Giants implode as Packers roll to convincing win Posted by Anthony Stalter (12/26/2010 @ 9:30 pm) Here are five quick-hit observations from the Packers’ convincing 45-17 win over the Giants on Sunday. 1. If they make the playoffs, the Packers will be a tough out. Green Bay still needs to beat the Bears next Sunday at Lambeau Field to make the playoffs, but if they do they’re going to be one of the tougher sixth seeds to have ever made the postseason. Pundits often remark how they can’t run the ball, but they won’t need to run the ball if Aaron Rodgers continues to play at a MVP level. I don’t want to downplay the need of a good rushing attack but Rodgers found Jordy Nelson on an 80-yard touchdown on their first possession on Sunday and the Packers were able to turn the game into a track meet. Then they kept throwing late in the second half even though they were up two touchdowns. With the weapons they have in the passing game, they can be aggressive – that can be their game. Granted, the opposing team won’t always turn the ball over six times but the Packers will be a dangerous matchup for any team in the postseason. People seem to forget how good this team is. 2. Turnovers once again kill the Giants. It’s pretty simple: Turn the ball over six times against any team, regardless of whether or not they’re a quality opponent, and you’re going to lose. Turn the ball over six times against a good team and you’re going to get your face pounded in. Not all of the Giants’ turnovers mattered because one or two came in garbage time when the Packers already had the win wrapped up. But the majority of them hurt. When teams don’t iron out their issues throughout the season, they can come back to haunt them. The Giants started coughing the ball up in Week 1 and have never stopped. 3. The Giants weren’t over last week’s collapse. The players said they were over their loss to the Eagles and maybe they thought they were. But it sure looked like the Giants needed a quarter to focus after what happened to them last Sunday. They spotted Green Bay a 14-0 lead in the first quarter when Jordy Nelson caught an 80-yard touchdown on the Packers’ first offensive possession when he got by Antrel Rolle at the line of scrimmage. Then Rodgers hit James Jones for a three-yard touchdown with 1:53 remaining in the quarter and all of a sudden it looked as if the rout was on. Credit Tom Coughlin’s squad for snapping out of their funk to tie the game at 14-14, but the Packers just kept coming. Once they took a two-touchdown lead late in the second half, you got the feeling New York was done. Last week was just too much for the G-Men to overcome. 4. Tom Brady, Michael Vick…Aaron Rodgers. All week it seems as though the sports radio talk shows have discussed who should win the MVP this year: Tom Brady or Michael Vick. But even though the Packers have yet to clinch a playoff spot, Rodgers should at least be in the discussion – even if his name is only briefly mentioned. This was Rodgers’ 10th career game with at least three touchdown passes and no interceptions, which is the most in NFL history for quarterbacks within three years of their first start. Nothing against Matt Flynn (he played well last Sunday night in New England), but take Rodgers off this team and they don’t even sniff a winning record. He has no running game, he lost his tight end in the first half of the season and his offensive line can be very inconsistent. Yet, he continues to put up outstanding numbers. He’s unreal. 5. What now? The Packers will host the Bears next Sunday in Green Bay and as previously mentioned, if they win they’ll clinch a playoff spot. The Eagles clinched the NFC East with the Giants’ loss and now they’ll fight for playoff seeding. The Giants will wrap up their season next week against the Redskins and they must win. If they win and Green Bay loses to Chicago, then New York is in. The G-Men better not overlook Washington, which has suddenly become pesky. Did Coughlin kick Dodge out of locker room following loss to Eagles? Posted by Anthony Stalter (12/22/2010 @ 5:00 pm) Giants’ punter Matt Dodge had himself a rough day last Sunday. First he had to watch his team blow a 21-point fourth-quarter lead to the Eagles and then he helped them lose the game when he punted the ball right at dangerous returner DeSean Jackson (who returned the gift for a game-winning touchdown). Following the game, Tom Coughlin saw Dodge crying and told him to get out of the locker room, or so says local Philadelphia sports radio loudmouth Howard Eskin via his Twitter page. After Eagles game learned that NY coach T. Coughlin saw his punter in tears. Told him get out of locker room. No longer on this team.
If the report is true, hopefully Coughlin kicked his defense out of the locker room, too. After they left, hopefully he proceeded to kick out his punt return team, his offense and all of his assistant coaches as well. Then when he was the only one left standing in his locker room, here’s hoping Tom Coughlin booted himself out. Because it doesn’t take just one man to blow a 21-point lead in the fourth quarter with only eight minutes remaining in the game. Did Dodge screw up? No doubt. It was a bad mistake and he cost his team dearly. But with the way Coughlin and his coaching staff was handling the game at that point, there’s little doubt that the Eagles would have won in overtime anyway. Maybe the report isn’t true. After all, it did come from Howard Eskin, who isn’t above Tweeting something like that just to rub the Giants noses in a loss to the Eagles. But again, if it is, Coughlin owes Dodge an apology. NFL Week 14 COY power rankings Posted by Mike Farley (12/18/2010 @ 8:00 am) 
Getting down to the wire, like when talking heads on NFL Network, etc. actually start pontificating about what we’ve been writing all season….. 1. Bill Belichick, New England Patriots—Now we’ve seen everything. Running the score up against the Bears during a Chicago blizzard, while holding them to one special teams TD? Did this team actually lose to the Browns a month ago? 2. Andy Reid, Philadelphia Eagles—Won a critical division game in Dallas, and the Eagles can make a statement against the Giants Sunday. What happens may determine if Reid stays right here or drops a few notches, but he’s still brilliant for how he handled the whole QB situation this year. 3. Mike Smith, Atlanta Falcons—He’s running a well-oiled machine, but that doesn’t happen by accident. 4. Steve Spagnuolo, St. Louis Rams—Nobody is complaining that his Rams lost to the Saints, but they my get a rematch, in St. Louis, in the playoffs. 5. Todd Haley, Kansas City Chiefs—Now the Chargers are breathing down his neck; but hey, he probably feels good that Josh McDaniels is watching games from his couch now. 6. Tom Coughlin, New York Giants—From the hot seat to the cold seat to the warm seat and back to the cold seat. And now the Giants have shot to take over the NFC East, while at times conjuring up visions of the 2007 team that won it all. 7. Jack Del Rio, Jacksonville Jaguars—Winning the AFC South when many thought they’d finish last could turn out to be a top storyline this year. But there are still three games left, including a big one this Sunday in Indy. 8. Mike Tomlin, Pittsburgh Steelers—What a great season this has turned out to be for the Steelers, and look no further than the guy in charge for much of that. 9. Raheem Morris, Tampa Bay Bucs—No matter how they finish, the Bucs have well exceeded expectations this season. 10. Lovie Smith, Chicago Bears—Big hiccup at home against New England, and now they get to play OUTDOORS on Monday night in Minneapolis. Yikes. Honorable mention: Sean Payton, New Orleans Saints—Did you know the Saints were 10-3? Neither did anyone else, but Mike Smith has reason to worry. Posted in: NFL Tags: Andy Reid, Atlanta Falcons, Bill Belichick, Chicago Bears, Jack Del Rio, Jacksonville Jaguars, Kansas City Chiefs., Lovie Smith, Mike Smith, Mike Tomlin, National Footbal League, New England Patriots, New Orleans Saints, New York Giants, NFL, NFL Coach of the Year, Philadelphia Eagles, Pittsburgh Steelers, Raheem Morris, Sean Payton, St. Louis Rams, Steve Spagnuolo, Tampa Bay Bucs, Todd Haley, Tom Coughlin
NFL Week 13 COY power rankings Posted by Mike Farley (12/11/2010 @ 7:00 am) 
Four weeks to go….who will stay on this list and who will drop off. Also, who will be the first coach to get fired? Maybe that’s for another list. For now, here are the best coaches/biggest surprises for 2010 thus far…. 1. Todd Haley, Kansas City Chiefs—A two-game lead on the Chargers is nice when you face them in December. Let’s see where this dude sits next week. 2. Steve Spagnuolo, St. Louis Rams—6-6 looks much better than 5-6, doesn’t it? At least it makes the Packers (8-4) and Bucs (7-5) feel better that they’re currently out of the playoffs based on standings. 3. Andy Reid, Philadelphia Eagles—A tough schedule to finish, but that has never scared Big Andy before, and it shouldn’t when Michael Vick is at the helm. 4. Bill Belichick, New England Patriots—If you put up 39 points on the Steelers and 45 on the Jets, you’re doing something right. 5. Mike Smith, Atlanta Falcons—The best record in the NFL should be good for something 6. Lovie Smith, Chicago Bears—9-3, and everyone is STILL waiting for the other shoe to drop. 7. Mike Tomlin, Pittsburgh Steelers—Let’s not forget the current AFC North leaders started the first quarter of the season without Big Ben 8. Tom Coughlin, New York Giants—Since being on the hot seat, Coughlin’s Giants have gone 7-2 and have won the last two games despite not having Steve Smith, Hakeem Nicks, and more than half of their starting O-line. 9. Jack Del Rio, Jacksonville Jaguars—Still in the lead for the AFC South in a year when most expected him to be fired 10. Raheem Morris, Tampa Bay Bucs—Much improved despite having trouble beating some of the better teams Honorable mention: Tom Cable, Oakland Raiders—Bonus points for beating the Chargers so soundly in San Diego last Sunday Posted in: NFL Tags: Andy Reid, Atlanta Falcons, Bill Belichick, Chicago Bears, Jack Del Rio, Jacksonville Jaguars, Kansas City Chiefs., Lovie Smith, Mike Smith, Mike Tomlin, National Football League, New England Patriots, New York Giants, NFL, NFL Coach of the Year, Oakland Raiders, Philadelphia Eagles, Pittsburgh Steelers, Raheem Morris, St. Louis Rams, Steve Spagnuolo, Tampa Bay Bucs, Todd Haley, Tom Cable, Tom Coughlin
NFL Week 12 COY power rankings Posted by Mike Farley (12/05/2010 @ 9:00 am) 
The coach of the year carousel continues to spin each week in this crazy NFL season…. 1. Todd Haley, Kansas City Chiefs—Bonus points if he runs up the score today against the Chiefs at home. 2. Steve Spagnuolo, St. Louis Rams—Yes, they are just 5-6 but that is good for a tie of first place in the NFC West. Say it out loud—the Rams could be playoff bound. 3. Andy Reid, Philadelphia Eagles—Temporary setback against the Bears last week but in the driver’s seat for the NFC East crown. 4. Mike Smith, Atlanta Falcons—Tough win at home against the Packers keeps Smitty in the hunt. 5. Lovie Smith, Chicago Bears—That mid-season swoon seemed to be an aberration rather than the rule, and Lovie has this bunch believing. 6. Raheem Morris, Tampa Bay Bucs—Lost big to Pittsburgh and Baltimore, which knocks Raheem down from the top. 7. (tie) Bill Belichick, New England Patriots and Rex Ryan, New York Jets—We’re going to leave these two tied until after they face each other on Monday night. 8. Mike Tomlin, Pittsburgh Steelers—If Stevie Johnson hangs on to that OT pass, we’re probably knocking Tomlin off this list, fair or not. 9. John Harbaugh, Baltimore Ravens—He knows this is the Ravens’ favorite time of year and expects to win in December. 10. Tom Coughlin, New York Giants—Holding his team together through injuries, some mental lapses on the field and a tough schedule. Posted in: NFL Tags: Andy Reid, Atlanta Falcons, Baltimore Ravens, Bill Belichick, Chicago Bears, John Harbaugh, Kansas City Chiefs., Lovie Smith, Mike Smith, Mike Tomlin, National Football League, New England Patriots, New York Giants, New York Jets, NFL, NFL Coach of the Year, Philadelphia Eagles, Pittsburgh Steelers, Raheem Morris, Rex Ryan, St. Louis Rams, Steve Spagnuolo, Tampa Bay Bucs, Todd Haley, Tom Coughlin
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