Cory Puffett
It’s been almost eleven months since I’ve written a
non-fantasy football blog post, and it’s with a very different perspective that
I write this one.
I spent the 2013 season writing almost every single day,
whether it was recapping or previewing games, trying to give you the low-down
on the most important news of the week, or keeping you in the loop on my
fantasy football league during it’s inaugural season.
Last year was the most fun I’ve had blogging about the NFL,
and part of that was because my co-hosts on Football
Freaks contributed to my blog from time to time. It’s the closest I’ve come
to feeling like a professional NFL analyst.
This year I needed the time off from writing. I switched my
college major and needed to get and stay on track with schoolwork. Hopefully I
can return near last year’s production in 2015, but that’ll be determined at a
later date.
In the mean time, I watched plenty of football this season,
but not like last year.
Last year I watched football all day every Sunday and I
would catch a lot of the games I missed on NFL Game Rewind. I haven’t gotten
around to watching games that weren’t televised here this season, so I have a
vastly different perspective when looking back on the regular season than I did
at this time last year.
The 2014 season was certainly interesting, but it felt
strange. My focus for most of the season was on fantasy football, so rather
than analyzing teams every week, I was focused on individual players. I spent
more time focusing on my team, the Redskins, rather than the rest of the
league.
Of course, I was very in tune with what players were doing
from one week to the next, but most weeks I couldn’t tell you which teams were
really gelling and which were pretenders.
That said, there are a few things I do want to bring up in
closing the 2014 season.
1. Romo haters can
find someone new to harass
I still have Aaron Rodgers slated as my MVP, but Tony Romo
is a very close second. Against the Redskins on Sunday he threw his first and
only December interception of 2014. He finished the year with 34 touchdowns and
9 interceptions to go with a completion percentage of 69.9, more than three
percentage points higher than any other season of his career in which he played
at least half the season.
Obviously his haters won’t find a new target, they can come
up with all kinds of things to say about the 2014 edition of Romo. He had the
best offensive line in football, true. He had DeMarco Murray, true. He had Dez
Bryant, true. But tell me your MVP favorite and I’ll give you another player
with plenty of guys around him.
2. Peyton Manning is
on the decline
Personally, I think the same can be said for Tom Brady, but
after the way he rebounded earlier this season, I’m going to wait on that one.
Peyton, however, seems to be a different issue. Kurt Warner argues that Peyton
isn’t really declining, the Broncos are just focusing too much on the run game
and are taking Manning out of his rhythm.
While Warner’s statement may have some merit, this is the
best regular season quarterback of all time we’re talking about. Some would
argue, and I myself have in the past, that he is the greatest quarterback of all time. He has never consistently
thrown a tight spiral, but I can’t remember the last time he had a four- or
five-game stretch with as many ducks as he’s thrown these past several weeks.
I’m not counting the Broncos out this postseason, but I have
a feeling that if they manage to get back to the Super Bowl, it will be due to
their run game and a defense that is much better than it was in 2013.
3. Seattle is no Super
Bowl lock
Don’t get me wrong; the Seahawks can get there. If I’m not
counting Denver out, there’s no way I can count out Seattle and still have any
shred of merit as a football analyst. Seattle’s defense is every bit as good as
it was last year. I’ve seen some inconsistencies that are a bit concerning, but
the talent is all there and I have to believe they’ll pull it together in their
playoff games.
But the offense is more than a little concerning. From what
little I’ve seen of them, mixed with studying score sheets, this seems to be
one of the more inconsistent units in the NFL. Obviously they had some issued
early in the season, but even over the past month it seems like they’re hit or
miss. I haven’t seen enough to say whether it’s play calling or Russell Wilson
or something else, but even with the road to Super Bowl XLIX going through the
pacific northwest, I’m not ready hand it to them.
4. Joe Flacco had a
very solid 2014 season
I’m still hesitant to give him too much credit because of
how quickly Baltimore fans are to take it to the bank. He’s still not elite.
However, I have to give credit where it is due and this was
probably the second best season he’s had to date. Flacco set a career high for
touchdown passes with 27 and threw just 12 picks. He even had eight games
without an interception and, granted it was against Tampa Bay, a five-touchdown
game. I don’t put much stock into his career-high 67.27 QBR because I’m not a fan
of the stat, but his 90.9 passer rating was the second best of his career.
I’m not sold on Baltimore for the playoffs, but that’s
mostly because of their poor passing defense. Their passing offense sits
squarely in the middle of the NFL, which is good enough to get to the Super
Bowl with a good defense. I just have a few too many questions about that side
of the ball to give this team a shot at more than one playoff win.
5. Andrew Luck has not separated himself from the 2013 QBs
It sure seemed like he had during the first half of the 2014
season. In fact, he had separated himself from all QBs. He had the most touchdowns, the most yards, and don’t
quote me on it but I think he had the best completion percentage at one point
early in the season.
Maybe it was the loss of Ahmad Bradshaw, or maybe it was the
sheer number of passes he’d already thrown, but Luck slipped back to the land
of the mortals very quickly during the second half of the season. Early in the
season he had his share of turnover problems, but his other production more
than made up for that. The problem was he only had three turnover-free games
all season and his production of late has been poor. After throwing for 300
yards and/or three touchdowns in each of his first ten games, he’s managed to
do so just once in his past six, during which time he’s thrown six
interceptions and lost four fumbles.
I will preview this weekend’s wild card games later this
week. If you’d like to get my take on any other NFL topics, drop me a line and
I’ll publish another post. Also, we plan to do an All-Sports Crew podcast this week, so look for a link to that on
Facebook, Twitter or Google+ on Thursday or Friday.