January 27, 2012


Matchups Of The Week – Patriots at Steelers

By Dan Zeigarnik, Patriots Daily Staff

When Did This Guy Become The Patriots QB?

Fans are a resilient bunch, and have quickly shrugged off one of the most embarrassing losses in recent history. It has already been chalked up as a trap game against a coaching staff that knew how Belichick operates. The Patriots seemed woefully unprepared for the dogfight that the Browns were clearly going to bring. Having just come off of a great win against the Saints, and getting a whole bye week to prepare for the Pats, Cleveland was brimming with confidence and the Browns brought their “A” game. Colt McCoy was cool under fire, and clearly has a bright future in this league. Peyton Hillis is simply a beast the likes of which we haven’t seen since Mike Alstott. It also seems that Cribbs, Massaquoi and Robiskie only needed a competent quarterback to let their considerable talents shine through. The Cleveland Browns are clearly playing well and are better then their 3-5 record would have you believe.

The Patriots on the other hand are worse then their 6-2 record. Their defense is young and porous in the middle third. There complete lack of ability to prevent a 10 yard pass down the middle is borne out by the stats; they are dead last in 3rd down stops. Their offense is better, but not much better. The Patriots running game, while lovable, holds on by a shoestring with 2 players who would fit right in with the cast of the movie The Replacements. Speaking of which, Tom Brady looked like Shane ‘Foot-steps’ Falco, and it’s not just his obnoxious and noxious haircut. It was his errant and off-balance throws. To top it all off, the wide receivers can’t seem to get open and are all having a sub-par year. Welker’s woes are understandable; Branch is slower and more injury prone then he was 5 years ago. Edelman is having a year to forget and Tate is still developing.

This was all evident to anyone actually watching the games and not just listening to 98.5 about how much better the Patriots are now that Randy Moss is gone. It was easy to get coaxed into that kind of thinking, because the Patriots were finding ways to win games and pad their record. However, it’s hard to win games when you lose the turnover battle especially in the costly way the Patriots did last Sunday. The things to keep in mind for the rest of the season is that the Pats are a fun team with exciting young players that play the Belichick way.

Next up are the vaunted Steelers on the road, and Patriot fans are understandably nervous about being 1 game into a 3 game loosing streak. Sunday’s play against the Browns didn’t help much to bolster their confidence. However, there isn’t a single team in the league without a loss, and most team have an embarrassing loss or even multiple losses on their sheet. In this topsy-turvy league, anything can happen week to week. Look for the Patriots to get the upper hand in these key matchups:

1) Quaterback Play

Tom Brady had a night to forget and needs to bring his ‘A’ game in order for the Patriots to have any chance at winning this game. Roethlisberger is an upper echelon QB, but his team never asks him to throw a lot or for many yards. Also, he has had his fair share of turnovers and mediocre games this season despite having only playing in 4 games.

2) Gostowski’s replacement

With Stephen Gostkowski out of the year with a torn quadriceps it is vital that his replacement be adequate.

3) Rashard Mendenhall

He is a workhorse that can run through or around his opponents. This does not bode well for the Patriots linebackers who were just flattened by a much less-talented Peyton Hillis. Containing Mendenhall is of utmost importance, as he is the lynch-pin of the Steelers attack.

4) 3rd down conversions

The Patriots defense needs to get off the field, and give the offense a chance to put some points on the board. Otherwise the Steelers will just grind out the clock with a well-oiled ground game.

5) Turnover battle

What happened to Rob Gronkowski against the Browns is only forgivable because he is such a promising rookie and those mistakes seem like flukes. The team that wins the turnover battle will most likely win the game.

Around The League – Week 10

By Jeremy Gottlieb, Patriots Daily Staff

Break up the Oakland Raiders! One of the league’s most reliable laughingstocks is in the midst of its first three-game winning streak since 2002 and sits comfortably just a half-game out of first place in the AFC West through nine games. It’s sort of unbelievable, really. The owner is still delusional looneytune/Skeletor lookalike, Al Davis. The coach is still Tom Cable, who is most famous for breaking an assistant’s jaw with his fist during training camp last year. But the results, which have been as bad as it gets since a Super Bowl appearance in ‘02 (29-83, four coaches, not a single single-digit loss season over that stretch) are decidedly different.

Tom Cable And The Raiders Are Relevant?

Look at last week’s win over Kansas City if you need some hard evidence that things are different in Oakland. Trailing 10-0 at the half, the Raiders came roaring back, forcing overtime in the waning seconds and winning in the end, 23-20, while getting important production in all three phases of the game. QB Jason Campbell, benched in Week 1 but now back at the controls thanks to an injury to his replacement Bruce Gradkowski, passed for 229 yards and a score in leading both a game-tying and a game-winning drive. Old buddy Richard Seymour, who has to have been absolutely flummoxed by the majority of his time out west since being traded by the Pats right before last season, turned in a vintage performance (eight tackles, two for a loss, a couple QB hits, a lot of general disruption). And rookie Jacoby Ford was immense in the kicking game (see below). In a season chock full of stunning developments, the Raiders playing well, challenging for the playoffs and just being relevant overall, is near the top of the list.

There’s still plenty of time for Oakland to return to its embarrassing ways. Davis, who may or may not still be alive, habitually sticks his nose into situations he’d be much better off avoiding. Cable can’t seem to publicly support Campbell even though he’s led the win streak in place of Gradkowski. Running back Darren McFadden, fourth in the league in rushing (757 yards in seven games) has never played more than 12 games in a season and has already missed time with nagging injuries this year. But of their seven remaining games, only a Week 11 trip to Pittsburgh and a Week 133 game at San Diego look truly scary. They still have three divisional games left with which to pad their 3-0 record in the AFC West. And their defense, so often hideous over the last eight years of utter futility, is ranked seventh in the NFL and looking strong. The Raiders are right in the thick of things and appear equipped to stay there. Will wonders never cease?

This Week’s Five Best Teams

1. Pittsburgh: What looked like a typical Steelers rout of the lowly Bengals on Monday night got a little hairy down the stretch thanks Pittsburgh’s underwhelming pass defense, which made 35-year old Terrell Owens look like he did in his 49er days. Still, given their experience and their balance on both sides, if you had to pick one team in the whole league to win a big game on a neutral field tomorrow, wouldn’t it be them?

2. New York Giants: The Giants keep on rising as they continue to put their inauspicious start to the season further and further in the rearview. The other New Jersey team went out to an extremely tough place to play in Seattle’s Qwest Field and smoked the Seahawks, rolling out ot a 35-0 halftime lead thanks in no small part to another huge week from the tandem of Eli Manning 21-of-32, 290 yards, three TDs) and Hakeem Nicks (6 catches, 128 yards, TD).

3. Baltimore: The Ravens looked really sloppy headed into their bye week but came out of it on fire with a very convincing, 26-10 win over a tough Miami squad. It’s been interesting to see this team morph from a defensive juggernaut to an offensive powerhouse, which is what happens when you’re as loaded (Ray Rice, Derrick Mason, Anquan Boldin, Willis McGahee, T.J. Houshmandzadeh, Donte Stallworth, Todd Heap and the ever-improving Joe Flacco) on that side of the ball as Baltimore is.

4. (tie) New England/Atlanta: Man, did the Pats come crashing down to earth in Cleveland last week. It was likely an aberration – they are still the most well coached and well prepared team in the league. How they fare the next four weeks (at Pittsburgh, vs. Indy, at Detroit, vs. the Jets) will probably determine their entire season. On another note, it was a really good win for the Falcons over the Bucs at home last week, giving them a bit of separation in the NFC South. In the end though, the division will be won or lost for them based on whether they can win any big games on the road and whether they can hold off the Saints.

5. New Orleans: Speaking of which, the defending champs are not only starting to get hot, they are getting healthy too. It may have been against the awful Panthers, but the Saints posted their second straight dominant performance on defense last week, are clicking offensively as well as they have all year and have this week off to get Reggie Bush and Pierre Thomas (not to mention Drew Brees and his mysterious knee ailment) back to full strength.

This Week’s Five Worst Teams

1. Dallas: The Cowboys rolled over and quit during last week’s 45-7 humiliation in Green Bay for now ex-coach Wade Phillips one last time. Offensive coordinator Jason Garrett takes over on an interim basis but in this week’s edition of the Broken Record Dept., this team will never, ever win as long as owner Jerry Jones plays an active role. Maybe, if he strips himself of the organization’s GM title and gets someone to do that job who actually, you know, knows how to do it, Dallas will have a chance.

2. Carolina: I know they have one more win than the Bills. But consider this little factoid about the team that is on pace to score less than 200 points for the entire season: All three of the Panthers QBs played in last week’s 34-3 blowout loss to New Orleans in which the team had 195 yards, total. Combined, they were 17-for-36 for 68 yards. That’s 1.9 yards per pass attempt. That’s also sickeningly awful.

3. Buffalo: 0-8, but still working hard. Poor Buffalo has now lost three in a row by a field goal. Last week, in losing to the Bears, it was a missed extra point that forced them to have to chase points earlier than they should have in a eventual 22-19 loss. Their kicker had made 321 straight extra points prior to the miss. Yikes. Anyway, this week they get the Lions, who haven’t won a road game since 2007, at home. Something’s gotta give!

4. Denver: How merciful was last week’s bye for the Broncos? Now 2-14 under Josh McDaniels since starting last season 6-0, the former Pats offensive coordinator is likely coaching for his job for the remainder of this year.

5. Cincinnati: Same old Bengals. To their credit, they showed a lot of heart and resolve in coming within eight yards of a 20-point, fourth quarter comeback against the Steelers on Monday night. But as has always been the case, they couldn’t remotely handle last season’s success, have too many malcontents as usual and will be at home for the playoffs for the 19th time in the last 21 seasons.

What’s Trendy

- Philip Rivers, Chargers: It was easy to shrug off the drum beating of support for Rivers to be this year’s league MVP when San Diego was 2-5. But after he threw for 295 yards and four TDs last week against Houston without his top four receivers (the No. 1 target was practice-squader Seyi Ajirotutu) in the team’s second straight win and with a bye this week, I’m starting to believe.

- Peyton Hillis, Browns: Remember that part a minute ago about the ongoing failure of Denver coach Josh McDaniels? Well one reason for it may be his trade of this human bowling ball Hillis, whom he called exactly 17 plays for last season, for third-string QB/massive draft bust Brady Quinn in the off-season. Hillis gashed the Pats previously stout run defense for a career-high 189 yards and two TDs on 29 carries last week. The Broncos are dead last in the league in rushing (67.2 YPG).

- Jacoby Ford, Raiders: In that Raiders win over the Chiefs last week, which was only the franchise’s biggest victory in eight years, the previously mentioned rookie Ford became the second player ever to have over 140 yards receiving and 150 yards on kick returns. He ran one kick back 94 yards for a score, caught a 29-yard pass to set up the game-tying field goal at the end of regulation, then capped it off with a 47-yard catch that set up the game-winner in overtime.

What’s Not

- Chad Henne, Dolphins: Henne became the next guy in the long Miami line of QBs who aren’t Dan Marino when he was benched on Wednesday in favor of brittle, string-armed veteran Chad Pennington. The Dolphins need a spark – they are 4-4, without a win at home all year and score TDs less that 40 percent of the time the get inside the red zone. So Henne, just over a full season’s worth of games into his career after being drafted in the second round out of Michigan last year, gets the hook.

- Matthew Stafford, Lions: When last year’s No. 1 overall pick plays, he’s pretty good (60 percent completions, six TDs against one INT, 91.3 passer rating). But such occasions are rare. Stafford has played in just three games this season after playing in just 10 last year; now, he’s potentially out for the season after suffering his second major shoulder injury of the year against the Jets last week. A huge bummer for Detroit.

- The Texans: Another week, another lousy defensive effort, another brutal home loss for Houston, which is exactly the same as it always is. It looked like this was the season for the Texans to break out of their perpetual .500-ness after their Week 1 blowout of the Colts and their stirring Week 2 comeback at Washington. But since then, they are 2-4, they can’t cover practice squad wideouts and appear destined for yet another 8-8, non-playoff season.

And finally…

You’re not gonna believe what I saw last night! I went to ESPN mobile on my phone to check a couple things only to find a massive, red, highlighted banner that said, “BREAKING NEWS.” Right beneath, the text read, “Vikings Quarterback Brett Favre Tells NFL Network He Won’t Return in 2011.” I was shocked. How could this be? Favre announced publicly that he’s retiring? And in the middle of a season in which he’s currently playing? And on a night when the league is premiering it’s Thursday night showcase game on its house network with a game between two first place teams neither of which is the Vikings? “You’re kidding,” I said to no one in particular.

I don’t know what was more predictable – that BrettFavre, king of all attention whores, queen of all drama queens, would decide to peddle this completely meaningless information while everyone was looking at something other than him, and that was infinitely more interesting and important to boot, or that ESPN would breathlessly, instantaneously make it their top story. The nightmare continues.

Going To Pittsburgh? Good Seats Available.

Feel like seeing the Patriots take on the Steelers this Sunday night? You can still find tickets, though the prices are pretty high at this stage.

At the moment, there are 87 tickets available for less than $190 (The game avg is $312) There are also almost 1200 instant delivery eTickets available for Sunday’s game, almost 100 for less than $200 (Game Avg: $312)

Worry Wart – Game Nine At Steelers

by Chris Warner, Patriots Daily Staff

Finding themselves atop the NFL power rankings last week, the New England Patriots dropped the britches they’d gotten too big for and took a collective dump in Cleveland. Should they repeat that effort in Pittsburgh, Steelers fans may find themselves in danger of carpal tunnel syndrome from waving their ridiculous little towels.

So, will the Patriots return to form – or at least the form we hoped they’d taken? Or will we see the team that made the Browns look like Super Bowl contenders? One can only hope. And worry…

New Patriots Kicker Shayne "Don't Call Me Shank" Graham

Ain’t It A Shayne: The fact that Wes Welker had to boot an extra point after Stephen Gostkowski’s injury epitomized a frustrating Sunday where Pats fans thought they were watching a different team. With Gostkowski on injured reserve, Shayne Graham has been tabbed as his replacement. While we find Graham’s 10 years of experience comforting, his player page video showing him missing a field goal seems less so.

Up-Tight Ends: Only a 1969 tour director for Lake Cuyahoga could have had a worse day in Ohio than tight end Rob Gronkowski. The rookie offset the efforts of Aaron Hernandez by causing two turnovers. Unlike the lake, we want Gronkowski to catch fire once again, especially with the wide receivers having their problems. This, of course, leads to a perfect segue…

Not So Open-Minded: Um, hey, any receiver not named Welker? Could you, uh, get some space between yourself and a defensive back this week? Because, like, the Steelers are really good at stopping the run and everything, which means that Tom Brady’s going to have to throw the ball. So, ah, try to run crisp routes and stuff.

You know, if you’re not too busy.

Rush Hard Rashard: Holy headaches. If Peyton “Running Up That” Hillis can have a career day vs. New England’s defense, what in the name of missed tackles will Rashard Mendenhall do?We’re not even sure we want to know, but we’d like to avoid watching the Patriots’ D getting sliced up like a sheet cake at an office birthday party.

Ben There, Done That: Despite his time away from the team, Pittsburgh QB/non-rapist Ben Roethlisberger seems back to his old self, throwing deep passes with accuracy and wriggling through onrushing defenders as if they were assault charges. (Yup; it’s there.) Facing a New England pass “rush” that’s better described as a pass “take-your-time,” Roethlisberger could enjoy a stat-padder of a day.

In Heinz Sight: While it’s true that the Patriots have a better record away from home than last year, achieving more than one win on an opponent’s field hardly qualifies them for the Lombardi Trophy. Heaven knows, fans don’t want to go through the late-season misery of 2009 again.

Whether that happens or not seems like it’s up to the Patriots. Maybe the right team will show up this week.

Email Chris Warner at [email protected]

First Impressions – Pittsburgh Steelers

By Greg Doyle, Patriots Daily Staff

The Patriots jump out of the frying pan of Cleveland and into the fire of Pittsburgh this coming Sunday after getting absolutely physically manhandled by the Browns last week and losing 34-14.

If physical teams that like to pound the ball are going to be a problem for the Patriots, there is probably no worse team in the NFL to face the right now than Pittsburgh. Maybe. Because perhaps on the other hand, there is no better team to face. If they have a problem with physical, running play, why not just get it out there and see if they’ve corrected it or not versus the best? That’s the test for the Patriots this week. Can they bounce back and handle a team that is good at tough, physical play on both sides of the ball and who wants to pound it at them on defense and is likely licking their chops seeing how they wilted against such play last week? If not, they have other physical teams who’ll try to replicate the Browns going forward such as the Jets, Lions and Dolphins. And many more if they make it to the playoffs.

Wes Welker Would Like To Avoid Another Close Up With Ryan Clark

If the Pats can stand up to Pittsburgh and counterpunch a bit themselves physically, well then, perhaps last week was just an aberration that is now behind them. Teams will have to think twice about what they’re gonna do. This very well could be the pivotal game for the Patriots this season whether they’re going to be a top team or merely a decent team. Lets look at some of the key Steelers they’ll face this week:

Ben Roethlisberger (#7), Quarterback: Big Ben, as he is known, is back after starting the season with a 4 game suspension following a host of personal problems. As most football fans know, Roethlisberger was accused at least twice of rape in recent years and at the very least appears guilty of very bad judgment. There were rumors of additional women who had claims against him who didn’t come forward as well. Fans and associates alike were quick to jump on the Big Ben Bashing Bandwagon in the wake of his scandals with reports of years of boorish behavior, arrogance, stupidity and an all around jerk-like persona from the Steelers QB. The hypocritical thing is Ben always tried to pass himself off through college and coming into the NFL as a God-fearing religious type from a very strict Christian family. Now Ben is back again, reformed, so he says. He tells us once again he has changed and is the God-fearing, Christian humble athlete he once professed to be but he really, really means it this time. Whatever. Not much of that is a concern to the Patriots. He’s back playing and his game hasn’t changed much. On the field, he is a big, physical quarterback who may be the toughest QB to actually get to the ground after hits in the NFL. Ben makes a lot of plays bouncing off of hits, breaking away from sacks, alluding coverage and he can throw quite well on the run. The Patriots have had some success against him and Roethlisberger has had his successes against New England as well. He does occasionally make really dumb decisions and can get on a cold streak at times. He’s also prone to get hot. The most important thing with him is not to let him run around. If you have a chance to wrap him up, you have to do it because if he breaks away he’ll likely make a play to a receiver whose man can’t cover him as long as required.

Rashard Mendenhall (#34), Running Back: Mendenhall was the Steelers #1 draft choice out of Illinois in 2008. At Illinois, Mendenhall had a good but not great year up until his last year there when he exploded for over 1,600 yards. After an injury shortened first year in the NFL, last year Mendenhall started to come into his own with an 1,100 yard season. He’s continued to improve this year and is a very dangerous running back who hits the hole as fast as any back I’ve seen in recent years. He really usually is at full speed by the time he is finished taking a handoff or pitch and its concerning for the Patriots given how they handled another big, hard running back last week in Peyton Hillis of Cleveland, which is to say not well. If anything, Mendenhall is more talented than Hillis and more of a threat. He is also improving and becoming above average as a receiver as well. One negative to Mendenhall’s game is he has had a past fumbling problem, but reportedly has worked hard to overcome it. He may be running behind a banged up offensive line. Left tackle Max Starks is out for the year and has been placed on IR. He’ll likely be replaced by former Bill Jonathan Scott who the Patriots usually had their way with when he was in Buffalo. Frankly, he’s not that good. Guard Chris Kemoeatu also was hurt Monday versus Cincinnati and could be out. Center Maurkice Pouncey got hurt Monday as well, but returned later in the game and should play Sunday. All this could affect Mendenhall’s effectiveness.

Mike Wallace (#17), Wide Receiver: Wallace is a very fast receiver averaging an amazing 23 yards per catch. He has quickly made the Steelers forget about Santonio Holmes, who was traded to the Jets this offseason. Wallace, who went to Ole Miss, gives the Steelers 60 minutes of stretch the field ability and game breaking type plays. Reportedly he runs a 4.33/40. In a year and a half of action, Wallace has produced 11 touchdowns so he is obviously a big playmaker. The Patriots defense this year has focused on preventing big plays and making teams beat them on offense with a consistent, if conservative, approach. Taking away the deep option for Roethlisberger that he has in Wallace will be a priority. They’ll like give whomever is on him help over the top with a safety. If Wallace is still able to make plays Sunday, its a sure sign the defense has simply failed to execute again this week and will probably lead to a long day for the Patriots defense.

Maurkice Pouncey (#53), Center: Pouncey is the Florida player who got away. Just a terrific center on the Gators recent teams, he is known as a team leader, tough guy, smart center and just all around tremendous player. There was even some talk of the Steelers making him a captain, which is unheard of for a rookie player. You’d have to think the Patriots liked him, but simply couldn’t get him and take Devin McCourty as well. Corner was a bigger need. But Pouncey could have played guard for a time as well. In any event, the Steelers have themselves a great player and anchor of their line going forward for probably a decade or more. The good news for the Patriots? Pouncey’s twin brother, Mike Pouncey, is now a senior at Florida and just about as good as Maurkice was there. Mike played guard while Maurkice was still at Florida, but has moved over to his brother’s center spot this season. The Patriots will like that position flexibility and could possible target the brother in this year’s upcoming draft.

Ziggy Hood (#96), Defensive End: Hood was the Steelers first round pick in 2009 and many are beginning to wonder if it was a rare Steeler draft swing and miss. Whether it was or not, we’re about to find out as Hood’s playing time will be extended going forward with usual starting end Aaron Smith likely out for the season. This year, Hood only has 6 tackles thru 8 games and no sacks despite starting the last two. The reviews have been mixed of his first two starting appearances. Without Smith and with a unproven Hood and some other aging players on the Steelers defensive line, they’re not what they used to be amongst the front three. Their linebackers are still very tough to run on however, but there is at least enough of a crack beginning to show there perhaps the Patriots can run just enough to keep the Steelers a bit honest and open things up in the passing game. Hood stepping his game up significantly would be an important way for the Steelers to prevent that, but the jury remains out if he’s a player or a bust.

Ryan Clark (#25), Safety: When the Patriots last saw the Steelers in 2008, Clark came up with a memorable hit on Wes Welker that pretty much set the tone for the Patriots blowout loss that day. Some on the Patriots weren’t happy with the hit and felt it was dirty. Clark wasn’t fined, however, and trying to figure out what’s a legal hit and what’s good solid defense in Roger Goodell’s convoluted NFL these days is nearly impossible. Still, the Patriots may be looking for payback on Clark, a player with at least some reputation for dirty play. There is no doubt Clark is a hitter and causes fear amongst receivers and if an offensive player gets a chance to light him up in return, they’d be more than happy to. Clark suffers from sickle cell anemia and after a game in Denver in 2007 had to have both his spleen and gallbladder removed due to negative affects from the thin air. He lost thirty pounds following the surgeries, but has regained his former level of play in the years since. When the Steelers travel to Denver, however, Clark does not go any longer.

Making The Grades – Patriots at Browns

By Jeremy Gottlieb, Patriots Daily Staff

OK class, move along. Nothing to see here. You didn’t actually witness the Patriots getting stomped, whupped, waxed, bombed, crushed, destroyed, clobbered and lambasted every which way by the (gulp) Cleveland Browns on Sunday. As far as we’re concerned here at Patriots Daily University, the game may as well have not even happened. The Pats didn’t really give up 404 yards of offense to a team starting a rookie quarterback named Colt McCoy, who in just his third career game, posted a better quarterback rating (101.6) than Tom Brady (90.5). They didn’t really allow 230 yards rushing, the most they’ve let up in a game since December, 2002. Most of those yards weren’t actually racked up by a former seventh-round pick named Peyton Hillis, a guy who averaged just over a carry per game last season but on Sunday looked like a combination of Jim Brown, Earl Campbell, Walter Payton and some super, extra enhanced mutant from “X-Men.” The Browns didn’t really convert more than half of their third downs, outscore the Pats 17-7 in each half and make the Pats coaching staff look like a bunch of Wade Phillips/Brad Childress/Norv Turner wannabes. And the game wasn’t really over in the third quarter. It all didn’t truly happen. OK, I’m lying – it did. And we will analyze it, albeit quickly, as we can already taste the collective chunks beginning to circulate in the old gullet, because that’s our job as professors at this esteemed institute of higher football learning. And then, we will forget this disaster on the shores of Lake Erie even happened and let the Browns, the city of Cleveland and their hope-deprived fans continue to think they just won the Super Bowl and not a midseason game that improved their record to 3-5. And we will sit back and wait for the Pats, surely embarrassed by taking all of last week’s “best team in football” hype a little too seriously, as evidenced by their tidal wave of shitty play on Sunday, get back to basics before invading Pittsburgh for a primetime matchup with the Steelers on Sunday Night Football. So with that, let’s get to this week’s report card, sponsored by the letters B for Blowout, and S for Suckfest.

The Patriots Were A Step Behind Peyton Hillis All Day Long

OFFENSE: Overall Grade: C-

Let’s see here… Another slow start and a handful more throws ranging from inaccurate to head-scratchingly bad for the quarterback? Check. A wildly inconsistent performance in the running game? Check. A complete and total disappearing act on the part of the wide receivers? Check. One of the great rookie tight ends having the worst game of his life? Check. Put all of those check together and you get a pretty lousy grade. Fewer thank 300 total yards? Check. Sure Danny Woodhead and Aaron Hernandez shined once again. But that’s all there was. It was the Pats worst day on offense all year and that includes two weeks ago in San Diego.

Quarterbacks: C

On the surface, Brady’s numbers look OK – 19-for-36, 224 yards, two TDs and that 90.5 passer rating. But he was never able to get into a rhythm all day even though for the most part the O-line again gave him ample time to throw. He only led three of nine drives for more than six plays and even though he was victimized by the Browns defense playing the game of its collective life, when he did have open receivers, he wasn’t hitting them the way he needs to or has in the past. More often than not, passes were short, overthrown or at least slightly off the mark. On the Pats first drive of the game, he had Rob Gronkowski open with daylight ahead of him on consecutive plays but threw the ball at Gronk’s shoes on the first one and tried to lead him too far on the second one. The result was the first of five punts and several missed opportunities. It wasn’t a total loss for Brady. His second TD pass, also Hernandez’s second TD reception, was a perfect touch throw to the back corner of the end zone. He hit Wes Welker with a couple of perfectly placed bullets over the middle to convert some big first downs. And if it weren’t for multiple drops (most of them by Gronk and Brandon Tate), those numbers would have been a lot better and the game’s outcome almost certainly would have been different. Regardless, it was not Brady’s best game by a long shot nor was it the first time this season that he’s struggled for a long stretch of play. With the Steelers, Colts and Jets on tap in three of the next four weeks, he’d better get it out of his system.

Running Backs: C

Woodhead’s total brainfart on a second half draw call on which he took off while Brady stood helplessly holding the ball out for no one notwithstanding, he had another solid game. Rudy 2 kept up his good work with another 92 total yards, consistently making guys miss in the open field and looking far tougher on inside runs than anyone his size has any right to look. It’s safe to say that Kevin Faulk, as important a cog in the Pats machine as he’s always been, isn’t nearly as missed as we were all afraid he would be following his Week 2 knee injury and Woodhead, ballad and all, is the key reason why. Elsewhere, it was slim pickins. BenJarvus Green-Ellis followed up his gigantic performance last week against the Vikings with a total el floppo against the Browns. In his defense, the Pats were down 10 points in the first four minutes of the game and trailed handily all which may have meant that any semblance of trying to establish the run went out the window. But unlike last week, he ran without conviction or decisiveness, mustering just 14 yards on nine carries. On one carry in particular, he got into some open space off left tackle and had his choice of hitting the edge and running for daylight outside or cutting it back toward the middle of the field, where there was also a bunch of open space. Instead, he literally ran right into Matt Light’s back while Light was blocking the only Browns defender anywhere near the play. Naturally, he slowed down, Light lost his leverage and Law Firm was dropped for a two-yard gain. If memory serves, it was his last carry of the game.

Wide Receivers: D

Tate took the Law Firm approach, building on his big game against Minnesota with an utter and complete dog of an afternoon. He had two of those costly drops, one of which hit him right between the 1 and the 9 on his jersey and would have gone for a much needed first down. One catch for 12 yards just isn’t gonna cut it, especially with Welker still at less than 100 percent and Deion Branch hobbled with a hamstring injury. More consistency out of Tate would be nice. Speaking of Branch, he’s kind of disappeared since that magical first game back against Baltimore a few weeks ago. Obviously, he’s playing hurt and is to be commended. But whether he can’t get open due to the hamstring or the Pats just aren’t going to him enough, there needs to be more production. Brady had him open on a deep in route in the third quarter and threw the ball 10 feet over his head, which of course isn’t his fault. But Branch has had exactly zero effect on any the past three games, not even matching his reception or yardage total from the Baltimore game in each of them combined. If he’s hurt, sit him out. It’s not doing anyone any good to have him out there and unable to contribute. As for Welker, it has to be hard enough for him to be trying to do the things he’s great at while still coming back to full strength from the knee surgery. When adding in the fact that the Pats can’t get the ball downfield which in turn leads to him being bracketed almost all the time, well, you figure it out. He performed admirably on Sunday, making his four catches and racking up those couple of first downs. But he can’t be expected to do it all even if he’s completely healthy and not being constantly double teamed.

Tight Ends: C-

It was bound to happen sooner or later. Rookies have games like Gronk had on Sunday fairly routinely. He and Hernandez have been so good, such positive forces all year so far, it was easy to forget they’re both just in their first year. But Gronk came crashing back to earth with a game that he probably needs to forget faster than anyone. Starting with the fair catch call on that first quarter kickoff that he then ran away from, continuing to a couple of brutal drops and a horrendous holding penalty that wiped out a third quarter drive at midfield when the Pats were still technically in the game and capped by his fumble at the Cleveland 2, it was a total horror show for the big guy. The fumble, which came on the ninth play of a perfectly executed two-minute drive at the 14:30 mark of the second quarter and with the Pats still in possession of two timeouts, was the play of the game. Gronk was simply trying to make something happen, fighting for the end zone so that his team would head into halftime down by just three points and set to receive the second half kickoff. But he has to know what the situation is there. If it’s fourth down, maybe he fights the way he fought. But it was first down. And the Pats had those 30 seconds and the two time outs. That’s an eternity to punch the ball in. It’s the kind of situational football that Belichick-coached teams play better than anyone. Not on Sunday though. Brady made a point after the game of saying that one play does not a loss make. But that fumble by Gronk was pretty close. He’ll bounce back – he appears to be too talented not to. And he did make a couple of decent plays in the game. But Sunday’s performance should be placed in the trash can, if it hasn’t already. As for Hernandez, it was nice to see him register his first two career TDs and put up his weekly, long seam route catch on which he vaporizes a defender and hauls in a pass right on his hip on the fly. Other than Woodhead, he was the only guy able to spark up the Pats offense. And the only reason this position group doesn’t get an F.

Offensive Line: B

The Pats welcomed back Logan Mankins on Sunday and he looked OK. He started, played the first couple of series, then rotated in and out with Dan Connolly for the remainder of the game (Connolly also spelled Stephen Neal for a stretch here and there). And while the alterations may have adversely affected the running game, they certainly didn’t factor into the pass protection. Brady was sacked just once (by the immortal Ahtyba Rubin) and hit just two other times. Light continued his strong play after hitting rock bottom in San Diego and outside of Neal getting fleeced by Rubin on the sack, there was nothing to complain about in regards to the line in the passing game. Still, the lack of a running game bears watching. The Pats dominated the Vikings defensive front last week and that group is far more heralded than the Browns. Should be interesting to see how the line looks against the Steelers this Sunday night They are first in the league against the run, allowing just 59 yards per game on the ground, or nine fewer than the Pats managed in Cleveland.

DEFENSE: Overall Grade: D-

Well, that was quick. Just when it looked like the Pats defense had turned a corner, along came Sunday. Getting gashed for over 400 yards by the Cleveland Browns represents a slight regression, don’t you think? It wasn’t just Hillis rolling for the third most rushing yards allowed by the Pats since the first Super Bowl season (184 on 29 carries with two TDs). It was the inability to stop McCoy, who looked like he was at his alma mater, Texas, carving up Baylor or Colorado or some other Big 12 scrub school. Even when the Browns ran a couple trick plays, which the D had to have been drilled on given their reliance on such gadgets on previous games, the reactions were late and confused looking All that needs to be said to further get this point across is that Jonathan Wilhite was the best player on D for the Pats on Sunday. Consider that for a moment… OK, now we can get on with dredging up the carnage.

Defensive Line: F

The strength of the Pats defense all year was its biggest weakness on Sunday. They just couldn’t handle Hillis at all at any point. This group was completely dominated all day long by the Browns O-line. From the first play of the game, when Hillis exploded through a hole the size of a planet then hurdled a would be tackler downfield like he was Edwin Moses or Carl Lewis, it was an ordeal for these guys. They just had no answer all day long. Both Ron Brace and Gerard Warren had a tackle for a loss but neither of them came on Hillis. The Browns simply wanted it more, worked hard to move Vince Wilfork out the way, which they seemed to do with ease, and subsequently beat the piss out of the Pats front. There really isn’t much more to say than that. If it had been a heavyweight fight, the Pats would have been done by way of the knockout sometime in the first round.

Linebackers: F

A couple of quotes from Browns players after the game read that the key to their running success and the focal point of their game plan was staying away from Jerod Mayo. They wanted to get Mayo out of position, keep him away from the line of scrimmage and limit his tackles to the downfield variety. Well, it worked. Mayo had 10 tackles but I’m hard pressed to remember any that came within seven yards of the line of scrimmage. He did force a fumble on Hillis, but it came after a 16 yard run and was just like the one Gronk had only it didn’t come at the 2-yard line. And on another play, the Browns even lined Hillis up wide and when Mayo ran over to cover him, Hillis got at least three steps wide open immediately and hauled in a 29-yard pass. Yikes. Mayo may want to join Gronk in putting this one in the old shredder, no? Brandon Spikes made a nice play to seal up the hole on Hillis’ first TD but when Hillis smashed into him, he barely moved while Spikes went flying backwards about five yards. That was the last time Spikes was heard from again all day. The same can be said for Jermaine Cunningham and Rob Ninkovich, neither of whom did anything but get pushed around. And on top of all this, McCoy wasn’t sacked or even hit a single time in the entire game. The domination wasn’t just of the D-line. It was of these guys, too.

Defensive Backs: D+

Let’s hear it for Wilhite! He actually sort of seem to maybe know how to play. Hallelujah! Wilhite broke up a pass, played some good coverage and even made a couple of nice tackles, one of them to stop a drive, kind of a big deal considering the ease with which the Browns converted third downs throughout the game. It’s nice to see the guy have a decent game after how bad he’s been. Way to go, Wilhite! And that’s it. No one else made a single play. Not one. James Sanders, who is the longest tenured veteran of this group and has played well in place of Patrick Chung the past couple weeks, was awful, routinely arriving at plays late and looking more lost than anyone on the Browns tricky, quick snap, end-around TD run by receiver Chansi Stuckey in the second quarter. It was a play on which no one seemed to know what was happening but Sanders, along with Kyle Arrington, looked more lost than anyone. And of course, we would be remiss to not mention our favorite DB, Brandon Meriweather. He did recover the Hillis fumble, to his credit. He also took such a bad angle on Hillis’s first run of the game, a play which he may have been able to slow down if he knew what he was doing, that I thought he was a fan who’d wildly run onto the field. Then, when McCoy rolled out and took off for the end zone on an eventual TD run in the third quarter, he was blown up by Browns receiver Josh Cribbs. It was an enormous hit and in a way, it was a little bit karma-y. Sorry, Brandon – if you’re gonna dish it out, you’d better be ready to take it.

Special Teams: D

No one gets out alive on this report card, class. It all started for the special teams on the first quarter kickoff that was botched by Gronk. Sammy Morris was nearby and maybe he called Gronk off after the fair catch call. We’ll never know. What we do know is that Morris couldn’t handle the ball, the Browns recovered, Hillis scored three plays later and they were off to the races. The Browns wouldn’t kick to Tate at all – every kickoff was short and thus needed to be fielded by an up man (Connolly had two returns for 19 yards) and it was a good strategy that worked in terms of field position. Our boy Zoltan didn’t have such a great day either with his best work coming when he somehow handled yet another ground ball by long snapper Clint Ingram. And Stephen Gostkowski somehow injured his thigh in the first half and will be out a few weeks. The injury allowed Welker to kick a late extra point which was sort of cool, I guess. But it’s a huge blow in the long run to this unit, which has looked average or worse every week since that explosion in Miami a few weeks ago.

Coaching: F

Belichick may well have had warned his charges about trick plays and stopping the run and how so many of his former assistants, led by Cleveland head coach Eric Mangini, may feel like they have something to prove and it could show in their preparation. It didn’t take. Mangini, his ex-Pat assistants (O-coordinator Brian Daboll, D-coordinator Rob Ryan, special teams coach Brad Seely) ran circles around Belichick and his crew to embarrassing extremes. The Browns had a perfect game plan in all phases and did whatever they wanted all day long. The Pats had no answers. It was one of the most stunning aspects of the loss, how thoroughly outcoached the Pats were, especially considering how masterfully Belichick had navigated the season up to this point. It was likely more of an aberration than anything else – the fact that Mangini was doused with Gatorade in the late stages proved that it was more than just another regular season game to him, his staff and his team and while that’s no excuse for such an ass whupping, it’s unlikely the Pats will run up against a team treating a game in such a way again. Still, whatever mojo Belichick had working through the season’s first seven games, he had better find it quickly. The Steelers and Colts are a lot better than the Browns.

Matchups Of The Week – Patriots at Browns

By Dan Zeigarnik, Patriots Daily Staff

The Patriots are a league’s best 6-1!

I guarantee that neither you nor anybody else saw that coming. They are exciting to watch and fun to follow. The rookie tight ends are electrifying. Danny Woodhead has become an immediate fan favorite. The defense still has a ways to go but it is young, talented, and is much-improved from last year.

While the team is not creaming its opponents like it they did in 2007, the Patriots resemble the feistiness of the 2001 team and that fits with the Patriot fans self-identification much better. Now they face the overlooked Browns, which just beat the Saints, are coming off of a bye week and are playing at home.

Look for the Patriots to perform well in these five areas of the game, to take home a seventh win.

Special Teams

The Patriots have a great special teams unit. So far they have blocked a field goal, a punt, and have run back two kickoffs for touchdowns. Apparently that’s not good enough against the Browns, who are supposedly even better then that. We will see what happens in this, special, matchup.

Wes Welker’s Routes

Will A New Knee Brace Mean Crisper Routes For Wes Welker?

Wes Welker is having a decent year considering he shouldn’t even be playing right now. He has recovered remarkably quickly from his devastating knee injury. However, he is clearly not having as productive a season as he did last year. Some of that is due to the fact that the offensive approach is much more balanced this year, as well as the fact that Randy Moss is gone which lets the defenses focus more on Welker. The other part is that Wes is wearing a big bulky brace that hinders his ability to cut with the same gusto as he is used to. Well folks, the good news this week is that Wes has gotten himself a much thinner knee brace that he likes a lot more. If his routes are crisper and he can get more up-field traction once he catches the ball it will make the Patriots offense that much more dynamic.

Peyton Hillis

Think of him as a rich man’s Heath Evans. He is big and lumbering; however he seems to catch the ball well out of the flat and to get yards after the catch by either running over opposing players or nimbly sidestepping them. He is ultimately a very likable guy, and someone who would fit great in the Patriots system. But not this week. This week The Patriots need to stop him in his tracks. The fans can go on to root for Hillis on Monday.

Patriots letdown vs. A Rested Browns Team

The Browns are a well coached team, or so everyone says. I think the Patriot fans clearly remember how ‘well coached’ the Jets were under ManGenius turned ManJudas, but that’s for another time. More importantly, this scrappy team is coming off a bye week and is playing at home. This does not bode well for the Patriots, who despite having some very respectable wins on the road this year, have faced some serious road woes in the past three years. With each successive road win, that monkey keeps sliding further off the Patriots back.

Trick Plays

The Browns don’t have the raw talent on their roster to compete with the big boys, so they devise trick plays to even the playing field. As always, a successful trick play is about catching the opposing team napping, so when the plays are called in the game is the most crucial and under-appreciated aspect of a trick play as opposed to the play itself. If the Pats are ready for them they will blow them up regardless of how tricky the trick play is.

Trading Places – Waiting For Next Year

We did something a little different this week, as the Cleveland sports blog Waiting For Next Year contacted us and asked for some input on today’s game.

Chris Warner obliged, and the result is on their post The Browns Will Win If…

Chris’ contribution is telling the Browns fans how the Patriots will win the game if…

You get the idea. Check out their site, and perhaps join in the discussion.

Why This Game Is Important – Patriots at Browns

By Bruce Allen, Patriots Daily Staff

Editor’s note: Greg Doyle is out in Cleveland for tomorrow’s game, College Scout will return next week with a look at the safeties.

This weekend the Patriots are in Cleveland to take on the 2-5 Browns, led by former Patriot assistant coach Eric Mangini.

While the Browns record isn’t impressive, their win over the New Orleans Saints two weeks ago certainly was. The Patriots need to be wary of this team, which is sure to give them a fight on Sunday. Here are a few reasons why this is such an important game for New England.

At 6-1, the Patriots boast the best record in the NFL, and sit atop many of the various “power rankings” put out by media outlets. A loss to the Browns would severely dent their credibility and with games agai

Eric Mangini Is Hungry For A Win Over The Patriots

nst AFC powerhouses Pittsburgh and Indianapolis up next, there is the possibility of a three game slide to 6-4, at which point all the goodwill and feelings built up over this 6-1 start would be gone. A win in Cleveland, even coupled with losses the next two games makes for a much more palatable 7-3 record.

This is an AFC game, and in terms of playoff positioning, you’ve got to get as many of these AFC games as you can. The Patriots right now have the best record in AFC games at 5-1, but the Jets, Steelers and Texans also each only have one AFC loss. The Patriots need a win to keep that AFC record strong.

Looking at records across the AFC, the Jets, Ravens, Steelers, Colts and Chiefs are

all one game behind the Patriots at 5-2. The Patriots need a win to stay ahead of those teams for another week. The Titans sit at 5-3, but have a bye this week. The Ravens play the Dolphins, and the Steelers play the Bengals this week, games that both Baltimore and Pittsburgh should win. The Colts have a fairly tough game on the road against Philadelphia this weekend, and the Chiefs renew an old rivalry by heading to Oakland to play the surprising (4-4) Raiders.

In terms of the AFC East, the Patriots need a win to keep ahead of the Jets, who play in Detroit this weekend, a game they should win. They also need a win to remain two games ahead of the Dolphins, who have a tougher matchup in Baltimore this Sunday. Keep in mind the Dolphins are undefeated on the road this season.

This game is also important in tiebreaker scenarios. The Jets play in Cleveland next week, and the Browns travel to Miami on December 5th. The Patriots need a win here to ensure they stay a game up on common opponent tiebreakers with the Jets. Of course, the Steelers and Ravens are in the same division as the Browns, and play them twice. Each of those teams has already beaten the Browns once this season.

The Patriots need a win to show that this young team is mature enough to go out on the road and defeat an underdog opponent that is sure to put up a fight. They need to build on road wins in Miami and San Diego, especially with a very tough game in Pittsburgh coming up next week. They need to be mature and focused enough not to be riding high after the Vikings win and avoid looking ahead to the Steelers next week. Avoid the dreaded “trap game,” in other words.

Facing a former assistant coach is never easy for Belichick, as evidenced by the games against Mangini’s Jets in the past, and against the Josh McDaniels-led Broncos last season. The Patriots need a win to keep Bill Belichick from being grumpy next week in practice.

Important enough for you?

Tonight on Patriots All Access (w/ video preview)

Tonight on Patriots All Access, airing on WBZ-TV at 7 p.m., and immediately following on Patriots.com:

  • Dan Roche breaks down an impressive win over Minnesota, followed by a visit inside the Patriots’ winning locker room
  • Steve Burton sits down with BenJarvus Green-Ellis following the running back’s two-touchdown performance against Minnesota
  • Scott Zolak gets Bill Belichick’s thoughts on returning to Cleveland, the home of his first head coaching job
  • Coach Belichick highlights the Browns’ special teams on The Belestator
  • In the first of a special, two-part “Path to The NFL,” All Access focuses on Tom Brady’s high school years through the eyes of his father, Tom Brady, Sr.
  • All Access introduces Patriots fans to wide receivers coach Chad O’Shea
  • Defensive lineman Vince Wilfork was “mic’d up” during the Bills game in September
  • Lyndsay Petruny follows the Patriots in the community, as they serve hot meals and exercise with Boys & Girls Club members in Chelsea
  • Patriots Football Weekly’s Paul Perillo and ESPNBoston’s Mike Reiss share their opinions on the upcoming Patriots-Browns game

Video Preview:

Patriots Buffet Table – Patriots at Cleveland Browns

by Patriots Daily Kitchen Staff

This week it’s a special road game edition of the Buffet Table. The Mangenius has brought his special brand of suck to Cleveland.

Mangini probably likes Glee. I don’t know why, I haven’t seen it, but I’m sure he has. Probably signs along using a hairbrush as a microphone.

It sounds like something he’d do. It would fit into his whole “crappy cover version of the real thing” persona.

I hate that guy.

What to eat?

We’ll be redoing a recipe from the Cleveland game way back in October of 2007. Why? Because it’s awesome.

We’re looking towards the German ancestry of many Clevelanders and making Schwenkbraten. Don’t worry it is easier to make that it is to pronounce. Schwenkbraten is a German grilled pork. Usually cooked over a beechwood fire, if you have a smoker go for it, it’s still great when cooked on a gas grill.

Finished Schwenkbraten

Ingredients:
Schwenkbraten – German grilled pork serves 4
4 onions
1 cup vegetable oil
3 cloves garlic crushed
1/2 cup (2 nip bottles) gin
1 tablespoon mustard (german stoneground will be best, but brown will do)
1 tablespoon thyme
1 tablespoon smoked paprika
1 tablespoon black pepper
2 teaspoons cayenne pepper
1 tablespoon salt (kosher will be best)
2 pound pork loin, you can use boneless pork chops,but the loin is more tender
8 bulkie or kaiser rolls

Prep:
Almost all of the work for this recipe occurs a day before. Slice the onions and put the rings into a large ziplock bag, add everything but the pork and salt, mix it all together. Cut the loin into 16 chops, cutting on the diagonal will give you thinner chops with more surface area. They’ll soak up more marinade and grill faster, both good things. Sprinkle the salt over your cut chops. After 15 minutes, put the chops into the ziplock, mix it up, push the air out of the bag and close. By adding the salt and allowing the meat to sit salted we drew some of the moisture out of the pork, that will allow the marinade to soak in faster. Refrigerate for 24 hours.

Cooking:
Take the chops out of the ziplock. Pour the onion and marinade mixture into a large aluminum foil pouch. Put the pouch on your grill, after 10 minutes put your chops onto the grill. The oil used in the marinade may flame up, so be careful when you put them on. 4 minutes later flip the chops, and after another 3 minutes check to make sure the pork is no longer pink and the juices run clear and you’re done. If you cut the chops thick you will need to cook them longer.

Layer the chops and onions onto the rolls, 2 chops per roll.  You could use some more German mustard if desired, but you won’t need it. Mix some cayenne pepper into brown mustard and you’re pretty close to the secret recipe stadium mustard served in Cleveland.

What to drink?

We’ll stretch the limits on the Oatmeal Stout. While it’s not a German beer and wouldn’t be a traditional match for German food, it is a good match for November and cooler weather.

Oatmeal Stouts as the name implies are stouts brewed with oats. But why add the oatmeal? Oats add a certain smoothness and fullness to the body of the beer, it goes very well with the roasted and bitter flavors found in your basic stout.

The style had gone extinct until it was reinvented by Samuel Smiths back in the 1980s. Today there are quite a few available.

Most of these will run from 5% to 6% ABV and from about 15 to 40 bitterness units. However there is a brewery from Ohio that specializes in making some much larger versions.

Hoppin Frog is a small craft brewer from Akron, Ohio and they’re known for a big Oatmeal Stout called B.O.R.I.S The Crusher.

B.O.R.I.S. standing for Bodacious Oatmeal Russian Imperial Stout is a hybrid between the Oatmeal and Russian Imperial Stout styles. Usually Oatmeal stouts aren’t this big (9.4% ABV) and Russian  Imperial Stouts don’t usually contain oats.

Not happy stopping there, they upped the ante to D.o.R.I.S. the Destroyer or Double Oatmeal Russian Imperial Stout. Even bigger at 10.5% ABV.

Neither of these beers are cheap, expect to pay about $8-10 for a 22 ounce bomber. Both are big, smooth, roasty, boozy, chocolate and coffee filled monsters.

There are more manageable Oatmeal Stouts on the market.

Starting in Vermont, Otter Creek puts out an organic Oatmeal Stout under their Wolaver’s line. It is at the heavy side with 5.9% ABV. The website is currently down for redesign.

From Massachusetts

Ipswich Oatmeal Stout is very good, but is big at 7% ABV.

People’s Pint Our Oatmeal Stout can only be found in bombers but it is in the normal alcohol range at 5.1% ABV.

Lefty’s Brewing Company is a newish entry to the scene. From Bernardston you can only find their Chocolate Oatmeal Stout in limited locations in the Western half of Massachusetts.

From the West Coast

Rogue Shakespeare Stout comes in at 6% ABV and about 70 bittering units. Available in 22 ounce bombers.

Anderson Valley Barney Flats Oatmeal Stout is 5.7% ABV and only 13 bittering units. Also available in cans.

From the middle

Founder’s Breakfast Stout is on the large side at 8.3%ABV and 60 bittering units. Not just an oatmeal stout, this one is a coffee, chocolate oatmeal stout. Breakfast in a bottle.

From England

Samuel Smith’s Oatmeal Stout as noted above the first of the reborn oatmeal stouts.

Young’s Oatmeal Stout (no website) is a 5.1% ABV stout, available in an 18+ ounce bottle (500 ml) like the Sam Smiths. Tastes fairly similar to the Sam. Smiths as well.

Oatmeal Stout is also popular amoung brewpubs, the following and many more keep the occasional oatmeal stout on tap.

  • Portsmouth
  • Boston Beer Works
  • People’s Pint (as seen above it’s also bottled)
  • Rock Bottom
  • John Harvard’s
  • Cambridge House

Around The League – Week 8

By Jeremy Gottlieb, Patriots Daily Staff

Thank god for Mike Shanahan, my favorite fraud coach, for giving me another opportunity to write about how massively overrated he really is after benching his handpicked quarterback, Donovan McNabb, with just under two minutes left in last week’s Redskins loss at Detroit with the game’s outcome still in doubt. He’s the gift that keeps on giving.

Is The Problem Mike Shanahan, or Donovan McNabb?

Trailing 30-25 with 1:50 left at Ford Field (and only having 25 points because he inexplicably went for a two-point conversion in the third quarter, watched his team fail to convert, then was forced to chase points for the remainder of the game because of it), Shanahan yanked McNabb. He inserted Rex Grossman, the same Rex Grossman who played himself out of a job in Chicago a couple years ago and is roundly perceived as an emblem of futility. Naturally, Grossman was sacked and fumbled on his first snap; the ball was recovered by the Lions and run back for a TD which effectively ended the game. Afterward, Shanahan said he made the decision because Grossman, “was more familiar with the team’s two-minute offense.” It was a ludicrous excuse that essentially meant that he thinks McNabb is a moron. Then the next day, he doubled back and said he made the decision because he didn’t believe McNabb had the “cardiovascular endurance” to be on the field at that point (although he’d rushed for a team high 45 yards in the game), which essentially meant that he thinks McNabb is fat and in lousy shape. McNabb has taken the high road through it all, just as he always did in Philadelphia when silly, soap opera-y stuff like this came his way. In private, however, he probably wants to strangle Shanahan and while we don’t condone anything like that here at Patriots Daily, someone may well need to smack a little sense into the guy who has one exactly one playoff game since 1999 but is still for some reason thought of as an elite, top echelon head coach.

Now it’s entirely conceivable that Shanahan doesn’t think McNabb is that good (note: he’s not) and was looking for a reason to bench him anyway, regardless of the 12-year veteran being his personal choice to lead the team. But to do it the way he did it, humiliating McNabb in the midst of a winnable game in the process, as well as likely causing at least a handful of his players to scratch their heads, was just dumb. Furthermore, to come out after the game and the next day with those asinine excuses was even dumber – doing so robbed him of a great deal of credibility and likely cast even more doubt into the heads of his players about whether he knows what he’s doing.

Shanahan has total control of the entire football operation in Washington even though he hasn’t accomplished anything in over a decade. It seems he’ll be able to cash in the currency he was awarded by being in the right place at the right time for John Elway’s ascension to Super Bowl champion at the tail end of his career for all of eternity. Still, despite having all the power, he seems intent on continuously reminding everyone of it, from his ongoing public embarrassment of defensive tackle Albert Haynesworth pretty much since the start of training camp to this fiasco with McNabb. It was refreshing to actually see some media types rip him for his actions (I’m certain I even heard the word stupid bandied about) instead of just gush about what an all-time great mastermind he is, though there was plenty of that too. The bottom line is that Mike Shanahan is no different than pretty much any other coach in the NFL, he’s just treated like he is. Maybe when the Redskins miss the playoffs this season and another year is added to this stretch in which he’s done absolutely nothing, that will start to change.

This Week’s Five Best Teams

1. New England: Tom Brady looking like MVP, Bill Belichick looking like Coach of the Year and they’re surrounded by guys named Deaderick, Brace, Ninkovich, Green-Ellis, Woodhead and Tate (not to mention Branch and Welker). It’s all a little Back to the Futurey, isn’t it?

2. Pittsburgh: The Steelers had a little setback in New Orleans on Halloween with Ben Roethlisberger still looking rusty in his third game back from suspension and the vaunted defense looking leaky in getting carved up by Drew Brees, who was 20-of-22 in the second half. Was likely a blip on the radar for such a talented group; we’ll know for sure after divisional game at Cincinnati on Monday night.

3. New York Giants: The Giants sort of seem like the best team in the NFC almost by default. But it’s not a fluke – their numbers on both sides of the ball over their four-game winning streak were as good as at any point since their ‘07 Super Bowl run. They are third in offense and second in defense overall and could well run away with the NFC East with wins against Dallas in Week 10 and Philly in Week 11.

4. Indianapolis: There are the Colts, still hanging around with Dallas Clark, Austin Collie and Joseph Addai out. They pounded the Texans last week with Peyton Manning having a typical game despite throwing to untypical receivers (Jacob Tamme, Blair White) and Dwight Freeney terrorizing Houston QB Matt Schaub

5. The NFC South (except Carolina): Atlanta, New Orleans and Tampa Bay all have five wins, making this division, along with the AFC East, the most formidable in the league. The Falcons and Bucs play this week, in Atlanta, and that should be the truest test of the season so far for Tampa, which has won seven of its last 11 games since starting 2009 1-11. Atlanta should be rested and healthy coming off their bye and the Saints can build on any momentum gathered from the Steelers win with a matchup against the lowly Panthers.

This Week’s Five Worst Teams

1. Dallas: Not only did the Cowboys piss away any pride they might have had left with a 35-17 home loss to Jacksonville of all teams, they let David Garrard, a journeyman QB if there ever was one, go 17-of-21 for 260 yards and four TDs, then tell Sports Illustrated’s Peter King, “It just looked like they weren’t into the game like an NFL team should be. There was a woe-is-me attitude with some of the players.” Ouch. The Dallas Cowboys are the biggest joke in the NFL.

2. Buffalo: The Bills are rapidly becoming my new favorite bad team despite being in the same division as the Pats. How can you not like them and be pulling for them? They made the Chiefs play almost a full extra session in barely last week, the second straight week they’ve gone down on an OT field goal on the road against a potential playoff team. They still can’t come close to stopping the run, giving up 274 more to Kansas City (their fifth straight game allowing at least 200 yards on the ground), but man are they getting closer and closer. In fact, it says here they put one in the win column this week against the woeful Bears.

3. Carolina: One week after actually looking like a competent offensive team in winning their first game of the season, they went to St. Louis and ran for just 25 yards while QB Matt Moore completed just four passes longer that 10 yards in throwing for only 194 yards on a whopping 37 attempts with three picks in a 20-10 loss to the Rams.

4. Denver: It doesn’t get any better for the Broncos. They lost 24-16 to the equally bad 49ers in London last week, allowing a third-string QB who hadn’t started a game in almost three years gash them for 196 yards on just 12 completions. A punt return for the game-tying TD was called back due to a penalty and another late score that got them back in the game preceded a blocked extra point. There probably aren’t many teams in the NFL as relieved to have their bye week than the Broncos, now with their worst record at midseason (2-6) since they finished 6-10 in 1999.

5. Cincinnati: There are plenty of teams that could be in this spot but I’m choosing the Bengals by virtue of their failed expectations. After going 6-0 in the AFC North en route to winning the division last year, they are 2-5 and looking rudderless. Carson Palmer is a shell of himself, they have major injuries on defense that they aren’t responding to the other teams in similar boats like say, the Packers, are and they can’t seem to maintain rhythm in games. Last week against the Dolphins, they opened the game with an 87-yard TD drive, then had 89 yards on their next eight drives put together.

What’s Trendy

- The Lions: Love the Lions! They have as many wins against the Redskins (two) as they do against the rest of the league since 2007. On Sunday, their high draft picks beat the crap out of Washington with QB Matthew Stafford throwing four TD passes, receiver Calvin Johnson (aka Megatron) catching nine passes for 101 yards and three TDs and defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh had two sacks, two more hits on the QB, a forced fumble and a 17-yard fumble return for a TD. Their offense has scored at least 30 points in three straight home games. It’s onward and upward in Detroit.

- The Raiders Offense: In perhaps the hardest current story to believe, the Raiders are actually at .500 thanks to their second straight blowout win, a 33-3 stomping of Seattle. Even more amazing, in running up 545 yards on the Seahawks, they posted their second straight game with 500+ total and have scored 92 points the past two weeks. These being the Raiders, coach Tom Cable announced he will bench QB Jason Campbell in favor of initial starter Bruce Gradkowski as soon as Gradkowski is recovered from the shoulder injury he suffered during the game in which Oakland started its current run despite the record totals the offense is putting up with Campbell at the helm. But it’s been so long since the Raiders were even remotely relevant and not a laughingstock that I’m willing to give Cable the benefit of the doubt.

- Dan Carpenter, Dolphins: Five field goals last week. Five field goals the week before that and three the week before that. No misses over that stretch and only two misses all year long (18-for-20). Miami’s kicker is it’s most valuable player. And how often do you see that?

What’s Not

- The Jets: So the Jets spent their bye week boasting (for a change) that their 5-1 record obviously made them the best team in the league. Then they went out and got whitewashed by Green Bay, a team with five defensive starters out for the year, at home. In the process, they called for a fake punt on 4th-and-18 from deep in their own end (it failed) and got a 2009-esque game out of QB Mark Sanchez (16-of-38, two INTs). Oddly enough, none of their loud mouths have said a word all week. Enjoy the silence.

- The Seahawks Defense: When Seattle, riding high after two straight wins made them 4-2 and the leaders of the NFC West, gave up those 545 yards to Oakland, it was the most it’d allowed since 2002. They also allowed 10 plays of more than 20 yards. Yikes.

- The Chargers Special Teams: The Chargers finally won last week but their atrocious special teams tried to cost them yet again. Another blocked punt (that’s four in eight games if you’re scoring at home) and a missed extra point yet somehow, coordinator Steve Crosby still has his job. The Chargers and their No. 1 ranked offense and defense, would likely be at least 5-3 and not 3-5 if not for this phase of the game and how bad they are at it.

And finally…

Just a quick couple more cents on Randy Moss. After the initial shock of hearing he’d been waived this past Monday, the fact that he got himself fired after just four games became a little easier to understand. Having never stepped into line throughout his career until he arrived in Foxboro, the Pats smartly got rid of him the instant it appeared he would potentially step out of it. And he wound up in a place that is the polar opposite of New England – a sinking ship on which there is no institutional control, the inmates run the asylum and the head coach is loathed by some, disrespected by most. The only real surprise regarding the fact that Moss went off the way he did following last Sunday’s game was that it hadn’t happened sooner. And the Patriots proved once again that they are smarter than everyone else by actually getting something valuable in exchange for him, whereas the Vikings and their nitwit of a coach panicked and just tossed him overboard. Brad Childress, the nitwit in question, is not long for his job and he knows it, which may explain why he seems to be trying to go out guns blazing (ripping BrettFavre to the media after a recent loss to Green Bay, bringing up Spygate leading up to the game against the Pats, unilaterally getting rid of Moss for nothing as opposed to deliberating with his staff or his superiors, etc.). And the big winners in all of this? Well the Pats, of course. But also Moss himself. He was claimed by Tennessee, which is in a tie for its division lead, seems headed for the playoffs and has a very regimented, solid foundation and power structure in place that’s headed up by a coach in Jeff Fisher who may not have the success of a Bill Belichick on his resume, but has been in place for 17 years and has as much job security as anyone. And that’s that. Now can we just move on, pretty please?