I'm a huge Patriots fan and I'm very very happy that they won, especially considering the fluke play they lost on at least one of their two previous Superball appearances (helmet catch? Huh?) and actually considering the fluke catch that led to the last play of the game as well. After the game my friends and I sacrificed much of our 3rd legs' (among other things) in favor of the great UTR Goddess of Fairness who seemed to know best how to balance things out
Forever a good sport, especially on such a sporty day, she made sure that after the game some of her positive energy rubbed off each and every one of us. Hooray to the UTR Goddess of Fairness and to her generous husband!
Hooray!
But... I feel very sorry for the Hawks in regards to that last play that they called and not because they found themselves on the short end of it but because the way they seem to be taking it, especially taking it out on Pete Carroll, the man that basically got them there.
Monday-morning quarterbacking galore notwithstanding I believe that the last play call of the game for Seattle was a good one. Whether he was in his Beast Mode for this game or not, all throughout Pats defense had no problems with stopping Lynch. They stuffed him over and over again. His success rate with carrying for over 2 yards was probably no more then 30%. In fact at some point Russell Wilson began passing more and carrying himself more then handing it out to Lynch and I'm sure that Pat's success against Lynch contributed to those decisions. Moreover Pats practically stopped Lynch on the play before. Everybody were readying themselves for Lynch trying to bulldoze his way into the end zone and I'm sure that Seattle's coaching staff realized that in the nose to nose encounter there is no way Lynch would be overpowering Wilfork. With Pats defense gearing up for one type of play and one type of play only, and getting ready to push Seattle's offensive pile back, and with 20 seconds and one Seattle's timeout at hand and reasonably thinking 2 more plays to go, why not try something different? After all football is a game of trick plays.
I think the responsibility for the play's result lies squarely on the receiver who instead of placing himself in front of the ball and forcefully pulling it close to his chest and letting his comrades push him into the endzone, put his hands out in anticipation of catching it. That's the way I probably would've tried to catch the ball and that's why I'm not a football player

Butler just pushed his way in front of the receiver and grabbed the ball.
In fact the only blame that I can reasonably assign to the Seattle's coaching staff is that this play was designed not for one of their more experienced receivers like Baldwin or Kearse or for the hot hand like Mathews or tight end Luke Wilson but for Ricardo Lockette (who?! R u sure we're talking about the same type of football and not the soccer-football?)
If Hawks plays allow themselves to blame the coach for what I believe was basically a good call, there'd be a while before they see themselves back in the Superball no matter how many great players they'd have on their team. If in doubt, look at the 49ers. The Seahawks are still a great team with enormous future potential but Pete Carroll is one of the main reasons they're so great too. Ruining him will only ruin themselves.
One more thing. While I'm happy for Brady getting his 4th ring, especially considering the rage it often evokes from those not in NE, I can't agree with him being chosen as an MVP of the game. If it would be MVP of the tournament, sure, if for nothing else but for his out-of-this-worldly performance against the Ravens.
Yet as for this game, Malcolm Butler is the main reason that Pats are Superball champs so whether it would be for one play or many, he is the MVP of the game. Not the quarterback who throws two dubious picks.
Now, I'd like to discuss one more topic: Atlanta's hiring of the Hawks defensive coordinator as the head coach. No that I care all that much but I think this was an error. This is not Dan Quinn's defense. "Legion of boom" culture was instilled in Seattle way before Dan Quinn showed up there. This is not Dan Quinn's defense, this is Mike Holmgren's defense. Personnel might've changed some but I think in case of Seahawks the culture is more important then personnel. Just a thought.
-- Modified on 2/2/2015 12:51:40 PM
-- Modified on 2/2/2015 1:20:59 PM