Monday, May 14, 2012

The woman behind the man who built the New York Giants


By Craig Ellenport

I doubt many of Peter King’s readers knew who Lovie Young was when they read the news in this week’s MMQB column that she had passed away last Thursday. She was the widow of the late George Young, architect of the New York Giants teams that won two Super Bowls under his reign as general manager.

I never met Lovie Young, but I did have the honor of talking to her just a few weeks ago. Though she was weakened by cancer, she was very gracious and offered her time to speak with me for a book project that focuses on how her husband built the Giants, almost from the ground up, when he was hired just two months after the debacle known as “The Miracle at the Meadowlands.”

There was never any doubt that Lovie was extremely proud of George, and his storied NFL career really had nothing to do with that. George was an incredibly popular high school coach and educator in Baltimore long before he drafted Phil Simms and Lawrence Taylor, long before he hired Bill Parcells, long before he laid the foundation that has kept the Giants successful long after he retired.

Lovie explained to me that George got his NFL break in the late ‘60s, when then-Baltimore Colts head coach Don Shula needed someone to evaluate players on film for him. Shula was impressed with George’s work, enough so to offer him a job with the Colts in 1968.

“But George had been so big in Baltimore and so popular, that I didn’t really think it was that big a deal,” said Lovie. “Isn’t that strange? But it’s true.”

Ten years later, after serving a number of roles under Shula with both the Colts and Miami Dolphins, Young was hired as GM of the Giants. It was never a job George aspired to, Lovie said. “He wasn’t interested (in being the boss),” she said. “He was interested in the franchise. The franchise was the thing that always fascinated him about the Giants. He always said, ‘Remember, they don’t love me, they don’t love you. They love the team.’”

One Giants player who did love both George and Lovie Young was Hall of Famer Harry Carson (and he wasn’t even drafted by George; he was already on the team when the Youngs came to town). Carson developed a close bond with George. He spoke at his funeral in 2001 and continued to speak with Lovie on a regular basis after that.

“One thing that really stands out is that his wife would always be at the airport,” Carson told me when I interviewed him about George for the book. “Regardless of what time we would come in from playing a game, she would be there to meet him. And I’d think, ‘How did this fat, bald guy with these big glasses… how did he snag this woman?’ And she’d love him so much that she’d be at the airport after every away game to pick him up. I thought, he must really be smooth, there must be something else to George.”

There was an awful lot to George, for which Giants fans can be eternally grateful. One of them was a strong woman by his side.

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Saints Bountygate will overshadow big moment for Brees


By Craig Ellenport

Some thoughts regarding the New Orleans Saints’ bountygate fallout, now that four players have been suspended for various lengths of time to go along with the coach and front office punishments:

Streak overshadowed
All the focus on how the Saints play without Sean Payton and Joe Vitt on the sidelines and without defensive standouts Jonathan Vilma and Will Smith through the first quarter of the season (Payton and Vilma the entire season), is going to overshadow and take away from what should be one of the coolest stories of the 2012 NFL season.

Drew Brees enters the season with a streak of at least one touchdown pass in 43 consecutive games. That’s four shy of the record held by Johnny Unitas – and I am not in the minority when I say I thought that was the most unattainable record in NFL history. (That honor now belongs to Brett Favre for his iron-man starting streak.)

Assuming Brees does keep the streak going – and obviously the Saints will be passing a lot regardless of how their defense plays – he will tie the record in Week 4 when New Orleans is at Green Bay. He’ll then have a chance to break the record in Week 5 at home vs. his old team, the San Diego Chargers – a nationally-televised Sunday night game.

It’s been 52 years since Unitas’ streak ended. If Brees breaks the record, it could easily be one that stands another 52 years, at least. Too bad the fanfare will be overshadowed by a media that is consumed with the Saints’ punishment.

Still the one
I agree with NFL.com’s Steve Wyche, who said on NFL Network Wednesday morning that he thinks the Saints remain the team to beat in the NFC South despite being shorthanded on the field and the sidelines.

Not taking anything away from Payton’s value as the head coach, but Brees is much like Peyton Manning in his ability to serve as an on-field coach and leader of the offense. The Saints will have no trouble scoring points this year. The defense, meanwhile, ranked 24th in 2011 in yards allowed per game and the team still finished 13-3 and won the division by three games. The Falcons remain a dangerous team; the Panthers and Buccaneers will both be improved. But none of those teams are as good as the Saints, suspensions or not.

The Vegas angle
Between the extra incentive on Brees and the offense to carry this team and the defensive holes that got bigger with the player suspensions, will the folks in Vegas have to think long and hard before setting the over/unders for Saints games?

They were used to setting that number high to begin with. Only the Green Bay Packers last season had a greater overall point total (combined for and against) than the Saints. For the record, here are the four teams with the highest average total points per game in 2011:

Green Bay Packers -- 57.4
New Orleans Saints -- 55.4
Detroit Lions -- 53.8
New England Patriots -- 53.4

It’s a safe bet the Saints will allow more points in 2012 and score at least as many as they did last year. It’ll be interesting to see how Vegas adjusts.