Posted on
October 08, 2013 by
Andy Larmand
As we took off into the second quarter of the season (for most teams), the fascinating phenomena kept rolling in. Included in this week’s list is something that hasn’t happened to the New England offense in seven years, a first for any quarterback since the merger, the continuation of home dominance for one NFC North team, a record-tying day for one tight end and an offensive outburst in Dallas. Here are your Week 5 NFL headlines.
Travis Benjamin had a career night in the return game for the red-hot Browns.
The Browns scored their first rushing touchdown of the season (and it wasn’t Trent Richardson) in their fifth game and stayed perfect when starting quarterback Brian Hoyer as they beat the Bills, 37-24, on Thursday night. They did, however, lose Hoyer for the season with a partially torn ACL suffered early in the game. Cleveland punt returner, Travis Benjamin, tied a franchise record with 166 punt return yards in the win for the first-place Browns. Their 37 points were the most they have scored in a game since putting up 41 back in 2009. Since Week 3, they are averaging 28.3 points per game after averaging eight points per game in the first two weeks.
The Patriots fell from the ranks of the unbeaten and the Bengals improved to 6-22 against the AFC East since 1998 as New England managed only six points in the 13-6 loss. The six points were the fewest for the high-powered New England offense since being shut out on Dec. 10, 2006, 21-0, in Week 14 against Miami. The Bengals’ 5-22 record had been the third-worst against one division in that span. Andy Dalton’s first-quarter interception in the red zone was the first red-zone pick of his career. Tom Brady fell two short of the all-time record for consecutive games with a touchdown pass as he failed to record one in game No. 53. The Pats had won 63 straight games when allowing 13 points or less with their last such loss coming in 2001. Read the rest of this entry →
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Category
Andy Larmand, Football, General, NFL
Posted on
October 01, 2013 by
Andy Larmand
The Saints’ offense, led by Jimmy Graham and Darren Sproles (43), has them off to a 4-0 start.
For the first time in 2013, the NFL traveled across the pond to Wembley Stadium in Week 4 for a matchup of a couple of surprise 0-3 teams and did not disappoint the locals. Also featured is Andrew Luck matching an impressive quarterback mark, a double-digit, fourth-quarter comeback in Houston, Denver scoring and then scoring some more and the Chiefs improving to 4-0. Perhaps more notably, the blue team in New York is now 0-4.
The 49ers and Rams began the week in an NFC West showdown on Thursday night and after two straight losses in Weeks 2 and 3, the Niners kept a three-game losing streak off of Jim Harbaugh’s resume with a 35-11 rout of St. Louis. Harbaugh has still never lost three in a row as 49ers head coach. The Rams finished the night with 18 total rushing yards on 19 attempts. They have now recorded less than 100 yards on the ground in nine straight games. Also, they were the first team since 2008 with 19-plus rush attempts and 18 or fewer yards. They were also the last team to do that. San Fran improved to 5-0 all-time when Colin Kaepernick throws two or more touchdown passes.
The Vikings scored a first-quarter touchdown for the eighth straight game as Christian Ponder connected with Greg Jennings from 70 yards out to help them get up, 10-0, on the Steelers in London. The eight straight with a touchdown in the first quarter is a team record for them. Pittsburgh is 0-4 for the first time since 1968. Jennings needs just two more 70-yard touchdown receptions to tie the all-time record of nine held by Jerry Rice.
Read the rest of this entry →
Tags: 49ersAndrew Luckandy LarmandAntonio gatesaqib talibArizonaArizona CardinalsatlantaAtlanta FalconsBaltimoreBaltimore RavensBearsbengalsbillsbroncosbuccaneersbucsbuffaloBuffalo BillsCardinalscardsCarolina PantherschargersChicagochicago bearschiefsChristian ponderCincinnatiCincinnati Bengalscolin kaepernickcoltscowboysdallasDallas CowboysDarren sprolesdenverDenver BroncosDetroitDetroit LionsDez BryantdolphinsDrew BreeseliasfalconsFootballGiantsGreen Bay Packersgreg jenningsHoustonHouston texansIndianapolisindianapolis coltsJacksonvilleJacksonville jaguarsjaguarsjake lockerjay cutlerjay feelyJerry Ricejetsjim harbaughjimmy grahamJoe FlaccoJohn ElwayKansas cityKansas City ChiefsLeGarrette BlountlionsLondonLondon fletchermaimi dolphinsmatt flynnMatt RyanmergerMiamimike glennonMinnesotaMinnesota VikingsMonday Night Footballnew englandNew England PatriotsNew OrleansNew Orleans SaintsNew YorkNew York GiantsNew York JetsNFCNFC WestOaklandOakland RaidersPatriotspeyton manningPhilip RiversPittsburghPittsburgh Steelersquarterraidersramsravensredskinsreggie bushrg3Robert griffin IIISaintssan diegoSan Diego Chargerssan FranciscoSan Francisco 49ersseahawksseattleSeattle SeahawksSt. LouisSt. Louis RamssteelersSunday night footballsuper bowltampatampa bayTampa Bay Buccaneerstampa bay bucsTennesseeTennessee titanstexansThursday nigt footballtitansTom Bradytouchdowntrindon hollidayturnovervikingsWashingtonWashington Redskinsweek 4wembley stadium
Category
Andy Larmand, Football, NFL
Posted on
September 24, 2013 by
Andy Larmand
As September continues to move toward October, this NFL season is providing us with some truths that stand the test of time and some that have and will continue to shock us all. And then, there are the teams or players who break the norm – finally. Week 3 saw the end of an almost-century-long losing streak, the worst loss ever for one head coach, a potential Cinderella story getting to 3-0, a first for the 49ers since 1958, and the Jaguars, well, being the Jaguars. Here are your Week 3 NFL headlines.
Alex Smith in Kansas City is working out all right so far as KC is 3-0.
The Eagles lost their eighth straight game at home and the Chiefs, led by former Eagles coach, Andy Reid, improved to 3-0 with a 26-16 win to open the week on Thursday night. It is just the second time Philly has ever lost eight in a row at home and first time since 1936-37. Lesean McCoy managed his third-highest rushing total in the loss, but only second-highest of the season with 158 yards and Michael Vick posted a career-high 61-yard run. The Chiefs joined the 2002 Panthers as the last team to start a season 3-0 after winning two or fewer games the year before. Alex Smith became the first Kansas City signal caller to win his first three starts with the team since Joe Montana in 1993.
Calvin Johnson tied Torry Holt as the fourth-fastest player to accumulate 8,000 career receiving yards as he did so in his 95th career game and Detroit beat the Redskins, 27-20. The win was the first ever for the Lions in the city of Washington (1-21) as they had not beaten the Redskins on the road since they were in Boston in 1935. The Skins fell to 0-3, but Robert Griffin III’s 975 yards through three games are the second-most all-time by a quarterback who started out 0-3. Matthew Stafford became just the second quarterback since 2001 to throw for 200-plus yards in the first half of each of his first three games of a season. Read the rest of this entry →
Tags: 0-33-0. Tony Gonzalez49ersAaron Rodgersadrian petersonalex smithandy LarmandAndy ReidArizonaArizona CardinalsAtlanta FalconsatlantsBearsbengalsbillsBrandon Weedenbrian hoyerbroncosbrownsbuccaneersbucsbuffaloBuffalo BillsCalvin JohnsonCardinalsCarolinaCarolina PantherschargersChicagochicago bearschiefsChristian ponderCincinnatiCincinnati BengalsClevelandclevelans brownsCoachcoltscowboysdallasDallas Cowboysdemarco murraydenverDenver BroncosDetroitDetroit LionsdolphinsDrew BreeseaglesEli ManningeliasespnfalconsfingerFootballgeno smithGeorge HalasGiantsgreen bayGreen Bay PackersheadlinesIndianapolisindianapolis coltsinterceptionJacksonvilleJacksonville jaguarsjagsjaguarsjake lockerJerry RicejetsJoe MontanaKansas cityKansas City Chiefskc chiefskenbrell thompkinslesean mccoylionsmarc trestmanmatthew StaffordMiamiMiami DolphinsMichael Vickmike vickMonday Night Footballnew englandNew England PatriotsNew OrleansNew Orleans SaintsNew YorkNew York GiantsNew York JetsNFLny giantsny jetspackerspanthersPatriotspatspeyton manningPhiladelphiaPhiladelphia EaglesPhilip RiversPittsburghPittsburgh Steelersquarterbackramsrashad Johnsonrecordredskinsrg3Robert griffin IIIrookierushrushingRussell WilsonsackSaintssan diegoSan Diego Chargerssan FranciscoSan Francisco 49ersseahawksseattleSeattle Seahawksspencer lanningSt. LouisSt. Louis Ramssteelersstl ramsSundaySunday night footballtamp baytampaTampa Bay Buccaneerstb12TennesseeTennessee titansThursday night footballtitansTom BradyTom Coughlintorry holttouchdownturnoverWashingtonWashington Redskinsweek 3win
Category
Andy Larmand, Football, NFL
Posted on
September 11, 2013 by
Andy Larmand
Lucky Seven: Peyton Manning had a night for the ages to open the season.
After seven long months of OTA’s and talking about Tim Tebow, football returned this Thursday under the lights in Denver, Colorado. And this time the lights stayed on for the whole game. The season got started with one of the best players of this generation reminding us all that he can still get it done, included a first for a veteran wide receiver, the extension of a couple of Opening Day streaks, one milestone coaching victory and a first for a Lions‘ player since the days of Barry Sanders. Here are all the important notes, interesting accomplishments and head-scratching statistics from Week 1 of the brand new season.
Peyton Manning tied the all-time single-game record with seven touchdown passes in the Broncos‘ 49-27 win over the defending champion Ravens Thursday night. He became the first quarterback to throw seven TD passes in a game since Joe Kapp in 1969. It was the 74th time in his career he has thrown three or more touchdown passes in a game – the most all-time. Denver’s 22-point win was the largest ever opening-week win by a team against a defending Super Bowl champ.
The Falcons lost their first ever season opener against the Saints as they fell, 23-17, after blowing a 10-0 first-quarter lead. Atlanta had been 6-0 all-time against New Orleans to open the season. In the loss, however, Tony Gonzalez became just the third player to record a touchdown catch in 17 different seasons, joining Jerry Rice (19) and Irving Fryar, who also did it 17 times.
With two against the
Bills,
Tom Brady has now thrown at least one touchdown pass in 49 consecutive games for the
Patriots – five shy of tying
Drew Brees for the all-time record. He also improved to 21-2 in his career against Buffalo. New England won its 10th straight opener and they forced at least one turnover in their 28th straight game.
The Bucs fell to 0-7 all-time in road games against the Jets as New York pulled out the 18-17 win on a last-second field goal. Tampa committed 13 penalties in the game, leading to five New York first downs and helped put them in position to kick the game-winning field goal. Rookie Geno Smith helped lead the Jets with a 76.0 QBR in the fourth quarter.
Marc Trestman joined Chip Kelly and Andy Reid in winning their debuts with new teams.
A.J. Green hauled in nine passes for 162 yards to break Chad Johnson‘s franchise record for receiving yards in a season opener, but the Bengals fell to the Bears in Marc Trestman‘s debut, 24-21.Bears kicker, Robbie Gould, set a Soldier Field record with a 58-yard field goal in the win.
Seattle and Carolina combined for just 19 points in the Seahawks‘ 12-7 win. Cam Newton put up career lows in total yards (163) and passing yards (125) for the Panthers in the loss. Russell Wilson threw for 320 yards, despite managing just the 12 points and it was the first 300-yard game of his career.
Ben Roethlisberger threw for just 191 yards as the Steelers mustered just nine points and fell to the Titans, 16-9. It was the fifth time since 2011 that Big Ben threw for less than 200 yards in a game. Though this was Pittsburgh’s first loss in a home opener since 2002, Roethlisberger did go over the career 30,000-yard passing mark on the day. Pittsburgh got on the board three seconds into the game after it was ruled that Tennessee kick returner, Darius Reynaud, fielded the opening kickoff before the goal line and then took a knee in the endzone. The safety tied the fastest score in any game since the merger.
The Browns lost their ninth straight season opener, 23-10, at the hands of the Dolphins. Nine straight is the longest active streak in the league. The teams combined for just 67 rushing yards and the Browns were just 1-for-14 on third down. Brandon Weeden set a new career-high for pass attempts in a game with 53, but threw three interceptions and was sacked three times.
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Tags: 49ersa.j. greenadrian petersonalex smithandre JohnsonAndrew Luckandy LarmandAndy Reidanquan boldinArizonaArizona CardinalsatlantaAtlanta FalconsBaltimoreBaltimore Ravensbarry sandersBearsBen Roethlisbergerbengalsbig benbillsBrandon WeedenbroncosbrownsbuccaneersbucsbuffaloBuffalo BillsCam NewtonCardinalsCarolinaCarolina Pantherschad johnsonchargersChicagochicago bearschiefsChip KellyCincinnatiCincinnati BengalsClevelandCleveland BrownsCoachcolin kaepernickcoltscowboysdallasDallas Cowboysdarius reynauddenverDenver BroncosDetroit LionsdolphinsDonovan McNabbDrew Breesduce staleyeaglesEli ManningfalconsFootballgeno smithGiantsgmengreen bayGreen Bay PackersHoustonHouston texansIndianapolisindianapolis coltsindyinterceptionirving fryarJacksonvilleJacksonville jaguarsjagsjaguarsjeff fisherJerry Ricejetsjoe kappJoe Montanajordy nelsonKansas cityKansas City ChiefsLarry Fitzgeraldlesean mccoymarc trestmanMiamiMiami DolphinsMinnesotaMinnesota VikingsMonday Night Footballnew englandNew England PatriotsNew OrleansNew Orleans SaintsNew YorkNew York GiantsNew York JetsNFLnyjOaklandOakland Raidersochocincoopening dayOTAspackerspantherspassPatriotspatspeyton manningPhiladelphiaPhiladelphia EaglesPhilip RiversphillyPittsburghPittsburgh Steelersquarterbackraidersramsravensreceptionrecordredskinsreggie bushRobbie gouldrushRussell WilsonsacksafetySaintssan diegoSan Diego Chargerssan FranciscoSan Francisco 49ersseahawksseattleSeattle Seahawkssolider fieldSt. LouisSt. Louis Ramssteelerssuper bowlsuper bowl eratampatampa bayTampa Bay Buccaneerstampa bay bucstdTennesseeTennessee titansTerrelle PryortexansThursdayTim TebowtitansTom BradyTony GonzaleztouchdownturnovervikingsWashingtonWashington Redskinswide receiverwinyards
Category
Andy Larmand, Football, NFL
Posted on
June 29, 2011 by
John Wingspread Howell
I’ve gradually gotten to the point that Twitter is my primary means of relating to people. My favorite use of the social medium is exchanging comments on Sabres games during games. It doesn’t matter who’s at the game and who’s in the TV room at home. We’re all sitting next to each other in the same section in the virtual arena.
Often we commiserate with each other about bad plays, missed opportunities, and foreboding signs from the tone and tenor of play by our hometown heroes. There is usually a hero, especially when the game goes well. I remember one of my “tweeps” (Twitter friends) typing “Gerbe Gerbe Gerbe Gerbe” when little Nathan Gerbe made stellar play after stellar play as the Sabres momentum toward an unlikely playoff berth started to build in one game late last season.
Buffalo is a unique town, even among small market towns. We are what we are, and because we are the butt of snow jokes and worse-than-Cleveland insinuations, our rust belt hackles get up quite easily. The upside of that syndrome is that it gives us a stronger sense of collective angst. We are David against the Goliaths of the world. We are on the side of justice on behalf of all the worlds victims and underdogs.
That being said, it was providential and perhaps inevitable that New York State’s greatest political victory for the underdog came as Buffalo sports fans, normally so obsessed with sports that we can be oblivious to the real world, were following the NHL draft and the unveiling of the Buffalo Bills new uniforms, all in one night. Read the rest of this entry →
Tags: buffaloBuffalo SportsNew York Politics
Category
General
Posted on
October 20, 2010 by
John Wingspread Howell
I moved back to Buffalo after being gone for 31 years. I guess I’m getting old but I don’t remember so much interest in the Yankees back then. It’s probably just that my mind is going. There’s probably no change. But in any case, there are an awful lot of Yankee fans in Buffalo—or else its just an act of support for locally owned New Era Caps that half the millinery products observed in the Queen City have that overlapping NY logo on them.
As someone whose favorite team is whoever the Yanks are playing, call me a big fat Ranger fan at the moment. And since I am a die-hard fan of the underdog, I’d be rooting for Texas even though they are from my least favorite state, and formerly owned by one of my least favorite Presidents, and from a town almost as arrogant and full of itself as the Big Apple.
Despite all of that, though, for the underdog fan, the Rangers cause is the quintessential band wagon to jump upon because this franchise has never won a single championship, either in Washington, or more recently, that other hotbed of corruption and paying to play known as Metro DFW. So… Senators—Rangers—losers all and always. Until 2010, perhaps. But I digress.
This really isn’t about the Senators/Rangers at all. It’s about Buffalo and how Buffalo is really not and really should not be about the Yankees, New York City, or anything having to do with either one. Read the rest of this entry →
Tags: buffaloNew York Yankees
Category
Baseball, General