News Archive for Vincent Jackson

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”?

Chargers Look To Muzzle Rex Ryan and Jets

Sunday, January 17th, 2010

Give Rex Ryan a hand, the guy has moxie.  He turned around a Jets squad overnight that lacked identity and an attitude to win.  He took a middle of the pack defense in 2008 and turned them into the most feared defensive unit in the NFL.  The coach deserves the credit, even if he has a bigger mouth than his old man, former NFL head coach and inventor of the 46 defense, Buddy Ryan.

But at some point, moxie isn’t enough to get you over the hill, and Rex Ryan’s Jets squad might run into the insurmountable mountain today in San Diego.

Ryan Looks To Maintain Jets Swagger

Ryan Looks To Maintain Jets Swagger As The Meet Up With Chargers

The San Diego Chargers closed the season on an 11-game win streak and laid claim to the title of hottest team in football.  During that span, they claimed road victories at the New York Giants, Dallas and Denver as well as home wins against Cincinnati, Tennessee and Philadelphia.  This body of work stamped them as the team to beat in the AFC.

The Chargers bring forward a very balanced offensive attack complemented with solid defensive play.  Philip Rivers delivered a dazzling season, rivaling the work of Indianapolis’ Peyton Manning.  His presence under center is a calming influence for an offense that spreads the ball out to every one and if needed, can grind it out on the ground if called upon.

The key to a San Diego victory will be Antonio Gates and LaDanian Tomlinson making waves in the passing game.  The Jets defense has been defined by the play of cornerback Darrelle Revis.  The Jets place him on the other team’s top receiver and take away half of the field.  Against the Chargers, this tactic will have less success as the Chargers passing attack has multiple options and can pass underneath effectively.  Gates and Tomlinson will set the tone of the game, as Revis will likely matchup with Vincent Jackson on every play and ground him.  With the additional passing outlets, Revis’ impact will not be as significant.

Defensively, the Chargers will look to get at Mark Sanchez and force him into mistakes.  If San Diego can shut down the Jets running game and put Sanchez into 3rd and long positions, the chance for turnovers will increase dramatically.  The Jets don’t have the type of passing attack that scares NFL defenses and you can expect to see the Chargers stuff the box all game long.

The Jets will be in this game, and a victory would not be a shocker if they can impose their will.  San Diego has not shown a good defense against the run all season.  If the Jets can grind the ball out, control the clock and keep Philip Rivers off the field, they have a shot.  It is easier for a team to transition to stopping the run when they have to, which makes the Chargers prospects good.

Turnovers are likely to decide this game.  Rivers ranked 4th in the NFL in Interception Ratio while Sanchez rated 30th out of 32 quarterbacks.  Expect a Sanchez interception to be the backbreaker for the Jets and end a great first season under Rex Ryan.

Prediction: San Diego 20, New York 17