In one sense, Sunday’s championship games hardly could have
gone better for the NFL. Both went to overtime and were filled with dramatic
comebacks and great performances. On the other hand, they were tinged with
controversy, and some players were simply unable to perform their best on the
biggest stage — including one Kansas City Chief whose brutal penalty may have
wiped out his team’s win.
HERE ARE MY EIGHT BIG DISAPPOINTMENTS FROM NFL CHAMPIONSHIP SUNDAY.
DEE FORD, LB,
CHIEFS
Ford was the unlucky Chief to be caught in the neutral zone
on what would have otherwise been a game-ending interception that would have
sent the Chiefs to the Super Bowl. He wouldn’t have impacted the play and had
he just stayed onside, Kansas City likely would have won. Instead, the flag
negated the huge play — leading to a Patriots touchdown. And though the Chiefs
rallied to force overtime, they ultimately lost there. It wouldn’t have gotten
that far if not for Ford’s error.
THE REFEREES
The name Bill Vinovich and his officiating crew will go down
in infamy in the city of New Orleans for a truly awful non-call late in the fourth quarter of the
NFC Championship. Had the correct call been made, the Saints would have gotten
a first down and been able to run out the clock, clinching a trip to the Super
Bowl as long as they made their field goal. There was no justification for
getting this one wrong, and the NFL’s nightmare has come true: a pretty blatant
officiating mistake cost a team a shot at a championship.
KANSAS CITY
CHIEFS’ PASS RUSH
Tom Brady simply didn’t face enough pressure from Kansas
City’s defense for it to make a difference. Brady wasn’t sacked at all and took
only one quarterback hit, despite the best efforts of the Chris Jones-led
Kansas City defensive line. The Patriots’ offensive line did a great job
protecting Brady, and he has enough knowledge and football IQ to know when he’s
about to get hit and avoid it. It was simply a very poor outing from a
defensive front that was expected to challenge him.
NEW ORLEANS
SAINTS’ CLOCK MANAGEMENT
The officiating will get the headlines, and deservedly so,
but New Orleans managed its final offensive drive of regulation very
poorly.
The Saints got the ball down to the Rams’ 13-yard line with
1:58 left, and Los Angeles had two timeouts remaining. With three run plays,
even without a first down, the Rams would have used two timeouts, plus another
40 seconds or so on a third run, followed by the rest of the play clock on a
field goal attempt.
In other words, the Rams could have been left with 30
seconds and no timeouts to try to get into field goal range and tie the game.
Instead, New Orleans threw two incomplete passes, ensuring the Rams had a full
1:41 — plus a final timeout — to set up Greg Zuerlein’s game-tying kick. Marcus
Peters made reference to this after the game.
KANSAS CITY
CHIEFS’ OFFENSIVE LINE
There’s a good argument to be made that the Chiefs lost this
game in the trenches. Patrick Mahomes was sacked four times and hit nine times,
and that doesn’t count the amount of times he had to rush a throw or didn’t
have time to find an open receiver because of New England’s blitzes. It’s hard
to see an open receiver with a defender in your face, and Kansas City let that
happen time and time again. It was a major factor behind the Chiefs’ inability
to score in the first half.
MICHAEL THOMAS,
WR, SAINTS
A week after a record-setting performance against the
Philadelphia Eagles, the Rams successfully held Thomas in check. Much like the
Saints offense, he was largely a non-factor after the first quarter, though
Drew Brees under-threw him on what should have been a clear touchdown. While
nobody would have expected Thomas to set another record, it’s fair to say that
he needed to have a better game than this for the Saints to win the game and
reach the Super Bowl.
KANSAS CITY
CHIEFS’ KEY OFFENSIVE WEAPONS
Patrick Mahomes did all he could to make things happen, but
the key weapons he’s relied on all season were simply unable to make plays for
him on Sunday during the AFC Championship. Sammy Watkins and Damien Williams
did really good work, but the bigger names failed.
Tyreek Hill had one 42-yard catch, but that was his only
contribution to the game. Travis Kelce — such a reliable weapon — only caught
three passes for a total of 23 yards, even though one was a touchdown. Those
were the big names that were going to be relied upon to get the Chiefs to a
Super Bowl, but they weren’t able to step up against New England’s defense.
TODD GURLEY, RB,
RAMS
What happened to Gurley? The star running back got just four
carries in the entire game, with C.J. Anderson heavily preferred to him in the
running game. He made an early error by dropping a screen pass that led to an
interception and was completely marginalized after that — be it a
coaching decision or an injury. This will end up being a subplot for the next
two weeks as the Rams gear up for the Super Bowl, but nobody would have
expected Gurley to be a total non-factor in a game Los Angeles won.
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