Daily Archives: September 25th, 2012

NFL power rankings: Where I’m refusing to let officiating nonsense ruin my enjoyment of the NFL (Shutdown Corner)

Of course, if you’re a Packers fan, that might be a little more difficult for you. It’s my pledge to you that in this week’s power rankings, I am not going to talk much about the NFL’s officiating situation. It can’t be ignored completely, of course, now that it’s directly affecting the standings, but I’ll try to minimize it. I think you’re going to get enough of that at, oh, just about anywhere else you look for football news or information. The best coping strategy is to focus on what matters: the football. There are still football plays being made, by football players, on football fields, and with the right about of focus, they can still be enjoyed and over-analyzed in the way to which we’ve become accustomed. Now let’s focus on the business of a fairly arbitrary ranking of all 32 NFL teams. 1. Arizona Cardinals (3-0) They beat a quality Seattle team, won in New England, and throttled the previously-unbeaten Eagles. No one else has that resume, so I ask you: Why not the Cardinals? Also, I may never got another chance to put the Cardinals at the number one spot in the power rankings, so I’m seizing the moment. 2. Atlanta Falcons (3-0) Atlanta vs. Houston is pretty much a coin flip, and when in doubt, I’ll take the better quarterback. Through three weeks, Matt Ryan is wearing that crown. A seventy-two percent completion rate and 8 touchdowns against just one pick? My goodness, that’s filthy. 3. Houston Texans (3-0) Defensive coordinator Wade Phillips got a lot of love last year, but what he’s doing this year might be more impressive. They subtract Mario Williams from the lineup, and the Texans are still in the top five in the league against the run and the pass. It helps that they’re in a division with three below-average NAIA teams, but still, it’s impressive.

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NFL power rankings: Where I’m refusing to let officiating nonsense ruin my enjoyment of the NFL (Shutdown Corner)

Incomplete Passes Hold Back Broncos This Time

ENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP) – One week, it’s interceptions. The next, it’s incompletions. In a 31-25 loss to Houston on Sunday, Broncos quarterback  Peyton Manning  threw 26 incompletions, the most he’s had in a single game over his 15-year career. “It’s a `We’ thing,” Manning said after the loss. “It’s not an individual thing. We’re all in it together now.” Indeed, no single person can be responsible for that many footballs hitting the turf. A review of the 26 incompletions looked like this: – Manning overthrew seven passes. – Broncos receivers dropped four. – Manning underthrew four. – Four hit Houston defenders in the hands but were dropped. – Manning grounded three to stop the clock or avoid a sack. – He had two deflected by defenders in coverage. – One got batted down at the line. – One was on the money to receiver  Demaryius Thomas , who couldn’t get his second foot down in the back of the end zone. Of all the errors, the drops stood out the most. Coach John Fox said the team consistently works on trying to eliminate those types of mistakes. “It’s just something we have to work to get better at and get a little more used to each other,” Fox said at his news conference Monday. “Any time you get your hands on a ball as a receiver, they call it a drop. Sometimes there are high throws or low throws. With timing and experience, it gets better.” Manning also completed 26 passes for 330 yards and two touchdowns. He finished with a respectable quarterback rating of 83.0 and no interceptions, which certainly takes some of the heat off after three picks in the first quarter last week against Atlanta. His 50 percent completion rate was about 15 points below his career average but Fox said he saw some progress from his star QB. “I thought he played better,” Fox said. “Just statistically speaking, and this isn’t dogging Atlanta at all, because they’re a very good defense, too. But that was a pretty salty defense we played yesterday.” The Texans defense came into Sunday having surrendered fewer yards and points than anyone in the league through two games. That didn’t hold after the third game, though Manning amassed 120 of his yards and both touchdown throws after the Broncos had fallen behind by 20 late in the third quarter. Before that, the Houston defense had his receivers blanketed for much of the day – accounting for a number of the off-target passes – and was a constant presence in the backfield, knocking down Manning six times and sacking him three more. “He got banged around in the pocket more than I’d like to see,” Fox said. “We were maybe a little inconsistent in our ability to run the ball. That put us in a little bit more third-and-unmanageable distances that are never fun for any offensive line.” While Manning’s problems in the Falcons loss were self-inflicted, it was the defense that helped put him in a hole in this one. Matt Schaub  threw touchdown passes of 60 and 52 yards to help the Texans build a 21-5 lead.  Andre Johnson caught the first pass.  Kevin Walter  caught the second. The first time, cornerback  Tracy Porter  was supposed to get help from the safety. The second time he wasn’t. Fox said Porter had a nagging knee injury that got worse after the first score. He didn’t return to the field after the second one. “It wasn’t like a mystery,” Fox said. “It was the same route, two different people, something we’ve seen. We didn’t execute as well as we needed to.” The plus side, once again, was the way the Broncos came back at the end. After falling behind by 20 for the second straight week, they rallied to within a score. Helped by a couple of pass interference calls, Manning moved the Broncos 49 and 74 yards for touchdowns in the final 10 minutes. His 38-yard pass to  Brandon Stokley  was a strike down the center of the field. Though he underthrew a few passes to the sideline, Manning didn’t warble many in this game. The pass to Stokley and the near touchdown to Thomas earlier were examples of the quality, pressure throws the quarterback can make – signs that, physically at least, he could be back to full health after missing a season with multiple neck operations. The drops and the missed connections on some of the overthrows and underthrows were signs that there’s still work to be done. “We have to study this tape and study what it is we’re doing wrong,” Manning said Sunday after the game. “Study anything that we are doing well and try to build off that. But I think it’s still part of the process. It’s hard to think about anything, really, besides losing two games in a row in tough fashion.” NOTES : Fox said all the players injured in Sunday’s game – WR Matt Willis (hamstring), RB  Willis McGahee (ribs), LB  Nate Irving  (concussion), CB  Tracy Porter  (knee bruise) and TE  Jacob Tamme  (groin) – were “day to day moving forward.” … WR  Eric Decker  got booed when he opted for a hook slide after catching a pass in the middle of the field at the end of the third quarter. Asked to explain it, Fox said, “I think you have to ask Eric that. I can’t tell you exactly what he saw.” … Fox defended LB  Joe Mays ‘ vicious hit on Texans QB  Matt Schaub  that cost the quarterback a chunk of his ear and is expected to cost Mays some major money from the NFL. “I know this: He doesn’t do it intentionally to hurt him,” Fox said. “That’s not  Joe Mays . That’s not what we teach. It’s accidental. Playing football. You see it around the league every week.” By EDDIE PELLS, AP National Writer (© Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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Incomplete Passes Hold Back Broncos This Time

Eagles Take Tumble Down NFL Power Rankings for Week 3: A Fan’s Analysis (Yahoo! Contributor Network)

The Philadelphia Eagles were sitting pretty in the NFL power rankings going into Week 3. Eagles fans like myself were happy that they were a top 5 team – at least due to their 2-0 record if nothing else. But after Week 3, we learned just how misleading power rankings and records can be in the NFL, now that Philadelphia is decidedly not a top 5 squad.

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Eagles Take Tumble Down NFL Power Rankings for Week 3: A Fan’s Analysis (Yahoo! Contributor Network)

Broncos Coaches Fox, Del Rio Fined For Abusing Officials

NEW YORK (AP) – The NFL fined Broncos coach John Fox $30,000 and defensive coordinator Jack Del Rio $25,000 on Monday for arguing with replacement officials a week ago. “There is a longstanding NFL rule prohibiting verbal or physical abuse of game officials,” NFL executive vice president of football operations Ray Anderson said. Anderson also said he is reviewing the conduct of Patriots coach Bill Belichick and the Ravens’ John Harbaugh in Sunday night’s New England-Baltimore game. Anderson also is looking at the actions of Redskins offensive coordinator Kyle Shanahan in Washington’s loss to Cincinnati. In Denver’s loss to Atlanta in the Sept. 17 Monday night game, Fox became enraged several times. Denver was called for 12 men on the field at one point and Fox challenged the play. The officials threw a flag, saying he couldn’t do so. Fox began yelling, insisting he could; Fox was correct. He lost the challenge, though, because the Broncos did have 12 men on the field. Fox also came on the field after a fumble recovery went to Atlanta even though Broncos lineman  Orlando Franklin emerged from the pile with the ball. Much pushing and shoving among players ensued. Del Rio was just as demonstrative in questioning calls in the 27-21 defeat. “There’s nothing much to say, other than that the league has its policy, there are procedures,” Fox said. “It’s kind of an in-house thing.” In the Patriots-Ravens game, Belichick grabbed the arm of an official as they were leaving the field after Baltimore kicked a winning field goal at the end of the game. He said he wanted an explanation of whether the kick was reviewable. “I’ve coached in this league a long time and I’ve never been penalized, never had any incidents with officials or anything like that,” he said. “I have never meant any disrespect or in any way tried to abuse or be disrespectful to the officials and the job that they do. I was trying to get an explanation for obviously an important call, play, in that game, and that’s the No. 1 thing between coaches and officials that’s always at the forefront is just communication of what’s going on, what’s happening.” Shanahan, son of Washington coach Mike Shanahan, was whistled for berating an official as the Redskins were attempting to drive for a tying touchdown in Sunday’s 38-31 loss. Robert Griffin III spiked the ball with 7 seconds remaining at Cincinnati’s 34-yard line, and tight end  Fred Davis  was called for a false start as the offense lined up for the next play. At least one official apparently indicated – erroneously – there would be a 10-second runoff because of the penalty, which would run out the clock. Cincinnati’s coaches and players along the sideline then walked onto the field, thinking the game was over. “When I overheard the official tell the head coach that the game was over after the false start penalty, I tried to explain that the game was not over,” Kyle Shanahan said in a statement. “That is what resulted in the unsportsmanlike conduct penalty. I tried to get an explanation of how I could get that penalty when half of the other team was on the field as well.” By BARRY WILNER, AP Pro Football Writer … AP National Writer Eddie Pells in Denver and Sports Writers Howard Ulman in Foxborough, Mass., and Joseph White in Ashburn, Va., contributed to this report. (© Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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Broncos Coaches Fox, Del Rio Fined For Abusing Officials

Panthers at critical stage after loss to Giants (The Associated Press)

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — The struggling Panthers find themselves at a crossroads less than a month into the NFL season.

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Panthers at critical stage after loss to Giants (The Associated Press)

NFL suspends Joe Mays for one game

Denver Broncos linebacker Joe Mays has been suspended for one game and fined $50,000 by NFL vice president of football operations Merton Hanks for an illegal hit against a defenseless player, the league announced. Mays was penalized for roughing the passer in the third quarter for an illegal hit to the head of Houston Texans quarterback Matt Schaub.

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NFL suspends Joe Mays for one game

Seahawks stun Packers on Hail Mary touchdown

SEATTLE — In a bizarre ending that capped a tough weekend for replacement officials, the Seattle Seahawks beat the Green Bay Packers 14-12 on Monday night.

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Seahawks stun Packers on Hail Mary touchdown

Denver Broncos defense out of sync

ENGLEWOOD — In just two weeks, Tracy Porter has gone from hero to scapegoat. Welcome to the fickle existence of an NFL cornerback not named Champ Bailey.

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Denver Broncos defense out of sync

Fox, Del Rio fined for berating officials (National Football Post)

Broncos head coach gets $30,000 penalty, while defensive coordinator hit for $25,000.

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Fox, Del Rio fined for berating officials (National Football Post)