RT's AFC Championship Preview
Posted On Friday, January 16, 2009 at at 1/16/2009 08:33:00 AM by Koski
As I embark on my last AFC playoff preview, I would like to give you a few thoughts before I pad my 4-0 record.
* How come nobody is talking about how Jake Delhomme single-handedly OJ’d the Panther’s season!? He just turned in the worst single performance in playoff history and somehow he gets a free pass. I don’t get it.
* We are about to enter a new era of great quarterbacks. Matt Ryan, Joe Flacco, Matt Stafford, Sam Bradford and Brady Quinn have the collective potential to bring back respectability to the quarterback position.
* I want to thank the Steelers defense for mailing in the last 5 minutes of last week’s game to ruin my prediction of a blowout. Thanks guys.
Baltimore Ravens v. Pittsburgh Steelers (-6)
#6 Baltimore Ravens
OFFENSE: The Ravens looked terrible on offense last week. The coaches looked scared out of their mind every time Joe Flacco dropped back to pass. The fear was completely unjustified as Flacco did what he has done all season which is manage the game and make a few big plays. I would say he played with significantly more confidence than Kerry Collins. Beyond Flacco, the running game was pathetic. The offensive line was dominated and the numbers proved it. McGahee had only 32 yards rushing and McClain had an abysmal 12 yards on 12 carries. No running lanes = No victory for the Ravens this week.
DEFENSE: There is only one thing that needs to be said about the defensive effort from the Ravens last week. If Ed Reed doesn’t pull a “one-game suspension” worthy dirty play on Chris Johnson in the first-half, the Titans win the game by 10 points and the Steelers are playing on the road this week.
#2 Pittsburgh Steelers
OFFENSE: The Steelers offense starts and stops with the run game. Willie Parker ran all over the Chargers (as predicted here) and the Steelers won the game going away. The run game will again be the key this week as Ben Roethlisberger cannot be trusted to win the game against a defense like the Ravens. He gave us a B game last week and he will need his “A” game if Parkers is stuck at the line of scrimmage all game. Of course, the unsung hero of the Steeler’s win over the Chargers was the offensive line which gave Big Ben all the time he needed and gave Parker the running lanes he needed.
DEFENSE: How is it possible that the best defense in the league can be underrated!? If you asked most fans which team has the better defense – the Ravens or the Steelers – I have to believe 2 out of 3 say the Ravens. Ridiculous. The Steelers gave up a bunch of passing yard to Rivers last week, but that was after the game was well in hand. Don’t expect the defense to let up this week.
Ravens v. Steelers Matchup
Ravens on offense: I fear for the Ravens this week. They will do their best to establish the run early but I think they will run into the same problem they had last week. Too much running the ball at the beginning which will force them to rely on Flacco to make big plays. To have a chance to win, the Ravens offense will need to score points by establishing a balanced offensive attack. If they continuously run the ball on 2nd and 7 in the first half, this game could be over very very early.
Steelers on offense: As I said above, getting Willie Parker his yards early in the game is critical for the Steelers. Big Ben is a very good quarterback but he cannot take over a game like Tom Brady or Peyton Manning. Even though I do expect the Steelers to control the line of scrimmage, I don’t think the Steelers can win without a steady diet of Parker. Nobody is talking about how “Super” Ed Reed won the game last week by putting Chris Johnson on the sidelines for the second half. Unless Reed can duplicate his dirty play, Parker will get his yards early and the Steelers will move the ball consistently down the field.
Prediction: It’s the Steelers again. The team that can run the ball wins this game and that team is the Steelers. While it would be easy to say the rookie Flacco folds under the pressure in a hostile environment, I think he continues to deliver a performance that keeps his team in the game. In the end, the Steelers are too good on the defensive side of the ball and they are a tough team to beat at Heinz Field unless some guy named Brady is the quarterback of the other team. Steelers by a touchdown.
Baltimore: 10 – Pittsburgh: 17
BREAKING NEWS!!!!! DENVER HIRES OFFENSIVE COORDINATOR
Posted On Thursday, January 15, 2009 at at 1/15/2009 10:41:00 PM by Koski
My sources tell me the Broncos will hire Mike McCoy to be the offensive coordinator. McCoy comes to Denver after nine seasons with Carolina, most recently serving as the QB coach.
Kurt Warner, Hall of Famer?
Posted On Wednesday, January 14, 2009 at at 1/14/2009 08:14:00 PM by KoskiThe NFC Championship game will be hosted by the Arizona Cardinals at the University of Phoenix Stadium thanks in large part to the play of Kurt Warner. The question that may be bounded about in the media is, “Is Kurt Warner a Hall of Fame player?”
Kurt Warner is NOT a Hall of Famer.
A Hall of Fame player should play at the highest level for many seasons. Career statistics set the threshold for greatness and post season performance acts as extra credit for those players whose career stats may be not up to snuff. I’ve picked several statistical categories to help compare Warner with several contemporary Hall of Fame quarterbacks and other contemporary quarterbacks with similar statistics. I chose six categories aiming to combine seasonal statistics, premier awards and Super Bowl extra credit points to see where Warner fits in historically.
3,000+ yards passing seasons – Throwing for 3,000 yards is a nice round benchmark of a superior season for a Quarterback. If you average 3,000 yards per season for 11 seasons your peers in career passing yardage would be Hall of Famers Steve Young, Y.A. Tittle, Troy Aikman and Sonny Jurgenson.
20+ TD pass seasons –If you averaged 20 TD passes a season for 12 seasons you’d have more TD passes than Steve Young, George Blanda and Jim Kelly and be right behind Y.A. Tittle.
# of Pro Bowls – As a QB, a pro bowl selection means you were one of the top 6 quarter backs in the NFL and one of the top three in your conference. One or two could be a blip, but four or five show consistent excellence.
Super Bowl Appearances – It’s important to get to the big game, even if you don’t win. Winning is a big bonus.
Seasons with 13+ games started – This is a longevity factor. 13 games is roughly 80% of a 16 game schedule. For QBs that played in the 1987 strike shortened season I use 11 games as the marker.
Up first, the five quarterbacks most recently inducted into the Hall of Fame, in no particular order:
Aikman
3,000+ = 5
20+ TDs = 1
Pro Bowl = 6
Awards = 1 SB MVP
SB record = 3-0
Seasons w/13+ GS = 8
Elway
3,000+ = 12
20+ TDs = 6
Pro Bowl = 9
Awards = 1 MVP, 1 SB MVP
SB record = 2-3
Seasons w/13+ GS =13
Moon
3,000+ = 9
20+ TDs = 7
Pro Bowl = 9
Awards = 0
SB record = N/A
Seasons w/13+ GS = 11
Marino
3,000+ = 13
20+ TDs = 13
Pro Bowl = 9
Awards = 3 time All Pro, 1 MVP
SB record = 0-1
Seasons w/13+ GS = 14
Kelly
3,000+ = 8
20+ TDs = 7
Pro Bowl = 4
Awards = 1 All Pro
SB record = 0-4
Seasons w/13+ GS = 11
Young
3,000+ = 6
20+ TDs = 5
Pro Bowl = 7
Awards = 3 All Pro, 2 MVP, 1 SB MVP
SB record = 1-0
Seasons w/13+ GS = 7
Now let’s look at retired quarterbacks that are not in the HOF and are most likely not going to be inducted any time soon:
Gannon
3,000+ = 4
20+ TDs = 4
Pro Bowl = 4
Awards = 2 All Pros and 1 MVP
SB record = 0-1
Seasons w/13+ GS = 4
3,000+ =7
20+ TDs = 5
Pro Bowl = 4
Awards = 1 All Pro
SB record = 0-1
Seasons w/13+ GS = 9
McNair
3,000+ = 6
20+ TDs = 3
Pro Bowl = 3
Awards = 1 MVP
SB record = 0-1
Seasons w/13+ GS = 8
Everett
3,000+ =7
20+ TDs = 6
Pro Bowl = 1
Awards = 0
SB record = N/A
Seasons w/13+ GS =8
Bledsoe
3,000+ = 9
20+ TDs = 7
Pro Bowl = 4
Awards = 0
SB record = 0-1
Seasons w/13+ GS =11
Next in line to the Hall:
Favre
3,000+ = 17
20+ TDs = 14
Pro Bowl = 9
Awards = 3 All Pros, 3 MVPs
SB record = 1-1
Seasons w/13+ GS =17
Here are Kurt Warner’s totals:
Warner
3,000+ =5
20+ TDs = 5
Pro Bowl = 4
Awards = 2 All Pros, 2 MVPs and 1 SB MVP
SB record = 1-1
Seasons w/13+ GS =3
Of all the quarterbacks I’ve listed, Kurt Warner is statistically closest to Rich Gannon, Troy Aikman and possibly Steve Yonug. He’s less like Aikman because Troy had Emmitt Smith and didn’t have to pass a great deal. Aikman and Warner are similar in the Awards/SB categories, where Aikman’s three wins and one SB MVP left no doubt of his greatness. Steve Young is somewhat similar, but sitting behind Hall of Famer Joe Montana for four seasons is a special circumstance that Warner does not similarly share. As of now, Warner is a slightly better Rich Gannon. Do you consider Rich Gannon to be a Hall of Famer? What if the Raiders had beaten the Buccaneers in SBXXXVII? I say Warner still has to do more to separate himself from Gannon to get into Canton.
One category routinely brought up by Warner-for-Hall-of-Fame supporters is his outstanding Passer Rating. I don’t put much stock in that category as a Hall of Fame indicator because it’s skewed by the current offensive era. Warner is currently 4th in career Passer Rating. The Hall of Famers I listed above have the following career passer ratings ranks: Aikman - 38th, Elway – 53rd, Moon – 42nd, Marino – 16th, Kelly – 25th and Young – 1st. The Top 20 in career Passer Rating is full of contemporary quarterbacks not even close to Hall of Fame consideration: Chad Pennington – 8th, Jeff Garcia – 13th, Trent Green – 17th, Marc Bulger -19th. In fact, 17 of the top 21 QBs in career passer rating are current players.
For me, Warner is close, but has some lofty achievements to reach before I would induct him into the Hall of Fame. He has had several great seasons, but also several okay-to-sub par, injury-shortened seasons and lacks the consistent greatness reserved for the Hall of Fame.
1) Warner will have to lead the Arizona Cardinals to the Lombardi trophy and win the SB MVP
2) He needs one more season of 3,000+ yards, 20+ TDs and 13+ games started.
Some would argue anyone who leads the Cardinals to a Super Bowl trophy should immediately be enshrined into Canton, but - what can I say – I still think the Hall of Fame is reserved for greatness.
Weekend Thoughts
Posted On Monday, January 12, 2009 at at 1/12/2009 09:07:00 AM by KoskiNFL Playoff thoughts
Baltimore v. Tennessee
Sure, Baltimore has a great defense, but Tennessee gave that game away. Let's do a quarter by quarter breakdown of all the Titans breakdowns.
1Q: After looking good holding Baltimore to two three and outs the Titans score first and hold the Ravens to a 3rd and 18. Then defensive offsides on Vanden Bosch pushes it to 3rd and 13. No biggie, except on the next play it looks like Chris Hope is supposed to have the deep third coverage, but is late getting over and gives up the 48 yard touchdown.
2Q: Tennessee has another nice drive into Baltimore territory, but it stalls when a screen to Bo Scaife is sniffed out by Raven safety Leonhard for a five yard loss to make it 4th and 8 at the Baltimore 30. Because of the wind conditions Jeff Fisher elects to go for it and Collins fumbles the snap. 4th and 8 isn't close to guaranteed against the Ravens, but you have to give yourself a chance. The next Titans possession starts at their own one yard line and they move the ball all the way to the Baltimore 32 and face a 3rd and 8. The Ravens blitz and Collins throws up a duck that is easily intercepted. Collins is a seasoned veteran, but looked like the rookie all game when the Ravens bring more than four pass rushers. The Titans hold the Ravens to three and out and get the ball back and in seven plays are already inside the Raven 22 yard line with 36 seconds before halftime. LenDale White earns five hard yards, but doesn't protect the ball when he's in a wash of defenders and the ball pops loose and Baltimore recovers.
3Q: Both teams are playing great defense after the half, each team forcing three punts. The Titans get to the 28 yard line on one drive, but the Ravens challenge a third down catch by Scaife and the ruling is reversed forcing a 51 yard FG attempt instead of a 46 yard try. Bironas misses to the left. 51 yard FGs are not gimmes in any sense, but you have to make those in the playoffs if you want to move on.
4Q: After the Ravens take the lead with a FG, the Titans put together a ten play drive and Collins completes a pass to Alge Crumpler on 2nd and 9 from the Baltimore 13. Crumpler gains seven before he's hit and the ball goes flying forwards, recovered at the one by Baltimore. Again, the contact was coming, but the ball wasn't protected. The Titans hold the Ravens on the next drive and comeback and tie the game with a FG afterwards. When Baltimore gets the ball back, they face a 3rd and 2 on their own 32 yard line when the now infamous play clock reaches zero and no flag is thrown. The amount of leeway that NFL fans are used to allows for a split second after the play clock reaches zero to get a play off, but this was almost a full second.
The Ravens earned the victory, but Tennessee did more than enough to help them out. Both fumbles had more to do with carelessness than with defensive pressure. Joe Flacco the rookie had more pocket presence than 15+ year veteran Kerry Collins. Tennessee lost its best offensive player, Chris Johnson, for the entire second half because of an ankle injury and they got burned by an officiating blunder. What lesson can be learned from this? Don't let your team peak too early in the season. Tennessee was the last unbeaten team this year and then fell off a little, even though they ended with the best record in the NFL. They didn't "play" in week 17 and then they looked sloppy after the bye week.
Arizona @ Carolina
The surest bet around had to be Carolina -9.5 at home against the a Cardinal team that was 0-5 on the east coast this season and 2-22 in it's last twenty four games played in the eastern time zone who was missing a key cog in the offensive attack, Anquan Boldin. Carolina even came out and scored rather easily on the first drive in five plays. Unfortunately, the Panthers could not cover Larry Fitzgerald and Jake Delhomme might have had the worst playoff quarterback performance of all time. It was extra ironic for Delhomme because on Sunday NFL Countdown on ESPN, I think it was Bob Holtzman said Delhomme came into the game as third all time in playoff QB rating after Joe Montana and somebody else. Later on the same show Cris Carter repeated the stat, but didn't give Holtzman(or whoever said it originally) credit like he had come up with it himself. Delhomme had six(!) turnovers including five INTs. Delhomme had a playoff passer rating of approximately 104.5 before this game and it dropped over twenty points after this game to 83.3.
Philadelphia @ NY Giants
This game was all about the Eagles defensive line. The Giants defense played great as well, holding Westbrook to 36 yards on 18 carries and only two catches for ten yards, but the Ealges and Broderick Bunkley in particular won this game for Philly. It was windy at the Meadowlands and John Carney, who missed only two 40+ yard FGs all year, missed two in this game. The windy conditions and the Giants power run game led Tom Coughlin to go for it on fourth ans short three times, but the Giants only converted the once in the first quarter. Not counting the intentional grounding by McNabb in his own endzone for a safety, neither team had a sack this game. Two great defenses, both teams like to blitz and both are in the top ten in number of sacks this season had zero this game. The Giants had zero sacks against the Eagles in three games this year. Clap it up for the Eagles offensive line.
San Diego @ Pittsburgh
Every team that scored first this weekend ended up losing. Three of the four teams scored touchdowns first. San Diego connects on a long bomb to DUI Jackson and then force a Pittsburgh punt. After giving the ball to Darren Sproles three times the Chargers give the ball to last week's MVP, punter Mike Scifres. Unfortunately, the Charger punt coverage was hideous, with four men bunched on the left side of the field and the five others spread too far apart on the the other side of the field. Naanee had a chance to push Holmes out of bounds, but instead dove at his ankles like a punter/kicker/quarterback and Hollmes hurdled him easily. The key to this game was San Diego's inability to get pressure on Roethlisberger and the Steeler offensive line to protect Big Ben. Only one sack for the Chargers, by the safety Weddle, while the Steelers got four sacks from Woodley, Harrison and Keisel, all DL/LBs.
Sharks
Despite some people panicking because the Sharks aren't leading the other NHL teams by 10+ points, they beat the Oilers and Canucks on back to back nights on the road. Now the Sharks have four home games spread out over the next week before the All Star break.
Warriors
I hate this team. Not because they are losing and will continue to lose. It's because the team is symbolic of what the Warriors were just three short season ago and the previous decade before that, irrelevant with no hope for the future. Ellis is unhappy. Maggette sucks. He can get to the line, but he can't pass, at all. Bellinelli looks promising. Randolph looks promising. Wright looked promising before separating his shoulder. Will any of them flourish with the Warriors? Most likely not because Robert Rowell and Nellie mucked everything up when their egos got in the way. Warriors basketball, it's a great time out.
Koski's NFC Divisional Playoff Preview
Posted On Friday, January 9, 2009 at at 1/09/2009 09:39:00 AM by Koski#6
The Eagles defense beat the Vikings last week. While the Eagles only sacked Tarvaris Jackson once, he felt the pressure.
Offense – The Eagles struggled to run the ball last week, but should be marginally more successful this week versus the Giants top ten rush defense. The Eagles did a good job of finding an open Brent Celek, who was the leading receiver against
Defense – The Eagles stopped the Viking rushing attack, for the most part, last week. They’ll have an even greater challenge this week versus the number one rush offense in the league. Saying Eli Manning is less mobile than Tarvaris Jackson is an understatement to be sure, so I expect more sacks this week for the Eagles. Brian Dawkins is the Ed Reed of the NFC. He won’t have to worry about Plaxico Burress and will focus on stopping the run, blitzing Manning and creating turnovers.
#1
The Giants earned the number one seed and home field advantage with the best running game in the NFL and a top ten defense. Brandon Jacobs and Derrick Ward provided an excellent one-two punch behind the best offensive line in football. The Giants defensive line has played extremely well and has put a good deal on opposing quarterbacks despite losing Michael Strahan to retirement and Osi Umenyiora to injury all season. Establishing a consistent rushing attack and containing Brian Westbrook will be the keys to victory.
Offense – Brandon Jacobs got nicked up at the end of the season, but has been able to rest for a couple weeks and should be ready to roll all over the Eagles. Derrick Ward comes in on passing downs and does his best Brian Westbrook impression when he gets the ball. The loss of Plaxico Burress severely hurts the offense in the playoffs. Burress provided a deep threat that required safety help. Domenik Hixon has had good games here and there, but has struggled to be consistent and will have a tough time against the Philly corners. TE Kevin Boss started the season slow, but has become more involved in the game plan during the second half of the season.
Defense – Justin Tuck leads the defensive attack from defensive end and he’s been aided by Mathias Kiwanuka and the improved play of Jay Alford and Fred Robbins. Corey Webster has proven to be an effective corner while Aaron Ross has been the corner that the opposition has chosen to attack. The Giants have problems covering the TE, but are still top ten in defending the pass.
Eagles on offense – The Eagles will have the same attack plan as they did versus the Vikings. They will try and get Westbrook matched up with the Giants linebackers in the passing game. The Giants linebackers are good, but they aren’t fast enough to keep up with Westbrook. I expect another 20+ touches for Westbrook and probably 10+ for Buckhalter, who is as healthy as he has been all season. The Eagles will feed Westbrook to draw the Giants safeties up before throwing the ball down the field to DeSean Jackson. The Eagles bring in Buckhalter a lot on passing downs because he’s a good pass blocker, but he’s also effective on draws and screens. McNabb will be under fire for a lot of the game and he’ll need to move around and keep plays alive while Tra Thomas and John Runyan try and block Justin Tuck. Like last week, I predict a “big” game for TE Brent Celek as the Giants defense has a lot of other responsibilities to worry about.
Giants on Offense- The battle in the trenches will be the key to victory. The Giants line will need to move the Eagles defensive tackles and slow the end rushers. The Giants want to use Jacobs pounding running style to challenge the Philly linebackers to tackle him all game. After the linebackers get tired of Jacobs, Ward comes in and uses his quickness to evade tacklers and break long runs. The Giants will want to stay away from obvious passing situations where Jim Johnson can go blitz happy without worrying about safety help deep. I expect a trick play or two from the Giants as they try and take advantage of the aggressive Philly defense. TE Kevin Boss should play an integral part in the passing game as Manning’s safety valve and should see some targets in the red zone.
Prediction- I really like how the Eagles are playing right now. They only lost by five at home when the Giants had Burress and beat the Giants at the Meadowlands a mere five weeks ago. Playing
#4
The Cardinals scored on a long flea flicker pass, a disrupted handoff fumble return and a short crossing pass to Boldin who somehow managed to stay inbounds as he sprinted down the sideline and they only won by six points. The Cardinals defensive line played outstanding, Betrand Berry in particular, and we’ll see if they can repeat the performance on the road where the Cardinals have been horrendous.
Offense- Larry Fitzgerald is the best receiver in the NFC and it’s a virtual draw between him and Andre Johnson for best wide receiver in the NFL. When Boldin is playing, the Cardinals like to work him underneath with Breaston and Fitzgerald working the deeper routes. This worked to perfection against the Falcons when Boldin caught a short pass and took it 71 yards for a score and Fitzgerald caught a 42 yard toss up over two Falcons in the end zone. Edgerrin James was surprisingly effective against a bad Falcons defense, but how will he do versus a better Panther defense?
Defense- The Cardinals defense turned up the pressure against
#2
Offense – I covered the rushing stats above, but DeAngelo Williams and Jonathan Stewart were both excellent running backs this year. Williams had an unbelievable year with 18 rushing touchdowns including two games with four a piece. Stewart was no slouch either, rushing for 10 touchdowns himself, more than Portis, Chris Johnson or Brian Westbrook. Steve Smith might have topped both backs by having the third most receiving yards in the NFL (only ten behind Fitzgerald) despite playing in only 14 games! Smith has a knack for catching deep passes in clutch situations. Pick your poison Cardinals, who will you try to stop?
Defense – The defense was not as good as you’d think for such a highly touted team.
Cardinals on offense – The Cardinals don’t have much choice. They are a passing team and that’s all they are. Even if Boldin is out they will bring in Jerheme Urban and keep throwing. Frankly, it’s for the best. It’s the playoffs so don’t waste your time trying to be something you are not. Put Warner back in the shotgun and spread the offense. Levi Brown will have his hands full with Julius Peppers and his results will be a referendum on his high draft status.
Prediction – Magic Eightball, will the Panthers obliterate the Cardinals this weekend? “All signs point to Yes.” I don’t see any way the Cardinals can win this game. They only lost by four in October, but
RT's AFC Divisional Round Playoff Preview
Posted On at at 1/09/2009 09:26:00 AM by KoskiBaltimore Ravens v.
#6
OFFENSE: It is no surprise that the defense continues to be the straw that stirs the drink for the Ravens but the offense continues to do a good job of not losing the game. Flacco was less than impressive in the win against the Dolphins but who cares? The most important stat for him is interceptions, as in zero. Little else is required of him in order for the Ravens to be in the game. Of course, he is afforded this luxury because the running game is hitting on all cylinders. McClain and McGahee were not exactly overwhelming against the Dolphins but they did run with passion that kept the Dolphins on their heels. The offense will need to be a little more dynamic than they were against the Dolphins if they expect to beat the Titans.
DEFENSE: The defense is playing as well as any defense I have seen in recent years (including the Bears of 2006). The Ravens have been very impressive in December especially against the Steelers on Dec. 14th (and they lost that game!) You cannot talk about the defense without talking about Ed Reed. It is really amazing what happens when you put an undersized wide receiver with a chip on his shoulder at free safety. There are football coaches around the country who would love to have Ed Reed talk to their wide receivers about the joys (and glory) of playing on defense. Reed is a difference maker and he plays at his highest level in tight games.
#1
OFFENSE: Similar to the Ravens offense, the Titans offense doesn’t exactly overwhelm with star or fire power (besides Vince Young … never mind). Kerry Collins has done a very good job as the leader this year. He still throws a very good ball and he rarely is the reason a team loses a game. However, he is not the type of guy who will carry the team so the running game will remain paramount to the Titans success. As a result, the Titans will continue to rely on Chris Johnson to get the job done as one of the most impressive rookie running back in recent memory. His “back-up” is LenDale White who is nothing short of one of the biggest head cases in the history of the NFL but credit Jeff Fisher with getting White to play with more passion than many thought possible. The combination of Smash and Dash gives the Titans all the offensive weapons needed to reach the conference finals
DEFENSE: The most important note of this game for the Titans is the return of Albert Haynesworth and Kyle Vanden Bosch. These two anchor an impressive defensive line which will be critical to the success of the Titans in the playoffs. There is no reason not to think the Titans will not continue their upper echelon rush defense in the playoffs. However, the rank near the bottom in the league at defending the pass which could come back to haunt them sooner rather than later.
Ravens v. Titans Matchup
Ravens on offense: The Ravens are going to have a really hard time scoring on the Titans. Flacco is going to be asked to more than he has all season because the Titans will have eight men in the box on most plays and the return of Haynesworth will only make things more difficult. It will be a long day for the Ravens if they cannot establish some kind of passing game to Derrick Mason and Todd Heap early on. Everyone is familiar with the concept of establishing the run to set up the pass – well – look for the Ravens to do the opposite.
Titans on offense: The Titans need to run the ball effectively to win this game. The potential loss of center Kevin Mawae could be huge for the run game and the pass coverage. The Ravens have been running the 3-4 for some time and they have been exceptional stopping the run all year. Chris Johnson has never played this much football in his life. Will he show signs of wear and tear or will the week off have him as good as ever?
Prediction: After the controversial end of the Steelers-Ravens game on Dec. 14, it just seems like the two are destined to play again. While I am very concerned about the play of Joe Flacco, I just think the Ravens defense goes 2001 Super Bowl on Kerry Collins and the Titans and wins the game in a close one.
#4
OFFENSE: The Chargers offense is very simple. Rivers is good not great and really needs a big performance from his running back in-order to be effective. Since LaDainian Tomlinson is hurt, Darren Sproles will need to have another huge game for the Chargers to have any chance at all. The reality for the Chargers offense is their best player when they have the ball is the punter, Mike Scifres. I fear for them on Sunday.
DEFENSE: Except for a brain fart by Antonio Cromartie, the defense was exceptional last week. The punter gave them numerous advantages but the defense stopped Peyton Manning – not the field position. They will need to duplicate their effort this time around if they have any chance of success.
#2
OFFENSE: The Steelers offense is not exactly overwhelming. They are ranked either in the middle or the bottom of the league in almost every important category. Of course, they have had numerous injuries at running back which has forced Ben Roethlisberger to win games on his own. That’s not exactly the ideal situation for a team that is built to run the ball down your throat then throwing the ball to keep you honest. Everyone seems to be healthy and the week off should really help this team.
DEFENSE: If defense wins championships then the Steelers should win the Super Bowl. They are first in the league in points allowed, yard and passing yards. However, the Steelers really struggled stopping the run … they were second in the league by allowing 80.2 yards per game on the ground. These numbers are impressive on their own but when you take in to account that they had to play the NFC East and played almost every tough team in the AFC – you have to realize this team is THE most dominant defense in the NFL.
Chargers v. Steelers Matchup
Chargers on offense: The Chargers need an all-pro performance from their offensive line in order to score more than 7 points in this game. I really don’t see how the Chargers move the ball any other way.
Steelers on offense: The Steelers will force the run and until it is established. The Chargers job is to keep it from becoming established and force Big Ben to throw the ball to win the game. Besides last week, the Chargers secondary has been dreadful this year against the pass so it could be a blessing in disguise for the Steelers if they have to throw the ball than they would like to.
Prediction: THIS GAME WILL BE A BLOWOUT!!!! While you will hear a thousand analysts tell you how the Chargers have a chance because they are on a roll, please remember that I told you on Monday that this game was the first lock of 2009. The Steelers are rested, motivated and hungry. Too many things have to go right just for the Chargers to score more than 10 points let alone cover a spread of 6 points. Did I mention the game is in
RT's AFC Playoff Preview
Posted On Friday, January 2, 2009 at at 1/02/2009 02:55:00 PM by KoskiIndianapolis v. San Diego – Saturday - January 3 @ 5:00
Indianapolis Offense
To keep it simple, the Colts have been on fire over the last 9 games. They have won all nine including a 23-20 victory over the Chargers. As always, Peyton Manning has been a big part of this streak, winning his third MVP as he continues his march to the Hall of Fame. He has had to be the leader because the Colts offense is last in the league in rushing at 79.6 yards per game. Marvin Harrison, Dallas Clark and Reggie Wayne will need to continue their impressive play for the Colts to move into the second round.
Indianapolis Defense
Much like the offense, the Colts defense is very effective in the passing game but abysmal against the run (24th in the league). As long as LT remains on the bench with another post-season injury, the Colts match up very well with the Chargers. The key for the Colts on defense will be the play of both corners – Hayden and Jennings. If they shut down the passing attack of the Chargers, the Colts will move on.
San Diego Offense
The good news is the Chargers score a lot of points (2nd in the league) including 52 points against the Broncos in a crucial week 17 victory. Philip Rivers has very quietly had a very strong season (#1 Passer Rating, most TD passes) despite a non-existent running game. LT has been nothing more than mediocre and he is hurt once again as the Chargers move into the playoffs. Without an effective rushing attack, it could be a long game for the Chargers.
San Diego Defense
The Chargers defense has been awful. While losing Shawne Merriman is one of the reason the Chargers went 8-8 this year, the real reason is they cannot stop opponents’ air attack (last in the league). Antonio Cromartie is one of the biggest talkers in the league and he started believing his own hype in the off-season. Like most trash talkers, he was less than effective this season and the Chargers struggled as a result. The Chargers’ defense will need to deliver a surprising performance against Peyton Manning in order to win this game.
Prediction
On paper, there is no reason to believe Peyton Manning and the Colts will not prevail. However, the game is not played on paper and the Chargers have been nothing short of stellar in the last 4 weeks. In addition, any team that gets motivated enough to care about their last 4 games when they are 4-8 is a team I don’t want to face in the playoffs. I think the Colts come up big just like they did against the Broncos and beat the Colts.
Baltimore v. Miami – Saturday - January 4 @ 10:00
Baltimore Offense
Joe Flacco has been the story for the Ravens all year. He was never asked to win games but he was asked not to lose them. He did exactly that. His numbers are not impressive but his composure and stability was. While he did not win a lot of games, the running attack did. Willis McGahee, Ray Rice and Le’Ron McClain have been nothing short of terrific. They lead the Ravens to the 4th ranked rushing attack in the league and they will need this attack to prevail on Sunday.
Baltimore Defense
How is it possible that the Ravens have this good of a defense again!? It was 8 years ago that they went to the Super Bowl with that dominating defense and they still have a great defense. Ray Lewis and Ed Reed continue to impress and they have to be nothing less than giddy to face a quarterback who lobs the ball around the field and a running back who plays passionless football.
Miami Offense
Chad Pennington has proven almost everyone wrong this season by leading a dead in the water Dolphins team to the playoffs. I don’t think Pennington would have had this season with the Jets but a change of scenery is often time all a player needs. Dan Henning deserves a lot of the credit for the resurgence of the offense. His willingness to use Ricky Williams and Ronnie Brown in different positions has been a boon for the entire organization.
Miami Defense
The good news, the defense is very strong against the run and does not give up a lot of points. The bad news, they are terrible against the pass. The good news, the Dolphins intercepted Brett Favre three times in their game last week. The bad news, they will be on the field most of the game because of the ball control style of the Ravens.
Prediction
Let’s cut to the chase – Will Joe Flacco make the Dolphins pay for putting 8 men in the box against the Ravens? The answer is … it doesn’t matter. The Ravens defense will be too much for the Dolphins and I expect them to roll to an easy victory