|
Expert Super Bowl Picks: We are now just a few days away from the biggest game of the NFL football season. This means that both teams are making some of their final preparations for Sunday’s Super Bowl and so are Expert Super Bowl Picks specialists. From day 1, we’ve seen the Indianapolis Colts [-4½] rise and remain as the string sports betting odds favorites to defeat the sports betting odds underdog New Orleans Saints [+4½] in Super Bowl XLIV. However, this week, we’ve observed a surge of the action leaning towards the Saints. Taking the Rex Ryan approach, it has been the underdogs that have been doing all the talking this week, in particular Saints defensive coordinator Greg Williams. According to him, their success is going to depend on his players’ ability to get to Peyton Manning and deliver some “remember me” hits. Given a chance to take some of his comments back, Williams addressed the media this week. “I’m not going to apologize for that,” he stated on Thursday’s media session. “I’m not going to be polite about that. That’s what defenses are about.”
Williams’ philosophy in professional football is very simple: hit as hard as you possibly can first, ask questions later. “I’ve told him every single time he stepped on a field of play, since he’s been in little league: ‘When you get done, you want them to remember your name. And if they can’t remember your name, it’s because you hit 'em so hard you knocked the name out of their mind.' That’s just how it is. It’s a con-tact game.” But can the Saints actually do to Manning what no one else has been able to do? Well, that remains to be seen. But if they can have anything close to the success they had against another guy that has seen it all in his career in Brett Favre, this could turn very interesting indeed. “He could’ve laid down or thrown the ball away, but he sat in there and took the hit.” Remi Ayodele said of the simultaneous double-hit Favre took from him (low) and from Bobby McCray (high). “I was surprised he got up from that.” I mean, we all saw what Favre looked like after taking one of the worst beating of his career after the NFC Championship game. Are Saints sorry for this? “He’s a warrior,” Ayodele added. “He don’t want nobody to feel bad for him. … He was trying to get here just like we were.” But the Saints defenders also understand there’s a distinct difference between No.4 and No.18. “Favre doesn’t care about punishment,” McCray explained. “His will to stay in there and keep playing is crazy. “Some quarterbacks” — Favre first among them — “like to get hit,” McCray said. “Some don’t. Peyton is one that definitely doesn’t like it. He won’t sit in there and take the shots. He’ll go down. He won’t let you get those big hits on him. He’s not a dummy for doing that. He’s not a coward for doing that. He’s just smart.” But even among all the hard-hitting and trash-talking, these players have the outmost respect for the great ones like Favre and Manning. “He’s different than everybody else,” Ayodele said of the Colts’ signal-caller. “It’s like playing a coach, a coach who can throw. Most quarterbacks want to look tough for their guys. That’s not him. He’s knows, ‘I might have to take this sack, and I might look like a sissy doing it. But guess what? I’m not hurt, and I’m going to get up and play the next play. And the next play. And the next.' “That’s probably why he’s one of the best quarterbacks ever to play.” SBGGlobal.com have the best bonuses in the industry waiting for you. Visit SBG Global today and get Up to 295% in total Bonuses for this Super Bowl XLIV!
|