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Showing posts with label leads. Show all posts
Showing posts with label leads. Show all posts

Monday, October 24, 2011

Broncos 18, Dolphins 15 (OT): Tim Tebow Leads Denver Broncos Over Miami Dolphins

The Broncos’ coaching staff, which had made him the starter just two weeks ago, had so little confidence in him that through three quarters, he attempted just eight passes.

But with five minutes left and the Miami Dolphins playing prevent defense, Tebow turned into the player who inspires fans to erect billboards and opposing teams to honor him when he visits, rallying the Broncos to two touchdowns.

And when Denver lined up for the 2-point attempt that would send the game to overtime, it seemed that only the Dolphins had never seen highlights from Tebow’s Heisman Trophy-winning career. They had their defense spread across the field, leaving gaping holes between each player. Tebow took the snap and ran off right tackle, untouched, for the conversion.

From there, the result seemed a fait accompli. The Broncos won, 18-15, on Matt Prater’s 52-yard field goal, giving them their second victory of the season and sinking the Dolphins to 0-6.

After the game, to the delight of a few hundred University of Florida fans left on the field, Tebow came out of the locker room to greet some of his former college teammates. He had led them to a national championship on the same field, when his legend took flight. The Broncos got no greater clarity Sunday about who their quarterback of the future is.

But they do understand now the ineffable quality Tebow seems to summon when things appear bleakest, and why so many people clamor for Tebow to have a chance.

“There’s competitive greatness,” Denver Coach John Fox said. “Not everybody that plays in this league has it. It’s a great quality to have. We have a guy — No. 7 that I work with every day — he had it. He definitely had it.”

Comparing Tebow to the former Broncos great John Elway, who is Denver’s executive vice president for football operations, should delight the Broncos fans who had implored Fox to start Tebow after Kyle Orton faltered in the first month of the season.

But even the way the Broncos played in overtime summed up the difficult and delicate decision that Fox and the Broncos face with Tebow. They have made him the starter now because they must find out if he can be their quarterback of the future.

The concerns that led them to make Orton the starter for opening day, however, seem to be lingering. In overtime, Tebow did not throw a pass, as the Broncos essentially reapplied the training wheels they had left on him for most of the game.

After the game, Fox said bluntly that if Tebow had completed more than three of his first eight passes, maybe Denver would have had him throw more, because the situation became dire.

On the game’s final drive, which started at the Dolphins’ 36 after Denver recovered a fumble, the Broncos had Tebow hand off three times, signaling that they would rather take their chances with a long field-goal attempt from a kicker who had missed two shorter tries earlier in the game.

Other than the victory, the game might have been the worst-case situation for the Broncos. They fear that the Tebow on display for most of the game is the real one, a better runner than passer, and that he may never be the accurate pocket passer they crave. Broncos coaches were clearly spooked when, on the Broncos’ first drive of the game, they used something resembling the spread option that Tebow ran to such great success in college.

But on his first pass, under pressure, he was nearly intercepted. After that, the Broncos (2-4) seemed to travel back to the 1970s, calling for handoff after handoff.

In the first three quarters, Tebow completed 3 of 8 passes for 24 yards and was sacked four times. He looked so bad that it was reasonable to wonder if the Broncos would give him another start.

“As a football player, as an athlete, you can’t lose confidence in yourself — or you’ve lost already,” Tebow said.

In the fourth quarter, he was 10 of 19 for 137 yards and 2 touchdowns, and there is no way coaches can ignore his ability to steer a team to victory even if the road there is sometimes ugly. So the Tebow experiment will live on, charming fans, confusing coaches and making everyone else wonder if there might be a place for a very different kind of N.F.L. quarterback.

“I’ve just got to play better in the first three quarters,” Tebow said, “so we don’t have to make that comeback.”

The Broncos would love for it to be that easy.


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Monday, October 17, 2011

Pitt leads list of struggling offenses

Before the season began, one of the big storylines surrounding the Big East was whether the league would feature more offense.

Some even debated whether West Virginia or Pitt would score more points with spread-system coaches Dana Holgorsen and Todd Graham entering the league.

That debate seems laughable today.

Holgorsen and his offense have performed as expected, racking up points and yards at a school-record clip. Graham and his Pitt offense? Not so much.

[+] EnlargeTodd Graham AP Photo/Keith SrakocicTodd Graham's offense has struggled in the first half of the season.The problems that have plagued the Panthers have come from nearly every position. The offensive line has given up 34 sacks this year and has had to deal with injuries to its two best players.

Quarterback Tino Sunseri has failed to properly execute the system in nearly every game, and has been benched at various points during games. The receivers have been inconsistent. You will not find one Pitt wide receiver among the league leaders in receptions or receiving yards per game.

Ray Graham is about the only player who has done anything right for the Panthers on offense.

The low point came this past weekend in a 26-14 loss to Utah, in which Pitt failed to score an offensive touchdown, had 50 yards passing and just 120 yards of total offense. Graham, who came in preaching high-octane offense, has never had his team struggle this badly in two other stints as a head coach at Rice and Tulsa.

In his five seasons combined at those two schools, the Utah game was the first time he has ever had a team fail to hit 100 yards passing. It was the first time his team failed to score a touchdown on offense, and the total offense mark was the worst in his career as a head coach.

Never have his offenses been this bad: Pitt ranks No. 96 in passing offense, No. 90 in total offense and No. 80 in scoring offense.

At both previous stops, Graham was blessed with solid quarterbacks who quickly grasped his system. He admits getting his system implemented has been harder than anticipated.

He has tried to transform a pro-style player into a hurry-up spread quarterback, and that has not worked. Sunseri has thrown five touchdowns and seven interceptions this season. He is one of 10 quarterbacks in the top 100 in pass efficiency rankings to have more interceptions than touchdowns. Sunseri ranks No. 85.

"The bottom line is we’ve not performed where we need to at that position," Graham said. "Tino far and away has the biggest grasp of what we’re doing offensively from his experience in the spring and the fall. We’ve got to get it out of him."

Pitt is not the only offense that has struggled in the Big East this season. That was abundantly clear after Saturday, in which three teams failed to score an offensive touchdown. UConn has not scored an offensive touchdown in two straight games. Louisville has one offensive touchdown in its past two games, and it came with 42 seconds left in a loss to North Carolina.

Scoring is up in the league, thanks in large part to West Virginia and Cincinnati, but offenses as a whole in this league are a tad worse this year compared to last year. Last season, four teams ranked No. 90 or worse in total offense. This year, five teams fall into that category.

West Virginia and its 503 yards a game stand above everyone else. No question the Mountaineers have gotten headlines for their offense. But for the most part, you can say that defenses are doing much better this season.

Two Big East teams rank in the top 30 in the nation in total offense. Five rank in the top 30 in total defense, and all but one team (Syracuse) ranks in the top half of the nation in that category.

Will these trends continue? The bulk of conference play remains before we find out.


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Friday, October 14, 2011

Hillman Leads San Diego State Past Air Force

Hillman ran for 103 of his 172 yards in the fourth quarter, including touchdown runs of 22 and 57 yards, and San Diego State survived a series of trick plays figuring in two Air Force scores to pull away for a 41-27 victory Thursday night.

"The offensive line got better and better as the game went on," Hillman said. "I just think we got hats on hats and the holes were just there, and I just ran."

The sophomore running back shook off a late fumble to finish with his 11th 100-yard performance in 18 career games. He had a 191-yard effort last year in a 27-25 victory over Air Force in San Diego.

"I try to have a big game every game, so that's just a coincidence," Hillman said. "I'm just happy I helped my team win tonight. We've had two tough weeks so this was nice."

Ryan Lindley threw for 209 yards and two touchdowns, including a go-ahead 28-yard score to Colin Lockett late in the third quarter to help San Diego State (4-2, 1-1 Mountain West) bounce back from consecutive losses. The Aztecs are off to their best start since 1977, when they began the season 5-1.

"I don't think any of us on the offensive side were playing our best football the past two weeks," Lindley said. "We knew we needed to step it up. Hats off to Air Force. They're a team that's going to grind with you for four quarters. We just continued to do our thing. We were running the ball well and kind of worked our play-action game in there, and everything worked out pretty good."

Tim Jefferson had touchdown passes of 18 and 26 yards to Jonathan Warzeka among his 22 completions in 36 attempts for 224 yards for Air Force (3-3, 0-2).

Air Force kept it close for much of the game. Mikel Hunter helped to break a tie with his second big run on a reverse, gaining 33 yards to the San Diego State 17.

The Falcons advanced to the 14 before Parker Herrington, who earlier kicked a 44-yard field goal, came on to add a 31-yarder for a 20-17 lead midway through the third quarter.

But San Diego State scored 10 points in a 14-second span following two Air Force turnovers.

"There were stretches where we did play well, but not nearly the way you have to for a full 60 minutes," Air Force coach Troy Calhoun said. "There's no doubt (the turnovers) were key plays. Fundamentally, there's some work that certainly has to be done."

Rene Siluano's interception of Jefferson's pass set up Abelardo Perez's second field goal, a 25-yarder that evened the score at 20 with 2:30 left in the third quarter. Then, on the first play of Air Force's next series, Mike DeWitt fumbled after a hit by Jerome Long, and Logan Ketchum covered the loose ball for San Diego State at Air Force's 28. From there, Lindley found Lockett open in the end zone for the go-ahead touchdown.

Hillman added to San Diego State's lead with a 22-yard touchdown run, breaking a tackle at the line of scrimmage and then dragging a defender the final 3 yards into the end zone.

He broke loose for his second score moments later, taking advantage of solid blocking at the point of attack.

Herrington kicked his first field goal, and Air Force pulled into a 17-17 tie in the finishing touch to a pulsating second quarter in which the teams combined for 24 points.

San Diego State went in front 10-7 on Lindley's 27-yard touchdown pass to tight end Alston Umuolo with 14:11 left in the second quarter.

Air Force answered with a scoring drive that featured two trick plays. On a third-and-9 play, Hunter broke free on a reverse for a 29-yard gain to the 11. Air Force managed to get to the 4, where they Falcons lined up for an apparent field goal try on fourth down. But Herrington lined up as the holder and punter David Baska, normally the holder, took his place as kicker. Herrington got the long snap and took off around the right side, pitching the ball back to the trailing Baska, who dove over a San Diego State defender and shoved the ball one-handed over the goal line for the touchdown.

The Aztecs wasted no time responding. Brandon Davis returned the ensuing kickoff 98 yards for a touchdown and a 17-14 San Diego State lead. Davis bolted up the middle, stepped out of a tackle at about the 25 and quickly veered into the clear down the right sideline, going the rest of the way untouched.


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Friday, September 23, 2011

Davis: Fitzpatrick’s guts, not smarts, leads Bills

NFL.com StaffPublished: September 21st, 2011 | Tags: Ryan Fitzpatrick, Buffalo Bills, Charles Davis, NFL Total Access

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Kudos to the Bills for their 2-0 start. But we know two weeks doesn’t make a season. So the question heading into Week 3 is whether this version of the Bills is any different than any of the teams who haven’t come out on the winning end against the Patriots since 2003.

For some perspective, consider George W. Bush was in his first term as President, Patriots TE Aaron Hernandez was 14 years old and Creed was winning music awards.

These Bills are led by Ryan Fitzpatrick. He’s a Harvard grad. He reportedly scored a 48 on his wonderlic exam. We’re convinced he’s pretty smart. And, as Fitzpatrick goes, so generally go the Bills.

But beyond his smarts, NFL Network analyst Charles Davis says it’s Fitzpatrick’s gritty-gutty style not only epitomizes his offense, but the tough, nothing-to-lose approach is part of what has led to the Bills’ recent success.

“His guts are what defines this offense. This is a guy who (the team) wants to follow because of how tough he is in the pocket and the plays that he makes,” Davis said after checking in with Bills offensive coordinator Curtis Modkins. “This team feels pretty good about itself because the guys who we’re talking about scoring touchdowns, these are guys are who were late draft picks and undrafted free agents who have a lot to prove. They’re not going to walk into New England with any fear. They think they can go out and make plays.”

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Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Peyton Manning leads Pro Bowl voting

NFL.com StaffPublished: November 23rd, 2010 | | Tags: 2011 Pro Bowl, Peyton Manning, Pro Bowl voting

A familiar name leads the way for 2011 Pro Bowl voting: Peyton Manning.

The current voting results were released Tuesday, and Manning (496,658 votes) holds a sizeable lead over Michael Vick (405,292 votes) and Adrian Peterson (400,921) among the top vote-getters.

Check out the top 10 vote-getters as well as the leaders by position in both the AFC and NFC.

Have your say in who goes to Hawaii by voting on your mobile phone, at NFL.com/probowl and even on Facebook.com/NFL by clicking the “Pro Bowl” tab.

Balloting concludes Monday, Dec. 20 and the teams will be announced at 7 p.m. ET on Tuesday, Dec. 28 on a special “NFL Total Access 2011 Pro Bowl Selection Show” on NFL Network.

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