<$BlogRSDUrl$>

Sunday, February 01, 2004

gridiron

Superbowl was today. Pats vs Cats. North vs South. New England vs Carolina.

After a disappointing first quarter and the majority of the second quarter with both teams playing to 3-and-out before punting on too many occasions (the Patritots had a chance for a field goal on thier first posession of the game and sent it wide to the right, then had another field goal chance charged down), it was New England who put a touchdown on the board first.

With 27 minutes elapsed and still no score (a Superbowl record) Deion Branch caught a five yard pass in the endzone and we were, at last, out of the blocks.

On the next drive Carolina were stuck with the ball on their own five yard line. A minute and fifty five seconds later Steve Smith is catching a 39 yard Jake Delhomme pass to make it (with the point after being good) 7-7. The second longest drive in Superbowl history.

So there's a minute left on the clock. You'd think it was good for a half-time score. But no, it wasn't done yet. The Pats drive down the field and wonder of wonders, with fifteen seconds left David Givens is catching another five yard pass from Tom Brady in the endzone. 14-7 for the Pats. Got to be half-time now, right?

Nope. Jake drives down to the 35yard line and with no time left on the clock, John Kasay kicks a 50 yard field goal to make it 14-10 at half time.

Then there was the half-time show. It was a dull and uninspired affair that prompted the NFL to make an official statement about the half-time show. It read:

"We were extremely disappointed by elements of the MTV-produced Halftime show. They were totally inconsistent with assurances our office was given about the show. It's unlikely that MTV will produce another Super Bowl halftime."

So they didn't get that P. Diddy, Jessica Simpson, Janet Jackson, Justin Timberlake and Kid Rock would be possibly terribly bad and, more likely, potentially inappropriate. And that last thing happened right at the end when Justin, doing a duet of some kind with Janet, pulled a flap on her costume to expose one of her breasts. Not to be prudish about it, but these artists appeal mostly to an 8-17yr old demographic, many of which would be tuning in for the game or just for the half-time show. Having a middle-aged never-was sister of a child molester show her boobies is not really entaertainment, prime-time or otherwise.

So, the second half...

Both offenses went to sleep for the third quarter, but in the fourth Antowain Smith ran in to complete a 70 yard drive and put the Pats further into the lead at 21-10

The response? DeShaun Foster running 33yards to get it to 21-16 and Jake failing to make a 2-point conversion pass.

Then, five minutes later in the play of the game, Muhsin Muhammed rounded out an 85yard passing play (the pass was about 50yards) to get the Cats ahead 22-21 for the first time in the game. Again, Jake tried a 2-point conversion and failed.

Then, on the next drive, Tom Brady makes a short pass to Mike Vraebel and a 2-point conversion run by Kevin Faulk puts the Pats back in front 29-22.

So what happens now, with two minutes left on the clock...?

Jake drives the Cats 80 yards makes the TD pass to Ricky Proehl, Kasay gets the point after and, with 1 minute left, we're tied at 29.

And so we're thinking it's probably going to be the first Superbowl ever to go into OT.

Until the (thus far) disappointing Adam Vinatieri steps up with four seconds left in the game. The kick, from 41 yards, sails through the uprights and breaks the hearts of confederates everywhere, despite making the game the highest scoring 4th quarter in a Superbowl.

32-29.

I really wanted the win for Jake. He was responsible for some great pass plays. That's not to play down MVP Tom Brady's part in the game. Sure, he was good. But DelHomme was better, even if the numbers don't seem to bear it out.

But, like the commercial during the game said, as of tomorrow, we're all unbeaten again.



Comments: Post a Comment

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?