Back For Another Go Around: Earlier today, the New England Patriots signed 40-year old lineback Junior Seau, who is the defensive version of Brett Favre, according to his current employer, Versus. Seau will add much needed experience to a Patriots' linebacking core that has been decimated with injuries so far this season. The Baltimore Ravens also made a roster move today, signing former Super Bowl hero David Tyree to a contract. Tyree was also working out with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, but in the end he chose Baltimore. Tyree could impress with the arm of Joe Flacco throwing him the ball. [Boston Globe, Baltimore Sun]

http://blogs.nfl.com/2009/10/12/free-agents-on-the-move/
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Jets Sign Chestnut as Sanchez backup

New York, NY– The New York Jets finalized a deal today with back-to-back Nathan’s Hot Dog Eating Contest winner Joey Chestnut. Though the terms of deal were undisclosed, the 25-year-old construction engineer is expected to backup QB Mark Sanchez, whose recent antics on the sidelines have caused some controversy.

For those who are somehow [...]

Drivin’: The Saints and Colts Are The Teams To Beat, Cedric Gets Revenge and the Vikings Fall

*The New Orleans Saints went into halftime down 24-10. The Dolphins were running all over them, Drew Brees had thrown two interceptions, and Chad Henne was protecting the football and allowing his two elite running backs, Ronnie Brown and Ricky Williams, to do their work on the ground. But when all was thought to [...]

Michael Crabtree Impressive and Effective In His Pro Debut

HOUSTON, TEXAS (But The Game Is On) – – – 6 plays.

After a couple of weeks of speculation as to how many snaps rookie wide receiver Michael Crabtree would be in on in his debut, Crabtree could be found standing on the sidelines for just six of the San Fransisco 49ers snaps.

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Drivin’: McDaniels, Broncos Now Among NFL’s Elite

The Denver Broncos are 6-0.

Yes, after an off-season in which they were written off (Yes, even by me, altough they could still technically lose the rest of their games and finish with the 6-10 record I predicted them to have.) because of serious personel issues (Jay Cutler demands his way out of town, [...]

Josh Cribbs is Mr. Everything For the Cleveland Browns

About a week ago, trade chatter started picking up around the National Football League, as it normally does when the deadline nears. One of the players assumed to be on the market because his team was all but out of it was Cleveland Browns specials teams star Josh Cribbs.

Well folks, after watching Sunday’s [...]

Reports: Crabtree to Start First Career Game

San Fransisco 49ers rookie wide receiver Michael Crabtree is going to start the first game of his NFL career next week against the Houston Texans, according to Matt Maiocco of The Press Democrat.

There is a “strong possibility” rookie receiver Michael Crabtree will be in the starting lineup Sunday against the Houston Texans, 49ers [...]

Drivin’: Drew Brees and the Saints Expose the Giants As Frauds

Saints

(Chris Graythen/Getty Images)

In the first five weeks of the season, the New York Giants had the best pass defense in the NFL. So the chatter leading up to today’s marquee match-up between the Giants and the also undefeated New Orleans Saints focused mainly on the passing offense of the Saints, which had been on a cold streak for two straight weeks, and the pass defense of the Giants.

What analysts failed to mention about that Giants miraculous pass defense had played against the likes of Jason Campbell, Tony Romo, Byron Leftwich, Matt Cassel, and JaMarcus Russell. You could argue that Campbell, Romo and Russell are in the bottom five of the NFL’s QBs (We know Romo is last.) and Cassel is not nearly as good as he was last year without the offensive line and set of receivers he was gifted with in New England. That means Byron Leftwich was the best QB they faced, and he was benched mid-game for Josh Johnson, a second year quarterback out of the University of San Diego. General point: Stats don’t tell the whole story.

Drew Brees made every single person that thought the Giants would come into the Super Dome and take care of business look absolutely positively foolish, torching a very overrated Giants secondary that was constantly lax on coverage and poorly coached. The Saints battered the big blue, 48-27, and it was much worse than the final score indicated.

Brees, after two straight games with no passing touchdowns, tossed for 369 yards and four touchdowns on 30 pass attempts. That put him at a near perfect 156.8 QB Rating. The New York defense was confused all day as Brees spread the ball out to multiple outlets. Marques Colston had a beast eight grabs on eight targets for 166 yards and a touchdown (he was ruled down at the one yard line on a play that should have given him another score).  Lance Moore caught six of the seven passes thrown his way for 78 yards and a TD. Tight end Jeremy Shockey also had a big day playing against his hated former team catching four passes for 37 and a touchdown.

That’s enough of a beat downs right there, but that wasn’t the only part of the Giants team that the Saints exposed as a fraud. A side effect of playing all of those bad quarterbacks in the first five weeks is that they had horrible defenses behind them. Thus, Eli Manning looked superhuman against some really bad teams, amassing a QB Rating of at least 93.5 in every game.

A very underrated Saints defensive group held Manning to 178 yards through the air and stopped Eli from completing 50% of his passes (14 of 31). Manning through for just one touchdown while turning it over twice on an interception and a fumble.

[Note: David Carr, in garbage time, was 4/5 for 72 yards and a TD. How about that!]

The Saints are now 5-0 and they certainly have that championship feel to them. Amazing quarterback, complete group of offensive players and a very good defensive unit. This may be a stretch, but New Orleans’ toughest opponent the rest of the year, which is certainly a beatable team. Could we be seeing a 16-0 team? Hey, anything is possible with Drew Brees as your quarterback.

Starting a new thing here separating the pages. Click here to see other observations from this week.

Michael Crabtree Will Debut Against the Houston Texans

Michael CrabtreeSan Fransisco 49ers head coach Mike Singletary said today that rookie wide receiver Michael Crabtree will make his season debut in his home stat of Texas against the Houston Texans next week, according to Matt Maiocco of Santa Rosa Press Democrat.

Crabtree is staying after practice during the bye week, catching passes from back-up QB Alex Smith, who has been getting full reps with the first team squad, and getting assistance from running back Frank Gore. Crabtree is working extremely hard to acclimate himself to the lifestyle of an NFL player.

“Every day he gets out here and every rep that he takes, makes him just that much better,” Singletary said. “He’s been studying his tail off, and it shows out here. He doesn’t have a whole lot of questions on the field. He’s running the right routes and doing the right things. It’s just a matter of taking every step with every second, every minute, to get him up to speed.”

Crabtree answered some questions at his locker today which Maiocco documented. Hit the jump for a transcript. Continue reading…

Back For Another Go Around:

Earlier today, the New England Patriots signed 40-year old lineback Junior Seau, who is the defensive version of Brett Favre, according to his current employer, Versus. Seau will add much needed experience to a Patriots’ linebacking core that has been decimated with injuries so far this season. The Baltimore Ravens also made a roster [...]

Rick Reilly Was Dead Wrong About the Denver Broncos

Kyle Orton and Josh McDanielsBefore the NFL season started, ESPN, um, employee Rick Reilly made a few lofty statements/predictions regarding this year’s version of the Denver Broncos. He was ripping on the Broncos for every single thing they did this off-season with the basis of his argument being: Jay Cutler is gone and Josh McDaniels is the coach. Yeah, now at we are in October, let’s take a look at those statements and reflect on them. Continue reading…