May 17, 2012

Scoring Slew Slays Seattle

logoThe New England Patriots let the backup quarterback of the 2-11 Seattle Seahawks run and pass all over them. Seneca Wallace eluded pressure, got big runs (three rushes, 47 yards) and had his best game as a pro (20 of 28, 212 yards, three touchdowns, zero interceptions). The Patriots only managed one sack of the career backup. But that sack turned out to be bigger than Santa’s.

Out of timeouts at New England’s 44-yard line, trailing by three, Wallace dropped back to pass but instead found himself smothered by blitzing safety Brandon Meriweather, who smacked the football out of his arms. Patriot Richard Seymour recovered, putting the visiting team on the winning end of a 24-21 contest they led for less than three minutes.

In this, only their second fourth-quarter comeback win of the season (the first was against the Rams), New England discovered some resiliency, scoring 11 points while shutting down the home team in the final fifteen minutes. During their winning touchdown drive, the Patriots got three third-down conversions, including a huge 13-yard Matt Cassel pass to Wes Welker on third and 10 during which Cassel got hammered by Seahawk Darryl Tapp. On the next play, Cassel tossed a bubble screen to Welker, who shot through a lane provided by the blocks of Jabar Gaffney and Matt Light, cut to the sideline and sped to the six. After a sack of Cassel, a six-yard draw from a slippery Kevin Faulk, and a Sammy Morris run for no gain, the Pats went for it on fourth down. Morris’ one-yard plunge over the left side of the line gave his team a one-point lead. Welker caught the two-point conversion after a fake-to-the-inside/cut-to-the-outside route that looked impossible to cover (but thanks for trying anyway, Seattle), giving the visitors a 24-21 advantage with under two minutes left.

On that final scoring possession, Cassel passed eight times in a row (it would have been more save for two sacks and a scramble), hitting on five (three to Welker, one each to Gaffney and Faulk). Welker earned hero status on the day, catching 12 passes for 134 yards, including four catches to convert third downs.

Before the visiting team’s heroics (or villainy, depending on your point of view), the Seahawks’ last TD had given them a 21-13 lead late in the third. The drive was fueled by a 63-yard Deion Branch catch-and-run that seemed to happen in slow motion, kind of like watching a wayward shopping cart roll downhill into your parked car. Wallace maneuvered his way to the right and fired a pass to Branch on the sideline. Branch juked Junior Seau (playing due to an injury to Tedy Bruschi), who took a surfing-type wipeout. The receiver then scampered across the field behind a series of Seattle blocks and cut up the left sideline to the nine. Though replays appeared to show him catching the ball out of bounds, the play was upheld. Branch added to his former fans’ misery by making a five-yard touchdown catch where he tipped the ball back to himself.

With all his success, announcers dubbed him “Former Patriot Deion Branch” for the rest of the day. Branch caught four passes for 88 yards and two touchdowns, his first scoring receptions of the season. I wanted to punch myself in the eye. And why on Earth couldn’t Ellis Hobbs get there in time to knock that pass away after Branch took long enough to tap it back to himself? Am I asking too much? Am I?

On the ensuing drive that bridged the third and fourth quarters, Cassel failed to connect with Randy Moss on first and second down but hit Gaffney on third for 28 yards to midfield. On the play, Cassel did a good job stepping up in the face of a blitz, while Gaffney did a good job getting open and reeling in the pass. So, hey, good job all around. Faced with another third down, Cassel managed to connect with Moss on a 33-yarder over Moss’ outside shoulder to Seattle’s 13. Stephen Gostkowski came on to cut the deficit to 21-16 with 12:19 left to play.

No one could have blamed New England fans for expecting the worst, as this game opened like the door to a well-trafficked outhouse. Seattle scored TDs on their first two possessions, running and gunning their way to a 14-3 lead early in the second quarter. On their first drive, the Seahawks held the ball for 13 plays over 6:35. The home team pounded the Pats with their ground game, as Maurice Morris and someone named Leonard Weaver gained 45 yards combined. Wallace found Branch in the near-left corner of the end zone for a 7-0 score in what looked to be the beginning of a long day.

After Gostkowski trimmed the lead with an impressive 50-yard field goal, Seattle scored their second TD. This drive only took three minutes off the clock, as Wallace got the final 46 yards in three plays: a 25-yard pass to rookie tight end John Carlson, an 11-yard scramble, and a 10-yard TD pass to Carlson, who had eight catches for 69 yards. Neither Jerod Mayo nor Meriweather could cover the tight end.

Remember when the Patriots had a tight end who caught passes? Those were the days.

Down 14-3 in the second quarter, New England responded with their first touchdown drive of the day (and we might add, not a bit too soon). After an impressive 55-yard kick return by Ellis Hobbs, the offense only had 43 yards to go. Cassel converted the lone third down with his legs, gaining three on third and two at the 22. LaMont Jordan (he’s back!) followed with an eight-yard slog through Seattle’s defense to the 11. New England benefited from a pass interference penalty where Marcus Trufant grabbed Moss. From the two, Cassel found Benjamin Watson (just to remind us that he’s here), closing the gap to 14-10 at the half.

Watson caught one pass for two yards. Just for perspective, I sat on my couch Sunday and caught only one fewer pass and gained only two fewer yards. The tight end also did little to endear himself by getting an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty for using the ball as a celebratory prop. Now, if he’d done something imaginative, I could have lived with it. But stuffing the ball under his shirt? What is he, six?

You know, I’m complaining, and I really shouldn’t be. The Patriots had a come-from-behind win in a nasty environment. They lost Tedy Bruschi and Vince Wilfork to injury, adding to a list that at this point could make up an entire squad (I’m not exaggerating as much as I’d like). Seau’s going to be 40 next month. I’m turning 40 this week, and I wince at the thought of having to tackle anything tougher than a plate of nachos. Still, as nice as it is to have Old Home Week with Seau and Rosevelt Colvin back, it’s daunting to think of this defense going against Kurt Warner’s Cardinals in two games.

Save for two three-and-outs and one well-timed safety blitz, New England’s defense did little to stop the offense of what is now a 2-11 team missing its starting QB. Seattle converted 58 percent of its third downs. They rushed for 134 yards. A guy named Seneca completed over 70 percent of his passes.

Maybe I asked for this. Last week, I requested more one-on-one coverage and more rookies in the mix. Well, rookie linebackers Mayo and Gary Guyton started the game, as did rookie cornerback Jonathan Wilhite, with mixed results (Mayo had a dependable seven tackles, Wilhite had three, while Guyton had two and was pushed around by various blockers). While I’d like to see more of Wilhite over Deltha O’Neal at this point, seeing him in single coverage fails to give me a warm feeling (unless heartburn counts).

But what the heck: a win is a win, and this win put New England in a virtual tie for first place in the AFC East with the Jets (losers to San Francisco) and Dolphins. The Patriots, last year’s team to beat, have become a beat-up collection of underdogs, rookies and retirees. They are, to use a made-up word, rootable. A backup QB? Rookie starters? Undrafted and late-round players holding down the fort? And they’re still in playoff contention? Sign me up.

So here’s my advice to you, Patriots fans, and I’ll try to follow it myself: have some fun. Sure, this team will drive you nuts. Rookies miss tackles and blow assignments; receivers continue to drop passes. The line can’t seem to give their QB time, while the defense doesn’t rush or cover all that well. Cassel seems less like “Tom Brady II” and a little closer to “Sage Rosenfels, The Sequel.” Sometimes you just have to shake your head.

Next week, if Oakland’s JaMarcus Russell passes for 300 yards as the Raider defense holds New England to 14 points, fans can all hold their noses together at the fresh stench of another Pats mess. But if New England wins it – no matter how they win it – then they’ve got to smile.

No, it’s not easy being a Patriots fan this season, but look at it this way: at least you don’t have to root for Seattle.

Chris Warner’s ‘Game Day Rear View’ appears after every game on Patriots Daily. He can be reached at [email protected].

Rosie-r Games Ahead

logoThis Week – Seattle Seahawks (2-10; Against AFC East 0-2)

Due to last week’s debacle against the 2008 version of the Steel Curtain, the New England Patriots will probably have to win out and get a few presents from Ole Kris Kringle in order to make the playoffs.  That goal is still not out of the realm of possibility; although it would be nice for the Patriots to control their own destiny. 

If you think of it, those close losses against the Colts and the Jets are like the tortured Ghosts of a Playoff Berth Lost while the remaining three games (at Oakland, versus Arizona, and at Buffalo) are like the ethereal Ghosts of Possible 11-5 season.  That leaves this game against Seattle as the very real Ghost of the Trap Game. 

For those who may not know, a trap game is one where an obviously superior team overlooks a really bad team.  Although the Pats looked frustratingly flawed and confused against Pittsburgh, there’s not much of an argument that the Pats should beat the Seattle Seahawks.

This Seahawk franchise is almost like a microcosm of the US economy.  They were living high on the hog with a 5-year streak of playoff appearances (2003-07), a four year streak of NFC West division championships (2004-07) with a Super Bowl appearance in 2005.  But now, they have fallen on hard times with a 2-10 record and now are led by a Lame Duck (HC Mike Holmgren) and HC Select (Jim Mora, Jr.).  On Sunday, it is up to the Patriots coaches and players to avoid acting like a stimulus package to the recessional-looking ‘Hawks.

A perusal of the stats reflects a Seahawk team that can’t do much on offense and can’t stop anyone on defense.  Seattle ranks near the bottom on most offensive categories like Scoring per Game (25th – 18.0), Total yards per game (30th – 257.3), Passing Yards per Game (31st – 148.8), Passing Plays over 20 yards (31st – 20) and QB Passer Rating (29th – 65.0).  In all honesty, there have been on-going injuries to the WR corps (Deion Branch especially) and starting QB Matt Hasselbeck, but as the old cliché goes, “Injuries are part of the game.”

Not surprisingly, the Seahawks have turned to the running game, which they have done relatively well (21st – 108.5 yds per game) in comparison.  One rather surprising stat is that the “Hawks are tied (with Oakland, no less) for 8th in the league with running plays over 20 yards (11).  The Seahawks employ a three-pronged running attack with Dallas transplant Julius Jones, change of pace back Maurice Morris and former Michigan State Spartan/well-traveled NFL veteran/Goal-line runner T.J. Duckett.  Those three have combined for a decent 10-game stretch for a regular RB (259 attempts, 1,099 yards and 8 TDs) but the running game is usually more effective when there is a definite lead back and Jones is not that back anymore.

Defensively, Seattle is actually worse.  They are giving up 25.9 points a game (26th in the NFL), allowing 386.7 yards per game (30th) and finish dead last in both passing yards allowed per game (265.2) and passing plays of 20+ yards allowed (44).  Lastly, only the woeful Detroit Lions are worse than the Seahawks in QB Passer Rating (99.3).  Only the common cold is as successful as the Seahawks opposing QBs.

The one phase that Seattle excels is at Special Teams.  They are 2nd in the NFL with 1,457 KO return yards and are 3rd in the league with a 25.1 average (with the 6th most KO returns).  They are tied for 4th with 37 KO returns of over 20 yards and tops in the NFL with 7 KO returns of over 40 yards.  All of these numbers come with only one fumble. 

Kick returns isn’t the only part of Special Teams that Seattle performs well. The Seahawks are 9th in the league with 307 punt return yards for a 10.6 average (12th in the NFL). 

On the coverage side, the Seahawks are 8th in the league with a 65.6 kick-off average and is third in the NFL with 31.5% of their kick-off ending up with touchbacks.

So, how do the Pats avoid the teeth of the Trap Game and leave the city of Starbucks with a win?  Easy peasey. 

On offense, the Pats need to keep their playbook wide-open and continue to attack the Seahawks with the pass intermingled with running both Morris and Faulk with the Law Firm getting some at the goal line.  On defense, the Pats need to take away the run and force the Seattle QB to find his WRs.  And they should definitely practice on generating a decent pass rush; maybe getting newly signed LB Roosevelt Colvin back in the mix in obvious passing downs.

But the real key to a Pats win is to possibly generate some game-changing plays in the Special Teams.  That could be as simple as securing the ball on a kick-off, which the Pats haven’t well this year (tied for 2nd in the NFL with 3 fumbled Kick-offs).  If anything has been shown by this season, the Pats can find ways to lose games.  I would rather not see the Seahawks win on a return for a touchdown due to a fumbled kick-off.

Britt Schramm’s ‘Line Em Up’ appears weekly on Patriots Daily. He can be reached at [email protected].

Random Wednesday Thoughts

logoLet’s start here – please, harbor no illusions that the New England Patriots will be the 2008-2009 NFL Champions, or that they will play any significant role in deciding which of the other teams will be.

They don’t have enough good players, and their concentration – like Emilio Estevez’s in The Breakfast Club – is for shit. If these last five games have taught us anything, it’s that somehow, someway, some New England Patriot is going to f**k it up. No matter how close the ballgame, no matter what kind of roll his team might be on, some NEP is going to hold on a long return, drop a perfectly good pass, fumble without being hit, not cover a receiver, miss a tackle in the backfield, and use the last of his three second half timeouts with 9:52 remaining the third quarter.

I’m exaggerating, but I can’t draw any other conclusion from their play in the last five games. Dropped passes, personal fouls and weird in-game decision making doomed them in Indy. Kick returns, unforced fumbles, and a bend-and-then-break defense killed them against the Jets. Two great, competitive games, but there was no cigar in either case for the mistake-prone Pats. When the f**k-up floodgates opened for the Steelers on Sunday, there was no ‘good game’. The Patriots were walloped accordingly.

They just don’t have good enough players (they may not have had enough even if there hadn’t been a single injury all season, the way the defense has played) and its December 3rd and they are still trying to get focused. In other words, it’s not happening.

That doesn’t mean we shouldn’t pull for them to make the playoffs anyway. Given the alternative (a month of ‘so what’ football), how can we refuse?

To that end, yesterday Chris Gasper of the Globe did a good job of summing up what’s ahead.

This morning, backed by some intriguing data from the Elias Sports Bureau, Mike Reiss has a can’t-miss piece on how third and long is a downer for the Pats. Mike weaves through the play-by-play on some of the most recent examples of the defense’s utter futility, and adds commentary from beleaguered coordinator Dean Pees. I’m not sure Pees helps. I choked a bit when the answer always seemed to be, “Doggone it, we had that play covered, but one guy missed his assignment, it’s a different guy every time, we went over this.”

Oh, come on. Your team is 20% points behind the rest of the league in nearly every third down and distance scenario. You’re not just missing it.

Elsewhere, Ron Borges has the NFL’s response to Ryan Clark’s thunderous hit on Wes Welker, which knocked the Pats stalwart from the game. Don’t get me wrong, I don’t ever want to see Welker hit like that again, but at the time, it didn’t strike me as dirty or illegal. Anyway, I’m really linking this so you can get a load of Mike Pereira, the NFL’s double talking head of officials.

If I follow him correctly, it’s not a foul, people simply have a misconception about a player leaving his feet (it’s always the fans’ fault first), but he’s no fan of these high hits, and he’s happy the officials threw a flag, but it’s not an illegal play. Probably.

I’m glad that’s been cleared up.

Scott Benson is the Editor and Co-Founder of Patriots Daily. He can be reached at [email protected].

Half Bad

logoSearching through the rain for something positive to say about New England’s 33-10 debacle vs. the Steelers, I came up with one small tidbit: they’re still in the playoff hunt. Sort of.

Sunday’s shame lies in the fact that a couple hundred miles south, the Jets were getting tossed around by the Broncos. Had the Patriots figured out a way to win, they would be tied at 8-4 atop the division (albeit with the Jets winning the tiebreaker). As it stands now, the Pats and Dolphins sit together in second place at 7-5.

Though the ball of yarn unraveled in the third quarter, when Pittsburgh scored 13 points while shutting out the home team to take a 23-10 lead, it first came loose late in the second, when the Patriots missed a key opportunity to score.

A 41-yard draw play to Kevin Faulk and a 14-yarder by Sammy Morris helped put the Patriots on the Steelers’ nine-yard line with 35 seconds left. When quarterback Matt Cassel threw a little bit behind a wide-open Randy Moss in the back of the end zone, Moss let the ball and the score slip through his fingers. Stephen Gostkowski missed the 27-yard field goal attempt, keeping the score tied going into the break.

New England got the ball to begin the third and moved into Steeler territory with help from two penalties. On second and one, Cassel got sacked, killing the home team’s momentum and setting the stage for a blooper bonanza reminiscent of early 1990s Patriots. For those few minutes of playing time, that’s not an overstatement.

The Steelers held the ball for 6:53, taking 14 plays to get to the seven-yard line. There, after a couple of incomplete passes where Ben Roethlisberger had enough time in the pocket to boil an egg (the plays took nine and ten seconds, respectively), Pittsburgh settled for a field goal.

Down 13-10, New England looked to get the ball back and at least tie things up, but increasingly useless rookie Matt Slater performed his own personal football follies, muffing the kickoff and accidentally booting it into the arms of the onrushing Steelers at the eight. On second down, Roethlisberger tossed to Hines Ward for a touchdown. Cornerback Deltha O’Neal may have been in the same zip code on the play.

[Read more...]