Postgame, Week 9: New England 24 @ Indianapolis 20
Undeniably 'The Best'
Patriots Make History .. Again
This time, it was the Patriots mounting the amazing comeback. Down by 10 with 9:35 left in the game, having just allowed a 1-yard plunge by the opposing quarterback, New England went to the Bread and Butter. That would be Tom Brady and Randy Moss.
Brady is the staple that sustains this team.
Moss? Man, Moss is butter.
Brady went to Moss on six straight plays to start the penultimate scoring drive. Incomplete, 15 yards, incomplete, 55 yards, incomplete, incomplete. Sure, four of the six are incomplete passes, but two of them accounted for 70 yards.
Throwing those six passes, Brady set up the Colts defense like Willie Mosconi set up a pocket billiards table.
24 - - -
20
With the Colts now focused on Moss, Brady hit Wes Welker over the middle for 10 and then at the front left pylon for the touchdown.
After the defense stymied another Indianapolis drive, Tom Brady once again showed why he's simply the best and why when the biggest games are on the line, he's the guy you want leading the troops.
Cool as sniper Brady connected with Moss over the middle for 5 yards. Like sharks, the Colts were chummed to cover Moss, and Brady went deep, this time to Donté Stallworth reeled in the perfect pass to set up Brady to Kevin Faulk over the middle for Brady's 25th career game-winning drive.
There now have been only six games in NFL history pitting undefeated teams with 5 or more wins. The Patriots have won two of them this year, including the only matchup of undefeated teams with at least 7 wins each.
Despite the offense's late-game "heroics," make no mistake, the defense won this game.
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Sealing the Deal Patriots defensive end Jarvis Green (97) strip-sacked Peyton Photo courtesy: Globe Staff Photo / Jim Davis |
Indy marched down the field, partly courtesy of a questionable neutral zone infraction penalty called on New England with the Colts facing a 3rd-and-2, partly on a questionable non-call on a Dallas Clark offensive pass interference.
Just outside the red zone, the Patriots defense stiffened. Richard Seymour made two big plays, first tackling Kenton Keith for a 5-yard loss, then getting a finger or two on Adam Vinatieri's 50-yard field goal attempt, deflecting it wide left. It was Vinatieri's first career miss at the RCA Dome.
An offensive line breakdown led to a New England 3-and-out and put the ball back in Peyton Manning's hands with hardly a breath's break for the D.
The Colts offense worked quickly, this time aided by another questionable pass interference call against Asante Samuel that gave the Colts a free 37 yards.
But once again, with the Colts suddenly on the 9 yard line, the Patriots defense solidified. Indy drove on one play to the 3, but went no further, and this time Vinatieri was able to connect on the field goal attempt to give the Colts a 3-0 lead.
Lucky to Give Up Only 6?
The offense got some things going, but the Colts came back again. On the first play from scrimmage, Rodney Harrison was flagged on another questionable illegal contact call, after which Manning was complaining to the officials. Worse, Indy got another free 40 yards on what was clearly offensive pass interference on Reggie Wayne. Ellis Hobbs was almost certainly going to intercept the pass, but Wayne dragged him down from behind. Somehow, Hobbs was the one penalized, putting the Colts on New England's 6.
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He Might Be A Giant Patriots receiver Randy Moss Photo courtesy: Boston Globe / AP Photo |
Despite all the adversity, the Patriots defense showed incredible resilience. Earlier in the season, while allowing very few trips to the red zone, New England was batting zero. Opponents scored on every red-zone trip, and the Patriots ranked last (technically) in the league.
Not so Sunday. Two of the Colts first three penalty-aided possessions moved inside the Patriots 10 and one stalled 3 yards outside the red zone. Yet the Patriots defense remained stalwart, and Indy came away with just 6 points.
The Colts penetrated the red zone just once more, Manning scoring on a sneak (kind of appropriate), accounting for New England's 0.333 red zone defense percentage.
Colts Offense Impotent
Outside of Joseph Addai, the sensational second-year Colts running back, the Patriots all but shut down the Indy offense.
Manning had another pedestrian day, completing less than 60 percent of his passes for only 225 yards -- 73 of those on a dump-off pass to Addai where the running back did all the work. Addai's touchdowns, combined with those two dubious pass interference calls (77 yards), accounted for 2 fewer yards than the rest of Manning's performance.
Clark, the tight end expected to shoulder a large portion of the receiving load with perennial Pro Bowl receiver Marvin Harrison sitting out due to injury, had just 2 receptions for 15 yards. Reggie Wayne, expected to be the go-to guy in Harrison's absence had just 5 receptions.
Addai was the Colts offense. He killed the Patriots on the ground, and he was Manning's best target through the air. In addition to the amazing touchdown run, Addai had 4 more receptions for 41 additional yards.
Addai became the first Colts player to accumulate at least 100 yards running (112 yards on 26 carries) and 100 yards receiving (114).
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Reaching for His Goals Patriots running back Kevin Faulk stretched the ball Photo courtesy: Globe Staff Photo / Jim Davis |
Meanwhile, the Patriots offense struggled in the first half. Discounting a kneel-down with 5 seconds left in the half, New England had just three offensive possessions in the first two quarters, and the first of those was a 3-and-out.
The Patriots relied on Laurence Maroney's play-action draws for the first part of the second drive. Four of the first five plays went to the second-year back, and he picked up 24 yards and a first down. He finished the game with 59 yards on 15 carries and a respectable 3.9 yards per carry.
New England generally kept it on the ground most of the drive, going to Heath Evans and Faulk to move down to the Colts 10. After a Ben Watson completion down the 4, Faulk was tackled on a pass route -- another completely blown call -- but it ultimately didn't matter as Brady threw a jump ball to Moss for a near-automatic touchdown.
The Patriots were driving late in the half, but a Matt Light "leg whip" penalty (actually tripping) set them back and Brady threw a deep jump ball to Stallworth, but this one was picked off by Antoine Bethea.
Despite the few possessions, the Patriots trailed in time of possession by less than a minute at halftime.
The second half started little different. Back to back 3-and-outs were trailed by a 34-yard Stephen Gostkowski field goal and another Brady interception, an excellent play by Gary Brackett.
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Helmet-to-Helmet Talk about dirty. Randy Moss made a Photo courtesy: NFL.com |
Fortunately, the defense had kept the Patriots in the game.
With the Game on the Line
Then came crunch time. Brady Time.
In the first competitive game the Patriots have played in this season, it became Bread and Butter Time.
Moss's legitimate 55-yard superhuman catch negated one of the Colts phantom pass interference gains. Moss was speared helmet-to-helmet by Bob Sanders on the play, but there was no flag.
There was a flag -- on Moss -- on the next play. Moss had position in the end zone and had a Colts defender climbing up his back. Somehow it was called offensive pass interference, but again it ultimately didn't matter. Brady hit Welker and the Patriots made history. Again.
Moss led New England with 9 catches for 145 yards, and Welker had 5 for 38; but Welker's larger contribution may have been his put returns, including an exciting 23-yard return to the Patriots 49 that set up the winning touchdown.
Records Continue to Fall
The Patriots continue to rewrite the record book and accomplish firsts of all kinds (some notes courtesy of The Globe's Mike Reiss.
- Brady continues to demolish the record for consecutive 3-plus passing touchdown games to start a season, previously 5 (Steve Young), now 9, and he's done it against some of the league's top-ranked overall defenses and passing defenses
- Likewise, he broke the record for consecutive 3-plus passing touchdown games at any point in the season, previously 8 by Manning in 2004
- Brady broke Vito "Babe" Parilli's single-season franchise touchdown record of 31 with his 31st, 32nd and 33rd scoring strikes
- Moss tied the Patriots single-season franchise record for touchdown receptions (12) co-owned by Stanley Morgan (1979).
- The game was the highest-rated Sunday afternoon regular-season game since 1987, which is as far back as record have been maintained
Brady remains on pace to throw just under 59 touchdown passes on the season.
The Patriots streak of scoring on their first offensive possession also ended at 8.
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Air Moss Did Jordan ever get that high? The only Photo courtesy: Globe Staff Photo / Jim Davis |
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Great article.
by scsatr on Nov 5, 2007 7:59 PM EST reply actions
Nice Job Tom...
Fox Sports is running a poll - which team will hand New England their first loss? Pretty interesting. Here's the link for anyone interested:
http://msn.foxsports.com/nfl/story/7412586?MSNHPHCP>1=10637
by daveb on Nov 5, 2007 7:59 PM EST reply actions
really dumb
'Da Da Da duh, if New England didn't have Tom Brady and hadn't blocked the field goal and didn't stuff them at the goal line all the time, and intercept Manning and get him to fumble, and if Randy Moss couldn't make ridiculous catches, then maybe the Colts could have won with divine intervention.'
Maybe. Yes, what that REALLY boils down to is that if New England weren't the best team in football history, the Colts might have won. But they are, so shut up.
also
For those of you who are like 'huh?' about why Reche can't tell me he didn't see the football, reference the below link:
http://thesportshernia.typepad.com/blog/images/reche_caldwell_insane_1_1.jpg
Postgame, Week 8: New England 24 @ Indianapolis 20
by rimrock101 @ Pats Pulpit on Nov 6, 2007 1:28 AM EST reply actions
out of curiousity
given the "take out the starters before they get hurt" arguments regarding the NE starters, I'd like to know if there is any defense for the steelers doing this.
Playing with injury
1.) Staying in physical game-shape: There is nothing like actually playing a game to stay in proper condition. All the weight and cardio-training in the world does not exercise the same muscles, in the same manner, as actually playing the game does. I do think that part of the reason that the Pats were able to come back last week, was because the offense was in good enough shape to do so. If they had been only playing half-games up until this point, things might have been different enough to change a very close game. There's a reason that almost every football players loses weight during the season. The games are incredibly draining, and that workout can not truly be duplicated off the field. If Roethisberger was healthy enough to play, then I have no problem with him being out there.
2.) Staying in mental game-shape: Practices, meetings, and film-study are important parts of the game, but are no subsitute for the experience of a game. This is doubly true for a QB. Roethlisberger won't have many chances to face a defense like Baltimore's, and getting reps against it will help make him a better QB.
3.) Continuity and shared game time: Receivers and linemen can practice a lot of the timing aspects of route-running, pocket protection, etc., but again, game time gives a much better test. Players that know each other, and have a lot of time together on the field are invaluable. A little risk of injury is probably out-weighed by the chance of getting that experience.
4.) Expanded game-plan: Without having to worry about protecting a lead or coming from behiond, the offensive coordinator can call plays that they might not normally, allowing for practice of new schemes in a game environemnt. I say, run all the double-reverses, flea-flickers you want. There's never be a better time to practice them.
5.) It's the longest time before the next game: most teams have a light practice on Monday, and take off Tuesday (or vice versa) then have a medium practice on Wednesday, full contact on Thursday, and then taper off Friday and Saturday. Push all of that back a day because it was Monday night. The game last night was the first time that Roethlisberger can play at game speed until Thursday, maybe Friday. Coach Tomlin might have wanted to know what he looked like then, so that he would have time to prepare in case he wasn't able to play.
The other side
Anyway - Colt bloggers comments range from: coach Belichick is a cheatin' bastard, the best team didn't win, Brady is not better than their ad-man, everyone outside of Massachusetts hates the Pats. They do an awful lot of whining over in Indy.
Next important stop for me is: Behind The Steel Curtain... can't wait to hear how Pittsburgh is gonna kick our ass.
GO PATS !!!
by TruePatsFan on Nov 6, 2007 1:15 PM EST reply actions
ok...
by DaPats on Nov 6, 2007 1:56 PM EST up reply actions
Pats Fans
Also, I thought these sites were for entertainment purposes. We're not discussing world peace here... are we? Good natured, but pointed banter should not be discouraged on these sites.
No, but if you prefer a 12 year writer, I'll fetch my son. Let me know.
by TruePatsFan on Nov 6, 2007 2:15 PM EST up reply actions
Let me be clear: I strongly discourage that
We are free to run our sites as we see fit. If others feel the need to denigrate and disparage other teams and their everyday fans -- to rule by malice and intimidation -- it's their prerogative, regardless how I or anyone else feels about it.
This is America. You are free to do as you will. But I would strongly discourage you from acting as you describe. It accomplishes nothing, and I feel it reflects poorly on other Patriots fans.
Understood...
I'm sure you are aware of the opinion they have of you over at stampedeblue, public enemy number one.
Though I'm a Pats fan I will not linger here, discovering the level of hatred of New England in other pro football destinations is so much more interesting. We have the finest football team in the world, we are living in the Golden Age of the New England Patriots... gotta make hay when you can.
GO PATS !!!
by TruePatsFan on Nov 6, 2007 2:38 PM EST up reply actions
Not cool
why ?
Why not present a counter argument or find a different angle of attack to defend your possition. Why get pouty and ban people??
And... they have no sense of humor over there.
by TruePatsFan on Nov 6, 2007 2:28 PM EST up reply actions
Based on what you said
Evidently, they do have a sense of humor. That sense may be despicable to intelligent people and to those with other tastes, but to them it's humor.
If you're really interested...
Isn't that illegal...
Why not have a little fun... you've heard of fun haven't you??
by TruePatsFan on Nov 6, 2007 3:09 PM EST reply actions
Was that supposed to be a reply to me?
Tom Jackson's "cheater!" comments
Before The Game, ESPN hosted a panel discussing Pats-Colts and ending with each 'personality' making his pick for the win. Did anyone else catch Tom Jackson covering his mouth, lowering his head, saying "cheater!" and giggling after someone else on the panel picked New England to win???
I know there's no love lost between Jackson and Belichick after the Lawyer Milloy trade and the "They hate their coach" incident, but isn't he supposed to at least give the appearance of impartiality???
Does anyone know a way to contact ESPN about this to register a complaint? Thanks for providing a forum to discuss this.
Keep the faith!
Missed your comment a couple days ago
That said, the "personalities" on ESPN are under no obligation to act impartially. Journalists follow a code of ethics that invokes impartiality, but Tom Jackson is not a journalist, and (as far as I can tell) does pretend to be one.

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