Sunday, October 24, 2010
BL Live Blog: Carlton Mitchell
Rookie and Brown Log favourite Carlton Mitchell is in uniform today and has gotten a rep at WR on O. We are hoping Mitchell steps up and makes a big play. Browns really need someone to step up at wide receiver if we are going to have a successful season.
BL Live Blog: touchdown!!
Who says Colt McCoy cannot throw long? Nice long pass to Cribbs which draws a pass interference call sets up Hillis TD. Browns up 10-0.
Browns look more prepared than the Saints.
BL Live Blog: 1 man line
1 man defensive line used by Ryan on third down vs the Saints offense. It worked but Ryan better hope the Saints don't go no huddle the next time they face that formation.
BL Live Blog: 3 points....
3 points after a big 69 yard punt return on a wonderful trick play is a bit disappointing. Something is better than nothing but a TD would've given the Browns a huge emotional lift. That said I liked Colt's poise in not forcing plays in the red zone. The Saints tried to put him under pressure and force a mistake. Give Colt credit, he made good choices.
BL Live Blog: trick play
Browns coaches must have seen something in game films. Nice big play. Let's see if Colt can get the TD
Friday, October 22, 2010
BL Predicts: Week Seven vs. the Saints
Once again, an easy game to predict as the Browns more or less have every factor possible working against them this Sunday in New Orleans. Despite serious limitations at the wide receiver position, in the defensive backfield and a lack of depth on the defensive line, the team is playing together and the coaches, in particular Rob Ryan, continue to come up with tactics that opponents have trouble with. This week, the best we can hope for is another good showing that comes up just short of the W.
BL Predicts:
New Orleans Saints 23
Cleveland Browns 10
The Brown Log's season record now stands at 3-3
BL Predicts:
New Orleans Saints 23
Cleveland Browns 10
The Brown Log's season record now stands at 3-3
Miami of Ohio: The Cradle of Coaches
From an interview this week with New Orleans Coach Sean Payton talking about Miami University in Ohio. It should be a well known fact that Miami of Ohio not only produced the infamous Super Bowl QB Ben Roethlisberger, but also many excellent coaches including Woody Hayes and Bo Schembechler.
Question: With Mike Shanahan coming back, Eastern Illinois now has three head coaches. Eric Mangini’s alma mater has only two. Has Eastern Illinois supplanted Wesleyan as the intellectual center of the football universe?
Payton: “We have a lot of Miami of Ohio coaches here who claim that’s still the cradle of coaching. I think more than anything else there’s some coincidence to it. If Mike Heimerdinger were to get going here he’d be the fourth head coach from Eastern. We pull for him at Tennessee. That was good learning grounds for all of us that went there and had a chance to play there and certainly advance our careers. I’m not too familiar with Wesleyan.”
Thursday, October 21, 2010
Tackling: Old era vs new era
OLD NFL HIGHLIGHTS: The tackles in this film are all clean
MODERN ERA NFL HIGHLIGHTS: The tackles in this video are almost all of the "blow-up" variety, many are direct hits to the head. Beyond safety, head hits actually make a defenders job easier because when you take a head out, you effectively cut the legs out of a powerful opponent. A head hit often causes an offensive player to completely lose his bearing. That is not football, it's cheating.
MODERN ERA NFL HIGHLIGHTS: The tackles in this video are almost all of the "blow-up" variety, many are direct hits to the head. Beyond safety, head hits actually make a defenders job easier because when you take a head out, you effectively cut the legs out of a powerful opponent. A head hit often causes an offensive player to completely lose his bearing. That is not football, it's cheating.
Head hits are not just part of the game: Darryl Stingley
Tackling someone at head level is illegal for one reason that goes well beyond safety. It's not football. Football is about the confrontation of athletes, at the top of their abilities, and may the best men win. When you get hit in the head, all of your determination and concentration on advancing that ball and winning that play, are instantly sapped out of your body. In a flash, every ounze of your energy transforms from trying to win a football game to preserving the safety of your head and neck. I played two years of organized football when I was a teenager. I was small, not a great player, but I knew how to play the game. I can attest, it's a hell of a scary moment when somebody takes your head out. You can be the better of the two men on the field confronting each other but if your opponent tackles or hits your head, you are going down, period, end of conversation.
For a closer look at a famous head shot, watch this video of the most infamous and saddest head hit in NFL history. One hit to the head of Daryl Stingley deprived him for life of the use of his limbs and contributed to his premature death at age 55.
For a closer look at a famous head shot, watch this video of the most infamous and saddest head hit in NFL history. One hit to the head of Daryl Stingley deprived him for life of the use of his limbs and contributed to his premature death at age 55.
Monday, October 18, 2010
Coach Mangini
This blog is one of many that has had a hard time accepting Coach Mangini. We've taken more than our share of shots at him. Paradoxically, yesterday left me feeling that perhaps Mangini will prove us wrong.
What is there to like from yesterday:
- His team never gave up.
- His staff had the courage to put the safety of key players like Cribbs and Massaquoi, above one game.
- Colt McCoy was prepared for a very tough game.
- The Browns have competed every game this season.
Don't get us wrong, we are likely going to slam Mangini again, but notwithstanding the loss yesterday, it appears that Mangini and his team are maturing.
What is there to like from yesterday:
- His team never gave up.
- His staff had the courage to put the safety of key players like Cribbs and Massaquoi, above one game.
- Colt McCoy was prepared for a very tough game.
- The Browns have competed every game this season.
Don't get us wrong, we are likely going to slam Mangini again, but notwithstanding the loss yesterday, it appears that Mangini and his team are maturing.
comments from the NFL on helmet hits
Here is an article from Yahoo on yesterday's disgraceful helmet hits
an excerpt:
an excerpt:
“I hadn’t heard that, but obviously suspensions would be a much bigger deal than fining guys,” said Colts center Jeff Saturday(notes), the team’s player representative. “I guess I don’t know what Goodell is going to say constitutes a suspension or not, but if guys are head-hunting out there to knock a guy out of the game, that’s the only way to take care of it.”
The Eagles’ DeSean Jackson(notes) and the Falcons’ Dunta Robinson(notes) were knocked out of their game Sunday after a frightening collision in which Robinson launched himself headfirst, while Steelers linebacker James Harrison(notes) sidelined two Browns players with head injuries after jarring hits.
Anderson wouldn’t speculate on how any players would be punished for hits from Sunday’s games.
“The fundamentally old way of wrapping up and tackling seems to have faded away,” he said. “A lot of the increase is from hits to blow guys up. That has become a more popular way of doing it. Yes, we are concerned they are getting away from the fundamentals of tackling, and maybe it has been coached that way. We’re going to have to look into talking to our coaches.”
Is the NFL going to protect players from head injuries or not?
Conrad Dobler, a guard for the St. Louis Cardinals during the 1970's was openly and proudly a dirty player. It's taken years for somebody to surpass him but yesterday the mantle was passed. Pittsburgh Steeler's linebacker James Harrison is the dirtiest player the NFL has seen in decades.
Harrison used his helmet as a battering ram against the Browns Sunday. His blows to the head of Josh Cribbs and Mohamed Massaquoi resulted in head injuries to both players. Without any doubt Massaquoi was in a vulnerable position and a flag should have been thrown. While by definition, Cribbs as a runner was not a vulnerable player, the blow to Cribbs head was a much dirtier play. The Massaquoi hit took place at full speed and a reasonable person could believe the helmet to helmet blow was accidental. Cribbs on the other hand was practically stopped, and it appears Harrison simply teed him up and hit him with intent to maim. Why wasn't unnecessary roughness flagged??
In the end, Harrison was Pittsburgh's most valuable player yesterday and the NFL refs were his partners in crime. Harrison helped the Steelers immensely by knocking Cribbs out of the game.
Unbelievable. The Brown Log has been consistent on this issue, being critical of TJ Ward on a much lesser violation in which he used his shoulder in a hit on a vulnerable receiver. In Harrison's case, there are no excuses. The zebras didn't bother to throw the flag even once.
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