Tagged: AFC

NFL Week 1 Picks

Salutations Good People,

After many long months, I am back at my desk and getting ready to make my picks for the week.  Last year, I had the goal of 170 wins during the season…. and I fell juuuuust short (169 wins).   It really was just one bad week that I had last season that not only robbed me of my 170-win goal BUT robbed me of shattering it.  That said, Week 1 is always a little dicey simply because I really only pay attention to a few teams, and so, Week 1, is my first opportunity to sit down and see what the rest of the League is offering.  For those who didn’t follow my picks last year, I’m not a journalist and I am open with my biases; I’ll give my thoughts on the match-up where I feel inspired to, but, ultimately, I’m just picking who I think will win.  Usually, I’m right — however, I don’t gamble so what does my accuracy really matter?  It’s all for good fun.

Here are my picks for Week 1.

Week 1 Picks

Packers @ Seahawks

We have gotten a fair dosing of the “Fail Mary” story in the past week, leading up to this game, but hopefully it is long past.  This game is a tough one.  “Fail Mary” aside, the Packers played well in Seattle the last time that they were up there; for it being the first game of the season, too, I reckon that everyone is healthy and ready to go (except for BJ Raji, but I hear that he may be more of a big name on the defense than a big factor… I don’t know, though; I don’t follow the Packers that closely).  It’s tough to bet against Aaron Rodgers (even if up against a great pass-defense) and now that he has a reliable running game, as well, there’s nothing in me that thinks that the Packers do not have a chance at winning this game.  I think that they do have a chance.  That said, the NFC West has had the Packers’ number as of late, especially in exploiting the Packers’ often-porous defense — most notably with my beloved 49ers and Colin Kaepernick: the Packer Killer.  While I’m not comfortable with the pick, I’m going to go with the Seahawks at home, simply because I’d rather pick them and have them lose (and take the loss in my Picks) than I would picking the Packers and having them lose AND taking the loss in my Picks — then I’ve just screwed my night.  At least this way, I’ll have some silver lining at the end of the night…. but I’m not confident on this pick.  Seahawks over Packers.

Saints @ Falcons –

While I think that the Falcons will bounce back this year — sure, they may not have much of a running game and their defense is suspect, but they’ll have Roddy White and Julio Jones healthy, and that has to be worth a few wins — I think that the Saints are going to win the division and also get home-field advantage throughout the playoffs, on the NFC side of the coin.  With Graham happy, Brees having some weapons (and, I believe, he is recovered from his abdominal strain by now), plus they have reinforced their defense, I think that they will win this game.  I’m not sold on the Falcons whereas I am sold on the Saints.  Saints over Falcons.

Vikings @ Rams –

I think that the beginning of this season is going to be tough sledding for the Rams.  Losing Bradford like they did, when they did, and now having to build the offense around Shaun Hill is a bit of a challenge.  Sure, they have a good running game but Hill is the wild card; I don’t know what to expect from him.  Meanwhile, I see a lot of promise with the Vikings — I don’t think that they’ll make the playoffs this year but I think that they could turn some heads as the season goes along.  I think that, despite the tough predicament the Rams are in, I’ll go with the Rams in this game simply because their defense is one of the best; quietly one of the best.  They have a great pass-rush and if the Vikings are rolling with Cassel as their guy in Week 1, I like the Rams defense against him.  Rams over Vikings.

Browns @ Steelers –

I’m going Steelers.  Not because I have a lot of faith in the Steelers (even though Big Ben and Tomlin are due for a good season) but simply because Cleveland appears to be a circus right now; I have no faith in them.  Which is exactly how I like it. (Side Note: I put a curse on the city of Cleveland some 7yrs ago; so far, so good. End Side Note.)  Steelers over Browns.

Jags @ Eagles –

From the highlights that I saw from the preseason (as well as how they performed down the stretch last year), I think that the Jags may have a chance in the AFC this year.  By “have a chance” I mean that I think that they can put together a respectable season; maybe not playoff-bound but I think that they could be good enough to be a spoiler team for other teams that are on the post-season bubble.  That said, I think that the Eagles will win the NFC East this year (again) and I’ll take their fast-paced offense, at home, over the Jags.  Eagles over Jags.

Raiders @ Jets –

The Raiders appear to be a mess.  While the Jets may not be in a much better situation, I still think that they are better than the Raiders (with Smith or Vick) and, being at home, I am going to go with the Jets in this game.  Jets over Raiders.

Bengals @ Ravens –

This could be a fun game.  The Bengals, I think, have more talent than the Ravens — but the Bengals also tend to not perform well when I want them to, haha.  I have more questions about the Ravens, though, than I do the Bengals.  And so I’m going to ride with the Bengals in this game, with their defense, and that Andy Dalton usually performs well during the regular season….. but I’m not 100% confident on this pick.  Bengals over Ravens.

Bills @ Bears –

I’m going to go with the Bears in this game simply because I haven’t heard anything about the Bills’ defense.  Everything seems to be focused on EJ Manuel and Sammy Watkins (who may or may not be nursing a rib injury from the preseason).  Meanwhile, the Bears’ offense could be pretty explosive this season, and I think that could cause problems for the Bills.  I don’t have much faith in the Bears’ defense, either, but — if looking at two teams with unimpressive defenses — I’ll take the offense that is stocked with proven veterans over the youthful offense that is banking a lot on the production from a (potentially not 100% healthy) rookie WR.  Bears over Bills.

Redskins @ Texans –

The only football-related story that I have heard coming out of DC this summer is the questions surrounding if RGIII is going to be healthy to start the season.  I don’t follow them closely and so I haven’t heard much — one way or the other — with any great deal of confidence.  That said, being on the road and going up against a potentially great pass rush (in Watts and Clowney) does make me concerned for RGIII, especially if he does not have his mobility.  Unlike other “mobile” QBs, I don’t think that RGIII can play well without mobility; I think that is a much bigger part of his game than the other “mobile” QBs.   I have a lot of questions about the Texans’ offense (ex. I have no idea who their starting QB is going to be…but it doesn’t seem like they have a solid pick, either…and that’s never good)….but I’d say it’s almost on par with the amount of questions that I have on the Redskins’ defense.  Ergo, I’ll take the superior defense/pass rush and the home team:  Texans over Redskins.

Titans @ Chiefs –

Last season, as you may recall, I was big on the Chiefs.  They had been a terrible team in the recent pass…but consistently had 8 or so Pro Bowl players on their team…..so they had talent but lacked a reliable QB and solid coaching.  Then they got Reid and Alex Smith, addressing both of those areas…. and for the first half of the season they were making me look like a genius, haha. Even though they stumbled as the season progressed and, ultimately, got bit (with a vengeance) by the Injury Bug in that playoff game in Indy, I felt as though they lived up to my expectations.  This year, though, I’m not sure.  No one seems to be talking about them — everyone is occupied with the Broncos (obviously) and there’s a bit of buzz around the Chargers, I hear as well; but I don’t know why the Chiefs can’t be competitive.  If anything, given another year with the offense, Alex Smith and the rest of those pieces should be clicking better; their defense hasn’t changed all that much from last year, either, I don’t believe.   However, for as quiet as the Chiefs have been this off-season and preseason, the Titans have been quieter (in my world).  Ergo, I’ll stick with the home team in this one, simply because the Titans are not on my radar as a team to look out for in the AFC this season.  Chiefs over Titans.

Patriots @ Dolphins –

I don’t follow the Dolphins, really, but I know that last year they had the whole media circus revolving Incognito and Martin, and that probably did have some impact on their performance.  Meanwhile, the Patriots had an incredibly mediocre roster of talent last year….and still won the division….and still made it to the AFC Championship game.  I don’t know if Gronk has been cleared to play (and how many games he will play this season; injury or re-injury seems inevitable) but I imagine that it’s Week 1 and the Patriots are as healthy as they’ll be, so I imagine that they will be able to get this win on the road.  Patriots over Dolphins.

Panthers @ Buccaneers –

The Panthers’ offense has me concerned.  Similar to the Bills, they seem to be relying a lot on young players on offense; really, just two young players on offense.  While I think that Cam Newton is better than EJ Manuel, I believe that Cam is still nursing a rib injury and his ankle may be a concern, plus is O-line is not a strength of the offense. Team that with the departure of Steve Smith and thus a rather unproven receiver corps, I don’t know what to think of their offense.  I reckon that their defense will still be a great defense so they do have that going for them.  Meanwhile, the Buccs have a new head coach, are removed from the QB distraction from last year, and I think could make progress this year within the division.  Because I have a few questions marks surrounding the Panthers’ offense right now, I’m going to stay with the home team and pick the Buccs, and then re-evaluate my opinion of the Panthers after I see them in action.  Buccs over Panthers.

49ers @ Cowboys –

For all of the talk about how my beloved 49ers are in shambles right now (and some media folks even writing them off this season), the word that I keep reading and hearing from players and coaches is that things are just fine; so I’ll trust them on that.  I think that the Cowboys’ offense will be able to move the ball against us — passing defense is not our strength, especially when we’ll be without 2 of our best pass-pressure players (Aldon & Bowman), but who knows? Maybe our secondary will be better this year with the changes that we have made?  Regardless, the Cowboys’ defense is supposed to be one of the worst…..ever…..and so I imagine that our offense will be able to move the ball on them, as well.  In that case, I will take the more all-around-talented team and I hope to see some good performances from our younger players: namely, Carlos Hyde and LaMichael James.  49ers over Cowboys.

Colts @ Broncos –

The Colts tempt me in this game.  However, seeing how they needed the Injury Bug to strike KC in that playoff game last season in order to win, coupled with the fact that the Broncos are in full-on Super-Bowl-or-Bust mode right now (with their off-season spending spree), I don’t think that the Broncos are going to come out of the gates with a loss….at home.  My concerns with the Broncos’ veteran additions (and their ability to hold up for the whole season) is irrelevant in Week 1, so I’ll be taking the Broncos at home.  Broncos over Colts.

Giants @ Lions –

The Lions are one of the more talented teams in the League, in my opinion, and perhaps their late-season collapses were more the result of their coaching than of the players on the field? We’ll find out this year, as Jim Caldwell is the new head coach.  I wasn’t impressed with Caldwell when he was at the helm of the Colts but he took that talented team to the Super Bowl….where he was promptly out-coached and the Colts were out-played by the Saints.  That said, I don’t think that the Lions are Super Bowl-bound, but I think that they’ll make the post-season, sure.  Meanwhile, I don’t think that the Giants will do much this year and so I’ll stick with the more talented team, especially while at home in the season-opener.  Lions over Giants.

Chargers @ Cardinals –

I don’t know if I’ve bought into the hype of the Chargers or just have too many questions to back the Cardinals in this game, but in what little action I saw from the Chargers’ starters in their preseason game against us, they seem to be in a good place right now.  Rivers seems happy in the new system, he was making good decisions, high-percentage passes, and such an approach could be successful against the Cards since they lost Dockett and another defensive star on the line.  Patrick Peterson, I believe, is no longer handling punt return duties and we’ll see how the Honey Badger rebounds this season.  Ultimately, though, my questions with the Cards are with Carson Palmer: he hasn’t been the same since his knee got blown out in that playoff game as a Bengal and now, I believe, he is in his upper 30s and I expect his production to fall off this season — but will that drop off start to happen in Week 1? That is the question.   I haven’t made many bold picks this week so I’ll roll with the Chargers in this game and see what happens.  Chargers over Cardinals.

####

We’ll see how Week 1 goes and I’ll recap it on Tuesday evening.

-Ryan.

NFL (Belated) Recap: Conference Championships

I know, I know – I am way behind on this post. Truth be told, I made the (classic) mistake of working on several different posts simultaneously and none of them got finished.  However, now that I’m on my stay-cation for the Super Bowl, all I have is time.  That said, here is my belated recap of the Conference Championships from last weekend.

I’ll get right to it: I didn’t watch a down of the AFC Championship – to me, the NFC is the vastly superior conference and so that game was much more important to me (especially with my beloved 49ers playing in it, for the third straight year).  That said, I did have some thoughts on the AFC title game and I’ll get to those now:

AFC CHAMPIONSHIP: Patriots at Broncos

I didn’t watch the AFC Championship for two reasons, really: 1) I don’t get CBS very well at my house*, so I don’t typically watch the AFC games in general; and 2) I figured that the ragtag Patriots would have to run out of steam eventually….and then they finally did.  I think that the Broncos are probably the best team in the AFC…but I wouldn’t put them in the Top 5 of the NFL, though. (Yes, I do not believe in the Broncos against the NFC’s best.)

The only highlight I remember seeing from this game, though, was the hit that Welker did on Talib that took him out of the game.  Was he intentionally trying to hurt him? No, I don’t think so; but he sure wasn’t running a route or any football-related activity.  His job on that play was to take him out of the play….and he ended up taking him out of the game instead.  I didn’t like it, regardless.  I don’t care for the Patriots but I didn’t like it.  Was it the “worst play” I’d ever seen – as Belichick stated – I don’t think so, but I do think it was illegal and in poor spirit.  Setting a pick is part of the game, now, I get that, but you should do so while also making a football-related move.  From what I recall, Welker turned his side/shoulder and sort of threw himself into Talib.  I didn’t like it.

Well, I’m not too worried about it because I don’t think the Broncos have a chance against the Seahawks, unless the NFL steps in and starts calling anything and everything on the Seahawks’ defense (which, they very well could; their defense is physical and quite aggressive. Not maliciously so, but they make a lot of contact after 5yds, they hold at the top of routes, and so forth — however, the officiating is so willy-nilly that it’s probably only called 30% of the time).

*I don’t watch a lot of TV – mostly just football. Ergo, I don’t mess with Comcast for TV and just gamble with my antenna and converter.  Downside? I only get FOX and NBC – of channels that I’d normally watch – with any considerable consistency. Upside? Those are, usually, the networks that have the games that I enjoy watching anyways.

That said, the Broncos won the AFC – as many predicted – and now we head onto the NFC….

NFC CHAMPIONSHIP: 49ers at Seahawks

Yeah, and a communicative black out I was in for that game – with the exception of occasional texts from my brother, and then halftime discussions with others.  But I was refusing to be on Facebook or Twitter, had any of my Seahawks friends texted, I would have ignored them, haha — I was shut in at my place, focused on the game.  It was a great game that, once again, left me wondering if Greg Roman, our Offensive Coordinator, is holding us back – but more on that later.

I know that the Seahawks fans will get riled up when I say this but: I think that we were better than them and that we let that one slip away.

I agree with Bill Simmons (on his BS Report) that us and the Seahawks are probably 1a and 1b in the NFL. That said, we can’t turn the ball over 3 times in the 4th quarter and expect to win that game.  I think that we put the “12th Man” to bed, finally, and made it what it should have been: a game between two great teams that are eerily similar in play style and build.  It was a game that came down to the areas that I mentioned in my prediction: who won the line of scrimmage, and who won the big plays.  I think that we won the former but they won the latter.

I heard/read about some people blaming the officiating for our loss, but that is nonsense.  Was the officiating suspect at times? Of course.  I think that erroneous “running into the kicker” should have been a “roughing” penalty — that would have given us the automatic first down — because the Seahawks player rolled into Lee’s planted leg; which is the definition for “roughing”.  I believe that it was on that ensuing drive that the Seahawks scored one of their TDs, and so, yeah, you could say that ended up being a big play that the officiating crew got wrong.  However, I’m not making that the excuse.  The officiating had been wildly inconsistent throughout the season and post-season and so if anyone was thinking that there weren’t going to be any missed calls and that it was going to get called correctly, they were foolish. Plain and simple.

In the Green Bay game, they were letting just about anything fly – so long as it wasn’t offside or false start – but Crabtree got mugged in the end zone on a would-be TD catch, feet away from the official: no flag.  We then started holding their guys: no flags. Rodgers escaped a sack where we had two guys making contact with him, but one of their lineman grabbed and pulled our guy off, and Rodgers maneuvered free: no flag.  Then in Carolina, the Panthers’ secondary was getting called for everything in the first half — notably, unsportsmanlike conduct and head-butting — meanwhile, Boldin was allowed to keep talking and gave (at least) one head-butt that was not penalized.  So, the officiating was all over the place this post-season.  I was expecting us to get screwed on some calls, my hope was that – despite the bad calls – that we would be in a position to win the game at the end…. and we were….. twice.  And we missed both times.

That’s why I don’t blame the officiating.  Were some calls wrong? I think so.  Did they have an impact on the game? Certainly.  But there are hundreds of “what ifs” in every game, so it’s senseless to get hung up on that.  The bottom line is that, despite the setbacks and “what ifs”, we were down 3 points with the ball – threw a pick*.  Then down 6 points with the ball, and drove inside their 20, with 2 time outs, and 30 seconds on the game clock – and we turned it over, again.  That loss is on us and us alone.

*After watching the post-game interview with Kaepernick, that now makes sense.  At the time, I was thinking: “Who the (expletive) was he throwing to?! Did he not see that guy standing right there?!?!”  But Kaepernick said, quite frankly, he thought that he could get it over him.  Which, I can’t critique too much, because that sort of play has a surprisingly high success rate for us.  And, on the ensuing drive, he pulled it off and hit Crabtree on the sideline, over the defender’s outstretched fingers.  Do I like it, though? Of course not.  I don’t think that the reward is worth the risk, however, I can see why he threw it now, since he has confidence converting that throw more often than not.  I reckon he’ll get better; he’s still a young QB after all.

However, it does give some optimism to playing there in the future because, really, we played a great game – save for one miscue that sealed our defeat.  We can talk about Kaepernick’s other pick or the sack-fumble they got on us, but we overcame both of those – it was that final miscue that did us in.  They played a great game, and they made the big plays that they needed to make in order to win.  That’s what it came down to.  I don’t like the Seahawks, and I hope and pray that the Broncos can beat them (haha), but I respect them.

That said, Go Niners!

####

As stated, I’m off all this week for the Super Bowl and so I’ll be putting together some more football-related posts before packing it away for the off-season.  As always, thanks for reading,

-Ryan.