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NFL – Bills’ Game Review

13 Sep

The Buffalo Bills, AKA “The Little Engine That Could”, stormed into Arrowhead Stadium on Sunday like a runaway locomotive, beating the Kansas City Chiefs soundly in all phases of the game in winning, 41-7. The Bills were a focused group, and the win was a total team victory. Ryan Fitzpatrick, trying to establish himself not only as his team’s unquestioned leader but as a legitimate starting quarterback in the NFL, threw for 208 yards and 4 touchdowns, to 3 different receivers, in an efficient performance. Fred Jackson ran hard all day and eclipsed the 100 yard mark with 112 yards rushing. The offense was balanced all day. Fitzpatrick utilized his tight end, Scott Chandler well, hitting him for 2 scores. He also threw a TD pass to each of his starting receivers, Donald Jones and acrobatic Stevie Johnson, who is a rising star. He also connected with slot receiver David Nelson for some important first down throws during the game to keep drives alive. C.J. Spiller pitched in to the running game with a late touchdown also. The Chiefs looked flat from start to finish, and looked unmotivated and out of gas by game’s end. The Bills’ special teams pitched in with a fumble recovery on the opening kickoff, setting a tone that they maintained throughout the game, good kick coverage all day and a long punt return from Roscoe Parrish that helped set up a score. Defensively, the Bills have said they are determined to improve their run defense, and although Jamaal Charles averaged over 6 yards a carry, the defense contained him for the most part, and the offense eventually made him a non-factor by building the big lead. The defense also had a fumble recovery and an interception, by Drayton Florence. Just like with the offense, there were contributions on defense from multiple players also. Rookie Marcell Dareus played well, Spencer Johnson had a sack, and Bryan Scott was an unsung hero after being forced into more nickel and dime formations due to the hamstring injury suffered by Terrence McGee. Even on a negative play, I saw positives from this Bills’ team, a sign that they plan on being aggressive. On the Chiefs only score of the day, rookie corner Aaron Williams, also pressed into extra duty by McGee’s injury, was beaten on a pass from Matt Cassell to Charles. Williams went for the interception and just missed, and with a 20-0 lead at the time, it wasn’t a bad decision to try and make the aggressive play. Chan Gailey and his coaching staff deserve credit for having the team completely prepared to play. The Bills look like a determined bunch, determined to wipe away years of losing and gain some respect around the league. They took a giant step toward accomplishing that on Sunday with their resounding victory over an AFC playoff team from a year ago.

 
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Classic Team Logo of The Day

13 Sep

An early alternate logo of the American Football League’s Boston Patriots, one of the league’s charter franchises which later regionalized and became today’s NFL New England Patriots. “Pat Patriot” was a fan favorite as a logo and was featured prominently on the team helmet until the mid-1990s. Some of the Pats’ all-time players from the AFL era include Gino Cappelletti, currently a long-time team radio broadcaster, Babe Parilli, Ron Burton, Jim Nance, Houston Antwine, Bob Dee, Tom Addison and Nick Buoniconti.

 

Classic Sports Card of The Day

13 Sep

1955 Bowman football card, front and back, of former Baltimore Colt fullback Alan “The Horse” Ameche. He was NFL Rookie of The Year in 1955, and a four-time Pro Bowler. His pro career was relatively short, as he played only six seasons, but Ameche carved out a place in league history when he scored the winning touchdown in the NFL’s first sudden death overtime championship game against the New York Giants in 1958, a contest now known as “The Greatest Game Ever Played”. Ameche, who died in 1988, was a cousin of noted actor Don Ameche.

 

NFL – Buffalo Bills 2011 Season Preview

09 Sep

 It’s been over a decade of futility for the Buffalo Bills, as instability in the front office and coaching  led to poor drafting, bad personnel decisions and just bad coaching on both sides of the ball. Last season, another regime change took place, as Buddy Nix was hired as general manager and Chan Gailey as head coach. Neither was a particularly popular choice, and how well the team does in 2011 will say a lot about the job this new management team is doing so far. It didn’t go well to start the season in 2010, as the Bills started 0-8, changed quarterbacks and traded their starting running back. To his credit, Gailey righted the ship, and the Bills played .500 ball, going 4-4 for the second half of the season. The hope is that the team will build on that improvement and finally start winning, but every new season is a different adventure in the NFL and nothing is guaranteed. Here is my season preview of the 2011 Buffalo Bills:

Front Office / Coaching

Buddy Nix has certainly been an active GM since taking over. Although fans have howled that the team has not pursued high-profile free agents, Nix has made moves that have remade the roster through both free agency and drafting. I’m not a fan of the trade of Lee Evans for a draft pick. I don’t see how that makes the Bills a better team in any way, shape or form. The move was supposedly made to clear playing time for all the great young receivers on the roster, but in my mind, when the time comes somewhere down the line, in a tough road game in November when the team needs a play to pull out a win in the fourth quarter, they will miss Evans. If this stable of young receivers suddenly all vanish at crunch time, then Nix should be held accountable.

The results of his first draft last year are mixed. There certainly weren’t any instant contributors among the draft picks. Many questioned the choice of C.J. Spiller early in the first round when the club already had 2 potential starting running backs, and Spiller still hasn’t shown anything other than occassional flashes. The new rule moving the kickoff to the 35 yard line, resulting in more touchbacks, will diminish his contributions even more. There were some players picked who showed potential, like Alex Carrington, Torrel Troup and certainly Arthur Moats, but they need to make big strides this year for the 2010 draft to be considered successful. Danny Batten, Marcus Easley and Ed Wang all return from injuries and all looked good in preseason games this year, so the draft could still turn out to be productive.  

As for coaching, Chan Gailey may not be the sexiest coach in the NFL but he appears to at least know what he is doing, unlike some of his predecessors of the last decade. His staff has now been together for a full season, and the addition of Dave Wannstedt as assistant head coach is a big plus. The defense is the unit that has to show the most improvement for the team to progress in 2011, and Wannstedt’s wealth of experience has to help.

Offense

This unit has one thing going into 2011 it didn’t have at the start of last season – stability. Ryan Fitzpatrick is firmly established as the starting quarterback, and Fred Jackson is undoubtedly the starting, every down running back. Additionally, Stevie Johnson has emerged as a real deep threat and Fitz’s favorite target, hopefully offsetting the loss of Evans. There isn’t necessarily stability along the offensive line, but with Eric Wood moving to his natural center position and Andy Levitre and Demetrius Bell a year more experienced, there’s a chance some stability can develop there. Adding versatile Brad Smith to the mix is a big plus. His biggest contribution will hopefully be adding some creativity which will help the team convert some third downs and keep drives alive, whether as a “wildcat” QB, slot receiver or even a rushing threat.

Defense

This unit was the main reason the team finished 4-12 last year. They couldn’t stop the run, couldn’t cover anybody, couldn’t pressure opposing QBs and couldn’t get off the field on third down. Since the unit was that bad, I don’t see the departures of players like Donte Whitner, Keith Ellison, Marcus Stroud and Paul Posluszny as great losses. This team needs to find some active defensive playmakers to replace guys who basically were bodies taking up space. The drafting of Marcell Dareus, signings of Shawne Merriman (if he stays healthy) and Nick Barnett, and the promotion of George Wilson to Whitner’s spot are all moves in that direction.

Special Teams

The Bills are solid in the kicking game with Ryan Lindell and punter Brian Moorman, and long snapper Garrison Sanborn was error-free for the most part. The new kickoff rule will diminish Spiller’s effectiveness, and actually Brad Smith may handle the kickoff return duties also. The punt return game should be good also with Roscoe Parrish returning from injury.

Here’s a position-by-position look at the Bills’ roster going into the 2011 season:

Quarterback

QB Ryan Fitzpatrick

 

This is Ryan Fitzpatrick’s offense going into the season, and the jury is still out on him as far as how effective a starting NFL signal-caller he can become. He looked pretty good after winning the job last year and put up numbers not seen for this franchise since Jim Kelly was here, but there is still certainly plenty of room for improvement. He needs to cut down on costly turnovers, and the best thing to help him do that would be an improved offensive line. Tyler Thigpen, the new backup, didn’t look very good in preseason but is still an improvement over Brian Brohm from last year. It’ll be interesting to see how much of a chance Brad Smith is given to actually play under center as the #3 QB.

Running Back

RB C.J. Spiller

Fred Jackson is without a doubt the workhorse running back on this team, but for the offense to really be successful, they have to find ways to get C.J. Spiller in space to make plays also. The NFL season is a long grind and both backs have to be productive along the way. Jackson will be a key in how successful Fitzpatrick is as QB, just as Thurman Thomas was for Kelly. He needs to give the Bills a consistent running game to keep defenses honest, and is certainly capable of doing that. Rookie Johnny White made the roster mostly as a special teams player, but with injuries he needs to be ready to step in if needed. Fullback Corey McIntyre is an unsung leader on the team, and valuable as a lead blocker, special teamer and occasional receiver out of the backfield.

Receivers

WR Stevie Johnson

 

I’ve already stated that I feel the team will miss Evans’ veteran leadership at some point, but there’s also no doubting that Stevie Johnson rose to become  the Bills’  #1 wideout last year. He certainly has more chemistry with Fitzpatrick than Evans had. With Evans gone, Johnson will get much more attention from opposing defenses, so it’s important that the other wide receivers, most notably new starter Donald Jones, continue to develop. Jones showed signs last year that he can be a factor in the offense, but in my mind the most important wideout on the roster after Johnson is slot receiver David Nelson. As an undrafted free agent last year, he showed tremendous poise and ability and was a key third down receiver. Roscoe Parrish is also a dangerous weapon in the slot. Marcus Easley, drafted in 2010 but sidelined the entire year with an injury, gets his chance to make it in the NFL also. I have a hunch that Easley will eventually surpass Jones as a receiver on the club, once he gets more experience. Of the tight ends on the roster, veteran David Martin is the best known. Although not the starter, the former Packer is a good veteran presence to have on the squad. Scott Chandler, a late-season waiver pickup last year, is the starter, apparently earning the job with his blocking ability. The third tight end is newcomer Lee Smith, signed after being cut by New England. His being cut may not be an accurate measure of his talent, since the Pats are loaded at tight end.

Offensive Line

OT Demetrius Bell

The Bills will go nowhere this year if their defense doesn’t improve,  but the unit most under fire after that is clearly the offensive line. The line starts out 2011 with one advantage over last season – they have Ryan Fitzpatrick, with his quicker decision-making and better mobility – lined up behind them instead of statue Trent Edwards. The move of Eric Wood to center is a positive step, since it’s his natural position and he has so much greater strength and size than last year’s starter, Geoff Hangartner. Wood may be the only recent first round draft choice, other than Dareus, to not be a bust when all is said and done. Andy Levitre is solid at left guard and Demetrius Bell should continue to improve at the important left tackle spot. Bell may have come to training camp a little too secure in his position, but Gailey’s move of putting Levitre there at times sent a clear enough message, and Bell’s play since then seems to show he got that message. The right side of the line looks like a work in progress, with a couple of waiver wire pickups – Kraig Urbik and Eric Pears – manning the guard and tackle spots respectively. Rookie Chris Hairston should eventually be the long term answer at right tackle, but he needs to gain experience first. In the meantime, coach Gailey seems satisfied with the play of Pears. Chad Rinehart, who gave Levitre a battle for his spot in camp, and Colin Brown, a guy definitely flying under the radar, supply depth along the line. The fact that the club claimed lineman Sam Young off waivers from Dallas after initially completing the 53-man roster tells you they aren’t completely happy with the guys they have in place.

Defensive Line

DE Marcell Dareus

 

The Bills plan to play a “hybrid” 3-4 defensive scheme this year, which means there’ll be a lot of 4-3 mixed in. The club is carrying 6 defensive linemen, and the team looks like it will have a solid rotation there this year. Rookie Marcell Dareus is being counted on heavily to help shore up last season’s dreadful run defense, and even with zero NFL regular season experience he is a vast improvement over Marcus Stroud, who he replaces. Nose tackle Kyle Williams is a Pro Bowler, and the other end, Dwan Edwards, is a solid if unspectacular veteran player. Torrell Troup, who backs up Williams, looks like a player and big Kellen Heard looked good in preseason. Spencer Johnson, who backs up Edwards, is a solid player who makes plays in the chances he gets to play and in my opinion may be better than Edwards.

Linebackers

LB Shawne Merriman

 

Trying to figure out who the Bills’ starting linebackers were going to be this year was difficult, but a look at their depth chart clears things up somewhat. The starter at strong side backer is Chris Kelsay, who I’ve never been a big fan of. His backup is Alex Carrington, who was a defensive end last year but moved to this spot. I can easily see Carrington, if he develops at the pace he’s shown so far, replacing Kelsay in the lineup at some point this year. Kelsay is a poster child for the type of player I mentioned earlier that the team needs to replace – guys who basically line up and take up space. Whoever plays this spot, obviously, will be the player who is playing with his hand on the ground when the team goes 4-3. Veteran Andra Davis starts at the “middle” linebacker spot, newcomer Nick Barnett is the “weak side” starter while Shawne Merriman, the wild card in the success of  not only the defense but maybe the team this year, plays what the team calls the “jack” linebacker. Hopefully that means his responsibility will be to pursue the ball and “jack up” quarterbacks and running backs all season. There is lot of depth at linebacker on the roster, which is important considering Merriman’s track record of getting hurt. Arthur Moats, Kirk Morrison and rookies Chris White and Kelvin Sheppard are backups at inside linebacker, and seriously Moats and Morrison are both better than Davis now. Backing up the outside backers are Danny Batten and surprise rookie Robert Eddins. I feel that before the season is very old that the 4 starters at linebacker will probably change, and the changes will be for the better.

Defensive Backs

S George Wilson

 

Trying to evaluate the players in the Bills’ secondary last year was difficult considering they had to cover for a weak front 7 by trying to cover receivers for long periods due to little to no pressure on opposing QBs, and by making tackles in the run game downfield all day since the linebackers weren’t doing it. I feel that if the improved front seven do their jobs this year, the Bills have a chance to have an outstanding secondary. Terrence McGee is a playmaker when healthy, and at the other corner, Leodis McKelvin, while nowhere near the player he should be considering how high he was drafted, has enough athletic ability to make plays if there’s pressure on the quarterback. Drayton Florence will be on the field a lot against multiple receiver formations, and is a solid pro. Rookies Aaron Williams and Justin Rogers are the other backups, and it’s probably just a matter of time before Williams pushes McKelvin to the bench. It was a surprise to see Reggie Corner get cut since he seemed to be an able backup. Don’t be shocked if he surfaces with the New York Giants, who were devastated with injuries at cornerback in the preseason and whose defense is coordinated by former Bills’ interim coach Perry Fewell. The player who needs to return to form this year is safety Jairus Byrd, a huge playmaker in his rookie year who tailed off last season. In fact, Byrd may be the player most impacted if the front seven improves, allowing him the freedom to ball-hawk. At the other safety spot, replacing Whitner, again, not a terrible player but a massive underachiever, with George Wilson is a positive move. Wilson is a team leader and in less playing time as Whitner’s backup was a hungrier, more active difference-maker as a player. Veteran Bryan Scott is a solid, versatile backup at safety who can play multiple positions and contribute on special teams. The other backup, rookie Da’Norris Searcy, is a project with size and potential.

Overview

As I stated in a post sometime during the last season, the Bills, who had no identity for a decade, began to develop one as the year progressed. I called them “The Little Engine That Could” as they gradually improved into at least a competitive football team. That nickname fit them well as their key players and team leaders – Fitzpatrick, Fred Jackson, Stevie Johnson, David Nelson on offense, Kyle Williams, George Wilson, Arthur Moats on defense – were all players who worked their way to prominence the hard way. They were lower round draft picks, undrafted college free agents, rejects from other teams, all pulling together to try to turn around a losing program. They were all non-entities as individuals, but started to make a difference and started to win when they played together as a team. Hopefully they enter this season with the same attitude, although Jackson’s flareup over whether or not he was the starting RB in the preseason wasn’t helpful. He has to realize that it takes an entire roster over a long, grueling season to win, and the team has to be top priority over individual stats. I was encouraged by the attitude Stevie Johnson came into the season with. After his breakout 2010 season, he could’ve easily started campaigning for a new contract and threatened a holdout and just generally developed a big head, but instead announced he needed to get better and was coming in to do exactly that – improve and help the team win. There are little to no expectations for this team to do anything in 2011, especially in the division they’re in. If they can avoid major injury problems, stay on track and stay focused on the task at hand, which is to continue to build on the modest success they had in the second half of the 2010 season, they may be able to shock some people and even be a factor in the AFC East race.

For any Bills fans who need to get psyched a little more for the start of the season, click on the link below:

Buffalo Bills – Shout Song

 
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Classic Team Logo of The Day

09 Sep

This old program cover from a 1962 American Football League game features a logo for the Buffalo Bills that was never actually an “official” logo of the team, but made many appearances on the program covers in the early years of the franchise. The cartoon character “Buffalo Bill” was the artwork of Kevin Weil on programs from 1961 until 1964. Although never officially recognized as a team logo, “Buffalo Bill” was featured prominently on an AFL  banner at the Pro Football Hall of Fame’s AFL 50th Anniversary display in 2009. A must-see web site for any Buffalo sports fan is www.buffalosportsmuseum.com  ,which I came across while looking for the old “Buffalo Bill” cartoon character. Check it out, it’s full of lost treasures from the city’s sports past.

 

Classic Sports Card of The Day

09 Sep

From www.CheckOutMyCards.com , a 1986 Topps football card of former Buffalo Bills linebacker Darryl Talley. Although he was overshadowed publicity-wise by teammates like Bruce Smith and Cornelius Bennett, Talley was the heart, soul and conscience of the Bills’ defense for most of the 12 years he played with the team. Known for wearing his “Spiderman” shirt under his uniform, he never missed a game in his long career with the Bills. He was a two-time Pro Bowler, and is a member of the Bills’ Wall of Fame. His brother John also played briefly in the NFL, and he is a cousin of New York Yankee shortstop Derek Jeter.

 

NFL – 2011 Week One Predictions

07 Sep

A new NFL season is upon us beginning on Thursday night, when the last 2 Super Bowl champions, Green Bay and New Orleans, square off in historic Lambeau Field. It’s a terrific matchup to kick off the year. The league has made it’s “Kickoff Weekend” a big deal in the last few years, making it an event. It’s a great move, since the league’s popularity is at an all-time high. Evidence of this came in week two of the preseason, when 2 of the top 5 highest rated television broadcasts were NFL preseason games. That’s not only 2 of the top 5 sports broadcasts, but all shows. You know you have a gold mine when your meaningless exhibition games are drawing bigger TV audiences than other sports’ regular games. I am starting my annual weekly predictions of the league’s games this week. My record last season wasn’t bad – 152 correct, 103 wrong. I consider that pretty good since a lot of pundits who pick games on the weekly pre-game shows consistently are sub-.500 on their picks. Week one, as I stated last year, is the hardest week of games to predict, since teams have been hiding their real intentions all through the preseason so as not to give opponents a read on them for game-planning purposes. Here are my Week One choices:

New Orleans at Green Bay – the Saints are only a year removed from being champions, and will be a hungry football team this year. Drew Brees will make sure of that. The Packers, however, won the Super Bowl even though they had 19 players on injured reserve, including offensive starters Ryan Grant and Jermichael Finley. Those weapons are now back. They also are at home in this game, and I just can’t get the visual of how awful the Saints’ defense was in last year’s wild card upset loss to Seattle. Green Bay wins at home in what should be a terrific game.

Buffalo at Kansas City – my record would’ve been much better last year if I had picked the Bills’ games with my head instead of my heart, especially since they started out 0-8. The Chiefs were a playoff team last year and are always tough at home in Arrowhead Stadium, but they beat the Bills by the skin of their teeth last year, and the health of QB Matt Cassel is questionable due to a rib injury, so I’m picking the Bills to open the season with a win.

Pittsburgh at Baltimore – the 2 teams who figure to slug it out for the AFC North title get round one started right away. I picked the Ravens to overtake the Steelers in the division, so it figures that I’ll pick them to get a jump in the race by winning this game. Ravens’ QB Joe Flacco is 0-6 against the Steelers in his career, and his security blanket – TE Todd Heap – is now in Arizona, but the Baltimore defense will get the job done and Ray Rice will have a big day, helping Baltimore get the win.

Atlanta at Chicago – I’m not a big fan of Bears’ QB Jay Cutler, and the new kickoff rule takes away a big weapon from Chicago in Devin Hester, and even though I see Atlanta faltering from its’ playoff season of 2010, they will win this game in a hard-fought, low-scoring defensive struggle. Atlanta’s running game will be the difference.

Cincinnati at Cleveland – the Bengals’ new rookie QB, Andy Dalton, looked good in preseason action but the real bullets start to fly this weekend. Browns’  QB Colt McCoy continues his development with a good game here, mixing in timely passes with a strong running game to give the Browns a win for their home fans over their Ohio rivals.

Indianapolis at Houston – it looks as though Peyton Manning will not play, and I think the Texans would win in this spot, at home on opening day, anyway. Houston has a talented team and is capable of playing big at times – their problem is consistency over a long season. The Texans will win to give their fans some initial hope, but we all know they’ll fade later in the year.

Tennessee at Jacksonville – I picked the Jaguars to surprise everyone and win the AFC South division, then they go and cut their starting QB, David Garrard, 5 days before the season opener. That won’t play well in the Jags’ locker room, especially since the team saves $9 million with the move. I actually now feel the Jags will wind up in the division basement, and the decline will start with this game as the Titans win the game on the road for new coach Mike Munchak.

Philadelphia at St. Louis – the Rams will be an up-and-coming team this year and contend for the NFC West title, but it won’t start this weekend. The Eagles are too talented and too experienced to lose in this situation, and will win on the road in a close game. Michael Vick didn’t exactly light it up in the last few games of 2010, and will be anxious to get back on track to his early season form of last year. He’ll have a big game against a young Ram defense.

Detroit at Tampa Bay – both of these teams are on the rise and will make some noise this year, and that makes for an interesting matchup between 2 franchises that are perennial losers. The Buccaneers are just a little ahead of Detroit in their development, and the home field advantage will be the difference. Tampa wins at home behind young QB Josh Freeman.

Carolina at Arizona – both of these teams were in the playoffs not that long ago, but have fallen on hard times. The Panthers are betting their future on rookie QB Cam Newton, while the Cardinals traded for Kevin Kolb to try to revive an offense that faltered after Kurt Warner retired. Kolb has just a little more experience and more importantly, has a better supporting cast around him than Newton at this point. It has to be a great feeling for a young signal-caller, taking the reins of his own team for the first time, to look around and see guys like Larry Fitzgerald and Todd Heap to lean on. Add the home field advantage to that, and the Cardinals are a clear favorite to win.

Minnesota at San Diego –  the Brett Favre era is over, the Donovan McNabb era begins, and Viking fans wonder how long it will be until the Christian Ponder era arrives. Meanwhile, in San Diego, Phillip Rivers is a constant and has star WR Vincent Jackson back. The Chargers are determined to bury their slow-start reputation and their defense is good enough to contain Adrian Peterson, and they will win their opener.

Seattle at San Francisco – this NFC West matchup features the worst quarterbacking of any of the opening day games, with Tarvaris Jackson, the Seahawks new QB, facing 49er first round disappointment Alex Smith. So the final score will probably be 48-45. It’s tough to predict anything in this division except that there will be a lot of mediocrity. I’ll pick the Seahawks to win, based on the momentum they picked up by winning a wild card playoff game last year.

New York Giants at Washington – all of this week’s NFL games will surely include pre-game remembrances of 9/11 on the 10th anniversary, but this one may be the most emotional, since both cities involved were directly attacked on that day. As far as the game, the Giants are the better team on paper but their inconsistent play ruined their 2010 season. You have to figure they’ll be focused on opening day, and I’ll pick them to win with Eli Manning outplaying Redskin QB Rex Grossman.

Dallas at New York Jets – this Sunday night marquee matchup should also have a pretty emotional 9/11 remembrance ceremony. The Cowboys have been huge underachievers in recent years but I feel they will be a strong title contender in 2011. They won’t win this game however, as the Jets will be keyed up and ready to go. The Jets, led by bombastic coach Rex Ryan, sometimes are a little full of themselves, but there’s no denying how good their defense is. They’ll make it a long night for Tony Romo and will win here.

New England at Miami – the early game of what is now another new NFL tradition – the Monday Night Opening Weekend Doubleheader. It seems no matter what the NFL does it never feels like over-saturation, since the fans can’t get enough. New England is still one of the best teams in the AFC, while the Dolphins have steadily declined over the last couple of seasons. The Patriots win easily with Tom Brady having a great game.

Oakland at Denver – the late portion of the MNF doubleheader. Oakland is an enigma – they are nowhere near the dominant franchise they were in the past and everybody seems to think Al Davis has lost it, but they are always in every game they play, have one of the NFL’s toughest defenses and win more often than they should. They were 8-8 last year and should improve in 2011. I see them going into Denver and winning against their old AFL rivals. The Broncos are relying on Kyle Orton at QB and will struggle to keep their heads above water all season.

 
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Classic Team Logo of The Day

07 Sep

Logo of a team that existed in the National Football League from 1933 until 1939, the Pittsburgh Pirates. The team was founded by Art Rooney and renamed the Steelers in 1940, and during the “Pirate” years never finished with a winning record. The team turned out to be one of the NFL’s most iconic franchises. Their most notable achievement as the Pirates was signing Byron “Whizzer” White, the future Supreme Court Justice, in 1938.

 

Classic Sports Card of The Day

07 Sep

1956 Topps football card of Hall of Fame quarterback Norm Van Brocklin, who played 12 seasons in the NFL, mostly with the high-octane Los Angeles Rams where he split QB duties with Bob Waterfield. With opening day 2011 for the NFL coming up this week, it’s notable that “The Dutchman”, in 1951, set an opening day record by passing for 554 yards, a mark that still stands today. Van Brocklin won an NFL title with the Rams that season also, and at the tail end of his career, led the Philadelphia Eagles to the title in 1960 over Green Bay, the only post-season loss of Vince Lombardi’s career. He retired after that game to become the first head coach of the expansion Minnesota Vikings in 1961.

 

NFL – 2011 AFC Predictions

06 Sep

The Pittsburgh Steelers represented the American Conference in last season’s Super Bowl, and will surely be contenders again this year, but the rest of the conference looks strong also. Here are my 2011 predictions for the division races in the AFC:

AFC East

This looks like a 2-team race between New England and the New York Jets. In the playoffs last year the Jets finally figured out how to contain Tom Brady, and that will give them an edge this year. They have the top defense in the conference and will nose out the Pats to win the AFC East. Buffalo has been mired in mediocrity for a decade, mostly due to horrendous drafting, but they will escape the basement this year and finish third, beating out Miami. The Dolphins lost pretty much their entire running game, which has been their strength in recent years, and Reggie Bush is not going to be an every down runner. Plus coach Tony Sparano is on the hot seat. The Bills defense will be improved this year, enough to at least overtake the Fish. In fact, the top rookie in the division will be Bills’ defensive lineman Marcel Dareus.

AFC North

This should boil down to the annual battle between the Steelers and Baltimore Ravens for the division title. I believe this year the Ravens will overtake Pittsburgh and win the division. The team added a couple of key weapons to their offense in RB Ricky Williams and WR Lee Evans, and already have one of the NFL’s toughest defenses. The Cleveland Browns have been slowly rebuilding under Mike Holmgren, and should finish third in the division, behind young stars Colt McCoy and Peyton Hillis. The situation in Cincinnati is a mess, with Carson Palmer “retired”, Cedric Benson facing assault charges and both Chad Ochocinco and Terrell Owens having moved on. Despite having the division’s worst team, the Bengals do have the AFC North’s top rookie – WR A.J. Green.

AFC South

This division has been owned by the Indianapolis Colts, and every year the Houston Texans are picked to overtake them, then fail to do it. The Colts are starting the year with injury questions about Peyton Manning, who had neck surgery, and this is the year they will finally surrender the division crown. However, it won’t be the Texans who overtake them. I’ll pick the Colts second, and the Texans third, with Jacksonville surprising everybody and winning the division. The Jaguars are always competitive under coach Jack Del Rio, and I see them outlasting the 2 favorites and sneaking into first place at season’s end. The Tennessee Titans are starting over under new coach Mike Munchak, and by season’s end they will have the division’s biggest impact rookie – QB Jake Locker, but will finish last.

AFC West

Although they always have the best team in this division on paper, the San Diego Chargers never seem to be able to close the deal. This year they will, and I’m picking them to win the AFC West. Phillip Rivers is one of the top QBs in the NFL and has all his weapons back to start the year. The Oakland Raiders will climb past Kansas City and finish second under new coach Hue Jackson, mostly on the strength of their defense. It’ll be interesting to see if Terrelle Pryor eventually wins the starting QB job from Jason Campbell. The Kansas City Chiefs won the division last year but I see them finishing third this year and missing the playoffs. Denver has the division’s top rookie in LB Von Miller but will bring up the rear in the AFC West standings.

 
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