Sunday, January 29, 2012

Belichick, Brady in cheerful mood as Patriots arrive in Indy for Super Bowl week

Even the usually dour Bill Belichick was joking around as the New England Patriots arrived in Indianapolis for Super Bowl week.

At his opening news conference Sunday night, Belichick was asked if he expected some Hoosier hospitality.

“I never had too much hospitality here,” he said, noting that the Patriots aren’t exactly popular in Colts country, “until I went for it on fourth-and-2.”
His gamble on that play at the New England 28 with 2:08 to go failed and led to the Colts’ winning field goal in a 2009 regular-season game.
“Fans greeted us lots more and were awfully friendly” after that, he added.
All-Pro receiver Wes Welker wasn’t familiar with the term when asked the same question.
“What is Hoosier hospitality? What does that consist of?” Welker asked to laughs before getting a full explanation from a local television reporter. “I think it will be a little strange practicing at the Colts’ facility. I don’t know how many people like that, but we’ll be calm and polite and not try to rub it in, so I hope everyone is appreciative of it.”
Belichick, dressed in a suit — no hoodie for the coach this time — also said All-Pro tight end Rob Gronkowski is “day to day” with a high left ankle sprain for next Sunday’s NFL title game against the New York Giants. Gronkowski has been wearing a walking boot since being injured in the AFC title game.
“You’ve got to prepare for every one of these situations that come up,” quarterback Tom Brady said of the possibility Gronkowski will be limited or sidelined. “You always have to have some contingency plans.”
Brady knows the Giants will bring lots of heat with their pass rush, but for now he was more comforted by not having to face a local rival who frequently has put Brady on his back.
“I see Dwight Freeney’s picture up there (on the stadium),” Brady said. “When you come to Indy and don’t have to play him, we are very fortunate for that.”
The Patriots drew about 25,000 fans to Gillette Stadium earlier Sunday for what Brady termed “a pep rally.” Team owner Robert Kraft, who has had an emotional year — his wife passed away last July and he was instrumental in resolving the NFL’s lockout of the players — was thrilled by the turnout.
“We had 25,000 people come to our stadium today to send the team off,” Kraft said. “At the stadium today it was so special, the time we are in now, to have 25,000 of our fans cheer our team is a very emotional experience.”
This is Kraft’s sixth Super Bowl as owner, and he vividly recalled the days when the team was lucky to draw 25,000 for a game.
“I sat with those crowds. I sat in the stands for 34 years and we had one home playoff game, in 1978, which we lost to Houston,” Kraft said. “And last Sunday, we were privileged to host our 15th playoff game.”

In Super Bowl XLVI, NY Giants and New England Patriots meet again as hunter is now the hunted

The theme of the last two weeks of the playoffs for the Giants was “revenge,” but that’s not what they’re seeking this time. They’ll arrive in this Super Bowl city on Monday afternoon having already proven they’re good enough to beat the Patriots.
The trick now is to do it again.

As the Packers and 49ers found out the last two weeks, beating the same team twice in a season isn’t easy. Against a Hall of Fame-bound coach like Bill Belichick, it can be especially hard.

“Knowing Coach Belichick and their staff they’ll have a new game plan, they’ll have some new wrinkles in there,” said Eli Manning. “They’re a great staff and great coaches. They’ll be well prepared. Just from watching one of their games it seems like they’ve already changed up a little bit.”

“Bill is an outstanding football coach who has his finger on everything that goes on there and does an exceptional job of planning,” Tom Coughlin added. “Therefore, it presents outstanding problems. And just as important is that they are a very, very good team.”

In fact, the Patriots team that touched down in Indianapolis on Sunday evening is riding a 10-game winning streak that dates back to their last loss on Nov. 6 24-20 to the Giants in Foxborough. When the Giants beat them, the Patriots were scuttling along at 5-3, looking like a fading dynasty.

Since then they’ve won their 10 straight games by an average score of 36-19.

Maybe most importantly, the Giants had no choice but to show their full hand in that regular-season meeting. It was a big game they needed to win to keep their momentum rolling as they began a difficult stretch of their schedule. They couldn’t hold anything back.

That makes this different than it was in 2007, when the Giants narrowly lost to the Patriots in the regular-season finale, only to beat them five weeks later in Super Bowl XLII. Years later, former Giants defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo admitted “there was a little bit of a pullback there” in that game because they didn’t want to show their entire game plan, in case they met again.

This time they are much more exposed.

“I think any time you play the Patriots they're always going to have something new for you,” Manning said. “The last time we played them they showed a lot of different looks, some different schemes on defense things that they have not shown before. When we played them in the Super Bowl four years ago they had some new things for that game. They tend to have a theme of the game and it changes from week to week.

“So you have to be prepared for a lot of different things. They do a great job of disguising things and showing different looks. We have to be prepared for it all.”

Of course, the same is true for the Patriots. They know the Giants got a good look at what they like to do with receiver Wes Welker (nine catches, 136 yards in that game) and their dangerous tight end duo of Rob Gronkowski and Aaron Hernandez (12 catches for 136 yards and two touchdowns combined). They saw how to attack the NFL’s second-worst defense, which they beat for 361 yards, even without receiver Hakeem Nicks and running back Ahmad Bradshaw.

That familiarity makes this game an intriguing chess match between Belichick and Coughlin and their staffs. The Giants know how to beat them. The Patriots have two weeks to study that film to figure out how to stop them.
It’s why, after all the studying and scheming, some players are convinced that what happened in the first game won’t really matter at all.

“Those games mean nothing,” said linebacker Michael Boley. “That game was so long ago. A lot has changed not only with their team but with ours.”

“Means absolutely nothing,” added safety Antrel Rolle. “It’s a totally different team, totally different mindset, two teams going head to head. Whatever it takes.”

Giants vs. Patriots: How Tom Coughlin Can Outsmart Bill Belichick

The 2012 Super Bowl will provide the professional pigskin viewing public with another opportunity to witness the latest installment in the war of coaching strategy between Bill Belichick and Tom Coughlin.
This coaching matchup sustains its intrigue not because of the distinctly disparate tactical approaches of the sideline front men but rather through some of the characteristic similarities, in addition to the coaching lineage that directly links these two Bill Parcells proteges.
However, if a certain degree of discipline and rigidity in game plan management represents the common hook that both men hang their hats on, there still remains an underlying sentiment that it will be Tom Coughlin taking on the underdog role of trying to out-coach his former stablemate.
Thus, a look at five suggestions as to how Corporal Coughlin might approach such an aspiration.

Super Bowl 2012: Second Ring Would Put Eli Manning in Hall of Fame Discussion

At the start of the 2011 season, nobody viewed New York Giants quarterback Eli Manning as a future Hall of Famer. In fact, we all laughed when he dared to say he was in the same class as Tom Brady.
Manning then proceeded to shut us up by having the best season of his pro career, and now he's just a week away from playing in the Super Bowl for the second time in his career.
So that future Hall of Famer idea? It's not looking too outlandish right about now. On the contrary, it's an idea we should start coming to grips with.
As things stand right now, Manning is not a Hall of Famer. His win in Super Bowl XLII is a huge feather in his cap, as is his Super Bowl MVP, but the rest of Manning's resume is lacking. His career passer rating of 82.1 is not impressive, and the fact that he has twice led the league in interceptions is not a good thing at all.
Manning at the Pro Bowl in 2009.

Pro Bowl selections don't mean as much as we think they do, but Manning has only been selected to the Pro Bowl twice in his eight seasons, once in 2008 and again this year. That's a pretty good indication of how up and down Manning's career has been. And indeed, there have been more downs than ups.
So as great as Manning was in 2011, his resume is not that of a Hall of Fame quarterback. Nothing is being decided today, but Manning would not be a Hall of Famer if we were.
The big picture could be significantly different a week from today. If Manning leads the Giants to a win over the Patriots on Super Sunday, we're going to be looking at his career in an entirely different light.
There are only a small handful of quarterbacks in NFL history who have won more than one Super Bowl. Most of them are in the Hall of Fame, and some are going to get there some day. Tom Brady will be a Hall of Famer, and Ben Roethlisberger probably will be too.
At the very least, a second ring would put Manning in the discussion. The debate will be heated, but rest assured this is a debate people will have. Compared to where we stand with Manning right now, that's a step up.

The scary part is that, win or lose, there's a lot more to come from Manning. He's only 31, meaning he has a few seasons left in him. The possibility exists that he will get a couple more cracks at the Super Bowl. Even if he doesn't, he's going to continue to build on his numbers.
As strange as it may seem, we could eventually come to see Eli as the better of the two Manning brothers. He already has as many rings as Peyton, and Eli is going to catch up to him numbers-wise in the coming years. Right now, I'm already willing to bet that Eli is going to have more rings when all is said and done.
So one way or the other, Manning is going to be in the Hall of Fame discussion. He'll be there right away if he's hoisting the Lombardi Trophy a week from today, but he'll be there eventually even if he isn't.

2012 Super Bowl: New England Patriots Sent Off By 25,000 Fans At Gillette Stadium

With an exactly one week separating us from Super Bowl XLVI, the New England Patriots set foot in Gillette Stadium one final time before an estimated 25,000 fans for a final send-off rally before boarding a plane to Indianapolis, Indiana where they will face the New York Giants on Super Sunday
The rally began at approximately 10 a.m. in Gillette Stadium, with fans dawning Patriots gear and cheering as loud as they have throughout the playoffs.
The only player that was absent from the send-off rally was tight end Rob Gronkowski, who continues to nurse a reported high ankle sprain. Gronk has been frequently spotted in a walking boot, but it is believed that he will play in the Super Bowl next Sunday night. He was reportedly seen with the same walking boot when he got off the plane in Indianapolis Sunday afternoon.
For the exception of Gronk, entire Patriots team and coaching staff was in attendance including team owner Robert Kraft. Kraft, whose been through a very emotional year after losing his wife Myra to cancer, has been very appreciative of the fan support him as well as his team. As Kraft knows, there is one hurdle left to clear before capping off a season dedicated to Myra right.
"I want to thank you all for coming here today and giving us the warmest welcome in the history of this team," said team owner Robert Kraft, addressing the crowd from a stage set up along the Patriots' sideline. "(It's) our send-off to Indy, where we intend to do business." (via ESPN Boston)
As for head coach Bill Belichick, this Super Bowl will be his fifth in New England. For him, it's all business and it's been that the whole season and was reflective in his comments on Sunday.
"It's a great honor to be representing the AFC and New England in the Super Bowl," Belichick said. "We're really excited about the trip. (We) appreciate the support. I'm sure we'll see some of you out in Indy. Go Pats." (via ESPN Boston)
As for the leader of the Patriots, Tom Brady, he is looking to redeem himself in a performance where he admitted he "sucked". Brady was brief in his comments on Sunday, and was very appreciative to a fanbase he call "the best fans in America".
"We're going down there for one reason," Brady said. "We're going to give it our best and hopefully we'll have a lot more people at our party next weekend." (via ESPN Boston)

Super Bowl 2012 Date and Time: Giants vs Patriots, Location, Line, Spread and prediction

Super Bowl 2012 Date and Time: Giants vs Patriots, Location, Line, Spread and prediction
Super Bowl 2012 is not today. Waking up in the wrong side of the bed. In the process of time, the New England Patriots and New York Giants will be vying for the Super Bowl 2012 title at the Lucas Stadium, Indianapolis, Indiana. As all other teams dropped their chances of being in the Super Bowl, only two teams remain – the AFC Champion and the NFC Champion.
The story is being portrayed as part two of their previous game this season or the 2008 Super Bowl which is considered by many as the best of all time. Call it either way, the Giants vs Patriots are the teams still standing until the Super Bowl 2012 starts and the winner is declared. The fact that these two teams met in one of the most contentious Super Bowl ever makes sense for the entire NFL supporters to anticipate greatly the Super Bowl 46. Yes, the Patriots emerged as the AFC champion despite many tumultuous challenges dismantling Denver Broncos and Baltimore Ravens in the playoffs. The Giants also proved that playing on the road will not be the hindrance in reaching the Super Bowl winning five road games already in getting into two Super Bowls.
Expectations are still high for the Patriots to win this game. The truth is that Las Vegas oddsmakers lifts the Patriots into 3.5 line spread favorites. In the eyes of Vegas experts, the Patriots are the favorites. True to them but not to all. If your remember the odds in the Super Bowl 2008, the Patriots were overwhelmingly favored by 14 points because of the way they won all their games and beating also the Giants in their season finale. This time around, a slim spread that favors the Patriots. Why are the Patriots still getting the nudge of the experts. The presence of Tom Brady and Bill Belichick will always be the determining factor as far as the Patriots success is concerned. Being the favorite to win the Super Bowl 2012, Brady’s offensive game and Belichick’s mind of the game will have the Patriots the edge.
However, there are other people that select the Giants because of quarterback Eli Manning making considerable improvements in anchoring the Giants offense. Manning faced the stingy defense of the 49ers in the NFC Championship game but he didn’t falter to deliver that passes when needed. Manning has been extremely great in playing his best in tough times. He can be now considered as one of the elite quarterbacks. Manning can make the case again and again if he wins this Super Bowl. Also, the Giants have the defense that can surely contain the offense of the Patriots. To compare the Ravens and Giants defense is not right at all. Giants will take the Ravens book and apply it in a given plays. Absolutely, the Giants may have seen something that they can explore defensively from the previous game. They found out the reason why Tom Brady didn’t play well at all.
In laying out the case of which is a better football team, other factors can be in the spectrum of adding into considerations. The Patriots are nursing a problem of whether the number one receiver tight end Rob Gronkowski will play the Super Bowl or no because of ankle injury. Leaving Aaron Hernandez, Wes Welker, and Deion Branch as the remaining receivers left for the Patriots. This will be a major adjustment on Brady on how he will distribute his passes in the most efficient way without Gronkowski.
Giants will not have the service of Plaxico Burress who caught the winning touchdown in Super Bowl 2008, but Hakeem Nicks and Victor Cruz are ever better in getting along with Manning in the passing game. Absolutely, these two receivers will be the main focal points of Manning and his offense as they try to extricate the defense of the Patriots.
Patriots didn’t have the defense in the regular season yet they survived and stopped the offense of the Broncos and they limited the offense of running back Ray Rice by allowing him only 67 yards. Patriots defensive package is unpredictable as experts believe that Belichick has the mind and game plan to tame the Giants offense. For the Giants defense, getting into Brady will be the main focus. To sack Brady more than five times will surely alter the complexion of the game in favor of the Giants.
Super Bowl 2012 Date and Time is on February 5, 2012 at 6:30 PM ET. The Super Bowl 2012 television coverage is on NBC. As for the Super Bowl 2012 prediction, New England Patriots will win this game.

Super Bowl 2012 Schedule: Patriots Arrive In Indy Sunday, Giants Monday

It is officially the Sunday before Super Bowl Sunday, and that means one thing: The arrival of both the New York Giants and New England Patriots is less than 24 hours away. On Sunday, the Patriots (13-3) will arrive in Indianapolis (see picture below of New England loading its team buses Sunday afternoon), while the Giants touch down Monday.
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via p.twimg.com
The biggest story lines of the week will revolve around the rematch of the 2008 Super Bowl, which will feature a lot of highlights of former Giants wide receiver making "The Helmet Catch" that helped New York down the Patriots, 17-14; the injury status of Patriots All-Pro tight end Rob Gronkowksi, who's battling a bad ankle; and the comparison of the two featured quarterbacks -- Eli Manning (Giants) and Tom Brady (Patriots).
On Tuesday, both franchises will hold media days, as the Patriots will begin theirs at 10 a.m. ET, while the Giants will have theirs at noon. Both teams will hold their regular practices during the week in preparation for next Sunday's 6:30 p.m. ET kick off time. The game will be televised on NBC.

2012 Super Bowl Schedule: Large Gillette Stadium Crowd Sends Off Patriots

An estimated crowd of 25,000 fans showed up at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, MA Sunday to send off the New England Patriots, who addressed the crowd then loaded team buses which headed to the airport so the AFC Champions could board a plane headed Indianapolis, IN -- the location of Super Bowl 46, Feb. 5 (6:30 p.m. ET on NBC).
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"We have the greatest fans in America. You guys have proved that year in and year out with your support," Patriots' quarterback Tom Brady said to the large crowed before his team boarded buses. "I wish I could take all you guys to Indy with us. We're going down there, and we're going down there for one reason. We're going to give it our best and hopefully we have a lot more people at our party next weekend."
The Patriots' opponent, the New York Giants, will arrive Monday and begin a week-long hype-fest that is known as Super Bowl week. On Tuesday, the two teams will hold media day, as the Patriots will begin theirs at 10 a.m. ET, while the Giants will have theirs at noon.
The most obvious story lines that will be discussed this upcoming week will be, of course, the rematch of the 2008 Super Bowl, which featured the Giants downing the Patriots, 17-14, thanks to the famous "Helmet Catch" by former New York wide receiver David Tyree. Another hot topic will be the health of the ankle of Patriots' tight end Rob Gronowski and the comparison between the two starting quarterbacks -- Brady and the Giants' Eli Manning.

2012 Super Bowl Schedule: One More Week To Go

The 2012 Super Bowl will kick off on Sunday Feb. 5, 2012 at 6:00 p.m. ET, even though many will look to find out what time the game comes on Sunday. The game isn't on this Sunday however, the Pro-Bowl is. That doesn't mean there aren't things to pay attention to in the upcoming week leading to the Super Bowl.

On Tuesday, both teams will hold media days. The New England Patriots will hold theirs at 10:00 a.m. ET while the New York Giants will hold their media day at 12:00 p.m. ET on the same day and both will be streamed live on NFL.com/live. Media day will generally field some good quotes, especially from a team like the New York Giants, who have some colorful characters. The teams will also hold their standard practices throughout the week as they prepare for the Super Bowl on Sunday.

For the latest Super Bowl updates, be sure to follow this StoryStream. Also be sure to check out Patriots blog Pats Pulpit and Giants blog Big Blue View.

Pro Bowl 2012: Rosters, Where to Watch Live Stream

The 2012 Pro Bowl serves as a nice appetizer for football fans awaiting Super Bowl XLVI between the New England Patriots and New York Giants next Sunday in Indianapolis.

The game won't get near the amount of viewers or attention as next Sunday's Super Bowl, but still gives fans an opportunity to see their favorite players in a more relaxed playing environment.

The game is typically played in Hawaii each year -- although last year's Pro Bowl was in Miami -- and is usually a high-scoring affair that has way more offensive highlights than any semblance of defense being played. It's clear that the players don't take it too seriously -- it has no playoff implications like the MLB's All-Star game -- and is usually just a paid vacation to Hawaii for some of the NFL's best players.

This is the second year that the game will be played a week before the Super Bowl as a measure to drum up interest and ratings for the mostly meaningless game. Due to the game being played before the Super Bowl, all Giants and Patriots previously voted into the game are forced to miss the competition and be replaced.

This year also marks the first year that players will be able to tweet during the game at a designated computer area. The NFL doesn't allow players to tweet during a regular-season game, but has set aside two designated computers to allow players to create some social media buzz for the Pro Bowl.

This year's game begins at 7 p.m. EST and airs on NBC. NBC Sports is also offering a live stream of the game on its Web site, NBCSports.com.

AFC Roster

Quarterback

Ben Roethlisberger, Pittsburgh
y-Andy Dalton, Cincinnati
Philip Rivers, San Diego

Running back

-Maurice Jones-Drew, Jacksonville
x-Arian Foster, Houston
y-Ryan Mathews, San Diego
y-Willis McGahee, Denver
x-Ray Rice, Baltimore

Fullback

*-Vonta Leach, Baltimore

Wide receiver *

-A.J. Green,  Cincinnati
*-Mike Wallace, Pittsburgh
Brandon Marshall, Miami
y-Vincent Jackson, San Diego

Tight end

Antonio Gates, San Diego
y-Jermaine Gresham, Cincinnati

Tackle *

-Joe Thomas, Cleveland
*-D'Brickashaw Ferguson, N.Y. Jets
y-Ryan Clady, Denver
x-Jake Long, Miami

Guard *

Ben Grubbs, Baltimore
*-Marshal Yanda, Baltimore
y-Brandon Moore, N.Y. Jets

Center

*-Nick Mangold, N.Y. Jets
y-Chris Myers, Houston
x-Maurkice Pouncey, Pittsburgh

Defense

Defensive end

*-Elvis Dumervil, Denver
*-Dwight Freeney, Indianapolis
y-Antonio Smith, Houston

Interior linemen *

-Richard Seymour, Oakland
y-Geno Atkins, Cincinnati
x-Haloti Ngata, Baltimore
y-Paul Soliai, Miami

Outside linebacker *-

Tamba Hali, Kansas City
*-Von Miller, Denver
y-James Harrison, Pittsburgh
x-Terrell Suggs, Baltimore

Inside/midde linebacker *-

Ray Lewis, Baltimore
Derrick Johnson, Kansas City

Cornerback

*-Champ Bailey, Denver
*-Darrelle Revis, N.Y. Jets
Johnathan Joseph, Houston

Free safety *-

Eric Weddle, San Diego
y-Ryan Clark, Pittsburgh
x-Ed Reed, Baltimore

Strong safety

*y-Brian Dawkins, Denver
x-Troy Polamalu, Pittsburgh

Special teams

Punter Shane Lechler, Oakland

Placekicker Sebastian Janikowski, Oakland

Kick returner

Antonio Brown, Pittsburgh

,y-Montell Owens, Jacksonville

NFC Roster

Quarterback

*-Aaron Rodgers, Green Bay
Drew Brees, New Orleans
y-Cam Newton, Carolina

Running back

-LeSean McCoy, Philadelphia
Matt Forte, Chicago
x-Frank Gore, San Francisco
y-Marshawn Lynch, Seattle

Fullback

y-Michael Robinson, Seattle
x-John Kuhn, Green Bay

Wide receiver

*-Larry Fitzgerald, Arizona
*-Steve Smith, Carolina
Greg Jennings, Green Bay
x-Calvin Johnson, Detroit
y-Roddy White, Atlanta

Tight end

*-Jimmy Graham, New Orleans
Tony Gonzalez, Atlanta

Tackle

*-Jason Peters, Philadelphia
*-Joe Staley, San Francisco
Jermon Bushrod, New Orleans

Guard

*-Jahri Evans, New Orleans
*-Carl Nicks, New Orleans
Davin Joseph, Tampa Bay

Center

*-Ryan Kalil, Carolina
Scott Wells, Green Bay

  Defense

Defensive end

*-Jared Allen, Minnesota
*-Jason Babin, Philadelphia
y-Julius Peppers, Chicago
Interior linemen

*-Jay Ratliff, Dallas
*-Justin Smith, San Francisco
B.J. Raji, Green Bay

Outside linebacker

*-Clay Matthews, Green Bay
*-DeMarcus Ware, Dallas
x-Lance Briggs, Chicago
y-Chad Greenway, Minnesota

Inside/midde linebacker

*-Patrick Willis, San Francisco
x-Brian Urlacher, Chicago
y-London Fletcher, Washington

Cornerback

 *-Charles Woodson, Green Bay
y-Brandon Browner, Seattle
x-Carlos Rogers, San Francisco
Charles Tillman, Chicago

Free safety

*-Earl Thomas, Seattle
y-Kam Chancellor, Seattle
x-Dashon Goldson, San Francisco

Strong safety

 *-Adrian Wilson, Arizona
  Special teams

Punter Andy Lee, San Francisco

Placekicker David Akers, San Francisco

Kick returner

Patrick Peterson, Arizona

Special-teamer Corey Graham, Chicago

Long snapper Brian Jennings, San Francisco

Super Bowl 2012 Commercial Features Ferris Bueller: What is Ad For?

The Super Bowl 2012 is less than a week away, and while some people watch for the football, others watch for the commercials. A sneak peek of one of the commercials features none other than Ferris Bueller. However, nobody knows what this highly anticipated ad is for. Do you have a guess?
Matthew Broderick reprises his role of the beloved hooky player in a commercial for the Super Bowl. This time Bueller is all grown up, but he's up to his old tricks trying to play hooky from work. He asks, "How can I handle work on a day like today?"
While people have wondered what this Super Bowl 46 commercial is for, others believe they have it figured out. One possibility is that this Ferris Bueller advertisement is for Honda. If this is true, will you be disappointed?
Check out the Super Bowl 2012 commercial sneak peek below and see what you think? Is this a car ad, or something more?

Super Bowl: Sometimes the roads traveled are rough, but Giants have a good guide in Tom Coughlin

Tom Coughlin was a halfback at Syracuse. Among his backfield mates were Floyd Little and Larry Csonka, two of the better fullbacks in NFL history.


Coughlin went to Boston College as a quarterback coach. His quarterback was Doug Flutie.

Coughlin became head coach of the Giants in 2004; in '05, Coughlin, with a winning record, benched veteran QB Kurt Warner and handed the franchise over to rookie Eli Manning.

A football Forrest Gump, East Coast-version? Maybe. A worthy adversary for Bill Belichick? Better believe it.

Super Bowl week has arrived. A Patriot-Giant rematch. Most football people, be they insider or fan, would say that while the G-Men have the better overall team, New England has the edge where it counts most.

Quarterback and head coach.

QB, I'll address in a few days. Head coach? Well, don't concede that one, either.

Belichick is Canton-bound, as soon as he hangs up his hoodie, but it's not certain that he's a better coach than Coughlin.

Belichick has three Super Bowl titles, though Coughlin's lone NFL championship came at the Patriots' expense.

And while the Patriots have been more consistent contenders than have the Giants even since New England's last Super Bowl title seven years ago, that can be explained by the difference between the AFC East and the NFC East.

Pro Bowl 2012 Score Update: AFC Holds 45-35 Lead In Fourth Quarter

In the third quarter of the 2012 NFL Pro Bowl, some exciting football broke out for a bit, largely in spite of itself. Despite the players' best effort to plod through the entire event, the action picked up quite a bit after halftime.

The AFC and NFC teams were tied 28-28 at halftime, but the scoring started quickly as the AFC took the lead on a 37-yard Sebastian Janikowski field goal. A minute later, the third-quarter NFC quarterback, Cam Newton, aired out a 55-yard pass to Steve Smith.
The NFC remained on top, 35-31 until Brandon Marshall caught his third touchdown of the game, from his third passer, Andy Dalton. The 47-yard pass was the definition of a circus catch and put the AFC back on top, 38-35.
Early in the fourth quarter, Vonta Leach rushed in from the goal line to extend the AFC lead.

Car makers tease and release Super Bowl commercials

With the NFL Super Bowl just one week away, a number of car makers have got in early to tease and reveal their multi-million-dollar advertising spots.
Suzuki jumped the gun with its commercial for the Kizashi Sport AWD, simply called ‘Sled’.
American Suzuki social media director Jeff Holland says the ad demonstrates how the Kizashi is the “perfect choice for those looking to upgrade their ride”.
Click to play this video
Suzuki "Sled" 2012 Super Bowl Ad
Audi’s 60-second spot ‘Vampire Party’ makes the new Audi S7’s LED headlights the star of the show.
“Audi LEDs – which at 5500 Kelvin produce the closest recreation of daylight available – put an end to the vampire party, and perhaps, to the greater vampire trend in pop culture,” Audi of America chief marketing officer Scott Keogh said.
Click to play this video
Audi 2012 Game Day Commercial - Vampire Party
Chevrolet’s commercial ‘Chevy Happy Grad’ was the winner of a social media competition. Created by 26-year-old independent filmmaker Zach Borst, General Motors global chief marketing officer Joel Ewanick says the ad is relatable, funny and shows the passion the Chevrolet brand elicits.
Chevrolet says it expects more than 110 million people to see Borst’s ad on Super Bowl Sunday.
Click to play this video
Chevy Happy Grad | Chevy Super Bowl XLVI Ads | Chevrolet Commercial
Lexus will make its debut in the Super Bowl slot with a 30-second commercial. Lexus vice president of marketing Brian Smith says the all-new Lexus GS luxury sports sedan will take centre stage, while the ad will also tease a number of other cars that are waiting in the wings and just as anxious to hit the road.
Click to play this video
Lexus Presents the 15-Second Teaser for the "Big Game"
Finally, Volkswagen is looking to repeat last year’s Super Bowl success with another Star Wars-themed spot. ‘The Force’, which featured a pint-sized Darth Vader and an all-new Volkswagen Passat, has almost 50 million views on YouTube. This year’s teaser, dubbed ‘The Bark Side’, has already raked up 9.8 million views.
Click to play this video
The Bark Side: 2012 Volkswagen Game Day Commercial Teaser
Advertisers have paid record prices for Super Bowl ads this year, with the 70 available 30-second spots selling for an average of US$3.5 million ($3.3 million).

Super Bowl 2012: Patriots are first to arrive in Indianapolis

The New England Patriots arrived in Indianapolis on Sunday, a week ahead of their Super Bowl meeting with the New York Giants.

The Patriots beat the Giants to the Super Bowl city by a day, with the Giants scheduled to travel on Monday.

“We’ll try to approach it in as much of a routine as we can,” Patriots Coach Bill Belichick said at a news conference Sunday evening. “Certainly there will be a lot of things that will be different this week. But there will be a lot of things that will be the same in terms of our preparation, our daily routines.”

The Patriots have qualified for their fifth Super Bowl appearance in the last 11 seasons with Belichick as their coach and Tom Brady as their quarterback, and are seeking their fourth Super Bowl triumph during that span.

“I think it all comes down to preparation and then obviously going out there and playing with confidence,” Brady said at his arrival-day news conference in Indianapolis. “We had a good week of practice, a couple really good days of preparation and trying to understand really the strengths and weaknesses of this Giants defense. We played them a while ago. I think they’ve changed a little bit. They’re certainly playing as well as anybody we’ve played all year. So we’ve got our work cut out for us.”

The Giants beat the Patriots during the regular season. They also beat the Patriots in the Super Bowl four years ago, denying New England an unbeaten 2007 season. Belichick said the Patriots aren’t seeking revenge for that defeat.

“I’ve been asked about that game for several days now,” Belichick said. “But really, all the games in the past, I don’t think really mean too much at this point. This game is about this team, this year. There really aren’t very many of us, coaches or players, that were involved in that game—and very few players, in relative terms, between both teams. We’re where we are now, and we’re different than where we were earlier in the season. The Giants are where they are now. I think they’re different than where they were at other points in the season.

“So to take it back years and years before that, I don’t think really has too much bearing on anything. I think the team that wins Sunday will be the team that performs the best, and we’re going to strive our preparations toward maximizing our performance on Sunday night.”

The Patriots are to practice this week at the Indianapolis Colts’ training facility. Asked about the level of hospitality he expects to experience during the week, Belichick referenced his failed fourth-down gamble late in a regular season loss to the Colts in 2009.

“I never had too much hospitality here until I went for it on fourth and two,” Belichick said. “And then since then, I’ve been greeted in a lot more friendly manner than I was in the past.”

Super Bowl 2012, Giants Vs. Patriots: Position-By-Position, The Defenses

As we head into Super Bowl Week let's continue previewing the 2012 Super Bowl between the New York Giants and New England Patriots by comparing the defenses of the two teams. Statistically, neither team was impressive during the regular season but has improved in postseason play.

As we go through the position-by-position breakdowns perhaps we can find the reasons for the improvement, and get an idea whether or not that better play is sustainable in Super Bowl XLVI.

By The Numbers

New England

Regular season: 411.1 yards per game (31st), 21.4 points per game (21st), 40 sacks (14th), 23 interceptions (2nd).
Postseason: 325 yards per game, 15 points per game.

The Patriots have been dramatically better, but have played less than tremendous offenses in Denver and Baltimore.

New York

Regular season: 376.4 yards per game (27th), 25.0 points per game (25th), 48 sacks (3rd), 20 interception (6th).
Postseason: 321 yards per game (2nd), 13.0 points per game (1st), nine sacks (tied for 1st)

Now, let's get to our position-by-position comparisons. The Giants are a 4-3 team, while the Patriots play a 3-4 defense. That makes the roles of the linemen and linebackers on each team slightly different, but we can still compare productivity.
Defensive Line

The Giants defense is built around their defensive line, and depends on it to control games. The Giants want to "kill the snake," meaning get pressure on Patriots quarterback Tom Brady and disrupt the New England offense, and it is the front four's job to do that. All-Pro Jason Pierre-Paul, along with defensive ends Justin Tuck and Osi Umenyiora, are the primary pass rushers. They occasionally get help from Mathias Kiwanuka or Dave Tollefson. Defensive tackles Chris Canty, Linval Joseph and Rocky Bernard have also played well.

The Patriots have massive nose tackle Vince Wilfork, and there is little doubt he can be a problem for New York. Andre Carter is a quality pass rusher coming from one of the end spots, as he had 10 sacks this season.

Advantage: Giants ... Is there really any doubt about this? The Giants, in a 4-3 geared around their linemen, are clearly better in this area.
Related: Position-By-Position, The Offenses
Linebackers

The Giants have gotten good play in recent weeks out of what is largely a makeshift group. Michael Boley is a solid every-down player and the defensive signal-caller. Kiwanuka is excellent against the run, and rookie Jacquian Williams is solid in pass coverage. Chase Blackburn has done a nice job at middle linebacker since the Giants hauled him of the street mid-season. Yet, this group is nothing to get overly excited about.

The Patriots best linebackers are Jerod Mayo (95 tackles, one sack, one forced fumble, two interceptions), Brandon Spikes (47 tackles) and Rob Ninkovich (74 tackles). It is an unspectacular group.

Advantage: Even ... Both teams are OK here. Neither team is special at this level of their defense.
Cornerback

The Patriots were second in the league this season with 23 interceptions. Cornerback Kyle Arrington (seven) was the team leader. Devin McCourty had two. The Patriots often use receiver Julian Edelman as a nickel cornerback, and he has done well in the role.

The Giants have Corey Webster (six INTs) and Aaron Ross as starters, with first-round pick Prince Amukamara in reserve. The Giants often move safety Antrel Rolle down into the slot in coverage situations.

Advantage: Even ... Both are good, neither is great.
Safety

The Giants have Kenny Phillips, Rolle and Deon Grant and they often use all three on the field together. The improved play of this trio has been a huge factor in the team's five-game winning streak. Phillips has not made a ton of huge plays, but has been solid. He could play a key role in defending Patriots' tight ends Rob Gronkowski and Aaron Hernandez.

The Patriots have Patrick Chung and James Ihedigbo at safety, and occasionally swing McCourty back deep as well.

Super Bowl 2012 - What another Super Bowl ring does to Tom Brady's legacy

Tom Brady and the New England Patriots enter this week anticipating their match-up with the New York Giants while feeling motivated by the prospect of lifting the Lombardi trophy on Sunday night in Super Bowl XLVI.

For Brady however, there are more motivators than just another Super Bowl ring, of which he already has three.

Indeed, he will be hoping to avenge his only ever Super Bowl loss from the 2007 NFL season, however while many other Patriots share that determination, only Brady has the opportunity to potentially achieve all-time greatness this weekend.

All-time greatness is a subjective thing. For many onlookers, Brady is already an all-time great and a certain hall of famer.

For the man who rages at his team for slacking off in the dying moments of a blowout victory, nothing short of being the best of all time will allow for any talk of being an all-time great.

Despite winning three Super Bowls and tying John Elway next week for the most Super Bowl appearances, no matter what happens, Brady still won't be satisfied, or even contemplate calling himself great, until he achieves much more in his career.

It is why he still struggles to overcome the fact that he was drafted 199th overall in the 2000 NFL draft as the seventh quarterback taken, exemplified by the tears shed in an interview prior to this year.

It's also why he scrutinized himself as if he were a camp arm trying to hold onto his job after the AFC Championship victory over the Baltimore Ravens.

It is that drive and passion that has made Brady a future hall of famer, but he is yet to separate himself from the pack and put his name in the discussion as the greatest quarterback ever.

As a youngster, Brady admired Joe Montana and the San Francisco 49ers. Now that he is a professional quarterback, it is Montana who is standing between he and his ultimate goal.

Generally, the argument for the greatest ever quarterback in NFL history is between Johnny Unitas and Joe Montana. Because the game has changed so much since Unitas retired in 1974, more often than not Montana is considered to be the standard bearer for modern era quarterbacks.

In fact, on NFL Network's top 100 players of all-time, a list voted for by a "blue ribbon panel" and released prior to this year, Montana was the fourth ranked player and highest ranked quarterback. Unitas was sixth overall and Brady was 21st.

The gap between Brady and Montana is not that large, but the discussion of who is the greatest can't even begin unless Brady wins another Super Bowl ring. Winning the Super Bowl is the most important aspect of any NFL player's career and the very fact that Montana has one more will always give him the edge no matter what records Brady breaks.

Winning the Super Bowl is a team effort, it is not an individual award, which is why I dislike the thought that determining the best individual is based on an accolade that is earned through a team effort. However, because the game has changed so drastically over the past decade or more, it is very difficult to compare players through statistics.

Even if you do just compare Super Bowl victories, you also have to compare the responsibility of the individual for that Super Bowl win.

While three of Brady's Super Bowls came on defensive led teams, Montana won two of his with Jerry Rice and never brought a team with such little talent to the Super Bowl as Brady has done this year.
Even though they have only beaten two teams with winning records all season, including the 9-8 Denver Broncos, you cannot argue that what Brady, and Bill Belichick, have managed this season is astounding.

Brady has never had much talent around him on offense, save for the 2007 season when Randy Moss gave him his first true number one receiver. Deion Branch, prior to 2007, was a good, but not great receiver. Despite this, he was still able to twice be the MVP of the big game as well as being the first ever unanimous MVP of the regular season.

Montana can then counter that however with one extra Super Bowl MVP and six all-pro selections.
You see the Brady-Montana debate is a very difficult one to differentiate between, that is presuming that it can start.

A Super Bowl victory next week won't make Brady the best ever quarterback to play the game, but it will allow the argument to begin. Determining whether Brady's single season touchdown record is relevant because of rules and whether Montana's unbeaten Super Bowl record is better than appearing in more is not something I intend on doing right now.

One thing will be clear though.

With a fourth Super Bowl ring, Brady's legacy will emerge from the ambiguous mesh that is the pack trailing Montana and Unitas.

A group that features Peyton Manning, the only ever four time league MVP, John Elway, appeared in five Super Bowls winning two, and Dan Marino who holds multiple all-time records at the position. Being in the company of guys like Manning, Elway, and Marino is not too bad for a sixth round pick, but Tom Brady isn't like every other 199th draft selection.

In a season when his arch rival, Peyton Manning, missed the whole season, Brady travels to the stadium that Manning built next week looking to ignite the debate between his boy-hood hero and he.

Super Bowl 2012: Ex-Boiler Matt Light still has Brady's back

Matt Light didn't come to the New England Patriots in 2001 to replace a legend, much less become one. That's just how it worked out.
His predecessor at left tackle, Bruce Armstrong, started 152 games and played in a club-record 212, along with six Pro Bowls from 1987-2000. Light has started 153 of his 155 games. Only two active Patriots have played more: quarterback Tom Brady and running back Kevin Faulk, 161 each.
So when the Patriots spent the 17th pick of the 2011 draft on 6-8, 319-pound Nate Solder and it appeared the team might have its left tackle of the future and Light might be its left tackle of the past, people noticed.
When the team re-signed Light, 33, in late July to a two-year deal that reportedly guarantees him $7 million but could be worth $12 million, there was relief. Brady expressed it.
"Matt's one of my favorite players that I've ever played with," he said. "He's a great guy, great for this team, great in the community. I just can't say enough about Matt."
Fact is, Light's reliability, three Pro Bowl appearances, Patriots co-captaincies and considerable personal qualities aside, left tackle is a primary football building block. In the hierarchy of NFL salaries, quarterbacks come first, then the defensive ends and outside linebackers who rush them, then the left tackles who protect their blind side from those ends and linebackers.
Light has had Brady's back all of the quarterback's 11 NFL seasons as starter, and come next Sunday, in five Super Bowls. Light prepped for that duty by covering Drew Brees' backside at Purdue from 1998-2000, a run that included the Boilermakers' lone Rose Bowl appearance of the past 44 years.
"Pretty wild," Light assented. "It's been a hell of a run."
Coach Bill Belichick isn't the effusive sort, but he agreed.
"Matt's had a terrific career. He's been a rock for us there," Belichick said, "both physically and mentally as far as assignments and his mental toughness and his consistency. It's almost to the point where, I don't want to say you take it for granted, but when you don't have a lot of problems, you kind of just assume that it's solid."
Among the ends and outside linebackers Light has faced this season are Indianapolis' Dwight Freeney, Philadelphia's Trent Cole, Kansas City's Tamba Hali, San Diego's Antwan Barnes, Washington's Brian Orakpo, Dallas' DeMarcus Ware, Denver's Von Miller, Baltimore's Terrell Suggs and the New York Giants' Jason Pierre-Paul, whom Light will see again in the Super Bowl.
The Giants, in fact, throw ends and outside linebackers at offensive lines in combinations of four and five. It's a matchup that could decide Super Bowl XLVI.
"That's the heart and soul of that defense and you see how they play the game and the impact they have," said Light, a leader on a line that in two playoff games yielded a single sack to the Denver and Baltimore pass rushers. "They can get it done rushing four. They can get it done rushing three in some cases. We've got a lot of film study to do, a lot of practice."
Fact is, Light was more eager to talk about a charitable initiative than the big game. His Light Foundation encourages youth development and features a 400-acre camp named Chenoweth Trails in his hometown, Greenville, Ohio, 24 miles northeast of Richmond, Ind., a 90-minute drive from Indianapolis.
Light hopes to use the Super Bowl to raise $250,000 to enhance the foundation's reach.
"We're giving away two Super Bowl tickets, hotel and airfare, plus some memorabilia and a meet-and-greet," he said. "It's cheap and easy and all the people around Indianapolis will love it. It's $2 a ticket, a minimum order of five, so it's $10. If you want that shot, go to lightraffle.org."

Sunday, January 22, 2012

NY Giants heading to Super Bowl XLVI to play Tom Brady and the Patriots have the same magic as the team that beat New England in Super Bowl XLII

So the Giants have done it again now, out of the stars, made it back through another overtime and into a Super Bowl. Lawrence Tynes has kicked another overtime field goal, this time at old Candlestick Park, kicked them to a rematch in Indianapolis with Brady and Belichick and the Patriots. So the Giants go back to the big game, go back because of big defense and big luck Sunday night, go all the way to Indy from 7-7 in the regular season. Were they lucky Sunday night at old Candlestick? You know they were. Sometimes you need some luck to go with the magic.

It was 20-17 this time, Tynes getting the chance in overtime because a kid named Kyle Williams, the Bill Buckner of this game. Williams had a Steve Weatherford punt bounce off his knee in the fourth quarter, setting up the touchdown that briefly put the Giants ahead this time. Then he fumbled one away to Devin Thomas in overtime that was the same as having his team’s season go through his hands.

An overtime championship game for the Giants. Again. Nobody had ever had two of those, until Tom Coughlin’s Giants, who came from nowhere to this one, who had that 7-7 record, and have now won five in a row from there, gone from nowhere to Indy.

When it was over Sunday, when there was a chance for Coughlin to have a quiet moment in the Giants locker room, he was sitting next to Osi Umenyiora, who turned to his coach and said, “Do you believe how all this is going down?”

Coughlin’s Giants won it all from 10-6 four years ago. They try to do it from 9-7 this time. But here they are, here are the Giants again, back to being the biggest game in town, and in Jersey, and everywhere there are people who grew up loving this team, starting with the ones who go all the way back to the Polo Grounds.

Eli Manning threw it 58 times at old Candlestick Park Sunday night, completed 32, threw two touchdown passes, one a bullet to Mario Manningham after that punt bounced off poor Kyle Williams’ knee when Williams shouldn’t have been near that ball, at a time when the 49ers defense was beating up Eli Manning but good.

But Eli Manning didn’t pick the Giants up and carry them to Indy Sunday the way he has carried them for so much of this amazing season. He had chances to win the game at the end of regulation, oh man did he, but could not, mostly because he was spending too much time picking himself off the ground.

Eli got the ball first in overtime and the Giants had to punt it and got it again and the Giants had to punt it away. And that is a way of telling you that the Giants go to the Super Bowl because of defense out of their past. Because they gave up two big plays — two touchdown drives for San Francisco that didn’t last two minutes, total - and gave Alex Smith and the 49ers nothing the rest of the day and night in San Francisco.

Giants see similarities to 2008 Super Bowl run

The 49ers made the defensive adjustments, holding Victor Cruz to two catches after he had eight in the first half. And they gave the Giants plenty of looks, coming at Eli Manning in waves at the end, sacking him six times and hitting him on another dozen occasions.
But in the end, there stood Manning.
He and the Giants didn't commit a turnover and they turned two Kyle Williams fumbles into 10 points in the fourth quarter and overtime for the 20-17 win Sunday night.
"They're great against the run and they get a lot of sacks," Manning said. "Those sacks can lead to turnovers, so I had to be smart and not turn the ball over. Try to be patient. That's what I kept telling myself. Don't force anything.
"I knew eventually we would get a big play or a break."
In winning their fifth straight game, the Giants (12-7) earned a date with New England in the Super Bowl on Feb. 5 in Indianapolis. It's a rematch of the 2008 Super Bowl, in which New York ended New England's perfect season.
That season, the Giants also caught fire late - and advanced on a Lawrence Tynes field goal in overtime in the NFC Championship Game (against the Packers).
Head coach Tom Coughlin was asked if he felt a sense of deja vu.
"I am trying to fight it, but (defensive end) Osi (Umenyiora) looked at me with a smile on his face," Coughlin said. "And he said, 'Have you thought about how this is coming down? Do you realize this is scary because of the way it's coming about?' "
There was a tiny scare on the game-winning 31-yard field goal, as the snap was low, but holder Steve Weatherford handled it.
Tynes' wife came running on the field after the game to hug the kicker, just like she had the night before.
"It's amazing," Tynes said. "I had dreams about this last night. It was from 42, not 31, but I was so nervous today ... just anticipating this kind of game."
Manning, who went 32-for-58 for 316 yards and two touchdowns, was not nervous in securing his record fifth road playoff win. Cruz helped Manning relax early by constantly beating cornerback Carlos Rogers for eight first-half catches for 125 yards.
"It's a matchup that I knew I had a pretty good shot against him," Cruz said. "Coming from the last game, I did some pretty good things. I knew that the key to this game was going to be getting open by any means necessary. ... (In the second half) they just played a lot of Cover 2 and forced us to run the ball."
The Giants' defense, meanwhile, didn't let Alex Smith get comfortable. Take away the two touchdown passes to Vernon Davis, and Smith was 10-for-24 for 95 yards. "Both defenses played superbly," Coughlin said. "Just a classic game. Seemed like no one was going to put themselves in a position to win it."
Manning made sure he didn't put the Giants in a position to lose it.
"We knew we couldn't turn the ball over, and we came close a couple of times," he said. "Just keep punting and don't give them a short field."

Dave Birkett: Dramatic wins by Giants, Patriots set up possible Super Bowl sequel

The NFL churns out more compelling games per capita than any sports league on the planet, and Sunday's conference championships were no exception.
It wasn't always great football. Billy Cundiff shanked the potential game-tying field goal with 11 seconds left in the Patriots' 23-20 win over the Ravens -- a few plays after Lee Evans dropped the would-be go-ahead touchdown.
And in the NFC nightcap, 49ers return man Kyle Williams outgoated Cundiff and Evans by letting one second-half punt bounce off his knee and fumbling another, in overtime, to set up Lawrence Tynes' game-winning 31-yard kick in the Giants' 20-17 victory.
Both games, though, made for dramatic TV. And while their outcomes left us two coaches short of a Har-Bowl -- probably a good thing; imagine how out of line Jim Harbaugh's handshakes would be with a Super Bowl ring on one hand -- they set up a rematch of one of the most memorable title games in recent history.
Four years ago, the Giants beat the Patriots to end New England's undefeated season in stunning fashion. David Tyree caught a ball with Velcro on his helmet, Eli Manning took his first steps toward quarterback elitedom, and the Patriots got what everyone but Gisele thought they deserved after Spygate and three championships in four years.
If you can stomach the next two weeks of buildup -- darn East Coast media -- you might just be in for a better sequel.
The Patriots were the best team the AFC had to offer all year, with Tom Brady throwing for 5,000 yards and a tight end in Rob Gronkowski who has helped revolutionized the position. The Giants had to claw their way into the playoffs, but they've been as hot as anyone the last month thanks to Manning and one of the game's best defensive lines.
For the XLVI straight time, the Lions will be home watching the Super Bowl from the comfort of their couch, the last place they want to be Feb. 5.
But if Sunday's games proved anything, it's that the Lions are building their team the right way, though they're a few roster tweaks from contention.
Brady is a superstar quarterback, his three Super Bowl rings are indisputable evidence of that. Manning doesn't get the same acclaim -- he's still at least the second-most accomplished passer in his family -- but he should. He was rightly voted to the NFC Pro Bowl this year after carrying the Giants' offense on his back the way great signal callers do.
Defensively, the Giants are ferocious up front with Jason Pierre-Paul and Justin Tuck and a seemingly endless group of linemen who harass opposing quarterbacks and make things easy on the rest of their defense. They had three sacks Sunday, and made Alex Smith a nonfactor in the second half.
The Patriots haven't been as consistently good up front, but on Sunday, with Brady having a subpar game (just 22 of 36 passing with two interceptions and no touchdowns) that's where they won. Vince Wilfork was a monster getting pressure up the middle. He had six tackles, one sack and made two huge plays at the end of the game, stuffing Ray Rice on a third-down run and grabbing hold of Joe Flacco's jersey to force a fourth-down incompletion.
The Lions have a soon-to-be 24-year-old quarterback in Matthew Stafford who's not on Brady's or Manning's level yet but he could be soon. And they built their defense up front on the same the principles that carried the Giants to a title in 2008.
The Lions still need a short-yardage running game -- with Brady struggling Sunday, the Pats scored both of their touchdowns on the ground -- but they think they found a hard-nosed back in the draft last year in Mikel Leshoure. And they need to bolster a defense that was the weak link in losses to Green Bay at the end of the season and New Orleans in the playoffs.
The Lions allowed 946 yards passing in those games; the teams playing Sunday gave up 1,057 total.

Giants top 49ers 20-17 in OT to reach Super Bowl

The New York Giants have their own Super Bowl formula: in overtime and on the road.
And with Lawrence Tynes' foot.
Five plays after the 49ers' Kyle Williams fumbled a punt, Tynes kicked a 31-yard field goal in overtime, sending the Giants to the Super Bowl with a 20-17 victory over San Francisco in the NFC championship game Sunday.
In another tight one in this decades-old postseason rivalry, both defenses made key stops before New York capitalized on a rare mistake in San Francisco's resurgent season. Williams' blunder put the Giants in perfect position for another sensational finish in a season full of them.
"That was a tough game. We had to fight for every yard that we got," Giants quarterback Eli Manning said. "Defense was outstanding, special teams getting us two turnovers was huge. That led to 10 points."
The first three overtime series ended in punts before Williams fumbled. The Giants won it moments later and silenced — for good this time — the towel-waving, poncho-wearing sellout crowd at cold, rainy Candlestick Park.
"It was one of those situations where I tried to turn it upfield and it just didn't work out," Williams said.
Manning and the Giants (12-7) will face the New England Patriots in the Super Bowl on Feb. 5 in Indianapolis as 3½-point underdogs. The last time the teams met for the NFL title, 2008, the Giants ended the Patriots' bid for a perfect season.
Tynes had a hand, er, foot in getting the Giants to that one, too, kicking a field goal in overtime.
Devin Thomas put the Giants in position this time by recovering his second fumble of the game after Jacquian Williams stripped the ball from fill-in return man Kyle Williams, who also fumbled earlier to set up a New York touchdown.
"It's my second NFC championship game, my second game-winner," Tynes said about his kick 7:54 into overtime. "It's amazing. I had dreams about this last night. It was from 42, not 31, but I was so nervous today before the game just anticipating this kind of game. I'm usually pretty cool, but there was something about tonight where I knew I was going to have to make a kick. Hats off to Eli, offense, defense. Great win."
Holder Steve Weatherford celebrated with a slip-and-slide on his back down the soggy field. Victor Cruz fell to his knees. Tynes quickly found his crying wife for a warm hug. Manning tossed his gloves into the temporary seats with a big smile, then received a surprise visit from big brother, Peyton, in the locker room.
Manning went 32 of 58 for 316 yards and two touchdowns and overcame six sacks in his record fifth road playoff win, New York's fifth in a row overall.
Manning threw a go-ahead 17-yard touchdown pass to Mario Manningham with 8:34 remaining after Kyle Williams fumbled for the first time.
The Giants challenged that the ball touched Williams' right knee and Thomas recovered with 11:06 left and coach Tom Coughlin won, giving the Giants the ball back at the 29.
"That was a tremendous football game for those that really enjoy football at it's very basic element," said Coughlin, who matched former Cowboys coach Tom Landry for most road playoff wins with seven. "Just a classic football game that just seemed like no one was going to put themselves into position to win it. Fortunately we were able to do that."
A 12-point underdog in the 2008 title game, the Giants battered Brady and got a last-minute TD pass from Manning to Plaxico Burress to win their third Super Bowl. Five months ago, Manning declared he was in the same class as Tom Brady. Now, he'll get another chance to outdo him on the NFL's biggest stage.
During this playoff run, he's already outplayed Aaron Rodgers and the defending champion Packers, and fellow former No. 1 pick Alex Smith.
Cruz set the tone Sunday with eight of his 10 receptions in the first half and finished with 142 yards.
"It's just been a tremendous effort by all of us, man," Cruz said. "We understand that any one of us can get hot at any moment. As long as we're all on the same page and just playing together, man, we've got a great group of guys."
The Giants appeared on the verge of collapsing and Coughlin's job status in jeopardy just a month ago, when they fell to 7-7 with an embarrassing loss to the Washington Redskins on Dec. 18.
They were facing elimination the following week against the Jets and Rex Ryan, but the Giants won 29-14. They followed with a 31-14 win over Dallas in the regular-season finale to win the NFC East and get to the playoffs for the first time since 2008.
New York dominated Atlanta at home in the opening round, and then came another stunner: a 37-20 victory at Green Bay.
Vernon Davis caught touchdown passes of 73 and 28 yards for the NFC West champions (14-4), who went from 6-10 a year ago to a contender and ended an eight-year playoff drought.
"It will be a tough one. It will take a while to get over," Harbaugh said. "There were a lot of ways in which we played well enough to win. We just didn't come away with it."
Smith completed just 12 of 26 passes for 196 yards, connecting on only one short throw to a wide receiver. With no threats on the outside, San Francisco managed one third-down conversion, coming on the final play of regulation. The offense was unable to overcome Williams' blunders.
"We all know him. We know how committed he is to winning," Smith said. "It's not on him. I look at the 1-for-13 on third downs. I know he's going to feel bad, but he's still part of our team. We didn't lose the game there. We lost it across the board offensively. We just couldn't get it done."
The only other time these two franchises faced off in the conference championship the game finished in memorable fashion. On Jan. 20, 1991, Roger Craig fumbled with the 49ers leading 13-12 late in the fourth quarter and the Giants went on to win 15-13 to deny San Francisco a chance at a third straight Super Bowl title. New York then beat the Bills to capture its second Super Bowl.
This time, it was Williams who made the crucial mistake.
'You hate to be the last guy that had the ball, to give it away in that fashion and to lose a game of this magnitude," Williams said. "It is what it is. We're going to move forward as a team. Everyone has come to pat me on the back and the shoulder to say it's not me."
Notes: Davis joined Jerry Rice as the only 49ers with at least two touchdowns receiving in back-to-back playoff games. ... Cruz caught a 36-yard pass from Manning on the first play of the second quarter, then Manning hit Bear Pascoe for a 6-yard touchdown seven plays later. ... Giants C David Baas beat his former team. ... Manningham missed the potential game-tying TD in a 27-20 loss here on Nov. 13.
Source: The Associated Press

Ole Miss debuts new Super Bowl-themed billboard

Ole Miss knew it was going to have two participants in the Super Bowl, just based on having four participants (one from each team) in today’s conference championship games.

Well, it turned out being Eli Manning and BenJarvus Green-Ellis as the latest Rebels (believe 24th and 25th overall) to play in the big game.
And this is the new billboard Ole Miss will be using to promote that fact.
Both played really well today – Manning was 32-of-58 for 316 yards and two touchdowns. He was also tough as nails, as the 49ers just beat him up all night long (including Patrick Willis, who had a sack and seven overall tackles). It got to the point where I was legitimately concerned for Eli’s well-being during the coin flip before overtime.
Green-Ellis had 68 yards on 15 carries for the Patriots, including a second-quarter touchdown. His counterpart, Michael Oher, was hurt early in the game but came back and seemed to play well for the Ravens.
Ole Miss started this latest promotional campaign by honoring Manning, Willis and Mike Wallace for their Pro Bowl selections. Then it  introduced a final four billboard for this week’s games.

Super Bowl XLVI: Is Eli Better Than Peyton?

With the Super Bowl being played in the same building where Peyton Manning has done so many great things one of the top storylines will be his younger brother Eli Manning. Both quarterbacks have each won a Super Bowl and been named MVP in the process. Peyton has won both regular season meetings between the two, but Eli has been the better postseason quarterback. Eli now has an NFL record five road playoff victories as well as he enters his second Super Bowl.

Super Bowl 2012: Tom Brady Will Outgun Eli Manning on Football's Biggest Stage

Tom Brady and the New England Patriots will avenge their 2008 Super Bowl loss by outgunning Eli Manning and the New York Giants in Indianapolis.

Both teams are returning to football's biggest stage for the first time since that thrilling 17-14 game in Super Bowl XLII. Unfortunately for New York, they won't have David Tyree to save them this time.

Of course, they will have the scorching hot Eli Manning, who has been shredding every secondary he faces.

After a career year in the regular season, Manning carried his success into the playoffs. Through three games, he's already racked up 923 passing yards (307.6 per game) and eight touchdowns.

In the NFC Championship Game, Manning took a savage beating from the 49ers defense. Despite spending half the game on his back, he threw for 316 yards and two scores to lead his team back to the Super Bowl.

This has been the best season of Manning's career, as he's taken that rare leap from "above average" to "elite." As good as he's been, however, Tom Brady is still the best quarterback in the NFL and he'll prove it on Feb. 5.

Brady has been up and down so far this postseason. After dissecting the Denver Broncos with 363 yards and six touchdowns, he was terrorized by the Ravens defense. He was picked off twice and failed to throw a touchdown pass for the first time in 36 games.

Although Brady struggled, the Patriots won 23-20 because of some great defensive plays and a shanked Billy Cundiff field goal.

This will be a close and high-scoring Super Bowl, but I'm expecting the Patriots to prevail.

Their defense proved they can make key stops, and Brady having back-to-back bad games is about as likely as getting mauled by a bear and struck by lightning in the same day.

Eli will play well, but I'm expecting a flawless performance from Brady. He'll survive the Giants pass rush, find Rob Gronkowski and Wes Welker with regularity, and lead the Patriots to their fourth Super Bowl title since 2002.

Papa John’s Bringing Peyton Manning To Super Bowl XLVI To Join Brother Eli

Peyton Manning will be going to Super Bowl XLVI after all —as a member of the Papa John’s team.
Manning, quarterback of the Indianapolis Colts who missed the entire season  due to surgery on his neck, and former Pittsburgh Steelers’ running back Jerome Bettis star in a commercial for Papa John’s which supports the pizza company’s “Call the Coin Toss” campaign.
According to Papa John’s, registered members of the Papa Rewards club who correctly call the Super Bowl XLVI coin toss will receive a “free large one-topping pizza and a 2-liter Pepsi Max.”

Both Papa John’s and Pepsi Max are official marketing partners of the NFL.
In the TV commercial, John Schnatter, founder, chairman and CEO of Papa John’s, is on the field at Lucas Oil Stadium, which will host Super Bowl XLVI on Feb. 5. He walks over to Bettis and says, “Hey Bus. Let’s flip for some Papa John’s pizza and a Pepsi Max.”
Bettis agrees, but the two are interrupted by a ref, who turns out to be Manning. “I’ll ref,” Manning says.
“Peyton,” asks an incredulous Bettis, “is that you?”
“Hey, a man’s gotta work,” replies Manning with a straight face, a reference to his situation this past season.
Bettis, Manning and Schnatter then get into a debate over who calls heads and who calls tails. The Papa John honcho then turns to the camera and says, “America, you decide.”
A voiceover then details the Papa Coin Toss activation and directs viewers to the company’s Web site for information.
All three then recite in unison Papa John’s slogan: “Better ingredients. Better pizza. Papa John’s.”

Papa John’s is expected to run a commercial during Super Bowl XLVI on NBC in addition to on-site activation in Indianapolis. The company has been offering free pizzas to consumers who order online.
Manning, who led the Colts to a win, and was named MVP, in Super Bowl XLI, is scheduled to be in attendance when brother Eli’s New York Giants face the New England Patriots in Super Bowl XLVI.
Bettis, who was a member of the Steelers’ Super Bowl XL championship team, is among the finalists being considered for induction as part of the 2012 Pro Football Hall of Fame. The Class of 2012 will be revealed in Indianapolis on Feb. 4.
Papa John’s is in the second year of a multi-year sponsorship with the NFL. The company is also the official pizza of the Arizona Cardinals, Atlanta Falcons, Baltimore Ravens, Dallas Cowboys, Houston Texans, Indianapolis Colts, Miami Dolphins, New York Giants, New York Jets, Philadelphia Eagles, Seattle Seahawks, St. Louis Rams, Tennessee Titans and Washington Redskins.

Super Bowl Downtown Street Closures Necessary, Frustrating

Motorists in downtown Indianapolis said they’re having difficulty navigating through the city with all of the street closures and road blocks as officials prepare for the Super Bowl.
Road restrictions began on Thursday and crews worked to close more streets that intersect Meridian and Georgia streets on Saturday, which confused drivers and caused minor traffic jams.


"People are trying to get around. Traffic is backed up in a lot of the places you wouldn't expect it to be,” driver Matt Traub said.The Super Bowl Host Committee launched its Know Before You Go plan in December in hopes that drivers will check street closures and restrictions before getting into their cars, RTV6's Chance Walser reported.Some drivers who accessed the website before driving downtown said they didn’t have much success."I got on the website and to tell you the truth, it was really confusing. There were lots of maps with lots of different colors changing different days,” driver William Bogard said.Committee member Mel Raines said Saturday was only the beginning of more road closures to come."Our next big restriction is on Sunday. South Street is going to close between Missouri Street and Capitol Avenue,” Raines said.Officials said the closures are making a way for the construction of temporary rigging that will be used to hold up zip lines and concert stages in the Super Bowl village along Georgia Street.

Patriots to play Giants in Super Bowl

It will be the New England Patriots against the New York Giants in the Feb. 5 Super Bowl in Indianapolis.
Quarterback Tom Brady’s 1-yard touchdown dive held up after the Baltimore Ravens missed a chance to win, then tie the game in the final seconds, and the New England Patriots took a 23-20 victory in Sunday’s AFC Championship.
With New England leading by 3 points with 11 seconds left, Billy Cundiff missed a 32-yard field goal attempt and the Patriots escaped with the win.
Two plays earlier, Joe Flacco’s pass to wide receiver Lee Evans in the end zone was stripped by backup cornerback Sterling Moore.
On his touchdown with 11:29 left in the fourth quarter, Brady took a huge hit from Ravens star linebacker Ray Lewis, then emphatically spiked the ball as he walked away. Earlier, Brady showed his fire by barking at Lewis following a hard tackle on a 4-yard run.
Brady’s fifth trip to the Super Bowl will equal John Elway’s achievement with Denver.
“We’re going to try to go out and kick some butt in a couple of weeks,” Brady said.
Meanwhile, in San Francisco, Lawrence Tynes booted the Giants into the Super Bowl again.
Tynes kicked a winning 31-yard field goal in sudden-death overtime and New York beat the San Francisco 49ers 20-17 in the NFC championship game tonight to reach its second Super Bowl in five seasons.
Eli Manning and the Giants (12-7) will face the Patriots again, just as they did when they won it in 2008.

Super Bowl XLVI Recliner Giveaways - Tradition Continues at Wholesale Furniture Brokers

Wholesale Furniture Brokers has launched a Facebook and blog recliner giveaway to celebrate Super Bowl XLVI. The Facebook giveaway requires contestants to 'Like' Wholesale Furniture Brokers' Facebook page and predict the final score of Super Bowl XLVI in a wall post to be eligible to win a vintage 7292 series leatherette recliner by Mac Motion Chairs. The blog giveaway requires contestants to write a blog post reviewing a recliner found on Wholesale Furniture Brokers' sites and link to the recliner and recliner category they found it in. The winner of the blog giveaway will win an Alto REC-516 series leather recliner by Stanley Chair. The deadline for entries for both Super Bowl XLVI recliner giveaways is February 5th at kickoff time.

Wholesale Furniture Brokers has announced its Facebook and blog Super Bowl XLVI Recliner Giveaways. The Facebook and blog giveaways have specific rules participants need to follow to be eligible to win. The giveaways are open to both US and Canadian contestants.
"This is our fifth annual Super Bowl recliner giveaway," says Matt Holmes, Wholesale Furniture Brokers' Marketing Manager. "We're giving away two leather recliners and a $250 gift certificate this year. It's going to be exciting to find out who's going to win the Super Bowl and our giveaways."

Participants of the Facebook giveaway need to 'Like' Wholesale Furniture Brokers' Facebook page (www.facebook.com/pages/Wholesale-Furniture-Brokers/58228806317) and post a prediction of Super Bowl XLVI's final score. The winner will be the participant that predicted a score closest to the actual final score. The prize for winning the Facebook giveaway is a vintage 7292 series leatherette recliner by Mac Motion Chairs. The participant with the most referrals will also win a $250 Wholesale Furniture Brokers' gift certificate.
The blog giveaway requires participants to write a blog post reviewing a recliner found on Wholesale Furniture Brokers' sites and link to the recliner and recliner chairs category where it was found. Participants need to post a comment on the official blog giveaway post linking to their entry post. An Alto REC-516 series leather recliner by Stanley Chair will be given away to the winner of the blog giveaway.
Contestants can enter both giveaways separately. The deadline for entries of both giveaways is February 5, 2012 at Super Bowl kickoff time. Kickoff time is approximately 3:30pm Pacific Standard Time. The winners of the Super Bowl XLVI Recliner Giveaways will be announced on February 6, 2012.

SUPER BOWL-BOUND

Whether you credit it to a higher power, good fortune, great play or black magic, the Patriots are headed to the Super Bowl. Glory days are here again.

In a game packed with more drama in the closing minutes than an entire season of “Pretty Little Liars,” the Patriots miraculously held off the Baltimore Ravens for a 23-20 victory today to claim the AFC Championship at rocking and rolling Gillette Stadium.

“It’s awesome,” coach Bill Belichick, decked out in his signature gray hoodie and sporting a rare smile, said from a confetti-strewn field after the Patriots had just won their 10th straight game and 15th in 18 tries this season.

“I’ve just got to give a lot of credit to the players. Those guys fought all year and, just like today, it wasn’t always perfect. But they fought to the final gun and we came out on top.”

The Patriots will face the in Super Bowl XLVI on Feb. 5 at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis.

These Patriots have displayed plenty of heart this season, but it didn’t appear they’d be anywhere near the Heartland next month as the Ravens methodically marched down the field with the clock winding down.

But the black-helmeted Ravens, playing the role of visiting villain to perfection, were foiled when rookie defensive back Sterling Moore somehow dislodged the ball from Lee Evans, denying the receiver of a likely game-winning touchdown catch with less than 30 seconds to play.

Two plays later, kicker Billy Cundiff was way, way, way wide left with his eminently makeable field-goal attempt from 32 yards. It was his first miss in the fourth quarter in two years.

“A long foul ball,” said safety James Ihedigbo, a UMass alum who grew up in Western Mass. following the Patriots as a kid.

“I had my eyes closed,” veteran tackle Matt Light said. “I wasn’t going too watch that one. That was a little too much stress for this guy, but it was unbelievable. Things happen for a reason.”

All that was left was for Tom “I sucked” Brady, who wasn’t his usual superhuman self while throwing two interceptions and no touchdowns, to take a knee, ensuring the Patriots of their fifth trip to the Super Bowl in the last 11 seasons.

Despite the Canton-bound presence of Belichick and Brady and the usual double-digit win total, these Patriots are not your older brother’s Patriots. Chiefly, they lack a dominate defense - something traditionalists believe is the key to winning championships.

But what this team doesn’t lack is character and camaraderie, versatility and flexibility. It doesn’t get down on itself and it isn’t full of itself.

“It’s a pretty mentally tough team,” Brady said. “There’s really some resiliency, we’ve shown that all season. Even in the three games we lost, we fought to the end.”

Now the Patriots are one win away from winning their first NFL championship in eight years. It is, as many believe, a foregone conclusion that will happen.

Call it a gift from heaven.

The Patriots have dedicated this season to Myra Hiatt Kraft, who grew up in Worcester and died in July after losing a bout with cancer. She was 68 and had spent 48 of those years married to Robert Kraft, who has owned the previously pathetic Patriots since 1994.

“We’ve dedicated the season to her and doing all we can to advance to our goal,” running back Danny Woodhead said. “We’re happy to win and I’m sure she’d be happy we won.”

At the other end of the hectic locker room, Kraft spoke with a handful of reporters. He talked about Brady’s stumbles, Vince Wilfork’s stoutness and the field goal gone wild.

“(There were) forces at work that’s beyond anything we can understand,” Kraft said, later adding, “I’m so excited we’re going to the big game. I still pinch myself thinking about it and I think of my sweetheart.”

Las Vegas oddsmaker sets early line for Super Bowl, and crosses his fingers

Jay Rood has posted the most important number of the year to sports gamblers in Las Vegas and throughout the country.

In Super Bowl XLVI in Indianapolis on Feb. 5, the AFC champion New England Patriots are favored to defeat the New York Giants by 31/2 points.

Also of interest, the over/under for total points in the game is 551/2 points.

Now, Rood, vice president of MGM Resorts supervising 12 race and sports books across Nevada, including Aria, MGM Grand, Mirage and the Bellagio on the Strip, waits for another seven figures of action to come his way.

How did you finalize those numbers?

"We were originally looking at the Patriots as 4- or 41/2-point favorites, but this Giants performance here [defeating San Francisco, 20-17, in overtime] being so dominating on the road against tough competition, while the Patriots are not looking as good as they have been, I think it's a good number."

What are you trying to accomplish in setting these numbers?

"The fans want to bet the favorite and the over. I'm hoping to generate enough volume on the underdog and under to set that off. With the Patriots winning, going into this weekend I preferred to have the Giants as the second team to help us split the money because of all of their fans."

There are gamblers who bring suitcases of cash into your books to try and gut you on your Super Bowl lines. Do those people arrive immediately or bide their time to just before kickoff?

"Both things happen. They have their opinions on the game as soon as it emerges, and if they don't like my number, they're here right away. That could happen to us now. The Giants bettors [Sunday] just cashed a ticket, and their team looked good, so they come right back and bet the Super Bowl based on what they saw and how that team let them cash a ticket. Yet, if they think the number will come their way even more, they'll bide their time."

Why are the Patriots favored?

"They're business-like. They take care of business and win. People like that. They won [Sunday] without [Tom] Brady playing like Brady."

I saw the Giants get to as high as 80-to-1 underdogs to win the Super Bowl earlier this season. Don't you need them to lose?

"We opened them [in future-book betting] at 30 to 1, but they didn't get a lot of support until they got to 12/1 and then recently, they opened the playoffs at 18/1 even after being 25/1 in Week 14. We won't get that hurt if they win. The Giants have been struggling the last couple years. [Coach] Tom Coughlin's been on and off the hot seat. Yes, they are extremely popular, but in regard to our risk, they're middle of the road. The [Detroit] Lions and [Houston] Texans we needed out, the [Dallas] Cowboys weren't good for us, either."

You're up this season?

"We were an overall winner for the season and playoffs. It was a little disappointing we didn't do better. Quite a bit of favorites to over combinations hit, and some obvious live [under]dogs hit. It's more and more challenging. People are much more savvy about what we're looking at, and it's more and more difficult to manage it, to draw money on the other side [favoring underdogs and the under] without exposing yourself. The numbers moved a lot this year because of that."

Last year's Super Bowl outcome was so ugly for you, with the betting again concentrated on the favorite and the over. Was there a desire to make the 'over' number especially high to help your cause?

"That combination, when it hits, is dreadful. There's not a lot you can do to offset it if it hits except hope you win every other scenario. There is a temptation to make the number high, but if you do put some extra points in there, then the professional handicappers jump right on it with their big money and force you to move the number down before your main public comes into town. Then you risk losing both ways. So you don't want to give the professionals a free pass and let the public come in looking at the lower number."

You'll need the Giants in this game. You like them getting a field goal plus that 'hook' of half a point?

"I didn't want my number to be a solid number, not simply three or four. People have to think if they really like the Patriots. Yeah, I like the Giants. The Patriots' defense isn't up to the normal defense you see from a Super Bowl team. At 31/2, it's a good bet."

Super Bowl Q&A: Brady's revenge?

On what he considered a bad day in terms of his performance, New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady got his wish.

Super Bowl XLVI will give Brady a chance to rectify his only Super Bowl loss, the 2008 edition in which Eli Manning bested Brady with a game-winning fourth-quarter touchdown drive that featured numerous big or clutch plays. It was in that game the New York Giants took the fear factor away from the three-time Super Bowl champs.

The Giants tipped off to the rest of the world that the Patriots can be beaten. The Giants slowed New England's offensive weapons with man-to-man coverage. They got pressure around the feet of Brady to make him uncomfortable in the pocket. The Giants were able to crack holes in the Patriots' defense.

What followed was a three-year run in which the Patriots failed to win a playoff game. Though the Pats breezed through a 2011 schedule in which they didn't beat a team with a winning record until the AFC Championship Game, they will go to Indianapolis knowing how difficult it is to win playoff games and Super Bowls, something they were starting to take for granted.

"It's hard to win these games,'' Brady said. "It's hard to win games in the NFL because every team is very talented. We did enough here the last 10 weeks to win these games. I'm sure this next game is going to come down to the end and hopefully we have enough plays.''

What's great about this Super Bowl is both teams might be considered the hottest going to Indianapolis. Despite a 9-7 season, the Giants got healthier during the playoffs and played their most complete football. The Pats enter with a 10-game winning streak and the chance to be favorites in the Super Bowl -- again.

But as the Giants proved four years ago, being the favorites doesn't mean much when the game starts. It's how you finish that counts.

1. What is the history between these franchises? Including the Super Bowl, the Patriots lead the series 5-4, but the Giants have won the past two games. They shocked the world by beating the Patriots in Super Bowl XLII, but they also won the regular-season game this season -- 24-20 in New England.

That game was classic Brady-Manning, almost like a Peyton Manning-Tom Brady game. The game was scoreless at the half. The Giants led 10-3 after three quarters. Then each quarterback exchanged scoring drives. Brady threw a 5-yard touchdown pass to Aaron Hernandez to tie the game and led a field goal drive to take a 13-10 lead. Manning completed an 83-yard drive with 3:03 remaining by hitting Mario Manningham with a touchdown pass to give the Giants a 17-13 lead. Brady needed 90 seconds to drive 64 yards and hit Rob Gronkowski with a 14-yard touchdown pass to put the Pats ahead. With 1:36 left, Manning executed an 80-yard, eight play drive that ended with a 1-yard touchdown pass to tight end Jake Ballard to win the game with 15 seconds left.

2. Which team has the most urgency? Without question, it's the Patriots. Brady qualified for his fifth trip to the Super Bowl by beating the Ravens 23-20 on Sunday, but his response to Patriots fans after the game was, "I sucked pretty bad today.'' Brady will be on a mission for the next two weeks. He felt badly he threw two interceptions. Against the Ravens, he wasn't particularly sharp, completing 22 of 36 passes for 239 yards and a horrible 57.5 passer rating. Brady and the Patriots settled for three field goals on drives and Brady didn't have his pinpoint accuracy.

"You beat yourself up,'' Brady said. "I've been doing this for quite a while. I'm glad we won, I'm glad we're moving on. Hopefully I can go out there and do better in a few weeks. I think offensively we can do better and that's what it's going to take."

When Brady is serious, his team is serious. He felt his last Super Bowl opportunity slipped away from him when the Pats lost to the Giants after the 2007 season. Brady tied Joe Montana with his 16th playoff victory Sunday. He and Bill Belichick became the first quarterback-coach duo to go to five Super Bowls. This time, though, he wants his ring.

3. What is the injury situation? As they were in the championship games, the teams are in good shape. The Patriots listed 14 players as questionable last week, but the only player who missed the Ravens game was tackle Sebastian Vollmer, who has back and foot problems. The extra week off, though, could give him a chance to play. The Pats had a scare in the third quarter when it appeared TE Rob Gronkowski he suffered a bad ankle injury. Ravens safety Bernard Pollard, who ended Brady's season in 2008 when he fell on Brady's knee, fell on the ankle of Gronkowski, who was taken to the locker room and had the ankle taped. He returned and finished the game.

Cornerback Kyle Arrington missed a couple of series with an eye injury, but he returned and finished the game. There will be questions about Brady maybe missing a practice or two, but he is fine. Weeks ago he suffered a slight left shoulder separation. His rehab caused him to miss practice on Wednesday, but he was off the injury report by the end of the week. He's fine.

The Giants suffered about five minor injuries in their 20-17 overtime victory over San Francisco, but most of the players were able to return. Linebacker Chase Blackburn re-injured a shoulder and could be a question mark. Safety Tyler Sash suffered a concussion Sunday. Center David Baas suffered a minor abdominal injury but was able to return. Wide receiver Hakeem Nicks banged up a shoulder but finished the game. Wide receiver Victor Cruz was banged up several times but played through the injuries.

4. How will the Giants try to contain Patriots TEs Gronkowski and Hernandez? Believe it or not, they won't be as successful as the Ravens. Brady threw 19 passes to Gronkowski and Hernandez on Sunday and completed 12 for 153 yards and no touchdowns. Against the Broncos, the tight ends combined for 14 catches, 200 yards and four touchdowns. Hernandez and Gronkowski caught 12 passes for 136 yards and two touchdowns in the Giants' win over the Patriots earlier this season.

In some ways, the Giants won't have what the Ravens had in matching up against the two tight ends. What the Ravens did was try to match a cornerback, sometimes 6-foot-2 Jimmy Smith, against either Hernandez or Gronkowski. The Giants' corners are 5-foot-11 or 6-0, so they don't have the one big corner to take away the tall Pats tight ends. Instead of matching up in man, they may try to bracket the tight ends with a linebacker or corner underneath and a safety on top.

Teams almost have to concede Hernandez and Gronkowski are going to get 12 to 15 receptions. The key is not letting them get touchdown receptions, which the Ravens did Sunday.

5. Will the Super Bowl be a high-scoring game? Maybe not. In fact, you get the feeling both teams will be in the low 20s like they were earlier this season. Brady was mad at himself Sunday for settling for three field goals in the red zone.

"Offensively, I wish we would have done a little bit better in the red area; certainly not throw interceptions,'' Brady said. "I'm glad we won, glad we're moving on. We've won 10 straight, hopefully we can make it 11.''

The Patriots were the second-best team in football in the red zone during the regular season. They scored 47 touchdowns in 72 red-zone trips. The Pats were average with their red-zone defense, ranking as the 11th worst, giving up 34 touchdowns in 61 trips. They've improved in the playoffs, however, giving up two touchdowns in seven trips. The Giants also gave up 34 touchdown drives in 61 trips into the red zone. Offensively, the Giants were the eighth-best red-zone team with 32 touchdowns in 56 trips.
6. What is the toughest challenge for the Giants? It will be hard to run the football against the Patriots. Nose tackle Vince Wilfork is playing at his absolute best during the playoffs. Despite giving up 117 rushing yards a game during the regular season and 4.6 yards a carry, the Patriots have improved their run defense during the playoffs. They limited Tim Tebow and the Denver Broncos -- who led the league in rushing --to 3.6 yards a carry in the divisional round. Ray Rice of the Ravens was held to 67 yards on 21 carries and the Ravens averaged only 3.7 yards on 31 carries.

"Vince was so on top of his game,'' linebacker Jerod Mayo said. "He was pointing to the ground before plays when he knew they were running plays and pointing to the air when he knew they were passing plays.''

Wilfork, who weighs in excess of 350 pounds, was unblockable against the Ravens. He consistently stuffed the run and either made the tackle behind the line of scrimmage or set it up for linebackers Mayo and Brandon Spikes to make tackles for short gains.

"I think, to be honest with you, on the run they just cut me loose,'' Wilfork said about a couple of key run stops late in the game. "I'm always taught when someone doesn't block you, it's a set-up. I don't know if they just just missed a block or if it was a set-up block. I just beat it.''

The Pats' run defense also improved in the past couple of weeks because Spikes is healthy along with safety Patrick Chung. Spikes and Chung each missed eight regular-season games.

7. What is the Giants' biggest concern going into this game? Blocking. In the Giants' victory over the 49ers, Manning was sacked six times, hurried 11 times and knocked down 19 times in 64 dropbacks. Giants coach Tom Coughlin has done a great job of patching the offensive line, and you knew there were going to have problems against the 49ers' tough front seven. Manning wasn't sacked in the first Patriots game but he was hit eight times. The Giants will have to control Mark Anderson, who is the Patriots' top remaining pass-rushing defensive end. He had 10 sacks during the regular season. They will problems handling Wilfork, whom the Ravens couldn't control. To have success, the Giants might have to pound big running back Brandon Jacobs into the line to wear down the Patriots, who run a 4-3.

8. Will the "let them play'' officiating trend continue? Probably. Officials have kept flags in their pockets. Early word is the league is considering John Parry as the Super Bowl ref. He was the ref for the 49ers-Saints playoff game and called only three penalties, including no holding calls. During the regular season, his crew averaged 15.8 flags a game, fourth-most among the 17 crews. His 2.7 holding penalties a game were among the highest.

But officials have let teams play during the postseason. Officials called an average of 8.1 penalties a game during the postseason and had only eight holding calls in 10 games. A Parry-officiated game tends to be exciting. His 47.3 points a game during the regular season was the fifth-highest total among the crews. The Giants have had six of the eight holding penalties, so they probably will be flagged. Remember, in Super Bowls, they use all-star crews.

9. Which coach has the biggest concerns? Go with Belichick, a defensive head coach who has major problems with his defense. The Patriots are the first team in Super Bowl history to go to the Super Bowl with a defense that gave up more than 360 yards a game in the regular season. The Patriots gave up 411.1 yards a game, but the 4,703 passing yards surrendered by the Pats during the regular season were the second worst in NFL history, second only to the 2011 Green Bay Packers.

Ravens quarterback Joe Flacco exposed more of those problems Sunday. Belichick's secondary looks like a frayed bandage on a big wound. Against the Ravens, the Pats used undrafted cornerback Kyle Arrington and former Pro Bowler Devin McCourty, who was the third-most burned cornerback this season (66 completions for 1,115 yards and six touchdowns). When the Pats go to three cornerbacks, McCourty moves to safety. His problem is press man coverage. He's not very good at press coverage and seems to work better in zone. On Sunday, Belichick moved safety Sterling Moore to cornerback and he played well even though he was beaten in the first quarter for a 42-yard completion by Torrey Smith. However, Moore made the "Immaculate Deflection'' when he stripped a potential game-winning pass from the hands of Lee Evans with 22 seconds, saving the victory. The problem? He didn't know the defensive call.

"I still don't know the call,'' Moore said more than an hour after the game. "When I saw Evans run the fade, which surprised me, I just covered him in man.''

There was serious confusion during the Ravens' final drive in the fourth quarter. Flacco was able to isolate slot receiver Anquan Boldin on Julian Edelman, a receiver helping out at corner. Boldin caught three passes on Edelman for 51 yards and then beat Nate Jones for a 9-yard pass when he filled in for Edelman on one play. Belichick uses receivers and undrafted players in his secondary and will be rebuilding the secondary after the Super Bowl, trying to find better talent.

10. Who's going to win Super Bowl XLVI? Though I write this without conviction, I'd give the edge to the Patriots. You just get the feeling there is a touch of destiny with this team that is tied to owner Robert Kraft, whose wife passed away last year. Players and the entire organization dedicated the season to her. Longtime Patriot followers believe it was Myra Kraft who somehow made Billy Cundiff miss his 32-yard field goal in the fourth quarter and helped Moore strip a potential game-winning touchdown pass from Evans.