2021-2 NFL Pro Football (pls, no other sports!)

This was the first time in my life that I watched four games all the way through over the course of a weekend. Every game was a nail-biter, with the exception of maybe the 49ers/Packers game which didn't have much action due to the bitter cold. Next Sunday's games should be good as well.
 

Chiefs vs Bills: did we just witness the greatest two minutes in NFL history?
Patrick Mahomes leaves the field after his triumphant performance for the Kansas City Chiefs against the Buffalo Bills
London Guardian U.S. 24 Jan 2022

Moments after Josh Allen’s 19-yard strike to Gabriel Davis deep in the fourth quarter, television crews cut to the quarterback’s family celebrating in a box at Arrowhead. The Bills led 36-33 and the champagne was about to be popped. Tears of joy streamed down Joel Allen’s face as he watched his son, who was having a perfect postseason, punch his ticket to the AFC Championship.

Or so we thought.

Then the Allen family had to sit through the most excruciating 13 seconds of their lives. CBS’s Tony Romo actually joked about the improbability of what was to come, “What can Patrick Mahomes do with 13 seconds left? Probably nothing. [Pause] But maybe something …”

Maybe something was right because thanks to his immense skill and Buffalo’s inexplicably bad prevent defense, Mahomes had two quick completions, the first a 19-yard pass to Tyreek Hill, followed by a 25-yard dart to Travis Kelce. In marched Chiefs kicker Harrison Butker to knock through a 49-yard field goal with no time in regulation remaining. 36-36.

Buffalo fans were stunned. Arrowhead was deafening. Kelce later explained how he and his quarterback freestyled on the completion: “I told [Mahomes] I’m probably not going to run the route that’s called and I was going to run to the open area. And in his cadence he was yelling to me, ‘Do it! Do it!”

Again, the Bills coaching staff are going to have a lot of regrets when they evaluate film of those final 13 seconds. And Bills fans will wonder why the team didn’t try a squib kick after scoring their final touchdown, something that would have taken vital seconds off the clock (instead, Tyler Bass’s touchback saved the Chiefs valuable time).

Butker’s field goal was the culmination of perhaps the most exhilarating two minutes the NFL has ever produced. Yes, there were bad defensive calls from both teams. But above all, it was Allen and Mahomes showing every inch of their talent and heart, the best vs the best.

In the two-minute span, there were three lead changes and a tie. Twenty-five points scored. The quarterbacks combined for 221 passing yards and three touchdowns in the same period. Bills wideout Gabriel Davis, until Sunday barely known outside Buffalo, became a household name – he finished the game with 201 receiving yards and four touchdowns, an NFL postseason record. Mahomes made magical throws from every angle. Allen did the same and picked up a litany of first downs using his legs.

Mahomes vs Allen is now the most compelling quarterback rivalry in football and will be for years to come. Allen finished the day with 329 passing yards and four touchdowns, Mahomes with 378 passing yards and three touchdowns. Neither quarterback threw an interception. But it will be those final moments that will define this epic duel.

To recap a two-minute span like no other:
  • 1:54 remaining. Allen to Davis on a 27-yard touchdown (two-point conversion is good): Bills 29-26 Chiefs
  • 1:02 remaining. Mahomes to Tyreek Hill on a 64-yard touchdown (extra point good): Bills 29-33 Chiefs
  • 13 seconds remaining. Allen to Davis on a 19-yard touchdown (extra point good): Bills 36-33 Chiefs
  • 0:00 remaining. Butker’s 49-yard field goal is good. Bills 36-36 Chiefs
Then there was overtime. If we learned anything from the final two minutes of regulation it was that the winner of the coin toss was marching down the field and winning the game. Kansas City got the ball and lo and behold, Mahomes led his teammates against an exhausted Bills defense, found Kelce in the end zone and voila, the Chiefs will host the AFC Championship for the fourth consecutive year.

The NFL overtime rules, under which the team that receive the ball can win with a touchdown, will be under much scrutiny this offseason. It was a travesty to deprive Allen the opportunity to match Mahomes point for point just because a coin landed on the wrong side for the Bills. But that’s a debate for another day. For now we should sit back and thank the football gods for a phenomenal divisional weekend topped off by a Bills-Chiefs classic. How much longer do we have to wait for these two powerhouses – and these two brilliant quarterbacks – to meet in the playoffs again?

MVP of the week
Matthew Stafford, quarterback, Los Angeles Rams. OK, this should be a joint one for Mahomes and Allen but it would be a shame not to discuss Sunday’s earlier game. Sean McVay wasn’t going down without a fight. The tide had taken a drastic turn for the Rams, who had let a 27-3 lead evaporate in the second half against Tom Brady and the Buccaneers. McVay’s playcalling was timid. There were fumbles and a high snap that went awry. Meanwhile, Brady was doing what he’s done so often. He was laser-focused on destroying the soul of his opponent.

But with 35 seconds remaining, McVay wasn’t messing around. He dialled up consecutive Stafford passes to Cooper Kupp, first a 20-yarder followed by the nail-in-the-coffin, a perfectly placed 44-yard strike to Cupp who had blown by safety Antoine Winfield. Gay knocked through the 30-yarder to send Los Angeles back home to host the NFC Championship. Stafford, who was almost flawless in the first half, threw for 366 yards, knocked off the Super Bowl champs, and is headed back to LA where his team will host the NFC Championship against the 49ers.

Quote of the week
“Lots of decisions to be made. I don’t want to be part of a rebuild if I’m going to keep playing” – Aaron Rodgers following Green Bay’s 13-10 loss to San Francisco.

Rodgers’ season may have abruptly ended but that doesn’t mean we’ll get a break from nonstop chatter about where he goes from here. Rodgers has his ticket out of Green Bay in the form of a restructured deal last summer that saves the team $20m if he’s traded before June 2022. The Packers are about to be $44m over the salary cap, leaving the future of many key players – including Davante Adams who will be a free agent and command a massive paycheck – in doubt.

Despite the off-the-field distractions this season, Rodgers is still an elite quarterback whose departure would command high draft picks at the very least, and put the Packers in a strong position to rebuild. (Not to mention a notable reduction in stress.) But there’s also a disparity in success between the regular and postseason versions of Rodgers. That the 38-year-old Rodgers has only played in one Super Bowl at this point in his career is underachieving at its finest, from both the player and his team. Perhaps he’ll have better luck in Pittsburgh, Denver or New Orleans.

Video of the week
What an authentic moment of joy between Robbie Gould and Jimmy Garoppolo following the 49ers’ dramatic win at a snow-covered Lambeau Field. In the video, captured by NFL Network reporter Stacey Dales, Garoppolo called Gould “a ****ing legend”. Hard to argue with the quarterback’s assessment given that Gould is now 20-for-20 on field goals in the postseason, including Saturday’s game-winner. Garoppolo also let out an audible curse directed at the Packers. The emotions were perhaps not surprising from a quarterback raised in Illinois and a kicker who played 11 seasons in Chicago:
https://twitter.com/StaceyDales/status/

Stat of the week
9. The Tennessee Titans pass rush was ready for its close-up, sacking Joe Burrow nine times. Defensive end Jeffery Simmons was unstoppable, collecting three sacks. Yet the Titans still lost 19-16. Racking up nine sacks in a playoff game and still losing is not an easy feat; in fact, the Titans are the first team since the 1970 merger to earn the honor. But when Ryan Tannehill throws an interception on his first pass of the game, his first of the second half, and his last of the season, it’s a scenario that starts making more sense.

The Bengals weren’t exactly offensive juggernauts but the final 32 seconds was a masterclass in clutch. A Logan Wilson interception. A 19-yard pass from Burrow to Ja’Marr Chase that set up the game-winning field goal. Evan McPherson nailing the 52-yarder. It’s on to the AFC Championship for Cincinnati.

Elsewhere around the league
* Tom Brady’s future will now take centerstage after an ESPN report suggested the 44-year-old is mulling his future. Brady was non-committal when asked about his future following the Bucs’ loss to the Rams on Sunday: “I haven’t put a lot of thought into it. I’ll just take it day by day. And we’ll see.”

* Bengals defensive tackle DJ Reader had a spectacular performance shutting down Derrick Henry and the Titans rushing game all day. When he wasn’t creating space for the linebackers, he was making tackles of his own. After the game, Reader spoke about a recurring theme for his team whose motto has been Why Not Us. “We’ve been getting slept on the whole year. It’s something we take pride for in this locker room. We take it as disrespect every time.”

* When San Francisco beat the Rams in a Week 18 thriller, SoFi Stadium in Southern CA looked and sounded like a 49ers home game. The Rams are trying to prevent a repeat in the NFC Championship game by restricting ticket sales. I’m sure no one will figure out a workaround (/snark).
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Disgusted that last minute field goals can decide the winner of a game.
Irwin points out how unfair overtime is to the losing team-Buffalo never had an opportunity to answer the Chief's touchdown, that is just not fair.
Given that, this weekend exhibited amazing football games.
 

Disgusted that last minute field goals can decide the winner of a game.
Irwin points out how unfair overtime is to the losing team-Buffalo never had an opportunity to answer the Chief's touchdown, that is just not fair.
Given that, this weekend exhibited amazing football games.
The Field Goals I can totally understand as that is the way the team managed the game and they got the job done. The overtime situation is messed up. It seems like each team should get a shot to have the ball regardless of what the previous team does.
 
Disgusted that last minute field goals can decide the winner of a game.
Irwin points out how unfair overtime is to the losing team-Buffalo never had an opportunity to answer the Chief's touchdown, that is just not fair.
Given that, this weekend exhibited amazing football games.
Do you place any blame on Buffalo? Each team already knew about the overtime rules. With 13 seconds left, Buffalo could have squibbed the kickoff knocking crucial seconds off the clock. Furthermore, why couldn't the #1 defense, especially the secondary, not come up with a stop?

ETA: That same #1 defense could have made a stop on the insane 64 yard touchdown run by Tyreke Hill.
 
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Okay, we saw an Aerial Battle between Chiefs and Bills, Now we have two slinging quarterbacks scheduled for next weekend.
Mahones (Chiefs) and Burrows (Bengals) can light up a scoreboard.
Mark these two guys, we'll be seeing them a long time (if their front offices continiue to provide them with a supporting cast.)
 
Do you place any blame on Buffalo? Each team already knew about the overtime rules. With 13 seconds left, Buffalo could have squibbed the kickoff knocking crucial seconds off the clock. Furthermore, why couldn't the #1 defense, especially the secondary, not come up with a stop?
That was the crucial mistake of the game for Buffalo. Kicking a hard ground ball up the middle pretty much forcing someone on Kansas City to field the ball and run at least a few seconds of the clock. I am not going to say they still would not have gotten into Field Goal range because at that point so many crazy things had already happened, but the chances would have been less.
 
Do you place any blame on Buffalo? Each team already knew about the overtime rules. With 13 seconds left, Buffalo could have squibbed the kickoff knocking crucial seconds off the clock. Furthermore, why couldn't the #1 defense, especially the secondary, not come up with a stop?
I don't think i would have attempted anything dangerous with 13 seconds to go, others would.
The way Josh Allen was matching Mahones 'score, for score,' that was a surprise!
 
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Don't talk too fast. The 49ers will definitely have something to say about that walking.
Yes, they'll say "ouch" as they will the ones being walked on. Jimmy G can't hold up in a big game. The extreme cold actually helped SF last week. Not totally sold on Stafford yet, but he's better than Jimmy G.
 
Do you place any blame on Buffalo? Each team already knew about the overtime rules. With 13 seconds left, Buffalo could have squibbed the kickoff knocking crucial seconds off the clock. Furthermore, why couldn't the #1 defense, especially the secondary, not come up with a stop?

ETA: That same #1 defense could have made a stop on the insane 64 yard touchdown run by Tyreke Hill.
I would have squibbed it but 13 seconds isn't much. Sometimes those squibs end up at the 40 yard line. Thye probably figured they'd eliminate the return and take their chances from the 25 with 13 seconds.
 
The NFL’s best weekend ever shows us why we can’t look away
Washington Post by Adam Kilgore 24Jan2022

The NFL so often punishes its followers for their devotion. Its owners have plundered cities for new stadiums and effectively blackballed a Super Bowl quarterback for protesting police violence. The sport brutalizes its players. The league is withholding the details of an investigation into a culture of sexual harassment within the Washington franchise. It owns a shameful history of equitable hiring for Black coaches. It dares you to love it.

And along comes a weekend such as this one. Though it may not offer moral assurance, it provides clarity for why the bargain is struck. The games deliver. They just do, undeniably. If you can brook the behavior of the billionaires in the suites and the suits in the league office, the players and coaches on the field will redeem and obscure it all. They will leave you emitting noises you did not know you could make. They will spur you to send text messages composed only of exclamation points. They will make you forget how long you’ve been grabbing your own hair. They will give you a feeling you remember forever.

The four playoff games of the divisional round created perhaps the greatest weekend in the league’s 102-year history. They stretched imagination, then surpassed it. From Joe Burrow’s cool Saturday afternoon through the ballistic duel between Josh Allen and Patrick Mahomes on Sunday night, all four were decided when the final play broke a tie score. Three included a change of possession in the final minute of regulation.

It was an exhilarating, exhausting 36-hour smorgasbord. Snow swirled over Lambeau Field. Tom Brady deleted a three-touchdown deficit with a bloodied lip. The Kansas City Chiefs lost the lead with 13 seconds left, then won. Four times, a football flew toward the goal posts as the clock hit zero, seasons and legacies hanging with it in the frigid air. Four times, it sailed through.

The weekend culminated with a game that had people wondering whether it was the greatest game ever played — and wondering with less doubt whether Allen and Mahomes had produced the greatest quarterbacking display ever. The Chiefs’ 42-36 overtime victory determined Kansas City will advance to the next round and that if aliens land and challenge us to a football game, Mahomes gets to be the quarterback.

In a rematch of last year’s AFC championship game, Allen and Mahomes traded laser beam throws and ingenious scrambles all evening. Every little boy in America dreams of playing quarterback, and nobody can play it like them. Not even their most gifted peers can match Allen’s physical force or Mahomes’s plucky inventiveness. At ages 25 and 26, they are the present and future of the league.

At the end, their duel turned delirious. Trying to lead the Bills to their first Super Bowl since the 1993 season, Allen rifled a touchdown pass on fourth and 13, the last gasp of a 17-play drive that pushed the Bills ahead 29-26 with 1:54 left. Trying to make his third consecutive Super Bowl, Mahomes answered with a 64-yard touchdown pass to Tyreek Hill, and the Chiefs suddenly led 33-29 with 1:02 left. Allen rushed the Bills downfield and slung a 19-yard touchdown pass to Gabriel Davis — Davis’s fourth of the day — with 13 seconds left. Against any other quarterback, maybe on any other day, Buffalo could exhale and exult.

“When it’s grim,” Coach Andy Reid told Mahomes on the sideline, “be the grim reaper.”

Mahomes zipped two passes into soft coverage and covered 44 yards in 10 seconds. Kicker Harrison Butker was true from 49 yards. The teams had scored 25 points in the final two minutes of regulation. The Chiefs won the coin toss and marched for an inevitable touchdown, thwarting another Bills dream season, reigniting discussion about the NFL’s overtime rules and launching a grand rivalry.

“We’re going to play this team a lot of times in games like this,” Mahomes said afterward.

In the AFC championship game, the Chiefs will face the Cincinnati Bengals, who began the weekend with their own thrills. The Bengals lived in the NFL wilderness for decades, and then they drafted Burrow. He led them to their first playoff victory since 1991 last week. On Saturday, linebacker Logan Wilson intercepted Tennessee Titans quarterback Ryan Tannehill’s pass with 20 seconds left. Burrow feathered a sideline pass to rookie Ja’Marr Chase, with whom he won a national championship at LSU, and set up rookie kicker Evan McPherson from 52 yards.

“Looks like we’re going to the AFC championship,” McPherson told backup quarterback Brandon Allen — before the kick. He drilled it down the middle, his fourth field goal of the day and his second from beyond 50 yards.

The upstart Bengals yielded Saturday night to the blue blood 49ers and Packers. The temperature in Green Bay lurched toward zero. Aaron Rodgers, the most skilled quarterback of his era, likely to claim his fourth MVP award next month, took the field in search of his first Super Bowl appearance since 2011. With his top-seeded Packers, Rodgers had another opportunity to match his playoff record to his ability.

The Packers stormed down for an opening touchdown, then bogged down. Late in the fourth quarter, Jordan Willis thrust his long left arm over Green Bay’s overmatched long snapper and blocked a punt. Talanoa Hufanga looked into the sky like a kid catching snowflakes on his tongue, found the ball and scooted into the end zone to tie the score. Jimmy Garoppolo, the quarterback whose team traded up to draft his replacement, recovered from an array of baffling, dangerous throws and led one final drive for a field goal. 49ers 13, Packers 10.

Rodgers had long ago made himself a central character of this NFL season. He started the year in open rebellion of Green Bay management, having agitated for a trade in the spring. A positive coronavirus test revealed Rodgers had misled the public when he had claimed over the summer to be “immunized” when he was not vaccinated. He cast himself as an independent thinker, even as he spouted misinformation. In an interview two days before the game with ESPN’s Kevin Van Valkenburg, Rodgers called the Biden administration “fake.” For a swath of viewers, Rodgers’s downfall provided schadenfreude and a million easy jokes on Twitter.

Just prior to the Rams vs Buccaneers game on Sunday morning, reports surfaced that Brady was mulling retirement at age 44 after winning seven Super Bowls, including last year’s. The Rams’ pass rush added a check mark to the “retire” column. Brady’s Buccaneers fell behind 27-3 early in the third quarter. A furious comeback tied the score with 42 seconds left. Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford, acquired in an offseason trade, heaved a deep pass to Cooper Kupp, sprinted 50 yards downfield and spiked the ball with four seconds left — remarkably, the same amount of time left when McPherson and San Francisco’s Robbie Gould trotted on with the score tied the day before. Matt Gay made it three walk-offs. And that was a prelude to Sunday night's Niners-Packers game.

The quartet of games provided everything the NFL can. You could gawk in awe. You could bask in victory or agonize over loss. You could debate whether Buffalo should have kept the ball in play when the Bills kicked off with 13 seconds left. You could complain about the officiating. You will think about so many moments for so long.

The NFL will continue apace, two more games next weekend, then the spectacle of the Super Bowl. So much around the game can make fans wince, but the game itself remains mesmerizing. The players are so spectacular, so advanced at their craft, so capable of producing drama. We will come back next week. The games will not let us look away.
 
Viewership up!

Patrick Mahomes and Josh Allen put on a show, and the National Football League benefited with its most-watched divisional playoff game in five years.

The Kansas City Chiefs’ 42-36 overtime win against the Buffalo Bills averaged 42.7 million viewers on Sunday, ViacomCBS reported. The network said the contest peaked with 51.6 million viewers. The Chiefs-Bills game produced one of the most memorable and drama-filled playoff endings in NFL history.

CBS Sports’ telecast was the most-watched divisional postseason game on any network since 2017. That year, the Green Bay Packers beat the Dallas Cowboys in January and averaged 48.5 million viewers.

Sunday’s contest was also up 18% compared to last year’s comparable game between the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and New Orleans Saints. That game averaged 36.3 million viewers. The Chiefs-Bills game also surpassed CBS Sports’ peak from its wild card showing between the San Francisco 49ers and Cowboys on Jan. 16. That contest peaked at 50.2 million viewers.

https://www.cnbc.com/2022/01/25/nfl...lion-people-watch-chiefs-win-over-bills-.html
 
I am fully aware that the NFL is made up billionaires that have zero in common with the NFL fans.
I promise I will do better each year by boycotting the NFL.

Like everyone else, I'm sucked in by the boredom of my life, watching these millionaire players (more to be added as P.S.)

In 1966. ALL Pro Tackle Alex Karas with the Detroit Lions was making 18K per year.
The Lions practice field was at a city park, the vendors were independents guys in pickups that drove to park and hawked
their wears

(Goggle tells me 6k was NFL minimum in 50's, 9K in 60's
the AFC amd NFC wars in the 70's and 80's made the physically gifted kids millionaires...
You watch football, your looking at greed.)
 
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I try to do my part by avoiding the imported beer and sticking to domestic when I visit Nissan stadium.
Sometimes I have a hotdog instead of the pull pork sandwich.
The owners will just have to buy the 'Bargain' brands sometimes, due to getting less from me...
 
My husband is an Anesthesiologist and that is suppose to be one of the top paying jobs in the world. In comparison to these athletes and celebrities he makes little compared to them. You then can also compare the sort of job that my husband does compared to an athlete or actor/actress. Now I am not saying an athlete does not have talent or does not put in hard work because they definitely do and they entertain a lot of people, but they get paid to play a game. The same could be said for celebrities who get paid to entertain. There is a lot of talent in that for sure and I couldn't do it, but my husband is part of a team that saves lives everyday. I don't see the comparison in that at all.
 
This was just reported, a real shock. I thought Payton deserved his suspension for Bountygate, but no denying he made the Saints a respectable football team at last (remember photos of fans wearing paper bags over their heads labeled "Aints"?).

He was definitely right in changing the rules on pass interference. The Saints were peaking in 2019 playoffs and had both the offense and defense to get to, and win, the SB. That uncalled pass interference play was robbery against the Saints, pure and simple. One of the most blatant fouls ever, with the cameras right on it. Even the TV announcers were aghast.

Saints’ Super Bowl Coach Who Fought NFL Rules Steps Down
Sean Payton was the most successful coach in the New Orleans Saints’ franchise history, but he drew rebuke from the league over targeted tackling and fought the NFL on rules.
NY Times Jan. 25, 2022

New Orleans Saints head coach Sean Payton, who led the team to its only Super Bowl title and, with QB Drew Brees, created one of the NFL’s most successful tandems, announced his retirement in a news conference on Tuesday.

Payton’s 16-year run with the Saints will be remembered for all the winning — 152 games for a .631 winning percentage, the fifth-highest among current coaches and a high-water mark for a historically moribund franchise — but also his pugnacious attitude toward the league and the rules governing the way the game is officiated.

Payton was suspended without pay for the 2012 season for his role in a scheme to pay players who hurt opponents and knocked them out of games, a scandal that became known as Bountygate. It was the first time the NFL had suspended a coach, and it cost Payton more than $7 million, while the team was fined $500,000 and lost two second-round draft picks.

Payton, 58, also butted heads with the league in 2019 after the Saints lost the N.F.C. championship game, in part because the referees failed to call what appeared to be defensive pass interference on Rams cornerback Nickell Robey-Coleman. That off-season, Payton successfully lobbied other teams to make pass interference a reviewable play.

He had been a member of the league’s competition committee, which reviews rules, technology, game-day operations and player protection, since 2017, but he stepped down from the group this season.

Payton made eight trips to the postseason, compiling a 9-8 record, including a victory over the Indianapolis Colts in the Super Bowl in the 2009 season. His departure adds the Saints to the list, now nine franchises long, of teams searching for new head coaches. Most of the other teams fired their coaches weeks ago, giving them a head start on interviewing replacements.

According to NFL Network, the Saints’ defensive coordinator, Dennis Allen, is the leading candidate to take over for Payton, and Aaron Glenn, the defensive coordinator for the Lions who coached in New Orleans under Payton from 2016 to 2020, may also be interviewed.

Payton’s departure, which comes a year after Brees’s retirement, throws into flux the balance of power in the N.F.C. South, which the Saints have dominated for years. The future of QB Tom Brady’s tenure with the TBay Buccaneers only adds to the uncertainty.

It is unclear whether Payton is retiring from coaching, or if he is taking time off before finding another assignment. Payton’s name has been floated as a potential coach of the Dallas Cowboys, for whom he was an assistant head coach and QBs coach from 2003 to 2005, when Bill Parcells led the team.

“I don’t know what’s next,” Payton said, addressing his future. “I don’t like the word retirement. I still have a vision for doing things in football, and I’ll be honest, it might be in coaching. It might be, but it’s not where my heart is right now.” Payton said he would be staying in the New Orleans area.

Payton’s departure leaves a big hole to fill for the team’s owner, Gayle Benson. Payton called the offensive plays on the sideline and was involved in nearly every aspect of the team’s football operations, working closely with General Manager Mickey Loomis and Dennis Lauscha, the president of both the Saints and the N.B.A.’s Pelicans.

Payton helped turn around a largely moribund franchise that had only seven winning seasons before he took over as coach in 2006, the same year that Brees arrived as a free agent from the San Diego Chargers, and a year after New Orleans was devastated by Hurricane Katrina.

“We took a chance on Drew at the time because we weren’t going to win any jump balls,” Payton said. “In other words, we had to be overly aggressive.”

Brees immediately became the centerpiece of the team and reeled off 12 consecutive seasons with 4,000 or more passing yds. He and Payton won 10 games and made the postseason in their first year together, and by 2009, after recording a 13-3 record in the regular season, won the team’s first and only Super Bowl title, which became symbolic of the city’s recovery.

With Brees gone, the Saints were not nearly as explosive this season, finishing 9-8 and failing to make the playoffs. Because of injuries, Payton was forced to use four different QBs, who collectively could not muster the statistics that Brees compiled even in his weakest years.
 
If Jerry Jones has any brains -he will hire Payton.
Payton probably wants a year or so off from coaching, no matter-wait with you bags of money Mr. Jones.
 
Working in the media would certainly be a lot easier than running a football team.

"Sean Payton has stepped down as head coach of the New Orleans Saints and he’s immediately the most sought-after target not just for NFL teams searching for a head coach but for the sports media world.

According to Front Office Sports, Fox Sports is targeting the former Saints coach as a candidate to succeed Troy Aikman should Aikman leave Fox Sports for Amazon to cover ‘Thursday Night Football’

If Payton were to take a job at television, he will have many suitors including FOX Sports, NBC, ESPN, CBS and even Amazon could be gunning for his services."

https://dailysnark.com/2022/01/25/r...an-payton-to-potentially-replace-troy-aikman/
 
My husband is an Anesthesiologist and that is suppose to be one of the top paying jobs in the world. In comparison to these athletes and celebrities he makes little compared to them. You then can also compare the sort of job that my husband does compared to an athlete or actor/actress. Now I am not saying an athlete does not have talent or does not put in hard work because they definitely do and they entertain a lot of people, but they get paid to play a game. The same could be said for celebrities who get paid to entertain. There is a lot of talent in that for sure and I couldn't do it, but my husband is part of a team that saves lives everyday. I don't see the comparison in that at all.
Speaking of comparison's, Alabama's coach Nick Saban makes something like $11 million a year (not including endorsements which would be higher). That makes him the highest paid state employee. I would bet that they are many in Tide Nation that would say he is more important that a doctor or an engineer. (smile)
 
Speaking of comparison's, Alabama's coach Nick Saban makes something like $11 million a year (not including endorsements which would be higher). That makes him the highest paid state employee. I would bet that they are many in Tide Nation that would say he is more important that a doctor or an engineer. (smile)
Being a College Coach probably takes a lot of work. Not just what you see on game day, but all the practices and game planning, but also recruiting as well. It is not an easy job for sure, but 11 million dollars a year is outrageous.
 
Finally got around to doing some editing on the full playoff games summaries. Due to the length, I will post each of the four games separately. Just finished the two Sat games, and will hopefully post the two Sunday game summaries tomorrow.
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2nd Round Playoffs–Saturday
NYT, MSN.com, WashPost, SB Nation Jan 26, 2022

Bengals 19, Titans 16
The Cincinnati Bengals last week broke their 31-year playoff drought with a young, explosive offense. The #4-seeded Bengals shocked top-seeded Tennessee Titans, when rookie Evan McPherson kicked his fourth and final FG Saturday, a 52-yarder, as time expired.

The Bengals will face the Chiefs in KC for the AFC championship. QB Joe Burrow, 25, in just his second NFL season, will go up against Patrick Mahomes, 26, of KC. Despite the minor age difference, Mahomes will be in his fourth straight AFC championship game.

Overcoming nine sacks from his porous OL, Burrow threw for 348 yds on 28 of 37 passing with one interception. The Titans became the fifth team to notch nine sacks in playoff game, joining KC (1994), the Browns (1987), the 49ers (1985) and Bills (1967). His counterpart on Saturday, Titan QB Ryan Tannehill, suffered just one sack, but was doomed by throwing three interceptions, all at crucial times. The final pick was most important as it came with just 20 seconds remaining.

Burrow was fabulous when he had time to spot his fleet-footed receivers, completing 28 of 37 passes for 348 yds with a 76% completion rate. The Titans blanketed Ja’Marr Chase, who still managed to haul in five passes for 109 yds. Receiver Tee Higgins and TE C.J. Uzomah each had seven receptions.

t wasn’t the prettiest performance by the Bengals’ signal-caller, but probably the gutsiest. The Titans got not only nine sacks but also 13+ total QB hits – unacceptable numbers that veer into the luckless Andrew Luck territory. Ja’Marr Chase had 109 receiving yds, becoming the first rookie WR to log 100-yard receiving games in his first two postseason games. There was great kicking by rookie kicker Evan McPherson: he’s 8-for-8 in the team’s two postseason wins, with four makes in each game (two of which have been for over 50 yds).

But the Bengals won’t win against high-powered KC unless they can crack the end zone. Aside from the first possession of the second half, the Bengals had a tough time gaining consistent rushing yds on the ground. Joe Mixon had just 18 carries for 65 yds, with a 3.6 YPC average as a team – not ideal.

The return of Tennessee’s stellar RB Derrick Henry from an absence of more than two months, didn’t keep the Titans from looking rusty after a bye week. Tannehill missed receivers, was sacked, rushed throws, and Henry — who finished with 62 yds on 20 carries — didn’t help much.

Despite being ranked #1 going in, the future for the Titans looks bleak. This tweet after the Chiefs/Mahomes-Bills/Allen game on Sunday perfectly sums up Tennessee’s problem:

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This year the Titans beat both the Chiefs and Bills, along with the Rams and 49ers too. They have a great roster, play a totally different brand of football, and can beat anyone at any time. But when the playoffs come around, QB play takes a front seat, and Ryan Tannehill hasn’t proven good enough in January. Tannehill has continued with his history of being great during the season but mediocre in playoff crunch times. Riding Derrick Henry is one thing, but it can only get you so far.

We know that the Titans are capable of beating both teams, but these young superstars are only getting better. Elite QB play can mask a lot of issues. Average QB play makes your path nearly impossible in today’s game.

The window remains cracked open for this team, but with Tannehill at QB, everything feels so limited. When you consider the fact that Allen, Mahomes and Burrow are all under the age of 26 and likely only get better from here, you really start to see that path to a Super Bowl get narrow, quick.

This offseason is now fascinating for Titans GM Jon Robinson. Does he make a play for a change under center? Does he add firepower around Tannehill and take one final shot? It’s a pivotal moment for the franchise. The Titans are already playing from behind with the lack of elite QB play, and they’re running out of time to catch up.
 
2nd Round Playoffs–Saturday
NYT, MSN.com, WashPost, SB Nation, Associated Press Jan 25, 2022

49ers 13, Packers 10
In snowy Green Bay, the heavyweight 49ers delivered an old-school lesson. The moral to them, with their bandaged-handed QB and their toss sweeps, is that football is still a hitting game, and still a game won as much by the unglamorous men as the glamorous. John Madden, who loved linebackers that hit hard and fast all game long, would have been proud of the sheer passion play of the 49ers defense, who turned iced-over Lambeau Field into a shoulder-driving, spit-flying display of old-time hockey.

The 49ers had a great DL and outstanding offensive weapons. Everything – except that guy, the QB you’re supposed to need so badly to win anything big. Jimmy Garoppolo, with his sore shoulder and his torn, wrapped-up thumb, was as maddeningly inconsistent as he always is, with moments of appalling bad judgment and errancy – ending up on Saturday 6 for 13 with 76 yds and an interception by Q3, plus two or three other near picks.

But Jimmy G is a leader, respected and trusted by his teammates. He has an emotional steadiness that mattered just as much as the 49ers trailed in the final minute, a willingness to keep coming back for more and hazard another throw despite flinching pressure. His team has faith in him, which he ratified by connecting with George Kittle and Deebo Samuel for 12 and 14 yds to help set up the game-winning 45-yard FG by Robbie Gould. “There was a calmness,” Garoppolo said later. “We realized it was just going to be that kind of game.”

Yes, that kind of game. The kind of game that left men hobbling off the field with “stingers” and exhaling long plumes of white frost as the snow blew sideways. The kind of game that turned on game-saving defensive stands, and the unexpected emergence of the 49er’s special teams unit – up till now considered a weakness (they ranked an awful #28 out of 32 teams) – that stepped up in a big way, at just the right time.

It was the kind of game that turned on just a few fundamentals and desperate efforts. Among them was that final drive: third down and seven yds to go, with the 49ers still out of FG range on that slick field. Which is when Shanahan told Garoppolo to stick the ball in Samuel’s stomach and let him cut back against the grain. Nine yds. And now they were inside the 30 with under a minute to go.

Which reminded you just how much the running game still matters after all. And of something LA Chargers Coach Brandon Staley, known as one of the game’s great young innovators, said about it earlier this season.

“There’s a physicality to the game that’s real, right?” Staley said. “If you’re just a passing team, there’s a physical element to the game that the defense doesn’t have to respect. And that’s the truth. Because the data will tell you that you don’t need a run game to play pass. You don’t need that. But what the running game does for you, it brings a physical dimension to the football game. And what the running game does that the passing game does not, is the running forces the defense to play block and to tackle. That happens on a run play - you must play blocks and you must tackle.

In the passing game, those things don’t need to happen, right? You don’t have to play as many blocks. And you may not have to tackle based on incomplete or not. So, what the running game does is it really challenges your physicality, and that’s why I think the run game is important to a QB. It’s literally going to allow him to have more space to operate when you do throw the football.”


Kyle Shanahan has his detractors, but he also has an eye for talent, especially in defensive coordinators. Vic Fangio and Robert Saleh produced Top 5 NFL defenses one after another, and DC DeMeco Ryans has continued the tradition. The Niners are the only NFL team that has remained in the top 5 defenses for the last five years, even in 2020 with a losing record. Ryans, like Fangio and Saleh, will certainly be offered a head coaching job in the next few weeks.

Green Bay – the team and the town – took the loss hard. “A little numb for sure,” QB Aaron Rodgers said. “Just heartbroken, you know?” said RB Aaron Jones. “It hurts so bad because there’s a finality to this thing,” LaFleur said. “I don’t think anybody envisioned it going the way it finished for us.”

GBay’s loss, which came on a 45-yard FG by Robbie Gould as time expired and secured SF’s spot in the NFC championship game at TBay or LA, was wrenching because it was supposed to be a steppingstone. This season, everything aligned for the team and QB to finally turn regular season excellence into a deep playoff push. But then the offense sputtered, the league’s worst special-teams unit had its worst day and the Packers became the first team in NFL history to win 39 or more games in a three-year span but not appear in a Super Bowl.

Saturday’s futile offense was surprising because on the opening drive, GBay dominated SF as SF had Dallas six days earlier. The Packers faced no third downs and RB A.J. Dillon plowed up the middle for an easy six-yard TD. Yet the Packers, like the 49ers in the opening round, couldn’t extend the lead despite the opposing offense mostly moving backward.

LaFleur blamed himself for getting too run-heavy in the second half and the uneven distribution of passing targets to Jones and Adams (21) compared to everyone else (five).

“I didn’t have a great night tonight,” Rodgers said. He pointed out he missed reads and the 49ers limited the quick game that worked in GBay’s Week 3 win at SF. “I definitely take my fair share of blame.”

Even when SF stirred, driving just before halftime, it couldn’t finish. 49ers QB Jimmy Garoppolo threw the type of critical interception that has plagued his whole career. Furious, he threw his helmet, and when a team staffer tried to help him into a puffy jacket on the sideline, he couldn’t find the armholes for several seconds and flung it to the turf, too.

Yet the Packers couldn’t turn the pick into points. SF’s Jimmie Ward blocked the Packers’ last-second FG attempt, foreshadowing what was to come. The Packers’ defense never broke - even coming up with a massive stop on a fourth-and-1 in the red zone - but they couldn’t fix their broken special teams.

After another stalled Packers drive late in Q4, the line allowed Jordan Willis to leak through and block Cody Bojourquez’s punt. Talanoa Hufanga scooped up the ball and ran it in for the game-tying score. Four minutes later, following a timeout, the Packers had only 10 players on the field to try to block the game-winning FG

Rodgers entered Saturday having thrown 20 TD passes with no interceptions over his last seven regular-season games. But he again wasn’t spectacular in the postseason. He went 20 of 29 for 225 yds with no TDs or interceptions. He was sacked five times while working behind an OL missing injured tackle David Bakhtiari.

The Packers (13-5) earned the NFC’s top seed for a second straight season but again failed to reach the big game when the 49ers rallied by scoring 10 unanswered points in the final five minutes. Rodgers dropped to 0-4 in career playoff matchups against the 49ers. SF beat the Packers 37-20 in the NFC championship game two seasons ago before losing 31-20 to the KC Chiefs in the Super Bowl.

This offseason, GBay will be $44.8 million over the salary cap and must decide on several key players, including wideout Davante Adams and Rodgers. Rodgers said that, in the next week or so, he would speak with GM Brian Gutekunst and others before taking time to contemplate his future. He said he will decide whether to retire, leave, or stay with GBay ahead of free agency, which begins in mid-March.
 


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