Friday, September 28, 2012

The Sports Mixer - After further review

A look back at last night's Browns-Ravens game...

The Browns lost to the Ravens 23-16 last night.  The following are some things I took away from this game as I've had time to digest what I saw and come to some reasonable, if not biased conclusions.

The Brandon Weeden debate will probably rage on, but he's continued to show improvement from week to week despite Pat Shurmer's reluctance to run the ball after halftime.  Trent Richardson wasn't lighting the world on fire, but he was gaining yards against a good defense.  Weeden made one very bad throw on the pick-six, but outside of that and his final airmail, his passes were catchable.  His receivers didn't help him by dropping at least five passes.  The drop by Greg Little that would've made it 23-20 was particularly rough.  Weeden did enough to win this game though.

The offensive line wasn't as offensive tonight.  Yes, Weeden was hit, but for the most part, he was able to get the passes off before the hits came.  There were a couple of times where that wasn't the case, such as when Haloti Ngata shoved Alex Mack up against Weeden, completely disrupting the play and causing a sack.  Overall though, it was a good enough performance.  They still need to open up more holes in the run game though.  Joe Thomas was hit with another holding penalty, his fourth this season.  It was a weak hold, but a hold nonetheless.

Trent Richardson needs the ball more and someone needs to remind Shurmer of this.  14 rushes for 47 yards isn't a lot, but his average of 3.4 ypc was better than Ray Rice's, who was held in check by the Browns defense.  Richardson did catch 4 passes for 57 yards, but it still feels like he's being underutilized.  Maybe the coaches are still being cautious, but he's seen the endzone four times in four games.  Get him the ball.  Also, kudos to him seeming to pick up on blitz protection when he was in there.

Josh Cribbs should be lucky to be standing today.  The hit he took on a punt return wasn't malicious, but it was still a hard hit that caused his helmet to fly up in the air, knock him out, and cause a fumble.  The referees had to review the play to make sure his helmet was on still when he fumbled (a rule I wasn't aware of; if a helmet comes off the ballcarrier while being tackled, the play is whistled dead), but Cribbs was clearly out for a few moments.  He has a few extra days to recover from the apparent concussion before the next game, which is good because the Browns need him.

Greg Little still can't reliably catch the ball, but he made a couple of tough catches to help his cause.  Unfortunately, the ones he dropped are the ones we all remember, particularly his drop as he fell in the endzone that would've made it 23-20.  Instead, the Browns had to kick a field goal to make it 23-16.  Little has the ability to make plays, but he just can't seem to consistently do so.

Josh Gordon made a nice catch in the fourth quarter, his lone catch.  It was good for 16 yards and he was hit almost immediately after cradling the ball.  He held on though and the drive continued after that.  He needs to pick it up and show he was worth the second round pick the Browns spent on him.  His size and athleticism are apparent, but he still seems to be figuring out the speed of the NFL.

The Browns miss Joe Haden in a bad way.  Three games, three big passing days from opponents despite the defensive line and linebackers doing a pretty good job.  Dmitri Patterson was picked on in the second half last night while Buster Skrine was attacked last week.  Skrine was also hit with a defensive holding on the Ravens final drive that prolonged things and took time away from Weeden on his final drive.  It's clear the Browns need another corner to play opposite when Haden comes back regardless.

Phil Dawson just keeps hitting field goal after field goal, no matter what the distance is.  He hit three last night, all from 50 yards or beyond to keep the Browns in the game.  The scary part?  All three could've been good from 60 or beyond.  He had that much leg in each kick.  The man should get one long-term contract to help finish his career and retire as a Brown.

The defense overall played a solid game, despite the secondary's issues.  Craig Robertson played an inspired first half, picking off a Joe Flacco pass in the end zone.  Billy Winn continued to show that he belongs in the rotation even after Phil Taylor comes back.  Between Ahtyba Rubin, Taylor, Winn, and John Hughes, the Browns have the potential to have a very deep interior in the defensive line. Frostee Rucker was in the backfield a couple of times and Jabaal Sheard picked up his first sack and pressured Flacco on a few other occasions despite being double-teamed at times.  D'Qwell Jackson was in on several plays as he continued his strong start to the season.

Travis Benjamin is giving the coaches a reason to keep him in, catching two passes for 26 yards and bringing a punt back 40 yards in relief of the injured Cribbs.  Jordan Norwood and Benjamin Watson also played well, although Norwood dropped a couple passes, including a potential touchdown pass.  The group needs someone to step up and Benjamin looks like he wants to.

A lot will be made of the wasted time in the first half, as once again Pat Shurmer played it safe when there was plenty of time to try and get a score.  Down 9-7 the Browns forced a punt after taking a timeout to stop the clock.  They had over 1:30 to move the ball with two timeouts still, yet the first play after the punt was a draw to Richardson for two yards.  Maybe Shurmer was trying to catch the Ravens napping, but if not for a big stand on defense, this could've backfired as the Ravens got the ball back with time to spare.  However, Sheard picked a great time to get his first sack and the Ravens ended up running out the clock.

Finally, the real referees made their return and the flow of the game was so much better.  There was still some chippy play, but the refs were quick to jump in and separate the players involved.  Unsportsmanlike conduct penalties were called on either side, Shurmer was hit with one after a questionable intentional grounding penalty was called on Weeden, and Paul Kruger was hit with one with two seconds left when he shoved Thomas down (who did a great acting job to boot; nevertheless Kruger still shoved him and the ref caught him), allowing one last play for the Browns.  The refs were decisive and there were no issues with reviews, penalties, spotting the ball, or clock management.  In short, they weren't really noticed, and that's a good thing

Going forward, when will the Browns win a game?  It doesn't appear to be next week, as they venture to the defending Super Bowl Champion New York Giants in New York.  The Giants are a pass-happy team and this will be the last game missed for Haden, which means a depleted secondary could get scorched one last time unless something crazy happens.  After that is a rematch with the Cincinnati Bengals at home, which seems like a much more likely time to get a win.  Haden will be back and Richardson and Weeden should have one more game under their belt.

Thursday, September 27, 2012

The Sports Mixer - The refs are back and week 4 is upon us

We knew it was only a matter of time.

After last Monday's mess on Monday Night Football, we knew the NFL couldn't let another game be played with the replacement referees.  We knew they couldn't risk upsetting another large fanbase as they did with the Green Bay Packers.  You could just feel that an agreement was going to be done.

Now we can go back to blaming the real refs for the missed calls going forward.  And believe me, it will only take about half a quarter before someone is yelling at the screen, yelling about the refs again.

"How could they miss that?" will be heard across Cleveland and Baltimore at some point.

But we'll still feel better about it all, won't we?  At least now we're blaming the real refs, not the ones who were clearly in over their heads at every turn, right?

Here's how I see the sequence of events going down tonight.  The refs will run out on the field to a standing ovation.  They'll bask in the ovation as if to say "we told you you'd miss us," then the coin toss will get botched, a push in the back on the Browns opening kickoff return will be missed, Joshua Cribbs walks in with his first kickoff for a touchdown in a century (at least it feels that long), and the Ravens fans will be up in arms and the boos will commence.

That being said, I find it highly appropriate that the refs return to the same field where on Sunday night, the fans were chanting an obscentity as loud as I've ever heard and in perfect rhythm with one another.  It was like being there, it was so loud.  Al Michaels made the comment that it was the largest cow manure chant in the history of sports, and later added that a seven second delay couldn't even save the viewing public.

Which is where I begin my picks.  Now that the regular refs are back and the game results can be trusted to be accurate, I'm going to run through the games and give my impressions.  Normally I'd save the Browns for last, but seeing that they're playing tonight on the NFL Network, they get to go first for a change.

Now watch me skip the next six weeks before I do this again.  You can always count on the Sports Mixer after all.

Browns (0-3) at Ravens (2-1) - 8:20pm NFL Network

Baltimore has been a scary place for the Browns in recent years.  Then again, divisional play hasn't been to kind to the Browns.  After all, their last divisional win was in Baltimore, in 2007, and almost didn't happen due to the refs (real refs) nearly blowing a field goal call.  In that game, Phil Dawson's kick bounced through the uprights twice and only after a mysterious phone call was it considered good.  Josh Cribbs then returned a kick 41 yards, setting up Dawson's game-winner in a 33-30 finish.

I don't know that this game is going to be close.  The Browns are a young, struggling team trying to find its way in a brutal opening month and a half.  The Ravens are a team that suddenly appears weak at defense, yet seems to come through when they need it the most.  Take Sunday's game against the Patriots.  They are down 30-21, then suddenly the defense steps up, stops Tom Brady several times, and the offense made enough plays (with some help) to win.  Torrey Smith played inspired football, playing just after learning that his younger brother was dead, catching two touchdown passes.

The Browns are coming off a loss to the Buffalo Bills where they trailed 17-14 before self-destructing on both offense and defense.  Missing three starters on defense has been rough, but oddly abandoning the running game in the third and fourth quarter allowed the Bills' defensive linemen to pin their ears back and rush Brandon Weeden at will, causing him to rush his throws or get sacked.  I get that Trent Richardson wasn't picking up huge chunks of yardage, but he looked to be getting stronger as the game went along, making the decision to pass only more baffling.

In the end, two fourth quarter picks sealed the deal in the loss even though Weeden put up modest numbers.  Also, look for a possible shake-up at receiver soon if Greg Little doesn't stop dropping passes and posing when he does catch one.  Jordan Norwood would love to take his spot.

This game has blowout written all over it, but much like the previous three games, I expect the Browns to hang with the Ravens for a least the first half.  I just don't see the Browns having the firepower or defensive ability to stop the Ravens all game long.  Ray Rice loves running against the Browns and Joe Flacco looks like an elite quarterback at this point.  If the Browns can run a little bit with Richardson, they might hang in there longer, but Ed Reed will likely get Weeden at some point.

Pick: Ravens 31, Browns 17

Sunday

Panthers (1-2) at Falcons (3-0) - 1pm FOX

Cam Newton appeared to regress last Thursday against the Giants.  He couldn't run, he couldn't pass, and the Panthers defense was shredded by Eli Manning.  This week, they get the Atlanta Falcons, a team that has rolled in its first three games.  Last week they smothered Phillip Rivers and the San Diego Chargers in San Diego.  This week they get a home game against a struggling and young Panthers team.  Steve Smith tried to send his young quarterback a message after the previous loss, but we'll see how Newton responds.

Matt Ryan is continuing to establish that he deserves to be talked about in the same breath as other elite quarterbacks, helped by his receivers Roddy White and Julio Jones.  Oh, and having Tony Gonzalez has continued to help the Falcons' offense thrive, just as the defense has thrived for the most part.  This game should be a cakewalk for the Falcons, but Newton is due for a big game as well.

Pick: Falcons 34, Panthers 27 in a shootout.

Patriots (1-2) at Bills (2-1) - 1pm CBS

The Patriots look disheveled.  Tom Brady is putting up good numbers, but at critical situations, he's no longer the lock he used to be.  In the fourth quarter against the Ravens, Brady couldn't get anything going, mustering up just a field goal as the Patriots blew a late lead to the Ravens.  This a week after falling short against the Arizona Cardinals on a missed field goal.

The Bills, on the other hand, have recovered nicely after a first week blowout, dismantling the Chiefs and then pulling away from the Browns despite losing CJ Spiller to a shoulder injury.  They will have Fred Jackson back though to help keep the running game going strong, which always helps Ryan Fitzpatrick.  The Bills are in a prime position to take control of the AFC East in this game, much like a few years ago when they started 3-0 coming into Patriots week.

That time, they imploded and never recovered.  Will this time be the same?  I don't know, but I like the Bills defense this year better than in previous years.  That said, Brady and the Pats are going to want to recover quickly before this season spirals on them.  I just don't know if they have enough to get past the Bills.

That felt weird typing that.

Pick: Bills 24, Patriots 20

Vikings (2-1) at Lions (1-2) - 1pm FOX

The Vikings are one of the surprises of the season thus far.  Christian Ponder has looked improved at quarterback, the defense has played reasonably well, and having Adrian Peterson back has helped immensely.  They have the potential to be this year's surprise team, a team no one picked who makes the playoffs by playing way over their heads.  Or it could all come crashing down.

The Lions, well, they just haven't played any defense at all.  Matthew Stafford has returned to his injury-riddled form before his breakout season last year.  Their running game has been a joke.  In short, not much has gone right for them.  Last week, they completed a remarkable regulation comeback against Tennessee to send the game to overtime, only to have a fourth and one come up short to lose the game.  It was admirable to go for it, but when you don't have a running game, well, you probably should try something other than a broken play.

Stafford has to come up big this week for the Lions to win.  As much talk as there was about the Lions front four on defense, the unit has struggled mightily thus far and the Vikings are showing some pop on offense. This could be a high-scoring affair.

Pick: Vikings 30, Lions 17 yeah I just contradicted myself.

Chargers (2-1) at Chiefs (1-2) - 1pm CBS

The Chargers want redemption.  After laying an egg against the Falcons last week, the Chargers want to rebound and regain control of the AFC West before the Denver Broncos or Oakland Raiders figure themselves out.  After all, aside from the Chargers, everyone else is fairly mediocre on paper.  At least that's what the Chargers would want you to believe.

Don't tell that to the Chiefs, who overcame a large deficit against the New Orleans Saints to shock them in overtime, largely on the legs of Jaamal Charles and some timely passes by Matt Cassel in the fourth quarter and overtime.  This on the heels of consecutive blowouts which had the Chiefs faithful questioning if they were going to win a game.

This is a big game for both teams.  A win by the Chiefs puts them in an early tie for first place and an early tiebreaker over the Chargers.  A win by the Bolts keeps them in first place regardless of what the Broncos or Raiders do in their game.  It also would redeem them of their poor performance last week against the Falcons.

Pick: Chargers 24, Chiefs 10 back to reality for the Chiefs

Seahawks (2-1) at Rams (1-2) - 1pm FOX

The Seahawks should feel lucky.  The football Gods blessed them with a victory Monday when they should've lost.  They have played inspired defense overall, but the offense has looked shakey, no surprise given that they are one of many teams running out a rookie or second year quarterback in Russell Wilson.  Wilson has shown glimpses, but has also shown that he's a rookie.  Marshawn Lynch has run well, but it hasn't translated into big scoring numbers for the offense.

The Rams have shown improvement so far this year.  Yes, last week was a rough one for Sam Bradford and the offense, as the Chicago Bears pretty much did what they wanted on defense, but nonetheless they've established a fairly decent core on offense that should only get better with time.  Unfortunately, they get to play another difficult defense, one that should have led the Hawks to a 3-0 record thus far.

Pick: Seahawks 20, Rams 13

49ers (2-1) at Jets (2-1) - 1pm FOX

The 49ers are an angry team.  They laid an egg against the Vikings, were thoroughly outplayed on both sides of the ball, and showed no edge on defense, which was unusual.  Even a gift timeout and challenge weren't enough to help them win.  This spells bad news for the Jets, who really have no business being 2-1.  Mark Sanchez hasn't looked particularly good the last two weeks and is going to be facing an angry defense looking to punish someone.  I smell a stinker coming from Sanchez and a much better performance from San Fran.

Pick: 49ers 27, Jets 10 I smell a Tebow sighting in this one

Titans (1-2) at Texans (3-0) - 1pm CBS

The Titans went in with Jake Locker this year and he's been, well, a young quarterback.  His last game was his best and he continues to do it with no help from Chris Johnson, who apparently forgot that running the football means gaining more than a yard or two each carry.  In fact, Locker seems to be pulling rabbits out of his, uh, hat at times, last week's game a prime example. Defensively the Titans are a mess, but they can score occasionally.

The Texans are trying to show they are the best team in football.  They have been dominant through three weeks on both sides of the ball and look to prove that last year was just the beginning of good things to come for Texans fans.  Matt Schaub shrugged off a brutal hit to lead the Texans to victory last week and with two dynamic running backs behind him, should continue to pile up numbers.

The Titans can prove a lot with a win, but I just can't see them doing it in Houston.

Pick: Texans 27, Titans 7

Raiders (1-2) at Broncos (1-2) - 4:05pm CBS

The Raiders somehow managed to win last week despite giving up huge chunks of offense to the Steelers.  It helps that Steelers defense appears to be weak at this point, but you can't overlook the win.  It was a huge boost for Carson Palmer and the rest of the offense to get the win heading into this game.

After looking like vintage Peyton Manning in their opening week win, he's had to overcome his own mistakes against the Falcons (three picks in the first quarter) and the lack of a defensive presence in their loss to the Texans. In each case, Manning has come up just short, leading some to wonder if the magic is gone after all.  This game is a chance for redemption, and it could come at the expense of the Raiders, which would delight Broncos fans everywhere.

This one has slugfest written all over it, a classic AFC West showdown.

Pick: Raiders 26, Broncos 24

Dolphins (1-2) at Cardinals (3-0) - 4:05pm CBS

The Dolphins deserved a better fate last week.  They harrassed Mark Sanchez all-game long and had a chance to win the game, but somehow fell short to the Jets.  Yet another team relying on a young quarterback, the Dolphins are going to have their ups and downs through the season.  They're hoping for a bounce back this week.

The Cardinals are 3-0 somehow, someway.  No one knows how they've done it, yet there they are, 3-0 with a win over the Patriots to boot.  Now they get to play at home against the Dolphins, in prime position to take control of the division.  Naturally, I expect them to stumble.

Pick: Dolphins 20, Cardinals 6

Bengals (2-1) at Jaguars (1-2) - 4:05pm CBS

The Bengals have had the luxury of playing two weak defenses since their opening weak massacre at the hands of the Ravens.  Andy Dalton has looked impressive, building upon his rookie season with the help of AJ Green, despite the lack of a strong running game.  The defense has underperformed, but that shouldn't be an issue this week against a weak Jacksonville offense.  Maurice Jones-Drew is playing, but if the Bengals stop him, the Jaguars offense will suffer and Dalton can take advantage.

Pick: Bengals 34, Jaguars 10

Saints (0-3) at Packers (1-2) - 4:25pm FOX

At the start of the season, this had marquee matchup written all over it.  Now, after the disastrous start for the Saints and a bad call against the Packers, this game has survival written all over it.  The Saints look lost without Sean Payton running the show and the Packers seem lost on offense, which has been a huge surprise thus far as the defense has played well.  There's a lot riding on this game for both teams.  Another loss by the Saints, and a near-dead season is finished.  A loss by the Packers puts the rest of their season at risk as well.

Pick: Packers 21, Saints 17

Redskins (1-2) at Buccaneers (1-2) - 4:25pm FOX

The Redskins have been exciting, but they've also been erratic.  RGIII has been as advertised, putting up big numbers and giving the Redskins a chance to win, but the defense has been a letdown and penalties have shot the Redskins chances on multiple occasions.  The Bucs have been the victim of bad play on both sides of the ball and Josh Freeman seems less and less like the future quarterback with each performance.

Pick: Redskins 27, Buccaneers 14

Giants (2-1) at Eagles (2-1) - 8:20pm NBC

Eli Manning has continued to put up big numbers while Michael Vick has struggled mightily.  The Eagles are 2-1 somehow, yet they should be 0-3 given how the offense has turned the ball over.  If not for their defense, they would be 0-3.  The Giants laid an egg on opening day, but since have piled up the offensive numbers.  The defense showed up last week as well to put the hurt on the Panthers' Cam Newton.  This week could see Vick's benching.

Pick: Giants 37, Eagles 17

Monday

Bears (2-1) at Cowboys (2-1) - 8:30pm ESPN

The Bears are an enigma.  Their defense has been solid, but which Jay Cutler that shows up often determines the Bears outcome.  Last week, he wasn't remarkable, but he wasn't horrid either as the Bears handled the Bucs.  The week before?  A disaster against the Packers.  The Cowboys are dysfunctional and Tony Romo has never completely showed he has what it takes to consistently control an offense.  Their game against Seattle is a prime example.  This game could get ugly.

Pick: Bears 17, Cowboys 14

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

The Sports Mixer - Stop the madness already

Here at the sports mixer, I've wanted to do a week-by-week look at the NFL schedule and do some picks.

Obviously, that hasn't happened as of yet.

There's an explanation for it though, I promise, and it has little to do with being lazy, although I could certainly see where you'd come to that conclusion given that I haven't written a thing overall in 3 weeks.

Okay, so lazy is part of it.

There's another reason though, and last night's Monday Night Football game epitomized that reasoning; the referees can't be trusted.

What does that have to do with picking a football game?

Consider this: if I had picked the game last night, my initial instinct would have been to pick the Green Bay Packers.  Good team, albeit a little dysfunctional to start the season, playing an underdog Seattle Seahawks team in a very loud environment.  Yet if anyone can overcome crowd noise and a feisty team, it's Aaron Rodgers, right?

Well, after watching the final play of the game, I would have been sabotaged by the replacement refs.  Simply put, they blew it.  Two different guys made two different calls, and in the end, they both were wrong in agreeing that it was a touchdown.  Then they decided they couldn't overturn it on replay and I think it's simply because they would've been mauled by the Seattle crowd that wanted that win.

In the end, anyone who picked Green Bay was done in by the refs, something you couldn't say until last night.

Sure, they've botched several calls, couldn't get the clock timed correctly in some instances, marked off penalties incorrectly, called phantom penalties, and have done everything short of forget that it's a football game.  So what that they seem to forget that they're officiating an NFL game, not a lower level game (see CJ Spiller's touchdown against the Cleveland Browns last Sunday when an offensive lineman was illegally downfield).

It's made the decision to start doing that sort of a column much more difficult.  Granted, there have been plenty of people reminding us that the regular refs missed calls, pointed the wrong way on turnovers and penalties, and so on, but we've never seen anything like what we've been seeing since the preseason started.

Who's to blame?  Who cares?  Just get it done already.  I'm sure the NFL can find a little bit of money in it's pool to give out to the refs and no longer lock them out.  Do it before someone gets seriously hurt since players and coaches clearly do not have any respect for the replacement refs.  Just watch the activities going on after the whistle blows.  Players shoving each other around, coaches running on to the field, and both players and coaches lobbying for calls.  It's out of control and Roger Goodell knows it.

He has to.  Does he not watch the replays of the games?

I understand that these refs are in over their heads.  I don't blame them.  One week, you're preparing for a D-III matchup with two schools no one outside of the students has ever heard of, next you know, you're trying to figure out if that was roughing the passer or a clean hit involving Tom Brady.  It's not fair to them, it's not right, and unfortunately, they're receiving the brunt of the criticism.

Except for that ref that was a blatant New Orleans Saints fan.  He deserved what happened to him.  Remember kids, if you're going to officiate a game involving your all-time favorite sports team ever, hide the pictures of you tailgating in the parking lot decked from head to toe in its apparell, and for God's sake, don't go posting on Facebook that you get to officiate that game.

This isn't to take blame away from the refs though.  A lot of things they've messed up, they should know from the game they're used to officiating.  While it's true that the NFL game has several different rules from college and high school, enough of them are the same that they shouldn't be botching those, but they have.  For instance, allowing the clock to run after a player ran out of bounds with the ball.

In the end, the regular refs have to be laughing at all of this.  They have to be loving that fans, players, and coaches are hoping and praying for them to return soon.  They have to think they're going to get a standing ovation in every stadium when they do come back.  When they mark off a penalty correctly, you know they'll love the fact that players from both sides will be applauding them.

Until they screw up a pass interference call, thus giving Kevin Kolb and the Arizona Cardinals a win they didn't deserve.  Then it's back to them being crappy refs again.

But all will be right in the NFL world again.

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Joined in progress - The Sports Mixer game blog

I was going to do a live blog during the Sunday night game, but unfortunately the sight of the Steelers made me queasy and I had to let my stomach settle first.

Just kidding.

I was doing laundry and didn't get to sit down with my laptop until 12:00 left in the third quarter.

So far, Peyton Manning has looked good, particularly in the no-huddle.  Unfortunately, Ben Roethlisberger is looking good as well.

It's 10-7 Pittsburgh as we join the game in progress.

Time notations are time left in the current quarter.

3rd Quarter

10:40 - Roethlisberger dumps off to Isaac Redman, who juggles it before finally corraling it.

10:15 - He dives!  And he looks short, at least according to the ugly yellow line that is draped across the field inaccurately most of the time, so now it's 4th and inches.

10:11 - Well that was a fortunate spot by the side judge.  On replay he never makes it to the yellow line, but the refs blow another call.

9:32 - Another false start on the Steelers.  By my count, that's now 27 on the Steelers.

8:26 - Apparently I'm the only person who hears the whistle blowing for another false start, but the play carries on and then the Referee goofs on the call, saying the penalty was declined even though it was a deadball foul.  Yeah, they aren't doing so hot.

8:03 - I really think players who hold out should be suspended for the first game.  Just saying, Mike Wallace.

7:30 - I'm fairly certain Denver missed the memo about the Steelers line being a mess.  They aren't getting near Roethlisberger right now.  Easy first down.

6:55 - Hey, Mike Adams.  We miss you here.  Trust me.  Nice play there.  Meanwhile, Peyton Manning is certain he's never seeing the field again in this game.  This drive is taking forever.

6:40 - Oh look, lost helmet.  They have chin straps, right?

6:09 - Almost had him.  Browns fans are familiar with Ben just barely getting rid of the ball as the pressure gets there.  Field goal try time.

6:05 - Steelers 13, Broncos 7 as the near-nine minute drive finally ends.

That drive was the epitome of a Steelers drive though.  They ran the ball a lot, Roethlisberger completed passes when he needed to, and third and long didn't slow them down one bit, at least until the end when the Broncos rush finally got there.  Now we'll see if Manning can resume his mastery.

5:59 - First pass of the second half for Manning is right on the money, and back to no-huddle we go.

5:32 - That was quick...and very easy.  Second play is a short pass left on a hot read to Demaryius Thomas, and 70 yards later it's 14-13 Broncos.  Wow.  Someone might want to inform the Steelers that Manning is the quarterback and blitzing ends badly.

In short, it took the Steelers almost nine minutes to put up a field and Manning less than a minute, after sitting for 57 minutes total, to put up a touchdown.  Oh, and it's his 400th career touchdown.

5:29 - I'm pretty sure the kickers are competing to see who can get a ball in the stands first.  They are booming these kickoffs right now.

That may have been the creepiest Old Spice commercial ever.  Sometimes I wonder where these ideas come from.  The Nissan commercial afterwards wasn't much better.  Personally, if my gas station attendant knew me like that I'd be using a different company.

5:25 - That was a dangerous throw by Ben.  Triple coverage there buddy.

5:18 - That was almost as dangerous.  Tracy Porter had his hands on that one.  Ben might want to reconsider where he's throwing.

5:12 - Dropped pass on a helmet-to-helmet hit.  I'm not a big proponent of the penalties that get called, but that was a pretty blatant hit there.  Meanwhile, the refs had trouble spotting the ball after the possession started on the 20.  Uh, 15+20 is what now?

5:03 - Little dump-off loses 2 yards.  Chris Rainey should've just dropped that one.

4:28 - Roethlisberger finally goes down.  I think the Steelers lineman were on a coffee break.  The entire middle brokedown.

3:48 - God I hate Steelers fans.  Meanwhile, the Broncos apparently decided not to include Heath Miller in their gameplan.  Fourth time he's been wide open now and 3 and 18 is converted.

3:10 - Denver must really like playing on defense right now.  Short gain just got longer thanks to a facemask penalty.  Tiime of possession is terribly in favor of Pittsburgh right now.  Yikes.  At least Manning won't be tired.  If he sees the field again.

2:41 - Jonathan Dwyer is a tough guy to bring down.  He just bounced off 4 guys, 3 coaches, and several cheerleaders to pick up a first down.

2:05 - Um, Ben?  Your receiver was about 10 yards closer to you.

1:35 - I love when coaches cover their faces with paper while speaking.  Because every team makes sure to hire lip readers.

1:15 - Imagine that, a third and seven converted because Miller is wide open.  Again.  Linebackers?  Where are you?

0:24 - Dwyer is just tough.  He shrugged off Adams like he wasn't there.  However, where's the containment on the outside?  Meanwhile, replay just showed Dwyer's knee was down as he crossed the 2 yard line.  Refs?  Did you see that?  Probably not.  Luckily, scoring plays are reviewed and the right call is made.

That marks the end of the quarter.  In the third quarter, the Broncos had the ball for all of 36 seconds, the Steelers the other 14:24, yet the Broncos lead 14-13 after three quarters.  Just goes to show you.

4th Quarter

14:56 - Nice play by Von Miller to stuff the middle and drop Redman for a loss.  Can Pittsburgh punch it in?

14:11 - Yes they can.  Mike Wallace catches the pass.  Hate Ben, but that was a perfect throw.

God, I just said that.  Punch me.

Oh look, going for two.  Fail.  19-14 your score.

On a side note, how do Fox and NBC both have America's game of the week?

13:41 - Well at least this possession will be longer than two plays.  Two runs and a first down since the safeties are playing deep.

13:04 - Well Thomas just stiff-armed Troy like he was a rag doll.  Wow.

12:15 - Manning makes the position look so easy.  He faked a handoff then threw a dart to Eric Decker.

11:45 - Another laser, this time to Stokely.  He's running no-huddle like he's still in Indy.

11:20 - That was a bit high.  There was also a ton of grabbing going on between the receiver and defensive back.

11:10 - Great effort by Jacob Tamme to get that first down.  The throw was low, but he got up and fought to get past the marker when most would've just rolled out of bounds.

10:35 - He's just picking them apart right now.  Decker almost fumbled though.

9:34 - What a mess.  The Broncos ran a play while Mike Tomlin threw the challenge flag on the field, so the refs are going to review whether there was a fumble or not.  Sadly, there wasn't so the Steelers should lose the challenge and timeout.  God I hate the Steelers sometimes.  This replay isn't even close.  He doesn't lose the ball til well after his knee hits, his elbow hits, and someone throws confetti in the air.

9:23 - Tamme with the catch, although I'm sure this is going to get reviewed.  He crossed the goal line, started to fall, and the ball went flying out of his hands, but it appears he had control.  Now Denver going for two.  They convert so it's 22-19 now in favor of the Broncos.

9:23 - He thought about bringing that one out from nine yards deep, didn't he?  Meanwhile they're pointing out how Manning changed the play while the refs were trying to figure out what was going on.

9:16 - Rainy just turned a near seven yard loss into a six yard gain. Nice cutbacks.

8:35 - Nice job by Porter to break-up a long pass attempt to Wallace.  Roethlisberger got hit again too.  Big third down coming since Denver keeps giving up big plays on third down.

8:29 - Hey! They covered Heath Miller!  Wallace was wide open down the field, but Ben was under so much pressure he never saw it.  Punting time.

7:49 - Too much dancing by McGahee.  He had a hole to the left, but missed it.

6:54 - Lance Ball with a nice run on first down.  Manning is looking like he didn't miss a game, much less a season.

5:45 - What a pretty throw that was to Tamme.  He lofted that ball perfectly.  After several runs, he hits you with that.  Just not fair.

5:20 - Not a big gain, but effective run.  Manning is working quickly.

4:38 - Manning is changing the play, then waiting for the Steelers to set up, then changing it again.  Eight yards later, it's third and two and the game is on again.

3:57 - That's the most annoying thing a quarterback can do.  The safeties kept running up when Manning would go under center, so he'd back off and look at them.  They'd start backing up and he'd go back under center.  The safeties came up again, so he backed off again, this time calling a timeout.

3:51 - Incomplete pass, but a flag is thrown.  Pass Interference on the Steelers.  That one hurts.  The defensive back never turned around to find the ball.

3:44 - McGahee is stood up, but the clock is ticking on the Steelers.  Oh, and the Steelers are down to two timeouts.

3:07 - That one was too high, but he made it so no one could catch that ball.

3:03 - Back shoulder throw to Decker, but he can't haul it in.  That was a catchable ball.  Broncos have to settle for a field goal.  25-19 is the score.  A touchdown can win it with 3 minutes to go.

2:52 - How did Roethlisberger get that one off?  Bad snap, pressure coming, and he puts it right on the money for a big gain?  I just despise the guy sometimes.

2:10 - Throwaway since no one was open.  I'm pretty sure he double-pumped at least twice on that play.  One day, that ball is going to pop out of his hand.  I hope.

2:04 - Porter steps in front of the pass and he's going the other way for a pick-six.  That'll put the game away.  He just jumped the route and 43 yards later, it's a touchdown.  Now Peyton comes running in to try for two.  Well, after the two minute warning.  Okay, so the refs messed that up too.  Sheesh.  In the meantime, the conversion fails.  Yeah, the refs are going to force the NFL to get the regular refs back soon.  Like tomorrow.  Please.

1:58 - Well, that kickoff almost made it in the stands.  Now back to our regularly scheduled football game.

1:54 - Von Miller just blew by the offensive lineman to get the sack.  Sorry Mike Adams.  I love the Buckeyes, but you blew that one.

1:22 - Sanders just got knocked around like a ping-pong ball.  Third and five now.

0:57 - Miller gets him again.  It looks like Ben just gave up on the play from the get go.  He just ducked down and disappeared in a mass of jerseys.  Nice tribute to Tim Tebow by Miller by the way.  Why are the Steelers taking a timeout?

0:47 - Oh, to give the Broncos a second-wind to sack Ben for the third time on this possession.  Kneel down time.

Final thoughts

Well, the Steelers couldn't run the ball, couldn't stop Peyton Manning, gave up some big chunks of yardage on the ground, and have a horrible offensive line.

They'll still win 10 games though.

The Broncos look good tonight, but we'll see how the defense holds up.  They were getting gashed early in the game.  Manning looks like he didn't miss a day though.  That's going to get them several wins alone.

Final: Broncos 31, Steelers 19.