BOOM! (Michael Perez)
Everyone in the world has seemingly questioned their record and asked whether they are “for real” or not. Any unbiased and logical person has their answer from Sunday in Philadelphia. The Atlanta Falcons dominated the Eagles, a great source of anguish the last few years, on the road in Philly. The Birds excelled from the opening whistle and only let up a touch when the game was essentially out of reach. Matt Ryan and the offense got back to their old ways and lit up the scoreboard, not even needing Matt Bosher’s punting until the fourth quarter. The defense shut down a “hungry” Eagles offense ready to explode with all their talent. Special teams took care of their business in a hostile environment with less-than-ideal conditions. Simply put, yes this team is for real and anyone who says they aren’t after Sunday shows their true biased opinion. This is not to say that the Falcons won’t have their bad days, but they are every bit deserving of their undefeated record. A look at the huge win……….
Ryan and Co. Rolling Again (Mel Evans)
After the blowing the doors off their opponents offensively the first three weeks, the Falcons looked rather pedestrian the following three. With a particularly weak performance against the Oakland Raiders at home. Many hoped the bye week would provide some help and answers. It certainly did. Matt Ryan was back to his surgical self at QB, slicing and dicing the Eagles defense, completing 22 of 29 passes for 262 yards and 3 touchdowns. All the while, Ryan spread the ball around to 7 different receivers in the process. Major kudos to Dirk Koetter for calling an excellent game, complete with many screens that kept the Eagles pass rush in check. Julio Jones had a huge day. Michael Turner, Jacquizz Rodgers, and Jason Snelling piled on 146 yards rushing and the offensive line looked as good as it has all season. Here’s to hoping the Falcons offense keeps on rolling along.
Michael Turner may not be the happiest player in the world now that he’s had his touches and carries cut back, but the Falcons rushing attack finally had a big day. Turner still got almost 50% of the carries, but the Birds gave both Jacquizz Rodgers and Jason Snelling plenty of touches in the game and it paid off. A trend in the NFL has developed to using a two back, or even three back, system that doesn’t depend solely on one feature back to carry the entire load. A question was posed back in the off-season on what kind of split would be best for the Falcons in 2012 and the games against the Eagles may have provided the best blueprint to date.
No position has been beat up more than the Falcons offensive line. Some thought an imminent collapse was coming with the Falcons and their problems on the OL. Well, they put some doubters to rest in Philadelphia on Sunday. They were much better in run blocking, protected Matt Ryan as good as they have all season, and overall had an excellent game. Many had been clamoring for the Falcons to inject something new into the OL in order to give it a much needed boost. Peter Konz shouldn’t get all the credit the improved play, but he looked pretty darn good in his first start in the NFL. He got overpowered one time that led to Ryan’s only sack, but otherwise he added a nice boost to the offensive line, perhaps in visual imagery alone. Tyson Clabo and Sam Baker both held up well against the Eagles talented pass rushers and Justin Blalock was his normal solid self. Todd McClure gets much of the credit for leading this OL through dark times and, hopefully, to brighter days. It was only one game, but it sure was a sight for sore Falcons fans eyes. An improved rushing attack coupled with many screens also helped out the OL.
Here Comes the Bier Truck! (Mel Evans)
Noodle arm. Weak arm. Can’t throw the deep ball. Has no deep game. These have been many trolls favorite garbage excuses when trying to denigrate Matt Ryan. It’s true he didn’t have a cannon like Jeff George or Matthew Stafford, but he could always throw the ball plenty far enough. Can those ridiculous attack lines finally be put to rest already? He’s thrown plenty of deep balls throughout his career, but after putting in a ton of work over the off-season, Ryan has a new comfort in the deep game and it shows. Look no further than his last minute bomb to Roddy White against the Carolina Panthers, from his own endzone nonetheless. But the cherry on top was the beautifully thrown ball to Julio Jones on a 63 yard touchdown strike zooming by supposedly one of the very best cornerbacks in the NFL, Nnamdi Asomugha.
Some scoffed at the price the Falcons paid Kroy Biermann to come back to Atlanta, saying it was way too much to pay a “backup.” Some thought that Biermann may very well be the biggest beneficiary of Mike Nolan’s new defense, and sure enough, he’s right up there. His stats won’t blow you away (30 total tackles, 2 sacks), but he’s been all over the field the entire season. Biermann has played with his hand in the dirt rushing the QB, but he’s also been playing as a standup LB where he has plenty of freedom to roam around the outside or move to the inside. His hustle and tenacity was on full display against the Eagles. With Philadelphia in desperation mode towards the end of the game, Biermann turned one of the best plays of the game. He rushed Vick from the outside and beat not one, but two-to-three defenders and chased him down for a sack. With all due respect to Ray Edwards, Biermann should be on the field all the time. His toughness and versatility is one of the Falcons best strengths.
OL Looked Fantastic (Mel Evans)
It was one of the bigger surprises when roster cut day came down. Robert McClain, a rarely known cornerback from Connecticut who had bounced around the NFL for several years, had won one of the coveted 53 man roster spots. Not too many gave much thought to it since the Falcons boasted Asante Samuel, Brent Grimes, and Dunta Robinson. But when Brent Grimes was lost for the season in the opener and Chris Owens suffered a concussion against the Broncos, McClain was forced into action as the nickel back. His first play only resulted in a Peyton Manning interception. McClain has taken advantage ever since. McClain is quick, tough, and always seems to be in the right position. He had good coverage and some nice hits, with his most important one coming when he forced Michael Vick out of bounds right before the 1st down marker. He already has 3 passes defensed on the year. McClain is moving out of “roster backup” territory and into possibly having a future as a potential starter. For a team searching so long for youthful talent at cornerback, the Falcons may have finally found one.
Not only was it fantastic to see Corey Peters back in action, it was also great to see Mike Nolan mix it up on a defensive front. Instead of having the traditional 2 defensive tackles and 2 defensive ends, Nolan put a 3 defensive tackle front on the line, mostly with Peters, Jonathan Babineaux, and Vance Walker. It paid dividends and held one of the league’s most dynamic backs, Lesean McCoy, pretty well in check. Many wondered early on whether or not Babineaux was athletic enough to hold the end in a 3-4 type look and the early returns are promising. Above all, it was nice to see Nolan mixing it up on defense after having 4 years of standard deployment week in and week out.
Drew Davis Earning a Role (Michael Perez)
Like McClain, Drew Davis has earned his chance the hard way. A former Oregon standout, Davis worked on the Falcons practice squad all year last season. He was thought to be in a two way battle with Kevin Cone for the 5th and final spot. At the time, most thought spots 1 through 4 were taken, with Kerry Meier being penciled in at the #4 wide receiver position. Funny thing was that Meier ended up getting cut, Kevin Cone made the roster, but late signee Tim Toone grabbed the 5th and final spot. Davis was relegated to practice squad duty again only to get called up soon after with Toone getting injured. To make a long story short, Davis put in his time, finally got his chance when Harry Douglas was injured, and made the absolute most of it. He only caught two passes, but one of them was a thing of beauty hauling in a touchdown and tapping the sidelines. The Falcons have always been set at receiver with Roddy White, Julio Jones, and Harry Douglas, but it turns out it may be even more talented than some thought.
Perhaps the most underrated Falcon on the roster outside of Justin Blalock, Vance Walker is steadily turning into one of the most solid players on the defense and the overall team. A 7th round draft pick out of Georgia Tech, Walker has always been excellent role player, but he may be growing out of that role and into a more prominent one. He already has 12 tackles, 2 sacks, and a forced fumble on the season. He’s listed as 6’2, 304, but he certainly looks bigger than that. In his last year of a restricted free agent contract, the former Yellow Jacket will be set to hit the free agent market in 2013. Walker seems like a perfect candidate to bring back and develop alongside Corey Peters, Peria Jerry, and maybe Travian Robertson. The Falcons may not have that enormous beast at nose tackle that some defenses do, but collectively, it’s looking like a very strong group and Walker is one of the main reasons.
Snelling's Got it Right Regarding the "Media Elite" (Mel Evans)
For the most part, Falcons fans have accepted and come to peace with the Media-Talking-Heads-Elite seeming bias against Atlanta both in the past and this current edition. It seems to be moving goalpost or that they have an “excuse rolodex” where the Falcons shoot down one of their biased opinions, they simply insert another one. First it was a soft schedule the Falcons played. Then it was Peyton Manning throwing those interceptions all on his own. Then it was the Falcons can’t run the ball. Then it was the Falcons can’t stop the run. Then it was the Falcons should be ashamed for having to come back to beat the lowly Panthers. Then it was Robert Griffin III getting injured and then the Falcons eeking out wins and possibly being the worst early undefeated team in history. With a great road test against a quality opponent, the Falcons dominated in every aspect of the game. And what was the story line after the game? The Eagles “collapsing, Vick possibly getting benched, and Andy Reid’s job security.” Did the Falcons even play in that game?
Of course when all else fails, just go to the fail-safe “they haven’t won in the playoffs” standard attack line. Or if that’s not your cup of tea, just ignore, ignore, ignore. The day after the game (Monday) a check of NFL.com had not one snippett, headline, buzz feed, article, opinion, nothing on the Falcons, but had all you can eat of the drama with the Jets, Cowboys, and Eagles. Maybe wins don’t matter that much anymore, but rather soap-opera style stories. Perhaps the NFL can merge their network with SoapNet and it would be a fantastic coup for everyone. Fact is, most Falcons fans find it humourous and don’t really get that bothered by it anymore. As Todd McClure said referring to the “media elite”: “I hope it stays that way,” McClure said. “I’m sure it will come to a point where they’ll start talking about us. The only time we really want them talking about us is in February.” Hopefully, it’s at least providing the players some motivation this season.
1) Simple quick draw: how big was this win?
2) Is the offense back to normal……for good?
3) How did you like the RB split? Should it change more?
4) Happy with the offensive line? Thoughts on Konz?
5) Matt Ryan can’t throw the deep ball, right?
6) Should Biermann play an even more prominent role?
7) Does Robert McClain have a future as a starter?
8.) Thoughts on the 3 DT front?
9) Has Drew Davis cemented a role even when HD comes back?
10) Should the Falcons bring back Walker to a multi-year deal?Y
11) How do you like the Media-Talking-Head-Elite’s “Excuse Rolodex?” Gotta hate those Falcons, right?
747 comments Add your comment
Big Lou
October 31st, 2012
3:47 pm
JB Falcon
The point of the comment was saying that Matt Ryan and Eli are very similar QBs. They went into the playoffs last year with almost identical stats. Completion percentage, yards, ect.
I was just defending Ryan on the post, because some criticisms were ill informed.
As for the talk of Eli this year, I think he deserves some praise. He has had great 4th quarter comebacks. He is the defending champ. He is proven.
After Matt gets some playoff wins, Super Bowl, he will be talked about all the time. Believe it or not, the media didn’t really talk about Eli much last year. It was all about Tebow and Aaron Rodgers.
Paddy O
October 31st, 2012
4:46 pm
The key is he SB wins. That is the entire purpose of playing. Eli has risen to the occasion twice now – cinderella teams/teams of destiny – twice. I had Ryan ranked above Eli last year, as 2007 appeared to be a fluke. But with 2, you can’t pretend. Eli is like a baseball closer – if he is playing a non crucial game – a closer coming in in non-save situation – he is not as sharp.
JB Falcon
October 31st, 2012
6:08 pm
Well, Reynolds, Spoon and Cone didn’t practice today so now MS says maybe we’ll know more tomorrow.
“Matt Ryan and Eli are very similar QBs.” Big Lou
I totally agree. As far as the last quarter miracles, I think Matt posses that same ability. We’ll see after this year is over.
DePlane
October 31st, 2012
6:29 pm
If a slant misses the mark while a receiver is on the move are the safeties/corners more prone to get the pick? I would think so…but don’t have any data. Seems like there is more opportunity when throwing in the middle. Just wonderin’ since conservatism has reigned supreme in the past and maybe that’s why we don’t see slant routes very often.
DHunt
October 31st, 2012
7:03 pm
DP, I certainly will agree that if you are really good with timing and accuracy, not to mention getting immediate separation, the quick slant can be a quick pick 6. I was thinking more of crossing patterns and deep posts to get the receivers the ball in positions to run. But like Big Ray said, can’t try to do too much too soon. And as long as nobody can stop what you’re doing, no need to force new things into the program too fast.
SOMEBODY NEEDS TO TELL THE TRUTH
October 31st, 2012
7:23 pm
Trade deadline less than 24 hrs away, should we entertain offers for Ray Edwards?
Rock
October 31st, 2012
7:27 pm
Well help pack ol Ray!!!
Take ur gift from AB and retire!!!
JB Falcon
October 31st, 2012
7:40 pm
I heard we already had an offer for RE but the movie ticket was expired.
DePlane
October 31st, 2012
7:45 pm
DHunt, definitely agree…stick with whats working and add the new stuff slowly. Heck I’ve waited this long I don’t mind if any new stuff comes when they are ready and know they can execute it.
SOMEBODY NEEDS TO TELL THE TRUTH
October 31st, 2012
8:26 pm
Too funny JB.
Wabe
October 31st, 2012
9:31 pm
Regarding the comparison between Eli and Ryan, Eli’s a great QB and everything, but I don’t think anybody can say to you with a straight face that Eli would have 2 Superbowl rings without the likes of Strahan, Umenyiora, Tuck, and JPP on that line in his Superbowl runs. Those D-Lines deserve as much credit as Eli does. Yeah, Eli made plays and everything, but, I laugh when folks shrug off Matt Ryan as a great QB because of his postseason failures. Truth is, guys like Eli and Big Ben benefited from playing behind great defenses to help make their Superbowl runs the success they were. Brees had the help of takeaway defense in 09, and it’s noted how Rodgers played behind a defense that came on towards midseason to end of the season when they made their Superbowl run.
Ryan hasn’t played well in the playoffs, that’s known. But, the team as a whole hasn’t exactly had the basis covered to really be in the conversation as a Superbowl contender. The talent has been here, but the schemes just didn’t match the type of talent we had. This year is different, because we have coordinators that understand where our talent is and they’re tapping into it.
JB Falcon
October 31st, 2012
9:42 pm
Wabe, Amen!
Geo
October 31st, 2012
10:02 pm
Great post, Wabe. Absofreakinlutely. If we do two things — play decent defense and protect Ryan — we will kick anybody’s ass.
JB Falcon
October 31st, 2012
10:03 pm
Trick or Treat Ya’ll. I’ve been told it is bedtime!
Big Lou
October 31st, 2012
11:14 pm
Wabe
If you say so. Defense can’t make Eli manning throw comeback touchdowns against the Patriots twice. I do agree about the better defense getting you a chance, though. If Ryan had went to the Ravens, he would have won a Super Bowl by now because he would have more chances to make mistakes.
JB Falcon
November 1st, 2012
9:22 am
How many of ya’ll have a female in mind to try out of the LFL on Nov 10th?
Wings
November 1st, 2012
9:26 am
From the Bradley AJC column:
“Sunday’s performance under ominous skies in a city that has never been kind to the Falcons was the most impressive regular-season road victory I’ve witnessed by this franchise since Nov. 8, 1998. Forecast: Those Falcons won at New England 41-10; they would finish 14-2 and reach the Super Bowl. Just sayin’.”
There is a really important embedded POINT in Bradley’s statement and it points to the one “weakness” of the Falcons offense.
The 2012 Falcons need to “BLOW the DOORS” off a respected opponent. Sunday night would RIGHT many wrongs from past Falcons-Cowboys games especially the Jan. 4, 1981 playoff game here in Atlanta when the Cowboys came back in the fourth quarter to defeat the Falcons. Leeman Bennitt was coach and he sat on the ball. I was at this game and I will not forget conservative play late in playoff games looses.
By that, I mean DON’T turn down the offense in the third and fourth quarters as was the case in Philly. Don’t take the ball out of the hands of Matt Ryan and the receivers. Don’t settle for those short and negative runs by Michael Turner on first down and then punt. At least include Quizz and Snelling in some creative plays when running the ball late in the game. Agressive play will be required late in playoff games so it might as well start now. In Philly, the Falcons gave up the ball on downs twice and had a punt blocked late in the game.
For the record 1978 season:
Dec. 30, 1978 – NFC Divisional – Dallas 27, Atlanta 20
After the Falcons led 20-13 at halftime, the Cowboys scored 14 unanswered points in the second half.
Dec. 24, 1978 – NFC Wild Card – Atlanta 14, Philadelphia 13
This was Atlanta’s first playoff game. The Eagles had one last shot to win the game as they reached the Atlanta 16-yard line with 13 seconds remaining, but missed a 34-yard field goal attempt. I was at this game.
For the record 1980 Season:
Jan. 4, 1981 – NFC Divisional – Dallas 30, Atlanta 27
The Cowboys scored 3 touchdowns in the fourth quarter to come from behind and defeat the Falcons 30-27.
COACH MIKE SMITH: DON’T TAKE YOUR FOOT OFF THE GAS!!!!
LEARN HOW TO FINISH THEM OFF NOW!!!
BLOW THE DOORS OFF THE COWBOYS!!
D3
November 1st, 2012
10:10 am
SOMEBODY — Funny as hell. What would we get, a 6th rounder? No one’s going to take on that salary (even though it’s not really that bad), but the guy you’re offering has to have something (currently performing at a high level OR long-term potential). Homeboy has neither.
Paddy O
November 1st, 2012
10:23 am
It is interesting – quite a few folks stated that Ray was a benefitter from #69; and at that time it appeared to me to be a stretch – but here, he is not getting to the QB. So, some do have better vision.
Coop
November 1st, 2012
10:55 am
Wings – Great post! Seriously excellent point!
Matty Bicep
November 1st, 2012
11:46 am
My biggest concern if we keep winning is staying sharp and motivated as the playoffs approach, we might have a playoff spot sealed up by week 11. Recent history has not been kind to teams that have a long “layoff” going into the playoffs going against teams that have been playing win or go home football over the past 3-4 weeks. Maybe week 15 will supply the type of motivation to provide for a sharp game.
Coop
November 1st, 2012
12:07 pm
MB – Good point. I share your concern. I’d also addthat I hope if they stay undefeated that they don’t start to press. 2 or 3 more wins and they’ll start getting the media blitz of going undefeated. There’s enough pressure to win and make the playoffs. Adding the pressure of going undefeated could affect the team. Of course, what do you do? You don’t want them to lose either.
Matty Bicep
November 1st, 2012
12:25 pm
Crazy thing too, only one team left on their schedule has a winning record right now. What is also funny is of the 7 teams we played, only one has a winning record as of right now, but if we were 0-7, 4 of the teams would have winning records. Philly, Oakland, and San Diego are all are 3-4.
So, if we win, we might only have beaten 2 teams with winning records, but if we lose to Detroit, Dallas, TB, and Arizona, we greatly increase our odds to losing to teams with winning records since they are all at .500 or a game below. Just be prepared for the topic of our opponents record to start coming up, but remember it means absolutely nothing. We truly have to go one game at a time.
JB Falcon
November 1st, 2012
12:26 pm
Here’s an interesting thought.?
http://espn.go.com/blog/nfcsouth/post/_/id/41113/lose-to-cowboys-win-super-bowl
Wabe
November 1st, 2012
2:22 pm
I think those Tampa games will be tougher than folks in the media may think…
Media heads seem to think the Falcons have a ‘cupcake schedule’ from here on out. But, it’s very possible to be playing a Tampa team that’s trying to make its own run to get into the playoffs. As of late, they’ve been playin’ better football, and I expect them to be a team around or above .500 when we play them. Another interesting point, if we’ve already got things locked up come time to play the Giants in week 15, do we really play that game as tough as we would earlier in the season? There’s a possibility that we see them a few weeks down the road from there, so do we show anything to them and tip our hand?
Big Lou
November 1st, 2012
3:24 pm
http://m.nfl.com/news/0ap1000000088610/atlanta-falcons-know-playoffs-mean-more-than-perfection/
JB Falcon
November 1st, 2012
3:53 pm
Big Lou, excellent link!
Coop
November 1st, 2012
4:03 pm
Seeing that Spoon won’t play on Sunday…
Paddy O
November 1st, 2012
4:04 pm
I agree on the TB team challenge. However, if we remain undefeated and disrespected by the national media, I think that should keep our team tenacious.
falcon21
November 1st, 2012
4:29 pm
Wings @ 9:26a, really good post man! In 78 we were really lucky. Phille’s fieldgoal kicker was injured and they had to use their backup kicker.
Arno
November 1st, 2012
4:32 pm
No Spoon. A challenge for Nolan, Dent and the rest of the D. Have a good feeling they won’t let Romo wriggle off the hook.
John Waynesworld
November 1st, 2012
4:44 pm
Down! Set! Haiku!
Talib to the Pats
Just made two games easier
Thank you Schianno!
Paddy O
November 1st, 2012
5:02 pm
can we contain Jason Whiten? How much pressure can we mount? How complex/shifty will our d alignment be? should be a highly entertaining game.
Paddy O
November 1st, 2012
5:07 pm
BL: that was a good article. We needed to dismiss MM & BVG. Thankfully, even that tough assignment was handled with meticulous class. However, I prefer we don’t lose this season.
Paddy O
November 1st, 2012
5:08 pm
BL: That was a very good article. We needed to get rid of MM & BVG. We handled that tough assignment with meticulous class. However, I prefer that we don’t lose this season.
Paddy O
November 1st, 2012
5:09 pm
odd. caught by the blog monster twice.
JJ
November 1st, 2012
5:54 pm
D3, Great write up…one of your best, which is saying something after what …100+ free post for the fish wrapper?
You bitchh,
Grabbed both my ww pickups this am. Great pickups my friend, thought you gave up after sleeping on the wire last week. We can still make the playoffs and then its anyones game. Just look at coop, started strong but falling into a bliss, dought hell even make the playoffs.
JWW, BT and a few others are not even trying to improve their team thru the waiver wire or trades. SW has been quiet but thats understandable…
Last thing, we want the SB no dought. We also want to win every game, but the next game is the only game that matters. However, were 7-0…why not try to put this team in the record books and go for the undefeated season? Glad were sitting spoon but not to worried with Nolan behind the scheme!
Sucks about spoon but Im not to worried because of our new proffesional DC!
Unca' Bob
November 1st, 2012
7:12 pm
I finally got caught up on my reads. Props and kudos to one and all for the great posts. The Cage seems to have taken a different tone and tenor and I for one enjoyed it. There seems to be a calmness that has been lacking in the past and I thank you for it.
D3,
To Father Falcon, well, you know my friend.
Wabe
November 1st, 2012
7:40 pm
Do we see Biermann playing more LB this week with Spoon out?
The Cowboys running game really hinges on Demarco Murray’s ability to be healthy. If he’s healthy, then I’m sure they’ll definitely try to incorporate a strong running game against what most are calling a ‘pourous Falcons run defense’. I’m sure Mike Peterson will get his share of snaps. And Dent will most likely contribute in some way as well. But, with the QB of the defense out, whose callin’ the shots this week? Who QB’s that defense? What’s yalls take?
JB Falcon
November 1st, 2012
7:48 pm
Wabe, Peterson can do that but do we risk playing him?
Arno
November 1st, 2012
7:50 pm
From DOL: Dent will start in the nickel package, which the Falcons used on a majority of their defensive snap under defensive coordinator Mike Nolan. When they used their 4-3 base defense, Peterson will play Weatherspoon’s outside linebacker spot.
Wabe
November 1st, 2012
8:00 pm
Peterson could do it, but I highly doubt that he gets every down snaps.
I’m thinking Nicholas takes Spoon’s duties QB’n the defense. I wouldn’t mind seeing Willie Moore get a look in this department too.
Big Ray
November 1st, 2012
8:07 pm
I listen to ESPN radio throughout the day, if I happen to be on patrol at work or just going somewhere in my truck.
The amusement continues…now the ESPN radio heads are talking up and down about whether Peyton Manning is the NFL MVP. Last I looked, his team is 4-3. Whatever….because if it’s not one Manning, it will be the other…
Big Ray
November 1st, 2012
8:08 pm
Wabe ,
I’m thinking Nicholas and Dent start. We may get to see Biermann standing up more than putting a hand in the dirt…just to disrupt things and help against the run if Murry is in good form.
Otherwise, the Bier Truck probably plays with his hand in the dirt since we’re not facing an especially mobile QB, though Romo can move some.
JB Falcon
November 1st, 2012
8:10 pm
This game will be a test to see how good we are. Nolan will come up with what he has to .
Big Ray
November 1st, 2012
8:15 pm
I care nothing about a perfect regular season record. It will mean something if we win it all, or at least go down fighting hard somewhere deep in the postseason. Feel free to argue that last part, I don’t care.
But seriously…to me a perfect season should be a side effect, a mere happenstance that occurs because you gameplanned and prepared for each and every game and maintained focus. In this, the ends truly justify the means, but the ends are a product of the means WITHOUT the aforementioned side effect being an actual goal.
In less confusing terms, having a perfect season should never be a goal. Preparing for and winning each game should be the goal, and that on a game-to-game basis. If you succeed, then the side effect is that you have a perfect season. And that is why the MEANS are important. Preparing to the utmost and focusing on each individual game is what will help you win each game….most especially the biggest one of them all.
Big Ray
November 1st, 2012
8:16 pm
The Dallas game is equally winnable and lose-able all at the same time.
Big Lou
November 1st, 2012
8:16 pm
Grimes was injured in the beg. of the season…
The secondary didn’t miss a beat.
I believe in Mike Nolan. Heck Dallas lost Shaun Lee for the year and they didn’t just collapse against the Giants.
Next man up. If great teams like Green Bay and the Giants can do it for a year, we can Handel a couple games.
Big Lou
November 1st, 2012
8:20 pm
I’m more worried about our offense to best honest. Dallas is no slouch. Rob Ryan is a dang good coach. I expect Tony to have a big games, since they lost their starting MLB/and his backup. We should get more… Slant Patterns.
Without a running game, Dallas will rely on the throw, which plays right into Mike Nolan’s hands. Expect zone blitz, with a lot of 4-6.
Matty Bicep
November 1st, 2012
8:28 pm
Don’t care if we go undefeated either, too much a distraction, not the mention the extra pressure it put on us in the playoffs. I don’t think it will ever the the goal, I think if we HAD to have this game, if we were 3-4 playing for our season like just about every other team in the NFL, Spoon would be a game time decision.