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Around SBN: Chicago Makes Its Pitch To Host Super Bowl

Techmocj

TNTitan89

Jun 13, 2008 Jun 02, 2012 11 580

a fan of

Tennessee Titans National Football League Team

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Jeff Fisher developed a country club culture, was more image than coach, and is no Mike Munchak.

over 1 year ago Techmocj_tiny TNTitan89 3 comments 2 recs

Dan asked Jones-Drew if his upcoming opponent, Tennessee, is a dirty team. "No, not at all," Jones-Drew. "They're a tough team."

Jones-Drew said he's used to playing the Titans and after-the-whistle stuff is not a problem. "We never complain," Jones-Drew. "We're tougher than other teams I guess."

over 1 year ago Techmocj_tiny TNTitan89 4 comments

The New York Giants fell victim to the aggressiveness of the Tennessee Titans. The Giants were called for five unnecessary roughness calls and one chop block. The Titans try to get you to play that game. They play on the edge and do a lot of pushing and shoving after the play is over but not enough to draw a flag. They want their opponents to retaliate. It gets you out of your game.

It is never smart to retaliate, as more often than not it is the second guy that gets caught. The Titans have a history of doing this — their team reflects the personality of their coach. Tennessee needs to be careful, though, as these things have a way of catching up to you.

over 1 year ago Techmocj_tiny TNTitan89 0 comments

THE GAME: Pittsburgh at Tennessee

THE SITUATION: Pittsburgh leading 10-3 in the second quarter. Tennessee has the ball, first-and-10 at the Titans 23 with 1:36 left until halftime.

THE PLAY: The Titans' Chris Johnson takes the handoff for 1 yard, but fumbles. It's recovered by Steelers linebacker James Harrison. The replay assistant challenges the fumble ruling.

THE RESULT: The ruling on the field is upheld, which leads to a Steelers field goal, giving Pittsburgh a 13-3 lead.

MY TAKE: The interesting part of this review is that all of the discussion on television focused on the knee not being down when the ball came loose. However, what they should have been talking about was whether the left forearm was on the ground before the ball got knocked out of Johnson’s arm. A runner is considered down by contact if anything other than his hand, foot or the ball touches the ground. Although it was a very close play, I think the left forearm was down and the Titans should have retained possession. This decision led to a field goal by the Steelers, but had nothing to do with the outcome of the game, considering the Titans turned the ball over seven times.

over 1 year ago Techmocj_tiny TNTitan89 0 comments

Music City Miracles High School Football Stats?

I have someone interested in building a database of high school football stats.  He is looking to track win/loss data vs opponents, home vs road, in vs out of district, regular season vs playoffs, by coach, etc.  I am not into HS football, but I assume some of you are.  Do you know if something like this exists or have any idea what challenges might exist to building something like this?  The closest thing I have found is http://www.hsfdatabase.com, but they don't currently track the level of detail we are looking for.


7 comments  | 

First, in support of his assertion that this rule change flies in the face of player safety, he says "For a recent example, look no further than Cedric Griffin tearing his ACL in overtime during last year's NFC Championship Game." What does that prove? A whole lot more people tear ACLs in regulation, so should the games be shortened to help protect the players more? It's ridiculous to think potentially adding one or two drives to a handful of games is going to cause a rash of new knee blowouts.

Then he points to Donovan McNabb's ignorance about the potential for games to end in a tie as evidence that the new overtime rule is so crazy complicated that the average fan can't wrap his brain around it. Seriously? You can state the whole rule in one sentence without even needing a semicolon. Then he cries about how the average fan already can't understand the intricacies of the strategies employed in a game. Yeah, let's not explode their overtaxed brains by saying you can't win the game with a field goal of the opening drive of OT. If that's too much to comprehend, go watch bowling.

Then he brings up the Cardinals vs. Packers game (which would have ended exactly the same way under the new rule) as evidence that not all games end with a team marching down the field and kicking a field goal. What a revelation! The point is not that all games end like that. It's that NO games should end like that. It's too easy to drive 35 yards and kick a field goal to prove that you are better than a team that you couldn't outscore in the first 60 minutes.

That brings us to his worn-out conclusion that "both teams...already have a fair and equal opportunity to win during the 60 minutes of regulation." So since it's been fair up to the end of regulation, there is no need to keep it fair going forward? If a game has reached the end of regulation with no winner decided, does that not indicate that the teams are closely matched and that giving the slightest edge will disproportionately affect the outcome? Besides the fact that the stats prove it, the coin toss logically puts the loser at a significant disadvantage. Otherwise, you would have a decent percentage of teams electing to kick instead of the 100% who now elect to receive. You probably still won't have teams electing to kick under the new rules because a touchdown on the opening drive still wins the game, but it's certainly more conceivable that someone would prefer their chances of winning with a field goal on the second drive over their chance of scoring a touchdown on the first. So while electing to kick under the old rules is plain crazy, doing so under the new rules is at least debatable.

Tucker ends by saying that the point of overtime is to get the game over as soon as possible. While quickness in trying to decide a winner is certainly a factor, the games should still be decided on the field without giving one team a significant advantage. By Tucker's logic, we'd be better off just handing the W to the team more skilled at calling heads or tails. That would both reduce injuries and keep the rules simple enough for even Texans fans to understand. Problem solved!

about 2 years ago Techmocj_tiny TNTitan89 2 comments

We were experienced, we were all friends. Sometimes the leader had to take the bad side, and I didn’t want to do that. I regret not doing it now. This year I will be more prominent and not really worry about friends and friendships as much as success and the growth of guys. I took a lot of pride in seeing Griff grow into one of the best safeties in the league and I feel like I kind of let him down.

about 2 years ago Techmocj_tiny TNTitan89 1 comment

Nice take by Mariotti regarding the resting of players heading into the playoffs

over 2 years ago Techmocj_tiny TNTitan89 7 comments

So now this other Chris Johnson wants to jump on the bandwagon of saying his 2-6 team could run the table. Seems much more credible coming from the Titans RB than the Raiders CB.

over 2 years ago Techmocj_tiny TNTitan89 2 comments