Colts 24, Stillers 20 ���. Nov 9, 2008 ����Game # 9
Stillers-Colts Postgame
Analysis and Grades
The
Stillers jumped out on top of Indy with a TD on their 1st drive, but lazily
lost focus and did so throughout the game, literally snatching defeat� from victory
by handing the Dolts a cheesy 24-20 victory in embarrassingly lethargic
fashion.� I�ll put as much effort into
this report as the team collectively did.�
Grades:
QB:�
Ben followed up last week�s stinker with another yet another one, �throwing 2 assaholic, miserable INTs to help lead the march to defeat.� Both were tentative, weak-kneed passes more
befitting a college freshman seeing his 1st varsity action.� The 1st pick was on a 3d & 2 on his own
16, on a medium in to Holmes that was short, weak, and off target.� This killer INT, with 90 ticks left in the
half, gave Indy a freebie TD to close the half down by 3 rather than 10.� The 2nd pick occurred in the 4Q, on a 3d
& 4 with the Stillers up by 3.�
Again, a weak, timid pass was jumped on and picked, although Holmes was
also weak on this play.� Indy scored the
winning TD 4 plays later.�� Ben also had
a host of other misfired and timid sack-takes, and he failed miserably to get
the offense mobilized and up to the LOS in a timely manner on the late 4Q
drive.� I realize Roth has the ailing
shoulder, but it may very well be time, NOW, to give the man 1-2 weeks of rest
and recuperation and then get healed for the playoff stretch, because efforts
like today�s won�t get it done.� �D+
RB:�
FB:
WR:�
Ward had a big game, snaring 9 balls for 116 yards.� He made a great adjustment on the underthrown
flea-flicker and had a good RAC, good for 41
yards.� He also had several other good
grabs on low passes in traffic.�
Nate had a
great pluck along the s-lines for a 16-yard gain, and had a good block on
Baker
looked lost and clueless on a pass in the 4Q, allowing the ball to go right
thru his hands on a short crosser.� Sweed played some, but was non-existent in the passing
game.
�B+
TE:�
Miller did not dress.� Spaeth had
a career day, grabbing 6 passes for 53 yards, and showing decent hands.� Of course, once Miller returns, Spaeth will
resume his role as the neglected leper.� Spaeth
failed to sustain his block on Tonio�s end around,
causing a 1-yard loss.� He dropped a low
pass on the 2nd series.� McHugh had a
poor block on a
OL: The line played okay when examined
overall.� Ben wasn�t harassed like he was
in the Philly loss; not even close.�� Freeney had his way with Starks, who was flagged for
holding once and probably had a couple others that were overlooked.��
DL:�
LB:�
Leading the way, as a man among boys, was James Harrison, one of the few
Stillers who played tenacious football from beginning to end.�
Timmons
started for the injured Woodley and did ok.�
Lacking Woodley�s brawn and power, Timmons was not able to collapse the
pocket.� He did have superb, super-tight
coverage on
After about
13 articles in other publications -- certainly not here at Stillers.com --
fawned all over James Farrior, he went out and had an utterly awful ballgame,
doing extremely little despite being on the field for EVERY play.� He finished with a piss-ant total of 3
solos.� He did put a nice lick on Addai on a toss sweep that was strung wide, but that�s
about it.� Supposedly �THE Winged God of
LB Coverage�, he put on a clinic of exactly how NOT to cover a TD on a 3d &
goal from the 2-yard line.� At the snap,
Farrior, like a complete pansy, actually BACKS OFF, despite there being no room
in the end zone to �go deep� anyways.�
Larry Foote
did almost nothing the entire game.�
DB:�
lke
Pola had an
okay game, making a couple bustups and helping to blow
up a couple running plays.� 2 poor gaffes
were extremely costly, though.� Late in
the 2Q, Pola had an INT right in his gut, and dropped it.� This would have been a sure
6-points and would have stuck a severe dagger into the Colts with the
Stillers going to the locker room up by 24-7 rather than 17-14.� (Of course, with the way Indy receivers were
roaming free and wild, no lead was safe.)��
Pola also mis-read the wheel route and the lob
pass on the winning TD.� It appeared to
be a botched coverage, but Pola was in a decent position and simply mis-timed his leap.� Very poor.�����
Ryan Clark --
then supposed God of Free Safety -- returned to the lineup and did little.� He had a free, clean, EASY shot at
Townsend
had some struggles, committing 2 holds, including 1 on a throw-away late in the
2Q that was very costly.� He also did
little on the Clark TD.� He was also
badly abused by Harrison on a post in the 2Q, in which
Ty Carter
saw a lot of PT.�� He had a good hit on
Gonzo, who was WIDE open on a 3d & 11 in the 3Q, and the ball was jarred
loose. �Gay was beaten for a TD by
C
Spec
teams:� A decent game from the spec teams.�� No disasters, which was a relief.� Enrster punted ok
in his 1st outing.� Holmes had a good 23-yard
PR late in the 3Q.� Russell had a nice
39-yard KO return in the #Q, and would have had more had he not slipped on the
shitty turf of Heinz Field.� Reed booted
a chippie FG.�� Bailey and Taylor each had
a good solo stop in KO cover, and Harrison a good solo in punt coverage.� Not sure what happened, but the Stillers had
to waste a TO in the 2Q when a player was late coming off the field.� �B+
OC:�
Arians had a nice initial drive, mixing runs and passes and exploiting
weaknesses that are prevalent ALL OVER the Indy defense.� After that, Arians did little, allowing the
Colts to dictate the game when they brought 8 men into the box and Arians
HELPED them out with a plethora of piss-ant little crossers and dumpers.� Aside from the flea-flicker, the entire passing
game was within 15 yards of the LOS.� Then
there was the fiasco on the 1st & goal at the 5 in the 4Q.� First, the offense had to WASTE a TO due to
apparent indecision and slowness in getting the play called.� I could live with the run on 1st down, which
netted about 4 yards.� Neanderthal playcalling on the 2nd and 3rd down plays was reprehensible.�
Overall,
Arians faced a weak-assed defense that had been exposed by numerous opponents
thus far this season, yet after the initial drive, all Arians could score was a
piddly 13 points.��
The lumbering, slow-as-whaleshit offense on
the game�s final drive was a chapter from a circus act.� On play after play, when any average NFL
offense could snap off the next play within 15 seconds, Arian�s glacial offense
was taking an eternity to jog down the field, stumble about in a stipor, take forever to get lined up, and then finally get
the snap off.��
All of the
Arians lovers out there, please step forward.� ����F
DC:�
Dick has feasted ALL season long, in 8 straight game,
against either weak offenses or decent offenses that were crippled by injuries
to key skill players.� The glowing adulation
this guy has received in the mainstream media is enough to make Elvis
jealous.� Tonight, Dick finally faced a
decent, healthy offense, and he was grossly tooled and outcoached
by Tom Moore.� Don�t let the final score
and final stats deceive you.� Only a
plethora of misfires to WIDE OPEN receivers (see the DB grade, above) prevented
the Colts from tacking on another 200 yards passing and 2-3 more
touchdowns.� Wild cheetahs in the open
prairie have more to contend with than the Indy receivers did tonite, as they roamed free as a bird all game long.
Dick also
re-introduced a popular oldie of his, the Velcro Blitz, in which every
rusher attaches himself to a blocker and plays pom-pom pull-away while the QB
stands back in the pocket, totally unfettered.�
Indy�s O-line has been reduced to a pile of shit, yet Dick was only
RARELY able to get quick pressure and harassment on Manning, and much of that
was due to the singular efforts of James Harrison.� All of the supposedly �exotic blitzes� didn�t
do jack shit against Manning and the Colts.�
�
The Rhodes
TD appeared to be a botched coverage by Farrior.� A forced FG there obviously means the game
could have gone into OT.� Let�s face
facts, though.�� By that point of the
game, after Indy WRs had roamed freely all game long
and Manning was getting EONS of time and space in the pocket, there wasn�t a
single rational person, anywhere, who felt strongly that the Stillers would
stop the Colts from scoring the winning TD.��
The height of Dick�s Follies was on the 3d & 11 late in the 3Q, when
Manning, under some rare pressure, threw a lollipop lob to Gonzales, who was so
WIDE OPEN that, had he detonated a hand grenade, it would have injured no
one.� �It�s always easy to feast on the crippled and incompetent,
but the real test is scheming against a capable, competent, relatively healthy
offense, and Dick failed miserably. D
HC:� After the initial
Stiller TD, the entire team went into a funk, and lost their focus and
attention to detail.�� The team ate big
and drank big after the win over the Skins last week, and reviled in their
press clippings all week long.� And then
they allowed a vastly inferior team to visit their house and pull off a win
they had no business of getting.� Very, very poor.�� The
overall intensity from the club was sparse and marginal the entire game.� Tomlin deserves the appropriate blame for
failing to maintain focus during the week and for failing to get the team in-focus
as they slathered around during the game in a stupor.��� D
Synopsis:�
Not much more needs be said.� The
Stillers wallowed around in a haughty funk, and paid the price for it by
allowing an inferior but dangerous club to hang around and then squeak by late
in the 4Q.� Very, very
disappointing.� �All the glow and pride after the win over the
Skins has now been flushed down the commode.�
A loss in the conference is never good for tiebreakers and the Stillers
pissed away what should have been a win.��
This is a team that faltered badly down the stretch last season, and it�ll
be interesting to see if the team sputters down the stretch again or rises to
the occasion.�
(Still Mill
and Stillers.com -- when it comes to the analysis of the