Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Extra Points, Part III

I haven't written a comprehensive entry in several weeks. So: here is hodgepodge of NFL weeks 13-15 and some bonus college content.

Sour as Sour Patch Kids: Second and One officially petitions the Valero Alamo Bowl to change its name to the Everyone Is Suspended Bowl. Just weeks after Michigan State announced the dismissal of two players and the suspension of another eight nine ten, the Texas Tech Red Raiders (whom the Spartans are playing in said bowl) announced the suspension of head coach Mike Leach over allegations that he locked an injured wide receiver in an electrical closet for hours on end. (ESPN)* To say the very least, the accusations are shocking. With the collective crimes committed by these two teams, they should have instead played in the Detroit Big Three Bailout Motor City Pizza Pizza Bowl: I noted earlier that Detroit is still the country's most violent city. 

Completely Sick Play of the Week: In the Bears' glorious, heinously nail-bitey overtime upset of the NFC North-leading Brett Favre Brett Favre Brett Favres, Jay Cutler, on the first snap of the Bears' third overtime possession, passed deep right against the blitz to Devin Aromashodu for 39 yards and the game-winning score. Aromashodu (also known as "that guy nobody wanted, probably because his name is too hard to pronounce") had veteran Pro Bowl corner Antoine Winfield beat by at least three yards on the final play - the safeties were nowhere to be found in the picture. This game gave me (and my father) approximately six different kinds of heart attack. 

And this happens every year! I come home for Christmas, and the first Bears game we watch (as we didn't get the depressing Baltimore contest due to bad weather and overlapping market rules) almost always requires the usage of an emergency defibrillator. Last year it was the Bears/Packers showdown, where the Bears played atrociously but blocked two field goals and still won the game, and the year before it was a similar contest, complete with Brian Urlacher intercepting a pass, running it back 93 yards to the house, and then keeling over in the end zone and needing oxygen - does anyone remember this?! 

More holiday capitalism: Yes. This is a real product. Vikes tickets: $150. The Vikings folding chair: $60. Getting to see Minnesota collapsing either way: Priceless. Source: sportsauthority.

Amusing Announcing, Part 1: During halftime on Monday Night, Chris Berman reviewed the Colts' decision to rest Peyton Manning and friends, who were forced to simmer on the sidelines as rookie backup QB Curtis Painter fumbled away the game. "He's no Rembrandt!" Breman remarked, "More like a finger painter!" More notorious puns from notable names: Fox announcers, in talking about Tampa Bay return man Michael Spurlock's 106-yard kickoff return, felt the need to distinguish him from Morgan Spurlock, of Super Size Me fame. 

Truly Special Special Teams: Just before recess in the Redskins/Giants contest, the 'Skins were trailing by 24 points. There are two seconds on the clock before the break. You are Jim Zorn; what do you do?

a) Try and get the ball in the end zone at all cost, even if you are are 4th and 60 and the attempt might fail horribly.
b) Be conservative - kick for three to avoid being shut out at halftime;
c) Look through your playbook, find the trick play that has the greatest chance of embarrassing your team, that one play that everyone and their cat knows will fail - and try it anyway and hope you still have your job by the end of the game?

The Redskins lined up for a field goal, and it became very evident that there was trickery afoot when one half of the offensive line whipped outside in a "swinging gate" formation, leaving punter Hunter Smith to stand under center. This formation is sometimes used for two-point conversions (if I remember correctly), because if it blows up, a lineman can take a handoff. The G-men smelled foul play and called a timeout. Washington came out and promptly ran the same fake again. We knew everything in Washington is bumbling and inefficient, but what, they didn't think Big Blue would be prepared for it? End result? Smith heave-hoed the ball into a gaggle of Giants, where it was intercepted and run back to midfield. Oi vey. (youtube) 

Messiest Series Ever, Bonus Bowl Edition: The University of North Carolina Tar Heels, squaring off against the Pitt Panthers in the Meineke Car Care Bowl, were first and goal on the five in the first quarter. The 'Heels then committed two consecutive illegal formation penalties, one of which negated a touchdown pass because one of the tight ends did not line up on the line of scrimmage. After a short pass play, UNC faced second-and goal from the Pitt 7, when QB T.J. Yates was flushed from the pocket and nailed. At the last second, he tossed the ball forward, which did not make it to the line, and the 'Heels were backed up another 8 yards for intentional grounding. Now third and goal on the 15 and eager to avenge their frustrating series, Yates heaved the ball to Greg Little for the touchdown. Little, in his celebrations, punted the ball into the stands and was immediately flagged for unsportsmanlike conduct. Aye caramba! 

Amusing Announcing, Part 2: During the Redskins/Giants blowout on MNF in Week 14, you could almost hear the men in the booth wince as Giants pass-rushers blew through the Native Americans' porous offensive line and repeatedly pounded Jason Campbell to the turf. "These are not sacks," one announcer quipped, "these are car wrecks."

Confucius says: Redskins QB who is pummeled repeatedly becomes Campbell's soup. Source: Macon Daily, Reuters.

Obligatory (Last) Fighting Nucleophiles Update: It did not end well. After I staged six (seven?) consecutive nucleophilic attacks, my league commissioner (whose identity remains secret, or is perhaps just a very complicated semi-stochastic algorithm) snubbed the 9-5 Fighting Nucleophiles, the official fantasy team of Second and One, out of the playoffs. I won't get into my suitably acrimonious and slanderous collection o' theories for why this happened, but ahead of me was seeded an 8-6 team (whom I defeated), and a girl who was 9-5, whom I swept soundly in divisional play. Of course, as FFB is part luck, whining about this is as effective as whining about losing in poker - it happens, and there's not a darn thing anyone can do. Not all was lost, however: The Nukes finished with a convincing winning record, and, with the second most-difficult schedule in our uber-deep league, finished tied for first in divisional records (I was 5-1 in my division, people!) and tied for third in power rankings. Plus, had I made the playoffs, I likely would have blown it in the opening round when I started the wrong tight end. Or something. 

Remember kids: Confucius says: Vikes who lose to Jay Cutler have been deep-sixed. 

*EDIT: 3:10 PM. Sources now confirm that Leach has been fired, and now there is talk of lawsuits. It just keeps getting better. 

Friday, December 25, 2009

Happy Holidays from 2ndand1!

I am enjoying the celebration of Christmas with my family - regular posting resumes in several days once everyone has recovered. 

This year, football-related gifts were exchanged at my house: I received two hoodies (a nice Bears one* and one for my favorite college team) from my parents, and a Nerf football from my dad- because there is an immutable law of presents that states every kid must get a football on Christmas morning. I gave my dad, in return, the Sports Spectacular edition of Uncle John's Bathroom Reader. "Because I actually read these things in the bathroom" he stated upon receiving it. And I gave my mom new pot-holders for the kitchen. "Because I really like pot-holders." She said. 

Hope everyone scored this holiday season.

*Which is cozy and currently provides more coverage than the Bears' defense.

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Extra Points, Part II

This joke is an oldie but a goodie; original source unknown:

Momma Bear and Poppa Bear are getting a divorce, and Baby Bear ends up in family court, where the judge deliberates over his custody.

"I will send you to live with Momma Bear." The judge says. 

"No!" Baby Bear pleads, "I don't want to live with her. She's mean and beats me!"

"Hm..." Replies the judge, "I shall send you to live with Poppa Bear then."

"No!" Replies Baby Bear, "Poppa's awful angry, and he beats me too!"

After thinking for several seconds, the judge has his solution. He bangs his gavel.

"You will live with the Chicago Bears." The judge quips, "They can't beat anybody."

Monday, December 21, 2009

Videospam!

Two questions stemming from yesterday's games:

1. What, at 0:07 into this video, is Aaron Rodgers doing in his touchdown celebration? (NFL, click on Rodgers Runs It In.)

a) Showing off his, erm, rushing ability to the fans;
b) Metaphorically saying he's "belting" the Steelers;
c) Solstice-appropriate fertility ritual;
d) Let's do the time warp again...

2. What, exactly, is the best headline for what happened to Raiders' defensive tackle Tommy Kelly? (Youtube)

a) Denver lost their shirt, Oakland lost their pants;
b) The Raiders haven't seen a you-know-what this big since Jon Gruden was coach;
c) Poor coverage;
d) Tommy, that's Devin Hester on line two; 
e) Merry Christmas and a Happy New Rear;
f) At least he's not the defensive end.

More to come...

Sunday, December 20, 2009

Holiday Picks!

Of course, there will be other entries after this in the coming days, but we (I) here at Second and One wish everyone a Merry Christmas, even if you don't celebrate said holiday. 

I have returned to my parents' house for some much-needed R & R, communion with the homeland, my mom's cooking, and, of course, watching football with my dad, an activity that will begin at 1PM EST today. So, without any additional preamble, here are Second and One's picks of the week:

Oakland @ Denver: Oakland is one of these really weird teams. They stink worse than a fish market in July, but once and a while, they pop up to spoil the fun for someone who is desperately trying to make a playoff run. They Beat both the Eagles and the floundering Steelers, but unfortunately have now lost their new starting QB Bruce Gradkowski. Which means we'll see Charlie Frye, who hasn't taken a snap in the NFL in over a year. If this doesn't work, we'll see JaMarcus Russell, who hasn't known what to do at this position since he played for Louisiana State. Additionally, the Oakland Raiders Raided are without Darrius Heyward-Bey, whom, until about week seven, had more names than he did touchdowns,* and tight end Zach Miller is questionable with a concussion. I think the Broncos (who sometimes look disorganized at the end of the season) are going to run away with this one.

Yes, this is a real product. Raiders tickets: $150. The Raiders grill tool set: $30. Seeing a barbecuing ether way: Priceless. Source: Sears. 

San Francisco @ Philadelphia: Philadelphia's offense has overcome some inconsistencies and is looking awful quick-strike and sophisticated this year. They've got wacky screen formations, deep pass plays, the Wild Vick (or whatever you call it), and they've won their past four straight, including toppling Big Blue in a barn-burner last week. With Brian Westbrook still out, the 49ers' 5th ranked rush defense shouldn't be an enormous threat to the Eagles. I'm going with Philadelphia just because the Niners have blown their past five straight on the road.

Cleveland @ Kansas City: Oh, who cares? The game ends 2-0, Cleveland, with the sole points coming when KC lines up to punt from their own end zone and snaps the ball out the back. 

Green Bay @ Pittsburgh: What has happened to the Steelers? It's bad enough when you lose to the Bears, but when you lose to the Chiefs, Raiders, and Browns in the same season, you're warm, buttered toast. Right now, Green Bay statistically has just about the best defense in football: ranked 2nd against the run, 3rd against the pass, and 2nd in stopping people from moving the ball. Fun Fact: In this game, we're seeing two of the league's most porous offensive lines: Roethlisberger has been nailed 38 times, and Rodgers 47. We are going to see more sacking than a Barbarian rampage of Rome. I still like the Packers though. 

Chicago @ Baltimore: Gregg Easterbrook at ESPN TMQ urges readers to "contact authorities if you have seen the Baltimore Ravens." On the other hand, if we're talking about the Bears, I have to cite the great writer Patrick McManus: "If intelligence were crankcase oil, the Bears aren't even wetting the dipstick*" This game will just be sloppy. Throw in the bad weather in Baltimore and the fact that both teams have gone kazoo with penalties as of late, and we're rearing to see a nightmare. Sadly, I feel like the Bears, whose offense runs circles around itself, will not fare too well against the Blackbirds' D. Devin Hester is out. Jay Cutler vs. Ray Lewis: all you need to know. Ravens. By a lot. I'll go shoot myself in the foot now, because I can guarantee it will be less painful than this game.

Poetic Afterthoughts: And now, a limerick about every team in the AFC North.

The Bengals can get lots of downs,
They beat both the Steelers and Browns,
When they bust lots of joints
And score lots of points
Eighty-Five sends in the clowns!

About Lewis and Reed we all rave,
Make Edgar Poe spin in his Grave!
Their defense can brag
But these penalty flags...
If only this team could behave!

An offensive line you cannot trust
Big Ben gets pounded to dust
Their star safety's out
and Pittsburgh fans shout:
"The Steelers have started to rust!"

What's happened to Cleveland is sick
Their game plan just can't seem to stick
Brady's not win-ish
And Anderson's finished
Maybe they should have got Vick?

And there we have it. To come later: thoughts on Brian Kelly, Chris Henry, and the Saints dropping a deuce (and we don't mean McAllister).

*I forgot the original source of this comment. 
**The original quote is not about football, but it can be found in Never Sniff a Gift Fish, a book about his adventures as an outdoorsman. It's a pretty good read. 

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

In brief...

The end-of-year madness is not subsiding any, and I'm getting really stressed out. I am going home for the holidays at the end of the week, so posting will be limited. I will share this, however:


Source: Me, via Graphjam.

Sunday, December 13, 2009

Week 14 Picks du Jour

First, Second and One is rather disappointed that Toby Gerhart did not win the Heisman, but was edged out by Alabama's Mark Ingram by only 28 points - the closest vote in Heisman history. (ESPN) Congratulations to Mr. Ingram. 

And now, three week 14 picks (in brevity)- thank heavens I didn't attempt to call the Steelers-Browns game! 

San Diego @ Dallas: To me, this seems pretty simple: we just look at what teams historically do in December. The Chargers have a habit of stinking in the early months of the season, roaring through a thrilling crescendo and dramatic climax where they obliterate everyone they play, and then choking in the playoffs. Fun fact: the Batteries have won 15 straight games in the twelfth month. Now, the Cowboys are on the opposite spectrum. They get hot around Halloween, and typically spend most of December partying, which results in spectacular on-field collapses. Memorable examples: getting blown out of wild-card contention by the Eagles in 2008, getting smashed to bits by the divisional playoffs by the Giants in 2007, and losing to both the Eagles and the Lions in 2006. Needless to say, I'm going with San Diego. 

Green Bay @ Chicago: This game will come down to a very minute key point - how well the Pack's O-line can protect Aaron Rodgers. If the Bears dial up a few Uber-Blitz formations, the pass-wacky Pack may have a hard time. Nonetheless, the Packers have one of the greatest combined defensive units in the league: third in pass coverage, fourth in rush coverage, and first in yards allowed per game. The Bears cannot score on anybody, Devin Hester is questionable, and the thought of Jay Cutler against Charles Woodson scares the daylights out of me. I regrettably have to pick Green Bay.

Detroit @ Baltimore: If Baltimore can stop committing so many penalties, this one seems obvious, as the Lions haven't won on the road this year yet. Knocking on a third win's door? Quoth the Ravens, "Nevermore!" - Blackbirds take it, by at least two score. 

For holiday spirit, yes, this is a real product for your tree! Buccaneers tickets: $150. The Buccaneers Christmas ornament: $23. Getting to see a hanging either way: priceless! Source: football-fanshop.com

More Poetic Afterthoughts: Last Sunday I wrote a limerick about every team in the NFC north. This week, we have one for the entire NFC south!

The Saints' opponents get diced
Last minute field-goals get iced
With remarkable wins
They're absolved of their sins
Savior of South, Breesus Christ!

The Falcons had Georgia at "go!"
But all they do these days is blow
Left their D at the door
And they can't seem to score,
All 'cause Matt Ryan stubbed his big toe!

The Panthers are like a bad dream
Their playoff hopes now without gleam,
Their RBs are fast,
And their D can outlast,
But Delhomme can't throw to his own team!

Their new QB plays fine sport,
But Tampa keeps coming up short
They've got only one win?
Call the salvage crew in
The Bucs have been shipwrecked in port!

Next week: Limericks about the AFC north, complete with references to the Steelers rusting.