Stillers 31, Clev 0� ���. Dec 28, 2008 ����Game #16
Stillers-Browns Postgame
Analysis and Grades
The
Stillers closed out their regular season by thrashing the hapless Brownies at Heinz
Field, 31-0.� Given the nature of the
rather meaningless game and the plethora of backups who played, this will be a
shorter report than usual.�
Grades:
QB:�
Ben had a spotty half of play before sustaining a concussion late in the
2Q and being carted off the field.� His
erratic play included:
����������� - Poor screen pass on the 1st
series.� No one throws a poorer screen
pass, after doing a worse selling job, than does Gentle Ben.
����������� - The long out n� up pass to Ward actually
pushed Ward OOB after the catch; a better pass, just a few inches to the inside
of the field, allows Ward to catch the ball and continue running.� �
����������� - Utterly hideous INT on a 1st down play at the Clev 20 in the
1Q.� He was tentative, as usual, while
Miller broke out of his cut and was WIDE open, and then he tried this gimpy,
moronic, off-balance toss that was well behind Miller and easily picked
off.� An all-around
boneheaded play by the QB.
����������� - Poor pass to Nate that was hauled
in via a great catch for a TD (a flag negated this play)
����������� - On the play prior to the injury,
Clev rushed a DB directly in front of Ben�s face.� Ben saw the rusher, then tentatively did
NOTHING, and then stood still and hung onto the ball.� Finally, with the DB grasping him, Ben
managed to throw the ball away.��
Ben was
injured when Steeler-killer Willie McGinest (how soon
until this sunuvagun retires?) landed on Ben�s upper
body with another Brownie hitting him down low, and the back of Ben�s head hit
the turf.�
Byron came
on in relief and played solidly.� His
first play, on a 3d & 8, netted 9 yards on a pass to Miller.� Byron capped the drive with a clumsy but
effective scramble for the TD.�
The biggest
worry now isn�t Ben�s health, as he�ll recover just fine.� The biggest worry is Ben�s play in the next
game (divisional playoffs), as Ben has a long history of playing like utter
vomit in the first game back after injury.����
Ben:� C���� Byron:�
A-
RB:�
Parker came out of his doldrums with a superb effort, gashing the Browns
for 116 Yards on 23 carries.� He ripped
off his longest run of the year, a 34-yard TD run in which he slashed off-tackle,
then sprinted up the sideline and outran the defense.� Willie also gave a nice stiff-arm to McGinest on a wide run in the 3Q, sending the big DE
sprawling onto his ass.� Perhaps these 2
plays are a sign that Parker is indeed back.��
Parker, of course, was not permitted to participate in the passing
game.�
FB: For reasons unknown to anybody on
the planet, McHugh got the vast majority of work at FB when the offense used
that set.� He did have a rare, solid lead
on Parker�s 8-yard run on 3d & 1 on the 1st series.�
WR:�
Ward eclipsed the 1,000 yard mark with a 6-grab, 70 yard effort.� He had a great RAC in the 4Q to set up
Russell�s TD plunge.� Tonio had a nice
pluck on a 3D slant to convert the 1st down in the 3Q.� He made a poor adjustment on a deep slant in
the 2Q.� Nate had a superb catch for a 1Q
TD, but a flag on
TE:�
Miller grabbed 5 balls for 50 yards, but overall he had a poor game that
really makes me wonder about the long-term viability of this cowardly
homo.� His blocking was absolutely
wretched throughout the entire game.� He
had a pitifully weak-assed block at the edge on Parker�s no-gain run in the 1Q,
plus Miller was called for holding as well.� �Later
in the 1Q, Miller�s poor block allowed his man to create backfield pressure,
and Parker was nailed for -3.� In the 2Q,
Miller got eaten alive by McGinest on a ground play,
which caused a 3-yard loss and another holding call on Miller. �Heath dropped a shovel pass midway thru the
2Q.� On the 3d & 13 completion to Nate, Miller was weak again in pass pro, which
caused Byron to get hit as he threw.� Just
prior to that, either Miller or Speath (TV angle made
it difficult to determine the number) whiffed and allowed his man to crush
OL: Overall, the line played adequately.� Kemo, who has been a vast disappointment this
season, had a couple good blocks on pulls.�
He pulled and sealed on Park�s long TD run.� He spotted Byron scrambling and ambled over
and took out the DB on Byron�s TD run late in the 2Q.� He had a good pull and scoop on Russell�s TD
plunge.� As I�ve stated several times
this year -- placed on the move, Kemo often gets a solid block.� Asked to scrap in simple, shot-area blocking,
Kemo is just as likely to miss.� Very puzzling.� Kemo
also had a false start.� Stapleton had
some struggles.� He had a weak block on
Parker�s 1-yd. run in the 1Q.� He was
beaten badly and allowed pressure on the 3d & 13 midway
thru the 3Q.�
DL:�
A fairly mediocre effort.� In a
game where everyone knew Clev would run the ball to keep the pressure off a QB
who�d just been signed 3 weeks ago, the line repeatedly got gashed by Lewis,
who finished with 94 yards on 23 carries.�
LB:�
�����������
����������� - Along with Foote, walled offon Lewi�s gut run for 9 in the
1Q
����������� - walled off on Lew�s
gut run of 13 from the Clev 5 in the 2Q
����������� - totally
tooled on the deep in to Rucker that Pola stripped (but was ruled inc.), which
would have been an 18-yard gain on 2d & 19.�
The play
that portends trouble in the playoffs, was the 3d
& 7 draw play on the 1st play of the 2Q.�
Woodley was sealed; Farrior was walled off; and Timmons flailed as Lewis
gained 11 yards.��� Not good.�
Woodley had
a good spin move and pressure in the 3Q, but then whiffed on the sack.�� Timmons allowed Lewis clean access to the
corner for 11 yards in the 4Q.� Fox saw a
lot of PT in the 2H.� Woodley put a
crushing block on Carter�s INT return for a TD.�
�����B
DB:�
Hard to evaluate this crew in facing a QB just signed off the scrap heap
3 weeks ago, and a receiving corps decimated by injury.� McFadden had a good read and string on a 3d
& 2 scramble and stopped the QB short of the sticks.� He also had a good blitz pressure in the 3Q
that created Carter�s 1st INT.� Pola
whiffed on Lewi�s 13-yard run from the Clev 5 in the
2Q, but had a good strip of Rucker that was ruled inc.� Tony Smith was finally allowed to play
safety, and had some good, hard hits at the end of scrums.� He also showed superb athleticism on his TD
return that was called back for an inc. pass.�
Ty Carter had a couple Dong INTs and returned
the 2nd one for a TD.�� ���Inc
Spec
teams:� So-so.�
Cribbs was held in check on returns, with good
stops by Russell (2 ea.),
Berger
mostly punted poorly, booming 1 punt after another into the EZ.� His lone good punt came off a lucky bounce
and roll, in the 2Q.� Holmes muffed a
punt but recovered in the 4Q.������ B-
OC:�
Arians kept alive his streak of not scoring a 1Q TD since the Indy game
on Nov. 9th.� I�m quite positive that he�ll
be able to keep this streak alive in the divisional playoff game in 2
weeks.��
We have no
idea why Arians is in love with McHugh playing FB over
We now see
that the incessant spikes by Ben were caused by the idiocy of Bruce
Arians.� Late in the 2Q, after a 2nd
& 15 pass to
�
The only
good thing we saw all day was the speed-draw to Parker early in the 3Q, which
gained 10 yards.�� Hooray
!!� Where the hell has this play
been all season, as opposed to the Whaleshit draw
that takes 5 seconds to develop??���
We�ll state
again here -- the biggest hurdle to the Sup Bowl is not an AFC opponent, bur
rather the chief saboteur, Bruce Arians.����
C+
DC:�
Dick finished the regular season by feasting on a bumbling,
inept offense that started a QB just signed 3 weeks ago off the scrap heap,
along with an injury decimated WR corps (no Edwards, no Soldier, no Jurevicius).�� The
Clev offense, in fact, set an NFL record for consecutive quarters without a TD
(now at 24).� �I�m quite sure Dick will feel awfully proud
about all of this.�
McFadden�s blitz in the 3Q, in which he came in cleanly on
the QB and forced an INT, was precisely what was missing from last week�s
vanilla defense.�� Let�s hope, and pray,
that Dick realizes this come playoff time.��
���Inc
HC:� Tomlin
finished his 2nd season as HC with a 12-4 record against the toughest schedule
in the past 30 years, yet isn�t even being mentioned for the Coach of the Year award.� Unreal.� Tommy has done a good job of keeping the team
fresh, focused, and cohesive down the stretch.��
���A
Synopsis:�
It�s always nice to beat on the hapless Stains of Cleveland.� Now, we get to enjoy a bye week and then we�ll
host an AFC Div. playoff on Jan. 11th.� Enjoy
the bye week rest, Stiller fans, and then get fired up
for playoff football!!
(Still Mill
and Stillers.com -- when it comes to the analysis of the