The Super Bowl. The fattest of them
all. The thing is milked dry of ways to buy and sell and buy and
sell. For many millions of people, it's a thing to make fancy dips
for and watch a handful of high-budget commercials. Some get off on
the halftime crap bonanza that takes forever and embarrasses me to be
from this planet. It draws out celebrities and even the leader of
the free world to bathe themselves in the grand spectacle. The scene
is frightful. It's the Coliseum all over again. How much longer
until we flood Cowboy Stadium and have under-water football? Bring
in the live tigers and let's do this thing right.
Yet underneath all of that—like cake
under frosting—is a game worth sinking your teeth into. I sense a
collective groan from the people in regards to the participants this
year. They wanted the Harbowl or the Packers or somebody
other than two blue-and-red teams from New York and Boston.
To them, this match-up is too predictable, too passe. Yet, despite
their displeasure, the game will go on and has all the makings of
being a damn entertaining one at that.
Seems to me the chic pick by most
analysts are the Giants. Their mental toughness and prosperous
passing attack has allowed them to rip off a mean winning streak,
leaving awestruck victims in their wake. Suddenly the Giants are
commanding; they will not be ignored. They are a well-coached group
of hard-working professionals who know what's at stake. Many of
these players have ripened into their primes, most notably Eli
Manning. The New York Giants are poised and ready to win another
Super Bowl, but they won't.
I think Eli the Lesser is too good to
shut down. I think he will lead his offense to at least 25 points
and take advantage of his three-amigo like receivers against a soft
and injured secondary. I think the Giants will move the ball, score
points and avoid turnovers.
The real question remains, however, if
the New York pass rush can get to Tom Brady. That seems to be the
selling point for those who pick against the Patriots. The fearsome
foursome up front for the G-Men are indeed top-notch and can make a
difference, but that only plays into the hands of Brady and his odd
cast of characters.
In the first Monday Night game of the
season, New England killed Miami on the quick passing game with Brady
dropping back three steps or less on his throws. They still play
that way, it's just become a little more complex since then. Wes
Welker, Aaron Hernandez and Rob Gronkowski get their money for their
yards-after-the-catch ability. Every skill player on their offense
can effectively line up at another position and they often do so in
their hurry-up mode. Brady picks up short yardage on the sneak
better than anybody I remember watching. Their offense almost always
makes perfect sense and they can use it in so many ways that they
become experimental, like lining up Hernandez in the back field and
handing the ball off to him. The New England Patriot offense is
football jazz and it's hard to put away.
I see New England pulling out some
craziness from its playbook and going after the Giants right from the
get-go. They ran the ball surprisingly well at key stretches against
Baltimore, which makes me think they won't run once in their first 15
plays this Sunday. I think Brady is too good and has too many
weapons. The Ravens kept them in check more than I predicted, but
this week the Giants will see a more efficient Patriot machine and
will struggle to contain them to 30 points. That total could be
more, but New England prefers the multi-play, ball-control drives
rather than the big hitters. They will wear the Giants out in the
fourth quarter and put the thing to bed. Brady will cement his face
in the Rushmore of quarterbacks and Billicheck will just go to bed.
So, that's the season, all wrapped up
in a boring New England Super Bowl win. The game will be thrilling
and high-scoring, great plays will be made, but afterward, most will
agree they don't want to see that match-up ever again. Instead, they
would love to see that hilarious boobs commercial again and again.
Patriots 31, Giants 28
Mojokong - more than money.
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