Yes,
Miami- Pittsburgh is a stirring kickoff for the 2006 season, and the Colts
versus the Giants offers the Manning Family Drama, and the Terrell Owens Show
opens in Jacksonville, and all the rest of the carnival. But there are other
games that are just as intriguing. This isn't a gambling column, but never have
I seen one weekend in which so many traps have been laid for your faithful
forecaster and his followers.
By traps I mean
games in which the oddsmakers in Vegas are practically begging people to go
with certain teams. Three jump out. Philly opened as a three-point favorite at
Houston and moved to 31/2 eight minutes later. Honestly, can you see anyone in
his or her right mind taking the underdog? As of Monday, the Texans' running
back corps consisted of a 2006 sixth-round draft choice, second-year pro
Vernand Morency, and Giants and Broncos castoff Ron Dayne. The Eagles,
guaranteed, will sweep the handicappers' box in your local paper. Guys in the
barbershop will be lining up to pick them. And thus we have a classic trap.
San Diego at
Oakland is another one. Is there any reason to take the Raiders and three
points? Six, maybe, but three? San Diego has won the last five, only one of
them closer than seven points.
Finally the Jets,
with problems at running back and wide receiver, are only three-point underdogs
in Tennessee, a team with superior talent at most positions. Seven points
wouldn't be out of line, but what the oddsmakers are saying is, "Look what
we're offering you ... a steal." No one could like the Jets, right?
Except me. I will
not be trapped. I see New York's defense forcing turnovers in a sloppy game. I
like the Jets. And I won't be trapped into following the line that forms behind
the Chargers. Philip Rivers hasn't gotten it done yet, and the Black Hole by
the Bay is not a good place to start. The only thing that worries me is the
Oakland offensive line's trying to block those superior San Diego rushers,
Shawne Merriman and his bunch. I think the Raiders will do it. Oakland is my
choice.
My formula has
run out where the Texans are involved, and I just don't have the guts to give
it another play. Philly is the pick, and this will probably be the one I'll
lose big.
My upset special
is the Giants over the Colts. Indy's playing a pat hand, with everyone
returning on offense except Edgerrin James-but that's a big except. I've seen
too many games in which he bailed them out by muscling first downs. Rookie
Joseph Addai will be a fine player someday, but I don't think he's ready to
carry that load just yet. This season the Giants will reveal just how good
their defense can be.
Pittsburgh will
throw the blitzers at Daunte Culpepper and challenge his mobility. I think
he'll do O.K., but I don't know whether he'll have time to get the ball to
Chris Chambers downfield. He'll still do better than Charlie Batch will against
the Miami defense. Big Ben Roethlisberger's absence(appendectomy) makes a tough
pick easy. Dolphins to win it.
I think Carson
Palmer and his Bengals wideouts will put more points on the board than the
Chiefs' running game will, so I'll go with Cincy in an upset. And here are a
couple more upsets: the Baltimore defense, even though it's not what it once
was, to topple Chris Simms and the Bucs in Tampa; Dallas to win at
Jacksonville. Oh, and Chicago to beat Green Bay at Lambeau, another dull
pick.
Last season:
79-40