Carolina Panthers 38, New York Giants 0
The Carolina Panthers have suffered some excruciating
losses in the Ron Rivera era. Since Rivera took over the coaching duties in 2011, the club has posted a dismal 2-14 mark in games decided by
7 points or less. The Panthers (1-2) shredded some of their frustration from their recent gut-wrenching losses by compiling arguably their most satisfying win in Rivera's tenure on Sunday, demolishing the hapless New York Giants (0-3) 38-0 in front of
their home crowd in Charlotte.
The front-seven
of the Panthers continues to look like one of the best in football after
another notable effort on Sunday. The Panthers made Eli Manning’s life a living hell, sacking the two-time Super Bowl
champion seven times (6 of which came in the first half) as the Giants offense
looked pitiful all afternoon.
Cam
Newton flashed his dynamic skills at quarterback, tossing
three touchdowns passes and rushing a TD score in the Panthers most lopsided victory
in franchise history. Newton amassed 223 passing yards and threw two touchdown
passes to Brandon LaFell and one to Ted Ginn Jr. Playing out of the read
option on some designated run plays, Newton rushed for 45 yards on seven
carries, including a TD run that witnessed him drag defenders into the end zone
with him before he let out a ferocious yell.
Cam Newton fired up the Panthers home crowd in their 38-0 thrashing of the sinking Giants. ( Mike McCarn- AP)
The Panthers' blowout victory should temporarily halt questions related to Ron Rivera’s job
security. Rivera and the Panthers head into their bye week 1-2, but their defense is playing at a championship level. If the Panthers can consistently play this caliber of defense, then they have a realistic shot at making their first playoff appearance since 2008.
The Giants, meanwhile, have been an utter disaster through the first three games of the 2013 season. The G-Men have been outscored 115-54 (an average of 38.3 to 18 per game). They have a recorded a mere 133 rushing yards through their first 3 games, the fifth fewest yards to start a season in the Super-Bowl Era, according to Elias Sports Bureau. The club is in complete disarray after totaling just 18 first-half yards and three turnovers in the contest, bringing their season total of giveaways to a whopping 13.
The Giants, meanwhile, have been an utter disaster through the first three games of the 2013 season. The G-Men have been outscored 115-54 (an average of 38.3 to 18 per game). They have a recorded a mere 133 rushing yards through their first 3 games, the fifth fewest yards to start a season in the Super-Bowl Era, according to Elias Sports Bureau. The club is in complete disarray after totaling just 18 first-half yards and three turnovers in the contest, bringing their season total of giveaways to a whopping 13.
The 38-0 loss
was the worst defeat for the Giants in the Tom Coughlin era.
Cleveland Browns 31, Minnesota Vikings 27
The Cleveland Browns were ridiculed the
entire week after trading running back Trent
Richardson to the Indianapolis Colts
for a 2014 first-round pick. The deal was perceived as the waving of the white
flag by the Browns. Richardson, the third overall pick in the 2012 draft, was
viewed as a cornerstone piece of the Browns’ future by former team president Mike Holmgren. Holmgren blasted the shocking
trade made by the new regime spearheaded by GM Mike Lombardi. Other critics asserted the club had quit on the 2013
season and had entered full-NBA-tank-mode before the calendar had even flipped
to October.
Determined to
silence their detractors, the Browns coaching staff and players mustered an
impressive 31-27 road win over the Minnesota
Vikings behind third-string QB Brian
Hoyer, who threw for 321 yards in the victory. The Browns (1-2) gave the nod to Hoyer over backup Jason Campbell with purported starter Brandon Weeden sidelined with a thumb
injury. Hoyer may have snatched Weeden’s job after engineering a game-winning drive late in the fourth quarter to propel the Browns to their first victory of the season. Hoyer did throw three interceptions, but
he also fired three touchdown passes, a feat Weeden has yet to accomplish in 17
career starts.
Jordan
Cameron is suddenly emerging as one of the league’s most
intriguing young tight ends after his three score game against the Vikings
(0-3) on Sunday. Cameron totaled 66 yards on his 6 receptions (3 for TD’s),
including the go-ahead grab in the back of end zone with 51 seconds left.
Josh
Gordon, fresh off a two-game suspension for violating the
NFL’s substance abuse policy, hauled in 10 receptions for 146 yards and one
touchdown.
The Browns were able to send a clear message to their fans, the critics and to to the rest of the NFL today that they have no intentions of quitting on the season and will
not roll over against any opponent.
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