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Guest "Go, Mordecai!"
Posted

They are not the same thing. A pitching duel is exciting to watch; field goal shootouts are not. I wish I could break it down further, but I know what I like and what I don't, and that Colts-Ravens game was just a chore to sit through.

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Guest Legalise Drugs and Murder
Posted

Well, there's no arguing taste. I thought it was great to watch. The turnovers and offensive faltering was more a product of excellent defense and gameplanning than it was a quarterback forcing it into traffic like an idiot. Those situations were created completely intentionally. I think it makes for great TV. Plus the Colts won.

Posted
Well, there's no arguing taste. I thought it was great to watch. The turnovers and offensive faltering was more a product of excellent defense and gameplanning than it was a quarterback forcing it into traffic like an idiot. Those situations were created completely intentionally. I think it makes for great TV. Plus the Colts won.

 

 

That and actually seeing the defense play better than they have in years made it fun to watch.

Posted

Oh, if the Pats advance today the Colts positively, absolutely MUST beat them next week. Especially in Indy. Beating the Chargers in SD might prove a bit more difficult. But there's just something about the Chargers that makes me think they aren't as good as their record, that they've gotten lucky a few times this year.

Posted
They are not the same thing. A pitching duel is exciting to watch; field goal shootouts are not. I wish I could break it down further, but I know what I like and what I don't, and that Colts-Ravens game was just a chore to sit through.

 

With a pitching duel, you have a dominating individual performance (the pitcher) to latch on to and you see every single facet of that domination with the batter/pitcher matchup. With football, many aspects of an elite performance can be obfuscated by the sheer number of things happening on any given play; TV coverage can (and typically does) point out many of the important points, but so much is happening so fast that the drama behind each play can be somewhat muted.

 

That being said, I'm not even sure I would consider the Indy/Baltimore game to be a defensive "matchup", per se, because the Baltimore offense just forgot to show up. Save for a deep bomb to Todd Heap, it seemed like McNair was checking it down on virtually every pass attempt and, even on many of those checkdowns, was forcing it into some heavy traffic. Jamal Lewis had a few moments where it appeared that he'd get something going, but he never really tore through the Indy D like many had predicted; the Ravens almost never had any offensive momentum through the whole game and you could sense that (or at least I could).

 

I wouldn't call it a stinker, but it wasn't even a good "defensive struggle", in my opinion.

Posted

I guess the Bears are back to the "chuck it 50 yards to Berrian and hope for the best" plan from the beginning of the season.

Guest Princess Leena
Posted
Well, there's no arguing taste. I thought it was great to watch. The turnovers and offensive faltering was more a product of excellent defense and gameplanning than it was a quarterback forcing it into traffic like an idiot. Those situations were created completely intentionally. I think it makes for great TV. Plus the Colts won.

I can't agree. McNair's INT at the 1 was entirely his fault. Off the top of my head, the Colts should have had 2 TD's with Manning's bad misthrow to Moorehead, and Dallas Clark's drop after the big hit catch.

Posted

Grossman's first big mistake of the day. That was really poorly done.

 

Edit: Alexander's having a great day. I'm really surprised that the Seahawks have managed to score 24 points on Chicago, but I guess Seattle's at top form now that all the elements of their offense are back and playing to their capacity. Meanwhile, the Bears' offense has generally looked dysfunctional in this half, and isn't taking advantage of Seattle's weakened secondary the way they did earlier in the game.

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