The Crystal Ball Week 12
Welcome to week 12 of the NFL season and another installment of the Crystal Ball, where we’re still trying to figure out what exactly picking a player off of the pile is.
Opening Kickoff
And that should just about do it for the Vikings season. Thanks for playing Brett please pick up your at home game prize at the door.
The Way It Was
Tampa Bay is still having trouble getting that one little yard. No worries though about getting 21 points. Nice road win rookies.
Dear Jets fans: It would seem the acquisition of Santonio Holmes is working out quite well for you. Congratulations to you for such a great pick up. Oh and as a Steeler fan, I will also say you are welcome and we accept gift cards from most major retailers.
I was so proud of Dallas for finally winning a home game last Sunday. Jerry Jones and mini Jerry Jones looked so proud. But that feeling was so short lived. Nice job blowing it at the end against the Saints. Tell me, who’s the crappier team on Thanksgiving now, the Lions or Cowboys?
If Brian St. Pierre, who was a stay at home dad last week, can score an 88 yard touchdown on Baltimore, that should be the final piece of damning evidence that the Ravens defense is terribly overrated.
Eagles’ receiver Jason Avant dropped a sure touchdown thrown right in his chest, prompting game announcers to make the comparison to former Cowboy Jackie Smith’s infamous Super Bowl drop. I’m sure every time someone drops a pass in the end zone Jackie just loves that people bring up that play.
Garrett Hartley missed an easy 27 yard field goal attempt for the Saints. Perhaps Bourbon Street may be a new home for Jeff Reed?
Before their Thanksgiving egg against the Jets, the Bungles gave up 35 unanswered second half points to the Bills. It would seem everyone has checked out in the Queen City.
Ok, I’ll say it, Tennessee is done. They’re blowing leads and losing games at an alarming rate and now seemingly unable to beat teams they should blow off the field. Now with Vince Young sidelined for the season, and causing a tremendous amount of disharmony in the locker room to the point of being banned, I cannot imagine how things could get worse. Good thing they picked up the experienced hand of Randy Moss to help out rookie quarterback Rusty Smith. Who wants to bet on Tennessee finding a new quarterback next spring? No one?
Boy Arizona certainly drug out the end of their game against Kansas City by scoring a garbage time touchdown. No report though if Todd Haley shook his finger at Ken Whisenhunt for cutting into the margin of victory.
I’ve said it before but it’s worth repeating, Patriot fans suck. They spent part of the fourth quarter booing because their young and inexperienced defense, who have been playing well, began to wilt against the Colts and their highly experienced quarterback. Why are you booing? That’s no way to urge your team to victory. You cheer your team, make noise, and throw off the Colts’ offensive rhythm. What spoiled jackasses. They need to trade teams with Buffalo so they can know real suffering and have a real reason to boo.
The Steel Pit
Steelers 35 – Raiders 3
This game should have been remembered for being a true hard hitting, animosity filled throwback to the 70’s rivalry between the two teams. Unfortunately it will only be remembered for atrocious officiating and Richard Seymour clocking Big Douche.
While I will touch on the officiating, Seymour and the aftermath of the punch later in the column, I would like to concentrate here on some of the positives of the game, of which there were quite a few.
The offense came out fired up, and played a complete opposite game than they did against the Patriots. The offense clicked on all cylinders, running the ball successfully and passing with deadly accuracy. Plus the offensive line gets extra credit for standing tall with Ramon Foster filling in for the underwhelming Trai Essex at right guard, and holding the fort when Maurkice Pouncey left the game with an injury.
The special teams units did well on returns and coverage, and new kicker Shawn Suisham made an efficient, if unspectacular, debut going 5 for 5 on extra point attempts. While we have yet to find out if he can handle field goals, I for one am a bit concerned. As the Lady K put it, his thighs are too small to be a kicker. Too many years of being spoiled by Jeff Reed I suppose.
The defense gets the best credit of all. They more than the other two units suffered the most humiliation and derision after the Patriot game and they came out against the Raiders intent on showing everyone their performance against New England was an aberration.
The defense was fired up and came out taking the game to Oakland. They took their beating from New England to heart and took it out all over the Raiders, winning every physical battle and engaging more than once in a few extracurricular ones as well. They took the fight to Oakland and showed everyone their heart and dignity is just fine. As a fan, I could not have been happier.
And I will give a bit of credit as well to the Heinz Field faithful, who were fired up from the opening kick off and banded together in the third quarter when they vocally made known their disgust at the horrid officiating. And come on NFL media, no one comments all week on how you could hear the fans chanting “Refs you suck” on national television?
Regardless, the team finally showed a complete all around game from start to finish, and did what good teams are supposed to do. They overcame bad calls and obstacles put in their path to win.
I hope that was merely a preview of things to come. Personally, I think its more of a harbinger of doom for all remaining in Pittsburgh’s path. The team is ticked off that the NFL left them out to dry regarding the officiating and Seymour’s reactionary punch. And teams with heavy motivation and a rallying point coupled with championship caliber talent are extremely dangerous. Warning NFL, the Steelers are finally clicking and after such disrespect last week by Oakland, the league and the media, they’re ready to start kicking tail and taking names. You are now on notice.
Only In Faux NFL Reality…
Apparently, this version of the Oakland Raiders felt the need to adopt the new slogan Just Cut It Loose. Whatever happened to Commitment To Excellence or Just Win Baby? This would never have happened if Al Davis were still alive.
Drew Brees supplanted Archie Manning as the Saints record holder for all time completions on the same weekend both Peyton and Eli threw game ending interceptions. Something tells me it was a quiet Thanksgiving in the Manning household.
Did anyone else catch Oakland punter Shane Lechter whiffing smelling salts before punts against the Steelers? Was that to pump himself up or to come to his senses that he plays for the Raiders?
Ok, show of hands please. Who honestly was surprised to hear a former Patriots employee was involved in an illegal videotaping incident? Somewhere Bronco fans weep a little harder.
49ers head coach Mike Singletary benched starting lineman Chilo Rachal for missing practice to be with his wife as she gave birth to their son. Come on Mike, that’s no way to behave as a professed man of God. I think the birth of a child ranks slightly higher than practicing the off tackle power rush.
Titans owner Bud Adams stated that Jeff Fisher and Vince Young will need to work out their latest tiff, because both will be back with the team next season according to him. Sounds like we have already slated two cast members of next season’s The Real World!
Well, the inevitable happened in Minnesota, with the Vikings jettisoning head coach Brad Childress. I know people have been saying that Childress has been made the scapegoat for the Vikings awful season, but I see it differently. Yes, Favre may stink, and the team may be laying down on the job, but Childress started it all. He’s the one who traded dignity and respectability to bring Brett back for another season, while still sacrificing any development for Tavaris Jackson. So scapegoat or not, this mess is all his doing. Have fun teaching high school science Brad.
Upon Further Review
Pittsburgh suffered the indignity of a record number of penalties, then watched their franchise quarterback get punched in the face after a play seemingly unprovoked. The entire afternoon prompted fans in attendance to jeer lustily and chant derisively at the officials working the game. But the NFL and national media created a much larger issue by ignoring and coping out on punishment and have added fuel to the growing fire that Steelers are being targeted by the NFL as a dirty team and one the league does not want to be one of its premier franchises.
It should have been the story of the week. Pittsburgh was repeatedly slapped with penalties, a good portion of which were questionable at best. Both James Harrison and LaMarr Woodley were called for roughing the passer penalties, despite both holding up upon actual contact and making every effort to back off the hit in any way possible. Ike Taylor was called for a questionable pass interference penalty. Ryan Clark was flagged for a helmet to helmet hit, despite the fact he led with his shoulders and the contact was made against the receiver’s lower back and abdomen. This call in particular turned the crowd hostile.
The oddest and most infuriating call was the penalty on Pittsburgh for picking a player off the pile. I have never heard of such a penalty and after watching the replay am still not sure why it was called. The raining of flags on seemingly every other play only built up tensions on the field to the breaking point and it came in spectacular fashion.
The explosion came after a Steelers touchdown, when Ben Roethlisberger, running up behind Oakland defender Richard Seymour, irked Seymour who turned around and punched Roethlisberger right in the face. Steeler guard Chris Kemoeatu, who had been having a personal war with Seymour all day, immediately went after the Oakland offender with the rest of the team following suit. The ensuing scrum that broke out involved everyone on the field as tensions finally boiled over.
While the officiating and on field incidents were bad, what happened in the aftermath was tremendously worse. Hardly a soul in the national media even mentioned the officiating or Seymour’s extracurricular activity. Other than. Sports Illustrated senior NFL writer Peter King briefly mentioning the on field assault and Fox Sports writer Alex Marvez opining on the growing perception that Pittsburgh is being targeted, not one national media source picked up the mantle of this story.
The NFL did far worse, not once acknowledging the poor performance of their officiating crew, or even stating they would be met with regarding what happened during the game. On top of that, they fined Seymour a paltry $25,000 for the physical assault. This felt inadequate considering the egregiousness of the action and insulting considering how much James Harrison has been fined for playing the game as he has been coached since he began his football career.
ESPN reporter Chris Mortensen stated the reason the fine was only 25k is because there are set levels for fines for this kind of infraction. While that may be true, I personally call shenanigans. The fines for the "illegal" hits this season have been seemingly arbitrary and at the discretion of the league and the commissioner. While the NFL may have a set schedule for fines in the case of player assault, that does not mean they could not change the schedule or impose additional penalties depending upon the severity of the case.
If the commissioner can generate fines for helmet to helmet hits as he sees fit, he very easily could have done the same in this situation. That he chose not to makes it painfully obvious from a public perspective point that Pittsburgh for some reason is a target of the league.
Whether there is an actual targeting of the Steelers or specific players (Harrison, Roethlisberger, and Woodley) is immaterial. With the outrageous fines being levied against specific players and the team as well as ignoring the terrible officiating from last week coupled with the on field assault of a franchise player that went seemingly unpunished by current standards, there is a rapidly growing impression that the league is out to punish the team for seemingly unknown reasons.
It matters not if this is true or not, the impression exists and grows weekly. By not doing anything to stem this impression, the NFL is estranging one of its largest and most loyal and vocal fan bases. At the moment due to the impending labor impasse, it might not be the best time for the league to alienate or anger any fans, especially one who can in one season account for almost half of all merchandise sold. As of now, that is exactly what the NFL is doing, and it will have serious ramifications both financially and in popularity in the near and distant future.
He Said He Said
''I've never seen a quarterback get punched since I've been in this league.'' - Steelers head coach Mike Tomlin
Me either. You would think something so unprecedented would draw a hefty fine or suspension, no?
“As I stand here today, I never expected us to be in this situation. Mathematically, I think there’s still some hope. But I hate to use Jim Mora’s comments about playoffs, but we can’t think about that.” – Vikings quarterback Brett Favre after Minnesota was destroyed by Green Bay
Playoffs? Don’t talk about playoffs!
“We are terrible. Terrible. I'm sorry. I just don't have a sound bite for you guys today.'' - Cincinnati wide receiver Terrell Owens
The funny thing is, T.O. said this after the Bills game. I wonder how he feels now.
"I've tasted the caviar now, so eating out of the garbage is not where I want to be.'' - Arizona wide receiver Larry Fitzgerald, on the current state of the Cardinals
Dare I dream he might go to the team that plays in the same city as his college Alma mater?
“How utterly ridiculous is it that James Harrison makes a football act and gets fined $75,000, and Richard Seymour, despite whatever happened to provoke him, slugs a player on national TV in full view of the cameras and knocks him to the ground -- and gets fined $25,000. Weak. Very weak.” – SI.com’s Peter King
THANK YOU! Shamefully this remains one of the only comments I heard about the Seymour incident, which in itself is very weak.
"I'm not walking out on my teammates, I'm walking out on you." – Titans quarterback Vince Young to Jeff Fisher, after Tennessee's loss to the Redskins
I guess Vince learned how to quit Jeff.
“We all know the answer to that one. Easy.” – Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger when asked if Richard Seymour’s penalty would have been different if he had hit Manning or Brady
Of course it would, since if that happened, people would still be losing their minds over it.
Idiot of the week
This week we have multiple winners of this coveted award and each falls under the theme of punching a player. I know you’re terribly surprised.
The first winner is Oakland defensive lineman Richard Seymour. Do really you need to ask why? Yeah, I know he apologized and didn’t mean it. That doesn’t make him less of an idiot.
The second winner is to the national media that covers the NFL. It’s bad enough the terrible officiating was a complete non story, but to barely even talk about a franchise quarterback getting punched in the face after a play on national television gives the impression of the media trying to ignore or bury a story. While I understand thanks to his unseemly actions this year, Big Douche has not endeared himself to many fans, and over the years his surly behavior has alienated him from the media in general. But by ignoring this story it speaks more about those who report on the NFL than those involved. Think about what happened this way. Imagine the furor that would have exploded if Seymour punched Phillip Rivers, Drew Brees, Peyton Manning, Tom Brady or heaven forbid, Brett Favre? There wouldn’t be enough hours in the day to read every scathing article about Seymour and the demand for his suspension.
The third and final winner is the NFL for ignoring poor officiating, throwing a two time Super Bowl champion and franchise player under the bus and actively working to change the public perception of one of its leading franchises from a class operation to collection of criminals and thugs.
So Richard, NFL media and the league, you are all idiots.
On Tap This Week
One week eh, the next week….
Last week: 12-3
Thanksgiving: 3-0
Season to date: 101 – 61
Yeah! Ok, I’m gearing up for a 7-6 week since that seems to be the pattern. But there’s always a chance to break patterns, no?
Sunday
Green Bay (7-3) at Atlanta (8-2)
This is the game of the week in my opinion. Green Bay is coming off an emotional victory against Brett Favre. Atlanta is holding onto their pole position in the NFC South. I know this is probably foolish, but I really like how the Pack is rolling.
Packers over Falcons
Pittsburgh (7-3) at Buffalo (3-8)
Somewhere, the remaining 25 Bills fans are talking themselves into Ryan Fitzpatrick as the future franchise quarterback. Hopefully after this week they’ll be free of such crazy thoughts.
Steelers over Bills
Carolina (1-9) at Cleveland (3-7)
Note to the now svelte coach Mangenius: Colt McCoy with a bum ankle is better than a fully healthy Jake Delhomme.
Browns over Panthers
Tennessee (5-5) at Houston (4-6)
I know, Houston has been working on self destructing despite their talent and their secondary is atrocious. But answer me this, who is Rusty Smith? Yeah that’s what I thought.
Texans over Titans
Jacksonville (6-4) at New York Giants (6-4)
Would you bet big on David Garrard on the road in winter, even if they are in first place? Me either.
Giants over Jaguars
Minnesota (3-7) at Washington (5-5)
Yeah, I know, Minnesota is a dysfunctional mess. But a coaching change is always good for at least a win or two, see Cowboys, Dallas. And since Washington is right behind Minnesota on the dysfunctional list, it’s a push.
Vikings over Redskins
Miami (5-5) at Oakland (5-5)
You know the growing theory that a team that gets humiliated one week completely dominates the next? This week it’s Oakland’s turn to validate that theory.
Raiders over Dolphins
Kansas City (6-4) at Seattle (5-5)
If Kansas City really wants to make the playoffs, this is a must win game. While I think Todd Haley is a twit extraordinaire I have a good feeling about the team itself.
Chiefs over Seahawks
Tampa Bay (7-3) at Baltimore (7-3)
I really want to back Tampa Bay. But they have not beaten anyone of note. And while I tend to believe the Baltimore defense is rather pedestrian, I have less confidence in such a young Buccaneer team.
Ravens over Buccaneers
Philadelphia (7-3) at Chicago (7-3)
I still do not like Jay Cutler. But it’s hard to deny how well they’re playing lately. Still, I’m not overly impressed with their victories, nor the teams they have defeated.
Eagles over Bears
St. Louis (4-6) at Denver (3-7)
I’ve said it before and I mean it, I like what St. Louis is doing. But they still do not know how to win on the road. And while Denver is less than stellar in the wins department, and Josh McDaniels may be looking for a new job soon, I still think Kyle Orton can get it done at home. Power of the neckbeard!
Broncos over Rams
San Diego (5-5) at Indianapolis (6-4)
I heard the argument this week that Indianapolis will have trouble this week since they have to incorporate so many new players. In the same argument, it was stated that San Diego would be very powerful since they were getting back Ryan Matthews, Antonio Gates, Malcolm Floyd, Vincent Jackson and a few other players. Gee, wouldn’t be hard for them to be in sync having to also incorporate so many new players? Sometimes, sports media professionals do not even listen to the drivel coming out of their own mouths.
Colts over Chargers
Monday
San Francisco (3-7) at Arizona (3-7)
If a football game is played in the desert, will anyone care?
49ers over Cardinals
