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Forums - Sports - The NFL Thread 2011: New York Giants Win Super Bowl XLVI

superchunk said:
wow... many of us may be wrong on Packers this coming week. With the very real possibility that their Offensive coordinator not being at the game... things could very well go for Giants.

Yeah poor guy lost his son. This could very well affect the play calling and might have an impact. If it was for any other reason I would be happy.



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RolStoppable said:
chocoloco said:
superchunk said:
wow... many of us may be wrong on Packers this coming week. With the very real possibility that their Offensive coordinator not being at the game... things could very well go for Giants.

Yeah poor guy lost his son. This could very well affect the play calling and might have an impact. If it was for any other reason I would be happy.

McCarthy calls the plays for the Packers, so I don't think a possible absence of the offensive coordinator will have a notable impact. So in case the Packers lose, this shouldn't be used as an excuse.

Good to know because many offensive coordinators do. More than likely the Packers will dedicate the game to the son and the coach.



chocoloco said:
outlawauron said:
This banter back between you two is pretty silly. Really guys?

 

If you think this is silly you have obviously not seen GAF's NFL thread. 

 

Meh, I just don't understand why any be all that passionate about the NFL in terms at being angry at other fanbases. Considering that you don't have any direct link to the institution or program. And I never used GAF to set the bar for civility.



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outlawauron said:

Meh, I just don't understand why any be all that passionate about the NFL in terms at being angry at other fanbases. Considering that you don't have any direct link to the institution or program. And I never used GAF to set the bar for civility.

I really do not know what you said has anything to do with banter between amp and I. And if this whole thread was entirely civil it would be boring and nobody would post. Sports unlike gaming are actually born out of competitition and loyalty to your region, so naturally trash talking is a part of the game. What is your team btw?



outlawauron said:
This banter back between you two is pretty silly. Really guys?


I haven't been offended by anything that chocoloco has said and I'm pretty sure that he hasn't taken much of what I have said too seriously.  We're just having fun.



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chocoloco said:
outlawauron said:

Meh, I just don't understand why any be all that passionate about the NFL in terms at being angry at other fanbases. Considering that you don't have any direct link to the institution or program. And I never used GAF to set the bar for civility.

I really do not know what you said has anything to do with banter between amp and I. And if this whole thread was entirely civil it would be boring and nobody would post. Sports unlike gaming are actually born out of competitition and loyalty to your region, so naturally trash talking is a part of the game. What is your team btw?

Live in Louisiana, born in Houston. I cheer for Houston and New Orleans. As a small child, I rooted for the Raiders because of Rich Gannon, Jerry Rice, and cool uniforms. All three kinda stuck with me.



"We'll toss the dice however they fall,
And snuggle the girls be they short or tall,
Then follow young Mat whenever he calls,
To dance with Jak o' the Shadows."

Check out MyAnimeList and my Game Collection. Owner of the 5 millionth post.

outlawauron said:

Live in Louisiana, born in Houston. I cheer for Houston and New Orleans. As a small child, I rooted for the Raiders because of Rich Gannon, Jerry Rice, and cool uniforms. All three kinda stuck with me.

Well you could have been trashing the Broncos all year, shame. Of course, I would probably get bitter with a very enthusaiastic Raiders fan. I will always remeber Jerry Rice as a 49er, but I can see why you would admire him during his Raider years if that is what you remeber of him. I still remeber him winning the Superbowl with the 49ers it was excellent. 

This has been a popular bumper sticker in Colorado.



chocoloco said:
outlawauron said:

Live in Louisiana, born in Houston. I cheer for Houston and New Orleans. As a small child, I rooted for the Raiders because of Rich Gannon, Jerry Rice, and cool uniforms. All three kinda stuck with me.

Well you could have been trashing the Broncos all year, shame. Of course, I would probably get bitter with a very enthusaiastic Raiders fan. I will always remeber Jerry Rice as a 49er, but I can see why you would admire him during his Raider years if that is what you remeber of him. I still remeber him winning the Superbowl with the 49ers it was excellent. 

This has been a popular bumper sticker in Colorado.

I remember Jerry Rice as a 49er, but I was too young to remember games and the great moments.

As far as Denver, I've been a small fan. Loved seeing Terrelle Davis and John Elway go against the Packers way back when. Of course, I've been a Tebow since he was at Florida, so it goes along with you.



"We'll toss the dice however they fall,
And snuggle the girls be they short or tall,
Then follow young Mat whenever he calls,
To dance with Jak o' the Shadows."

Check out MyAnimeList and my Game Collection. Owner of the 5 millionth post.

I know this thread has too much Tebow, but this is an article all should read about the guy which shows why he deserves everyone's respect as a man.

http://espn.go.com/espn/story/_/id/7455943/believing-tim-tebow

 

I believe in Tim Tebow

By Rick Reilly
ESPN.com
Archive

 

Tim Tebow FoundationTim Tebow with Jacob Rainey, one of the many people dealing with health problems that Tebow hosted at Broncos games this season.

 

 

I've come to believe in Tim Tebow, but not for what he does on a football field, which is still three parts Dr. Jekyll and two parts Mr. Hyde.

No, I've come to believe in Tim Tebow for what he does off a football field, which is represent the best parts of us, the parts I want to be and so rarely am.

Who among us is this selfless?

Every week, Tebow picks out someone who is suffering, or who is dying, or who is injured, flies them and their families to the Broncos game, rents them a car, puts them up in a nice hotel, buys them dinner (usually at a Dave and Buster's), gets them and their families pregame passes, visits with them just before kickoff (!), gets them 30-yard line tickets down low, visits with them after the game (sometimes for an hour), has them walk him to his car, and sends them off with a basket of gifts.

Home or road, win or lose, hero or goat.

Remember last week, when the world was pulling its hair out in the hour after Tebow had stunned the Pittsburgh Steelers with an 80-yard OT touchdown pass to Demaryius Thomasin the playoffs? And Twitter was exploding with 9,420 tweets about Tebow per second? When an ESPN poll was naming him the most popular athlete in America?

Tebow was spending that hour talking to 16-year-old Bailey Knaub about her 73 surgeries so far and what TV shows she likes.

"Here he'd just played the game of his life," recalls Bailey's mother, Kathy, of Loveland, Colo., "and the first thing he does after his press conference is come find Bailey and ask, 'Did you get anything to eat?' He acted like what he'd just done wasn't anything, like it was all about Bailey."

More than that, Tebow kept corralling people into the room for Bailey to meet. Hey, Demaryius, come in here a minute. Hey, Mr. Elway. Hey, Coach Fox.

Even though sometimes-fatal Wegener's granulomatosis has left Bailey with only one lung, the attention took her breath away.

"It was the best day of my life," she emailed. "It was a bright star among very gloomy and difficult days. Tim Tebow gave me the greatest gift I could ever imagine. He gave me the strength for the future. I know now that I can face any obstacle placed in front of me. Tim taught me to never give up because at the end of the day, today might seem bleak but it can't rain forever and tomorrow is a new day, with new promises."

I read that email to Tebow and he was honestly floored.

"Why me? Why should I inspire her?" he said. "I just don't feel, I don't know, adequate. Really, hearing her story inspires me."

It's not just NFL defenses that get Tebowed. It's kids who will die soon. It's adults who can hardly stand. It's high school girls who don't know if they'll ever go to a prom.

For the game at Buffalo, it was Charlottesville, Va., blue-chip high school QB Jacob Rainey, who lost his leg after a freak tackle in a scrimmage. Tebow threw three interceptions in that Buffalo game and the Broncos were crushed, 40-14.

"He walked in and took a big sigh and said, 'Well, that didn't go as planned,'" remembers Rainey. "Where I'm from, people wonder how sincere and genuine he is. But I think he's the most genuine person I've ever met."

There's not an ounce of artifice or phoniness or Hollywood in this kid Tebow and I've looked everywhere for it.

Take 9-year-old Zac Taylor, a child who lives in constant pain. Immediately after Tebow shocked the Chicago Bears with a 13-10 comeback win, Tebow spent an hour with Zac and his family. At one point, Zac, who has 10 doctors, asked Tebow if he has a secret prayer for hospital visits. Tebow whispered it in his ear. And since Tebow still needed to be checked out by the Broncos' team doctor, he took Zac in with him, but only after they'd whispered it together.

And it's not always kids. Tom Driscoll, a 55-year-old who is dying of brain cancer at a hospice in Denver, was Tebow's guest for the Cincinnati game. "The doctors took some of my brain," Driscoll says, "so my short-term memory is kind of shot. But that day I'll neverforget. Tim is such a good man."

This whole thing makes no football sense, of course. Most NFL players hardly talk toteammates before a game, much less visit with the sick and dying.

Isn't that a huge distraction?

 

 

Stephanie TaylorNot everything Tim Tebow does on one knee is controversial. Ask Zac Taylor.

 

 

"Just the opposite," Tebow says. "It's by far the best thing I do to get myself ready. Here you are, about to play a game that the world says is the most important thing in the world. Win and they praise you. Lose and they crush you. And here I have a chance to talk to the coolest, most courageous people. It puts it all into perspective. The game doesn't really matter. I mean, I'll give 100 percent of my heart to win it, but in the end, the thing I most want to do is not win championships or make a lot of money, it's to invest in people's lives, to make a difference."

 

 

So that's it. I've given up giving up on him. I'm a 100 percent believer. Not in his arm. Not in his skills. I believe in his heart, his there-will-definitely-be-a-pony-under-the-tree optimism, the way his love pours into people, right up to their eyeballs, until they believe they can master the hopeless comeback, too.

Remember the QB who lost his leg, Jacob Rainey? He got his prosthetic leg a few weeks ago and he wants to play high school football next season. Yes, tackle football. He'd be the first to do that on an above-the-knee amputation.

Hmmm. Wonder where he got that crazy idea?

"Tim told me to keep fighting, no matter what," Rainey says. "I am."

 

 

 

 

 


 



Team 1 Team 2  ima Men    Result
New Orleans San Francisco  1  21-24                
Denver New England  2  23-41                
Houston Baltimore  2  20-27                
New York Giants Green Bay  2   20-30                

 

 

It is done



                                           

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