Monday, February 7, 2011

Pass Aaron Pass

You’ve heard the old saying about how to win football games, “you have to run the ball and be able to stop the run”. By that logic, the wrong team lost the Super Bowl. Green Bay ran the ball a meager 13 times; two of those were kneel downs by Aaron Rodgers, in all, the Packers gained 50 yards on the ground. In contrast, the Steelers ran the ball 23 times for 126 yards, averaging 5.5 yards per carry. If I were to tell you prior to the game that Pittsburgh will more than double the Packers rushing yards, nearly double their total carries, run one less passing play, and tally three times as many sacks, who would your money have been put on?

Football is an ever-evolving sport, it started with the inclusion of the forward pass, then the likes of Johnny Unitas further enforced the importance of a quarterback’s ability to pass. Dan Fouts took it to new heights and was quickly followed by Dan Marino lighting up the scoreboard and rewriting the record books. Quarterbacks were putting up bigger and bigger numbers, but the Lombardi trophies weren’t coming with them. Peyton Manning’s record breaking 2004 season didn’t end with a Super Bowl title and Tom Brady’s 50 touchdown 2007 season ended with a loss to the New York Giants and their two man running attack. With the last two Super Bowls, it appears that we are firmly entrenched in the “Year(s) of the quarterbacks”

The Saints won Super Bowl XLIV despite only running ball 18 times for 51 yards while allowing 99 yards on 19 carries. Super Bowl XLIII, the victorious Pittsburgh Steelers managed just 58 yards on 2.3 yard per carry average. That means over the last three Super Bowls, the winning team has had 159 rushing yards on 56 carries. In contrast, Pittsburgh in Super Bowl XL rushed 33 times for 181 yards and Indianapolis in XLI rushed 42 times for 191 yards. Of the first 41 Super Bowls, the winning team rushed for 100+ yards in 37 of them, but it hasn’t happened since the Colts in 2007.

Change is definitely upon us and those old sayings are just that, old and outdated.

On a side note, I don’t see any way the owners and NFLPA do not come to an agreement for the CBA. The Super Bowl garnered more viewings worldwide than any event on television, ever. There is too much money at risk here for them not to come to an agreement. I sure hope they do, the last few Super Bowls have been great television, from Roethlisberger’s stalled two minute drill, Tracy Porter sealing the win for the Saints with the pick-6, Kurt Warner and Big Ben gun slinging into the closing seconds of XLIII, to David Tyree’s impossible catch and Eli’s game winner in the closing seconds, and Peyton Manning finally grabbing his Championship. Football has become the greatest spectacle in American sports and I can’t see someone no making a concession on order to maintain their loft atop the sports’ world.

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