Monday, December 26, 2011

2011 NCAA First Round Playoff-Arkansas-38, Virginia Tech-17

Fayetteville, AR-Arkansas used a 28-point first quarter explosion to bury the Hokies and advance to the NCAA Quarterfinals, 38-17. Razorback QB Tyler Wilson threw three first quarter TD passes and finished with 298 yards passing on 24 of 34 passing. Dennis Johnson ran for 99 yards and 2 TD for Arkansas. Virginia Tech struggled to maintain an offense all day. The Hokies ground attack was held to 84 yards, while the passing game struggled to convert the ensuing third and longs created by the lack of a running game. Logan Thomas avoided the big mistake, but could only manage 20 of 38 attempts.

The Razorbacks don't yet know their opponent yet, but they will be home for the NCAA Quarterfinal.





Virginia Tech Hokies..(11-3)-3-7-0-7-17
Arkansas Razorbacks..(11-2)-28-0-7-3-38

Ark-Johnson 46 run (Hocker Kick)
VT-Journell 21 FG
Ark-Childs 43 pass from Wilson (Hocker Kick)
Ark-Wade 8 pass from Wilson (Hocker Kick)
Ark-Wade 15 pass from Wilson (Hocker Kick)
VT-Wilson 1 run (Journell Kick)
Ark-Johnson 16 run (Hocker Kick)
Ark-Hocker 24 FG
VT-Boykin 13 pass from Thomas (Journell Kick)

Rushing (season totals in parentheses)
VT-Wilson-20-66-1 (286-1,693-10), Thomas-18-10-0 (155-426-10), Oglesby-3-8-0 (93-344-6)
Ark-Johnson-15-99-2 (116-736-5), Wingo-10-59-0 (106-499-3), Green-1-1-0 (61-201-5), Wilson-12-(-19)-0 (65-(-40)-4)

Passing
VT-Thomas-38-20-267-1-0 (401-235-3,066-20-9)
Ark-Wilson-34-24-298-3-0 (441-281-3,720-25-6)

Receiving
VT-Boykin-5-83-1 (62-814-6), Davis-4-64-0 (33-568-5), Coale-4-34-0 (56-821-3), Drager-3-26-0 (17-212-2), Wilson-2-10-0 (23-136-1), George-1-30-0 (2-67-0), Coles-1-15-0 (35-464-3)
Ark-Wright-5-63-0 (68-1,092-11), Childs-4-87-1 (20-279-1), Adams-4-53-0 (53-683-3), Hamilton-3-31-0 (34-547-3), Johnson-3-20-0 (25-273-2), Wade-2-23-2 (10-85-2), Gragg-2-10-0 (42-502-2), Wingo-1-11-0 (20-194-2)

Friday, December 23, 2011

2011 NCAA First Round Playoff-Georgia-22, LSU-17

Baton Rouge, LA-LSU dominated the college football in 2011, but they had trouble getting Aaron Murray and the Georgia offense off the field. Murray threw for 352 yards and 2 TD and the Bulldogs knocked off the top-tanked Tigers, 22-17. Georgia controlled all phases of the game, outgaining LSU, 481-254. If not for a pair of Georgia turnovers, the margin of victory would have been even larger.

Isaiah Crowell ran for 111 yards for the Bulldogs and helped to control the clock. LSU could only manage 40 yards on the ground. Despite rolling to a 13-0 record in the regular season, LSU could not manage a second consecutive victory over Georgia. The Bulldogs will travel to Tuscaloosa to face Alabama in the NCAA Quarterfinals.

Georgia Bulldogs.(11-3)-3-10-0-9-22
LSU Tigers........(13-1)-3-7-0-7-17

LSU-Alleman 26 FG
UGA-Walsh 49 FG
UGA-Walsh 27 FG
UGA-Mitchell 22 pass from Murray (Walsh Kick)
LSU-Ford 2 run (Alleman Kick)
UGA-Walsh 40 FG
UGA-Charles 22 pass from Murray (Pass Failed)
LSU-Shepard 15 pass from Lee (Alleman Kick)

Rushing (season totals in parentheses)
UGA-Crowell-29-111-0 (211-958-5), Thomas-7-31-0 (78-392-2), Samuel-2-0-0 (75-240-1), Murray-15-(-13)-0 (94-111-2)
LSU-Ware-14-21-0 (188-721-8), Ford-8-19-1 (131-774-8), Blue-3-6-0 (81-545-7), Lee-1-(-6)-0 (7-(-21)-0)

Passing
UGA-Murray-43-24-352-2-2 (414-242-3213-35-14)
LSU-Lee-35-17-218-1-0 (202-121-1524-15-3)

Receiving
UGA-Bennett-4-68-0 (35-384-5), Charles-4-59-1 (48-631-6), Mitchell-4-55-1 (42-669-5), King-4-54-0 (44-526-7), Conley-3-42-0 (19-330-2), McGowan-2-51-0 (9-135-1), Brown-1-21-0 (15-249-3), Thomas-1-5-0 (5-26-0), Crowell-1-(-3)-0 (8-52-1)
LSU-Randle-4-97-0 (54-1,001-8), Peterson-3-41-0 (20-213-1), Beckham-3-33-0 (39-470-2), Shepard-3-25-1 (17-215-5), Clement-2-4-0 (9-100-1), Ware-1-9-0 (11-84-1), Wright-1-9-0 (6-50-0)

2011 NCAA First Round Playoff-Baylor-42, Oregon-35 (OT)

Eugene, OR-Baylor and Oregon engaged in an epic shootout in the first round. The two teams combined for 1,169 yards and 77 points before Baylor triumphed in OT. The Bears were led by Terrance Ganaway's 209 rushing yards and 4 TD. Heisman Trophy winner Robert Griffin III threw for 338 yards and 2 TD. Kendall Wright added to his epic season with 8 receptions for 153 yards, including a 32-yard touchdown in the third quarter that gave Baylor a 35-28 lead.

Baylor fell behind 21-7 in the first half before two Ganaway touchdowns in the second quarter tied the game at the half. LaMichael James was legendary in a losing effort, running for 229 yards and 3 TD, while catching passes for another 47.


Baylor Bears..(10-3)-0-21-14-0-7-42
Oregon Ducks...(11-3)-14-7-7-7-0-35

Ore-James 31 run (Maldonado Kick)
Ore-James 24 run (Maldonado Kick)
Bay-Ganaway 4 run (Jones Kick)
Ore-James 47 run (Maldonado Kick)
Bay-Ganaway 63 run (Jones Kick)
Bay-Ganaway 7 pass from Griffin (Jones Kick)
Bay-Martin 28 run (Jones Kick)
Ore-Paulson 14 pass from Thomas (Maldonado Kick)
Bay-Wright 32 pass from Griffin (Jones Kick)
Ore-Tuinei 16 pass from Thomas (Maldonado Kick)
Bay-Ganaway 2 run (Jones Kick)

Rushing (season totals in parentheses)
Bay-Ganaway-28-209-3 (257-1,556-19), Griffin-18-48-0 (179-692-9), Martin-6-43-1 (46-311-3), Salubi-2-2-0 (55-232-1)
Ore-James-28-229-3 (250-1,875-20), Barner-9-34-0 (154-943-11), De. Thomas-9-31-0 (62-471-5), Da. Thomas-5-(-3)-0 (55-202-3)

Passing
Bay-Griffin-25-18-338-2-1 (394-285-4,336-38-7)
Ore-Da. Thomas-28-19-238-2-0 (344-213-2,731-32-6)

Receiving
Bay-Wright-8-153-1 (109-1,725-14), Williams-4-88-0 (57-983-11), Reese-3-72-0 (49-883-7), Najvar-2-18-0 (17-164-2), Ganaway-1-7-1 (7-59-2)
Ore-Tuinei-4-54-1 (44-495-9), Paulson-4-47-1 (34-475-7), Huff-3-39-0 (32-455-2), Vaughn-3-20-0 (17-204-1), James-2-47-0 (19-257-1), Hoffman-1-21-0 (11-154-0), De. Thomas-1-7-0 (43-578-9), Barner-1-3-0 (16-135-2)

Thursday, December 22, 2011

2011 After Week 15

2011 Playoff seeds after Week 15's action.

Week 15

Team...Record...Point Differential

1. Green Bay Packers....(13-1)...(+183)
2. New Orleans Saints...(11-3)...(+151)
3. San Francisco 49ers..(11-3)...(+142)
4. New England Patriots.(11-3)...(+140)
5. Houston Texans.......(10-4)...(+107)
6. Baltimore Ravens.....(10-4)....(+98)
7. Pittsburgh Steelers..(10-4)....(+67)
8. Detroit Lions.........(9-5)....(+63)
9. Atlanta Falcons.......(9-5)....(+60)
10. Dallas Cowboys........(8-6)....(+52)
11. New York Jets.........(8-6)....(+31)
12. Cincinnati Bengals....(8-6)....(+22)

----------------------------------------------

out Denver Broncos........(8-6)....(-51)
out San Diego Chargers....(7-7)....(+45)

Two teams out and two teams in after Week 15. Chicago and Denver lost and dropped out. Cincinnati and Dallas and moved back in. The top 8 stayed exactly the same. The only top 12 match this week is the Monday night game between #9 Atlanta and #2 New Orleans.

Sunday, December 18, 2011

2011 NCAA First Round Playoff-Wisconsin-34, Boise State-30

Boise, ID-Wisconsin earned a measure of revenge for last season's title game loss to Boise State by taking a trip out west and taking out the Broncos. The game was a classic, featuring 7 lead changes and a pair of great performances by 2 outstanding quarterbacks.

Russell Wilson led Wisconsin to victory by completing 24 of 29 for 272 yards and 3 TD. Kellen Moore kept Boise State in the game by throwing for 413 yards and 4 TD. The Badgers overcame 531 yards from the Boise State offense. Montee Ball scored his 39th TD of the season (which is really 5 behind Barry Sanders record; if we're counting Montee Ball's playoff total, we should count Sanders 5 TD from the bowl game after his record-setting season).

Wisconsin Badgers.........(12-2)-7-3-10-14-34
Boise State Broncos........(11-2)-3-13-7-7-30

BSU-Goodale 21 FG
Wis-Toon 13 pass from Wilson (French Kick)
Wis-French 28 FG
BSU-Shoemaker 25 pass from Moore (Goodale Kick)
BSU-Miller 13 pass from Moore (Kick Missed)
Wis-Toon 10 pass from Wilson (French Kick)
BSU-Miller 10 pass from Moore (Goodale Kick)
Wis-French 33 FG
Wis-Ball 14 run (French Kick)
BSU-Linehan 6 pass from Moore (Goodale Kick)
Wis-Byrne 11 pass from Wilson (French Kick)

Rushing (season totals in parentheses)
Wis-Ball-25-64-1 (300-1,823-33), White-13-53-0 (146-736-6), Wilson-9-14-0 (82-334-5)
BSU-Martin-22-113-0 (254-1,261-15), Harper-5-4-0 (119-557-8), Wright-2-1-0 (45-219-3)

Passing
Wis-Wilson-29-24-272-3-0 (313-230-3,151-34-3)
BSU-Moore-43-28-413-4-0 (448-328-3,920-45-7)

Receiving
Wis-Toon-4-40-2 (59-862-11), Pedersen-4-31-0 (33-370-8), Abbrederis-3-49-0 (54-863-7), Duckworth-3-33-0 (18-263-1), Ball-3-26-0 (23-281-6), Garner-2-41-0 (4-86-0), Doe-2-28-0 (4-32-0), White-2-13-0 (17-163-0), Byrne-1-11-1 (2-25-1)
BSU-Miller-5-73-2 (63-720-10), Shoemaker-4-96-1 (63-1,055-16), Burroughs-4-89-0 (49-530-1), Martin-4-57-0 (29-286-2), Moore-3-41-0 (23-258-1), Linehan-3-20-1 (26-272-6), Harper-2-13-0 (20-156-1), Efaw-2-1-0 (28-227-6), Boldewijn-1-23-0 (17-232-2)

Saturday, December 17, 2011

2011 NCAA First Round Playoff-South Carolina-34, Kansas State-13

Manhattan, KS-The South Carolina/Kansas State game posed a serious question; should I use a player who is injured in real life as if they were healthy in this game? After careful consideration, I decided to not take real life injuries into account for this (or any other) simulation. South Carolina's star RB Marcus Lattimore injured himself during the Gamecocks' 2011 season, but he was a part of lifting the team to a #9 finish in the BCS standings, so I decided he, or any other injured player in real life, would be able to be healthy on THPF in any simulation.

South Carolina wound up getting 122 yards from Lattimore and 110 more from Brandon Wilds as the Gamecocks won the battle up front and became the 2nd SEC team to qualify for the Quarterfinals. The Gamecocks defense held Kansas State to 172 yards for the game, and Lattimore did the rest. He scored on runs of 7, 9, and 31 yards to help South Carolina pull away in the second half.

South Carolina Gamecocks........(11-2)-0-10-10-14-34
Kansas State Wildcats.............(10-3)-10-0-0-3-13

KSU-Cantele 50 FG
KSU-Klein 6 run (Cantele Kick)
USC-Sanders 16 pass from Shaw (Wooten Kick)
USC-Wooten 24 FG
USC-Wooten 38 FG
USC-Lattimore 7 run (Wooten Kick)
KSU-Cantele 34 FG
USC-Lattimore 9 run (Wooten Kick)
USC-Lattimore 31 run (Wooten Kick)

Rushing (season totals in parentheses)
USC-Lattimore-26-122-3 (189-940-13), Wilds-13-110-0 (120-596-3), Shaw-15-22-0 (131-505-7)
KSU-Klein-34-66-1 (327-1165-27), Hubert-21-63-0 (209-996-3), Pease-8-31-0 (42-175-2), Rose-7-4-0 (16-39-0)

Passing
USC-Shaw-16-11-109-1-0 (187-123-1327-13-6)
KSU-Klein-5-1-8-0-0 (256-146-1753-12-5)

Receiving
USC-Jeffery-3-30-0 (48-644-7), Sanders-2-28-1 (28-366-3), Miles-2-15-0 (8-76-0), Jones-1-15-0 (13-158-1), Wilds-1-12-0 (16-148-0), Ellington-1-7-0 (18-218-1), Lattimore-1-2-0 (20-184-1)
KSU-McDonald-1-8-0 (9-141-0)

Friday, December 16, 2011

2011 NCAA First Round Playoff-Alabama-41, Clemson-6

Tuscaloosa, AL-The Crimson Tide used a 24-point second quarter to put away Clemson and advance to the NCAA Quarterfinals. Alabama's offense gained 442 yards against the Tigers. Quarterback A.J. McCarron led the Crimson Tide offense by throwing for 314 yards and 3 TD, including 2 to DeAndrew White. Heisman candidate Trent Richardson produced 173 yards from scrimmage, including 123 on the ground, and scored twice.

The Alabama defense held Clemson and super freshman Sammy Watkins to only 89 yards in the first half. By halftime, it was 31-3, and Clemson was effectively out of the game. Watkins was held to 49 yards of total offense for the day. The Tigers were led by RB Andre Ellington, who ran for 129 yards on 22 carries.

Clemson Tigers..........(10-4)-3-0-0-3-6
Alabama Crimson Tide...(12-1)-7-24-3-7-41

Ala-White 4 pass from McCarron (Shelley Kick)
Cle-Catanzaro 48 FG
Ala-Maze 19 pass from McCarron (Shelley Kick)
Ala-White 20 pass from McCarron (Shelley Kick)
Ala-Shelley 31 FG
Ala-Richardson 3 run (Shelley Kick)
Ala-Shelley 48 FG
Cle-Catanzaro 37 FG
Ala-Richardson 20 run (Shelley Kick)

Rushing (season totals in parentheses)
Cle-Ellington-22-129-0 (235-1191-10), Watkins-11-29-0 (42-258-0), Bellamy-3-5-0 (60-348-3), Boyd-14-0-0 (146-186-5)
Ala-Richardson-30-123-2 (293-1706-22), Lacy-6-16-0 (90-647-7), Fowler-1-5-0 (57-390-4), McCarron-8-(-16)-0 (34-(-49)-2)

Passing
Cle-Boyd-19-9-119-0-0 (472-283-3697-31-10)
Ala-McCarron-39-23-314-3-0 (333-219-2714-19-5)

Receiving
Cle-Ellington-3-31-0 (25-140-0), Watkins-3-20-0 (81-1179-11), Bryant-2-59-0 (9-260-2), Hopkins-1-9-0 (62-863-4)
Ala-Maze-5-59-1 (61-686-2), Hanks-4-59-0 (25-329-1), Smelley-4-48-0 (31-365-4), Bell-3-57-0 (19-286-2), Richardson-3-50-0 (30-377-3), White-2-24-2 (16-175-4), Williams-2-17-0 (16-198-2)

Thursday, December 15, 2011

2011 After Week 14

2011 Playoff seeds after Week 14's action.

Week 14

Team...Record...Point Differential

1. Green Bay Packers....(13-0)...(+188)
2. New Orleans Saints...(10-3)...(+129)
3. San Francisco 49ers..(10-3)...(+125)
4. Houston Texans.......(10-3)...(+122)
4. New England Patriots.(10-3)...(+122)
6. Baltimore Ravens.....(10-3)...(+118)
7. Pittsburgh Steelers..(10-3)...(+84)
8. Detroit Lions........(8-5)...(+62)
9. New York Jets........(8-5)...(+57)
10. Atlanta Falcons......(8-5)...(+33)
11. Denver Broncos.......(8-5)...(-33)
12. Chicago Bears........(7-6)...(+46)

-----------------------------------------------

out Dallas Cowboys.......(7-6)...(+36)
out Cincinnati Bengals...(7-6)...(+15)
out Tennessee Titans.....(7-6)...(+15)

Only one team left the top 12 (Dallas), and only one team entered the top 12 (Denver). The 49ers loss created a #2/#3 flip-flop between San Francisco and New Orleans. Houston and the Pats are currently tied for 4th; whoever wins that spot gets a bye. The Jets and Falcons moved up; the Bears slid back.

The top 12 matchups in Week 15 feature #4 New England at #11 Denver, and #7 Pittsburgh at #3 San Francisco.

Sunday, December 11, 2011

The 2011 NCAA Football Tournament

It's time for the 2nd annual college football tournament using the BCS for what it should be used for, namely to seed the top 16 teams in college football for a single-elimination tournament. Like last season, I will play these games over the next few weeks, culminating in an NCAA Championship Game. I ran this tournament on The Big Kovalsky blog last year, with Boise State beating Wisconsin for the national title. Boise State is back again this year, along with 15 other challengers for college supremacy. Here is the schedule for the first round...

2011 NCAA Football Tournament

Friday, December 16, 2011
12 pm EST-#15 Clemson (10-3) at #2 Alabama (11-1)
3 pm EST-#9 South Carolina (10-2) at #8 Kansas State (10-2)
6 pm EST-#10 Wisconsin (11-2) at #7 Boise State (11-1)
9 pm EST-#12 Baylor (9-3) at #5 Oregon (11-2)

Saturday, December 17, 2011
12 pm EST-#16 Georgia (10-3) at #1 LSU (13-0)
3 pm EST-#11 Virginia Tech (11-2) at #6 Arkansas (10-2)
6 pm EST-#14 Oklahoma (9-3) at #3 Oklahoma State (11-1)
9 pm EST-#13 Michigan (10-2) at #4 Stanford (11-1)

The first round features a rematch of the Championship Game from last season between Wisconsin and Boise State, as well as a rematch of Oklahoma and Oklahoma State from several weeks ago. The tournament features five teams from the SEC, four from the Big 12, and two each from the ACC, Big 10, and Pac 12, with only Boise State from a small conference (at least, this year). I will have results as they become available. ;)

Friday, December 9, 2011

1944 NFL Championship-Philadelphia Eagles-12, New York Giants-0

December 24, 1944

Weather-50 degrees, wind 16 mph WSW

The Philadelphia Eagles won the first world championship in their franchise history by dominating the New York Giants on the ground. The Eagles rolled up 254 yards on the ground, led by Mel Bleeker's 130 yards. Bleeker broke open a 6-0 game in the fourth quarter when he swept left, got the corner, and took it 58 yards to the house.

Steve Van Buren added 72 yards on the ground, and Jack Hinkle added 48 more, including 3 big third down conversions in the second half. The Giants were held to 149 yards offense as they were unable to mount any serious challenge to the scoreboard. Their best opportunity followed a Howie Livingston interception that gave the Giants the ball in plus territory. The Giants wound up going 4 and out, with Bill Paschal, who was held to 29 yards on the ground, getting stuffed on a fourth and one. New York's passing attack was a miserable 8 for 33 for 103 yards for the afternoon.

Philadelphia Eagles......(9-1-2)-0-0-3-9-12
New York Giants..........(9-2-1)-0-0-0-0-0

Phi-Zimmerman 15 FG
Phi-Zimmerman 30 FG
Phi-Bleeker 58 run (Kick Missed)

Rushing (season totals in parentheses)
Phi-Bleeker-13-130-1 (87-541-5), Van Buren-8-72-0 (99-590-6), Hinkle-14-48-0 (120-529-2), Steele-1-6-0 (60-253-5), Zimmerman-5-(-2)-0 (33-(-84)-2)
NYG-Paschal-21-29-0 (243-879-9), Cuff-10-25-0 (98-527-1), Soar-1-3-0 (12-11-0), Livingston-1-0-0 (90-386-3)

Passing
Phi-Zimmerman-19-4-44-0-1 (145-51-882-9-13), Sherman-2-0-0-0-0 (33-16-156-1-2)
NYG-Herber-18-5-75-0-0 (120-46-806-6-8), Soar-9-2-14-0-0 (24-10-165-3-1), Sulaitis-6-1-14-0-0 (23-5-67-1-4)

Receiving
Phi-Cabrelli-2-9-0 (19-199-1), Bleeker-1-24-0 (10-346-5), Ferrante-1-11-0 (5-92-1)
NYG-Liebel-3-39-0 (18-364-6), N. Adams-2-45-0 (19-453-1), Cuff-2-11-0 (15-159-2), Paschal-1-8-0 (2-11-0)

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

2011 After Week 13

2011 playoff seeds after Week 13's action.

Week 13

Team...Record...Point Differential

1. Green Bay Packers........(12-0)...(+158)
2. San Francisco 49ers......(10-2)...(+127)
3. New Orleans Saints........(9-3)...(+124)
4. Houston Texans............(9-3)...(+121)
5. New England Patriots......(9-3)...(+115)
6. Baltimore Ravens..........(9-3)...(+104)
7. Pittsburgh Steelers.......(9-3)...(+73)
8. Detroit Lions.............(7-5)...(+56)
9. Chicago Bears.............(7-5)...(+49)
10. Dallas Cowboys............(7-5)...(+39)
11. New York Jets.............(7-5)...(+30)
12. Atlanta Falcons...........(7-5)...(+25)

----------------------------------------------

out Tennessee Titans..........(7-5)...(+20)
out Cincinnati Bengals........(7-5)...(+16)

There are currently nine teams that are 7-5, so there is a logjam that's being decided by point differential. The Jets are new to the top 12, checking in at #11, with Cincinnati leaving the top 12. Otherwise, every other team held positions except for New Orleans and Houston, who flip-flopped between #3 and #4. There are no games featuring a top 12 matchup in Week 14, but with those nine teams angling for the last 5 playoff spots, there will be more jostling during the last month of the season.

Monday, December 5, 2011

1944 NFL Semifinal-Philadelphia Eagles-14, Green Bay Packers-7

December 17, 1944

Weather-33 degrees, wind 7 mph SW

Philadelphia used a consistent ground game to keep the Packers offense off of the field. The Eagles ran for 230 yards, led by Mel Bleeker's 96 yards on 14 carries. Bleeker also caught a 23-yard TD from Roy Zimmerman to give Philadelphia a 14-0 lead on the opening drive of the second half. Rookie Steve Van Buren added 74 yards and a TD on the ground, and Jack Hinkle rushed for 60 yards for the Eagles.

Green Bay scored in the fourth quarter to cut the lead to 14-7, but were unable to get past the 50-yard line for the rest of the game. Irv Comp threw for 177 yards for the Packers, 109 of those to Don Hutson on 8 receptions.

Philadelphia will face the New York Giants for the NFL Championship.

Green Bay Packers......(8-3)-0-0-0-7-7
Philadelphia Eagles..(8-1-2)-0-7-7-0-14

Phi-Van Buren 5 run (Zimmerman Kick)
Phi-Bleeker 23 pass from Zimmerman (Zimmerman Kick)
GB-Jacunski 8 pass from Comp (Hutson Kick)

Rushing (season totals in parentheses)
GB-Duhart-11-40-0 (62-223-2), Comp-9-23-0 (61-157-2), Fritsch-12-12-0 (106-334-4), Brock-5-6-0 (41-206-3), Hutson-1-1-0 (13-88-0)
Phi-Bleeker-14-96-0 (74-411-4), Van Buren-11-74-1 (91-518-6), Hinkle-14-60-0 (106-481-2), Zimmerman-2-2-0 (28-(-82)-2), Sherman-2-(-2)-0 (24-(-44)-1)

Passing
GB-Comp-29-12-177-1-1 (206-92-1336-13-22)
Phi-Zimmerman-21-8-53-1-2 (126-47-838-9-12)

Receiving
GB-Hutson-8-109-0 (66-975-9), Jacunski-2-36-1 (11-187-1), Brock-1-18-0 (5-92-2), Fritsch-1-14-0 (4-19-0)
Phi-Cabrelli-3-21-0 (17-190-1), Bleeker-1-23-1 (9-322-5), Ferrante-1-15-0 (4-81-1), Hinkle-1-(-1)-0 (3-33-0), McDonald-1-(-2)-0 (5-24-1), Gauer-1-(-3)-0 (3-32-0)

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

1944 NFL Semifinal-New York Giants-34, Chicago Bears-0


December 17, 1944

Weather-48 degrees, wind 21 mph SW

The New York Giants crushed the Chicago Bears, 34-0, behind 113 rushing yards from Bill Paschal and a stifling defense that has pitched 4 shutouts in their last 5 games. The Giants ran for 261 yards against Chicago, with Ward Cuff adding 77 yards and a TD and Howie Livingston running for 73 yards and 2 TDs.

Chicago could never get moving offensively, only managing 193 yards on offense as Sid Luckman was held to 90 yards passing. Chicago's offense was a juggernaut all season, but the Giants defense kept the Bears off of the field.

New York will host either Green Bay or Philadelphia in the NFL Championship Game.

Chicago Bears........(6-4-1)-0-0-0-0-0
New York Giants......(9-1-1)-10-14-10-0-34

NYG-Cuff 11 run (Strong Kick)
NYG-Strong 40 FG
NYG-Livingston 29 run (Strong Kick)
NYG-Livingston 2 run (Strong Kick)
NYG-Liebel 22 pass from Soar (Strong Kick)
NYG-Strong 14 FG

Rushing (season totals in parentheses)
Chi-Fordham-10-77-0 (83-458-4), Margarita-14-29-0 (102-492-4), McLean-6-4-0 (35-29-1), Luckman-2-0-0 (22-(-96)-1), Grygo-1-0-0 (54-322-2)
NYG-Paschal-26-113-0 (222-850-9), Cuff-12-77-1 (88-502-1), Livingston-5-73-2 (89-386-3), Soar-2-(-2)-0 (11-8-0)

Passing
Chi-Luckman-21-11-90-0-1 (164-82-1108-11-13)
NYG-Herber-16-5-80-0-0 (102-41-731-6-8), Soar-5-4-38-1-0 (15-8-151-3-1)

Receiving
Chi-Wilson-4-44-0 (28-309-4), Berry-3-24-0 (24-402-6), McLean-1-12-0 (20-426-5), Margarita-1-10-0 (16-140-0), Kelly-1-3-0 (1-3-0), Fordham-1-(-3)-0 (2-10-0)
NYG-N. Adams-3-66-0 (17-408-1), Liebel-2-33-1 (15-325-6), Cuff-2-13-0 (13-148-2), Weiss-1-3-0 (2-13-0), Paschal-1-3-0 (1-3-0)

The 1944 Season

Playoff seeds for 1944...

#4 seed-Chicago Bears (6-3-1)
Last Playoff Appearance...1943, lost NFL Semifinal
Playoff Record...0-3
All-Pro-QB Sid Luckman, C Bulldog Turner

Chicago has yet to win a postseason game in THPF, but they've been a playoff team every season, and 1944 is no different. Chicago started the season 1-2-1 before winning 5 of 6 at the end of the season to get in the playoffs. Chicago won a tiebreaker with Detroit and 2-time defending champion Washington. The Bears feature the best offense in the NFL, led by Hall of Fame QB Sid Luckman.

#3 seed-Green Bay Packers (8-2)
Last Playoff Appearance...1943, lost NFL Semifinal
Playoff Record...2-2, 1941 NFL Champions
All-Pro-E Don Hutson

Like Chicago, the Packers have been a playoff team in every season of THPF, but it's been 2 years since they have won a game in the postseason. Green bay started the season 6-0 before losing twice to potential playoff opponents in the final month of the season.

#2 seed-Philadelphia Eagles (7-1-2)
Last Playoff Appearance...first appearance in franchise history
All-Pro-T Al Wistert, RB Steve Van Buren

The Eagles are a playoff team for the first time in their history. Philadelphia was unbeaten through 7 games before losing for the only time in 1944 to Chicago. The Eagles feature the top ranked defense in pro football, allowing just under 56 yards rushing per game. Rookie Steve Van Buren scored 7 TD and picked off 5 passes for Philadelphia.

#1 seed-New York Giants (8-1-1)
Last Playoff Appearance...1943, lost NFL Championship
Playoff Record...1-2
All-Pro-G Len Younce, RB Bill Paschal

The Giants are steamrolling the opposition heading into the postseason. New York has won their last 4 games, pitching 3 shutouts. The Giants have held their opponents to only 7.5 points per game, allowing 3 TD passes while intercepting 34 passes. Bill Paschal led the ground game with 737 yards.

1944 Playoffs

December 17, 1944

Chicago Bears at New York Giants, 3 pm
Green Bay Packers at Philadelphia Eagles, 6:30 pm

December 24, 1944

NFL Championship Game, 6:30 pm

2011 After Week 12

Here are the 2011 playoff seeds after Week 12's action.

Week 12

Team...Record...Point Differential

1. Green Bay Packers.....(11-0)...(+155)
2. San Francisco 49ers....(9-2)...(+101)
3. Houston Texans.........(8-3)...(+114)
4. New Orleans Saints.....(8-3)...(+110)
5. New England Patriots...(8-3)...(+108)
6. Baltimore Ravens.......(8-3)...(+90)
7. Pittsburgh Steelers....(8-3)...(+45)
8. Detroit Lions..........(7-4)...(+70)
9. Chicago Bears..........(7-4)...(+56)
10. Dallas Cowboys.........(7-4)...(+45)
11. Cincinnati Bengals.....(7-4)...(+44)
12. Atlanta Falcons........(7-4)...(+32)

-----------------------------------------

out Oakland Raiders........(7-4)...(-14)
out New York Jets..........(6-5)...(+15)

Detroit's loss to the Packers dropped them from #6 to #8, and Chicago's loss to the Raiders dropped them to #9. The Saints blowout of the Giants allowed them to leapfrog the Pats into the #4 seed, although it's hard to imagine the Texans can hold the #3 seed with the injury mess they have at QB. If the season were to finish this way, the Dallas at Pittsburgh game jumps out as the headline first round matchup. Also, there would be an AFC North showdown with Cincinnati at Baltimore and an NFC North grudge match with Chicago at Detroit.

This week, there are some games featuring both teams in the top 12, like #11 Cincinnati at #7 Pittsburgh, #12 Atlanta at #3 Houston, and #8 Detroit at #4 New Orleans. I would expect more movement heading to the final quarter of the season.

Monday, November 28, 2011

1943 NFL Championship-Washington Redskins-14, New York Giants-7


December 26, 1943

Weather-36 degrees, wind 14 mph NW

Washington got 2 TD passes from Sammy Baugh, and their defense held the Giants to 181 yards as the Redskins rolled to a second consecutive NFL Championship, 14-7. Joe Aguirre caught a 9-yard TD pass from Baugh in the first quarter to tie the game, and Baugh found Bob Masterson for what turned out to be the game winner in the opening drive of the second half.

Baugh finished with 119 yards passing for Washington. Wilbur Moore led the Redskins ground attack with 79 yards. Bill Paschal led the Giants with 98 yards on the ground, scoring an NFL-record 12th rushing TD to give the Giants a 7-0 lead on New York's opening possession.

New York Giants.......(7-4-1)-7-0-0-0-7
Washington Redskins...(8-3-1)-7-0-7-0-14

NYG-Paschal 14 run (Cuff Kick)
Was-Aguirre 9 pass from Baugh (Masterson Kick)
Was-Masterson 7 pass from Baugh (Masterson Kick)

Rushing (season totals in parentheses)
NYG-Paschal-26-98-1 (196-760-12), Cuff-10-39-0 (102-658-4), Brown-6-14-0 (41-152-1), Leemans-2-3-0 (39-62-0), Nix-2-(-1)-0 (23-37-0)
Was-Moore-6-79-0 (54-328-3), Farkas-13-44-0 (139-414-5), Seymour-4-16-0 (78-291-0), Baugh-4-(-3)-0 (25-(-45)-0)

Passing
NYG-Nix-13-3-25-0-0 (78-31-444-3-4), Leemans-6-2-13-0-0 (93-39-373-5-5)
Was-Baugh-25-9-119-2-0 (282-153-2046-25-19)

Receiving
NYG-Adams-2-15-0 (12-101-1), Paschal-1-10-0 (11-88-2), Pritko-1-7-0 (2-19-0), Liebel-1-6-0 (14-216-3)
Was-Farkas-3-38-0 (23-246-4), Aguirre-2-28-1 (42-478-8), Masterson-2-22-1 (20-252-4), Lapka-1-26-0 (4-106-0), Moore-1-5-0 (34-594-7)

Sunday, November 27, 2011

1943 NFL Semifinal-Washington Redskins-10, Green Bay Packers-0

December 19, 1943

Weather-20 degrees, wind 12 mph SE, light snow

Washington's defense was dominant all day, holding the Packers to only 136 yards of offense and knocking them out of the playoffs for the second consecutive year, 10-0. Tony Canadeo was sacked 3 times and pressured all day, as Green Bay was limited to only 40 yards passing for the entire game.

Sammy Baugh was efficient throwing the ball despite the wind and snow. Baugh completed 11 of 18 and was able to convert third downs through the air all evening. Wilbur Moore scored the only touchdown of the game right before halftime. Moore also led the Redskins with 51 receiving yards.

Washington will host the New York Giants for a chance at a second straight NFL title.

Washington Redskins...(7-3-1)-0-7-3-0-10
Green Bay Packers.....(7-3-1)-0-0-0-0-0

Was-Moore 3 run (Masterson Kick)
Was-Masterson 12 FG

Rushing (season totals in parentheses)
Was-Farkas-16-43-0 (126-370-5), Seymour-9-43-0 (74-275-0), Moore-8-18-1 (48-249-3), Seno-4-11-0 (30-163-0), Baugh-2-1-0 (21-(-42)-0)
GB-Laws-8-41-0 (51-273-0), Falkenstein-7-29-0 (65-227-1), Fritsch-7-15-0 (61-184-4), Canadeo-8-8-0 (102-447-3), Uram-3-3-0 (18-56-0)

Passing
Was-Baugh-18-11-172-0-0 (257-144-1927-23-19)
GB-Canadeo-16-7-59-0-0 (145-63-934-9-12)

Receiving
Was-Moore-3-51-0 (33-589-7), Aguirre-3-30-0 (40-450-7), Masterson-2-30-0 (18-230-3), Lapka-1-41-0 (3-80-0), Seymour-1-14-0 (18-181-2), Farkas-1-6-0 (20-208-4)
GB-Hutson-4-26-0 (51-802-11), Jacunski-2-30-0 (26-558-3), Craig-1-3-0 (1-3-0)

Friday, November 25, 2011

1943 NFL Semifinal-New York Giants-35, Chicago Bears-0

December 19, 1943

Weather-21 degrees, wind 13 mph SE

I learned a valuable lesson in this one. I decided to play the game as I have so far in THPF, which means running the game with the lineups provided. I didn't realize that, not only does Sid Luckman not start for the Bears at quarterback, he isn't even an option. As a result, Bob Snyder, who threw all of 26 passes for the Bears in 1943, threw 30 of them in this game, and completed 3. He did manage to throw 5 to the Giants, who returned 2 of them for touchdowns. Dave Brown had 3 interceptions for the Giants, including one of the touchdown returns, plus a short touchdown run that made it 35-0, Giants. He is the first player in THPF to score on offense and defense in the same game.

From now on, I will check the starting lineups and start the players who received the most touches during the season. Chicago bows out for the third straight season in the Semis. The Giants get a crack at a world title against either Washington on Green Bay. Since the Bears got screwed by the people at WIS, I included the above team photo of their championship team IRL.

New York Giants...(7-3-1)-14-0-0-21-35
Chicago Bears.....(8-2-1)-0-0-0-0-0

NYG-Cuff 44 run (Cuff Kick)
NYG-Brown 45 interception return (Cuff Kick)
NYG-Paschal 8 run (Cuff Kick)
NYG-Dubzinski 44 interception return (Cuff Kick)
NYG-Brown 2 run (Cuff Kick)

Rushing (season totals in parentheses)
NYG-Cuff-12-96-1 (92-619-4), Paschal-23-90-1 (170-662-11), Nix-2-12-0 (21-38-0), Brown-3-7-1 (35-138-1), Trocolor-3-(-3)-0 (9-(-7)-0)
Chi-Clarke-15-28-0 (135-584-2), Magnani-8-27-0 (59-337-2), McLean-4-3-0 (39-130-1), Snyder-1-0-0 (7-(-20)-0)

Passing
NYG-Trocolor-6-4-34-0-0 (13-6-38-0-1), Nix-12-4-23-0-1 (65-28-419-3-4)
Chi-Snyder-30-3-37-0-5 (56-10-153-0-9)

Receiving
NYG-Adams-2-21-0 (10-86-1), Walls-2-18-0 (16-249-2), Liebel-2-11-0 (13-210-3), Paschal-1-4-0 (10-78-2), Cuff-1-3-0 (8-55-0)
Chi-Wilson-1-16-0 (22-309-5), Siegal-1-14-0 (3-43-0), Pool-1-7-0 (19-370-5)

The 1943 Season

Here are the playoff seeds for 1943, from lowest to highest...

#4 seed-New York Giants (6-3-1)
Last Playoff Appearance...1941, lost NFL Semifinal
Playoff Record...0-1
All-Pro-RT Al Blozis

In Mid-November, the Giants were 2-3-1 and heading nowhere, but they managed to string 4 consecutive victories together to end the abbreviated season and earn a playoff berth. New York used running backs Bill Paschal and Ward Cuff to control the clock and keep their defense off the field.

#3 seed-Washington Redskins (6-3-1)
Last Playoff Appearance...1942, Defending Champions
Playoff Record...2-0, 1942 NFL Champions
All-Pro-QB Sammy Baugh, LG Dick Farman

Washington is trying to repeat their championship performance of the year before. Sammy Baugh threw 23 touchdowns and intercepted 11 passes for the Redskins...think about that for a second, it boggles the mind. Washington started the season at 6-0-1, then lost 3 straight heading to the postseason.

#2 seed-Green Bay Packers (7-2-1)
Last Playoff Appearance...1942, lost NFL Semifinal
Playoff Record...2-1, 1941 NFL Champions
All-Pro-RB Tony Canadeo, E Don Hutson

Green Bay continued to feature Don Hutson, who caught 47 passes and scored 11 touchdowns through the air. Hutson also had 8 interceptions, which was second on the team to Irv Comp's 10 picks. Green Bay won 5 of 6 to close the season and secure a home game for the postseason.

#1 seed-Chicago Bears (8-1-1)
Last Playoff Appearance...1942, lost NFL Semifinal
Playoff Record...0-2
All-Pro-QB Sid Luckman, LG Danny Fortmann, C Bulldog Turner, PR Harry Clarke

I would imagine that if you're a Bears fan, I may be beginning to piss you off. That's certainly not my intention. Chicago steamrolled their way to another #1 seed. Sid Luckman threw an NFL-record 28 touchdowns for the top ranked offense in the NFL. Chicago hasn't had any success yet in the THPF, but they have a chance to turn it around in 1943.

1943 Playoffs

December 19, 1943

New York Giants at Chicago Bears, 3 pm
Washington Redskins at Green Bay Packers, 6:30 pm

December 26, 1943

NFL Championship game

1942 NFL Championship-Washington Redskins-14, Pittsburgh Steelers-7

December 20, 1942

Weather-29 degrees, wind 9 mph NW, light snow

Washington's defense held the Steelers to 201 yards, holding them scoreless over the last 52 minutes of the game on their way to a 14-7 victory and an NFL Championship. Sammy Baugh threw an early interception that Bill Dudley converted into a 7-0 lead. In the second quarter, the Redskins got their running game together and converted consecutive drives into touchdowns and a lead they would never relinquish.

Ray Hare was named MVP after running for 106 yards and a touchdown for Washington. Bill Dudley helped the Steelers stay in the game, leading the ground attack with 66 yards and adding 74 more through the air.

Pittsburgh Steelers (8-5)-7-0-0-0-7
Washington Redskins (12-1)-0-14-0-0-14

Pit-Dudley 10 run (Niccolai Kick)
Was-Hare 59 run (Masterson Kick)
Was-Farkas 3 run (Masterson Kick)

Rushing (season totals in parentheses)
Pit-Dudley-18-66-1 (194-802-6), Riffle-16-38-0 (143-568-5), Hoague-10-12-0 (83-193-1), Sandig-7-8-0 (63-145-3), Gonda-3-3-0 (21-203-2)
Was-Hare-5-106-1 (38-378-3), Farkas-14-46-1 (160-633-7), Todd-8-36-0 (85-310-0), Seymour-1-10-0 (60-241-1), Baugh-4-1-0 (28-57-1)

Passing
Pit-Dudley-8-5-74-0-0 (110-43-521-2-5)
Was-Baugh-17-7-70-0-2 (264-151-1728-17-13)

Receiving
Pit-Kichefski-2-22-0 (18-219-0), Cotton-1-28-0 (3-86-0), Bova-1-15-0 (4-51-0), Riffle-1-9-0 (4-59-0)
Was-Masterson-2-19-0 (26-353-2), Todd-1-16-0 (25-361-4), Moore-1-11-0 (14-149-2), Cifers-1-9-0 (19-205-1), Justice-1-9-0 (12-143-1), Farkas-1-6-0 (13-170-2)

2011 After Week 11

I was taking a look at the standings the other day and decided to make a mock up of what the 2011 postseason will look like when we get there in The History of Pro Football (THPF). Here are the 2011 playoff seeds after Week 11's action. I will make this standings list for the rest of the regular season.

Week 11

Team...Record...Point Differential

1. Green Bay Packers...(10-0)....(+143)
2. San Francisco 49ers.(9-1).....(+111)
3. Houston Texans......(7-3).....(+107)
4. New England Patriots(7-3).....(+90)
5. New Orleans Saints..(7-3).....(+85)
6. Detroit Lions.......(7-3).....(+82)
7. Baltimore Ravens....(7-3).....(+80)
8. Chicago Bears.......(7-3).....(+61)
9. Pittsburgh Steelers.(7-3).....(+41)
10.Dallas Cowboys......(6-4).....(+44)
11.Cincinnati Bengals..(6-4).....(+41)
12.Atlanta Falcons.....(6-4).....(+22)

----------------------------------------

out New York Giants...(6-4).....(0)
out Oakland Raiders...(6-4).....(-19)

That finish would make for some interesting first round matchups, including an NFC South matchup of Atlanta at New Orleans, Tony Romo and Dallas at Baltimore and their big play defense, and Pittsburgh at Chicago in what I would imagine would be a freezing Soldier Field.

Sunday, November 20, 2011

1942 NFL Semifinal-Pittsburgh Steelers-7, Chicago Bears-0

December 13, 1942

Weather-18 degrees, wind 12 mph WSW, light snow

For the second consecutive year, the Chicago Bears came steamrolling into the postseason as the top seed, favored to win an NFL Championship. And for the second time, they were unable to stop the run and were sent home in the semifinals, this time by Pittsburgh, 7-0. The Steelers used 190 rushing yards to control the clock, especially in the second half, when Pittsburgh had the ball for 21:31.

Pittsburgh plays a caveman style that featured 41 runs in 50 plays and a grand total of 2 passing yards for the game. Dick Riffle made the big plays for the Steelers, intercepting his fifth pass of the season in the fourth quarter, then slamming in from a yard away for the only score of the game on the ensuing possession.

The Steelers will travel to Washington for the NFL Championship. The Bears lose their chance for a perfect season and finish 11-1.

Pittsburgh Steelers (8-4)-0-0-0-7-7
Chicago Bears (11-1)-0-0-0-0-0

Pit-Riffle 1 run (Niccolai Kick)

Rushing (season totals in parentheses)
Pit-Riffle-12-63-1 (127-530-5), Gonda-1-53-0 (18-200-2), Dudley-14-40-0 (176-736-5), Sandig-6-21-0 (56-137-3), Hoague-8-13-0 (73-181-1)
Chi-Famiglietti-16-61-0 (134-564-8), Gallarneau-9-47-0 (77-339-4), Maznicki-7-32-0 (61-375-1), Clarke-3-6-0 (61-279-4), Luckman-1-6-0 (14-0-0)

Passing
Pit-Dudley-8-3-9-0-0 (102-38-447-2-5)
Chi-Luckman-19-8-56-0-1 (124-65-1080-10-14), O'Rourke-6-1-36-0-0 (94-38-987-11-16)

Receiving
Pit-Kichefski-1-8-0 (16-197-0), Looney-1-1-0 (8-60-1), Sandig-1-0-0 (7-103-0)
Chi-Siegal-3-65-0 (16-329-2), Wilson-2-8-0 (11-97-0), Pool-1-9-0 (11-330-5), Nowaskey-1-8-0 (7-136-0), Berry-1-3-0 (5-32-0), Gallarneau-1-(-1)-0 (15-290-3)

Sunday, November 13, 2011

1942 NFL Semifinal-Washington Redskins-38, Green Bay Packers-21



December 13, 1942

Weather-37 degrees, wind 9 mph WSW, light rain

Andy Farkas ran for 119 yards and 3 touchdowns to lead the Washington Redskins to a 38-21 victory over the defending champion Green Bay Packers at Griffith Stadium. Farkas was excellent in the red zone, but the whole Redskins ground game was dominant. Along with Farkas, Dick Todd finished with 79 yards on the ground and Ray Hare finished with 75. Washington ran for 305 yards as a team, as they controlled the clock, leaving the high powered Packers passing game off of the field.

Washington marched the length of the field for touchdowns the first 2 times they touched the ball against Green Bay. By halftime, Washington had a 28-7 lead and cruised to victory from there. Cecil Isbell threw for 151 yards and 2 TD for Green Bay.

Green Bay Packers (8-3-1) -7-0-14-0-21
Washington Redskins (11-1)-14-14-3-7-38

Was-Farkas 3 run (Poillon Kick)
Was-Hare 52 run (Poillon Kick)
GB-Fritsch 19 run (Hutson Kick)
Was-Farkas 1 run (Poillon Kick)
Was-Kovatch 2 pass from Baugh (Poillon Kick)
GB-Jacunski 62 pass from Isbell (Hutson Kick)
Was-Poillon 17 FG
GB-Hutson 5 pass from Isbell (Hutson Kick)
Was-Farkas 12 run (Poillon Kick)

Rushing (season totals in parentheses)
Was-Farkas-21-119-3 (146-587-6), Todd-12-79-0 (77-274-0), Hare-6-75-1 (33-272-2), Seymour-5-41-0 (59-231-1), Masterson-2-(-4)-0 (5-8-0), Baugh-4-(-5)-0 (24-56-1)
GB-Fritsch-5-80-1 (79-403-1), Sample-10-65-0 (67-320-4), Brock-9-12-0 (104-249-2), Isbell-2-1-0 (38-84-1)

Passing
Was-Baugh-22-12-134-1-0 (247-144-1658-17-11)
GB-Isbell-15-11-151-2-0 (283-157-2172-26-14)

Receiving
Was-Moore-3-24-0 (13-138-2), Masterson-2-26-0 (24-334-2), Justice-2-26-0 (11-134-1), McChesney-2-18-0 (10-118-2), Farkas-1-21-0 (12-164-2), Todd-1-17-0 (24-345-4), Kovatch-1-2-1 (13-92-2)
GB-Hutson-5-36-1 (79-1247-18), Jacunski-2-81-1 (10-206-2), Brock-1-13-0 (21-152-1), Uram-1-11-0 (22-431-4), Mason-1-9-0 (8-95-0), Riddick-1-1-0 (7-105-1)

Sunday, November 6, 2011

The 1942 Season

Let's count down the playoff seeds for 1942, from lowest to highest...

#4 seed-Pittsburgh Steelers (7-4)
Last Playoff Appearance...first appearance in franchise history
All-Pros-QB Bill Dudley

In real life, it took the Steelers until the seventies before they qualified for an NFL postseason. In this blog, the Steelers make their first appearance in the second season. Head Coach Walt Kiesling led his team back from an 0-2 start with a stout defense that allowed only 10.8 points per game. The Steelers are led by All-Pro Bill Dudley, who led the team in both rushing and passing. Pittsburgh won 7 of 8 games in midseason to earn a playoff berth in 1942.

#3 seed-Green Bay Packers (8-2-1)
Last Playoff Appearance...Defending Champions
Best Playoff Appearance...NFL Champions (1941)
All-Pros-WR Don Hutson

The defending world champions were led back to the postseason by league MVP Don Hutson, who set new NFL records for scoring and receiving that may take decades to break. Hutson even led the team in interceptions with 7. Cecil Isbell directed Curly Lambeau's offense with aplomb, becoming the NFL's first 2000-yard passer. After losing the opener to the Bears, the Packers ripped off 6 straight victories on their way to the playoffs.

#2 seed-Washington Redskins (10-1)
Last Playoff Appearance...first appearance in franchise history
All-Pros-QB Sammy Baugh, LT Willie Wilkin, RB Andy Farkas

The Redskins were a home loss to the Giants away from a perfect regular season. Sammy Baugh threw 16 TD for Washington, and a stifling defense has only allowed a total of 13 points in their last 4 games heading into the playoffs, and only allowed 3.3 yards a play for the season.

#1 seed-Chicago Bears (11-0)
Last Playoff Appearance...1941, lost NFL Semifinal
Best Playoff Appearance...NFL Semifinal appearance (1941)
All-Pros-QB Sid Luckman, LG Danny Fortmann, C Bulldog Turner, RT Lee Artoe, RE George Wilson

Chicago ran the table during the regular season with the top ranked offense and the top ranked defense in football. The defense pitched 4 shutouts and gave up only 154 yards of offense per game. The offense was led by All-Pro QB Sid Luckman and future Hall of Fame lineman like Danny Fortmann and Bulldog Turner

The 1942 Playoffs

December 13, 1942

Green Bay Packers at Washington Redskins, 3 pm
Pittsburgh Steelers at Chicago Bears, 6:30 pm

December 20, 1942

NFL Championship Game

Friday, November 4, 2011

1941 NFL Championship Game-Green Bay Packers-12, Brooklyn Dodgers-10

December 21, 1941

Weather-30 degrees, wind 18 mph NE, light snow

The Green Bay defense made a key goal line stand in the 4th quarter to save the game, then Cecil Isbell directed a two-minute drill to win it for the Packers. Brooklyn was facing a 4th and 1 at the Green Bay 34 with 1:56 to play. After a Packers timeout, Dodgers head coach Jock Sutherland decided to try the spongy weak side of the Green Bay defense with George Kracum. Kracum looked like he was going to get the first down, but his plant foot slipped turning the corner and he came up a half yard short.

Cecil Isbell would hit MVP Don Hutson for 20 yards, then Lou Brock for 7, then Hutson again for 20 yards. The drive stalled there, but Hutson would hit his 4th field goal with 36 seconds to play to win it for the Packers. Hutson would finish with 6 catches for 108 of Cecil Isbell's 175 passing yards. Hutson also made all 4 of his field goal attempts. Brooklyn's running attack kept them in the game with 195 yards on the ground, led by Merl Condit's 85 rushing yards.

Brooklyn Dodgers (8-5) -0-0-7-3-10
Green Bay Packers (12-1)-0-6-3-3-12

GB-Hutson 12 FG
GB-Hutson 13 FG
GB-Hutson 27 FG
Bro-Parker 6 run (McAdams Kick)
Bro-McAdams 13 FG
GB-Hutson 27 FG

Rushing (season totals in parentheses)
Bro-Condit-11-85-0 (112-490-4), Parker-12-57-1 (108-395-1), Manders-13-40-0 (140-623-5), Kracum-6-11-0 (63-197-3), Schwartz-1-2-0 (3-10-0)
GB-Hinkle-17-38-0 (163-495-5), Uram-8-34-0 (64-303-0), Paskvan-5-33-0 (51-181-0), Isbell-7-19-0 (87-402-1), Brock-3-12-0 (20-62-0)

Passing
Bro-Parker-15-6-51-0-0 (132-64-777-4-9)
GB-Isbell-22-10-175-0-0 (241-133-1721-15-11)

Receiving
Bro-Schwartz-2-18-0 (30-429-3), Manders-1-11-0 (7-78-0), Condit-1-8-0 (8-59-0), Hodges-1-8-0 (14-148-0), Wemple-1-6-0 (3-43-1)
GB-Hutson-6-108-0 (68-885-10), Mulleneaux-1-31-0 (10-247-2), Uram-1-23-0 (8-161-0), Brock-1-7-0 (23-314-2), Urban-1-6-0 (3-32-1)

1941 NFL Semifinal-Green Bay Packers-3, New York Giants-0

December 14, 1941

Weather-5 degrees, wind 8 mph W

The Packers and Giants played a defensive struggle at freezing cold City Stadium in Green Bay. The Packers defense controlled the game, holding the Giants to 150 yards on their way to the 1941 NFL Championship game. Neither team turned it over and penalties were few and far between despite the cold, a fantastically played game by both teams.

Packer QB Cecil Isbell played well in all phases, throwing for 67 yards, running for 66, and leading the defense with 5 solo tackles. Record-breaking receiver Don Hutson led the Packers with 4 catches. Hutson was responsible for the only points of the game, a 15-yard field goal in the second quarter. Green Bay ran for 179 yards against the Giants, led by Isbell and Clarke Hinkle, who finished with 64 yards on a game-high 17 carries.

Green Bay will host Brooklyn for the NFL Championship.

New York Giants (8-4) -0-0-0-0-0
Green Bay Packers (11-1)-0-3-0-0-3

GB-Hutson 15 FG

Rushing (season totals in parentheses)
NYG-Leemans-10-33-0 (110-365-4), Eshmont-8-30-0 (58-194-0), Marefos-6-21-0 (66-174-2), Franck-6-13-0 (54-114-3), Yeager-1-12-0 (23-79-1), Cuff-5-8-0 (33-165-0)
GB-Isbell-8-66-0 (80-383-1), Hinkle-17-64-0 (146-457-5), Paskvan-8-32-0 (46-148-0), Uram-7-11-0 (56-269-0), Brock-3-6-0 (17-50-0), Hutson-1-0-0 (5-22-2)

Passing
NYG-Leemans-10-4-45-0-0 (76-35-520-4-5)
GB-Isbell-13-6-67-0-0 (219-123-1546-15-11)

Receiving
NYG-Yeager-1-15-0 (12-235-3), Cuff-1-14-0 (20-331-2), Poole-1-9-0 (7-83-2), Eshmont-1-7-0 (2-11-0)
GB-Hutson-4-39-0 (62-777-10), Uram-1-14-0 (7-138-0), Hinkle-1-14-0 (9-92-1)

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

1941 NFL Semifinal-Brooklyn Dodgers-17, Chicago Bears-13

December 14, 1941

Weather-20 degrees, wind 12 mph NW

The NFL semifinal was supposed to be a formality for Chicago on their way to a second consecutive NFL title, but Brooklyn had other plans. The Dodgers overcame a 10-0 first quarter deficit with a solid running game and two second-half touchdown passes from their QB Clarence (Ace) Parker, a former league MVP.

The Dodgers ran for 200 yards against Chicago, led by All-Pro FB Pug Manders, who ran for 97 yards on 16 carries. Merl Condit made huge plays on offense and defense to spark the Dodgers in the second half. Brooklyn tied the game in the third quarter when Condit intercepted a pass and Parker hit Perry Schwartz for a 10-yard score to tie the score at 10. In the fourth quarter, Condit broke free for a 46-yard run off right tackle, leading to a Parker to Eddie Rucinski TD pass that gave Brooklyn their first lead.

With the victory, Brooklyn moved to 8-4 on the season and earned a spot in the NFL Championship game.

Brooklyn Dodgers (8-4)-0-3-7-7-17
Chicago Bears (10-2) -10-0-0-3-13

Chi-Maniaci 24 FG
Chi-McAfee 15 pass from Luckman (Maniaci Kick)
Bro-McAdams 32 FG
Bro-Schwartz 10 pass from Parker (McAdams Kick)
Bro-Rucinski 7 pass from Parker (McAdams Kick)
Chi-Maniaci 23 FG

Rushing (season totals in parentheses)
Bro-Manders-16-97-0 (127-583-5), Condit-10-48-0 (101-405-4), Parker-11-37-0 (96-338-0), Kracum-5-17-0 (57-186-3), Schwartz-1-1-0 (2-8-0)
Chi-McAfee-11-59-0 (76-533-5), Standlee-11-45-0 (92-459-5), Gallarreau-7-10-0 (56-314-8), Plasman-1-2-0 (2-3-0), Luckman-1-1-0 (19-19-1)

Passing
Bro-Parker-15-7-87-2-1 (117-58-726-4-9)
Chi-Luckman-24-9-125-1-0 (143-77-1306-10-6), Snyder-3-2-13-0-1 (31-15-366-3-3)

Receiving
Bro-Schwartz-3-49-1 (28-411-3), Condit-2-19-0 (7-51-0), Hodges-1-12-0 (13-140-0), Rucinski-1-7-1 (18-211-2)
Chi-Nowanskey-3-22-0 (15-221-1), Kavanaugh-2-40-0 (13-354-6), Siegal-2-34-0 (11-254-3), Plasman-2-18-0 (16-301-0), McAfee-1-15-1 (8-159-4), Pool-1-9-0 (6-110-1)

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

The 1941 Season

Our simulation begins in 1941, just one week following the Pearl Harbor attacks that ushered the US into World War II. While the US government is beginning to prepare for war, the NFL, a 20-year old enterprise, is preparing for the postseason.

The Chicago Bears are looking to repeat as champions and carry a 10-1 record into the postseason. They won the title in 1940 by destroying the Washington Redskins, 73-0. Chicago is led by QB Sid Luckman, LG Danny Fortmann, RB George McAfee, and C Clyde (Bulldog) Turner. They are joined in the postseason by the #2 seed, (10-1) Green Bay, led by league MVP LE Don Hutson and QB Cecil Isbell, the #3 seed, (8-3) New York Giants, led by LT John Mellus and C Mel Hein, and the #4 seed, (7-4) Brooklyn Dodgers, led by FB Pug Manders and LE Perry Schwartz.

The 1941 Playoffs

December 14, 1941

Brooklyn Dodgers at Chicago Bears, 3 pm
New York Giants at Green Bay Packers, 6:30 pm

December 21, 1941

NFL Championship Game

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

The Structure


When I first decided to try this replay, I briefly considered replaying every game from each season. Thanks to great sites like pro-football-reference.com, anyone can access any team's schedule from the dawn of the NFL, so it would simply be a matter of compiling all the generated data, and, of course, having the free time to replay every game and write game summaries for each played game. Since this is a solo endeavor, I decided to run each season's playoffs only instead. There were some changes I wanted to make, aspects of the history of the game that I wanted to alter just to see how the outcome would be affected.

It took until the 70s before there were wild card teams as part of the NFL playoffs. For years, a team had to win it's division or conference to participate in a playoff or a championship. Once the NFL realized the goldmine available through TV revenue from extra playoff games, it was only a matter of time until more teams were added to the playoff mix. The fact that the league kept expanding helped to keep deserving teams in the postseason (for the most part).

The result of extra teams in the postseason has been more improbable runs to the championship for teams that were far from dominant during the regular season, especially during the last several years. Teams that struggled during the regular season like the 2007 New York Giants and the 2010 Green Bay Packers have parlayed playing well at the right time of year into World Championships. 40 years ago, those teams wouldn't have had the chance at the postseason. In this replay, teams from the past which have finished near the top will get an opportunity to make a run at a title. I expect that, like the last few years, teams who have been forgotten in history will walk away with championships. Also, teams that dominated a specific era in the past will have to endure more rounds of playoffs to achieve the same level of success. Not every one of them will succeed.

The amount of teams entered in the postseason is determined by the number of teams playing pro football during that season. In order to be considered "pro football" the team must exist either in the NFL, or in a league that would one day merge with the NFL, like the AAFC of the late 40s and the AFL of the 60s (sorry USFL). Here is the amount of playoff teams per season...

1941-1945-4 teams
1946-1949-8 teams
1950-1959-6 teams
1960-8 teams
1961-1975-10 teams
1976-present-12 teams

In a four-team playoff, it will be 1 vs. 4 and 2 vs. 3, with the winners of each semfinal playing for the title. In a six-team playoff, the top 2 seeds will receive a bye into the second round. In an eight-team playoff, it will be 1 vs. 8, 2 vs. 7, 3 vs. 6, and 4 vs. 5. The winners from that round will meet in semifinals, with the highest remaining seed facing the lowest remaining seed, and the other two remaining teams paying as well. In a ten-team playoff, it will be 7 vs. 10 and 8 vs. 9 in the first round, with the highest seed left after the first round playing the number 2 team, and the lowest seed playing the number 1 team. In that same round, 3 will play 6 and 4 will play 5. In the twelve-team playoff, the playoffs will look like they do now in the NFL, with the top 4 seeds getting a bye to the second round.

Of course, when it comes to picking playoff teams, I can take the division or conference champions and the second place teams, maintain divisions and conferences, as well as the AFC and the NFC after the merger in 1970. Instead, I'm going to rank all teams in pro football based upon winning percentage for that season, using point differential as the tiebreaker. As a result, there will be no conference structure preventing 2 NFC teams or 2 AFC teams from meeting for a championship. If the Pittsburgh Steelers and New England Patriots make it throught that season's tournament, or if Dallas and San Francisco make it, than they meet for the championship, even if it's 2 teams from the same league in real life.

This may not seem like the most equitable approach, but, in my eyes, there is no better way to rectify the issue using whatifsports.com. There is no method provided to weight one team's results against their level of competition using this particular simulation method. For example, you can make a pretty compelling argument that the 1962 Detroit Lions, who finished at 11-3 in the NFL, were a much better team than the 1962 Dallas Texans, who also finished 11-3, but did so in the AFL, simply based upon the overall quality of players in each league in 1962. The Lions 11-3 record was achieved against much better teams, so if the Lions and Texans had met in a game that year, the Lions should win the majority of the time.

The problem with this line of thinking is that the teams on What If Sports are based on the statistics generated by each team that season, regardless of the quality of their opponents. Keeping that in mind, the Texans may have more yards per game or may force more turnovers or play better defense in the red zone (I'm just speculating, of course), and those stats, even if they were achieved against lesser competition, will be the basis of their performance on what if sports, and, as a result, this simulation.

So...expect an AFL team from early in the AFL's history to come away with a championship in this simulation. I've tried to come up with scenarios to weigh the results of an AFL team's record against the strength of their opposition, but even if I were to penalize an AFL team (or an AAFC team), there is no method to account for that strength of opposition in the simulation itself, so I've decided to seed on record and point differential, regardless of how it was achieved.

I've also never been a fan of the concept of neutral site games, in any sport. I like the idea of a home crowd influencing a game, or bad weather being a factor at the end of the season. I've always loved those films of old championship games played in bad weather, like the 1965 NFL Title game played in the mud of Green Bay, or the NFL Title game from two seasons later played in sub-zero conditions between Dallas and Green Bay, the Ice Bowl. The History of Pro Football blog is bringing back the NFL Championship played at the home stadium of the team with the better record. If Pittsburgh finished with the best record in pro football in a specific year, than the Steelers would have home field throughout the playoffs in this simulation, up to and including the NFL Title game played at Heinz field. Sure, the corporate suits would hate it, but it's the dilettante corporate suits who sterilize the game at it's zenith anyway, so good riddance. Thanks to sites like almanac.com and the Weather Underground, I can look up a specific date in history and tell you what the weather was in Chicago (or Detroit or New York), then use that weather data in the simulation.

Also...I've never really understood why playoff statistics have to be considered separate from regular season statistics. The playoff sample size is so small that, taken in and of itself, it's relatively meaningless. So why not add them to the regular season statistics? If Franco Harris ran for 1246 yards in 1975 (he did...I checked), and he runs for 340 yards in 3 playoff games in this simulation, then his season total will be 1586 for that year in the simulation, not 1246. What does this mean? It means that almost all regular season records are rendered obsolete, as they most certainly will be eclipsed in this new format with extra games. It also means that the better your team is and the farther they go in the playoffs, the more beneficial to a player's statistical portfolio. We will have more 2000-yard runners, possibly some 2000-yard receivers, and more 5000-yard quarterbacks.

We will also most likely have some different champions, perhaps different franchises separating themselves as excellent within a given era, and some new Cinderellas who history may have forgotten.

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Edit on 11/12/11...When I am listing the playoff seeds for a particular season's playoffs, I am going to list franchise accomplishments as if the 1941 season is the first season of official record keeping, meaning I will only make references to playoff appearances and championships that occur after 1941.

Sunday, September 4, 2011

The Idea

Like many football fans my age, I am a student of the history of the game. I will gladly spend my money on any piece of the story from 90 years of pro football. Just this week I spent about 40 bucks on 3 books from Amazon about the NFL, one about the 70's era Oakland Raiders and 2 books about Vince Lombardi (see...I recognize there's more to football than the New York Jets). I may be one of the few private citizens with original issues of both the 50-year NFL anniversary book and the 75-year NFL anniversary book. I am lucky to have grown up immersed in the game.

Ever since Super Tecmo Bowl came out for the Nintendo (remember that?), I've been running football seasons through simulation, searching for a fairly statistically accurate way to reproduce a particular season, or a particular era. Unlike baseball, which has had and continues to have several reliable methods to simulate history through games like OOTP, football sims have been few and far between; the ones that have been released demonstrate their relative limits and inaccuracies fairly quickly. Part of the problem with pro football is the way they distribute and police their licensing agreements. The Madden franchise and Electronic Arts have had an exclusive deal with the NFL and the NFLPA to license anything related to pro football video games. If you want to use real NFL players in a video game or a simulation, you're out of luck unless you purchase Madden, because only EA has that option. As a result, when Madden comes out with an inferior product, they don't have to change what they do or offer a lot of customization with their product to satisfy their customers. If you don't like the product they're offering, you essentially have no place else to go.

One of the greatest aspects of OOTP is the ability to play by just about any rules you'd like. Want to play a 100-game season? Check. How about two 15-team leagues, with the pennant winners meeting in a winner-take-all World Series? Sure, why not...how about adding an extra playoff team and an extra round of playoffs? The last time I played OOTP years ago, all of these options were on the table. So...why not try the same thing with pro football. If you were going to recreate pro football history in a simulation, why not rethink the whole premise and introduce different rules and see how it would have played out? That's what interests me, and, if it interests you, then you'll like this blog.

Thanks to What If Sports, every pro football team that played from 1941 to the present day, whether it's the AAFC, the AFL, or the NFL, is available for simulation. All you have to do is create the structure and any idea you can think of can be actualized. This idea is to start in 1941 and apply the modern idea of a playoff format to history, with a few tweaks for good measure.