Saturday, December 19, 2009

MVP Race Down to the Wire

In what will surely be remembered in NFL lore as the era of offensive explosion for quarterbacks, the last few years have signalled the NFL's encouragement of the passing game. This year, the ridiculous amount of passing has come to a head with three juggernauts of the modern game competing for MVP. In case you've been living under a rock for the past fourteen weeks, here's the lowdown on the race for Most Valuable Player (in order of their worthiness in my eyes):

1. Peyton Manning (QB, Indianapolis): No single player means more and does more for their team as an individual than Peyton Manning, whose religious studying habits, thorough football intelligence, and laser-accurate arm have guided them to their current undefeated status. Despite injuries to receiver Anthony Gonzalez, Peyton has made stars out of rookies Pierre Garcon and Austin Collie, who have 100 catches between them for 1332 yards and 11 scores through Week 15. Combined with the always potent tandem of Reggie Wayne and tight end Dallas Clark, Manning's high-octane offense has dominated despite being at the bottom of the league in rushing yards. The hallmark of a great player is the ability to execute even when every opponent knows what's coming, and everyone who plays the Colts knows that Peyton is going to get the ball. Most importantly of all, he is still undefeated.

2. Brett Favre (QB, Minnesota): I don't think anyone expected the Vikings to be as dominant as they have been this year, thanks in large part to the stunning play of Brett Favre. The former Green Bay Gunslinger has reformed himself into the Minnesota Miracle Man by taking care of the football and allowing Minnesota's plethora of talent to be unleashed. Sidney Rice and Visanthe Shiancoe have been turned into Pro Bowl players, and Favre's surprising health even at age 40 has defied all odds. And for all the talk of how he has revamped his style of play, Brett has still shown his ability to make the long, game-winning throws. His stats (27 scores and only 6 picks) are incredible, especially at the ripe old age of fourty. His only knocks are his record (they have 2 losses) and the exceptional talent of the Vikings offense; while he may be the biggest piece (with Adrian Peterson as a close second), Favre is still a cog in the Minnesota team.

3. Drew Brees (QB, New Orleans): It's hard to imagine that the man who was leading the league in touchdown passes coming into Week 15 being third on an MVP list, but I honestly think this is where Brees belongs. Sure, his team is undefeated, but the Saints' starting lineup is much less compromised than the Colts' and Brees lacks Brett Favre's argument for age (not only that, but Brees was already established in the Saints offense while Favre came out of his second retired stint just after the end of training camp). But give Mr. Brees some credit; he is a superb playmaker who has willed his team to many improbable and superb victories. But that being said, he's not my pick for MVP.

These three front-runners aside, other quarterbacks who have not even entered the MVP conversation are also playing extremely well. After a rocky start to the season with a terrible offenseive line, Favre's replacement Aaron Rodgers has finally begun to click with his line and is beginning to live up to the hype they established in the preseason. Philip Rivers may well by leading the hottest team in the NFL in the San Diego Chargers, who beat Dallas last week and continue to play inspired offense despite starting their third-string nose guard. All of these deserve whatever props come their way, and possibly more; in any other year, those two (or sensational tailback Chris Johnson, who needs only 125 more rushing yards in each of his next three games to reach the benchmark of 2000) could be the talk of the league.

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