Championship Preview
January 14, 2015
Seattle (-7.5, 47) vs. Green Bay – Sunday, 3:00 p.m. ET
The Seahawks and Packers meet in Seattle on Sunday afternoon for the NFC Championship. It’s a rematch from the very first game of the NFL season when the Seahawks easily dispatched GB at home, 36-16. Seattle’s defense dominated that matchup as QB Aaron Rodgers completed 23-of-33 passes for a measly 189 yards with 1 TD and 1 INT while RB Eddie Lacy rushed for just 34 yards on 12 carries. For Seattle, Russell Wilson had a workmanlike performance on offense (19-of-28 for 191 yards and 2 scores) while RB Marshawn Lynch did the heavy lifting out of the backfield (20 carries, 110 yards, 2 TD).
It’s been 19 weeks since that matchup and both teams are undoubtedly different from that September night, but the Seahawks will again play at home and will be the odds-on favorite to win this one. Green Bay’s main concern heading into this one is how Rodgers’ injured calf holds up against arguably the best defense in the NFL. Rodgers was noticeably hobbled in last week’s game against the Cowboys, especially in the 1st half when he completed just 9-of-15 passes for 90 yards and 1 TD. He was able to step up his play in the 2nd half (15-of-20 for 226 yards and 2 TD), but his mobility is still a major question mark heading forward.
Seattle is No. 1 against the pass (186 pass YPG) and the 17 pass TD allowed is good for No. 2 in the NFL. While the sack totals aren’t that high (37 sacks ranked 20th in the NFL), Seattle does a great job of pressuring the opposing QB and forcing mistakes (+9 in TO differential). While Seattle’s defense gets most of the publicity, it’s QB Russell Wilson that continues to impress in big games. In six career playoff games, Russell Wilson is 5-1 SU with 9 pass TD to just 1 INT. Last week with the Panthers limiting Marshawn Lynch and this Seahawks rushing attack, Wilson stepped up with 268 pass yards and 3 TD. He rarely makes mistakes and is always a threat to run it (849 rush yards in the regular season).
Green Bay’s defense isn’t statistically great, but isn’t nearly as bad as some of the talking heads make it out to be. Eight of the last nine opponents have been held to 21 points or less and the Packers finished an NFL-best +14 in turnover ratio. Seattle is 7-0 SU & 6-0-1 ATS in its last seven games. The Seahawks won those seven games by 15.5 PPG, each coming by 10+ points. The defense has held those last seven opponents to just 57 total points (8.1 PPG), including four home opponents to 33 total points. Overall they are 8-1 SU and 6-2-1 ATS at CenturyLink Field. They’ve beaten the likes of Green Bay by 20 points, Arizona by 16, San Francisco by 10, St. Louis by 14, and Carolina by 14 at home.
The Packers were 4-4 on the road this year and scored 18.1 fewer PPG on the road than at home with Rodgers markedly better at home (28 TD, 0 INT in nine games) than on the road (13 TD, 5 INT in eight games). Green Bay has gone 8-1 in last nine games. Offensively the Packers have averaged 32.4 PPG over that span behind a masterful Aaron Rodgers (22 TD, 2 INT), but it’s been an impactful Eddie Lacy that has been the main difference maker as the reliable 2nd option for this Packers offense. Lacy has 812 rush yards on 5.1 YPC with 9 total TD over the last nine games. He likely won’t have easy sledding against this Seattle defense that ranked 3rd in the NFL against the run, surrendering just 81.5 rush YPG and 8 rush TD. Seattle is looking to make it to the Super Bowl for the second consecutive year while the Pack are looking for their first trip since winning it in 2011.
New England (-7, 54) vs. Indianapolis – Sunday, 6:40 p.m. ET
On the AFC side of the playoffs, it’s one side we fully expected to be here while the other is a bit of a surprise. New England was our Super Bowl longshot (at 10/1 odds) at the beginning of the season and other than an inconspicuous 2-2 start, the Pats have been everything we envisioned them to be. Their opponent here, Indianapolis, arrived maybe a bit ahead of schedule. They have a world-class quarterback in Andrew Luck but the supporting cast leaves something to be desired. Still, a lot can be said for the Colts dispatching the Broncos in Denver last week, and they’ll take aim at another Goliath here in New England as a seven-point underdog.
New England has won 11 of its last 13 games with the only real loss over that span a five-point defeat to the Packers in Green Bay (the other loss came against Buffalo in a meaningless Week 17 game with home field advantage already locked up). The Pats avoided the upset last week against Baltimore by erasing two separate 14-point deficits to win, 35-31. Tom Brady finished 33-of-50 passing for 367 yards with 3 TD and 1 INT, leading the Pats to victory as they completely abandoned the run in the 2nd half (tallied just 14 yards on 13 carries for the game). Brady will take aim at an Indianapolis pass defense that had a very successful day against Peyton Manning last week (26-of-46 for 211 yards) but has had its share of struggles over the course of the year (27 pass TD allowed).
Since losing by 22 points to New England Week 11, the Colts have reeled off seven wins in their last eight games. Five of those seven wins have come by 11 points or more, including last week’s double-digit victory at Denver. They’ve been adequate on the road this season with a 6-3 SU record. However, last week’s win in Denver was the first road win over a playoff qualifier. They had previously lost to Denver by 7, Pittsburgh by 17, and Dallas by 35. They’ll try to continue their strong road play on Sunday in a place where few opponents find success.
The Pats are 8-1 SU at home with the lone loss coming in the aforementioned meaningless Week 17 game against Buffalo. They own a +14.9 average point differential in those nine home games and that includes quality wins over Cincinnati (26 points), Denver (22 points), Detroit (25 points), Miami (28 points), and Baltimore (4 points). Overall they are 12-6-1 ATS in 19 home games since the beginning of 2013. In the first meeting this season on November 16th, New England rushed 44 times for a season-high 246 yards and 4 TD behind a huge day from Jonas Gray in the 42-20 victory.
Andrew Luck had a good game, tossing for 303 yards and 2 scores, but it wasn’t nearly enough for this offense to keep pace. It didn’t help that Indy had no help from its rushing attack, notching just 19 yards on 16 carries in that game. They haven’t been a great rushing team all season long, ranking 22nd in the NFL with just 100.8 rush YPG.
The Colts have gotten decent production in their two playoff games, however, totaling 213 rush yards on 53 carries against Cincinnati and Denver combined. That rushing attack could be the “x-factor” here. If the Colts can get a successful rushing attack going against this New England rush defense (9th-best in NFL in rush defense, surrendering just 104.3 rush YPG), they’ll be able to make it a game. New England last won a Super Bowl in 2004 but has made two trips there in 2008 and 2012 (both losses to NY Giants). Indy’s last trip to the Super Bowl was in 2010 (loss to New Orleans) and its last win was in 2007.
January 14, 2015
Seattle (-7.5, 47) vs. Green Bay – Sunday, 3:00 p.m. ET
The Seahawks and Packers meet in Seattle on Sunday afternoon for the NFC Championship. It’s a rematch from the very first game of the NFL season when the Seahawks easily dispatched GB at home, 36-16. Seattle’s defense dominated that matchup as QB Aaron Rodgers completed 23-of-33 passes for a measly 189 yards with 1 TD and 1 INT while RB Eddie Lacy rushed for just 34 yards on 12 carries. For Seattle, Russell Wilson had a workmanlike performance on offense (19-of-28 for 191 yards and 2 scores) while RB Marshawn Lynch did the heavy lifting out of the backfield (20 carries, 110 yards, 2 TD).
It’s been 19 weeks since that matchup and both teams are undoubtedly different from that September night, but the Seahawks will again play at home and will be the odds-on favorite to win this one. Green Bay’s main concern heading into this one is how Rodgers’ injured calf holds up against arguably the best defense in the NFL. Rodgers was noticeably hobbled in last week’s game against the Cowboys, especially in the 1st half when he completed just 9-of-15 passes for 90 yards and 1 TD. He was able to step up his play in the 2nd half (15-of-20 for 226 yards and 2 TD), but his mobility is still a major question mark heading forward.
Seattle is No. 1 against the pass (186 pass YPG) and the 17 pass TD allowed is good for No. 2 in the NFL. While the sack totals aren’t that high (37 sacks ranked 20th in the NFL), Seattle does a great job of pressuring the opposing QB and forcing mistakes (+9 in TO differential). While Seattle’s defense gets most of the publicity, it’s QB Russell Wilson that continues to impress in big games. In six career playoff games, Russell Wilson is 5-1 SU with 9 pass TD to just 1 INT. Last week with the Panthers limiting Marshawn Lynch and this Seahawks rushing attack, Wilson stepped up with 268 pass yards and 3 TD. He rarely makes mistakes and is always a threat to run it (849 rush yards in the regular season).
Green Bay’s defense isn’t statistically great, but isn’t nearly as bad as some of the talking heads make it out to be. Eight of the last nine opponents have been held to 21 points or less and the Packers finished an NFL-best +14 in turnover ratio. Seattle is 7-0 SU & 6-0-1 ATS in its last seven games. The Seahawks won those seven games by 15.5 PPG, each coming by 10+ points. The defense has held those last seven opponents to just 57 total points (8.1 PPG), including four home opponents to 33 total points. Overall they are 8-1 SU and 6-2-1 ATS at CenturyLink Field. They’ve beaten the likes of Green Bay by 20 points, Arizona by 16, San Francisco by 10, St. Louis by 14, and Carolina by 14 at home.
The Packers were 4-4 on the road this year and scored 18.1 fewer PPG on the road than at home with Rodgers markedly better at home (28 TD, 0 INT in nine games) than on the road (13 TD, 5 INT in eight games). Green Bay has gone 8-1 in last nine games. Offensively the Packers have averaged 32.4 PPG over that span behind a masterful Aaron Rodgers (22 TD, 2 INT), but it’s been an impactful Eddie Lacy that has been the main difference maker as the reliable 2nd option for this Packers offense. Lacy has 812 rush yards on 5.1 YPC with 9 total TD over the last nine games. He likely won’t have easy sledding against this Seattle defense that ranked 3rd in the NFL against the run, surrendering just 81.5 rush YPG and 8 rush TD. Seattle is looking to make it to the Super Bowl for the second consecutive year while the Pack are looking for their first trip since winning it in 2011.
New England (-7, 54) vs. Indianapolis – Sunday, 6:40 p.m. ET
On the AFC side of the playoffs, it’s one side we fully expected to be here while the other is a bit of a surprise. New England was our Super Bowl longshot (at 10/1 odds) at the beginning of the season and other than an inconspicuous 2-2 start, the Pats have been everything we envisioned them to be. Their opponent here, Indianapolis, arrived maybe a bit ahead of schedule. They have a world-class quarterback in Andrew Luck but the supporting cast leaves something to be desired. Still, a lot can be said for the Colts dispatching the Broncos in Denver last week, and they’ll take aim at another Goliath here in New England as a seven-point underdog.
New England has won 11 of its last 13 games with the only real loss over that span a five-point defeat to the Packers in Green Bay (the other loss came against Buffalo in a meaningless Week 17 game with home field advantage already locked up). The Pats avoided the upset last week against Baltimore by erasing two separate 14-point deficits to win, 35-31. Tom Brady finished 33-of-50 passing for 367 yards with 3 TD and 1 INT, leading the Pats to victory as they completely abandoned the run in the 2nd half (tallied just 14 yards on 13 carries for the game). Brady will take aim at an Indianapolis pass defense that had a very successful day against Peyton Manning last week (26-of-46 for 211 yards) but has had its share of struggles over the course of the year (27 pass TD allowed).
Since losing by 22 points to New England Week 11, the Colts have reeled off seven wins in their last eight games. Five of those seven wins have come by 11 points or more, including last week’s double-digit victory at Denver. They’ve been adequate on the road this season with a 6-3 SU record. However, last week’s win in Denver was the first road win over a playoff qualifier. They had previously lost to Denver by 7, Pittsburgh by 17, and Dallas by 35. They’ll try to continue their strong road play on Sunday in a place where few opponents find success.
The Pats are 8-1 SU at home with the lone loss coming in the aforementioned meaningless Week 17 game against Buffalo. They own a +14.9 average point differential in those nine home games and that includes quality wins over Cincinnati (26 points), Denver (22 points), Detroit (25 points), Miami (28 points), and Baltimore (4 points). Overall they are 12-6-1 ATS in 19 home games since the beginning of 2013. In the first meeting this season on November 16th, New England rushed 44 times for a season-high 246 yards and 4 TD behind a huge day from Jonas Gray in the 42-20 victory.
Andrew Luck had a good game, tossing for 303 yards and 2 scores, but it wasn’t nearly enough for this offense to keep pace. It didn’t help that Indy had no help from its rushing attack, notching just 19 yards on 16 carries in that game. They haven’t been a great rushing team all season long, ranking 22nd in the NFL with just 100.8 rush YPG.
The Colts have gotten decent production in their two playoff games, however, totaling 213 rush yards on 53 carries against Cincinnati and Denver combined. That rushing attack could be the “x-factor” here. If the Colts can get a successful rushing attack going against this New England rush defense (9th-best in NFL in rush defense, surrendering just 104.3 rush YPG), they’ll be able to make it a game. New England last won a Super Bowl in 2004 but has made two trips there in 2008 and 2012 (both losses to NY Giants). Indy’s last trip to the Super Bowl was in 2010 (loss to New Orleans) and its last win was in 2007.
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