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absolutely! what a sweet sweet victory!
thassssssssss right baby!!! hmmmm ill buy you a beer if you come to the parade tuesday here in NY lol
I already marked you! I grew up in Riverside / Oak Park by the way
You just got yourself a member mark....GO CUBS!!!!!!!
Lol i gotta give it to you, im a pats fan but SHIT we straight up got out played. NOBODY touched brady all season. last night brady couldent move he got rocked... definetly icin down today lol
Amen brother!! 100 year anniversary this year..
congrats it was good lol
No choke at all... Giants outplayed them all the way... Giants best team in 2008 hands down..
Giants best team of 2008.. No doubt!
giants fans give me ur extra beer to drink away that loss.... holy shittttttttttt
YOUR RIGHT GO YANKEES!!!!!!
Thanks...Lets get back to America's past time....GO CUBS!!!!
that is the best siggy I've seen. peoplemark for you!
NICE PICK BRO!!!
CONGRATS!!!...
huge upset..
ALL I CAN SAY IS WOW... lol
ALL I CAN SAY IS - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------- B O S T O N S U C K S
...........GIANTS!!!!............
......GIANTS!!!!!.....
......SAHARA ENERGY!!!!!......
......THE BIGGEST UNDERDOGS!!!!!.......
YES...this is the FANTASY message.......
....HERE it IS!!!!
GIANTS cover GIANTS win......NOW what about SAH?......
....I think in my fantasy the GIANTS started everything....was it $100,000 to cover equals $190,000.....AND i think it was $10,000 for GIANTS outright at 5-1 equals $50,000......and then it was ALL put on SAHARA ENERGY thats SAH on TSX at 7-8 cents per share to rise into MILLIONS.....wasn't it?......A GIANT!!!!
I wonder how much OREOS paid to have it unfold like that?
17 wins and nothing to show for it.....the cheaters got what they deserved....congrats GIANTS
HAHAHAHAHHA lolololololooololoololo
hold on wait............
nope...
ROFLMAO @ that
Tonight's banner should go something like this
[Suppressed Sound Link]
For Giants Fans Only!!!!!!
INTERNATIONAL
World-Wide
Suicide & Crisis Hotlines
Crisis Counselors are
waiting for your call.
http://suicidehotlines.com/international.html
Nothing like underdogs for the ages
by Steve Politi/Star-Ledger Columnist
Sunday February 03, 2008, 3:01 AM
GLENDALE, Ariz. -- They were willing to puff out their chests and predict the final score, insisting that nothing less than the Lombardi Trophy would make this trip a success. But when you asked the NY Giants Giants to view this opportunity tonight in Super Bowl XLII in a broader context, they came up empty.
"I'm not thinking about that at all," receiver Amani Toomer said.
"We're not worried about history," running back Brandon Jacobs said.
"Man, I just want the ring," defensive end Michael Strahan said.
No, the Patriots were the team constantly talking about history, how a victory would secure their place in the sports pantheon and establish them as the greatest team we've ever seen.
They're right, of course. A victory in Super Bowl XLII would cap the 19-0 season and put the Patriots in their own stratosphere. Linebacker Junior Seau put it this way last week: "There's good, there's great, and there's ever. We have a chance to be part of that category -- ever."
But the Giants have a chance to become an "ever team," too -- and, in many ways, what they would accomplish with a victory would be just as lasting. They can become one of the most beloved underdogs in sports history, joining a short list of teams whose accomplishments only grow with time.
You know the list. USA Hockey in 1980, the team of college kids that upset the Russians and then won gold in Lake Placid. Villanova basketball in 1985, the undersized squad that shocked big, bad Georgetown for the national championship. The Jets in 1969, with Joe Namath running toward that stadium tunnel at Super Bowl III, waving his finger for eternity.
Most teams win championships and are quickly forgotten in history. Not these teams. We love them, make books and movies about them, because of the improbability of their victories. We are a nation infatuated with the Cinderella story in sports, and while it's hard to imagine a team from New York with the nickname the Giants fitting into that mold, they do.
A victory over the Patriots will cap the most improbable Super Bowl run in history, turning the players who pull it off into legends. No sports fan will ever forget what they accomplished, just like nobody will forget the boxer who put Mike Tyson on the canvas in 1990.
"I remember they did the fight overseas, and usually you wake up in the morning and Mike Tyson knocked somebody out in the first round," Strahan said. "When you saw that Buster Douglas knocked him out, you're just in amazement. If we win, it's a big, big upset."
New England can achieve a much different kind of history. Perfection is something people will respect and admire, but it's nothing they'll embrace. The Patriots won, then they won again, then they won some more. Their story is impressive, but it lacks drama or charm. Think about it: Would anyone want to watch a movie about this Patriots team?
The Giants' season, meanwhile, unfolded as if it were entitled "Friday Night Lights: The Pros."
They have the embattled head coach, the struggling franchise quarterback and the aging defensive end who passed on retirement for another go around. They have the 0-2 start and the midseason hiccups, the injuries and the setbacks and new characters stepping up.
They won three straight road playoff games, including one in the second-coldest game in NFL history, and can cap their run against an undefeated team that has already beaten them once. If the Giants win the Super Bowl tonight, their last three victories will have come against teams with a combined record of 45-6. No team has ever had a more daunting road to the Lombardi Trophy.
"If the Giants win, no question, it would have to be one of the biggest upsets ever," said Jim Kiick, the running back for the '72 Dolphins. "People will always go back and look at that victory. It will stand in history."
It will also stand as one of this market's most revered teams. The '94 Rangers ended the 54-year Stanley Cup drought with that thrilling spring. The Miracle Mets captured the city during that magical fall in 1969.
Now, the Giants have a chance tonight to steal bragging rights back from Boston and script the most unlikely championship of them all. "I can't even imagine how big it would be in the city of New York for us to win this game," Strahan said. "I can't imagine."
If they pull off the upset tonight, Strahan and his teammates will spend the rest of their lives finding out just how big. One more victory, and they will earn a spot with Villanova and the '69 Jets, with USA Hockey and Buster Douglas. One more victory, and they will become one of the most celebrated underdogs in history.
His five reasons why the Patriots will achieve perfection on Sunday:
1. Tom Brady will perform at his best. His much-discussed ankle injury, suffered in the AFC Championship Game, won't be a factor. It didn't even show up on the Patriots' injury report, and he practiced all week. Brady's struggles against San Diego in the AFC title game were an aberration. Against the Giants, we will see the Brady who won league MVP by throwing 50 touchdowns. On Sunday, he will attack the middle of the field with slot receiver Wes Welker and tight end Benjamin Watson. Welker and Watson are fast enough to split safeties Gibril Wilson and James Butler and help open up the perimeter for speedy wideouts Randy Moss and Donte' Stallworth, with one or both reaching the end zone.
2. The Pats will be able to run the ball effectively. The most under-appreciated aspect of the offense is their rushing attack, which ranked 13th in the NFL. Laurence Maroney has come on as a major force in the postseason. Maroney is particularly successful running up the middle, behind center Dan Koppen and guards Logan Mankins and Russ Hochstein. He should continue to have that sort of impact in the Super Bowl in order to help slow down the Giants' pass rush and give the Patriots' offense some balance.
3. Brady will effectively use play-action against the Giants' aggressive defensive front. He is one of the very best quarterbacks in the league at reading the blitz, and quickly checking to hot routes. The Patriots will spread the field with four- and five-receiver sets and let Brady locate mismatches. Most everything that the Pats do on offense begins with Brady using play-fakes and attacking with short and intermediate passes. The quicker he gets the ball out -- especially on sideline routes -- the better his chances of keeping the chains moving and getting into a rhythm. And he will be able to do exactly that on Sunday.
4. New England should do a good job of handling the Giants' impressive one-two rushing attack of powerful Brandon Jacobs and speedy Ahmad Bradshaw. The Patriots did an excellent job of shutting down Jacksonville's rushing attack, one of the best in the NFL, in their divisional-round victory over the Jaguars. The Pats' run-stopping ability begins with nose tackle Vince Wilfork using his considerable lower-body strength and leverage to clog the middle and force runners to bounce outside to Mike Vrabel and Adalius Thomas. New England's aging inside linebackers, 39-year-old Junior Seau and 34-year-old Tedy Bruschi, should be able to count on Wilfork to keep them free of blockers. The Giants will need at least two blockers to handle to Wilfork, and that should help provide freedom for ends Richard Seymour and Ty Warren, and the Pats' linebackers.
5. Once the Patriots have the Giants' running game under control, they will be able to confuse Eli Manning, or at least keep him off balance, by mixing up fronts and coverages. Although Manning has yet to throw an interception in the postseason, he should count on some pass-rushing configurations that he has never seen before and coverages that will cause him to hold the ball and/or take a sack, make a poor pass under duress, or entice him into making a bad pass.
Vic Carucci Predicts: Pats 42 - Giants 10
Super Bowl prediction: Five reasons why Patriots will win
By Vic Carucci | NFL.com
PHOENIX -- I admire a good underdog story as much as the next guy, and the one featuring the New York Giants is extremely compelling.
They've also written a pretty nice comeback story, turning red-hot at the absolute right time -- the beginning of the postseason.
I like Eli Manning's transformation from underachieving No. 1 overall pick to consistent elite performer. I like Tom Coughlin's transformation from ultra-rigid drill sergeant to a coach who can listen as well as he dictates.
But I don't like anything about the Giants as much as I like the New England Patriots' chances of being 19-0 after Super Bowl XLII.
The Pats had the look of an NFL champion back in August, when I (along with many others) picked them to hoist the Vince Lombardi Trophy for a fourth time. They've since developed the look of dominance that has put them in a position to make history and go down as the greatest team in the history of the league … and one of the greatest in the history of sports.
Here are five reasons why the Patriots will achieve perfection on Sunday:
1. Tom Brady will perform at his best. His much-discussed ankle injury, suffered in the AFC Championship Game, won't be a factor. It didn't even show up on the Patriots' injury report, and he practiced all week. Brady's struggles against San Diego in the AFC title game were an aberration. Against the Giants, we will see the Brady who won league MVP by throwing 50 touchdowns. On Sunday, he will attack the middle of the field with slot receiver Wes Welker and tight end Benjamin Watson. Welker and Watson are fast enough to split safeties Gibril Wilson and James Butler and help open up the perimeter for speedy wideouts Randy Moss and Donte' Stallworth, with one or both reaching the end zone.
2. The Pats will be able to run the ball effectively. The most under-appreciated aspect of the offense is their rushing attack, which ranked 13th in the NFL. Laurence Maroney has come on as a major force in the postseason. Maroney is particularly successful running up the middle, behind center Dan Koppen and guards Logan Mankins and Russ Hochstein. He should continue to have that sort of impact in the Super Bowl in order to help slow down the Giants' pass rush and give the Patriots' offense some balance.
3. Brady will effectively use play-action against the Giants' aggressive defensive front. He is one of the very best quarterbacks in the league at reading the blitz, and quickly checking to hot routes. The Patriots will spread the field with four- and five-receiver sets and let Brady locate mismatches. Most everything that the Pats do on offense begins with Brady using play-fakes and attacking with short and intermediate passes. The quicker he gets the ball out -- especially on sideline routes -- the better his chances of keeping the chains moving and getting into a rhythm. And he will be able to do exactly that on Sunday.
4. New England should do a good job of handling the Giants' impressive one-two rushing attack of powerful Brandon Jacobs and speedy Ahmad Bradshaw. The Patriots did an excellent job of shutting down Jacksonville's rushing attack, one of the best in the NFL, in their divisional-round victory over the Jaguars. The Pats' run-stopping ability begins with nose tackle Vince Wilfork using his considerable lower-body strength and leverage to clog the middle and force runners to bounce outside to Mike Vrabel and Adalius Thomas. New England's aging inside linebackers, 39-year-old Junior Seau and 34-year-old Tedy Bruschi, should be able to count on Wilfork to keep them free of blockers. The Giants will need at least two blockers to handle to Wilfork, and that should help provide freedom for ends Richard Seymour and Ty Warren, and the Pats' linebackers.
5. Once the Patriots have the Giants' running game under control, they will be able to confuse Eli Manning, or at least keep him off balance, by mixing up fronts and coverages. Although Manning has yet to throw an interception in the postseason, he should count on some pass-rushing configurations that he has never seen before and coverages that will cause him to hold the ball and/or take a sack, make a poor pass under duress, or entice him into making a bad pass.
Regardless of how they do it, a Patriots victory over the Giants will be the sort of achievement that can be admired for many, many years to come. That's because -- given the 35 seasons that have passed since the Miami Dolphins went 17-0 -- it will likely be many, many years before we see another perfect season in the NFL ... if we see another.
I expect the Patriots to write the final chapter of this incredible season with a blowout win. Final score: Pats 42, Giants 10.
Have a question for Vic on anything NFL related? Don't just sit there -- send it to AskVic@nfl.com, and the best questions will be answered throughout the season right here on NFL.com.
forsure... just threw down more on the Patriots +9.5....
LETTTS GOOO BOYYYYZZZZ!!!!
gonna be a hell of a game
Giants 23- Pats 17.
Bandwagon!! lol
Going to be a fun game! Go Blue!
Big Blue 29 - N Eng 25 GO BIG BLUE - - - -
Some days you're the bull,some days you're "THE MATADOR"...good luck to you tomorrow....gotta run, Plaxico (k)needs treatment...
i,m from rhode island go pats.
Congrats on a great season....18-1....not too shabby...GL
Patriots will dominate
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