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Pastimes : Philly Sports Thread(except soccer:) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: stormrider1 who wrote (2408)10/5/2012 10:05:35 AM
From: LTK007Respond to of 2749
 
<<Watch Fletcher Cox...I believe he has the potential to be something very special for this team in time.>> i think he has pro-bowl in his future. Jason Peters and Mike Patterson are eligible to return from the 6th to 9th week, after that they can not return this year(this my understanding). But i can find zero news, the club is NOT talking.

The return of both would be huge in upgrading team to another level.(If Patterson comes back a DL will be cut, perhaps Cedric Thornton, but Patterson is are best or 2nd best DT(some think Cox is moving to #1 status pretty fast).
Steeler player has announced they are going HUMILIATE Boykin---game plan will be right at him, evidently.
<<Boykin found himself in the spotlight Thursday after Pittsburgh wide receiver Antonio Brown told the Observer-Reporter in Washington, Pa., that Boykin was the "candy bar" in the Eagles' defensive backfield, meaning Boykin is the one who can be exploited when the Steelers host the Eagles on Sunday.>>
Also Steelers are going to try to do to Dallas Reynolds what Cards did to him(Cards were blitzing right up the middle wiping out Reynolds
Reynolds says he is ready this time. He better be.
Boykin replied look i am a rookie between two pro-bowl level oustside CBs, i know i am going to be the target, the one they want to intimidate, i am not goig respond to that remark.

Reality hurts o this game because NOTHING would give me more pleasure then send Steelers into a hole at 1-3 and us into SB potential status at 4-1.
In terms NFC teams, NOT one has established themselves the most likely to go to Super Bowl---key is NFC-East bangs up Falcons--Falcons handles the NFC-East, they will be the team favored for SB, imho.

O yes Rams SACKED Kolb 9 times last night--and beat Cardinals 17-3.
Later, Mike.



To: stormrider1 who wrote (2408)10/6/2012 5:13:19 PM
From: LTK007Respond to of 2749
 
i didn't watch, but i gather PSU stadium went into a frenzy with our comeback win against then ranked #24 NorthWestern. i tip my hat to Coach Bill Obrien, he is doing the impossible--i'd figured they be 0-6 by now--4-2 is mingboggling---how many players from last year left for other schools, 7? Later, Max p.s. i think he has players in us against the NCAA butchers.



To: stormrider1 who wrote (2408)10/10/2012 7:32:21 PM
From: LTK007Respond to of 2749
 
Lions-Eagles Preview (for 2nd straight week Eagles playing team coming off bye-week)
Associated Press
Sitting at the bottom of the NFC North, the Detroit Lions know they need to come out of their bye week with a much-improved effort going forward.

While the Philadelphia Eagles share the NFC East lead, Michael Vick knows he must get better at holding on to the football.

The visiting Lions try to avoid a fourth consecutive loss Sunday and beat the Eagles for the first time in a quarter-century.

After going 10-6 and snapping an 11-year postseason drought in 2011, Detroit (1-3) was widely expected to take a big step forward this year. That, however, has yet to happen, with the Lions dropping three in a row since a season-opening 27-23 win over St. Louis.

"That's our challenge right now to dig our way out of this," coach Jim Schwartz said. "There have been a lot of things that have happened that are not indicative of where this team will be after 16 games and like I said, we need to get those corrected."

The Lions saw their woes continue in a 20-13 home loss to Minnesota on Sept. 30, allowing touchdowns on kickoff and punt returns for the second consecutive game. Matthew Stafford, though, is hoping a week off makes all the difference.

"Obviously, you want to head into a bye week with a win," he told the team's official website, "but it's a good time for us to kind of get away from it a little bit, refocus and get ready for a 12-game stretch."

Stafford has been limited to three touchdown passes - he had 41 last season - and his four interceptions equal his total through eight games in 2011. He has yet to find Calvin Johnson in the end zone, though the star wideout ranks second in the league with 105.8 receiving yards per game.

"I'm not real surprised," said Johnson, who had 16 TD catches last year but whose only one this season came from backup Shaun Hill.

"We know teams aren't going to let you do what you did last year. We have to find a different way."

The Eagles (3-2) also are in search of better play from their quarterback. Vick's eight fumbles are three more than any other player and his five lost fumbles also lead the league. He put the ball on the ground three times last Sunday in a last-second 16-14 defeat at Pittsburgh, and lost one fumble at the Steelers' 1.

"I wish I could take back the fumble on the goal line, but I can't," he said. "Ultimately, we put ourselves in a position to win this game, but we didn't win. That's how it goes in the NFL. You wish you could have some things back, and there are plenty of things I wish I could have back through the course of this season, but you can't get them. I will do a better job of protecting the football."

While Vick threw six interceptions in his first two games, he hasn't been picked off in his last three - a trend coach Andy Reid hopes to see with his fumbles.

"We've got to go back and work on ball security and he knows that and he's gonna get it right just like he did with the interceptions," Reid said. "We're gonna get it fixed. It won't be the last time he carries the football. He just has to secure it away, keep it high and tight. When he's in traffic, get that thing covered up with the off hand."

Vick could be in for another long day against a Detroit defense that has nine sacks and has allowed five passing TDs. The Lions are surrendering an average of 213.0 yards through the air to rank 10th in the league.

Besides defensive end Cliff Avril (back) possibly returning, Detroit could receive a boost from safety Louis Delmas, who has a chance to make his season debut Sunday following left knee surgery.

"He's a big-time playmaker," defensive end Kyle Vanden Bosch said of Delmas. "And, he brings an attitude and energy to our team that really picks everyone up."

The Lions could surely use Delmas as they try to snap a six-game losing streak to the Eagles, including playoffs, dating to a win in Philadelphia on Nov. 16, 1986.

Philadelphia took the most recent matchup 35-32 at Detroit on Sept. 19, 2010, behind 120 rushing yards and a career best-tying three touchdowns from LeSean McCoy. Vick threw for 284 yards and two TDs but fumbled twice.

The Eagles, 3-0 when McCoy rushes for at least 80 yards, are looking to open 3-0 at home for the first time since 2005.

Detroit has lost six of seven on the road, including a playoff loss, while allowing averages of 36.6 points and 441.9 yards.



To: stormrider1 who wrote (2408)10/14/2012 1:13:42 AM
From: LTK007Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2749
 
We talk about O-LIne but the D-Line?? ZERO sacks for 2 games!(7 FOR 5 GAMES!) We see sacks tomorrow or trouble(Washburn talks, and it is clear he is feeling pressure)
After the Eagles were held without a sack for the second straight game Sunday, Jim Washburn's wife Sandy wrote a Bible verse on a Post-it Note and gave it to the frustrated defensive-line coach to put on his desk at the NovaCare complex.

Galatians 6:9 reads: "And let us not grow weary of doing good, for in due season we will reap, if we do not give up."

A very appropriate message of persistence for a coach and a unit going through a sack drought only a year after it led the NFL in that category.

"I'm really concerned," Washburn said. "It's depressing [not to have more sacks] when you spend as much time on pass rush as we do.

"It's hard. It's hard on me and it's hard on my guys. I think we're playing a lot better than last year. It's just that they're keeping a lot of people in to block. Dang. There's seven guys blocking four a lot of times. Not all the time, but a lot of times."

Last year, the Eagles racked up a league-high 50 sacks, 46 of them by Washburn's unit. This year, with the additions of high-round rookies Fletcher Cox and Vinny Curry and the return-to-health of 2010 first-round pick Brandon Graham, the sky appeared to be the limit.

When I asked defensive end Trent Cole before the season whether the Eagles had 60-plus sacks in them, he smiled confidently and said, "We can get as many as we want."

But opposing teams are having a little something to say about that. They are regularly keeping six, and sometimes seven, people in to block, while opposing quarterbacks are getting the ball out before Cole and Co. have a chance to wrap their arms around them.

Through five games, the Eagles have only seven sacks, and, as mentioned earlier, none in their previous two games. The last time they went sackless in back-to-back games was in 2008. They are 27th in the NFL in sacks per pass play.

"It's just circumstances," Washburn said. "I had the same thing happen in Tennessee. My first 2 years there, we broke the franchise record for sacks. Then the third year, I said, 'Let's put a number on it. We're going to do this.' Boy, we got stoned."

After registering 54 and 55 sacks in 1999 and 2000, the Titans finished with only 32 in '01, as opposing offenses did the same things against them that they're doing against the Eagles this year.

"[Lions wide receiver] Calvin Johnson had eight touchdowns at this point last year," Washburn said. "This year, he's got one. Everybody goes, 'Calvin's not playing well.' Shoot, he's the best player in football. He's just getting a lot of attention.

"What happens is, sometimes your reputation precedes you. This is the most seven-man protections I've ever seen. From the standpoint of the total defensive line, we're much better than last year, without any question. We're rushing just as well. We're just not getting sacks, because they're keeping people in.

"They can take that away from you, just like they can take Calvin Johnson away. You do it with numbers. If you don't do it with numbers, you just get the ball out fast."

While it's little consolation to Washburn and his players, they are coming close a lot. They have 88 hurries in the first five games, which is 31 more than they had last season. At this point last year, the Eagles had 16 sacks.

"I've got this little stopwatch I've had for a hundred years," said Washburn, who isn't quite that old (he's 63). "I chart every throw against us. When we played Arizona, Kevin Kolb, the ball was coming out like a laser. The next week [against Miami], he holds the ball, and [Dolphins linebacker] Cameron Wake gets him four to five times. Then he holds the ball the next week and the Rams get him.

"My guys are about to have a stroke back there. They say, 'Why didn't he hold it like that against us?' It's all about what happened last year. We rushed hard last year, but we're better than we were last year. We've just got to keep going. Keep doing the right thing, and hopefully everything will work out."

One possible solution to the sack drought would be to blitz more, or at least threaten to blitz more. But it's not really who the Eagles are anymore. They've blitzed only 39 times in the first five games. Maybe that will change Sunday, maybe it won't.

"We used to watch [Bears linebackers Brian] Urlacher and [Lance] Briggs," Washburn said. "They'd stand up there in the A-gap. The other team would be scared to death to chip the ends. Urlacher and Briggs rarely came, but their presence standing up there in the A-gap affected what the offense did."

The Eagles aren't the only team struggling to get sacks. The Giants and Ravens, who both had 48 sacks last season, have eight and nine, respectively, this season. The Giants are 22nd in the league in sacks per pass play. The Ravens are 24th.

The Ravens' sack number has been affected by the absence of linebacker Terrell Suggs, who ruptured his Achilles' tendon last spring. The Giants' problems are similar to the Eagles. They're a team that mainly relies on a four-man rush and is dealing with a lot more max-protection, short drops and quick throws by the quarterback.

"That's just the way it is," Washburn said. "We're not the Lone Ranger. Other teams are getting the same thing. When we threw the long one the other day to DeSean Jackson, I think we had seven [blockers] protecting [Mike Vick].

"To get a number of sacks, you've to get a number of one-one-one rushes. And our number of one-on-one rushes is just not very high. When they're blocking seven, both of our tackles are doubled. That sucks. What we really have is two guys blocking one end, with both tackles getting doubled. That leaves one end getting a one-on-one.

"I'm not the smartest guy, but I'm not dumb, either. I know what's happening. But it still doesn't make it any better. We want to win, but we want to do our part. We're like everybody else. We want to do our part."

This and that

Lions coach Jim Schwartz and Washburn spent 10 years together on Jeff Fisher's staff with the Tennessee Titans. They're friends. Washburn's son, Jeremiah, is an assistant offensive-line coach on Schwartz' staff. They share a similar defensive philosophy, particularly an allegiance to the wide nine. "If you have personnel that fits it, it's very good," Schwartz said of the wide nine. "You can get tremendous pressure on the outside. You can limit a lot of play-action passes. It can eliminate outside runs. [But] if you don't have the personnel, it doesn't work. If you look at Philly's [defensive-line] personnel with [Jason] Babin and Trent Cole, they go nine deep on that line. It obviously fits their personnel. They haven't gotten a lot of sacks, but they've affected the passer. They've done a good job on third down. You can't always get a sack, but you can pressure the quarterback and make him throw before he's ready, before the wide receivers get to the sticks. He's able to keep a lot of guys fresh by rolling [his lineup]."

Former Cowboys quarterback and current Fox Sports game analyst Troy Aikman gave a pretty frank - and accurate - assessment of Dallas sports fans earlier in the week in an interview on KTCK-AM 1310 The Ticket. Said Aikman: "I don't think Dallas has ever really had a great homefield advantage. People have said, 'Wow, the Cowboys really lost homefield advantage when they left Texas Stadium.' But Texas Stadium really wasn't that much different than the new stadium. Having played playoff games in Texas Stadium, that stadium was rocking when it was great. But when we would play in Philadelphia or New York and walk out of the tunnel, I would have to be yelling at the top of my lungs for guys to hear me. There was no way you could go down there near the goal line and use a hard count in an opposing stadium. And yet, in Texas Stadium, teams did it all the time. I think for a large part - and the fans don't want to hear this - a lot of the people that attend sports [in Dallas], they're there, because it's kind of just a place to be seen. I've always said Dallas isn't so much a sports town as it is a winner's town."

Figuring the Eagles

It's become pretty clear that quarterbacks no longer are reluctant to throw at Nnamdi Asomugha. In Asomugha's 21 games with the Eagles, receivers that he's been responsible for covering have been targeted 69 times, catching 41 passes for 568 yards and two touchdowns, according to Pro Football Focus. In the previous three seasons (48 games), Asomugha was thrown at only 87 times and gave up 50 completions for 592 yards and one touchdown.

LeSean McCoy is on pace to rush for 1,398 yards, which would be 89 more than last season. He has 13 runs of 10 yards or more. Last year, he finished with 48.

After throwing six interceptions in his first 81 attempts, Michael Vick has gone 104 attempts without throwing another one.

Opponents are averaging 6.9 yards per carry against the Eagles in the second quarter (33-for-227).

The Eagles have held opponents to zero or negative yards on 33 of 127 rushing attempts this season. They've allowed 11 runs of 10 yards or more.

Opponents are only 3-for-13 against the Eagles on third down and 2 yards or less.

Eagles receivers have only seven drops in five games. Last season, they had 29.

Quick hits

Look for Brandon Graham to get more snaps Sunday against the Lions. The third-year defensive end played 18 snaps against Pittsburgh. Had five hurries in 11 pass-rush situations. "Right now, he's rushing at a better percentage than anybody," defensive-line coach Jim Washburn said. "He's done it 3 weeks in a row. He's a guy I want to get more reps."

Fullback Stanley Havili saw a lot more playing time in the previous two games, and slot receiver Jason Avant saw a lot less. In the last two games, the Eagles used two-back sets on 46.3 percent of their offensive plays, compared with only 19.9 percent in the first three games. At the same time, their use of three-wide-receiver sets decreased, from 48.2 percent in the first three games to 33.8 in the last two. Avant played 175 snaps in the first three games, but only 64 the last 2 weeks.

I don't understand how Redskins quarterback Robert Griffin III can suffer a concussion on Sunday and be cleared to practice on Wednesday. Generally, it takes until Friday for an NFL player to go through all of the required post-concussion testing and then get the green light from an independent neurologist.

2-minute drill

From the Lip

"I don't believe we're close right now. You look at the games and how we're playing, we don't look like a good team. I wouldn't sit here and say we're close."

-Titans RB Chris Johnson on his 1-4 team

"I've read a lot of tweets, and everybody's saying that I'm desperate, I'm begging for a job. But it's not begging for a job when you know you can still play at a high level, given the opportunity."

- Unemployed WR Terrell Owens

"This whole bounty thing, for the most part, is just a big sham. The fact that our coaches are suspended for part of the year or the entire year is pretty ridiculous."

- Saints QB Drew Brees on bountygate

"I see those two guys as stand-alone linebackers. They don't need a lineman to jump in the gap and they don't need special fronts. They don't need any of that. They can stand in a bubble, on an uncovered lineman. They do it physically and with great technique. They disengage from blocks and they get to the ball. And they do it down after down. I tell you, it's the best linebacker plan in the past 30 years."

- Former NFL linebacker and current ESPN analyst Matt Millen on 49ers linebackers Patrick Willis and Navarro Bowman



By the Numbers

The Lions are 6-10 in their last 16 games.

The Eagles haven't returned a kickoff return for a touchdown at home since Oct. 1, 2000, when Brian Mitchell took one back 89 yards against the Falcons. Only two teams have gone longer without a home kickoff return for a TD - the Bengals and the Dolphins. The Bengals haven't had one since 1999. For the Dolphins, it's been a lot longer - 1970.

Since the current 12-team playoff format was instituted in 1990, 13 teams have managed to qualify for the playoffs after being at least three games under .500 5 weeks or later into the season.

If Andrew Luck throws for 300 yards Sunday against the Jets, he will become the first rookie in league history to throw for 300-plus yards in three straight games.

The Bears lead the league with five interception returns for touchdowns. They're the first team in history to have that many in the first five games of the season.

That's saying thumbthing

THUMBS UP: To Chiefs offensive tackle Eric Winston for lambasting the idiots at Arrowhead Stadium who cheered when struggling quarterback Matt Cassel got knocked out of the 9-6 loss to Baltimore with a head injury. Cassel, who is 32nd in the league in passing, had four turnovers against the Ravens. As he lay on the ground in the fourth quarter after getting drilled by defensive tackle Haloti Ngata, fans cheered. "We are athletes, OK? We are athletes. We're not gladiators," Winston said. "There are long-lasting ramifications to the game we play. I've already come to the understanding that I won't live as long because I play this game. And that's OK. That's a choice I've made. A choice all of us have made. But when you cheer somebody getting knocked out, I don't care who it is, it's sickening. It's 100 percent sickening. Matt Cassel hasn't done anything to you people. Hey, if he's not the best quarterback, then he's not the best quarterback, and that's OK. But he's a person. And he got knocked out in a game and we have 70,000 people cheering that he got knocked out?"

THUMBS DOWN: To Jets owner Woody Johnson, who doesn't seem to understand that the best owners are the ones who keep their mouths shut and let the people they hired to run their team do the talking about football matters. There was Johnson, on CNBC of all places, this week, discussing his team's quarterback situation and the Jets' Monday night loss to the Texans. Even as his coach, Rex Ryan, was refusing to guarantee that Mark Sanchez would be the team's starter beyond next week, Johnson was talking about him as if he's a shoo-in for Canton. He also said the Jets will be keeping his backup, Tim Tebow, for the duration of his contract, which doesn't expire until after the 2014 season. "I think he's going to be a real valuable asset in terms of helping us win game," Johnson said.

Domo's rankings

1. Texans 5-0 (1 last week)

2. Falcons 5-0 (2)

3. 49ers 4-1 (3)

4. Ravens 4-1 (4)

5. Patriots 3-2 (6)

6. Bears 4-1 (14)

7. Giants 3-2 (9)

8. Vikings 4-1 (14)

9. Cardinals 4-2 (7)

10. Packers 2-3 (5)

11. Eagles 3-2 (8)

12. Broncos 2-3 (10)

13. Rams 3-2 (15)

Read more: philly.com
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To: stormrider1 who wrote (2408)10/14/2012 6:14:42 PM
From: LTK007Respond to of 2749
 
To Mike :posted on two threads: i DON'T want to hear BLAME it on Vick! He is the scapegoat for a team that is NOT performing. The Defense and OL LOST this game!(Nick Foles, slo-of-foot would have had to have Refs stop the game and give victory to Lions, on the grounds of MERCY for QBs that have to play with ATROCIOUS Offensive Lines.)
That coaches told Vick to STAY in pocket and don't freelance on our last possession was IDIOT decision. Vick of himself got this game to 23-13, and then watched the Defense fail miserably THREE times. Regards OL , we don't have one!
Vick must be allowed to play footloose! He brought the team back in 2nd half take a to 23-13 lead being footloose.. Vick set up for victory and The Team then BLEW IT!
Dallas lost in a PAINFUL manner also today.
If 49ers beat Giants--The NFC-EAST turns into a mess where NO team gets in Playoffs except the Division champ.
If Giants beat 49ers, they deserve to be named the best team in NFC-East.
Dallas now 2-3 and we are 3-3, and Dallas and Eagles have win over Giants.

49ers in last two games, won by a total score of 79-3! They are losing at 1/2 time 10-3 to Giants--this game is important. If they win they will be 4-2, and be ONLY team with a winning record in the NFC-East.
My wife called me long distance to remind me it is JUST a game:) Max