Showing posts with label Tom Brady. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tom Brady. Show all posts

Monday, October 13, 2008

Bad Randy is Back

My alternative title for this piece was going to be San Diego Chargers 30 - NE Patsies 10. What I want to focus on is that Bad Randy, he of the Oakland Raiders years, seems to be back so soon after Good Randy set the single-season receiving TD record (23!) with Tom Brady at the helm of the NE offense in 2007.

Now, obviously, Matt Cassel is no Brady. That was proven last night against the Chargers, even though Cassel had a not great, but not altogether terrible stat line: 22 of 38, 57.9%, 203 Yds, 5.3 YPA, 0 TD, 1 INT, 4 sacks, plus 7 rushes for 29 Yds and a respectable 4.1 YPC average. Keep in mind that much of Cassel's passing yardage came in the waning minutes, when the game was long decided. He certainly was out of sync with Moss on several long balls, and there were several passes dropped by SD defenders that could have been INTs.

Given that Cassel had some success when he decided to pull the ball down and run, he could be forgiven for trying to score with his legs on 4th and 1 with 9:13 to go in the 3rd quarter and NE down only 17-3 at that point. On that play, he missed a huge target in Ben Watson, who was open, even though SD was not exactly putting pressure on the pocket. The real problem was that missing the chance to cut the lead to 17-10 meant the game was, for all intents and purposes, over at that point.

At least, for Randy Moss, the game was over. From that point onward, the Bad Randy of 2005-6 was on the field. Moss just isn't the same player when he isn't motivated to win. During his first year in the NFL, Moss used as motivation the fact that 17 teams passed on him for perceived character issues to light up the league for 69 receptions, 1,313 Yds, and 17 TDs. That was a monster year for any WR, much less a rookie out of Marshall.

Moss had numerous good years while at Minnesota, and was a productive receiver until landing with the Oakland Raiders by way of a trade prior to the 2005 season. Before then, Moss had reliably put up over 1,000 Yds receiving and usually double-digit TDs per season, even with several off-the-field incidents as distractions. At Oakland, Moss still reached the 1,000 Yd plateau his first season with the team, but then fell off a cliff in 2006, catching only 42 balls for 553 Yds and 3 TDs in 13 games.

When Oakland first traded Moss to New England (for what? a fourth-round pick, was it?), everyone wondered just which Moss the Patriots were going to get. Would he once again be the extremely productive WR featured for so many years at Minnesota? Or would be disappear from prominence, especially in an offense like New England's, which likes to distribute the ball to multiple receivers? Everyone knows the answer to that question was Good Randy! He loved the team chemistry, loved not having to carry the offense by himself, and loved setting passing and receiving single-season records with a QB like Brady.

Sadly (and I say this because I have Moss on my fantasy team), Moss appears to be packing it in this season, even as NE sits 3-2, second in the AFC East despite being outscored by 20 points. It's still very early in the season, but the Moss on the field last night appeared to not try all that hard to catch balls thrown his way. Moss and Cassel were definitely out of sync on one long pass play into the end zone; Moss thought Cassel would throw for the middle of the field, but the pass came to the outside. Other times, it looked as though Moss was not actively trying to make the amazing catches he would normally make, including catches over a defender in his face. In the picture at left, despite the fact it looks like Moss is making a catch, the pass fell incomplete.

The most telling moment for me, though, was that Moss had his gloves off and looped through his facemask before the game officially ended. True, having Belichick call timeout with 2 seconds left, just so they could try to score a meaningless TD to cut the margin of victory, was a little excessive. But they had one more play to run, and Moss was not ready to play.

Monday, September 8, 2008

Super Bowl Loser Curse Strikes Again

OK, by now, most people will have heard that Tom Brady appears to be lost for the season due to an ACL injury he sustained in week 1 against KC.  My condolences go out to Tom and his team, since no one likes to see a player get hurt, especially not one of Tom Brady's stature.  Yes, Tom was the first QB picked in most fantasy leagues this fall.  Yes, the Patsies were primed for another run at the Super Bowl and greatness.  Yes, numerous columnists wrote this summer how no one should expect the Patsies to fall victim to the Super Bowl loser curse.

Wait, what's that you say?  There's another curse on top of the Billy Goat curse, the SI cover jinx curse, and the Madden cover curse?*

* We will, of course, be holding our breath this entire season for Brett Favre, this year's EA Sports Madden NFL 2009 cover boy. 

Yes, yes there is.  Going back at least to the 2000 season, when the Titans lost to the Rams in the Super Bowl and then had a big drop-off the next season, every Super Bowl loser has had a tough time bouncing back from the loss.  The '01 Giants had several rough years before finally climbing back into prominence through the wildcard last year.  The '02 Rams have been shells of their former selves for the past five years and will probably continue that skid this year.  The '03 Raiders have, well, been the Raiders for the past four years.  The '04 Panthers have done OK, but have struggled to make it back to the playoffs.  The '05 Eagles also struggled in the year following their Super Bowl run.  The '06 Seahawks continue to win their Division, but how hard is that, really?  The '07 Bears completely fell apart on defense last year and notably cut or allowed to depart via free agency their top QB, RB, and WR from last year.  

Now, much of what people love about the NFL is its parity.  When a team like the Browns can bounce from 4-12 one season to a stunning 10-6 the next, really, anything can happen from season to season.  One good player from the April draft can add to a key free agent signing and a new coach...  ...and take the Saints from 3-13 in 2005 to 10-6 in 2006.  One lucky bounce, one fumble recovery, or one onside kick recovery can get an entire team of players believing in themselves and change the entire season.  That's the beauty of the NFL.

On the flip side, players do get hurt.  They get older, slightly slower, and lose a step.  Again, key players can depart via free agency, and it becomes harder and harder to field a competitive team year after year.  Gone are the days of the Broncos, Vikings, and Bills being able to get scramble back up to the peak of the NFL season, the Super Bowl, after each crushing defeat the previous year.  The difference from other Super Bowl losers is that the Patriots have shown they know how to refresh their roster and keep finding talented players that no one else wants (Corey Dillon, anyone?).  They've been to the Super Bowl four times this decade, and last year was their first loss in those four trips. 

What remains to be seen is how well Matt Cassel will perform this year.  Yes, he was able to connect with Randy Moss and guide the Patsies to a week 1 defeat of the Chiefs.  Randy Moss will become his new bestest friend, I think.  There is still a ton of talent on the New England roster.  They still sit atop the AFC East, but with the aforementioned Favre now competing in their Division, the road to the Super Bowl becomes much, much harder than it was before, no disrespect intended towards Chad Pennington.  As noted above, Farve is competing against his own curse, so it should be interesting to see which curse strikes hardest this season. 

Any votes for the Billy Goat curse?