Week 12 Analysis: Philadelphia @ New England

November 26th, 2007 1:24 am
by Big Dog

God bless Andy Reid and the Philadelphia Eagles. I’ve written previously about how watching the New England Patriots just dominate football is boring. This week the Eagles demonstrated that New England aren’t untouchable.

The Eagles came to play with a clear plan, and for the most part were able to execute it well even though QB Donovan McNabb was out with an ankle injury and backup QB A.J. Feeley(27-42, 345 yards, 3 TDs, 3 INTs) was managing the game. Feeley did a magnificent job and even though the Eagles didn’t come away with the win, due mainly to a pair of interceptions from Feeley, it’s important to remember that for most of the game Feeley had better stats than New England QB Tom Brady 34-54, 380 yards, TD).

For the Eagles’ offense it was clear from early in the game that New England weren’t going to give any room deep or on the outside. This opened up the inside pass every time. In fact, this was a feature topic of conversation for John Madden and Al Michaels mostly because it was absolutely true for the whole of the game. Even when Philadelphia took the lead and New England’s defense was clearly struggling to contain them, the inside pass was always there for Feeley. In addition, Eagles RB Brian Westbrook had his typically solid game, making good, strong runs and critical receptions.

On defense, the Eagles were able to contain Patriots WR Randy Moss(5 receptions for 43 yards) and basically eliminate his impact on the game. This did open the game up for WR Wes Welker who managed an impressive 13 receptions for 149 yards. In truth, if it hadn’t been for Welker’s speed and effective route running, New England wouldn’t have been in this game at all.

The most frustrating aspect of the game for the Eagles were Feeley’s interceptions. The first came on his second play of the game and was returned by CB Asante Samuel for a TD. The Eagles dealt with that setback promptly, with a fantastic drive for their own TD. The second interception came in the late stages of the fourth quarter, as Philadelphia was 3 points down and trying to score for the win. Feeley (against all the experience and success of the game to this point) attempted the long throw to the outside corner of the endzone and once again Samuel took the pick. In the resulting drive, New England ate a lot of the clock and forced Philadelphia to burn their final timeout.

The Eagles got the ball back with 20 seconds on the clock, needing to make about 40 yards to be within FG distance. Once again, Feeley went for the outside throw, clearly trying to preserve time and ignoring the old football adage “take what they give you”. This time Patriots’ S James Sanders came away with the ball and that was the game.

This was one of the genuinely exciting Patriots games of the season and among other things provided an excellent demonstration of why Andy Reid is considered to be one of the best coaches in the league today. The Eagles came so very close to a truly remarkable upset win today, and in so doing, they have provided a blueprint for taking on New England that is bound to haunt the Patriots through the rest of the season.

Posted in John Madden, Andy Reid, NFL Coaches, Brian Westbrook, Al Michaels, Asante Samuel, James Sanders, Wes Welker, A.J. Feeley, Randy Moss, Tom Brady, NFL on television, Analysis, Game, NFL on NBC, NFL Franchises/Teams, New England Patriots, Philadelphia Eagles, NFL Players, NFL | No Comments »

The hot seat - it burns, burns, burns

October 3rd, 2007 6:35 am
by Big Dog

We said it last time, and now it’s more true than ever, Norv Turner has to be grimacing with his butt firmly planted on the hottest seat in the NFL right now. So far this season San Diego have failed to fire on offense, in spite of Turner’s reputation as an offensive specialist. The Chargers are now languishing at 4th in the AFC West and have already lost more games than they did last season. Following the high expectations set last season, if the Chargers don’t turn things around and soon, Norv’s seat is set to spontaneously combust.

While it might not look like it on the surface, Andy Reid and Donovan McNabb must be feeling things heat up a little bit too. So far the Eagles have played four games using the same basic plan with little adjustment for each opposing team. Of those four games the Eagles have won only one, and while that game was won in spectacular fashion, it wasn’t a division game. In fact Philadelphia are now locked in a desperate struggle to salvage their season given the fact that Tony Romo, Terrell Owens, Wade Phillips and the Dallas Cowboys seem to be pretty content just racking up one win after the next.

Over in San Francisco somebody should tell Mike Nolan that Russell Crowe has already proven that Armani suits don’t win championships (his team made the playoffs and lost in the first round). There’s plenty to be said for looking good while you win, but you need to be winning before you can start worrying about looking good.

Cam Cameron also has to be starting to feel the heat in his first season for the Dolphins. Even though nobody had huge expectations for Miami, they’ve managed to disappoint anyway. Miami fans have to be hoping that Cam’s track record with successful QBs soon bears fruit with Trent Green.

What do you think? Hit us up in the comments and tell us whose seat is heating up and why.

Posted in San Francisco 49ers, Andy Reid, NFL Coaches, Trent Green, Cam Cameron, Wade Phillips, Mike Nolan, Norv Turner, Donovan McNabb, Dallas Cowboys, NFL Franchises/Teams, Miami Dolphins, Game, NFL Players, Tony Romo, San Diego Chargers, Philadelphia Eagles, Terrell Owens, NFL | No Comments »

NFL Week 4 Instant Analysis: Philadelphia Eagles at New York Giants

September 30th, 2007 11:54 pm
by Pro Set

Philadelphia 3-16 NY Giants

It would be tempting to blame the injury problems of Philadelphia for the loss to NY Giants. RB Brian Westbrook was among those sorely missed. The truth is, however, that the Eagles were outplayed in a classic demonstration of why left tackles get paid so much money.

When Phildelphia had possession, I felt that they ran the ball well through RB Correll Buckhalter. I also felt that PHI followed up their rare first downs with too many subsequent 1st & 10 pass plays. The NBC coverage foussed heavily on the battles between RT Jon Runyan and LE Michael Strahan, and, on the other end, LT Winston Justice and RE Osi Umenyiora. It is trite to say that the Giants dominated the edge rush and forced QB Donovan McNabb into rushing his passes.

What nobody seemed to address, however, was that McNabb was not stepping up into the pocket and keeping his eyes downfield. He was taking five step drops and then getting hit. After the sheer volume of sacks that the Eagles conceded, I wanted to see McNabb hit his final drop step and step up, allowing his tackles to concentrate on stopping the inside move. Did anyone hear the name of DT Fred Robbins get mentioned? That means that there was less inside pressure on McNabb, but I guess that they did not have time to pressure him before he was sacked by the edge rushers.

There really is no point writing more than this. Since PHI could not protect the passer, the Eagles could not throw the ball. This meant that it was imperative for the Eagles to get the lead. On this reasoning, the game was decided in two plays.

First, with NYG moving forward late in the second quarter, LB Omar Gaither picked off a QB Eli Manning pass. After carrying the ball back to midfield, he ran out of bounds. I could not believe that he did not try to run over Manning. This was a terrible decision. The momentum of the turnover disappeared in a symphony of penalties and negative plays. How many truly great NFL defenders would run out of bounds when faced with a QB guarding the yardage to the endzone: not many.

Second, the FR TD return by LB Kawika Mitchell deserves mention. I still don’t know how a skill position player like Correll Buckhalter could not cover up that fumble. This Giants TD, occurring late in the 3rd quarter, drained the belief from the PHI players. If PHI had entered the final quarter, after conceding endless sacks and penalties, with only a ten point deficit, the NYG player might well have thought that the Eagles would prove impossible to extinguish: it’s happened before in this rivalry.

So, overall, the Eagles tried but failed in their (hopefully unintended) application of the Homer Simpson strategy. Stand up like a man, take as many punches as the other guy can possibly throw at you, and then push him over for the knock out victory. Having said that, Andy Reid had as many answers to the NYG pass rush as Moe Siszlak had to the power of Drederick Tatum. Was Andy Reid not once an NFL offensive lineman?

Finally, we only had to wait 90 seconds before John Madden mentioned exotic blitzes (see preview).

Posted in Kawika Mitchell, Fred Robbins, John Madden, Correll Buckhalter, Week 4 Instant Analysis, Jon Runyan, Michael Strahan, Osi Umenyiora, Shaun Andrews, Andy Reid, NFL Coaches, NFL Franchises/Teams, NFL on NBC, Analysis, Eli Manning, Philadelphia Eagles, Brian Westbrook, Donovan McNabb, NY Giants, NFL | No Comments »

Week 4 Previews and Fantasy

September 29th, 2007 1:22 pm
by NFL Freak

It’s another big week in football with some key conference matchups.

  • To read Pro Set’s preview of Seattle @ San Francisco, click here.
  • To read the Philadelphia @ NY Giants preview, click here.

In other news:

Posted in NY Giants, Philadelphia Eagles, Monday Night Football, San Francisco 49ers, Seattle Seahawks, NFL on FOX, NFL Franchises/Teams, NFL on Sky Sports, ESPN, Game, NFL on television, NFL schedule, NFL on NBC, NFL | No Comments »

NFL Week 4 Featured Preview: Philadelphia Eagles @ New York Giants

September 28th, 2007 11:07 pm
by Pro Set

Philadelphia (1-2) @ NY Giants (1-2) Sun 8:15pm ET on NBC

It will be hard for the loser of this match to win the division. Philadelphia comes in off an amazing display of offensive power against a Detroit Lions secondary that had clearly been studying film of the 2000 St Louis Rams defense: maybe Mike Martz brought it with him. NY Giants hits the halfway point of its divisional schedule here and will need a win to keep pace with Dallas.

NY Giants

QB Eli Manning was well supported last week by a dependable second half running game. RB Derrick Ward carried the ball effectively and exceeded expectations. The Giants cannot afford to spot the Eagles a 14-point lead like they did the Redskins. It follows that the Giants will need to run the ball with some success early in the match. The Giants should take heart from the way that the Redskins were able to run the ball against the Eagles. WSH was able to ground out long drives by good fundamental blocking. The power and strength of the PHI front seven is somewhat of a concern.

In the passing game, I’m sure that we’ll here at some point that Eli Manning will face some exotic blitzes from PHI defensive co-ordinator Jim Johnson. This is where the Giants have to make a decision. If WR Plaxico Burress is healthy enough, the Giants might be tempted to use a max protect scheme on 3rd down and try to hit Burress deep against single coverage. If Burress is still troubled by his ankle problem, then TE Jeremy Shockey has to be the hot receiver. If Shockey makes 3rd down catches that move the chains, the Eagles will be forced to back off the pressure. Eli Manning has a history of losing his mechanics and technique when pressured, so PHI will be loathe to sit back and just play coverage.

Philadelphia

After the surreal nature of last Sunday, QB Donovan McNabb might be expected to enter this game on top of the world. But I think that RB Brian Westbrook is more important. Westbrook has to be decisive and strong against an NYG front that suddenly clicked in the second half last Sunday. Westbrook cannot get greedy and bounce runs outside. I would like to see the Eagles line up and run consistently over the right side of the line, using the nastiest RG / RT combo in the NFC, being RG Shaun Andrews and RT Jon Runyan. I can’t see LB Kawika Mitchell and LB Antonio Pierce shedding those blocks too easily. Of course, if DT Fred Robbins and DT Barry Cofield can disrupt the central rushing lanes, the linebackers will be far more dangerous.

When the Eagles throw the ball, WR Reggie Brown and WR Kevin Curtis have to get open. The Giants secondary was torched by the Cowboys in Week 1, and the Redskins too hit some deep passes last Sunday. I expect the PHI line to provide good pass protection. I think that the Eagles have to try to drive the Giants into softer coverage with a couple of early deep balls on 1st & 10 or better. I have not been impressed with TE LJ Smith so far and I think that he needs to be a better broken play 3rd down receiver (much like WSH TE Chris Cooley). The Eagles also should make every effort to use Westbrook on screens and option patterns, since the linebackers will have to sit off him out of respect for his speed. If they don’t, PHI must be prepared to call the wheel route and let Westbrook go deep.

Conclusion

It’s hardly a big call to predict that this will be close. I think, unusually, that it will help the Eagles to be on the road. I think that they need to be a little more conservative on offense and let the Giants force the play. There is an injury doubt over PHI K David Akers, but he is expected to play. I like the Eagles in a close one, mainly due to the fact that Westbrook is a proven game-breaker in this series. Don’t be surprised to see some trick plays, and maybe even fake kicks. This one is too important for both teams to leave any page untried.

Prediction: Philadelphia

Posted in Antonio Pierce, Kawika Mitchell, Fred Robbins, Kevin Curtis, Reggie Brown, Jeremy Shockey, David Akers, LJ Smith, Derrick Ward, NFL Game Previews, Eli Manning, NFL Franchises/Teams, Game, Philadelphia Eagles, NY Giants, Brian Westbrook, Donovan McNabb, NFL | No Comments »

MNF coverage crippled by commentary

September 18th, 2007 1:50 am
by Pro Set

Despite Joe Theismann leaving the booth, tonight’s MNF coverage really demonstrated how far matters have deteriorated since Al Michaels departed for NBC.

With a tight, hugely important divisional showdown in play, (yes, actually in play) the long-suffering viewers were treated to a torturous over-indulgence of Charles Barkley followed by a fourth quarter descent into storyline wonderland that was just infuriating.

Barkley entered the booth in the third quarter and made some prescient and insightful remarks on the pressures facing QB Donovan McNabb. This was a really interesting period as McNabb battled to keep PHI within striking distance with the fans on his back.

But the MNF crew just had to begin pontificating on the New England spygate incident. This had been covered, on national television, 24 hours previously when the Patriots were actually playing. The relevance and newsworthiness of the MNF input was negligible, at best. The story of the evening was the game in front of them, and the issue at hand was how PHI would convert its painful but stuttering drives into TD opportunities, whilst getting pressure on WSH QB Jason Campbell on the other side of the ball without letting the Redskins run freely.

Mercifully the enforced conversation created by Barkley departed at the end of the third quarter. I’m not sure that I could have coped if Mike (the Choirboy) Tirico had mentioned again that Barkley covers the NBA for TNT, and that “our (Tirico’s and Barkley’s) paths will cross many times during the (NBA) season.”

We all then suffered as Tony Kornheiser, who tries hard but does not seem to have the patience to appreciate a full game of NFL football, started soliloquising on the future of WSH coach Joe Gibbs. The relevance of this subject matter to the game at hand was zero. It’s Week 2 and the Redskins are 1-0 so the future of the coach is absolutely moot when a 2-0 start is one defensive stop away. My bet is that Joe Gibbs, as well as every interested viewer, was fully focussed on how to contain the threatened PHI comeback.

I felt that Kornehiser had saved this up for a large PHI lead to fill 4th quarter dead time, and refused to allow the game to dictate the storylines. This manufactured storyline is beloved by the MNF crew. It simply gives them an excuse to follow a prepared script and cue up something that gives the aura of preparedness.

I feel ungrateful criticising a crew that has replaced the Mike Patrick, Paul Maguire, Joe Theismann, Suzy Kolber human interest-athon that used to crush my will to breathe.

But Tirico insists on explaining the ultra obvious during the one game of the week that is on cable, and might be expected to draw the most discerning and knowledgeable audience. Kornheiser is a newspaper man and loves to focus on pre-game storylines that can be “followed up” and “developed.”

I yearn for the return of Dick Stockton and Matt Millen, or Ray Bentley and Ron Pitts.

Posted in Washington Redskins, Al Michaels, Tony Kornheiser, Dick Stockton, Matt Millen, Jason Campbell, Joe Gibbs, Donovan McNabb, Philadelphia Eagles, Monday Night Football, Mike Tirico, Ron Jaworski, NFL on NBC | No Comments »

Week 2 Instant Analysis MNF edition

September 18th, 2007 1:11 am
by Pro Set

Washington 20-12 Philadelphia

The Philadelphia defence simply could not sustain pressure on the Washington offence. The WSH running game did exactly what the preview called for: controlled first down situations and tried to hit the trick play (half back option pass on 1st & 10 at PHI 22 with 7:04 left in the 3rd quarter). The speed of WR Santana Moss drove the PHI secondary deep and opened up run-after-catch yards for TE Calvin Cooley as an outlet for QB Jason Campbell (16-29 [209; TD; INT]).

Combining this with a Philadelphia offense that lacked big play capability, especially in the second half, the Redskins were able to win the game by playing fully within their capabilities.

Yesterday, New England QB Tom Brady displayed amazing accuracy as the Patriots blasted the Chargers. In the final 2 minutes, on 3rd & 6 from the WSH 8, Eagles QB Donovan McNabb (28-46 [240]) missed WR Kevin Curtis on a quick out at the goal line that would have allowed PHI a chance to tie the game with a 2 pt conversion.

All throughout the match, the PHI offence lacked punch and failed to dominate. The injury to TE LJ Smith nullified Smith as a passing threat whilst WR Reggie Brown looks like a solid 3rd receiver at best. NFL starting WRs need to get more separation than the PHI players did.

WSH took some good lessons from Week 1 in recognising that McNabb is far less mobile than previous seasons. Since PHI lacked a true deep threat, as noted above, WSH played good tight coverage and trusted S Sean Taylor and S Levon Landry to clean up anything that got behind the corners and linebackers.

Despite their stilted output, PHI was still in a position to score the requisite TD at the end of the game. To demonstrate how McNabb is not near his best at the moment, examine his decision making on 2nd & 2 from the WSH 41 with 3:15 remaining in the game. WSH dropped 8 defenders in coverage, fearful of the big play on 2nd & short. McNabb threw the ball deep where it was WR Greg Lewis (who has appeared to have lost his big play ability from 2004 and 2005) and 3 WSH defenders. The ensuing 3rd & 2 was a telegraphed rush for a 3 yard loss (causing PHI to burn a precious timeout) and the drive, despite converting on 4th & 5, never regained momentum.

I felt that, on the other side of the game, the WSH offence was run well by QB Jason Campbell. As well as Campbell played, including a couple of huge 3rd down conversions on consecutive drives in the second half that brought 10 points, I thought that WSH FB Mike Sellers was also deeply influential. His lead blocking was superb. He really took on the linebacker in the hole and allowed RB Clinton Portis and RB Ladell Betts to gain momentum and carry tacklers forward. Some of the leads off tackle or over guard were beautifully executed.

For the Eagles, next week becomes a must win and I have to say that their defence looked surprisingly vulnerable. On reflection, having reviewed the play-by-play, I put this down to the solid WSH play calling that never gave the Eagles a key to what was coming. As long as the tight running game works on first down, WSH is going to be a handful for most teams.

Posted in Monday Night Football, Week 2 Instant Analysis, Washington Redskins, Philadelphia Eagles, NFL Franchises/Teams, Game, Analysis, NFL | No Comments »

Week 2 Featured Preview

September 15th, 2007 9:53 pm
by Pro Set

San Diego @ New England 8:15pm ET on NBC

Last season San Diego compiled a 14-2 record that culminated in a first round bye and a home divisional playoff. New England defeated San Diego in one of the most compelling and intense NFL games that I have ever seen. When a team sacks a 14-2 coach because of one loss, nothing more needs to be said about how much pain surrounds that playoff exit.

For this monster game, new San Diego coach Norv Turner will look to replicate the overwhelming pressure and crisp ball movement that gave them what appeared to be a winning lead at Qualcomm. It will not be easy. QB Philip Rivers looked a little rusty last week, going 22-31 (190; INT). There has been an injury cloud over some skill players in the SD offense. WR Eric Parker is out; and TE Antonio Gates is probable with a back injury. This all leads to the obvious conclusion that San Diego will struggle to beat the Patriots through the air. For not the first time, the burden will rest upon RB Ladainian Tomlinson to gain the early down yardage that prevents 3rd and long. Many of his carries last week resembled the infamous outing he had in 2005 at Philadelphia. In this game, however, Tomlinson is also going to be critical as a receiver; a previously huge facet of the SD offense which I thought was underused last week hosting Chicago. With Patriots S Rodney Harrison suspended and with DE Richard Seymour injured, San Diego has to get on top between the tackles. Look for the Patriots to cover Gates with LB Adalius Thomas, and I suspect that LB Rosevelt Colvin will deal with Tomlinson on passing plays.

For San Diego, I would eschew max protect and try to take advantage of NE blitzes with swing passes. This means that Rivers will have to make the perfect pre-snap read of the NE defense, but maybe he can get the inside word on signals from Bill Belichick.

When New England has the ball, San Diego has real problems. The best San Diego strategy to prevent QB Tom Brady from having time to set and throw deep to WR Randy Moss might be the all-out blitz. Brady, however, will hang in the pocket regardless of pressure and will keep his eyes up to spot the open receiver. One other huge game where this strategy was used against New England was by Denver (2005 AFC Divisional Playoff). Even though Denver won, it was only because Brady fractionally missed three or four deep balls where Denver had completely sold out and brought up to 8 players. It follows that San Diego must get central pressure on passing downs through DT Luis Castillo and edge pressure through LB Shawne Merriman. CB Drayton Florence cannot cover Moss alone.

In the running game, it will be the usual story of how much help C Dan Koppen needs to deal with NT Jamal Williams. If Koppen gets help from a guard to stop the initial surge, and then the Patriot interior linemen can get a hat on the SD linebackers, this game is over. The Bears were able to run up the middle last week, and it was fumbles, rather than tackles in the backfield, that generally halted the CHI rushing attack.

Overall, New England appears to have too good an offense not to score at least 20 points. It is hard to see San Diego matching the pace. I think that the best chance for the Chargers is if they get an early lead and goad the Patriots into being overaggressive on both sides of the ball. The home crowd pressure to throw deep to Moss will be there.

But I think that the Patriots are smarter than that, and will patiently run the ball, and trust Brady on third down. Expect New England to win unless the turnover margin is greater than +2 in favour of San Diego.

Posted in Norv Turner, Antonio Gates, Bill Belichick, Shawne Merriman, Denver Broncos, Richard Seymour, Rodney Harrison, NFL Game Previews, Philip Rivers, Drayton Florence, LaDainian Tomlinson, NFL Coaches, Randy Moss, NFL on NBC, NFL Franchises/Teams, NFL on television, Analysis, Game, Eric Parker, Philadelphia Eagles, Tom Brady, New England Patriots, Chicago Bears, San Diego Chargers, NFL | No Comments »

Week 1 Instant Analysis

September 9th, 2007 5:59 pm
by Pro Set

Philadelphia 13

Green Bay 16

I always feel that college football players receive too much criticism for errors of judgement. On Sundays, the reverse is true. Green Bay scored 13 points from 3 PHI turnovers and that was, unsurprisingly, decisive. I said that the Eagles had to avoid turnovers and special teams touchdowns. The Eagles managed to yield to both categories on one play in the first quarter on a muffed punt recovery. PHI WR Greg Lewis was the culprit.

With a McNabb INT leading to a GB field goal, the Eagles had given up a 10 point start on the road. From then on PHI controlled the game without dominating. The Eagles ran well on early downs through RB Westbrook. This took pressure off McNabb. PHI built a 13-10 through some solid drives and disciplined defence, however it was inevitable that GB QB Favre would influence the result at some point. His effort on the tying FG drive late in the 3rd quarter was phenomenal (7-9 for 66 yards), especially, of course, on 3rd down.

So the game arrived at the not uncommon NFL scenario of scores level deep into the final quarter. GB had not looked like providing another long scoring drive or anything close, with the Packers rushing game shut down.

It looked like PHI would have the last chance to win the game when the Packers were stopped on 3rd down inside the final minutes. But JR Reed, replacing Lewis as PR, sprinted towards the GB short punt at full speed and dived forward, muffing the catch. In all my time watching NFL games, this ranks as one of the worst individual mistakes that I have ever seen. There was no risk to possession by ignoring the ball. The punt was short, the game was tied. The game was then lost.

From a supposed professional, this was inexcusable. An example has to be set, and if Andy Reid does not cut him this week then I think that he simply has no future as a playoff coach. By not cutting him, Reid is admitting that the PR was not given specific instructions to ignore any difficult catch opportunity and simply to ensure that PHI secured possession.

Knowing when to instruct your players to leave a punt alone if in any doubt is an important feature of game management, and I openly questioned Reid’s game management in the preview. The Eagles gave this one away, and suffered a conference loss. The Packers defence was vastly improved on last season’s rabble, and I think that this makes McNabb’s effort very impressive.

Posted in Greg Lewis, Donovan McNabb, Brian Westbrook, NFL Coaches, Andy Reid, Green Bay Packers, Philadelphia Eagles, Game, Analysis, NFL Franchises/Teams, Brett Favre, NFL | No Comments »

Keep your eye on these…

September 9th, 2007 8:13 am
by Big Dog

It’s a big week in football. Arguably the biggest week of the regular season as teams seek to stake out an early lead in the race to divisional titles and the playoffs. Beyond the usual suspects, here are some players to watch closely in the coming games.

Firstly look out for Randy Moss in his debut for the Patriots. In their first outing together, Tom Brady will be wanting to connect early and often with his star receiver. This is even more important given the fact that Moss has been under an injury cloud coming into this game and has missed most of the preseason. If these two can establish a rhythm, they could be a nightmare for opposing defences.

Secondly, keep an eye on Brett Favre. Sure, it seems an obvious (and maybe even cliched) thing to say, but it’s true. It’d be easy to think that Brett’s motivated by the records he’s set to tumble this season. He’s one win away from passing Dan Marino and matching John Elway. He’s only seven touchdown passes away from the record for most all time. Records like that would be distracting for anyone, but it’d be a big mistake to think that’s what gets Favre going.

As he demonstrated last season with all the talk surrounding his possible retirement, Brett is more interested in the task at hand than the talk off the field. In the same way that he is able to keep looking downfield as the first and second tackles make contact, he is hungry for the Packers to win. Even with a tough matchup against the Eagles, watch closely this week (and this season), for the records and the football.

Third, the battle of the backups. This will be one of the most interesting matchups of the first round. Damon Huard (KC Chiefs) and Matt Schaub (Houston) will be working to prove their value as they both move into starting positions. Both men have demonstrated that they belong in the league, and after years of patience and hard work, they’re now in a position to capitalise on the opportunity to shape the game.

There is a real mental toughness required to patiently ride the bench and to accept that even when you do play, you’re probably headed right back to the bench. Expect both men to demonstrate this toughness and patience as they go head to head. I’ve got no better reason for this than a good feeling, but I think Huard might come out in front.

Posted in Damon Huard, Matt Schaub, Kansas City Chiefs, New England Patriots, Randy Moss, Tom Brady, Green Bay Packers, Philadelphia Eagles, Houston Texans, Analysis, NFL Franchises/Teams, NFL Players, Brett Favre, NFL | No Comments »