Chargers play dumb, so season is over
By: STEVE SCHOLFIELD - Senior Sports Columnist | ∞
SAN DIEGO ---- Here are the cold, hard facts of the NFL playoffs: You can be lucky and win, but if you don't play smart, you lose.
The Chargers put on one of their dumbest performances of the season Sunday afternoon, draining all the joy out of a 14-2 regular season.
Today, the Chargers will take their physicals to signal another end of a season that was supposed to end in Miami.
All that talk about going to the Super Bowl should wait until the Chargers win at least one playoff game.
That hasn't happened in San Diego since Bill Clinton was president, back in January 1995.
As you know, the New England Patriots came to town and stole a 24-21 victory at Qualcomm Stadium, thanks in part to the brilliant play of quarterback Tom Brady.
If you look closer at what happened in this game, blame the players for some knucklehead moves.
Some of their mistakes were physical. The receivers dropped six passes. The defenders dropped three balls that should have been intercepted. The Chargers lost three balls on fumbles, and quarterback Philip Rivers threw one interception.
Then there were the mental miscues ---- two unnecessary-roughness flags and an interception that shouldn't have happened.
Add it all up, and the Chargers didn't play well enough to advance.
The Chargers held an eight-point lead with just under seven minutes to play. On a fourth-and-5 at the Chargers' 41-yard line, Brady tossed a pass into the arms of Chargers safety Marlon McCree at the 31.
Instead of batting the ball down, McCree, one of the more cerebral players on the team, grabbed the interception and headed up the field, where he immediately fumbled. New England recovered.
"I thought we had the game right there," Chargers running back LaDainian Tomlinson said.
Instead, New England capitalized on the play and scored a touchdown and a two-point conversion to tie the scored 21-12.
When asked whether he considered knocking the ball down, which would have given the Chargers a first down at their 41, McCree said no.
"I was trying to make a play, and any time I get the ball I am going to try and score," McCree said. "If it's a two-minute situation, that is the only time I will try and knock the ball down."
McCree should have realized that with Tomlinson running the ball ---- he had 123 yards on 23 carries ---- all the Bolts needed were a couple of first downs to run out the clock and end the game.
In the third quarter, the Chargers held New England on third down at the Chargers' 29. But cornerback Drayton Florence popped Daniel Graham, drawing an unnecessary-roughness penalty. That gave the Patriots a first down that led to an easy 34-yard field goal by rookie Stephen Gostkowski.
Even when the Chargers did something well, they couldn't stand prosperity.
After Tomlinson scored and Nate Kaeding added the extra point to put the Chargers up 21-13 in the fourth quarter, tackle Shane Olivea was tagged with a personal foul that forced the Chargers to kick off from their 20. The Patriots started their game-tying drive at their 37 instead of deep in their own territory.
"The personal-foul penalties were very disappointing," Chargers coach Marty Schottenheimer said, "because what you end up doing there is you put your own personal feelings ahead of the football team."
Olivea offered his own excuse.
"I was told the penalty was on someone else," Olivea said. "I didn't throw a punch. I saw two guys take a shot at Roman (Oben) when he was down and on his back, and I wasn't going to let them do that. I waited for the referee to do something, but he didn't. So I took things into my own hands. It's just a really disappointing feeling right now."
It should be. Olivea didn't keep his poise, and it cost the Bolts.
Conventional wisdom says that the team that scores first has a better than 50 percent chance of winning in the playoffs. Schottenheimer put himself under the gun on the Chargers' second series of the game when he didn't let Kaeding try a 47-yard field goal.
Instead, Schottenheimer went for it on fourth-and-11, not the highest of odds.
"I thought we had a play that we could use that would make the yardage," Schottenheimer explained. "Our intention was to be very aggressive."
The Bolts at times were very aggressive, but in the final analysis, they couldn't overcome their own mistakes. That's why this loss will linger for a long, long time. And it will probably cost Schottenheimer his job.
Steve Scholfield is senior sports columnist for the North County Times. He can be reached at (760) 740-3509 or stevescho@cox.net. Comment at sports.nctimes.com.
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JR wrote on Jan 15, 2007 3:38 PM:Steve you must be furious ! Marty Ball surfaces again. SD has a good team with a great runner, but we all know that "teams" win championships not individual players. Charger fans can look forward to other games down the road, but they should learn from yesterday. Let Marty go and find a young coach. Find a coach that can relate to young players. Ones with lack of intelligence and team ethics. 4 th and 11??? Please, what did he think this was a "sandlot" game? That alone showed NO respect. Great call also Marty on the fumble challenge..who needs a time out with 18 secinds left right? The players played good enough to win even with the bonehead personal fouls. The coaches (Marty) lost this game. Your only as good as the general.. Aloha ! J
scottdee wrote on Jan 15, 2007 3:40 PM:How ironic when the Chargers players were dropping balls all day that McCree SHOULD HAVE dropped that interception..After the McCree play a collective "here we go again" could be heard for miles in my neighborhood and it emanated from somewhere inside my house despite an 8 point lead and just over 6 minutes to go..Of all the drops by the Chargers the most inexcusable in terms of degree of difficulty had to be Clinton Hart's in the 1st quarter..Marty and the players' mantra for this game was win for the team yet McCree's and Florence's huge mistakes were "its all about me" driven..The following players will not be on the roster at the beginning of the '07 regular season: Florence (keeps trying to impress himself, a failed "project", I'll take my chances with Cromartie), Kiel (likely to be in prison), Foley (physically unable to play anymore), Godfrey (retirement), Edwards (contract issues), Turner (could be franchised), Jordan (unless Oben retires), Krause (Aaron Shea will be back at TE), Sproles (if he's lost even half a step he's gone), Volek (payroll reducing move plus Rivers needs a young challenger like Drew had and Whitehurst is impressive), and possibly Cameron or some other assistant(s)..Marty had a mandate to go deep into the playoffs and Dean and AJ are rightfully not impressed..Not fair you say, well either you learn and accept life is not fair early in your life or you become a registered democrat and complain about it the rest of your life..Marty is a good guy and a competent coach but he's got to go and I've been saying that for years..How can Florence, McCree, Parker, and Olivea look veterans like Godfrey, Edwards, and Jamal Williams straight in the eye and say they tried their best for the team?
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