Sunday, September 30, 2012

'We got our ass kicked.' Yes you did, Rex

There are no positives. Nothing good to take away from this game.

"We got our ass kicked," Rex Ryan said in the postgame news conference.

That sums it up. 

Ryan said the team won't report to the facility Monday or Tuesday because they need to do some "soul searching." That, as well as learning basics of the game like tackling, holding onto the ball and moving the chains.

The Jets did none of that in a 34-0 slaughtering at the hands of the 49ers.

It was a loss as miserable and painful to watch as their Monday Night 45-3 massacre at the hands of the Patriots two seasons ago. Ryan called this one his worst losses. Though the deficit was only 10 points much of the game, the Jets were never really in it. As Alex Smith overthrew open receivers and 49ers defenders dropped interceptions, the score remained close but the Jets continued to trip over their own feet.

Mark Sanchez was horrible, again completing less than 50 percent of his passes and making some throws that would leave you scratching your head if he were a rookie. Sanchez is in his fourth year now.

The defense was not helped at all by the offense but didn't look a whole lot better. A wildcat run by Colin Kaepernick and option reads had the Jets on their heels throughout the first half. Kyle Wilson, stepping into the starting lineup after the Darrelle Revis injury, was burnt time and time again. Yet, he still found it acceptable to trash talk and wave his finger at receivers who blew by him but couldn't catch passes out of their reach. 

Santonio Holmes crumpled onto the turf with what looked like a knee injury but was later revealed to be one to the foot, losing the ball in the process leading to a 49ers recovery and touchdown.

Robert Malone had a punt blocked late in the fourth quarter, when the stomping was in its final stanza, seemingly just to complete the circle of futility. 

49ers backup quarterback Colin Kaepernick avoided the end zone not to rub it in, sliding down at the Jets' three yard line to limit the crushing.

It was that kind of day for the Jets.

Despite the three-hour embarrassment they hosted at MetLife Stadium Sunday, the Jets are actually still in first place in the AFC East at 2-2. 

As bad as it was, it is only one loss. 

But the rose colored glasses can be taken off after you digest the standings. They won't be staying that way for long unless a drastic change takes place.

Week 1 and the firing on all cylinders performance against the Bills is moving further into the rearview mirror. The Jets were lucky to escape Miami last week with their second win. 

Luck never hurts but it can only mask chronic problems for so long. 

The run defense is mediocre, still not establishing the edge. Run the ball outside on the Jets and you're probably gonna get the corner. 

Receivers are running wild across the middle of the field, burning the safeties too often. Darrelle Revis' absence will only exacerbate that. As will Kyle Wilson continually being a step behind his man.

Then there's what will be the most scrutinized position this week, the quarterback. After a prolific first week, Mark Sanchez again looks unfit to be a starting quarterback. He's making poor decisions, overthrowing receivers, turning the ball over. Sure, he is severely lacking weapons. Dustin Keller and Stephen Hill were out, and now Holmes may too be joining them. At some point though the excuses fall flat. 

Good quarterbacks make lesser players around them look better. The best, like Tom Brady, make average receivers like Deion Branch and David Givens, feasible options. Right now, it appears Sanchez needs a top five receiver to make him a legitimate option. 

Sanchez has shown signs of promise. He has had a couple of playoff games that give you hope. But so did Chad Pennington and he proved not to be the answer.

It took about five seasons of 'close but no cigar' for the Jets to figure it out and cut the cord, benching Pennington halfway through the 2007 season for Kellen Clemens. 

Clemens wasn't a great option but Pennington just wasn't cutting it either. `

2012 is starting to feel a whole lot like 2007. In that long season, the Jets watched Pennington be victimized week after week, back breaking pick six after back breaking pick six. 

Nothing went right. They lost star linebacker Jonathan Vilma to a season-ending injury before Week 8. Head Coach Eric Mangini summed it up well saying, "It's not the same movie. It's the same ending."

Pennington proved that season he was not the Jets' quarterback answer. Clemens wasn't either. It was time to go in another direction. 

By no means do I legitimately believe Tim Tebow is the solution for the Jets. I'm not sure he's more than a Wildcat quarterback. A lot of his 2011 success was a brilliant offensive scheme that I believe would have ultimately been squashed with more film analysis had it continued in Denver.

At this point though, Mark Sanchez has to prove himself. He is statistically among the worst quarterbacks in the league right now. It's hard to keep making excuses for that.

Cutting the cord on your first round franchise guy is not easy to do. It's tough to let go. But at some point, they leave you no choice. The Jets and Sanchez are not there yet. Week by week, though, it's getting worse and the calls for Tebow don't help it. 

You can't place all the blame on one person or unit. Sunday's loss was a complete failure in every facet of the game. It is by no means the end of the season though. You move on and forward.

However, like Mangini in 2007, Ryan can't sit back and watch the same ending. Eventually, you wise up and change the channel before the part that makes you cringe or cry. 

If days like this become the norm, heads will roll. Brian Schottenheimer was the first goner. A coordinator usually is. Beware though No. 6 - if not the head coach, the quarterback usually follows next.

Thursday, September 27, 2012

Drops, miscues and Greg Little's Usain Bolt pose

[Monday analysis for newsnet5.com after covering the Browns' Week 3 loss to Buffalo]

The Browns dropped the ball Sunday.

Not trying to use the cliché idiom - just stating the literal. Take whatever else from it you may.

Cornerback Dimitri Patterson dropped Ryan Fitzpatrick's pass that wasn’t intended for him but may as well have been. Hold on and it looked like a surefire pick six before the two minute warning.

On a third down before the half, a wide open Greg Little dropped Brandon Weeden’s throw that hit him right on the hands as he darted across the field.

Travis Benjamin joined the act in the third quarter, also on a third down.

Even C.J. Spiller dropping his shoulder too hard on the wet grass of Browns Stadium and missing the rest of the game was not enough to switch momentum the Browns way.

Simply, the Browns lost and it wasn’t pretty. Pat Shurmur didn’t leave much room for interpretation following the 24-14 loss to the Bills.

“Just didn’t get it done. There’s no magical answer sometimes other than we didn’t get it done,” Shurmur stated bluntly.

Not much else to say.

There weren’t many bright spots.

You can't take solace in the strong defense of Week 1, hell bent on keeping the game within reach until the bitter end. Nowhere were the promising performances of rookies Brandon Weeden and Trent
Richardson that shone a ray of hope on an intra-division loss in Week 2.

This time, you can’t pinpoint two or three plays that spelled the Browns’ demise.

All the little wrongs added up to one big one - not just in short, instantaneous doses but in a slow, torturous manner.

Through all the miscues and mental mistakes, Greg Little saw it fit to draw even more attention to himself. When Little caught the ball, he made sure you knew full well he did, again invoking Usain Bolt with his lightning bolt pose, notably after converting a first down on an out route reception.

But Little came away with no gold medal. He didn’t even come away with points. He simply caught the ball in a game his team was losing.

Some Browns fans are tiring of Little’s act.

@BrownsForum: Is Greg Little going to strike a pose after every single routine play? Get back to the huddle you idiot. #Browns #NFL

@TheBigTuna2: Hey Greg Little, Usain Bolt would not have dropped that pass.

@jhill7204: Greg Little is everything I hate about football

But then again, Little said last week he’s not concerned about the fans.

@Str8UpGlittle: Honestly I really don't care what fans say I really could careless! I ride with the 53 men in the locker room and the coaches thats it.

Well, except when it’s Bills fans taking over Browns Stadium.

“That pissed me off and I take full responsibility for it happening. I think you can only blame the players on the field and I think we gotta do more to change that,” Little said.

By the fourth quarter, Browns fans could take no more of the team. The stadium became a Buffalo block party, a raucous bunch of Bills fans spurred on by their defensive line pumping them up.

The Browns had no control of the game and by its end their fans had lost control of the stadium.

At 0-3, the Browns and Saints possess the NFL’s worst records. If you watch the games though you know which one can take that sole title right now.

Two days into fall, Cleveland football is already at risk of becoming irrelevant in 2012.


Read more: http://www.newsnet5.com/dpp/sports/football/browns/Analysis-Miscues-drops-and-more-doom-Browns-to-0-3-start-as-Greg-Little-draws-fans-ire#ixzz27iQ4yKcJ

Browns Week 2: Trent sets fantasy world abuzz

[Week 2 postgame piece for newsnet5.com]

"I let my game speak for itself... you'll see Sunday," Trent Richardson said Thursday in response to comments by Bengals linebacker Rey Maualuga. 

It didn't just speak - it rolled through, dashed past and silenced Cincinnati defenders. 

Trent Richardson made a statement to NFL players and coaches with his performance in the Browns 34-27 loss to the Bengals. He also made a big impact virtually. 

The rookie back who was picked third overall in the 2012 NFL Draft was also a high pick in fantasy drafts. Richardson's average draft position in ESPN leagues was 36.9, a billing he did not live up to in his first game. His 39 yards were good for only three points in standard scoring leagues. 

Different story come Week 2. 

There were plenty of milestones for the 'Bama back in game two as a pro: 
- First NFL TD 
- First Browns rookie to rush for 100 yards since Lee Suggs ran for 186 against the Bengals on Dec. 28, 2003 
- First Browns rookie since the merger with 100+ rushing yards, rushing TD and receiving TD 
- First Browns player to register a rushing & receiving TD in the same game since Jamal Lewis in 2007 

@SportsCenter: Breakout game for rookie Trent Richardson. 104 Rush Yds, TD, Rec TD – 24 fantasy points in ESPN league standard scoring. 

Whopping numbers from Richardson and an equally whopping 599 retweets of that tweet. 

By nature, fantasy is a volatile game of odds. Fantasy owners can be a fickle bunch and one week's success story is often the next week's source of hair pulling. Cowboys wide receiver Kevin Ogletree, for instance, went from Week 1 fantasy darling to Week 2 dud. 

Some owners were a bit too quick to doubt Richardson, who was one of Week 2's top scoring running backs. 

@ptreez Trent Richardson with 25 fantasy points....on my bench... 

@Jasminf05 Since I benched Trent Richardson this week and he went for 26 pts and the RB I played only got 11 there's no way I'm going to win this week 

Those who stuck with Richardson in their starting lineup, 66 percent of Yahoo owners, were justly rewarded. 

@dhoffeditz RGIII and Trent Richardson are keeping my Fantasy Football team alive. God bless you both. 

@jdburrows51 I am winning 117-55 in fantasy football and my leading scorer is Trent Richardson with 27 pts. #unexpected #likeaboss 

It's safe to say Richardson did enough to impress Maualuga and the fantasy owners who invested in him. U.S. Olympic gymnast McKayla Maroney ? Verdict's still out on that one.

Read more: http://www.newsnet5.com/dpp/sports/football/browns/analysis-browns-running-back-trent-richardsons-big-week-2-sets-fantasy-football-world-abuzz#ixzz27iPQtxsf

First week flubs for Browns rookies Weeden, Richardson


[Posted to newsnet5.com following the Browns' Week 1]

Before the game even began Browns quarterback Brandon Weeden found himself caught in trouble, stuck underneath the enormous American flag unfurled on the field while throwing the ball around during pregame. 

It was a harbinger to what was ahead in the Browns' 17-16 loss to the Eagles. 

In his pro debut, Weeden was trapped in a four-quarter nightmare, throwing four interceptions and completing just 12 of his 35 pass attempts for 118 yards. 

"As an athlete, even though you wish they're gonna be all up, there are gonna be some downs," Weeden said. 

The meager 5.1 quarterback rating Weeden finished with was on the wrong side of the spectrum. 

Fellow first round rookie starter Trent Richardson also struggled to get going, totaling just 39 yards on 19 carries. 

"As far as having that initial burst, I don't think it was at full stride. It's gonna get better. It's not going to take that long. Trust me," Richardson said. 

The 5'9, 227-pound running back's longest run was nine yards but made a much bigger impact on Eagles safety Kurt Coleman, jarring his helmet off on contact. 

"That's just how I play football," Richardson said. 

It's the kind of smash-mouth style that will fit in well in the rock 'em, sock 'em AFC North. The next step for Richardson is more powerful runs like that and a taste of the end zone, something no one on the Browns offense got Sunday afternoon. 

Linebacker D'Qwell Jackson was the only Brown to cross the pylon, celebrating with a flip after a pick-six that gave the Browns a 16-10 lead in the fourth quarter. All afternoon the Browns defense put the offense in good position, forcing five turnovers. But much like last season, the offense seemed allergic to the end zone, sending Phil Dawson out on drives starting just shy of midfield and at the Eagles' 43 and 22. 
  
"Fortunately for me I've had games where I haven't played as well but I feel like I've given my team a chance to win but today I didn't feel like I really did that," Weeden said. 

Missed receivers, overthrows and dropped passes plagued the stagnant offense. Playing the most scrutinized position on the field, Weeden's mistakes were magnified. Game one was one to forget but it's just the beginning for the 28-year-old. 

"This one's in the past. It stings. It's gonna sting for a few days. But part of my makeup is I that I've got a short memory," Weeden said. 

Forgetting is tough to do if you're a Browns fan. There are too many home opener losses in this new era to just shrug another one off, especially Sunday's heart-wrenching result. 

The Browns start out 0-1 for the 13th time in 14 years but their rookies are one up in the NFL experience column. That can't hurt going forward.

Saturday, September 15, 2012

FILM STUDY: Brandon Weeden Week 1 vs. Eagles

After watching All 22 game film, I decided to breakdown Brandon Weeden's rough Week 1 outing vs. the Eagles. First, a theme I noticed with film photos, then my notes on of all 35 of  Weeden's passes.

PROBLEM: Weeden struggles in the pocket when his protection breaks down to the right side

Trent Richardson fails to hold a block on the rushing end, Phillip Hunt

The pressure is there and though Hunt stumbles, he is nearing Weeden, forcing him to get rid of the ball

Weeden gets it out before he's hit but it's underthrown for the intended receiver Travis Benjamin deep down the right sideline...

And intercepted by Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie, who is in perfect position to easily pull it down


On this play, Cullen Jenkins breaks free and is flustering Weeden to his right shoulder

Mohamed Massaquoi is wide open deep down the right sideline but as you can see, the pass is nowhere near Massaquoi, sailed over his head out of bounds

Weeden excelled in short drop, quick release play setups, the source of most of his completions. He struggled when forced to make reads in the pocket and when pressure could build up around him. The gameplan for Week 2 should include more of these quick release plays to minimize the potential for mistakes and allow Weeden to build confidence.

COMPLETIONS
1- Three-step drop, slant 24 yards to Massaquoi, 18 YAC
2- play action to TE A. Smith, -1 yards
3-  stood in pocket, 3 yds, Watson
4- Three step drop,  slant 12 yards to Benjamin
5- Stood in pocket, Massaquoi crossing route, 4 yards
6- playaction, short pass to Jackson, 6 yards
7- Stood in pocket, Eagles prevent, Gordon 20 yards
8- Shotgun, three-second release, two steps, slant to Gordon, 12 yards
9- Shotgun, three-second release, two steps, slant to Massaquoi, 13 yards
10- Richardson out of backfield, Weeden pressured, 5 yards 
11- Shotgun, Three-step drop, three-second release, out, 6 yards Watson
12- Jackson out of the backfield, 14 yards

INCOMPLETIONS
1- Deep right, Massaquoi -SAILED
2- less than 10, slant to Benjamin, broken up 
3- DROP, Richardson
4- INT 1- off Little's hands red zone, into Eagles for INT by safety Coleman
5- Miscommunication to Richardson out of backfield
6- INT 2- deep for Benjamin, pressured to right, INT by DRC
7- Short out for Little, thrown out of bounds, uncatchable
8- Play action A. Smith WIDE OPEN, Weeden never sees him to his left down the field, thrown away deep to his right after pressured 
9- DEEP pass for Massaquoi SAILED out of bounds
10-  DROP Marecic
11- Too high, Benjamin DEEP
12- Broken up for Massaquoi
13- INT 3 - deep for Benjamin, pressured to right, INT by DRC
14- coverage, drop? Intended Gordon
15- Crossing, incomplete, off hands
16- Behind Little
17- Dropped/broken up for Benjamin
18- Pressure, thrown away
19- SAILED open A. Smith, end zone, uncatchable out of bounds
20- Off target Cameron, inside 10
21- SAILED, out of bounds, uncatchable for Little
22- DROP, Jackson out of backfield
23- INT 4- DEEP for Massaquoi picked by safety Coleman

Saturday, September 1, 2012

With Tettleton at the helm, opportunity is rich for Bobcats

Bobcats quarterback Tyler Tettleton was full of poise on the fourth quarter drive that sealed victory over Penn State Saturday in Happy Valley.

Tettleton calmly marched the Bobcats methodically 93 yards down the field in 14 plays for a touchdown that put the game out of reach.

Three times on that drive Tettleton threw on third down. 11 yards to Jordan Thompson on 3rd and 1,  seven yards to Bakari Bussey on 3rd and 5 for first downs and a picture perfect back corner fade to Donte Foster on 3rd and goal to culminate it. 

The Bobcats ran off 6:42 and removed hope from Beaver Stadium.

Twenty-one unanswered points in the second half surged the Bobcats to a 24-14 win, maybe the biggest in program history. 

It was similar to their final game of 2011, another landmark win, as they roared back from a double-digit deficit in Boise to notch their first bowl win. 

Spearheading the triumph on the blue turf was Tettleton, who in his last game as a sophomore led the offense on a 61-yard game-winning drive in the final two minutes. 

Tettleton didn't skip a beat Saturday.

The junior gives the Bobcats plenty of hope for 2012. 1-0 with their most difficult, BCS opponent off the schedule, Ohio can dream big. 

Pressure may rise if an undefeated run stretches through the season but don't expect to see Tettleton fazed.