After all has been said, it is time to get this game done!
Super Bowl XLIX Game Predictions:
Seattle Seahawks at New England Patriots
Overall Points Per Yard Pick: New England Patriots by 1
Home/Away Points Per Yard Pick: New England Patriots by 1
Vegas Lines Pick: New England Patriots by 1. Patriots by 1, Over/Under 47.5
Pythagorean Theorem Pick: New England Patriots by 1. New England Patriots projected to win by a 2014 Pythagorean Rating of 0.742 - 0.737
Fantasy Projection Pick: Seattle Seahawks by 3. The Seattle Seahawks defeated the New England Patriots 118-53 in Creative Misfortune's "If Real Football Used Fantasy Scoring..." Misfortune Bowl IV this season. That fantasy victory will surely hold up in the real Super Bowl.
Best Record Wins Pick: Seattle Seahawks by 3. Both teams at 14-4, "home team" wins
Home Team Wins Pick: Seattle Seahawks by 3. It is only 1,401 miles from Seattle, Washington to the University of Phoenix Stadium, whereas it is 2,655 miles from Foxborough, Massachusetts to the University of Phoenix Stadium. Seattle gets the nod for home-field advantage.
Here's hoping for Double Overtime!
An NFL blog featuring weekly predictions, power rankings and what would happen "If Real Football Used Fantasy Scoring..."
Friday, January 30, 2015
Thursday, January 29, 2015
Super Bowl XLIX Preview - Franchise Comparisons - New England Patriots vs Seattle Seahawks
Two great franchises are set to battle it out in Arizona on Sunday. We’ve
compared the offenses. We’ve compared the defenses. Now let’s compare the
organizations as a whole and see how they stack up to each other.
Founded -
New England Patriots: 1960
Seattle Seahawks: 1976
Comment of Misfortune: New England is older by 16 years and was part of the original American Football League before it joined with the NFL.
Team Advantage: New England
Score: New England, 1-0
Stadium Capacity -
New England Patriots: 68,756
Seattle Seahawks: 67,000
Comment of Misfortune: Since 68,756 is a few more drunken fans than 67,000, I gotta rule in favor of New England.
Team Advantage: New England
Score: New England, 2-0
Uniform Colors -
New England Patriots: Dark Blue, Red, White, and Silver
Seattle Seahawks: College Navy and Action Green with Wolf Gray accents
Comment of Misfortune: Both teams have a variation of Navy Blue in their colors, so that's a draw. The Red, White and Silver and Action Green accents kind of offset each other. Wolf Gray, however, is a very cool color and tips this category in favor of the Seahawks.
Team Advantage: Seattle
Score: New England, 2-1
Nickname -
New England Patriots: Evil Empire, Homeland Defense, Patsies
Seattle Seahawks: Seahawks, Legion of Boom, Seagulls, Seachickens
Comment of Misfortune: I know what Patriots are and I have a pretty good idea what a mythical Seahawk may look like. When I hear Evil Empire I am immediately reminded of Star Wars, the menace of the Emperor. Legion of Boom, however, sounds like some cool threat that Spider Man or Superman would have to fight. Gotta give the nod to Seattle.
Team Advantage: Seattle
Score: Tied, 2-2
2014 Record -
New England Patriots: 12-4 (2-0)
Seattle Seahawks: 12-4 (2-0)
Comment of Misfortune: Both teams finished the season with 12 wins and neither have lost in the playoffs yet, so I have to call this category a draw.
Team Advantage: Draw
Score: Tied, 2-2-1
All-Time Regular Season Record -
New England Patriots: 450-377-9 (.538 win % since 1960)
Seattle Seahawks: 306-307 (.499 win % since 1976)
Comment of Misfortune: Not only has New England played more games than Seattle, they've won a higher percentage of them, too.
Team Advantage: New England
Score: New England, 3-2-1
All-Time Playoff Record -
New England Patriots: 27-18 (.600 win %)
Seattle Seahawks: 14-12 (.538 win %)
Comment of Misfortune: That's holds true for the playoffs as well… New England has more games and more victories.
Team Advantage: New England
Score: New England, 4-2-1
2014 Touchdowns Scored -
New England Patriots: 63 (regular season, 52; playoffs, 11)
Seattle Seahawks: 51 (regular season, 43; playoffs, 8)
Comment of Misfortune: The Patriots have scored more touchdowns, both in the regular season and the playoffs, than the Seahawks.
Team Advantage: New England
Score: New England, 5-2-1
2014 Field Goals Scored -
New England Patriots: 35 (regular season, 34; playoffs, 1)
Seattle Seahawks: 32 (regular season, 31; playoffs, 1)
Comment of Misfortune: In close, defensive battles, field goals can be of utmost importance. The Patriots have the edge here.
Team Advantage: New England
Score: New England, 6-2-1
Super Bowl Titles -
New England Patriots: 3 ~ Super Bowls XXXVI, XXXVIII, and XXXIX
Seattle Seahawks: 1 ~ Super Bowl XLVIII
Comment of Misfortune: My grade-school math tells me 3 is a lot more than 1, so this category definitely falls New England's way.
Team Advantage: New England
Score: New England, 7-2-1
Other Championships -
New England Patriots: None
Seattle Seahawks: None
Comment of Misfortune: Since neither of these teams existed before 1960, there wasn't much chance for them to win any other league championships.
Team Advantage: Draw
Score: New England, 7-2-2
All-Time Record vs Each Other -
New England Patriots: 8-8
Seattle Seahawks: 8-8
Comment of Misfortune: The teams are a perfect .500 against each other. Super Bowl XLIX will tilt the head-to-head records significantly in favor of one or the other
Team Advantage: Draw
Score: New England, 7-2-3
Record in Last 10 Games vs Each Other (since December 1986) -
New England Patriots: 3-7
Seattle Seahawks: 7-3
Comment of Misfortune: Seattle has dominated the head-to-head matchups since 1986, winning 7 out of their last 10 matchups.
Team Advantage: Seattle
Score: New England, 7-3-3
Biggest All-Time Victory vs Each Other -
New England Patriots: 31 points (New England 31, Seattle 0; October 9, 1977)
Seattle Seahawks: 21 points (Seattle 24, New England 3; September 24, 1989)
Comment of Misfortune: Both blowouts took place over 25 years ago, so neither is relevant to today, but New England's 31 point victory in 1977 is far more impressive than the mere 21 points Seattle managed to win by in their 1989 victory.
Team Advantage: New England
Score: New England, 8-3-3
Total Franchise All-Pro Players -
New England Patriots: 32 Players (named a total of 53 times)
Seattle Seahawks: 19 Players (named a total of 31 times)
Comment of Misfortune: When it comes to Pro's Pros, New England has had almost twice as many All-Pro players on their rosters than the Seahawks, despite only being in the league 16 years longer.
Team Advantage: New England
Score: New England, 9-3-3
Total Franchise Pro Bowl Players -
New England Patriots: 87 Players (named a total of 211 times)
Seattle Seahawks: 44 Players (named a total of 103 times)
Comment of Misfortune: When it comes to fan balloting, New England once again has double the number of players voted to the Pro Bowl and the Patriots have sent their players twice as many times to the glorified flag-football game than Seattle.
Team Advantage: New England
Score: New England, 10-3-3
PAC-12 Players on Roster -
New England Patriots: 11 - Akeem Ayers (UCLA), LeGarrette Blount (Oregon), Brandon Browner (Oregon State), Patrick Chung (Oregon), Cameron Fleming (Stanford), Tyler Gaffner (Stanford), Rob Gronkowski (Arizona), Sealver Siliga (Utah), Matthew Slater (UCLA), Nate Solder (Colorado), Shane Vereen (California)
Seattle Seahawks: 14 - Doug Baldwin (Stanford), Derrick Coleman (UCLA), Jermaine Kearse (Washington), Marshawn Lynch (California), Cassius Marsh (UCLA), Anthony McCoy (USC), Brandon Mebane (California), Zach Miller (Arizona State), Mike Morgan (USC), Paul Richardson (Colorado), Richard Sherman (Stanford), Malcolm Smith (USC), Will Tukuafu (Oregon), Max Unger (Oregon)
Comment of Misfortune: Nice to see a West Coast team filled with a large number of West Coast players! Left Coast Advantage - Seattle.
Team Advantage: Seattle
Score: New England, 10-4-3
Team Fans -
New England Patriots: New Englanders
Seattle Seahawks: The 12th Man
Comment of Misfortune: Since the 12th Man can generate recordable earthquakes, I have to give them the nod in this category. Not that it will do them any good at the Super Bowl, though, since the game will be played in Arizona and not the Pacific Northwest.
Team Advantage: Seattle
Score: New England, 10-5-3
Final Judgment:
New England clearly has the historical advantage over Seattle, despite only being in existence 16 years longer than the Seahawks, although Seattle has had far fewer scandals tied to its name than the Patriots have in recent years.
If history holds true, the Patriots will raise the championship trophy this weekend.
If we are truly witnessing the end of one dynasty and the beginning of the next, the Seahawks will reign supreme in Arizona.
Check back tomorrow for the predictions of Creative Misfortune for Super Bowl XLIX…Will either team be a unanimous pick by all prediction systems?
Founded -
New England Patriots: 1960
Seattle Seahawks: 1976
Comment of Misfortune: New England is older by 16 years and was part of the original American Football League before it joined with the NFL.
Team Advantage: New England
Score: New England, 1-0
Stadium Capacity -
New England Patriots: 68,756
Seattle Seahawks: 67,000
Comment of Misfortune: Since 68,756 is a few more drunken fans than 67,000, I gotta rule in favor of New England.
Team Advantage: New England
Score: New England, 2-0
Uniform Colors -
New England Patriots: Dark Blue, Red, White, and Silver
Seattle Seahawks: College Navy and Action Green with Wolf Gray accents
Comment of Misfortune: Both teams have a variation of Navy Blue in their colors, so that's a draw. The Red, White and Silver and Action Green accents kind of offset each other. Wolf Gray, however, is a very cool color and tips this category in favor of the Seahawks.
Team Advantage: Seattle
Score: New England, 2-1
Nickname -
New England Patriots: Evil Empire, Homeland Defense, Patsies
Seattle Seahawks: Seahawks, Legion of Boom, Seagulls, Seachickens
Comment of Misfortune: I know what Patriots are and I have a pretty good idea what a mythical Seahawk may look like. When I hear Evil Empire I am immediately reminded of Star Wars, the menace of the Emperor. Legion of Boom, however, sounds like some cool threat that Spider Man or Superman would have to fight. Gotta give the nod to Seattle.
Team Advantage: Seattle
Score: Tied, 2-2
2014 Record -
New England Patriots: 12-4 (2-0)
Seattle Seahawks: 12-4 (2-0)
Comment of Misfortune: Both teams finished the season with 12 wins and neither have lost in the playoffs yet, so I have to call this category a draw.
Team Advantage: Draw
Score: Tied, 2-2-1
All-Time Regular Season Record -
New England Patriots: 450-377-9 (.538 win % since 1960)
Seattle Seahawks: 306-307 (.499 win % since 1976)
Comment of Misfortune: Not only has New England played more games than Seattle, they've won a higher percentage of them, too.
Team Advantage: New England
Score: New England, 3-2-1
All-Time Playoff Record -
New England Patriots: 27-18 (.600 win %)
Seattle Seahawks: 14-12 (.538 win %)
Comment of Misfortune: That's holds true for the playoffs as well… New England has more games and more victories.
Team Advantage: New England
Score: New England, 4-2-1
2014 Touchdowns Scored -
New England Patriots: 63 (regular season, 52; playoffs, 11)
Seattle Seahawks: 51 (regular season, 43; playoffs, 8)
Comment of Misfortune: The Patriots have scored more touchdowns, both in the regular season and the playoffs, than the Seahawks.
Team Advantage: New England
Score: New England, 5-2-1
2014 Field Goals Scored -
New England Patriots: 35 (regular season, 34; playoffs, 1)
Seattle Seahawks: 32 (regular season, 31; playoffs, 1)
Comment of Misfortune: In close, defensive battles, field goals can be of utmost importance. The Patriots have the edge here.
Team Advantage: New England
Score: New England, 6-2-1
Super Bowl Titles -
New England Patriots: 3 ~ Super Bowls XXXVI, XXXVIII, and XXXIX
Seattle Seahawks: 1 ~ Super Bowl XLVIII
Comment of Misfortune: My grade-school math tells me 3 is a lot more than 1, so this category definitely falls New England's way.
Team Advantage: New England
Score: New England, 7-2-1
Other Championships -
New England Patriots: None
Seattle Seahawks: None
Comment of Misfortune: Since neither of these teams existed before 1960, there wasn't much chance for them to win any other league championships.
Team Advantage: Draw
Score: New England, 7-2-2
All-Time Record vs Each Other -
New England Patriots: 8-8
Seattle Seahawks: 8-8
Comment of Misfortune: The teams are a perfect .500 against each other. Super Bowl XLIX will tilt the head-to-head records significantly in favor of one or the other
Team Advantage: Draw
Score: New England, 7-2-3
Record in Last 10 Games vs Each Other (since December 1986) -
New England Patriots: 3-7
Seattle Seahawks: 7-3
Comment of Misfortune: Seattle has dominated the head-to-head matchups since 1986, winning 7 out of their last 10 matchups.
Team Advantage: Seattle
Score: New England, 7-3-3
Biggest All-Time Victory vs Each Other -
New England Patriots: 31 points (New England 31, Seattle 0; October 9, 1977)
Seattle Seahawks: 21 points (Seattle 24, New England 3; September 24, 1989)
Comment of Misfortune: Both blowouts took place over 25 years ago, so neither is relevant to today, but New England's 31 point victory in 1977 is far more impressive than the mere 21 points Seattle managed to win by in their 1989 victory.
Team Advantage: New England
Score: New England, 8-3-3
Total Franchise All-Pro Players -
New England Patriots: 32 Players (named a total of 53 times)
Seattle Seahawks: 19 Players (named a total of 31 times)
Comment of Misfortune: When it comes to Pro's Pros, New England has had almost twice as many All-Pro players on their rosters than the Seahawks, despite only being in the league 16 years longer.
Team Advantage: New England
Score: New England, 9-3-3
Total Franchise Pro Bowl Players -
New England Patriots: 87 Players (named a total of 211 times)
Seattle Seahawks: 44 Players (named a total of 103 times)
Comment of Misfortune: When it comes to fan balloting, New England once again has double the number of players voted to the Pro Bowl and the Patriots have sent their players twice as many times to the glorified flag-football game than Seattle.
Team Advantage: New England
Score: New England, 10-3-3
PAC-12 Players on Roster -
New England Patriots: 11 - Akeem Ayers (UCLA), LeGarrette Blount (Oregon), Brandon Browner (Oregon State), Patrick Chung (Oregon), Cameron Fleming (Stanford), Tyler Gaffner (Stanford), Rob Gronkowski (Arizona), Sealver Siliga (Utah), Matthew Slater (UCLA), Nate Solder (Colorado), Shane Vereen (California)
Seattle Seahawks: 14 - Doug Baldwin (Stanford), Derrick Coleman (UCLA), Jermaine Kearse (Washington), Marshawn Lynch (California), Cassius Marsh (UCLA), Anthony McCoy (USC), Brandon Mebane (California), Zach Miller (Arizona State), Mike Morgan (USC), Paul Richardson (Colorado), Richard Sherman (Stanford), Malcolm Smith (USC), Will Tukuafu (Oregon), Max Unger (Oregon)
Comment of Misfortune: Nice to see a West Coast team filled with a large number of West Coast players! Left Coast Advantage - Seattle.
Team Advantage: Seattle
Score: New England, 10-4-3
Team Fans -
New England Patriots: New Englanders
Seattle Seahawks: The 12th Man
Comment of Misfortune: Since the 12th Man can generate recordable earthquakes, I have to give them the nod in this category. Not that it will do them any good at the Super Bowl, though, since the game will be played in Arizona and not the Pacific Northwest.
Team Advantage: Seattle
Score: New England, 10-5-3
Final Judgment:
New England clearly has the historical advantage over Seattle, despite only being in existence 16 years longer than the Seahawks, although Seattle has had far fewer scandals tied to its name than the Patriots have in recent years.
If history holds true, the Patriots will raise the championship trophy this weekend.
If we are truly witnessing the end of one dynasty and the beginning of the next, the Seahawks will reign supreme in Arizona.
Check back tomorrow for the predictions of Creative Misfortune for Super Bowl XLIX…Will either team be a unanimous pick by all prediction systems?
Wednesday, January 28, 2015
Super Bowl XLIX Preview - Seattle's Offense vs New England's Defense
The Seattle Seahawks have been
playing hard-nosed, solid football all season long. Despite stumbling a bit early
in the season, they have played well when it mattered most – aside from the
first 55 minutes of the NFC Championship game. A favorite all season, Seattle
has lived up to their expectations so far and now face an extremely difficult
test in the Super Bowl against a New England unit that has been just as
dominating on the AFC side of the house. The young Russell Wilson leads the
offense along with the help of Marshawn Lynch, a punishing back who will move
piles and knock out would be tacklers every chance he can get.
Despite the weapons that Seattle has
at their disposal – a star quarterback, a power running game, a solid receiving
corps and a strong offensive line - the Seahawks offense will be no match for
the crafty Patriots if their defense can't slow down Brady and the interesting
array of formations New England has in store for them.
The Patriots, for their part, have
improved greatly on defense during the second half of the season. The defense
is not one that strikes fear into their opponents, since their offense often
gives them a good lead to work with, but New England has played solid defense
throughout the season, aside from a game or two. The Patriots will have to play
better than average defense if they want to slow down Seattle's power running
game so they can get Tom Brady and his charges back on the field. It's always
easier to play defense when your offense gives you a 21-point lead to work
with.
Super Bowl XLIX Statistical Matchup
*Note: None of these stats “mean”
anything, but let’s have fun with them anyway… Numbers include playoff games
Stat Keys:
Passing Points = Total Passing
Touchdowns + ½ Total Field Goal Points
Rushing Points = Total Rushing
Touchdowns + ½ Total Field Goal Points
Points per Passing Yard = Passing
Points / Total Yards Passing
Points per Rushing Yard = Rushing
Points / Total Yards Rushing
Category
|
Seahwks Offense vs
|
NE Defense Allowed
|
When They Collide…
|
Rushing Values
|
|||
Rushing Points
|
186
|
85
|
|
Rushing Yards
|
3056
|
1888
|
Each rushing yard worth
|
Points per Rushing Yard
|
0.061
|
0.045
|
0.053
|
At their Best (DEF worst)
|
350 yards
|
218 yards
|
284 yards = 15.1 pts = 15 pts
|
2014 Average
|
170 yards
|
105 yards
|
138 yards = 7.3 pts = 7 pts
|
At their Worst (DEF Best)
|
80 yards
|
19 yards
|
50 yards = 2.6 pts = 3 pts
|
Passing Values
|
|||
Passing Points
|
187
|
212
|
|
Passing Yards
|
3701
|
4255
|
Each passing yard worth
|
Points per Passing Yard
|
0.051
|
0.050
|
0.051
|
At their Best (DEF Worst)
|
329 yards
|
429 yards
|
379 yards = 19.3 pts = 19 pts
|
2014 Average
|
206 yards
|
236 yards
|
221 yards = 11.3 pts = 11 pts
|
At their Worst (DEF Best)
|
126 yards
|
126 yards
|
126 yards = 6.4 pts = 6 pts
|
Projected Score Breakdown
|
Rushing + Passing
|
Combined Points
|
|
At their Best
|
15 pts + 19 pts
|
34
|
|
2014 Average
|
7 pts + 11 pts
|
18
|
|
At their Worst
|
3 pts + 6 pts
|
9
|
Projected
Super Bowl XLIX Score for the Seattle Seahawks: 20 points
Based on the New England projections
from yesterday versus the Seattle defense -
If both offenses come out blazing
and the defenses stumble, expect Seattle to
win a very close shoot-out, 34-33.
If both teams play as they have
tended to play all season, expect the game to go into overtime with both teams
having scored 17 points. All bets
are off at that point.
If a knock-down, drag-out defensive
struggle takes place, expect the Seahawks to win on the strength of
field goals by the score of 9-7.
If Seattle comes out playing perfect and New England plays like they have in recent Super Bowls, expect the Seahawks to cruise to their second
straight Super Bowl title by a projected score of 34-7.
If New England comes out playing perfect and Seattle plays like they did the first three-and-a-half quarters
against Green Bay in the NFC Championship game, expect the Patriots to run away with their fourth Super Bowl championship by a
projected score of 33-9.
Based on these statistical
comparisons, if the Patriots hope to win, they need their offense to be on fire
or their defense to be on fire. If both units play average, expect the Seahawks
to be hoisting the Lombardi Trophy after the game.
Check back tomorrow to see how these
two Super Bowl franchises stack up to each other both in history and
intangibles…
Tuesday, January 27, 2015
Super Bowl XLIX Preview - New England's Offense vs Seattle's Defense
The New England Patriots are a team
that crushes their opponent's spirit by scoring 35+ points a game. Few teams
have won as often as the Patriots over the past decade - or by such outrageous,
obnoxious numbers. Tom Brady can pick apart a defense like few other
quarterbacks in NFL history. His ability to read a defense and know exactly
where to go each and every play will force Seattle's secondary to stay with
their coverages longer than normal. Julian Edelman, Rob Gronkowski and Brandon
LaFell are among the many, versatile weapons Brady has at his disposal.
While the Patriots are not
traditionally known for their ability to run the football, their run game has
exploded late in the season behind the powerful running of LeGarrette Blount
and Jonas Gray. The offensive line is playing outstanding as well and has kept
aggressive defenses from wrecking havoc with the timing of their passing game.
The Seattle Seahawks defense has
played lights out football during their run through the regular season and
playoffs. Just as versatile on defense as the Patriots are on offense,
Seattle's defensive front seven look to completely disrupt the high-powered New
England attack. If Seattle's defense can slow down the Patriots enough to hold
them to field goals instead of touchdowns, they will be able to give Russell
Wilson and Marshawn Lynch a fighting chance to keep pace with Tom Brady and
company. The Seahawks can win the game with their defense, but they will have a
lot easier time containing the Patriots if their offense can give them an early
lead. They can’t expect a miracle finish two games in row.
Super Bowl XLIX Statistical Matchup
*Note: None of these stats “mean”
anything, but let’s have fun with them anyway… Numbers include playoff games
Stat Keys:
Passing Points = Total Passing
Touchdowns + ½ Total Field Goal Points
Rushing Points = Total Rushing
Touchdowns + ½ Total Field Goal Points
Points per Passing Yard = Passing
Points / Total Yards Passing
Points per Rushing Yard = Rushing
Points / Total Yards Rushing
Category
|
Patriots Offense vs
|
Seahawks Defense Allowed
|
When They Collide…
|
Rushing Values
|
|||
Rushing Points
|
143
|
87
|
|
Rushing Yards
|
1918
|
1571
|
Each rushing yard worth
|
Points per Rushing Yard
|
0.075
|
0.055
|
0.065
|
At their Best (DEF worst)
|
246 yards
|
190 yards
|
218 yards = 14.2 pts = 14 pts
|
2014 Average
|
107 yards
|
87 yards
|
97 yards = 6.3 pts = 6 pts
|
At their Worst (DEF Best)
|
14 yards
|
29 yards
|
22 yards = 1.4 pts = 1 pt
|
Passing Values
|
|||
Passing Points
|
291
|
151
|
|
Passing Yards
|
4749
|
3371
|
Each passing yard worth
|
Points per Passing Yard
|
0.061
|
0.045
|
0.053
|
At their Best (DEF Worst)
|
408 yards
|
296 yards
|
352 yards = 18.7 pts = 19 pts
|
2014 Average
|
264 yards
|
187 yards
|
226 yards = 12.0 pts = 12 pts
|
At their Worst (DEF Best)
|
142 yards
|
82 yards
|
112 yards = 5.9 pts = 6 pts
|
Projected Score Breakdown
|
Rushing + Passing
|
Combined Points
|
|
At their Best
|
14 pts + 19 pts
|
33
|
|
2014 Average
|
6 pts + 12 pts
|
18
|
|
At their Worst
|
1 pt + 6 pts
|
7
|
Projected
Super Bowl XLIX Score for the New England Patriots: 20 points
Check back tomorrow to see how the
Seattle Seahawks offense compares to the New England Patriots defense. Will the
numbers for the Seahawks put them over the 20 points the Patriots are projected
to score?
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