News Archive for Jonathan Vilma

The NFL Pro Bowl Is A Disaster

Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

This year the NFL is trying some new things to spice up the Pro Bowl in 2010.  As we have all heard by now, the Pro Bowl is the week before the Superbowl, instead of afterward, and it will take place in Miami instead of the traditional location in Hawaii.

The location isn’t necessarily a bad thing since there are plenty of sunny weather locations in early February, but there are a couple things I liked every year about it being in Hawaii. I like that they wore jersey’s with aloha flower water marks on them; which made each jersey a little more unique (which helped increase their sales), and that they touted Hawaiian leis during interviews to really give you that Pro Bowl feeling.

Saying “You’ll be seeing him in Hawaii” to a player performing at Pro Bowl status during the regular season was always fun as well.

All of these things aside I can see why they would like to move locations to the US mainland. For one, it would make going to the Pro Bowl more accessible to people that were previously unable to incur the cost of the travel expenses it took to go to the Pro Bowl. The flight, the hotel, the intermittent traveling, all on top of the cost of a Pro Bowl ticket package could get rather costly.

Bringing it to the mainland means that people could drive the distance to see their favorite players, and inter-US flights would make it relatively cheaper. Cities could too benefit from having the extra tourist volume coming from hosting an event coming from a gigantic brand like the NFL.

What the Pro Bowl is ruining is the meaning of the honor itself due to its new scheduling. Now that the Pro Bowl is a week early of the Superbowl, many players that are participating in the Super Bowl are opting out of participating because…. they are getting ready for the f-in Superbowl. Who in their right mind would get voted into the Pro Bowl, and actually play in it if they were going to the Superbowl?

The Superbowl is the most important achievement in the sport; it’s what these players live for. Even if a player said “derr, I’ll play”, the coach and organization would stop that noise real quick. This eliminates anybody voted to the Pro Bowl who is in the Superbowl; so no Peyton Manning, Drew Brees, Jonathan Vilma, Darren Sharper, Reggie Wayne, Dallas Clark, Jeff Saturday, Dwight Freeney, Antoine Bethea, and others.

Almost equally as important as who isn’t in the Pro Bowl would be who IS in the Pro Bowl as their replacements. This list includes:  Donovan McNabb (for Drew Brees), London Fletcher (for Jonathan Vilma), Antrel Rolle (for Darren Sharper), Quintin Mikell (for Roman Harper), David Garrard (for Peyton Manning), Vincent Jackson (for Reggie Wayne), Heath Miller (for Dallas Clark), Kevin Mawae (for Jeff Saturday), Kyle Vanden Bosch (for Dwight Freeney), and Yeremiah Bell (for Antoine Bethea), and others.

This results in a total of 17 “replacement” pro bowl additions. All of these players are “good” NFL players, but if you’re telling me you’d rather see David Garrard over Peyton, or Heath Miller over Dallas Clark, or Vanden Bosch over Freeney, you must be insane. Now the Pro Bowl itself has been watered down by players that weren’t voted in because they weren’t the best at their position during the regular season.

The drop off for some of these positions is significant when considering the level at which a Peyton Manning is playing when compared to David Garrard. What will  suffer will be the various skill games that are played by individual players before the game (by not showcasing the best player at that position in every case), and the game itself (by not having all of the best players on the field). Will this also have some effect on HOF players getting in where a player may get 1 or 2 more Pro Bowl visits during their career that wouldn’t normally have happened? You could make a case…

Now I know this is marginalized because it’s not a “real” game, but even if it isn’t, you don’t have to treat it like it’s not by instituting a new “twist” designed to increase attention given to the game, but makes those deserving players unavailable to participate. I don’t see this approach lasting more than this trial year before being moved back.  Do you think this is a good idea? I do not.

Two other things I’d like to point out is that I am surprised this didn’t get vetoed by the owners considering that the players that make it to the Pro Bowl have incentives in their contracts that say “I get paid when I make the Pro Bowl”; meaning that owners and organizations are shelling out some bu-coo bucks where they normally wouldn’t have had to. The other thing is that it is being reported that the Pro Bowl in Miami might not even sell out, and tickets are as low as $20 to get in. Is this the result of the Pro Bowl not actually being “the best of the best”?

Arizona Looking To Stop Saints From Marching On

Saturday, January 16th, 2010

Kurt Warner always seems to rise when it counts most.  Holding most of the single-game records in playoff and Super Bowl history, he gave us another one for the ages last week.  His stat line read 29 for 33, 379 passing yards and five touchdowns.  Not bad for a guy that prior to the game against Green Bay was contemplating retirement.

Warner Looks For A Repeat Performance

Warner Looks For A Repeat Performance

Warner brings his Cardinals squad to New Orleans today, in a familiar underdog role trying to take down the top seed in the playoffs.  Facing a New Orleans defense which withered down the stretch, its likely that the words “Warner to Fitzgerald” will be heard time and again during this afternoon’s matchup.

If you are going to defeat Warner, putting pressure on him is the key.  New Orleans’ defense this year was defined by solid middle of the defense play by Jonathon Vilma, Darren Sharper and Roman Harper.  Pressuring the quarterback in not their fortay, as only Will Smith can consistently get at the quarterback.  If Warner is not pressured, he is going to feast on  a New Orleans defense that makes big play, but does so inconsistently.

On the other side of the ball, the Arizona defense matches up nicely with the New Orleans offense.  Drew Brees had a phenomenal season, playing very consistently all year long.  Brees had just two blips on the season, Miami and Dallas.  In both games, Brees was harassed by get-to-the-quarterback defenses.

New Orleans benefited greatly all season from matchups against defenses that didn’t put pressure on a pass happy offense.  12 of New Orleans’ 16 games this season came against pass rushes that ranked in the bottom half of the league. Minus the Philadelphia Eagles meltdown in Week 2, the Saints looked awful against the top pass rush teams that they played in Washington, Dallas and Miami.

For New Orleans to come out with a victory, they will need to establish the run to slow down a strong Arizona pass rush that ranked sixth in the NFL in sacks.  The negatives look to be outweighing the postives entering today’s game.  Toss in Tom Benson’s slobbering salute to Deuce McAllister that is nothing more than  a distraction to their game plan preparation…Saints fans show get ready for Warner to pin a loss on them.

Prediction:  Cardinals 38, Saints 34.