Saturday, April 25, 2009

Eastern Conference Quarter Finals Game 5: Capitals 4, Rangers 0; Rangers Lead Series 3-2


WASHINGTON -- The Washington Capitals hit the rewind button and played Friday night's game at the Verizon Center like it was the regular season.

Chalk up another win for the Southeast Division champs -- enough to give them at least two more days of life in the Stanley Cup Playoffs.

Facing elimination, the Capitals played their best game of the series against the New York Rangers for a 4-0 victory. They chased a player they've been calling "The Difference," goaltender Henrik Lundqvist, after just 40 minutes and 14 shots on goal -- and also got a second shutout from their 20-year-old rookie goalie, Simeon Varlamov.

Game 6, another elimination game for the Capitals, is Sunday afternoon back at Madison Square Garden. If the Caps win, Game 7 will be back at the Verizon Center on Tuesday night.

"That's our goal," Alex Ovechkin said of coming back home for an all-or-nothing Game 7. "We never give up. We fight and we love this situation. It's hard, but we love it."

For the first time all series, the Capitals actually managed to get to Lundqvist -- despite taking a series-low 21 shots. Matt Bradley, the third-line right wing who scored the game's first two goals, beat Lundqvist on a shorthanded breakaway 4:58 into the first period.

However, it was his second goal that showed the Caps that, yes, Lundqvist is human, too.
Bradley shot the puck from about a foot above the goal line and roughly 25 feet off the left post. Lundqvist tried to stand up and make the save by covering his five-hole, but he couldn't do it and the puck somehow popped through his pads at 12:07.

Lundqvist, who looked back into his net in disbelief as the sirens went off and the lights flashed, called it a "brutal goal" and said it was "just a bad decision" to stand up instead of going down on one knee.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Eastern Conference Quarter Finals Game 4: Rangers 2, Capitals 1; Rangers Lead Series 3-1


NEW YORK -- The two things that never wavered for the New York Rangers during their topsy-turvy regular season were their League-best penalty kill and the stellar play of goalie Henrik Lundqvist.
In their most important game of 2009, both came though in a big way for the home team.
Lundqvist was spectacular in stopping 38 shots and the Rangers killed all six Washington power plays to win Game 4 Wednesday night at Madison Square Garden, 2-1 -- despite more undisciplined play from agitating left wing Sean Avery.
The Rangers staked themselves to a 3-1 lead in their Eastern Conference Quarterfinal series and gave themselves a chance to close it out in Game 5 at the Verizon Center on Friday night. If they do, they'll meet the Boston Bruins in the next round.
"I've said it before, that's why they pay me the big bucks, being there to stop the puck," Lundqvist said. "It's fun.
"The Rangers jumped out to a 2-0 lead 2:23 into the second period when Chris Drury scored on a rebound after his first attempt was flubbed by Capitals rookie goalie Simeon Varlamov. Paul Mara also scored on a slap shot from the point that deflected into the net off Washington defenseman John Erskine 13:55 into the game.
However, it was everything that happened after Drury's goal that showed why the Rangers are even participating in this year's playoffs.
The Capitals had 30 shots on goal, including eight on the power play, in the final 40 minutes. All but one -- an absolute rocket by Alex Ovechkin 2:13 into the third period, following a brilliant individual effort -- were turned aside by Lundqvist, who has been the difference in all three Rangers' wins in this series.

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Chinese GP: Vettel Leads Home Red Bull 1-2 at Wet Shanghai!!!!


The predicted rain arrived ahead of the start of the Chinese Grand Prix resulting in the race starting behind the safety car, very reminiscent to the Japanese Grand Prix of 2007. After claiming pole position yesterday in style, Sebastian Vettel took advantage of his position at the head of the field and went on to dominate the 56-lap race.
It was however a far from easy victory for Vettel, who led home team-mate Mark Webber to record Red Bull Renault’s first win, as the persistent rain ensured that the result was far from certain until the very second he took the chequered flag almost two hours after the race first began.
After eight laps behind the safety car the race got underway properly on lap nine with Fernando Alonso having already relinquished his second position with a very early pit stop. The Red Bull duo of Vettel and Webber were quickly able to establish a gap over Jenson Button who passed his Brawn Mercedes team-mate Rubens Barrichello early in the race.
With an 11 second advantage at the head of the field Vettel pitted on lap 15 and Webber shortly repeated the procedure leaving Button at the head of the field. Further back down the order Jarno Trulli was really struggling in the conditions and heading to the final turn on lap 18 was hit hard from behind by Robert Kubica’s BMW Sauber. Trulli’s Toyota was extensively damaged and he was out of the race and the safety car was deployed.
Jenson Button’s 14 second lead at the head of the pack was immediately negated to nothing as he headed to the pits for this first stop. From that point onwards, Vettel and Webber dominated at the front as they traded fastest laps and eased away to a comfortable victory from Button. Webber finished 11 seconds behind Vettel and kept the pressure on his young team-mate and while he will be happy with the result for the team, having your team-mate record the team’s first victory will be tough to take.
Jenson Button took the chequered flag in third position, 34 seconds behind Vettel, while Rubens Barrichello had a low-key race in the second Brawn Mercedes and was never really on the pace of the front runners. The decision not to change his wet tyres in the second and final pit stop put him under pressure from those close behind, but the Brazilian veteran held on to retain the position.
FINAL RESULTS:
1) Sebastien Vettel - Red Bull - Renault
2) Mark Webber - Red Bull - Renault
3) Jenson Button - Brawn GP - Mercedes
4) Rubens Barichello - Brawn GP - Mercedes
5) Heikki Kovalainen - McLaren - Mercedes
6) Lewis Hamilton - McLaren - Mercedes
7) Timo Glock - Toyota
8) Sebastien Buemi - Scuderia Toro Rosso - Ferrari

Eastern Conference Quarter Finals Game 3: Capitals 4, Rangers 0; Rangers Lead Series 2-1


NEW YORK -- The New York Rangers still have an All-Star in goal, but after the last 120 minutes of hockey played in this best-of-7 Eastern Conference Quarterfinal round series, it's safe to say they no longer have the edge over the Washington Capitals.
Simeon Varlamov is his name and at least in the last two games this 20-year-old Russian rookie goalie has done everything possible to even up the goaltending, an area in which the Rangers certainly thought they had an advantage heading into the series and definitely did after Game 1.
Varlamov stopped all 33 shots he faced Monday night in a pivotal Game 3 at a deafening Madison Square Garden, and the Capitals beat Lundqvist four times for a 4-0 victory to slice their deficit in this series to 2-1.
Game 4 is Wednesday night back at the Garden and Varlamov will bring a shutout streak of 112:16 into the game. The lone goal he has allowed was to Ryan Callahan just 7:44 into the first period of Game 2.
"It's very important that when you play in the playoffs that the goalie plays the best," Varlamov said through an interpreter. "If the goalie plays the best then the team feels more confident. I understand the value for my team in being a great goalie."
Varlamov was the surprise starter in Game 2 on Saturday for Jose Theodore, who allowed four goals on 21 shots in a 4-3 loss in Game 1. The Russian was good in stopping 23 of 24 shots, but the Caps couldn't beat Lundqvist and lost, 1-0.
Washington coach Bruce Boudreau, secretive about who he would start in goal all the way up to when the lineups were finally announced, sent Alex Ovechkin to tell Varlamov on Monday morning that he was going to start.

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Eastern Conference Quarter Finals Game 2: Rangers 1, Capitals 0; Rangers Lead Series 2-0


WASHINGTON -- The Washington Capitals may be getting the better of the territorial play, but the New York Rangers have shown through the first two games of their Eastern Conference Quarterfinal series that they are the more committed team.
After blocking 21 shots in Game 1, the Rangers blocked 29 more in Game 2 in front of another roaring red crowd at Verizon Center Saturday afternoon. An early goal from Ryan Callahan was all they needed for a 1-0 victory and a 2-0 lead in the series back to Madison Square Garden.
"It's huge to have a lot of guys to block shots and sacrifice their bodies in a series like this, especially when you face so many good players that can shoot the puck," said Rangers goalie Henrik Lundqvist, who made 35 saves for his fourth career postseason shutout. "We had a lot of blocks in the first game, especially after faceoffs, and (Saturday) again they came up big on a couple that they had a pretty good shot opportunity. We did a lot of good things.
"The Rangers scored the only goal they needed 7:44 into the game when Brandon Dubinsky's patience along the boards in the neutral zone resulted in a 2-on-1 for Markus Naslund and Callahan.
Capitals defenseman Mike Green pinched and forward Viktor Kozlov came too hard, allowing Dubinsky to send a pass to Naslund for a 2-on-1 against defenseman Tom Poti. Naslund cut through the left circle before slotting a pass to Callahan, who redirected it over rookie goalie Simeon Varlamov's glove.
Varlamov was the surprise starter in favor of veteran Jose Theodore, who allowed four goals on 21 shots in Game 1. The 20-year-old Russian played well, stopping 23 of 24 shots.
"We just have to score goals," said Capitals sniper Alex Ovechkin, who had six shots on goal but took another seven that were blocked. "We made one mistake in the first period, they used it and we didn't score goals."

Saturday, April 18, 2009

Eastern Conference Quarter Finals Game 1: Rangers 4, Capitals 3; Rangers Lead Series 1-0


WASHINGTON -- Nobody in the New York Rangers dressing room ever said they were going to completely stymie the Washington Capitals' powerful offense. It would have been ludicrous even to think that.

The Rangers knew heading into Game 1 of their Eastern Conference Quarterfinal series on Wednesday night that Alex Ovechkin and Co. were going to get chances and score some goals. However, they felt that if they were able to weather the storm, all could be well in the end.
That's exactly what happened in Game 1 as the Rangers stole home-ice advantage in the series by escaping a dreadful first period still locked in a scoreless tie and beating Washington 4-3 on Brandon Dubinsky's game-winner with 8:17 left in regulation.
Game 2 isn't until Saturday (NBC, 1 p.m. ET).
"That team is going to surge," Rangers coach John Tortorella said. "It's a matter of reclaiming your momentum with some simple plays, maybe your forecheck, holding on to the puck. It's not about scoring a goal right away. It's about getting your game back.
"Washington totally dominated the first period. The Caps held a 14-4 advantage in shots, a 16-11 advantage in hits and an 11-4 advantage in faceoffs. Ovechkin had 11 shot attempts, including six that went on net, and was credited with six hits. There were times when it seemed he was everywhere.
All that dominance didn't matter. Rangers goalie Henrik Lundqvist kept the game scoreless.
"We knew as the game went on we would improve our game," said Lundqvist, who came up with 32 saves.
The Capitals were fearful of just that after coming away empty after the first period.
What's worse is Washington goalie Jose Theodore didn't get much action in the first period -- and he looked shaky in the second.
Caps' coach Bruce Boudreau said he didn't think about pulling Theodore during the second intermission even though he allowed three goals on 11 shots in the middle period -- not one of which was scored through a screen or off a deflection or a rebound -- because he didn't want to show any signs of panic.

Monday, April 6, 2009

Malaysian GP: Button Makes It Two In a Row for Brawn GP at Rain Drenched Sepang!!!


From F1-Live.com:
Jenson Button won a shortened 31 lap Malaysian Grand Prix from Nick Heidfeld and Timo Glock on a day when heavy rain forced the race to be halted well ahead of the scheduled 56 laps.
Monsoon rains are common-place late in the afternoon and it was therefore of little surprise that the weather created problems and much confusion for the Formula One circus.
Until the very heavy rain began to fall, the second round of the championship proved to be a thriller with Nico Rosberg storming into the lead from fourth position on the grid at the start and controlling the race in his Williams Toyota from Jarno Trulli’s Toyota until the first round of pitstops.
Button meanwhile bided his time during the first stint well aware he had more fuel on board than his rivals and as the others pitted, picked up the pace to ensure he exited the puts following his first stop in the lead.
Light rain began to fall on lap 22 with Kimi Raikkonen already having gambled and switched to full wet tyres some three laps earlier. The gamble did not pay off for Raikkonen as he burned through the tyres on the dry circuit, but all of the front runners soon began to pit as light rain started to fall.
Timo Glock had not made the best start to the race and had dropped towards the bottom of the top ten but he and the Toyota team opted to switch to intermediate tyres and not the full wets. This decision paid off as he carved his way through the field to run third when the really heavy rain fell.
While Glock made progress through the field the other drivers opted to change from full wet tyres to intermediate tyres but the switch was only suitable for a few laps as by lap 28 the heavy rain forced them all back onto the full wet tyres, shuffling the race order behind Button yet again.
Conditions then deteriorated significantly forcing first the safety car out and then the red flags bringing a halt to proceedings for over 50 minutes before the result was declared.
As the FIA fumbled around before making a decision to declare the race, it became clear that Nick Heidfeld had worked his way up to second position in his BMW Sauber having made just the one pitstop compared to the three or four made by the rest of the field. A gamble from the team certainly paid dividends after a difficult weekend to date.
Jarno Trulli finished fourth in the second Toyota losing time in the wet conditions, while Rubens Barrichello was fifth when the race came to its premature conclusion.
Mark Webber and Lewis Hamilton had a fantastic battle ahead of the red flag with Webber much faster in the twisty mid-field and Hamilton leaning on KERS heavily to retake the position on the long Sepang straights on at least three occasions. Webber finished in sixth position ahead of the defending champion.
After his fast start Nico Rosberg lost ground in the pit stop shuffle and finished eighth for Williams while Ferrari leave the second round of the championship still without any points with Massa ninth and Raikkonen parking his F60 when the red flags came out with an unidentified KERS issue.
FINAL RESULTS: Note, 1/2 points awarded for rain shortened race
1) Jenson Button - Brawn GP - Mercedes
2) Nick Heidfeld - BMW
3) Timo Glock - Toyota
4) Jarno Trulli - Toyota
5) Rubens Barichello - Brawn GP - Mercedes
6) Mark Webber- Red Bull - Renault
7) Lewis Hamilton - McLaren - Mercedes
8) Nico Rosberg - Williams - Toyota

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Austrailian GP: Button Wins Maiden Race for Brawn GP!!!


From F1-Live.com
After the excitement and drama of qualifying, the 58-lap Australian Grand Prix lived up to all expectations as Jenson Button recorded his second career victory and the first for the brand new Brawn Mercedes team.
Out of the ashes of the Honda team, Brawn GP stunned its rivals as soon as they took to the tests tracks in Spain for pre-season testing. The form continued into practice and the team aced the front row in qualifying in Melbourne.
Race day saw Button make a perfect start to lead the first lap by five seconds as Rubens Barrichello slipped down the field as his anti-stall device kicked in. As the drama played out in the closing stages, Rubens Barrichello inherited second position to make it a famous Brawn GP one-two result.
While Button was rarely troubled at the front of the field, the battle for second position looked set to go down to the wire a Sebastian Vettel defended his position from the charging Robert Kubica. A small error on his worn option tyres from the Red Bull Renault driver at the first turn saw the German racer lose momentum allowing Kubica’s BMW Sauber alongside heading into turn three.
Vettel, obviously keen to retain the position was not going to give in without a fight but then went in too deep eliminating himself and Kubica within sight of the chequered flag.
This allowed the recovering Barrichello through into second position for a dream Brawn Mercedes result and cost Red Bull Renault at least six valuable championship points.
Following the disappointment post-qualifying yesterday, Jarno Trulli put in a great drive from the pit lane to finish third in his Toyota, while team-mate Glock took the chequered flag in fifth position after a long battle with double world champion Fernando Alonso. While the TF109 has proven rapid all weekend there was sting in the tail for the team for the second straight day...
Following the chequered flag and the podium celebrations, Trulli was found guilty of passing Lewis Hamilton whilst behind the safety car. The Italian veteran was handed a 12 second penalty dropping him from third position to 12th.
Hamilton started the 58-lap race from 18th position following his gearbox issues in qualifying and made great progress on the option tyre in the opening laps. As Ferrari, Vettel and Kubica slipped up the 2008 race winner and defending champion found himself in a sensational fourth position at the flag and then third in the record books.
FINAL RESULTS: Note, as of 3/31/09, Lewis Hamilton was disqualified from this race for lying to stewards about his engine, thus moving everyone up below him one spot.
1) Jenson Button - Brawn GP - Mercedes
2) Rubens Barichello - Brawn GP - Mercedes
3) Lewis Hamilton - McLaren - Mercedes
4) Timo Glock -Toyota
5) Fernando Alonso -Renault
6) Nico Rosberg - Williams - Toyota
7) Sebastien Buemi - Scuderia Toro Rosso - Ferrari
8) Sebastien Bourdais - Scuderia Toro Rosso - Ferrari

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Super Bowl XLIII: Steelers 27, Cardinals 23


Steelers earn sixth Super Bowl victory in thriller over Cardinals
Associated Press - From NFL.com
TAMPA, Fla. -- The winning play in Super Bowl XLIII was right out of a schoolyard.

Scamble right, scramble left, find someone open.
The perfect unscripted ending to a game of improbable swings.

Their Steel Curtain shredded, Ben Roethlisberger and Santonio Holmes improvised the 6-yard touchdown pass with 35 seconds left to give the Pittsburgh Steelers a record-setting sixth Super Bowl victory, 27-23 over the Arizona Cardinals on Sunday night.

"Great players step up in big-time games to make plays," said Holmes, the game's MVP. He said he told Roethlisberger that he "wanted to be the guy to make the plays for this team."
And he was.

Holmes grabbed the ball with both arms stretched fully above his head in the back right corner of the end zone, his toes barely dragging inbounds. He fell, sat up and cradled the ball like the prize it was.

This thriller certainly matched last year's Super Bowl, which ended with New York Giants wide receiver Plaxico Burress' TD catch -- with 35 seconds left, too.

But this one was even wilder. With the last tension-packed seconds ticking away, a kneeling Roethlisberger held Steelers coach Mike Tomlin's hand as Cardinals quarterback Kurt Warner led one last, but futile, drive.
"These guys just don't blink," Tomlin said. "They deliver. It's never going to be pretty or perfect, if you will, but they have a great deal of resolve."

The Steelers (15-4), who won their second Super Bowl title in the last four seasons, led 20-7 in the fourth quarter, only to see Warner and the Cardinals stage a remarkable rally to go in front 23-20 with 2:37 remaining.

Warner hit Pro Bowl wide receiver Larry Fitzgerald in stride for a 64-yard touchdown pass with 2:37 left. Already owning a slew of playoff receiving marks this year, Fitzgerald sped down the middle of the field, watching himself outrun the Steelers' defense on the huge video screen.
But Fitzgerald could only watch from the sideline as Roethlisberger engineered a 78-yard drive to win the Super Bowl in what resembled Heinz Field South. With waves of twirling Terrible Towels turning Raymond James Stadium into a black-and-gold tableau -- Steelers fans supporting their beloved team, the economy be damned -- Pittsburgh's offense rescued the title.

"I knew it was a touchdown 100 percent," Holmes said, even though the play had to withstand a video review. "My feet never left the ground. All I did was stand up on my toes and extended my hands."

And hauled in the pass that punctuated another Pittsburgh championship, adding to those won in the 1974, '75, '78, '79 and 2005 seasons.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Farewell To A Great American Patriot


BAMBINO: Today is the final day of the presidency of our 43rd president, George Walker Bush.

This man stood up to the bullies of the world only to be ridiculed by the MSM and far left kooks. He made tough decisions without worrying what the polls were or what France or Germany thought. Mr. Bush has kept this great nation safe after 9/11 and that is his legacy and the only issue that matters. Yes the economy sucks right now, but if you're dead, you can't enjoy a good one.

Mr. President, you were my Commander in Chief and I would walk through the gates of hell if you asked me to. You are a great man and you will be misssed by a majority of fair minded Americans. God bless you!

Memorable Moments and Events:

2000 Election: You won it fair and square. The US Supreme Court looked at all the arguments and all the ballot counting in Florida and sided in your favor, even with a liberal majority on the bench. Al Gore is till crying over it. Far left kooks always made the lame argument that you "stole" the election, but we know the deal and you were rewarded with another term 4 years later.

September 11th, 2001: No one expected it. I blame only the terrorists and their sympathizers for the attack. You reacted with professional demeanor and I appreciated you not making those 7 yr olds panic. You kept your cool. You came to NYC and stood on the rubble and vowed to get the bastards that did this.

Afghanistan: We invaded Afghanistan in October 2001 and smashed the Taliban and Al Qaeda and established a democracy there. It's still a troubled area of the world. The Taliban remnants are still trying to disrupt the process and Al Qaeda operates across the border in Pakistan. Let's hope the rookie can finish the job there. It's no easy task.

Iraq: Let's face it, Saddam had to go. 14 UN Resolutions later, we took care of that roach and his gang thugs despite what France and Germany (who were in bed with the tyrant) thought. We all know he had the WMDs, whether we found them or not was irrelevant. The liberal nutjobs will never give you your due on Iraq, but they won't be the ultimate arbitor, history will. Mistakes were made along the way, but Iraq is now a democracy and an ally and our brave military continues to keep the peace there. To put the casualties in it's proper perspective, nearly double the Marines were killed on Iwo Jima (7,000) in 30 days than in the 5 plus years in Iraq and nearly 13,00o Marines and Sailors were killed on Okinawa in just 6 weeks. Let's hope the Messiah doesn't botch the victory there.

2004 Election: You beat John "Lurch" Kerry and won a mandate by the American people. Liberals everywhere were threatening to leave the country. It's too bad they are cowards and they lie. The look on Jon Bon Blow Me's face when Lurch conceded was classic.

Tax Cuts: Let me say that I benefitted tremendously from them as did the economy. The private sector created many jobs and the rookie should make them permanent.

The Mainstream Media: The MSM, liberal media, antique media, whatever you want to call it, is loaded with elitist liberals who despised you from Florida 2000 and on. With a brief respite following 9/11, they attacked you and weakened this country with countless stories about Abu Graib (which didn't advance the story any further), Gitmo, No WMDs, rendition, alleged torture, on and on. They even talked the economy down as best they could giving no confidence to investors and consumers. How much you wanna bet they will talk it up once the Messiah is sworn in? How much you wanna bet these snobby elitists will continue to blame you for it? They'll get away with it for at least a year.

All in all, you kept me and my family safe after 9/11. And that's the only issue I care about. Breathing is great, isn't it? Farewell Mr. President.

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

NFC Divisional Playoff: Eagles 23, Giants 11


BAMBINO: Well, what can I say? After a crow dinner with all the trimmings and crow sandwiches for the last few days, I am over the loss.

The Giants that I know did not show up Sunday, what's worse, they made a mediocre team like the Eagles look like world beaters. The G-Men laid an egg plain and simple. There was bad play calling, bad execution, bad penalties, etc. Despite that they were still in the game late in the 3rd quarter. The Giants D swarmed McNabb on a 3rd and 20 but Donovan stepped out of it athletically and threw a pass for a 1st down to Avant. That pretty much did it. The Giants folded after that.

With all that said, I am proud of the Football Giants for the season they had and for last year's unbelievable run. I don't care what anyone says, that was the best Giants win ever, EVER!

Next year, we will be back mark my words. Until then, it's Hockey and Baseball. How long 'til pitchers and catchers?

Monday, January 5, 2009

NFC Wild Card Playoff: Eagles 26, Vikings 14


Eagles top Vikings, will face NFC East rival Giants in divisional round
Associated Press - From NFL.com
MINNEAPOLIS -- All but forgotten as playoff contenders, Donovan McNabb and the Philadelphia Eagles have a playoff win.

Next up: the Super Bowl champions.
Brian Westbrook caught a short pass out of the backfield and zigzagged through the Minnesota defense for a devastating 71-yard touchdown midway through the fourth quarter, and the Eagles spoiled the Vikings' first home playoff game in eight years with a 26-14 victory Sunday.

"I've seen this team have confidence in each other and try to have one another's back," McNabb said. "What you're seeing is a team playing with a lot of energy, playing with emotion and just having fun."

Eagles cornerback Asante Samuel's 44-yard interception return of Tarvaris Jackson's errant pass in the second quarter set a tone for the kind of game most Vikings fans feared from the unpolished quarterback.

Andy Reid improved his playoff coaching record to 9-6, including at least one win each time the Eagles have qualified in his 10 years. He bested his buddy and former offensive coordinator, Brad Childress, in this one, and they spoke for several moments on the field after the game while maybe a thousand Eagles fans cheered around the tunnel entrance and began a derogatory chant toward the New York Giants.
BAMBINO: Does it surprise anyone that Philly fans behave with a lack of decorum? They have to be the absolute worst sports fans on earth. They make English Football Hooligans look like tea totallers. If the Giants execute, they should have a big day against The Eagles.

AFC Wild Card Playoff: Ravens 27, Dolphins 9


Ravens force five turnovers to end Dolphins' dream season

Associated Press - From NFL.com
MIAMI -- The Baltimore Ravens had Chad Pennington spinning, ducking, on his heels and on his back. When he did manage to get a pass away, they were often there to snatch it.

The Ravens came up with four interceptions, including one returned 64 yards for a touchdown by Ed Reed, and won 27-9 Sunday to spoil the Miami Dolphins' first playoff game in seven seasons.
Baltimore stuffed Miami's ground attack and negated the Wildcat, but most of all the Ravens harried Pennington into uncharacteristic mistakes. After throwing only seven interceptions during the regular season, he had four during a 22-minute flurry midway through the game.
"We heard all week that they don't turn the ball over," linebacker Ray Lewis said. "But we force turnovers."

With a rookie coach in John Harbaugh and a rookie quarterback in Joe Flacco, wild-card entrant Baltimore (12-5) won for the 10th time in 12 games and will play Saturday at AFC South champion Tennessee.

"We're going to Tennessee," Reed said. "Be there."

The playoff victory was the first for the Ravens since they beat Miami in a first-round game in January 2002. The result put the brakes on this season's remarkable resurgence by the Dolphins (11-6), who won the AFC East after going 1-15 in 2007.

AFC Wild Card Playoff: Chargers 23, Colts 17 F/OT


Sproles' big day lifts Chargers over Colts in overtime

Associated Press - From NFL.com
SAN DIEGO -- Peyton Manning has his MVP award and nothing more, outdone again in January by the San Diego Chargers.
Speedy little Darren Sproles scooted 22 yards for the winning score 6:20 into overtime and the Chargers beat the Colts 23-17 in an AFC wild-card game Saturday night, ending Indianapolis' nine-game winning streak a day after Manning won his third Associated Press NFL MVP award.

Sproles came up big on a night when the Chargers played the final 2 ½ quarters without LaDainian Tomlinson, who stood on the sideline in obvious discomfort from what appears to be a serious groin injury.

Fifty years after the Baltimore Colts won the first overtime game in league history by the same score over the New York Giants for the NFL title, Indianapolis wasn't so fortunate. It was victimized by Sproles, who rushed 23 times for 105 yards, caught five passes for 45 yards, had 106 yards on four kickoff returns and 72 on three punt runbacks.

"It's disappointing to lose a playoff game," Manning said. "We certainly had some chances to win, but give them credit. We had chances to put the game away, but we just didn't do it."

The Chargers (9-8) won the overtime toss. Indy's Darrell Reid called heads, but referee Ron Winter's flip came up tails. Sproles sent the Chargers into the second round of the playoffs, either at Tennessee or Pittsburgh, by finishing off the only series of overtime with his TD run around left end against an exhausted defense for the Colts (12-5).

NFC Wild Card Playoff: Cardinals 30, Falcons 24


Cardinals rally past Falcons to advance to divisional round

Associated Press - From NFL.com
Kurt Warner opened with a 42-yard touchdown pass to Larry Fitzgerald and connected with Anquan Boldin on a 71-yard scoring play as the Cardinals beat Atlanta 30-24 Saturday before a raucous, towel-waving crowd.
It was the franchise's first home playoff game since the then-Chicago Cardinals beat Philadelphia to win the NFL championship in 1947.

"A lot of people coming into this game said we were the worst playoff team ever to get in," Arizona coach Ken Whisenhunt said. "... I think we rallied around that."

Atlanta rookie Matt Ryan was intercepted twice, was tackled in the end zone for a safety and fumbled the ball away on a botched handoff. That fumble was returned 27 yards by Antrel Rolle 52 seconds into the second half to put Arizona ahead for good.

Everyone knew the Cardinals could pass, but a stout defense and effective running game were a bonus.

"You have to really give credit first to their defense," Falcons guard Harvey Dahl said. "They did an outstanding job. They were flying all over the place."

Atlanta's 60 yards rushing represented a season low.

"We couldn't run the ball," Falcons wide receiver Roddy White said. "We had to throw it around a little bit more than we're used to. Things like that kind of put us behind the eight-ball."

Arizona's Edgerrin James outgained Atlanta's Michael Turner, the NFL's No. 2 rusher.

"They controlled the line of scrimmage," Falcons coach Mike Smith said of the Cardinals' defense.