November, 2009

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Brett Favre is good at football

Monday, November 30th, 2009

Before I get to the Vikings’ latest mudhole stomping, I’ve had quite a few people ask about off-season baseball projections and other baseball opinion requests.

In all honesty, I’m HIGHLY unlikely to do player projections again this year. Because I haven’t had the time or resources to automate my system, I do a lot of data entry. It’s grunt work. Hours of it.

Because of the work I’m putting in launching the Minnesota State Poker Tour, along with Minnesota Poker Magazine and KFAN duties, I just don’t have the time to devote to baseball research like I did in previous years.

Sorry! As many of you already know, you can find me tweeting about baseball almost every day (www.Twitter.com/PMac21). I’ll also continue to blog about the Twins as often as possible.

Here’s the Vikings week 12 write-up from KFAN.com:

Week 12 Review: Throwing it around the lot

From KFAN.com

In the locker room, following a 36-10 throttling of the Chicago Bears, a Vikings PR member walked over and handed a post-game stat sheet to backup quarterback Tarvaris Jackson, who was in the middle of a conversation with Brett Favre.

When Jackson looked at the stat sheet, his eyes grew wide and his jaw hit the floor. He looked over at Favre, then back at the stat sheet in amazement. Favre simply smiled and shrugged.

It’s tough to pinpoint exactly what Jackson was looking at specifically on that stat sheet that caused such a wide-eyed reaction.

Maybe it was the 83 offensive plays Minnesota ran to Chicago’s 38. Maybe it was the Vikings’ 40+ minutes time of possession. It could have been Minnesota’s 537 total yards to Chicago’s 169. Or maybe it was Favre’s 392 yards passing, three touchdowns and zero interceptions. Or the fact that five Vikings receivers had at least 50 yards.

Or maybe it was just a combination of all of the above.

In addition to the thorough drubbing of a division rival, Favre and his offensive teammates re-wrote several pages of the NFL and team record books on Sunday. Favre tied Jim Marshall’s NFL record of 282 consecutive games played. He also became the first player in NFL history to tally 500 total touchdowns. Visanthe Shiancoe tied the Joe Senser for the most touchdown receptions in one season by a tight end (8). And Ryan Longwell set a new team record for most career 50+ yard field goals made (9).

We’re running out of adjectives to describe these guys. They’re just flat-out unstoppable right now.

And let’s be honest, the offense wasn’t even clicking on all cylinders on Sunday. The Vikings committed 10 penalties, Adrian Peterson added two more fumbles to his naughty list, and the Vikings twice settled for field goals inside the red zone.

Still, they scored 36 points and put up over 500 yards of total offense. Combined with a lights-out defensive performance, the Bears never had a chance.

“This is the most explosive offense I’ve seen in my entire life,” Shiancoe said. “Players are playing at a high level, everybody. Favre is making terrific reads. It seems like everyone is getting open. Everyone is eating a piece of this pie, so we’re jus taking advantage of all the mismatches the defense gives us.”

The route to offensive success on Sunday, as it has been several times this season, was somewhat unorthodox given what we’ve seen under Brad Childress the last four years. Instead of pounding the run and letting Adrian Peterson shoulder the load, the Vikings are using the threat of Peterson to successfully throw the ball all over the field.

Favre threw 48 times on Sunday, completing 32 of those throws for 392 yards (10 yards shy of a career high), three touchdowns and zero interceptions. As mentioned above, five receivers (Shiancoe, Sidney Rice, Bernard Berrian, Percy Harvin, Chester Taylor) gained 50 yards or more.

“(Steve Hutchinson) and I were standing on the sidelines with four minutes left,” Favre said. “He came over and said to me, ‘Hey, I told you that you wouldn’t have to (throw) too much (this season).’ “I said, ‘Yeah, I’ll never believe you again on anything.’ I’m no fool. I figured we would have to throw it some. I didn’t come just to hand off. I love to play… I guess when you key on Adrian the way teams have… for us we’ve had to kind of shift gears at times and throw the ball, and it’s been pretty effective for us.”

On Sunday specifically, it may have looked like the Vikings gameplanned to air it out, but they didn’t necessarily intend on throwing it nearly 50 times. The Bears forced it upon themselves by some of the blitzes they were using, according to Brad Childress.

“I just thought we were getting a lot of tight fire zones and they were kind of leaving zones open. I told Bev (Darrell Bevell) the best way to move the ball right here is to throw it and throw it again. You can’t be belligerent,” Childress said. “You can’t smash your head against the wall. Typically that helps your run game a little bit. It’s just how they deploy and how they elect to take it away.”

It’s amazing to think back over the last couple years and appreciate how the Vikings offense has evolved — from a methodical, run-first mentality to a team that can essentially score 30 points using any approach.

“It’s fun, man,” said Artis Hicks, who filled in at right guard for the injured Anthony Herrera.  “Not saying anything against Sage (Rosenfels) and Tarvaris, because they’re great quarterbacks and they’re learning and they’re coming along, but Brett has the experience to know where guys are going to be. I think the biggest thing is that he knows if he gives them the ball, they’re going to catch it.”

As Favre alluded to in his press conference, the Vikings certainly don’t want to find themselves in two-minute drill situations with no timeouts like they faced against San Francisco. But it’s comforting to be able to beat teams in multiple ways.

And that’s what the Vikings have done all year.

Defense holds Bears to 12 plays, 2 yards in second half

Overshadowed by the offensive aerial attack was a defensive effort that stymied Jay Cutler and company all afternoon long. The Bears gained only 169 total yards all game, and they ran only 38 offensive plays. That’s almost unheard of.

“When you’re up multiple scores, it’s easier to play defense because you handicap the offense,” Jared Allen said, on the heels of a game where he tallied his first two sacks since Green Bay. “They have to play one-dimensional. They have to drop back and throw. And we were shutting down the run. Every game we go into, we feel that if we can make a team one-dimensional, then we have the matchups and we feel like we can win.”

The Vikings also forced Cutler to throw his league-leading 19th and 20th interceptions of the season. The 20th was a tipped ball that Allen intercepted, and the 19th was a spectacular diving effort by Cedric Griffin in the end zone.

The Bears even tried running no-huddle. While it may have tired the Vikings out a bit, it really didn’t do much to ignite the stagnant offense.

Not to mention, the Vikings defense is clicking without Pro Bowl cornerback Antoine Winfield, who sat out yet again with a foot injury. Childress said the team will wait until Winfield is absolutely 100%.

“All of us have stepped up,” Griffin said. “It’s a team effort right here. No man can do it by himself, and we are all doing a great job right now. The whole team is playing with a lot of confidence — offense, defense, special teams. We are doing a great job in practice, the coaches are giving us a great game plan, and we’re going out and executing.”

Peterson happy with win, disappointed about fumbles

Even though the Vikings are 10-1 and riding high, it’s fair to point out that Adrian Peterson still has major issues hanging onto the football. He fumbled twice in Sunday’s game, and he’s fumbled 15 times since the beginning of last season.

“It is something that you want to rectify,” Childress said. “We have a great drive going there in the first series and moved it down there in plus territory. Some of it’s keeping it high and tight, some of it’s churning for extra yards. Nonetheless, you can’t give the ball to them. You can’t do that.”

Despite answering questions about fumbling for nearly two full seasons (and rest assured, he’ll answer more this week), Peterson, at least up until now, has refused to do anything drastic to cure his fumbling illness. He also tends to be fairly nonchalant about the issue.

After Sunday’s game, Peterson sat in front of his locker for nearly five full minutes with a dismayed look on his face, clearly frustrated with the fumbles.

“Sometimes I think about it and I can be my own biggest enemy,” Peterson said. “How I run, I try to scratch for every yard. I just have to be more aware and now some guy is going to come in when they have me wrapped up and try to punch the ball out. It’s on me.”

Ultimately, Peterson says he cares more about winning than any individual accolades. But for a guy who has clearly fallen behind Tennessee’s Chris Johnson as the league’s premiere running back (at least for this season), the fumbling certainly won’t help his status going forward.

Vikings Week 11 Review: “How good do you want to be?”

Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

From KFAN.com

The Vikings brought an 8-1 record into Sunday’s game against the Seattle Seahawks, and despite essentially having clinched the NFC North while averaging over 30 points per game, many people still felt the Purple had yet to put together a complete, dominant performance.

That is, until Sunday.

“We just talked about how fortunate we were to be 8-1, and (I asked) for a show of hands last night, ‘Who feels like we played our best game so far?’” Brad Childress said. “There wasn’t a guy. It’s so important. How good are you? How good do you want to be?”

On Sunday, the Vikings showed they may just belong at the top of the NFL food chain. Beating a 3-6 Seahawks team 35-9 is certainly no great accomplishment in itself — some would say such a blowout is to be expected if the Vikings consider themselves contenders.

But the way Minnesota toyed with Seattle for 60 minutes in all three phases was a refreshing sight.

431 yards of total offense to Seattle’s 212 (much of which came during garbage time against Viking backups). Four yards rushing for Seattle (FOUR!). A 35-3 lead early in the 4th quarter. Zero turnovers.

Let’s just say it’s obvious that things are going well when a healthy Brett Favre can trade his helmet for a baseball cap in the third quarter and watch backup quarterback Tarvaris Jackson guide the ship for the final 15-plus minutes.

“I feel like this was the most complete game of the season,” said Visanthe Shiancoe, who caught eight passes for 78 yards and a touchdown. “When it comes to all three phases — special teams, offense, and defense — we fed off each other today. A lot of momentum out there, and everybody had a piece of the pie I feel in this win.”

Indeed, everybody did have a piece of the pie, certainly offensively. Three receivers finished with at least 75 yards (Shiancoe, Sidney Rice, Percy Harvin). Four receivers caught a touchdown pass (Shiancoe, Rice, Harvin, Bernard Berrian). Both Chester Taylor and Adrian Peterson ran for more than 70 yards. Brett Favre set an NFL record with his 22nd career four-touchdown performance, and he set a Vikings record by completing 88% of his passes (22-of-25).

“It was pretty efficient,” Favre said about his performance. “I think it was a good example of really utilizing everybody. Sidney didn’t have a 200-yard game. Everybody had a hand in it.

“We didn’t hurt ourselves, but I think there is so much more for us to achieve. That goes without saying. We obviously have put ourselves in a very good position, as we have every week. There is still a lot of football left to be played. Up to this point, our guys have no lost out focus. That has gotten us to where we are.”

It’s almost impossible to determine who the best team is in the NFL right now. Certainly the Vikings are in the mix, along with New Orleans, Indianapolis, New England, and maybe a couple others. But there’s no question the Vikings continue to grow and get better each week, and with the weapons they possess on both sides of the ball, it’s fair to say we probably still haven’t seen the peak.

“They demand — for real, no bull — they demand attention out there. You can’t ignore this (guy) going down the field,” Shiancoe said, pointing to Sidney Rice, and talking about his fellow offensive teammates. “Did you see him last week? Did you see him the weeks before that? You can’t ignore Percy, you damn sure can’t ignore Bernard, let alone Adrian in the backfield.”

Seattle head coach Jim Mora voiced a similar opinion — a feeling of helplessness, judging by his words.

“We played a good team, a very good team,” Mora said. “They are probably one of the most complete teams we have faced this year, offensively, defensively, and special teams, they are solid throughout.

“They do not have a weakness on their football team. They are good all around, they are big and physical and fast. There are a lot of good football players on that football team. We hope we could get a block made and spring something. They wouldn’t let us.”

And that leads us back to the question at hand.

“How good can you be?” Childress said, referring back to his Saturday night speech. “That is the push as we continue forward here. I saw that come to light in a bunch of different ways. I’m not going to say there weren’t negative plays or things we want back.

“They got nine (wins) and we got six more to see how good we can possibly be as we push forward here.”

Defense holds Seahawks to franchise low in rush yards

Over the last couple weeks, when trying to find leaks in a team full of body armor, poor tackling came to the forefront as one of the soft spots. The absence of Antoine Winfield definitely hurts, but coaches and players pointed to poor tackling as the main reason why opposing teams sprung big plays during the first half of the season.

Well, even though Seattle won’t be playing much football in January, the Vikings appear to have fixed some of their tackling woes by holding the Seahawks to a franchise-low four yards rushing (12 attempts).

Defensively, this was the second-best run-stopping effort in franchise history for Minnesota. In 2006, the Vikings held Detroit to -3 yards on the ground.

“We say it all the time — stop the run,” Ben Leber said. “This team (the Seahawks), I think they want to pass first and run second. We still came out with the attitude that we were going to stop the run. Our front four did a great job controlling the line of scrimmage.”

After leading the NFL in stopping the run for three seasons, the Vikings have actually fallen out of the top five this season in both rush yards allowed per game and per carry. And they’re well aware.

“It’s number one on our list of things we want to get accomplished for the season,” Chad Greenway said about stopping the run. “Our defensive front is so good that it’s something we should be there and be number one. We haven’t been there this year, so it’s good to have a day like today. We need some more of those if we want to get back in this battle.”

As if the Vikings defense hasn’t generated enough momentum over the last couple weeks, Winfield (foot) is likely to return against Chicago next weekend.

Let the crescendo continue.

News, Notes, Tidbits

- After it was announced to a sold-out Mall of America Field crowd that Brett Favre set an NFL record with 22 career four-touchdown performances, his receivers all ran over to congratulate him, and fans started chanting, ‘MVP, MVP, MVP!’

“It’s fitting,” John Sullivan said.

“He’s an incredible player. Nothing surprises me at this point. He’s the best player I’ve seen, and we know that if we protect him he’s going to make plays to receivers down the field.”

Favre has now thrown 21 touchdown passes to only three interceptions on the season. He’s on pace for the best year, statistically, of his career. Interestingly, Favre said he hasn’t always felt 100% confident.

“The fact that we are 9-1, you would think that my confidence would be sky-high,” Favre said. “It’s not that I’m not confident, but my wife would attest to this and actually Darrell (Bevell) would as well, he probably wouldn’t admit it. But going into this season and debating on whether or not to play… I let doubt and maybe some insecurities seep in.

“I’m getting back to that confidence that I had when I didn’t know any better. I was pretty good. I’m feeling more confident. I think I’m more of a realist at this age, but that doesn’t mean that you can’t go out and turn it loose and play, because my arm feels great. Physically, I feel pretty good. I don’t feel like I’m 25, but I still feel like I can make a lot of the plays that I used to make. A key for me, and really for any player, is you can’t second guess. You’ve got to turn it loose, and this year I’ve been doing that.”

- Quarterback controversy, perhaps?

OK, no. But how about Tarvaris Jackson entering the game near the end of the third quarter and completing 6-of-8 passes for 77 yards and a touchdown? Not bad.

“I’m watching Brett Favre instead of other guys,” Jackson said when asked about how he’s progressed from last year to now. “Not to disrespect those guys (past Viking quarterbacks), they’re good players also, but Brett’s a Hall of Famer, and he’s done a great job leading our team to a 9-1 record so far. It’s a bit different being that I didn’t get benched this year. It was a coach’s decision to bring in a guy like that. You want to be mad, but it’s kind of hard to be mad.”

- Seahawks’ WR T.J. Houshmandzadeh had a front row seat to watch the offense he turned down in favor of a fat contract with Seattle this past offseason. The veteran receiver felt more comfortable with Matt Hasselbeck as his quarterback than either Tarvaris Jackson or Sage Rosenfels. Of course, had Houshmandzadeh known Favre was going to be in the mix, he may have made a different decision.

“I mean, I am human like anybody else,” Houshmandzadeh said. “I think about it, you know. But there is nothing I can do about it. It is what it is.

Houshmandzadeh had four catches for 36 yards on Sunday, and he was booed mildly a couple times during the game.

Must be tough to watch his former team (Cincinnati) and the team he turned down (Minnesota) headed for the playoffs while the Seahawks toil four games under .500.

Target Field is Awesome

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

I was given an extended tour of Target Field on Tuesday night, and I can honestly say I’m blown away. What an awesome facility with spectacular skyline views.

Here are a few iPhone photos:

Twins Trade for JJ Hardy… And I’m Happy

Saturday, November 7th, 2009

I’m going to make this quick. If you’ve read this blog or listened to KFAN over the past few months, you know that I was begging the Twins to trade for shortstop JJ Hardy as far back as June.

On Friday, they pulled the trigger, dealing spunky/undisciplined CF Carlos Gomez to the Brewers.

Here are some important notes to consider following this trade:

- Even though he had a poor season last year, Hardy drastically improves the Twins paltry middle infield offense.

Including Orlando Cabrera’s sizzling stretch run, Twins shortstops hit .263/.309/.374 (.683 OPS) collectively in 2009, which is worse than the American League average of .274/.329/.391 (.720 OPS) by 37 points of OPS.

Hardy limped his way to a .229/.302/.357 (.659 OPS) line, which was good (or bad) for a .292 wOBA — roughly 35-40 points below league average. BUT in 2007, Hardy posted a .786 OPS (.338 wOBA) and in 2008 he posted a .821 OPS (.355 wOBA).

Because Hardy is 27 years old, let’s assume his 2009 season was the bottom of the barrel. Let’s say he rebounds to a .270/.320/.450 line with a wOBA in the range of .333 (which is lower than the numbers he posted in ‘07-’08… he could easily return to those numbers as well).

That would put Hardy in the upper echelon of offense among shortstops.

- According to RZR and UZR, Hardy is one of the best defensive shortstops in baseball (UZR of +8.8 per 150 games). Orlando Cabrera was one of the worst in 2009 (UZR of -13.7 per 150 games).

Because they used Cabrera and Brendan Harris at shortstop for a significant portion of the season, and because Nick Punto’s defense at shortstop took a step backwards in 2009, the Twins ranked in the bottom 1/3 of Major League Baseball in shortstop UZR (-4.7 per 150 games).

Hardy is worth roughly one full win above replacement level with his glove alone.

- Carlos Gomez was undervalued in Minnesota.

Because his offense never quite clicked, most fans assumed Gomez was basically worthless. In reality, he’s one of the best defensive centerfielders in all of baseball, which shouldn’t be overlooked when talking about a pitching staff that allows the most flyballs in all of baseball.

Denard Span is a league-average centerfielder. Gomez is among the elite. There is a dropoff, and it will be noticed over 162 games.

- Hardy and Mauer are friends. They played on All Star teams together at the ages of 15 and 16. When trying to reach a contract extension with one of the best players in baseball, adding one of his friends to the team certainly can’t hurt.

- This is an awesome trade.

The Twins needed a shortstop under the age of 35 who can hit and play good defense. They got one.

And they trade from a surplus. I wouldn’t be surprised if Gomez developed into a solid, every-day centerfielder at some point. But Hardy ALREADY IS a solid, every day player, with potential to be an All-Star at his position.

A heavy weight lifted from Favre’s shoulders

Sunday, November 1st, 2009

From KFAN.com

In what may go down as one of the most surreal days in NFL history, Brett Favre, wearing a purple number 4 jersey in the football cathedral where he made prayers come to fruition for 15 years, led the Vikings to a 38-26 victory over the Green Bay Packers on Sunday.

As expected, Favre was booed lustily when he walked into Lambeau Field — booed by the same fans that once worshipped him. He was also booed by Packer fans as he left the field — simply feeble verbal jabs after The Silver Fox had already buried his former alliance for the second time this season.

Now that both meetings with Green Bay are in the rear view mirror, Favre, who fought back tears during his postgame interview with FOX’s Pam Oliver, can breath a sigh of relief and reflect.
“I wasn’t hoping anything. It was about what I expected I guess,” Favre said about the crowd reaction. “It was probably worse every time I took the field, offensively. I consider it a good thing. It’s better than saying nothing, I guess. I know what I did here.

“I wasn’t expecting a standing ovation, but I know what I’ve done and what I stand for.

“Deep down inside, I know how they feel. Packer fans cheer for Packers first. I know that, and I hope that everyone in the stadium watching tonight said, ‘You know, I sure hate them jokers on the other side, but he does play the way he’s always played, with his excitement and passion for the game.’ As long as I play, that’s not going to change, and I think that’s what people have admired about me throughout my career. That’s all I can do, and what I’ve done here, as I’ve  said, speaks for itself. What I was apart of was awesome. That will never change.”

Packer fans certainly weren’t thinking about the 1996 Super Bowl season when Favre took the field on Sunday. Nor were they thinking of the three MVP trophies Favre won while he played in Green Bay.

All they could think about, presumably, was how their hero of 15 years donned the jersey of an arch rival. Nevermind how the two sides arrived to this point — in fact, Packer fans can blame their own front office just as much as anybody else for how things played out.

Was the booing justified? Probably. Will things eventually blow over when Favre inevitably enters the Hall of Fame as a Packer? Most likely.

But on Sunday, the tension was thick.

Favre won’t necessarily admit that the boos sting a little bit inside, but he made no secret in the days leading up to Sunday about the fact that he was hoping Packer fans would acknowledge what he brought to the city for 15 years.

They didn’t. They were probably too blinded by the bonfires containing old Favre memorabilia.

Ultimately, however, Number Four is the one laughing last.

“I had some pretty good games here with the Packers, but this is pretty high up on the list,” Favre said.

“I knew I didn’t have to prove anything. Am I glad, pleased with the way these two games have turned out? Absolutely. But I knew I could play. I knew this was a good football team, I knew the Packers were a good football team, but it had nothing to do with trying to prove myself to anyone.

“My arm feels great, my mind is in a good place, the team has welcomed me in, and all the other  stuff doesn’t matter. It makes for a good story. I’m glad it’s over, I’m glad we won them both,  but I’m not going to sit here an throw any daggers.”

Favre won’t throw any verbal daggers, but Viking fans sure will. This is the first time since Moss’ mooning incident five years ago when Viking fans can say, “ha-ha!”

And in reality, trailing by two games with no tie-breaker help, and meetings with Baltimore and Pittsburgh lurking in the second half, the Packers and their fans can do absolutely nothing about it.

Robison’s blunder shifts momentum

Following a 26-yard field goal by Mason Crosby that cut the Vikings lead to 24-6 in the third quarter, the Packers decided they’d seen enough of Percy Harvin, who nearly broke a touchdown on his previous two kick returns.

Instead of kicking deep, Crosby squibbed one to the Vikings’ 35-yardline, essentially conceding fantastic field position. Brian Robison picked up the ball, and instead of simply falling on the ball he decided to squeeze a few extra yards out of the return.

Devin Hester he is not. Robison fumbled, and the Packers recovered. Shortly thereafter, Aaron Rodgers hit Spencer Havner on a 16-yard touchdown pass to cut the lead to 11, 24-13. Lambeau Field went from comatose to jubilation.

If not for the fumble, the Vikings had a chance to drive on a short field and increase the lead to 27-6 or even 31-6. They were moving the football with relative ease and had every ounce of momentum.

The Packers followed their touchdown drive by forcing the Vikings to go three-and-out. A few plays later, Rodgers found Havner in the end zone again to make it 24-20.

The Vikings eventually answered back with touchdown passes from Favre to Jeff Dugan and from Favre to Bernard Berrian, but the temporary Undertaker-esque rise from the dead by Green Bay was nerve-racking and unnecessary.

It’s easier to say this in hindsight, but if Robison doesn’t fumble, the Vikings may have blown the Packers completely out of the water. We’ll never know.

Vikings are legit

If anyone doubted the legitimacy of the Vikings as NFC contenders, Sunday’s performance in a hostile environment answered quite a few questions.

Sure, the Vikings, like any team, have leaks. Without Antoine Winfield, tackling has clearly become a significant concern on defense. The second half near-collapses are somewhat annoying. And Adrian Peterson’s “famine, famine, feast” approach to collecting rushing yards (he’s only the 16th-most consistent running back in the NFL, according to numbers compiled by FootballOutsiders.com) is a bit unsettling.

But ultimately, the Vikings have weapons everywhere, and when the defense needs to crank up the intensity they do.

“That’s the satisfying thing,” Favre said after the game. “We’ve played, for the most part, like we’re capable of playing. That’s the satisfying part. We haven’t underachieved.”

Just look at some of the key performances from Sunday:

Jared Allen tallied three more sacks, giving him 10.5 on the season. He’s on pace for 20. Percy Harvin had a break out game, averaging 35 yards per kick return, and hauling in five passes for 84 yards and a 51-yard touchdown that saw him survey the carnage of three fallen Packers defensive backs before he waltzed into the end zone.

Favre threw for 244 yards and four touchdowns without an interception and without being sacked. In fact, in two games against Green Bay, Favre has thrown seven touchdown passes, zero interceptions, and was not sacked at all. Not once.

Aaron Rodgers was sacked 14 times in those two games.

Chad Greenway had 10 tackles. Pat Williams came alive again with five tackles and a sack. And Ray Edwards deflected two passes and tallied two sacks of his own.

Players are making plays, and the flaws the Vikings have displayed are coming, for the most part, against teams that will probably play meaningful football in January (Ravens, Steelers, Packers), yet they’re still finding a way to emerge victorious — or, in the case of the Pittsburgh game, they found a way to “outplay” the defending champions, but eventually succumbed to a barrage of defensive touchdowns.

This is fun to watch.

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