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The Game

  • Feb. 5th, 2008 at 9:35 PM
Spain
I promised to write a few words about the SuperBowl, once I caught my breath.

It was an amazing game. Some are calling it the best SuperBowl ever played. That might be overstating it (though not by much). While it is true that all too many SuperBowls have been blowouts, there have been some other exciting ones over the years. The last Giants championship, when Scott Norwood's kick went wide right. The Rams - Titans game, when Dyson was tackled inches short of the goal line to prevent the tying touchdown. The three Patriots victories, all of them decided by field goals. The San Francisco - Cincinnati game, where Joe Montana drove the 49ers down the field to score the winning TD with seconds left. Some of the classic old Pittsburgh v. Dallas SuperBowls. And then there was SuperBowl III, when the Jets shocked the world and upset the Baltimore Colts. That one wasn't close, really, but still managed to be incredibly exciting... especially as time ran out, and you realized that the football world had just been turned upside down.

This one, though... this one was special, for a whole bunch of reasons. The Giants weren't even supposed to be in it. After their loss to Washington late in the season, it didn't even look certain that they would make the playoffs. The turn-around started in the Buffalo game the following week, maybe with the long electrifying run by Bradshaw. Beating the Bills clinched the playoff berth, but then came that "meaningless" season-ending game against the Patriots, that turned out to be one of the most meaningful games the G-Men ever played.

And then the playoffs. One and done, the pundits said, just like last year and the year before. Tampa Bay would eliminate them. But the Giants went down to Florida and beat the Bucs. That only meant they had to face the Cowboys in Dallas, however, and the Cowboys had crushed them twice during the regular season, and besides, Eli wasn't good enough to shine the Holy Romo's shoes. No way they could win that one, all the experts agreed. Yet somehow they did, and my, wasn't THAT sweet. That took the G-Men to the championship game in Green Bay, against Brett Favre, an army of cheeseheads, and temperatures that might dismay even Sworn Brothers of the Night's Watch. When their field goal kicker missed not one but TWO game-winning field goals, it seemed certain they would lose that one. Only somehow Favre threw an INT, and the kicker proved that the third time IS the charm.

And all that was only prelude. All they had won was the chance to get their asses kicked by the mighty Patriots, the unbeaten Patriots, the perfect Patriots, Evil Little Bill's team, a scoring machine that had gone through most of the season not just beating opponents, but crushing them, humiliating them, running up the scores and setting records. Vegas made the Giants two touchdown underdogs, the biggest point spread since the Jets and the Colts in '69.

Talk about your perfect Hollywood set-up.

I have heard a few people complain that the first half of the game was "dull" because the score was only 7-3 well into the third quarter. Cretins. The game was never dull, not a moment of it. There is more to football than scoring. "Defense wins championships," the talking heads will say, and that was what was on display in Phoenix, the Giants defense rising to the challenge and shutting down the highest-scoring offense that the NFL had ever seen. There have been great defenses on display in SuperBowls before -- the Doomsday Defense of Tom Landry's Cowboys, Pittsburgh's Steel Curtain, Buddy Ryan's ferocious 46 defense that knocked Patriots QB Tony Eason out the game and out of football, the defense the Giants fielded in 1986, led by Lawrence Taylor, Harry Carson, and my namesake George Martin. The Giants D this year was not as heralded as any of those, but after the way they played in the SuperBowl, they should be. They may not have a nifty nickname, but damn, they played with heart. Tom Brady is a Hall of Fame QB, a battle-seasoned veteran as tough as any signal caller in the NFL today, but after four quarters of trying to pass with Giants in his face and on his back and wrapped around his legs, even he was looking mortal.

The Giants D was one of the things I loved best about this game. And wasn't it strangely ironic that the defender who wreaked the most havoc on Brady and the Pats was a guy named Justin TUCK? The gods of football have a strange, quirky sense of humor sometimes.

And then there was Eli.

Okay, I confess. I didn't believe. I WANTED to believe, I really did. I wanted to think that Ernie Accorsi knew what he was doing when he traded away Philip Rivers and all those draft choices for Peyton's little brother. For four years I tried to believe. When Eli won his first victory as a starting quarterback -- against the hated Cowboys in the final game of his rookie season, in the waning seconds -- I thought it was an omen of Great Things to Come, and I've kept the game in TiVo ever since. Whenever I get down, I click it up and watch Eli call his audible at the line, and Tiki takes the ball and runs into the center of the Cowboy line for the winning TD and the Giants single season rushing record.

In the years that followed, however, those Great Things seemed awfully slow in coming, and I lost faith. Eli would have a couple good games, and I'd think he'd turned the corner, and then he'd have a long spell of mediocrity, and maybe a horrendous game or two, like the one this year against Minnesota. It was looking more and more like Ernie Accorsi had been mugged by San Diego, and I began to itch to see what Jared Lorenzen could do.

Well, I'd still like to see what the Hefty Lefty can do someday, but not if it means benching Eli. Somehow, along around that Buffalo game, or maybe during that "meaningless" season finale against the Patriots, the game slowed down for Eli, and he turned a corner. His play during the playoffs was spectacular, and never more so than in the SuperBowl, with the world championship on the line and two minutes remaining on the clock. Brady, bruised and battered as he was, still refused to turn into Tony Eason, no matter how many times the Giants D line hit him in the mouth. He had driven his team the length of the field, to put the Patriots ahead with a TD pass to Randy Moss (made easier when Corey Webster, the Giants defender, slipped and fell when he tried to make his cut). Now it was on Eli to answer.

And he did.

There have already been hundreds of accounts of the Giants' game-winning drive written and published, but none of them can capture the excitement of it, the suspense, all the heroics. It was a near thing, full of plays that balanced on a knife's edge, any one of which could have gone the other way and produced a very different outcome. Heroes and villains and desperate doings. A couple of near-interceptions that stopped my heart. The second effort by Brandon Jacobs on the 4th-and-1 run, that kept the drive alive. Steve Smith, a rookie receiver injured for most of the year, playing like he thought he was the OTHER Steve Smith, the All-Pro wideout on the Panthers. The winning touchdown pass to Plaxico Burress, when the genius on the enemy sideline decided to go after Eli with an all-out blitz, thus leaving Plax one-on-one with Ellis Hobbes. (For those who don't follow football, this was somewhat like sending out Tyrion Lannister to cover Gregor Clegane).

And, of course, The Play. Manning to Tyree.

If you're been anywhere near a television set the past two days, you've seen it fifty times. People are still arguing about whether it's the greatest SuperBowl play of all time, and debating what nickname to hang on it. (The Catch II was suggested, but that's too derivative, and really only refers to the reception, and not the scramble and throw that preceded it. The Great Escape is more original, but has the opposite problem; it's all about Eli escaping, and not Tyree's grab. The Play is my choice. We'll see what sticks).

To tell the truth, I don't care if it was best play ever or only the third best play ever. Michael Strahan said watching it took years off his life, and I know just how he feels. I can't imagine how Patriots fans must have felt as it went down. Both ends of it were amazing, and both could have easily turned disastrous. I have been watching football for more than fifty years, and I've never seen anything like it.

And it was David Tyree, man. Somehow that makes it even cooler than if it had been Amani Toomer or Plaxico Burress, as much as I like them. Those of you who aren't hard core Giants fans probably don't know David Tyree. He's a late round draft choice, been on the Giants for five years now, mostly as their fifth-string wide receiver and special teams ace. He's not as tall and strong as Plax, doesn't have Amani's sure hands or the blazing speed of Sinorice Moss. Every year, in training camp, Tyree is on the bubble, and there's always speculation about whether or not he'll make the cut. So far, he always does. As the fifth wideout, he doesn't get a lot of offensive plays, and even when he's on the field in a five-wide formation, the ball doesn't often come his way. Mostly he's made his living as the gunner on special teams... and he's been terrific at that, even earning a Pro Bowl nod as special teamer a few years back. Special teams aces never get much love, though. Tyree does not have the physical gifts of a Terrell Owens, a Randy Moss, or a Plaxico Burress... but whenever he has been given a chance, he plays his heart out, and I have always loved guys like that, the Wayne Chrebets and Phil McConkeys of the NFL world.

This season was especially hard for Tyree. He almost got cut in training camp, and there were some who said he'd lost a step and wasn't the force on special teams that he had been. Then he broke his wrist and missed a bunch of early season games. Later, when he came back, his mother died. He caught four passes all season... and three in the SuperBowl. One was the first Giants touchdown. The other was The Play.

And now he's immortal. If the Giants draft a young wide receiver this year, there's still a good chance that Tyree might not even make the team next season... but his heroics in the SuperBowl will be remembered as long as there is an NFL, and he will never have to pay for a drink in New York City as long as he lives.

Everyone is talking about Eli, about Tyree, about Justin Tuck and Osi Umenyiora and Michael Strahan, but there were other heroes too. Brandon Jacobs, the battering ram, who will NOT be denied when the Giants need a yard. Ahmed Bradshaw, kid running back, who just refused to go down. And I want to say a word about Corey Webster too. Here's another young player, a second round draft choice, highly regarded coming out of college... but halfway through the season, he sure was looking like a bust. He lost his starting job and fell so far down the depth chart it was hard to remember that he was still on the team. Late season, though, Webster worked himself back into the lineup, and since then he's been terrific. In the playoffs he was a real force, showing the quickness and sure hands the Giants saw when they drafted him. It was his interception that won the Green Bay game, setting up Tynes for his third kick.

In the SuperBowl, though, Webster came perilously close to turning back into a goat. It was him on Randy Moss when the Patriots scored their go-ahead touchdown, falling down as he tried to cut. If the Patriots had won, he would have had to live with that.

Webster redeemed himself, though. After Eli and Tyree and Plax had put the G-men ahead, the Patriots still had thirty-five seconds and Tom Brady. First play, the G-Men got a sack when Jay Alford, another of their terrific rookies, burst through the line and drove Brady to the ground. Second-and-twenty, though, Brady scrambles loose and lofts a bomb into the air that sails fifty yards downfield toward the hands of the streaking Randy Moss, who had gotten a step on both of his defenders... and there was an instant there, as the ball fell toward Moss's hands, when I could picture him snatching it from the air and streaking in for a touchdown that would have driven a knife through my heart and the heart of every Giants fan everywhere... but at the last second, Corey Webster leapt and knocked the ball aside.

No one is writing much about THAT play, but in the end it was just as crucial as Tyree's catch, or Plaxico's touchdown grab.

Defense, man. Defense wins championships.

G-MEN RULE!

Comments

( 104 comments — Leave a comment )
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[info]mrbnatural wrote:
Feb. 6th, 2008 06:42 am (UTC)
IT'S GOOOOD!
[info]mercury_glitch wrote:
Feb. 6th, 2008 06:51 am (UTC)
I watched the last bit, I was working late and I'm really not a football guy (I actually get 99% of my football information from your posts), but when I saw the Giants win my first thought was: "George Martin will be happy, there just may be a chance for the Starks after all!"

[info]allandaros wrote:
Feb. 6th, 2008 07:25 am (UTC)
Not a chance. Winter is coming.
[info]jacen wrote:
Feb. 6th, 2008 06:54 am (UTC)
I envy you. To have a team you truly love play THAT game is a fan experience I have never yet had. The game was obviously entertaining and nail biting for someone with no real emotional connection to the Giants but I can only imagine how much more thrilling it must be from your perspective. And a great bit of sports writing there as well. I would love to see you write a sports novel some day like Friday Night Lights or When Pride Still Mattered. I know you'd knock it out of the park.
[info]kwei_cee wrote:
Feb. 6th, 2008 07:09 am (UTC)
The Play
I find myself compelled to break my lurking to argue against naming the Manning to Tyree pass as "the Play". That moniker belongs to the ending of the 1982 Big Game (Cal v. Stanford), where Cal snatched victory from a very young John Elway QBing for Stanford. Yeah, I'm an Old Blue.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7aCDfJH6eRY

Anyhow, back to my anonymous suffering, which shall only abate when _A Dance with Dragons_ is in my hands. Keep up the great work!

Your humble servant,
Kwei-Cee Chu
[info]phillip_ii wrote:
Feb. 6th, 2008 04:58 pm (UTC)
Re: The Play
Agreed. Eli-to-Tyree took two Miracles, but Cal's win took five in a row, and they had to get through the entire Cardinal team AND their band. "The Play" belongs to the '82 Bears.
Re: The Play - [info]crocobar - Feb. 6th, 2008 07:59 pm (UTC) Expand
[info]blackcoat wrote:
Feb. 6th, 2008 07:11 am (UTC)
As a credit to your ability as a writer, this *ALMOST* made me care about football.

But then I got over it.
[info]mizkit wrote:
Feb. 6th, 2008 08:55 am (UTC)
It actually made me want to watch the game, which is pretty astonishing. :)
(no subject) - [info]malimar - Feb. 6th, 2008 09:13 am (UTC) Expand
[info]paul_le_fou wrote:
Feb. 6th, 2008 07:13 am (UTC)
Great writeup of a great game, but I do have to throw in one thing. It can't be The Play, because as fantastic as it was, it's still not as fantastic as the play that already has the name, the Cal-Stanford lateral-ridden band-smashing nightmare from '82. Also, there's gotta be something more... creative than The Play out there. Something that encapsulates both how Eli was too slippery to take down, or the Pats defense couldn't make it stick, and how Tyree was too sticky to drop the ball. Rubber and Glue?
[info]amothtoflame wrote:
Feb. 6th, 2008 07:17 am (UTC)
I'm not a Giants fan, but I wanted them to win so that the Pats would lose, and in homage to yourself. Despite this, I can't stop watching the video of The Play on the NFL website and my heart stopped during that play. One of the greatest I've ever seen for sure. Congratulations, Giants!
[info]jonnivalentine wrote:
Feb. 6th, 2008 07:23 am (UTC)
I went to a local pub to watch the game, since my television is far from fitting for the superbowl, and expecting it to be full of band-wagon Patriots fans, I was pleasantly surprised to see it that it consisted of largely Giants fans, or at least Patriots haters. I say at least Patriots haters because I was far and away the most exciting person in that building after "The Play" I nearly knocked over a pitcher of beer in my jumping excitement, and I was afraid my 21 year old heart was gonna stop in its tracks. Congratulations to the G-men, and here's hoping against one of the all too famous "terrible after Superbowl seasons" that so many teams suffered (thankfully the Colts at least put up a good fight this year, even if Big Manning seemed to enjoy passing to San Diego far too much).
I had faith in Baby Manning (as I've been calling him all year) since seeing those rare glimpses of greatness you mentioned above, and I knew he would come out of his shell eventually. He managed to do that and so much more in the last several games.
Also, I think a huge congratulations to Tom Coughlin is in order. The man did an excellent job coaching a struggling team, and even though he received criticism for playing his starters against the Patriots in week 17, we can clearly see that was an excellent decision that set off a firestorm of positive momentum that just couldn't be stopped.
[info]dswdiane wrote:
Feb. 6th, 2008 07:26 am (UTC)
Could you, please, put some of this commentary behind an LJ cut? All you have to do is type "<"then type "lj-cut" then type ">" and the rest will be behind the cut so it doesn't take up space on all our live journals, and only those of us who want to read it can do so.

Edited at 2008-02-06 07:28 am (UTC)
[info]japanfreak wrote:
Feb. 6th, 2008 07:34 am (UTC)
Even if you don't care about football, this is a wonderfully composed post. Why throw it behind an LJ cut where some people might just write it off? Besides, this is his LJ and you didn't have to friend him, so why tell him what to do with it?

:) I'm not trolling, just stating the facts here.
(no subject) - [info]dswdiane - Feb. 6th, 2008 09:05 am (UTC) Expand
(no subject) - [info]japanfreak - Feb. 6th, 2008 10:07 am (UTC) Expand
(no subject) - [info]dirkdada - Feb. 6th, 2008 03:25 pm (UTC) Expand
[info]dgillmore wrote:
Feb. 6th, 2008 07:31 am (UTC)
"Brady scrambles loose and lofts a bomb into the air that sails fifty yards downfield toward the hands of the streaking Randy Moss, who had gotten a step on both of his defenders... and there was an instant there, as the ball fell toward Moss's hands, when I could picture him snatching it from the air and streaking in for a touchdown that would have driven a knife through my heart and the heart of every Giants fan everywhere... but at the last second, Corey Webster leapt and knocked the ball aside.

An interesting moment. Brady to Moss over two defenders was a common theme this year. Moss had both defenders beat, but had to slow down to try and make a play on the under-thrown pass..

Webster did a great job with the opportunity that presented itself, but if Brady hadn't been beat around all game, the step Moss had on him probably would have been enough to deny the opportunity altogether.

I'd like to see more consistency from Eli on a year-to-year basis, but I give all credit to him and the G-Men and their resiliently overwhelming defense, they certainly got it done this post-season.
[info]sensorglitch wrote:
Feb. 6th, 2008 07:32 am (UTC)
Yea, the game was pretty amazing. I wasn't cheering for the Pats I was hoping Moss would get a ring. Theres still hope for that though
[info]alice_the_raven wrote:
Feb. 6th, 2008 08:16 am (UTC)
Great game! Hoorah for the Giants!
[info]janetlin wrote:
Feb. 6th, 2008 09:10 am (UTC)
I haven't watched football since the Niners back in the eighties, and now I feel bad for missing this game...
[info]matt_snow wrote:
Feb. 6th, 2008 10:31 am (UTC)
Superbowl
Coming from England, I can't pretend that I'm the biggest football fan in the world (prefering soccer, naturally) or know too much about it. But every year I make the effort to watch the Superbowl as its one of those iconic sporting events like the F1 Monaco Grand Prix, Wimbledon, The World Cup (Soccer). As a huge GRRM fan, my allegiance was with the Giants and what a game it was. Stayed up till 3am watching it and do not regret it, I might even say I actually like football now!

And even I can appreciate the quality of that Play as you would call it!
[info]crocobar wrote:
Feb. 6th, 2008 08:00 pm (UTC)
Re: Superbowl
Once again, please do not call it that. The Play will ever be Berkeley vs Stanford '82
Re: Superbowl - [info]matt_snow - Feb. 6th, 2008 08:27 pm (UTC) Expand
Re: Superbowl - [info]crocobar - Feb. 6th, 2008 08:59 pm (UTC) Expand
[info]denari wrote:
Feb. 6th, 2008 10:40 am (UTC)
Unfortunately in the UK, these things don't make the news :( And youtube seems to have deleted the video because of copyright infringement to the NFL :(
[info]despairfaery wrote:
Feb. 6th, 2008 11:57 am (UTC)
I know nothing of football, but knowing how much you love the Giants, I was pulling for them in the super bowl. It thoroughly confused my husband!
[info]lifeisacabaret wrote:
Feb. 6th, 2008 12:24 pm (UTC)
I am not a football fan at all, but I thought of you when I heard about it. Whee!
[info]ailsaek wrote:
Feb. 6th, 2008 12:45 pm (UTC)
I'm a New Englander and not much of a football fan. I hate the Patsies, though, always have. When I watched the last quarter, I was excited and impressed, and I wondered how it hit someone who was a fan of the other team.

Now I know. Great account, and reading it makes the game retroactively more fun, because now I have some idea who these guys are. Reading that felt like watching the Bird/McHale Celtics back in the Glory Years.
[info]xraytheenforcer wrote:
Feb. 6th, 2008 12:56 pm (UTC)
I'm already wondering in how many ways the Jets and Giants can break their fans' hearts next year. Actually, I'm already wondering how the Mets are gonna break mine.
[info]ebenstone wrote:
Feb. 6th, 2008 02:57 pm (UTC)
Have faith...we have Santana!!!!!
(no subject) - [info]xraytheenforcer - Feb. 6th, 2008 03:55 pm (UTC) Expand
[info]thinspirits wrote:
Feb. 6th, 2008 01:00 pm (UTC)
The Giants are the best thing to happen to my Dolphins all year.
[info]tenzil wrote:
Feb. 6th, 2008 01:13 pm (UTC)
I like 'The Great Escape,' that's what my kids and I have been calling it. If he hadn't made the escape there wouldn't have been a catch, is our thinking on the subject.
[info]paxinator wrote:
Feb. 10th, 2008 03:46 am (UTC)
Great Escape is good.. i like "Manning Miracle"
While not directly refering to the reception, it also aludes to it in that the Giants "escaped" from defeat by the scramble, pass and reception.

I'm a fan of aliteration!
[info]prodigal wrote:
Feb. 6th, 2008 01:18 pm (UTC)
This is the first Super Bowl in years that I watched every minute of. My most heartfelt congratulations to your team on their well-deserved victory.
[info]kram006 wrote:
Feb. 6th, 2008 01:22 pm (UTC)
I was a neutral fan to the game, but wanted the Patriots to win simply to shut up those '72 Dolphins "champagne-opening" deal that goes on every year.

But all I could ever ask for is a game like this. And your description of it is the best I've seen (go figure, your books are the best I've read ;) )

As for the naming the play, apparently the actual playcall from the Giants is Phantom. I almost like "The Phantom" as the name of the play--it almost seems as if the shadows are trying to pull Eli down, then almost seems as if some guiding hand is helping Tyree make that beautiful catch. Or, as someone mentioned up earlier, I do like "Rubber and Glue" as well.
[info]nestdweller wrote:
Feb. 6th, 2008 01:45 pm (UTC)
Sports columnists, eat your heart out. That was a lovely rundown.

Congrats again to the Giants and all their fans!
[info]racebannon42 wrote:
Feb. 6th, 2008 02:07 pm (UTC)
Congrats George. As a fan there is no better feeling than watching your team win the big game. As for naming the play, I like "The Clutch" it has threefold meaning, in eli escaped the clutch of the defenders, Tyree clutched the ball to his helm, and it was a clutch play on 3rd and long.
[info]theyoungwolf wrote:
Feb. 6th, 2008 08:14 pm (UTC)
I was thinking something along the lines of the Blue Genie. The name just stuck to me ever since I saw the play.
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