How do injuries and shakeups across NFL change Super Bowl picture?

There is a lot of news swirling around the NFL right now. We examine the impact of these shakeups and injuries between now and the postseason.

There is a lot of news swirling around the NFL right now. We examine the impact of these shakeups and injuries between now and the postseason.

Ranking the 12 greatest revenge games in NFL history

Tom Brady’s trip to Foxborough inspires a list of the most compelling revenge reunions in NFL history.

In case you somehow have escaped the hype thus far, this Sunday night marks one of the most eagerly anticipated NFL matchups in recent memory.

Tom Brady is set to lead the defending Super Bowl-champion Tampa Bay Buccaneers into Foxborough, Massachusetts, to face his former team, the New England Patriots.

It will be the first time Brady opposes the Patriots, whom he guided to six Super Bowl championships in 20 seasons. The game also will provide a delicious chess match between Brady and former coach Bill Belichick, one of the great defensive minds in pro football history.

Tampa Bay is a 6½-point favorite over New England, according to Tipico Sportsbook.

With all that in mind, Touchdown Wire ranks the 12 greatest revenge games in NFL history below.

American Century Championship leaderboard: Tracking 49ers

An updated look at where current and former San Francisco 49ers rank on the American Century Championship leaderboard.

The American Century Championship celebrity golf tournament at Edgewood in Tahoe began Friday and features a handful of 49ers and 49ers alumni.

The only current 49ers player in the field is kicker Robbie Gould, who has right tackle Mike McGlinchey tagging along as his caddy. Former 49ers Steve Young, Jerry Rice and Alex Smith are also playing in this year’s tournament with varying degrees of success.

This tournament takes on a little bit different system than traditional golf scoring in order to level the playing field some. Their scoring system is a modified version of Stableford rules according to the Golf Channel. Here’s how it works:

Albatross (Double-Eagle): 10 points
Hole-in-one: 8 points
Eagle: 6 points
Birdie: 3 points
Par: 1 point
Bogey: 0 points
Double bogey or worse: -2 points

We’ll keep this 49ers leaderboard updated throughout the three-day event. Here’s where the past and present 49ers stand:

Jerry Rice thinks he’d double his numbers in today’s NFL

The NFL is less physical than it was when Jerry Rice played, and the 49ers Hall of Famer thinks his stats would explode if he played now.

How good would Jerry Rice be if he entered the league now? The Hall of Famer estimates he’d be roughly twice as good in the modern, offense-friendly, pass-happy NFL.

Rice joined NBC Sports’ Brother From Another at the American Century Championship golf tournament in Tahoe and talked about how he’d fare in today’s game. The NFL’s greatest receiver said his numbers would skyrocket thanks to a dip in physicality.

“First of all, the game really favors the wide receiver now, because you can’t put your hands on him,” Rice told Michael Smith and Michael Holley. “Linebackers can’t take shots at you coming across the middle anymore. It’s kind of hard because it’s hypothetical, I probably might be able to like double everything.”

Rice is already leaps and bounds ahead of every other player in receptions, receiving yards and receiving touchdowns, and it’s less than a reach to assume he’d amass even greater numbers if he stepped into this version of pro football.

Doubling his numbers seems perhaps a little farfetched, but it got us wondering what that would look like.

Here are his real numbers:

Receptions: 1,549
Receiving yards: 22,895
Receiving touchdowns: 197

Here’s what those numbers look like doubled:

Receptions: 3,098
Receiving yards: 45,790
Receiving touchdowns: 394

His career totals are already comical. Doubling them puts them in a realm somewhere north of absurdity.

For context, Rice played 303 games and averaged 5.1 receptions for 75.6 yards and 0.65 touchdowns per contest. Those are incredible numbers over a 20-year span.

Doubling them across a 20-year sample shines a light on just how insanely productive a player would have to be to reach those totals.

Rice would need to average 10.2 catches, 151.1 yards and 1.3 touchdowns per game. Last year Packers WR Davante Adams was the NFL’s leader with 8.2 catches per game. He also led the league in yards per game at 98.1, and he averaged 1.3 touchdowns per game with 18 in 14 contests. Rice would need to blow him away in the first two categories on average for two decades.

While all of those numbers put Rice’s ambitious hypothetical goals into their nigh impossible perspective, it’s hard to put anything past him considering the numbers he amassed during a much more physical, run-heavy era of NFL football. He’d surely be more productive than he is now, but even doubling his numbers might be a stretch for the GOAT.

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WATCH: Jerry Rice has some encouragement for Ohio State quarterback Justin Fields

NFL Hall of Fame receiver Jerry Rice had an encouraging and endorsing message for Ohio State quarterback Justin Fields. Watch.

Ohio State quarterback Justin Fields is still hearing about flaws in his game, and now the G.O.A.T. of all NFL receivers is coming to his defense.

There aren’t too many former NFL football players that you’d want to have in your corner than Hall of Famer Jerry Rice. He came out of little-known Mississippi Valley State and proved everyone wrong. Many believed he didn’t have the speed and athletic ability to make it at the next level. Over 22,000 yards, 1,500 receptions, and almost 200 touchdowns later (all still tops in NFL history), and we now know many were severely mistaken.

Rice’s former team, the San Francisco 49ers, own the No. 3 overall pick, and it sounds like there’s a good chance the Ohio State quarterback will be there for the taking. Rice didn’t go as far as lobbying for Fields to have his name called by the Niners, but he did have some encouragement for the former Heisman finalist.

“Good morning G.O.A.T.S, what’s going on? Justin Fields, hey man, don’t worry about what they’re saying about you brother,” Rice said. “We know that you’re a hard worker and that you enjoy what you’re doing on the football field. You inspire your teammates to be better. Hey, they said the same thing about me. They said I couldn’t run a 40 (yard dash). Yeah, I might have run a 4.5, 4.6, I’m not even sure. But for one thing — they didn’t clock me on my way to the end zone– couldn’t nobody catch me. So hey, just let that stuff blow over your head man. Congratulations. I’m sure you’re looking forward to the draft, and hopefully, you go high. Hey, the G.O.A.T. is out.”

If you’d like to see Rice deliver the message himself, here’s the video he shared to his Instagram account.

We hear you Jerry, and we couldn’t agree more.

Emotions in Motion, Part 3: How Bill Walsh (accidentally) saw the future of pre-snap deception

Bill Walsh is known for all kinds of innovations. Add an elevated understanding of pre-snap motion to that list.

Part 1 of Doug Farrar’s “Emotions in Motion” series presented an overall view of the advantages of pre-snap motion, and some level of angst as to the percentage of coaches who refuse to avail themselves of this cheat code. Part 2 took a deep dive into Aaron Rodgers’ enlightened views on the concept through the eyes of head coach Matt LaFleur. In Part 3 of the series, let’s get into the Wayback Machine to discover how Bill Walsh (no surprise there) became the first offensive play-designer to make pre-snap motion a primary construct of his playbooks.

Though most professional football offenses were far more formationally stationary in previous eras than they are today, there were those coaches who experimented with throwing defenses off-kilter with pre-snap motion. Sid Gillman and Tom Landry were two in a small group, and the fact that those  coaches are among the game’s all-time greatest innovators fits nicely with the idea of thinking outside the box to throw off defenses that were also far more cookie-cutter in previous eras.

But it was Bill Walsh, more than any other coach, who brought the gospel of pre-snap motion to the field in highly effective ways. Starting with his time as the Oakland Raiders’ running backs coach in 1966 — where he worked under Al Davis, who ingested most of what he knew about the passing game from his earlier time with Gillman — and then as the Cincinnati Bengals’ offensive coordinator under Paul Brown from 1968 to 1975, and certainly as the San Francisco 49ers’ head coach from 1979 through 1988, Walsh saw no issue with using pre-snap movement as a force multiplier in an offense that was as much art as it was science.

But as voluminous and well-thought as most of his innovations were, this came from random chance. In his autobiography, “Building a Champion,” Walsh described how he started to use the tight end in motion from one side of the formation to the other.

“We used the tight end in motion first by mistake,” he said. “Cincinnati was playing the Raiders in Oakland. In the third quarter, Bob Trumpy lined up on the wrong side by mistake. He had to shift over quickly to the other side, and all hell broke loose. At that time, the Raiders had very specialized [defenders]. They had a weak-side linebacker, they had a strong-side linebacker, they had a defensive end who only played on the tight-end side, and they would shift their two inside linebackers. They all ran into each other in the middle of the field, trying to adjust.”

After the game, offensive line coach Bill Johnson suggested to Walsh that the Bengals put motion in the playbook on purpose. Walsh said that they looked at each other and doubled over laughing at first, but that’s how motion became a seminal part of the Walsh offense. And the motion concept was mostly nightmarish for the more static defenses of the time. Against defenses with specific linebacker designations (weak-side and strong-side, strong-side being the linebacker lined up over the tight end), Walsh could direct his tight end to create unfavorable matchups.

“If a weak-side linebacker was fast but had trouble handling a big, blocking tight end, we could force him to defend on the strong side anytime we wanted, simply by moving the tight end to his side,” Walsh said.

Of course, when Trumpy went in motion, quarterback Ken Anderson still had to throw the ball to the right team, which didn’t always happen when the Bengals faced the Raiders in Week 5 of that season.

And here’s receiver Isaac Curtis motioning from outside to the slot against Oakland in the 1975 divisional playoffs. A nifty concept that would have worked but for the fact that linebacker Ted Hendricks sacked Anderson — one of four sacks the future Hall-of-Famer had on the day.

So… it took a few minutes to work out the kinks.

In any event, Walsh started to split Trumpy outside of the formation, forcing those linebackers to stray from their preferred places and opening up other alternatives. By the time he was hired in San Francisco as the 49ers’ head coach in 1979, Walsh was using receivers in motion, backs in motion… everything was about getting the defense off-balance before the snap even happened. Walsh saw the defense as a moveable canvas onto which he would paint exacting structural concepts, and motion was a major part of this. Walsh discovered that by putting different players in motion, a quarterback could discern whether the defense he was facing was man or zone.

“If a back goes in motion and the linebackers begin to loosen, the quarterback can expect a zone,” he wrote. “If a linebacker immediately moves with the back in motion, the quarterback can see man-to-man coverage.”

Again, this worked at a basic level because defenses were relatively rudimentary in the 1970s — the substitutions and hybrid positions of the current era were rarely seen. Teams use motion to discern coverage concepts to this day, though disguised and split coverage concepts are the norm in the modern age. Back then? Teams didn’t know how to adapt.

By the early 1980s, Walsh was designing all kinds of new alchemies. This 23-yard pass from quarterback Matt Cavanaugh to running back/tight end Earl Cooper against the New Orleans Saints looked like something straight out of Andy Reid’s Chiefs playbook in any of the last three seasons, with Cooper as the motion receiver from left to right, and both guards pulling the other way. The pulling guards influenced the defense to head away from Cooper, and the motion — not to mention Cavanaugh’s bootleg to the right — helped to negate the Saints’ all-out blitz. (H/T to John Turney of the awesome Pro Football Journal site for the video assist).

“We called that play because we thought they would be blitzing,” quarterbacks coach Paul Hackett said. “That’s why we wanted Matt to be moving. We used the misdirect action to buy him time, but that pass is delivered quickly anyway.”

By the last game of his time as the 49ers’ head coach and offensive genius, Walsh had developed it to his usual standard — ruthlessly effective, incredibly multi-faceted, and with more wrinkles than anybody else would have considered. The game-winning touchdown in Super Bowl XXIII against Paul Brown’s Bengals was a play called “Red Right Tight F Left 20 Halfback Curl X Up,” and here’s Walsh drawing it up, Michelangelo-style:

As you can see, Jerry Rice is motioning from right to left pre-snap, and as Joe Montana told me this week, that was not only by specific design to open things up for other receivers, it also turned Rice into an option receiver, which just seems unfair.

The one thing Bill noticed was that … I mean, we used [pre-snap] motion for a reason,” Montana said. “We’d used motions with Jerry [Rice] coming across the formation — this was right to left, but a lot of times, we’d run it the other way as fast as we could before the defender could catch up to him — the man trailing him. We’d bring him across again after throwing it to Jerry in the flat right away, and let him turn it [upfield]. The next time, we’d bring him over in the same look, and we’d start him into the flat, and he’d run an angle back in.

“So, we were hoping that if they were playing man-to-man, they would put him into that, but if not, that motion also kicked [the Bengals] into two deep safeties. That’s where the “X Up” comes into play, where J.T. [John Taylor] had to read. If there’s a free safety, he hooks it outside. And if they were split, and there was no safety in the middle, he does a little nod-out like he’s going to hook, and then he goes to the post. There’s not a lot of time and space between when he runs that hook and before he runs out of space in the end zone. You have to anticipate that.”

Montana also said that when Rice motioned and didn’t have a specific following defender, he knew he was facing a zone defense — one of the primary reasons teams use pre-snap motion to this day.

It’s not surprising that Bill Walsh was able to take something like pre-snap motion that was considered to be something between gimmickry and heresy for other coaches and turn it into a key element of his offensive designs. It’s also not a surprise that even to this day, a lot of coaches are still lagging behind his enterprising genius in this regard.

In Part 4 of the “Emotions n Motion” series, we’ll take a look at the teams who benefited the most in the 2020 season from pre-snap motion… and the teams who, despite that obvious advantage, used it at an unhelpfully low rate. 

Watching tape with Joe Montana: Hall of Fame QB recalls his most amazing plays

If you ever wanted to sit down with Joe Montana and get an inside look at some of the great plays in NFL history, you can now do just that.

There’s no better way to learn what really goes on in a football game than to ask players and coaches what actually occurred on the field. Tape and metrics will tell you a lot, but if you can get the inside intel from the guys who are actually drawing it up and executing it, it’s an entirely different dimension. The more detail the better in that case, which is why I’ve enjoyed watching tape with some of the NFL’s best players, and some of the NCAA’s best draft prospects.

I’ve been fortunate enough to watch tape with everyone from Patrick Mahomes to Richard Sherman, and three players in Super Bowl LV — Mahomes, Buccaneers running back Ronald Jones II, and Buccaneers safety Antoine Winfield Jr.

Since I started doing this with former NFL guard Evan Mathis in 2015 after Mathis challenged me to learn more about a sack he had allegedly allowed than I actually knew, the concept has always been enlightening, and has contributed a great deal to my football acumen, such as it is. Hopefully, those who have read these articles have felt the same way.

And then, once in a while, you just hit the motherlode. That happened to me this week when I was afforded the opportunity to speak with Joe Montana regarding his involvement in the new Fan Controlled Football league. Montana has been an investor and Chief Strategic Advisor since 2018, and we’ll be running a separate piece on Montana’s role in the league, as well as some very candid comments about one of the league’s most prominent quarterbacks — one Jonathan Paul Manziel.

But when I realized that I’d have quite a few extra minutes of scheduled time with Montana, I thought it would be interesting for me, and for our readers, to dive back into the low-def, No-22 of the 1980s and go over some of the most important and amazing plays of the decade with the man who defined it.

So, without further ado, here’s the opportunity to go under the hood with one of the greatest players in NFL history, who worked his magic with the greatest offensive mind in NFL history in Bill Walsh, and find out just how this was all done — at a forensic level.

Folks, it’s time to watch tape with Joe Montana.

Michael Irvin puts Randy Moss on blast over Jerry Rice ranking

Michael Irvin questioned whether Randy Moss had something wrong with his mind for questioning whether Jerry Rice is the G.O.A.T.

There’s a full-blown, raging battle going on between Hall of Fame wide receivers.

Randy Moss’ comments on the Terrell Owens podcast that he was the greatest wideout of all-time and T.O. was second rankled Jerry Rice. Now, Dallas Cowboys Hall of Famer Michael Irvin has jumped into the fray, basically questioning Moss’ sanity.

“Jerry Rice is the greatest of all time,” Irvin said on 95.7 The Game’s “Damon, Ratto and Kolsky” show. “If anybody says anything other than that, they need to see some kind of doctor to examine his cranium. Period.”

Irvin is on firm turf as Rice’s statistics and resume stand far above those posted by any other wideout in NFL history.

“You gotta pay homage to what this man has done. … This shouldn’t even be a discussion,” Irvin said. “I got Jerry Rice up there with the greatest player ever, period. I don’t wanna hear wide receiver. I’m talking about period, of all time.

“This discussion should not be a discussion.”

So long as diva wide receivers have mouths, there is going to be a discussion, no matter how off-base their opining might be. It is what they do because their personalities are nothing short of art forms.

 

Jerry Rice sends message to Randy Moss in G.O.A.T. debate

The G.O.A.T. Jerry Rice with a brief response to Randy Moss before he took it down on IG

The G.O.A.T. has spoken … and then taken his point down from an Instagram post.

Jerry Rice’s response to Randy Moss claiming he was the greatest NFL wide receiver was up on Instagram long enough for 38,000 likes.

Moss had made his claim earlier in the week on Terrell Owens’ podcast. In the process, he added Rice was third, maybe fourth on the all-time list.

The numbers speak for themselves. Jerry Rice is the G.O.A.T. and no one will likely match his numbers.