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2010 NFL Week 19 Game Recaps



Steelers 31, Ravens 24

  • Joe Flacco still can't beat Ben Roethlisberger. In the six meetings between the two quarterbacks, Big Ben is an unblemished 6-0.

    This one was probably the toughest for Roethlisberger. Baltimore held a 21-7 lead, but self-destructed in the third quarter. In four drives, the team went fumble, three-and-out, interception and fumble. Pittsburgh was up by a field goal in the blink of an eye.

    Flacco had a chance at the very end, however. In the team's penultimate drive, Anquan Boldin dropped a touchdown after a bogus holding call wiped out a punt return for a score. On the ensuing possession, T.J. Houshmandzadeh dropped a first-down conversion on what would be the final play of the game for the visitor.

    As Adam Schefter cleverly tweeted, "Newly-acquired WRs Anquan Boldin and T.J. Houshmandzadeh were supposed to be the difference for the Ravens. They were."

  • Flacco was just 16-of-30 for 125 yards, a touchdown and an interception. Though Baltimore scored 24 points, Flacco had very little to do with it. Fourteen points came via Roethlisberger and Rashard Mendenhall lost fumbles. In fact, the Ravens had just 94 yards through three quarters (compared to Pittsburgh's 199).

  • Ray Rice, who was responsible for one of the third-quarter fumbles, had only 19 touches. He didn't enjoy any success on the ground (12-32, TD) but was predictably very effective in the passing game. One has to wonder what Cam Cameron was thinking by not giving the ball enough to his best player.

  • Roethlisberger was heavily pressured in this game (6 sacks), so he played remarkably well considering how many defenders were in his face the entire afternoon. Big Ben went 19-of-32 for 226 yards and two touchdowns, which includes a clutch 3rd-and-19 conversion late in the fourth quarter to set up the game-winning touchdown.

  • Mendenhall had that decisive score. He found the end zone twice, but struggled to find room against the Ravens' front (20-46).





    Packers 48, Falcons 21

  • Wow. I had a good feeling the Packers would win - they were a five-unit pick of mine - but I did not expect this. Green Bay absolutely dominated this game, and the 48-21 result doesn't even indicate how lopsided this matchup was.

    The Packers outgained the Falcons, 442-194. All of Atlanta's touchdowns were bogus; the first came off a Greg Jennings fumble. The second was a kickoff returned for a touchdown. And the third came in garbage time. As great as Aaron Rodgers was, the defense was a major part of why this was a massive blowout.

  • Matt Ryan had no chance. He was sacked five times and intercepted twice by Tramondous Williams (one returned for a score). Ryan finished 20-of-29 for 186 yards, one touchdown, the two picks and a lost fumble. Atlanta's front office will need to add weapons around Ryan this offseason; aside from Roddy White, he has nothing.

    And that includes Tony Gonzalez. He's done. The one bad thing about watching Green Bay win was witnessing the end of Tony Gonzalez's career. Gonzalez, a complete shell of his former self, caught just one pass for seven yards. Though he'll be a first-ballot Hall of Famer, Gonzalez has never won a playoff game.

  • The Falcons became the third No. 1 seed in the NFC to lose in the divisional round in the past four years. The previous two No. 1 seeds - 2007 Cowboys, 2008 Giants - failed to make the playoffs the following season.

  • As for the Packers, Rodgers was nearly perfect. He went 31-of-36 for 366 yards and four touchdowns (3 pass, 1 rush). Rodgers now has 12 touchdowns in his first three playoff starts - the most by any quarterback in such a span; the previous record-holder was Daryle Lamonica (10).

    Rodgers converted third downs all night, showcasing his trademark ability to elude pass-rushers in the pocket and extend plays. Troy Aikman said that Rodgers would be his first choice at quarterback if he were starting a franchise from scratch.

  • Three Packers had at least six receptions: Greg Jennings (8-101), Jordy Nelson (8-79, TD) and Donald Driver (6-76). Jennings had what seemed like a key fumble that resulted in a Falcons touchdown in the first quarter, but the Packers were so unstoppable on offense - they didn't punt once - that it didn't matter whatsoever.

  • James Starks didn't post pretty stats (25-66), but ran really effectively. Starks is very talented and should be Green Bay's starting running back entering the 2011 NFL season.

  • The worst moment in the NFL season occurred after the third quarter in this contest: the announcement of the Punt, Pass and Kick winners. My reaction on the forums when I realized that I'd have to endure this:

    NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Not the punt pass and kick winners AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH OH GOD MAKE IT STOP MAAKEEEEEEEEEEEE ITTTTTTTTT STOOOOOOOOOOOOPPPPPPPPPPP




    Bears 35, Seahawks 24

  • The Chiefs were exposed as a fraud last week. The Falcons' supposed homefield advantage at the Georgia Dome was similarly revealed as a farce on Saturday. Unfortunately for my January NFL Pick of the Month, we couldn't go three for three.

    The Chicago Bears will live for another week, thanks to the Seahawks completely beating themselves in every facet of this game. Seattle dropped a whopping seven passes in the first half (Mike Williams 3, Cameron Morrah 1, Golden Tate 1, Brandon Stokley 1, Ben Obomanu 1). Make it eight drops if you count Jordan Babineaux's failed attempt at an interception in the first quarter.

    Jay Cutler tossed the ball right to Babineaux, who couldn't come up with the turnover and perhaps subsequent touchdown. That was the turning point of the game - well, one of the two - because Chicago scored a touchdown a couple of plays later to make it 14-0.

    The other turning point was John Carlson's concussion on the second drive of the game. Carlson was a major part of the offensive game plan, and his absence was huge for the Seahawks, who couldn't move the chains whatsoever until the fourth quarter. In fact, Morrah, Carlson's replacement, had a huge drop later on that same possession.

  • Matt Hasselbeck went 26-of-46 for 258 yards and three touchdowns. Those numbers could have been even better if it weren't for all those drops (he had two more by Mike Williams in the second half).

    Despite a horrendous regular season, Hasselbeck has stepped up and performed well in the playoffs. The Seahawks should bring him back while they groom Charlie Whitehurst or another young signal-caller.

  • As for the other quarterback, Cutler went 15-of-28 for 274 yards and four touchdowns (2 pass, 2 rush). However, it could have been much worse for Cutler. He had that aforementioned dropped interception in the end zone. He also fumbled, which was fortunately recovered by his own lineman. Additionally, Cutler tossed a couple of sketchy passes that had a chance of being picked off.

  • Cutler's offensive line played a lot better than most people thought it would. It's unclear though if this was just a result of Seattle sucking or not; remember, the Packers sacked Cutler six times in the season finale, so the city of Chicago should wait a while before throwing a parade for its offensive front.

    The line thrived in both pass protection and run blocking. The Seahawks couldn't stop Matt Forte (25-80) or Chester Taylor (11-44, TD), negating opportunities for Cutler to screw up. Seattle consequently also had problems containing Greg Olsen (3-113, TD), as the athletic tight end beat Lawyer Milloy for the game's opening score.




    Jets 28, Patriots 21

  • I'm really speechless. I can't believe the Patriots lost. I thought this game would be close - I had the Jets covering - but I never thought that New York had a chance to win this game.

    But this is why the NFL playoffs are great. You never really know what to expect. I'd go off on a tangent about how great a college football playoff system would be, but I'm really not in the mood. Blame Pete Carroll and those stupid Seattle receivers, but I digress.

  • The Patriots just looked complacent the entire evening. They showed no sense of urgency until there were about four minutes left and they realized, "Ah crap, we might actually lose this thing." New England just took the Jets lightly, and can you blame them? A 45-3 victory over the same team would do that.

    Still though, I'm a bit surprised that Tom Brady played so stoically. A week ago, Rex Ryan called Brady "overrated" and a product of Bill Belichick's system. I thought we'd see a furious Brady against the Jets. In fact, this is why I didn't make the Jets a multi-unit selection. Brady generally plays with a big chip on his shoulder, but he just looked like he didn't care.

    Note that I don't want to make it sound like it's all on Brady. He went 29-of-45 for 299 yards, two touchdowns and an interception. He took five sacks and had to hurry a lot of his throws. The play-calling was abysmal as well. But Brady just seemed off.

    Fortunately for Brady, he'll get over this one pretty quickly. As Ted Berg tweeted, "Tom Brady's going to be thinking about this one tonight, when he's sleeping with a supermodel atop piles of money."

  • Having said all that, I don't want to take anything away from the Jets. Ryan came up with an unbelievable game plan. He undoubtedly locked himself in a room after that 45-3 defeat and worked tediously to come up with a solution for the New England offense. Well done, Rex.

  • Mark Sanchez also deserves a ton of credit. Some of his early throws were off the mark, but he settled in and finished the game brilliantly, going 16-of-25 for 194 yards and three touchdowns. Sanchez's score to Santonio Holmes (3-20, TD) was a thing of beauty, and I'm still not sure how Holmes got his knee down inbounds.

  • A strong running game helped Sanchez. Shonn Greene (17-76, TD) and LaDainian Tomlinson (10-43) trampled their second straight opponent, as the Jets' offensive line pushed around New England's defensive front.



    For more, check out my updated 2010 NFL Power Rankings, which will be posted Monday morning.

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    Ok 01-13-2013 01:06 am xxx.xxx.xxx.219 (total posts: 1)
    113     3

    San Francisco had a tremendous advantage in this contest because of the 8 p.m. start time. Circadian rhythms set in, and many Packer bodies shut down just after halftime.

    - Oh my god. Please tell me youre trolling
    Raven Hate 01-12-2013 11:36 pm xxx.xxx.xxx.219 (total posts: 2)
    14     3

    Ohh, I also forgot to mention the block in the back and hold by Jacob Hester on Holliday's 2nd return TD.

    If anything the officials tried to swing the game Denver's way.
    Raven Hate 01-12-2013 11:33 pm xxx.xxx.xxx.219 (total posts: 2)
    157     6

    Walt, I enjoy the site, but when it comes to the Ravens you have an inexplicable and clear bias against them. Seriously, who in the Ravens organisation pissed in your cheerios?

    For the "Tuck Rule" fumble - Peyton Manning lost control moving his hand forward but had CLEARLY regained possession with 2 hands before fumbling, so you're wrong there.

    You fail to mention the earlier strip-sack that was taken away by a bogus hands to the face call which the officials clearly botched and tried to cover up.

    As far as bias towards Baltimore - which game were you watching? The officials just plain sucked. They blew calls both ways and anything 50/50 went the way of Denver early on.

    Baltimore's offensive line just dominated one of the better defensive lines in the NFL (if you include Miller) and Flacco outplayed Manning against what was a better statistical unit, at home.

    I love the site, but the irrational Raven hate you have just dumbfounds me.
    Bucky 01-12-2013 11:26 pm xxx.xxx.xxx3.29 (total posts: 1)
    55     3

    In the replay, you could see Manning get his both hands on the ball when it was against his groin. He dropped it after that, so IMO it was a fumble and a good call.
    HATE 01-07-2013 10:31 pm xxx.xxx.xxx.144 (total posts: 2)
    123     9

    your hate against the Ravens is blatantly obvious every week. You keep pointing out the missed plays by the colts but forget everything that could've made this game even more a blowout in the ravens favor. i appreciate the work you put in for this site but i'm not gonna look at this section if all you're going to do is discredit my team in any way you can when they win.
    D 01-07-2013 04:49 pm xxx.xxx.xxx.1.1 (total posts: 1)
    16     7

    While the RGIII injury is unfortunate, should have been avoided and obviously played a part. You can't dismiss the fact that the Seahawks broke down the Washington D. There's a reason they put up 371 yards in 3 Quarters. And that's because they were playing ball and started to dismantle the 'Skins defense. There's multiple facets to Football, more than just RGIII vs the defense, can't discount the rest.

    More blame should be put on Shanahan for continuously putting out a completely hobbled QB who was not a better option than Cousins at that time. He was hurt prior to this game and was visibly hurt and no where near playing level. He chose to ignore that and put him out there even though he clearly wasn't the best answer. Boneheaded decision that hurt the Redskins the most.

    @Seahawks fan in NJ 01-07-2013 04:23 pm xxx.xxx.xxx.237 (total posts: 1)
    19     14

    HAHAHAHA. what a joke. it's like every seattle fan is delusional... or just to casual to formulate an opinion.
    Still at it! 01-07-2013 03:28 pm xxx.xxx.xxx9.66 (total posts: 7)
    48     4

    Walter loves to mention TWO dropped interceptions for the Indianapolis defense, but fails to mention how many dropped interceptions the Ravens defense had. He throws the call on the Ray Rice fumble as a "bone" but then goes on to make it sound like every other call went the Ravens way.

    Still salty he lost his "biggest play of the weekend" yet again. Even when I warned him.

    Yeah... it sure looked like the Colts really had a huge advantage because "Pagano knows the Ravens."

    Note to Walt... the Ravens defense stopped playing midway through the 2nd half once they built their lead. They were simply letting the Colts run out the clock. Why show more material for Peyton Manning than you have to?

    Indianapolis looks like a promising team going forward, but they got beat by a better team that finally had all it's defensive stars on the field at the same time this season. They didn't "give the game away" as Walt would have you believe.

    And if the forecast for freezing temperatures and possibly snow this weekend in Denver hold true... the Ravens could play very well against the Broncos.
    John M 01-07-2013 01:43 pm xxx.xxx.xxx5.76 (total posts: 1)
    20     3

    "I don't want to completely discredit the Ravens' defense", but that's exactly what I'm going to do. The only disappointing thing about them was that they didn't hang on to 3 more of Luck's poor/deflected passes.

    This was not an evenly matched game. In fact it was the least evenly matched game of the weekend on the scoreboard, although the Joe Webb debacle was worse overall.

    You were way off on who the better team was, and if it weren't for the Rice fumbles in Colts territory and Flacco choosing to go to Tandon Doss (really?) in key first half moments, the score would have been even more lopsided.

    The worst part is that you're just waiting for them to lose to claim that you were right all along about their flaws and fraud status, despite how many picks you get wrong along the way.
    Matt 01-07-2013 01:40 pm xxx.xxx.xxx.249 (total posts: 1)
    18     3

    Walter has hated the Ravens ever since that Chargers game and refuses to ever say they just played a good game because of it lol. Every win is "Well, if this and this didnt happen then Baltimore would have been in trouble"
    #1 Seahawk Fan in NJ 01-07-2013 01:08 pm xxx.xxx.xxx.140 (total posts: 6)
    12     28

    Keep whining about RG3 and his injury.

    The bottom line is after taking two punches to the face in the 1st quarter, Seahawks made their adjustments and whipped the Skins (without their best pass rusher)

    The Seahawks could have scored 40 if not for some errors.
    jo 01-07-2013 11:29 am xxx.xxx.xxx.200 (total posts: 6)
    13     3

    walt u complain about colts outplaying ravens and the missed calls by ref and luck making bad throws and a tipped int etc. but you dnt recall that if rice dont fumble twice
    Joe R 01-07-2013 11:17 am xxx.xxx.xxx.194 (total posts: 1)
    4     3

    I have to disagree with anon. It was pretty evident midway through the 3rd quarter that RGIII was toast. Not only did Shanahan stick with an ineffective Quarterback, but now Washington has to anxiously wait and see if he feels lingering effects to this game.

    I don't think he will, and I hope not (since I really like RGIII), but it's a reasonable concern. Cousins wasn't exactly ineffective when he played during the season, too. And it's not like they couldn't go back to RGIII
    anon 01-07-2013 11:03 am xxx.xxx.xxx.254 (total posts: 3)
    11     2

    Is it just me or are the people calling for Shanahan's head for not pulling RGIII the same people who were calling Jay Cutler a wimp for not reentering the NFC Championship game on a torn ACL a couple years ago?

    Also, let's be honest: if Shanny had pulled RGIII earlier and they had lost because of Kirk Cousins, people would have been screaming at how dumb Shanny was for not sticking with his young star QB during a win-or-go-home scenario. This really is a no-win situation for the poor guy.
    @wtf? 01-07-2013 10:38 am xxx.xxx.xxx1.83 (total posts: 1)
    19     7

    sherman and co, have been doing that all year long! i'm sure they sent escorts to the refs before the game. 49ers were a victim of that in the first game. if griffin didn't get hurt, he was gonna curb stomp that seattle defense. good luck getting away with all that nonsense vs white and jones down in the ATL. Atlanta in an easy win.


    2013 NBA Mock Draft - May 22


    2013 Fantasy Football Rankings - May 22


    2014 NFL Mock Draft - May 21


    Charlie's 2014 NFL Mock Draft - May 20


    NFL Picks - Feb. 3








    2012: Live 2012 NFL Draft Blog - April 26
    2012 NFL Week 1 Recap - Sept. 10
    2012 NFL Week 2 Recap - Sept. 17
    2012 NFL Week 3 Recap - Sept. 24
    2012 NFL Week 4 Recap - Oct. 1
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    2012 NFL Week 16 Recap - Dec. 24
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    2012 NFL Week 18 Recap - Jan. 7
    2012 NFL Week 19 Recap - Jan. 14
    2012 NFL Week 20 Recap - Jan. 21
    Super Bowl XLVII Recap - Feb. 4
    Super Bowl XLVII Live Blog - Feb. 4


    2011: Live 2011 NFL Draft Blog - April 28
    2011 NFL Week 1 Recap - Sept. 12
    2011 NFL Week 2 Recap - Sept. 19
    2011 NFL Week 3 Recap - Sept. 26
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    2011 NFL Week 5 Recap - Oct. 10
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    2011 NFL Week 9 Recap - Nov. 7
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    2011 NFL Week 11 Recap - Nov. 21
    2011 NFL Week 12 Recap - Nov. 28
    2011 NFL Week 13 Recap - Dec. 5
    2011 NFL Week 14 Recap - Dec. 12
    2011 NFL Week 15 Recap - Dec. 19
    2011 NFL Week 16 Recap - Dec. 26
    2011 NFL Week 17 Recap - Jan. 2
    2011 NFL Week 18 Recap - Jan. 9
    2011 NFL Week 19 Recap - Jan. 16
    2011 NFL Week 20 Recap - Jan. 23
    Super Bowl XLVI Live Blog - Feb. 6


    2010: Live 2010 NFL Draft Blog - April 22
    2010 Hall of Fame Game Live Blog - Aug. 8
    2010 NFL Kickoff Live Blog - Sept. 9
    2010 NFL Week 1 Review - Sept. 13
    2010 NFL Week 2 Review - Sept. 20
    2010 NFL Week 3 Review - Sept. 27
    2010 NFL Week 4 Review - Oct. 4
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    2010 NFL Week 7 Review - Oct. 25
    2010 NFL Week 8 Review - Nov. 1
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    2010 NFL Week 13 Review - Dec. 6
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    2010 NFL Week 15 Review - Dec. 20
    2010 NFL Week 16 Review - Dec. 27
    2010 NFL Week 17 Review - Jan. 3
    2010 NFL Week 18 Review - Jan. 10
    2010 NFL Week 19 Review - Jan. 17
    2010 NFL Week 19 Review - Jan. 24
    Super Bowl XLV Live Blog - Feb. 6


    2009: Live 2009 NFL Draft Blog - April 25
    2009 Hall of Fame Game Live Blog - Aug. 10
    2009 NFL Kickoff Live Blog - Sept. 10
    2009 NFL Week 1 Review - Sept. 14
    2009 NFL Week 2 Review - Sept. 21
    2009 NFL Week 3 Review - Sept. 28
    2009 NFL Week 4 Review - Oct. 5
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    2009 NFL Week 6 Review - Oct. 19
    2009 NFL Week 7 Review - Oct. 26
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    2009 NFL Week 17 Review - Jan. 4
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    2009 NFL Week 20 Review - Jan. 25
    Super Bowl XLIV Live Blog - Feb. 7


    2008: Live 2008 NFL Draft Blog - April 26
    2008 NFL Kickoff Blog - Sept. 4
    NFL Week 1 Review - Sept. 8
    NFL Week 2 Review - Sept. 15
    NFL Week 3 Review - Sept. 22
    NFL Week 4 Review - Sept. 29
    NFL Week 5 Review - Oct. 6
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    NFL Week 7 Review - Oct. 20
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    NFL Week 13 Review - Dec. 1
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    NFL Week 17 Review - Dec. 29
    NFL Wild Card Playoffs Review - Jan. 4
    NFL Divisional Playoffs Review - Jan. 11
    NFL Championship Sunday Review - Jan. 19
    Super Bowl XLIII Live Blog


    2007: NFL Draft: Day 1 Review Blog - April 28
    Quarterback Rankings - June 25
    NFL Kickoff Blog - Sept. 6
    Chief Carl Has Lost a Step - Sept. 9
    The NFL Cheated the Patriots - Sept. 16
    NFL Week 3 Wrap-Up - Sept. 23
    NFL Week 4 Wrap-Up - Sept. 30
    NFL Week 5 Wrap-Up - Oct. 7
    NFL Week 6 Wrap-Up - Oct. 14
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    NFL Week 8 Wrap-Up - Oct. 28
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    NFL Week 12 Wrap-Up - Nov. 25
    NFL Week 13 Wrap-Up - Dec. 2
    NFL Week 14 Wrap-Up - Dec. 9
    NFL Week 15 Wrap-Up - Dec. 16
    NFL Week 16 Wrap-Up - Dec. 23
    NFL Week 17 Wrap-Up - Dec. 30
    NFL Week 18 Wrap-Up - Jan. 6
    NFL Week 19 Wrap-Up - Jan. 13
    2008 Championship Sunday Diary - Jan. 20
    Super Bowl XLII Live Blog - Feb. 3


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