Saturday, December 5, 2009

A Bit Belated..

There hasn't been much in the way of a legitimate NFL update here, but I have very good reason. In December, my research group writes long annual progress reports to turn in to the head of our group. Mine is already seventy pages, and not a word of this is about football, so it's time for some words on that.

Brett Favre, Brett Favre, Brett Favre Drew Brees! Drew Brees! Drew Brees! I was thinking this category would be rather hard this week. I was watching the Vikings game, as the Norsemen of the Apocalypse shamelessly ran up the score on my blundering Bears (don't get me started on our pass-rush). In said roasting pasting friendly contest, Brett Favre passed for 392 yards, 3 TDs, and no interceptions. He looked 25 years old against the Bears, and I thought he was a shoe-in for this category...until I saw the Saints game. I watched it with Catherine, my good friend and a Saints fan extraordinaire, and after the second touchdown (and possibly second glass of wine), we simply defaulted to loud cheering and senseless Drew Brees worship. I will now continue the trend. Drew Brees completed 78% of his passes, for 371 yards, no interceptions, and five touchdowns. Drew Brees earned a perfect passer rating on Monday Night Football, against Bill Belichick's defense, where he would pump-fake to draw the safeties, and bomb deep against corner blitzes to wide-open receivers. Drew Brees served the Patriots a taste of their own medicine on a night where the average noise level in the Superdome was about 110 db. (nola.com).* Drew Brees' tears can cure cancer. Hurricanes are afraid of Drew Brees. Drew Brees can fly.

Yeah. That's what I'm talking about. Source: Chuck Cook, New Orleans Times-Picayune

Dumb, Daft Defenses: During the Thanksgiving Day skirmish between Dallas and Oakland, the Cowboys were driving from their own 25-yard line with about thirteen minutes left before the intermezzo. Two Raiders defensive backs (Trevor Scott and Tyvon Branch), both ran for what would have been an easy interception. However, while Branch had clear sights for a pick-six, Scott was facing away from the end zone - and the two promptly collided head-to-head. The only points they got off of this play were style points from the Three Stooges. Fine demonstrations of conservation of momentum are nothing new to the Raiders: see here how two Oakland receivers, with crossed routes, demonstrate inertia against the Chargers (Ballhype). 

Fresh From the Bakery: Oh, Carolina Panthers. Why doth thou provide so much amusement? Against the struggling Jets, Jake Delhomme threw four interceptions. A good point was raised over at ESPN: The Big Black Cats, with the likes of DeAngelo Williams, are ranked #4 in rushing - Why has Delhomme attempted 30 or more passes in six games this season? Take whoever these pass-wacky play callers are and send them to Chicago to help Jay Cutler, please! Statistic O' Suckage: On the season, Delhomme has 18 interceptions, six fumbles, and three lost fumbles - to only eight touchdowns. He's also been sacked 23 times.

You Know You're Having Quarterback Problems When...reason # 245: your QB's jersey number is in the double-digits and is still less than the number of times he's coughed up the ball. Source: AP, Seth Wenig, panthers.com

Why is this news again? This is all over the news: During the Broncos' Thursday night dismantling of the Giants, the NFL Network cut to a replay of Denver Stampede coach Josh McDaniels' audio feed, in which he hollered at his offense on the sidelines, and in doing so said a very prominent swear word. Everyone promptly snapped out of their Thanksgiving food comas, spit out their night-caps in surprise, and gasped "Did he really just say that?" This was all over the news: everyone was apologizing and people were outraged over the NFL Network's faux pas. I like to think of this as "Big deal. A football guy swore in front of  group of other football guys." Although maybe, at sixteen years old, McDaniels shouldn't say potty words, lest his mom wash his mouth out with soap.

The Joke Just Writes Itself: Ok. The Vikings have a fast offense. We get it. Earlier this last weekend, RB Adrian Peterson was cited for driving 109 mph in a 55 mph zone. On Monday, Vikes wideout Bernard Berrian was similarly stopped for driving 104 mph in a 60 mph area. (ESPN) Second and One, however, argues that Brett Favre will not be cited: he will simply drive 20 mph under the speed limit with his turn signal on permanently.

Obligatory Fighting Nucleophiles Update: At 7-5 and poised to strike again, the Fighting Nucleophiles, official fantasy team of Second and One, are making a playoff run! Aaron Rodgers ran up the score on the Lions. Santonio Holmes had his first touchdown since week 1. The Colts' D came back from a serious first-half slump to run the Texans into the ground, and I staged a fifth consecutive nucleophilic attack. 

Perhaps my biggest achievement: I started the right tight end. Yes. That's right. Read it again. Shiancoe (starter) torched the Bears' woeful deuxiemme, while Celek was stopped by the 'Skins. In other news: it is reported that the moon is blue and all of the planets have just aligned. 

Yes. This is a real product. Lions Tickets: $150. The Lions Doormat: $55. Seeing people wipe their feet with the Lions either way: Priceless. Source: Outdoorrugs.com.

Poetic Afterthoughts: Today, just for the heck of it, I wrote a limerick about every team in the NFC North. 

While Childress is filling his quota
And Peterson's back for the coda
In "4" he is dressed
(And at 40, no less)
It's Senior Day in Minnesota!

The Bears have got naught to work with
They've been pounded and pummeled and pithed
A poor defensive batch!
Nobody to catch!
The honeymoon's over for Smith!

While nobody else seems to get
The points that the Packers can net
They've got offensive fever!
The world's best receivers!
Tell me, why did they need Brett?

Can the Lions be freed of their fetters?
Lose that "L", the harshest of letters?
Their rookie's adroit
But they play in Detroit
And I have seen doormats look better.

Next week: We'll do the same with the NFC South, complete with references to Matt Ryan's turf toe.

*Other things that are 110 db or louder: your iPod on full volume, jackhammering, a rock concert. Quieter than 110 db: my television, normal talking, breathing, the Patriots' defense.

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