View New Posts
  1. #1

    Default Minnesota at New Orleans

    By Mike Triplett & Rick Alonzo
    For Sporting News
    Why to watch
    The quarterbacks are as good as it gets. Minnesota's Brett Favre is remarkably having one of the best seasons of his Hall of Fame career, and he played one of his best games Sunday, throwing four touchdown passes in a 34-3 rout of the Dallas Cowboys.
    But Favre didn't come out of retirement again to settle for the NFC Championship Game. It's Super Bowl or bust for the NFL's all-time leader in passing yards and passing touchdowns, who has not been back to the Super Bowl since losing to Denver 12 years ago.
    New Orleans' Drew Brees, meanwhile, is trying to get to his first Super Bowl and, in the process, break into that elite stratosphere of quarterbacks. Brees, who turned 31 last week, set the NFL record for completion percentage in a season, and he became the second quarterback to throw for 4,000 yards in four consecutive seasons (joining Peyton Manning).
    Last year, Brees was the second QB ever to throw for 5,000 in a season. But he knows that he'll ultimately be judged by how he performs in games like these.
    As it should be, the NFC title will be decided by a showdown between the two best teams. The Saints (14-3) and Vikings (13-4) were dominant for much of the season before a couple of mini-slumps in December. And both of them reached their peak last week in the divisional round of the NFC playoffs, winning by the same margin -- 31 points.
    This should be the toughest matchup to date for both teams. Each team can score points. The Saints offense, which led the league in points scored, is thrilling to watch and creates matchup nightmares for defenses because it is so deep and versatile. The Vikings offense is even more balanced, though, with Favre playing as well as ever while defenses continue to focus on stopping All-Pro tailback Adrian Peterson.
    The Vikings have a fearsome defensive front, and the Saints have an aggressive, opportunistic defense. And both teams are built to take advantage of the other's biggest weakness (for the Saints, it's their porous run defense; for the Vikings, it's their shaky play at safety). There will be no free rides into the Super Bowl.
    Saints safety Darren Sharper will provide a fascinating subplot for several reasons. </B>For one, he's dying to make his former team pay for giving up on him last offseason, where he lingered in free agency before settling on a one-year bargain deal in New Orleans.
    He also has a longtime personal relationship with Favre, who was his teammate in Green Bay for eight years before they became rivals when Sharper went to Minnesota. And like Favre, Sharper is trying to get back to the Super Bowl for the first time in 12 years as he heads toward the twilight of his career.
    It would be shocking if Sharper didn't have a major impact on how this game plays out. He has been an incredible playmaker for the Saints this year, helping to lead their drastic culture change on defense. He intercepted nine passes with three touchdown returns and an NFL record 376 interception return yards this season, then added a fumble recovery last week against Arizona (plus an interception that was called back by a late hit).
    Sharper does like to gamble, though, and Favre knows him as well as anybody, so they'll try to pick on each other. The Vikings, meanwhile, could really use Sharper on their side in this game. Their safeties have not stepped up consistently in Sharper's absence, and now they're going against arguably the league's most dangerous passing offense.
    Vikings Keys For Success


    1. Run the ball. The Saints' biggest weakness is their run defense, and the Vikings must exploit that with Adrian Peterson's strong cutbacks, a facet of opposing running backs that has given New Orleans problems. The Vikings are 6-0 when Peterson carries the ball at least 25 times, including the 34-3 victory over Dallas in the divisional round. Peterson had 26 carries for 63 yards.
    When Peterson gets a high number of carries, it helps the offense control time of possession and the linemen have the chance to assert their will on defensive linemen eager to rush Favre.
    2. Keep Brees contained. Brees is one of the least sacked players in the NFL in recent years because of his mobility and quick release under pressure. The Vikings don't need to necessarily sack Brees often to win this game, but they must keep him from buying extra time getting outside of the pocket. If pass rushers can put pressure on Brees with the front four, as they did last week against Dallas, the secondary won't have to cover the Saints' dangerous receivers as long. 3. Find separation. When healthy, the Saints' starting cornerback tandem of Tracy Porter and Jabari Greer are a force for opposing receivers. Porter and Greer allowed one passing touchdown in their season's first eight games. It's up to Vikings receivers to get open and give Favre openings to hit them. This is the biggest game in the young pro careers of Percy Harvin and Sidney Rice, and they need to respond to the tough matchup.

    Saints Keys For Success


    1. Bring the offense. This is what the Saints do best, and they do it better than any team. Brees is playing the position as well as anyone, and he has a seemingly endless selection of targets at his disposal.
    Tailback Reggie Bush looked healthier, faster and more dangerous than ever last week against the Cardinals. The receivers create matchup nightmares: Marques Colston (a big, tall target with great hands), Devery Henderson and Robert Meachem (speedy downfield threats) and Lance Moore (a shifty target with great hands in the mold of Wes Welker and Miles Austin). Tight end Jeremy Shockey is one of the best receivers at his position. And the Saints have been running the ball effectively.
    They can put a lot of pressure on the Vikings by posting an early lead and forcing them to play catch-up. Or, if things start out a little ugly, the Saints can make up a deficit in a hurry. They must hold up against Minnesota's pass rush (see below), but the Vikings' secondary is vulnerable, especially at safety, so opportunities should be there.
    2. Give Brees time to throw. Brees' ability to avoid sacks is in large part because he makes quick decisions, gets rid of the ball and finds holes in defenses. Defenses rarely have success when they blitz against him. But he's obviously more dangerous when he has time in the pocket to wait for plays to open up downfield.
    And Minnesota's front four, led by end Jared Allen and tackle Kevin Williams, rarely give quarterbacks that time, especially on the fast track inside a dome. This will be a huge test for Saints left tackle Jermon Bushrod, who has been mostly solid in his first season as the Saints starter.
    Bushrod had a forgettable performance against Dallas in Week 15, as did the entire Saints' pass protection. But he held his own against Julius Peppers, John Abraham and the Giants and Jets, among others. The Saints will surely offer him help with blocking help from tight ends and backs, but that takes a receiver out of the fold.
    3. Contain the run. The Saints have been vulnerable to big plays in the run game, especially on the opening drive this year. And once again, they let Arizona's Tim Hightower break off a 70-yard touchdown run on the first play of scrimmage last week.
    They settled down after that, allowing 31 rushing yards the rest of the game. But their run defense was inconsistent past three months. It has been especially porous against cutback runs, but the problems have stemmed from missed assignments to missed tackles in every level of the defense. They're healthier across the board now, which should help, but they're facing one of the NFL's most potent rushing attacks, with tailbacks Adrian Peterson and Chester Taylor. Peterson and the Vikings' line have looked rather human in recent weeks, especially since teams continue to stack the box against them. But this matchup might help them get off the ground.

    The Bottom Line

    A painfully long drought will end for one of these tortured franchises. The Vikings went to four Super Bowls in the 1960s and 1970s and lost all four of them. They haven't been back in 33 years. But they have nothing on the Saints, who have never reached a Super Bowl in 43 years -- one of five teams left on that list. In fact, this will be the first time New Orleans has ever been host to an NFC championship game. Expect a frenzied Superdome crowd that will do all it can to will the Saints to victory.

    Scoring prediction: Vikings 27 - Saints 31

  2. #2

  3. #3

    Default

    I think the Vikings will be better at running the ball and stopping the run the key will be for Peterson to secure the rock, the Saints are ball hawks on D they love trying to force turnovers weather it be stripping the ball or getting a big interception (#1 in defensive TDs) I believe if Minnasota can control the clock and not turn it over they will squeek it out.

    Vikings 27
    Saints 24

  4. #4
    aceking's Avatar SBR PRO
    Join Date: 09-07-05
    Posts: 3,960
    SBR Points: 670
    Message Me

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Nomocino View Post
    I think the Vikings will be better at running the ball and stopping the run the key will be for Peterson to secure the rock, the Saints are ball hawks on D they love trying to force turnovers weather it be stripping the ball or getting a big interception (#1 in defensive TDs) I believe if Minnasota can control the clock and not turn it over they will squeek it out.

    Vikings 27
    Saints 24
    Saints win by 2 TDs .
    1000pts

    SBR WORLD
    POKER CUP
    3rd Place 2012

    10,842

    SBR POKER TOP 100

    25th Place 11/1/2011

    SBR Founder Join Date: 9/7/2005


  5. #5

    Default

    I like Over 52.5 in this one!! Minnesota is a little banged up and they've had some problems w/pass defense during the season! Minny gave up 29/ppg in their last 5 road games including 4 TDs to Jay Cutler in their last road game! New Orleans won't be able to run much on the Vikings so Brees will be airing it out atleast 40 times! Last but not least...Favre/AP & the Vikes big O-line will do plenty of damage to the Saints smaller defensive unit themselves! Minnesota 31-30 in a thriller but I'm on the Over!!

  6. #6

  7. #7

    Default

    I see Brett throwing some picks after the Saints score some early TDs. Saints win by 10.

  8. #8

    Default

    Vikings can run and throw, sack the QB, and play excellent all around D. Beat a strong Cowboy team. Destiny = Farve this yr.
    Saints O is fine, can throw, still not convinced their running game is so hot, and IMO their D is mediocre. They beat a beat up injured AZ team with poor D.
    Take Minny and the points!

  9. #9

  10. #10

    Default

    If defense wins championships, then I give small edge to Minny.

    Offense....Small Edge Saints
    Defense...Big Edge Minny....rookie lineman against Jarad Allen...and we saw what he did against Dallas w/ Flozell out last week
    Special Teams....Edge Saints

    I can see this being a FG margin type game and thing Minny + the pts is a good play

    OR

    Teaser
    Colts to -1.5
    Minny to +10.5
    175 pts

    3-QUESTION
    SBR TRIVIA WINNER 05/24/2012


  11. #11

    Default

    Saints 34
    Minny 14


    Sammy check your email

  12. #12

    Default

    Very nice write up. But I have to stick with my home town boy Farve.

  13. #13

    Default

    i agree with aceking saints by 2 TDs >>> if not more

  14. #14

    Default

    Still leaning Vikings baby...And if you buying the Jets punch like "Goerge Foreman" you drinking the spiked punch..

  15. #15

Top