Yeah. Greg. But he turned the game around with this one.
i agree scotty.
worst half of football weve played since New England last year.
and we still had a chance to win.
on a night where we have 1000 turnovers, the refs didnt help us out at all, with ******** lining up over the center calls and everything else that could have gone wrong did.... we still only lost by 7.
not the end of the season. or the world
Come on, the refs were so bad they couldn't count to 12.
Favre has been good in the pocket all year decision wise and over the years when he rolls to the sidelines he tend to make poor decisions.
The days of intentionally rolling Favre out should now end.
I totally agree! All the fake draws and crap just slowed everything down. I am almost sick over McCarthy's playcall
Come on, the refs were so bad they couldn't count to 12.
Barnett knew right away he screwed up on that play. He put his hands to his face.....he knew he messed up. It happened so fast, i think it was bang bang and he had no time to let go. By then, it was seen by the ref.pack_in_black said:Come on, the refs were so bad they couldn't count to 12.
Very good point. That was inexcusable. It was right there, and I'd like to hear Perriera's explanation for that one, turning over a call that had no chance at being reversed. That's a traveshamockery.
But we still should've won, regardless of that sh***y call. You just can't make any excuse for 4 turnovers, and a penalties like the Barnett facemask on THIRD DOWN. It was the players' faults for losing, you can't expect MM to protect the ball himself....
KGB94SACKEM said:I totally agree! All the fake draws and crap just slowed everything down. I am almost sick over McCarthy's playcall
So McCarthy called the "roll out and throw it to urlacher" play?
lol
Greg C. said:What made Favre's pass even worse is the fact that on a rollout you can throw it away with no chance of intentional grounding being called. That play brought back memories of 2005, when Favre made so many bad throws out of desperation.
I thought McCarthy's bad decision was not that playcall, but the three straight runs he called on the next possession. That was like a slap in the face to Favre. Favre had just thrown his first interception in three games (and the one in NY was a deflected ball anyway), and suddenly McCarthy didn't trust him.
Bad things happen when you play scared.