Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Week Seven Observations


1. There are some things I observe every week. Here are some things we will just assume the rest of the way, givens that don't need to be mentioned from here on out:
  1. Peyton Manning is ridiculously good
  2. JaMarcus Russell is ridiculously bad
  3. Drew Brees never misses a throw in the Superdome
  4. Reggie Bush is a wuss
  5. Steven Jackson runs hard
  6. Kyle Orton and Shaun Hill live to throw the ball away
  7. Marc Bulger struggles with pressure
  8. Donovan McNabb is inconsistent
  9. Buffalo's offensive design is horrendous
  10. Cleveland has no talent on offense
  11. Brandon Marshall and Percy Harvin are tough to bring down
  12. Seattle plays much better at home
  13. LaDainian Tomlinson is over the hill
  14. Philip Rivers to Vincent Jackson is unstoppable
2. Derek Anderson has the toughest job in the NFL. Situation plays such a huge role in a quarterback’s success, or really any player’s. Look at Anderson in ’07. Look at Kurt Warner’s career. Look at Kyle Orton.

3. The Browns do not have much of a running game, but they should be using it more. Their pass attack is a joke. The Mangenius has always passed too much. Could he be fired within his first 365 days? What a terrible hire.

4. Green Bay, surprisingly, ranks second in the NFL in yards allowed per game. Schedule is part of it.

5. Tampa Bay is this year's version of the '08 Detroit Lions. They are deceptively bad. Their defense is really quite atrocious. Their offensive design is pitiful. They have a little bit of talent on O, just as Detroit did last season, but negative plays and turnovers kill them. They are always patching leaks and springing new ones.

6. The chances of Josh Freeman helping the Bucs more than Josh Johnson are not good. This is a Fitzpatrick/Edwards situation. The offensive design is so hideous, no quarterback could win for the Bucs.

7. Well, maybe Peyton Manning. This could be the best anyone has ever played quarterback.

8. Man, Ricky Williams looks spry. He could be a top 10 running back right now. Williams is old for a back, but he doesn't have the mileage

9. Miami's offense now has everything but a #1 WR. Drops and poor efforts on jump balls are killing them.

10. So is bad tackling in the secondary.

11. Jairus Byrd is the leading contender for Defensive Rookie of the Year, with five interceptions in the last three games. Byrd can play, but most of his picks have been gifts from Mark Sanchez and Jake Delhomme.

12. Jay Cutler gets the blame, but if you look at Chicago’s roster, there isn’t much talent to give him and Forte a fighting chance. I laugh hearing this argument the Bears would be better off with Kyle Orton. There isn’t much coaching either. This is a team with serious long-term problems, and they don’t have a first or second round draft pick in next year’s draft. Superstar Coach X will have his hands full in 2010.

13. Best performance from Carson Palmer in years – maybe the best game he’s ever played.

14. It all starts with the offensive line, which was stunningly dominant for the Bengals on Sunday. When the line plays like that, the Bengals are very hard to stop.

15. The Bengals appear to be an emotional, high-variance team capable of playing great football or wetting the bed. Psychology is paramount in evaluating this team week-to-week.

16. Cedric Benson – legitimately good. His style is unique in today’s game. No one runs with more patience than Cedric Benson. To think I passed twice on Benson in the fantasy draft in favor of Lee Evans and Eddie Royal, who have seen the ball fewer times this season than Benson saw it in one game against the Bears.

17. On the other side of the coin there is Michael Turner, who has turned into Jamal Lewis. This guy was one of the best last season, he really was. And now he stinks. He’s below average for a starting running back. Football Outsiders crapped the bed on most of their preseason predictions, but the "Curse of 370" theory continues to build steam.

18. Jason Snelling, on the other hand, looks like the ’08 Michael Turner. Much like Darren Sproles was better than LaDainian Tomlinson last year, Snelling is now better than Turner.

19. I’ve had it in the back of my mind for almost a year that Matt Ryan is overrated. It seems he goes into each play knowing where he’s going to throw the ball, and then executes that like a robot. If things break down, if the defense confuses him, if his guy isn’t open, he throws the ball away or jams it into double coverage. He is not an improvisational quarterback. Stick Ryan on a bad offense and I’m not sure they move the ball. This season he doesn’t appear to be any better than last. It seems he looks for Tony Gonzalez a little too stringently. It all goes back to the running game though. Turner isn’t scaring anyone right now, the Falcons can’t rely on the run, defenses cheat back, and thus Atlanta’s offense lacks consistency.

20. The other Football Outsiders prediction that has come through is Miles Austin, their #1 “prospect” for 2009. His gait is gorgeously smooth for a big guy.

21. I keep trying to defend Tony Romo, who possesses the 5th best passer rating in NFL history. As I said before the season, Romo is the only quarterback in the league who makes plays and throws accurately. Romo’s weakness is pressure. As usual, Mike “Old Whitey” Smith forgot to blitz.

22. Strong also-rans for the weekly awards: Niners Michael Crabtree and Alex Smith for Offensive Breakout Player of the Week, Adrian Wilson, Darrelle Revis, and Brandon Meriweather for Defensive MVP of the Week.

23. Gambling mistake of the week: Underrating Arizona’s run defense and defense in general. The Cardinals comfortably lead the league in rush yards allowed and yards per rush.

24. The Cards are thwarting the Super Bowl Hangover through evolution. Nice job by Ken Whisenhunt, who didn’t try to mimic last season’s lightning-in-a-bottle ethos. Whisenhunt joins a crowded Coach of the Year conversation.

25. I told you to hang in there, Beanie Wells fantasy owners. It’s only going to get better.

26. You can blame Jason Campbell. You can blame Washington’s wide receivers. You can blame Jim Zorn. You can say Clinton Portis is running out of gas (which he is). You can blame bingo/play caller Sherman Lewis. But the biggest reason Washington stinks on offense is their line. It is godawful. They do nothing well. They have a great coach in Joe Bugel, so you know it is the talent. These guys suck. You can only get away with a shaky line if you have a top-flight quarterback like Brees, Warner, Rodgers, or Roethlisberger AND stud WRs AND great scheme; Washington has none of those things. Not only that but their offensive line could be the worst in the league with Chris Samuels out. Stephon Heyer looked dreadful in Samuels’ stead.

27. Senseless coaching trend of the season – no one is attempting field goals longer than fifty yards. What’s going on here? I thought a fifty-three yarder was no big deal in this league. Teams are just automatically punting rather than attempting long field goals. I miss Lane Kiffin, who called for this ludicrous 76-yard attempt shortly before (precipitating?) his firing last season.

28. Andy Reid threw the ball twice in his own red zone with a 17 point lead and less than five minutes left on Monday night. Passing in that situation should never enter your mind. The game is over if you do nothing but run the ball the rest of the way, but passing opens the slightest crack of opportunity for the opponent. Andy Reid has a disease. The man calls pass plays like he has a quota. I really cannot believe how bad some of these coaches are at game management.

29. Need to settle a bet – does anyone know if there is a difference in the balls used in college vs. the balls used in the NFL? And if so, what is that difference?

Defensive MVP of the Week: Will Witherspoon, Philadelphia
Offensive MVP of the Week: Carson Palmer, Cincinnati
Defensive Breakout Player of the Week: Alan Branch, Arizona
Offensive Breakout Player of the Week: Jason Snelling, Atlanta
Defensive Coordinator of the Week: Mike Zimmer, Cincinnati
Offensive Coordinator of the Week: Bob Bratkowski, Cincinnati

32. Cleveland (32)
31. Oakland (31)
30. Kansas City (30)
29. Tampa Bay (29)
28. St. Louis (27)
27. Buffalo (28)
26. Washington (26)
25. Tennessee (25)
24. Carolina (24)
23. Detroit (23)
22. Jacksonville (22)
21. Seattle (21)
20. San Diego (20)
19. San Francisco (16)
18. Houston (19)
17. New York Jets (18)
16. Chicago (12)
15. Miami (14)
14. Atlanta (9)
13. Dallas (15)
12. Arizona (17)
11. Philadelphia (10)
10. Green Bay (13)
9. Cincinnati (11)
8. Baltimore (8)
7. Denver (7)
6. New England (6)
5. New York Giants (3)
4. Minnesota (5)
3. Pittsburgh (4)
2. New Orleans (2)
1. Indianapolis (1)

6 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

"Andy Reid has a disease."

8:54 PM  
Blogger 81Trucolors said...

Love this post. Really good stuff here.

9:38 PM  
Blogger Hammer Player a.k.a Hoyazo said...

I always love your observations posts. With this much knowledge swirling around up there, why are your picks so bad?

10:32 AM  
Blogger GnightMoon said...

That's the fundamental question, isn't it?

6:06 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

because some of his observations are garbage.

I guess your counting the Houston game as the Bengals "wetting the bed?" Out of the top 12 teams in your rankings, the Bengals are the least likely to "wet the bed." They have two things that they win at every week: they control both lines of scrimmage and dont turn it over. Dont know why it was stunning that the offensive line was dominate for the Bengals, they have been dominate week in and week out so far this season.

Your forgetting one thing about Matt Ryan, its his SECOND year in the league. He has all the tools including a hunger to get better.

Cards suprising me as well, they play good D.

This is my best year by far betting NFL. You seem to be a smart guy, I just dont think your adjusting well from season to season and seem to be living in the past on certian things. For example: the cincinnati bengals. I am not a fan of the team but after the Green Bay game I knew they had one of the best O lines in the league. Just because Cincinatti has been bad doesnt mean they cant get things turned around.

One quick tip for betting this year: the colts cover, they always cover

11:09 AM  
Blogger GnightMoon said...

Matt Ryan is on pace to be an excellent quarterback. He is not one yet though.

Cincy is clearly a solid team but they almost lost to the Cleveland freaking Browns and that Pittsburgh game was a miracle in which they were dominated for 55 minutes. Bengals are 4-3 vs the spread; three of the wins were outright as significant dogs while the fourth was a blowout in a one point spread.

We are on Colts this week though laying twelve to a solid team makes me uncomfortable.

11:35 AM  

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