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QF7 wrote:Niners are a good team, no doubt, but it was only a one TD (and PA) difference. If Prescott hadn’t thrown those interceptions the game could have easily gone the other way. Purdy’s had a Cinderella several games but you can’t rule out a rookie mistake at a critical moment. So I’ll take Hurts’ experience and pick the Eagles, who were dominant over the Giants.
Burrows is playing very well and Mahomes’ ankle is a big question so I pick Cincy in that game.
StarAC17 wrote:QF7 wrote:Niners are a good team, no doubt, but it was only a one TD (and PA) difference. If Prescott hadn’t thrown those interceptions the game could have easily gone the other way. Purdy’s had a Cinderella several games but you can’t rule out a rookie mistake at a critical moment. So I’ll take Hurts’ experience and pick the Eagles, who were dominant over the Giants.
Burrows is playing very well and Mahomes’ ankle is a big question so I pick Cincy in that game.
This San Fran team is one of the best teams I have seen in my lifetime watching football. I don't remember the 1985 Bears on the account of being 1 at the time but it looks just as good as those dominant Patriot teams of the last 20 years and even with a 3rd string QB have a good shot to win it all. The Eagles might be ballin' but they haven't faced this defense. I think the Niners win and go to the SB. Line is Philly -2.5
For the AFC I see this as a Pick'em and Vegas agrees opening the line at Chiefs -1.5 which upon checking further is now KC -1.0. I am taking Cinci here especially considering Mahomes's health and how they went into the snow in Buffalo and dominated the game.
So I see Cinci and SF in the superbowl.
Aaron747 wrote:I have been completely delighted by the Niners so far, every time the OL takes a beating, the defense steps things up. And every time the secondary has an off day, Purdy has kept pace with clutch 2nd half play. The Cowboys looked defeated the last 10 minutes today even as they had several good opportunities.
QF7 wrote:Niners are a good team, no doubt, but it was only a one TD (and PA) difference. If Prescott hadn’t thrown those interceptions the game could have easily gone the other way. Purdy’s had a Cinderella several games but you can’t rule out a rookie mistake at a critical moment. So I’ll take Hurts’ experience and pick the Eagles, who were dominant over the Giants.
Burrows is playing very well and Mahomes’ ankle is a big question so I pick Cincy in that game.
cjg225 wrote:The Mahomes injury does change Cinci/KC, but I think KC's defensive front and homefield advantage will weigh heavily in that game.
My preference for a Super Bowl is Cinci/San Fran with San Fran winning, but I think Philly will roll San Fran; they're playing too well and their own homefield advantage will be problematic. Purdy has been good, but Philly is too good right now. I think San Fran lucked out a bit with how bad Dallas' offense was last night (largely due to Prescott and then losing Pollard).
QF7 wrote:Niners are a good team, no doubt, but it was only a one TD (and PA) difference. If Prescott hadn’t thrown those interceptions the game could have easily gone the other way. Purdy’s had a Cinderella several games but you can’t rule out a rookie mistake at a critical moment. So I’ll take Hurts’ experience and pick the Eagles, who were dominant over the Giants.
Burrows is playing very well and Mahomes’ ankle is a big question so I pick Cincy in that game.
Revelation wrote:
Overall, the 9ers could pretty much run at will on the Cowboys, which is not what most fans expected. I think if the 9ers had run a bit more it would have been a blowout by the 4th quarter.
It is amazing how many examples we've seen this season of teams/coaches who can't run a 2 minute drill, while every dork at home who's ever played Madden is screaming at their TV.
Aaron747 wrote:
Niners fans have a long memory...the 1986-1990 teams were just incredible to watch. The 1993-95 teams weren't bad either.
StarAC17 wrote:For any Cowboy fans you aren't getting any better until Jerry and his son stop being the GM, bring in football people and shut up and sign the cheques.
.
StarAC17 wrote:
This San Fran team is one of the best teams I have seen in my lifetime watching football. I don't remember the 1985 Bears on the account of being 1 at the time but it looks just as good as those dominant Patriot teams of the last 20 years and even with a 3rd string QB have a good shot to win it all. The Eagles might be ballin' but they haven't faced this defense. I think the Niners win and go to the SB. Line is Philly -2.5
For the AFC I see this as a Pick'em and Vegas agrees opening the line at Chiefs -1.5 which upon checking further is now KC -1.0. I am taking Cinci here especially considering Mahomes's health and how they went into the snow in Buffalo and dominated the game.
So I see Cinci and SF in the superbowl.
StarAC17 wrote:As for the two minute drill. It's hard to pull off and really only the marquis QB's can pull it off with relative success. Dallas doesn't have a Marquis QB and an average coach at best and like usual Dallas does Dallas things. Miami bungled it last week getting a delay of game on 4th down and missing a wide open Tyreek Hill, but that is was with a 3rd string QB not their starter.
ER757 wrote:StarAC17 wrote:For any Cowboy fans you aren't getting any better until Jerry and his son stop being the GM, bring in football people and shut up and sign the cheques.
.
This right here. Truer words were never spoken. Jerry needs to step back but his ego won't let him be out of the spotlight.
Revelation wrote:StarAC17 wrote:As for the two minute drill. It's hard to pull off and really only the marquis QB's can pull it off with relative success. Dallas doesn't have a Marquis QB and an average coach at best and like usual Dallas does Dallas things. Miami bungled it last week getting a delay of game on 4th down and missing a wide open Tyreek Hill, but that is was with a 3rd string QB not their starter.
I think it's a phenomena of the times that many coaches get the job without being able to do what was once considered a core skill. Brandon Staley is another one who has shown he can't manage it, IMO.
An interesting counter-example: In 2001 Tom Brady had started less than a season when he led the Patriots to their first SB win over "the greatest show on turf" Rams. He certainly was no GOAT back then. He was known to most people as a game manager, a dink-and-dunk guy. Yet if you watch that final game winning drive, the one John Madden said should not have been attempted, he just keeps the pressure on one play at a time with very little wasted time. Not working with elite talent, either. JR Redmond, Troy Brown, Jermaine Wiggins weren't thought of as elite, although IMO Brown should have been at least in the conversation. Granted, they only needed a FG instead of a TD, but the point is, they knew how to execute a 2 minute drill. Their coach made sure they knew exactly what to do since he made them practice it all the time. I know they don't get as much padded practice time these days, but that's no excuse, IMO. You can teach the key skills QB/WR/TE/RB need in five-on-five non-padded drills.
I know I sound like a grumpy old man, but time after time these are shown to be core skills that make huge differences in the critical moments of critical games. If you hire a guy who can't coach and execute this successfully, you're admitting you're not trying to be a Super Bowl caliber team.
And yes, I'm a spoiled Boston sports fan, lol. At least I can say I was a fan long before the Patriots won a SB or the Sox won a WS. I was all in on the 1975 World Series Red Sox team, and they broke my heart. As an adult I can say it's no shame taking the Big Red Machine team with players like Griffey Sr, Bench, Morgan, Rose and Conception to seven games, but as a kid I was heartbroken.
Revelation wrote:I think it's a phenomena of the times that many coaches get the job without being able to do what was once considered a core skill. Brandon Staley is another one who has shown he can't manage it, IMO.
StarAC17 wrote:I think with the 2 minute drill the coach has to back the heck off actually. It's the QB's team and he calls the plays and reads the defenses. When its works its similar to friends playing on the field, its very improvised and the best QB's can take it on their shoulders and still fail a lot at it.
When Dallas and My Dolphins messed it up it was the coach doing dumb things and not necessarily the QB messing it up. The rules are simple, don't get sacked and if you are going to throw it inbetween the hashmarks make it a big play. Other than that sidelines only.
cjg225 wrote:I kinda wonder if the NFL would prefer San Fran instead of Philly from the NFC.
If it's a Cinci/Philly Super Bowl that is a very regional game. Neither are big draws beyond their home markets. Obviously, people will watch the game regardless, but there is an element of who's playing that matters. I'd hazard a guess that the Niners are a bigger draw than the Eagles. I think Cinci/KC is a bit of a wash in that respect. Maybe edge to the Chiefs.
cjg225 wrote:I kinda wonder if the NFL would prefer San Fran instead of Philly from the NFC.
If it's a Cinci/Philly Super Bowl that is a very regional game. Neither are big draws beyond their home markets. Obviously, people will watch the game regardless, but there is an element of who's playing that matters. I'd hazard a guess that the Niners are a bigger draw than the Eagles. I think Cinci/KC is a bit of a wash in that respect. Maybe edge to the Chiefs.
StarAC17 wrote:ER757 wrote:StarAC17 wrote:For any Cowboy fans you aren't getting any better until Jerry and his son stop being the GM, bring in football people and shut up and sign the cheques.
.
This right here. Truer words were never spoken. Jerry needs to step back but his ego won't let him be out of the spotlight.
Dallas is the NFL equivalent to Scuderia Ferrari for anyone who also likes F1.
Jerry hires a yes man as a coach because a talented football mind is going to want autonomy which Jerry never gave to Jimmy Johnson or Bill Parcells. We knew from GB days that McCarthy was a mediocre coach and he couldn't win with Aaron Rodgers and you expect him to win with Dak Prescott?
People actually think that Sean Payton is going to to go to Dallas. Please, he will go to a team that gives him the ability to do what he could do in New Orleans.Revelation wrote:StarAC17 wrote:As for the two minute drill. It's hard to pull off and really only the marquis QB's can pull it off with relative success. Dallas doesn't have a Marquis QB and an average coach at best and like usual Dallas does Dallas things. Miami bungled it last week getting a delay of game on 4th down and missing a wide open Tyreek Hill, but that is was with a 3rd string QB not their starter.
I think it's a phenomena of the times that many coaches get the job without being able to do what was once considered a core skill. Brandon Staley is another one who has shown he can't manage it, IMO.
An interesting counter-example: In 2001 Tom Brady had started less than a season when he led the Patriots to their first SB win over "the greatest show on turf" Rams. He certainly was no GOAT back then. He was known to most people as a game manager, a dink-and-dunk guy. Yet if you watch that final game winning drive, the one John Madden said should not have been attempted, he just keeps the pressure on one play at a time with very little wasted time. Not working with elite talent, either. JR Redmond, Troy Brown, Jermaine Wiggins weren't thought of as elite, although IMO Brown should have been at least in the conversation. Granted, they only needed a FG instead of a TD, but the point is, they knew how to execute a 2 minute drill. Their coach made sure they knew exactly what to do since he made them practice it all the time. I know they don't get as much padded practice time these days, but that's no excuse, IMO. You can teach the key skills QB/WR/TE/RB need in five-on-five non-padded drills.
I know I sound like a grumpy old man, but time after time these are shown to be core skills that make huge differences in the critical moments of critical games. If you hire a guy who can't coach and execute this successfully, you're admitting you're not trying to be a Super Bowl caliber team.
And yes, I'm a spoiled Boston sports fan, lol. At least I can say I was a fan long before the Patriots won a SB or the Sox won a WS. I was all in on the 1975 World Series Red Sox team, and they broke my heart. As an adult I can say it's no shame taking the Big Red Machine team with players like Griffey Sr, Bench, Morgan, Rose and Conception to seven games, but as a kid I was heartbroken.
I think with the 2 minute drill the coach has to back the heck off actually. It's the QB's team and he calls the plays and reads the defenses. When its works its similar to friends playing on the field, its very improvised and the best QB's can take it on their shoulders and still fail a lot at it.
When Dallas and My Dolphins messed it up it was the coach doing dumb things and not necessarily the QB messing it up. The rules are simple, don't get sacked and if you are going to throw it inbetween the hashmarks make it a big play. Other than that sidelines only.
Aaron747 wrote:You are completely correct - if the QB can play the clock and take charge of the drive, that makes all the difference.
Here's the original 2-minute drill by Joe Montana to win Super Bowl XXIII:
https://youtu.be/m7B4JZAiG6c?t=5906
Revelation wrote:Aaron747 wrote:You are completely correct - if the QB can play the clock and take charge of the drive, that makes all the difference.
Here's the original 2-minute drill by Joe Montana to win Super Bowl XXIII:
https://youtu.be/m7B4JZAiG6c?t=5906
The ghost of Bill Walsh is mighty pissed off at you right now.
cjg225 wrote:I kinda wonder if the NFL would prefer San Fran instead of Philly from the NFC.
If it's a Cinci/Philly Super Bowl that is a very regional game. Neither are big draws beyond their home markets. Obviously, people will watch the game regardless, but there is an element of who's playing that matters. I'd hazard a guess that the Niners are a bigger draw than the Eagles. I think Cinci/KC is a bit of a wash in that respect. Maybe edge to the Chiefs.
cjg225 wrote:I kinda wonder if the NFL would prefer San Fran instead of Philly from the NFC.
If it's a Cinci/Philly Super Bowl that is a very regional game. Neither are big draws beyond their home markets. Obviously, people will watch the game regardless, but there is an element of who's playing that matters. I'd hazard a guess that the Niners are a bigger draw than the Eagles. I think Cinci/KC is a bit of a wash in that respect. Maybe edge to the Chiefs.
PHLspecial wrote:cjg225 wrote:I kinda wonder if the NFL would prefer San Fran instead of Philly from the NFC.
If it's a Cinci/Philly Super Bowl that is a very regional game. Neither are big draws beyond their home markets. Obviously, people will watch the game regardless, but there is an element of who's playing that matters. I'd hazard a guess that the Niners are a bigger draw than the Eagles. I think Cinci/KC is a bit of a wash in that respect. Maybe edge to the Chiefs.
Except for Philadelphia is the 4th largest media market in the U.S. What are you talking about. SF ranks like 8th or 9th...
Internationally that's a different story.
Aaron747 wrote:The Niners have fans in several states. Hard to say the same for the Eagles.
cjg225 wrote:Aaron747 wrote:The Niners have fans in several states. Hard to say the same for the Eagles.
Exactly. The Niners have a large appeal across the US because of their history.
The Eagles... not so much.
Teams that have dynastic runs tend to develop fans well outside their home markets.
PHLspecial wrote:Except for Philadelphia is the 4th largest media market in the U.S. What are you talking about. SF ranks like 8th or 9th...
Revelation wrote:Fandom is a weird thing.
seb146 wrote:We were watching something and a commercial for the KC-Cincinnati game came on. It looks like Patrick Mahomes has a different shaped helmet than the other quarterbacks. Like it seems more stretched out over the crown of the head. Has anyone else noticed this?
Revelation wrote:Picking one site at random, BetMGM, gives us the odds for this weekend's playoffs:
Philadelphia Eagles vs. San Francisco 49ers PHI -2.5 (-120)
Kansas City Chiefs vs. Cincinnati Bengals KC -1.5 (-110)
I gotta say, I think it goes chalk.
I think PHL will beat SFO, perhaps in a rout.
I think KC will beat CIN (and the spread), but there is a decent chance for an upset.
ER757 wrote:Revelation wrote:Picking one site at random, BetMGM, gives us the odds for this weekend's playoffs:
Philadelphia Eagles vs. San Francisco 49ers PHI -2.5 (-120)
Kansas City Chiefs vs. Cincinnati Bengals KC -1.5 (-110)
I'm not a gambler, so this may be a silly question. The numbers you have in parentheses, what do they mean? I've see those types of numbers when I am watching something on ESPN News and they have betting lines on the scroll.
NFL money line bets are one of the simplest form of NFL bets which makes it a great option for beginners. All you have to do is pick which team you think will win a specific game. That’s it. If they win, you get paid. If they lose, so do you. A tie game is called a “push” and you get your money back.
...
Betting the money line on a big favorite isn’t likely to return much profit. On the flip side, a successful money line bet on a big underdog can lead to a big payday.
Here are the most important things to remember when reading American odds on an NFL money line bet:
- The minus sign indicates which team is the favorite.
- The plus sign tells you which team is the underdog.
- The minus sign tells you how much you must bet to win $100 in profit.
- The plus sign tells you how much profit you will win if you bet $100.
Revelation wrote:Picking one site at random, BetMGM, gives us the odds for this weekend's playoffs:
Philadelphia Eagles vs. San Francisco 49ers PHI -2.5 (-120)
Kansas City Chiefs vs. Cincinnati Bengals KC -1.5 (-110)
I gotta say, I think it goes chalk.
I think PHL will beat SFO, perhaps in a rout.
I think KC will beat CIN (and the spread), but there is a decent chance for an upset.
Revelation wrote:Picking one site at random, BetMGM, gives us the odds for this weekend's playoffs:
Philadelphia Eagles vs. San Francisco 49ers PHI -2.5 (-120)
Kansas City Chiefs vs. Cincinnati Bengals KC -1.5 (-110)
I gotta say, I think it goes chalk.
I think PHL will beat SFO, perhaps in a rout.
I think KC will beat CIN (and the spread), but there is a decent chance for an upset.
NIKV69 wrote:Revelation wrote:Picking one site at random, BetMGM, gives us the odds for this weekend's playoffs:
Philadelphia Eagles vs. San Francisco 49ers PHI -2.5 (-120)
Kansas City Chiefs vs. Cincinnati Bengals KC -1.5 (-110)
I gotta say, I think it goes chalk.
I think PHL will beat SFO, perhaps in a rout.
I think KC will beat CIN (and the spread), but there is a decent chance for an upset.
Remains to be seen if Mahomes has that breakaway speed after his ankle injury and can get those yards after he is flushed from the pocket. If not Cincy has a chance.
Revelation wrote:I think PHL will beat SFO, perhaps in a rout.
I think KC will beat CIN (and the spread), but there is a decent chance for an upset.
ER757 wrote:My main concern about the Bengals is their O-line. It wasn't great to begin with and now three of the starters are hurt. Hard to believe that Burrow won't be running for his life almost every time he drops back. I don't think Mahomes will be 100% so his scrambling may be limited. Kelce supposedly has a bad back so may not be up to full speed either. This one could be down to which team can limp to the finish line first. My heart is with the Bengals, but if I had money on the game it would be with the Chiefs
scbriml wrote:What a finish. Stupid penalty by Bengals puts KC in field goal range with eight seconds left. Brain-dead play.
NIKV69 wrote:scbriml wrote:What a finish. Stupid penalty by Bengals puts KC in field goal range with eight seconds left. Brain-dead play.
How about Mahomes and Kelce playing hurt and through pain! That was some performance. I still think Philly wins the SB.
NIKV69 wrote:scbriml wrote:How about Mahomes and Kelce playing hurt and through pain! That was some performance. I still think Philly wins the SB.
scbriml wrote:What a finish. Stupid penalty by Bengals puts KC in field goal range with eight seconds left. Brain-dead play.
Revelation wrote:
I think the Chiefs win is tainted. The refs gave KC most of the benefit of the doubt, the Bengals very little. On Twitter #NFLRigged is now trending. When you have two teams well matched at the conference championship level, just a bit of a tailwind makes a huge difference, and KC got that tailwind. On top of that, Romo's relentless ball-washing of Mahomes was disgusting. It's pretty clear who NFL, Inc wanted to win.
I'll have to pick the best of two evils and support the damn Eagles going forward.
StarAC17 wrote:As for the refs they missed a block in the back on the punt return just before the final drive that would have backed up KC much further. However if one call costs you the game then you weren't in position to win regardless.
- 5 yard defensive penalties do not yield a 1st down unless the yards awarded gets you one. I am sick of these 5 yard holding or illegal contact penalties (which you can call on every play) on 3rd and 15 yielding 1st downs. Replay the down at 3rd and 10. No penalties should yield automatic 1st downs
- They need to call intentional grounding more. I don't like QB's throwing at the feet of their TE's and RB's (who are blocking) in the pocket to escape a sack, you need to get out of the pocket to earn the right to throw the ball away. The called one of these against Burrow but they could have called multiple ones on both QB's
Revelation wrote:
The problem is in many cases the defense will have more than five yards to give and will try to get away with holding even more than it already does. If they do get called, so what, they have five yards to give, but chances are they will get away with it more often than not and get off the field.
Revelation wrote:The problem is the lack of consistency. They say they are trying to protect the QB more, this is why they don't call it more, but in a big spot they call it on Burrow. I don't know exactly how the rule is written, but clearly the receiver was in the vicinity, and as you say, this is routinely not called as grounding. And if we're calling everything, how come Clark didn't get roughing for taking three steps at Burrow after he threw the ball and making contact with him?
Revelation wrote:On a different tangent, I dislike the way PI is being called these days. The defender can have contact with the receiver. The idea is that this lets him both watch for the ball, and know where the receiver is by keeping a hand on him. Yet they are all coached to use that hand to grab the receiver's arm and restrict their ability to move just as the ball is arriving. This often means the receiver can't jump, or he can't rotate into a favorable position. If the receiver does anything to get free of that hold, he gets called for OPI. Basically, almost every close "jump ball" goes to the defense these days. And since PI/OPI cannot be reviewed, they get away with it.