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FMQB: Ask Me About, My Super Bowl Trophy

Posted by fmquarterback on February 7, 2014
Posted in: Uncategorized. Leave a comment

RussellWilson

 

Sunday night was a rough night in the FMQB household, and we’re not even remotely Broncos fans. For me, I want 2 things when it comes to the Super Bowl: to see the greats win it, and for it to be a close game. We’ve been absolutely blessed by the latter in recent years. I think I’m so obsessed with the history of the NFL, that I want to be able to tell my grandchildren “I watched Peyton Manning play, he was the greatest quarterback of all time.” And I think watching greatness struggle and fail is tough. Throughout the game, I was literally in shock to what I was witnessing and just kept thinking how disappointing this was. I have since gotten over it (thank God it wasn’t the Rams who lost) and have began to truly respect what the Seahawks did this year. But let’s start with the game.

 

Total Dominance:

 

Twelve seconds into the game, you could already tell it wasn’t going to be good for the Broncos. I was probably the most confident after going down 2-0, telling FFMQB that it wouldn’t matter. (Interesting to hear that the Broncos were surprised how loud it was which led to the early mistake, I guess the 12th Man did show up). Even after the 1st quarter, the dominance of Seattle seemed diminished by the fact that they had scored 3 times, and yet it was still a 1 possession game. The Seahawks weren’t going to win on FG’s and Safeties alone. But the Denver offense just couldn’t get going the entire game. At one point, I mentioned how Peyton wasn’t going down the field at all, it seemed like their gameplan was to get the Seahawks with tons of screens and short passes. As my rival columnist TMQ pointed out, the old football adage is “Run toward speed and away from strength.” Meaning all the horizontal movement and crossing routes isn’t going to work against a speedy defense like the Seahawks. This gameplan completely did the Broncos in. It took 20 minutes for Denver to even get a 1st down, and the drive in the 2nd quarter proves my point. Denver did all these dink and dunk passes, had a 16 play drive that only went 49 yards in 8:39 before Manning threw his pick 6 to Malcolm Smith. They basically wasted an entire quarter and drive to come away with no points (or really come away with negative 7 points). That was killer as well. Going into halftime I thought they still had a shot to make it close. Percy Harvin running back the 2nd half kickoff for a TD was the true nail in the coffin. Up 29-0, that made the entire second half garbage time (which was kind of disappointing). There are 2 key things that I feel led to the Seattle victory: First, it was a total team win. Each aspect of the game was top notch, and there truly was no clear cut MVP. I felt that Kam Chancellor (safety), Cliff Avril (DE), Malcolm Smith (LB), Percy Harvin (WR), or Russell Wilson could have gotten it, and that’s impressive to have that many guys who played lights out. Second key: The lack of Omaha. Seriously, did anybody hear Peyton say that at all? 

 

24 Seconds:

The Seahawks could have shown up for the first 12 seconds of each half and still won the game. They scored a Safety on the first play of the game, and ran back the opening kickoff.

 

String of Super Bowl Blowouts:

Defensive teams aren’t typically known for putting up huge points, they instead win by simply disrupting the other team’s offense. But look at the most recent Super Bowl blowouts and you see a very odd trend:

 

2014 Seahawks, #1 defense, won by 35 points

2003 Buccaneers, 2 defenders in hall of fame, still have “Tampa 2” coverage named after them, won by 27 points

2001 Ravens, practically coined the term “Defense wins Championships,” won by 27 points

1985 Bears, slew of hall of famers, one of the best defenses of all time, won by 36

 

In fact, if you look at the blowouts, only a couple are by offensive teams. By and large it’s the defensive team with the huge score in all of these games, which is a pretty interesting tidbit.

 

Super Stat of the Week:

For the 3rd straight Super Bowl, a Safety was scored. 2 of the last 3 Super Bowls saw the first score of the game as 2-0.

 

Super Stolen Stat of the Week #2:

The Broncos scored on 10 of 14 postseason possessions. But in the Super Bowl, they scored on only One of 11 possessions.

 

Super Stat of the Week #3:

Peyton Manning has thrown interceptions returned for TD’s in consecutive Super Bowls that he’s played

 

Super Stolen Stat of the Week #4:

Teams that return an interception for a TD are 12-0 in the Super Bowl

 

Super Stat of the Week #5:

The 3 largest halftime deficits in Super Bowl history are all owned by the Broncos

 

Super Stat of the Week #6:

The Broncos have lost a record 5 Super Bowls in their history. How depressing to be a Broncos fan, they lose a Super Bowl every 7 years on average.

 

Super Stat of the Week #7:

The Seahawks were the 1st team to score a Running TD, Passing TD, INT return for TD, KO return for TD, Safety, and FG in a Super Bowl.

 

Super Stolen Stat of the Week #8:

Peyton Manning only had 51 yards passing through 26 minutes

 

Super Stat of the Week #9:

Percy Harvin outrushed both Marshawn Lynch and Knowshon Moreno

 

Super Stat of the Week #10:

In the last 2 Super Bowls, the 2nd half has opened up with a Kick Return TD. Both by the winning team.

 

Seahawks Dynasty?

Of course every team has confidence after winning a championship, but many times you can tell it was a 1 and done thing (i.e. the Ravens of last year who missed the playoffs completely this year). But the Seahawks could have something going here. They don’t have any major needs, and aren’t exactly losing any key parts to free agency this year (Golden Tate is arguably the best player that could leave). The key point is the fact the Seahawks are the 2nd youngest team in the league, with many of their Superstars still under inexpensive rookie contracts. Russell Wilson and Richard Sherman still have another year on their original deals. The Seahawks have done an amazing job drafting recently. The Super Bowl MVP Malcolm Smith was a 7th round pick, and the best cornerback in the game, Richard Sherman, was a 5th round pick. Russell Wilson was a 3rd round pick, taken after Andrew Luck, RGIII, Ryan Tannehill, Brandon Weeden, and Brock Osweiler. It’s scary to think that the Seahawks could only be getting better.

 

Ask Me About my Super Bowl Trophy:

Russell Wilson joined Kurt Warner, Tom Brady and Ben Roethlisberger as the only 2 QB’s to win the Super Bowl in their 2nd year. This is pretty good company, considering that those 3 QB’s have started in 10 Super Bowls, which lends well towards Wilson’s potential success as a QB. Wilson also just broke the record for the most wins in a QB’s first 2 seasons (28), breaking Roethlisberger’s record. No more asking him about his baseball career or college days American Family, time to ask him about his Super Bowl win!

 

Facebook Quote of the Game:

“Haha Broncos fans, where’s your God now?” Friend

“He left when Tebow did” Friend #2

 

Social Media Note of the Game #2:

FMQB made a comment about Bruno Mars, saying “What is he standing on, a giant Roomba?” Being the more social media savvy of the two of us, FFMQB tweeted this at iRobot, and the company re-tweeted it!

 

For the Record:

I saw this year’s Lombardi Trophy before Russell Wilson did. Anybody who read my random summer article knows why, but here’s proof!

Lombardi Trophy2This was during our trip to the Hall of Fame. Here is the 2014 Lombardi trophy (un-engraved of course) that got handed to the Seahawks on Sunday.

Lombardi Trophy1

 

FMQB: It Is Time

Posted by fmquarterback on February 2, 2014
Posted in: Super Bowl, Uncategorized. Tagged: 49ers, Denver Broncos, football, john fox, kaepernick, NFL, patriots, pete carroll, peyton manning, russell wilson, seattle seahawks, Super Bowl, Tom Brady. Leave a comment

SB3

Welcome to a special Super Bowl Sunday edition of FMQB! We are finally here! Why there are 266 games prior to this one will all be decided in ONE…FINAL…GAME. Last week was FMQB’s bye week (perhaps a mistake), but hey, I only have 3 things to talk about. The Super Bowl and the 2 games last week, so let’s take a look at 2 of those games which decided how we got here.

Patriots at Broncos:

There were a few key points to why the Broncos won this game. The epic matchup between Brady and Manning soon turned into Peyton making plays and Brady making mistakes. Right away, Brady missed on a wide open receiver downfield, overthrowing a sure TD. It happened at least 3 times that game, and those minor mistakes alone killed the Patriots. The Broncos defense also showed up this game, holding LeGarrett Blount to 6 yards rushing (after a 166yd and 4 TD game last week). But the most telling stat of the game was the pressure on the quarterback. Brady was hurried 6 times, and sacked twice. Manning had an incredible stat line, with 0 hurries, 1 hit, and 0 sacks! That dominance by the offensive line is how Peyton was able to complete 32 passes for 400 yards. Continue Reading

FMQB: Fighting Rain, Wind, and Earthquakes!

Posted by fmquarterback on January 17, 2014
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: 49ers, Brady, Broncos, championship, football, kaepernick, Manning, NFL, omaha, patriots, playoffs, Seahawks, wilson. Leave a comment

benoit-kaepernick-960

Divisional Round Recap

Saints at Seahawks:

Battling the wind, rain, and earthquakes whenever the Seahawks scored is a tough battle. What’s even tougher is trying to win after failing to score the first 3 quarters is dang near impossible. Jimmy Graham had 0 catches (if you don’t count the garbage time reception). I would say the Seahawks played a solid game. Nothing flashy, but a lot of running and taking advantage of points where necessary. Russell Wilson was 9-18 with 103 yards. This won’t cut it against the Broncos, but could against the 49ers. The Saints still had a shot at it until Colston decided that the guy 7 yards ahead of him was considered a “lateral.” I won’t harp on him too much, but why not step out of bounds with 8 seconds left on the 36 yard line. You get another shot to get 10 yards and could have a 25 yard throw to tie the game! I guess the play was drawn up and practiced during the week (meaning the Saints thought they would be down or lose the game), would have been crazy if it had worked.

  Continue Reading

FMQB: “Wild” Card Weekend

Posted by fmquarterback on January 10, 2014
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: 49ers, alex smith, Andrew Luck, bengals, Broncos, Cam Newton, Chargers, Chiefs, Colts, dalton, Drew Brees, eagles, foles, kaepernick, NFL, Packers, Panthers, patriots, peyton manning, playoffs, rivers, rodgers, Saints, Seahawks, Tom Brady, wild card. 2 Comments

AndrewLuckBeard

They playoffs are upon us, and Wow, did they start off with a bang! We saw the 2nd largest comeback in playoff history in a 99 point game, 3 road team underdogs win, and the Ice Bowl part 2. We had teams win by 1 point, 2 points, and 3 points. Absolutely thrilling weekend in the NFL!

For the Record…

Last week I picked the Colts, Eagles, Bengals, and 49ers. So I went 2 for 4.

Chiefs at Colts:

The Chiefs were a fun team this year, the epitome of the saying “there is parity in the NFL, next year any team can make it.” They had the #1 overall pick last year with the worst record. Yet this year were the last undefeated team and a playoff surprise. If I hadn’t have put money on the Colts, I may have rooted for the Chiefs. Even being decimated by injuries to pro bowl stars, the Chiefs got out to an incredibly fast start, leading 38-10 in the 3rd Quarter. We then witnessed the 2nd greatest comeback in playoff history (I highly doubt we’ll ever see another Bills comeback with a backup QB). The Colts put on the gas and scored a TD on every drive except for one INT in the middle. The Chiefs could only manage to kick 2 FG’s in the closing 28 minutes, which led to their demise as well. There are some playoff games that I remember vividly (2003 Giants vs 49ers comes to mind), and I think this one just got added to the list.

How the Colts Cameback:

Let’s pause for just a moment here, so we can dissect how the Colts actually came back. Sure the comeback was highly improbable, but FFMQB can attest to the fact that I was saying “The game isn’t over yet” several times in the 2nd half, and explaining how the Colts could pull it off. Within minutes of the 3rd, they were down by 28. The Colts needed to attack the score like any business goal is attacked. Split it up into time frames and chip away at it. You can’t score 28 points in one play, so the Colts needed to say “alright, we need to make up 14 points in the 3rd quarter and go from there” (thus halving their deficit to 14 by the start of the 4th). Well they exceeded their goal, and were down by 10 going into the 4th. Because they took care of business 1 play at a time and had short term goals, they ultimately won the game.

Saints at Eagles

I gave the Eagles 3 ways to win the game last week (rushing, getting to Drew Brees, and being the home team). The only thing Philadelphia accomplished was being the home team…Backup RB’s for the Saints outrushed the NFL’s leading rusher by 100 yards, and Drew Brees was only sacked twice. In fact, the Saints rushing was so good, they got the ball back with 5 minutes in the game and slowly marched their way down the field and didnt’ even give the ball back to Philly. This was a strong, gritty game that kept going back and forth. This to me is what playoff football is all about, even if the Colts game was more exciting.

Bengals at Chargers

The one stinker of the bunch. Andy Dalton became the 5th QB to take a team to the playoffs his first 3 years, and is subsequently 0-3 in those games. Once they got down, Dalton seemed to be throwing for the stars, just long bombs trying to knock the lead away in 1 play (not chipping away at it like the Colts did). Dalton did not have a solid game, and the Chargers proved me wrong, keeping the Bengals scoreless the entire 2nd half.

49ers at Packers

Ice Bowl Part 2! Ok, it wasn’t as cold as they initially thought as it ended up staying over 0 (windchill was -10). Couldn’t believe that Kaepernick and most Packers were playing sleeveless! Another back and forth game in the freezing cold, with 4 lead changes. Rodgers played mediocre, not necessarily good or bad, but he went the entire 1st quarter without a completion (first time in his career). Kaepernick also leaned on Michael Crabtree very heavily (13 targets), and it seems like their team is turning around with that pair back together. Like the Saints, the 49ers got the ball with over 5 minutes, and drained the clock before kicking a game winning FG without giving the Packers the ball. Kaepernick won this game with his legs, connecting on a couple key 3rd downs on the drive. If that is back in his repertoire, that could make the 49ers a more dangerous team.

Stat of the Week #1:

This is only the 4th time since 1990 that both #6 seeds won

Stolen Stat #2:

Indianapolis possession results in the second half: interception, touchdown, touchdown, interception, touchdown, touchdown, touchdown, kneels to end game.

Stolen Stat #3:

New Orleans won its first-ever road playoff game.

Stolen Stat #4:

Kansas City has not won a playoff game in 20 years.

Stolen Stat #5:

Cincinnati has not won a playoff game in 23 years.

Stat of the Week #6:

In the last 19 seasons, only once (2009, New Orleans and Indy) have the two top seeds entering the playoffs advanced to the Super Bowl. Not great news for the Broncos and Seahawks matchup potential.

Stat of the Week #7:

The Colts had just 14 turnovers in 16 games this season. They had 4 turnovers on Saturday.

Stat of the Week #8:

Peyton Manning has gone 1 and Done 8 times in his playoff career

Quote of the Week:

“Beating the Chiefs, so easy a caveman could do it” Regarding Andrew Luck and his beard

Quote of the Year:

“Yeah, but Sean Payton can’t make it rain” Reporter (Payton is making the Saints practice as realistic as possible with the Seahawks logo, wet ball drills, deafening music).

“No, but I can…” Saints lineman  Classic answer to that question!

Division Round Predictions:

I know that most Wild Card weekend are unpredictable, but the Divisional round tends to even out a bit. But I’m sensing another surprising weekend.

Saints at Seahawks

Seattle has been a popular Super Bowl pick since about Week 2, and they trounced the Saints 34-7 earlier this season. But I think Sean Payton is a genius when it comes to creative ways to attack adversity. Last week it was different colored gatorade and heavier workout uniforms. This week he has painted the Seahawks logo on the Saints practice field to make it seem as real as possible. Call me crazy, but I’m going to pick the upset, with the #6 Saints beating the #1 Seahawks 20-17.

Colts at Patriots

I will start by admitting that I am changing my pick on Friday morning. I went all week knowing that I was going to pick the Patriots in this slot, but I have a feeling that the Colts magic from last week will carry over. The ONE thing they can’t do is get down early. Even if down 14-0, the Colts will lose. But if they come out strong, I think that their D-line will give Brady fits and force mistakes. Will be an interesting game. There’s one team that you can’t count out if they’re down by 28, against another team that you can’t count out if they’re down by 7 with a minute left in the game. So basically no lead is safe in this game. My prediction is that Brady will have the ball with a chance to drive down the field, and fail. 24-20 Colts win.

49ers at Panthers

Another rematch from the season. In this close and defensive battle, the Panthers beat the 49ers 10-9. I’ve been down on the Panthers all year, and have truly been shocked watching them beat the Saints and Patriots earlier this year. I’m still struggling to pop on the bandwagon. I think their surprise playoff run will be as short lived as Kansas City’s. San Francisco is the hottest team coming into the playoffs, they’ve won their last 7 and seem to be finally hitting their groove. Colin Kaepernick found his legs again last week, and think that he will stay on that pace this week. San Francisco has also had it’s fair share of playoff games the last 3 years, while Cam Newton struggled to win games in the regular season. I’m going for the 2nd upset in the NFC with the 49ers taking the Panthers easily, 24-10.

Chargers at Broncos

A rematch isn’t enough for this matchup, this will be the 3rd time these 2 teams play this year. Both teams split the season series, with the Chargers winning in Denver (and vice versa). Even the Broncos win was by a less than convincing 8 points. I love when teams meet for a 3rd time. You already know their tendencies and it’s always a division rivalry game. I remember the Jets a few years ago getting revenge on the Patriots after going 0-2 against them in the regular season. This should be a hard fought game. Remember that Chargers coach Mike McCoy was Denver’s O-coordinator last year. I think Manning comes out knowing he can’t lose, and the Broncos handle business in convincing fashion. Denver 35, San Diego 17

Danger for Denver:

The Broncos lost to 3 teams all season (Colts, Patriots, and Chargers). All 3 teams are left, and they’ll have to beat 2 of them to even make the Super Bowl. To be fair, the Broncos kept it close, losing by 3 to the Pats, 6 to the Colts, and 7 to the Chargers.

Bonus “For the Record”:

Yes, I am living dangerously this week and picking 3 upsets. But as Bond would say, “There’s no point in living if you can’t feel alive”

Reader: Non NFL-Thought of the Week:

Tim Tebow made his ESPN debut last night – picked Fla St. to win 35-31. He was wrong. Fla st. won 34-31…plenty of room for improvement.

FMQB- Playoff Time!

Posted by fmquarterback on January 4, 2014
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: 2014, 49ers, aaron rodgers, alex smith, Andrew Luck, andy dalton, bears, bengals, Chargers, Chiefs, colin kaepernick, Colts, Denver Broncos, Drew Brees, football, jay cutler, jim harbaugh, new orleans saints, NFL, Nick Foles, Packers, peyton manning, philadelphia eagles, philip rivers, playoffs, week 17. Leave a comment

IceBowl

For the second straight week, FMQB has turned into Saturday Morning Quarterback. Sorry for that, but had another weird holiday week. To make it up to readers, I have decided to “live tweet” (if you will, but not on Twitter) during both NFC matchups! Like me on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/fmquarterback to see my thoughts live in action. I talk a big talk, here’s your chance to see if my strategies and predictions are actually true!

We’ve made it to the home stretch. 11 games remain before we find the ultimate champion. But before we talk about the beauty of the NFL playoffs, let’s take a look at an amazing Week 17 and how we got to where we are.

A Surprising Fight

Before Sunday, yours truly was wondering if NBC was regretting throwing in the Dallas vs Philly game before finding out that Tony Romo was out for the year. But I was pleasantly surprised at the fight the Cowboys put up. It was a back and forth affair, with Dallas scoring in the 4th and missing a 2 point conversion. But they got the ball back with time left, and I really thought Kyle Orton was going to pull it off. Of course he threw an interception on the first play which makes you feel bad for the guy, but very exciting game in the end. Cowboys need to figure out a way to make it over the hump, it’s been 3 straight years with a “Win and In” game the final game of the year, and they are 0-3 in those games. Continue Reading

FMQB: Conspiracy Theory

Posted by fmquarterback on December 28, 2013
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: aaron rodgers, bears, Broncos, Cam Newton, cardinals, carson palmer, Chargers, dolphins, Drew Brees, football, jay cutler, jets, NFL, Packers, Panthers, peyton manning, playoffs, Ravens, Saints, Seahawks, week 17. 1 Comment

CamNewtonPassing

It’s the final week of the year, man this season flew by. At least for 16 teams, they live to fight another day. There is a very exciting week 17 coming up, with #1 seeds and divisions still up in the air. But first, let’s take a look at an exciting week last week.

Cardinals Crack the Code

For weeks, analysts have been saying if Seattle gets home field advantage, they were basically a lock for the Super Bowl since nobody could come into Seattle and win. Arizona has been a force this season, but not sure if anybody expected them to pull of a win. Last year in Seattle, Arizona lost 58-0. But they turned that around last week, giving the Seahawks their first home loss in 2 years. Not sure what happened, but Carson Palmer threw 4 INT’s, and the Seahawks only kicked 2 FG’s off of those turnovers. Seattle is starting to falter a bit, and have lost 2 of their last 3 games. and at the very least, teams won’t feel like they’re invincible at home.

Panthers’ Huge Win

In a battle for the NFC South, the Panthers pulled off a huge win on Sunday, knocking the Saints out of a first round bye and a home playoff game. With the Saints 7-0 home record, but 3-5 road record, this could effectively change/ruin their playoff hopes. Very clutch performance from Cam on that final drive. He had a rough outing the entire game until the game was in his hands. The Carolina defense also showed up, sacking Brees 6 times. I guess changing out that left guard didn’t exactly work.

Manning’s Magical Season

As any avid reader knows, I am obsessed with stats, and the potential of breaking records. With the offense-happy league now, Peyton Manning is exactly right. Records that are set this year are in danger of being broken the very next season. Nevertheless, Manning has had an amazing season, and broke the single season record of TD passes by throwing his 51st in only the 15th game of the year. Last year, it was Calvin Johnson and nearly Adrian Peterson, but this is your year Peyton. Congratulations!

Does Anybody Want to Make the Playoffs?

Week 16 was an odd week. There were a few teams that could have wrapped up playoff spots, but wanted to make it more dramatic for fans, as it seemed that each of these teams lost. The Lions blew an awesome opportunity with both the Packers and Bears losing, as they lost on their own to the Giants and eliminated themselves from the playoffs. The Dolphins somehow got shutout against the Bills of all teams. The Ravens and Bears also had great opportunities, although they both lost to respectable teams (Patriots and Eagles). But still, very weird week where nobody seemed to want to get it done.

How Convenient:

Welcome to the meat of this week’s post. As I’m sure FFMQB is sick of by now, I have been complaining about the Aaron Rodgers situation for the past month (it probably doesn’t help that I have money on the Packers). To start off, I am never one to believe conspiracy theories. We landed on the moon people, Lee Harvey Oswald had a relatively easy shot at JFK, and the US government wouldn’t terrorize their own country. In saying that, the whole Packers situation is a true conspiracy theory. At this point, Aaron Rodgers has been practicing and been pain free for a month. The injury was also on his non-throwing shoulder. Doctors were saying “there’s a risk of injury.” News flash, it’s football! Take a look at the Cowboys situation before Friday. Romo gets a herniated disk, and fought all week to try to play on Sunday. So the Packers doctor says “Aaron, you have a slight risk of injury on your non-throwing shoulder and you’re pain free, but you can’t play.” Yet the Cowboys say “Tony, you have something wrong with your spine and are in immense pain, but we’ll shoot you up and you can try to go.” This makes zero sense to me. Either way, sure is convenient that Rodgers is ready to go now that they have 1 final shot at the playoffs. Should be interesting to see a rusty Cutler and a rusty Rodgers battle it out for the division.

Hot Seat

By the next time you see me, there will have been a slew of coaches fired in the NFL. In an HR nightmare, there is about 25% turnover every year from coaches, with about 8 teams starting over. Let’s take a look at who may be looking for a new job on Monday.

A Given: Coaches who are basically out the door already. Texans Gary Kubiak (already happened). Redskins Mike Shanahan will either quit or be fired, although it’s tough to blame the guy. NY Jets, Rex Ryan. I think he deserves one more chance, as the Jets being in the playoff hunt in Week 17 wasn’t on anybody’s radar. Buccaneers Greg Schiano. Loved the guy at Rutgers, but he has brutal tactics and lost the locker room early in the year. Lions Jim Schwartz. Another guy with aggressive and dirty tendencies. The division was theirs to lose when the 2 best QB’s in the division went down for multiple weeks, yet the Lions went 1-5 in that stretch.

Potential: Vikings, Leslie Frazier. He’s had 2 incredibly rough seasons that sandwiched a playoff team. But the Josh Freeman signing was a poor allocation of money, and he needed to find a QB and stick with that person. Oakland’s coach has only had 2 years, but has struggled to find an identity. The Raiders are notoriously quick to let coaches go even with Al Davis gone.

Hot Seat, but not gone: Giants, Tom Coughlin. Feel bad for the guy, because he has been on the hot seat for the past 10 years, minus the 2 years after they won the Super Bowl. There will be discussions about firing him, he may even retire, but I bet he’s back. Cowboys, Jason Garrett. Definitely showed improvement this year, which is the only reason why I think he stays. Working with a crazy owner like Jerry Jones has got to be tough, but Jones seems to have his back. Plus with Romo out, it’s tough to place blame on Garrett for missing the playoffs.

Stat of the Week #1:

In the AFC, an 8-8 team will make the playoffs. In the NFC, there’s a chance that an 11-5 team will miss the playoffs

Stat of the Week #2:

For the 3rd straight week, a team kicked and recovered an onside kick when the other team was expecting it. For reference, in 2012 teams were successful just under 13% of the time.

Stat of the Week #3:

Panthers LB Luke Keuchly had 24 tackles on Sunday. To put this in perspective, the leading tackler in the NFL averages 10.4 tackles a game.

 

Stolen Peyton Manning Stat:

Peyton Manning threw more TD passes in 15 games (51) than his dad Archie threw in his first 5 seasons combined (47)

Peyton Manning Stat you weren’t expecting:

At age 37, Peyton Manning just threw his 487th TD pass on Sunday. Favre was 41 when he tossed his 508th.

Peyton Manning Stat of the Week #3:

Manning became the first QB ever to surpass 50 TD’s and 5000 yards in the same season.

Stolen Stat of the Week (don’t remember what number we’re at):

The top seed in the AFC (Denver) has 4 players with 60+ catches and 10+ TD catches. The top seed in the NFC (Seattle), does not have a player with 60 catches, nor 10 TD catches.

Crazy AFC Playoffs:

For the first time in my history as a football fan, there are 5 teams vying for the final AFC playoff spot, and NONE of them control their own destiny! With 3 teams at 8-7, each team needs help from one or both of the other teams. There’s even a chance (actually a high chance) that all 5 end up being 8-8. From MMQB, take a look at how this would play out:

“For a moment, let’s say in Week 17 we have the following four results: Jets over Miami, Cincinnati (which has but a vague hope of getting a bye) beats Baltimore, Kansas City over San Diego, and Pittsburgh over Cleveland. That would create this logjam for the sixth seed:

In a five-way playoff tie, you first break ties within divisions. The Jets would eliminate Miami by virtue of a better division record (3-3 to 2-4). Pittsburgh eliminates Baltimore by having a better division record (4-2 to 3-3). That narrows it to Pittsburgh, San Diego and the Jets.

We go to conference-games tiebreaker. Pittsburgh would be 6-6. San Diego and the Jets would be 5-7. That’s it. And Pittsburgh would make it … after being 2-6 at the midway point.”

FMQB- The Magic Show

Posted by fmquarterback on December 20, 2013
Posted in: Uncategorized. Leave a comment

JustinTucker

 

Week 14 was one of the craziest weeks we had seen in the NFL, yet somehow Week 15 seemed to top it (or at least equal it). We once again had a week of crazy games, calls, and comebacks. The excitement only grew with teams just a couple weeks shy of the playoffs. After a couple upsets, all of a sudden there are a couple teams that are primed for division wins who had an outside shot at the playoffs a couple weeks ago.

 

Matt Flynn’s Magic

Packers QB Matt Flynn was literally a wizard in the second half of Sunday’s game, casting a spell to make the Cowboys defense disappear…ok, any 4 year old that likes magic could do the same thing. The Packers started off so terribly, that yours truly changed the channel to watch the shootout between KC and OAK. I kept flipping back and at one point realized the Packers were making a comeback. They were down 26-3 at halftime, and then outscored the Boys 34-10 in the second half to win the game. Not to take too much away from Flynn, but this was abysmal by the Cowboys. First of all, one stop wins the game for them. Or one extra FG wins it. Or actually calling plays to run time off the clock wins it. As another columnist pointed out, from the point at which Dallas took a 26-3 lead, Dallas ran 23 passing plays and seven rushing plays. That’s only 1 run every 4 plays when you’re up by 23! As some readers might remember, I struggle when a team runs to burn timeouts, but that’s only when they’re up by less than a TD. This is ridiculous! On top of that, 1/3 of the passing plays were incomplete and stopped the clock. If only 2 of those 8 incompletions were runs instead, that’s 1:20 off the clock which also wins them the game.

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A Tale of 2 Quarterbacks, and Different Opinions

Posted by fmquarterback on December 13, 2013
Posted in: Uncategorized. Leave a comment

 

EaglesVsLionsWhat a crazy week in the NFL! Six games were affected by snowy conditions. Including one in Philadelphia which ended with 8 inches of snow on the ground! It was so bad, that there were times the ball would sink in and disappear. Kicking was rendered useless, and only 1 extra point was attempted, and blocked. There were 7 two-point conversions in the game, which lends to a unique sample size on how successful these tries are: teams went 3 for 7. I love this kind of football, it brings the game back to its roots for me, and turns into instant classic games.

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FMQB- Voodoo in the Locker Room

Posted by fmquarterback on December 6, 2013
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: Eli Manning, Jacksonville, Nick Foles, Panthers, peyton manning, Seahawks. 1 Comment

 

JacksonvilleJaguars

It’s a Bird, it’s a Plane, NO, it’s a Jacksonville picture topping the FMQB headlines? I’ll talk about that later. It’s the final 4 weeks of the season, and it seems to be going way too fast this year. Remember when I was complaining about the lack of exciting games earlier this year? Well that’s all changing with these last games. We have tight playoff races and major seeding questions yet to be answered. Take a look of what’s coming down the line. Week 14, we have Bengals vs. Colts, Eagles vs. Lions, 49ers vs. Seahawks, and Panthers vs. Saints. Week 15 is Patriots vs. Dolphins (ok, we have one bummer week). Week 16 has Panthers vs. Saints again, Colts vs. Chiefs, Cardinals vs. Seahawks. Then Week 17 will have a win and you win the division game between the Eagles and Cowboys, and most likely a final wild card spot between the 49ers and Cardinals.

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FMQB- Poetry in Motion

Posted by fmquarterback on November 29, 2013
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: Brady, Broncos, Chargers, Chiefs, football, Lions, Manning, Matt Flynn, NFL, Packers, patriots, playoffs, Ravens, RGIII, Steelers, Thanksgiving. 1 Comment

PatriotsVsBroncos

And it seems to me you played your game
Like a football in the wind
Never knowing who to call off
When the punted ball came in
And I would have liked to have that back
But I was just too chilled
Your teams’ candle burned out long before
Your QB’s legend never will

Name that song FMQBers! It’s the famous Elton John’s Candle in the Wind…or at least a parody of it. Believe it or not, I just listened to that song for the first time in my life, and also realized how few lyrics there were in the song (which makes it tough to make a football song out of). Of course, I am referencing the amazing Sunday night game between the Patriots and Broncos. The Patriots floundered in the first half, on several fumbles in a row. By the end, they were down 24-0, and yours truly was excited to see such a decisive game with that team losing so early. Well the winds definitely changed (metaphorically) in the 2nd half, and all of a sudden it was the Broncos fumbling and not being able to score, and the Patriots scoring every possession they had the ball. Granted, the Broncos started working on the clock immediately in the 2nd half while the Patriots scored 31 unanswered points (which just shouldn’t happen in the NFL). The 2 teams were dangerously close to the 2nd Tie of the game before destiny roared it’s evil head, and we all know what happened after Denver blew a standard punt play. Overall, absolutely crazy game which could very well be a prequel to the AFC Championship. Continue Reading

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    FMQB is a blog for football fans, by a football fan. Each week I try to show some insights into several games and interesting statistics while also bringing humor to the mix. Join me for some fun by taking a quick break every week to re-live the best game in the world.

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