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Santonio hurting Steelers possible wild-card chances
Re: Santonio hurting Steelers possible wild-card chances
Originally posted by hawaiiansteel
Originally posted by Smashmouth
Maybe you should go by "HawiianHolmes".
actually, all the women in Hawaii have nicknamed me "John Holmes"...
Kinda like the fat kid we used to call "Skinny"
Molon labe
People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf. George Orwell
?We're not going to apologize for winning.?
Mike Tomlin
American metal pimped by asiansteel
Only two defining forces have ever offered to die for you 1. Jesus Christ, 2.The American G.I., One died for your soul, the other for your freedom.
Re: Santonio hurting Steelers possible wild-card chances
Originally posted by hawaiiansteel
Originally posted by fordfixer
Originally posted by hawaiiansteel
Originally posted by Smashmouth
Maybe you should go by "HawiianHolmes".
actually, all the women in Hawaii have nicknamed me "John Holmes"...
Kinda like the fat kid we used to call "Skinny"
I knew you would like that
Molon labe
People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf. George Orwell
?We're not going to apologize for winning.?
Mike Tomlin
American metal pimped by asiansteel
Only two defining forces have ever offered to die for you 1. Jesus Christ, 2.The American G.I., One died for your soul, the other for your freedom.
Re: Santonio hurting Steelers possible wild-card chances
the Jets' offense has sucked as badly as ours lately...
Jets, Packers have issues that make reaching playoffs a struggle
By Steve Wyche NFL.com
Senior Writer
Published: Dec. 13, 2010
Reuben Canales / NFL The Jets have scored just nine points during their two-game losing streak.
From "Hard Knocks" to little resistance. The New York Jets are on the verge of falling out of the playoff hunt and dredging up memories of two seasons ago, when rented ringer Brett Favre built things up for a painful crash over the final five games that left them out of the postseason. Except this time, it's fresh-armed but inconsistent Mark Sanchez leading the slide.
The woof tickets coach Rex Ryan's been selling all season might not be worth anything upon exchange, seeing as though the Jets were supposed to be better than any team in the NFL but could end up not among the six AFC playoff teams.
Their painful 10-6 loss to the Dolphins on Sunday followed a thumping by New England that dropped the Jets to 9-4. While it's still one of the best records in the NFL, it leaves them out of contention for the AFC East title that will be won by the scorching-the-earth Patriots. New York's record isn't the worry; it's where it is trending and what lies ahead.
Ryan considered benching Sanchez
With the offense struggling, Jets coach Rex Ryan said he considered benching Mark Sanchez in the third quarter of Sunday's 10-6 loss to the Dolphins.
The Jets would be the No. 5 seed if the season ended today, but it doesn't and New York has scored nine points in two games. The Jets next two opponents, Pittsburgh and Chicago, boast the second- and fourth-ranked scoring defenses, respectively. New York has the sixth-best scoring defense, allowing 18.6 points per game but the offense hasn't generated half that many points the past two games.
Adding to the situation -- there always is something else with these Jets -- Ryan said he thought about removing Sanchez from the game in the loss to Miami. He said he opted not to because it wasn't all Sanchez's fault. That's not going to make a sensitive player feel any better knowing that, even for a fleeting second, a coach who's had his back lost faith.
Sanchez and Ryan will spend this week downplaying the situation. But when the quarterback reflects on turning the ball over with more frequency (12 interceptions in the last eight games after none in the first five) and not getting his team into the end zone while guys like David Garrard and Josh Freeman have elevated their games over the past few weeks to get their teams in contention, he could start to press even more.
Then you have real problems. Well, on that note …
The Jets do have a real problem. Strength and conditionaing coach Sal Alosi opted to go Shane Stant on Dolphins special teamer Nolan Carroll who was running downfield on punt coverage and was temporarily injured. Instead of using a collapsible baton to bang Carroll on the knee like Stant did to figure skater Nancy Kerrigan, Alosi leaned his knee out and tripped Carroll, who had been re-routed out of bounds on the Jets' bench.
Alosi has apologized and he will get in trouble for this, however, this was such an out-of-place deal, it will have enough legs to be discussed for a few days, possibly masking the problems with the Jets -- or adding to them.
With all these compound fractures, we're beginning to hear about heartbreak of the past, most recently when the Jets traded for Favre in 2008 and he led the team to an 8-3 start, only to have New York lose four of its final five games and finish out of the playoffs.
It could or could not happen again, but there is not much reason to believe New York is going to get well this week at Pittsburgh, which is trying to stay ahead of Baltimore in the AFC North and gain even more momentum for a playoff run.
New York made it to the AFC title game last season and ran its record to 9-2 before dropping two straight. Should the Jets stumble, the thumbing of noses at Ryan and the self-hype machine will be immeasurable. They'd have brought it on themselves. The only way they can prevent that is to play the best football of their season over the final three weeks. However, the obstacles in their way are serious -- with some of those hurdles coming from within their own building.
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