In a game that truly lived up to the title of a championship game, the San Francisco 49ers led by Head Coach David Pactor defeated the Oklahoma Outlaws to win the Frozen Tundra Super Bowl number six. Click for Game Box Score: Congratulations to Coach Pactor for winning and thanks to all the other Frozen Tundra coaches and especially Commissioner Garry Nagata for a competitive and enjoyable season. A lot of work when into making this season possible and it ran smoothly from beginning to end. Hopefully we will all be back again next season to take aim at the new kings of the league, the San Francisco Forty Niners.
FT Baltimore Colts
Sunday, March 18, 2012
In a game that truly lived up to the title of a championship game, the San Francisco 49ers led by Head Coach David Pactor defeated the Oklahoma Outlaws to win the Frozen Tundra Super Bowl number six. Click for Game Box Score: Congratulations to Coach Pactor for winning and thanks to all the other Frozen Tundra coaches and especially Commissioner Garry Nagata for a competitive and enjoyable season. A lot of work when into making this season possible and it ran smoothly from beginning to end. Hopefully we will all be back again next season to take aim at the new kings of the league, the San Francisco Forty Niners.
Tuesday, March 13, 2012
This is one of the rare moments where the seeding is justified and the fans get what they want, a battle between the number one and number two teams for league supremacy in 2012. The deciding game will be held on March 17 at 8:00 am Pacific time in order to be viewed live in prime time in Kabul.Both teams ride long winning streaks on their path to the title game. San Francisco lost their last game back in week 8 (more on that later) while Oklahoma has been without a blemish since way back in week 2 of the Frozen Tundra season. In fact, the Outlaws haven't been involved in a one score game since back in week nine. In the playoffs the Forty Niners survived a big test from the Cincinnati Bengals, then rebounded with a convincing semi-final victory over a very good New York team. Oklahoma used their defense to suffocate Tampa Bay and in their semi-final game the Outlaws were clicking on all cylinders in downing Seattle.
Through the regular season San Francisco led the Frozen Tundra on both sides of the ball. They allowed the fewest points and scored the most points. Oklahoma was nearly as impressive, finishing second only to the Niners in both categories. Individually San Francisco's Quarterback Drew Brees was the league leader in Completion %, Passing Yards & T.D.'s. San Francisco Defensive End John Abraham was fifth in the F.T. in sacks with 12. The Outlaws counter that with their trio of standouts. Quarterback Ben Roethlisberger finished with the highest Q.B. Rating in the Frozen Tundra and was second in the league in Passing T.D.'s. Defensive End Trent Cole was tied for third in the league in sacks with 13. Wide Receiver Nate Washington pulled in a league high 17 touchdown passes while averaging 18.5 yards per catch! Both teams have respectable running games led by double threat backs. San Francisco has the dangerous Ray Rice who accounted for over 2000 combined rushing and receiving yards. Oklahoma boasts the veteran Frank Gore who produced over 16oo yards of offense for the men in black.
Taking a deeper look at what worked this season for these two teams. San Francisco just brutalized teams with their offense. The 49ers produced over 5900 yards of offense, averaging over 370 yards per game. With their opponents playing mostly from behind the San Francisco defense showed little mercy as they allowed just over 240 yards per game, finished 4th in the league in sacks and produced 31 takeaways. Oklahoma was not quite as overall impressive statistically. While San Francisco more resembled a high tech attack, Oklahoma was more of a throwback. The Outlaws provide constant pressure on both sides for 60 minutes and when a crack eventually appears they pour through like water through a compromised dam. I've alluded to Ben Roethlisberger's phenomenal consistency through the season. On defense Oklahoma was number two in sacks, number two in interceptions and number two with a +18 in giveaway/takeaways.
Earlier I mentioned that San Francisco lost in week 8. The relevance of that, the loss was to the Oklahoma Outlaws. For Oklahoma the game was the type of execution that they hope for in the Championship game. The Outlaws defense harassed Drew Brees throughout the contest and San Francisco did crack. Six sacks, five interceptions (one for a T.D.) and a convincing 18 point win. The rushing game struggled for Oklahoma but Roethlisberger had his typical efficient day under center. A touchdown, no picks and a cool 262 yards passing. For San Francisco, this was a worst case scenario and one that they certainly hope doesn't recur in the rematch. Finally, the last keys to the game of the season:
- Drew Brees, good or bad or somewhere in between? Needless to say, at this level of competition if Brees has a game like back in week 8 then San Francisco has a tough road. Brees pedigree for the rest of the season is very good so the odds of a repeat of that performance is small.
- Can Roethlisberger be disrupted? This guy has shown 16 weeks worth of single minded, game winning focus. Can the Forty Niners discover a way to get him off his game?
- Who's running this thing? In week eight the two teams combined for 49 rush attempts that yielded a total of 165 yards! Neither team abandoned the run but neither defense allowed the running games to get going. Both teams have displayed the capacity for running the ball during the season, if one team establishes a successful running game that could swing the pendulum their way.
- The lightning bolt. This could be any one of several things: Oklahoma's Nate Washington connecting on a bomb or Marc Mariani breaking a punt return. Trent Cole having a huge game and forcing Drew Brees into mistakes...San Francisco's Drew Brees getting a hot hand with his plethora of inviting targets, Brandon Lloyd, Mike Wallace and Brandon Marshall. Or, Eric Weems breaking a kick return.
Should be quite an entertaining game.
Teams offensive leaders:
| PASSING | ATT. | COMP. | T.D. | INT. | RTG. |
| Drew Brees - S.F. | 581 | 363 | 37 | 23 | 92.6 |
| Ben Roethlisberger - OKL. | 473 | 269 | 33 | 9 | 97.0 |
| RUSHING | ATT. | YDS. | AVG. | LONG | T.D. |
| Ray Rice - S.F. | 336 | 1438 | 4.3 | 47 | 12 |
| Frank Gore - OKL. | 229 | 1156 | 5.0 | 25 | 4 |
| RECEIVING | REC. | YDS. | AVG. | LONG | T.D. |
| Antonio Gates - S.F. | 75 | 952 | 12.7 | 57 | 7 |
| Nate Washington - OKL. | 59 | 1092 | 18.5 | 75 | 17 |
Tuesday, February 28, 2012
In the first of the two semi-final games it will be the number two seeded San Francisco Forty Niners hosting the number three seeded New York Yanks. The two teems advanced through the quarter finals in two very different games to make it into this contest.San Francisco survived a very difficult quarter-final challenge from Tom Brady and the Cincinnati Bengals, winning by the slimmest of margins 17-16. In that game the Bengals did a lot of things right against the Niners. Cincy got their running game going and that enabled them to gain the edge in time of possession. Although they didn't shut down the San Francisco offense, they did force the 49ers to work hard for what they got. Also San Francisco was forced to do one thing that they absolutely did not want to do, punt the ball eight times with Devin Hester looking to return one for six points at every opportunity. Although it sounds like the Forty Niners were lucky to win, that just goes to show how good they are. With all these factors working against them they still won the game. The Niners defense held Tom Brady and the big Bengals passing game to below 200 yards with less than a 50% completion rate, that was impressive. The special teams also did a good job in coverage. Despite the eight punts Hester didn't get 1 return yard, plus the Forty Niners had a better starting field position in the game.
While San Francisco struggled, New York swept past the Philadelphia Eagles in their quarter-final game with a convincing 27-14 win. The Yanks defense was the big story here as Philadelphia struggled to move the ball on offense. Although the Eagles Maurice Jones-Drew gained 138 yards, it took 20 carries to get that total and his longest run was 17 yards. Alex Smith, who had been so steady for Philadelphia all season, was harassed into a miserable day. Smith completed just 32% of his attempts and he was intercepted three times. On offense it was not a great day passing or running the ball. Yanks quarterback Aaron Rodgers completed less than half his pass attempts and had one touchdown toss to go with one interception. On the ground, Michael Bush was held below 100 yards rushing with a long run of 16 yards.
Teams offensive leaders:
As the Yanks and Forty Niners did not meet in the regular season, let's look at how they should match-up. In the regular season San Francisco was number one in scoring offense averaging more than 31 points per game. On defense San Francisco was number one in the league, allowing just over 13 1/2 points per game. 49ers Quarterback Drew Brees led the Frozen Tundra in Completion %, Passing Yards and Touchdowns. The San Francisco offense passed for two thousand more yards than they allowed. Halfback Ray Rice ran for 1400 yards and totaled 14 touchdowns. The San Francisco defense was fourth in the league in sacks with 35 and John Abraham accounted for a dozen of those by himself.
Statistically New York can't quite match those S.F. numbers but that doesn't mean that they weren't also stout. The Yanks averaged over 25 points per game, good enough for fourth best in the league. New York out gained the opposition by nearly 1,2oo yards via the pass. The New York defense allowed just over 18 points per contest which ranked them as the seventh best team in points allowed.
The time of possession was remarkably even between the two teams with New York holding the ball for 1 minute longer on the season. In the important takeaway/giveaway statistic, San Francisco was +4 while New York was a comparable +2. San Francisco picked off 17 passes while the New York defense picked off 18. Both teams had three wide receivers with over 60 receptions and each had one 1000 receiver. Finally, both teams totaled over 1400 yards rushing. Let's get the keys to the game:
- What San Francisco would wish for is to have Drew Brees play like the he did for most of the regular season. Have a big passing game and let's move on to the Championship.
- What New York would love to do is to keep the 49ers defense off balance. Make a guessing game as to which receiver Rodgers is going to and also to mix in some effective running from Michael Bush.
- When Brees struggles you still have Ray Rice. That's a very nice safety valve to have a runner like that who can help win a defensive slug-fest.
- Minimize the negatives and maximize the positives. Brees has thrown 22 interceptions while Rodgers has thrown 23. Brees has been sacked 31 times while New York only managed 10 sacks on the season. San Francisco had 35 sacks but Rodgers is elusive and a scramble can mean that all bets are off and a big play can occur. Also, don't ignore Rodgers 250 yards rushing on the year. Which side of the ball is going to pull off the big plays for these teams?
| PASSING | ATT. | COMP. | T.D. | INT. | RTG. |
| Drew Brees - S.F. | 581 | 363 | 37 | 23 | 92.6 |
| Aaron Rodgers - N.Y. | 629 | 375 | 24 | 22 | 79.1 |
| RUSHING | ATT. | YDS. | AVG. | LONG | T.D. |
| Ray Rice - S.F. | 336 | 1438 | 4.3 | 47 | 12 |
| Michael Bush - N.Y. | 240 | 1049 | 4.4 | 30 | 15 |
| RECEIVING | REC. | YDS. | AVG. | LONG | T.D. |
| Antonio Gates - S.F. | 75 | 952 | 12.7 | 57 | 7 |
| Aaron Hernandez - N.Y. | 105 | 940 | 9.0 | 20 | 0 |
In the other Semi-Final game it is a rematch of the week 11 contest between the #1 seeded Oklahoma Outlaws and the #4 seeded Seattle Seahawks. Back in that week 11 game the Outlaws easily handled the Seahawks winning by a score of 2701. Let's take a quick look inside that game. For Oklahoma, Quarterback Ben Roethlisberger was effective in the victory. His peripheral statistics for the game didn't stand out but his bottom line of two touchdowns and no interceptions speak well for his game generalship. What makes the performance even more impressive was that the Outlaws' running game was shackled by the Seahawks, managing just 65 yards on the ground. For Seattle, Quarterback Peyton Manning had a miserable day. Manning's one touchdown was more than offset by throwing for three interceptions. In addition, the Seahawks lost a fumble so the true story of the loss was Seattle's -4 in turnovers in the game.The two teams advanced to this game with convincing quarter final victories. Oklahoma shut out Tampa Bay 17 -0 and Seattle got by San Diego 27-17. In the Outlaws' win over Tampa Bay, the Bucs offense was throttled by the Oklahoma defense. On the ground Tampa Bay only managed 69 yards of offense. Turning to the passing attack Matt Schaub and the Buccaneers were harassed throughout the game by a staunch Oklahoma defense. Schaub managed just 165 yards as he was sacked five times and picked off twice. The Oklahoma offense didn't get rolling until the second half but when they did they were again led by Roethlisberger. Ben threw for 242 yards, two touchdowns and his customary zero turnovers.
Seattle also won their game by pulling away in the second half. The Seahawks' contest with San Diego featured a wild second quarter where the two teams combined for 31 points to go into halftime tied 17-17. Seattle's defense closed the door from that point, blanking the Chargers in the second half. Seattle Quarterback Peyton Manning was effective in leading the offense. Manning completed 69% of his throws, totaling over 300 yards and one touchdown. The Seahawks ground attack couldn't do much against the Chargers so the game really was in the hands of Manning and the defense. Peyton's brother Eli Manning struggled with the pass versus the Seahawks never able to connect for a scoring toss. Chargers running back Arian Foster had some success but when the game was on the line the Seattle defense came up big.
Oklahoma's season story was they lost the first two games on their schedule. Since that stumbling start they haven't lost a game since week two. The Outlaws averaged over 28 points per game while allowing less than 14. Their points scored/points allowed differential of +13.81 was second best in the league behind San Francisco. The Oklahoma offense is led by Quarterback Ben Roethlisberger, who had the highest QB Rating in the Frozen Tundra at 97% with 33 touchdowns and only 9 picks. The offense totaled the second most points in the F.T. Veteran running back Frank Gore led the rushing attack with over 1100 yards but the offense truly ran through Roethlisberger. Wide Receiver Nate Washington was the prime target in the passing game. Washington averaged over 18 yards per catch and had 17 touchdown receptions. The Oklahoma defense was just as daunting, finishing second in the league in fewest points allowed. The team was also second in the league in sacks with 48 and second in the league in interceptions with 25. As you would expect Oklahoma had a whopping advantage in takeaway/giveaways with a +18. Defensive stalwarts for the Outlaws were lineman Trent Cole who had 13 sacks and in the secondary Dashon Goldson led the team with 6 interceptions.
Seattle is also on somewhat of a long roll, having lost just one game since week 4 on the schedule. Veteran signal caller Peyton Manning does the heavy lifting but the piecemeal Seattle running attack accounted for over 2000 yards of rushing offense. Seattle had the #8 ranked scoring offense to go along with their #4 ranked scoring defense. The one area where Seattle shone brightest was in creating sacks. The Seahawks were number one in that category, they totaled 54 sacks on the season. Linebacker Clay Matthews was the league sack king with 16 and was aided by lineman Tamba Hali and his 13 sacks. Antonio Garay's 8 was third on this team but would have placed him on top of many team's leader board. Back on the offensive side of the ball,k Manning has three big targets in Vernon Davis, Marques Colston and Hakeem Nicks. Brad Smith and Brandon Jacobs head the effective running attack and Smith doubles as the Kickoff Return man (2 T.D. returns). On to the keys to the game:
- For Oklahoma, go back to week 11. Put pressure on Manning and control the ball on offense. An almost seven minute advantage in time of possession and a +4 in turnovers should equal a win.
- For Seattle, forget about week 11. If the Seahawks can execute better they should be right in the contest. Turnovers are killers and Seattle has tempted fate many times this year as they are -9 for the season.
- Pressure, they say it can either crush a rock or make a diamond. Manning wasn't sacked too often but Oklahoma got to him twice in week 11. Roethlisberger was sacked one more time than Manning on the year but he's a dangerous man outside the pocket. Big Ben had over 150 yards running the ball with six rushing touchdowns. Both teams like to bring heat but which side will be more effective in harassing the passer?
- In a game of two great passers don't ignore the run. Frank Gore has been a Pro-Bowl rusher and he still can do the job when the passing game struggles. However, it's Seattle's running game that can sneak up on you. They ran for more than 2100 yards and teams have had some success moving on the ground against Oklahoma.
Teams offensive leaders:
| PASSING | ATT. | COMP. | T.D. | INT. | RTG. |
| Ben Roethlisberger - OKL. | 473 | 269 | 33 | 9 | 97.0 |
| Peyton Manning - SEA. | 552 | 316 | 29 | 18 | 84.1 |
| RUSHING | ATT. | YDS. | AVG. | LONG | T.D. |
| Frank Gore - OKL. | 229 | 1156 | 5.0 | 25 | 4 |
| Brad Smith - SEA. | 161 | 920 | 5.7 | 30 | 4 |
| RECEIVING | REC. | YDS. | AVG. | LONG | T.D. |
| Nate Washington - OKL. | 59 | 1092 | 18.5 | 75 | 17 |
| Vernon Davis - SEA. | 81 | 1153 | 14.2 | 58 | 7 |
Wednesday, February 22, 2012
San Diego and Seattle will meet for this first time this season in a quarterfinal match between the #4 and #5 seeds. These are two imposing defensive teams which finished ranked third and fourth in the league in points allowed. San Diego gave up 247 points during the regular season. Seattle allowed 267 points on the year. San Diego's offense scored 406 points. The Seattle offense accumulated 393 points. Two pretty even teams according to these bottom line statistics but how they got here was quite different.
Seattle had a huge offensive production, led by the veteran Peyton Manning. Peyton threw for over 4000 yards and had a big season connecting with targets, Tight End Vernon Davis and Wide Receivers Hakeem Nicks and Marques Colston. The rushing attack was a three-headed troika of Brad Smith, Brandon Jacobs and Michael Robinson who combined for over 2000 yards of rushing offense.
San Diego was quarterbacked by the younger Manning brother Eli. The Chargers air attack was more conservative but still moved the ball with success in the air. Tight End Chris Cooley was the production receiver but when the Chargers wanted to go deep they were ably equipped to do so with Lee Evans and Dez Bryant stretching the field. The San Diego running game relied heavily on Arian Foster to do the work. Foster responed with a 2000 yard season and a league leading 17 rushing touchdowns.
The two defenses were very similar against the run, separated by just 20 total yards. Seattle's pass defense was a little tougher to penetrate allowing 300 less yards through the air than the San Diego defense. The Chargers defense was more opportunistic as they enjoyed a +19 advantage in Takeway/Giveaway's.
This is a game where it could come down to special teams. Seattle has the reliable veteran Adam Vinatieri handling the kicking chores. Returning kickoffs will be Brad Smith who had two returns for touchdowns during the regular season. San Diego has the league second most accurate placekicker Matt Bryant who hit on 91% of his tries this year. Returning punts the Chargers have the electrifying Dez Bryant who tied for the league lead with 4 touchdown returns. Now for the keys to the game:
- Turnovers. An especially crucial factor when two teams are this evenly matched. As mentioned earlier San Diego was +19, I didn't mention Seattle's -9. How good must Seattle have been this year to win 12 games and still turn the ball over that much? Not a good idea to try that in the playoffs.
- Keep Peyton from getting in a rhythm/keep Arian Foster on the sidelines. Whichever team has more success implementing their plan on defense stands a good chance of winning the contest.
- When everything else is even, what about the special teams? Both teams are well equipped to break the game with their special teams. Again, if one team can establish a clear advantage in this aspect then they can earn a victory.
| PASSING | ATT. | COMP. | T.D. | INT. | RTG. |
| Eli Manning - S.D. | 487 | 253 | 16 | 12 | 69.9 |
| Peyton Manning - SEA. | 552 | 316 | 29 | 18 | 84.1 |
| RUSHING | ATT. | YDS. | AVG. | LONG | T.D. |
| Arian Foster - S.D. | 392 | 2065 | 5.3 | 74 | 17 |
| Brad Smith - SEA. | 161 | 920 | 5.7 | 30 | 4 |
| RECEIVING | REC. | YDS. | AVG. | LONG | T.D. |
| Chris Cooley - S.D. | 67 | 650 | 9.7 | 35 | 5 |
| Vernon Davis - SEA. | 81 | 1153 | 14.2 | 58 | 7 |
Half a season ago the New York football Yanks had a week 9 date with the Philadelphia Eagles. After a closely played first half the Yanks just took control and won going away by a final score of 29-17. Whenever you talk about the expansion team from New York the initial focus is on Quarterback Aaron Rodgers. He is the driving force for the team's 13-3 record as New York out gained their opponents through the air by more than 1200 yards. The Yanks running attack was headed by Michael Bush who did manage a solid 1000 yard season. New York's defense isn't the big play variety but they are tough. Trying to sustain a long attack against this unit often results in futility.
Philadelphia used more of a grind it out style of attack. This was a team during the regular season that would methodically win games, often inviting the opposition to beat themselves. Quarterback Alex Smith's play reflected that of the team itself. Take what the other team gives you, don't force the action and once the other team starts to over commit, then you hit them with a big play. The Eagles offensive line is stout, having allowed only 7 sacks the entire season.
The Yanks can get their offense rolling with big Tight End's Aaron Hernandez and Anthony Fasano doing the damage on short receptions. When Rodgers wants to go long he has his favorite target Mike A. Williams but focus on him and Steve L. Smith and Malcolm Floyd can expose a defense.
Philadelphia's Maurice Jones-Drew enables the Eagles to do what they like best. Pound on the defense and accumulate first downs. For the regular season Philly had 41 more first downs than their opponents. Jones-Drew had over 2000 yards rushing which placed him second among all Frozen Tundra rushers. Don't be fooled into thinking this is a 3 yards and a cloud of dust type offense. The Eagles counter with a strong Tight End tandem of their own, Jason Witten and Dallas Clark. On the outside Greg Jennings is a big threat along with dependable veteran Reggie Wayne.
Time to focus on the keys to the game:
- Aaron Rodgers. In the week nine game Rodgers was on fire, blowing up the Eagles with 4 touchdown passes and over 300 yards. A repeat of this type of performance gives the Yanks the best chance to advance to the semi-finals.
- Aaron Rodgers. Not a typo! Rodgers threw just two more touchdowns than interceptions on the season. If he can't get on a hot streak with his receivers then it becomes a ground game and the Eagles get the edge there.
- Three large focus points for Philadelphia: turnovers, defend the pass and run the ball. For the season the Eagles owned a +15 advantage in turnovers. When they played New York in week 9 they generated zero turnovers. Jones-Drew had success running in week 9 but the Yanks had the ball for 7 more minutes. Which player, Rodgers or Jones-Drew will impose his will more?
| PASSING | ATT. | COMP. | T.D. | INT. | RTG. |
| Alex Smith - PHI. | 530 | 285 | 24 | 13 | 76.3 |
| Aaron Rodgers - N.Y. | 629 | 375 | 24 | 22 | 79.1 |
| RUSHING | ATT. | YDS. | AVG. | LONG | T.D. |
| Maurice Jones-Drew - PHI. | 377 | 2138 | 5.7 | 37 | 10 |
| Michael Bush - N.Y. | 240 | 1049 | 4.4 | 30 | 15 |
| RECEIVING | REC. | YDS. | AVG. | LONG | T.D. |
| Maurice Jones-Drew - PHI. | 74 | 640 | 8.6 | 45 | 1 |
| Aaron Hernandez - N.Y. | 105 | 940 | 9.0 | 20 | 0 |
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