Posts Tagged detroit lions

NFL WEEK 4: A LESSON IN CRAPTASTIC-NESS

No Gravatar

I sat and watched most of the 14 minute-plus overtime period between the Bengals and the Browns.  I don’t know why.  I guess I was looking for one of the two teams to show that they were interested in winning the game.  It was one of those stretches when the field looked enormous and it simply seemed impossible that either team could score.  I was almost right, if it wasn’t for Cleveland finally deciding to be crappy enough to go ahead and lose.  One thing I will say though, is that Josh Cribbs is a flat-out monster.  He’s gotten a lot bigger since his rookie season, and plain looks mean when he has the ball.  He’s at least worth watching the highlights every week.

 

Speaking of crappy teams, the R*dsk*ns and the Bucs battled it out to see who could claim to be the crappiest team on the East Coast.  Turns out it’s the Bucs.  Though not for a lack of effort by Washington, who committed four turnovers and still won the game.  ‘Sk*ns QB Jason Campbell was astoundingly bad, throwing 3 picks and losing a fumble, but still knifed through the (now officially garbage) defense of Tampa Bay to throw the winning TD pass.  The two teams combined for a combined 6 of 27 on 3rd down, and a whopping 252 passing yards.  Blecch.

 

Amazingly, neither of these teams are the worst in the league. That distinction belongs solely to the St. Louis Rams, who have lost 14 straight, and have been shutout twice in this young season, both times by teams in their own division.  I need not say more of the St. Louis club, nor much of the teams that destroy them each week – although I must call attention to the disciplinary prowess of Mike Singletary’s 49ers, who only drew 3 flags all game and committed no turnovers while gut-stomping the Rams 35-0.

 

Dallas and Denver both looked inept, combining for 6 of 26 on 3rd down, as well as a combined 17 penalties for over 150 yards.  Lucky for Denver, Tony Romo looked worse than anyone on the field. While his stats aren’t outrageously bad, his performance was unwatchable – unless you hate the Cowboys, which I do.  Before WR Sam Hurd damn near bailed him out in the 4th quarter on a sissy little 7-yard outlet pass that Hurd took 53 yards inside the Denver 15, Romo had made every mistake possible:  botched snaps, lost fumbles, his 8th-career pick in the red zone, leading his receivers into getting drilled by safeties (Roy Williams may be urinating blood after chasing a Romo misfire in the 4th quarter), and all-around poor decision making.  Up until Hurd’s late catch-and-run, Romo had 36 yards passing in the 2nd half, and had been throwing terrible balls for several series in a row.

 

tony romo gets sacked.  online photo, no source available

 

I thought that Dallas would expose Denver’s defense as a hoax, but it was Denver who exposed Romo’s Cowboys as garbage.  Wait, hasn’t that happened already?  On several occasions?  Oh, I forgot – they’re the Cowboys.  That means they’re still considered good until Bill Parcells says that they in fact suck.

 

 

OTHER CALLS I GOT WRONG:

Ravens at Patriots: A very well-played, hard-fought game until the last drive, when Baltimore WR Mark Clayton dropped two passes, one for a TD and one for a first down on 4th and 6, which ended the game.  The latter was in his chest, but he couldn’t haul it in.  Disappointing for a Ravens team who played well enough to beat the Patriots.

 

Jets at Saints: Okay, now I really mean it:  I won’t be picking against the Saints again.  Before you dismiss the Jets though, note that the NY defense did it’s part, holding New Orleans to less than 350 total yards and only 10 points.  The Saint’s D made up for it, scoring two TD’s.  Tough game for the adorable and charming Mark Sanchez (if you say his name out loud with emphasis on the ‘chez’, he sounds even more charming).

 

Bills at Dolphins: Backup Miami QB Chad Henne wasn’t required to do much, as the Dolphin twin RB’s Ronnie and Ricky piled up 200 yards and 3 TD’s.  Buffalo QB Trent Edwards did his part too, throwing 3 picks.  Dick Jauron’s clock is ticking in upstate New York.

 

Tennessee at Jacksonville: Wow, the Titans are about finished already, and it’s not even week 5.  This slump is a mystery to me, and I can’t imagine how Titans coach Jeff Fisher feels.  He has consistently fielded a tough, balanced, competitive team since he became head coach, and this thing has now spun out of control.  The playoffs are out of the question, the Titans are now relegated to just trying to win a game.

 

 

BEARS HOMER SECTION

Another win, another grumpy homer.  The Bears let Detroit rack up 21 points in the first half, and 3rd-and-long is again looking like a gimme against the Chicago defense.  They give up two 3rd-and-5’s, two 3rd-and-6’s, as well as 3rd downs of 7, 9, and 10 yards, the last of which yielded a touchdown.

 

Yes, the Bears came on strong in the 2nd half, but how does Lovie Smith leave Zackary Bowman, a 2nd-year corner with about 5 games under his belt, one-on-one with Calvin Johnson for the entire first half?  On the first play from scrimmage, Lovie brought the house and watched as rookie QB Matt Stafford calmly faced down the blitz and dropped the ball perfectly into Johnson’s basket for 45 yards.  As if that wasn’t enough, Lovie then let Johnson continue to roam unchallenged for 123 first-half yards.  Hey Mr. Smith – the Lions have one good receiver, how about you pay him the respect of a double team before he lights you up single-handedly?

 

On top of that, the Bears left the stadium limping.  Devin Hester, Johnny Knox, and special-teams ace Adrian Peterson all were knocked to the sideline.  Knox was dinged after he had an impressive 102-yard kickoff return for a score to open the 2nd half. Thank the Lord for the coming Bye Week, the Bears need it.

 

Jay Cutler.  online photo, no source available.

 

Some positives were there, like Adewale Ogunleye’s dominating performance, Matt Forte’s big day (although it was almost all on two runs), and a big-time turnaround in the 2nd half in all three phases of the game. Looking better, but I still think they’d get beat down by an elite team, one of which likely resides in the division. We’ll certainly know more about that after a highly-anticipated matchup tomorrow night.

 

contact email: nick.thomas@flyingpigskin.com

 

 

  • Share/Bookmark

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

The Last Post About the NFC North for a While

No Gravatar

Favresota’s got me burned out on football already. I gotta wrap this up quick and move on, or I’ll be wishing this season to be over before it’s even started.

 

Here’s my 2009 NFC North predictions.  I shocked and dismayed myself:

Green Bay: 12-4
Chicago & Minnesota: 10-6
Detroit: 5-11

It’s all about the future in Detroit, and likely will be for a while. That’s why they pretty much aren’t included in the following accessible, ADD-friendly, loosely-organized bullet-points:

 

COMMON WINS/LOSSES:

• The NFC East will hand key home losses to Minnesota and Chicago. This won’t bode well for either teams’ chances for the postseason after losing potential tiebreakers to New York and Philadelphia.

 

• AFC North matchups should split evenly between losses to the Steelers and Ravens, and wins against the Bengals and Browns. Everyone beats up on Detroit and the NFC West this year, like usual.

Online photo, no source available

DOUBTABLE PICKS:

• Bears winning at Seattle, Week 3. I picked ‘em because they’ll be 0-2 and will be pissed or desperate or both, and the Seahawks, while I really know nothing about them, seem iffy. Seattle is always tough at home, but the Bears play them well.

 

• Minnesota winning at Arizona, Week 13: The Vikes beat up the Cardinals late in the season in the desert last year. They’re not likely to do it two years in a row. I picked Minnesota because Brett Favre and Tarvaris Jackson threw a combined 10 touchdowns against the Cards in 2008.

 

• Green Bay winning at Arizona, Week 17: The Cardinals could be finished, could be breathing at this point. Green Bay may have it wrapped up in the North and lay down to an Arizona team trying to break the Super-Bowl-loser stigma of missing the playoffs. But if these two teams either both need it or both don’t, the Pack will win.

online photo, no source available

TURNING POINTS:

• The Packers will take control with a big win over Dallas at home in Week 10, coming off an important road win in Tampa the week before. The Vikings and Bears both have much more losable road games in the NFC South; Chicago will make it two straight seasons losing in Atlanta, and the Metrodomers will get roughed up in Carolina in Week 15.

 

• Both Green Bay and Minnesota should be red-hot early. The Vikings should win their first five games and I’ve got GB starting a ridiculous 11-1. I know how it sounds, but take a look for yourself. I see one loss, in Minnesota, through Week 12. There’s three losses somewhere in the last 5 games, but it won’t matter by then.

 

• The Bears’ hard start could derail Jay Cutler’s first season in Chicago if tempers flare. They open on Monday Night in Green Bay, then follow with their home opener against Pittsburgh. Then there’s the toss-up in Seattle. They could be starting 0-3 and wanting to lynch their new QB before catching a gimme with Detroit. But if the three losses are close, well-played games they will hang in there and make it three teams in the division with 10+ victories.

 

ODDS OF ME MAKING IT TO WEEK 1 WITHOUT HURTING MYSELF OR OTHERS BECAUSE OF BRETT FAVRE:

50-50 at the moment.  Come on, the man isn’t John Lennon, he isn’t Jesus.  He’s not running from the police, so what’s with the helicopters?  He’s an old-ass quarterback who can’t let go with an ego that just sucks up all this exposure.  Good luck getting rid of him now after obnoxiously lavishing him with attention.  Sheesh.

 

  • Share/Bookmark

Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

Off-Season Wrap Up: Detroit Lions

No Gravatar

What do you say about the Detroit Lions that hasn’t been said already? More importantly, what do you say about the Detroit Lions that anyone is going to give a bleep about?

I had to ask the internet who their new head coach was; I couldn’t have remembered if you put a gun to my head. Turns out it’s Jim Schwartz, and according to his Wikipedia page, he’s been the defensive coordinator in Tennessee for the last eight seasons. Huh. Scott Linehan is the new offensive coordinator, coming off a head coaching job in St. Louis and who oversaw Minnesota’s pretty damn good 2004 season as OC. Gunther Cunningham rounds out the defensive portion of the coaching overhaul in Detroit. All I know about Gunther Cunningham is that the name Gunther is funny to me, and that he used to coach for the Chiefs at some point. I vaguely remember his name being associated with Chicago before Dick Jauron was hired. Good ol’ Dick.

Detroit Lions fan.  Online photo, no source available

So the Lions lost all sixteen games last year, and even though they lost a decent amount of squeakers…they lost all sixteen. Really close, winnable games slipped away at Chicago in Week 9, and they got legitimately jobbed Oct. 12th at Minnesota. The Vikes needed an ultra-bogus PI call in the last 2 minutes to steal a win at home.

They were no doubt a crappy team, and newly-minted Bears assistant head-coach Rod Marinelli had a lot to do with it. In fairness, the Matt Millen GM legacy didn’t leave him much to work with. Marinelli’s defensive prowess was good enough for dead last in the league, and his offense was 27th. That about wraps it up for the Rod Regime in Detroit.

The bright spots at Ford Field amounts to the foundation the Lions can count on: Kevin Smith and Calvin Johnson. FP is already on record as endorsing Kevin Smith’s potential, and Calvin Johnson’s unchallenged status as the Lion’s no. 1 wideout will produce more than the 1300+ yards he had last year. They made Matthew Stafford a filthy rich man and still have Daunte Culpepper (reunited with Scott Linehan) vying for the starting slot at QB.

Matt Stafford.  online photo, no source available

The offense seems to have some talent, but the defense will have to improve. They can’t get any worse after giving up 30 or more points in 11 games last year. It would be silly to try to make it seem like Detroit had much of a shot at making an impact, but there’s always the thought of the ‘08 Dolphins, who went from 1-15 in ‘07 to 11-5 and a division championship. No one expects that kind of turnaround, but the Lions will improve by default, and the NFC North isn’t strong enough to justify the attention it’s getting these days. 6 wins is realistic, and don’t be shocked when division rivals blow it at Ford Field in 2009.

  • Share/Bookmark

Tags: , , , , , ,

Fantasy Sleepers 2009: Kevin Smith

No Gravatar
Fantasy Sleeper 2009 - Kevin Smith - Online Photo No Source Available

Fantasy Sleeper 2009 - Kevin Smith - Online Photo No Source Available

As one of the few bright spots for the only 0-16 team in history last year, RB Kevin Smith showed in 12 games that he could hang with the big boys.  Smith gobbled up nearly 1,000 yards and averaged over 4 yards a carry doing it (in 12 games, mind you).

Going into 2009, expect Detroit to rely heavily on their rushing attack until their quarterbacks can gain some confidence, and Smith to receive the bulk of the attention.

Expect Smith to draft somewhere between rounds 3-5 and start for most 2-3 RB teams right out of the gate.

Check out our Preseason Fantasy Football 2009 Positional Rankings.

  • Share/Bookmark

Tags: , , ,