Archive for October, 2010

Columbus Day Election 2010 Predictions

Monday, October 11th, 2010

I would wish liberals a happy Columbus Day, but I am not sure most of them know what that is. In California they have Cesar Chavez Day and Harvey Milk Day, yet some colonizing straight white imperialist male apparently does not deserve such recognition.

For those who actually either were home schooled, or read after school to compensate for dreadful public school textbooks, today is Columbus Day. To get back to the point where schools actually teach about Christopher Columbus, the Founding Fathers, and the Constitution, it might help to have Republicans win the 2010 elections so they can appoint people who want to improve the schools, not destroy them.

I have said that I believe the Republicans will win 50 House seats to retake the chamber and fire the Pelosiraptor. I also believe that she will resign from the House altogether if this occurs. In the Senate I have the Republicans picking up 7 seats to fall short 52-48.

It is vital that Republicans win gubernatorial races because 2010 is a redistricting year. The Pelosiraptor is already trying to steal 5 more California House seats for the left through further gerrymandering. This must be stopped.

Since I am not Michael Barone or Larry Sabato, analyzing every single House race is above my pay grade.

Yet here are my thoughts on the Senate. I will not be analyzing the overwhelmingly obvious races where no changes are taking place. Jim DeMint will not be losing to Al Green in South Carolina, despite Green doing a fabulous remake of “Put a little love in your heart” with Annie Lennox. On the flip side, Barbara Mikulski will not be playing defensive tackle in the NFL any time soon since her reelection seems assured in Maryland.

Not everybody is safe.

In California, Barbara Boxer leads Carly Fiorina slightly. My distaste for Boxer knows no bounds, but despite 28 years of accomplishing nothing, California will never learn. Boxer survives as California collapses.

In Nevada, Harry Reid and Sharron Angle are tied. Angle is a lovely human being. I have done events with her personally. Yet Reid will get in the gutter so deep that Angle will be tarred and feathered before it is over. Unless Angle is prepared for a street fight, she will lose. Reid is already trying to demonize her. I say Reid survives by the skin of his teeth.

In Washington, Patty Murray is seen as vulnerable. Until liberal Washington actually does it, I remain skeptical. I think Murray survives.

Wisconsin is one that could be a shocker. Russ Feingold is trailing by 9. Yet he has been in the Senate for 18 years and Wisconsin is liberal. Also, I want to at least say that unlike most liberals, Feingold has integrity. Unlike the other gutless little rats running away from the Obama agenda, Feingold is not backing down in his support for Obamacare. I disagree with his principles, but at least he has them. I would not be surprised if he comes back and wins. I think he will.

In Delaware, Christine O’Donnell is a lovely human being. Because she is a religious Christian, the left needs to destroy her as they did with Sarah Palin and are trying to do with Sharron Angle. Delaware is a moderate to liberal state, and O’Donnell might be too conservative for gutless Republicans unwilling to fight for her. She is down in the polls and may not have enough time to come back.

Have I become a cheerleader for the Democrats? Of course not. Republicans have plenty to be happy about.

Pennsylvania looks very good for Pat Toomey. I think he takes down Sestak with less difficulty than the left hopes.

Rand Paul has weathered the storm in Kentucky. He blundered early, but has recovered and leads by a 7 point margin.

Illinois is a nailbiter, and Mark Kirk has made some stumbles. Yet he is a Republican in the tradition of Abraham Lincoln, able to win moderates without alienating conservatives. His opponent has many scandals. Kirk may survive. I think he will.

West Virginia is an interesting case. Joe Manchin is a popular governor, which is actually working against him. Voters want him to stay as governor, which right now is costing him the senate seat. Republicans should be ok here.

Connecticut is one where the big lead could be misleading. Linda McMahon trails by 9 in liberal Connecticut, but this climate could allow her to storm back. I would not be surprised if she shocks the country and wins, especially since her opponent is mired in scandal.

In Arkansas, Blanche Lincoln is toast. In North Dakota, the popular governor leads the senate race by about 50 points. Those are pickups. Rob Portman in Ohio leads by 14, while Dan Coats in Indiana leads by 17. Those are pickups.

Roy Blunt leads by 7 in Missouri, as the Carnahan name is not what it was a few years ago. The late Mel Carnahan was beloved,  but his wife squandered that good will by attacking John Ashcroft. Missouri voters don’t like mean politics, and their daughter is not making headway.

David Vitter leads by 15 in Louisiana. Whatever one thinks about his scandal, remember, it is Louisiana. Vitter will be fine, especially since his opponent is overreaching with beyond the pale attack ads.

Lisa Murkowski will not harm matters in Alaska as Joe Miller will win. In Florida, Charlie Crist has a shot if Kendrick Meeks drops out. Marco Rubio has a big lead and should win, but this race is fluid.

Kirten Gillibrand and Chuck Schumer will remain in New York, while Buck will take the Colorado seat.

Realclearpolitics.com has Republicans picking up 9 seats to make it 50-50. They see GOP gains in Arkansas, Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, North Dakota, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia, which I agree with.

RCP also has GOP pickups in Wisconsin and Nevada. This is where I differ. I hope I am wrong. I hope RCP and I are both wrong about Boxer in California.

Governorships have some give and take. Rick Scott in Florida, John Kasich in Ohio, and Corbett in Pennsylvania should all be ok, with Florida being the closest.

Yet Jerry Brown is leading Meg Whitman in California, and Neil Abercrombie leads Duk Aiona to replace retiring Linda Lingle in Hawaii. Those would be a pair of Democratic pickups.

RCP shows 7 GOP pickups to change a 26-24 deficit into a 31-19 GOP advantage. They have 6 governorships flipping to the Democrats and 13 more flipping to the Republicans, with a precious few staying in the same column.

I have 2 disagreements. Although Dudley leads by 3 1/2 points in Oregon, John Kitzhaber should not be underestimated. Oregon is liberal, and Ron Wyden is coasting in his senate race. Kitzhaber may survive.

Michigan I am really going out on a limb. The numbers show GOP candidate Snyder up by 18. Yet this is still Michigan, where unions and crippling bureaucracy reign supreme. They said Jennifer Granholm was toast 4 years ago, and she won. She is leaving, but never underestimate the left’s power to further destroy this state by electing more liberals.

So I see 7 pickups for the Republicans to lead governorships 29-21.

I am often wrong, but never in doubt.

In that spirit, let’s enjoy a peaceful Columbus Day and see what happens.

eric

NFL 2010–Week 5 Recap

Sunday, October 10th, 2010

Before getting to the NFL action, one football game on Saturday deserves a recap. My coed touch football team “Team Awesome” played our opener. We were the light green shirts, and we were playing the brown team.

Another team had won two straight championships while this team was on Summer vacation, but so what? The Rockets won twice when Michael Jordan retired. Those don’t count. We won six straight before that, with me on the last two championships of that run.

With former team leader Scott engaged and in Virginia, and his brother Ryan and their cousin Andrew partying in Las Vegas, others had to step it up in week 1. Luckily we have Ashley, Tiffany, and Brittany, football’s fabulous females. I at age 38 came out of retirement for one more season. I am two years younger than Brett Favre, and know personally how tough it is to retire from football.

Chris Steck was our emotional leader, and a pair of new guys Chris and Conrad are solid players. We play iron man football. On offense I run the Wes Welker crossing routes because the deep patterns come less easy. On defense I rush the passer because in football years, I am old. Covering receivers is more strenuous than pass rushing.

Team Awesome Light Green Team at Brown Team–We fell behind 6-0 after our quarterback threw an interception, at which point Scott may have tried to call from Virginia to yell at us. Yet we came back and led 22-6 at the half. The Brown team mounted a furious rally but Team Awesome is just that. We prevailed by a dozen. I had several receptions and did no harm. The chase for the seventh straight championship is well underway. 38-26 Team Awesome Light Green Team.

Now for the NFL Week 5 Recap.

Kansas City Chiefs @ Indianapolis Colts–This would be the week where we would see if the Chiefs were for real. Todd Haley decided to start with a surprise onsides kick that failed, setting up the Colts at the Kansas City 37. The Colts came out running, with Addai getting them inside the 5. The drive stalled, and a field goal had the Colts up 3-0. The defenses controlled the game, although the Colts eventually added another field goal to lead 6-0 in the second quarter. With 2 seconds left in the half, Ryan Succop hit a 45 yard field goal to have the Chiefs within 6-3 as Jim Caldwell shockingly enough stayed expressionless.

Neither team could crack the end zone, and a third quarter field goal had the Colts up 9-3. The Chiefs drove to the red zone and again settled for a field goal to trail 9-6. Manning was intercepted, setting the Chiefs up at the Colts 35. Shockingly enough, the Chiefs moved nowhere and another field goal had the game tied 9-9. This awful game saw the Colts go back in front with…what else? Another field goal.

A lifeless game finally saw Manning lead a 12 play, 71 yard drive that consumed 5 1/2 minutes. With 4 minutes left in the game, an 11 yard touchdown run by Hart made the difference. Kansas City had one last shot, but a game of field goals ended when Succop missed a field goal. It is hard to say the Colts should be concerned at 3-2, but their offense is sluggish. Jim Caldwell may be emotionless, but the team itself seemed passionless on the field. They did just enough, as the Chiefs lost their first game of the year. 19-9 Colts

Denver Broncos @ Baltimore Ravens–Joe Flacco threw a 58 yard pass to Dixon, as the Ravens moved to the one. Heloti Ngata was borught in on offense in the tradition of William the Refrigerator Perry. On 3rd and goal Willis McGahee got belted backward. On 4th and goal from the 1, Flacco went back to pass and got sacked for a 14 yard loss.

Flacco came back and found Todd Heap for a 22 yard gain. Again the Ravens to the one, and this time Flacco snuck over as the Ravens led 7-0. The Ravens got the ball back, and defensive pass interference in the end zone had the Ravens on the one. Ray Rice ran it in to have the Ravens up 14-0.

Denver fumbled the ensuing kickoff, setting up the Ravens up at the Denver 20. A field goal had the Ravens up 17-0. The Broncos finally showed life with less than one minute before the half as Kyle Orton went deep to Brandon Lloyd for  50 yard touchdown to get Denver within 17-7.

After a scoreless third quarter, the Ravens effectively salted the game away with a 14 play, 72 yard drive that lasted 7 1/2 minutes. Rice banged it in to lead 24-7. Denver did tack on a 38 yard Josh Prater field goal got the Broncos within 24-10, but the Ravens simply kept the ball. An 11 play, 90 yard drive ended with McGahee running 30 yards for the score that had the Ravens winning in a blowout 31-10. A garbage touchdown was not enough to keep the Broncos falling to 2-3. As the Ravens, they did not have a letdown after their big emotional smackdown win last week at Pittsburgh. John Harbaugh has the Ravens looking like a Super Bowl contender. Josh McDaniels is merely in a stupor. 31-17 Ravens

St. Louis Rams @ Detroit Lions–The Rams began the game with an onsides kick that failed. This led to a field goal. As the second quarter the Rams tied the game, when a lifeless game exploded with Logan returning the ensuing kickoff 105 yards to have the Lions up 10-3.

Shawn Hill led a 13 play, 81 yard drive that lasted over 7 minutes. After a deep ball to Calvin Johnson almost connected, the Lions methodically drove to the one, where Hill hit Johnson for the touchdown to have the Lions up 17-3.

The Rams did add another field goal, but then Shawn Hill led a 12 pla, 80 yard drive just before the half. A 3 yard touchdown to Brandon Pettigrew had the Lions up big 24-6.

In the third quarter Hill hit Nate Burleson for a 26 yard touchdown as the Lions led 31-6, on their way to finally getting their first win this season and not going 0-16 again. The Lions poured it on with Jason Hanson adding two more field goals and Smith returning an interception of Sam Bradford 42 yards for a touchdown. Steve Spagnuolo and Sam Brdfors will turn the Rams around, but finally we can say that Bradford is only a rookie. He took his lumps today. 44-6 Lions

Chicago Bears @ Carolina Panthers–A short field had the Bears at the Carolina 38. Matt Forte ran 18 yards to put the Bears up 7-0. Carolina came back, but stalled inside the Chicago 10. A  John Kasay field goal had the Panthers within 7-3. Forte then broke off a 68 yard touchdown to have the Bears up 14-3. Robbie Gould added a field goal before the half to have the Bears up 17-3.

The second half was unwatchable, as the quarterback play was dreadful. Todd Collins finished 6 of 16 for 32 yards passing and 4 interceptions…and he was somehow on the winning side. As for Carolina, Jimmy Clausen was 9 of 22 for 61 yards and an interception, while Matt Moore was 5 of 10 for 35 yards and 2 interceptions. The only quarterback to do anything right was 3rd string Chicago quarterback Hanie, who went 2 for 3 for 19 yards without any interceptions.

John Kasay connected from 53 yards out in the third quarter, but Robbie Gould salted it away in the fourth quarter with kicks from 53 and 43 to provide a mercy killing to this horrible game. Lovie Smith saw his team somehow get to 4-1 while the Panthers remained winless as Jon Fox groped for a ray of hope. 23-6 Bears

Jimmy Clausen then was intercepted, as the Bears were back in the red zone. The offense stalled, but a 29 yard Robbie Gould field goal had the Bears up 17-3. The Bears missed a chance to go up 24-3 when Jay Cutler was intercepted inside the 5 as the Panthers temporarily stopped the bleeding.

Jacksonville Jaguars @ Buffalo Bills–A 45 yard touchdown pass from Ryan Fitzpatrick to Lee Evans had the Bills up 7-0 early. David Garrard was then intercepted, and Buffalo was on the move again. Jacksonville tacked on a field goal of their own to get within 10-3.

In the second quarter Fitzpatrick led a staggering 15 play, 9 minute drive that stalled at the 5 yard line after 70 yards as Buffalo settled for a 22 yard Ryan Lindell field goal to lead 13-3. Garrard came back with a 12 play drive to set up Josh Scobee from 49 yards out. Last week Scobee drilled the 59 yarder at the gun, so this was a chip shot. He made it to have the Jaguars within 13-6. Garrard led the Jaguars back again, and the 1 yard touchdown pass to Mercedes Lewis had the teams tied 13-13 at the break.

In the third quarter Garrard hit Lewis again, this time for a 27 yard touchdown as the  Jaguars led 20-13. Fitzpatrick returend the favor, and a 5 yard touchdown pass to St. Johnson had the game tied again 20-20. The teams went tit for tat as a 7 yard touchdown pass from Garrard to Sims-Walker had the Jaguars in the lead again 27-20.

In the fourth quarter, Garrard led the Jaguars to a 4th and 1 at the Buffalo 17. Jack Del Rio decided not to go for it, and the short field goal gave the Bills some breathing room at 30-20. Buffalo punted, Garrard led Jacksonville in an exact repeat of the previous drive. On 4th and 1 from the 22, again Del Rio opted for the field goal as the Jaguars led 33-20.

Buffalo again could not move the ball, and again Garrard led them into long field goal territory. Scobee connected for the 5th time, this time from 46 yards as the Jaguars led 36-20. Fitzpatrick led a furious desperate rally, hitting St. Johnson from 7 yards out with 1:40 to play. Yet the 2 point conversion failed, ending any further threat. The Bills remained winless under Chan Gailey as the Jaguars kept scrapping wins for Del Rio. 36-26 Jaguars

Green Bay Packers @ Washington Redskins–Brandon Jackson rambled for 71 yards to set up a 4 yard touchdown pass from Aaron Rodgers to Donald Lee. To have the Packers up 7-0. Green Bay drove to the Washington one in the second quarter, but on 4th and goal Rodgers threw incomplete.

Later in the half the Packers took over inside the Washington 35, but went backwards and settled for a 52 yard Mason Crosby field goal to lead 10-0. The Redskins managed a field goal to trail 10-3 at the break.

In the third quarter it was the Packers tacking on a field goal to lead 13-3. Early in the fourth quarter Donovan McNabb went deep to Armstrong for a 48 yard touchdown to get the Redskins within 13-10.

With less than 2 minutes to play McNabb had the Redskins on the move. With one minute to go, Graham Gano barely made a 45 yard field goal to tie the game 13-13.  With 24 seconds left Rodgers fired a perfect strike over the middle to set up a 53 yard field goal Crosby attempt with 7 seconds left. Crosby had hit from 52 and 36 but missed from 44. Crosby doinked it off the upright and the game went to overtime.

In overtime, Rodgers was intercepted, giving the Redskins the ball at the Green Bay 39. On 3rd and 1 at the 30, defensive holding moved the Redskins closer. On 3rd and 3 from the 15, Mike Shanahan took no chances, bringing in Gano from 33 yards out. Midway through overtime, Gano was perfect as the Redskins had the win to improve to 3-2. The Packers had the lead and blew it, and Mike McCarthy will have to regroup his team that had high expectations when the season began. 16-13 Redskins,

New York Giants @ Houston Texans–Eli Manning threw a 5 yard touchdown pass to Ahmad Bradshaw, who stretched it just beyond the pileon to have the Giants up 7-0. Big Blue got the ball back at the Carolina 40, and Manning hit Hakeem Nicks for a 27 yard completion to the one. Brandon Jacobs banged it in to have the Giants up 14-0.

In the second quarter Manning hit Nicks again, this time for a short touchdown pass to have the Giants cruising on the road 21-0. The Texans got on the board with a field goal, but the Giants added a field goal to lead 24-3. The second half was uneventful as Big Blue made a statement on the road by throttling the Texans.

Ward did run it in from one yard out to get the Texans within 24-10, but a 42 yard field goal by Lawrence Tynes and a fourth quarter 4 yard pass from Manning to Steve Smith completed the rout as Tom Coughlin saw his team answer their critics today as Gary Kubiak saw his critics return after another lopsided home loss following a strong start to the season. 34-10 Giants

Atlanta Falcons @ Cleveland Browns–After a scoreless opening quarter, Matt Ryan led the Falcons 66 yards in 12 plays, but the drive stalled at the 7 yard line. A 24 yard Matt Bryant field goal had the Falcons up 3-0. Seneca Wallace came back for the Browns quickly, with a 19 yard touchdown pass to Hillis to have the Browns up 7-3, as Walrus Mike Holmgren allowed Eric Mangini to coach the rest of the half.

Ryan then led a 14 play, 70 yard drive that consumed nearly  7 1/2 minutes, but again the Falcons bogged down in the red zone. A 30 yard Bryant field goal had the Falcons within 7-6. A third chip shot field goal for Bryant was blocked.

Cleveland added a field goal to led 10-6, but in the third quarter the Falcons finally woke up. Matt Ryan went deep to Roddy White for a 45 yard touchdown to have the Falcons up 13-10. A miserable game saw Seneca Wallace get replaced with Jake Delhomme. Delhomme has been besieged in the last couple of years, and both his old and enw team are horrendous this year. EVerything came down to one play with 4 1/2 minutes left in regulation.

On 3rd and 7 from the Cleveland 47, Delhomme was intercepted by Biermann, who returned it for a 31 yard touchdown to ice the game. Mike Smith, a non-decript white guy who looks like a guy named Mike Smith, saw his team win a non-descript below average game. The win still counted. 20-10 Falcons

Tampa Bay Buccaneers @ Cincinnati Bengals–Carson Palmer went deep to Terrell Owens for a 43 yard touchdown as Owens reminded the crowd that he loved him some him. Palmer then completed a pass to Cody Grimm, who plays defense for the Buccaneers. The 11 yard interception return tied the game 7-7. The Bengals added a field goal to lead 10-7 in a game somebody cared about somewhere. Surprisingly enough, the second half was as exciting as it was heartbreaking.

In the third quarter Josh Freeman led the Buccaneers 80 yards in just over 5 minutes. On 3rd and 11 from the Tampa Bay 37, Freeman scrambled for 12. After Freeman hit Kellen Winslow for 22 yards, defensive pass interference set up the Bucs on the one yard line. Graham took it in to have the Tampa up 14-10.

Carson Palmer brought the Bengals back, but the drive bogged down at the Tampa. Mike Nugent connected from 35 as the Bengals trailed 14-13. The Buccaneers fumbled the ensuing kickoff, and the Bengals took over at the Tampa 29. On 3rd and 9, Palmer hit Leonard for 11. Cedric Benson ran for 9, 6, and 1 yard to set up Palmer to Gresham for the 1 yard touchdown. Benson ran it in for the 2 point conversion to have the Bengals up 21-14 with 12 minutes left in regulation.

The Bucs faced 3rd and 10 at their own 20 when Freeman hit Williams for 37 yards.  The drive stalled and the Bucs punted. The Bengals took over at their own 6 with 9 minutes left in regulation. The reams exchanged punts, and the Bengals still led with 2 1/2 minutes to play. Then came a meltdown that will be talked about in Cincy for weeks to come.

Facing 3rd and 13 at their own 38, Palmer was intercepted at midfield. On 3rd and 4 from the Cincy 44, Freeman scrambled for 9 yards at the 2 minute warning. Freeman hit Williams for 15 and then went to Williams again for a 20 yard touchdown to tie the game 21-21 with 1:34 left.

The Bengals took over at their own 16, and Palmer quickly hit Owens for 29 yards to the Cincy 45 with 57 seconds left. On 3rd and 1, Palmer picked up 3 yards to the Tampa 43 with 31 seconds left. The Bengals appeared to be in the drivers seat.

Out of nowhere, Palmer threw for Chad Johnson and was intercepted by Piscitelli, who returned it 31 yards to the Cincinnati 34 with 14 seconds left in front of a shellshocked home crowd. It was Palmer’s 3rd interception on the day. Freeman then hit Spurlock for 21 yards down to the 13 with 5 seconds left. Connor Barth nailed the 31 yard kick to give the Buccaneers the stunning win. Marvin Lewis saw a win get blown to bits as Raheem Morris saw his young team steal a win. 24-21 Buccaneers

San Diego Chargers @ Oakland Raiders–13 straight times the Chargers have won this game.

San Diego began and went 3 and out. The Raiders struck immediately on special teams as Mike Scifres had his punt blocked by Rod Cartwright. It rolled out the back of the end zone as the Raiders led 2-0 only one minute into the game. The free kick resulted in successive blunders on special teams as it went out of bounds, giving the Raiders the ball at midfield.

Bruce Gradkowski went right to work, hitting Zach Miller for 14 yards. Michael Bush, starting in place of an injured Darren McFadden, ran twice for 4 total yards, followed by an incomplete pass. Sebastian Janikowski came in for a 50 yard field goal. Seabass drilled it, and the Raiders led 5-0 only 3 minutes in.

San Diego again went 3 and out, and then a moment happened that had people everywhere asking “Are you kidding me?” Scifres had his punt blocked a second time, this time by Meyers. This time the ball bounced perfectly to Eugene to result in an easy touchdown return. In a shocker, special teams had the Raiders up 12-0 only 4 1/2 minutes in.

San Diego took over at their own 20 and Philip Rivers connected with Darren Sproles for 29 yards. Yet illegal motion brought the play back. Yet on 3rd and 15 from the 15, Rivers completed a pass to Malcolm Floyd at midfield. On 3rd and 8 Rivers completed a 10 yard pass to Sproles for another first down. A 16 yard completion had the Chargers with 1st and goal at the 10. Matthews got the ball to the one. This is where the Chargers are supposed to steamroll over the Raiders.

Not this time. The running play resulted in a fumble that the Raiders returned to the 15. Everything had gone right for the Raiders so far. They had gotten every break. Now it was time to see if the offense could make it matter over the course of the game.

Early on they could not. 6 yards by Michael Bush was followed by a pair of incomplete passes. Even leading 12-0, the Raiders would need offense to win this game. The defense dodged a bullet, but now was back on the field.

One play resulted in a 45 yard completion to Floyd down to the Oakland 17. Again, the Raiders showed the heart that was missing in previous seasons. Rivers got belted from the blind side, and the Raiders recovered the fumble. Again, the offense needed to do something.

Gradkowski then got hit and fumbled, with the Chargers having 1st and goal. It appeared that Gradkowski’s arm was going forward, and Tom Cable challenged the call. Gradkowski got hurt on the play as well. The call was overturned and the Raiders retained possession. A personal foul against the Raiders on the play moved the Raiders back to the 10. Jason Campbell came in for Gradkowski as the Raider nation held their breath. Campbell handed the ball off to Michael Bush, who on 3rd and 15 came up one yard short on a draw play. Shane Lechler punted 58 yards, as the Chargers began the second quarter at their own 24.

While the scoreboard showed the Chargers down 12-0, they had moved the ball easily on their previous 2 drives. Only so many bullets can be dodged. On 3rd and 7 from the 26, Rivers hit Sproles for 23 yards. A 13 yard completion had the Chargers at the Raiders 38. The Raiders were very solid against the run, stuffing the ground game. Yet the passing game was killing them. Rivers hit Floyd for 15 more down to the 23. From the 18, Rivers fired between 2 defenders and hit Antonio Gates for the touchdown. The Chargers were within 12-7, and for the billionth time, the Raiders had to show some life on offense if they were to win.

The Raiders fumbled on the ensuing kickoff, but were lucky enough to retain possession. Gradkowski remained in the locker room as Campbell came back out behind an offensive line that early on was getting hammered by the San Diego defense. Naturally, the Raiders went 3 and out and the Chargers took over at their own 18. On 3rd and 1 Rivers went deep incomplete as the Chargers punted. Barring a 3rd blocked punt, the Raiders would need to do something…anything…on offense.

They never got the chance. The punt was almost blocked, and Scifres got decked. Roughing the kicker allowed the Chargers to retain possession, as Scifres got up slowly. The Chargers took over at their own 42. Rivers made it look easy, hitting Gates for 23 yards. At that moment Rivers had 211 yards passing, to only 13 for the Raiders. Rivers hit Floyd at the 15. A pass to Jacob Hester set up 1st and goal at the 4. Tolbert ran it in untouched as reality had finally set in. The Raiders had been dominated statistically, and somehow only trailed 14-12 instead of 28-0. There were still 5 minutes left in the half, but with the Raiders offense being pathetic, it almost seemed pointless to watch or expect anything.

The Raiders took over at their own 34. Campbell got sacked, and punting on 2nd down seemed very appealing. Somehow, on 3rd and 14, Campbell hit Zach Miller, who took it for a 17 yard gain to keep the drive going. On 3rd and 6, Campbell was hit and fumbled. Guard Lofa recovered the ball and then kept rolling on the ground trying to pick up the 1st down. This was not the Holy Roller, but it was still heads up football. On 4th and 1 from the San Diego 43, Tom Cable decided to go for it. It was an absolutely necessary decision, and Michael Bush barreled up the middle for 8 yards to the 35. A short swing pass to Bush went for 16 yards down to the 19. with 1:15 left on the clock. On 4th and 3 from the 12, Seabass nailed a 30 yard field goal to have the Raiders up 15-14 in a game they had been completely outplayed on offense and defense.

Rivers calmly lofted a 35 yard bomb to Floyd to the Raiders 34, and then a 13 yarder to Gates to the Oakland 21. On 3rd and 9, Rivers threw incomplete. Yet illegal contact gave the Chargers an automatic first down with 16 seconds left in the half. The Raiders had only 2 penalties a week earlier, but were drowning in yellow flags this week. Yet offensive holding on Dombrowski, who is named perfectly for a football player, moved the Chargers back with 6 seconds left in the half. Nate Kaeding came in for a 43 yard field goal. Kaeding nailed it, and the Chargers led 17-15 at halftime. Philip Rivers had thrown for 290 yards in the first half alone, with the all time game record of 554 by Norm Van Brocklin being a possibility. Short of the Raiders blocking another two punts, they were in big trouble.

Despite being only 1 of 5 for 14 yards before being injured, Gradkowski showed hit typical grit by starting the second half. An ounce of offensive line protection to keep him from getting killed would have been helpful. After a 4 yard run by Bush, a pair of incomplete passes, including one dropped by Johnny Lee Higgins, led to another punt. The Chargers took over at their own 34, as Rivers attempted to put on another passing clinic.

Rivers was sacked by Richard Seymour for an 8 yard loss, but on 3rd and 7 Rivers avoided the sack and completed an 11 yard pass for another first down on his way to maybe passing for 1000 yards in this game. A dropped pass on 2nd and 10 was nullified by offsides on the Raiders. On 3rd and 7, Rivers fired incomplete and the Raiders finally had a defensive stop. Rarely are punts exciting,  but all eyes were on Scifres. The punt got off cleanly, but a great return was short of a touchdown only when the return man ran into his own blocker past midfield. The Raiders took over at the San Diego 46.

Gradkowski was clearly hurt, as Jason Campbell came back in. On 3rd and 2 from the 38, Bush ran into a brick wall and lost a yard. Cable decided to go for it rather than try the 55 yard field goal or punt. Bush lunged up the middle and was short by a couple inches, as the Chargers took over. Rivers went deep for a 41 yard touchdown bomb to Floyd as the Chargers led 24-15. The only question was how quickly the Raiders would fold.

The answer appeared to come on the ensuing kickoff, which Ford Bobbled before falling down at the 2 yard line. The Raiders did stay calm, and a pair of Bush runs set up 3rd and short. Campbell snuck for the 1st down at the 15. Campbell went deep to Reece. The call was ruled out of bounds, although it appeared Reece got both feet down inbounds. Cable again challenged the call. The call stood, but a 3rd and 4 laser from Campbell to Louis Murphy went for 58 yards to the San Diego 21.

On 3rd and 2 from the 13, Campbell burned the second Oakland timeout. After a false start, Campbell hit Bush for 11 yards to set up 1st and goal at the 7. Bush took it to the 4 and then to the 2. On 3rd and goal Campbell rolled out and fired to the back of the end zone. This was not Montana to Clark, but Zach Miller made a leaping catch. Initially ruled a touchdown, Norv Turner challenged the call. It clearly seemed like Miller got his knee and hand came down inbounds before his elbow landed out. The call stood, and the Raiders were within 24-22 with just over one minute remaining in the third quarter. The 99 yard drive was the longest touchdown drive by the Raiders since 1997. Seabass did his part by booming the kick for a touchback. Now the defense had to somehow stop Rivers.

Rivers immediately hit Gates for 28 yards. Illegal contact moved the ball 5 yards more past midfield. Encroachment added 5 more for the 10th Raiders penalty. Despite not being able or even needing to run all game, a couple runs as the fourth quarter began had the Chargers at the Raiders 18. On 3rd and 9 from the 17, Rivers threw incomplete. Kaeding hit the 34 yard field goal as the Chargers led 27-22 with a full 12 minutes left in regulation. The anemic Oakland offense went 99 yards on the last drive. They needed one more touchdown drive to take the lead and end the nightmarish losing streak.

The Raiders took over at their own 27. On 2nd and 7, Bush picked up 7 for the 1st down at the 37. An incomplete pass on 2nd and 10 was nullified by illegal contact. This time the Chargers gave the Raiders the gift. From the Oakland 42, Campbell hit Zach Miller, who bulled his way for 11 yards to the San Diego 47. A 20 yard pass to Louis Murphy was nullified by offensive interference against Murphy as the Raiders faced 2nd and 18 on their own side of midfield.  A pass to Miller set up 3rd and 11. Then divine providence took over.

Campbell fired a bullet to Miller. Miller had the first down, but in fighting, lost the ball. Ford, atoning for his earlier mistake fielding a kickoff, pounced on it at the Chargers 32 for the Raiders. Bush picked up 8 yards and one more on 2nd and 2. On 3rd and 1 from the 23, Campbell went nowhere on a sneak. 4 1/2 minutes remained as the Raiders faced 4th and 1. They burned their final timeout as the Al Pacino speech in “Any Given Sunday” about fighting for that inch became an appropriate metaphor. The Raiders have been losing for 7 years, and plays like this either turn a team around or continue the misery.

Campbell faked the handoff to Bush, rolled to his right, and hit a wide open Meyers for 12 yards down to the 15. Michael Bush slammed up the middle for 6 more yards. Encroachment set up 2nd down and less than a yard from the 5. Out of the shotgun, Bush took the draw play from Campbell and rammed it in just past the goal line. With 3:39 to play, the Raiders led by one point with the 2 point conversion looming large.  With the running game working perfectly, Campbell rolled out for a low percentage pass that was incomplete. It was a bad call, and Rivers had plenty of time to inflict more suffering on the Raider Nation. Seabass kicked it to the end zone, but Sproles returned it to the San Diego 27.

Rivers quickly scrambled for 14 yards and hit Floyd for 13 more as the Chargers passed midfield in what at this point seemed inevitable. At the 2 minute warning the Chargers faced 3rd and 5 at the Oakland 40. Rivers fired complete to the 34 to pass 400 yards, with over 200 going to Floyd. Rivers went to Floyd again, and defensive pass interference on Chris Johnson set up the Chargers at the 24. With the Chargers now totally in the drivers seat, offensive holding pushed them back to the 34 with 1:15 left. The Raiders sent an all out blitz and drilled Rivers just after he threw it incomplete.

On 2nd and 20, the Raiders sent another all out blitz. Rivers was hit and fumbled. It was returned all the way for a touchdown. The Raiders celebrated, but the officials huddled to discuss it. For those who remember the nightmare of the “Tuck Rule,” this was critical. Rivers clearly had the ball come out before his arm went forward. Either the Raiders were going to lead by 8, or the Chargers would have 3rd and 20 and a winning field goal chance. Nothing will ever erase the pain of the Tuck Rule, but sweet vindication lit up the Silver and Black faithful as the touchdown stood. The 65 yard fumble return by Tyvone Branch had the Raiders up by 8 with 58 seconds left as Seabass drilled the extra point after the third Chargers fumble. Yet the game was not over.

Seabass again kicked it deep, and Sproles again brought it out. This time he was cut down at the 15. A sure interception by Stanford Routt somehow became a 22 yard reception as the 44 seconds remained. A deep pass to Buster Davis appeared to have the Chargers in business but Routt redeemed himself and broke it up at the last possible moment as it fell incomplete.  A short pass to Davis resulted in him getting leveled by Rolando McClain with 31 seconds left and 3rd and 5. The Chargers took their final timeout. Last year the CHargers came back to win in Oakland with 18 seconds left. This time Mike Mitchell broke up the 3rd down pass to make it 4th and 5 with 27 seconds left.

The Raiders brought everybody as Rivers fired incomplete deep. The bleeding has stopped. The nightmare has stopped. The losing has stopped. For the first time since 2003, the Raiders have defeated the Chargers.

Norvelous Norv Turner graciously shook the hand of Tom Cable. 2 weeks ago the Raiders missed a chance to turn the corner. While they are only 2-3, they are not 1-4. 1-4 ends the season. 2-3 keeps things alive. Some people will ask about a quarterback controversy. There is none. If Gradkowski is healthy, he starts. Yet without Gradkowski and McFadden, the Raiders gave Al Davis something the team has not had in awhile…pride and poise. This was a gigantic win. 35-27 Raiders

New Orleans Saints @ Arizona Cardinals–This game was supposed to be an easy win for the defending champions. As Chris Berman says, “That’s why they play the games.” Drew Brees quickly got the Saints to the Arizona 14, where they settled for a 31 yard Jon Carney field goal to lead 3-0. Later in the opening quarter Brees led an 11 play, 76 yard drive that took 5 1/2 minutes and ended in a 1 yard pass to Jeremy Shockey as the Saints led 10-0. Then the coronation took a wrong turn.

Ken Whisenhunt is at the bottom of his quarterback depth chart.  Kurt Warner is retired, Matt Leinart was cut, and Derek Anderson was benched. Max Hall started this game. Hall did just enough in the second quarter on a 10 play drive to allow Jay Feeley to hit a 37 yard field goal to get the Cardinals to within 10-3.

With 4 minutes left in the half the Cardinals had the ball at the Saints 31, but holding pushed them out of field goal range. A  perfect punt pinned the Saints at their own 1. Rather than run the ball, Sean Payton called for a pass play n the shadow of the goal line. Disaster struck when Brees was intercepted. From the 2 yard line, the Cardinals did it the hard way. On 3rd and goal from the 1, Hall was sacked at the 2 and fumbled the ball. While this again was not the Holy Roller, it was fumbled forward into the end zone and recovered by Brown for a Cardinals touchdown and a 10-10 tie in front of relieved home crowd.

The Saints got the ball back at their own 28 with 2:13 left in the half Brees quickly hit Marquis Colston for 19 yards and Devry Henderson for 39 more. The drive went no further, but a 32 yard John Carney field goal had the Saints up 13-10 at intermission.

The Saints went nowhere to start the second half, and the Cardinals took over at their own 40. On 2nd and 5 from the Saints 44, Hall was sacked and fumbled. Twice in one game, the Cardinals offense consisted of fumble recoveries of their own miscues. Instead of a loss of possession or even yardage, Alan Faneca recovered the ball for a 10 yard gain to the Saints 34 and a first down. Jay Feely nailed the 44 yard field goal to tie the game 13-13.

Brees methodically led a 7 1/2 minute drive from the Saints 28 to the Cardinals 4. A false start killed the drive, and John Carney came in for the 29 yard field goal. Garret Hartley lost his job to Carney after missing a 29 yarder a couple weeks ago. This time it was Carney who missed the chip shot, and the game remained tied.

Hall came back for the Cardinals, leading them from the 20 to the Saints 11. This time it was Jay Feely with the 29 yard attempt. He made it, and with 11 1/2 minutes left in regulation, the Cardinals had the 16-13 lead. Disaster struck the Saints again one minute later when Betts fumbled, and Rhodes returned it 27 yards for a touchdown as the Cardinals led 23-13. 90 seconds later the miscues continued as Brees was intercepted again. The Cardinals punted, and the Saints took over at their own 11 with 7 1/2 minutes left. The teams exchanged punts, and the Saints began at their own 20 with 3 1/2 minutes left.

Brees hit Shockey for 18 yards and Meachem for 12 more before throwing a 35 yard touchdown pass to Meachem. The Saints were within 23-20 and their was still 1:49 left to play. The onsides kick failed, and the Cardinals took over at the Saints 35. On 4th and 5 from the 30, Ken Whisenhunt decided against the field goal with 34 seconds to play. He decided to punt and play field position, and the Saints were trapped at their own 9  with 24 seconds left.

Brees was instantly intercepted by Dominick Rodgers-Comartie. Rather than go down, Cromartie decided to run it all the way back. This causes teams to lose games, but this time he scored the 28 yard touchdown at the buzzer to put an exclamation point on the upset. The Saints are simply not the same team as last year, and every team is gearing up to knock them off. 30-20 Cardinals

Tennessee Titans @ Dallas Cowboys–This game was a pinball machine, despite Wade Phillips and Jeff Fisher being known for defense. The TItans began the circus with Vince Young hitting Nate Washington for a 24 yard touchdown pass to have the Titnas up 7-0. The Cowboy punted, and Young led the Titans from their 14 to the Dallas 34. Rob Bironas nailed a 52 yard field goal to have the Titans up 10-0.

Tony Romo led the Cowboys, and the opposing 34 yard line was the final destination for this drive as well. Buehler connected from 51 to have the Cowboys within 10-3. From the Titans 33, Young scrambled to midfield. On 3rd and 7, illegal use of hands kept the Titans moving. Chris Johnson ran for 29 yards to the 14. Young hit Kenny Britt for the 12 yard touchdown as the Titans led 17-3 and Jerry Jones considered burning down his billion dollar metropolis and firing his entire staff. When the Cowboys went from 1st and 10 at their own 29 to 1st and 10 at the Tennessee 34 back to 4th and 31 at their own 45, Jones prepared the bulldozers.

The game did continue, and with 2:48 left in the half the Cowboys took over at their own 25. Romo hit Roy Williams for 17, and on 3rd and 7 from the Tennessee 42,  Romo hit Dez Bryant for 9 yards. Romo went back to Williams for a 27 yard gain, and from the 6 Romo hit Williams one more time to have the Cowboys within 17-10 at the break. The Titans did reach their own 41, but Jeff Fisher opted to have Vince Young take a knee and a locker room lead rather than risk a disastrous Hail Mary.

The Cowboys began the second half at their own 25. On 3rd and 4 from the 31, Romo went deep to Miles Austin. Austin caught the ball between 2 defenders and raced for a 69 yard touchdown as the game was instantly tied 17-17. The Titans punted, and Romo quickly moved Dallas to a 3rd and 4 at the Tennessee 19. Romo was then sacked, one of 6 sacks on the day. Buehler missed the 44 yard field goal and the game remained tied.

Tennessee punted again, as the Cowboys took over at their own 9. Romo led them to the Tennessee 21 and then went for all the marbles. In what would be a common theme in the second half, Romo was intercepted in the end zone for a touchback as the game was still tied.

From the 20, Young went deep to Britt for what was first ruled an 80 yard touchdown. Wade Phillips challenged the call. The touchdown was reversed as Britt was ruled down by contact, but the play still went for 52 yards. Yet the Titans went no further and instead settled for a 40 yard Birona field goal as the stalemate was finally broken with the Titans back on top 20-17 just before the third quarter ended.

Dallas took over at their own 36. From the 48, Romo hit Jason Witten for 31 yards. Yet on 3rd and goal from the 3, a false start ended the threat. Buehler connected from 26 as the game was tied again 20-20 with 10 1/2 minutes left in regulation.

The Titans punted, and the Cowboys took over at their own 12. From the 16, Romo was intercepted again, as Verner returned it to the one. Chris Johnson plunged in as the Titans led again 27-20 with 7 1/2 minutes left.

Bironas kicked the kickoff out of bounds, as the Cowboys took over at their own 40. Romo found WIlliams for a 27 yard gain. On 4th and 2 from the Tennessee 25 and 5 minutes left, Phillips decided to go for it. Romo hit Austin for 7 yards. On the next play Romo hit Witten  for the touchdown. 4 1/2 minutes remained, and for the third time in the second half the game was tied at 27-27.

Due to unsportsmanlike conduct on the Cowboys, they kicked off from their own 15.  Mariani took the kickoff at the Tennessee 16 and returned it 73 yards to the Dallas 11. This was not the Home Run Throwback Adelphia Miracle, but it was just as effective. A facemask moved the ball to the 5. On 3rd and goal at the 1, Johnson ran it in again as the Titans were back up by 7 with 3 1/2 minutes to play.

The Cowboys took over at their own 24, but on 4th and 9 from the Dallas 43 Romo fired incomplete. 1:54 still remained and the Cowboys had 2 timeouts left. Fisher played it very conservatively, and on 4th and 4 from the Dallas 37, decided to punt rather than risk a 55 yard field goal. An awful 14 yard punt had the Cowboys at their own 23 with 47 seconds left.

Romo then threw his third interception, quickly ending any suspense. The preseason Super Bowl contending Cowboys are now 1-3, while the Titans continue to win impressive games on the road. Romo threw for over 400 yards, but not the win. 34-27 Titans

Philadelphia Eagles @ San Francisco 49ers–Andy Reid does very little talking, quietly letting the long-term results speak for themselves. Mike Singletary is the second coming of Ray Rhodes, all scowl and bark and no results. Kevin Kolb started for the injured Michael Vick.

The 49ers returned the opening kickoff near midfield, and Alex Smith went right to work by giving the ball to Frank Gore. 3 straight runs went forward and the 4th one went backward 4 yards. On 3rd and 10 from the Philly 38, Smith hit Zeigler for 20 yards. Smith hit Michael Crabtree for a 7 yard touchdown to culminate the 11 play, 7 minute drive to have the 49ers up 7-0.

Kolb brought the Eagles right back from the Philly 25. From the Philly 38, Kolb hit Captain Morgan Brent Celek for 32 yards. On 3rd and 3 from the 23, a wildcat snap to Deshard Jackson went for 8 yards. Kolb hit Captain Morgan Brent Celek for the 8 yard touchdown to tie the game 7-7.

At the end of the opening quarter, Gore fumbled and the Eagles took over at the San Francisco 45. Stalwart David Akers hit a 32 yard field goal to have the Eagles up 10-7. Alex Smith went deep from the Philly 47, but was intercepted at the 3 yard line to keep the score unchanged.

With 3 minutes left in the half, the Eagles took over at their own 47. Kolb hit Jackson for 20 yards. At the 2 minute warning, McCoy ran up the middle for a 29 yard touchdown that gave the Eagles the 17-7 lead. Smith brought the 49ers back with passes of 17 to Crabtree, 11 to Gore, and 22 more to Crabtree. With 47 seconds left in the half, Joe Nedney nailed a 50 yard field goal to get the 49ers within 17-10. With 25 seconds left in the half the Eagles had 3rd and 3 at their own 44. Kolb was sacked and fumbled, as the 49ers recovered. Yet Joe Nedney had less success from 40 as he did from 50, with his miss ending the half.

The third quarter saw Gore fumble the ball away at the Philly 44. Yet with the Eagles facing 3rd and 1 at the San Francisco 30, Andy Reid resorted to gimmicks because in 11 years he has refued to draft a bruising running back. The wildcat snap failed. On 4th and 1 Reid passed up the field goal. Reid called a pass because once again, the Eagles have not run the football in short yardage situations in over 11 years. Kolb threw incomplete.

As the third quarter was ending, the Eagles had 4th and 2 at the 49ers 35. Admitting that he has no running game, the wind became an issue as Reid opted to punt rather than have Akers try a 53 yard field goal. Yet Reid waited for the quarter to end without snapping the ball. With the wind more favorable to start the fourth quarter, Reid brought in Akers instead.  The Strategy made sense, except Akers missed and the 49ers took over at their own 44.

From the Philly 35, Smith was sacked and fumbled. Mikell picked the ball up at the Philly 48 and rumbled 52 yards for the touchdown. A close game all of a sudden had the Eagles up 24-10. Mike Singletary prepared to bench Smith, and with the home crowd booing Smith relentlessly, Singletary decided to leave him in. At some point you have to let him succeed or fail, but repeatedly benching serves no purpose. Ted Ginn returned the kickoff to the San Francisco 40, but 3 straight SMith incompletions led to a punt. Philly went 3 and out and the 49ers took over with 11 minutes left in the game at their own 31.

Singletary was rewarded for his loyalty. Smith hit Zeigler for 12 yards and Vernon Davis for 36 more. Smith hit Davis for the 7 yard touchdown as the 49ers were back within 24-17 with 7 1/2 minutes left as the Eagles appeared to coast too early.

From the Philly 36, there would be no coasting. Kolb hit Jeremy Maclin for 22 yards.  McCoy fumbled but, the Eagles retained possession and actually picked up 10 yards. With 4 1/2 minutes left Akers was brought in for a 45 yard kick. Akers barely made it, but the Eagles had some breathing room at 27-17.

Yet while the offense did just enough, the defense and special teams fo the Eagles did much less. Ginn returned the ensuing kickoff 61 yards to the Philly 36. On 3rd and 4 Smith hit Crabtree for 5 yards, and then hit Crabtree for 16 more. On 3rd and goal from the 1, Smith hit Gore for the score. The 49ers were down by a field goal with 2:02 to play. The 49ers had all 3 timeouts, and Singletary decided to kick it deep and rely on his defense rather than go for the onsides.

From the 20, Andy Reid rewarded Singletary by going ultra-conservative. A running play lost 3 yards. Then Reid does what he always does whenever the run fails. He abandons it. On 3rd and 2 from the 28, Kolb threw incomplete. A failed run would have forced the 49ers to use their last timeout. Instead the 49ers took over after at their own 32 with 1:28 to play and one timeout.

Smith hit Davis for 27 yards. An injury to a Philly defender stopped the clock and again preserved the final San Francisco timeout. Yet with 36 seconds left from the Philly 44 on 3rd and 10, Smith was intercepted by Lindley. Taking no chances, Lindley went to the ground rather than fumble it back as the 49ers did last week. The 49ers fell to 0-5 as agonizingly close losses continue to mount. 27-24 Eagles

Minnesota Vikings @ New York Jets–The subplots are overwhelming.  Randy Moss is back with the Vikings. Brett Favre may be engulfed in scandal. Favre is playing against one of his old teams. The Vikings have the offense, with Adrian Peterson running hard. Rex Ryan brings the defense. Darrel Revis has a hamstring problem but will play. Santonio Holmes returned from his 4 game suspension. Adding to all the drama was a lightning storm that delayed the opening kickoff almost an hour. The teams even exchanged words before the game began. Beyond all of that were two teams that fell one game short of the Super Bowl last year, and desperate to take that last step.

The Jets kicked the opening kickoff out of bounds, giving Minnesota the ball at the 40. Brad Childress decided to go to the bag of tricks on the very first play. Favre pitched the ball out. Then it was pitched to Randy Moss on a reverse. Then Moss threw it to Favre, who caught it for a first down. It was gorgeous, but Favre was flagged for being an illegal man downfield. That followed by a pair false starts had Minnesota moving backward and the Vikings punted.

Sanchez started out with play action to Ladanian Tomlinson, firing to Braylon Edwards past midfield.  the drive stalled, and the teams traded punts, with the Jets starting their next drive at the Minnesota 40. Tomlinson ripped off a 12 yard run, and Nick Folk hit a 25 yard field goal to have the Jets up 3-0.

On their next series the Jets faced 3rd and 15 at their own 9. Sanchez completed a pass for the 1st down, but holding brought it back. So instead a run straight up the middle got the Jets the 1st down anyway. The Jets eventually kicked another field goal to lead 6-0 in a game that became a slog due to the torrential rains. The second kick was from 53 yards out, but that was before the skies opened full throttle and drenched everything.

The Vikings could not muster any offense. With 30 seconds left in the half the Jets managed to reach the 4 yard line, but Rex Ryan tried passes rather than ram it in. Several incompletions later, a 22 yard field goal had the Jets up 9-0.

Despite trying to avoid kicking to Percy Harvin all half, a squib kick was returned by Harvin to the Minnesota 41. Brad Childress, who is bald and Catholic, decided that bringing Favre out of retirement and getting Randy Moss served one purpose…to guard on the kneel down play rather than try the Hail Mary.

Mark Sanchez began the third quarter by rolling out on a naked bootleg and getting absolutely clocked. The Jets punted, but Brett Favre fumbled a snap without being touched, giving the Jets the ball at the Minnesota 46. Favre already led the NFL all time in passes, completions, touchdowns, and interceptions. Now he leads in fumbles as well. This led to a fourth field goal and a 12-0 lead as the rain slowed.

After nearly three quarters of lifeless football, the Vikings offense finally got going. Favre led a 10 play, 72 yard drive. Favre hit Percy Harvin for 11 yards. On 3rd and 15 Favre hit Randy Moss for 16 yards at midfield. On 3rd and 12 Favre hit Harvin for 22 yards. At that moment Favre became the only quarterback to throw for more than 70,000 yards. On 3rd and 17 from the Jets 37, Favre went deep to Randy Moss, as a perfect pass and perfect catch became Favre’s 500th touchdown pass, the only quarterback to achieve that. It was his first touchdown connection with Moss, as Favre hugged Moss and pumped his fists on the way to the sidelines. The Jets still led 12-7 with 2 minutes left in the third quarter.

The Jet seemed to quickly regain momentum when Brad Smith returned the kickoff 86 yards to the Minnesota 15. Yet again the Minnesota defense held, and a 5th field goal with less than one minute left in the third quarter had the Jets up 15-7.

Percy Harvin returned the kickoff 17 yards to the Minnesota 35, and Adrian Peterson ran for 30 yards to the Jets 35 as the third quarter ended. The fourth quarter began with Peterson barreling over defenders for another 10 yards. Favre then went deep to Moss again, and Moss was flagged for offensive pass interference. On 3rd and 9 Favre delivered a perfect laser to Harvin, who caught it in stride and completed the 34 yard touchdown to get the Jets within 2 points.

Confusion then reigned as Childress prepared for the extra point even though the Jets were down by 2. There was a Jets game awhile back where Rich Kotite got confused about whether to call a 2 point conversion because rain had caused his chart to get wet, rendering him unable to decide what to do. Kotite was Jewish, while Childress is bald and Catholic. Either way, the decision to go for 2 should not require a timeout, which Childress burned to discuss it. Favre rolled out, avoided a tackler, and fired into the end zone for an interception. The Vikings still trailed by 2 with 13 minutes left in regulation.

The teams exchanged punts, and with 7 minutes left the Jets took over at their own 34. Sanchez hit Braylon Edwards for 16 yards and Jerricho Cotcherry for 10 more. Tomlinson picked up 16, and Greene ran for a 23 yard touchdown. The extra point had the Jets up 22-13 with 4 1/2 minutes to play.

Favre was nowhere close to being done. Needing 2 scores, Harvin returned the kickoff to the Minnesota 46. On 2nd and 15 Favre hit Peterson for 21. From the Jets 39, Favre hit Greg Lewis for 33 yards down to the 6. After a false start, Favre hit Harvin for the 11 yard touchdown as Harvin somehow got his feet in bounds. This wass done in a bit over a minute as the Vikings again trailed by a deuce with 3:16 to play and 2 timeouts.

After Minnesota took their second timeout, Sanchez hit Santonio Holmes for 11 yards and a 1st down. Yet on 2nd and 11 from the Jets 34, Sanchez blundered badly in terms of clock management. He snapped the ball with 2:08 left, rather than wait a few more seconds. The pass landed incomplete with 2:04 left, essentially giving the Vikings another timeout. The next pass fell incomplete as well at the 2 minute warning, but the Vikings would get the ball back with one timeout. Had Sanchez waited before snapping the ball on 2nd down, the Vikings would have had to burn their last timeout. The Vikings took over at their own 15 with 1:48 to play, needing only a field goal.

After an incomplete deep ball to Moss, the Jets took a timeout on defense as Ryan decided to bring pressure rather than sit back in a prevent. Ryan sent the entire house and Darrell Revis fell down, but Favre overthrew Harvin on a lob with nobody else defending. The Jets got flagged for encroachment to set up 3rd and 5.

Favre had thrown 3 touchdown passes in this game, and throughout 20 years we have seen the good, the bad, and the ugly out of the Gunslinger. At the worst possible time, # 4 gave us the ugly. His 4th touchdown pass was completed to Gang Green defender Dwight Lowery, who returned it 21 yards for a touchdown. Nick Folk, in addition to 5 field goals, kicked the extra point to ice the game.

Rex Ryan saw his Jets improve to 4-1 while the Vikings dropped to 1-3. Next week Minnesota plays Dallas, and it is shocking to think that the two teams many picked for the NFC Title Game will see the loser of that game drop to 1-4. The Jets have won 4 straight after an opening one point loss, and look every bit as tough as advertised. As for the league, this game was everything it was billed to be and more. This is Monday Night Football at its best. 29-20 Jets

My un-retirement from sports 2010

Saturday, October 9th, 2010

On March 11, 2007, I entered the blogosphere. In one of my very first columns, I announced my retirement from sports.

https://tygrrrrexpress.com/2007/03/my-retirement-from-sports/

Love of the game of football kept me playing. In my coed touch football league, I helped my team win a couple of championships.

At age 38, I thought I was done. Yet when Brett Favre, who is two years older than me, came back for one final shot, I decided to do the same.

Today begins my final unretirement from sports.

I know, I have written this before, but this time it is final.

https://tygrrrrexpress.com/2009/07/my-un-retirement-from-sports/

Sure, I could discuss the Randy Moss Trade. It makes the Vikings an instant Super Bowl contender. They have a tough game this week at the Jets, but beyond that they could easily get back to elite status. Randy Moss stretches the field. These Vikings could be every bot as good as 1998, or even 2009. Brett Favre has the receiver he craved.

Speaking of Brett Favre, I could discuss the scandal.  I want no part of it. I think the timing reeks to high heaven, right before the Vikings-Jets Monday night game. This is the sports equivalent of an October surprise often found in politics. I hope # 4 is innocent because if he suffers a fall like Tiger Woods, it would hurt a ton of people who believed in him, especially his family. I will wait and see how this plays out.

I could talk about Big Ben Roethlisberger returning, but that sentence sums it up. The Steelers did well without him, but we shall see if he helps get them back to the big dance. More importantly, let’s see if he is a better human being. Again, I really hope Favre does not end up falling into the “great player, not so great guy” category.

I could talk about how Darren McFadden is out again with an injury, but the Raiders have seen him miss so many games that it is getting ridiculous already. He is an electric player when healthy, but he keeps getting hurt. This time it is a hamstring.

I could talk about Glen Coffee getting arrested. He quit football to focus on his ministry, and got arrested on speeding and gun charges. Somebody send Tony Dungy to his house now.

I could talk about the suicide of Kenny McKinley of the Broncos, but it is too mind-numbing. When a young man takes his life, we fail as a society. We should pray to God for our friends and loved ones, and for the McKinley family.

I could talk about Former Governor George Allen’s book, where he compares politics to sports. His father was the legendary Coach George Allen Senior, and his brother Bruce Allen used to be the General Manager for the Raiders. I did an event with Governor Allen, and he autographed his book for me with a nice inscription. I did the same for him with my book. I will have more to say about his book later.

Yes, there is plenty of life in this big wide world, from the tragic to the triumphant. Yet today is the day where, inspired by the Gunslinger Favre, give it one last shot.

Today I am unretiring from football. My game is 2:10pm. After the season I will retire again, and this time it will be final. I turn 39 in January.

Until that day, I am ready for some football.

Let’s get it on!!!!

eric

Week 5 Picks:

Denver Broncos @ Baltimore Ravens

(Ravens by 7, they win but fail to cover)

Jacksonville Jaguars @ Buffalo Bills

(Bills by 1.5, they cover)

Kansas City Chiefs @ Indianapolis Colts

(Colts by 7, they cover)

St. Louis Rams @ Detroit Lions

(Lions by 3, they cover)

Atlanta Falcons @ Cleveland Browns

(Falcons by 3, they cover)

Tampa Bay Buccaneers @ Cincinnati Bengals

(Bengals by 6.5, they cover)

Chicago Bears @ Carolina Panthers

(Panthers by 2.5, they cover)

Green Bay Packers @ Washington Redskins

(Packers by 2.5, they cover)

New York Giants @ Houston Texans

(Texans by 3, Giants win outright)

New Orleans Saints @ Arizona Cardinals

(Saints by 6.5, they win but fail to cover)

San Diego Chargers @ Oakland Raiders

(Chargers by 6.5, they win but fail to cover)

Tennessee Titans @ Dallas Cowboys

(Cowboys by 7, they win but fail to cover)

Philadelphia Eagles @ San Francisco 49ers

(49ers by 3, they cover)

Minnesota Vikings @ New York Jets

(Jets by 4, Vikings win outright)

eric

President Obama campaigns for Republicans

Friday, October 8th, 2010

In a stunning turn of events, President Obama has decided to campaign for Republicans.

http://thehill.com/homenews/administration/123089-obama-gop-will-stall-agenda-if-they-win-house

I was very surprised by this. I knew he would try to move to the right to save his job (That is what he means by jobs saved or created with over 10% unemployment), but I did not think he would simply campaign for the Republican Party.

At a Democratic National Committee Fundraiser in New Jersey (where Governor Chris Christie actually does real work, something Mr. Obama could learn about), Mr. Obama said the following:

“Unless we are able to maintain Democrats in the House and Senate, then we’re going to be stalled for two years or four years, and we’re going to start going backwards.”

Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes!

I finally agree with the man. Maybe his ears are big so the better he can hear me and Little Red Riding Hood with them.

That is it precisely.

He is concerned that if we fire the Pelosiraptor, all the fabulous “progress” that “progressives” have made the last two years will be reversed. Maybe we will go back to the pre-Pelosiraptor years when the George W. Bush economy from 2002 to 2006 was clicking on all cylinders. Oh the horror! We would go back to the days when Barney Frank was just a crybaby minority member on the House Financial Services Committee and not a leading agent of economic destruction.

Liberals love to say that the economy crashed on President Bush’s watch. It did just fine when Republicans controlled everything. It crashed and burned when the left got Congress.

(The left will call this a coincidence, or at least argue against correlation. They can then stop trying to relate the financial crisis to George W. Bush, since there is zero correlation according to anybody that did not hate the man personally before, during, and after his tenure.)

Pelosinomics has failed. Mr. Obama is worried Americans might want to reverse it. He should.

“Now when unemployment is still at 9.5, 9.6 percent that gives an enormous advantage to whoever is not in power because they can simply point at the status quo and regardless of causation say, ‘You know what? It’s the folks who are in power that are at fault,’” Obama said. “So that gives a natural momentum” to Republicans, he said.

How the heck does this egomaniac think he got elected in 2008? Does he honestly believe he is that special?

(Actually he does, wearing “Eau D’Obama @nus” cologne every morning.)

Barack Obama got elected because Lehman Brothers burned.

That’s it. Nothing else.

John McCain was ahead 49-44 in polls, a consistent lead that evaporated on September 15th of 2008. Some events are more powerful than any human being. The day JFK was shot in 1963, even Barry Goldwater conceded that the 1964 election was lost for Republicans.

Barack Obama got elected because an economic disaster allowed him to exploit fear about the future for his own gain. This is called politics. He got lucky, and took advantage by not letting a crisis go to waste.

Then he got elected, and realized that the actual real work was tougher than he thought. He did not fix the problems, and the people want to reverse his failed policies. The people beg for jobs and he babbles on about green technology while offering a Chevy Volt nobody would buy even if they had money in the bank. People want jobs, and he offers a health care plan that has businesses dropping coverage altogether.

He calls the businesses evil. They claim they are trying to survive. I believe them because he has never run a business.

“One of the strengths of Democrats is that we don’t march lockstep. We like to have internal arguments and we’re very self-critical,” Obama said.

What he means is that Will Rogers was right when he said that he did not belong to any organized political party because he was a Democrat. Democrats are dysfunctional because they are a collection of beggars with no uniting philosophy.

Republicans have a coherent agenda. They win when they stick to it. Also, this notion of “lockstep” belies the fact that there are plenty of Republican disagreements. The entire Tea Party movement sprung out of that. So on the one hand their is a mythical Republican civil war, and on the other hand we march in lockstep.

I was for Barack Obama’s argument before I was against it before I was either for it or against it depending on liberal polling and focus groups.

I gave my word that if Barack Obama were to actually be right about something, I would praise him. Well my blinking VCR theory has him right twice a day by accident, and I will sing his praises right now for being right.

If Republicans take over the Congress, it will reverse or at least put an end to his rigid leftist governance. It will force him to stop being an arrogant ideologue and start being bipartisan for his own sake like he promised.

(I just hope this time Dick Morris slams the phone down on him.)

Mr. Obama, please keep campaigning for the Republican Party.

Actually, I should not be too happy. Barack Obama is so unpopular that he might claim to be a Republican so people keep voting for Democrats.

Now if we can only get the Pelosiraptor to admit that if the Democrats win, she will promise to deliver more of the same in larger doses.

eric

NFA Corruption and Gloria Allred

Thursday, October 7th, 2010

When I am wrong, I do (eventually, grudgingly, through clenched teeth and other clenched areas) admit it.

I use to refer to Greta Van Susteren as Greta Van Substanceless. I detested her program because she spent way too much time on Anna Nicole Smith and other nonsense. I would watch O’Reilly and Hannity, and then switch to CNN because even badly liberally slanted news on topics that matter is better than a neutral eye on nonsense. I could watch CNN with the sound off and observe the ticker.

Friends of mine recently have suggested that I give Greta a second look. I am glad I did. She has focused on everybody from Sarah Palin to Brett Favre (I admit a severe football bias on the latter).

The past couple nights Greta has been outstanding. She went toe to toe with Gloria Allred, and she turned Gloria all red.

Greta Van Susteren is no partisan hack. When leftist crybabies attack Fox News the way conservatives go after terrorists, they are referring to Bill O’Reilly, Sean Hannity, and Glenn Beck. Nobody attacks Greta. She is neutral, reasonable, and fair. She is not even political. Her angle is legal, and she seems to have a sincere grasp of the law.

Gloria Allred is absolutely a partisan. She is on the left. She is an ardent liberal warrior (When liberals wage war, they do so on Republicans). She has been called everything from an ambulance chaser to a publicity hound. She does come across as parasitic.

Yet my opinion should not carry the day. I listened to the two women debate, and Greta came across as far more believable.

The issue centered around the controversy over California Gubernatorial Nominee Meg Whitman hiring and then firing a housekeeper who was an illegal immigrant.

Allred accused Van Susteren of being a shill for Meg Whitman. Van Susteren emphatically pointed out that she has never even met Ms. Whitman and does not know her at all.

Allred has been accused of shilling for Jerry Brown. Allred has donated to him in the past. Allred has criticized him in the past as well, but from the left. He was not liberal enough on some issues for her. He is still much more liberal than Ms. Whitman, and therefore deserving of her support.

While there is no direct evidence that Jerry Brown was behind this October surprise, it does seem strange that whenever Democrats are losing in the polls, they get in the gutter.

(Democrats will claim both sides do it. There is not even close to an equal tit for tat on this one.)

Al Gore denied breaking the George W. Bush drunk driving scandal 4 days before the 2000 election. John Kerry broke the Bush National Guard non-story as Dan Rather and Mary Mapes and the Jayson Blair Times relied on “fake but accurate” memos.

Greta had Allred on the defensive by pointing out a simple fact that I concede to completely overlooking. By Allred having her client sue Ms. Whitman for $6,000 in back wages, she is risking opening the woman up to deportation.

I am not in any way saying justice should be ignored. If Ms. Whitman owes this money, it should be paid. There are people who exploit illegal immigrants in awful ways. Some rapists deliberately sexually assault women because they know the women fear deportation. This is heinous, and while the rapists deserve the harshest penalty (I advocate the death penalty for rape), entering the country is illegal. Nobody deserves to be raped, but entering America illegally increases the risk of being victimized.

Gloria Allred is no dummy. She had to know that subjecting her client to potential deportation is not worth the amount of money being sought.

This makes the charge that Ms. Allred is not acting in the best interest of her client very valid. Greta Van Susteren did not even passed judgment. She simply kept asking Ms. Allred if the risk-reward ratio was worth it for the client. Ms. Allred hemmed and hawed.

When a fiduciary violates their responsibility, that is called corruption. It is up to Ms. Allred to act in the best interest of her client. Time will tell if she did that. I suspect otherwise.

This situation is personal for me because I know what it is like to be victimized by a corrupt entity while watching people get exploited.

As I have said before, one of the most corrupt entities on Earth is the National Futures Association. I have met several of the sources of the corruption, from Phil Raleigh and Ronald Hirst to Melissa Glassbrenner to Bill Maitland. They are led by the top corruptocrat Dan Driscoll. I have discussed in the past why Dan Driscoll is basically Eliot Spitzer with better hair. I brought a legal issue to Mr Driscoll, and his response was stunning, even for a talentless technocrat like himself.

I was responsible for making sure that any new potential brokers hired by my firm had the integrity and character to be in the financial services industry. After all, most clients would not want criminals handling their money. I took this oversight role very seriously.

I repeatedly told applicants that the coverup is often worse than the crime. If they have issues in their backgrounds, disclose them to me in a confidential setting. Don’t lie to me. If a person has criminal convictions, they might still be allowed to become brokers based on the circumstances. If they lie on their applications, the NFA will show no mercy (I agree with this).

One fellow lied on his application. He had felony convictions. The NFA website clearly states that anybody convicted of a felony is subjected to “statutory disqualification.” The person has the right to an appeal, which can take months.

(Most people refuse to fight. One guy had a felony drug charge. In the years since, he got married, had a child, and turned his life around. He fought for an entire year, and finally was granted the right to be a broker. I agreed with the end result. Yet somebody who stole money from clients would not be a good case for redemption. Each case is different.)

When I found the applicant lied, I explained I could not hire him.

I was then sent a letter by the New York Civil Rights Commission accusing me of human rights violations!

Human rights violations? To me that was something done by Stalin, Hitler, and Pol Pot. I was a paper pusher at a brokerage firm.

In New York, it is actually illegal to discriminate against felons. The applicant sued my firm with help from an aggressive leftist bleeding heart civil rights attorney. She was Gloria Allred without the fame.

(Civil rights is often thought to involve race. The applicant was Caucasian and male, as am I.)

I explained that the issue was that the applicant lied. Yet even so, I pointed out that the NFA bans the hiring of felons.

The civil rights attorney investigated, and came back to me with news that the NFA refuted my point, and that there was no prohibition on hiring felons.

I researched for answers, and it seems that like any group of government-lite weasels, the NFA splits hairs very fine.

(The NFA is not a “rules-based” organization. It is “philosophy-based,” which means they make up the rules as they go along.)

It is legal for firms in this industry to hire felons. It is just illegal to allow them to do the actual work.

So I can hire a felon, but cannot let him make sales calls or solicit business. The entire role of a broker is to perform those functions. Yet to hire a person to sit and do nothing is legal. Only a quasi-government agency like the NFA (self-regulatory organization for hair splitters) could be this stupid.

I went to Dan Driscoll for help. I explained to him that many clients would be uncomfortable having convicted felons as brokers. Worse, the guy lied on his application.

Mr. Driscoll pointed out that the NFA supported the notion of not having felons as brokers.

Yet Mr. Driscoll would not back me up to the New York Civil Rights Commission. I was hung out to dry, thrown to the wolves.

The case was settled, and I was not convicted of any civil rights violations. I vigorously denied the charges.

The New York Civil Rights Commission successfully intimidated the NFA. It was better for the NFA if a small firm gets sued than if the NFA gets sued.

Dan Driscoll decided it was easier to sacrifice a pawn like me than allow an ounce of honor to lead to a cleaner financial services industry.

Both Dan Driscoll and the NFA, in addition to the NYCRC, used and abused people. The brief settlement this applicant received came at a price of his reputation as a problem employee. I will never disclose his name, but the industry is small. Plenty of people will not hire this guy because he gamed the system.

The NYCRC knew this. They did not care. A liberal ideological agenda trumped fiduciary responsibilities.

Gloria Allred makes her living defending parasites, be they hookers, adulteress mistresses, porn stars, or illegal immigrants.

The NYCRC does the same, in this case putting the rights of felons and liars over law abiding citizens.

The NFA and Dan Driscoll speak about the integrity of the derivatives market, but have zero interest in anything but preserving their own power. Any client that gets ripped off by this broker suffers solely because the NFA will not stand up for the rule of law.

Greta Van Susteren declared that enough was enough. At some point sanity has to take over. An 11th hour election attack could lead to a woman getting deported solely so Gloria Allred can get more fame and publicity before using this woman up and moving on to the next “victim.”

Without rules, laws, and honor, the entire system breaks down. Between Gloria Allred, Dan Driscoll, the NFA, and the NYCRC, it is no wonder that hiring is down in America. Corporations are paranoid. They are tired of frivolous lawsuits by leftist trial lawyers who get rich off of the misery of those who never get a fraction of the payday that the lawyers get in ancillary benefits.

Why be honest? Gloria Allred, the NYCRC, the NFA and Dan Driscoll have all proven that the penalty for corruption is…nothing.

Al Gore and John Kerry almost stole elections with help from liberals in the media. Gloria Allred may just take down Meg Whitman and elect Jerry Brown because she is like that.

Then again, what do I know?

I am just a human rights violator (not convicted) in a world gone mad where felons are oppressed victims and honest workers are guilty until proven innocent.

eric

J-Street and George Soros–The ultimate self-loathing Jewish union

Wednesday, October 6th, 2010

For those seeking to undermine Israel and destroy Judaism worldwide, please support J-Street.

J-Street came about because AIPAC was considered too “Pro-Israel,” and therefore “right-wing,” as if defending a right to exist should have a political label.

(Ironically, I have been very critical of AIPAC at times for being too liberal, and reluctant to ever discuss the use of force.)

J-Street builds itself as “Pro-Israel, Pro-Peace.” It is neither.

It is not even pro-Jewish.

While I am a staunch Republican, I do have friends who are major players in the organization “Democrats for Israel.” DFI are passionate Obama supporters, hardly the vast right-wing conspiracy.

(I am leaving their names anonymous because if they get caught having Republican friends it could damage them at Jewish dinner parties.)

Even people at DFI privately express concerns that J-Street goes too far.

Let me be less diplomatic (as always).

J-Street are a combination of self-loathing Jews and anti-Semites. While a precious few of them may actually be proud Jews who are hopelessly naive and ignorant of history, the driving engine behind the organization is hostility to Israel under a Jewish fig leaf.

After two years of hollow denials, it was confirmed a few days ago that the ultimate leftist and self-loathing Jew George Soros is funding J-Street.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/09/29/AR2010092907376.html

Some people will claim that since Soros is Jewish born, he has to be good for the Jews. That imbecilic train of thought also applied to Jayson Blair Times owner and destroyer Arthur “Pinch” Sulzberger Jr, although at least he had the decency to admit his self-loathing and convert out of the faith.

(Sorry Christian America, he is your problem now.)

Being Jewish does not automatically mean one is proud of such a birthright.

Soros has a history of hostility toward Israel, and supporting Palesimian causes in all cases.

He rails against Wall Street and capitalism (translation: Jewish bankers) while making his money destroying the currencies of third world nations for profit. He makes money off of human misery. The sad part is no matter how anti-Jewish he acts, misguided anti-Semites use him as an example of justifying the greedy Jewish banker stereotype.

This is the man funding J-Street.

Not only did J-Street accept money from this horrendous man. They lied about it. They denied it. This was an old fashioned coverup that should end in the word “gate.” Maybe it can be called “Hategate.”

Watergate became famous when Woodward and Bernstein were told by Deep Throat to “always follow the money.”

J-Street is owned lock, stock, and barrel by George Soros. They raise money from other sources, but he got them started.

When a disgusting man throws his money and weight around, it is no surprise that it should go to organizations that are equally odious.

J-Street cannot and should not ever again claim to be Pro-Israel or Pro-Jewish. If the NAACP received its funding from the Ku Klux Klan and then tomorrow advocated abandoning Africa, banning affirmative action, and returning segregation laws, there would be questions of sanity among the leadership.

This is what has happened in the liberal Jewish community. Too many liberal Jews are liberal first and Jewish second. Therefore, anything a liberal does has to be seen as good for Jews because it is liberal.

Liberal Jews must not deny the anti-Semitism in America that comes from the left. They criticize conservatives for teaming up with the “Christian Right,” while laying down in a vile bed with the secular anti-Jewish and anti-Semitic left.

J-Street is a poisonous cocktail that seeks to eradicate Judaism as we know it. It is funded by an anti-Semitic criminal billionaire.

(Soros is a convicted insider trader, but apparently only conservatives go to jail for financial crimes.)

Jews and supporters of Israel (sadly not often the same thing) must make sure that J-Street is financially crippled so that it gets shut down immediately.

With Jews like these, the Arabs and Palesimians will be just fine.

Israel will not be.

eric

Fall into Line 2010!

Tuesday, October 5th, 2010

In 2008, many Republicans expressed dismay that John McCain was the presidential nominee. I personally liked John McCain, but preferred Rudy Giuliani. The day after John McCain won the nomination, I delivered a simple yet stern message to the supporters of Mitt Romney, Mike Huckabee, Fred Thompson, and Rudy Giuliani.

Fall…into…line!

In 2010, that message is even more vital.

I don’t want to read one more article about a mythical GOP Civil War. We had one in 1992 when Ross Perot destroyed the Reagan Coalition due to a personal animus toward George Herbert Walker Bush. In 2010, the Tea Party did not go rogue. They went mainstream. They won in Republican primaries. They are Republican candidates.

I detest ideological purity. I care about winning and governing. It is time to fall into line like good, loyal, Republican soldiers.

In Delaware, I probably would have backed Mike Castle. He was a safe, consensus choice. I would not have supported the Tea Party backed candidates in Nevada or Delaware.

I have since gotten to know Sharron Angle personally, and find her to be a lovely human being.

In California and Maryland I did back the Tea Party candidates, and was crushed when Chuck DeVore and Jim Rutledge lost.

I have no love for Carly Fiorina or Dr. Wargotz. Yet like DeVore and Rutledge, I am falling in line behind them with zero strings attached. The goal is to defeat the Twin Barbara terrors Boxer and Mikulski.

In Connecticut, I most likely would not have backed WWE lady Linda McMahon. I am firmly behind her with no reservations whatsoever.

I do not blindly support Republicans or conservatives. I could never support Pat Buchanan, David Duke, Robert Novak (who thankfully kept his bile confined to his media job) or anybody else who bared anti-Semitic fangs or any other kind of racism. Ron Paul is a non-starter. He might not be an anti-Semite, but he is no friend of Israel. Also, his anti-war positions and isolationism fit comfortably into the leftist lunatic wing of the Democratic Party.

This brings me to Kentucky, the one major race where I really have to swallow hard. I have studied Rand Paul. His Israel position is much better than his father. He is totally right on economics and totally wrong on foreign policy. As a presidential candidate like his father was, this is a non-starter. As a senate candidate, he can win the election and then normal conservatives can ductape his mouth when he tries to talk about matters of foreign policy.

The bottom line is that we have our nominees. They went through Republican primaries and won fairly and squarely. Every race is winnable in this climate, and that includes Christin O’Donnell. Remember Ronald Reagan was too old and conservative to defeat Jimmy Carter.

Let the left try to savage Republicans and conservatives. That is what they do.

We cannot and must not turn inward and let the left win.

We Republicans are a family. So whether our nominees are to the right of Christine O’Donnell or to the left Meg Whitman, I love them.

Whether one supports the Conservative Party or the Tea Party, the mainstream right of center party in America is the Republican Party. The primaries are over. Do not vote third party or stay home.

Vote Republican, whether it be governors and senators or judges and city council candidates.

Do not vote blind. Learn about the candidates. Study them closely. There is not one Republican running for any major race that should be a deal breaker.

So to anybody in America who us right of center, 2010 could be our best election since 1994. The left is a mess. Nobody can bring us down except us.

Don’t let that happen.

Republicans must do one and only one thing. Be loyal soldiers. Moderates must support conservatives when they are the nominees and vice versa. It is too late for Delaware to choose a more moderate candidate or California to choose a more conservative one. Our nominees are just fine the way they are.

Republicans everywhere, do one thing and do it immediately.

Fall…into…line!

eric

Liberals rally for the sake of rallying

Monday, October 4th, 2010

Several years ago Saturday Night Live had a hilarious skit (every few years they have one, due to the law of averages) featuring Matthew McConaughey leading a meeting of anti-war protesters. While the purpose of the meeting was to protest the War in Iraq, every liberal interest group came with their own agenda, from gay rights to the environment. When one man yells out “legalize porn,” an exasperated McConaughey points out that it already is legal. The man responds, “Not the kind I like!”

This is today’s liberal Democrats.

On August 28th, 2010, Glenn Beck held a rally at the Capitol steps. The theme of the rally was “Restoring Honor.”

The rally brought 500,000 people to DC. The crowd was peaceful and polite. It was a love-in. When it was over the streets were cleaner than before the rally began.

Glenn Beck, Sarah Palin and others spoke about leading more honorable lives, and loving God and our neighbors.

Who could possibly object to such a gathering?

Liberals.

Since Glenn Beck and Sarah Palin are conservatives, everything they do must be invalidated and demonized.

There was nothing to criticize about this rally. It was an overwhelmingly positive development. Yet since conservatives organized the rally, it had to be bad.

Liberals could have organized such a rally. They chose not to do so. It is easier to tear others down than build people up.

Liberalism is the anti-ideology. It stands for nothing but hatred of conservatives. Democrats are the anti-party, existing to hate Republicans and nothing more.

One does not have to agree with conservative Republicans, but at least they stand for something. Glenn Beck and Sarah Palin truly believe in the cause of a more honorable society. The left cannot credibly attack that message, so they try to destroy the messengers through ridicule. The alternative approach of liberals holding a rally to discuss honor is a foreign concept.

On October 2nd, 2010, liberals held a rally at the Capitol to preach “national unity” and “coming together.”

It was just another collection of leftist beggars engaging in a hatefest of conservatives.

When conservatives hold a rally, it is because of a cause. The rally has a point. The Tea party movement, which is basically disaffected conservatives, is obsessed with reducing out of control government spending. That is it.

So what was the leftist rally a couple of days ago about?

For some it was government run health care. For others it was abortion. For yet others it was environmental. Even more came to support looser immigration laws. Others supported the Palesimians right to destroy Israel.

When a rally is about everything, it is about nothing. Since there is only one uniting factor, the left inevitably rallies about that. This is why the signs at the Restoring Honor rally were positive. What were the signs at the leftist unity rally?

One said “Tax the rich and end the wars.”

Another read “Billions for jobs, not occupation. End U.S. aid to Israel.”

Another read “Chri$tianity = Pagani$m = Heathen$ = Nazism.”

http://american-conservativevalues.com/blog/2010/10/one-nation-rally-images-10-2-10/

The speeches spewing bile at conservatives flowed. Ed Schultz is not known for treating political opponents with human decency.

Conservatives do not despise liberals. We despise terrorists. We support killing them. On business matters, we favor tax cuts. We do not care who receives those cuts.

Liberals have a frothing hatred for conservatives because it distracts from the cold hard truth that without conservatives, they would turn inward and destroy each other in the same way Arabs badmouth Israel but thank the heavens for its existence and the Palesimian misery.

Like Arab nations barely containing heir contempt for each other, the greeniacs, animal rights activists, black separatists, white union workers, illegal immigrants, gay marriage advocates, and anti-war, anti-Semitic  Code Pinkos tolerate each other just long enough to hate Republicans before going back to clawing each other to death. They are united by a negative, which prevents anything positive.

Now Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert are holding rallies the day before Halloween. Stewart is holding the “Rally to Restore Sanity” while Colbert wants to “Keep Fear Alive.”

In other words, Stewart is calling the Beck supporters insane and Colbert is accusing them of spreading fear.

What about leading honorable lives is insane or fearmongering?

If liberals can show an ounce of honesty (well they would not be liberals), they would concede that despite their loathing of the messengers, the message was overwhelmingly positive in its tone and result. People came away inspired, vowing to love their children and neighbors more.

Stewart and Colbert emphatically deny that Glenn Beck had nothing to do with their rally, which was not in any way a counter-rally. Bill Clinton wagged his finger years earlier, so liberal protesting (about protests no less) rings hollow.

Of course these rallies are meant to mock Beck. What would one expect Stewart to do, offer something constructive to society?

One could ask why liberals don’t just hold a rally preaching honor without attacking the other side.

Liberals don’t do this. They can’t. Hatred of the right is their form of crack.

Besides, their rallies reflect what they truly believe. Atheists and Agnostics are hip and cool while those believing in Monotheism are unenlightened dolts, in addition to being zealots.

Jon Stewart epitomizes the obnoxious secularism of the left, branding religious people as zealots when it is the secularists wishing to demonize everyone else.

This is why the left could never do a Restoring Honor rally. They find the idea of preaching about God to be noxious.

That is why they need to destroy Glenn Beck and Sarah Palin. Those two individuals could lead a blood drive and the left would carp, because anything positive they could possibly do needs to be obliterated before public opinion comes to the conclusion that Beck, Palin, and most religious people are simply good human beings who really do believe in loving their neighbors and strengthening families.

Whether done with anger or humor (or what liberals like Stewart consider humor when not calling Harry Truman and George W. Bush war criminals), the end result is the same.

The left needs to tear everything down because building something up is not what they do.

A positive rally about loving people, even conservatives?

They would not even try.

They would not know how.

They just rally for the sake of rallying, convinced that they matter.

The Restoring Honor rally changed many lives for the better.

Only those incapable of and unwilling to offer a positive vision could denounce such a beautiful event bringing out the best in humanity.

Let the liberals rally. They are preaching to each other, and at some point will admit that even they are not listening or believing what they say.

eric

NFL 2010–Week 4 Recap

Sunday, October 3rd, 2010

From Duffy’s Sportsbar in South Florida, here is the NFL 2010 Week 4 Recap.

(The upside is football starting at 1pm allows for sleeping in. Also, they serve the food to you…no having to get up to go to the fridge. The downside is that pajamas are not a good idea.)

New York Jets at Buffalo Bills–This had the potential to be  trap game for the Jets after a big emotional win on the road against Miami last week. Trent Edwards was released as Ryan Fitzpatrick stayed, which means something to somebody in Western New York. Early on Mark Sanchez took Gang Green right down the field, and a one yard plunge up the middle by Ladanian Tomlinson had the Jets up 7-0 early on. Nick Folk missed a field goal that would have extended the lead. Folk did connect in the second quarter to have the Jets up 10-0.

Late in the half Sanchez went deep to Braylon Edwards for a 41 yard touchdown to have the Jets up 17-0 in a laugher. However, the 2 minute drill gave the Bills a spark of life. Fitzpatrick hit Martin for a 4 yard touchdown as the Bills trailed 17-7 at intermission.

In the third quarter Rex Ryan went to his bag of tricks, and a direct snap ti Jerricho Cotcherry resulted in him throwing an 8 yard touchdown pass to Dustin Keller as the Jets led 24-7. Keller caught another short touchdown pass, this one from Sanchez in a more traditional manner, as the Jets continued slapping the Bills silly 31-7. Ladanian Tomlinson got in on the fun with a 26 yard touchdown run as the throttling had the Jets up 38-7.

Buffalo mounted a furious rally that fell just short by 24 points. The Jets did not take this game too lightly, as they now have 3 consecutive division wins, the last 2 on the road. Hard Knocks is what they are delivering as they are 3-1 and winning in statement fashion. 38-14 Jets

Cincinnati Bengals at Cleveland Browns–Until Ohio is sold to Canada, this intradivision rivalry will continue to waste airspace in the other 49 states. The Bengals have not lived up to the hype, while the Browns are a mess as Jake Delhomme remains out. Chad Johnson should send Pepto Bismol to every fan who watches this game because it will make them sick. The Browns kicked a field goal to lead 3-0 and allow the Walrus Mike Holmgren to let Eric Mangini coach the second quarter.

Seneca Wallace led an 87 yard drive that ended in a 24 yard touchdown pass to Evan Moore to have the Browns leading 10-0 in the Boredom Bowl. The Bengals did kick a field goal, although neither of their reality tv star wide receivers kicked the ball. With 3 1/2 minutes left in the half Carson Palmer went deep to Terrell Owens. Owens failed to drop the ball, racing for the 78 yard tying touchdown and then announcing to the crowd that he loves him some him. The Browns kicked a field goal to lead 13-10 at halftime. For some reason, the second half was played.

In the third quarter Seneca Wallace led the Browns on an 11 play, 64 yard drive that was capped off with Patrick Hillis running it in from one yard out to have the Browns up 20-10. Carson Palmer was then hit, and his fumble deep in Cincy territory led to a Phil Dawson field goal as the Browns extended the lead to 23-10.

Cincinnati did put a field goal on the board to trail 23-13, as Terrell Owens griped on the sidelines, most likely about the skyrocketing costs of his health insurance premiums. The PPO providers apparently don’t love him some him. The Bengals got the ball back and Palmer calmly led an 80 yard drive that was capped off with a 3 yard touchdown toss to Leonard as the Bengals were within 23-20.

With 9 1/2 minutes left in regulation, Palmer, who finished the day 25 of 26 for 371 yards passing, moved the Bengals from their own 14 to a 3rd and 3 at the Cleveland 31. Offensive holding on Chad Johnson pushed the Bengals out of field goal range as the Browns took over with 4 1/2 minutes left at their own 11.

Hillis took the game over, picking up gains of 1, 5, 5, and 1, as Cincy used their timouts. Hillis picked up 3 more, and then ripped off a 24 yard gain. The Bengals never got the ball back as the Browns hung on for their first win and the Bengals remain ridiculously overrated as Marvin Lewis fails to see his head cases get the job done. 23-20 Browns

Baltimore Ravens at Pittsburgh Steelers–This is why we watch football. This game was expected to be a head-knocker with points at a premium. The 2 teams who met in the AFC Title Game a couple years ago could be there again, as Mike Tomlin and John Harbaugh are virtual mirror images of attitude and consistency.

The attempt to keep the game scoreless was helped along by a 6 minute drive for the Ravens that ended in a missed Billy Cundiff field goal. Charlie Batch then threw a 34 yard deep strike to Fabian Washington at the one yard line. Rashard Mendenhall banged it in to have the Steelers up 7-0. Joe Flacco came right back with a 40 yard deep ball to Derrick Mason. Illegal contact kept the drive going. On 3rd and 7 from the 9 and the Steelers smelling pass, a perfect draw play resulted in a touchdown run by Willis McGahee to tie the game 7-7 early in the second quarter.

With 6 minute left in the half, Batch was stripped of the ball near his own goal line. Yet instead of falling on it, Ravens defenders tried to pick it up and run 1 or 2 yards to glory, allowing the Steelers to fall on it and retain possession. Offsetting penalties only added to the confusion. Flacco led the Ravens into the red zone with seconds left in the half but could not crack the Pittsburgh defense. From 33 yards out, Cundiff put the Ravens up 10-7 at haftime in a game that was every bit as nasty as advertised.

Denver Broncos at Tennessee Titans–After a scoreless first quarter, Kyle Orton hit Eddie Royal from 8 yards out to have the Broncos up 7-0 on the road. Yet Vince Young quickly brought the Titans 71 yards in only 4 plays, with an 8 yard touchdown to Kenny Britt deadlocking the game 7-7. With 23 seconds left in the half, Prater kicked a field goal to have the Broncos leading 10-7.

The second half became a slog as the Titans kicked a field goal to tie it and the Broncos added one of their own to lead 13-10. A game with little excitement got exciting in a hurry as a 98 yard Mariani kickoff had the Titans up 17-13. No laterals were involved. Orton brought Denver right back, but at the 18 the drive stalled. Prater connected on a 3rd field goal to have Denver within 17-16. With 5 minutes left in the third quarter Rob Bironas kicked his second field goal as the Titans led 20-16.

With 5 1/2 minutes left in regulation the Broncos faced 3rd and 1 at the Tennessee 11, a wildcat snap yielded nothing. Josh McDaniels decided to go for it on 4th and inches, and the Broncos made it on the ground by the nose of the ball. With 4 1/2 minute left the Broncos faced 4th and 3 at the 5. Orton fired to the back of the end zone but the low throw was dropped as Jeff Fisher saw his team make a critical stand.

The Broncos got the ball back, and with 2:17 to play they were at the Titans 45. At the 2 minute warning they were back at midfield facing 2nd and 25. Orton went deep, and defensive pass interference in the end zone set up 1st and goal on the one with 1:52 left. A false start pushed Denver back. Orton then hit Correll Buckhalter for the touchdown as Denver led by a field goal with 1:33 to play.

Jeff Fisher could only watch helplessly as the Titans fumbled the ensuing kickoff, ruining any chance of a comeback. The Titans had all of their timeouts, and held Denver to another field goal as the Broncos led by 6 with 30 seconds left. The ensuing kickoff was returned to the 43, but an illegal block nullified that. A deep pass was dropped with 16 seconds left. Another deep pass was dropped again with 8 seconds left. A final hail mary fell incomplete.

Denver improved to 2-2 with the hard fought road win as Tennessee lost another tough game at home. 23-20 Broncos

Detroit Lions at Green Bay Packers–This is another example of a game on paper that was supposed to be a blowout for the homers. A couple years ago the Packers faced the 0-15 Lions and helped them make history. The mercy rule was not expected to be in effect today. Matthew Stafford is still injured and Bobbie Layne is still deceased.

Green Bay already led 7-0 due to a 29 yard touchdown pass from Aaron Rodgers to Donald Driver when the Lions offense decided to end the suspense with an early interception. Yet the Lions still have Calvin Johonson, and the all world receiver took in a 23 yard touchdown pass from Shawn Hill to tie the game 7-7 in the second quarter.

Yet the Lions are the gift that keeps on giving, and gift field position had the Packers at the Detroit 12. Rodgers hit Finley for the touchdown to have the Packers back on top 14-7. Rodgers has been firing at will this season, and a 17 yard touchdown pass to Greg Jennings had the Packers cruising at 21-7.

The Lions refused to quit, at least in the first half. Hill led a 13 play, 80 yard drive that took over 6 1/2 minutes off the clock. Just before the half, Hill hit Calvin Johnson from 21 yards out as the Lions were only down 21-14 at the break. Green Bay did fumble the kickoff before the half but stalwart Jason Hanson was short on a 55 yard field goal attempt. Hanson would redeem himself bigtime in the second half as everybody else but him went to sleep.

Hill kept throwing, but in the third quarter he was intercepted by 2009 defensive player of the year Charles Woodson, who raced 48 yards for a touchdown to have the Packers up 28-14. Detroit kept chipping away as four…yes four…field goals had the Lions only trailing 28-26 with practically the entire fourth quarter to play. Hanson connected from 39, 52, 49, and 24. The Lions then intercepted Rodgers on a bomb with 11 1/2 minutes left as the blowout had quietly turned into a thriller.

With 6 1/2 minutes left the Lions faced 4th and 9 from the Green Bay 37. Despite missing earlier from 55, Hanson was now red hot. Jim Schwartz decided not to give Hanson a chance, opting to punt and play field position.

Rodgers bled the clock, leading the Packers from their own 13 to a 3rd and 7 at the Detroit 21 with 55 seconds left. With the Lions prepared for the pass, Kuhn ran straight up the middle for 8 yards as the Lions helplessly watched the clock run out.

These are the Lions, and they did not get the job done to get their first win. Green Bay is 3-1, and while tis was far tougher than it should have been, to quote Chris Berman, “That’s why they play the games.” As for Lions, that’s why they lose the games, dropping to 2-34 in their last 36 games. 28-26 Packers

San Francisco 49ers at Atlanta Falcons–Mike Singletary scowls. So what? This is not 1985 Chicago. When Alex Smith threw a 12 yard pass to Vernon Davis, the 49ers led 7-0 and all of San Francisco talked of the second coming of Joe Montana to Dwight Clark. No, not really. Yet when the 49ers blocked a punt for another touchdown to lead 14-0, it became apparent that the Falcons were flat after their big emotional win on the road against New Orleans last week. Taylor Mays caught the blocked punt in the back of the end zone and got his feet down to make it a touchdown instead of a safety.

Matt Ryan is Matty Ice, and he calmly led a 12 play, 6 minute drive that covered 71 yards, with Ryan hitting Douglas for 8 yards to have the Falcons within 14-7. The defenses took over, and in the second quarter the Falcons kicked a pair of field goals to get within 14-13. The second kick never should have happened. With one minute and 20 seconds left in the half, the 49ers only needed to run the ball and try to end things. To describe how they screwed this up makes the Miracle at the Meadowlands seem sane. Singletary has a new offensive coordinator, and from the Atlanta 34 a pass for Frank Gore was intercepted.

From the Atlanta 33, Matt Ryan had Atlanta at the Atlanta 47 with one minute left. Ryan hit Douglas for 33 yards to the San Francisco 19. With 36 seconds left, the Falcons faced 4th and 1 at the 10. Mike Smith may look like an average non-descript white guy who looks like a guy named Mike Smith, but he does not act like it. Rather than kick the field goal, he decided to go for it so that the Falcons could bleed the clock and not leave 30 seconds left. If the gamble failed he would be ridiculed in Barry Switzer territory. Ryan picked up 2 yards, the field goal was good, and the Falcons trailed by a point at the break.

The second half was lifeless. Alex Smith led the 49ers from their own 8 to 3rd and 4 at the Atlanta 34. A penalty pushed them out of field goal range. Everything seemed over as Matt Ryan was intercepted with under 2 minutes to play. Yet rather than go to the ground, too many defenders want to be part of an ESPN highlight reel. Rather than go coast to coast, Roddy White caught up to the defender and stripped the ball loose, and the Falcons had one last shot. Ryan took over with 1:22 to play in regulation and the Falcons at their own 7 yard line. They had all 3 timeouts, but miles of ground to cover.

On 3rd and 10 Ryan hit Douglas for 17. Ryan hit Roddy White for gains of 13 and 20 to the San Francisco 39 with 52 ticks left. On 3rd and 2 from the 31, Ryan hit Tony Gonzalez for 5 yards as the 49ers were using their timeouts in case they needed a comeback of their own. Both teams took their final timeout with 7 seconds left and Matt Bryant coming in for a 43 yard field goal to win it.

The kick was good, and the 49ers dropped to 0-4. The Falcons have had back to back Cardiac wins to get to 3-1, and Mike Singletary is most likely still scowling somewhere. His team led 14-0, showing how motivated they are. 16-14 Falcons

Carolina Panthers at New Orleans Saints–When a bad team travels on the road to face a good team, the good teams are supposed to win in a blowout. This is especially true when the home team is angry after blowing a win the week before. After 14 minutes of scoreless football, Drew Brees went deep to a receiver in double coverage. Defensive pass interference set the Saints up at the 5.  Brees hit Moore for the touchdown.

In the second quarter Jimmy Clausen threw his first NFL touchdown pass, proving that Charlie Weis really is a genius. The 55 yard touchdown to Jimmy Stewart tied the game at 7-7. With 1:13 left in the half, last week’s goat Garrett Hartley did not come on the field. There was no chance at redemption as his predecessor became his successor. Old man John Carnet hit the 32 yard field goal to have the Saints up 10-7 in a game where they dominated statistically but not on the scoreboard.

In the third quarter Deangelo Williams took a handoff and raced 39 yards for a score as the Panthers shocked the home crowd and led 14-10. New Orleans put a field goal on the board to trail 14-13 late in the third quarter. With 3:50 left in regulation a third field goal by Carney had the Saints leading this war of attrition by a deuce.

The Panthers had a final shot, and on 4th and 4 from their own 46 with 1:53 left, Matt Moore completed a perfect strike at the Saints 38. On 3rd and 12 Moore was sacked. On 4th and 16, John Fox decided against a 62 yard John Kasay field goal. Moore threw incomplete and the Saints survived a heartstopper. Sean Payton knows repeating will be tough, and the last 2 weeks have proven this. It was ugly, but the Saints got the win and John Carney got redemption in the same week as his AARP card. 16-14 Saints

Seattle Seahawks at St. Louis Rams–USC lost the day before, justifying Pete Carroll’s exit. Yet the Rams are no longer the second coming of San Jose State, as Sam Bradford has them improved. Bradford led a 10 play, 90 yard drive that ended with a 15 yard touchdown pass to Gibson to have the Rams up 7-0. In the second quarter Matt Hasselbeck led a 14 play, 81 yard drive that took 6 1/2 minutes. However, the drive stalled at the 5 and a 22 yard Olindo Mare field goal had Seattle within 7-3. The Rams tacked on a field goal of their own to lead 10-3 at the half.

In the third quarter Bradford found Darby for a 21 yard touchdown pass as the Rams led 17-3 and got closer to Bradford’s first NFL win. Seattle mounted no comeback, and while the win was unexciting, the Rams will happily take it. Seattle never got going as the Rams clamped down on defense. Steve Spagnuolo helped win a Super Bowl in New York with defense. This may be the first building block. 20-3 Rams

Indianapolis Colts at Jacksonville Jaguars–Last year these teams put on a pinball clinic in Jacksonville as the Colts survived 35-31 in their march to the Super Bowl. The first half of this game was just as exciting, as defensive mind Jack Del Rio had few answers for Peyton Manning and Jim Caldwell almost had a facial expression the game was so exciting. Caldwell is all personality.

Manning put on a clinic early on with an 11 play, 59 yard drive that took 6 1.2 minutes and finished with Joseph Addai running it in from 2 yards out as the Colts led 7-0. David Garrard, perhaps the best dressed player in football, led a 5 minute 76 yard drive that ended with Garrard himself scrambling for 25 yards to tie the game 7-7.

In the second quarter with a short field, it was the Jaguars who led 14-7 when a 45 yard drive culminated with Maurice Jones-Drew took it in from one yard out to have the Jaguars up 14-7. Yet Manning is not in the Hall of Fame only because he has not retired yet. 85 yards, 11 plays, and 6 minutes later, a 7 yard touchdown pass from Manning to Dallas Clark tied the game 14-14 at intermission.

Manning had the Colts on the move again in the third quarter when he decided to go for all the marbles. He was intercepted in the end zone, and it was returned just past midfield. With a short field, Garrard calmly threw a 15 yard bullet between a pair of defenders to Lewis to have the Jaguars up 21-14.  As the third quarter was ending, Manning had the Colts going in for the tying score until Reggie Wayne fumbled at the 10 yard line. It was returned 43 yards past midfield, but the Jaguars failed to move the ball. The Colts got the ball back early in the fourth quarter at their own 4 yard line.

Manning went right back to Wayne for a gain of 21. Manning hit Wayne again for 13 and to Austin Collie for 12 more at midfield. Manning hit Dallas Clark for 15 and Wayne for 17 more. Manning then hit Wayne for 12 down to the 6. After a flurry of passes, Joseph Addai ran for 4 and 2 more to complete the 96 yard drive and tie the game 21-21 with 5 1/2 minutes left in regulation.

A 39 yard kickoff return had the Jaguars at their own 43, and Garrard answered Manning. On 3rd and 4 just shy of midfield, a critical roughing the passer call had the Jaguars at the Colts 23. On 3rd and 1 from the 14, Garrard picked up 3. On 3rd and 7 form the 8, Garrard hit Jones-Drew for the touchdown as the Jaguars led by 7. The Colts took over at their own 35 with 2:02 to play as Del Rio and the home crowd took deep breaths.

3 incomplete passes set up 4th and 10. Manning calmly hit Dallas Clark for 16 just past midfield. Manning then went deep to Wayne for a 42 yard gain to set up 1st and goal at the 7 with a full 1:07 to play. On 3rd and goal at the 1, Manning hit Collie for the tying score with 48 seconds to play.

Garrard had one last shot. On 3rd and 2 from the Jacksonville 31, Garrard hit Underwood for 6 yards. Garrard then hit Underwood for 22 to the Indy 41. Del Rio brought in Josh Scobee for a 59 yard field goal attempt with 5 seconds left. Scobee absolutely beat the daylights out of the ball, leveling it over the bar with some room to spare. Scobee took his helmet off and ran around the field, as was his right. This game was every bit as thrilling as last year, and this time the Jaguars stood tall as the Colts fell to 2-2. These teams meet later in the year in Indy. 31-28 Jaguars

Houston Texans at Oakland Raiders–Jewish Raider fans are still mourning the crushing loss last week. For more on the game of the day, go to http://www.justblogbaby.com

The Raiders started last week by giving up a kickoff return for a score. This week it was the Silver and Black taking the opening kickoff and seeing Ford return it 64 yards to the Houston 38. Golden field position was wasted when Bruce Gradkowski was hit and fumbled the ball, knocking the Raiders out of field goal range.

The Texans took over at their own 10 and Matt Schaub hit Dreesen for a 29 yard gain. Schaub then hit Walton for 12 and Steve Slaton for 13 more. From the Oakland 33, Ward raced around the right side for an easy touchdown as the Texans led 7-0.

The Raiders took over at their own 20. From the 25, Gradkowski hit Darren McFadden, who took a short pass for a 43 yard gain. On 3rd and 6 from the Houston 28, Gradkowski hit Zach Miller for 10 yards. Michael Bush picked up 8 yards, and then the final 2 as the Raiders tied the game 7-7.

After an exchange of punts, the Texans took over at the Raiders 37. Slaton picked up 23 on the ground, and on 3rd and 8 fro the 11, Schaub hit Dreesen for the touchdown as the Texans led again 14-7. In the second quarter the teams exchanged punts again as the Raiders took over at their own 36.

Gradkowski hit Miller for 17 yards to the Houston 44. On 3rd and 3 from the 37, Gradkowski picked up 5 yards himself. Gradkowski hit McFadden for 11, Miller for 8 more, and Reece for the 13 yard score as the Raiders again tied the game 14-14.

With 1:10 left in the half, the Raiders took over at their own 43 Gradkowski hit Miller for 23 and McFadden picked up 5 more. Well within Janikowski’s range, Gradkowski was then sacked and fumbled, killing the drive. Schaub actually got the Texans into field goal range, but as the half ended a field goal doinked off the upright.

For undisclosed team reasons, Gary Kubiak did not have Arriun Foster start. Unfortunately for the Raiders, he did play. The third quarter began with Foster easily rambling 74 yards for a score to have the Texans back on top 21-14.

The Raiders reached midfield but punted. Schaub then led a drive that consumed over 7 1/2 minutes of clock and 13 plays. Beginning on his own 10, he faced 3rd and 7 at the 13. He coolly hit Daniels for 8 yards. Arriun Foster took a short pass 31 yards. On 3rd and 1 from the Oakland 27, Foster picked up 4. The Drive stalled at the Oakland 17, but Neil Rackers connected from 35 to have the Titans up 24-14.

Gradkowski then went deep and was intercepted, with a return all the way back to the Oakland 35. Foster picked up 11 and Dreesen caught a pass for 9 more. On the opening play of the fourth quarter, Schaub hit Foster from 10 yards out to have the Texans coasting at 31-14.

As I keep saying, as long as Gradkowski is in the game, the Raiders have a chance to win. A healthy Darren McFadden also helps greatly. McFadden had 105 all purpose yards by halftime, and from the Oakland 13, he quickly picked up 23 yards.  Gradkowski then hit Johnny Lee Higgins for another 12. On 3rd and 8 from midfield, Gradkowski hit Miller for a pair of  9 yard gains. After an encroachment penalty, Bush picked up 6 and then Gradkowski hit Miller for 6 more and then for the 14 yard touchdown. The Raiders were within 31-21 with a full 11 minutes left in the game. After the Texans went 3 and out in only one minute, the Raiders took over at their own 18.

Gradkowski quickly hit Miller for 10 yards and Bush picked up another 11. A pass to Higgins went for 26 yards at the Houston 35. On 3rd and 5, Gradkowski hit Louis Murphy for just enough. The drive stalled at the 21, and Seabass came in for a 39 yard field goal. Last week he had a nightmarish game, and his 5 misses this year lead the league. He only missed 3 all of last year. This kick was good and the Raiders were within 7 points with over 6:13 still remaining. 613 is an important number in Jewish culture, although Al Davis did not factor that into the rest of the game.

With 3 minutes left, the Raiders got the ball back at their own 25. On 3rd and 3 Gradkowski threw incomplete, but defensive holding kept the drive going. At the 2 minute warning the Raiders faced a comfortable 2nd and 2 at their own 44. Yet a critical intentional grounding penalty followed by an interception gave the Texans the ball at the Oakland 41 with 1:40 left. The Raiders still had timeouts, and everything came down to 3rd and 6 at the 37 with 1:31 left. Foster ran for 8 yards and the Raiders were done.

This was the year that the Raiders were going to finally stop being losers and be an average team. They were a missed kick from being 2-1 last week. Instead they are 1-3, and in last place in the division. Tom Cable has to get wins in a hurry or he may lose the team. Every time the team looks like it is about to turn the corner, it takes a step back. Gradkowski finished 24 of 39 for 278 yards and 2 touchdowns with 2 interceptions. The Texans improved to 3-1, while the Raiders still remain unfulfilled potential. 31-24 Texans

Washington Redskins at Philadelphia Eagles–Forget Shakespeare. This is the real theatre with men in tights to watch. Donovan McNabb remains as classy as ever, refusing to criticize publicly the organization that royally screwed him over. Walrus Lite Andy Reid continued to have Michael Vick start while Mike Shanahan blamed Al Davis for the Albert Haynesworth situation. He just does not like Als. While Eagles fans have booed Santa Clause, for once in their lives they showed class, cheering McNabb before the game in ways they never did during his 11 years.

They had little to cheer about early on as McNabb put on a clinic. With a short 39 yard field, a 12 yard run by Torain had the Redskins up 7-0. Later in the quarter a 78 yard drive finished with a 31 yard touchdown pass from McNabb to Chris Cooley as the Redskins led 14-0 in front of a stunned crowd.

The crowd then went silent in the second quarter as Michael Vick made an some electric moves, and scrambled all the way to the Washington one yard line. Vick got sandwiched at the goal line, and left the game with injured ribs. In a series of 3 weeks, Eagles fans have went from worshipping Kevin Kolb for no reason to pillorying him for no reason to anxiously seeing what he could do. A penalty on the Vick scramble meant Kolb was starting with 3rd and 16. A field goal made it 14-3.

McNabb came right back with a 56 yard completion that would have been a touchdown had the receiver not stumbled to the ground untouched. After 11 plays, 72 yards, in 6 minutes, Gano kicked a field goal to have the Redskins up 17-3. Maybe now Eagles fans understand that McNabb can play. Down by the goal line on 4th and goal, a delay of game penalty after a timeout prevented a touchdown attempt as a field goal before the half cut the gap to 17-6, at which point Kevin Kolb was declared Mayor of Philadelphia.

The second half was uglier than the old Veterans Stadium. The Eagles fans did cheer for McNabb when he completed a pass to one of the Eagles, resulting in an interception.  Kevin Kolb did manage to get the Eagles into the end zone with 4 minutes to play. The 2 point conversion failed as the Eagles got to within 5 points.

With one minute left in regulation Kolb rallied the Eagles for one last chance. Defensive holding on Philip Buchanan had the Eagles at midfield with 26 seconds to play. With 13 seconds left, the Eagles faced 4th and 10. What occurred next was not the Miracle at the Lincoln, but it was close. A deflected pass was caught and then quickly lateraled, resulting in a 1st and 10 at the 32 with 4 seconds left. The Hail Mary was perfectly thrown, and could have been a touchdown as the receiver jumped high and had it in his hands. Without being touched, it slowly bounced out, and was intercepted.

Andy Reid made the decision to trade away McNabb, and he has to live with it. As for Kolb, he almost pulled off the miracle. Haynesworth was on the field for the final play, and imagine if his not getting to Kolb had turned ugly. McNabb got some sweet vindication in a hideous and hard fought game. McNabb and Reid shared a lengthy and very warm hug after the game. 17-12 Redskins

Arizona Cardinals at San Diego Chargers–Both of these teams were coached by the late Don “Air” Coryell, which proves that I was grasping at straws for a compelling storyline. The Cardinals survived an Oakland meltdown last week for a one point win, and were looking for back to back AFC West wins against a Chargers team off to its typical September slow start under Norvelous Norv Turner.

Philip Rivers started out making it look easy with an 89 yard drive that culminated in a 33 yard touchdown pass to Antonio Gates to have the Chargers up 7-0. Yet in the second quarter while looking for more, a fumble was returned by Rhodes for a 42 yard touchdown to tie the game 7-7. With Kurt Warner retired, Ken Whisenhunt takes points wherever he can get them.

Rivers needed only 5 plays to move the Chargers 63 yards, with a 5 yard run by Tolbert putting the Chargers back in front 14-7. On the next San Diego drive, 65 yards came easily, as Rivers hit Gates again, this time for a 26 yard touchdown to have the Chargers up 21-7. Derek Anderson completed a perfect pass to Phillips, who plays defense for the Chargers. The 31 yard return had the Chargers leading 28-7 at the break.

There would be no miracles for the Cardinals. For the second time in three weeks they were carpet-bombed on the road, falling behind 41-7. At least this time they mounted an inspired rally that resulted in a field goal. The Chargers did not have a letdown. They never let up either. 41-10 Chargers

Chicago Bears @ New York Giants was the Sunday night game. The defenses had the clear advantage, but late in the opening quarter Eli Manning led the Giants from their own 20 to the Chicago 5. The drive stalled, and a 22 yard field goal had Big blue up 3-0 at home. Jay Cutler was then intercepted to give the Giants a short field, but Lawrence Tynes missed a 38 yard field goal. The rest of the unwatachable opening half saw Jay Cutler get slammed to the ground and knocked out of the game just before halftime as the Giants still led 3-0.

Late in the third quarter the Giants finally mounted a drive, going 90 yards. From the Chicago 30, Bradshaw ripped off a 25 yard gain. Bradshaw carried people the final 5 yards on the next play as the Giants led 10-0 with 3 minutes left in the third quarter.

With 150 year old Todd Collins at the helm, the Bears did manage a field goal to close within 10-3. With 7 minutes left in the game, the Giants had a chance to turn out the lights as Ahmad Bradshaw broke free and raced toward the end zone. Naturally, he was caught from behind and stripped of the ball, as the Bears took over at their one yard line.

They ended up punting, giving the Giants golden field position. They finally slammed the door shut when Brandon Jacobs banged it in from a couple yards out. Collins was also knocked out of the game, and emergency quarterback rookie Caleb Hanie came in for 4 minutes of a rude welcome to the NFL under impossible circumstances.

Tom Coughlin silenced his critics for another week and Lovie Smith saw the Bears lose their first game, which they should have done a week earlier anyway. Mike Martz is an offensive mad scientist, but the Big Blue defense carried the night with 10 sacks, 9 of them in the first half on Cutler, 2 interceptions, and 3 forced fumbles. 17-3 Giants

Patriots @ Dolphins was the Monday night game, and a bizarre game it was. The first half was fairly uneventful. Chad Henne threw a 19 yard touchdown pass to Bess in the first quarter. In the second quarter New England kicked a pair of field goals, the second one after Randy Moss dropped a touchdown pass. Moss went without a catch for the first time since 2006, and Tom Brady passed for only 153 yards. The Dolphins led 7-6 at halftime. In the second half, all heck broke loose as a series of special teams plays defied disbelief.

First Tate ran the second half kickoff back 103 yards for a touchdown to have the Patriots up 13-7. Miami then had to punt, and the punt was blocked. New England took over at the Miami 15, and a 12 yard touchdown run by Green-Ellis had the Patriots up 20-7.

Henne brought the Dolphins back 80 yards, and a 28 yard pass from Henne to Ricky Williams had the Dolphins within 20-14. Yet despite having little offense, Brady led New England 78 yards in 12 plays in 5 minutes. An 11 yard touchdown to Woodhead had the Patriots up 27-14.

Early in the fourth quarter, Miami lined up for a 53 yard field goal to get them within 10 points. The kick was blocked, and returned 35 yards by Arrington  to have the Patriots up 34-14 in front of a shocked home crowd. Completing the rout was an interception of Henne that Chung took 51 yards for the final New England score.

For the first time in NFL history, a team in the same game scored a rushing touchdown, passing touchdown, blocked field goal, kickoff return, interception return, and had a touchdown set up by a blocked punt. Tony Sparano had no answers, apologizing to the crowd. Henne was benched late and Tyler Thigpen threw another interception. The evil hoodie Bill Bellichick saw his team excel on special teams in an unprecedented manner. 41-14 Patriots

eric

Farewell George Blanda

Saturday, October 2nd, 2010

Farewell George Blanda.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Blanda

Earlier this week, the longest professional playing career in the history of the game of football saw iron man George Blanda leave for the great field in the sky as the gridiron great left us at age 83.

Today we question whether a certain quarterback should play his 20th season. George Blanda played for 26 seasons. In addition to being the team quarterback, he was actually also the kicker. He finished with a then-record of 2002 points. He played in four different decades, starting in 1949 and retiring after the 1975 season at age 48.

From 1949 through 1958, he played for the Chicago Bears, with a brief stint with the Baltimore Colts in 1950. He was told in 1959 that he was too old, but after sitting out the 1959 season, joined the upstart American Football League. He played with the Houston Oilers from 1960 through 1966, winning the first two AFL Championships. He joined the Oakland Raiders in 1967, and as the backup to Darryl Lamonica, helped get the Raiders to Super Bowl II against Vince Lombardi and the Packers. He had played against them many times while with George Halas and the Bears.

In his final two seasons as the backup to Ken Stabler, he saw the 1974 and 1975 Raiders reach the AFC Title Game but lose to Pittsburgh both times. Sadly, he retired before the 1976 season where the Raiders finally defeated the Steelers in the AFC Title Game and then trounced the Minnesota Vikings to arn their first Super Bowl victory.

In 1970, at age 42, AP named him the male athlete of the year. In a remarkable 5 game stretch at age 42, his kicks led the Raiders to 4 wins and a tie that meant the difference between missing the playoffs and reaching the AFC Titte Game again.

George Blanda was what football is about. It is hard-nosed, gritty, and thrilling when everything is on the line.

More importantly, it is the end of an era and a major piece of football history.

Earlier this year we lost Don Coryell. We watch television today, and we see the Raiders play the Chargers in games that will one day maybe be classics.

Yet the history of football involves the legends that already exist.

There will never be another George Blanda. The game is too brutal and the players are too big and strong for a 48 yard quarterback and kicker. He was one for the ages.

The Silver and Black flags at the Oakland Alameda County Coliseum will be at half staff this Sunday.

Heavy hearts will fill the Raiders Nation, but they will be grateful hearts as well.

Farewell Mr. Blanda. You played the game with honor and integrity, and football fans everywhere will remember your greatness on the field.

There is football in heaven, and George Blanda, while younger than God, is at the senior table planning the next play.

eric

New York Jets at Buffalo Bills

(Jets by 5.5, Bills win outright)

Cincinnati Bengals at Cleveland Browns

(Bengals by 3, Browns win outright)

Baltimore Ravens at Pittsburgh Steelers

(Steelers by 1, they cover)

Denver Broncos at Tennessee Titans

(Titans by 6.5, they win but fail to cover)

Detroit Lions at Green Bay Packers

(Packers by 14.5, they win but fail to cover)

San Francisco 49ers at Atlanta Falcons

(Falcons by 7, they cover)

Carolina Panthers at New Orleans Saints

(Saints by 13.5, they cover)

Seattle Seahawks at St. Louis Rams

(Seahawks by 1.5, Rams win outright)

Indianapolis Colts at Jacksonville Jaguars

(Colts by 7, they win but fail to cover)

Houston Texans at Oakland Raiders

(Texans by 3.5, Raiders win outright)

Washington Redskins at Philadelphia Eagles

(Eagles by 6.5, they win but fail to cover)

Arizona Cardinals at San Diego Chargers

(Chargers by 9, they win but fail to cover)

Chicago Bears @ New York Giants is the Sunday night game.

(Giants by 4, they win but fail to cover)

Patriots @ Dolphins is the Monday night game.

(Pick em, Patriots win)

eric