#54 on the Broncos is Leo Chenal’s son for the rest of his career. He is never going to live that down. He looked like a toddler trying to block Leo. That was truly one of the most amazing things I’ve ever witnessed on a football field. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Mosbonian:
I watched the replay of the highlights and I swear that their LT had so many early departures that it made Taylor seem like an amateur
It's not really Bolles' fault. If the snap count is on three, he can't count that high. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Wisconsin_Chief:
#54 on the Broncos is Leo Chenal’s son for the rest of his career. He is never going to live that down. He looked like a toddler trying to block Leo. That was truly one of the most amazing things I’ve ever witnessed on a football field.
That's one of those situations where he'll move to some small town, change his name and jersey number, start a small dairy farm, and never tell anyone about his past. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Rain Man:
That's one of those situations where he'll move to some small town, change his name and jersey number, start a small dairy farm, and never tell anyone about his past.
Or live next door to the guy that interfered during the cubs playoff game [Reply]
Originally Posted by DRM08:
In every close game, you're gonna have calls and non-calls that piss off both sides. Just part of the game in a sport with subjective officiating. If a team gets blown out by 30 points, that will eliminate the ref complaints.
Somehow the Tico Sports play-by-play woman a) recognized it was Leo Chenal who blocked it and b) talked about him blocking the XP in the Superbowl. Well done.
Actually she's saying Leo Chenal just ended the Broncos Superbowl [Reply]
Alex Forsyth had been knocked to the ground five times on placekick protection in the two weeks leading up to Sunday, and the Chiefs noticed and attacked that spot, leading to the game-deciding block.
Alex Forsyth had been knocked to the ground five times on placekick protection in the two weeks leading up to Sunday, and the Chiefs noticed and attacked that spot, leading to the game-deciding block.
Originally Posted by RaidersOftheCellar:
And those fools called it a fluke.
That kind of thing is really the difference with championship teams. The Chiefs have been that way for a while now, even the Royals were like that when they won. You'd read these stories over and over where they scouted some little weakness and had the patience to wait and exploit it when the game was on the line. [Reply]