Tag: Atlanta Falcons (Page 48 of 66)

Peyton Manning wins third MVP Award

Indianapolis Colts’ quarterback Peyton Manning took home his third MVP Award on Friday, beating out Dolphins’ QB Chad Pennington and Falcons’ RB Michael Turner.

Peyton ManningPeyton Manning has joined Brett Favre as the only three-time winners of The Associated Press NFL Most Valuable Player Award.

The Indianapolis Colts quarterback was a landslide winner Friday in balloting by a nationwide panel of 50 sports writers and broadcasters who cover the NFL. Manning also was the league MVP in 2003, when he shared it with Tennessee quarterback Steve McNair, and in 2004.

Favre, then with Green Bay, took MVP honors in 1995 and ’96 before sharing it with Detroit running back Barry Sanders in 1997.

Manning received 32 votes, far ahead of Miami quarterback Chad Pennington and Atlanta running back Michael Turner.

I don’t know if anyone is playing as good as Manning is right now. But the playoffs have spelled a different story for him in the past and it’ll be interesting to see how he does on the road Saturday night in San Diego. I know the man won a Super Bowl, but it doesn’t erase the fact that he’s had more bad times than good in the postseason. And with how banged up the Colts are on defense, their game Saturday against the Chargers won’t be a gimmie.

(Boy I’m positive, huh? The man wins his third MVP Award and I dump on him. What a dick…)

Chris Johnson calls ROY Award “bogus”

Tennessee Titans’ running back Chris Johnson is unhappy that Atlanta Falcons’ quarterback Matt Ryan won the AP Offensive Rookie of the Year Award and believes he should have won the honor.

Chris JohnsonThe award is voted upon by a panel of 50 media members from across the nation and is overseen by the Associated Press. Ryan received 44 votes, while Johnson, the runner-up, received just three votes.

“Of course, it would have been different,” Johnson said. “I had the most votes of any rookie [for the Pro Bowl], more than Matt Ryan. I’m the only one that made it to the Pro Bowl out of all the rookies.”

Pro Bowl balloting is done in thirds, with fan vote, player vote and coaches votes each counting one-third in the process.

“He’s a good player, and he played quarterback and did a good job this year,” Johnson said of Ryan, who guided the Falcons to an 11-5 record and a playoff berth. “But the whole thing is bogus, because people are voting for it that are not on the same field as the people who are playing.

“I’m disappointed. I did all I could to win it. I feel I did the best. I feel I did all I could do to win it; it just didn’t come my way.”

Ryan threw for 16 touchdowns and 11 interceptions, posting 3,440 yards and an 87.7 passer rating.

Johnson rushed for 1,228 yards and nine touchdowns for the Titans.

Johnson definitely has an argument because he was extraordinary this year. But voters know that running back is arguably the easiest position to pick up as a rookie, while quarterback remains the hardest. And last time I checked, Johnson finished behind fellow rookies Steve Slaton and Matt Forte in rushing yardage (granted he didn’t play in the final week, but Slaton didn’t see a ton of carries at the start of the season either) and the Titans are the No. 1 seed in the AFC. Ryan led a Falcon team that was predicted to win 1-2 games this year to an 11-5 record and a playoff appearance.

Again, Johnson has an argument. But I think the award wound up in the right hands.

Rich McKay would be a solid choice for Browns’ next GM

The Cleveland Browns were given permission by the Atlanta Falcons to interview president (and former GM) Rich McKay for their current general manager position.

Rich McKayMcKay was stripped of his general manager duties after last season. He stayed on with the Falcons to help in several capacities.

McKay has stepped into the background this season as Thomas Dimitroff took over the football operations. He’s been instrumental in helping Dimitroff with the salary cap, contract negotiations, the Falcons’ pursuit of new stadium options and several other business operations.

The Falcons went to the NFC Championship game in McKay’s first year, but things went sour with his hirings of Jim Mora and Bobby Petrino, poor free agent signings, like Ed Hartwell, and failed high draft picks in DeAngelo Hall and Jimmy Williams.

To McKay’s credit, he did select guard Justin Blalock, wide receivers Roddy White and Michael Jenkins and make the trade for defensive end John Abraham.

McKay’s tenure with the Falcons has endured the federal dogfighting investigation that landed quarterback Michael Vick in prison.

The article fails to mention that McKay also drafted current starters Michael Boley, Jonathan Babineaux, and Chris Houston, as well as playmaker Jerious Norwood, who shares carries with Michael Turner. None of those picks were first round picks, either, which is a testament to his ability to draft in the middle rounds.

Of his bad decisions, the hiring of Bobby Petrino was just as much owner Arthur Blank’s fault as it was McKay’s because Blank had to have a big name for his coach. And when the Falcons signed Ed Hartwell, he hadn’t missed a game in his entire career and then blew both knees out in his first two years in Atlanta. Is that on McKay?

Signing Vick to a huge contract extension turned out to be a disaster, but nobody knew he was fighting dogs in his spare time. Jimmy Williams was a total bust, while Hall was overrated and cocky, but he did make a Pro Bowl and never finished with less than four interceptions after his rookie year.

McKay would be a great fit in Cleveland because he’s won before and would give the Browns much-needed direction. He built the Buccaneers 2002 Super Bowl team and got the Falcons to the NFC Championship Game in 2004. He wouldn’t be a better choice than the Patriots’ Scott Pioli, but the Browns could do a lot worse than a guy who turned around once morbid franchises in Tampa and Atlanta.

Not every move a general manager makes is going to be a home run. But McKay has had more hits than misses in his career and even though he lost his GM role with the Falcons last year, it spoke volumes to his credibility that Atlanta wanted to keep him as president. It should also be noted that McKay’s name once came up to replace Paul Tagliabue as NFL commissioner.

Top 10 Erroneous Columns of 2008

In one of the coolest features I’ve seen compiled in a long time, RealClearSports.com put together a list of the top 10 erroneous columns of 2008.

Patriots-Giants Super Bowl XLII1. Pats Can’t Lose

“Crown them Now. Pats Can’t Lose” – Jay Mariotti, Chicago Sun-Times

“…[I]f you’re expecting a Super Bowl…please be aware that the New England Patriots already have won their fourth Vince Lombardi trophy in seven years. They clinched it Sunday, while sitting around their TV sets, watching the only team that possibly could have beaten them, the Indianapolis Colts, lose at home to the San Diego Chargers … Beyond a mass kidnapping, nothing will stop the Patriots from their destiny. They’ve overcome close calls with great escapes, and now, just two wins short of the greatest season in American team sports since the Bulls’ 72-10 title year, no opponent in this solar system will beat them … Crown them. We know exactly who the Patriots are: the perfect football team.”

Sorry, Jay. Take solace in the fact that you were one of millions who was very, very wrong. Unfortunately, your words got printed.

I love when Jay Mariotti is called out. I don’t know, it just makes me feel all warm inside.

Some of the other erroneous columns discussed:

“Mets Won’t Collapse Again” – Mike Vaccaro, New York Post
“Rays Won’t Make Playoffs” – Mike Vaccaro, New York Post
“Picking Ryan ‘Highly Debatable'” – Terence Moore, Atlanta Journal-Constitution
“Lakers Will Win Title” – Michael Ventre, NBC Sports
“McNabb’s Reign Likely is Over” – Ashley Fox, Philadelphia Inquirer

Falcons’ quarterback Matt Ryan wins AP Offensive Rookie of the Year

Atlanta Falcons’ quarterback Matt Ryan won the AP Offensive Rookie of the Year in a landslide.

Matt RyanMatt Ryan is more than the face of the sensational turnaround by the Atlanta Falcons. He also is the best member of a superb rookie crop, earning The Associated Press 2008 NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year award Tuesday.

The quarterback from Boston College, selected third overall in April’s draft, was a landslide winner in balloting by a nationwide panel of 50 sports writers and broadcasters who cover the league. Ryan became the third quarterback in five years to win the award; before that, no QB ever took the honor.

He joins Ben Roethlisberger (2004) and Vince Young (2006) as top rookie quarterbacks.

Well deserved. Ryan stepped in right from Week 1 and played like a veteran for 16 games. I realize Joe Flacco was equally impressive this season, but he benefited from playing for a team with one of the best defenses in the league. The Falcons’ defense is a bit underrated, but they didn’t give Ryan the same scoring opportunities as the Ravens did Flacco. Ryan didn’t get to play the Bengals and Browns twice a year, either.

It’ll be nice to see Ryan on a national stage for the first time this season when the Falcons head to Arizona to play the Cardinals this Saturday for Wild Card Weekend. Check this kid out if you haven’t seen him play yet – he’s amazing. (Although, as I wrote last Sunday, he seems to be hitting that rookie wall because he hasn’t been as sharp lately as he had been earlier in the year.)

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