Funny how Bill Belichick manages to lose guys like Asante Samuel and replaces them with rookies. 7. Mike Williams, Tampa Bay Bucs—Strong start and will hopefully finish strong and move up. He has the talent. 8. Eric Berry, Kansas City Chiefs—Numbers are fading, but that might be because no one is throwing in his direction. 9. Jermaine Gresham, Cincinnati Bengals—Give him a couple of years, he’s going to be a star. 10 (tie). Aaron Hernandez/Rob Gronkowski, New England Patriots—Combined, here are their numbers—61 catches, 772 yards, 9 TDs. Posted in: NFL Tags: Aaron Hernandez, Cincinnati Bengals, Cleveland Browns, Colt McCoy, Dallas Cowboys, Detroit Lions, Devin McCourty, Dez Bryant, Earl Thomas, eric berry, Jermaine Gresham, Kansas City Chiefs., Mike Williams, National Football League, Ndamukong Suh, New England Patriots, NFL, NFL rookie of the year, Rob Gronkowski, Sam Bradford, Seattle Seahawks, St. Louis Rams, Tampa Bay Bucs
Are the Patriots changing their offensive approach? Posted by Anthony Stalter (10/07/2010 @ 12:30 pm) In the first two weeks of the season, the Patriots threw the ball a combined 71 times against the Bengals and Jets, compared to their 43 rushing attempts. In their last two games against the Bills and Dolphins, the Pats threw the ball a combined 59 times compared to 62 rushing attempts. Four weeks is too small of a sample size to make any definitive statements about the direction of New England’s offense, but considering the team traded their No. 1 receiver on Wednesday, it would appear that Bill Belichick is changing his approach on that side of the ball. Now, it would make sense that the Pats would call more running plays against the Bills (whose front seven has been banged up) and Dolphins (whose pass defense ranks in the top 10 and whose run defense ranks in the bottom half of the league). But the Bengals and Jets both have solid pass defenses, so why throw on them? Granted, the flow of the game dictates how plays are called for an offense. If a team were successfully moving the ball on the ground, it would make sense to keep pounding runs at a defense in order to wear them down. Making adjustments is a vital component in football. That said, Tom Brady has completed 72.2% of his passes for 367 yards and five touchdowns when the Patriots have used a two-tight end set this year. And if the public knows that, so does Belichick. Maybe Belichick came to the realization that as the season wears on, he could throw the ball just as successfully with Aaron Hernandez and Rob Gronkowski as he did with Moss. And maybe that’s why he didn’t hesitate trading Moss, who some believe is in decline and who was mentally starting to fade without being offered a new contract. Either way, without Moss taking away double teams from Wes Welker, Belichick will have to change his strategy going forward. He can’t continue to use three-receiver sets like he has the past couple of years and think he’s going to be as successful without Moss. He’s going to have to adjust. And knowing Belichick, he will. |