It's a good thing Bill Belichick is Bill Belichick. He has the resume and those super bowl rings to survive the stupid call he made with the game on the line Sunday night. It was one of those typical Colts versus Patriots classic that was as good as advertised. Colts were trailing 34-21 in the fourth quarter when they scored once and kicked the ball away to the Patriots with less than 3 minutes to go. The Colts trusted their defense instead of going for an onside kick. Indy had all 3 of their timeouts plus the 2 minute warning. Pats got the ball and started the drive on the wrong foot by taking a timeout. It's very rare that the team thats ahead needs a timeout in that situation. They ran on the first down for minimal gain and gained 8 yards on a pass play on second down. Colts stopped the clock both times. Pats couldn't complete the pass on third down. Everybody, including the Pats special team thought hoody will punt the ball away. Instead hoody shocked the world by deciding to go for it on 4-Th and 2 from his own 28 yard line! On top of it, he took his third and last timeout to set the play up. They went for a short pass, that was completed, but Kevin Faulk juggled a ball a little bit after touching it well beyond the first down marker. He then caught the ball as he was being tackled backwards and he landed short of the first down with no clarity on where actually did he have possession of the ball. The ref did not give him the spot and the first down and the Pats turned the ball over to the Colts on downs.
I actually thought Faulk got the first down despite the bobble, but the ref was not in a position to see it. Hoody could have challenged the call if only he had a timeout. And the clock was just beyond 2 minutes and hence was not eligible for a review from upstairs. The ball went to Manning on the 28 yard line and of course he scored the winning TD after milking the clock expertly for a 35-34 win. This was a shocking end to a game that the Patriots seemed to dominate and it was a stupid coaching call for sure. I love aggressive coaching and going on fourth downs and I have always maintained that Belichick and the Patriots are one of the most aggressive teams in the league despite Belichick's defensive background. I have seen them going for it on fourth down under similar situations and actually making it. But that usually happens further down the field and not at their own 28 yard line. Most coaches would even be scared to pass the ball on those 3 downs, but may be they'll do it considering they are turning the ball over to Manning, one of the best QBs ever, if they don't get the first down. And of course the hoody is absolutely going to pass the ball around on the first three downs given that he has hall-of-famers Tom Brady and Randy Moss on that offense. But he took it too far when he chose to go for it on 4-Th down as well. And it was not 4-Th and 1 either. It was a good, long 2 yards. You cannot run the risk of giving Peyton Manning a short field with the game on the line. Of course Belichick is facing the music everywhere and most experts are ripping him apart the last day and a half.
The irony of the whole thing is that the Pats actually got the first down. The ref just missed the call and the hoody is paying the price. I love it! I can't believe how most coaches on TV are supporting him. I guess it's a fraternity and they want to stick together. Some of these coaches will never go for it on 4-Th and 2 even if their life depended on it and they are saying it was not a bad decision by the hoody. Even Gruden on monday night football was saying how going for it is much better than giving the ball to Manning even it that dude has to go 70 or 80 yards. Well, he just had to drive 28 yards because of this stupid decision and hows that better than making him drive 80 yards? Now we all get a new phrase - "don't pull a Bill Belichick". Speaking of MNF, the Cleveland Browns are horrible. They literally put me to sleep. I was watching the game and I suddenly woke up on my couch wondering what happened. Cleveland Browns offense is what happened and I turned the TV off to proceed with my night. The Chicago-San Francisco and the Dallas-Green Bay games were also pretty mediocre this week. Dallas and Green Bay were both surprisingly ineffective on offense and Dallas lost the game.
The other surprise of the week was Denver losing to Washington and now they are tied for first with the resurgent Chargers. San Diego will eventually win that division when its all said and done. Cincinnati is going to win it's division too after they went into Pittsburgh and punked them even without a great game from Carson Palmer and that offense. The Saints and the Vikings are still rolling. There was another interesting coaching call in the Jaguars-Jets game. The Jags were trailing 21-22 and were facing a second-and-6 from the 10 with less than 2 minutes to go. Maurice Jones-Drew took a handoff up the middle and could have easily walked in for a TD. But he went down and took a knee to give Jacksonville first-and-goal from the 1 with about 1 1/2 minutes left. Jets were out of timeouts and this move allowed the jags to milk the clock all the way down. They kicked the winning field goal with 0's on the clock. Smart move. Jags coach Jack Del Rio even mimicked Herm Edwards's "you play to win the game" in the post-game news conference. What's up with these coaches pulling references from legendary rants from fellow coaches? Last week, Arizona's Ken Whisenhunt made fun of Dennis Green's "we let them off the hook" line. Keep it up coaches. In other news, college basketball is kicking off and ESPN is doing a beautiful thing. They have a 24 hour kick-off marathon. Best idea ever. Unfortunately, I may not get to watch any of it. But I still love the idea.
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