banner

Posts Tagged ‘Playoffs’

Looking Toward the Holidays

December 18th, 2008 - 2:15pm by Ryan TorainOther posts by

Alright, I finally got on top of things. I’ve started shopping for my family.

I’m just kind of looking around, shopping for my mom, my dad, my brothers and sisters and all — friends and family. As I see something I’ll grab it, basically. So that’s been fun.

It feels good to be able to take care of your family a little bit, be able to give back. They’ve been helping me out since I’ve been little, so it’ll be good to see everybody.

As far as what I want for Christmas, I don’t know. Just probably to hang out with my family. I’ve been away for so long, just seeing them will be a good gift for me. Plus I’m excited to give them their gifts.

Speaking of giving gifts, a couple days ago — Tuesday, actually — I went with some of the other rookies to The Sports Authority store to help give some kids some Christmas presents. That was an experience. Each one of them had a gift certificate for 100 dollars, so it was fun to go around and see what they wanted to buy. It’s always good to hang out with the kids. They all have such different personalities, and it’s just good to give back and have a good time with them.

Click to continue reading “Looking Toward the Holidays”

A Couple of Super Bowl Thoughts, and Predictions …

February 3rd, 2008 - 1:29pm by AndrewOther posts by

It’s Super Sunday.

T-minus three hours or so to kickoff.

And, I’ll be honest, I’m not watching the pregame show.

It’s testament to the prominence of the sport that Fox can justify four and a half hours of pregame content, which doesn’t even factor what airs on ESPN and NFL Network throughout the day. But by this time, I’ve heard virtually everything there is to hear about this game. I need to step away.

I mentioned this to my mother, who is back home on the couch with my father, watching college basketball. By backtracking through our Super Sundays as a family, we realized that more often than not, we’d built up to the big game with other games, rather than chatter.

Besides, I’ve wasted so much time stewing over this game and my prediction for it that I’ve ensured a long post-game night of catching up with tasks and obligations that await here at my desk.

Click to continue reading “A Couple of Super Bowl Thoughts, and Predictions …”

Conference Championships — A Few Thoughts

January 20th, 2008 - 11:34pm by AndrewOther posts by

And so we are given a rematch of a game that was so significant it aired on three networks – and ironically, said rematch will air on the one over-the-air broadcast partner frozen out of that televised trifecta of Dec. 29. If Fox wants to share the air, maybe the Dumont network could be revived for such a purpose.

NEW ENGLAND 21, SAN DIEGO 12

Perhaps it’s appropriate that the Patriots sealed their fourth Super Bowl trip of the decade and sixth in the last 22 years with a final score that was a palindrome. After all, any way one disseminates the unbeaten New England side – forwards, backwards, sideways, upside down – the conclusion is the same, one of greatness that until this year seemed unattainable.

But this game might have been their most unsightly to date, punctuated by three Tom Brady interceptions that all-but gift-wrapped the game to the visiting Chargers, who proceeded to return the gift by marching to four Nate Kaeding field goals and nothing more.

Click to continue reading “Conference Championships — A Few Thoughts”

Conference Championship Preview

January 19th, 2008 - 4:37pm by AndrewOther posts by

Chargers-Patriots

SAN DIEGO (13-5) AT NEW ENGLAND (17-0)

WHEN: Sunday, 1 p.m. MST
WHERE: Gillette Stadium, Foxborough, Mass.
TV: CBS

Philip Rivers is resolute and defiant. Those two characteristics have made him seem a tad possessed in recent weeks — particularly in his rapport with Colts fans last Sunday at the RCA Dome — but are often to his credit, and in a different manifestation helped him become the No. 4 overall pick in the draft after a fairly phenomenal matriculation at North Carolina State.

But with the San Diego Union-Tribune reporting that he suffered a partial tear of his right anterior cruciate ligament, one wonders if his defiance might get the better of him.

What is more significant than Rivers’ official “doubtful” status is the fact that he was limited in practice. It’s tough enough to go against the Patriots with a full week of preparatory work. Can one really expect to be ready when that work is truncated?

San Diego’s best bet might be to go with Billy Volek, who led them to the game-winning score in the fourth quarter last week and played with a crispness that kept the Chargers’ offense at its typically productive pace in spite of the absences of LaDainian Tomlinson and Antonio Gates.

Click to continue reading “Conference Championship Preview”

Divisional Playoff Recap

January 14th, 2008 - 9:02pm by AndrewOther posts by

Everyone misfired on Colts-Chargers … and we now have a two-way deadlock for first place heading into the conference championships:

THE PREDICTIONS SO FAR:

ANDREW MASON: 4-4

MIKE RICE, NEWSRADIO 850 KOA: 4-4

KYLE MONTGOMERY, BRONCOTALK: 6-2

JOHN BENA, MILE HIGH REPORT:: 6-2

JONATHAN DOUGLAS, BRONCOTALK: 4-4

GREEN BAY 42, SEATTLE 20

“Is it snowing there?” queried a friend back in Colorado via text-message as the Packers and Seahawks battled in a gorgeous snowfall that is surprisingly rare for playoff games at Lambeau Field.

Where I was — elsewhere in Wisconsin — the landscape was wintry, but the skies were dry.

State Street Brats

There was no snow beyond a few flurries in Madison, which is 135 miles south-southwest of Green Bay. But by dining at the locally renowned State Street Brats, a favored establishment among University of Wisconsin students and state-government officials alike, I gave myself the next-best experience to being at Lambeau, replete with Brett Favre jerseys galore and the ubiquitous “Go Pack Go” cheer being played over the speakers throughout the restaurant.

(And by the way, from being at Lambeau Field once before, I can only offer this thought on the “Go Pack Go” cheer — cut it back a bit. It’s like going to games at Oklahoma or Tennessee, where one hears “Boomer Sooner” or “Rocky Top” after every … single … play. Two-yard run off tackle? Strike up the band! Less is more, everyone.)

Click to continue reading “Divisional Playoff Recap”

Wild-Card Recap

January 7th, 2008 - 2:46am by AndrewOther posts by

Observations, witticisms and other random thoughts from a playoff weekend …

THE PREDICTIONS SO FAR:

ANDREW MASON: 2-2

MIKE RICE, NEWSRADIO 850 KOA: 3-1

KYLE MONTGOMERY, BRONCOTALK: 3-1

JOHN BENA, MILE HIGH REPORT:: 3-1

JONATHAN DOUGLAS, BRONCOTALK: 2-2

Worthy kudos to Mike, Kyle and John. Perhaps I’ll forecast next weekend’s contests with a clearer head now that the team for which I had season tickets while growing up — Tampa Bay — has been scratched from the docket.

SEATTLE 35, WASHINGTON 14

So much for momentum.

Washington’s lofty hopes were spoiled quickly and exploded like a ripe banana in a microwave. Two plays from scrimmage, two Seattle touchdowns — one on a D.J. Hackett reception and the other on Marcus Trufant’s 78-yard interception return — sent the Redskins home just when it seemed they had snatched all momentum and were poised to deal the Seahawks a humbling home defeat.

Click to continue reading “Wild-Card Recap”

Wild-Card Preview: AFC

January 4th, 2008 - 11:16pm by AndrewOther posts by

Jaguars-Steelers

JACKSONVILLE (11-5) at PITTSBURGH (10-6)

WHEN: Saturday, 6 p.m. MST
WHERE: Heinz Field, Pittsburgh
TV: NBC

GHOSTS OF PLAYOFFS PAST:

JACKSONVILLE: Natrone Means. His 175 yards in the Jaguars’ wild-card win over the Bills in 1996 gave the team its first playoff win and perpetuated the momentum they’d built in a five-game, five-win mad dash from 4-7 despair to a playoff-worthy 9-7 finish. What he and his Jacksonville comrades did next week is something that I’m sure most in Broncos Country wish to forget, even though that 30-27 loss at Mile High Stadium is pointed to by many players as the fuel that powered a world-championship engine a year later.

Click to continue reading “Wild-Card Preview: AFC”

Wild-Card Preview: NFC

January 4th, 2008 - 7:30pm by AndrewOther posts by

Redskins-Seahawks
WASHINGTON (9-7) AT SEATTLE (10-6)

WHEN: Saturday, 2:30 p.m. MST
WHERE: Qwest Field, Seattle
TV: NBC

GHOSTS OF PLAYOFFS PAST:

WASHINGTON: John Riggins. This is the 25th anniversary of the Redskins’ run to Super Bowl XVII — and I use the word “run” because it was Riggins who carried the team to the promised land of Pasadena. One-hundred and nineteen yards against Detroit in the opening-round win over Detroit … another 185 yards a week later against Minnesota … a 140-yard stampede over Dallas in the NFC Championship … and a then-Super Bowl record 166 yards against Miami to give the Redskins their first world title in 40 years. He would eventually stretch his run of consecutive 100-yard playoff games to six before having it snapped in Super Bowl XVIII a year later. The only man with more consecutive 100-yard rushing games in the playoffs? Denver’s Terrell Davis.

Click to continue reading “Wild-Card Preview: NFC”

Win and They’re In … Broncos Have Seen This Play Before

December 27th, 2006 - 1:56am by AndrewOther posts by

wild card teamsIf a game like Sunday’s seems familiar to you, there’s good reason: the Broncos were in this exact same situation just under two years ago.

On Jan. 2, 2005, Denver needed a win over the Indianapolis Colts to cement an AFC wild-card spot that just a week earlier was out of the Broncos’ grasp without some help from other teams. The Broncos got it from the Pittsburgh Steelers and Houston Texans, who defeated the Baltimore Ravens and Jacksonville Jaguars, respectively, in Week 16 to set Denver up in a win-or-else scenario for the year’s final game.

The Broncos won, 33-14. Not unusual, really, since the Broncos have fared well in the last decade when a playoff spot or seeding is on the line in the regular-season finale — just like it will be on Sunday, when a win gets the Broncos into the postseason as the No. 5 seed.

Denver won a 1997 game against San Diego when the team was playing for a wild-card home game, beating the Chargers 38-3 to wrap up the No. 4 seed. A loss to the Chargers would have placed the Broncos in a tie at 11-5 with the Jacksonville Jaguars, who would have won the tiebreaker based upon a superior conference record. That wasn’t the case, and the Broncos instead hosted the Jaguars and routed them en route to a world championship.

Three years later, the San Francisco 49ers came to Denver for what turned out to be the last game at Mile High Stadium. That wasn’t known at the time, as the Broncos could still have claimed the AFC West with a win and an Oakland Raiders loss one day later. Denver took care of its portion of the equation, dominating the 49ers 38-9. A day later, Oakland romped over the Carolina Panthers, giving the Raiders the division title; an Oakland loss would have made the Broncos division champions by virtue of a head-to-head sweep.

In 2002, the Broncos prepared all week as though they would be playing a meaningful season-ending duel against the Arizona Cardinals. But an early-afternoon win by the Cleveland Browns over the Atlanta Falcons eliminated the Broncos before kickoff. Having prepared as though the stakes would be much higher, the Broncos still rolled past Arizona 37-7 to seal a winning season — the first of an ongoing streak of five in succession.

All the Broncos have to do is repeat recent history, and a fourth consecutive playoff appearance is theirs. If Denver can accomplish that feat, it would make them one of only four teams in the league with ongoing postseason streaks of that magnitude. Indianapolis has a five-year run in progress, while Seattle and New England each have four consecutive playoff appearances, having already punched their cards to this year’s January dance.

But if the Broncos repeat history, they would also be making a little of their own. A win would give the team three consecutive wins in regular-season finales, something the Broncos have never accomplished.