I firmly believe all signs point to yes.
Let’s look back shall we…
WEEK 17: GIANTS VS PATS: Sit ‘em or play ‘em.
With Tom Coughlin’s head on the chopping block, he chooses to play his starters against one of the most impressive teams in pro sports history. He not only lets his boys play, but Coughlin and the vets motivate the Gmen to push the mighty Pats to the brink. They force the NFL Network to simul-cast the game on three competing networks, as what will go down as the day the fans beat the league. This game was decided by two plays, Moss for six, and Eli pick. None the less, Eli became a man on this evening in December.
Well, “that’s why they play the game.”
WILD CARD WEEKEND: GIANTS AT BUCS
Tampa Bay’s defense is too good for shaky Eli to handle. The warm weather and ferocious rush will leave the fairytale Giants licking their wounds and wishing Tiki was still in the backfield.
This game can best be described in one line: Best dressed Amani Toomer has gotten his groove back.
Well, “that’s why they play the game.”
DIVISIONAL PLAYOFFS: GIANTS AT DALLAS
Tony Romo and the big Dallas D are bringing back America’s team.
Eli will stumble and Romo will flourish. Giants secondary cannot handle T.O. and the high powered Boy’s O. Well, the only thing that nauseating Troy Aikman didn’t mention, and what may have been the most revealing and critical part about this game, is that in the second quarter it took the Cowboys 20 plays and nearly 11 minutes to score a touchdown.
On a drive that Aikman and Joe Buck drooled over, they failed to mention the fact that the Giants got to look at the entire Cowboys' playbook, and did it right before the half.
They saw exactly what they would call on 2nd and short, as well as 3rd and long. During this drive, the Giants put all their collective offensive heads together and created a series of plays that would lead them to the same result of the Cowboys' 11 minute drive: 7 PTS.
Proving that Eli became a man, in the huddle before their 47 second drive to change the landscape of the Divisional Playoff, Eli gets in the huddle and with confidence tells his O, “We are going to get six.”
It would be one thing if he just said it, but he actually did it.
A swarming D in the 2nd half put more heat on Romo than he got on his first date with Jessica.
And, well, “that’s why they play the game.”
NFC CHAMPIONSHIP: GIANTS AT PACKERS
Frozen Lambeau, Brett Favre in the playoffs, it is his year. There is no way the Giants can handle the YAC of Green Bay’s receivers. Eli doesn’t play well in cold weather, never mind 25 below.
After a first half of flawless Eli ball and a running game that sent chills down the already frozen spines of the Packer’s D, the Giants found themselves in control of the biggest game of their last 20 yrs.
Wide left, wide left, and a lost toss.
I know all Giants fans had already begun rehearsing the, “we had a great season either way,” line in their head, when much maligned Corey Webster stepped in front of the great one, Favre’s pass, in overtime giving Laurence Tynes a chance to resurrect his career and keep his children from being home schooled.
If you told me that Brett Favre would have the ball at Lambeau Field, in the NFC Championship game, down by three with the temperature diving towards state of emergency status, with the Super Bowl on the line, I would have bet my house and unborn child’s life that he would come through setting up a Brady-Favre showdown for history.
Well, “that’s why they play the game.”
SUPER BOWL XLII: GIANTS VS PATRIOTS
New England at 18-0 and 12 point favorites will have the game wrapped up by halftime, maybe even the 2nd quarter. Belicheat is too smart, Brady too good, and history is inevitable.
To kick off the 1st quarter, Eli drives the lowly Giants straight down the field, mixing passes and runs as casually as Johnny U. They settle for three, but put a stamp on this game that will never be erased. Over the next 4 quarters Tom Brady found himself on his back looking up at the University of Phoenix roof 23 times.
Hit after hit, followed by a blurring secondary of coverage, Mr. Brady was the one who needed flowers, not Gisele.
While the Giants D made Belicheat pout like a spoiled 10-year-old who was just told he has to eat the crust on his grilled cheese, Easy Eli and his band of brothers systematically moved the ball up and down the field.
Every single Giant played a role in this victory.
From Toomer’s tight rope balancing act in the 2nd quarter, to Ahmad Bradshaw’s crucial 3rd down scampers, to Kevin Boss’ 45 yard welcome to the NFL catch. These Giants played like a team while Hollywood Brady and cocky Belicheat were trying to remember what it was that made them so successful in the past.
So again, from Brandon Jacobs on 4th and one, to Tyree’s TD to, “THE CATCH”, to a perfectly read and delivered six from Eli to Burress, we saw a team play like a team. Alford scissoring Brady like a car hitting a telephone pole at 85 mph perfectly sealed the unlikely victory.
Giants World Champs, ‘72 Dolphins popping their bubbly while Mercury Morris folds up his lawn chair and puts away the welcome neighbor sign. Eli Manning MVP.
Well, “that’s why they play the game.”
This game epitomized everything that is right about sports.
The Giants' victory makes a better story than if the Pats went 19-0. The sports world gained the moderate fan for life and added a few that never would have thought of turning on the game until they saw Easy Eli lead his brothers to the cave and slay the evil dragon.
Sports are the only reality TV we really have.
It is unscripted and uncontrollable. Sometimes the victor can be called and sometimes things go as planned. But when they don’t, and when all that is supposed to happen doesn’t, when you have a troubled coach, a media tortured QB, and a fan base screaming for a chance to cheer, then you have the perfect formula for an upset.
An upset for the ages. Quite possibly the greatest game in sports history. A game that had a day after of everyone from the secretary to the house mom to the bus driver to the CEO saying, “What a game!”
This is why we play sports, this is why we watch sports, and this is why we feel that on any given day we can be heroes.
Well, it can be most simply put, “That’s why they play the game.”
That’s why we wake up every morning.
Because each day we have a chance at redemption like Eli and Coughlin or getting our dues like Toomer and Strahan, or simply going from average to great like Tyree. It teaches us that the only destiny that is for sure is the destiny that we control. It is pretty impressive when the biggest day in sports, on the biggest stage in sports, produces the best moment in sports.
So go buy the DVD, TiVo the NFL Film's greatest games special and sit down with your kid and show them that even the most unlikely of things can happen when you believe and take history into your own hands.
We all knew history was going to be made on Super Sunday, we just didn’t expect it to be by the Giants.















comments (21) write a comment »
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4 months ago
Good stuff, Gavin
Truer words have never been spoken
4 months ago
yahhhh trick that what da patriots get how u go 4rm 18-0 make it to the superbowl and lose aww man but better luck next time
4 months ago
awesome article. hands down, one of the best ive ever seen on this site.
4 months ago
Definitely a bright spot in a dark time for sports. Just as people start to think the Super Bowl is over hyped, we get a game like this. Good article.
4 months ago
Fantastic article!
4 months ago
Great article. The game kept me on the edge of my seat for four quarters - it was by far one of the most exciting games I've ever watched, and you summed up the reasons very well. Thank you for writing this.
4 months ago
It's a testament to the greatness of the game that you can write about it a month later and it's still an interesting read. They'll be writing/talking about SB XLII for years to come. It had all the storylines you could ever want.
4 months ago
Nice job Gavin. While I won't say it was the greatest game, especially as a fan of neither team, I will say that the Giants surprised the heck out of me. I was kind of hoping to see history made by New England, if for nothing else than to shut up Don Shua and those Dolphins who celebrate every time a team finally loses. But Eli is coming of age right before our eyes. Keep up the good work.
4 months ago
I'm inclined to agree with a lot of the other comments here--this is one of the best articles I've read on any website, be it ESPN, SI, or here at Bleacher Report. Great work, Gavin.
4 months ago
Nice write ponyboy.....thoroughly impressed
4 months ago
Great read!!!! Maybe you could help that Stew guy with his writing!
4 months ago
Ok PONYYY!!!!
4 months ago
Hey.....It only took the Giants 18 years to win a title.... THATS WHY WE PLAY THE GAME !!!
4 months ago
Hey... It only took the Patriots 36 years to finally win a Super Bowl!!! (and you had to cheat to even do that)
4 months ago
Great jon, the article truly does say it all. Why on any given Sunday the game is played. I always thought that the game itsself. Had a the feeling of David vs. Goliath. GO Blue...
4 months ago
Nice to read someone put things into perspective. Yes, it was the ultmate 'Reality show." Well done.
4 months ago
Very true. SuperBowl 42 was almost ridiculous with the underdog storylines -- they were so unbelievable you couldn't have pitched it as a movie to Hollywood, and yet it was all true.
For me, the game saved the season. All year long, especially after about week 8, I began to feel like all the games were meaningless. It just seemed so utterly inevitable -- the Pats were going to win the Superbowl -- even if they didn't go 19-0. All the other games and division winners felt like also-rans. Why is Arizona even bothering to play? Who cares if the Giants beat Buffalo? What did it really matter... it's all over already but for Brady hoisting the Lombardi Trophy.
And then a funny thing happened on the way to 19 and 0... the little team that could, punched the bully in the mouth and walked off the field with the bully's trophy in hand.
Suddenly all those games in October were meaningful again. That win over Buffalo clinching a playoff spot was huge. Every game won by every team in the league HAD ACTUALLY MATTERED.
What a game! What a season.
4 months ago
Since there's what? 32 teams? That's pretty good. By the way, name the teams that have more NFL titles than the Giants. It think there's only one - the Packers. Don't be bitter.
4 months ago
The first NFL title game was in 1933. From 1920 to 1932, the team with the best record was simply declared the champion without playing any playoff or title games. Superbowl 42 was the 18th NFL title game for the Giants. The next closest team is the Packers with 12. That means that there have been 74 championship games and the Giants have been involved in 18 of them, or 1 every 4 years. I wish they had a better overall record in those games, but a title game every 4 years is easily the best record in the NFL.
John
4 months ago
This article hit it right on the head. I like to hope that the GIANT fans didn't give up hopebut I know that in the Washington game my mind went to Golf. I coulodn't feel more proud of the GIANTS for overcoming all of the odds and winning the big one. Eli forever.
Rick
3 months ago
get the chills every time i read this article not just cause Im a giants fan and not just because I was there and will always have memories of this like you wrote about, but because this article really explains why anyone watches sports, and people often forget that reason. Great article man.
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