2011年11月30日水曜日

Vikings rookie report: Week 12

Here's how the Vikings' key rookies performed in Sunday's 24-14 loss to the Falcons.

QB Christian Ponder — The most positive development to come out of Ponder's performance Sunday was his lack of turnovers, after throwing four picks in the previous two games. However, the offense was fairly rudimentary in the first half as the team struggled to move the ball, recording only five first downs in the first 30 minutes. He came alive a bit in the second half, making good throws into tight windows to Percy Harvin and Visanthe Shiancoe on the Vikings' first touchdown drive and throwing a gorgeous ball into the back of the endzone — on fourth down, no less — to Harvin for the second score.

TE Kyle Rudolph Rudolph was inactive for the game because of a quad injury, and his status is uncertain for Sunday's tilt with the Broncos.

DL Christian Ballard — It was an up-and-down performance for Ballard, who got washed away on a couple of Michael Turner runs early in the game and had an encroachment penalty. But he managed to generate a good pass rush, drawing a holding penalty and getting a hit on Falcons QB Matt Ryan.

S Mistral Raymond — Raymond had to take extra snaps at safety because of an injury to Tyrell Johnson. He recorded three tackles in the game but didn't make too much of an impact, positive or negative, which was a welcome sight for a secondary that has made a lot of mistakes over the last few games.

Source: http://www.profootballweekly.com/2011/11/30/vikings-rookie-report-week-12

USC Trojans football Colorado Buffaloes Notre Dame Fighting Irish Pittsburgh Panthers Florida State Seminoles Miami Hurricanes

Browns 60-second rant: Complete game needed

The Browns have lost six straight to the Ravens, but Cleveland has been a pesky foe at times. Consider the last three games:

2010, at Cleveland: The Ravens led only 13-10 at halftime before a failed Cleveland onside kick to begin the third quarter put Baltimore in great field position. The Ravens capitalized with a touchdown, the final points of the game in a 20-10 Ravens win.

2010, at Baltimore: The Browns, 13-point underdogs, led 17-14 early in the fourth quarter before Joe Flacco's third TD pass of the game to Anquan Boldin gave Baltimore the lead for good in a 24-17 win.

2009, at Cleveland: The Browns played the Ravens to a 0-0 tie at halftime before the Ravens seized control on a Ray Rice TD run, a Dawan Landry interception return for six and a field goal in a 16-0 win.

In each of these games, the Ravens have put away the Browns in the second half. 

Sound familiar?

The Browns had the Bengals in a vulnerable spot on Sunday and could not finish. Cleveland had problems on offense, defense and special teams, and Cincinnati made several difference-making splash plays.

The Browns struggle to make such plays. A couple of them would surely aid their upset chances, but sound play in all three phases will be their best hope Sunday.

Two of the Ravens' three losses are to the Jaguars and Seahawks, clubs whom the Browns have defeated. But expecting the Ravens to play another poor game on the road doesn't seem like a winning proposition. And even if they start slowly at Cleveland, they have shown they can find that extra gear late to put the game away.

Yes, the Browns can compete with the Ravens. A win to end this three-season losing streak against them will take two halves of strong play, not just the one they were able to muster at Cincinnati.

Source: http://www.profootballweekly.com/2011/11/30/browns-60-second-rant-complete-game-needed

Arizona Cardinals Kansas City Chiefs San Francisco 49ers Seattle Seahawks San Diego Chargers St. Louis Rams

Lady Vols Vs. Middle Tennessee State, 7 PM EST Live Game Thread

Source: http://www.rockytoptalk.com/2011/11/29/2595184/lady-vols-vs-middle-tennessee-state-7-pm-est-live-game-thread

Oakland Raiders Kansas City Chiefs Ben Graham Patrick Edwards Eugene Sims Aldrick Robinson

Georgia has been solid in turnover game

There are a lot of theories as to why Georgia made such a turnaround after its 0-2 start. The defense has been lights out. Aaron Murray truly got his groove back. But when talking to Murray about Georgia’s resurgence, the sophomore quarterback pointed to the Bulldogs’ ability to win the turnover battle. “We've done a great job all year of limiting the turnovers, and our defense has done an awesome job of giving us the ball back, giving us great field position all year,” Murray said.

Source: http://espn.go.com/blog/ncfnation/post/_/id/54529/georgia-has-been-solid-in-turnover-game

Clemson Tigers Florida Gators Northwestern Wildcats Wichita State University Nebraska Cornhuskers North Carolina Tar Heels

Alex Pietrangelo Out Sick Against Capitals Tonight; Cade Fairchild Called Up

Source: http://stlouis.sbnation.com/st-louis-blues/2011/11/29/2597202/alex-pietrangelo-out-sick-against-capitals-tonight-cade-fairchild

Joshua Cribbs USC Trojans football Colorado Buffaloes Notre Dame Fighting Irish Pittsburgh Panthers Florida State Seminoles

B1G endorsements: Defensive POY

The Big Ten announced its 2011 all-conference teams and most individual awards Monday night, but four more awards will be revealed Wednesday afternoon. Before the winners are revealed, we're putting in our endorsements for Offensive Player of the Year, Defensive Player of the Year, Coach of the Year and Freshman of the Year. We'll agree on some and differ on others. Here's our second endorsement, for the league's top defensive player in 2011: Brian Bennett endorses Penn State DT Devon Still There are three really strong candidates for defensive player of the year in Illinois defensive end Whitney Mercilus, Nebraska linebacker Lavonte David and Penn State's Still.

Source: http://espn.go.com/blog/ncfnation/post/_/id/54526/b1g-endorsements-defensive-poy

Pittsburgh Steelers Chicago Bears Detroit Lions Green Bay Packers Minnesota Vikings Houston Texans

Moos provides straight talk about Cougars

For Washington State athletic director Bill Moos, firing Paul Wulff was necessary because he didn't see "butts in the seats" at Martin Stadium. Wulff's failure wasn't just about wins and losses to Moos. It was the state of the program, which needs to urgently work to get better on the field and with facilities upgrades. "We've either got to run with the big dogs, or admit that we're a doormat," he said. Moos' straight-talking news conference was as much about getting boosters back to investing in the football program as it was about Wulff's termination.

Source: http://espn.go.com/blog/ncfnation/post/_/id/54532/moos-provides-straight-talk-about-cougars

Pittsburgh Panthers Florida State Seminoles Miami Hurricanes Georgia Bulldogs Texas A&M Aggies Arkansas Razorbacks

Close wasn't enough to save Wulff

Paul Wulff almost turned Washington State around. Just like he almost kept his job. But the Cougars going 4-8 this year after winning just five games the previous three years wasn't, in the end, enough to convince athletic director Bill Moos to retain Wulff for the final year of his contract. “Paul and I met at length Sunday, and then spoke again this morning, after which I determined the best path for Cougar football moving forward is to have a change of leadership,” Moos said in a statement.

Source: http://espn.go.com/blog/ncfnation/post/_/id/54527/close-wasnt-enough-to-save-wulff

Oakland Raiders Kansas City Chiefs Ben Graham Patrick Edwards Eugene Sims Aldrick Robinson

Finding Hope: in which I convince you that our in-game adjustments are really, really good (on defense)

Source: http://www.rockytoptalk.com/2011/11/27/2590164/finding-hope-in-which-i-convince-you-that-our-in-game-adjustments-are

Clemson Tigers Florida Gators Northwestern Wildcats Wichita State University Nebraska Cornhuskers North Carolina Tar Heels

SEC Championship 2011, LSU Vs. Georgia: Bulldogs Feel Disrespected

Source: http://www.sbnation.com/ncaa-football/2011/11/29/2596537/2011-sec-championship-football

New York Giants Philadelphia Eagles Washington Redskins New York Jets New England Patriots Denver Broncos

DeSean Jackson Benched In Eagles Loss

Source: http://www.bleedinggreennation.com/2011/11/28/2591488/desean-jackson-benched-in-eagles-loss

Joshua Cribbs USC Trojans football Colorado Buffaloes Notre Dame Fighting Irish Pittsburgh Panthers Florida State Seminoles

AFC East Power Rankings preview

Week 12 saw a little bit of everything in the AFC East in Week 12. We had close games, excitement and controversy. Here is how the results could impact Tuesday's NFL Power Rankings: New England Patriots (8-3) Last week: No. 6 Result: W, 38-20 against Philadelphia Analysis: The Patriots are cruising. They picked up another convincing win and have the AFC East in the bag. The only question now is can New England stay hot to secure home-field advantage throughout the playoffs?

Source: http://espn.go.com/blog/afceast/post/_/id/34869/afc-east-power-rankings-preview-6

Green Bay Packers Minnesota Vikings Houston Texans Atlanta Falcons Carolina Panthers Indianapolis Colts

2011年11月29日火曜日

Week 13 fantasy football schedule

Here is the program guide to PFW's WEEK 13 fantasy football coverage.

MONDAY

Del Pilar's Digest: Fantasyland injuries

Del Pilar's Digest: Fantasyland QB report

Del Pilar's Digest: Fantasyland RB report

Del Pilar's Digest: Fantasyland WR report

Del Pilar's Digest: Fantasyland TE report

TUESDAY

Fantasy Ticker

Week 12 Fantasy Players of the Week

QB rankings (updated Thursday, Sunday)

RB rankings (updated Thursday, Sunday)

WR rankings (updated Thursday, Sunday)

TE rankings (updated Thursday, Sunday)

PK rankings (updated Thursday, Sunday)

Defense rankings (updated Thursday, Sunday)

WEDNESDAY

Del Pilar's Mailbag 

Matchups to exploit or avoid

Ten most intriguing players

Practice report

THURSDAY

QB fantasy tips

RB fantasy tips

WR fantasy tips

TE fantasy tips

21 things

Practice report

FRIDAY

Del Pilar's Digest: Week 13 player history review

Start or sit

Injury report

SATURDAY

Del Pilar's Mailbag

Del Pilar's Digest: Fantasyland 24-hour pregame prep

Injury report for Monday-night teams

SUNDAY

Live fantasy injury updates

Facebook fantasy chat (11:30 a.m. ET - 12:50 p.m. ET)

 

Quick links:  Schedule | Game CenterFantasy statistics | Team pages for depth charts, player news, transactions and more

Source: http://www.profootballweekly.com/2011/11/29/week-13-fantasy-football-schedule

Paul Warfield Mike McCormack Frank Gatski Ozzie Newsome Joe DeLamielleure Gene Hickerson

The Colts Are 0-11, But Watching Peyton Manning's Son Marshall Will Make You Smile

Source: http://www.stampedeblue.com/2011/11/28/2591726/the-colts-are-0-11-but-watching-peyton-mannings-son-marshall-will

Bobby Mitchell Paul Warfield Mike McCormack Frank Gatski Ozzie Newsome Joe DeLamielleure

Week 12 RB rankings

Updated Nov. 28, 2011 @ 7:45 p.m. ET

Byes: none

Here are our fantasy rankings for running backs:

  1. Arian Foster, Texans at Jaguars
  2. LeSean McCoy, Eagles vs. Patriots
  3. DeMarco Murray, Cowboys vs. Dolphins
  4. Michael Turner, Falcons vs. Vikings
  5. Ray Rice, Ravens vs. 49ers
  6. Steven Jackson, Rams vs. Cardinals
  7. Matt Forté, Bears at Raiders
  8. Marshawn Lynch, Seahawks vs. Redskins
  9. Cedric Benson, Bengals vs. Browns
  10. Rashard Mendenhall, Steelers at Chiefs
  11. LeGarrette Blount, Buccaneers at Titans
  12. Maurice Jones-Drew, Jaguars vs. Texans
  13. Michael Bush, Raiders vs. Bears
  14. Frank Gore, 49ers at Ravens
  15. Kevin Smith, Lions vs. Packers
  16. BenJarvus Green-Ellis, Patriots at Eagles
  17. Ryan Mathews, Chargers vs. Broncos
  18. Shonn Greene, Jets vs. Bills — UP
  19. Willis McGahee, Broncos at Chargers
  20. Ben Tate, Texans at Jaguars
  21. Chris Johnson, Titans vs. Buccaneers
  22. Darren Sproles, Saints vs. Giants
  23. Jonathan Stewart, Panthers at Colts
  24. Reggie Bush, Dolphins at Cowboys
  25. DeAngelo Williams, Panthers at Colts
  26. Beanie Wells, Cardinals at Rams — DOWN
  27. Mike Tolbert, Chargers vs. Broncos
  28. Brandon Jacobs, Giants at Saints
  29. Mark Ingram, Saints vs. Giants
  30. Donald Brown, Colts vs. Panthers — UP
  31. C.J. Spiller, Bills at Jets — UP
  32. Peyton Hillis, Browns at Bengals — INJ, UP (ACTIVE)
  33. Pierre Thomas, Saints vs. Giants
  34. Marion Barber, Bears at Raiders
  35. Toby Gerhart, Vikings at Falcons
  36. Delone Carter, Colts vs. Panthers — UP
  37. Roy Helu, Redskins at Seahawks
  38. James Starks, Packers at Lions — INJ, UP (ACTIVE)
  39. Isaac Redman, Steelers at Chiefs
  40. Daniel Thomas, Dolphins at Cowboys
  41. Ryan Torain, Redskins at Seahawks
  42. Javon Ringer, Titans vs. Buccaneers
  43. Chris Ogbonnaya, Browns at Bengals — DOWN
  44. Jackie Battle, Chiefs vs. Steelers
  45. Danny Woodhead, Patriots at Eagles
  46. Joseph Addai, Colts vs. Panthers — INJ, DOWN (ACTIVE)
  47. Ryan Grant, Packers at Lions — DOWN
  48. Dexter McCluster, Chiefs vs. Steelers
  49. Lance Ball, Broncos at Chargers
  50. Maurice Morris, Lions vs. Packers
  51. Kendall Hunter, 49ers at Ravens
  52. Ricky Williams, Ravens vs. 49ers
  53. Thomas Jones, Chiefs vs. Steelers
  54. Marcel Reece, Raiders vs. Bears
  55. Da'Rel Scott, Giants at Saints
  56. Joe McKnight, Jets vs. Bills
  57. Johnny White, Bills at Jets
  58. Jason Snelling, Falcons vs. Vikings
  59. Jacquizz Rodgers, Falcons vs. Vikings
  60. Brian Leonard, Bengals vs. Browns
  61. Deji Karim, Jaguars vs. Texans
  62. Felix Jones, Cowboys vs. Dolphins — INJ, DOWN
  63. Bernard Scott, Bengals vs. Browns
  64. Derrick Ward, Texans at Jaguars
  65. Lorenzo Booker, Vikings at Falcons
  66. Justin Forsett, Seahawks vs. Redskins
  67. Chester Taylor, Cardinals at Rams
  68. LaRod Stephens Howling, Cardinals at Rams
  69. Shane Vereen, Patriots at Eagles
  70. John Kuhn, Packers at Lions
  71. Tashard Choice, Bills at Jets — DOWN
  72. Charles Clay, Dolphins at Cowboys
  73. Anthony Dixon, 49ers at Ravens
  74. Kregg Lumpkin, Buccaneers at Titans
  75. Leon Washington, Seahawks vs. Redskins
  76. Chris Ivory, Saints vs. Giants
  77. Mewelde Moore, Steelers at Chiefs
  78. Jeremiah Johnson, Broncos at Chargers
  79. Ronnie Brown, Eagles vs. Patriots
  80. Montario Hardesty, Browns at Bengals — INJ, UP (ACTIVE)
  81. Phillip Tanner, Cowboys vs. Dolphins
  82. Danny Ware, Giants at Saints — INJ, UP (ACTIVE)
  83. Dion Lewis, Eagles vs. Patriots
  84. Bilal Powell, Jets vs. Bills — UP
  85. Thomas Clayton, Browns at Bengals
  86. LaDainian Tomlinson, Jets vs. Bills — INJ (INACTIVE)
  87. Taiwan Jones, Raiders vs. Bears — INJ

Not listed: Knowshon Moreno, Broncos; Adrian Peterson, Vikings; Fred Jackson, Bills; Jahvid Best, Lions; Darren McFadden, Raiders; Ahmad Bradshaw, Giants

 

The above player rankings are based on expectations for this week only, not for the entire season, taking into account this week's specific matchups and injuries. The initial rankings are compiled before the release of the NFL's early injury report and are updated Thursday to reflect the status of each player.

We base our rankings on the following scoring system: For skill-position players, one point for every 10 rushing/receiving yards, one point for every 30 passing yards, six points for a TD run or catch, four points for a TD pass, two points for a two-point conversion run or catch, two points for a two-point conversion pass. For kickers, three points for FGs of 18-39 yards, four points for FGs of 40-49 yards, and five points for FGs of 50-plus yards. Defensive rankings are based primarily on points allowed, yardage allowed and sack potential.

Glossary of notations

INJ — player has an injury that may affect productivity or availability.
ILL — player has an illness that may affect productivity or availability.
UP — player was moved up on draft board after original posting.
DOWN — player was moved down on draft board after original posting.
Not listed — player is temporarily sidelined due to injury or suspension but otherwise would be ranked.
ACTIVE — on game day, player has been designated active (posted shortly before kickoff, when available).
INACTIVE — on game day, player has been designated inactive (posted shortly before kickoff, when available).

Players and/or notations added after the original posting are shown in boldface.

Note: Remember to check back for late-week and weekend updates, as well as game inactives (when available) in the 90 minutes preceding the 1 p.m. Sunday kickoffs. You'll also find regular updates in our live fantasy injury reports on Sundays.

Source: http://www.profootballweekly.com/2011/11/28/week-12-rb-rankings-2

Cleveland Browns Pittsburgh Steelers Chicago Bears Detroit Lions Green Bay Packers Minnesota Vikings

Texans' fortunes hang on rookie QB Yates

The Texans stacked another win on Sunday — their fifth in a row — by holding off the offensively inept Jaguars. The win improved Houston's record to 8-3. But the Texans also stacked another injury, this one threatening to derail a season overflowing with promise and excitement just a few short weeks ago.

Backup QB Matt Leinart, who lasted less than one half in his first NFL start in more than four years, will soon be placed on injured reserve with a broken collarbone, leaving Houston with just fifth-round rookie T.J. Yates and recently signed journeyman Kellen Clemens as its options under center.

The Texans are clinging to a two-game lead over the Titans in the AFC South, with two postseason hopefuls, the Falcons and Bengals, looming in the next two weeks.

The PFW Spin

As the Texans prepare to start their third different QB in as many weeks, let's quickly break down Yates. He's a big, smart, athletic QB who fits Houston's offense well. In his first NFL action in Week 12, Yates replaced Leinart with less than two minutes remaining before halftime and his team holding a seven-point lead. The rookie completed 3-of-6 passes, twice moving the chains to set up Neil Rackers for a 33-yard field goal heading into the half. Yates exhibited nice tempo in the two-minute drill, despite coming off the bench cold.

In the second half, Yates completed 5-of-9 passes for 39 yards. The good news: he did not turn the ball over, looked better than Jaguars starter Blaine Gabbert and helped his team hang on for the win. The bad news: Houston could not have played any more conservatively and Gabbert was benched in the fourth quarter.

Also troubling was Houston's inability to run the football in the second half. In the final 30 minutes, it managed only 16 yards on 17 carries. RBs Arian Foster and Ben Tate had very little space to operate with the Jaguars knowing what to expect. The Texans have been vulnerable against stout run defenses such as Oakland (70 rushing yards on 25 carries), Baltimore (93 rushing yards on 25 carries) and Jacksonville (88 rushing yards on 31 carries).

Which brings us to the timing of their latest QB injury: Atlanta and Cincinnati, the Texans' opponents in Weeks 13 and 14, respectively, are two of the top five run defenses in football. Houston must quickly prove that it can be dominant against big, physical fronts — even with more attention undoubtedly being paid to Foster and Tate as Yates gets acclimated — or things could go south quickly. Fortunately, the Texans close with three winnable games against the Panthers, Colts and Titans. Still, not relinquishing the confidence and momentum they've worked so hard to build over the past month will be critical.

The Texans plan to sign another veteran QB this week. But they already have quashed Brett Favre speculation — a wise move, we say — and passed on the likes of Brodie Croyle, Jeff Garcia and Trent Edwards when they opted for Clemens last week. In other words, one of these guys could be added to the mix, but will they really be a better option than Yates or Clemens?

Back to Yates: he has great weapons, coaching and the league's No. 1 ranked "D" working in his advantage. (Replace the word 'Yates' with 'Leinart' and it feels like last week all over again.) But what he doesn't have is the big-game experience that Leinart brought to the table, which was one of the most comforting aspects for the Texans after starter Matt Schaub went down. Leinart was a Rose Bowl champion and Heisman Trophy winner in college; Yates left the University of North Carolina with a 23-21 record as a starter.

The bottom line is that the strength of Houston's run game and defense has made it the AFC's No. 1 seed if the playoffs began today. That is encouraging, and there is no question the Texans will count on those elements even more down the home stetch. But like Leinart, whose golden opportunity vanquished because of an unlucky break, Yates is going to have to make some throws when opponents focus strictly on stopping the run. The Texans barely afforded him the opportunity in Week 12, instead sticking to the run game even when it wasn't working.

How quickly Yates can learn on the fly and give Kubiak confidence to open up the playbook likely will determine how far the Texans go.

Follow Arthur Arkush on Twitter

Source: http://www.profootballweekly.com/2011/11/28/texans-fortunes-hang-on-rookie-qb-yates

USC Trojans football Colorado Buffaloes Notre Dame Fighting Irish Pittsburgh Panthers Florida State Seminoles Miami Hurricanes

Wisconsin's forward thinking results in rematch with Michigan State

Down for count, Badgers get off mat to earn spot in Big Ten championship game

Getting beat by Michigan State on a Hail Mary? That was a standing 8-count.

Source: http://www.chicagotribune.com/sports/breaking/ct-spt-1129-big-ten-foot--20111129,0,4087272.story?track=rss

Gene Hickerson Joshua Cribbs USC Trojans football Colorado Buffaloes Notre Dame Fighting Irish Pittsburgh Panthers

Rapid Reaction: Patriots 38, Eagles 20

PHILADELPHIA -- Rapid reaction from the Patriots’ 38-20 win over the Eagles at Lincoln Financial Field: What it means: The blowout win improves the Patriots to 8-3 and has them keeping pace atop the AFC standings with Baltimore and Houston. This is important when it comes to competing for a potential No. 1 playoff seed. The rest of the Patriots’ season looks like this -- vs. Indianapolis; at Washington; at Denver; vs. Miami; vs. Buffalo.

Source: http://espn.go.com/blog/afceast/post/_/id/34816/page/rapid/rapid-reaction-pats-38-eagles-20

Frank Gatski Ozzie Newsome Joe DeLamielleure Gene Hickerson Joshua Cribbs USC Trojans football

VIDEO: Real Sociedad's I�igo Mart�nez Has Scored Twice From His Own Half This Season

Source: http://www.sbnation.com/soccer/2011/11/28/2594598/inigo-martinez-goal-real-sociedad-betis-midfield

Detroit Lions Green Bay Packers Minnesota Vikings Houston Texans Atlanta Falcons Carolina Panthers

UCLA's Neuheisel fired, but will coach in Pac-12 title game

LOS ANGELES — UCLA has fired coach Rick Neuheisel after four seasons in charge of his alma mater.

Source: http://www.chicagotribune.com/sports/breaking/chi-uclas-neuheisel-fired-but-will-coach-in-pac12-title-game-20111128,0,2107440.story?track=rss

Otto Graham Paul Brown Marion Motley Jim Brown Lou Groza Dante Lavelli

Jim Irsay Says Indy Star's Bob Kravitz Is 'Full Of Barn Poop'

Source: http://www.stampedeblue.com/2011/11/25/2586345/jim-irsay-says-indy-stars-bob-kravitz-is-full-of-barn-poop

Pittsburgh Panthers Florida State Seminoles Miami Hurricanes Georgia Bulldogs Texas A&M Aggies Arkansas Razorbacks

NCAA Basketball 2011: Missouri Hits No. 13 In College Rankings

Source: http://stlouis.sbnation.com/2011/11/28/2592457/ncaa-basketball-2011-how-far-will-missouri-leap-in-rankings

Arkansas Razorbacks Penn State Nittany Lions Alabama Crimson Tide Clemson Tigers Florida Gators Northwestern Wildcats

Pac-12 candidates for Broyles Award

Four Pac-12 coaches have been nominated for the 2011 Broyles Award, which annually honors a top assistant coach: Arizona offensive line coach Robert Anae, Oregon State special teams coach Bruce Read, USC defensive coordinator Monte Kiffin and Stanford defensive coordinator Derek Mason. The five finalists for the award will be announced today. The winner will be announced on Dec. 6. The winner of the 2010 Broyles Award was Gus Malzahn, offensive ...

Source: http://espn.go.com/blog/ncfnation/post/_/id/54401/pac-12-candidates-for-broyles-award

Arizona Wildcats Houston Cougars California Golden Bears Texas Longhorns Baltimore Ravens Cincinnati Bengals

Shorts and Shells: Week 12

In 1920, William Butler Yeats wrote his famous poem "The Second Coming" as an allegory of things falling apart in post-war Europe.

In 2011, the collarbone injury to Matt Leinart might have the Texans and their fans thinking that their universe is in shambles.

Yeats, meet T.J. Yates, fifth-round rookie out of North Carolina.

Here's an excerpt from the famous poem:

Turning and turning in the widening gyre
The falcon cannot hear the falconer;
Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity.

Surely some revelation is at hand;
Surely the Second Coming is at hand. ...

Now, I was an English major in college, and I probably knew more of what the poem meant 15 years ago. But it's not hard to tell that Yeats is painting a dim picture and yet also is opening up the possibility for good things to happen in the end.

With Leinart likely to miss the rest of the season, the Texans will have their third starting QB in as many games when they take on the Falcons in Week 13. As for Leinart, you do feel badly for the kid. This was his chance to change his career. Now what?

"I said, 'Not again,' " Leinart said. "This was a great opportunity for me, playing well and feeling good. It's unfortunate, but I'm not going to give up. It's not in my nature. I'm just going to keep moving forward, figure this out and move one step at a time.

"We have the utmost of confidence in T.J. Yates to get the job done. That's why he's here, but it hurts pretty bad."

Although Yates did not embarrass himself in replacing Leinart (8-of-15 passing, 70 yards), the Texans once more have to pick up the slack with another key player out. Call it the Third Coming — from Matt Schaub to Leinart and now to Yates — if you believe in putting positive spins on things.

The loss of Mario Williams has been absorbed. The team found ways to generate yards with Andre Johnson out of the lineup for five games, and he caught only two passes for 22 yards in his return on Sunday. Losing Schaub was big, very big, but the Texans spent the past two weeks preparing and talking up Leinart.

"It's kind of crazy how we're losing players, but somehow we keep finding a way to overcome," Johnson said.

If any team is used to hitting the reset button, it's the Texans. If nothing else, successful teams typically have to overcome adversity, usually of the major variety. Ask the Packers, who lost more man-hours to injury last season than any other team and still won a title. The difference? They did not lose Aaron Rodgers, Greg Jennings, Clay Matthews and Matt Flynn. There is not as big a gap between those players and the Texans' lost starters as you might think.

"This team knows how to deal with adversity," Yates said. "We've taken an injury almost every single game of the year, and the team has rallied around each other and really found a way to win."

Second-guessing the Texans' decision not to put in a claim for Kyle Orton is misplaced. One, the Chiefs (by virtue of their worse record) would have gotten Orton no matter what. Two, there's no way they could have known Leinart would go down on a freak injury like that, even if it's the second time in his career he has suffered a broken collarbone. The first was in 2007, when a guy named Kurt Warner took over for the next two-plus seasons and established the back end of what might turn out to be a Hall of Fame career.

Without trying to connect the dots too much, both Warner and Yates were completely unheralded when they got their shots. Both earned their chances to start (Warner twice) by a starter's injury. Both are tough and smart.

From PFW's 2011 Draft Preview book, here's the scouting report from PFW draft analyst Nolan Nawrocki on Yates coming out of North Carolina, where he played for former NFL head coach Butch Davis and former NFL coordinator John Shoop:

"Positives: Very good size. Smart, tough and has shown improved poise in the pocket. Comfortable working from under center. Can lob the fade with touch and put some air underneath the ball. Fine short accuracy.

"Negatives: Has a rag arm — balls tend to hang up in the air. Limited athletic ability. Inconsistent footwork diminishes accuracy, and it really wanes outside 15 yards. Streaky, plays too hot and cold and confidence issues have shown in his play. Heavy-footed, cannot escape the rush and has been slowed by injuries.

"Summary: Regained his confidence and came on strong as a senior but has limited upside to develop and will only fit into a short-to-intermediate, West Coast passing game as a game-managing reserve."

A four-year starter at North Carolina who broke many of Ronald Curry's passing records, Yates had something of an up-and-down career. But it ended in shocking fashion with a last-minute bowl win that will go down as one of the wildest finishes in college football history. Explaining what happened in the final 30 seconds of regulation of the 2010 Music City Bowl against Tennessee would take up the bulk of this week's "Shorts and Shells," so watching this should give you the picture.

(In a nutshell, Yates drove the Tar Heels into position to kick a game-tying field goal and send the game to overtime after a running play as time ticked away. Initially it was ruled that the clock had run out before he could spike the ball, but the replay showed there was one second left, and the Tar Heels made the subsequent field goal. In overtime, Yates scored in the first OT, and UNC won it in the second OT with a field goal.)

On his bio page from the UNC media guide, Yates noted that he recently had read Jack London's "Call of the Wild." Not to overdo the English-major thing, but the symbolism here is also fantastic. In the book, the main character, the sled dog Buck, goes from a sheltered life living in sunny California to being thrown into the brutal and unforgiving clime of the Arctic. It's there that Buck's feral instincts take over and he becomes a true pack leader.

Going from clipboard holder as a No. 3 QB to getting thrown into a playoff race probably has a similar feel. We'll see if Yates can make what would be a shocking transformation in Houston.

 

Controversial call of the week

Reports have surfaced that Lions DT Ndamukong Suh will be fined heavily and suspended (at least) two games for his Thanksgiving Day stomp of Packers OG Evan Dietrich-Smith.

The hit from the commissioner's office should not be shocking. Neither should the act Suh committed itself.

Others have chimed in on this, but Suh is just following in the footsteps that have been laid out by head coach Jim Schwartz, who has tried to put together a team of tough players and asked them to continue the tone he has set. We know from the end of the 49ers-Lions game that the tone includes trying to intimidate the opponent.

Plus, there's the matter of how Suh handled the situation, which further proves he doesn't get it. After the game, Suh said he did nothing wrong — and that he had seen the replay. The Lions followed that up the next day with a statement excoriating their star player's actions. Suh responded not by issuing a team-released response, but with a post on his Facebook account.

Because Suh is a smart and well-spoken kid, he comes off as intelligent. Most of the time it's deserved. But this was stupid. Instead, he looked immature, acting on his own playbook.

CBS' Shannon Sharpe made some smart observations on the entire process and how Suh failed to handle it.

"I'd also feel better about (the situation) if he apologized to the guy that he committed the offense against," Sharpe said. "Apologize to your teammates. Apologize to this organization. I don't think he's learned his lesson. I think what happened, somebody got in his ear and said, 'Look, you sounded ridiculous saying what you said; you need to make an apology.' But you do that publicly. Everybody doesn't have a link to your Facebook page. Do it publicly."

Instead, Suh will sit. He hurt his team, which is fighting for a playoff spot. This might be what it takes for him to figure it out.

 

The wow factor

This week's edition goes out to the hidden factors for the 6-5 Broncos:

"Deafening silence from haters right now. We're living on Tebow time." — @BobLeyESPN on Twitter

It's true that Tim Tebow is 5-1, and the Broncos are a better team with him under center. But the reasons for it are not as clear as everyone makes them out to be.

Not only is Tebow hard to prepare for, but he also has another gift: He has made the rest of the team better around him.

Did anyone watching Sunday's game notice the kind of time that the Broncos' offensive line afforded him to throw? Several times the fivesome of Ryan Clady, Zane Beadles, J.D. Walton, Chris Kuper and Orlando Frankin, with help from the backs and tight ends, gave Tebow a five-Mississippi to survey the field. Even though Tebow tends to lock in on one receiver or look to his primary read, the line was outstanding in its pass protection.

It was equally so in its run blocking. Running a college-themed scheme is tricky, based on timing and repetition, so it's amazing that this group has jelled the way it has so quickly. Also, when it has gone to more of a straight-ahead run series, Willis McGahee has been given chances to succeed.

Also impressive of late has been the Broncos' defense. In the past three games, the Broncos have allowed 258, 318 and 344 yards, holding the Chiefs, Jets and Chargers to 10, 13 and 13 points, respectively.

Credit coordinator Dennis Allen for getting his team in order. This secondary looked completely out of sorts at one point this season, but it has not allowed any one receiver to go for more than 64 yards in the past three games. The pass rush has been cranked up a notch with Von Miller and Elvis Dumervil, and it has allowed Allen to play more sophisticated and complex coverages.

Interesting to note that the Eagles and Broncos both wanted Allen, somewhat of an unknown at the time, to take their defensive coordinator job. Allen, then the Saints' secondary coach, chose Denver. The Eagles turned to Juan Castillo. We know how that has turned out.

 

Entertainers and icons

A tip of the cap to perhaps the most entertaining early game in Week 12, between the Jets and Bills:

Still can't figure out the Jets.

The Bills, well, their effort was commendable after losing S George Wilson and RB Fred Jackson this week and being without their three best players — Jackson, NT Kyle Williams and C Eric Wood.

It was Ryan Fitzpatrick's best game since signing his extension, and he needed that kind of game to quiet his critics. What they didn't need was a game of histrionics from Stevie Johnson, who absolutely ate up Jets CB Darrelle Revis like few men ever have but sullied the effort with a 15-yard celebration penalty that hurt his team and a crucial drop in the final minute.

Don't forget, Johnson is trying to get a new contract. Bad way to show you have earned it.

But this is more about the Jets, who make it fun and interesting always but have a way of making you question what you see.

You see Mark Sanchez throwing a career-high four TDs, but you know your eyes didn't fool you in the first half, when he was missing passes and making shaky decisions.

You see Shonn Greene running hard but then leaving the game with an injury and leaving paper-thin depth behind him.

You watch the defense seal the game at the end with a few close-out plays, but you have to remember the open receivers and lack of juice in the first three quarters.

Most of the elements of a great team are there. They just are not there at all times. The Jets are still in the race. We've learned previously not to count them out. It's just that ...

For every big offensive play, they go three-and-out the next possession. For every big defensive series, they give up inexplicable chunks of yards. If Plaxico Burress doesn't make that one-handed catch, do the Jets even win this game? Clutch is one thing; hanging on a high-wire act is quite another.

Rex Ryan has resorted to a questionable game of cat and mouse with Sanchez, threatening him and dangling his job out in front of him, with the fear of being replaced by Mark Brunell serving as the motivation. Bad call and a sign of desperation.

And on defense, they used way more cover-zero, an all-out blitz, than usual against the Bills and way more than Ryan has ever run in New York. It's not a baseline coverage; it's something you run as a change-up to get more pressure. You know when a team is leaning on it heavily, it's a sign the team can't generate a regular pass rush.

The Jets say they need to close out 5-0. They certainly are capable. And it's going to be fun to watch how it all unfolds. But you just get the feeling that the many holes on this team are going to come back to haunt the Jets and leave them just short.

 

Ten takeaways of the week

Here are 10 things I took from Week 12 as we start in earnest the playoff run:

1. Three big-name receivers — Stevie Johnson, DeSean Jackson and Dwayne Bowe — are looking for big-name contracts. But they have a funny way of showing it sometimes. Johnson's antics and horrible drop did not help his team Sunday. Neither did Jackson, who was benched by the Eagles in the fourth quarter of their blowout loss to the Patriots. Bowe had a few big catches in the loss but didn't put forth the best effort on the game-ending interception as the Chiefs were driving to beat the Steelers. Receivers and their agents tend to trumpet the numbers when it comes time to talk turkey. But teams are more than happy to bring up the intangible elements in those situations. That's why these three players might not break the bank the way they hope or expect to.

2. I can tell you that when word surfaced of an "unidentified team" being interested in Terrell Owens, I immediately thought Patriots. And then Sunday, when I saw agent Drew Rosenhaus, who just happens to represent the unemployed T.O., on the Patriots' sideline, it only made my thoughts on the matter harden. Whether Owens could help the Patriots, given that we don't know his health status, is a matter of conjecture. But we do know that the Patriots lack a quality deep threat, even after their big win over the Eagles, and could sign Owens in the next two weeks for the stretch run.

3. Julian Edelman is becoming the next Troy Brown. On defense, anyway. On a 2nd-and-8 play from the New England nine-yard line in the third quarter, he covered DeSean Jackson brilliantly on a double move, staying with the slinky receiver, and then came up to stop Vince Young on a QB scramble, keeping him from making the first down. Later, Edelman crushed Young on a blitz, forcing the Eagles to punt after the overthrow. No coach gets more out of his talent, and knows how best to use it, than Bill Belichick. He finds an Edelman capable of pulling double duty every few seasons when needed.

4. Really questionable call by Chan Gailey onside-kicking from his own 20 after Stevie Johnson's Plaxico Burress "leg shooting" celebration and subsequent 15-yard penalty. It helped turn the game. It's as if Gailey had decided to go for it before the penalty and refused to reconsider after having the kickoff start 15 yards farther back. Horrible call. It started the comeback for the Jets, who were down 14-7 and had only 111 yards of offense before they got the ball back. Three plays later, they tied the game, and on their first possession of the second half, the Jets took the lead. It might have cost the Bills a game they fought hard to win.

5. After the Chargers missed a field goal early in the fourth quarter, Qualcomm Stadium's cannon operator still fired the weapon, leading to some groans in the crowd. Those groans grew louder when the Chargers were on the losing end of a 16-13 OT game, their sixth straight defeat. No playoffs — And whom are we kidding? They are not making it — means no more Norv Turner. It has been a long run, and one during which he often received the unfair brunt of the criticism. But this team has underachieved for too long, and Philip Rivers (healthy or hurt) is having his worst season. A change of atmosphere is likely coming. Have to wonder if the Chargers regret the decision not to replace Turner with Ron Rivera, although Rivera is a very noble guy and might not have wanted to leapfrog his former head coach like that.

6. The number of close games in the NFL is pretty amazing. Even if games are not exciting — take Seahawks-Redskins, for instance — they are ultracompetitive. Through Week 11, there had been 79 games that were decided by seven points or fewer, which was two off the all-time mark of 81 back in 1988. In Week 12, there were nine more such games, with Panthers-Colts still a one-score game in an eight-point contest.

7. Interesting to note that of the 10 previous teams to start the season 11-0, only half went on to win Super Bowls. Three of the past four — the 2009 Colts, the '07 Patriots and the '05 Colts — fell short, with only the '09 Saints going the distance in the past 13 seasons. That said, the Packers eliminated one dangerous opponent, the Lions, on Thanksgiving and just keep getting it done. Two of the five remaining opponents en route to the pursuit of 16-0 are likely to have replacement quarterbacks, with the Chiefs (Kyle Orton?) and Bears (Caleb Hanie?) in Weeks 15 and 16. The Packers will face the Lions again in Week 17, and it will be a tough one. But watch out for the Raiders in Week 14. They are far from a perfect team, but the rushing combination of Michael Bush and Darren McFadden (if he's healthy) could be dangerous, Carson Palmer is heating up and the Raiders' defensive front is a top-10 unit.

8. How good were the kickers and punters in Oakland on Sunday? The Bears are regarded as having the best special teams in the NFL, but Sebastian Janikowski set a personal mark with six field goals and Shane Lechler was the player of the game with his nearly 50-yard net average, which included a booming 80-yarder and a coffin-corner kick that kept the ball out of Devin Hester's deadly hands (and legs). Adding to the show was Bears PK Robbie Gould, who nailed a 53-yarder right down the pike. But the Raiders were overall a leg up on the Bears on Sunday. Throw in the Raiders' kicking game as a realistic reason why they could end Green Bay's unbeaten run.

9. The Chiefs would be a very good football team if they had a quarterback. Maybe they will next season — Matt Cassel vs. Kyle Orton is shaping up as the best early QB battle for 2012 — but they do not right now. For all of Tyler Palko's moxie and athleticism, he just can't throw accurately from the pocket. Todd Haley is a good play-caller, and the Chiefs have enough playmakers to be effective. Defensively, Romeo Crennel has this team playing at a high level. They have an excellent kicker, punter and return units. Expect the Chiefs to be the division favorites next year, even if this streaky season has slipped away from them.

10. The Titans are a tough team to figure out. But that doesn't mean they are not still in the race. They have a fierce offensive line, a feisty secondary and a dangerous return game that provides good field position and occasionally breaks a long one, like Sunday's razzle-dazzle reverse kickoff to Tommie Campbell for a TD. The problem seems to be that the offense yings and yangs too much, with the run game and passing game seldom clicking on the same day. That was the case Sunday when Chris Johnson shined (we'll stop short of saying he's fully back yet) and Matt Hasselbeck mostly struggled. But with the Texans suffering yet another key injury, you can't count this Titans team out, not at 6-5 and not with three very winnable games left on the schedule against the Bills, Jaguars and Colts.

 

Top five, bottom five

My top five and bottom five NFL power-ranking votes this week:

1. Green Bay: Three of the final four games are at Lambeau Field, where the Packers have won 10 straight and are 16-1 since the end of the 2009 season.

2. San Francisco: The "HarBowl" in the rearview mirror, the Niners now can focus on getting the offense back on track next week against the Rams.

3. Pittsburgh: Dominated the game against the Chiefs in every category but the scoreboard. Can't read too much into it past that, though.

4. New Orleans: Zach Strief quietly has done a nice job since entering the starting lineup.

5. Baltimore: No way to overstate the importance of the job Jameel McClain and Albert McClellan have done in replacing Ray Lewis. Two undrafted free agents replacing a Hall of Famer. Unreal.

28. Carolina: Young, growing team ended long road losing streak but still has lots to improve upon.

29. Jacksonville: Have themselves a tricky situation with Blaine Gabbert struggling, but they pretty much had to pull him against the Texans.

30. Minnesota: Percy Harvin did his best to carry the team on his back.

31. St. Louis: Becoming harder to picture Steve Spagnuolo surviving this season if improvements don't come very quickly.

32. Indianapolis: Blame game should continue. Path to 0-16 never looked clearer.

Source: http://www.profootballweekly.com/2011/11/28/shorts-and-shells-week-12

Alabama Crimson Tide Clemson Tigers Florida Gators Northwestern Wildcats Wichita State University Nebraska Cornhuskers

2011年11月27日日曜日

Harbaughs meeting a first in league of many siblings

For the first time in NFL history, two brothers took the field as opposing head coaches when John Harbaugh and the Ravens beat Jim Harbaugh and the 49ers, 16-6, on Thanksgiving night.

While the "Harbaugh Bowl" was a first, the NFL has seen plenty of siblings play with and against each other.

Here are the sets of brothers on active NFL rosters (listed alphabetically):

1. Hamza and Husain Abdullah — Older brother Hamza, now with the Cardinals, has been a special-teams ace, playing sparingly on defense. Husain has started 24 games at safety for the Vikings the past two seasons and has four career interceptions.

2. Jordan and Jonathan Babineaux — DB Jordan has been in the NFL one season longer than DT Jonathan. The pair played each other for the fourth time on Sunday, with Jonathan improving to 3-1 vs. his brother after the Falcons' win over the Titans.

3. Marion and Dominique Barber — Marion, in his first season with the Bears after six with the Cowboys, has 58 career touchdowns. Dominique, a safety for the Texans, is on injured reserve.

4. Dustin and Britton Colquitt — The sons of former NFL P Craig Colquitt are having terrific seasons, with each ranking among the NFL's top 10 punters in net average. Britton, of the Broncos, has a 2-1 head-to-head advantage over Dustin, of the Chiefs.

5. Vernon and Vontae Davis — This might be the most athletic set of brothers on the list, although both Vernon, a 49ers tight end, and Vontae, a Dolphins cornerback, have seen dips in their production this season. The two have yet to play each other in the NFL.

6. Chris and Rob Gronkowski — Dan Gronkowski spent some time with Rob and the Patriots this season, but he is currently not on a roster. Rob, a tight end, is the most accomplished of this athletic family. He will face FB Chris' Colts in Week 13.

7. E.J. and Erin Henderson — Even though both played at the University of Maryland, it wasn't until 2011 that the Hendersons started alongside each other at linebacker. E.J. has been a key on the Minnesota defense for much of the past decade, and Erin is making an impact in his first season as a starter.

8. John and Peria Jerry — The Jerry brothers, who both went to Ole Miss, play on opposite sides in the trenches. John is a reserve offensive lineman for the Dolphins, and Peria has started a career-high four games at defensive tackle for Atlanta.

9. Dawan and LaRon Landry — Here are two of the hardest-hitting safeties in the NFL. Dawan was one of the tougher Ravens defenders for five seasons before signing with the Jaguars. LaRon has been known to lay out opposing players, too.

10. Eli and Peyton Manning — Although a neck injury has kept him on the sideline this season, Peyton might go down as the greatest QB of his generation. Meanwhile, Eli has had an impressive career of his own. Both players were the top pick in the draft and have won Super Bowl MVP awards. Peyton is 2-0 lifetime against his younger brother.

11. Clay and Casey Matthews — These brothers come from one of the more famous NFL families. Casey is a rookie linebacker with the Eagles. Clay is an outside linebacker for the Super Bowl champion Packers and was the PFW/PFWA Defensive Player of the Year in 2010.

12. Devin and Jason McCourty — Two of the NFL's top young cornerbacks, the McCourty twins even share a Twitter handle (@McCourtyTwins). Jason left Rutgers a year early for the NFL's Titans in 2009. Devin had a stellar rookie season with the Patriots in '10. The two will play each other next season when the Pats travel to Nashville.

13. Paul and Pat McQuistan — The journeyman brothers have played tackle for a combined seven teams in seven NFL seasons. Paul is starting in Seattle now because of injuries, and Pat, who started eight games in Miami last season, is a reserve with New Orleans.

14. Maurkice and Mike Pouncey — The twins from the University of Florida have shown great maturity with impressive play at the center position. Mike, of the Dolphins, has had to live up to the great rookie year that Maurkice had last season with the AFC champion Steelers, and he has fared well.

Source: http://www.profootballweekly.com/2011/11/26/harbaughs-meeting-a-first-in-league-of-many-siblin

Eugene Sims Aldrick Robinson Tory Collins Brandon McRae Jermelle Cudjo James Farrior

Air Force Vs. Colorado State Final Score: Falcons Reach Bowl Eligibility With 7th Victory

Source: http://www.sbnation.com/ncaa-football/2011/11/26/2588834/air-force-vs-colorado-state-final-score

New England Patriots Denver Broncos Arizona Cardinals Kansas City Chiefs San Francisco 49ers Seattle Seahawks

QB Moore earning Dolphins' respect

A big reason for the Dolphins' midseason turnaround has been the quarterback play from Matt Moore, who replaced Chad Henne as the team's starter when Henne went on injured reserve. The former Panther has had a very impressive stretch over the last four games, completing 70-of-104 passes (67.3 percent) for seven touchdowns and one interception. The team is 3-1 during that span. Moore has struggled with accuracy throughout his career, but in eight games he has a 63.0 percent completion percentage, which is a career high.

It's not just Moore's play on the field that has helped the team. The way we hear it, the Dolphins have rallied around Moore, who has proven to be a better leader than Henne. Offensive players have been very receptive to Moore's aggressiveness and confidence with his throws, which was seen on his touchdown throw to Brandon Marshall in the Dolphins' Thanksgiving loss to the Cowboys. Miami is still expected to take a quarterback with its first pick in April's draft, but Moore's play makes the QB position look less tenuous heading into 2012.

 

Follow Kevin Fishbain on Twitter

Source: http://www.profootballweekly.com/2011/11/26/qb-moore-earning-dolphins-respect

Brandon McRae Jermelle Cudjo James Farrior Fred Davis Peter Mayer Nate Burleson

Report: Jets extend Schottenheimer, Pettine through 2012

The Jets' coordinators received contract extensions through 2012 before this season began, although the team has not announced that fact publicly.

According to multiple New York media outlets, offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer and defensive coordinator Mike Pettine each received a contract extension in the offseason.

Schottenheimer's Jets offense is 22nd in the league, and he has received a lot of criticism this season.

Source: http://www.profootballweekly.com/2011/11/25/report-jets-extend-schottenheimer-pettine-through

Cincinnati Bengals Cleveland Browns Pittsburgh Steelers Chicago Bears Detroit Lions Green Bay Packers

Illinois Game Day: Illini hope to end regular season with victory

MINNEAPOLIS – Since early October, Illinois has had little reason to feel upbeat.

Source: http://www.chicagotribune.com/sports/breaking/ct-spt-1127-illinois-minnesota-football--20111127,0,4849505.story?track=rss

Buffalo Bills Dallas Cowboys Miami Dolphins New York Giants Philadelphia Eagles Washington Redskins

Final Word: AFC East

Five nuggets of knowledge about Week 12: Win or go home: If you're looking for a game with a playoff-type feel, look no further than Sunday's AFC East showdown between the Buffalo Bills (5-5) and New York Jets (5-5). If the season ended today, neither team would be in the playoffs. That means neither club can afford to lose. New York won the first meeting 27-11 in Week 9 and is trying to sweep Buffalo for the third time in four seasons. Sanchez can't be a liability: The time to step up is now for Jets third-year quarterback Mark Sanchez.

Source: http://espn.go.com/blog/afceast/post/_/id/34707/final-word-afc-east-44

Patrick Edwards Eugene Sims Aldrick Robinson Tory Collins Brandon McRae Jermelle Cudjo

4A football state final | Rochester holds off Richmond-Burton

Rochester 42, Richmond-Burton 39

Three yards and a cloud of artificial turf was Richmond-Burton's game plan for the Class 4A football state final.

Source: http://www.chicagotribune.com/sports/breaking/ct-spt-1126-prep-foot-4a-final-20111125,0,3933213.story?track=rss

Mike McCormack Frank Gatski Ozzie Newsome Joe DeLamielleure Gene Hickerson Joshua Cribbs

Cowboys' secondary bailed out vs. Dolphins

The Cowboys won on Thanksgiving Day in dramatic fashion, coming back to beat the Dolphins 20-19 following a last-second field goal. Yet the takeaway point of the game was the disturbing play of the secondary, which allowed several big plays in Dolphins QB Matt Moore's 288-yard throwing day.

The loss of CB Mike Jenkins, who has missed four games, has hurt the group. So has the fact that S Gerald Sensabaugh is playing with an injured foot. Jenkins could return in Week 13 against the Cardinals, which would help.

Without him, the Cowboys allowed five pass plays of 20 yards or longer and had three pass-interference/illegal-contact calls against them. The previous week against the Redskins, one of the weaker throwing teams, the Cowboys allowed six 20-yard-plus pass plays.

CB Alan Ball, who figures to move down the chain when Jenkins returns, was victimized a few times. But so were Terence Newman and Orlando Scandrick, both of whom allowed long receptions in the win. Safeties Abram Elam and Barry Church also were picked on in coverage, and reserve CB Frank Walker was called for unnecessary roughness inside the Dallas 10-yard line.

Pass defense is not entirely on the heads of the four, five or six defensive backs on the field, naturally. It also involves the skill of the offense, the pressure provided by the defensive front, the coverage skills of the linebackers and the defensive play-calling. However, against the Dolphins, the Cowboys racked up four sacks and nine pressures by PFW's count, which is more than ample. Plus, defensive coordinator Rob Ryan didn't appear to be putting his defensive backs in poor position with lots of risky or complex defensive calls.

Newman had been better of late, and Scandrick is perhaps the Cowboys' most consistent DB, so with the potential return of Jenkins, the level of panic is not extraordinarily high. Yet, following two shaky performances by the back of the defense, we might want to consider this area one of potential concern as the Cowboys, winners of four straight, head toward the playoff march. If they want to win the division, they will need more consistent play on the back end while trying to fend off the Giants.

Source: http://www.profootballweekly.com/2011/11/25/cowboys-secondary-bailed-out-vs-dolphins

Dante Lavelli Len Ford Bill Willis Bobby Mitchell Paul Warfield Mike McCormack

2011年11月26日土曜日

Pitt leads WVU 20-14

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. -- West Virginia showed it can run the ball, but special teams hurt the Mountaineers once again in the third quarter against Pitt. Tavon Austin muffed a punt deep in Pitt territory, and the Panthers converted that into a 27-yard field goal by Kevin Harper. It was the second muffed punt of the game for the Mountaineers. But perhaps lucky for them, the defense has been able to hold Pitt to field goals both times it was pinned deep.

Source: http://espn.go.com/blog/ncfnation/post/_/id/54088/pitt-leads-wvu-20-14

Buffalo Bills Dallas Cowboys Miami Dolphins New York Giants Philadelphia Eagles Washington Redskins

Rams Vs. Cardinals: Rams Aim For First Victory Over NFC West Opponent

Source: http://stlouis.sbnation.com/st-louis-rams/2011/11/25/2587182/rams-vs-cardinals-rams-aim-for-first-victory-over-nfc-west-opponent

New England Patriots Denver Broncos Arizona Cardinals Kansas City Chiefs San Francisco 49ers Seattle Seahawks

Nnamdi Asomugha Injury Not Considered Serious

Source: http://www.bleedinggreennation.com/2011/11/25/2585857/nnamdi-asomugha-injury-not-considered-serious

New York Jets New England Patriots Denver Broncos Arizona Cardinals Kansas City Chiefs San Francisco 49ers

How The Eagles Can Beat The Patriots

Source: http://www.bleedinggreennation.com/2011/11/25/2586691/how-the-eagles-can-beat-the-patriots

Peter Mayer Nate Burleson Otto Graham Paul Brown Marion Motley Jim Brown

Injuries, discipline for Suh potential problems for Lions

Not only did the Thanksgiving Day loss to Green Bay put the Lions four games back in the NFC North race with five games to play, but the fallout from the defeat could extend beyond Week 12. The most obvious concern is whether DT Ndamukong Suh will be suspended after pushing Packers OL Evan Dietrich-Smith's head into the turf and then stomping the lineman. Suh, who was ejected, was adamant that he did not mean to stop Dietrich-Smith, but it's yet another controversy regarding the style of play by the second-year pro from Nebraska. Injuries are also a concern for Detroit. RB Kevin Smith impressed early against Green Bay and then left with an ankle injury. Also, on Friday, the club announced that RB Jahvid Best (concussion) would miss the rest of the season. Two starters in the secondary — FS Louis Delmas and CB Chris Houston — were knocked out of the game with knee injuries. Delmas, on Twitter, called the injury a "minor (setback for) a few weeks." A Lions defense forced to cope with the loss of any starters could have its hands full with the Saints' potent offense in Week 13.

Source: http://www.profootballweekly.com/2011/11/25/injuries-discipline-for-suh-potential-problems-for

Colorado Buffaloes Notre Dame Fighting Irish Pittsburgh Panthers Florida State Seminoles Miami Hurricanes Georgia Bulldogs

Colorado Vs. Utah Final Score: Utes Fall, Buffs Finally Win A Road Game, UCLA Wins Pac-12 South

Source: http://www.sbnation.com/ncaa-football/2011/11/25/2586879/colorado-vs-utah-final-score-ucla-pac-12-south-standings

Kansas City Chiefs Ben Graham Patrick Edwards Eugene Sims Aldrick Robinson Tory Collins

Bears-Raiders matchup of the day: Friday

Here's a look at a key matchup heading into Sunday's battle between the Bears and Raiders.

Bears interior offensive line vs. Raiders defensive tackles

The Bears could catch a break Sunday in this matchup. Richard Seymour, who typically starts next to Tommy Kelly at D-tackle for Oakland, didn't start last week and was limited to a minor role in the rotation due to a knee injury, which is still bothering him. He did not practice Thursday and is listed as questionable.

When healthy, Seymour and Kelly form one of the league's top D-tackle duos — Seymour (five sacks) and Kelly (5½ sacks) account for 38 percent of the Raiders' sacks this season — but John Henderson, who has great size and good power, will start for Seymour if the knee relegates him to spot duty again.

Bears OLG Edwin Williams, who made his first start of the season last week in place of the injured Chris Williams, could face a tougher test than he did last week against San Diego. The Raiders blitzed often against the Vikings last week, and Williams, C Roberto Garza and ORG Chris Spencer could see linebackers shooting through the A gaps to try to pressure QB Caleb Hanie, who is making his first career start.

A key for the Bears' offense will be good communication at the line of scrimmage before the snap and the performance of the interior O-line to keep Hanie comfortable and RB Matt Forté from being tackled in the backfield.

Follow Dan Parr on Twitter

Source: http://www.profootballweekly.com/2011/11/25/bears-raiders-matchup-of-the-day-friday

Louisiana Tech Bulldogs Arizona Wildcats Houston Cougars California Golden Bears Texas Longhorns Baltimore Ravens

Report: Andrew Luck Will Not Re-Enroll At Stanford In 2012

Source: http://www.stampedeblue.com/2011/11/23/2582461/report-andrew-luck-will-not-re-enroll-at-stanford-in-2012

Tory Collins Brandon McRae Jermelle Cudjo James Farrior Fred Davis Peter Mayer

SB Nation Indiana: Colts Are Now Intentionally Tanking Games To Get Andrew Luck

Source: http://www.stampedeblue.com/2011/11/25/2585753/sb-nation-indiana-colts-are-now-intentionally-tanking-games-to-get

Dante Lavelli Len Ford Bill Willis Bobby Mitchell Paul Warfield Mike McCormack

20 AFC East reasons to be thankful

Reason No. 20. Bills, Jets still in playoff hunt: With the way these two teams have played lately, both are fortunate to still have a chance at the postseason. One team's hopes will end when Buffalo plays at New York this Sunday. Reason No. 19. Tony Sparano: Say what you want about Sparano, but the embattled head coach has the Dolphins playing their best football. Miami made the right choice to stick with him the rest of this season. Reason No. 18.

Source: http://espn.go.com/blog/afceast/post/_/id/34684/twenty-afc-east-reasons-to-be-thankful

New York Giants Philadelphia Eagles Washington Redskins New York Jets New England Patriots Denver Broncos

Vikings-Falcons matchup of the day: Thursday

Here's a key matchup to watch in Sunday's Vikings-Falcons game.

Vikings' running game vs. Falcons' run defense

The Vikings will probably be without their starting running back and top playmaker, Adrian Peterson, Sunday. When he left the game Sunday, the running game disappeared with him. The drop from Peterson to Toby Gerhart is quite extreme.

Look for Gerhart to take the bulk of the carries, with Lorenzo Booker getting looks on third downs and WR Percy Harvin mixing in some carries from the tailback position. While the Vikings can't expect to get the type of explosive, game-changing runs they usually receive from Peterson, grinding out yards with Gerhart to make second and third downs easier will be key.

It will be a tough assignment against the strong Falcons run defense, which is giving up only 85.4 yards rushing per game and holding teams to 3.8 yards per carry. MLB Curtis Lofton, who is having an exceptional season in the middle of the defense with 91 tackles and a forced fumble, has been the best player in the front seven.

If the Vikings are unable to make second and third downs manageable for QB Christian Ponder, he will be put in the long-yardage situations he has struggled with in the last two games.

 

Source: http://www.profootballweekly.com/2011/11/24/vikings-falcons-matchup-of-the-day-thursday

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Romo rallies Dallas to win over Miami

Updated Nov. 24, 2011 @ 9:19 p.m. ET

By Jaime Aron, AP Pro Football Writer

ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Win big, win small; win pretty, win ugly. Tony Romo learned a long time ago that victories are the only thing that matter in the NFL.

So on a day when he was sloppier than he'd been in months, and when his defense was giving up plenty of long drives but only one touchdown, Romo had one chance to make it pay off — and he did. He and DeMarco Murray led an efficient final drive, setting up rookie Dan Bailey for a 28-yard field goal as time expired to give the Dallas Cowboys a 20-19 victory over the Miami Dolphins on Thursday.

Dallas (7-4) won its fourth straight, and fourth this season decided by a kick by Bailey in the final two minutes or in overtime.

Heck, it was the second time in five days that he ended a game with a winning field goal.

``We're just finding ways to win,'' said Romo, who offset a pair of interceptions with a pair of touchdown passes.

That plucky formula will send the Cowboys into December leading the NFC East. They're a half-game ahead of the New York Giants, pending their game at New Orleans on Monday night. If New York wins, the clubs would be tied; a Saints win would keep Dallas on top alone.

``There is no favorite,'' Cowboys cornerback Terence Newman said. ``I'll tell you what happens at the end of the season. We just have to keep on plugging and get some wins.''

The Dolphins (3-8) had four drives that got within 10 yards of the end zone, yet settled for field goals every time. Their only touchdown came on a 35-yard pass from Matt Moore to Brandon Marshall.

However, Miami still nearly pulled it out. In the second half, the Dolphins scored on all but their final drive, and that was all it took to end a three-game winning streak.

``When you come into somebody else's place, those (deep drives) have got to be touchdowns,'' Miami coach Tony Sparano said. ``They've been touchdowns the last few weeks and that's why you win.''

Eighteen years after these teams played another Thanksgiving game decided on a last-second field goal - one best remembered for Leon Lett's gaffe on snow and ice - conditions were so balmy that the glass end-zone doors at Cowboys Stadium were opened for the first time all season.

Maybe that's what caused both teams to play so sloppy for so long. TV viewers, especially anyone fresh off a huge holiday meal, might've dozed off watching the first half.

But things got plenty interesting after halftime. Moore led Miami on three straight scoring drives of at least 70 yards, the last putting the Dolphins up 19-17 with 7:14 left.

Dallas punted on its ensuing drive, then Moore was finally stopped, too. Miami punted and Dez Bryant made a rare appearance as a returner, taking it 20 yards.

Romo took over at the Cowboys 36-yard line with 2:59 left. Jason Witten went into the huddle and told teammates, ```We need this W, whatever it takes. No penalties. We've got to get it there,''' left guard Montrae Holland said.

Witten caught consecutive passes to put Dallas at the outer edge of Bailey's range. Then it was up to Murray to drive the ball closer.

With blood streaked across the white numbers on his blue jersey, Murray churned out 27 yards on the next five carries. His constant gains — between 3 and 9 yards, including one where he went down rather than stretch for more and risk going out of bounds — took the clock from 2:41 to :17. After a kneel-down to waste more time and center the ball between the hash marks, Bailey split the uprights.

``That's what they are paying me to do, I guess — to go out there and make kicks,'' said Bailey, who has made 26 in a row, one shy of the club record.

Romo ended a streak of 128 straight passes without an interception, but he completed 22 of 34 for 226 yards. Many of those came while scrambling and some while also being hit or grabbed. He was patient waiting for a 5-yard touchdown pass to Laurent Robinson to develop, and the pair were in sync on an 18-yarder made with Romo moving to his left.

``He just kind of kept hanging in there,'' Garrett said. ``I thought he moved in the pocket really well. In critical situations, he ... allowed us to make plays.''

Murray ran 22 times for 87 yards, and caught four passes for 41 yards. Robinson caught seven passes for 79 yards. Witten had four catches for 43 yards and Bryant caught three balls for 35 yards.

Moore was 19 of 32 for 288 yards and a touchdown. He took four sacks and had trouble handling several snaps; one went through his hands and was recovered by Dallas only 5 yards from the end zone. That set up the first Romo-to-Robinson touchdown, with 55 seconds left in the half, ending Miami's streak of 13 quarters without allowing a touchdown.

Reggie Bush ran 16 times for 61 yards and had 35 more on three receptions. Marshall had 103 yards on five catches, including the TD pass hauled in while Newman had him in a headlock for about 5 yards.

``We felt like we played a good game all day, but we didn't make enough plays and they did,'' Miami safety Yeremiah Bell said. ``That's the price you pay, so if we would have made more plays, we would have won the game.''

NOTES: The Cowboys improved to 28-15-1 on Thanksgiving. Romo is 5-0 on the holiday; he missed last year's game - which Dallas lost - with a broken collarbone. ... The Dolphins are 3-4 on Thanksgiving. ... Miami's Shayne Graham, who was among Bailey's competition for the Dallas job in the preseason, made FGs of 23, 26, 27 and 28 yards.

Game stats

Copyright 2011 by STATS LLC and Associated Press. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and Associated Press is strictly prohibited.

Source: http://www.profootballweekly.com/2011/11/24/romo-rallies-dallas-to-win-over-miami

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