| Image Courtesy of AP |
Ok,
ok… I get it.
He’s
ELIte.
It
took a couple days for me to muster up the will… I didn’t even want to write
this because I was so upset, not only that the Giants won, but that it now
seems that, for Tom Brady, like former Red Sox star Pedro Martinez said about
the Yankees in 2003, “the Giants are his daddy.”
The
way the game mirrored 2007 was perplexing. Giants struck first, Patriots took
the lead into halftime, Giants took the lead with less than two minutes left
with an amazing catch during the drive—then by David Tyree, now by Mario
Manningham—to give Brady one final shot and the Pats failed to capitalize in
the end, losing this year’s Super Bowl 21-17.
A
dropped pass behind Deion Branch during the Patriots final drive could have
changed the game; it’s a catch that you have to make in the Super Bowl. A
dropped pass by Wes Welker in the drive beforehand could have put the game away
before that.
Just
like an Asante Samuel pick could have put the game away for New England in
Super Bowl 42.
Just
like an Eli Manning sack that turned into a circus catch could’ve put the game
away for New England in that same game.
Tom
Brady, arguably the best Quarterback ever, showed weakness two weeks ago
against Baltimore. He vowed to play better on this night. He did, but it wasn’t
enough. He was outplayed by the younger brother of his long-time foe. In the
stadium that his big brother calls home, Eli Manning seemed to revel in the
aura of his big brother.
But
in reality, it was just Eli Manning showing how much he’s grown as a player and
how much he’s grown as a quarterback.
Would
I take Eli over Brady? Never. And until this game, I never imagined I would
ever call Eli a top-tier Quarterback. He’s Eli Manning. He’s inconsistent. He’s
never been the guy that took a team on his back. He was lucky.
But
in this game? In these playoffs? He did what I thought he could never do. He
proved me wrong. And for me, Patriots fans and other New York Giant
non-believers, well, they were proven wrong too. So confident that the Patriots
would not let the Giants pull one over on them twice, these same people’s
overconfidence cost them. With Manning leading the way on offense and Justin Tuck leading the way on defense with two sacks on Brady, it was hard to lose.
After
watching the game, I thought back to an old WWE clip from three years ago by
Edge(yeah, I like WWE, sue me.), where you can basically replace Edge for Eli
and the crowd with everyone in New England. And you can bet Eli just wanted to
gloat about his victory, just because of all the doubters that he did, in fact,
prove wrong.
Video property of WWE
Manning
was doubted since the start. Since he got drafted by San Diego and demanded a
trade then and there. Since he never really got off to the start people hoped
from the number one overall pick in 2004. Since he played miserably in his
first career playoff game. Since he never got out of his big brother’s shadow.
Well,
now he has one more ring than his brother. Does that mean he’s better? No, not
by any means. But this ring means more than 2007. A lot of things went the
Giants way in that Super Bowl. In this one? The defense played exceptionally
well, but Eli played like a veteran. He played like a star. He played like a
leader. He joked about the ups and downs of the season during the Parade, and
he walked and talked like a Champion.
I
went against the Giants the whole way. I thought the Falcons would beat them in
the Wild Card round. I thought the Packers would give them the reality check
they needed. The opposite happened. I thought the 49ers would beat them in
their first NFC Title game in over a decade. I thought there was no way the
Patriots would lose to the same team twice in a row in the same season. No way
they would let the Giants win not one, but TWO Super Bowls against them. I thought
the old Eli would show up. The one we Philly fans know and love.
I
was wrong, and, as much as it pains me to say it, I have nothing but respect
for Eli, Tuck and this Giants team today. They deserved it.
peyton> eli
ReplyDeleteDidn't say otherwise haha.
ReplyDeleteMuch respect for saying something like that haha.
ReplyDeleteA very humble article, well done
ReplyDeleteI think everyone is wondering why Eli waited 8 years to develop pin-point accuracy.
ReplyDeleteTom Brady is also arguably not a very good QB at all. Arguably.
ReplyDeleteif peyton had bradys teams all these yrs he would've broke every record that could be broken, he is the better qb
ReplyDeleteI'm sorry but that couldn't be further from the truth. Brady won with Troy Brown, David Patten, Reche Caldwell, Antowain Smith and Deion Branch. If he had Marvin Harrison and Reggie Wayna? He would've 3-peated. Peyton always had the better team around him. I see Brady and young Donovan McNabb as the only two QBs that could lead their team far in the playoffs with lack of a receiving core. It's the opposite of what you said. Brady with Harrison and Wayne from 02-07 would've been DEADLY.
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