HAS TOM BRADY WON
HIS LAST SUPER BOWL?
OK, so maybe that's a little bit much. Tough to rank it with
plays like the Music City Miracle and the Minneapolis Miracle, which won
playoff games. Or even plays like the David Tyree helmet catch, which helped
keep alive an all-time Super Bowl upset. Context matters and this Week 14
regular-season magic trick didn't crush the Patriots' hopes or ensure the
Dolphins of anything.
It was just amazing, is all. How often do you see the
multi-lateral, end-of-game desperation play work? Ever? All that was missing was
a commentator yelling, "The band is out on the field!!!"
Besides, it's OVERREACTION TUESDAY, after all, so why not
open up by wondering if that play was the greatest of all time. It probably
wasn't, but it had the kind of epic feel we look for in this weekly breathless
exercise. And it leads nicely into our first reaction of the week
TOM BRADY HAS
WON HIS LAST SUPER BOWL
Sure, it took a miracle for the Miami
Dolphins to beat the New England
Patriots on Sunday, but the Patriots still allowed 412 yards of
Dolphins offense and is now 3-4 on the road this season. In their four road
losses, they've allowed an average of 31.25 points per game, and if you average
out all seven of their road games, they're being outscored by an average of
25-23 away from Foxborough this year. They trail the Kansas City
Chiefs (whom they beat head-to-head) by two games in the race
for the No. 1 seed, and at this point they're far from assured of a first-round
bye.
MY VERDICT: OVERREACTION.
I completely believe the Patriots need to lock down that No. 1 or No. 2 seed in
order to feel good about their chances of getting back to the Super Bowl this
year. And while I understand they beat them, it's hard to imagine this New
England defense holding down the Chiefs' offense (or, heck, even the Chargers'
offense) in a road playoff game. But I'm not ready to bet against Brady -- not
after seeing his connection with Rob
Gronkowski roar back to life Sunday. Miami is always a tough
spot for Brady and the Pats, who should be able to shrug off Sunday's loss --
as long as it doesn't keep them on the road too much in January.
THE MVP AWARD IS A
TWO-MAN RACE BETWEEN AARON DONALDAND PATRICK
MAHOMES
Donald went into Sunday night's game leading the league with
16.5 sacks and on pace to challenge Michael Strahan's single-season sack
record. But only two defensive players -- Alan Page and Lawrence Taylor -- have
ever won the award, which usually goes to a quarterback. Mahomes led the Chiefs
to an overtime victory over a very game Baltimore
Ravens squad and is up to 43 touchdown passes already with
three games to go. The 43 touchdown passes already tie Drew Brees'
2012 season for the eighth-most ever, and the 53 for which he's on pace would
be the second-most ever in a season, behind Peyton Manning's 55 in 2013.
MY VERDICT: NOT
AN OVERREACTION. Sure, we could be sitting here Thursday night after a huge
Chargers upset saying its Philip Rivers and
not Mahomes. But at the moment, Mahomes looks like the clear leader for the
award unless (A) he slips up at all in the final three games and (B) Donald
does indeed set that sack record from an interior defensive line position.
Brees is making a compelling case himself, as is Donald's teammate Todd Gurley.
But Donald and Mahomes are separating themselves as truly exceptional here in
the latter part of the season.
JOHN HARBAUGH
IS OFF THE HOT SEAT
The Ravens' three-game win streak ended Sunday in Kansas
City, but it didn't go quietly. The Ravens became the third team this year to
hold the Chiefs under 30 points, joining the Denver
Broncos and, somehow, the Arizona
Cardinals. They held them to just 24 in regulation. If you're
judging a coach by what he does to save a lost-looking season and whether his
players continue to play hard for him when it looks like his job is in
jeopardy, Harbaugh is making a strong second-half case to stick around.
MY VERDICT: OVERREACTION.
As close as Sunday was, and as much fun as Lamar Jackson has
been, Baltimore is still one of four 7-6 teams vying for what appears to be
just one available AFC wild-card spot (though they are only a half-game behind
the suddenly reeling Pittsburgh
Steelers in the AFC North). They play the Tampa Bay
Buccaneers at home, the Los Angeles
Chargers on the road and the Cleveland
Browns at home to close out the season. Solid chance to go 2-1,
but no sure thing. And if the Ravens miss the playoffs, that'd make it four
years in a row. And given the expectations the Baltimore organization has for
itself and the feeling around the team heading into this season, I still think
four playoff-free seasons in a row mean Harbaugh would be working elsewhere in
2019. (But I do think it'll be as someone's head coach.)
AMARI COOPER WAS
THE MOST IMPORTANT ACQUISITION BY ANY TEAM THIS SEASON
The Dallas
Cowboys' trade-deadline acquisition just about put the NFC East on
ice with his circus catch to beat the Philadelphia
Eagles in overtime. It was Cooper's 10th catch of the game (for
217 yards) and his third touchdown. In six games as a Cowboy, Cooper is
averaging 6.7 catches, 107 yards and one touchdown per game. The Cowboys are
5-1 in those six games and hold a two-game division lead over Philadelphia and
Washington.
MY VERDICT: NOT
AN OVERREACTION. Look, the Cowboys' defense has been good all year. Cooper
has nothing to do with that. And fundamentally, they still want to grind out
yards with Ezekiel
Elliott and control the clock the way they did for most of
regulation Sunday. But before they got Cooper, they had no downfield threat in
the passing game that scared anyone. Think what it has done for the team's
confidence to know they have someone to whom they can go in the passing game to
make a big play for them. Even on the weeks when Cooper doesn't go off for huge
numbers, he's a factor. The Cowboys have plenty of flaws, and if Zack Martin is
out for a while it's hard to see them making much noise in the playoffs. But
it's pretty clear now they're headed there.
THE STEELERS WILL
MISS THE PLAYOFFS
Pittsburgh lost to the Oakland
Raiders on Sunday. The Raiders. The team that has spent the
past eight months looking as if it wanted to get rid of enough players so it
wouldn't even have 11 to start on game day. Pittsburgh has lost three games in
a row now and is playing without James Conner,
who was helping them forget about Le'Veon Bell. They hold a half-game lead over
Baltimore in the AFC North, and there are three teams that have the same record
as Baltimore and are out for a wild-card berth. Pittsburgh's final three games
are at home to the Patriots, in New Orleans and at home to rival Cincinnati.
And did I mention they just lost to the Raiders? The Raiders!?
MY VERDICT: NOT
AN OVERREACTION. If the Steelers lose their next two very losable games,
they would be 7-7-1 and could need a Week 17 victory over Cincinnati to even
have a chance of getting in. Remember the Bengals knocking the Ravens out of
the postseason in Week 17 last year? Think they wouldn't just love doing
that to the Steelers? Pittsburgh has to come up with a way of beating the
Patriots and/or the Saints if it wants to avoid an embarrassing collapse.
No comments:
Post a Comment