An NFL Dynasty

             A friend called over the weekend and our discussion meandered to the subject of the NFL Playoffs that got underway on Saturday.  My friend’s position is that the Chiefs are a dynasty; I do not yet have them in such a lofty status – – although another Super Bowl victory this year would elevate them.  At some point, my friend asked what I thought the Chiefs lacked in terms of “dynastic stature”.

My answer had two parts:

  1. I think the “Brady/Belichick Patriots were a dynasty because of the longevity of the excellence there spreading over about 15-18 seasons.  Even in years when the Pats were not playing in the Super Bowl, they were serious contenders to have been participants.  The Chiefs are getting close to being today what the Patriots were in pre-COVID years, but I think they need more “aging” in that status.
  2. I think dynasties produce a wide variety of “truly great players” – – not sort of great ones but really great ones – – and again the Chiefs are close but not quite there.

My friend accepted Part 1 but pushed back on Part 2.  So, I explained my feeling that the Chiefs roster of late had not produced a wide variety of great players, that did not detract from the greatness of several individual players – – Patrick Mahomes, Travis Kelce and Chris Jones to be specific.  I believe that all three of those players will be in the Hall of Fame sometime in the future but as a way to draw a comparison, I suggested a look back at the Steelers’ dynasty in the 1970s.

  • QB = Terry Bradshaw – – Hall of Fame
  • RB = Franco Harris – – Hall of Fame
  • WR = Lynn Swann and John Stallworth – – both in the Hall of Fame
  • OL = Mike Webster – – Hall of Fame
  • DL = Joe Greene – – Hall of Fame [Aside:  The rest of the “Steel Curtain” front four were awfully close to Hall of Fame caliber too.]
  • LB = Jack Ham and Jack Lambert – – both in the Hall of Fame
  • DB = Mel Blount and Donnie Shell – – both in the Hall of Fame

The only position group not represented here is Tight End; I could not recall who was a tight end for the Steelers in the 1970s but I used Google to check and the only Steelers’ tight end from that era that I can remember even when presented with a list was Bennie Cunningham who was a good player but not a Hall of Fame caliber player.

The thing about the 10 players cited above, is that they came from every position group on the team; there were no significant weaknesses on those Steelers’ teams.  As of now, I do not see the same spread of greatness over the rosters of the Chiefs over the past several seasons.  Now, if someone wanted to compare the Steelers of the 1970s to the Bill Walsh/George Siefert Niners teams of the 80s and early 90s, I think that would be an interesting discussion.

I’ll close today with some observations by Chuck Noll – – the guy who coached those Steelers in the 1970s:

“Everyone’s job is important, but no one is indispensable.”

And …

“Before you can win a game, you have to not lose it.”

And …

“The critics are always right. The only way you shut them up is by winning.”

But don’t get me wrong, I love sports………

 

 

Football Friday 1/10/25

This is the time of the year when the football season – – which began in August with Georgia Tech beating Florida St. in Dublin, Ireland – – sheds all the baggage and has the best teams stepping forward for action.  In terms of quantity and quality together, this is the best football weekend of the season.  Counting last night’s CFP game, in a 96-hour timespan, there schedule holds two excellent college football matchups, and 6 NFL playoff games scheduled such that no two games overlap in time – – pending the need to reschedule the game in LA due to wildfires.  It is an orgy of football.

Ergo this is not merely a Football Friday; consider this an orgiastic version of Football Friday.  Don’t just let the good times roll; kick it up a notch [Hat tip to Emeril Lagasse] and revel in the pure football hedonism this weekend represents.

Having said that, I must begin this week on a down note.  There was no “Betting Bundle” last week but I did propose a four-legged Money Line Parlay then.  That wager bit the dust when the Atlanta Falcons lost by giving up 44 points to the Carolina Panthers.  But enough negativity …

 

College Football Commentary:

 

Over the last several years of conference realignments, there have been some big geographic swings as the major conferences have acquired larger and larger footprints.  Every time I see Stanford or Cal playing in an Atlantic Coast Conference game a shiver goes down my spine.  Well, it appears as if that contagion has spread to the minor collegiate conferences now.  Earlier this week came the announcement that the Huskies of Northern Illinois will not be playing MAC football beyond next season; instead, Northern Illinois will join the Mountain West Conference for football competition.

Ever since Michigan upset Ohio St. right after Thanksgiving, there have been reports saying that there is unhappiness among the supporters of Buckeyes’ football about Ryan Day as the leader of the program.  Ryan Day’s record at Ohio St. is 68-10; yes, Ohio St. always schedules a couple of cupcake games, but in his 6 years on the job in Columbus, Ryan Day has beaten 87% of the opponents presented to him and his team.  Yes, he has lost 4 consecutive games to Michigan; no, it is unreasonable to label him as “sufficiently deficient” and thereby justify firing him.

I know this will not happen, but I can still wish for it to happen.  As of this moment, I am rooting for Ohio St. to win the CFP and be crowned as the National Champion.  And when they hand the trophy to Ryan Day and put a microphone in front of him, I would love for him to tell everyone in Columbus to take a hike because he has had enough of their negativity, and he is going to go and find a coaching job elsewhere.  If done in a quiet and measured tone of voice, he need not amplify his message with an extended middle finger in the face of those who think he is less than satisfactory.

Before we get to the games this weekend, I want to comment on two events related to the college football coaches’ game of musical chairs that takes place every December/January.  I know that Bill Belichick going to UNC is the biggest element in that saga, but there are two other events that have coaches “going home”:

  • Scott Frost is returning to UCF next year. He was the coach there in 2016 and 2017; he went to bowl games both years and UCF posted a 13-0 record in 2017.  Frost played QB for Nebraska, and that undefeated season at UCF got him the job leading the Cornhuskers starting in 2018.  That simply did not work out at all; he was fired in the middle of his fifth season at Nebraska and had a record of 16-31 there.  Now he is going back to Orlando to resume his coaching career at UCF.  He will find one big difference when he gets there.  Back in 2016 and 2017, UCF played against American Athletic Conference opponents; in 2025, UCF will play against Big-12 Conference opponents.
  • Rich Rodriguez is returning to West Virginia; those country roads have taken him home.  Rodriguez coached the Mountaineers for 7 years about 20 years ago posting a cumulative record of 61-26 there and winning the Big East Conference championship 4 times.  He left West Virginia to take the job at Michigan and his departure sparked lawsuits and rancor; his three years at Michigan were unproductive with an overall record of 15-22.  After that he spent 6 years at Arizona with middling success.  Then after a 5-year hiatus, he went to Division 1-AA Jax St. where his teams went 27-10 and won their conference twice.  As in Scott Frost’s case, Rodriguez will not find a “Big East Schedule” in front of him in 2025; West Virginia is now in the Big 12.

And, as luck would have it, UCF and West Virginia will play each other in Orlando next year.  It’s like a Hollywood screenplay…

There was one situation where a coach was not fired when I expected him to be fired.  Trent Dilfer has been the coach at UAB for two seasons; the cumulative record there is 7-17 and in 2024 there were some truly ugly losses such as:

  • La-Monroe 32 UAB 6
  • Navy 41 UAB 18
  • Tulane 71 UAB 20
  • Army 44 UAB 10
  • Memphis 53 UAB 18

The decision at UAB is to run it back at least one more time with Trent Dilfer on the sidelines.  I suspect the results next year will have to be a tad more competitive when the team loses…

 

CFP Games

 

            Last night, Notre Dame advanced to the CFP Final Game beating Penn St. 27-24.  A few observations:

  • For about the first 25 minutes, Penn St. was in charge.  For about the next 25 minutes, Notre Dame was in charge.  The game was tied 10-10 going into the 4th quarter.
  • Notre Dame was clearly the better team in the 4th quarter.
  • If you like Micah Parsons as an edge rusher in the NFL, you ought to like Penn St. DE, Abdul Carter too.
  • Some commentators have suggested that the Lions’ QB, Drew Allar, should reconsider his decision to come back to college football next year; he should declare for the Draft in a thin QB class for 2025.  I think that would be a huge mistake for Allar; his accuracy, his arm strength and his “decision-making” last night would probably have made him a third-day pick come April.
  • The Notre Dame defense has no “stars”, but it does have about 15 players who are all well above average in terms of competence – – and they play team defense very well.

Ohio St. – 6 vs Texas (50.5):  I think the oddsmakers have this game pegged wrong; I think this game will be an offensive display.  Yes, I know that both defenses are ranked in the Top 3 in Total Defense this year, but I also know that Quinn Ewers and Will Howard are two QBs who are both on a roll.  I think the difference in the game will be Ohio St. freshman WR, Jeremiah Smith who is already a certified monster on the field.  I like Ohio St. to win and cover AND I like the game to go OVER – – and – – I’ll put those two bets in on a same-game parlay; put all of that in the “Betting Bundle”.

 

NFL Commentary:

 

Dan Orlovsky was one of the color analysts for the Steelers/Bengals game last week.  While I do not mind him at all in his “studio persona”, he was maximally annoying on that broadcast.  He would not/did not ever shut up and he raved about plays and happenings in the game that were pretty pedestrian.  ESPN should never have allowed that to go on for a full game; ESPN must not allow that to happen in any future games.  I am a full-fledged supporter of the First Amendment guaranteeing free speech – – but I think Orlovsky’s performance was a violation of that right.

Sam Darnold has clearly had the best year of his football life this season.  Darnold was the overall #3 draft pick (by the Jets) in 2018.  Going into this season, his record as a starter was a less-than-stellar 21-35-0; in 2024, his record as a starter is 14-3-0.  So, is that an indication of his natural talent maturing and emerging – – or is it a mirage?

In the last offseason, Darnold signed a 1-year contract for a guaranteed $8.75M with the Vikes.  He will be an unrestricted free agent on March 10 when the NFL’s open signing period begins – – unless the Vikes sign him before then or unless they put a franchise tag on him.  The fact that the Vikes’ coaches have that period of “exclusivity” to deal with Darnold may provide a good answer to the question above.  If they think this was a mirage, they will probably let him walk without a serious attempt to sign him and cast their lot with JJ McCarthy who they drafted in the first round last April.  If they think 2024 was a serious indication of Darnold becoming a certified franchise QB, that changes things a lot …

Do not be too hasty in judging Darnold based on his first several years in the NFL.  Please recall Jim Plunkett who started out on a very mediocre career trajectory but who was a “late-bloomer” and managed to get two Super Bowl rings and one Super Bowl MVP award once “the blossom” had emerged.

The Titans fired their GM, Ran Carthon this week; he had been the Titans’ GM since January 2023.  Here is part of the statement from Titans’ owner Amy Adams Strunk regarding that decision:

“I’ve loved the time I’ve spent with Ran. He’s a talented football mind, a great man, and friend to everyone along his path.

“It’s impossible to ignore that our football team hasn’t improved over the past two years. I am deeply disappointed in our poor win-loss record during this period, of course, but my decision also speaks to my concern about our long-term future should we stay the course.

“I love this team more than you can imagine. To our fans: we know this level of performance isn’t acceptable. We’re humbled by your support as we continue to work towards building the team you expect and deserve.”

She made the “firing announcement” about her.  Really?  That got me to thinking about her other actions as a team owner and then it hit me:

  • Last year – – when Ran Carthon and then head coach Mike Vrabel could not play in the same playpen – – she fired Vrabel and kept Carthon.
  • Now, she shifts blame to the Front Office.
  • Meanwhile, she asserts her love for the team and her humility.

It seems to me that with Danny Boy Snyder out of the picture, there needs to be some consensus built around who is now the worst NFL owner.  While he was among those in the inner circle of the NFL, the trophy was retired permanently in the Washington DC area.  Not so in 2025 …  So here are my four candidates for worst owner currently in the NFL in alphabetical order:

  1. Mark Davis (Raiders):  If he has made a good hiring decision in the last decade, it surely does not come to mind quickly.
  2. Jimmy Haslett (Browns):  The trade for Deshaun Watson and then the contract handed to Watson guarantee Haslett a spot on this list.
  3. Woody Johnson (Jets):  Since 2000, he has had 7 head coaches and none of them finished with a winning record for the Jets; since 2000 he has had 6 different GMs providing rosters to those 7 head coaches who left with losing records.
  4. Amy Adams Strunk:  See above …

If I were to create a “Dishonorable Mention” list to accompany the list above, I would include the McCaskeys (Bears), Jim Irsay (Colts) and David Tepper (Panthers).

Looking at the seven owners on my combined list there, notice that two of the seven are in the AFC South Division.  That division seems always to be an afterthought when it comes to fan focus outside the local areas of the individual teams.  Moreover, it has been a while since a significant playoff threat has emerged from that division; maybe you have to go all the way back to the days of Peyton Manning with the Colts to encounter such a situation.

The AFC South has always seemed to me to be the NFL’s version of the “junk drawer” that we have in our kitchen.  If something does not “fit” with anything else logically, then stick it in the “junk drawer” and we can find it there if we ever go looking for it.  [Aside:  My long-suffering wife objects to my “junk drawer” label; she prefers to call it “The Drawer of Many Things.”  Po-TAY-toe … Po-TAH-toe.]

Let me break down the AFC South here for a moment:

  • Colts:  In what delusional state must one reside to consider Indianapolis as part of “The South”?
  • Jags:  At least, they are geographically in “The South” but they are also irrelevant more seasons than not.
  • Titans:  For a team that has made the playoffs 10 times in 25 seasons, it has an amazingly small national following.
  • Texans:  An expansion team that has made the playoffs 8 times but never made it to the Conference Championship Game.  Meh!

Here are a few comments on games from last week – – many of which were meaningless:

Commanders 23  Cowboys 19:  Jayden Daniels got the second half off but backup QB, Marcus Mariota led a late fourth quarter drive to produce the winning TD putting the Commanders in the playoffs as the 6th seed in the NFC.

Broncos 39  Chiefs Junior Varsity 0:  Ask a random sample of people on the street to name 3 players on the Chiefs’ roster this year and make a list.  Any name on that list did not appear in this game.   Some folks assert that the Chiefs “threw the game” to assure that the red-hot Bengals could not be in the playoffs.

“Who knows what evil lurks in the hearts of men?

“The Shadow knows…”

Panthers 44  Falcons 38:  The Falcons needed to win this and to have the Bucs lose.  Neither event happened.

Bucs 29  Saints 19:  The Bucs did what they needed to do to win the division and make the playoffs for the fourth year in a row.

Seahawks 30 Rams Junior Varsity 25:  The Rams had clinched a playoff spot, so they rested Matthew Stafford, Cooper Kupp, Puka Nacua and Kyren Williams.  However, no conspiracy theories have emerged here…

Bears 24  Packers 22:  The important outcome from this game is that Packers WR, Christian Watson tore his ACL and is out for the balance of the playoffs.  QB Jordan Love injured his elbow also, but he is expected to play this week.

Pats 23  Bills 16:  Two weeks ago, the Giants pulled off an upset that relinquished the overall #1 pick in the Draft to the Pats; last week, the Pats emulated that generosity with this win handing the overall #1 pick in April to the Titans.

 

Games This Week:

 

Just for the record, there are no Dog-Breath Games on the card this week.

 

(Sat. 4:30PM ET) Chargers – 2 at Texans (42.5) :  The Chargers lead the NFL in scoring defense; if “defense wins championships”, the results of these playoffs would seem to be a foregone conclusion.  The Texans won their division, but they have not looked nearly as good this year as they did last year.  Injuries to Tank Dell and Stefon Diggs tanked the offense; the Texans played teams with winning records six times this year and won only one of those encounters.  The Chargers have a history of coughing up a hairball at a critical time in do-or-die games; Jim Harbaugh is there to change that history – – if the football gods will permit.  Justin Herbert has never won a playoff game; that is another historical element that could be changed here – – if the football gods will permit.  I like the Chargers to win and cover here; put that in the “Betting Bundle”.

 

(Sat. 8:00PM ET) Steelers at Ravens – 10.5 (43.5):  When you go looking for this game on TV, it will be streaming on Amazon Prime Video even though it is not a Thursday Night game.  The Steelers are in a tailspin; they have not looked good for the last month; in their last 4 games (all losses), the Steelers have averaged just a smidgen over 14 points per game.  Meanwhile, the Ravens have been on a tear late in the season.  However, it must be noted that Lamar Jackson has been in 6 playoff game situations and has only won twice.  Basically, this is a third meeting between these AFC North teams, and they have split the first two.  I have a personal policy which requires that I refrain from selections in NFL games with double-digit spreads.  I will just sit back and watch these two teams slug it out on each other.

 

(Sun. 1:00PM ET) Broncos at Bills – 8.5 (47):  The weather forecast for Sunday in Buffalo is for “snow showers” (whatever that means in Buffalo NY) and temps around freezing.  Often teams traveling to Buffalo in December/January need to play in conditions that are unfamiliar; in this case, the Broncos have an idea what snow and cold weather are all about.  The Bills were 8-0 at home this year; the Broncos were 4-5 on the road.  This is the first NFL playoff game for Bo Nix, but it is hardly a novelty for Josh Allen.  I think the fundamental challenge in this game is for the Broncos’ defense; can they keep the game from turning into a track meet?  The oddsmakers think it can according to that Total Line.  I think the Bills are going to win the game, but I like the Broncos’ defense to keep it close and keep it near that modest Total Line; so, give me the Broncos plus the points; put that in the “Betting Bundle”.

 

(Sun. 4:30PM ET) Packers at Eagles – 4.5 (45):  This is a rematch from the first game of this year’s NFL season when these two teams met in Sao Paulo, Brazil; the Eagles won that game 34-29.  The Packers got to the playoffs this year despite losing 5 of their 6 division games.  The absence of Christian Watson will affect the Packers’ aerial game, and I assume that Jordan Love sat out the second half of last week’s game simply as a precaution and not due to a serious elbow injury.  The Eagles will have Jalen Hurts back at QB after he spent two weeks in the concussion protocol; has any “rust” accumulated during that absence?  I think this will be a close game; I do not think there will be anywhere near the 63 points scored by these two teams against each other as back in September; I’ll take the Packers plus the points; put that in the “Betting Bundle”.

 

(Sun. 8:00PM ET) Commanders at Bucs – 3 (50):  This is the Game of the Week.  The Commanders averaged 27 points per game this year; the Bucs averaged 28 points per game this year.  The Commanders will score points; the question mark for them is the defense.  The Bucs beat the Lions and the Eagles this year; the Bucs also lost to the Cowboys and the Falcons (twice) this year.  Assuming the “good Bucs” show up here, I think this game will challenge the scoreboard operator to keep up; so, I’ll take the game to go OVER, and I’ll take the Commanders plus the points; put that in the “Betting Bundle”.

 

(Mon. 8 :00PM ET) Vikes – 1 at Rams (48):  Sam Darnold had a bad outing last week against the Lions; there is no way to sugarcoat that fact.  The question here is:

  • Was that a one-off or was that too big a moment for him?

We know what to expect from the Rams and we pretty much know what to expect from the Vikes’ pressure defense.  What is up in the air here is the Vikes’ offense and how well Sam Darnold can make it operate.  I like this game to go OVER; put that in the “Betting Bundle”.

Let me review this week’s “Betting Bundle”:

  1. Ohio St. – 6 over Texas
  2. Ohio St./Texas OVER 50.5
  3. Same Game Parlay of those two bets above to win $264.
  4. Chargers – 2 over Texans
  5. Broncos + 8.5 against Bills
  6. Packers + 4.5 against Eagles
  7. Commanders +3 against Bucs
  8. Commanders/Bucs OVER 50
  9. Vikes/Rams OVER 48

With a nine-element “Betting Bundle”, I don’t think I need any Money Line Parlays this week…

Finally, words of wisdom from Vince Lombardi:

“If you can accept losing, you can’t win.

But don’t get me wrong, I love sports………
 

 

The Value Of Patience

Yesterday, I commented on two “one and done” NFL coaches.  After I posted that rant, I got to thinking about how lots of coaches are less than outstanding in their first year on the job and I wondered how some coaches who turned out to be top-shelf NFL coaches after a while would have fared in today’s environment of “instant success” or “see ya later”.  The results are not pretty:

  • Bill Belichick:  First year in Cleveland he was 6-10.  First year in New England he was 5-11.  However, his overall record turned out to be 302-165 with 7 Super Bowl appearances and 5 Super Bowl victories.
  • Pete Carroll:  First year in Seattle he was 7-9 which was one game worse than the Seahawks had been the year before.  However, he “hung on” in Seattle for 14 seasons posting a 137-89-1 record there with 2 Super Bowl appearances and 1 Super Bowl victory.
  • Tom Landry:  His Cowboys were an expansion team, so his record for the first four years in Dallas was a meager 13-38-3.  He was the head coach for the Cowboys for 29 seasons with an overall record of 250-162-6.  His teams went to the Super Bowl or the NFL Championship Game 7 times and won the Super Bowl twice.
  • Chuck Noll:  His Steelers went 1-13 in his first year in Pittsburgh; they posted losing records in Noll’s first three seasons there.  He proceeded to stay with the Steelers for 23 seasons winning 4 Super Bowl Games along the way and posting a career record of 193-148-1.
  • Bill Parcels:  The Giants were 3-12-1 in his first year at the helm.  Nevertheless, he had the chance to hang onto the job and lasted 8 years with the Giants and then 11 more seasons with other teams.  His overall record was 172-130-1 and he won 1 Super Bowl Game.
  • Andy Reid:  The Eagles were 5-11 in his first year in Philly; that was 1999 and Reid has been coaching in the NFL continuously since then.  His career record is 273-147-1 and his teams have been to the Super Bowl 5 times and won the Super Bowl 3 times.
  • Bill Walsh:  His first year with the Niners produced a record of 2-14, but he survived to stay with the team for 10 years earning a career record of 92-59-1.  His teams also won 3 Super Bowl Games along the way.

I think you get the idea here.  Even men who proved to be outstanding head coaches in the NFL stumbled in their first year or so on the job.  In the seven cases listed here, team owners were rewarded for patience in staying with these coaches for more than a single season of disappointment.  Four of the coaches above are in the Hall of Fame now; the other three are still “active” in the coaching profession; Carroll is seeking a new job in this hiring cycle; Belichick is at UNC and Reid is still wearing that humongous red coat on the Chiefs’ sideline this year.  It would not surprise me in the least to see those three “still active” head coaches join the other four in the Hall of Fame one of these days.

Moving on …  I want to say something about football coaches at a lower level of the game here.  A few years ago, Deion Sanders came out of nowhere to take the head coaching job as Jackson St.  He just happened to bring his two sons and Travis Hunter along with him to Jackson St. and they quickly dominated the SWAC.  Sanders moved on to Colorado and has done quite well there to the point that he is now rumored to be a potential NFL head coach sometime soon.

That success seems to have opened a door for other NFL alumni to take jobs at small HBCUs as the head football coach.  Eddie George was the first person to follow the “Deion Sanders Route” to the head coaching ranks when he took over the Tennessee St. program and led the team to the Division 1-AA championship tournament this season.

Now, former NFL WR, DeSean Jackson has been hired to run the football program as Delaware St.  The Hornets are members of the MEAC; it is an HBCU institution.  Football has not been overly successful for Delaware St. over the years, the school’s cumulative record is 370-458-11.  Jackson is not walking into a long tradition of winning football at Delaware St.; the last winning record for a season I can find is back in 2007.  I hope he gets at least a few years to try to turn things around.

Recently, Michael Vick was hired to take over the football program at Norfolk St.  The Spartans also play in the MEAC and Norfolk St. is also an HBCU.  The similarities extend to the fact that Norfolk St. is also not a perennial powerhouse in that league and there is no real “winning tradition” there.

Vick and Jackson were teammates with the Eagles; now they will be rivals trying to put unsuccessful football programs on a positive vector heading.  Vick would seem to have one advantage over Jackson simply based on geography.  Michael Vick is from Newport News, VA which is right next door to Norfolk VA in the Tidewater region of the state.  Vick went to high school there and is well known in local sports circles having gone to Va Tech about 25 years ago.  Jackson, on the other hand, is from Los Angeles and went to school at Long Beach St in California.  In terms of recruiting “locally” it would appear that Vick has an edge – – but they play the games on the field and not on paper.

Finally, with regard to the rewards for patience in new coaching hires, let me close with this from Julius Caesar”

“It is easier to find men who will volunteer to die, than to find those who are willing to endure pain with patience.”

But don’t get me wrong, I love sports………

 

 

The Football Version Of “One And Done”

The phrase “one and done” probably originated in the world of college basketball referring to a player who would go to college knowing that he would only be there for one year.  His intent was to play in the NBA, but he had to wait for one year to be eligible for the NBA Draft because of a provision of the CBA that governs how the league operates.  This year, it seems that “one and done” might have a more sinister meaning when it comes to the NFL.  In this week where NFL coaches and coaching staffs are in medias res, we have a few “one and done” situations:

  • Jerod Mayo is “one and done” as the head coach of the Pats.  The team finished the year with a 4-13-0 record and by winning the last game of the season handed the overall #1 pick in the Draft to the Titans.  Mayo did not take over a team full of latent talent; the Pats were also 4-13-0 in the 2023 season.  I cannot help thinking that Mayo was destined to fail in this job – – maybe not in one year but in the end – – because the fans and the Pats’ brass are probably spoiled by the fading memories of the Pats’ dynasty in the Brady/Belichick regime.  Jerod Mayo was identified with those joyous days but the reality is that no one was going to bring them back to Foxboro in short order because the roster is flawed.
  • Antonio Pierce is “one and done” as the head coach of the Raiders.  I know; technically he is “one-and-a-half and done” in that job because he was the team’s interim head coach for 9 games in 2023.  Nevertheless, the Raiders also clocked in with a record of 4-13-0 this year and that led to Pierce’s dismissal.  Another similarity between Pierce’s situation and Mayo’s plight in New England is that the Raiders’ roster was not primed for success in 2024.  I think there is a more fundamental “issue” at work with the Raiders.  Like the Pats, there are memories of a glorious past, but those euphoric days predated the current team leadership.  Al Davis was a “scratchy” curmudgeon – – but Al Davis knew football.  Mark Davis seems like a much more affable and cooperative person – – but I don’t think he knows half of what his father knew about football.
  • If Antonio Pierce “deserved” to be let go, then the Raiders’ GM, Tom Telesco, should have been hand-in-hand with Pierce on the way out the door.  He came into the Raiders organization last January and in his year at the helm, the team “regressed” from 8-9-0 in 2023 to 4-13-0 in 2024.  If Telesco is entitled to a longer leash than one season, why is the standard different for Pierce?
  • Nick Sorenson is “one and done” as the Defensive Coordinator for the Niners.  The expectations for 2024 were lofty in the Bay Area and the team finished 6-11-0.  Kyle Shanahan has a “genius label” attached to him – – deservedly or undeservedly – – so he is not vulnerable to separation for one bad year.  But it was Shanahan who fired Steve Wilks as Defensive Coordinator last January presenting Shanahan with the opportunity to fill that vacancy with Sorenson.  Actually, I think there might be a more positive motive behind this firing decision.  Perhaps the Niners see an opportunity to “upgrade” at the Defensive Coordinator position by keeping Sorenson on the staff and hiring Robert Saleh for a second stint as the Niners’ Defensive coordinator.  Remember, Saleh was sufficiently successful in that role about 5 years ago that he was a hot head coaching prospect in an offseason leading to his getting the top job with the Jets.  Just a thought…

This is the time of the year when fans begin to imagine positive changes for their favorite NFL franchises.  Often, there is far too much “imagination” in their thinking and not enough “reality” but hope springs eternal.  One source of fans’ “irrational exuberance” [Hat tip to Alan Greenspan] is the annual positioning by players who let it be known that they would like a new NFL employer.  If/when that player is Joe Flabeetz, no one particularly cares; when that player is one with Pro Bowl achievements on the résumé, fans get energized.  So, who might be available for moving from one place to another this year – – ignoring for a moment the likely impending drama involving Aaron Rodgers:

  • Maxx Crosby has indicated that he is not particularly interested in hanging around while the Raiders go through a rebuilding process.  Reports of his willingness to play elsewhere were still echoing around the football world when fans in Cincy had him signed, sealed and delivered to the Bengals.  And the Bengals’ defense was the unit that needed upgrading as of this season, so the move makes sense – – in a simple and transactional world.  Looking at his situation, there is no team in the NFL that has two defensive ends better than Maxx Crosby; he would be an upgrade for 31 other franchises; if he is really going to be sent elsewhere, there are plenty of teams other than the Bengals who might “buy a lottery ticket” so to speak.
  • Tyreek Hill has made it known that he would like to be traded from the Dolphins and also posted a photoshopped picture of his face on Antonio Brown’s body on a social media site.  There is no doubt that Hill – – like Crosby – – can upgrade the WR position for most every NFL team; but unlike Crosby, Hill brings enough baggage with him that his nickname ought to be Samsonite.  [Aside:  Posting a picture of himself “aligned with” Antonio Brown is not a good way to push said baggage into the background.]  Hill left the Chiefs amidst drama there; the Dolphins gave him a contract worth $120M and stood by him during a period of “involvement with law enforcement”; what would lead any other team to think he would not produce the same sort of “drama” in their locker room?  But in the NFL, talent trumps bad behavior, and Tyreek Hill does have talent …

Finally, some of today’s commentary deals with errors that need to be corrected; so, let me close with these words from Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC):

“It’s one thing to shoot yourself in the foot.  Just don’t reload the gun.”

But don’t get me wrong, I love sports………

 

 

A Strange Upcoming Year?

It is far too early in the calendar year to draw any reasonable conclusions, but there are a few unusual circumstances in the sports world that might lead one to conclude that 2025 will be a year of strange happenings.  Consider:

  • The betting favorite for the team that will represent the NFC in this year’s Super Bowl Game is the Detroit Lions.  This will be the 59th iteration of the Super Bowl and the Lions have taken part in exactly none of the previous 58 games.
  • Another serious NFC contender to play in that game is the Minnesota Vikings.  The last time the Vikings were in the Super Bowl, the opposing QB was Ken Stabler.
  • In case you had not noticed, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers won their division for the fourth consecutive season.  That had never happened before…
  • Meanwhile, the Buffalo Bills won their division for the fifth consecutive season.  Even though the Bills played in – – and lost – – four consecutive Super Bowl Games, they had never won their division 5 times in a row.

Strange doings in the sports world early in 2025 are not limited to the NFL; perhaps some examples from the NBA will suggest a year of unusual sporting circumstances:

  • As of this morning, the Oklahoma Thunder of the NBA sport a record of 30-5 and the team has won 15 games in a row.  There are 8 NBA teams today that have not won a total of 15 games this season, let alone 15 games in a row.
  • Believe it or not, the Thunder do NOT have the best record in the NBA as of today; the Cleveland Cavaliers – – of all teams – – check in with a record of 31-4 and they are riding a 10-game winning streak.

The status of men’s college basketball suggests an unusual change of circumstances for this year:

  • Only one “blueblood basketball team” – – Duke – – is ranked in the Top-5 today.  The other 4 schools have had strong programs in recent years, but none are legendary college basketball programs:
      • Tennessee – – ranked #1
      • Auburn – – ranked #2
      • Iowa St. – – ranked #3
      • Alabama – – ranked #5
  • Meanwhile, perennial powerhouses are not even in the Top-10 this morning such as:
      • Kansas – – ranked #11
      • Michigan St. – – ranked #16
      • Gonzaga – – ranked #18
      • UCLA – – ranked #22
      • Michigan – – ranked #24

And “across the pond” in the English Premier League, you can find an element of strangeness in the table as of today.  The season over there is just past the halfway point in terms of games played; while the final standings may change dramatically, there is a decent sample size to try to analyze and digest:

  • Manchester United – – EPL champions for 13 seasons – – finds itself in 13th place in the 20-team league.  Man U is 23 points from the top of the table and only 7 points clear of the relegation zone.
  • Manchester City – – 8-time EPL champion and champions for the last 4 consecutive seasons – – are in 6th place this morning and would not qualify for any of the international club competitions if that were to be their final position.
  • Nottingham Forest was only promoted to the EPL for the last two seasons after spending the previous 14 seasons in the Championship.  As of this morning, Nottingham Forest is in 3rd place in the EPL.
  • Bournemouth has spent the last 10 seasons cycling between the EPL and the Championship; it was promoted to the EPL two seasons ago along with Nottingham Forest.  Today, Bournemouth is in 7th place in the table, only 1 point behind Manchester City, 9 points ahead of Tottenham Hotspur and 10 points ahead of Manchester United.

I remember in 12th grade English class having been assigned to write an essay on Shakespeare’s use of birds as omens in the play Macbeth.  My initial reaction to the assignment was that this was going to be impossible because I did not recall any animals as part of the play we had just read.  Then I took a closer look and indeed there were mentions of ravens and owls and falcons in the text.  My lesson there was that you have to look closely if you are trying to find “unusual things” in a larger work.  So, maybe that lesson applies here to these early oddities in 2025?  If only I had access to three witches in a park nearby who might give me a prophecy for 2025.

“Double, double toil and trouble ;

Fire burn and caldron bubble.

Cool it with a baboon’s blood,

Then the charm is firm and good.”

But don’t get me wrong, I love sports………

 

 

Jim Laranaga Stepped Down …

With the sporadic writing here in Curmudgeon Central over the Holidays, I did not have the opportunity to comment on a small matter that produced a headline for a day or so and then slipped quietly into the night.

  • Jim Laranaga stepped down as the head basketball coach at the University of Miami.

Laranaga is a basketball lifer; he played for Providence in the late 60s and took a job as a graduate assistant coach at Providence in 1971 right after he graduated.  He has been an assistant coach or a head coach at the collegiate level ever since then.  Laranaga is 75 years old and has clearly earned his retirement days; twice he took teams to the Final Four (Geroge Mason and Miami) and even when his teams lacked the talent level to be a top-shelf contender, those teams always played hard and made opponents earn any victories.

As he announced his resignation, Laranaga cited his desire to spend more time with his family meaning someone else needed to spend extra time with the team since he no longer would be able to do that.  Frankly, that is an obligatory aside in any resignation/retirement statement; here is part of his statement that caught my attention:

“The University needs a new leader of the program, one who is both adept at and embracing of the new world of intercollegiate athletics.”

Jim Laranaga is another victim of the unintended consequences of “paying college players” and “NIL cooperatives”.  He joins a growing list of college coaches – – in basketball and in football – – who simply do not want to be a part of what college sports have become.  If you want, you can say something akin to “Good riddance” to those folks who refuse to embrace “change”.  Or, you can say that the jury is still out as to whether the new incarnation of collegiate athletics is in fact better overall than it used to be.

Specifically, I hope Jim Laranaga has a long and satisfying retirement.  Bonne chance, good sir.

Moving on …  With the NFL regular season over as of last night, I was thinking back on events in the last offseason that were considered to be impactful at the time but just did not work out.  The one that spurred my thinking was the Falcons’ signing of Kirk Cousins to be their franchise QB – – only to have the team also take Michael Penix, Jr. with a Top-10 Draft pick.  The Cousins deal was for 4 years and had about $100M guaranteed and I remember thinking that the Falcons were going to try and emulate what the Packers did with Aaron Rodgers who sat for 4 years while Brett Favre finished his career in Green Bay before turning the keys to the car over to Rodgers.  I thought that made sense.

There is a thing known as “Buyer’s Remorse”.  Basically, it is a feeling of regret experienced by some folks soon after they have made an extravagant/expensive acquisition.   I was thinking this morning that the Falcons may be feeling Buyer’s Remorse about now with that large guaranteed payment hanging over the team’s salary cap status.  And then I realized that there were a couple other “trumpeted moves” from last offseason that just did not work out the way they were envisioned.

The Jets traded for Hassan Reddick giving up a third-round pick to acquire him.  Reddick wanted a new deal, and the Eagles were not inclined to give it to him; hence, the trade.  In 2023 with the Eagles, Reddick recorded 11 sacks and 13 tackles for a loss; getting him for a third-round pick seemed like a good idea.  The problem was that Reddick was very serious about wanting a new contract and he held out from the Jets’ Training Camp plus for several weeks of the regular season. In 2024, Reddick only appeared in 10 games, and he produced 1 sack and 2 tackles for a loss.  That is a significant reduction in performance and clearly could not have been part of the Jets’ thinking last year.

Lest anyone think I am picking on the Jets here, the Eagles had a need to replace Reddick on their roster; remember he gave them 11 sacks in 2023.  So, the Eagles chose to sign Bryce Huff as a free agent which had an ironic note to it:

  • Huff had been an edge rusher/DE for the Jets in 2023 and had recorded 10 sacks and 10 tackles for loss.

On the surface, it looked as if the Eagles had replaced Reddick’s onfield production at a contractual level they were happy with AND they had pocketed a third-round draft pick for their troubles.  Let me channel Lee Corso here:

“Not so fast, my friend…”

Huff appeared in 12 games for the Eagles in 2024 and needed surgery for a wrist injury in mid-season.  In those 12 games, Huff produced 2.5 sacks, 3 tackles for loss and 1 forced fumble.  Neither player turned out to be nearly as productive as envisioned at signing time.

One other move that turned out to be a bad one involved Diontae Johnson.  Back before the Draft last year, the Steelers traded Johnson to the Panthers for CB. Donte Jackson and a low-round draft pick.  The Panthers’ offense was anemic in 2023; Johnson was supposed to give them a credible deep threat at WR.  Diontae Johnson’s season in 2024 was basically a disappointing downward spiral:

  • He played 7 games for the Panthers catching 30 passes for 3 TDs.
  • In mid-season the Panthers sent him to the Ravens for a late-round pick swap.  That had to be disappointing to the Panthers’ braintrust, but the team did not fall apart after sending him off.
  • For the Ravens he played in 4 games and caught 1 pass for 6 yards.  He also refused to enter a game for the Ravens when another WR was injured.  Naturally, the Ravens just waived him.
  • The Texans took Johnson off waivers; he played 1 game in Houston and caught 2 passes for 12 yards.

I guess the Texans might be happy with their move to acquire Johnson since it cost them only a waiver claim; the Panthers and Ravens are probably not happy with their acquisition decisions.

Finally, having focused today on the concept of “Buyer’s Remorse” let me suggest that the part of our society over the last several decades where this concept should be easily recognized is the political realm.  How many politicians have we the people elected to a wide range of offices who subsequently did not perform or produce as promised?  Sadly …

But don’t get me wrong, I love sports………

 

 

Football Friday 1/3/25

Happy New Year, everyone.  I get to kick off ranting in 2025 – – so to speak – – with the first Football Friday of the year on the first Friday of the year.  As the first order of business, I will review last week’s “Betting Bundle”:

  • Spreads and Totals went 4-2-0.  I’ll take that percentage every week.
  • Money Line Parlays went 2-1; “Profit = $181.  Muy Bueno!

 

College Football Commentary:

 

The College Football Playoff needs structural repair.  The four first round games produced four blowout results that were less than entertaining.  Please do not tell me that the Notre Dame/Indiana game had only a 10-point differential and that is not a blowout.  With 2 minutes to play in the game, the score was 27-3; that game was indeed a blowout.

Then came Round 2 – – where the top seeds would enter the fray.  That is where and when the drama would reach a crescendo.  Not so.  Penn St. and Ohio St. dominated their opponents.  At least Texas/Arizona St. and Notre Dame/Georgia produced some moments of uncertainty for fans watching at home without a direct rooting interest in the outcomes.  Two “good games” out of “eight games played to date” is not compelling TV – – and it is only for the capture of TV money that this 12-team playoff exists.

The top four seeds by the Selection Committee – – albeit with some seeding rules handed to them without any escape clauses – – all took gas this week.  Boise St. did not belong in the field; it was there to avoid shutting out the “minor conferences”; the CFP will always have one such participant.  The derogatory term for this in the business world is that Boise St. was a “quota hire” to fill a vacancy that they were not fully prepared to function in prosperously.  The same label could be applied to Clemson, Indiana and SMU which I discussed last week; without those four teams, the field could have been 8 teams, and no one would have gotten a BYE Week over the Holidays.

There is a simple mathematical truth to consider here.  To have a balanced and symmetrical field for a single elimination playoff/tournament, one must have:

  • An even number of teams – – AND – –
  • That “even number” must represent a integer power of the number 2.

[Aside:  21 = 2  22 = 4  23 = 8  24 = 16  25 = 32  26 = 64 …]

The 12-team field in this year’s CFP fulfills the first condition above but not the second.  What should happen is that the CFP field should shrink to 8 teams; what is going to happen is that the field will expand to 16 teams.  The cash flow from the added games will not allow for the number of games to be televised to decrease.  However, I want you to think about something here; pretend for a moment that this year’s field was 16 and not 12.  What that would mean is that four teams that the Selection Committee evaluated to be inferior to Boise St., Clemson, Indiana and SMU would have been in the field.  Do not ask me to lead the charge for something like that to happen because I think that is moving in the wrong direction.

I also have a problem with the Selection Committee itself that probably cannot be solved.  Currently there are 13 members on that Committee

  • Six of the thirteen are Athletic Directors at Division 1-A schools
  • One of the thirteen is an Assistant Professor at a university
  • One of the thirteen is fully employed by NFL Legends.
  • Five of the thirteen are long-time college football coaches who are now fully retired.

The five football coaches could – – if they chose to do so – – spend 40 hours a week reviewing game film from the top 25 or so teams in the country and by the end of November they would have an expertise-based focus on the selection and seeding of the best teams.  I don’t know if those coaches actually do anything of the sort – – but they might choose to do so and I would totally defer to their judgment if they did.

The other 8 members of the Selection Committee have full-time jobs, many of which demand a minimum of 40 hours a week.  I suggest that those members cannot – – even if they really wanted to do so – – spend another 40 hours in a film room reviewing play on the field.  Let me put this in personal terms:

  • I watch a lot of college football on TV.
  • I watch You Tube highlights of notorious plays and highlights from special games
  • I read stat sheets and observations from folks covering lots of games.
  • None of this makes me competent to be on the Selection Committee!
  • And if that is what those other 8 members of the Committee can bring to the table, then they too are not in the right position as “Selectors”.

I know that sounds like a giant “Hot Take” that I hope to get picked up on some other website that might make it go viral; that is NOT the case.  I have been thinking along these lines for a couple of years now, but this year’s performance by the selected teams and the seeded teams gives me the opportunity to bring my thinking out into the open.

Let me be clear about one thing here.  I AM NOT saying that unless you played the game of college football, your opinions and evaluations are unworthy.  What I AM SAYING is that if  you are going to contribute meaningfully and positively to a discussion about the best twelve or sixteen football teams in the country, you need to have seen all of them play more than a few highlight plays and you need to have seen a few other teams that just might be on the fringe of being in that Top-Twelve or Top-Sixteen.  And if one has a full-time job, I do not think there are enough hours in a week for that person to do the work necessary to be a fully informed “selector”.

I realize I can be proven wrong; I submit that this year’s CFP field and CFP seedings do not come close to proving me wrong.

I also want to comment on something that has come into clear focus for me in the 8 CFP games to date:

  • There are way too many “plays under review” … AND
  • Far too many of the reviews that take two minutes to “adjudicate” are clear and obvious calls once one looks at one or two of the replays.  Maybe they could consume 20-30 seconds of delay.
  • It is almost as if – – not really but it sure seems like it – – the officials “upstairs” have a quota of reviews to suggest in order to get commercial breaks in for the networks.

Here are some comments on last week’s CFP games:

Notre Dame 23  Georgia 10:  If you like defense, this was a game for you.  Neither team gained 300 yards of Total Offense in the game; Notre Dame won the game averaging only 4.0 yards per offensive play.  The Bulldogs outgained the Irish by 50 yards and the Bulldogs were penalized by 42 fewer yards than the Irish.  Nonetheless, Notre Dame won on the strength of forcing two turnovers and returning the second half kickoff for a TD.  Last week, Notre Dame simply dominated Indiana; they did not dominate Georgia in this game but won handily based on hustle and focus.

Texas 39  Arizona St. 31 (2OT):  It looked as if Texas would run Arizona St. out of town in the first quarter and then it looked as if Texas settled down to an attitude of a cat playing with captured prey – – and it almost cost them the game.  The Sun Devils were the Rocky Balboas of the tournament; they got pounded and pounded – – but they never gave up and they came back to deliver punishing blows of their own sending the game to OT.  Like the fictional Rocky Balboa, the Sun Devils went the distance with Texas…

Ohio St. 41  Oregon 21:  Ladies and gentlemen, Ohio St. WR, Jeremiah Smith, is a freshman; he just turned 19 years old, and his stats for the day were 7 receptions for 187 yards and 2 TDs.  Oregon was undefeated coming into the game but were run out of town on a rail in this one.  With 3 minutes left in the first half, the Buckeyes led 34-0.  For the game, Ohio St. outgained Oregon 500 yards to 297 yards.

Penn St. 31  Boise St. 14:  The Nittany Lions defensive thrust for the game was to make sure Ashton Jeanty did not run wild and beat them; if the Broncos’ QB, Maddux Madsen, could produce a game capable of victory without Jeanty dominating, then so be it.  The Penn St. defensive philosophy worked quite well earlier this week.  Penn St. TE, Tyler Warren, has been on my NFL Draft watch list prior to this game but I now think he could easily be a Top Ten pick next April.

One note I read yesterday is that Alabama QB, Jalen Milroe has declared for the NFL Draft this year.  He certainly has had good coaching and has had experience playing at the top level of college football, but color me skeptical that he is ready for a prominent role at the NFL level just yet.  Now, in his favor, this is a very thin cadre of QBs coming out this year and perhaps his thinking is that he will compare favorably to the top QBs in the draft this year more readily than perhaps next year.  Even so …

Another college QB made some unusual news last week.  Dillon Gabriel is the QB for Oregon and based on this statement made to a TV station in Portland, he is not into “old school football”:

“We love the Rose Bowl.  We love warm weather.  I think we should play more games on nice grass instead of artificial stuff. The more sun the better.

“Why do we do it to ourselves? Do fans want to sit in the snow and the rain?

Let’s make arenas. Let’s make domes. More grass. Let’s do more fireworks at games. Yeah, let’s do that.”

Ignoring for just a moment the difficulties of growing natural grass in domed arenas, let me just say that it would be a great irony if Gabriel were to be drafted by a team like the Jets or the Giants or the Browns or even the Steelers (who need QBs).  In case you did not know, Dillon Gabriel is from Hawaii – – so perhaps his aversion to snow and freezing weather is forgivable.

 

The CFP Semi-Finals:

 

Both games will happen before the next weekend, so the lines and the totals here are VERY early ones that could change dramatically in the next 6 or 7 days.

(Thurs, Jan 9th)  Notre Dame – 2 vs Penn St. (46):  The injury status for Penn St. DE, Abdul Carter is very important here; he is as good an edge rusher/DE as I have seen in college football this year.  If he can play – – injury is healed – – I like the game to stay UNDER; if he cannot play or cannot play at nearly his normal level, I like Notre Dame to win and cover.

(Fri Jan 10th) Ohio St. – 6 vs Texas (52):  Here are the pertinent questions for this game:

  • Was Ohio St. super-excited to steamroller Oregon because they lost to Oregon earlier this year?  Ohio St. never lost to Texas earlier this year.
  • Did Texas take Arizona St. lightly and lose their edge once they went up by 2 scores early in the game?  If they “lose their edge” against Ohio St. it will be fatal.

I love the Texas defense, and I love the Ohio St. offense.  I have no interest in making a pick in this game thereby forcing me to root for a predetermined outcome.  I just want to watch this one intently and focused.  If you care which way I am leaning in this game, I would take Ohio St. on the Money Line.

 

NFL Commentary:

 

            I think it is pretty clear that the NFL’s Offensive Rookie of the Year will be Jayden Daniels and having seen him in about 12 of his 16 games so far, he would be my choice for that honor.  Having said that, let me present some stats for another offensive rookie who seems to have done his business well outside the focus of the spotlight.  Ladies and gentlemen, I give you Brock Bowers of the Las Vegas Raiders – – a team that has been irrelevant to the NFL in 2024 save for their role as an “opposing team” to other squads in the league.

Last year, when talking about the Heisman Trophy and the NFL Draft, I said that the Trophy would go to a QB and that I thought Jayden Daniels deserved that award.  I also said that I thought the “best football player” I waw for the year was Brock Bowers.  So, fast forward to today and let’s take a look at Bowers‘ stats as a rookie TE for the Raiders:

  • In 16 games, Bowers had been targeted 144 times and caught 108 passes.  That is a 75% success rate.
  • Bowers has 1144 yards receiving or 10.6 yards per reception.
  • Bowers has 4 TDs and 58 receptions resulting in a first down.
  • Oh, by the way, he is also a very competent blocker as a tight end …

Seen in isolation, you can consider these stats overly optimistic or not much more than hum-drum; so let me give you some comparisons:

  • Amon-Ra St. Brown is a top-shelf WR.  He has 109 receptions and 1186 yards receiving; that is one more catch and 42 more yards than Bowers who is a TE.
  • CeeDee Lamb is a top-shelf WR.  He has 101 catches and 1194 yards receiving; that is 7 fewer catches and 50 more yards than Bowers who is a TE.
  • Garrett Wilson is a top-shelf WR.  He has 97 catches and 1053 yards receiving which is11 fewer receptions and 91 fewer yards than Bowers who is a TE.

So, where are Bowers’ stats compared to other tight ends?

  • Travis Kelce – – you’ve heard of him – – has 97 receptions for 823 yards; that is 11 fewer catches for 321 fewer yards.
  • George Kittle – – you’ve heard of him – – has 76 receptions for 1079 yards; that is 32 fewer catches for 65 fewer yards.

I think you get the idea here.  Brock Bowers is a damned good football player and can make up for the fact that the people throwing the ball in his direction have been Gardner Minshew, Aiden O’Connell and Desmond Ridder.  Let me just say that none of those three passers will ever be confused with Patrick Mahomes at any point in the present tense or the future tense.

Brock Bowers is an outstanding football player; recognize it.  He has already broken Mike Ditka’s record for receiving yards by a rookie tight end and if he snags 9 balls in his final game this week, he will eclipse Zach Ertz’ record for most catches by a tight end in a season.

Soon, the NFL Coach of the Year will be identified.  There are only 32 possible candidates for the award and so I will take the liberty to identify – – alphabetically – – my Top-25% of the candidates for this season.  You can add or subtract from this list as you please:

  1. Dan Campbell:  His team is 14-2; you may think he is raving yahoo, but he has his team winning games with significant folks on IR.
  2. Jim Harbaugh:  The Chargers have been an underachieving bunch of stuff for years now; Harbaugh has the Chargers at 10-6 with a guaranteed playoff slot in his first year there.
  3. Sean McDermott:  The Bills are 13-3 so far and continue to dominate the AFC East.
  4. Sean McVay:  The Rams are 10-6; they have clinched the NFC West title despite starting the season at 1-4 including a loss to the Bears and a blowout loss to the Cards.
  5. Kevin O’Connell:  His team is 14-2; it may seem as if they are doing it with smoke and mirrors, but it has been sustained for an awfully long time now.
  6. Sean Payton:  Coming off a disastrous season last year and with a rookie QB, the Broncos are 9-7 and still have a realistic shot to make the playoffs this year.
  7. Dan Quinn:  His Commanders are relevant in January which is a major vector heading deviation from recent years.
  8. Andy Reid:  If you need something tangible to accept this nomination, consider the record is 15-1 which is better than anyone else’s.

Tons of attention has been paid to Saquon Barkley and the single-season rushing record; the decision is that the Eagles will not play Barkley against the Giants this week so that record will stand.  However, there is another record by an NFL “All-Timer” that could be matched this week, and it has gotten only passing mention by comparison:

  • Mike Evans needs 85 yards receiving this week to reach 1,000 yards.  If he does so, that will be the 10th consecutive season with that receiving total in his first 10 seasons in the NFL.  The only other player to do that is Jerry Rice.

Here are comments on some of the games from last weekend.

Lions 40  Niners 28:  I think the most important thing about this game was the Brock Purdy threw for 377 yards and 3 TDs in the game and kept it sufficiently interesting until the middle of the second half.  The Niners season has imploded on them; the Lions will go to the playoffs hoping their defense does not implode any further.

Giants 45  Colts 33:  The Giants had lost 10 games in a row when they kicked off here and then Drew Lock did his John Unitas imitation.  Lock was 17 of 23 for 309 yards with 4 TDs and zero INTs.  Oh yeah, he also ran for a TD.  This offensive explosion dropped the Giants draft order from overall #1 to overall #4.  If the Colts are not feeling humiliated by this performance, they should.

Eagles 41  Cowboys 7:  No Jalen Hurts?  No problem.  No Kenny Pickett?  No problem.  Welcome Tanner McKee, a late round pick from Stanford who entered the game in the second half and went 3 of 4 for 54 yards and 2 TDs.  The score was tied 7-7 at the end of the first quarter; after that the outcome was not seriously in doubt.

Raiders 25  Saints 10:  Another example of a bad team winning a game and hurting their draft position next April.  The game was meaningless to 2024 standings and action, so the only way to look at it is through the perspective of next year’s draft.

Jags 20  Titans 13:  I guess one of these bottom-feeders had to win this one …

Vikes 27  Packers 25:  This game was not quite as close as the score might lead you to believe; the Vikes led 27-10 at the start of the 4th quarter.  Sam Darnold was the star of the game throwing for 377 yards and 3 TDs for the night.

Bengals 30  Broncos 24 (OT):  The Bengals kept their slim playoff hopes alive with this win.  Joe Burrow threw 3 TD passes and amassed 411 yards passing in the game; Tee Higgins had 11 catches for 131 yards and hauled in all 3 of Burrow’s TD passes.

 

Games This Week:

 

There are some outrageously surprising lines this week reflecting which teams will be playing their starters and which teams have something immediate to motivate top performance in this last week of the NFL regular season.  The field for the NFC playoffs is pretty much set; three things remain in doubt:

  • The Packers and Commanders will be the #6 and #7 seeds, but that order will depend on game results this weekend.
  • Either the Lions or the Vikes will be the #1 seed and get the playoff BYE Week based on the winner this week; the loser will be the #5 seed.
  • Either the Bucs or the Falcons will win the NFC South, and that division winner will be in the playoffs and the other team will be out.

Over in the AFC:

  • The Bengals, Dolphins and Broncos can all make the final playoff slot in the Conference depending on what happens this week.  The Broncos control their position; if they win, they’re in.

Because of all the uncertainty this week, I am not going to offer up a “Betting Bundle” because the NFL slate is closer to a week of Exhibition Games than anything else and the college lines are too early to be reliable.  In cases where I have a “leaning” I’ll indicate it.

(Sat 4:30PM ET) Browns at Ravens – 20 (41):  The spread for this game opened at 17.5 points and has expanded from that lofty level.  The Ravens clinch the division with a victory here and the Browns are a sorry sack of s*it at this point in the season.  Nevertheless, anyone who wagers on any NFL game with a 20-point spread is clearly addicted and needs an intervention.  The Browns’ offense has gone AWOL over the last month; consider:

  • Steelers 27 Browns 14 (This is the “good game” on this list!)
  • Chiefs 21 Browns 7
  • Bengals 24 Browns 6
  • Dolphins 20 Browns 3

Meanwhile, the Ravens average 30 points per game.  This game is on national TV; I wonder if it can hold its initial audience for very long.

(Sat 8:00 PM ET) Bengals – 2 at Steelers (48):  If the Browns were to win outright, the Steelers would be division champs with a win.  The Bengals can still snuggle their way into the final playoff slot but the only way to do that is for them to win here.  Hence the spread for the game and the unusually high Total Line for a Steelers’ game.  If you absolutely must have some action on games this weekend, consider taking the Bengals to win and cover.  If you absolutely must have some action on games this weekend, consider your situation in the much larger context of your life.

Saints at Bucs – 14 (44):  The Bucs are in the same situation as the Ravens; if they win, they’re in.  The Bucs have won 5 of their last 6 games to put themselves in that position; the Saints are 5-11 and have looked awful in their last two losses.  With Mike Evans needing 85 yards to tie an NFL record (see above), my guess is that he is targeted early and often in this game.

Bills – 2.5 at Pats (38):  The spread here opened at 5.5 points; then came reports that the Bills would start Josh Allen to keep a streak alive, but that Allen would be subbed out of the game; naturally, the line adjusted to that news.  Despite their 3-11-0 record, the Pats played the Bills very close just two weeks ago in Buffalo; was that an omen or just a happenstance?

Bears at Packers – 10 (41):  The Packers and the Commanders are both in the playoffs; the Packers are in the 7th slot but could move up to the 6th slot with a win here and a Commanders’ loss to the Cowboys.  The Bears are a stone cold mess; they have lost 10 games in a row ever since losing to the Commanders on a Hail Mary pass in October.  So, the Packers have some motivation unless they check the scoreboard and see the Commanders up big on the Cowboys.

Dolphins – 1.5 at Jets (39):  Even if this were not Week 18, there is no way I would bet this game.  The Dolphins need several things to fall their way to get into the playoffs; the Jets have been eliminated from that possibility for about a month.  Tua will not play for the Dolphins this week and the game is in NYC where the warm-weather Dolphins have not shown well in late season games in the past.  So, my choice here would be to take the dog-assed Jets [Hat Tip to Dan Jenkins] or a Dolphins team without their starting QB in a venue not suited to their game.  No thanks; I’ll pass.

Chiefs at Broncos – 10.5 (40):  If the Broncos win, they are in the playoffs and both the Bengals and the Dolphins are out.  The Chiefs will get next week off no matter what happens here, and they have already announced that they will play Carson Wentz in place of Patrick Mahomes and sit other starters.  I think that provides an interesting angle to the game.  Wentz has had his career arc aimed downward for about 5 years now, but he showed some talent in his first couple of years in the league.  So, how might he produce in an “Andy Reid system” with a full season of study as a backup?  That angle is more interesting to me than the game outcome.

Chargers – 4.5 at Raiders (41.5):  The good news here is that the Raiders have a two-game winning streak; the bad news is that those two wins have dropped the Raiders out of the Top-5 for the Draft next April.  Both coaches are reputed to be great motivators; both coaches will need that capability to get this game played at full speed; it really doesn’t mean much of anything.

Jags at Colts – 5 (44):  With apologies to Elizabeth Barret Browning …  How meaningless is this game?  Let me count the ways:

  • It is inconsequential, insignificant, pointless, unimportant, useless and worthless.
  • That pretty much sums things up.

The Colts simply wet the bed last week giving up 45 points to the Giants; the Jags are just miserable.

Panthers at Falcons – 9 (48):  The Falcons can win the NFC South with a win here and a loss by the Bucs.  The Falcons have shown well in the last couple of weeks but that may not be enough to get in the playoffs because the Bucs should prevail over the Saints this week.  The Panthers have looked better late this season than they did at the start – – but there is still plenty of room for improvement.

Commanders – 6 at Cowboys (44.5):  The Commanders are in the playoffs and the Cowboys are not; the Commanders will keep their #6 seed in the playoffs with a win.  The Cowboys won the first meeting between these two teams back in late November giving the Commanders another smidgen of motivation to play well here.

Seahawks – 6.5 at Rams (39):  The spread here opened at Rams – 2.5 and has swung by 9 points toward the Seahawks.  It appears that the Rams will be resting starters and announced Jimmy Garoppolo will play QB in the game.  The Seahawks looked disinterested and discombobulated last week even though they beat the Bears 6-3.

Niners at Cards – 5 (43):  Here is the motivation factor for this game:

  • If the Niners win, they will not finish dead last in the NFC West.

What more can you ask for?

Texans at Titans – 1 (37):  The Texans are in the playoffs as division champs and the Titans are 3-13-0 and have lost their last 5 games in a row.  Nevertheless, the Titans are favored here giving you an idea how the oddsmakers view the import of this game…

Giants at Eagles – 3 (37.5):  The Giants held the top pick in the Draft for next April – – until they beat the Colts last week.  If they win here, I believe they could drop all the way to #8 in the upcoming Draft which would put an exclamation point on a miserable season for the club which included a 10-game losing streak.  The fact that the Eagles will rest starters and are still favored in the game says a lot about the way the oddsmakers view the Giant’s roster.

(Sun Nite) Vikes at Lions – 2.5 (54.5):  The Total Line for this game opened at 51.5 points and has been climbing slowly but steadily all week.  This is clearly the Game of the Week; both teams show up with records of 14-2-0; the winner gets the #1 seed in the NFC playoffs and the loser gets the #5 seed meaning the loser has to play a road game in Round 1 of the playoffs.  There is plenty at stake here.  Why is the Total Line high – – and getting higher?

  • The Lions give up 250.4 yards per game passing; only the Jags are worse.
  • The Vikes give up 243.6 yards per game which ranks them 28th in the league.
  • The Lions have given up 18 TD passes, and the Vikes have given up 23 TD passes.

So, which passing offense is going to have the better day?  The one led by Jared Goff who has been in games of this magnitude before or the one led by Sam Darnold whose career rose from the ashes this year when JJ McCarthy was injured in Training Camp?  If I were going to pick this game, I would play it to go OVER the Total Line.

There is no “Betting Bundle” to review this week, but let me throw out – – just for giggles – – a four-team Money Line Parlay:

  • Bengals @ minus-130
  • Bucs @ minus-820
  • Falcons @ minus-400
  • Commanders @ minus- 200     $100 wager to win $272

Finally, let me close with this from Vince Lombardi:

“Once you learn to quit, it becomes a habit.”

But don’t get me wrong, I love sports………

 

 

Bad Ads 2024

Advertisements on TV feed my habit.  I spend lots of time watching sports on TV and without ads in that programming, there would be no sports on TV.  So, you would think that my appreciation of advertising support would make me see ads as “good things” – – except some of them are just plain awful.  So, in the spirit of candor, here are some of the worst ones from 2024.

Some industries appear on these lists annually; for some reason the actors in these industries seem to be engaged in a race to the bottom when it comes to positive quality ads.  I have no explanation for that; it is merely an observation.  One such industry is the insurance industry.

  • Progressive:  Not only do they continue to bombard us with new concocted situations involving Flo and her band of blissful idiots, they are now trying to make one of those blissful idiots into another central character.  The latest “twist” is that Jamie has forsaken his high school football team because his passion is helping people to save money on their insurance.  Now, if that storyline gets you to run out and snatch a policy from Progressive, you may be as dumb as the people who green-lighted that ad.
  • Geico:  I will give them a positive nod for bringing back “The Caveman”; a couple of those ad spots are actually entertaining.  However, Geico also has the ads for “Geico Training Camp” where people are learning to interact with customers over the phone by catching cell phones launched from a “pitching machine”.  Those ads ring the stupidity bell quite loudly.  And the guy whose finger is “cramping up” for overdoing scrolling and tapping on a cell phone is most annoying.
  • Liberty Mutual:  LIMU the Emu and Doug simply cannot go away quickly enough.  For a fleeting moment, they hinted at such an outcome when they did a spot where Doug was supposed to be on the receiving end of a falling piano.  No such luck; he still walks among us.  But wait, there’s more …  Now we get to deal with the guy who saved money on his insurance from Liberty Mutual, so he had a wax figure of himself created – – except it melts in the sunlight or it takes a frisbee to frontal lobe.  That sure makes me want to get a price quote from Liberty Mutual.

Beer brewers also portray themselves in meaningless ways.

  • Modelo:  When you drink Modelo, you do it because you are a “fighter” and Modelo bears the mark of a “fighter”.  The term “fighter” is used in a very broad sense here because one category of identified “fighters” are fans in a sports bar who never miss a play.  Another category contains women who “turn metal into murals” on pimped-out cars.  Fight on …
  • Bud Light:  This product is a perennial participant in these rants.  This year, they had some ads featuring the “Bud Light Genie” who simply tipped a bottle of Bud Light at someone making a wish so that the wish came true.  Naturally, at the end of the ad, they implore everyone to “Drink Responsibly”.  I wonder why they never think about “Advertising Responsibly” and putting something on the air that might make even a modicum of sense.

Retailers lit up the TV screens with some annoying stuff this year:

  • Old Navy:  Here is another reliable entry on these sorts of lists.  Every year the company puts an over-the-top choreographed ad for its low-class clothing on the airwaves.  I guess it must work because they keep doing it even if it is demonstrably silly.
  • Walmart:  Their ads for Black Friday were not nearly as bad as they could have been but in the week before Christmas, Walmart flooded the airwaves with rapper, Busta Rhymes, reminding everyone over and over and over that Walmart would be delivering last minute things to customers on Christmas Eve.  That ad crossed over into the realm of annoying about the third time I saw it; regarding the thirty or forty other times it was on the air…
  • Target:  Their flagship Christmas ad took the viewer on a stroll through a Target store where you would encounter a polar bear, an igloo and roaming reindeer.  Somehow, someone at Target and at their ad agency concluded that imagery of that type would get me to visit their stores.  I think not…

Here are two ads from auto manufacturers:

  • Honda:  They show Honda CR-V models driving on a multi-colored highway with bright Christmas bulbs along the sides of the “highway”.  In the fine print, it says that the car on your screen has a “premium color”.  Folks, the color of the vehicle in question is – – white.  White is a premium color.  Thank you, Honda.
  • Jaguar:  An ad for its SUV – – Jaguar F-Pace – – features a DJ spinning some tunes while the visuals include disjointed scenes of the vehicle going off road and/or through a tunnel.  I defy you to identify a consistent thread of logic through all of that.  I also defy you to convince me that I should spend about $75K on an SUV based on that disjointed message.

[Aside:  Jaguar making an SUV makes about as much sense as Jeep making a sports car, no?]

Pharmaceutical companies have entered the ad space of sports programming in the last year or so.  Two drugs advertised repeatedly have the same theme:

  • Jardiance:  Users here break into song and dance creating a musical flash mob as the largely overweight singers/dancers tell us that they are lowering their A1C and that the little pill has a big story to tell.
  • Wegovy:  A guy tells us he lost 35 pounds and starts walking down a street.  He is joined by others who have lost weight, protected themselves from cardiac events and who are keeping the weight off as they create a traffic stopping flash mob on a suburban street.

Those two drugs are not made by the same drug company so that does not explain the similarity of the ads.  So, maybe I am too stupid to see how either drug that affects metabolism in a positive way relates to participation in a flash mob.  I’ll hang up and listen for the answer …

Fan Duel did several ads featuring Kevin Hart and LeBron James.  Kevin Hart is a comedian and is reputed to be funny.  Where all that humor went in producing those ads is a mystery for the ages.  There are few things more cringeworthy than someone trying to be funny and failing to be funny.  These Fan Duel ads hit that atonal note.

I will admit that creating an ad that makes ColoGard an attractive product is nigh onto impossible.  ColoGard is essentially a stool sample you collect at home (presumably) and send via UPS for analysis; ColoGard screens for colon cancer.  Having acknowledged the difficulty facing the ad producers here, let me say that putting out an ad where a bunch of middle-aged folks tout the wonders of ColoGard by singing a poop-themed version of My Way is not even close to headed in the right direction.

Buffalo Wild Wings created a mascot about 18 months ago; naturally, it is a talking buffalo – – with wings.  Leaving aside the absurdity of that creation, this creature is annoying, interruptive and speaks in buffoonery – – just the qualities one tries to imbue to a mascot as the mascot is being created.  The only saving grace here is that this loud and annoying mascot is actually a decent representation of a Buffalo Wild Wings sports bar on game day.  There are tons of annoying incursions on your attempt to just watch a game and have an adult beverage at the same time.  Only in real life, the incursions are by other humans and not an avian bison.

[Aside:  When it comes time to move on from this annoying mascot, may I suggest that the final “episode” feature “Buffalo Bill Cody” entering the sports bar with rifle in hand so that he can dispatch this beast and extend his record for killing more buffaloes than anyone else in history.  I know; that still needs work …]

Some ads get carried away in the claims they make.  Cascade is a dishwasher detergent brand and in one of its ads it claims that Cascade gets “up to 100%” of stuff off dishes in one wash cycle.  Calm down ad-boy; “up to 100%” of food on plates is accomplished by every brand of detergent – – and by using just water by itself.  No product gets more than 100% of the dirt off the dishes – – including Cascade.

I have saved two ads for AT&T for the end here; they are not directly related except both deal with cell phones as the central figure in the ad:

  • AT&T Number One:  A woman’s elderly voice runs through the ad; she is talking to either her children or her grandchildren offering advice and/or encouragement.  At the end, she says in a gravely voice, “I would love to keep in touch more.”  Good for you Granny – – and you know what, this is something you control.  Phone calls go in two directions; so, if you pick up your phone more often and dial out to your friends, relatives and family, you will indeed … keep in touch more.  As they say in the Nike ads, “Just do it!”
  • AT&T Number Two:  A man and a woman are sitting up in bed waxing rhapsodically about their new iPhone from AT&T.  The man says he want to hold it; the woman says she wants this feeling again and again.  A little light double entendre there seems harmless – – except.  Already outside the bedroom door are a teenage boy and girl – – presumably the offspring of the couple in the bedroom – – and they are listening in on their parents.  From the looks on their faces, they assume their parents are “having relations”.  The last action has the woman telling the man, “We should do this more often,” whereupon the two kids cringe and walk away from the bedroom door.  Somehow, someone somewhere thinks that vignette is going to convince me to run off to an AT&T store so that I can use AT&T as my wireless carrier.

Memo to Someone, somewhere:  Not Happening!

            That’s enough for this year; there will certainly be a fresh set of examples for Bad Ads next December allowing for another of these end-of-year rants.  One reason I am confident there will be further grist for this mill is this quote from ad executive, Leo Burnett:

“I am one who believes that one of the greatest dangers of advertising is not that of misleading people, but that of boring them to death.”

Also, these words from Henry Ford:

“Stopping advertising to save money is like stopping your watch to save time.”

But don’t get me wrong, I love sports………

 

 

Rest In Peace, Greg Gumbel And Bill Bergey

There were two sports-world related deaths last week – – Greg Gumbel and Bill Bergey.  Greg Gumbel was a great broadcaster; he was one of the rare individuals who excelled at doing play-by-play and at being a studio host.  Not many people even try to exist in those two worlds; Greg Gumbel did and he was excellent at both.

Bill Bergey was a great linebacker for the Bengals and the Eagles in the 1960s and 1970s.  He did not get the same level of recognition as some other linebackers of his time because the Eagles’ teams he played for were abysmal.  Nonetheless, Bill Bergey was a force majeure.

Rest in peace, Greg Gumbel and Bill Bergey.

Since I mentioned Bill Bergey, he is not in the Pro Football Hall of Fame, but I think that he is one of those players who would have gotten into the Hall had he been on more successful teams.  The list of 15 finalists for enshrinement this year has just been released, and I will use this opportunity to present the list and then to give you my selections.

  • Eric Allen
  • Jared Allen
  • Jahri Evans
  • Antonio Gates
  • Tory Holt
  • Luke Kuechly
  • Eli Manning
  • Steve Smith, Sr.
  • Terrell Suggs
  • Fred Taylor
  • Adam Vinatieri
  • Reggie Wayne
  • Darren Woodsen
  • Marshall Yanda

There is a maximum of 5 members to a new class for the Hall of Fame and a successful aspirant needs to get 80% of the votes cast.  Stipulating that every name on that list is worthy of placement on the list, here would be my five votes – – if I had a vote in the first place:

  1. Eric Allen – – A really good player on some really mediocre teams
  2. Antonio Gates – – I am surprised that he is not already in the Hall of Fame
  3. Tory Holt – – An integral part of the “Greatest Show on Turf”
  4. Terrell Suggs – – Simply a great edge rusher
  5. Marshall Yanda – – Great in pass protection and a bulldozer on run plays

Moving on …  When Travis Hunter won the Heisman Trophy earlier this month, he created a new “category” of trophy winners because it is difficult to say whether he is a great WR who also plays CB or vice versa.  Since he would obviously be the only player in that new category, I wondered what the distribution among other positions was for Heisman winners.  If I have counted correctly:

  • 44 Running Backs – – collapsing fullbacks and halfbacks
  • 39 Quarterbacks
  • 4 Wide Receivers
  • 2 Tight Ends
  • 1 Cornerback

Defense may win championships, but offense gets a dominant share of public recognition.

Finally, I’ll close here with these words from coach John Heisman to give you an idea of his focus on football fundamentals”

“Gentlemen, it is better to have died as a small boy than to fumble this football.”

But don’t get me wrong, I love sports………

 

 

Football Friday 12/27/24

One Holiday down – – one Holiday to go.  In between, there comes a Friday and that suggests a Football Friday.  Let’s start with a review of last week’s “Betting Bundle”:

  • Bets on spreads and totals:  3 wins, 3 losses, 1 push.  Meh!
  • Money Line Parlays:  1 win, 2 losses.  “Net Loss” = $46  Not good.

 

College Football Commentary

 

            I am not going to go through the four first round games of the CFP from last weekend because I want to focus on the CFP itself today.  There is going to be negativity in some of the commentary; so, I want to be sure to begin by saying this is NOT going to be a nostalgia piece shining glory on “the way it used to be”.  I have no fondness at all for the days when a “college football national champion” was determined by polls where many of the voters never saw the top teams play.

The BCS used computer rankings and stat analysis to pair two teams in a single championship game.  That was better than polling; it was controversial to say the least and at least one team every year got to play the “we were snubbed” card.   So, the answer was to create the CFP with four teams in a simple bracket.  Better still – – but maybe not perfect.

Fortunately – – or unfortunately depending on how you look at it – – the three-game CFP drew sizeable TV audiences and sizeable TV audiences can be monetized pretty easily.  Expansion was “the answer” because “expansion” also meant “cash flow”.  That was not the explanation given when expansion was being formulated; rather, the narrative was that an expanded CFP would assure that all worthy aspirants to the national championship would get the chance to show their stuff on the field.  Oh, and as a sidelight, fans would get more football entertainment.  What could possibly go wrong?

Some folks who comment on sports wondered why the expansion had to go from 4 teams to 12 teams because in all the years that I have followed college football, there has never been a time when 12 teams could make a legitimate case for themselves as national champion.  Usually, four teams battling it out on the field would be sufficient; maybe occasionally a fifth or sixth team could “enter the chat”, but never 12 teams.  I said that the potential for first-round blowouts was a real potential downside; so, I was part of that “12-team skepticism” and the results from Round One of the first 12-team CFP have not alleviated that skepticism.

The “closest game” in the first round was Notre Dame/Indiana where the Irish won by 10 points.  But that is terribly misleading because with 2 minutes left in the game, the score was Notre Dame 27 and Indiana 3.  That “closest game” was a blowout that was never in doubt in the second half.  The first-round games fell far short of “entertaining”.

I still believe that having a field of 12 contenders for the national championship is too large but when you add to that bloated field restrictions as to who “must be invited” and how the seedings must be done, you wind up in a situation where the Selection Committee is painted into a corner.  And it certainly seems as if this year’s Selection Committee failed to account for a very important aspect of the selection process:

  • Strength Of Schedule

We saw last year what can happen when an undefeated team from Conference-USA (Liberty) was matched with Oregon in a New Year’s Day Bowl Game.  The final score was 45-6; the only positive thing you might say about the game was that Liberty actually led 6-3 at the end of the first quarter.  The “problem” here is that while Liberty was 13-0 entering the game, they had not played anyone close to the caliber of Oregon and several of Oregon’s opponents.  There is more to assessing a team’s strength than their win-loss record; you must consider to whom the team lost and over whom the team was victorious.

In 2024, the Selection Committee – – with all the constraints handed to it – – made it worse in my opinion.  Please do not take the following as put downs for teams in this year’s CFP; what I intend is to suggest that strength of schedule should have been given more weight in selecting the field.

Let me start with Indiana and let me say up front that the Hoosiers can only play the teams on their schedule; they have no flexibility.  Having said that please look at their 11-1 record as they arrive at the CFP:

  • Out of Conference Games:  Florida International, Western Illinois, Charlotte.  FIU won 4 games playing a C-USA schedule, Western Illinois is Division 1-AA and Charlotte won 5 games playing an American Conference schedule.
  • Big-10 Games:  Indiana did NOT play Oregon, Penn St., Illinois or Iowa – – four of the six best records in the conference.  When they did play Ohio St., Indiana lost by 23 points.
  • Indiana’s record in front of the Committee was 11-1 and it was built on a cupcake schedule.

Next consider SMU.  They presented a record of 11-2 to the Selection Committee and one of the losses was in the ACC Championship Game.  Sounds good until you look at the opponents.  From my perspective, SMU’s two “signature wins” were over Louisville by 7 points and Duke by 1 point.  Now, if those are “signature wins” let me assert that the “signature” was not nearly as bold and outstanding as was John Hancock’s on the Declaration of Independence.  Once again it was a laudable record compiled at the expense of mediocre opponents.

I am not trying to pick on the ACC today, but the other team from that conference – – Clemson – – was the Conference Champion and it was overmatched in Round One of the CFP.  The Committee had no choice but to include that conference champion even with 3 losses on its record.  The fact is that this was a “down year” for football in the ACC; Round One of the CFP this year convinced me that none of the ACC teams should have been included.

I will get back to the teams invited to participate in a moment but let me take on another issue with the CFP as presented this year.  Playing the first-round games on the home fields of the higher seeded teams is piling on.  The Committee in its wisdom has declared the four teams that are “superior” to their first-round opponents via the seeding process.  So, now you give those teams the added advantage of a home game?

Some commentators think that one more expansion of the CFP will resolve the issues because if you expand the field to 16 teams, you need not give out any BYE Weeks thereby making the seedings less constrained.  To that suggestion, I say, “Buncombe”.  [Hat Tip to H. L. Mencken there.]

  • There are already too many teams in the CFP.
  • Why would this year’s CFP be better with four more teams all of whom the Selection Committee deems to be inferior to Indiana, SMU and/or Clemson?

I know that the CFP will eventually go to 16 games simply because of the TV dollars that will be made available.  When that happens, the semi-finals and the final game will probably be entertaining TV fare and once in a while there will be a significant showing by a Cinderella Team in the early rounds, but I suspect that many games will be like the first-round games this year – – blowouts.

Moving on …  I was channel surfing and ran across the Myrtle Beach Bowl between UTSA and Coastal Carolina.  I did not stay long because the score was 21-0 and I have no particular attraction to either team.  However, I was surprised at how full the stadium was for what must be considered a “Minor” Bowl Game.  Wikipedia was helpful here.

  • The venue for the game was Brooks Stadium with a capacity of 21,000.
  • The attendance for this year’s bowl game was 8,164.
  • Seeing a minor bowl game with 40% of the stadium filled was surprising.

 

Interesting Bowl Games This Week:

 

(Fri Afternoon) Ga Tech – 2.5 vs Vandy (51.5):  Two teams that surprised pundits this year.  Tech beat Miami and lost to Georgia by 2 points in overtime; Vandy beat Alabama, Kentucky and Auburn while losing to Texas by a field goal.

(Fri Nite Late)  Texas A&M – 4 vs USC (52):  Middle of the pack in the SEC versus middle of the pack in the Big-10.

(Sat Morning)  UConn vs UNC – 2 (53):  If this were a college basketball game, it would be “Must-See TV”.

(Sat Afternoon)  Iowa St. vs Miami – 4 (55.5):  Both teams ended the regular season on low notes.  One of them will go out on an even lower note …

(Sat Nite)  BYU vs Colorado – 4 (54.5):  Two teams from the Big-12 both of whom posted 7-2 records in conference but never faced each other.

(Tues Noon) Alabama – 12 vs Michigan (45):  In recent times, this pairing could well have been for the national championship itself.

(Tues Afternoon) South Carolina – 10 vs Illinois (47.5):  A good SEC team against a good Big-10 team.

 

CFP Games Next Week

 

(Tues Nite)  Penn St. – 11.5 vs Boise St. (51.5):  Boise St. will want to run the ball with Ashton Jeanty; Penn St. ranks #7 in the nation in rushing defense allowing 100.4 yards per game and 3.1 yards per carry.  Before you jump on the Nittany Lions train because of that defense, consider that when Jeanty went up against Oregon’s defense he ran for 192 yards and 3 TDs.  I think that line is fat, so I’ll take Boise St plus the points; put it in the “Betting Bundle”.

(Wed Afternoon)  Texas – 13.5 vs Arizona St. (51.5):  Defense matters, and Texas’ defense ranks #3 in the nation in Total Defense yielding only 261.1 yards per game.  The Arizona St. defense allows 336.9 yards per game.  Arizona St. RB, Cam Skattebo is the second-best RB I’ve seen this year, and he will test that Texas defensive line in this game.  I don’t have a good feel for this game, but I am hoping for more competitive games in this round of the CFP; so, I’ll take Arizona St. plus the points here and hope for a close game; put that in the “Betting Bundle”.

(Wed Afternoon Late)  Ohio St. – 2.5 vs Oregon (54.5):  Traditionalists will see this with a measure of nostalgia because this is the Rose Bowl, and it pits a Big-10 team against a team that used to be in the PAC-8 – – or PAC-10 or PAC-12 depending on your age.  This is also a rematch; these teams met in October in Oregon where the Ducks won by a single point.  Ohio St. had more than 450 yards on offense in that game as did Oregon.  This is the CFP Game of the Week.  I see this game as a high scoring affair; so, I’ll take the game to go OVER; put that in the “Betting Bundle”.

(Wed Nite)  Notre Dame vs Georgia – 2.5 (44):  It appears that Gunner Stockton will make his first career start at QB for Georgia in this game.  He has played well in “relief roles” but the big unknown is his readiness for “prime time”.  Notre Dame is a running team (222 yards per game); Georgia’s run defense is only ranked #36 in the country giving up 128 yards per game.  How Georgia defends the run is the key to this one.  [Aside:  How in Hell did Notre Dame lose at home to Northern Illinois this year?]  This looks to me to be a coin flip game.  There is a standard protocol here in Curmudgeon Central for coin flip games and that protocol says to take the game to go OVER; put that in the “Betting Bundle”.

 

NFL Commentary

 

Now that we know that the Chiefs will have the BYE Week in the playoffs – – and home field advantage throughout those playoffs – – the value of that BYE Week comes into focus.  The Chiefs have the option to sit Patrick Mahomes let his ankle “heal” along with other players who are “nicked”.  The game next weekend against the Broncos has no bearing on playoffs for the Chiefs and that means the next meaningful game for the Chiefs will be on the weekend of January 18 or 19.  That is more than 3 weeks of “healing time” for players with minor injuries and that is significant.

I want to say something about the Commanders/Eagles game last weekend.  That was the most poorly officiated NFL game that I have seen this year.  The officials were not biased; they missed calls and made ticky-tack calls for and against both teams from start to finish.  To give an example of what I mean, on the play that scored the winning TD for the Commanders with about 10 seconds left in the game, the right tackle for the Commanders was obviously in motion before the snap.  Even the broadcasters looking at the replay said the officials missed the call; I called for a flag in my living room before the QB released the ball.  And that was not nearly the worst call of the day.  Santa needs to have left lumps of coal in the stockings for those officials.

Often in these rants I discuss coaches on hot seats in danger of losing their jobs.  Today I want to focus on three men who – – I think – – deserve to get one of the vacant jobs come January 2025.

  • Ben Johnson:  He is currently the Offensive Coordinator for the Lions and has held that position for three seasons.  He was a coveted candidate in last year’s head coaching sweepstakes but took his name out of the running choosing to return to the Lions this year.  So far, the Lions lead the NFL in scoring (493 points) and are tied with the Vikes for most offensive plays gaining 20+ yards and most offensive plays gaining 40+ yards.  Johnson is only 38 years old, and he majored in math and computer science as an undergrad; he is young, and he is smart.
  • Mike Vrabel:  He was the head coach of the Titans from 2018 until he was surprisingly fired from that job last year.  He had a winning record in Tennessee in 4 of his 6 seasons there and he made the playoffs 3 times.  In the 2021 season, he was named Coach of the Year in the NFL.  He has spent this year as a consultant to the Cleveland Browns; so, if he wants another head coaching position, he can say in his interviews that he is “rested and ready”.

I suspect that anyone reading those two names above is thinking, “Nothing newsworthy about those nominees; everyone knows they will get plenty of interest”.  Well, my third head coaching candidate might surprise some:

  • Brian Flores:  He is currently the Defensive Coordinator for the Vikes and in his two years at that job, he has significantly revitalized that unit.  So far in 2024, the Vikes have given up the fewest points in the NFC and are second in the NFL in scoring defense.  Moreover, he has head coaching experience with the Dolphins for 3 seasons where he took over a miserable team and managed to squeeze out two winning seasons in his three years there.  And therein lies the problem.  As a result of that firing, Flores filed a class-action lawsuit against the NFL and several teams specifically; that case is almost 3 years old now and it can easily get in the way during any interview Flores may get in this offseason.  If a team owner or GM can get beyond the allegations in that lawsuit, they should find a highly qualified candidate for their vacancy.

Now for some comments on some of last week’s games

Packers 34  Saints 0:  That is the first shutout of the year in the NFL, and it was never seriously in danger of falling since the Saints only crossed the 50 yardline twice in the game.

Bengals 24  Browns 6:  The Bengals have a dim light at the end of the tunnel that leads to the playoffs, but it remains illuminated with this win.  The Bengals’ defense has been porous all season long until last weekend; so, the question here is:

  • Did the Bengals finally “figure it out” – – or – –
  • Was the opposing QB, Dorian Thompson-Robinson, what the defense needed to succeed?

Falcons 34  Giants 7:  The Falcons recorded two Pick Sixes in the game.   The win keeps the Falcons relevant in the NFC South race.

Rams 19  Jets 9:  All of a sudden, the Rams are beating teams by shutting them down instead of outscoring them.  The Jets turned the ball over on downs twice in the game and the Rams got 10 points off those two failed fourth-down tries.  Look at the difference in the game score …

Vikes 27  Seahawks 24:  Above, I mentioned that Brian Flores has been successful in building the Vikes’ defense.  Well, last week they held the Seahawks to 2 of 10 conversions on third-down and they recorded 2 INTs.  The Vikes can still win the NFC North with this win; the Seahawks fell a full game behind the Rams in the NFC West race.

Raiders 19  Jags 14:  One of these teams had to win this stinker of a game …

Cowboys 26  Bucs 24:  The Bucs’ normally swarming defense did not show up for this one; Cooper Rush and Company moved the ball at will.  The loss leaves the Bucs tied with the Falcons in the NFC South.

 

Games This Week:

 

When the Seahawks/Bears game went to halftime last night, I did what I normally do for night games.

  • I visited the facilities – – and – –
  • I set a timer for 10 minutes to come back for the second half after checking my emails and texts.

The difference last night was that the first half of that game was so dreary that I thought about bagging the second half for about half a minute before I returned to my perch aside the TV.  Boy, was that ever a mistake!  Above, I said that last week got me to see the worst officiated game of the season.  Last night was the least interesting game that I saw all season.

If you are given the opportunity on some streaming service to go back and check out the action in the Seahawks 6-3 win over the Bears, politely decline that offer.  The good folks at NFL Films should find a way to quarantine – – permanently – – any visual record of that sh*tshow.

I did draw two conclusions from the game:

  1. The Bears’ interim head coach is over his head in that role.  If he gets even a single interview in this offseason of coach shuffling, it will not be based on anything he has done with his time “at the helm” in Chicago this year.
  2. Jayden Daniels is going to be a better NFL QB than Caleb Williams when all is said and done.

The schedule maker looks awfully prescient this week. He foresaw some late season matchups that have serious playoff implications, and he also managed to come up with two games that will pit four bad teams one upon another so that the schedule pollution is somewhat contained.

 

(Sat Early PM)  Chargers – 4 at Pats (43):  The Chargers get to leave balmy SoCal and fly about 3000 miles to play this game in Foxboro where the temperature will be in the 40s and there is a 50% chance of rain.  Not exactly ideal conditions for a team that needs to win to stay relevant in the AFC Playoffs.  The Chargers are the better team; they have the better QB; they have the better coach.  Notwithstanding all of that, the Pats gave the Bills all the Bills could handle just last week.  This game is definitely worth watching tomorrow.

(Sat Late PM)  Broncos at Bengals – 3 (49):  Here is the situation in a nutshell:

  • As of today, the Broncos own the 7th playoff slot in the AFC at 9-6-0
  • The Bengals are still alive for that slot and must win out while the Broncos lose out.
  • It’s an elimination game for the Bengals.

It’s another game clearly worth your attention this weekend.  I think offense dominates this game; the Broncos’ offense wins because the Bengals’ defense stinks and the Bengals’ offense wins because they have Joe Burrow and a bunch of really good pass catchers.  Give me the OVER in this game; put that in the “Betting Bundle”.

(Sat Nite)  Cards at Rams – 7 (48):  The spread for this game opened at 3.5 points and has exploded to this level.  The Cards were eliminated from playoff contention last week, but the Rams have their playoff aspirations in the palms of their hands.  If you decide that you need to miss one of the Saturday Games this week, make it this one.

Colts – 7.5 at Giants (40.5):  The Colts are still mathematically alive for the AFC playoffs, but I suspect that even members of Jim Irsay’s nuclear family are starting to plan for a January vacation to somewhere warm and sunny.  The Giants’ highest aspiration for this game is not to be totally embarrassed to the point where their blunders make it to Facebook Reels.

Falcons at Commanders – 4 (47.5):  I gave this game serious consideration as the Game of the week for several reasons

  • Both teams are alive in the NFC playoff race
  • Both teams will start a rookie QB
  • Both teams have first-year head coaches who turned things around this year

A Falcons’ victory here would set up two very interesting and important games for Week 18; this game should be played with great energy by both squads.  Jayden Daniels is going to outplay Michael Penix, Jr. at the QB position and that will give the Commanders a comfortable win; give me the Commanders to win and cover here; put that in the “Betting Bundle”.

Raiders – 1 at Saints (38):  This game came ever so close to being the Dog-Breath Game of the Week because the Saints will be playing without their QB, RB and Swiss Army Knife and that has led the oddsmaker to make the woebegone Raiders a road favorite.

Titans at Jags – 1 (39):  And as miserable as the Raiders/Saints game should be, this one looks to be worse.  It is a division game between two teams who bring 3-12-0 records to the kickoff.  The QB showdown pairs two backups – – Mason Rudolph versus Mac Jones.  If that doesn’t get your juices flowing, that would make you a normal human being.  The late Pete Axthelm had a great description for this sort of a game; he called it a Smashed Windshield Game because:

  • If you parked your car to go shopping and left two tickets to this game on the dashboard of your car, you would find – – upon your return – – a smashed windshield and two additional tickets to the game on your dashboard.

Ladies and gentlemen, let me present to you the Dog-Breath Game of the Week.

Jets at Bills – 9 (46.5):  The Bills have no motivation here; they clinched the AFC East weeks ago and they cannot get the overall #1 seed in the AFC Playoffs.  The Jets have been out of any playoff thinking for about a month now, but Aaron Rodgers has some motivation to show that he is not totally washed up such that he cannot get an NFL QB job next season.  Believe it or not, in late December in Buffalo, the weather is forecast to be in the mid-50s but with an 80% chance of rain.  Given the circumstances, would you play Josh Allen if you were the Bills’ coach?

Panthers at Bucs – 9 (49):  After spitting the bit last week against the Cowboys, the Bucs need this one to stay in the running for the NFC South title and a playoff slot.  The Panthers have shown a lot of improvement in the last month, but I don’t know that they are quite yet ready to give a motivated Bucs’ team a scare.

Packers at Vikes “pick ‘em” (49):  Here we have the Game of the Week.  The combined record for these two teams is a stunning 24-6-0.  If the Vikes win here and then win again next week over the Lions, the Vikes will win the NFC North.  However, winning this one – – even at home – – is no walk in the park for the Vikes; the Packers’ offense is hitting on all cylinders and the Packers’ defense has been smothering since early November.

Cowboys at Eagles – 7 (39):  This spread opened at 11.5 points and the Total Line opened at 44.5 points; clearly the availability of Jalen Hurts is a key element to betting on this game.  Kenny Pickett is a competent backup, but his lack of a deep passing game allows defenses to put 9 or even 10 men “in the box” making a running game nigh onto impossible.  Beyond Pickett, the Eagles will have to dig very deep should they need to depend on either Tanner McKee or recently signed off the streets Ian Book.  Adding to the cloudiness surrounding this game, the Cowboys announced last night that they will shut down CeeDee Lamb for the rest of the year.

Dolphins – 7 at Browns (40):  The Dolphins are still mathematically alive for the playoffs; the Browns have been out of it for at least a month and probably more like two months.  It is a must win game for the Dolphins and it is happening in the north in December where and when the Dolphins are historically inept.  Then again, these are the Browns as the opponents…

(Sun Nite)  Lions – 3.5 at Niners (51):  The Niners season is kaput; the Lions are guaranteed to be in the NFC Playoffs but their position in those playoffs is not secure yet.  The Niners are offensively challenged with injuries and the Lions are defensively challenged with injuries.  This game comes down to which M*A*S*H unit plays better than its opponent.  The Lions are a good team playing with a motivation factor; the Niners are merely a good team playing for “pride”.  I like the team with some positive motivation here so give me the Lions on the road to win and cover; put that in the “Betting Bundle”.

Let’s review this week’s “Betting Bundle”:

  • Boise St. + 11.5 against Penn St.
  • Arizona St. + 13.5 against Texas
  • Ohio St./Oregon OVER 54.5
  • Notre Dame/Georgia OVER 44
  • Broncos/Bengals OVER 49
  • Commanders – 4 over Falcons
  • Lions – 3.5 over Niners

And just for fun, here are three Money Line Parlays:

  • Commanders @ minus-200
  • Lions @ minus-185    $100 wager to win $131

And …

  • Chargers @ minus-225
  • Oregon @ +125     $100 wager to win $225

And – – to end 2024 on a patriotic note …

  • Army @ minus-675
  • Navy @ +120   $100 wager to win $153.

Finally, closing words from Vince Lombardi:

“There is no room for second place. There is only one place in my game and that is first place. I have finished second twice in my time at Green Bay and I never want to finish second again.”

But don’t get me wrong, I love sports………