Russell Baxter – a.k.a.
@BaxFootballGuru – tweeted this NFL stat last night:
Best regular season W-L record, 2010-12:
New England Patriots 39-9
Atlanta Falcons 36-12
Green Bay Packers 36-12
Baltimore Ravens 34-14
Pittsburgh Steelers 32-16
New Orleans Saints 31-17
San Francisco 49ers 30-17-1
Interesting. So of the seven teams with
the best overall regular-season record over the last three seasons, four of
them are playing this weekend in the conference championship games, one lost in
the divisional round… and two – the Saints and the Steelers – missed the
playoffs entirely.
What does this mean? It indicates the
Saints and Steelers had pretty significant dropoffs this season. Neither was a
huge surprise, however, seeing as the Saints faced the distraction of
Bounty-gate and the Steelers dealt with heavy doses of injury and aging.
The Packers, at least, have a Lombardi
Trophy to show for this three-year success. That leaves the four teams playing
this Sunday. The Patriots are no strangers to the Super Bowl and were there
just a year ago. The Ravens haven’t been there since 2000 and the Falcons and
49ers must go back to the ‘90s for their last trips to the big game.
Which of these four will get to New
Orleans for Super Bowl XLVII? Here’s how it will go down:
49ers at Falcons:
While not spectacular, the Falcons
defense has been every bit as solid as the 49ers defense this season. Atlanta
has only allowed more than 28 points twice this season and did not allow more
than 31 at all. San Francisco allowed more than 31 twice. The star of this game
will be Falcons defensive coordinator Mike Nolan, who will find a way to keep
his defense disciplined enough to not get beat by Colin Kaepernick. And if
Kaepernick is in check, then Matt Ryan will have little trouble scoring enough
points to send the Falcons to the Super Bowl.
The pick: Falcons 23, 49ers 17
Ravens at Patriots:
Is it crazy to think that New England –
a team that gave up a gazillion yards a game earlier this season – could
actually be the best defense still alive in the postseason? Maybe, but there’s
something to it. The midseason acquisition of cornerback Aqib Talib has
something to do with that; the maturation of young players with talent has
something to do with that. And oh, yeah, there’s that Vince Wilfork guy up
front. Even if you don’t buy into the improvement of the Patriots defense, you
know that Bill Belichick will find a way to neutralize the Ravens’ most
dangerous weapon, receiver Torrey Smith. That being the case, and considering
you know Tom Brady and the offense will get their share of points, then Ray
Rice must have a monster game to keep the Ravens in this thing. Won’t happen.
The pick: Patriots 27, Ravens 20
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