Archive for January, 2010

It’s not about Harry Reid

Monday, January 11th, 2010

Harry Reid has been under fire recently for racially tinged comments about Barack Obama.

While I want Harry Reid to resign for many policy based reasons, I do not want him to resign over this.

I have met Harry Reid. I do beli8eve he has some anger in his heart, much of it directed at Republicans.

I do not believe he is a racist. I do not believe this at all.

His comments were stupid, and he apologized for them, and that should be it.

So why is the case not closed?

Because this is not about Harry Reid.

This is about an entire political ideology called liberalism that seeks to define and demonize all conservatives as having malicious hearts.

It is called ideological bigotry.

Harry Reid is a tiny part of this cancerous growth.

Trent Lott makes kind remarks about Strom Thurmond that had nothing to do with race, and he is branded a racist and loses his job.

Rush Limbaugh sticks up for Janet Reno when John Conyers is rude to her, and Bill Clinton calls him a  racist.

Dr. Laura favors traditional values, so gay groups brand her a homophobe and hound her off the air in the name of tolerance.

Nancy Pelosi compares tea party attendees to the people who murdered Harvey Milk and George Moscone, even though those killers were liberal Democrats.

Ted Kennedy said things about Robert Bork and Clarence Thomas that make me glad he is gone from this Earth.

The list is endless.

The Democrats were the party of slavery, yet it is Democrats that judge everybody by race, gender, or sexual orientation. Republicans understand that cutting taxes and killing terrorists crosses all strata.

The reason the left throws racial and other ethnic bombs is because they have no governing philosophy They can win elections, but getting bills passed into law is beyond them. As the country music song says, when you stand for nothing you will fall for anything. The only thing that unites liberals and Democrats is hatred of conservatives and Republicans.

So yes, we should let Harry Reid off the hook for this. We should criticize him on his record only. Even though he called President George W. Bush a loser and a liar, that does not mean we need to get in the gutter.

What we do is wait. The next time a conservative or Republican is made out to be a bigot, we hit back with a  ferocity the left has never seen. We verbally make their ears and eyes bleed.

If somebody wants to demonize me or people I believe in, they had better have evidence.

I had to listen to eight years of George W. Bush being compared to Adolf Hitler. Dubya was called every name in the book. The left could not criticize his policies alone. They had to try and destroy the man and grind him into dust.

I refuse to do that with Harry Reid. As for the bigotry bombthrowers in the Democratic Party, you will get yours, and payback will bleed.

eric

NFL 2009-2010–Wild Card Recap

Sunday, January 10th, 2010

My birthday yesterday was spectacular, from inception to its salaciously delicious conclusion.

Enough reminiscing about the past. The NFL playoffs are upon us with four wildcard games.

New York Jets @ Cincinnati Bengals–Last week the Jets beat the Bengals 37-0 in the Meadowlands. The playoff rematch was in Cincinnati. The Bengals got off to a hot start with a 56 yard kickoff return, but on the third play from scrimmage fumbled the ball away. The Jets punted and the Bengals got the ball back at the New York 45. Cedric Benson picked up 19 yards on the ground, and on 3rd and 6 from the 11, Carson Palmer hit Laverneous Coles for the touchdown to put the Bengals up 7-0. After that the roof caved in.

In the second quarter the Jets took over after  a punt at the Cincinnati 47. Greene ran for a 39 yard touchdown to tie the game 7-7. Palmer was then intercepted, setting the Jets up at their own 43. Mark Sanchez hit Keller for a 45 yard touchdown pass to give the Jets the 14-7 halftime lead.

In the third quarter seven straight running plays set up a 4th and 4 at the Cincy 24. The field goal was good, but holding pushed the Jets back 10 yards. Before they could try the kick again, a false start pushed them out of range and they punted. The Bengals moved from their own 12 to a 4th and 5 at the New York 17. SHane Graham came in for a 35 yard field goal and missed it. Sanchez came in and hit Jerricho Cotchery for 18 yards and Braylon Edwards for 16 more. Thomas Jones ran it in form 9 yards out as the Jets had the lead on the road 21-7.

The Bengals got back in the game when Benson ran for a 47 yard touchdown to get the Bengals within 21-14 with 11 minutes left in regulation. Sanchez hit Keller on a short swing pass that went for 43 yards down to the Cincy 23. Green broke off a 14 yard run and added 5 more, but on 3rd and 2 from the 3, Jones only picked up one yard. With 6 minutes left, facing 4th and 1 at the 2, Rex Ryan opted for the field goal. The chip shot was good as the Jets had a 10 point lead.

From the Cincinnati 37, Palmer quickly led the Bengals down the field, needing 2 scores to tie the game. Helped along by a pair of defensive penalties, the Bengals reached the Jets 11. At that point Gang Green hunkered down, and 3 straight incomplete passes later Marvin Lewis decided to go for the field goal. From 28 yards out, Graham missed again. The Bengals got the ball back one final time but Palmer was leveled on back to back sacks. Marvin Lewis saw his 9-3 Bengals fade down the stretch, while Rex Ryan saw his Jets barely squeak into the playoffs. On this day the Jets got it done on the road. 24-14 Jets

Philadelphia Eagles @ Dallas Cowboys–Despite both teams being 11-5, both coaches Andy Reid and Wade Phillips and both quarterbacks Donovan McNabb and Tony Romo were going to be skewered in the media if they lost this game played at the 1.2 billion Jerry Jones Metropolis. Dallas swept the season series, including 24-0 last week. This game was expected to be much more competitive. It was not.

Romo took half of the opening quarter to move the Cowboys from the Dallas 17. A 30 yard screen pass to Felix Jones had the Cowboys with 1st and 10 at the Eagles 14. A pair of penalties and a sack had the Cowboys at 4th and 32 from the 36. Wade Phillips decided against the long field goal, as the Cowboys punted. Dallas got the ball back just shy of midfield, and Jones ran for 20 yards down to the Philly 31. Yet again they went backwards, and on 4th and 13 from the 34, Phillips again opted for the punt rather than a shaky field goal kicker.

Despite a scoreless first quarter, the Eagles went nowhere with awful field position. Dallas took over at their own 45. On 3rd and 8 Romo hit miles Austin for 12 yards. The first big play was a deep bomb that led to defensive pass interference and the ball on the Philly one yard line. Romo hit Phillips for the touchdown as the Cowboys led 7-0. The Eagles came right back. They began at their own 17, and from the 24, it wa Michael Vick at quarterback on the play, not McNabb. The wildcat snap saw Vick throw deep to Jeremy Maclin for a 76 yard touchdown to tie the game 7-7.

Romo was then intercepted, but the Cowboys challenged the call and on review it was ruled incomplete. Defensive pass interference again hurt the Eagles as the Cowboys moved form their own 15 to their own 42. On 3rd and 9, Romo hit Patrick Crayton for 18 yards to the Philly 39. On 3rd and 7 Romo hit Roy Williams for 17 yards and Jason Witten for 18 more down to the one. Tashard Choice ran it in to complete the 10 play, 85 yard drive and put the Cowboys up 14-7.

The Eagles punted again, and the Cowboys again had great field position at their own 41. Romo hit Austin for 36 yards to the Philly 23. On 3rd and 10 Romo hit WIlliams for 17 yards down to the 6. The Eagles finally clamped down, holding the Cowboys to a field goal and 17-7 lead. Disaster then struck as Vick went from hero to goat, fumbling the ball away as the Cowboys took over at the Eagles 18. Romo hit Austin from 6 yards out to have the Cowboys coasting at 24-7.

Philadelphia continued to self-destruct as another fumble set the Cowboys up at their own 42 with 51 seconds left in the half. An unsportsmanlike conduct penalty on the Philadelphia defense allowed a 48 yard field goal attempt, which was good. A scoreless first quarter became a second quarter Dallas avalanche as the Cowboys led 27-7 at the break.

The second half was uneventful. Felix Jones broke off a 73 yard run in the third quarter to have the Cowboys leading 34-7. Dallas beat Philly for the third time this season. Phillips and Romo got the monkeys off their backs with the first Dallas playoff win since 1996. As for Andy Reid, he was 7-0 in opening round playoff games before this loss. Despite almost being the # 2 seed, instead McNabb will be subjected to more criticism than an 11-5 quarterback should. 34-14 Cowboys

Baltimore Ravens @ New England Patriots–This was another game where a mismatch appeared illusory. The Ravens barely made the playoffs with a 9-7 record on the last weekend, while the Patriots coasted to another division title. Despite Wes Welker being injured, the Patriots had the edge at home, where Bill Bellichick and Tom Brady had never lost a playoff game. In a stunning turn of events, this game was practically over by the end of the first quarter.

The Ravens began at their own 17. One play and 17 seconds into the game, Ray Rice had an 83 yard touchdown run and 7-0 Ravens lead in front of a shellshocked Patriots crowd. The Patriots needed 3 plays for Tom Brady to get sacked by Terrell Suggs and fumble the ball, setting up the Ravens at the New England 17. McClain ran it in from one yard out to have the Ravens up 14-0 only 4 1/2 minutes into the game.

After an exchange of punts, Brady was intercepted, again giving the Ravens a short field at the Patriots 25. On 3rd and 1 from the 16, Joe Flacco snuck for just enough. Despite the Ravens running the ball almost all game, Flacco hit Willis McGahee for 13 yards to set up Rice from one yard out to have the Ravens up 21-0. Brady was then intercepted again, this time by Ed Reed. Reed lateraled the ball to Landry, who took it to the Patriot 9. The Patriots finally held on defense, but a field goal had the Ravens up 24-0 after the most hellacious opening quarter in Patriots playoff history.

Needing plenty of miracles, New England got one in the second quarter when a punt bounced off a Ravens lineman. The Patriots recovered at the Baltimore 16. While John Harbaugh saw his team thrashing the opponents, he made a coaching mistake by not challenging the fumble recovery. It appeared the ball was recovered out of bounds, which would have given it back to the Ravens. The non-challenge led to a 6 yard touchdown pass from Brady to Julian Edelman. The Patriots still trailed 24-7, but any game with the evil Hoodie Bill Bellichick on the sidelines requires a stake through the heart.

Flacco barely threw the ball all game, as the Ravens rammed the ball down the Patriots throats all game. Yet a Flacco interception gave New England a chance, until they went 3 and out. The Patriots got another break when the Ravens punted and New England took over at the Baltimore 44. On 3rd and 8 from the 32, Brady hit Kevin Faulk for 17 yards, but offensive pass interference on Randy Moss instead pushed the Patriots back. On 4th and 12 from the 36, Bellichick opted against the field goal as the Patriots punted again and trailed 24-7 at intermission.

In the third quarter, trying to make something happen, Brady tried to party like it was 2007. A deep ball was intercepted by Landry, who returned it 42 yards to the New England 22. With Flacco throwing no passes. 4th and 3 at the 4 led to a field goal and a 27-7 Ravens lead. A strong kickoff return had the Patriots at their own 47, where they finally got going. A 10 play drive culminated with a 1 yard toss from Brady to Edelman as the Patriots only trailed 27-14.

They got no closer as the Ravens had a long kickoff return of their own to start at their own 48. Flacco then led a 12 play, 6 minute drive that stretched into the fourth quarter. On 3rd and 2 from the New England 44, Flacco hit Derrick Mason for 8 yards. On 3rd and 7 from the 13 Flacco hit Clayton for 17 yards. On 3rd and 7 from the 13 Flacco scrambled around the end, stretching the ball just beyond the first down marker. New England had no answers on 3rd down, and on 3rd and goal from the 3, McGahee ran it in to ice the scoring. New England desperately tried to rally, but the final deflating blow came when Stephen Gostkowski missed a 44 yard field goal.

From the opening run, the Ravens took New England and belted them in the mouth. Flacco threw only 10 passes all game, and completed 4 of them for 34 yards. Most of that came on the last scoring drive. Yet the epitome of a game manager is to not lose the game, and with Ray Lewis and Ed Reed on defense and a punishing running game, Flacco did his job as New England suffered its very first home playoff loss. 33-14 Ravens

Green Bay Packers @ Arizona Cardibnals–Last week these teams met in Arizona, with the Packers having clinched a wildcard and the Cardinals again clinching their division. Yet the Packers played their starters most of the game and the Cardinals rested theirs early on. Kurt Warner gave way to Matt Leinart, who gave way because he is not a good quarterback. The Packers raced to a 33-0 lead and won 33-7. The rematch in the wildcard was again in Arizona, but this time the Cardinals were not playing their backups. The results showed early and often.

Aaron Rodgers was intercepted on the opening play from scrimmage, setting up the Cardinals at the Green Bay 40. On 3rd and 8 Warner hit Urban for 13 yards. Wells ran for 14 and Warner hit Steve Breaston for 11 more. Tim Hightower banged it in from one yard out to put the Cardinals up 7-0. Donald Driver then fumbled, and the Cardinals took over at the Green Bay 22. Warner hit Doucet for the 15 yard touchdown as the Cardinals led 14-0. Arizona got the ball back again at their own 41, and Warner continued slicing and dicing the Packers defense. The drive stalled at the Green Bay 5, but Neil Rackers made the field goal to have the Cardinals up 17-0.

In the second quarter the Packers showed signs of life, and Mike McCarthy decided to have Mason Crosby attempt a 54 yard field goal to get the Packers on the board. The kick was no good. The Cardinals went down the field again, but a chance to turn out the light early on ended when Larry Fitzgerald fumbled at the Green Bay 16 and Matthews returned it to the Green Bay 48. Ryan Grant ran for 10 yards, and a horse collar penalty on the next run added 15 more. Grant ran for another 20 to set up 1st and goal at the 7. On 3rd and goal from the 11, and incomplete pass was for naught as defensive pass interference instead gave the Packers 1st and goal at the 1. Aaron Rodgers took it in to make it a 17-7 game.

Yet the Green Bay defense had no answer to Warner. From the Arizona 21, the Cardinals marched 79 yards with relative ease. A 25 yard run by Larod Stephens-Howling followed by a defensive facemask foul  had the Cardinals in the red zone. From the 15, Warner hit Doucet, who bounced off a couple tacklers, lost his helmet, and spun into the end zone to have the Cardinals up 24-7 with just over 2 minutes left in the half. That was enough time for Rodgers to complete a 44 yard bomb to the red zone. The Packers got inside the 5 yard line, but could not punch it in, settling for a 20 yard field goal as the Cardinals led 24-10 at halftime.

The Arizona onslaught continued in the second half. Warner hit Fitzgerald for a 33 yard touchdown pass to have the Cardinals up 31-10. Yet Rodgers brought the Packers back from the 20. An 18 yard pass to Finley on 3rd and 10  moved the chains. On 3rd and 8 from the Green Bay 40, a incomplete pass was offset by defensive pass interference. Rodgers then hit Jennings for 35 yards to set up a 6 yard touchdown pass to Jennings to get the Packers within 31-17.

Mike McCarthy called a surprise onsides kick that worked perfectly as the Packers took over at their own 43. On 4th and 1 from the Arizona 48, McCarthy decided to go for it, and Ahman Green picked it up. Rodgers then hit Finley down to the Arizona 21. From the 10, Rodgers hit Nelson for the touchdown to get the Packers to within 31-24. Yet the Green Bay defense still had no answers.

From the Arizona 27, Warner hit Doucet for 15 yards, and Wells ran for 42 yards to the Green Bay 16. Warner hit Fitzgerald for an 11 yard touchdown as the Cardinals led 38-24 after three quarters.

Less than one minute into the fourth quarter the Packers were on the board again. Facing 4th and 5 from the Arizona 30, Rodgers hit Driver, who shook a tackle and took it to the end zone as the Packers were back within 38-31.

Ken Whisenhunt got conservative on the next series, and running plays led to the first Arizona punt of the game. Rodgers then hit Finley for 38 yards and Driver for 28 more down to the one. Kuhn ran it in to tie the game 38-38 with 11 minutes in regulaton.

On the next series Whisenhunt had Warner continue his passing clinic. On 3rd and 4 from the 26, Warner hit Hightower for 7 yards. On 3rd and 1 from the Green Bay 47, Wells picked up just enough. Warner then hit Breaston for 26 yards, and went back to Breaston for a 17 yard touchdown to put the Cardinals in front again 45-38 with 5 minutes to play. The only downside was that the Packers had the ball again.

The Packers began at their own 29, and a defensive holding penalty moved things to the 40. Rodgers ran for 13 yards to the Arizona 47, and then hit Jennings for 22 yards down to the 25.  On 3rd and 5 from the 20, Rodgers hit Finley for 9 yards down to the 11 at the 2 minute warning. Rodgers hit Hadner for the touchdown to tie this pinball machine game 45-45 with 1:53 left.

The Cardinals took over at their own 21, and on 2nd and 5 from the 26, Warner hit Breaston for 24 yards to midfield and Fitzgerald for 15 more to the Green Bay 35 with 22 seconds remaining. From the 32, Warner hit Doucet,  who broke tackles and got down to the 16 as the Cardinals called timeout with 14 seconds remaining. Rackers came in for the 34 yard kick to win it. He hooked it way wide, no good. The teams went to overtime.

The Packers won the toss, and a pair of offenses that put up 90 points were not going to end on defense. Or maybe in a game that had seen everything, they would. The Packers took over at their own 20, and on 3rd and 6 from the 24, Rodgers got hit by Mike Adams. The ball bounced off of Rodgers’s helmet, and then bounced off of Rodgers’ foot straight into the arms of Karlos Dansby, who took it 17 yards for an interception return touchdown to end one of the all time playoff thrillers and the highest scoring game in NFL Playoff history.

A crushed Aaron Rodgers finished 28 of 42 with 4 touchdown passes, including rallying from 31-10 in the second half. Yet interceptions on the very first and last plays of the game were the difference. As for Kurt Warner, he was a ridiculous 29 of 33 for 379 yards passing and 5 touchdown passes. The teams combined for 1000 offensive yards. The big winner in this game was the NFL itself. 51-45 Cardinals, OT

From a competitive standpoint, most of the wildcard games were not that good, despite the last one being one of the greatest games of all time. Let’s hope the divisional games offer better fare. The divisional games are now set.

Baltimore Ravens @ Indianapolis Colts

New York Jets @ San Diego Chargers

Dallas Cowboys @ Minnesota Vikings

Arizona Cardinals @ New Orleans Saints

eric

January 9, 2010–The anniversary of my being

Saturday, January 9th, 2010

Today is the anniversary of my being. At 6:28pm EST, I turn 38.

For lunch I am spending my birthday speaking to the American River Republican Women’s Federated.

I then hightail it back to Los Angeles for my 8pm birthday party in Beverly Hills.

I met a 12 year old girl yesterday in temple named Julie. Today is her bat mitzvah. I hope she has a successful bat mitzvah.

My Uncle Joey just had a surgical procedure. My birthday wish obviously centers around his health.

As for present, the best present I could ask for besides being surrounded by friends is gorging on the NFL Wildcard games. I predict:

Eagles @ Cowboys–Eagles win

Jets @ Bengals–Bengals win

Packers @ Cardinals–Cardinals win

Ravens @ Patriots–Patriots win

Oh yeah, and to that Republican brunette:

(Insert salacious message here–redacted)

To all of you who have been friends of the Tygrrrr Express, me personally, or both, thank you so much.

I am the luckiest guy in America.

eric

The First Android in Chief Spaketh

Friday, January 8th, 2010

I originally promoted Barack Obama from the First Gasbag to the First Blatherer.

I am now promoting him to First Android.

I never thought that Barack Obama was a bad guy. I disagreed with him, but he seemed affable enough in his naive wrongheadedness. He was polite in his dismissiveness of others.

I realize now that he might not be human.

I have no proof of this, but given what modern technology can do, I think he might be a robot.

I cannot think of another way to explain his lack of human emotions, or even motions. Comparisons to Dr. Spock normally center on his ears, but I think they might be missing beating hearts as well.

This does not make him a bad guy. Plenty of people have gone through life motionless, expressionless, and emotionless.

The joke about the late Dallas Cowboys head coach Tom Landry was that a computer was located where a human heart would normally be. The San Francisco 49es had robots coaching them for fifteen years. Bill Walsh and George Siefert managed to win Super Bowls without ever conveying anything resembling a Homo Sapien reaction.

In this case sports really is a good metaphor for politics. There is a certain bias against people with “quiet passion.” As a long time manager at Wall Street firms, I had to consciously remind myself that a guy does not have to be loud to have passion.

I am an old school guy that is not into the new sensitivity movement that has wussified men everywhere. I want to see Bill Parcells kicking over a water cooler. I love clips of George Halas and Vince Lombardi barking orders.

In politics, it is not enough to be a “thinker,” which I think is in the case of Obama code for aloof and detached. Bill Clinton was a complete phony, but he knew how to push emotional buttons. George W. Bush truly cared about people, and let them know it.

Barack Obama does love his family, but outside of his wife and kids, he has little to no use for anybody.

Terrorists are trying to murder Americans, and Barack Obama cannot and will not get angry to the point of doing something about it.

The only time Barack Obama shows even a trace of human emotion is when something negatively affects him personally.

Reverend Wright d@mns America, and Obama shrugs. Reverend Wright claims that Obama is just another politician, and Obama then and only then takes umbrage.

For those who claim that Barack Obama “took responsibility” for the December 25th bombing, this is ridiculous. He began spending many minutes repeating meaningless phrases like “systemic failure.” He neglects to mention that it is his system that is failing.

He talks about how now is not the time for blame, when his entire governing strategy is to blame his predecessor. He is flailing on the security issue because he knows that the American people will not blame George W. Bush if a terrorist attack happens on Obama’s watch. Obama deliberately wants to reverse Bush policies. Therefore Obama alone is to blame if we get attacked specifically because of a deliberate policy reversal that leads to tragedy.

From party crashers to suicide bombers, security is simply not as big a priority for Obama as health care. He wants to deal with domestic policy. He has to deal with foreign policy, and he does so reluctantly. He can barely hide his disdain at being inconvenienced.

I am not covering his speech because it was more nonsense. Nobody is going to be fired. He spoke about demanding accountability, but those are just words.

For those that want to know what Obama truly cares about, listen to when he comes close to remotely almost experiencing passion.

In his most recent speech, the only time he truly came close to being animated was when discussing civil liberties. He put his foot down. There will be no profiling.

The rest of his speech was boilerplate.

He truly believes that his way is righteous and that the preceding administration was evil. If Americans get blown to kingdom come, it will be much more difficult to try to turn the USA into a subsidiary of the ACLU.

This Android running our country needs to start caring about Islamofascism. He needs to get angry, not because it affects his poll numbers, but because 300 Americans almost got killed.

George W. Bush worried every day of his Presidency about keeping us safe. I do not see Barack Obama showing much interest in this topic.

He wants to “fundamentally transform” America.

This is how KSM gets a civilian trial.

This is how American soldiers get put on trial for punching terrorists.

This is how repeated security breakdowns can be explained away as “unacceptable,” a word that he keeps using to the point where it conveys a concern that someone left the cap off of the toothpaste.

If this man wants to be a pointy headed academic about health care, that is fine. He can wonkify to his robotic heart’s content.

The murder of Americans requires somebody who is willing to immediately let America know that he spends every waking minute giving a d@mn about getting the job done.

God forbid something were to happen to his lovely children, he would show human emotion.

I am thrilled he cares about his children. He should.

Now he needs to care about the rest of us.

No more platitudes. No more excuses.

I am banging my fist on the table and saying that he needs to get the d@mn job done.

The screwups have to stop.

If he continues down this path, there will be may more dead Americans.

He will then coldly decide whether to take a poll or a focus group to decide whether to issue a platitude, bromide, or meandering to let us know that he kinda sorta cares.

People are trying to kill us. It is time for the Tin Man to get a heart transplant.

The Android needs to learn how to be human so he can understand why humans are so concerned about the life and death struggle of this generation.

eric

Ding, Dong, the Dodd is Dead

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

I love it when liberal bullies run crying for their mommies.

With Ted Kennedy it took death. With Eliot Spitzer it took the threat of jail.

With Christopher Dodd, being too liberal and too corrupt for even Connecticut meant it was game over.

(He could always run in New Jersey though.)

With two Senators down, only 58 more remain in the way,

Christopher Dodd was just another liberal that portrayed mainstream conservatives like me as the enemies of America.

He never had a bad word to say about an Islamist, but he bragged about having the courage to stand up to Bill O’Reilly.

He is better off leaving the senate anyway. With Kennedy gone, he had nobody to get drunk with or sexually assault waitresses with. When one is liberal, these things get whitewashed.

(Her name was Carla and she worked at La Brassiere.)

The Island of Gasbagistan just lost another member.

He does not need a golden parachute. He has already received enough golden gifts.

I know I am being harsh. I mean after all, except for being one of the main contributors to a world economic crisis while raking in corrupt sweetheart deals from people he should have been regulating, Chris Dodd was a pretty good guy.

It takes a ton of courage to quit to avoid having to face the voters. It also takes a delicious irony that those skewering a certain female governor will praise Senator Dodd. They will say he at least finished out his term. That would mean something if Senators actually did any real work. Maybe I missed the hundreds of pieces of legislation passed this year, or the bad bills repealed.

By not leaving right now he gets to change his mind if the polls improve. Some will claim that he will miss the deadline, but the left repeatedly breaks rules. Frank Lautenberg came back to the Senate because he found a judge to ignore the filing deadline.

Now Dodd can bask in self-serving glowing testimonials about how special he was.

Maybe he can go be a financial lobbyist in Angelo’s office. The poor baby will make millions, and will finally be above the law.

I hope he and his family live quiet lives in the private sector far away from television cameras.

He is not getting a tribute from me.

He was a lifelong bully.

He should be indicted, but most likely he will find a cushy job where he gets to excoriate conservatives for being alive. CBS News does need a new anchor.

Good riddance to a bad guy.

Government just got slightly better today.

eric

It’s Called Radical Islam!

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

To quote Colonel David Hunt, “They just don’t get it.”

“They” are President Obama and Secretary Robert Gibbs.

I have stayed away from Robert Gibbs out of sympathy. He is the Barney Fife of the Obama administration, which says a lot given that Joe Biden is still employed in some capacity.

Yet Robert Gibbs finally reached the zenith of political idiocy in an epic press conference.

For those that wanted proof that the world has fallen off its axis, Helen Thomas asked a useful question.

Helen Thomas has faced sharp criticism from everything involving an anti-Israel bias to her affair that broke up Abraham Lincoln’s marriage. Yet whether her question was asked out of clarity or a lack thereof, she asked it.

She asked Robert Gibbs four words.

“Why do they hate us?”

(Some will say that is five words. The numbers add up because this is Obamaworld and he said so.)

Gibbs said he did not know.

Now admitting a lack of knowledge is often admirable, and would be refreshing if our President ever did so. Yet in this case Gibbs does know, and he is under orders from the boss not to go Biden and blab.

I will explain things so that even a Poison Ivy League Professor turned president can understand.

“They” are the terrorists.

“They hate us because of Radical Islam.

Islamofascists, also known as Islamists, or people who practice Radical Islam, want to establish a caliphate. Non-Muslims are infidels. The only hope for infidels is to convert to Islam or be murdered.

That is it.

They want to end Western Civilization and murder all Christians, Jews, Buddhists, atheists, and even Muslims allowing non-Muslims freedom.

Barack Obama is so scared of offending Muslims that he will not mention Radical Islam.

Decent Muslims hate Radical Islam as much as I do. They are as anti-murder as I am.

We cannot win a fight if we refuse to admit who we are fighting.

I was at the airport recently, and a 70 year old white lady needed ten minutes to get through security. She was in a wheelchair, and she was forced to stand up and walk through the metal detector. This held up everybody else.

The rocket scientists at LAX could have let her just wheel through and then dealt with her on the other side in a quick and unobtrusive manner.

Radical Islamists are getting on planes while Americans are held up because an old lady’s wheelchair is a concern. Also, making her stand up was cruel. So much for supporting the handicapped.

We keep hearing about “systemic failures,” but the failure is refusing to take concrete steps.

Until we start profiling, we are surrendering.

Everybody profiles. Ask any girl who dated me when I had long hair if her father profiled me as a slacker, drug user, or musician. I was fine with it. I passed the screening with ease.

70 year old white ladies in wheelchairs are not blowing up airliners. Middle Eastern men in their 20s and 30s are doing this.

We could have waterboarded the suspect, but the president refuses to allow this. He doesn’t get it.

When we waterboarded KSM, we got valuable intelligence that led to the foiling of other terror attacks.

Barack Obama instead has decided to roll the dice, even though he keeps coming up snake eyes.

He got lucky this time. Next time there will be dead Americans, and blaming his predecessor won’t cut it.

He can offer high minded blather until the cameras turn off, but nothing will change the fact that we are less safe solely because he refuses to deal with the actual problem.

The incident on December 25th was absolutely Barack Obama’s fault. It was his failure of leadership.

I don’t care of this offends anybody. I am not interested in feelings. I am interested in Americans, even liberals, not being blown to kingdom come.

The president better grow up in a hurry.

Radical Islamists are at war with us. We need to be at war with them.

Even Helen Thomas understands this.

Even Robert Gibbs understands this, even if he is not allowed to say so.

eric

2012–Already Decided

Tuesday, January 5th, 2010

Cancel 2012. No, not the movie that I have zero interest in seeing. Actually, cancel that too. Cancel the 2012 Republican primaries. Skip Iowa and those twelve people in Dix Hills Notch, New Hampshire. They are like Punxatawney Phil the Groundhog. When they see their shadow, they give themselves fifteen more minutes of self-importance.

Cancel the GOP nomination because the nominee has already been decided. It was decided in 2008. For those of you backing other candidates, you have no say. You don’t get to choose. The nominee is decided. Mitt Romney is the nominee.

Whether you like Mitt Romney or not, this doesn’t matter. He has been anointed.

Republicans preach conservatism, but when it comes to picking presidential nominees, we are the biggest bunch of socialists on the planet.

Democrats may be wrong on every issue, but at least they have real primaries. Obama is dreadful, but Hillary was not given her coronation. We Republicans are a hierarchy. We always pick the person who is next in line.

I am as thrilled as anybody that Ronald Reagan was given three chances, but this was an aberration. In real life if somebody keeps running for President and losing, and then is handed a nomination as a consolation prize, there is a chance they may lose again. We are not a charity. Just because liberals reward people like Arab sympathizer Helen Thomas for violating the law of averages does not mean we have to do the same.

The entire rational in 1996 for Bob Dole’s candidacy was that it was “his turn.” John McCain was handed the 2008 nomination because he lost in 2000. This is not Summer camp where the last place kid gets a prize. We would all be better off if the last place kid was told that he sucked, but that he may or may not be good at something else. Maybe if Simon Cowell was allowed to screen GOP nominees we could weed out the chaff.

I have nothing against Mitt Romney. He looks like a presidential nominee. He is tall, has good hair, and is inoffensive. That means Tim Pawlenty will be the vice presidential choice. He is tall, has good hair, and is so harmlessly inoffensive that he may be standing in your living room.

Mitt Romney is what we call “acceptable.” Rudy Giuliani was loved by the Neocons and other foreign policy conservatives. He was fine with the economic conservatives. The social conservatives were suspicious of him. Mike Huckabee is perfectly qualified to be King of Iowa, but Republicans do not get elected without support from the Wall Street Journal editorial pages and Sir Charles of Krauthammer.

None of the three legs of the Republican stool would be in a state of open revolt over Mitt Romney. 2008 was a year where we needed a sexy nominee on the ticket. We had to swing for the fences. After four years of Obama, people will have had all of the sexiness they can handle. Like a hot woman at a bar, sexiness left us broke. In 2012 the social, economic, and foreign policy conservatives look at Mitt Romney and think, “fine. He’s good enough.”

We have so many talented people in our party that never get mentioned. One person I love is Mississippi Governor Haley Barbour. Three people helped the GOP take back the congress in 1994. Newt Gingrich brought the strategy. Rush Limbaugh brought the media and the message. Haley Barbour brought the money and the bourbon. The bourbon was used in a late night meeting with Gingrich, which is how he got the money. After Hurricane Katrina, some Louisiana lady was crying that she was “so overwhelmed.” Haley Barbour was rolling up his sleeves, turning into the Rudy Giuliani of the South, and getting the job done. Never send a liberal to do an adult’s job.

Another great choice would be Hawaii Governor Linda Lingle. She is a Jewish Republican who got elected in a state with virtually no Jews and no Republicans. She simply vetoes everything. In one recent legislative session there were 33 bills, and she vetoed 27 of them. Of the six that became law, one was a children’s health care bill. After all, anything for the children has to be good. A few weeks later she did not like how the law was working, so she had it overturned.

I just want the GOP to have a real primary. The media creates tension. George Herbert Walker Bush defeated Reagan in Iowa. George W. Bush stumbled in New Hampshire. It doesn’t matter. Mitt Romney is next in line, and his opponents are running for the right to lose and be handed the nomination the next time around. If people want to prove me wrong, that would be fine. Otherwise, let’s cancel the primary and give the money back to Republican voters in the form of a tax cut.

eric

2010…Now What?

Monday, January 4th, 2010

Although the Tygrrrr Express is primarily a political blog during the week, politics took a holiday as 2009 came to a close and 2010 entered.

The year ended with me giving my 2010 Tygrrrr Express State of the Blog Address. The cheers and standing ovations were deafening, as I announced that the state of the Tygrrrr Express is strong.

On New Year’s Day the lads and I had a “guys day in.” It is like a guys night out, except less manly. We all took a nap during the Rose Bowl, and one of the guys chucked masculinity to the winds by wearing a “snuggie” during the game. No, it was not me.

The weekend brought plenty of football, including Week 17 of the 2009 NFL Season.

Next week is my birthday, and I have plenty of speeches in 2010.

Yet this is mainly a political blog, which leaves one question as the first work day of 2010 begins.

Now what?

I mean surely I am going to start the year with something to enthrall you all.

Yeah right. You should have lowered your expectations a couple of years ago.

I could immediately start the first of a billion columns about the 2010 congressional elections.

No.

I could immediately start the first of two billion columns about the 2012 presidential election.

Double no. For the love of all things holy, no.

Tomorrow I will explain why the 2012 nomination is already decided, and then refuse to discuss 2012 until well after the 2010 elections.

Surely I could discuss the health care bill. I mean I could actually bore myself to sleep. When there is an actual bill up for a vote that will either pass or fail, I will wake up.

There is the Climategate scandal. First of all I hate putting the word gate onto every scandal. Call that hategate. Secondly the story will not matter unless something comes out of it, such as a complete shift in public opinion. That may be happening, but it is too soon to tell.

I could talk about the Christmas bombing attempt to blow up an American airliner. After all, that was very serious. Because the plane did not blow up, those on the left that love the smell of their own scents will have learned nothing. Telling you all that those on the left love the smell of their own scents offers nothing new. I don’t want an actual attack, but nothing short of that will wake people up.

Rush Limbaugh went to the hospital with chest pains. He is resting comfortably. That is the whole story. God forbid something would have happened, I could have pointed out the vitriol of the leftist blogs jumping up and down in celebration. The ideological bigotry columns will resume when the actual events occur.

Look, analyzing news on Monday is only possible when things actually happen on Sunday.

The Desperate Housewives episode was depressing, but if you did not watch it that is on you. You don’t deserve a recap. Eva Longoria and Terri Hatcher get paid to frolic around in their undies, and they are very good at it. Instead in this episode we saw Ms. Longoria in a flash forward with hair whiter than Barbara Bush. It was frightening.

A pair of basketball players on the Washington Wizards allegedly pulled guns on each other in the locker room. The team used to be known as the Washington Bullets. The name was changed to give the team a  better image. Once again, Washington, DC, is a bastion of morality. I would say more but I don’t care. They could have shot each other and been done with it.

To the best of my knowledge, no clergy person got caught violating an altar boy this calendar year.

Sure, Palesimians are trying to blow up Israelis, but that is not news.

Sure, Iran is trying to blow up the world, but the people in charge don’t care.

Even Bob Herbert of the Jayson Blair Times put aside his anger at Republicans to focus on the New York Jets. I never thought I would live to see him write a column worth reading, but it was a good article discussing his long history as a loyal fan of his team. It will be the only time I ever identify with him.

I could take a positive approach and say that if we bother to get to know people, they may surprise us.

Let’s do that. If he never writes another column of leftist bile, I will never point it out. He and every other media person gets a clean slate from me.

I will even give the President a clean slate for 2010 until he does something that bothers me. The over/under on that is later today, as soon as he starts speaking.

So as I clear out my Jdate and eharmony caches, and find the time to search for a Republican Jewish brunette to frolic with, I will approach things politically as any moderately responsible person would.

I will wait and see.

If that does not produce anything, i can always engage in some public metaphorical navel gazing, which was pretty much this column.

Now what?

2010. Your guess is as good as mine.

eric

NFL 2009 Week 17 Recap

Sunday, January 3rd, 2010

This is it. Week 17. Everything on the line.

One more time, we quote John Randall.

(Grabbing a bullhorn): THIS…IS…WHEN…THE…BIG…DOGS…COME…OUT!

Football doesn’t need flowery hyperbole, not in Week 17. Let’s get it on.

The goal is a championship, and before getting to 16 NFL games, my team “Kiss Da Baby” won our championship. Here is our celebration. Like the 1985 Bears, we were so good that we did it before the actual game, which was a formality.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LcXlYUrATco

New York Giants @ Minnesota Vikings–The Vikings came in needing a win and a Philly loss at Dallas to get the #  2 seed. Brad Childress, who I bald and Catholic, had to be pleased the way this game started as Brett Favre and the offense easily sliced through the listless eliminated Giants. Brett Favre hit Vincent Shiancoe for the 10 yard touchdown. Minnesota got the ball back and Favre  went deep to Bernard Berrian for a 40 yard gain. Minnesota got no further and punted.

On the first play of the second quarter, the Vikings were in the red zone. On 3rd and 1, Adrian Peterson came up just short.  Brad Childress initially decided on the field goal, but changed his mind. The Vikings blew it with a false start, and they settled for the 36 yard Ryan Longwell field goal to lead 10-0. On the next Minnesota drive Favre went deep to Sidney Rice for a 50 yard gain, and then found Shiancoe for a 27 yard gain inside the 5. Peterson took it in from one yard out as the Vikings led 17-0.

On the next drive for Minnesota the Giants committed a defensive facemask penalty, and on 3rd and 3 from the Giants 10, the Giants jumped offsides. Favre found Rice for the short touchdown as Vikings led 24-0. Manning was intercepted again. The only thing to go right for the Giants was when a 40 yard touchdown pass from Favre to Percy Harvin was called back due to offensive pass interference. On 3rd and 18, a short swing pass led to 4th and inches. Childress kept his foot on the accelerator and again decided to go for it. Favre acted like he was rolling out, but he had already handed the ball off. A second effort picked up the 1st down. Favre found Rice for the touchdown anyway as the Vikings coasted 31-0 at halftime.

The Giants came all the way back for the miracle win. No, not really. Another field goal made it 34-0 Vikings, and Manning was stripped of the ball by Jared Allen inside the Giants own 10. On 4th and goal from the 2 the Vikings stayed on offense as Favre hit Tahi for the score to make it 41-0.

At that point the overblown Childress-Favre feud must have boiled over because Childress benched Favre and brought it Tarvaris Jackson. Apparently 41-0 was not good enough for Childress, as Favre as taken out of a game they had a chance to win. Favre accepted the benching and rested up by cracking jokes on the sidelines. Childress showed he was right to bench Fave as Jackson heroically led the Vikings to another field goal and a 44-0 lead. Apparently Favre will be starting the playoff game despite being washed up years ago and barely getting his team to 12-4 and passing for 4200 yards. The Giants collapsed to finish 8-8 after a 5-0 start, as Tom Coughlin prepared for a miserable offseason. 44-7 Vikings

Jacksonville Jaguars @ Cleveland Browns–Jacksonville needed a miracle to make the playoffs while Cleveland wanted to end the season with 4 straight wins. The Walrus Mike Holmgren is the new team President, and the players want him to keep Eric Mangini. Phil Dawson got the Browns on the board with a 27 yard field foal to make it 3-0. Josh Scobee tied it up 3-3. In the second quarter a 14 yard Joshua Cribbs touchdown out of a wildcat snap had the Browns up 10-3, and an interception of David Garrard led to a 21 yard field goal and a 13-3 Cleveland advantage at intermission.. In the third quarter Jerome Harrison ran it in from 6 yards out to have the Browns comfortably ahead at 20-3.

Early in the fourth quarter David Garrard hit Zach Miller for a 6 yard touchdown to get the Jaguars within 20-10. Yet Jack Del Rio could only watch as Derek Anderson led a 14 play, 60 yard drive that carved up his defense and bled over 8 minutes off of the clock. Dawson nailed another field goal to make it 23-10. Garrard did throw a touchdown pass on the final play of the game, but being down by 13 points made the garbage touchdown just that. The Jaguars were eliminated from contention.

As for the Browns, despite starting the season 1-11, they ended with 4 straight wins to get to 5-11. Mangini learned from Bellichick, who learned from Parcells. Parcells was 1-11 with the Patriots in his first year before winning 4 straight to get to 5-11. The next year they made the playoffs. Cleveland has reason for optimism heading into next year. 23-17 Browns

New Orleans Saints @ Carolina Panthers–Jonathan Stewart broke off a 67 yard touchdown run to get the Panthers up 7-0 less than one minute into the game. Despite losing 2 straight after a 13-0 start, Sean Payton rested his starters as Mark Brunell played instead of Drew Brees. The Saints have locked up home field, and were taking no chances. The Saints had a fumble return touchdown nullified when it ruled that quarterback Matt Moore was down. Then a punt return for a touchdown by Reggie Bush was nullified by an illegal block. In the second quarter the Saints managed a field goal to pull to within 7-3.

With 13 seconds left in the half Matt Moore found Jarrett for a 30 yard touchdown. The Saints fumbled the ensuing kickoff, allowing John Kasay to tack on a field goal and make it 17-3 Panthers at halftime. The second half was sominex.

A 39 yard Kasay field goal had the Panthers up 20-3 in the third quarter. Kasay tacked on another one to make it 23-3. As the third quarter was ending, Lionel Hamilton banged it in from one yard out to get the Saints to within 23-10. The Saints got no closer. They are a shaky # 1 seed, as 13 wins were followed by 3 straight losses. The Panthers really want Jerry Richardson to keep Jon Fox, as the players have fought hard down the stretch. One lingering offseason issue will be whether Matt Moore is their starter or injured Jake Delhomme reclaims his job. 23-10 Panthers

Pittsburgh Steeleres @ Miami Dolphins–Both of these teams were in playoff contention but needed to win and get help. A 7 minute drive was capped off with a 10 yard touchdown from Ben Roethlisberger to Santonio Holmes as the Steelers led 7-0. Chad Henne brought the Dolphins right back with a short touchdown pass to tie the game 7-7. Big Ben then went deep to Mike Wallace for a 54 yard touchdown bomb to put the Steelers back in front 14-7.

Henne again came back, as the Dophins reached the Pittsburgh 8 yard line before having to settle for a 25 yard field goal as Miami trailed 14-10. Big Ben brought Pittsburgh down the field again, but at the 5 yard line the drive stalled and a Reed field goal had the Steelers up 17-10.

In the third quarter a 36 yard run by Rashaard Mendehall set up a 2 yard touchdown pass from Big Ben to Heath Miller, who made a leaping catch in the end zone and somehow got the toes down to make it 24-10 Steelers. After that the ultimate horror in football occurred. Every play is a collision, and backup quarterback Pat White came in for a snap, ran to the sidelines, and got blasted. He was taken off the field on a stretcher as players on both sides prayed. This game was meaningful for both teams, but it was another reminder of why starters should rest in games that don’t matter, as well as the ultimate reminder of the fragility of everything.

One minute into the fourth quarter the Steelers could not get past the 2 yard line, but a field goal had them up 27-10. The Dolphins came back, and defensive pass interference call on the Steelers led to a gorgeous reverse call that Hartline took for a 20 yard touchdown to get Miami within 27-17 with 11 ½ minutes in regulation. The Steelers got the ball back and Tyler Thigpen came in for Chad Penne and threw a deep touchdown pass to Bess as the Dolphins were right back in it down 27-24 with 8 ½ minutes to play.

Roethlisberger was then hit and fumbled, and former Steelers standout and all time trashtalker Joey Porter recovered for the Dolphins at the Pittsburgh 12. Yet 2 plays later Tyler Thigpen was intercepted, and the Steelers had the ball at their own 2 with 6 minutes to play. Roethlisberger, who is not Jewish, led a 14 play drive in an attempt to seal the victory.

Big Ben, with one arm dangling, handed off to Willie Parker. Parker converted a critical 3rd down, and then ripped off a big run. However, he went out of bounds rather than go down inbounds and let the clock stop. With 1:42 to play and the Dolphins out of timeouts, the Steelers had 3rd and goal at the 8. Parker ran it in for the touchdown, but offensive holding nullified the play and stopped the clock. On 4th and goal at the 11, the Steelers brought in the field goal team as the clock wound down. Mike Tomlin did not even use a timeout as a delay of game penalty set up Reed from 33 yards out. The kick was good but the Steelers only led by 6 points with 40 seconds left. Tyler Thigpen came in as the Dolphins took over at their own 21. He was intercepted by Ike Taylor to end it.

A couple weeks ago the Dolphins were 7-7, with 2 games at home. They lost them both. Although Tony Sparano is the coach, this is a typical Bill Parcells situation. His teams always turn around, take a step back, and then surge forward. Miami going from 1-15 to 11-5 and back to 7-9 follows this pattern. The Dolphins were eliminated, while the 9-7 Steelers remained alive but needed a ton of help in the afternoon games. 27-24 Steelers

New England Patriots @ Houston Texans–Matt Schaub fired a 25 yard touchdown pass to Joel Dreesen to put the Texans up 7-0. Tom Brady played with 3 cracked ribs in a game where meaning was debated. Wes Welker then went down with a knee injury in the first quarter in a game that should end the discussion of what to do with stars in meaningless games. You bench them. Instead Welker is done for the year woth a torn ACL and MCL. Bellichick left them his other starters in and Brady led the tying drive with a short Fred Taylor touchdown run capping it off.

In the second quarter a Stephen Gostkowski field goal had the Patriots up 10-7. Schaub moved the Texans right back. An incomplete pass to the end zone led to a defensive personal foul for a late hit on a defenseless receiver, placing the ball inside the 10. On 4th and goal at the 1, Schaub threw the ball to nobody as the Texans turned it over on downs.

Yet Brady was now out of the game and supposedly done for the day as Bellichick took no more chances. The backup quarterback is as famous as Peyton Manning’s backup. A handoff from the one led to a fumble and recovery by the Houston defense for the easy touchdown. The extra point was no good, as the Texans led 13-10. Stephen Gostkowski nailed a 53 yard field goal to tie the game 13-13 late in the half. The Texans missed a long field goal as the half ended.

Early in the third quarter Brady was back in the game, proving that Bellichick truly is insane. Brady got hit but got up. Midway through the third quarter the Texans were driving when disaster struck. Darrius Butlet intercepted Schaub and returned it 91 yards the other way to put the Patriots up 20-13. Kris Brown has missed more field goals than any kicker in the league, and another miss kept the Texans from closing the gap in this game.

One minute into the fourth quarter an 11 yard touchdown run by Fred Taylor had the Patriots up 27-13. Schaub brought the Texans back, and a short touchdown pass to Jacoby Jones had the Texans within 7. Jones got past 2 defenders, leapt, and somehow got his feet down. Kris Brown, who had already missed 2 field goals and an extra point, was jeered by the crowd when he came out for the extra point, a rare occurrence. He made it, and the Texans were down 27-20 with 9 ½ minute left.  Brady remained in the game.

Brady got sacked, the Patriots went 3 and out, and Jacoby Jones returned the kick 30 yards inside the New England 35 with 7 ½ minutes left. Foster, which is Australian for beer mate, ran it in from one yard out as the game was tied 27-27 with 4:43 to play. Brady remained in the game and was intercepted by Marcus Pollard, who ended Brady’s season last week in week 1. The Texans were in total control at the New England 28, although the erratic Kris Brown was a wild card. 4 straight running plays to Foster ended with him running it from 3 yards out as the Texans now led 34-27 with 1:54 to play.

The ever ridiculous Bellichick brought the backup in to replace Brady for the 2 minute drill after letting Brady get knocked around all game. Brady fumed on the sidelines with his arms folded. Randy Moss was also on the sidelines. For those who care, Brian Hoyer is the backup quarterback. Hoyer fired to Slaton at the Houston 13, but offensive holding nullified the play. With 18 seconds remaining and the Patriots facing 4th and 3 at the Houston 35, Hoyer fired to Edelman, who dropped it.

The Texans were 5-3, lost 4 straight, and then won 4 straight to have their very first winning season at 9-7. Gary Kubiak was walking the plank a month ago, and now it seems Bob McNair’s patience will have been rewarded. The Texans did their part, but still needed help later in the day to make the playoffs. 34-27 Texans

Indianapolis Colts @ Buffalo Bills–In a snowstorm, Peyton Manning was intercepted. Ryan Fitzpatrick fired 15 yards to Fred Jackson. Manning came back with passes to Reggie Wayne and Dallas Clark, and then handed off to Mike Hart for a 2 yard touchdown to tie the game 7-7.

The starters for the Colts were then done for the day as Curtis Painter got his chance at glory. Yet it was Fitzpatrick hitting Lee Evans for a 21 yard touchdown to put the Bills up 14-7. Curtis Painter fumbled, and Fitzpatrick then threw a 41 yard touchdown pass to Terrell Owens, who has no Super Bowl rings, to make it 21-7 Bills. A Ryan Lindell field goal just before the half had the Bills up 24-7.

Sometimes meaningless games can have meaningful results. This was not that game, especially in a second half that produced little action, although the winter wonderland snowstorm looked pretty from my warm Los Angeles condo. The Colts have home field while the Bills have some interviewing to do. 30-7 Colts

Chicago Bears @ Detroit Lions–Robbie Gould got the Bears on the board 3-0 in a game with no playoff implications. However, if the Lions lost they would have a chance at the # 1 pick in the draft. In 2006 the Lions needed to lose their last game to get the top pick. They won their final game and picked # 2. Oakland took JaMarcus Russell and Detroit got Calvin Johnson, allowing the Lions to protect the integrity of the game and get the better player. Again the Lions tried to win as Jason Hanson tied it up 3-3. Gould nailed another one to put the Bears up 6-3. Lions, Bears, and field goals, oh my.

Dante Culpepper did throw a 12 yard touchdown pass to Johnson to put the Lions up 10-6. The Lions may have had nothing to play for, but Culpepper certainly did as he tries to revive his career. Jay Cutler came back with a 7 yard touchdown to Greg Olsen with 14 seconds left in the half to make it 13-10 Bears.

In the third quarter the Lions tried a fake punt that did not work, as a fumble set up another Cutler touchdown pass. Cutler hit Aromashodu from 9 yards out to put the Bears up 20-10. Culpepper led the Lions back, and Hanson nailed a 48 yard field goal to get the Lions to within 20-13 after three quarters.

The Lions got the ball back, and Culpepper led a 5 minute drive that culminated in a 5 yard touchdown pass to Calvin Johnson that tied the game 20-20 with 9 ½ minutes left in regulation. Yet the Lions defense had no answer for Jay Cutler. A 48 yard bomb to Devon Hester followed by a 31 yard strike to Olsen set up Cutler hitting Clark from one yard out to put the Bears in front 27-20 with 7 ½ minutes left.

Culpepper brought the Lions right back, but the drive went dead at the Chicago 14 under a hail of incompletions. With 4 ½ minutes to play, Jim Schwartz opted for a field goal rather than go for the tying touchdown. This seemed curious given that the Detroit defense was a sieve the entire game. The Bears took over clinging to a 4 point lead.

Matt Forte broke off a 53 yard run. On 3rd and 5 from the 12, with everything on the line, Cutler’s 4th touchdown pass, a 12 yarder to Aromashodu, put the game out of reach. For good measure, the Lions fumbled the kickoff, setting up another field goal. At 2-14, the Lions were an improvement over 0-16. They even don’t have the top pick in the draft yet. Lovie Smith saw his team finish on a high note and end 7-9, with a chance he may get a chance to turn it around with a healthy team next year. 37-23 Bears

San Francisco 49ers @ St. Louis Rams–The 49ers played in a game that some of their relatives may have cared about. A scoreless first quarter was not followed by the refunding of tickets. A loss by the Rams would guarantee them the top pick in the 2010 Draft. With 4 minutes left in the half, a 54 yard field goal had the Rams leading 3-0. Midway through the third quarter the 49ers took a 7-3 lead as Rams fans prepared a draft party. The Rams kicked another field goal in the second half to trail 7-6. Even this game had one exciting play, as Alex Smith went deep to Vernon Davis for a 73 yard touchdown to have the 49ers up 14-6 midway through the fourth quarter. Mike Singletary was prepared to fire the entire team if the 49ers lost. A Frank Gore 1 yard run ended that chance. The St. Louis Rams are now on the clock. 21-6 49ers

Atlanta Falcons @ Tampa Bay Buccaneers–Last week’s hero Connor Barth gave the Buccaneers up 3-0 on the Falcons in a game with no playoff possibilities. Atlanta tied the game 3-3 in a game that was every bit as exciting as advertised. With no time on the clock, the last play of the half had the Falcons at the one yard line. Matt Ryan found Justin Peale for the touchdown as the Falcons led 10-3 at intermission.

A thrilling second half had the Buccaneers tie the game 10-10 and the Falcons retake the lead 17-10. With 4 minutes to play Josh Freeman went deep and was intercepted. The Falcons tacked on a field goal to lock up the win. Mike Smith, an average non-descript white guy who looks like a guy named Mike Smith, saw the Falcons improve to 9-7. While they missed the playoffs, the Falcons now have back to back winning seasons for the first time in the entire history of their franchise. As for the Buccaneer, Jon Gruden is still in the Monday Night Football booth. 20-10 Falcons

Baltimore Ravens @ Oakland Raiders–The Ravens came in knowing that if they win, they are in the playoffs, and if they lose, they are out. The Raiders wanted to end the season strong and play spoiler as they did last year. Tom Cable started Charlie Frye, while the Ravens won the toss and deferred, counting on the ineptness of the Oakland offense. On 3rd down Frye hit Chaz Schillens for a 1st down and then hit Marcell Reese for an 11 yard gain and another 1st down. On 3rd and 5 from their own 45, Frye threw incomplete.

The Raiders punted, but the defense sacked Joe Flacco as the Ravens punted it back. The Raiders went nowhere, and a 2 yard pass from Flacco to Todd Heap set up Willis McGahee from 2 yards out to put the Ravens up 7-0. Frye came back and hit Schillens for 15 yards and Johnny Lee Higgins for 16 more on a play action pass that fooled the cameraman. Frye then scrambled around, avoided tacklers and bought tons of time, and found Higgins for another 1st down at the Baltimore 23. On 3rd and 6 from the 19, a pass to Darren McFadden in the end zone was ruled out of bounds. Sebastian Janikowski did his job and the Raiders were within 7-3.

The defense held, and Frye hit Schillens for 22 yards, as Schillens hurdled a defender on the play. A sack of Frye ended the drive as the Raiders punted on 4th and from the Baltimore 45. Shane Lechler did his job as the Ravens started from inside their own 5. The Oakland defense did not do their job. From the Baltimore 23, McGahee broke a couple of tackles, and at midfield , took the last defender Eugene and stiff armed him to the ground and raced the distance. The 77 yard touchdown run had the Ravens up 14-3.

With 2 ½ minutes left in the half, the Raiders faced 3rd and 4 at their own 26. Frye threw incomplete, but defensive pass interference kept the drive alive. Frye then hit Higgins for 21 yards. Frye hit Louis Murphy for 17 yards  and 5 more yards had the Raiders at the 18. A neutral zone infraction moved the Raiders to 2nd and 1 at the 13. On 3rd and 1 Frye scrambled for the 1st down, just past the marker. With 47 seconds left in the half, Frye found Zach Miller in the back of the end zone with a perfectly thrown ball over 2 defenders to get the Raiders within 14-10.

The Raiders again broke down as a strong kickoff return had the Ravens at the Oakland 37. Flacco hit Derrick Mason at the 20 with 23 seconds left.  On 3rd down Flacco threw an incomplete pass, and he was also beyond the line of scrimmage. Billy Cundiff came in for a 37 yard field field goal attempt. The kick was no good. With over 200 yards passing from Frye in the first half alone, the Raiders were within 14-10 at the break. Yet Charlie Frye was getting beaten up in the first half, and spent the entire half limping.

The Raiders were totally in this game when disaster struck. The Ravens went 3 and out, and the Raiders took over. JaMarcus Russell came out to start the second half. Bruce Gradkowski coming out in a wheelchair would have been preferred. Heck, get Ken Stabler out of retirement. Russell took over at his own 10 as the entire Raider Nation prayed for him to just hand the ball off. Charlie Frye hit the exercise bike in a desperate attempt to get back in the game.

Russell has been every chance under the sun, and he has been given another one. Russell hit Schillens for a 21 yard gain.  The dormant running game got going when Michael Bush ran for 5 and caught a pass for 5 more to set up 3rd and a foot. Shockingly enough an entirely predictable off tackle run was blown up in the backfield as the Raiders punted again. An illegal block on the return had the Ravens starting deep in their own territory. Flacco was sacked by Michael Huff, as the Raiders took over after a punt on their own 48. Once again, an ounce of offense could give them the lead.

Russell hit Murphy for 12 yards to the Baltimore 40. On 3rd and 9 the Raiders suffered a false start. On 3rd and 14 Russell hit Schillens for the 1st down. Give Russell an ounce of credit. A perfect pass between defenders got it done. The guy has talent. He just has not lived up to his potential. Yet on 2nd and 9 from the Baltimore 26, Russell burned a timeout. On 3rd and 9 Russell completed a pass short of the first down. Seabass nailed a 39 yarder to give him 1000 career points. The Raiders were within 14-13.

Flacco was sacked again as the Ravens punted again. The Raiders took over at their own 27. Russell scrambled for 3 yards and hit Miller for 6 more to set up 3rd and inches. This time Cable called a quarterback sneak, and Russell picked it up. It sure beats starting a handoff behind the line of scrimmage that stays there. With seconds left in the third quarter, Russell had been doing everything right. He then threw an interception, and the Ravens took over at the Oakland 22. The Ravens had 0 yards in the third quarter as the period ended with a 6 yard McGahee run. Yet the Ravens were in control.

McGahee scored is third touchdown, a one yarder with 13 minutes in the game. The Ravens led 21-13, and Russell was being asked to atone for his mistakes again.  On 3rd and 7 from the Oakland 40 after a Baltimore timeout, Russell again threaded the needle for a 20 yard strike to Murphy. On the next play a perfectly executed pitchout had Murphy take the end around for another 1st down to the Baltimore 26. Then it happened again. Russell, who has no pocket presence, got hit and fumbled the ball away, killing the drive.

With 6 minutes to play, Flacco completed a short pass, as terrible defender Stanford Routt failed to stop it. The 3rd down conversion got the Ravens closer to icing it. On the next 3rd down, Flacco was being taken down when he threw it incomplete. Intentional grounding was not called, which allowed Billy Cundiff to try a 51yard field goal to end it. Cundiff was no good again, and the Raiders had 3:43 to play and the ball at their own 41. JaMarcus Russell got it done against Denver, and last year at Tampa Bay to end their season. He was again being asked to overcome his myriad of mistakes with great field position and plenty of time.

A false start, 3 yard dink, and incomplete pass set up 3rd and 12. Russell fired low to Murphy. With 3 minutes left, Cable decided to punt and rely on the defense. Lechler got it done, and the Ravens took over at their own 7. If the defense could get a stop, there was slim hope. On 3rd and 5, the Raiders had no timeouts. It came down to one play. McGahee killed the Raiders all game, and he killed them again. He ripped off a 30 yard gain and Flacco took 3 kneel downs to win. The Ravens not only clinched a playoff spot, but they also eliminated hated Pittsburgh.

As for the Raiders, they suffered their 7th straight season of losing at least 11 games. I still maintain that Al Davis should give Tom Cable another year, but with Bruce Gradkowksi at quarterbackand Charlie Frye as the backup. JaMarcus Russell must stay on the bench, and never play again until he develops pocket presence and a work ethic. This game was less painful than losing 16-3 to the Ravens in the 2000 AFC Title Game, but it still sucked. 21-13 Ravens

Philadelphia Eagles @ Dallas Cowboys–The Eagles and the Cowboys were fighting for the NFC East crown. Last year in Week 17 the Cowboys traveled to Philly for a do or die game and got belted by the Eagles 44-6 to send the Eagles to the playoffs and send Dallas home. This year both teams were assured of playoff spots, and the final game was in Dallas in the 1.2 billion dollar Jerry Jones metropolis. An Eagles win would make them the # 2 seed with a 1st round bye. Due to the Minnesota win earlier in the day, Dallas could not get the # 2 seed. However, they could still host a playoff game. The loser was most likely the # 5 seed.

Tony Romo hit Jason Witten for a short touchdown pass after strong running by Marion Barber as the Cowboys led 7-0. Romo on the next drive led the Cowboys 12 plays to a 3rd and goal at the 8. A pass was then batted up in the air and intercepted, killing the Dallas drive. The Eagles did nothing with it, and in the second quarter Romo hit Patrick Crayton for a touchdown as the Cowboys led 14-0. Dallas tacked on a field goal to lead 17-0 at intermission.

In the third quarter the Eagles tried to get back in it, but normally reliable David Akers barely missed a long field goal. Dallas put the nail in the coffin when Felix Jones took a pitchout and raced 50 yards for the score to make it 24-0 Cowboys.

The Cowboys won the NFC East, and ended up as the # 3 seed. The Eagles with a win would have been the # 2 seed. Instead they fell all the way to the # 6 seed on the road as a wildcard. Ironically enough, these teams play again next week in Dallas in a rematch. Wade Phillips is off the hot seat unless the Cowboys lose next week. Andy Reid is on the hot seat unless the Eagles win next week. Actually Reid is safe, but the media will idiotically crucify him. The same goes for Donovan McNabb and Tony Romo, who will have seven days of media scrutiny and then a rematch. 24-0 Cowboys

Kansas City Cheifs @ Denver Broncos–Denver needed to win at home against dreadful Kansas City and get help. As Chris Berman says, that’s why they play the games. In the beginning they did not do their own job, as the 6-0 team that collapsed to 8-7 fell behind in this game 7-0. After a ridiculous Kansas City gadget play resulted in an interception for the Broncos, they got on track, and Knowshon Moreno ran it in from one yard out to tie the game 7-7. In the second quarter, the Chiefs kicked a field goal and the Broncos responded with a short one of their own to send the teams to the locker room at 10-10.

In the third quarter Jamal Charles ran it in to have the Chiefs leading 17-10. Kyle Orton came back and went deep for a 40 yard pass to Brandon Lloyd to set up Moreno from one yard out again as the game was tied 17-17. Matt Cassel then went deep to Chris Chambers for 43 yards to have the Chiefs on the move again. This led to a field goal and a 20-17 Chiefs lead. In a well played game, Kyle Orton made the first mistake, as he was intercepted by Derrick Johnson, who took it 45 yards for a touchdown to have the Chiefs leading 27-17 with 5 minutes still to play in the third quarter.

Things turned again when Ty Law intercepted Matt Cassel. Orton hit Brandon Stokely for the touchdown to get Denver within 27-24.Yet Charles broke off a 30 yard run and Kansas City was on the move again. With 13 minutes in regulation, a Ryan Succop field goal had the Chiefs up 30-24. Orton came right back with a 31 yard game to Lloyd. Then everything turned as Orton was intercepted by Johnson again. Johnson made a leaping catch, and again took it the distance in front of a shellshocked Denver crowd as the Chiefs led 37-24 with 10 minutes to play.

Jamal Charles ran wild, and a 56 yard run gashed the Broncos for good. 259 yards on the ground completed the blowout as Orton was intercepted by Flowers in the end zone. Todd Haley ended the year on a high note, and Josh McDaniels saw 6-0 followed by 2-8 and home for the year. For the second straight year Denver collapsed, this time at home against an inferior opponent. Last year 8-5 saw 3 straight losses. This year 8-4 saw 4 straight losses. Brandon Marshall and Tony Scheffler watched Josh McDaniels make decisions much worse than the ones that got his predecessor fired by Pat Bowlen. Denver missed the playoffs for the fourth straight year. 44-24 Chiefs

Tennessee Titans @ Seattle Seahawks–At 7-8 the Titans were eliminated, but Chris Johnson was only 99 yards from 2000 for the season. The pathetic Seahawks gave Johnson his chance. The Titans jumped out in front 7-0, but Matt Hasselbeck hit Carlson for the tying score at 7-7. Sometimes meaningless games can be thrillers. This was not that game The teams exchanged field goals in the third quarter to make it 10-10. With 12 minutes left in regulation Olindo Mare connected from 20 yards out to have Seattle up 13-10.

Needing only 8 yards to reach 2000, Chris Johnson burst through for a 62 yard touchdown as the discussion was about to focus on Eric Dickerson. Instead offensive holding nullified the play as Jeff Fisher and Mike Heimerdinger exploded on the sidelines. A few plays later Johnson did top 2000. More importantly, Johnson ran it in from one yard out to give the Titans the lead. Matt Hasselbeck responded with an interception to end the miserable season.

Walrus Mike Holmgren is in Cleveland, the Seahags are a mess, and the Titans overcame an 0-6 start to finish 8-8. Chris Johnson joined the 2000 club, and the Titans have hope for next year t get back to elite status. 17-13 Titans

Green Bay Packers @ Arizona Cardinals. The Cardinals came in knowing that with the earlier Minnesota win, the # 2 seed was not possible. The Packers were locked in as a wildcard and the Cardinals hosting a playoff game. Defensive pass interference set up a short Aaron Rodgers touchdown pass, and a 51 yard pass to Nelson set up Aaron Rodgers from one yard out as the Packers led 14-0 on the road. Kurt Warner was taken out of the game to rest as the Cardinals had nothing to play for. Matt Leinart came in, and there went hopes for a win. Leinart went back to pass form his own end zone, where offensive holding meant a safety and 16-0 Packers lead. The Packers took the free kick and kicked a field goal to lead 19-0. Leinart was then intercepted by Charles Woodson, who returned it 42 yards for a touchdown as the Packers were leading 26-0 in a blowout.

For some reason Mike McCarthy left his starts in the second half in a meaningless game as Rodgers hit Finchen to make it 33-0. These teams play again next week in Arizona. 33-7 Cardinals

Washington Redskins @ San Diego Chargers–The Chargers were locked into the # 2 seed, but perhaps Norvelous Norv Turner played his starters just to throw dirt on the face of the Redskins, who were right to fire him.  Jim Zorn is on the hot seat, but nobody has succeeded in Washington since Joe Gibbs the first time. Daniel Snyder has banned signs criticizing him. San Diego began with a field goal and a Philip Rivers touchdown pass to Antonio Gates to make it 10-0 Chargers.

The Chargers added a field goal to lead 13-0 before the Redskins finally got going. Jason Campbell led a 12 play drive that culminated in a touchdown pass to Todd Yoder to get Washington within 13-7. Another Jason Campbell touchdown pass from one yard out actually had the Redskins up 14-13.

In the third quarter a field goal gave the Redskins a 17-13 lead. Norv Turner decided that winning 10 in a row was not good enough, and Rivers was benched for Billy Volek. Keeping Rivers healthy with a bye assured could have played a role, as the Volek era was expected to be the rest of this game. Volek was intercepted. The Chargers got the ball back, and Nate Kaeding kicked a 45 yarder to get the Chargers within 17-16. The Redskins kept the pressure on with another field goal to lead 20-16.

With one minute to go the Chargers reached the Washington one yard line. Billy Volek found a wide open Mike Tolbert from one yard out with 35 seconds left to end the misery for Jim Zorn and the Redskins. After nearly sleeping through this game, the Chargers get a real week off next week, ending the season with 11 straight wins. 23-20 Chargers

Cincinnati Bengals @ New York Jets—The Bengals had nothing to play for, if one takes the position that the difference between the # 3 and # 4 seed is nothing. The Bengals get the # 3 see dif they win and the # 4 seed if they lose. The Jets had everything to play for, with a win getting the in the playoffs and a loss eliminating them and sending Houston to the postseason. Those criticizing the Jets for getting to play against backups for 2 straight weeks should pipe down. The Jets played by the same rules as everyone else. Playing backups is not the same as deliberately trying to lose, as San Diego proved earlier in the day. The Jets were hoping that Rex Ryan, the brashest Jets person since Joe Namath, would back up his boast and end 4 decades of giving away golden opportunities.

Brad Smith, who returned a kickoff 106 yards for a score last week, took a handoff 57 yards to the one yard line this week, setting up Thomas Jones to quickly put the Jets up 7-0. The Bengals punted, and the Jets led an insane 20 play…yes 20 play…drive. The Jets had the ball 14 of the first 15 minutes, but on 3 plays from the one yard line all the Jets did was lose a yard. Early in the second quarter they settled for a field goal and a 10-0 lead.

The Bengals again did nothing, despite having starters Carson Palmer and Chad Johnson in the game. Brad Smith continued to drive the Bengals bats, as a 32 yard touchdown run had the Jets up 17-0. Things were so lopsided that the Bengals did not get a first down until standout Jets cornerback Darrell Revis was called for illegal contact. A short swing pass from Mark Sanchez to Jerricho Cotcherry became another touchdown to make it 24-0 Jets with only 30 seconds left in the half. It got worse as Palmer was then intercepted. The Jets added another field goal to lead 27-0 as the half ended.

The Jets had 251 yards to only 7 total yards for the Bengals. Palmer was 1 for 10, with the one completion worth 0 yards. The Jets had the ball for over 25 minutes in the first half compared to less than 5 for the Bengals. Knowing that these teams would face each other next week in Cincinnati for the wildcard game, Marvin Lewis and Rex Ryan kept it pure vanilla in the second half. The Bengals played their backups, and the Jets cruised. The Jets had every right to celebrate, but the rematch is on the road. 37-0 Jets

One aspect of disappointment for football fans is that 3 of the 4 wildcard matchups are rematches from today. Nevertheless, the NFL playoffs are upon us.

NFC:

# 1 Saints and # 2 Vikings have the bye week.

# 5 Packers @ # 4 Cardinals
# 6 Eagles  @ # 3 Cowboys

AFC:

# 1 Colts and # 2 Chargers have the bye week.

# 5 Jets @ # 4 Bengals

# 6 Ravens @ # 3 Patriots

eric

NFL 2009-2010 Playoff permutations and combinations

Saturday, January 2nd, 2010

While many websites break down the myriad of NFL playoff permutations and combinations, I break it down in plain English. Football English admittedly, but English nonetheless. We will start with the NFC since everything is admittedly cut and dry. The AFC is a mess, which is the way it should be heading into Week 17.

In the NFC, all 6 playoff teams are already decided. Unfortunately from a competitive standpoint, there is zero drama as to who the playoff teams will be. The New Orleans Saints, Minnesota Vikings, Philadelphia Eagles, Arizona Cardinals, Dallas Cowboys, and Green Bay Packers are in. The only drama is with regards to the seedings.

The Eagles are at the Cowboys this week. Last year these teams met in Week 17, with a playoff berth for both teams on the line. The Eagles were at home, and they blasted the Cowboys 44-6 to make it to the playoffs and send Dallas home. This year the battle is for the NFC East title, and the game is in the new 1.2 billion dollar Jerry Jones metropolis in Dallas.

The Packers are at the Cardinals, which will have slightly less impact on the seedings.

The Vikings, despite recent troubles, are at home against the listless New York Giants.

The Saints are the # 1 seed. They have locked up home field advantage throughout the playoffs.

The # 2 seed is a potential free for all.

If the Eagles win at the Cowboys, they are the # 2 seed, and get the 1st round bye.

If the Eagles lose, and the Vikings win, the Vikings get the # 2 seed.

If the Eagles and Vikings both lose, and the Cardinals win, the Cardinals get the # 2 seed.

If the Cowboys beat the Eagles and the Vikings and Cardinals both lose, the Cowboys get the # 2 seed.

The Cardinals and Vikings cannot finish lower than the # 4 seed.

If the Eagles lose they drop to the # 5 seed.

If the Cowboys lose they drop to the # 5, and maybe even the # 6 seed.

The Green Bay Packers are the # 6 seed. They can get to the # 5 seed if they beat the Cardinals and the Eagles beat the Cowboys.

The AFC is farely boring at the top, but there is plenty of excitement in terms of several teams that can still make the playoffs. The wildcards are far from decided.

The Indianapolis Colts have locked up the # 1 seed and home field throughout the playoffs.

The San Diego Chargers have locked up the # 2 seed and the other 1st round bye.

The New England Patriots and Cincinnati Bengals have locked up their divisions. The Patriots are at the Houston Texans and the Bengals are at the New York Jets. If the Patriots and Bengals both win or both lose, they finished with tied records. The Patriots would be the # 3 seed and the Bengals the # 4 seed. If the Patriots lose and the Bengals win, the Bengals get the # seed and the Patriots the # 4 seed.

Despite zero suspense with the division winners, the wild cards is where all hell breaks loose.

The Baltimore Ravens, New York Jets, Denver Broncos, Houston Texans, and Pittsburgh Steelers are all 8-7. The Jacksonville Jaguars and Miami Dolphins are 7-8. All of these teams can still make the playoffs. With the exception of the Broncos, anybody else who loses is automatically eliminated. The Broncos have the strangest situation because they can win and miss the playoffs or lose and make it. The Tennessee Titans are also 7-8 but they are eliminated.

The Pittsburgh Steelers are at the Miami Dolphins. The winner is guaranteed nothing but the loser is out.

The Ravens and the Jets control their own destiny. If they win, they are in as the # 5 and # 6 seeds. The Ravens are at the Oakland Raiders, and the Jets host the Bengals.

If the Broncos win, they get in with any of the following:

1) The Jets losing and either the Ravens or Steelers losing

2) The Jets losing and the Texans winning

3) The Ravens losing and either the Steelers losing or the Texans winning.

The Broncos can still lose and get in under more mind-boggling scenarios than worth discussing.

The Houston Texans get in if they win and any 2 of the following 3 teams lose: Ravens, Jets, Broncos.

The Pittsburgh Steelers get in if they win and either of the following happens:

1) The Texans lose and either the Jets or Ravens lose.

2) The Jets, Ravens, and Broncos all lose.

The Jacksonville Jaguars are at the Cleveland Browns. For the Jaguars to get in they have to win and hope that any 4 of the following 5 teams lose: Ravens, Jets, Texans, Steelers, and Broncos.

As awful as it is for the Jaguars, it is worse for the Dolphins.

The Dolphins have one scenario, which is to win over the Steelers and hope that the Jets, Ravens, Texans, and Jaguars all lose.

Now for my predictions, which are always wrong.

In the NFC, all eyes are on the Eagles and the Cowboys. The Eagles are the better team but the Cowboys have home field and the revenge factor. This game could go either way, but I am going to pick the Cowboys with very little confidence. The Vikings will dispatch the lifeless Giants. The Cardinals will defeat the Packers solely because they are at home. That will decide the seedings.

1) Saints

2) Vikings

3) Cardinals

4) Cowboys

5) Eagles

6) Packers

Under that scenario, in a bizarre coincidence, the Wild Card games will be exact rematches of the Week 17 games, with the Eagles again at the Cowboys and the Packers again at the Cardinals.

In the AFC, everybody is picking the Ravens to stomp the Raiders as a formality. The only person not taking this game as an automatic win is Ravens Coach John Harbaugh. The Raiders are fighting hard, and they very well could get the upset. The Jets have been gift wrapped a trip to the playoffs, but never underestimate the power of the Jets to screw it up when it counts. They are infamous for finding ways to lose big games.

I am going to go against the tide and say the Ravens and Jets both lose.This opens the door for the Broncos and Texans.

There is absolutely no way the Denver Broncos will lose at home to the Kansas City Chiefs. Josh McDaniels could suspend the entire team and play with high school players. The Broncos will win and get the # 5 seed.

The Houston Texans will be at home against a Patriots team where only the evil hoodie Bill Bellichick knows who will start.

The argument over whether they have anything to play for goes to an argument of whether being the # 3 or # 4 seed matters. Theoretically it could, but the scenario required to make it happen never has. Having said that, The Patriots are the better team and Bellichick usually plays everybody. The Texans are givena chance at home, and they blow it.

The Steelers are at the Dolphins, with the Jaguars between them in the rankings. The Jaguars are at the Browns, who started 1-11 and lost 3 straight. With Walrus Mike Holmgren peering over Eric Mangini, the Browns win their 4th straight and the Jaguars are done.

This gives the Steelers and the Dolphins an equal chance for the last spot. The Steelers are on the road, but are a far better team. Miami looked awful at home last week and will again. The Steelers smash them and get the final spot. They then make noise about how nobody wanted to play them and that they won it all as the # 6 seed in 2005.

1) Colts

2) Chargers

3) Patriots

4) Bengals

5) Broncos

6) Steelers

The Broncos at the Bengals in one wildcard is a rematch of week 1, a terrible football game. Yet back then both teams were seen as awful. So the rematch could be good. The Steelers will see their bragging come to an end when the Patriots easily dispatch them. Then the Patriots will be the insufferable team that claims nobody wants to play them.

eric

San Francisco 49ers at St. Louis Rams

(49ers by 7, they win but fail to cover)

New York Giants at Minnesota Vikings

(Vikings by 9, they cover)

Jacksonville Jaguars at Cleveland Browns

(Browns by 1.5, they cover)

Pittsburgh Steelers at Miami Dolphins

(Steelers by 3, they cover)

New England Patriots at Houston Texans

(Texans by 8, upset special, Patriots win outright)

Atlanta Falcons @ Tampa Bay Buccaneers

(Falcons by 2.5, they cover)

New Orleans Saints @ Carolina Panthers

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

Indianapolis Colts @ Buffalo Bills

(Bills by 7.5, upset special, Colts win outright)

Chicago Bears at Detroit Lions

(Bears by 3, they cover)

Philadelphia Eagles at Dallas Cowboys

(Cowboys by 3, they cover)

Washington Redskins at San Diego Chargers

(Chargers by 4, they cover)

Baltimore Ravens at Oakland Raiders

(Ravens by 10.5, upset special, Raiders win outright)

Kansas City Chiefs at Denver Broncos

(Broncos by 12.5, they cover)

Green Bay Packers @ Arizona Cardinals

(Cardinals by 3.5, they win but fail to cover)

Tennessee Titans at Seattle Seahawks

(Titans by 4.5, they cover)

Cincinnati Bengals at New York Jets

(Jets by 10, upset special, Bengals win outright)

eric