Justin Tuck had a little trouble Sunday night before finding his intended Gatorade target— Tom Coughlin— after the New York Giants defeated the Dallas Cowboys, 31-14— but it sounds like the Giants defensive end plans on dumping a cooler of the juice on his head coach after the Super Bowl.
"We're capable of winning the Super Bowl," said Tuck after the Giants clinched their first playoff spot since 2008.
Tuck finally did douse Coughlin with the Gatorade— with a little help from the coach's son-in-law Chris Snee—after the Giants handily beat the Cowboys at MetLife Stadium.
Tuck's optimism is not unfounded. After a lackluster performance against the Washington Redskins, the G-Men had relatively easy wins against two bitter rivals— the Cowboys and New York Jets.
The Giants defensive line is healthy for the first time this season and sacked Tony Romo six times and chased him all over the field.
Last week against the Jets, the Giants got to Mark Sanchez five times and forced three interceptions.
The Giants (9-7) run to the Super Bowl is a marathon and kicks off next Sunday in a wild card game against the Atlanta Falcons (10-6) at MetLife Stadium.
The Falcons might prove to be a bigger challenge than either the Cowboys or Jets. Dallas came to New Jersey with Romo and his bruised throwing hand and the Jets were there with Sanchez and his black and blue ego.
The Giants now face a formidable opponent with another Ryan on their side.
After beating loudmouths Rex and Rob, they will face Matt Ryan— a quarterback who does his talking on the field.
Combine Atlanta's Ryan with running back Michael Turner, receivers Julio Jones and Roddy White and veteran Tight-end Tony Gonzalez and you have a multi-faceted offense that can run up the score.
Let's play devil's advocate and assume the Giants do beat the Falcons and the New Orleans Saints defeat the Detroit Lions, then they will have to play the Green Bay Packer at Lambeau Field.
The Giants almost beat the Packers in a 38-35 shoot-out on Dec. 4 at MetLife Stadium and did beat the Pack in the NFC Championship game in Green Bay on their run to their 2008 Super Bowl title.
Tuck isn't the only Giants player sipping the Gatorade.
"I think we're in the perfect position," said linebacker Mathias Kiwanuka. " We didn't get here the way that we wanted to, but regardless of what happened during the season, we're in the playoffs, we won our division, we have a chance at the Super Bowl."
The Giants are the first NFC East champion to finish the regular season with less than 10 wins but in 2007 no one gave New York any chance of making the Super Bowl— never mind beating the undefeated— and 12-point favorites— New England Patriots.
Tuck, who has battled through a series of injuries throughout the season, says he is healthy now and—combined with Osi Umenyiora and Jason Pierre-Paul— give the Giants the best pass-rushing trio in the NFL.
Never one to be left out of the verbal mix, Giants running back Brandon Jacobs backed Tuck's bravado.
"I wouldn't want to face the New York Giants right now," said Jacobs. "It's going to be tough to beat us in the playoffs."
Tampilkan postingan dengan label Mathias Kiwanuka. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label Mathias Kiwanuka. Tampilkan semua postingan
Senin, 02 Januari 2012
Selasa, 08 November 2011
Tom Brady Went From Elite QB To An Irate One
If Eli Manning finally proved to the world he should be considered an "elite" quarterback—in the class of Tom Brady—with his late-game heroics on Sunday, it was was the New York Giants defense which may have turned the New England Patriots QB into an irate one.
The Giants D was all over the All-everything QB during Sunday's 24-20 win but Brady's frustration reached an early boil when one of his passes was tipped into Giants linebacker Mathias Kiwanuka's hands in the second quarter.
Brady vented his frustration after the drive-killing INT by heading to the bench, slamming a cup of Gatorade to the ground and getting a power drink spritz. It looked like the cold sprinkle even caught the pissed off signal-caller off guard.
It wasn't only the Giants coverage that made Brady's afternoon miserable all day. The pass rush was all over him—resulting in two sacks, three knockdowns and over a dozen hurries. Something the New England glamor boy isn't used to—especially in his home stadium.
The Patriots lost at home for the first time in 20 games.
While Brady wasn't terrible, it Manning who looked more elite after rallying the Giants on a game-winning 80-yard, eight play drive with 15 seconds left in the game. It was moments after Brady had given New England their own last minute 20-17 lead with 1:36 to go.
The way things are going for the Patriots right now, Brady may be seeing more Gatorade sprinkles than showers.
The Giants D was all over the All-everything QB during Sunday's 24-20 win but Brady's frustration reached an early boil when one of his passes was tipped into Giants linebacker Mathias Kiwanuka's hands in the second quarter.
Brady vented his frustration after the drive-killing INT by heading to the bench, slamming a cup of Gatorade to the ground and getting a power drink spritz. It looked like the cold sprinkle even caught the pissed off signal-caller off guard.
It wasn't only the Giants coverage that made Brady's afternoon miserable all day. The pass rush was all over him—resulting in two sacks, three knockdowns and over a dozen hurries. Something the New England glamor boy isn't used to—especially in his home stadium.
The Patriots lost at home for the first time in 20 games.
While Brady wasn't terrible, it Manning who looked more elite after rallying the Giants on a game-winning 80-yard, eight play drive with 15 seconds left in the game. It was moments after Brady had given New England their own last minute 20-17 lead with 1:36 to go.
The way things are going for the Patriots right now, Brady may be seeing more Gatorade sprinkles than showers.
Kamis, 22 September 2011
Ex-Giants Linebacker Says Fewell Taught Flopping To Players
The New York Giants are being taught how to fake injuries by the team's defensive coordinator Perry Fewell, former Giants linebacker Bryan Kehl told Howard Balzer of The Sports Xchange.
"Perry Fewell coaches that," Kehl told Balzer. "He's their D.C.[defensive coordinator]. He coaches that."
Call it the Fewell Flop.
Kehl was a little-used linebacker who played a couple of months with the Giants when Fewell started in 2010. Kehl was waived after week 1 and picked up by the Rams-- where he is still on the roster.
While Kehl didn't perform for the Giants, it sounds like he got some free acting lessons as a parting gift.
The NFL might be interested in what Kehl allegedly learned from Fewell. The league released a statement to all 32 teams warning of fines, suspensions and even loss of draft picks if it is determined that someone took a dive on the field during a game.
The bad taste surrounding Giants safety Deon Grant and linebacker Jacquain Williams' "injuries" during the team's 28-16 win over the St. Louis Rams during Monday night's game won't wash away.
If you haven't heard, as soon as the Rams got into the red zone with their hurry-up offense and the winded Giants defense unable to make quick substitutions, Grant and Williams both dropped like fainting Justin Bieber tweens to stop the drive.
It looked like Williams saw Grant was down and he miraculously hopped right up while Grant waited for medical attention. The Rams drive stalled and they settled for a field goal.
The Rams are still miffed over the incident.
Rams quarterback Sam Bradford said he heard Giants players telling one another to "Go down,' after Grant tackled running back Cadillac Williams on the Giants 7-yard line late in the first quarter.
Grant continues to declare his innocence and showed reporters his swollen right knee and said he hasn't missed a game in 12 pro seasons. On videos, Grant is shown holding his left knee.
"You go and check my medical report," Grant said Wednesday. "I have the injuries to speak for it... two torn MCL's that I never had surgery, wrist surgery, shoulder surgery, a broken hip with a metal plate and screws in it. How can another person that's not in your body tell you you are faking an injury?"
Grant conceded that he heard the "Go down" yells, but said it was because he couldn't get up and off the field.
In the memo sent to each team, the NFL said they will punish future bad acting jobs.
The memo stated: "Those found to be violators will be subject to appropriate disciplinary action for conduct detrimental to the game."
Giants defensive end Mathias Kiwanuka thinks accusing injured players of flopping could lead to trouble.
"I think it's a really dangerous path to go down," said Kiwanuka. "If you start letting referees decide whether a player is hurt or not, it might come back to bite them big time... it might lead to lawsuits."
An NFL spokesperson said no punishment could be handed down without solid proof-- like an admission of guilt.
"Perry Fewell coaches that," Kehl told Balzer. "He's their D.C.[defensive coordinator]. He coaches that."
Call it the Fewell Flop.
Kehl was a little-used linebacker who played a couple of months with the Giants when Fewell started in 2010. Kehl was waived after week 1 and picked up by the Rams-- where he is still on the roster.
While Kehl didn't perform for the Giants, it sounds like he got some free acting lessons as a parting gift.
The NFL might be interested in what Kehl allegedly learned from Fewell. The league released a statement to all 32 teams warning of fines, suspensions and even loss of draft picks if it is determined that someone took a dive on the field during a game.
The bad taste surrounding Giants safety Deon Grant and linebacker Jacquain Williams' "injuries" during the team's 28-16 win over the St. Louis Rams during Monday night's game won't wash away.
If you haven't heard, as soon as the Rams got into the red zone with their hurry-up offense and the winded Giants defense unable to make quick substitutions, Grant and Williams both dropped like fainting Justin Bieber tweens to stop the drive.
It looked like Williams saw Grant was down and he miraculously hopped right up while Grant waited for medical attention. The Rams drive stalled and they settled for a field goal.
The Rams are still miffed over the incident.
Rams quarterback Sam Bradford said he heard Giants players telling one another to "Go down,' after Grant tackled running back Cadillac Williams on the Giants 7-yard line late in the first quarter.
Grant continues to declare his innocence and showed reporters his swollen right knee and said he hasn't missed a game in 12 pro seasons. On videos, Grant is shown holding his left knee.
"You go and check my medical report," Grant said Wednesday. "I have the injuries to speak for it... two torn MCL's that I never had surgery, wrist surgery, shoulder surgery, a broken hip with a metal plate and screws in it. How can another person that's not in your body tell you you are faking an injury?"
Grant conceded that he heard the "Go down" yells, but said it was because he couldn't get up and off the field.
In the memo sent to each team, the NFL said they will punish future bad acting jobs.
The memo stated: "Those found to be violators will be subject to appropriate disciplinary action for conduct detrimental to the game."
Giants defensive end Mathias Kiwanuka thinks accusing injured players of flopping could lead to trouble.
"I think it's a really dangerous path to go down," said Kiwanuka. "If you start letting referees decide whether a player is hurt or not, it might come back to bite them big time... it might lead to lawsuits."
An NFL spokesperson said no punishment could be handed down without solid proof-- like an admission of guilt.
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