Wednesday, November 10, 2010

One Man Army


Peyton Hilis began his NFL career with the Denver Broncos as a fullback weighing in at 240 pounds. He was productive in Denver, but missed the majority of the 2008 season injured and was used on a limited basis in 2009. Somehow the Broncos miscalculated severely by trading away Hillis for quarterback Brady Quinn (on a team that already has Kyle Orton and Tim Tebow). Now the Browns are using him as their primary running back (now emerging as their best player). Last Sunday, ith a spectacularly dominating performance, Petyon Hillis defeated the Patriots single handedly.

Hillis's 184 yards and two touchdowns on 29 rush attempts (6.3 yards per carry) was the best performance by a running back against the Patriots this season. The Pats held Ray Rice, Adrian Peterson, Cedric Benson, and the Dolphins dangerous tandem of RB's to under 100 yards rushing. Enter Peyton Hillis and the (at the time) 2-5 Cleveland Browns. This one man army took on the entire Patriots defense by himself and carried his team to an upset victory. It was disheartening to watch a Bill Belichick defense that was simply pounded into submission. The Browns completed 14 passes for 174 yards and zero touchdowns, with their leading receiver posting 58 yards. Cleveland would have never won this game without the clock devouring, defense exhausting, and flat out dominant running of Peyton Hillis.

The Browns held the football for just over 38 minutes (63 % of the game) as Tom Brady watched most of the game from the sideline. Cleveland out gained the Patriots on the ground 230 yards to 68 and when the Patriots did have the ball, no reciever could hold on to the football. Yes, it was not Brady's sharpest performance, but he threw no interceptions and made some good throws at key times. Brady could do nothing as he watched his receivers drop pass after pass, and the offense never really got into a rhythm.

The entire outcome of the game could have been different if the Patriots had scored before half time. Being down 17-7 in the waning moments of the second quarter, the Pats drove the ball to the Cleveland goal line. Then tight end Rob Gronkowski fumbled the football on the three yard line and instead of being down by a field goal, the lead stood at 17-7. New England never found their rhythm on offense and when they did it was fumbled away or dropped. The best way to defeat Tom Brady is to keep him off the field (by dominating time of possession) and that is exactly what Peyton Hillis did; by himself.

Sources Used


www.espn.com
www.si.com
www.http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/multimedia/photo_gallery/basketball/nba/
www.weei.com




2 comments:

PatsFan said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
PatsFan said...

Hilis had a very strong game while hopefully the Patriots were having one of their weakest. I believe that it is Deion Branch who has advised after their self-reflections, that we will see an entirely different Patriots team this week. I certainly hope so and that they resume their march towards their goal, the Super Bowl.