|
|
By Randy Williams, on April 1st, 2012 Hollywood’s playbook has long been open to footballers. Oh sure the glamour positions of acting have been filled by such gridiron talent as Paul Robeson, Woody Strode, Mark Harmon and Jim Brown, but where are all the linemen, the blocking backs and special team players to do the writing, directing and producing? Those behind-the-scenes crafts as well as editing and cinematography will be the focus of the inaugural NFL Hollywood Boot Camp that kicks off Monday on the back lots of Universal Studios.
Born out of a meeting between Film Life CEO Jeff Friday and Baltimore Ravens linebacker Terrell Suggs at a film festival produced annually by Friday down in Miami, the new program is funded by the Player Engagement division of the NFL, an educational arm which also has offers programs in broadcasting, business and music for current and former NFL Players.
Competition to be accepted among the class of twenty players for the four-day Hollywood camp was intense. The entry qualification process was aimed to test the player’s true commitment to entertainment and required among other things writing a critical essay on a motion picture that inspired them to explore a career in filmmaking.
The player-turned-critic essays covered such films as “Slumdog Millionaire”, “The Black Swan”, “Crash”, “The Godfather” and Kurosawa’s 1950 classic “Roshomon”.
In reviewing the applicants what surprised Troy Vincent, NFL Vice President of Player Engagement, the most was that “many are already in the business”.
Indeed some have made forward progress with their Hollywood careers hoping to score in their new field of play.
Former NFL linebacker Jon Alston, through his own production company, Dream America Pictures, has written and directed a feature film called “Red Butterfly”. Currently in post-production, Alston describes it as ‘a gritty underground New York crime thriller.’
Still performing at a high level in the NFL, Suggs, a five-time Pro Bowl linebacker, has also enjoyed some early success in filmmaking.
The first movie Suggs wrote, a short film entitled “When Beautiful People Do Ugly Things” was accepted at last year’s Cannes Film Festival.
“It is a pretty amazing feeling to get your inaugural effort in Cannes. I said to myself ’yeah I think this is for me, movies are going to be my business after I’m through sacking quarterbacks,” says the one-time NFL Defensive Player of the Year.

The examples of cinematic creativity and initiative has impressed the NFL’s coordinating executive.
“It shows the talent level out there,“ says Vincent. “We just don’t think about these stars on Sunday in that fashion.”
The range of goals about what these players want to get out of this program are as diverse as their film tastes.
“I have a goal going in to be a writer, but we’re going to be exposed to the full gamut of filmmaking so I am open to other crafts that will be presented there. I know the mastery of film is what takes place behind the camera. The director’s vision using the script as a template. How do you effectively put the audience into that scene where a given character is going through an emotional moment in the story. I want to learn to do that,” says former NFL safety Nick Ferguson
Eagles pro bowl longsnapper, Jon Dorenbos, who won an Emmy hosting the team’s weekly cable tv show, is looking forward to soaking in all the creative talent on hand.
“Good things happen when good creative people get together. I love the producing angle but I don’t know anything about the financing of films or screenwriting so I am excited to be learning about those aspects, at the same time I am open to all the crafts presented.”
Adds Alston: “I want to expand my knowledge about the craft of filmmaking, including cinematography. In terms of career paths I would like to come away from this experience with a mentorship. They can be so valuable.”
Consisting primarily of lectures and panel discussions, some of the Hollywood professionals lending their talents will be such multi-hyphenate filmmakers as John Singleton, Michael Mann and Eriq La Salle.

“We only have 3 full days so we are covering the basics – screenwriting, cinematography producing, directing and another class on how the film industry works bringing in agents, managers, actors, and execs talking about how projects get done. There will be direct representation from the guilds like writers, editors and cinematography,” says Friday.
The players better pay attention in class because the program culminates in a very hands-on manner.
There will be a production component.
Program creator Friday explains, “Filmmakers La Salle (“ER”, “Ringer” and the upcoming CBS drama “Widow Detective”) and Robert Townsend (“Los Americans”, “Partners in Crime”) will captain two teams. Holding a mock draft, each team of ten will be driven from their hotel and dropped off at the Universal Studio back lot. Based on a brief script I present, each team will do preproduction, break the script down, create a shot list, cast it (pro actors on hand), and make a 3-5 minute movie. The players will have varied interests so the role of the coach is to get them involved based on what their interests are – do they want to be cinematographers, do they want to write, direct or be actors.”
Adds actor/director La Salle: “We’re gonna have fun in our work. Robert (Townsend) and I will walk our respective teams through each stage that we encounter starting with the script and working with the actors, why we put the camera where we do, how we tell the story cinematically. It will be nuts to bolts but the bottom line is about exposure. We won’t make assumptions, some will know more than others coming in. First and foremost we hope that they come away with a respect and better understanding for the craft.”
 Actor/Director Eriq La Salle
As the players come out of the editing room, an interested audience will be on hand to see their finished work as some of the league owners will be coming out to review the players’ short films. A couple of the team owners have some pretty good movie credits of their own. The Philadelphia Eagles’ Jeffrey Lurie was a producer for the Oscar-winning documentary “Inside Job”. Steve Tisch, one of the owners of the reigning Super Bowl champion New York Giants, produced “Forrest Gump”, winner of six Academy Awards.
But the program does not end after the curtains fall on the fourth day as a core component of the program is mentoring.
“By the last session we will be pairing players with Hollywood professionals for a mentoring program, “explains Friday. “They will ask the players now that they have gone through program if there is a certain craft they want to explore further. From there we will pair them up with a professional from that field. We then ask mentors to commit to a one year period where they stay in touch with the player. And bring players in on their active projects.”
For these “stars on Sunday” like Suggs just getting started and filled with dreams of making it in the film world, they’re hoping this program will get them closer to their heroes.
“Story, financing, production, distribution, casting, marketing – successful producers in Hollywood are like a combination of a great NFL coach, GM, owner and league executive rolled into one. So many variables come into play. That is why my hero is Harvey Weinstein. Words can’t describe his genius for picking films to be a part of. I don’t think he is given enough credit. If I meet him I’ll be like a little kid meeting his favorite football player,” says Suggs, who is in post-production on his first theatrical film, “The Coalition”, which the emerging filmmaker describes as ‘The First Wives Club meets The Entourage. The ultimate battle of the sexes’.
Battles, in the back field or on the back lot, both look like they’ll be part of Suggs’ life for a long time to come.
By Randy Williams, on March 20th, 2012  
The wildly popular Spartacus: Gods of the Arena, a Starz television mini-series and prequel to Spartacus, is now available on DVD. The series traces the bloody history of the House of Batiatus and the city of Capua before the arrival of Spartacus.
This two-disc, six-episode season follows the character Gannicus (Dustin Clare- “Underbelly”), the first gladiator to become Champion of Capua representing Lentulus Batiatus.
Cast members and characters reprised from the original series include John Hannah (“The Mummy”) as Batiatus, Lucy Lawless (“Xena:Warrior Princess”) as Lucretia, Peter Mensah as Oenomaus, Nick Tarabay as Ashur and Lesley-Ann Brandt as Naevia.
Batiatus has ambitions of stepping out of his father’s shadow by seeking recognition for his own name and achieving greatness for his house with the support of his wife Lucretia.
Special Features-
Starz Studios: Gods of the Arena
Extended Scenes
Alternate Endings
Content Too Risqué for Cable TV
Convention Panel
Arena Bloopers
On Set With Lucy Lawless
Post Production: The Final Execution
Weapons of Mass Disruption
Battle Royale: Anatomy of a Scene
10 Easy Steps to Dismemberment
Dressed to Kill
Enter the Arena: Production Design
By Randy Williams, on March 15th, 2012 Recreational hoops is the backdrop for a new comedy pilot from Steve Levitan.
Former Saturday Night Live funny guy Will Forte is set for the lead role in Rebounding. The single-camera comedy pilot for Fox comes from Modern Family co-creator Steve Levitan.
The project, written by Joe Port and Joe Wiseman and directed by Jason Winer, is described as an uplifting comedy about a man (Forte) recovering from the death of his fiance with the help of the idiots on his pick-up basketball team. 
Hayes MacArthur (Perfect Couples), Matt Jones (Breaking Bad), Aly Michalka (Hellcats) and Malcolm Barrett (Better Off Ted) round out the cast.
Forte, is currently seen in Tim And Eric’s Billion Dollar Movie and has three movies coming out this summer: Rock Of Ages, That’s My Boy and Neighborhood Watch. His small screen credits include 30 Rock, The Cleveland Show, Conan and Lab Rats.
By Randy Williams, on March 8th, 2012 The Tribeca Film Festival (TFF) announced its starting lineup for the 11th annual gathering which includes the popular Tribeca/ESPN Sports Film Festival.

The series has become a leading platform in presenting independent sports and competition-themed films.
Taking place the middle of next month in lower Manhattan, here is a peak at the sports film slate for 2012:
Broke
Directed by Billy Corben
(USA) – World Premiere, Documentary
More money, more problems. Sucked into bad investments, stalked by freeloaders, saddled with medical issues, and naturally prone to showing off, most pro athletes end up broke within a few years of retirement. Drawing surprisingly vulnerable confessions from retired stars like Marvin Miller, Jamal Mashburn, Bernie Kosar, and Andre Rison, this documentary digs into the psychology of men whose competitive nature carries them to victory on the field and ruin off it
Benji
Directed by Coodie and Chike
(USA) – World Premiere, Documentary
In 1984, 17-year-old Ben Wilson was a symbol of everything promising about Chicago: a good-natured youngster from the city’s fabled South Side, and America’s top high school basketball prospect. His senseless murder on the day before his senior season devastated the city of Chicago and sent ripples of anguish nationwide. A stirring portrait of a phenom admired both on the court and off, Benji tells the story of a legend who might’ve been.
Town of Runners
Directed by Jerry Rothwell
(UK) – World Premiere, Documentary
Over the past two decades the small, rural Ethiopian town of Bekoji has been the unlikely home to numerous Olympic champion long-distance runners, whose athletic success has paved the way for a generation of young Ethiopians searching for a better future. TFF award winner Jerry Rothwell (Donor Unknown) follows two teenage track hopefuls who face the challenge of growing up and striving for greatness in a developing nation. In Amharic, Oromo with subtitles
On the Mat
Directed and written by Fredric Golding
(USA) – World Premiere, Documentary
Achieving success in high school wrestling requires a level of devotion unmatched perhaps by any other sport. That high levelfo success has become a yearly expectation at Lake Stevens High, winner of seven Washington state championships in the past 10 years. Narrated by Lake Stevens wrestling alum Chris Pratt (Moneyball), this documentary follows the team over the course of a season as they fight through injuries and academic issues to maintain their school’s legacy
Knuckleball!
Directed by Ricki Stern and Annie Sundberg, written by Christine Schomer, Ricki Stern and Annie Sundberg
(USA) – World Premiere, Documentary
This story recounts the trials and triumphs of two of the best known knuckleball pitchers currently playing in the MLB: Tim Wakefield, a Red Sox veteran struggling to clinch his 200th career win, and R.A. Dickey, an up-and-comer with the Mets looking to make a name for himself. From the directors of Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work this film deconstructs the controversial and erratic knuckleball style.
By Randy Williams, on February 27th, 2012 The saga of a high school football team on the poor side of Memphis came away with an Oscar for Best Documentary Film at last night’s Academy Awards in Hollywood.
 Filmmakers TJ Martin, Dan Lindsay and Rich Middlemas
Facing a lineup that included Wim Wenders’ dance film Pina, a war documentary Hell and Back Again as well as Paradise Lost 3 : Purgatory and If a Tree Falls: A Story of the Earth Liberation Front and West Memphis Three, Undefeated, directed by Daniel Lindsay and TJ Martin, took the honors.
The feature-length documentary chronicles how a charismatic volunteer coach turns the Manassas Tigers high school team and its players around after years and years of losses. The “cast” is led coach Bill Courtney and three players – O.C. Brown, Chavis Daniels and Montrail “Money” Brown.
The movie is reminiscent of “The Blind Side,” the 2009 feature film based on a true story in which a Memphis mother played by Sandra Bullock adopts a homeless black teenager and helps him achieve football stardom. Bullock won an Academy Award for Best Actress.
Since the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Science began presenting an Oscar category for the Best Documentary feature film in 1943, “Undefeated” becomes the 17th documentary film involving sports to have been nominated for the award: ”The Conquest of Everest” (1953), “Torero!” (1957), “The Horse With the Flying Tail” (1960), “La Grande Olimpiade” (1961), “The Legendary Champions” (1968), “The Olympics in Mexico” (1969), “Jack Johnson” (1970), “On Any Sunday” (1971), “The Great American Cowboy” (1973), “The Man Who Skied Down Everest” (1975), “Going the Distance” (1979), “Hank Aaron: Chasing the Dream” (1995), “When We Were Kings” (1996), “One Day in September” (1999), “On the Ropes” (1999), and “Murderball” (2005).
By Randy Williams, on February 24th, 2012 WEST
Arizona Diamondbacks Colorado Rockies
Last Year’s Result: 1st (lost Div. series) Last Year’s Result: 4th Place
Biggest Newcomer: P Trevor Cahill Biggest Newcomer: P Jeremy Guthrie
Biggest Goner: None Biggest Goner: None
Training Site: Scottsdale, AZ Training Site: Scottsdale, AZ
Los Angeles Dodgers San Diego Padres
Last Year’s Result: 3rd Place Last Year’s Result: 5th Place
Biggest Newcomer: 2B Adam Kennedy Biggest Newcomer: P Huston Street
Biggest Goner: P Hiroki Kuroda Biggest Goner: P Heath Bell
Training Site: Glendale, AZ Training Site: Peoria, AZ
San Francisco Giants
Last Year’s Result: 2nd Place
Biggest Newcomer: OF Melky Cabrera
Biggest Goner: OF Carlos Beltran
Training Site: Scottsdale, AZ
CENTRAL
Chicago Cubs Cincinnati Reds
Last Year’s Result: 5th Place Last Year’s Result: 3rd Place
Biggest Newcomer: P Chris Volstad Biggest Newcomer: P Ryan Madson
Biggest Goner: P Carlos Zambrano Biggest Goner: P Francisco Cordero
Training Site: Mesa, AZ Training Site: Goodyear, AZ
Houston Astros Milwaukee Brewers
Last Year’s Result: 6th Place Last Year’s Result: 1st Place(Lost NLCS)
Biggest Newcomer: OF Jack Cust Biggest Newcomer: 3B Aramis Ramirez
Biggest Goner: None Biggest Goner: 1B Prince Fielder
Training Site: Kissimmee, FL Training Site: Phoenix, AZ
Pittsburgh Pirates St. Louis Cardinals
Last Year’s Result: 4th Place Last Year’s Result: 1st (World Champs)
Biggest Newcomer: P Eric Bedard Biggest Newcomer: OF Carlos Beltran
Biggest Goner: 1B Derrick Lee Biggest Goner: 1B Albert Pujols
Training Site: Bradenton, FL Training Site: Jupiter FL
EAST
Atlanta Braves Miami Marlins
Last Year’s Result: 2nd Place Last Year’s Result: 5th Place
Biggest Newcomer: None Biggest Newcomer: SS Jose Reyes
Biggest Goner: P Derek Lowe Biggest Goner: P Chris Volstad
Training Site: Kissimmee, FL Training Site: Jupiter, FL
New York Mets Philadelphia Phillies
Last Year’s Result: 4th Place Last Year’s Result: 1st Place-Lost Div.
Biggest Newcomer: OF Andres Torres Biggest Newcomer: P Jon Papelbon
Biggest Goner: SS Jose Reyes Biggest Goner: P Roy Oswalt
Training Site: Port St Lucie, FL Training Site: Clearwater, FL
Washington Nationals
Last Year’s Result: 3rd Place
Biggest Newcomer: P Brad Lidge
Biggest Goner: P Livan Hernandez
Training Site: Viera, FL
By Randy Williams, on February 20th, 2012 
It is that time of year when the terms grapefruit and cactus make their annual entry into the baseball lexicon as major leaguers head to their team’s training camps in Florida and Arizona.
Here’s a thumbnail (and I mean thumbnail) guide to the American League:
WEST
Anaheim Angels Oakland Athletics
Last Year’s Result: Second Place Last Year’s Result: Third Place
Biggest Newcomer: 1B Albert Pujols Biggest Newcomer: OF MRamirez
Biggest Goner: None Biggest Goner: None
Training Site: Tempe, AZ Training Site: Phoenix, AZ
Seattle Mariners Texas Rangers
Last Year’s Result: Fourth Place Last Year’s Result: AL Champions
Biggest Newcomer: INF Carlos Guillen Biggest Newcomer: P Joe Nathan
Biggest Goner: INF Adam Kennedy Biggest Goner: P CJ Wilson
Training Site: Peoria, AZ Training Site: Surprise, AZ
CENTRAL
Chicago White Sox Cleveland Indians
Last Year’s Result: Third Place Last Year’s Result: Second Place
Biggest Newcomer: Mgr Robin Ventura Biggest Newcomer: RHP Derek Lowe
Biggest Goner: OF Juan Pierre Biggest Goner: DH Jim Thome
Training Site: Glendale, AZ Training Site: Goodyear, AZ
Detroit Tigers Kansas City Royals
Last Year’s Result: 1st (Lost in ALCS) Last Year’s Result: Fourth Place
Biggest Newcomer: 1B Prince Fielder Biggest Newcomer: LHP JSanchez
Biggest Goner: OF Magglio Ordonez Biggest Goner: CF Melky Cabrera
Training Site: Lakeland, FL Training Site: Surprise, AZ
Minnesota Twins
Last Year’s Result: Fifth Place
Biggest Newcomer: SS Jason Carroll
Biggest Goner: RHP Joe Nathan
Training Site: Ft. Myers, FL
EAST
Baltimore Orioles Boston Red Sox
Last Year’s Result: Fifth Place Last Year’s Result: Third Place
Biggest Newcomer: LHP Wei-Yin Chen Biggest Newcomer: Mgr Bobby Valentine
Biggest Goner: DH Vlad Guerrero Biggest Goner: RHP Jon Papelbon
Training Site: Sarasota, FL Training Site: Ft. Myers, FL
New York Yankees Tampa Bay Rays
Last Year’s Result: 1st-Lost Div. Playoffs Last Year’s Result: Wild Card-Lost Div.
Biggest Newcomer: RHP Hiroki Kuroda Biggest Newcomer: 1B Carlos Pena
Biggest Goner: DH/1B Jorge Posada Biggest Goner: OF Johnny Damon
Training Site: Tampa, FL Training Site: Port Charlotte, FL
Toronto Blue Jays
Last Year’s Result: Fourth Place
Biggest Newcomer: RHP Francisco Cordero
Biggest Goner: C Jose Molina
Training Site: Dunedin, FL
By Randy Williams, on February 15th, 2012 Some of golf’s biggest stars, crowd-pleasers like Phil Mickelson, Fred Couples and Bubba Watson, are expected to play in this week’s PGA tour stop at the Northern Trust Open, but they’ll be competing in a unique environment that enjoys quite a bit of star power in its own right where the links between the sport and Hollywood really began.
The site is the Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, California just a few miles down Sunset Boulevard from Hollywood. The players entering the clubhouse are immediately given a sense of the glamorous history as the walls are filled with show business stars who once roamed Riviera’s fairways like Charlie Chaplin, W. C. Fields, Elizabeth Taylor, Clark Gable, Katharine Hepburn, Spencer Tracy and Howard Hughes.
Humphrey Bogart used to sit for hours under the sycamore tree out at the 12th hole with a thermos containing his favorite beverage watching the pros play through. Greta Garbo used to walk the course, sneaking out from her house on a ridge overlooking the 13th hole.
Nestled in the Santa Monica Mountains between Malibu and Brentwood, just about a couple of Par 5s from the Pacific Ocean, the Riviera Country Club course was designed by George C. Thomas and opened in 1926. Some of its early members included silent film stars Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford. Even today its well-preserved Mediterranean architecture and 1920s décor exude nostalgic glamour and with its arched entryways, paintings, stone fire place, angled stairs, high ceilings with dark wood beams and antique chandeliers, along with expansive bay window views and private terrace, it gives a feel as if you’re visiting a classic film actor’s estate high up in the hills rather than a private country club.

Over the years Riviera has drawn some of the bigger stars from both entertainment and golf to the event. Players like Ben Hogan (who won the 1948 U.S. Open here), Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods have competed as have entertainers Bob Hope, Bing Crosby and Dean Martin.
The sport and the town’s highest-profile industry have even got together to produce several feature movies with the Riviera’s picturesque grounds as a backdrop. The 1951 drama “Follow the Sun” with Glenn Ford portraying Ben Hogan making a courageous comeback after a serious auto accident; the comedy “Pat and Mike”, starring Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy, were filmed here as were scenes for “The Caddy”, starring Jerry Lewis and Dean Martin, with a cameo appearance by Ben Hogan.
While the Par 71 layout (7,078 yards for Tour play) made up of bent grass greens and kikuyu fairways and has been the primary host for the PGA Tour’s Nissan Open, previously known as the Los Angeles Open, and more recently as the Northern Trust Open, it has also been the site for some majors like the US Open in 1948, the PGA Championship in 1983 and 1995, and the US Senior Open in 1998.
What makes the Riviera such a classic and favorite among PGA players and celebrities alike is that it is just as challenging today as the day it opened. Its most notable holes include the very first one. A short par 5 with an elevated tee over 75 feet above the fairway, it tempts players to hit driver, but out of bounds on the left side makes players think twice. I’ve seen prominent players hit it out of bounds left and right. It is no surprise scores range from eagle to double bogey. It can get your mind racing to either frame of mind in a hurry.
Along the west end of the course, the sixth hole, a par three, is world-famous for having a bunker in the middle of the green. If a player is on the wrong side of the green, he or she will have to make a tough decision to either putt around or chip over the bunker.
On the back nine, the eleventh hole is a long par five where eucalyptus trees and thick and nasty barranca grass come into play which is followed by the long par four twelfth, often into the wind, which can make things pretty tricky in that it plays to a narrow green surrounded by bunkers and trees. One tree, Bogey’s Tree, is named after Humphrey Bogart where he sat quietly enjoying the action year-in and year-out when the pros came to town.
The seventeenth hole is an all-uphill par five that is the longest hole on the golf course (578 yards). The finishing hole, a renowned par four where the green is surrounded by a natural amphitheatre with a beautiful view of the clubhouse, starts out with a blind tee shot which must be accurate to have any shot for a birdie try which usually requires a long iron to a narrow green.
It is a challenging course that requires one to play all their clubs. Some of the games very best like Woods and Nicklaus despite trying on multiple occasions have failed to win here.
Texan Ben Hogan sure enjoyed a lot of success at the Riviera. So much so that it has long been known within golfing circles as “Hogan’s Alley”,
 Ben Hogan Enjoyed Great Success at the Riviera
a nickname bestowed upon it by three-time Masters champion Jimmy Demaret after Hogan won the 1947 and 1948 Los Angeles Opens and the 1948 US Open at the Riviera within an 18 month stretch.
Other notable winners at Riviera include Sam Snead, Byron Nelson, Tom Watson, Johnny Miller, Nick Faldo, Ernie Els, Phil Mickelson and Canada’s Mike Weir (a back-to-back winner in 2003 and 2004).
Though the Riviera has been redesigned a few times, most notably in 1992 when Ben Crenshaw and Bill Coore redesigned the bunkers to return them to the state they were in when the course originally opened, the fabled course is still in style and is being strongly considered as a future host site for a Presidents Cup and the United States Open.
Whoever raises the trophy in victory this Sunday night you can just imagine Bogie tipping his hat and hoisting his thermos in acknowledgment of the young man’s fine effort on a still-beautiful but tough course that harkens back to the Golden Age of Hollywood. 
By Randy Williams, on February 6th, 2012 Set against the world of horse racing, this new series created by David Milch and Michael Mann, has moved out of the gates to overall positive reviews filling the screen with well-presented horse races, gambling and lots of scheming and intrigue. But unlike the races themselves, the pacing is much more methodical leaning toward observational storytelling. And HBO couldn’t be happier as they have already agreed to a second season after just one episode aired.
Through a myriad of main characters, tied to the same racetrack and woven together with complex relationships and storylines, this is not a program for those drawn to clean, conventional plots with a single protagonist flying past the screen at breakneck speed.
Dustin Hoffman is “Ace” Bernstein , an enigmatic, ex-con moneyman fresh from a prison stint looking to get back at those responsible for his incarceration and take financial control of the racing operation. The cast also includes Nick Nolte and Dennis Farina as part a group of gamblers, trainers, jockeys, agents, hangers-on and horse-owners at California’s Santa Anita Racetrack. 
By Randy Williams, on February 2nd, 2012 The New York Giants and New England Patriots are the last teams standing in this strike-shortened season as the league’s title game plays out on Sunday in Indianapolis.

The Giants beat the Patriots 17-14 in Super Bowl XLII by ending their perfect season at 18-1 four years ago. And I believe the same result will occur here only with a slightly higher final score.
Here’s why:
The Patriots secondary gave up the second-most passing yards in the 2011 regular season and they haven’t improved much in the playoffs. Despite the cumulative efforts of Patriots defenders Devin McCourty, Sterling Moore and Julian Edelman look for Hakeem Nicks and Victor Cruz in particular, to produce the game-breaking numbers over their New England counterparts like Welker and Gronkowski (turnovers being even).
Big and fast with solid regular season (82 receptions for 1,536 yards and nine TDs) and playoff numbers (140+ receiving yards in the first half against the Forty Niners and though they kept him quiet in the second half, New England won’t be so lucky), look for Cruz to break the 100 reception yard mark to help his teammates hoist the Lombardi Trophy.
 Giants on Cruz Control
|
|