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NFL

When Did It Become Cool To Hate On Antonio Pierce?

Giants MLB Antonio Pierce is a lot like the David Eckstein of professional football. If this was purely a physical game, he wouldn’t be playing it. He’s not fast enough, or athletic enough to playing middle linebacker in the NFL. However, he’s always has gotten by being the smartest guy on the field. He made all the defensive calls for the Redskins, and since coming over to the Giants, has been one of the vocal leaders of this team.

Now, at age 31, he is beginning to get even slower in the middle of the Giants defense. We’ve all known that Pierce isn’t going to be a guy who plays until he’s 39, because his physical skills won’t allow him to.

In the middle of a season where the Giants defense has left something to be desired, people are pointing the finger at Pierce. They are calling him fat, old, and for whatever reason people like to keep bringing up the whole Burress thing now that the team is struggling.

Here is the reality of the situation, folks: Pierce is the least of the teams problems. What we have right now is a tale of two defenses. The first rushes the passer as well as anyone in the league, shows sticks with plays, and even makes some plays in the secondary. The other lacks enough cover guys to keep receivers in check, can’t seem to get the quarterback and fails in pursuit at times. One played the first half against the Falcons, and the other played in the second half.

Why are people blaming Pierce? They want to talk about how he can’t cover. News Flash: He couldn’t cover when he was at his physical peak. They say that he is slow, he was always slow for his position. He should have three roles in the defense: Call the audibles, play downhill against the run and come on the occasional overload blitz. When he’s used like that, he’s still a really good player. When you ask him to play cover-2, which defensive coordinator Bill Sheridan has at times this year, he looks lost.

One last thing: Yes, he was there when Plaxico did his best Cheddar Bob impression, but can we really punish him for that? He tried to hide the gun, which was idiotic, but how many people would do the same if their friend was in trouble at the end of the day?

So, stop blaming AP for the Giants defensive struggles. Yes, his career with the team is winding down, but he’s got at least another year. The Giants should be looking into bringing another middle linebacker in and having him take an apprenticeship year under AP. Then, Pierce should stick around and start what’s going to be a hell of a coaching career.

NFL

Aaron Rouse Not The Giants’ Problem, It’s The Cover Two

I watched yet another Giant loss yesterday and found myself screaming at the TV on several occasions. Not so much because of the last second touchdown pass, but more because of what allowed that to happen. So many of those plays came because of the fact that new Giants defensive co-ordinator Bill Sheridan has insisted on overusing the defensive scheme that has driven me crazy since The Bucs invented it, The Cover two.

The Giants are supposed to be an agressive defense that uses a lot of man-to-man coverage. They are supposed to be physical at the line of scrimmage, not a team that plays soft zone. I had to be seeing things. So, I went to an expert. Newsday’s Bob Glauber confirmed my theory via Twitter.

More Cover 2, yes. RT @3stringsafety @BobGlauber Does Sheridan call a lot more cover-2 than Spags did? It never seems to work

So, I wasn’t crazy. More than anything, I’ve been trying to think what the plan was when Sheridan decided to start using a system that is such a mismatch for the Giants personnel. Michael Johnson, Aaron Rouse and C.C. Brown are all far too limited in terms of range to be covering half the field at anytime. The only Giants safety that I can see doing that is Kenny Phillips, and he’s out for the season. The other concern I have is that middle linebacker Antonio Pierce was never the most athletic guy in the word to begin with. Now you are going to have him in open space as often as Sheridan does? That doesn’t make a lot of sense.

Sheridan should go back and watch some highlights of the Super Bowl team. That team relied on pressure and man coverage for the most part. Did they give up big plays? Sure. However, they also made a ton of big plays too. That’s what missing from this version of the Giants defense.

The other thing that drives me nuts is something the broadcast team actually complimented yesterday. Phil Simms said that he like the fact that the Giants were only rushing four. I hate that. This team is designed to blitz, so they should be blitzing. It’s not a question. Spags sent pressure on almost 75 percent of all plays, this year, I don’t know the number, but it’s definitely way down from that that.

In all sports, defense is that act of making the other team make a play. That’s not what the cover two does. Rather it just prevents them from making big plays, allowing them to exploit holes in the zone to keep them in front of the defense.

We’ve all seen how well it’s worked so far.

NFL

Observations From Saturday’s Giants-Bears Game

1. How good did Jay Cutler Look?

It’s amazing what a week can do. After being very mediocre in his first start, Cutler looked great this time around. He was mobile, and made great throws all night. The Bears had a great gameplan of moving the pocket against the Giants pass rush, and they did a real nice job of making it happen.

All of that being said, Cutler still doesn’t seem completely in sync with his receivers, specifically Devin Hester. The one play that comes to mind is a deep ball in which Michael Johnson blew a coverage and Hester was wide open, but pulled up on his route. Cutler overthrew him by ten yards. Hester needs to know that his quarterback can lead him in the open field.

2. What do Antonio Pierce, Michael Boley, Kenny Phillips, Aaron Ross, Rocky Bernard, and Chris Canty have in common?

None of them played last night. That’s why it’s hard for me to take anything that happened to the “first team” last night seriously. they were missing a safety, a corner, two defensive tackles, their middle linebacker and an outside linebacker. How in god’s name do you expect any team to compete against a quality quarterback with that many injuries?

3. A wide receiver needs to start stepping up.

Once again, the Giants passing seems to be off kilter. The receiving corps, as deep as it is, doesn’t really seem to be meshing with Eli Manning as fast as the team would like. No receiver had more than 2 catches once again, but there were signs of life. Namely, Hakeem Nicks made his one catch count as it went for 55 yards. The biggest X-factor in this whole race is going to be Mario Manningham, who is clearly talented, but can’t seem to do anything right.

Next week is going to be important for the Giants passing game, as it will be the first time that these receivers play extended minutes and get a chance to get into a rhythm. At least, that’s what I’m hoping.

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