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Peyton Hillis

November 8, 2010 by · Comments Off on Peyton Hillis 

Peyton Hillis, Coming off a bye week, the Cleveland Browns on all cylinders dominated New England Patriots, a team that entered the game with the best record in the NFL. This was not a fluke victory by any stretch of the imagination.

On offense, Peyton Hillis could not be stopped, he ran a career-high 184 yards on 29 touches for 2 touchdowns. That includes a nice 35-yard blast that had to end the Patriots in the fourth quarter, forcing New England to make backup Brian Hoyer in the game, and they were losing so bad. Colt McCoy threw the ball only 19 times, but completed 75% of his passes. Congratulations Brian Daboll – the Browns finally had a perfect offensive game, with emphasis on the race, then have a clutch mixed in a few steps today, changed my mind – McCoy is the starting quarterback the rest of the season.

As for the Patriots offense, Tom Brady seemed to be confused with the defense is our team was pulling it. Their receivers struggled to catch the ball, at times, and Rob Grankowski had a costly fumble just before halftime. The Patriots converted just 11.3 of their third downs (27%), which I guess is a low season for them.

The Browns did not stop the creativity and risk taking in this game. They are mixed on kickoffs to keep the ball away from Brandon Tate, and one of those attempts resulted in an accidental kick game recovery. On offense, a version of “fumblerooski” has been executed, with Chansi Stuckey to take on a score. The Browns also converted a fourth and short in its own territory in the first quarter.

In the last two games have been incredible, and not think you can beat the New York Jets next week now? Cleveland could even be promoted taking into account how the Jets to lose to the Lions?

Matt Leinart

January 17, 2010 by · Comments Off on Matt Leinart 

Matt Leinart:Things started well for the Cardinals…but the good times didn’t last long.

Drew Brees
threw for 247 yards and three touchdowns, and Reggie Bush racked up 217 all-purpose yards (84 rushing, 24 receiving, 109 on punt returns) and two touchdowns during the Saints’ 45-14 rout of Arizona on Saturday.

The Cardinals struck first on a 70-yard TD run by Tim Hightower (six carries, 87 yards) on the game’s opening play, but it was all Saints after that.

TE Jeremy Shockey, who missed the final three games of the regular season due to a toe injury, caught the first TD pass. He had three catches for 36 yards before exiting the game due to a knee injury. Marques Colston (6-83) and Devery Henderson (4-80) also caught TDs. Robert Meachem was shut out and Lance Moore had just two catches for six yards.

The Saints were efficient with the ball, striking on big plays and/or getting set up with a short field thanks to takeaways. Pierre Thomas was clearly the feature back and showed no signs of being slowed by his rib injury, but he couldn’t get much going, gaining 70 total yards (52 rushing on 13 carries and 18 receiving on four catches). Backup RB Lynell Hamilton (4-20) scored a rushing touchdown, and he looked much better than fellow backup RB Mike Bell (4-11).

The Saints’ D/ST played well, recording a sack and two takeaways. They also left Kurt Warner battered and bruised.

Warner left the game in the second quarter after being leveled while trying to make a tackle after an interception. He reportedly suffered a chest injury and did return in the second half.

He finished the game with 205 passing yards and no TDs. Larry Fitzgerald didn’t make his first catch until late in the second quarter and finished with 77 yards and six catches. Steve Breaston (4-52) and Early Doucet (6-54) just couldn’t get going like last week.

Because Arizona trailed much of the game, Beanie Wells (2-5, TD) was mostly a non-factor.

Matt Leinart didn’t do much in relief of Warner at the end of the first half and fourth quarter, throwing for 47 yards. It remains to be seen if Warner will be back next year. It also remains to be seen if Leinart will be back.

The Saints will be hosting the NFC title game against either Minnesota or Dallas next week. Brees and Colston look like great plays in postseason leagues, and Bush, thanks to his return/big-play ability, is also a nice player to have. Thomas and the D/ST have value, too, but the rest of the New Orleans’ players, particularly the receivers, are too boom-or-bust to really count on.

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