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Super Bowl XLII Preview
(Sports Network) - The New England Patriots
stand 60 minutes from the first 19-0 season in
NFL history, with the New York Giants, their
Super Bowl XLII counterpart, seeking to ruin
that run at perfection with a monumental upset
on Sunday.
University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale, AZ
will be the site of the conflict, which takes
place roughly five weeks after the Patriots
and Giants engaged in a memorable affair at
the Meadowlands in Week 17 of the regular
season.
New York took New England to the wire in that
contest, building a double-digit second-half
lead before falling, 38-35. The result made
the Patriots the first team to finish 16-0
since the NFL schedule was expanded in 1978,
and Bill Belichick's squad also became the
first to achieve perfection in a regular
campaign since the 1972 Miami Dolphins went
14-0 en route to a Super Bowl title.
The '72 Dolphins remain the only team in
league annals to finish unbeaten and untied
through the postseason.
Sunday will mark the second time two teams
that squared off in the last game of the
regular season will engage in a Super Bowl
rematch. The Cowboys' 27-10 win over the
Broncos in Super Bowl XII came less than a
month after Dallas had downed Denver, 14-6, on
the final week of the 1977 regular season.
In addition to achieving perfection, the
Patriots can also enhance one of the NFL's
foremost dynasties with a victory.
After winning Super Bowls following the 2001,
2003, and 2004 season, the Pats can become
just the second team in NFL history to win
four titles in a seven- year span. The
Pittsburgh Steelers (1974, 1975, 1978, 1979),
who won four world championships in six years,
are the only other club to pull off the feat.
The Steelers and 49ers (1981, 1989, 1988,
1989) are currently the only franchises to win
four Super Bowl titles in a single decade,
another exclusive club New England could join
with a victory.
The Patriots (3-2 in Super Bowls) will make
their sixth Super Sunday appearance, a mark
that trails only that of Dallas (8), and is
tied with Pittsburgh (6) and Denver (6) for
the most all-time.
While the game is viewed by some as being the
final and inevitable step toward New England's
coronation, a red-hot Giants team figures to
have a little something to say about that.
New York is in the Super Bowl for the first
time in seven years thanks to consecutive
playoff road wins over the Buccaneers (24-14),
Cowboys (21-17), and Packers (23-20 in
overtime), and the Giants' 10 wins away from
home in 2007 are an NFL record.
Tom Coughlin's squad can become just the
second team to hoist the Lombardi Trophy
following four straight playoff wins away from
their home facility, joining the 2005
Steelers.
At the same time, the Giants (10-6 in the
regular season) are the first six- loss team
to reach a Super Bowl since the 1988 San
Francisco 49ers defeated the Cincinnati
Bengals after finishing 10-6 that year.
New York, which went 3-5 at home this season,
is the first of 84 Super Bowl participants to
reach the game's ultimate stage after
finishing with a losing mark on its home
field.
The G-Men are 2-1 in Super Bowls, beating the
Broncos (39-20) and Bills (20-19) following
the 1986 and 1990 seasons, respectively, and
falling to the Ravens (34-7) to close out the
2000 campaign.
SERIES HISTORY
The Patriots have a 5-3 edge in their all-time
series with the Giants, and have won four
straight since New York took down New England
by a 13-10 count at Foxboro Stadium in 1990.
As mentioned, New England was a 38-35 road
winner when the teams last met, in Week 17.
The Patriots and Giants also met in the 2007
preseason, with New England taking a 27-20
decision at Gillette Stadium on Aug. 30.
Belichick, who served as an assistant coach
with the Giants from 1979 through 1990, is 2-2
against his former employer, with both losses
coming during his tenure in Cleveland
(1991-1995).
The Giants' Coughlin is 1-4 all-time against
the Patriots, with all but one of those games
dating back to his tenure with the Jaguars
(1995-2002). That record includes a 20-6 loss
to New England in the 1996 AFC Championship,
and a 25-10 win in a 1998 AFC First-Round
Playoff. Coughlin is 2-1 head-to- head against
Belichick, with both wins coming for his
Jaguars against Belichick's Browns in 1995.
WHEN THE GIANTS HAVE THE BALL
After putting together a regular season
compatible with his inconsistent four- year
career, Eli Manning (3336 passing yards, 23
TD, 20 INT) has undergone a playoff revelation
marked by sound decision-making and a
minimizing of mistakes. The former No. 1
overall draft pick has completed 62 percent of
his throws and not committed a turnover in New
York's three postseason games. Manning's
outstanding run actually began with a strong
outing against New England in Week 17, when he
went 22-of-32 for 251 yards and tossed four
touchdown passes. Since an interception thrown
by Manning late in that game, the Giants
offense has gone 33 possessions and 194 plays
without a turnover.
New York's receiving corps possesses a strong
blend of size, experience and youth in the
threesome of Plaxico Burress (70 receptions,
1025 yards, 12 TD), Amani Toomer (59
receptions, 3 TD) and Steve Smith. The
6-foot-5, 232-pound Burress can be a matchup
nightmare for opposing defensive backs, as
Green Bay's Al Harris recently found out
first-hand. Burress manhandled the Pro Bowl
corner with an 11-catch, 151-yard performance
in the NFC Championship and also caught two
scoring passes from Manning in the Giants'
38-35 loss to the Patriots in late December.
Toomer, one of only two remaining members from
New York's 2000 Super Bowl squad, has compiled
196 yards and three touchdowns in this
postseason. The rookie Smith has made up for
an unproductive and injury- plagued regular
season with nine playoff catches, including
several key grabs.
The Giants have had to get by without the
services of four-time Pro Bowler Jeremy
Shockey (57 receptions, 3 TD) since the
animated tight end broke his fibula in a
mid-December loss to Washington. However,
rookie Kevin Boss (9 receptions, 2 TD) has
proven to be a useful fill-in at the position,
as evidenced by a four-catch, 50-yard effort
with a touchdown in the first meeting with New
England. Michael Matthews (6 receptions), who
made the club out of training camp as an
undrafted rookie free agent, is a quality
blocker who is often used in short-yardage
situations.
The Giants will send out their
"thunder-and-lightning" tandem of Brandon
Jacobs (1009 rushing yards, 23 receptions, 6
total TD) and Ahmad Bradshaw (190 rushing
yards, 1 TD) in hopes of keeping the Patriots'
record-setting offense off the field as much
as possible on Super Bowl Sunday. The
21-year-old Bradshaw has been the more
effective member of the duo during the
playoffs, having totaled a team-best 163
rushing yards on 39 carries, but Jacobs did
put up a respectable 67 yards on 15 attempts
against New England in the regular- season
finale. The pairing will be running behind
another unsung hero in fullback Madison
Hedgecock, an early-season waiver claim whose
powerful blocking has been essential to the
team's proficiency in the ground game.
An unheralded offensive line group has been
the most reliable facet of New York's offense,
partly because of its ability to remain
intact. All five regulars started all 16
regular-season contests, although anchorman
center Shaun O'Hara missed the Wild Card round
victory over Tampa Bay after spraining his
knee in the New England game. The standout of
the unit is right guard Chris Snee, who also
doubles as head coach Tom Coughlin's
son-in-law.
New England primarily uses a three-man
defensive front, with Pro Bowler Vince Wilfork
(70 tackles, 2 sacks in the regular season)
manning the middle and Richard Seymour (30
tackles, 1.5 sacks) and Ty Warren (83 tackles,
4 sacks) occupying the ends. Seymour, who has
two sacks and a fumble recovery during his
Super Bowl career, is often replaced by Jarvis
Green (39 tackles, 6.5 sacks) in passing
situations. The Patriots ranked near the
bottom of the league with 4.4 yards allowed
per carry during the regular season.
The Patriots have a pair of highly-decorated
linebackers in the middle of their four-man
group, with former Pro Bowlers Tedy Bruschi
(99 tackles, 2 sacks), and Junior Seau (76
tackles, 3.5 sacks, 3 INT) occupying those
places. Seau (16 tackles, 1 sack) and Bruschi
(15 tackles) are 1-2 on the team in stops
during the postseason. Mike Vrabel (77
tackles, 12.5 sacks) and Adalius Thomas (82
tackles, 6.5 sacks, 1 INT) man the outside
linebacker positions for New England, and are
viewed by opponents as the team's most
dangerous pass rushers. Vrabel will be making
his fourth Super Bowl start as a Patriot, and
will be looking for an encore of his XXXVIII
performance against the Panthers, when he
sacked Jake Delhomme twice. Thomas had New
England's only sack of Manning in Week 17.
Once regarded as an area of weakness and
inexperience for the Patriots, the cornerback
position is now well-equipped to deal with any
receiving corps in the league. Asante Samuel
(44 tackles, 6 INT), Ellis Hobbs (63 tackles,
1 sack, 1 INT), and Randall Gay (33 tackles, 3
INT) have all had positive moments this
season, and all will be on the field when the
Giants use multi-receiver sets. Samuel and
Hobbs both have picks during the 2007
postseason, and Hobbs had the team's only INT
of Manning in Week 17. The safety position is
also an area of strength for New England, as
starters Rodney Harrison (67 tackles, 2 INT, 1
sack), James Sanders (73 tackles, 2 INT), and
top backup Eugene Wilson (32 tackles, 1 INT)
all bring a great deal of experience to the
table. Harrison and Wilson were the Pats'
starters in their Super Bowl wins over the
Panthers and Eagles, and Harrison has two
picks and two sacks in those games.
WHEN THE PATRIOTS HAVE THE BALL
National Football League MVP Tom Brady (4806
passing yards, 50 TD, 8 INT) comes off one of
the great statistical seasons in NFL history,
though less focus will be on that fact than on
Brady's gimpy right ankle. Brady was hurt in
the third quarter of the Pats' AFC
Championship win over the Chargers, and
struggled during much of a performance in
which he threw a season-worst three
interceptions. Even with that showing, Brady
(471 yards, 5 TD, 3 INT in the postseason) has
a 105.7 rating in these playoffs. He's also
3-0 with six touchdowns, one pick, and 735
yards in three career Super Bowl appearances.
Brady was 32-of-42 for 356 yards and two
touchdowns against the Giants in Week 17.
One of the major storylines on Super Sunday
will involve wideout Randy Moss (98
receptions, 23 TD), who will be appearing in
his first career Super Bowl and trying to
shake off a conspicuously quiet 2007
postseason to date. Moss has touched the
football just three times in the playoffs,
catching two balls for 32 yards and carrying
once for 14 yards. Moss had six catches for
100 yards and a pair of touchdowns against the
Giants in the regular season finale. Slot
receiver Wes Welker (112 receptions, 8 TD) has
16 catches for 110 yards and two touchdowns in
the playoffs thus far, and logged 11 grabs for
122 yards versus the G-Men last time out.
Donte' Stallworth (46 receptions, 3 TD) and
Jabar Gaffney (36 receptions, 5 TD) both had
their moments during the regular season, and
have combined for nine catches totaling 117
yards in these playoffs.
Tight end Benjamin Watson (36 receptions, 6
TD), who has made two of his three catches in
the playoffs to date count for touchdowns,
remains a trusted red- zone target for Brady.
Watson, who will be making his first career
Super Bowl appearance, caught four balls for
38 yards against New York in Week 17. No. 2
tight end Kyle Brady will be appearing in his
first career Super Bowl at the age of 36.
Brady had nine catches (two for touchdowns)
during the regular season, and has one grab in
the 2007 postseason. Vrabel, who caught a
touchdown pass against the Eagles in Super
Bowl XXXIX, occasionally appears as a tight
end in goal-line sets.
Running back Laurence Maroney (835 rushing
yards, 6 TD) has generated a major impact for
the Patriots during the playoffs, carrying 47
times for 244 yards and two touchdowns (5.2
yards per rush) in wins over the Jaguars and
Chargers. In his last five games overall,
Maroney has averaged 110 rushing yards and
scored seven touchdowns. The second-year pro
was held to 46 yards on 19 carries against the
Giants in Week 17, but scored twice. Kevin
Faulk (265 rushing yards, 47 receptions, 1 TD
in the regular season), who led New England
with eight catches for 72 yards in the AFC
Championship win over San Diego, has 16 rushes
for 95 yards (5.9 yards per attempt) and seven
receptions for 45 yards during his Super Bowl
career. Fullback Heath Evans (121 rushing
yards, 3 TD), who comes in during
short-yardage situations, has just three
touches in the '07 playoffs to date.
The underrated New England offensive line is
led by a pair of Pro Bowlers, left tackle Matt
Light and center Dan Koppen, both of whom have
a great deal of Super Bowl experience. Light
will be making his fourth Super Bowl start as
a member of the Patriots, Koppen his third.
The third member of the starting group with a
Super Sunday resume' is right guard Stephen
Neal, who was a starter against the Eagles
three years ago. Left guard Logan Mankins and
right tackle Nick Kaczur, who complete a group
that allowed just 21 sacks all year, will be
playing in their first career Super Bowls. The
Patriots rushed for 4.4 yards per carry during
the regular season, but New England running
backs amassed just 48 yards on 22 combined
totes against the Giants. New York recorded
only one sack in that game, that by linebacker
Reggie Torbor.
Giants ends Osi Umenyiora (52 tackles, 13
sacks), Michael Strahan (57 tackles, 9 sacks)
and Justin Tuck (58 tackles, 10 sacks) have
been wreaking havoc all year long, and the
trio will be counted on to make Brady
uncomfortable in the pocket for the Giants to
have a chance to pull off the upset. The
36-year-old Strahan, one of only two players
left from the Giants' 2000 NFC champion squad,
has been the most productive of the group in
the postseason. The seven- time Pro Bowler has
compiled 18 tackles, one sack and a forced
fumble in the three playoff games.
While the pass rushers get most of the
defensive attention for New York, the Giants
did finish eighth in the NFL against the run
(97.7 ypg). The solid play of interior linemen
Fred Robbins (42 tackles, 5.5 sacks) and Barry
Cofield (34 tackles, 1 sack) had much to do
with that lofty ranking, but perhaps no player
is more valuable to the Giants on defense than
middle linebacker Antonio Pierce (103 tackles,
1 INT, 1 sack), the team's top tackler and a
vocal presence in the huddle. The linebacking
corps did suffer a potentially- damaging blow
when strongside starter Mathias Kiwanuka went
down to a season- ending broken leg in
mid-November, but Torbor (39 tackles, 1 sack)
has filled in capably for the converted
defensive end. Offseason acquisition Kawika
Mitchell (76 tackles, 3.5 sacks, 1 INT) has
proven to be a nice addition on the weakside.
No position on the Giants' defense has
experienced as much flux as that of
cornerback, as recent injuries to Sam Madison
(67 tackles, 4 INT, 14 PD), Aaron Ross (42
tackles, 3 INT, 1.5 sacks), and Kevin Dockery
(46 tackles) have really tested the team's
depth. New York has been able to survive,
however, because reserves Corey Webster (18
tackles, 1 INT) and R.W. McQuarters (15
tackles) have stepped up their play at a most
crucial time. The pair have accounted for all
five of the team's interceptions during the
postseason, with Webster setting up Lawrence
Tynes' game-winning field goal in the NFC
Championship by picking off Brett Favre in
overtime. Both Madison and Ross returned to
action in the conference title game, while
Dockery has a good chance of playing in the
Super Bowl as well. Similar to Pierce's role
within the linebacking corps, the glue of New
York's secondary has been free safety Gibril
Wilson (92 tackles, 4 INT), a mainstay in the
team's starting lineup since the Giants wisely
grabbed him in the fifth round of the 2004
draft. Strong safety James Butler (61 tackles,
1 INT) has been inconsistent in his first
season as a starter and often shares time with
rookie Michael Johnson (25 tackles), who has
flashed potential but also lacks experience.
SPECIAL TEAMS
Kicker Lawrence Tynes earned himself a notable
place in Giants lore, not to mention an
appearance on the Late Show with David
Letterman, with his 47-yard overtime field
goal that propelled New York to victory over
Green Bay in the NFC Championship. However,
the Scottish-born kicker also misfired on a
pair of three-point tries in the game and had
a spotty first year with the Giants. Tynes was
23-of-27 on field goals during the regular
season, but all four of those misses were from
inside 40 yards.
Punter Jeff Feagles no longer boasts a
powerful leg -- his 40.4 yard average was the
second-lowest in the league -- but he's still
quite adept at pinning in the opposition with
his kicks. The ironman punter had 25 boots
land inside the 20-yard line this season.
Veteran R.W. McQuarters averaged a mediocre
7.6 yards per punt return during the regular
season, but did come up with a key 25-yard
runback in New York's upset victory at Dallas
in the Divisional round. He also had a
near-costly fumble in the Green Bay game.
McQuarters has returned three punts for
touchdowns during his 10-year career, but none
since 2004. The Patriots are fully aware of
the capabilities of New York kickoff returner
Domenik Hixon, as the young backup wideout had
a 74-yard kick return touchdown when the two
teams met in the regular-season finale. Hixon,
claimed off waivers from Denver in October,
has also performed well on returns this
postseason, averaging 25.1 yards on 10
attempts.
New York has been very strong on punt coverage
this year, having limited the opposition to
just 6.2 yards per return prior to the
playoffs (5th best in the NFL). The stars of
the unit are linebacker Chase Blackburn, who
led the team with 17 special teams tackles,
and wide receiver David Tyree, a Pro Bowl
honoree as a special-teamer in 2005. The
Giants haven't been as good defending kicks,
and Tynes has struggled at times on kickoffs.
The Pats' Stephen Gostkowski has attempted
just two field goals in the 2007 postseason to
date, missing on a 35-yarder and making one
from the same distance in the Divisional
Playoff win over Jacksonville. The second-year
pro was 21-of-24 during the regular season,
including 3-of-5 from 40 yards-plus, and hit a
season-high-tying 45-yarder during a 3-for-3
night against the Giants in Week 17. He is
9-of-10 on field goals during his playoff
career, including a 50-yarder against the
Chargers in a 2006 Divisional Playoff.
Gostkowski ranked among NFL leaders with 15
touchbacks during the regular season, but has
just two in his last nine games.
Punter Chris Hanson (41.4 punting avg.) was
the least-used regular punter in the NFL with
just 44 kicks, and has booted the ball only
five times in the playoffs (38.0 avg.).
Hanson, who made his only Pro Bowl while
playing for the Coughlin-coached Jaguars in
2002, had a punt blocked and recovered for a
touchdown against the Jets in December.
New England is likely to use either Welker or
Faulk on punt returns, as both have appeared
at the spot during the 2007 postseason. Welker
was the Pats' primary return man during the
regular season, averaging 10 yards per attempt
with his high a 35-yarder against Indianapolis
in November. The Patriots have used both
Maroney and Hobbs on kickoff returns during
the postseason, and former second-round draft
pick Chad Jackson was also utilized in that
capacity against the Jaguars un the Divisional
round. Hobbs was the club's usual return
choice during the regular season, averaging
more than 26 yards per return and scoring on a
108-yard play against the Jets back in Week 1.
Due to the proficiency of their offense, the
Patriots have a great deal of experience
covering kickoffs, and not as much on punts.
New England allowed a modest 22.1 yards per
kickoff return during the regular season, and
the only touchdown surrendered by that
coverage group was Hixon's aforementioned
return in Week 17. New England's opponents
were able to return only 14 of the team's 44
punts, with a 33-yard return by Yamon Figurs
of the Ravens ranking as the only one to go
for more than 20 yards all year. Special teams
stars for New England this year have included
Pierre Woods (22 special teams tackles),
Brandon Meriweather (18 tackles), Kelley
Washington (18 tackles), Larry Izzo (14
tackles), and Eric Alexander (14 tackles).
OVERALL ANALYSIS
Though the Patriots have the edge in a
majority of the above personnel categories,
it's not a decisive edge on many counts. The
Giants proved on Dec. 29 that they have the
ability to make this a game, and it is
difficult to envision a team that is playing
with as much confidence and purpose as is New
York to get run off the field in this one.
Still, it's even more difficult to visualize
the Patriots dejectedly walking off the pitch
at University of Phoenix stadium as Coughlin
and Manning share smiles and hugs on the
awards stage. New England has found a way on
18 consecutive occasions, and will find a way
yet again.
Predicted Outcome: Patriots 27, Giants 24
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