I was right about this one for a change. The Seattle Seahawks dominated the New England Patriots, defeating them 29-13. The score and even the stats do tell the story of how bad the Seahawks made the Patriots look. Most of the stats were about the same for both teams. There were only 3 that gave any indication of how much of a blowout this was: the 3-0 turnover advantage the Seahawks had, the Seahawks sacked Drake Maye 6 times, and the Seahawks’ time of possession was 33:11 to 26:49 for the Patriots. The Patriots had a lot of garbage stats that made the game appear closer than it really was. The Patriots, for whatever reason, did not stick with their running game. They ran the ball 18 times for the game and had a 4.4 average per play. The Seahawks, on the other hand, ran the ball 32 times for exactly the same average. This is a legitimate stat because once the Patriots fell behind in the 4th quarter, they threw on almost every down. When the game was still in doubt, the Pats ran the ball fairly effectively, but did not push the issue. Drake Maye, who played more like Elly May, hardly ran at all. He did not seem to have much pocket presence. This is a player who during the regular season used his legs to win many a game, running for 38 first downs, second on the team. You had this sinking feeling that Seattle was going to let this one slip away at one point. New England was going to get the ball with just under 11 minutes to go in the game, and the score was 19-7. The Patriots had just pulled off a nice 3-play, 65-yard drive. The Seahawks punted the ball, and the Patriots’ deep man failed to catch it, allowing the ball to be downed on the 4-yard line. It cost the Pats at least 10 to 15 yards. Then Maye went into desperate pass mode for no reason. He got away with the first one, which allowed the Patriots to move from their own 4 to the 44. Then he threw desperate pass no. 2 and was not so lucky. This one was intercepted, and the game was essentially over. The stage was just a little too big for the 23-year-old. This Super Bowl is not going to make any top 10 lists, that is for sure. The Seahawks would have covered even with my spread of about 10 points. Pro football season is finally over. Congrats to the Seahawks. Let the baseball games begin.
Super Bowl, Still The Same
Sports: Super Bowl, Oh So Wrong
This is an updated version of a blog I wrote 6 years ago about the Super Bowl. Nothing has really changed about this event which disrespects the sport it represents more than any event in history. The game of football, the players and participating teams take a back seat to what is called the Super Bowl. It is one of the highest, if not the highest rated TV event of the season. At least half who watch it watch for the commercials and the halftime show. The NFL thinks there is nothing wrong with that. Greed is their number one priority. Let’s look at what makes this event so wrong.
This week will be Super Bowl 60. The first Super Bowl was in January 1967, and the powers to be in the NFL, decided to make this a unique game. Pete Rozelle, the commissioner of the NFL at the time, gets a lot of credit for bringing professional football to the top of the rung, in professional sports. This is one place, where he went off the rails. Everything the NFL did, and continues to do concerning this game, is just succumbing to the whims of the television networks, who do not have the game’s best interests at heart. Let’s face it, the Super Bowl is nothing more than the NFL Championship game, just like the World Series, the NBA finals, and the Stanley Cup finals is to those sports. Maybe football has a bit of an inferiority complex, because it is only one game that decides their championship, rather than a series. During the playoffs, you never hear that old adage, the NFL use to sell, that any team can be beat any other team, on any given Sunday. Where did the NFL go wrong when it started the SUPER BOWL. Let me count the ways.
First, they decided to play the game at a neutral site. The reasoning was they wanted to make weather less of a factor in such an important game. This, despite the fact that some of the most iconic games in NFL history, have had weather has part of the equation. The very next year was the famous Ice Bowl of 1967. There was also the feeling, that this was too important of a game for one team to have a home field advantage. The result of this was giving the fans, who had supported the team for all those years, the shaft. In this day and age, it takes most fans their life savings to go to the Super Bowl. This ended the electricity of the home field created by those home field fans. Just think of all those terrible towels at Three Rivers Stadium, or Hines Field, if the Steelers would have been able to play some of their Super Bowls, at home. Thank God, that the other professional sport leagues did not follow this idiotic thinking.  The home field is what gives the other sports that special feel for their championship series and games. Pro football will never have this, and they really don’t care, since everybody is getting their pockets lined.
The decision to have two weeks between the conference championship games and the Super Bowl. Another decision to increase the hype, but in my view led to games that were not very well played. Athletes are creatures of habit, and back when the Super Bowl started, there were no bye weeks and no first rounds byes.  Once the season started the games were played every week with no breaks until boom, 2 weeks off till the Super Bowl. Even today there is a debate, if a first round bye is a good thing in the playoffs. I think the two weeks off is less of a factor today, because teams do have bye weeks during the season, and the bye week in the playoffs. There is no need to take the two weeks off, other than to increase the hype of the game. I still can’t believe that networks can talk about one football game for two weeks.  The game has gotten lost in the shuffle of what the Super Bowl has become, a non football event.
Yes, here is the final coup d’etat. Because of the HALF TIME SHOW, half time at the Super Bowl is about twice as long as the regular season. Half time during the regular season is about 15 minutes. The Super Bowl halftime usually takes about 30 minutes. To hell with what the players are use to, and the natural flow of the game. This would be like making the 7 inning stretch in baseball 15 minutes, during the World Series. You have to wonder, do players warm enough before the start of the second half. Then there is the commercials. Many times you see on social media, that someone says, I only watch, because of the commercials. A new use for the DVR. Fast forward the game and watch the commercials. This is pro football at its finest. You have to wonder if the players realize how insignificant their championship game is, when the outcome could be affected by the halftime show and commercials. The Super Bowl is still one of the most watch events in the world, so nobody really cares, that it is being watched for all the wrong reasons. The NFL has taken a great game and turned it into a carnival. Over the years because players have gotten more use to the hype and Super Bowl issues the games themselves have been better. All of these factors in my view still can affect the outcome of the game. As long as the cash cow is flowing at a maximum rate nobody really cares.Â
