Is because of what happened in the SB. What fucking bullshit. It's so funny they call that but the obvious pick Welker set three plays earlier doesn't get called.
who believes the Giants have ever under achieved under Coughlin they need to look at how many rings Peyton has despite his dominance and realize how damn hard it is to win it and how incredibly fortunate we are to have won 2 in the last 7 years
who believes the Giants have ever under achieved under Coughlin they need to look at how many rings Peyton has despite his dominance and realize how damn hard it is to win it and how incredibly fortunate we are to have won 2 in the last 7 years
Peyton is the ultimate choke artist in the post season considering how dominant his regular season play is. I did some stat research on the guy and his SBs turned up exactly the same for the most part:
1 TD, 1 INT each game (except last year, 2 INT)
3 TD/4 INT all time.
TDs thrown those 3 SB regular seasons, 49, 35, 55. Team records, 12-4, 14-2, 13-3.
29 points, 17 points, 8 points.
The narrative never fails. He had a rather dominant post season last year (by his standards), and faced a Seahawk team that didn't exactly dominate their own postseason through two home games.
Sure Seattle was better, but in the era of parity how long has it been since we've seen an SB blowout like this? Tampa/Oakland 2002? Never should have been crushed and look so unprepared.
One thing that stands out is how awful his footwork and pocket presence can look under legitimate pressure. This SB, some of those old games versus the Patriots. Man, it looks like two totally different people.
If Denver wins the SB this year, the only reason they'll do it is because that defense is finally good enough to carry Peyton in it. Rex Grossman elevated the Colts defense in that one win, but that caliber QB won't be around come February.
defense last year was an all-time, historically great defense and just completely overwhelmed Denver's offensive line. On top of that, their incredible secondary also took the approach of flrting with defensive holding on every single play knowing the refs couldn't call it every time. Faulting Peyton for last Super Bowl's result is an egregiously unfair criticism. A QB made up of Joe Montana's cool, Dan Marino's release and accuracy, Peyton's pre-snap reads, Michael Vick's speed, and Big Ben's resistance to being tackled would have still gotten crushed last year. It was Seattle's day.
Against New Orleans, he had to battle a great offense who was able to steal an extra possession with an onside kick. At the end of the game, Terry Porter just made a fantastic play jumping the route on the interception. It happens.
And against Chicago, not only did Peyton have to play in the only Super Bowl ever in the rain (and it was pouring continuously), but he had to overcome an opening kickoff TD by Devin Hester.
But go on, tell me more about using a three-game sample (with three different head coaches) to define him.
6 minutes left on the DEN side of the field with 2 timeouts... why force a ball in that spot? Like Simms said, the receiver was never open on that play.
defense last year was an all-time, historically great defense and just completely overwhelmed Denver's offensive line. On top of that, their incredible secondary also took the approach of flrting with defensive holding on every single play knowing the refs couldn't call it every time. Faulting Peyton for last Super Bowl's result is an egregiously unfair criticism. A QB made up of Joe Montana's cool, Dan Marino's release and accuracy, Peyton's pre-snap reads, Michael Vick's speed, and Big Ben's resistance to being tackled would have still gotten crushed last year. It was Seattle's day.
Against New Orleans, he had to battle a great offense who was able to steal an extra possession with an onside kick. At the end of the game, Terry Porter just made a fantastic play jumping the route on the interception. It happens.
And against Chicago, not only did Peyton have to play in the only Super Bowl ever in the rain (and it was pouring continuously), but he had to overcome an opening kickoff TD by Devin Hester.
But go on, tell me more about using a three-game sample (with three different head coaches) to define him.
I've seen enough to know that he underperforms in the postseason and SB.
Whether he is to blame for the losses is always up for debate.
And now that I think of it, the only other QB to throw for 50+ in a regular season also lost the super bowl.
defense last year was an all-time, historically great defense and just completely overwhelmed Denver's offensive line. On top of that, their incredible secondary also took the approach of flrting with defensive holding on every single play knowing the refs couldn't call it every time. Faulting Peyton for last Super Bowl's result is an egregiously unfair criticism. A QB made up of Joe Montana's cool, Dan Marino's release and accuracy, Peyton's pre-snap reads, Michael Vick's speed, and Big Ben's resistance to being tackled would have still gotten crushed last year. It was Seattle's day.
Against New Orleans, he had to battle a great offense who was able to steal an extra possession with an onside kick. At the end of the game, Terry Porter just made a fantastic play jumping the route on the interception. It happens.
And against Chicago, not only did Peyton have to play in the only Super Bowl ever in the rain (and it was pouring continuously), but he had to overcome an opening kickoff TD by Devin Hester.
But go on, tell me more about using a three-game sample (with three different head coaches) to define him.
I've seen enough to know that he underperforms in the postseason and SB.
Whether he is to blame for the losses is always up for debate.
And now that I think of it, the only other QB to throw for 50+ in a regular season also lost the super bowl.
May have both lost t, but they both got there. Brady had a better game shot.
Quote:
Yet started him in fantasy? Sounds like typical dep, even you don't believe the crap you spew!
I listened to bbi. I think your the only who saw rivers struggling tonoght like I did. I am sorry kmed.
There's 2 TD's.. and there's still an entire quarter+ left. Can you calm down now?
And you never made fun of Eli for the dear in the headlights look?
Quote:
In comment 11937995 kmed said:
Quote:
Yet started him in fantasy? Sounds like typical dep, even you don't believe the crap you spew!
I listened to bbi. I think your the only who saw rivers struggling tonoght like I did. I am sorry kmed.
There's 2 TD's.. and there's still an entire quarter+ left. Can you calm down now?
Need 1 more :)
And does Denver ever kick field goals?
they do it every week; besides who cares about san diego...
Welker set more illegal picks than garnett.
Wording...
FYI Philip rivers talks more crap than Richard Sherman. Believe that. E is a motor mouth
Quote:
.
Wording...
*Mouthing off. Haha, sorry
Said he has a pulled groin.
as long as they win they don't care...and the really could give a rats ass about fantasy football.
I think indy is the wind best team.
Peyton is the ultimate choke artist in the post season considering how dominant his regular season play is. I did some stat research on the guy and his SBs turned up exactly the same for the most part:
1 TD, 1 INT each game (except last year, 2 INT)
3 TD/4 INT all time.
TDs thrown those 3 SB regular seasons, 49, 35, 55. Team records, 12-4, 14-2, 13-3.
29 points, 17 points, 8 points.
The narrative never fails. He had a rather dominant post season last year (by his standards), and faced a Seahawk team that didn't exactly dominate their own postseason through two home games.
Sure Seattle was better, but in the era of parity how long has it been since we've seen an SB blowout like this? Tampa/Oakland 2002? Never should have been crushed and look so unprepared.
One thing that stands out is how awful his footwork and pocket presence can look under legitimate pressure. This SB, some of those old games versus the Patriots. Man, it looks like two totally different people.
If Denver wins the SB this year, the only reason they'll do it is because that defense is finally good enough to carry Peyton in it. Rex Grossman elevated the Colts defense in that one win, but that caliber QB won't be around come February.
Against New Orleans, he had to battle a great offense who was able to steal an extra possession with an onside kick. At the end of the game, Terry Porter just made a fantastic play jumping the route on the interception. It happens.
And against Chicago, not only did Peyton have to play in the only Super Bowl ever in the rain (and it was pouring continuously), but he had to overcome an opening kickoff TD by Devin Hester.
But go on, tell me more about using a three-game sample (with three different head coaches) to define him.
6 minutes left on the DEN side of the field with 2 timeouts... why force a ball in that spot? Like Simms said, the receiver was never open on that play.
Against New Orleans, he had to battle a great offense who was able to steal an extra possession with an onside kick. At the end of the game, Terry Porter just made a fantastic play jumping the route on the interception. It happens.
And against Chicago, not only did Peyton have to play in the only Super Bowl ever in the rain (and it was pouring continuously), but he had to overcome an opening kickoff TD by Devin Hester.
But go on, tell me more about using a three-game sample (with three different head coaches) to define him.
I've seen enough to know that he underperforms in the postseason and SB.
Whether he is to blame for the losses is always up for debate.
And now that I think of it, the only other QB to throw for 50+ in a regular season also lost the super bowl.
Quote:
defense last year was an all-time, historically great defense and just completely overwhelmed Denver's offensive line. On top of that, their incredible secondary also took the approach of flrting with defensive holding on every single play knowing the refs couldn't call it every time. Faulting Peyton for last Super Bowl's result is an egregiously unfair criticism. A QB made up of Joe Montana's cool, Dan Marino's release and accuracy, Peyton's pre-snap reads, Michael Vick's speed, and Big Ben's resistance to being tackled would have still gotten crushed last year. It was Seattle's day.
Against New Orleans, he had to battle a great offense who was able to steal an extra possession with an onside kick. At the end of the game, Terry Porter just made a fantastic play jumping the route on the interception. It happens.
And against Chicago, not only did Peyton have to play in the only Super Bowl ever in the rain (and it was pouring continuously), but he had to overcome an opening kickoff TD by Devin Hester.
But go on, tell me more about using a three-game sample (with three different head coaches) to define him.
I've seen enough to know that he underperforms in the postseason and SB.
Whether he is to blame for the losses is always up for debate.
And now that I think of it, the only other QB to throw for 50+ in a regular season also lost the super bowl.
May have both lost t, but they both got there. Brady had a better game shot.