On January 31 the Pro Bowl kicked off in Miami. I am not going to beat around the bush; it is time that the NFL scraps this feeble attempt at entertainment. Anybody who watched even a few plays of the alleged all-star game can agree that any player who was giving a 40 percent effort was working twice as hard as their opponent.
On ESPN “First Take” Marcellus Wiley told a story about his first Pro Bowl appearance. He had no idea what the etiquette was on how hard to try so he decided to work the first play at about 50 percent, the next thing he knew he had blown past perennial all-pro left tackle Chris Samuels for a sack.
Samuels glared at the fresh faced Wiley and said “Oh you want to play for real huh?” Wiley said he dialed it back to about 20 percent for the rest of the game after that. Please do not interpret this as a complaint, because if I was an NFL player why would I bother risking injury in a game that means as much as a game of Madden?
The NFL outsmarted itself by moving the game the week before the Super Bowl. Their logic was a two-pronged version of stupidity. Part one was that the average football fan would miss the gridiron in the week off before the Super Bowl. Part two was that by the time the Pro Bowl would roll around after the Super Bowl in past seasons, the average fan did not care anymore.
The biggest problem I see in this flawed logic is that players from the two Super Bowl teams cannot play. It is pretty hard to get excited about an all-star game when a lot of the all-stars are not even playing. Fourteen players from the Saints and Colts combined missed Sunday’s game because they obviously had bigger fish to fry. Add to that 17 more who missed the game with various injuries and it’s not even an all-star game, it is a mediocre-and-above contest. To put it in perspective, of the six quarterbacks actually voted into the pro bowl, only Aaron Rodgers played in the game.
Instead of having these guys waste their time in a game where they rightfully do no put out any effort in a meaningless game, let’s see a skills competition. I am proposing a collection of different challenges for the various positions ranging from 40 yard dash, rep test on bench press, a quarterback challenge, obstacle course, etc. I personally would love to see who can bench press 225 pounds the most times. I miss the days of the old quarterback challenge on CBS.
In regard to that other bowl that probably a few more people watched, there is one thing that has been sticking in my craw. I am so sick of hearing the Peyton Manning detractors say how this game hurts his legacy, and that it proves he is not an all-time great.
This is ridiculous to the point of being almost offensive. Manning was 31-45 for 333 yards, one TD and one pick, these are hardly pedestrian numbers. Everybody is going to kill him for the late game interception by Tracy Porter, but if you look at the play again you cannot entirely blame Manning.
Did he telegraph the throw? Probably. Should the ball have gone somewhere else? Maybe. But like the saying goes, it takes two to tango. Though Manning did not say so in his post-game news conference, it was clear he was not the only one at fault. He kept repeating that “Porter made a great play and made a great break on the ball,” which was true.
Peyton failed to mention the half-hearted route by Reggie Wayne. There is no way Wayne should let Porter ever get underneath him on a slant pattern. Even if Porter did flat out beat Wayne to the ball, it would be nice to see a wide receiver bail out his quarterback once in awhile.
The interception aside, Manning performed extremely well, and was statistically better than his first appearance on the grand stage. All of you Manning haters need to understand he is an all-time great.
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All Time Greats win superbowls. Manning, like Marino, is an all time great passer. But he will never be in the same group as Brady, Aikman, Montana, Bradshaw, Starr, Graham, etc. The job of a QB isn’t anything statistical, although great stats help, its to lead your team to victory in a world championship game. QBs who lead they’re teams 3 or more times are considered Dynastic, that is the goal of every QB, to win as many superbowls as possible and bring your city, your team, your fellow players a title. Montana did that for San Francisco, Bradshaw did that for Pittsburgh. Winning a Superbowl is hard enough, winning 4 in 6 years is astronomically hard, but Terry did it. Aikman and Brady both won 3 in 4 years. Bart Star won 5 championships out of 6 visits in the 60s. Otto Graham led the Browns to win 3 of 6 championship visits in the 50s. And if Manning was younger, I’d say look at Elway or look at Graham and how they salvaged their records by persevering, but at this point in Mannings career, with the state of his team, he isn’t going to probably have 2 or 3 more superbowls left in him, he needs to win 2 more to be considered in that top group, 3 if he wants to press for the title of best QB ever. I don’t think he can do that at all. He’ll be lucky to get back to 1 more. The colts need a running game, they need more solid receiver play. Garcon and Wayne both dropped easy catches.