By Joe Smeltzer
This week,
something outrageous happened: Monday Night Football didn't stink.
Finally, MNF had
a matchup that felt like a heavyweight fight. Two of football's best teams—
with two of football’s best quarterbacks that are ready to take the torch when
Brady, Rodgers and Brees retire—went at it on ESPN, not NBC, and delivered not
only the best Monday Night game of the year but probably the best NFL game of
2018 period.
Yet, after the
Rams sealed a 54-51 win over Kansas City, people still found something to
complain about. Apparently, the contest was "too offensive-oriented,"
providing another example of the trend that is hurting football.
First off,
people who think that Monday's game didn't have any defense weren't paying
enough attention. Both teams lit up the scoreboard, but ultimately, LA forcing
six turnovers—two of which courtesy of the best defensive player in football,
Aaron Donald—is what won them the game. The Rams scored two defensive
touchdowns, so at least one team showed up on D Monday Night.
As for the
general issue of the NFL becoming similar to the Big 12 in that there's just too much
scoring, I don't buy into that theory as much as others, such as former Pittsburgh Steeler Brett Keisel, seem to. Now there are
instances where NFL games play more like a Pro Bowl than a Super Bowl—such as,
well, this year's Super Bowl—and that can get annoying. The way I see
it, however, is every game is different.
Good football comes in all shapes and sizes. A 6-3 contest doesn't have to be an
offensive stalemate, just like a 54-51 game doesn't have to be a glorified
7-on-7. There can be defensive struggles where the offenses move the ball, just
like it’s possible to have a shootout where a big turnover ends up deciding the
game. Those of us who watch football enough should know a good game when they
see one, and Monday Night's wasn't a good game: it was a great one that
probably won't be topped this season, and maybe not even next season.
Speaking of the
Big 12, there’s an excellent matchup Friday night in Morgantown. Like
Monday's game, this contest features two good teams with two elite
quarterbacks. Oklahoma's Kyler Murray and WVU's Will Grier are both Heisman
candidates and their teams are playing for a berth in the Big 12 title game
and, in Oklahoma's case, possibly the College Football Playoff.
All of this is
at stake, and the game will be played in front of one of the more hostile
crowds in the country, so given what that this matchup has going for it, I won't
be one of those that will have an aneurysm if the first quarter ends in a 14-14
tie.
Like every
sport, football has its problems, and maybe the game is becoming too offensive
oriented to an extent. How strongly fans feel about that is up to them, but it
shouldn't cloud their view of a classic that just happened to feature a lot of
scoring.
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