🏈 Super Bowl LI

Was Lane kiffin calling plays for Atlanta? If they run the ball and kick field goals they win. Stupidy!!

Onside kick recovery big lead and you have several negative plays and punt when you got the ball in field goal range. Same thing after Julio's catch.. run the ball, kill the clock and a field goal makes it an 11 point game with no time outs

And what's crazy is they had run it well all night...
 
Well I totally fucked us and jinxed us. This game had an eerie similar feel as the National Championship game against Clemson, Alabama being my Falcons. Start off great and build a lead and insert defensive dominance. Then in the second half the offense can't sustain a drive, only to throw the defense back out there time and time again to defend the best player in the league, and ultimately lose in the final moments.

I have never been big on Matt Ryan when it comes to the Matty Ice nickname and >$100M payday he got. Solid guy with great character, but I simply feel he needs to win the big one before he makes it big like that. He had a tremendous season, and one no one can argue. He kept his turnovers down and set plenty of records while taking us to a Super Bowl. I simply do not think he is elite or deserving of $100M. I think Brady, Rodgers, Wilson, Brees, and even Big Ben are worthy (if we must pay someone that much money) of that kind of contract, but they all won Super Bowls and showed they could carry a team on their backs. Simply put, you don't take a fucking sack and take your team out of field goal range to ice the Super Bowl, especially when your kicker is as close to automatic as it freaking gets. An elite quarterback knows they can't take that sack. An elite quarterback knows to go to Julio Jones no matter if he's quadruple covered knowing he'll catch it or pull a flag out of it. I mean, I simply can't understand the mindset of a guy that is not new to the league or the position, and that has the talent to pull off the right decision. Sure, bad play calling, but making over $103M is a notice that he should be making the right call during the play.
 
.Simply put, you don't take a ******* sack and take your team out of field goal range to ice the Super Bowl, especially when your kicker is as close to automatic as it freaking gets. .

Conversely, you don't call a PA pass on 2nd and 11 at the NE 25. I blame that sequence SOLELY on the coach.

You run a draw play, maybe getting 3-5 yards in the middle of the field. Freeman had been running the ball lights out most of the night. Who knows? Maybe he gets the 1st down. At worst, he gets no yardage and you bring your clutch kicker on for a 42 yard FG to make a 2 possession lead.
 
Another reason to always have your DC and OC on the field :rolf:

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Going down? Falcons’ coaches stuck without elevator after Super Bowl | Jeff Schultz blog

HOUSTON — I’m sure most of you don’t want to spend any more time reviewing the carnage of Sunday’s Super Bowl collapse against New England.

Some are calling it a choke. As much as I hate using that word, when a team leads 28-3 in the third quarter and 28-9 with less than 10 minutes remaining in regulation and has a chance to put the game away with a field goal with under four minutes remaining and still loses — well, it’s hard to argue against the “choke” word.

For my column on 34-28 overtime loss, click here.

But this is how bad things went for the Falcons. Several of their assistant coaches, including offensive coordinator Kyle Shanahan and defensive coordinator Richard Smith, got stuck upstairs when the elevator never came to pick them up and take them down to the locker room afterwards. You can see them standing by a bank of elevators in the photo above.

Here’s what happened:

— When the game ended, the assistants stepped out of their coaching box and went to the elevators. As a general rule, elevators are held for coaches before media — or fans seated in luxury boxes — can use them. But that wasn’t the case this time. The elevators were on other floors taking fans.

— After more than five minutes, the coaches were told it might be best to walk down. So they descended a staircase and soon found themselves walking in an NRG plaza with fans, outside of concession stands, as several New England fans were shouting and celebrating their team’s win.

— The group waded their way through the crowd for about 50 yards, then somebody shouted for them to hook back because an elevator would pick them up from that floor. So they all walked to the elevators and waited. It was another several minutes before an elevator came, but not before all had vented to stadium employees and Shanahan let out some expletives. Shanahan eventually walked away to lean against a wall and cool off. In total, it was at least 20 minutes from the time the coaches waited for their first elevator before they reached the ground floor.

Understand, Shanahan wasn’t in the best mood anyway because of the loss, which happened in part because of his fourth-quarter decisions, calling two ill-advised pass plays in obvious running situations that resulted in sacks (and one fumble). (See game column for more detail.) That opened the door to the Patriots’ comeback.

The Falcons obviously wouldn’t have made it to the Super Bowl without the success of Shanahan’s offensive scheme. But they lost this game in part because of him.
 
That's twice now that Dont’a Hightower has saved the Super Bowl for the Patriots

James White’s third touchdown of the game won Super Bowl LI in overtime. Julian Edelman’s insane catch — the anti-David Tyree/Mario Manningham/Jermaine Kearse curse breaker — allowed that to happen.
But Dont’a Hightower saved the game.
Without Hightower’s strip sack with 8:31 remaining, the Patriots do not beat the Atlanta Falcons — simple as that. As Shutdown Corner’s Frank Schwab pointed out, it was one of 16 plays the Patriots needed (and got) to win the miraculous game.
[Yahoo Store: Get your New England Patriots championship gear right here!]
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New England Patriots’ Dont’a Hightower made the play that allowed the comeback to happen. (AP)
But Hightower knocked out the crucial Jenga piece that allowed the Patriots to finally topple the Falcons. And it’s not the first time he made a somewhat forgotten but crucial play to preserve a Super Bowl title. More on that later.
First, the play in LI: The Falcons faced a 3rd-and-1 from the Atlanta 36-yard line. They had run it twice on first and second down for 9 yards. The Falcons wanted to be aggressive there, so they called for a deep ball.
The problem was that Hightower came free on a blitz and Devonta Freeman never picked him up (despite Freeman’s postgame denials it was his guy) and Hightower crushed Matt Ryan. The ball came loose, and the Patriots recovered at the 25. They would score a TD and a two-point conversion two minutes and change later to make it 28-20, Atlanta.
“The Hightower sack was a huge play for us,” Patriots head coach Bill Belichick said. “We really needed that.”
The Patriots felt like they had to make it a one-score game to have a chance at that point, and they did so in a stunning flurry. Without that turnovers, even if Ryan’s pass is incomplete or a short-yardage run is stuffed, the Patriots likely were facing having to drive 65 or 70 yards with a little more than eight minutes left just to cut the lead to eight. Instead, they did so at the 6:00 mark.
Their longest play from scrimmage all night was 28 yards; they were chipping away, and the clock was tick-tocking against them. This was the biggest game tilter right here.
One of the hallmarks of New England’s Super Bowl victories under Belichick has been that they’ve been team efforts. Yes, Tom Brady delivered big moments in all five of them, and unsung heroes stepped up in each as well. But Hightower is one of the Patriots’ better defenders, and quite well known as a former first-round pick. And that’s twice now he’s come through with game-saving plays in his two Super Bowl appearances.
The other came on the oft-forgotten play right before Malcolm Butler picked off Russell Wilson in Super Bowl XLIX. The Seattle Seahawks had the Patriots on the ropes with first-and-goal from the New England 5-yard line with just over a minute left, and Marshawn Lynch appeared to be going in for the game-winning score. But Hightower made an incredible play to power through Seahawks left tackle Russell Okung and somehow bring down Lynch at the 1.
You know how that drive ended. But it never would have happened without Hightower’s superhuman effort on the play before.
There will be plenty of time to speculate about the future of Hightower, who is a free agent after the season and probably wants to get paid market value. He’s not a perfect player, and the Patriots often will sub him out in certain packages. But he played all 49 defensive snaps for the Patriots against the Falcons and delivered the one that allowed New England to finish off their miraculous comeback for the ages.
He can look back and say he delivered when his team needed him most.
 

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