Monday, November 16, 2009

Animal Rescue League Dog of the Day


Hercules is a great dog. He needs a home.

Hercules also needs a new name, because he is about as un-Hercules a dog as you'll ever meet. He's very shy, at first, to the point of timidity -- you'd think he's scared -- but once he relaxes and feels comfortable around people, he's very friendly, gentle and affectionate. He's easy to walk, he's extremely playful, and he likes other animals.

Hercules is a lot of fun!

He'll make a wonderful friend and companion. Somebody's going to be glad they adopted him. He's only about 10 months old, so he'll be around for a long time, too. He's housebroken, crate-trained and has gotten along just fine with kids.

Learn more about Hercules by e-mailing
arldogs@yahoo.com.

Or, visit Hercules in person/dog at
The Animal Rescue League of Western Pennsylvania,
located at Fifth and Hamilton in East Liberty-Side/Shadyside
or whatever the realtors are calling my neighborhood these days ...
It's near Trader Joe's and the Nabisco plant (now being developed as Bakery Square).

Links!

  • Blitzburgh over at Behind the Steel Curtain offers a frank assessment of yesterday's loss, along with some potentially helpful suggestions.
  • Christmas Ape at D.C. Steeler Nation blasts the play-calling, kickoff coverage and Red Zone incompetence.
  • Nice Pick Cowher has a typically excellent recap of Sunday's game against the Bengals, including this food for thought:
"On three of those (Red Zone) drives, what started as a 1st and goal from around ten yards out became a 2nd and goal from the 25-30 yard line because of a penalty or sack. The playcalling was beyond atrocious. I realize the Bengals are the #2 team against the rush and Rashard Mendenhall only had 36 yards on the day but lining up in a five WR set from the 8-yard line????

"... This loss drops the Steelers to 6-3 and creates a scenario where the only way we can win the division is by finishing a full game ahead of the Bengals. With that scenario highly unlikely to happen, it appears the Black and Gold are now relegated to Wild Card status. Last year, the New England Patriots missed out on the Wild Card despite an 11-5 record. In other words, not only is that route to the Super Bowl extremely difficult because you have to play three games all on the road but it’s a huge crapshoot just to get the spot in the first place."

Pheh. Bleah. Again.




The Bengals out-Steelered the Steelers yesterday at Heinz Field, as galling as it is to admit that. Give credit where credit is due. The Bengals played stout defense, performed on special teams and did just enough on offense -- especially late in the fourth quarter, again -- to win the game.

While it is tempting after defeat to assign blame, it's also prudent to assess the opponent and figure out what they did to beat your team. After all, the Steelers and Bengals are likely to meet again in the playoffs. They can't beat us three times in one year, can they? Nahhh ...

As a team, the Steelers seemed out of sync, and just a little bit off, all day, particularly on offense.

On defense, Defensive Coordinator Dick Lebeau did his job, as far as we can tell. For the second straight game, the Steelers held a heralded foe without an offensive touchdown. Also on the plus side, cornerback Ike Taylor once again held Chad Ochocinco in check, limiting him to just two catches and allowing keeping Ochocinco out of the end zone.

Additionally, it was neither LeBeau's fault nor Troy Polamulu's fault that Troy went down with a left knee injury (same knee as before). Injuries happen. Just ask Cincinnati running back Cedric Benson. Still, Troy's absence made a huge difference -- it had to, especially late in the fourth quarter (just like the first game against the Bengals, when the game was on the line).

No excuses. The Bengals beat the Steelers. The question for future reference (i.e., playoffs) is, how did they do it?

First and foremost: Defense.

The Steelers ran 17 plays (17!) in the Red Zone and came away with no touchdowns. It didn't help -- not at all-- that James Harrison (Silverback) drew a crucial, 15-yard unsportsmanlike conduct penalty to keep the Bengals' final drive alive. That penalty cost time as much as it did yardage. Nevertheless, the Steelers' defense allowed only 61 yards rushing, 178 yards passing, and zero touchdowns. That's a pretty good day's work against a talented squad.

As for the Steelers' offense, uncharasterically, Santonio Holmes and Heath Miller let key passes sail through their hands. Although both would have been tough catches, those are catches we've come to expect those guys to make. Holmes's was especially disappointing since he was wide open in the end zone and Big Ben threw a fairly nice pass, albeit a little high and fast, and it came in directly over 'Tones's head. Tough catch. But still.

These drops underscored a point Joey Porter's Pit Bulls made last week, which is that the Bengals' corners are playing extremely well. The Bengals' secondary (Jonathan Joseph, Leon Hall, Morgan Trent Zach Crocker, et al) blanketed the Steelers' receivers the entire game and forced coverage sacks, as Big Ben (true to form) held onto the ball, held onto the ball, held onto the ball, waiting for someone to come open. They didn't -- not often enough.

With that in mind, the play-calling merits scrutiny. Why? Why did the first-half pass-to-run ratio amount to 27 passes and just 9 runs? Why?

Moving on ... let's look at Special Teams. Shield your eyes, though, because here's where it gets prickly. Again, keep in mind that neither team scored an offensive touchdown.
For the third time this season, however, the Steelers allowed a kickoff return for a touchdown.

"Special Teams Coach Bob Ligashesky, you got some 'splainin' to do."

In the last four games, the Steelers have surrendered three (three!!!) kickoff returns for touchdowns. Inexcusable. Short of going out on the field, though, we're not sure it's entirely Ligashesky's fault.

Which brings us to kicker Jeff Reed. Maybe it's not all his fault, either, but: For crying out loud, at least try to make a tackle, Drunko.

That's the second time this season Reed merely waved at and/or ran by a kick-returner going for a touchdown. I hope the pleasantries he exchanged with returner Bernard Scott were congenial, as Scott was flying past him, because Reed's effort was laughable.

Additionally, and perhaps even more worrisome, is that Reed's kickoffs all season have been short and low. The result is that even when the other team doesn't get a long return, they're still starting too many drives at the 35-yard or 40-yard line. And, then, this morning, we heard Reed on the radio saying, "I did my job. My job was to force the return man to the inside lane, and I did that."

Bullshit, and that statement smacks of pointing fingers at your teammates. How is that the other team's kickers consistently launch their kicks five yards deep into the end zone, yet Reed rarely gets his kickoffs beyond the five-yard line?

This is an issue, Skippy, and it ain't funny. Three kickoff returns for touchdowns, two missed field goals during the three-point loss in Chicago, and a missed field goal in the first loss to Cincinnati, which won that first game by, yup, three points. Not cool. Not cool at all.

Watch out, Reed, or next season you may be kicking for the Cleveland Browns ... who play the Baltimore Ravens in this evening's Monday Night Football matchup. We're betting the folks at ESPN are thrilled to be airing this one. Whoop-de-doo!

On a more positive note, congratulations to the Pitt Panthers for defeating the Notre Dame Fighting Irish in Saturday night's thriller. Good job. Pitt wide receiver Jonathan Baldwin looks like a young hybrid of NFL stars Calvin Johnson and Larry Fitzgerald, and that ain't a bad thing to be, no sirree.

Now, all Pitt has to do is beat the West Virginia Mountaineers and the highly ranked Cincinnati Bearcats, and the Panthers will be invited to a major bowl. Piece-a-cake.