The 'Monday Night Fiasco' finally put an end to the NFL's replacement officials. Photo credit to CBS Chicago. |
Happy New Year, everyone! To kick off 2013, I am reviewing
the 2012 regular season. Today I will cover the first nine weeks and tomorrow I
will review the last eight weeks of the season. My predictions for this weekend
will come Wednesday on The All-Sports Crew’s blog and in each of my Wild-Card previews, which will start coming
out Thursday.
Heading into Week 10, these were the standings in the NFL:
AFC East
|
AFC North
|
AFC South
|
AFC West
|
1. NE (5-3)
|
1. BAL (6-2)
|
1. HOU (7-1)
|
1. DEN (5-3)
|
2. MIA (4-4)
|
2. PIT (5-3)
|
2. IND (5-3)
|
2. SD (4-4)
|
T-3. NYJ (3-5)
|
3. CIN (3-5)
|
3. TEN (3-6)
|
3. OAK (3-5)
|
T-3. BUF (3-5)
|
4. CLE (2-7)
|
4. JAC (1-7)
|
4. KC (1-7)
|
NFC East
|
NFC North
|
NFC South
|
NFC West
|
1. NYG (6-3)
|
1. CHI (7-1)
|
1. ATL (8-0)
|
1. SF (6-2)
|
T-2. DAL (3-5)
|
2. GB (6-3)
|
2. TB (4-4)
|
2. SEA (5-4)
|
T-2. PHI (3-5)
|
3. MIN (5-4)
|
3. NO (3-5)
|
3. ARI (4-5)
|
4. WAS (3-6)
|
4. DET (4-4)
|
4. CAR (2-6)
|
4. StL (3-5)
|
It seemed clear at the time that Atlanta and Houston were a
close one-two in the NFL. Houston had picked up right where they left off when
Matt Schaub got hurt in 2011 and the Falcons were flat-out winning, even if
some games were closer than they should have been.
AFC East
The Patriots had suffered a few tough losses, and they didn’t
have a feel of consistency to them. They seemed to be in line to win the
division, but mostly on the merit of everyone else in the division being bad.
Down in Miami, Ryan Tannehill was turning heads with pretty rapid improvement
through the first several weeks.
AFC North
Baltimore kicked off the season with a big win over
Cincinnati in which they showcased a very efficient hurry-up offense. Things
settled down for them after that game but they kept control of the division
early. Cincinnati started the season slow but Andy Dalton and A.J. Green were
starting to make their offense look like a serious contender.
AFC South
Houston, as I mentioned, was considered one of the league’s
best teams. Losing Brian Cushing seemed not to hurt as much as we thought it
would, thanks mostly to J.J. Watt’s phenomenal play. Indianapolis, meanwhile,
was in the middle of a CHUCKSTRONG campaign to win games for Coach Pagano, who
was away from the team receiving treatment for leukemia.
AFC West
San Diego controlled the division early on, but a memorable
second-half collapse handed the division on a silver platter to Peyton Manning
and the Denver Broncos, allowing Denver to lead the division with the hard part
of their schedule completely out of the way.
NFC East
The Giants struggled in their season opener against Dallas,
becoming the first defending Super Bowl champs to lose the NFL Kickoff Game.
Dallas cooled off after that game and New York caught fire, winning six of
their next eight.
NFC North
Chicago was rolling through the first half of their
schedule, mostly due to a weak schedule. Their only loss was to Green Bay and
they hadn’t played another good opponent otherwise. The Packers, meanwhile,
were hot and cold early one but seemed to be on the rise. The Vikings were the
surprise of the NFL. Adrian Peterson hadn’t been noticed as much as Christian
Ponder as the second-year quarterback was playing excellent ball in the early
part of the season.
NFC South
Atlanta was running away with the division and was the only
undefeated team left after Week 9. Tampa Bay seemed to be picking things up and
a young man named Doug Martin seemed to be inserting his name in Rookie of the
Year discussions while Josh Freeman was throwing for 300+ yards seemingly every
game. New Orleans was suffering the effects of having their head coach, and
their interim head coach, on top of a few players, suspended.
NFC West
The 49ers had suffered a few letdowns but still seemed to be
a close second to the Falcons in the conference. Seattle seemed more of a
pretender than anything with a home win over New England in a game when Tom
Brady played awful and of course the infamous ‘Monday Night Fiasco’ against
Green Bay.
Replacement Refs
The first three weeks were dominated by talk of how poor a
job the replacement officials were doing. We may have been a little too
hard on them and not hard enough on the league for not getting a deal done with
the officials’ union, but it was pretty bad and it all culminated on that
Monday Night game between Seattle and Green Bay. Thankfully the madness ended
within a couple days of that game and we the real refs were back from Week 4
on.
Bounty Scandal
The New Orleans Saints had to deal with a lot with the NFL’s
crackdown on their bounty system, which we still don’t really seem to have
concrete evidence of. They lost the first several games of the season,
including an overtime loss to Kansas City, who never led during regulation of
any game in the first half of the season.
Rookie Quarterbacks
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