Friday, September 24, 2010
Now that's more like it
Everything the Colts did wrong in their Week One opener against Houston changed for the better when the Giants came to town. The first sign that this was going to be one of the best games I've ever seen the Colts play was the emergence of the run game on the opening drive. Both Jospeh Addai and Donald Brown were effective the whole night. The Colts never had so many running plays in the Peyton Manning era.
Brown scored the opening touchdown untouched from seven yards out. But the drive that really showed that the Giants had no chance was when Manning took over at the Colts one-yard line, marched to midfield using mostly runs, and using the play action to find an open Dallas Clark at the 30 and running in the end zone for the second score of the day.
By halftime, it was 24-0, and effectively over.
Much hype was made about the showdown between Peyton and his little brother Eli Manning, who quarterbacks the Giants. I was hoping both would play well because Eli is my fantasy QB. But he did not. But then again he didn't have much of a chance. The Colts defensive line dominated the line of scrimmage, sacking Manning multiple time and forcing two fumbles. They also intercepted him in the first half before the win was sealed.
Eli did throw two touchdowns and despite his bad game, was my fantasy scoring leader for the week with 14 points.
I mentioned last week that the first Sunday was great for my fantasy team and bad for the Colts. The second week was the complete opposite. My fantasy team bombed with uncharacteristically quiet outputs from Chris Johnson, Greg Jennings and Pierre Garcon. My big mistake was sitting the Colts defense in favor of Carolina, who totaled one point in their loss to Tampa Bay.
Hopefully the Colts take their good play on the road and have anoher inspired effort in Denver Sunday.
Around the NFL
I don't ever recall a week with so much parody. Miami won in Minnesota, the Bears downed the Cowboys in big D, the Bucs beat the Panters, the Jets without Darrelle Revis stopped New England and the Steelers dominated in Tennessee. It's odd that teams like Kansas City, Tampa Bay, Pittsburgh and the Bears are 2-0, while preseason SUper Bowl contenders Minnesota, Dallas and San Francisco are looking at 0-2 starts.
Wednesday, September 22, 2010
Illini hang on against Huskies
CHAMPAIGN - While rain swept over most of the northern half of the state of Illinois, the Fighting Illini and Northern Illinois Huskies football teams were spared a drop for their Saturday tilt at Memorial Stadium.
Tuesday, September 21, 2010
Maroons win two in a row
WARRENSBURG – Two weeks ago, even the most optimistic and loyal Maroon fans would have had trouble believing the football team would enter the Okaw Valley Black schedule with a .500 record. In games against Maroa-Forsyth and Central A&M, Clinton was outscored by a combined total of 97-7.
The last two weeks have gone much better. After a 15-12 win over Argenta-Oreana a week ago, the Maroons put together their first win streak since the 2008 season with a 21-14 triumph over the Cardinals in Warrensburg.
“It was an ugly win, but we’ll take it,” Clinton head coach John Hayden said. “Defensively we played well, but struggled to get the ball in the end zone on offense at times.”
Much of the action for both teams occurred during the second quarter after a scoreless first. The Cardinals had a touchdown run to open the game’s scoring early in the period, but Clinton responded with a long drive that resulted in a 15-yard touchdown pass from Aaron Ennis to Cory Collins.
But just when it looked like the Maroons had taken the momentum back after tying the contest, Warrensburg quarterback Craig Munson ran for a 76-yard touchdown on the Cardinals’ first play from scrimmage following the Clinton TD.
“We had some kids over pursuing on that play,” Hayden said. “They played it a little too much, but they didn’t panic. I was happy with the way we responded.”
Clinton responded less than a minute later when Kadarius Sneed found the end zone on a 45-yard run. Sneed rushed for a team-high 67 yards. But the extra point was blocked and Warrensburg held a 14-13 lead at halftime.
The Maroons looked to take the lead with two minutes remaining in the third quarter, but they were stopped on a fourth and goal situation from the Cardinal four-yard line.
Although the Maroons missed out on that opportunity, they cashed in at the 9:51 mark of the fourth quarter when Aaron Ennis rushed for a one-yard touchdown. An Ennis pass to Keiron Sneed for the two-point conversion put the Maroons up 21-14.
On the touchdown drive, receivers Jocelyn Hopkinson and Byron Conner came up with big plays, although one was brought back due to a questionable holding call.
Warrensburg had the ball on the Clinton 15 with 2 minutes, 43 seconds remaining and a fourth and five situation. The Maroons stopped the Cardinals and never let them have the ball back.
An 18-yard Ennis pass to Jocelyn Hopkinson on a third and long with 2:16 all but clinched the victory for the Maroons.
“Jocelyn had some key clutch catches for us,” Hayden said. “He had some big plays and kept the ball in bounds on that third down catch, which was huge.”
Clinton’s road win evened their record at 2-2, matched the team’s win total from last season and more importantly gave them momentum heading into the conference season.
The Maroons will visit Monticello Friday evening for the first game of the Okaw Valley Black schedule. With the Sages, St. Teresa and Tolono Unity among the Maroons’ next few games, the slate only gets tougher for Clinton.
“We want to keep the momentum going,” Hayden said. “I feel like we’ve been improving each game and moved the ball better offensively Friday night than we had all year.
“Monticello is a good program, so we need to bring more intensity when we play them. We are sticking with the same philosophy, just trying to clean up a few things offensively.”
The Maroons return home a week from Friday when they host Shelbyville in the team’s annual Homecoming Game.
Photo: Byron Conner returned to the Clinton lineup after missing the previous week due to a concussion.
Thursday, September 16, 2010
NFL Power Rankings: Week 1, 2010
Wednesday, September 15, 2010
Great fantasy day, bad reality day
I wish I could say the same about the Colts. The Houston Texans showed that they were improved and wanted the game more than Indy did. Houston was more focused and ran Arian Foster for 231 yards and three touchdowns. At no point did the Colts have the lead.
Although there were many times during the game where I just figured that the Colts were going to pull it out because they always do, something about this one seemed like it was finally the Texans' turn. It was opening week and they had been specifically preparing for this game because they were 1-15 against the Colts all-time, including two big blown leads in the last two games played in Houston.
Although Peyton Manning played great, the offensive line struggled and wide receiver Pierre Garcon dropped a few passes and failed to make big plays like he did all year in 2009. An Austin Collie fumble early in the fourth quarter really took the team out of their rhythm. They would have had the ball at the Houston 10, going in for a score that would have made it a three-point game.
But the biggest concern of the game was the run defense, that looked every bit as bad as they did in 2006 when Maurice Jones-Drew ran all over the bumbling defense in a December game in Jacksonville. The defense also suffered the loss of Bob Sanders, who is out indefinitely with torn biceps. Arian Foster had a break out day, and that was way too much for the Colts.
Foster's big day wan;t too much for my fantasy team, that scored an incredible 166 points in a 166-34 victory over my opponent. That's right, I won by 132 points. No other team in the league even scored 132. Foster had 50 points for me, which would have been enough to beat my opponent on his own. But just for show I had Chris Johnson, who had 30 points, the third most in the whole league behind Foster and the Bears' Matt Forte. I beat my opponent at every position, with the help of Visanthe Shiancoe, Pierre Thomas and Eli Manning. Greg Jennings also had a touchdown for me.
I am confident that the Colts will get back on track as they host the New York Giants in the second ever "Manning Bowl." It's a home game on a Sunday night, but New York is really good and the Colts could be 0-2 if they do not improve from what they did on Sunday in Houston.
I still think they bounce back.
Around the NFL
I thought the Calvin Johnson no-TD at the end of the Lions-Bears game in Chicago was a bad call that cost the Lions the game. It was clearly a catch for many reasons. He had the ball in control across the goal line. That's all you need. He also had his feet in bounds and came down with the ball. The refs were wrong for interpreting it the way they did.
Bob Sanders is one of many key players around the league that will miss serious time to an injury. Kris Jenkins of the Jets and Ryan Grant of the Packers are both out for the season.
Saturday, September 11, 2010
ESPN Fantasy Convention 2010
Friday, September 10, 2010
2010 NFL Predictions
This week in history: 9/11
Excited for Sunday
Tuesday, September 7, 2010
A day in the (National) Park
One word that could describe the day was fog. I have never seen more fog than I did while cruising down Skyline Drive, from Front Royal to Luray, Virginia. I liked the effect it had, and was responsible for a lot of great pictures, but I feel I missed out on some of the better scenery of the eastern half of the United States.
I enjoyed seeing the Luray Caverns, the small towns of Virginia and walking down to the actual Shenandoah River. It was a great day for scenery too, but I wish it wasn't as overcast as it was.
Saturday, September 4, 2010
NFL Power Rankings: Preseason 2010
NFC Champion: Dallas Cowboys
AFC Champion: Indianapolis Colts
Super Bowl Champion: Dallas Cowboys
Wednesday, September 1, 2010
Trojans dominate Maroons, again
CLINTON - All summer long, the Clinton Maroons football team had been eyeing Maroa-Forsyth. They were out for revenge. Maroa had beaten the Maroons 42-7 in the 2009 season opener, John Hayden's first game as head coach of Clinton. At practice from June to August, Hayden would remind the players about 30-40 times per practice that the Trojans had easily handled them last year.